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February 4, 2025 93 mins
This is the full episode of The Morning Show with Preston Scott for Teusday, Feburay 4th.

Our guests today include:
- U.S. REP. Kat Cammack



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!
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:14):
Born and friends, Welcome to Tuesday.

Speaker 2 (00:18):
Go ahead, strand, welcome to the ninth edition of the
Morning Show with Preston Scott and Preston.

Speaker 3 (00:31):
He is Jose and it is a joy to be
with you. As we like to do, We'll start with
some scripture. One Peter three, verse nine says, do not
repay evil for evil, or reviling for reviling. But on

(00:51):
the contrary, bless for to you this you were called
that you may obtain a blame. Let me let me
convert that into more modern parlance. You ever heard of
the expression two wrongs don't make a right. Do not

(01:21):
repay evil.

Speaker 1 (01:24):
For evil?

Speaker 3 (01:26):
Two wrongs don't make make something a right a something? Well,
they did this, So I'm I can't tell you how
often I've seen that and fought that being a little
transparent here, look there, I absolutely understand.

Speaker 1 (01:55):
The desire.

Speaker 3 (02:00):
And and I'll tell you where I fight it, probably
more than any other place, is when I'm driving.

Speaker 1 (02:09):
Road rage is.

Speaker 3 (02:12):
An expression of this, and it's really, man, you're frustrated
because that person didn't have to do that, and they
did it. They almost caused a wreck, almost they almost.

Speaker 1 (02:31):
Whatever the case might be.

Speaker 3 (02:33):
And this there's this righteousness that rises up in us
that wants to say.

Speaker 4 (02:38):
Hey hey, hey, hey, hey hey.

Speaker 3 (02:45):
But today, more than ever, so many people are lacking
any level of restraint by the Holy Spirit, that it
gets out of control and you can be as right
as rain and it just doesn't matter. That's an area

(03:08):
that I constantly have to work on. Oh it's hard,
and that's just driving right, imagine and look and most
of the time someone does something knuckleheaded on the road,

(03:29):
everyone's fine, and you just there's a part of you that, look,
we're we're honest around here. There's a part of you
that's like, dude, I want you so pulled over. I
want you ticketed to the core. And there's a part

(03:51):
of you that's like, yeah, he gets in a wreck,
it's on him. You know, that dude weaving in and
out on his motor cycle, that's on him. Careful, guard
your heart. But I get it. That's just an everyday challenge.

(04:20):
But it exists all over. It's not just on the roads, now,
is it. So there's your verse today Verse Peter three nine,
A little check yourself as we start the program today,

(04:41):
and uh yeah, not gonna waste any time today. There's
no warm up other than the history segment and the
National Day of segment. After that, we're all in. Congresswoman
kat Camick is going to join us. We've got a
lot to get through, and so buckle up, buttercups. We

(05:07):
are in it for the ride. Today it's The Morning
Show with Preston Scott. Lookie dookie there. February fourth, seventeen

(05:42):
eighty nine. The Electoral College chooses George Washington be the
first US president. How consequential was that choice? We talk
about it all the time in the history segment, how
these small choices made that.

Speaker 1 (05:55):
At the time, you think.

Speaker 3 (05:56):
Yeah, either him or him, him or her? What if
we don't choose Washington? And what if we choose now?
You know, what if the person that's chosen decides, you know,
I kind of like this and kind of plays at

(06:18):
King George the third says, I don't think I'll step
down crazy small moments in history, and I guess it
would be appropriate to suggest the same is true.

Speaker 1 (06:38):
In our lives.

Speaker 3 (06:40):
These small moments, these small choices, these random events where
we do this versus this?

Speaker 1 (06:50):
Is it really all that different?

Speaker 3 (06:53):
There are consequences to choices, good and bad and that's
where we can really you talk about learning from history,
It's not just look, we chose George Washington. It's imagine

(07:14):
if we hadn't. It's what other choices do you and
I make routinely in our day that proved to be consequential.
Sorry to do this, but I'm feeling compelled to. Chuck
Colson once told a group of young people, and if

(07:38):
you don't know who Chuck Colson is, look him up.
Amazing flow to his life ups and downs. He ended
up in prison as a result of the Watergate scandal.
It got saved in prison, started something called Justice Fellowship,
and was one of the great apologists for the Christian

(07:58):
mindset and faith that the twentieth century ever had. And
Chuck Colson once told a group of young people, you
make one big choice your entire life. It's not about
where you're going to go to school, though it's important.
It's not about who you're going to marry, though it's important.
It's about whether you're going to be a Christian or not,

(08:19):
because that singular choice places a filter in your life
by which you run all other choices through. So, for example,
he's telling these young people, if you're a Christian. It
then determines what you're going to do for a living.
If you're a Christian, it then determines who you're going
to marry for the rest of your life. If you're
a Christian, it determines whether you drink or not at

(08:40):
a party, because well, if you're under twenty one, that's
not an option for you. You're a Christian, You're not allowed.
It's the law. And so it was a brilliant crystallization
of choices and how it's not easy, but it's simple.

(09:01):
Eighteen sixty one, six southern states from the Confederate States
form the Confederate States of America. Nineteen thirty two, The
first Winter Olympics in the United States, Lake Placid. Nineteen
forty five. Fdr Winston Churchill and Joseph Stalin meet at
Yalta to discuss a post.

Speaker 1 (09:21):
World War two world In.

Speaker 3 (09:23):
Two thousand and four of the social networking website Facebook.
Can you imagine Facebook is just twenty one years old?
It launched on this date in two thousand and four.
Can you even get your brain about how big that
thing grew in such.

Speaker 1 (09:41):
A short period of time. That's insane.

Speaker 3 (09:46):
Lastly, today is National Homemade Soup Day. To my daughter
in law, I just say she is a homemade soup fanatic, brilliant.
Today is National Create a Vacuum Day. No, we're not
talking about oryx or hoovers. We're talking about voids in space.

(10:09):
And today's National Thank a Mail Carrier Day. So to
all of you mail carriers out there humping it, thank
you for doing your job, appreciate it. Wish things were
easier for you, but they're not. But I thank you anyway.
Sixteen minutes past them. Leon County residents gather around the radio.

(10:41):
All right, if you don't live in Leon County, use
this as an examples. You know, this is one of
my overarching points. You know, Sean Hannity talks about where
he lives, Glenn Deck talks about where he lives, Clay
and Buck talk about where they live. And so the
fact that we're here we talk about local things at times,

(11:04):
because I think it's good for the local community that
we talk about certain local things. But I also think
it's instructive for all of you who live outside of
the community that you say, oh, that can happen. Because
in Leon County, Florida, it's a bit of an anomaly.
It is a very leftist community. How we've maintained our

(11:25):
popularity over the years is just god plain and simple,
because I think deep down, even those of you that
are Democrats that listen to the program, you know I
speak truthfully. You also know I'm authentic, but more importantly
that I'm just I'm honest about it. You know, when

(11:46):
the gops close their sweaty and stinky, I let you know.
It's just that the platform of the left is just wrong.
And here's an example. WCTV reporting Leon County leader say
they're looking for ways to protect immigrants amid pressure criticism
from recent ice raids.

Speaker 1 (12:08):
Now, the article is somewhat.

Speaker 3 (12:09):
Silly the way it's prepared, and it's probably a transcript
of the stand up that the reporter did. Last week,
a group of protesters showed up at a Leon County
Commission meeting, Leon County City Commission meeting whatever to urge
officials to do more. Some county commissioners discuss searching for

(12:32):
ways for local government to fight back on immigration policy,
and they quote Commissioner David O'Keeffe who proposed hiring more
Leon County attorneys, changing the funding for the detention center
based on how the sheriff responds to ICE or even
working quietly behind the scenes to avoid drawing attention. And

(12:55):
then they quote some people that are involved in one
of those ridiculous extremist groups, demanding that, for example, just
spend more money resources working with Leon County schools to
make sure undocumented kids aren't snatched.

Speaker 1 (13:10):
Up by ICE.

Speaker 3 (13:13):
I couldn't take it, so I dashed off the following
note to all county commissioners. I want to strongly urge
you to avoid engaging in conflation, which is what Commissioner
O'Keefe and perhaps others Bill Proctor are doing. There's zero
need for legal immigrants to have concern about actions by
US Immigrations and Customs enforcement. Some politicians and illiberals on

(13:35):
the left have this habit of intentionally confusing legal immigration
with illegal immigration. People here illegally have no rights other
than human rights. I refuse to believe that you were
not aware of the hundreds of thousands of children who
have been trafficked into America illegally. Was Commissioner O'Keefe worried
about the children who may be in our schools who

(13:58):
might have been trafficked. I will land to the question,
he wasn't. At least there's no record or press conferences
of concern. Please do not follow the reckless path of
the city by engaging in tone deaf actions which ignore reality.
Pulling across the nation show massive support by legal immigrants
for actions targeting illegal immigrants by the new federal administration. Additionally,

(14:22):
you would have to be remarkably dangerously ignorant of the
dangers posed by, for example, Trende Aragua, members of which
were arrested here in Tallahassee to be advocating for taxpayers
to pay for more county attorneys. Ever heard of Lake
and Riley, Joscelyn Nungary, Gloria Cassio, Ruby Garcia, Christopher Gadd,

(14:43):
Travis Wolf, Alex Wise Junior, Elizabeth Mendina, Melissa Powell, Rearden Powell,
Aiden Clark, Rachel Morin say their names commissioners better yet
find out how they and countless others died. Stop this nonsense.
I will be using my platform to ensure communities. Members

(15:05):
of this community are well aware of actions that you
consider and more importantly take. Remember, the issue of dealing
with illegal immigration is supported across the political spectrum, which
includes this community. Only the extreme left defends it and
conflates it. Sincerely, here's my advice to you. Do not

(15:27):
let this happen. Voice your concerns, make your voice heard.
You can write all commissioners at once. It's very easy,
very easy. They make it easy. The city makes it tough.
They don't want you to do that. Accounting to its
credit makes it easy. Let them know. This type of

(15:49):
nonsense is ridiculous. Did you know that trend de Aragua
was in our community? Did you know they were here?
Thank god? This president is dealing with this problem across
the country. Thank god. Twenty seven past the hour, we'll

(16:15):
be watching you.

Speaker 4 (16:18):
Welcome to MAD Radio Network, Make a Difference Radio Network,
and this is the Morning Show with Preston Scott channeling

(16:38):
our inner Steely Dan.

Speaker 1 (16:41):
Morning.

Speaker 3 (16:44):
Welcome to the Tuesday edition of the Morning Show with
Preston Scott. He's ose, I'm Preston Big stories in the
press box. Governor's not alone in not being happy with
what the legislature has done. It's interesting. I don't has

(17:04):
he vetoed it yet. I don't think he has yet.
Perhaps he's waiting for the session to start. Give him
a chance to change it. But the clock might be running,
he might have a limited amount of time. But the
Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles said, hey,
leadership in the House and Senate did not consult with

(17:25):
us about the practical applications of their of their law,
and their law handcuffs us, and we are we are
part of who has to enforce it.

Speaker 1 (17:36):
That's a problem.

Speaker 3 (17:40):
And therein is the problem with the unintended consequences which
frequently happen with laws, but that usually happens on the
other side of the aisle. See this, this, This is
why this whole thing rubbed me wrong. They did not
thoroughly craft a build. That's what the governor wanted. He

(18:01):
wanted the opportunity to say, Okay, these are the things
that I think need to happen, let's talk about this.
And they said, we'll do our own And they didn't
consider the things that may matter most. So they're asking
the legislature to change things.

Speaker 1 (18:22):
You could use the.

Speaker 3 (18:24):
Imagery of someone spanking somebody, you could use the imagery
of somebody dunking on somebody. Whatever imagery you want to use,
use it. Because yesterday Donald Trump got both Mexico and
Canada within one day waved a white flag of surrender.

(18:52):
Both agreed to send troops to the borders. Both agreed
to deal with the fentanyl crisis in.

Speaker 1 (18:59):
A more.

Speaker 3 (19:03):
Tactical manner, and the President said, good, we'll give you
thirty days. We will withhold the tariffs, and we'll see
how things go. Thanks, thanks for the call, justin Thank
you President of Mexico whose name doesn't remotely sound like

(19:29):
someone from Mexico, but that's okay.

Speaker 1 (19:37):
Yeah, I love it.

Speaker 3 (19:40):
I wonder how angry people on the left are that
it was this easy. Seriously, it's almost a trickle if
that it might be a drop at the border compared
to the flow the broken pipe.

Speaker 1 (20:07):
China.

Speaker 3 (20:09):
China said, Okay, we'll put fifteen percent terrify on your stuff,
all right, cool, let's see how that works out. Because
your people are piss poor. The overwhelming majority of your
people ain't got nothing, so you're gonna make things more

(20:35):
expensive for him. Okay, let us know how that works
for you. Fair enough. And then the last big story,
members of the United States military are receiving full reinstatement
because they were kicked out over refusal to get the

(20:57):
COVID shot US Marine Corps acting on it. It's just
the start full back pay reinstatement, no record of their
alleged wrong, which was not a wrong. They were the
smart ones. I'm sorry. If you got the vacs, I

(21:19):
feel for you. I'm gonna keep telling you go see
an alternate care doctor and get some targeted nutrition to
help you deal with the fact you got that in
your body. Forty minutes past the hour, pretty impressive set
of big stories.

Speaker 4 (21:38):
It's The Morning Show with Preston Scott on News Radio
one hundred point seven WFLA.

Speaker 3 (21:51):
I'm sorry, I'm laughing, but I was watching a short
in the break and out of You've seen some of
the genius ways Trump's supporters made sure their signs weren't
messed with, and if they were, someone paid a price.
One guy put his Trump sign out side of the

(22:14):
road and put tax strips on either side of it.
So this dude runs over it and it's captured on camera.
He thinks he's done something funny, and all of a sudden,
he's here in the air. Leave his tires. He's here
in the tax strip spin around in his wheel well,

(22:35):
and he gets out of the car to look and
sees it and loses his mind and is mad at
the person who put the Trump sign.

Speaker 4 (22:44):
He's bleeping people.

Speaker 1 (22:47):
You're the one who tried to run over the sign illegally.
Buh bud.

Speaker 3 (22:52):
Then the short I just saw was a guy walking
down the street and he sees a Trump sign in
someone's yard, and I mean well in their yard, not
by the sidewalk, but in their yard. He looks both
ways and bolts for it, and it's just one of
those little signs that are on a wire. What he
couldn't possibly know is that the guy had electrified the thing.

(23:15):
So as he grabs the sign, he gets blasted with
a few vaults, and it's just it's just classic.

Speaker 1 (23:26):
It's beautiful. Love it, you know.

Speaker 3 (23:31):
Jose was just talking to me in the break about
just the speed in which we're getting things done. Trump
is and again this is the all things work together
for the good type thing. Now, obviously I don't know
where Trump's heart is it really is with regard to
christ I don't I hope and pray for him, as

(23:55):
I did Barack Obama, as I did George W. Bush,
as I did Bill Clinton, as I did. Did you
know all of the presidents in my lifetime, including you know,
Joe Biden. But the fact of the matter is, I
don't know hope for the best, but it's abundantly clear

(24:19):
that he thought long and hard in these last four
years about who he was going to pick, how he
was going to handle things, and he came in with
a plan. And look at what's happening. Look at the

(24:47):
ease again of the border. I'll be honest with you. Now,
you can turn your people loose to fix legal immigration.
Let's look at what that means, and we need to
have that discussion, not immigrants, and what that means as
far as the founding of this nation, this nation was
based on settlers, not immigrants. Immigrants choose to be part

(25:11):
of what settlers set up, the society that settler's craft.
Immigrants look around the world and go, oh, I like that.
It's not about changing it, and we need to change
our immigration policy to reflect that. But for those of
you in Georgia, this is worth noting. Nicole Shanahan. You

(25:33):
don't know the name. Necessarily, she was the running mate
for Robert F. Kennedy Junior when he was running for president.
What I didn't know is that she was a billionaire.
She's a billionaire philanthropist, and she has basically said to
the Georgia senators, I'm watching your votes. And apparently Rafael

(25:55):
Warnock has said no to Kennedy, and she was involved
in bankrolling and getting him elected. I'll just read what
she said in response to his vote. Man, do I
regret ever helping you. The only reason you're in that
seat is because I sent massive financial support to Shirley

(26:16):
Scharrod C four to mobilize rural Georgia in the twenty
twenty runoff. I'll be correcting that massive mistake asap. You're awful, well, okay,
Then she said the two candidates I helped elect, Senator
Rafael Warnock, Senator John Ossoff, Please know I will be

(26:37):
watching your votes very closely. I'll make it my personal
mission that you lose your seats in the Senate if
you vote against the future health of America's children. Now again,
I'm not lockstep with Robert F. Kennedy Junior, but I
don't care about his position on abortion as it relates

(26:58):
to HHS because it's not a federal issue really anymore.
It just isn't now if we have issues where it overlaps.
Then we'll have to address that. But the overriding issue
right now are are we're living in the wake of
the catastrophe of COVID and on that he's been proven

(27:18):
right as a lot of us have been. So that's
who we got right now, forty eight minutes past the hour,
come back and yeah, they tried. You've got a couple

(27:41):
aviation mysteries still shrouded in questions. You've got the medical
jet that crashed outside Philadelphia.

Speaker 1 (27:57):
That thing.

Speaker 3 (27:59):
Just I mean fell out of the sky. Listening to theories,
some say it had to stall, some say, no, way,
that's all. There's something malfunctioned. But that then came down whole,
and so that points to maybe a stabilizer.

Speaker 1 (28:21):
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (28:22):
We'll see what we do know about the American Airlines
Regional jet is at this point. What's being reported is
that the captain Jonathan Campos thirty four in the first
officer Samuel Lilly twenty eight, attempted to pull the plane's

(28:43):
nose up seconds before the crash, and TSB member todd
Edmand said at one point, very close to the impact,
there was a slight change in pitch, an increase in pitch,
which means they're pulling the nose up. The airliner was
at three hundred and twenty five feet plus or minus

(29:06):
twenty five feet. The helicopter was was not supposed to
be above two hundred feet. The collision happens at three
hundred and twenty five feet or three hundred feet. The
helicopter's not supposed to be there. And so I've looked

(29:30):
at a lot of the you know videos. I watched
a half hour video yesterday that was recommended to me
by a certified flight instructor and a FAA certified check ride.

Speaker 1 (29:47):
You know, I don't.

Speaker 3 (29:48):
Know how what that title is, but it's the person
that approved somebody to get a private license. He's a
friend of mine, and he emailed me privately and he said, hey,
take a look at this, and so I did. The
guy who did it has a little bit of a
YouTube following. He certainly has the credentials to do what
he did in offering his analysis. He just doesn't do

(30:12):
it very well. He's just it's tough to follow. It
was a tough half hour, but there were some interesting
things gleaned from that, and we'll get to some of
that in just a few minutes because we do have
some more information on the pilot of the helicopter. Because

(30:36):
while there is responsibility that the air traffic controller may
need to take in this in not being more aggressive,
but that could be a staffing issue as well. This
was clearly the fault of the pilot of the helicopter.

(30:57):
There's no doubting that at all. I believe that from
the get go. We're going to talk a little bit
more about that. But what have we learned about the pilot?
Some interesting things that we now know or maybe that
we don't know. Next well, alrighty Didy, welcome second hour

(31:33):
already of the Morning Show with Preston Scott at how
are from now? US congress Woman Cat Camick, Firebrand of
Congress will join us. She takes no prisoners. She's practical,
very pragmatic, and she does not she does not sanitize anything.

(31:55):
I mean, you want to know what's going on, what's
happening behind closed doors. If she's there, she's telling you,
unless it's confidential, unless it's restricted and classified, okay, and
I'm good with that. Gotta have some secrets. Anyway, we
moved to the second hour. Did it occur to you

(32:17):
that it was a little bit different that the United
States military, still with the embedded people from the Biden regime,
chose not to release the name of the pilot of

(32:38):
the helicopter that they went ahead and released the names
of the others. Ryan O'Hara, chief warrant officer to Andrew Eves,
who I think is the one that was communicating with

(32:59):
the tower, but not Captain Rebecca Loboch. Why why not
tell us her name? You get some indication when after

(33:24):
the releasing of the name, you find out that not
only are all of her social media site scrubbed clean,
but so are her families, her parents, her sisters gone.

(33:49):
So why would you scrub everything from social media for
the entire family because you don't want anyone to know
anything about her. Now, what we do know that is
public record at this point is she worked in the
Biden White House. She was there as recently as January

(34:09):
sixth for a ceremony when Hillary Clinton and George Soros
received medals from Biden. She was employed, apparently by the
White House, which perhaps accounts for a five hundred and
twenty five thousand dollars home. I mean, you're working for

(34:33):
the military you're not probably affording that at her age,
maybe at the end of a career, perhaps, but she
could afford that house four years ago, only two years
into the military. So the social media accounts for her

(34:58):
and her family.

Speaker 1 (35:02):
Scrubbed.

Speaker 3 (35:05):
Military pilots trainers in our military have said, and I quote,
I'll tell you that Rebecca Lobach in no way should
have been the pilot in command on that flight. Five
hundred hours in five years inconceivable, another Rebecca Loback was

(35:25):
commissioned in twenty nineteen and had five hundred hours of
flight time. The math doesn't add up airframe type rating training.
That's a thousand hours plus at minimum. So perhaps Donald
Trump is correct when he says DEI may have played

(35:46):
a role in this. Was she being fast tracked for
another reason? Some have suggested she was being prepped for
work as a CIA operative.

Speaker 1 (35:56):
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (35:59):
What to be accurate. Is that she was an lgbt
Q activist and as such would have been a prime
target for fast tracking. So she came into the military

(36:19):
as Donald Trump's leaving office, and then all of a
sudden she's in the White House and she made mistakes
that well, we don't have time to address right now necessarily,
but that we've we've got to talk about We've we've

(36:41):
got to talk about some errors. We'll do that in
h in the coming days. Ten past the Hour more
here on the Morning Show with Preston Scott.

Speaker 4 (36:53):
Welcome to the Morning Show with Preston Scott.

Speaker 1 (37:13):
This is kind of interesting.

Speaker 3 (37:19):
Do you call it a man hunt when you're hunting
for a woman and what if the person the woman
is trans Now it's back to okay being called a
man hunt, right, Nothing funny about the story, though, you know,

(37:39):
the politics of names and personal pronouns is worth laughing at.
Felleral authorities are looking for a thirty two year old
woman linked to the murder of a Border patrol agent
who was killed on the job. David Maeland Moland forty four,

(38:06):
pulled over a couple of folks and one of them
shot and killed him. She was eventually shot and killed.
Her trans friend is sitting in jail. I guess, but

(38:27):
they're looking for Michelle Zajko, described as armed and dangerous,
believed to have supplied the guns. She's also connected to
murders in California and Pennsylvania. They think she killed her
parents parents probably didn't approve of her lifestyle, so she
shot and killed them. Person of interest in a homicide

(38:53):
in California. Perhaps the landlord Michelle Jacqueline Jamie Zagko, member
of a trans terror cult, didn't know there was such

(39:15):
a thing. I knew that that there's not a real
far leap to go from trans and cult trans non
binary and a group called the Zizians. They are a

(39:35):
vegan cult of transgenders. Feel like I'm watching yeah, describing
that seems like that's the spin off for the next
Walking Dead series, right.

Speaker 5 (39:55):
The bizarre vegan trans cult the Walking Dead, the Zizzians, doesn't.

Speaker 1 (40:06):
It It's like, you can't make this stuff up.

Speaker 3 (40:14):
And you remember we talked about the the guy who
turned himself in versus trying to kill Scott Bessent, Mike Johnson,
Pete Hagsith, Ryan Michael English, Well, Ryan Michael English, also

(40:36):
known as Riley Jane English, goes by the she her pronouns.

Speaker 1 (40:54):
What I so is is.

Speaker 3 (40:58):
Is Ryan Michael Because she's described as a trans identified male,
so that would mean she's a woman, right, I mean,
if you're a trans identified male, if you're trans male,
you're a woman. If you're a trans woman, you're a guy.

(41:23):
At least that's what I've always thought. Here's what all
of this adds up to mental illness, and it's starting
to blow up. And I have great sympathy and empathy
for people that are dealing with their hardwiring, because we're hardwired,

(41:53):
male and female.

Speaker 1 (41:55):
Dad.

Speaker 3 (41:55):
There's guys that enjoy painting and decoration and things that
are more feminine, but that doesn't make you a woman.
They're dudes that like pink and purple.

Speaker 4 (42:12):
Cool.

Speaker 3 (42:14):
There are girls that love being outdoors and doing guy stuff. Cool,
no problem. But you are who you're wired to be,
and when you fight against that, that conflict then boils over.
And that's what we're seeing. We're seeing vicious, violent crimes
being committed by people that are struggling with mental illness.

(42:35):
And that's why you cannot have them in the military.
You can't. You cannot.

Speaker 1 (42:41):
You just can't.

Speaker 3 (42:43):
Can't have them teaching impressionable children. Kids can't do it.
Seventeen passed the YO.

Speaker 4 (42:53):
Health related news coming up next.

Speaker 3 (43:08):
Came across a article in Epic Health Epic Times. Researching
show that we undergo dramatic biological biological changes in our
forties and in our sixties. Can I see a show
of hands that say, amen, you don't know that you're

(43:29):
not forty? I feel like I am, but you're not forty, sir.
You can't say an amen to that. I can say
amen to both of them. Amen on the forties with
my left hand, and Amen on the sixties with my right.

Speaker 1 (43:43):
You can't I hear an amen?

Speaker 3 (43:45):
Uh?

Speaker 4 (43:46):
Yeah, it's it's what's interesting.

Speaker 1 (43:49):
Here is.

Speaker 3 (43:53):
A study that has been produced and published in Nature,
aging over five thousand, shall we say, samples from one

(44:13):
hundred and eight volunteers age twenty five to seventy five
different ethnic backgrounds, and they showed that two major periods
of change happen around age forty four and age sixty.
I've passed them both disease risk changes that happened to

(44:41):
the body and the body's reaction to alcohol, for example,
is major ramped up in the forties.

Speaker 1 (44:53):
In a bad way, caffeine, you name it.

Speaker 3 (44:58):
And so what they oil down to is five different
things that may help slow things down a little bit
because these changes generally aren't good, they're just part of
the process. The idea has been for many that we
unless you're Dick Clark, you age gradually. This says no,

(45:25):
in your mid forties you're gonna go, and in your
and in and around sixty you're gonna go.

Speaker 1 (45:33):
That's what this says.

Speaker 3 (45:36):
So these dietary habits contribute to various aspects of physical health.
Number one more plant protein, plant based protein. Just saying
two less sugar makes sense, Then say none says less.

Speaker 1 (46:00):
Three.

Speaker 3 (46:01):
This was interesting because we talked about the benefits of
elderberry back a couple of weeks ago, how elderberry is
like a thing now the challenge is finding it. Elderberry
juice good luck plain. Elderberry juice is obscenely expensive. You
can find to concentrate and then make a juice that

(46:25):
might be useful. They recommend like six ounces a day
of that stuff. I'm thinking to myself, how bad can
it taste? Just don't make it if you don't know
what you're doing, because elderberries can can bring arsenic into
your system if you don't thoroughly know what you're doing.
Supplement with gojiberry though that's number three in this list,

(46:49):
also known as wolfberry. There's a recipe for rose mulberry
gojiberry tea. If you're so inclined regular sleep boom, I'm
killing that. And then exercise regularly and I'm back to that.

(47:10):
So yeah, there are things that we can do to
help the process. Twenty seven past the hour, reset the
Big Stories in the press Box and have a laugh.

Speaker 4 (47:19):
Next, give it like a fine wine.

Speaker 3 (47:23):
Ah excuse me, man, Please have some more water the Pellegrino.

Speaker 4 (47:28):
Yes, sparkling.

Speaker 1 (47:30):
This breeze is very nice.

Speaker 4 (47:32):
Good morning, and welcome to the Morning Show with Preston Scott.

Speaker 3 (47:54):
Big Stories in the press Box this morning, Morning friends,
I'm Preston's ose us knwhen Kat Camick in a half hour,
fired service members are beginning to receive their reinstatement notices.
Those who got dumped because of the experimental shot known
as the COVID vaccine, which wasn't one getting put back

(48:15):
into the service. Can you imagine the hell they've been through,
having to find work, losing their benefits.

Speaker 1 (48:24):
I mean, I just.

Speaker 5 (48:30):
Unbelievable.

Speaker 3 (48:36):
Donald Trump, we said yesterday chess, not checkers. We're not
playing checkers anymore. One day is all it took for
Mexico and Canada to say, yes, mister President, your your
requests are reasonable, and they are so The Mexican president

(48:58):
agreed to send ten thousand military troops to the border.
That means dealing with the cartels. Cartels are not going
to just go away. They're just not. And then Canada followed.
Now China's gone with a fifteen percent tax tariff on

(49:21):
our stuff. Okay, look, okay, trust me, we will see
progress made. What you must remember is China subsidizes their

(49:42):
businesses because they take everything, and so the Chinese owned businesses,
which most of them are, there's very limited free enterprise
in China. Their prices are so low because the government
pays them to be low, they make up the difference.

Speaker 1 (50:03):
So it's part of the deal.

Speaker 3 (50:06):
I want to circle back though to immigration because I've
seen this before, but a listener sent this to me
and it's just worth hearing.

Speaker 1 (50:15):
In order.

Speaker 3 (50:16):
Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, Nancy Pelosi, and Chuck Schumer and
what they've said about illegal immigration. You know what, that's
going to be only in one channel, and I'm going
to have to hold on that. I will re record

(50:39):
that so that the way that our system works is
one channel. Tallahasse gets one channel, Panama City gets another.
So if something's just feeding through one channel, is a problem.
So I've caught it. It's okay. I will air it
in just a few minutes. But what it's going to
do is it's going to un score the rhetoric and

(51:03):
how democrats and leftists illiberals just don't have any consistency.
Their rhetoric is based on who's in the room, even
at times their accent. You know, when I've spoken at

(51:33):
churches that are primarily black congregants, i will occasionally have
fun with dialects and I'll do a Lutheran Midwestern pastor,
and I'll do a Pentecostal pastor from the South, and
I'll do a Black pastor that.

Speaker 1 (51:52):
Is getting all fired.

Speaker 3 (51:54):
I'll do voices at times to just make a point
to illustrate how there are distinctions, but yet one body,
Hillary and Barack and others, they do it to patronize.

(52:14):
They do it as if they're going to somehow be
welcomed differently because they're using this lilt in their voice.

Speaker 1 (52:24):
Whatever.

Speaker 3 (52:26):
But we'll circle back to that. It's forty minutes past
the Hours the Morning Show with Preston Scott.

Speaker 4 (52:35):
Welcome to Them, a d radio network where we challenge
you to make a difference in your world in a
positive way, improving the lives of others.

Speaker 3 (52:45):
It's the Morning Show with President Scott. Don't think for
one second that Democrats, not all, but enough, aren't going

(53:14):
to step back and say, well, we can't let the
last election stand like that.

Speaker 1 (53:19):
Even if we've got a cheat, we got to go
back to cheating. Woman named Gina.

Speaker 3 (53:29):
We'll go with that name, since that's what the story
here on the Gateway Pundit points to resident of Oakland County, Michigan,
shopping with a friend last fall, approached by a young,
approximately twenty five year old woman standing near the door
of Joe Randazzo's Fruit and Vegetable Market in Dearborn.

Speaker 1 (53:53):
Heights, located in Wayne County.

Speaker 3 (54:01):
She recognized the woman with the clipboard that was approaching her,
and this time she decided to roll tape and she
recorded the interaction. Here's a portion of her statement to
the Dearborn Police Department. What police, The woman with the

(54:23):
clipboard asked me if I was registered to vote. I
explained to her that I was registered in Oakland County
and plan on voting there because I lived there. This
was back in October, just before the election. She said,
it doesn't matter you can vote down here too. She
asked me to fill out a form on her clipboard

(54:44):
with my name, address, and phone number. I told her
that I would be looking for a pen in my purse,
and I pushed the record button on my phone app,
the phone recorder app. I put a fictitious name and
phone number on the list on her clipboard. The woman
further wanted me to complete a change of address form,
indicating that it was very important to complete the form.

(55:05):
I told her that I needed to catch up with
my friend who was shopping already inside the store, and
she could have the pen. All of it is verified.
Every word that she said is verified. So why would
a canvasser try to convince Gina to commit a felony

(55:28):
by registering to vote and then allowing canvassing groups to
assign her an address where she can vote in two counties,
especially in Wayne County, which is considered to be the
epicenter for voter fraud in Michigan.

Speaker 1 (55:48):
So she's a hero. But here's my point. It's happening.

Speaker 3 (55:57):
Woman with Connecticut employee. She's charged with changing Republican voter
registrations to Democrats. This happened in September Torrington Police initiated

(56:19):
an investigation after discovering discrepancies and voter registration cards submitted
fifty seven year old ORLANDA Brantley, an employee of the
Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services, had changed party
affiliation on cards from no or Republican to Democrat without
the knowledge or consent of the individuals. Here's my point

(56:44):
in bringing up these two stories. These are two She
had to post a ten thousand dollars bond. She scheduled
to appear in court next week. Don't tell us it
doesn't happen, and that it hasn't happened. Don't just don't.

(57:08):
You can say, oh, those are just two examps too small.
Please remember the voting numbers from twenty twenty versus twenty
twenty four, and even people on the left looking at
the numbers and going by god, I guess we did
steal twenty twenty because it's outrageous and that's something we

(57:33):
have got.

Speaker 1 (57:33):
To keep on our radar.

Speaker 3 (57:34):
Or when we come back the audio, I wanted to
play for you and if time allows, a manly minute,
so don't leave us.

Speaker 1 (57:42):
It's the Morning Show with Preston.

Speaker 4 (57:43):
Scott Sensey of sensibility, communicator of common sense amplified. It's
The Morning Show with Preston Scott. All right, take two,

(58:07):
here we go.

Speaker 1 (58:08):
This is.

Speaker 3 (58:11):
This is what Republicans in the House and the Senate
need to play every single time a discussion comes up
about illegal immigration on the campaign trail and in the
chambers of the House and the Senate, no less than
Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, Nancy Pelosi, and Chuck Schumer.

Speaker 6 (58:35):
I think we got to have tough conditions. Tell people
to come out of the shadows. If they've committed a crime,
deport them, no questions asked, They're gone. If they've been
working and are law abiding, we should say, here are
the conditions for you staying. You have to pay a
stiff fine because you came here illegally. You have to
pay back taxes, and you have to try to learn English,

(58:55):
and you have.

Speaker 4 (58:56):
To wait and line.

Speaker 1 (58:58):
Get that cheer.

Speaker 7 (58:58):
What happened is you are going to pay a significant fine,
you are going to learn English.

Speaker 1 (59:06):
You are going to go to the.

Speaker 7 (59:07):
Back of the line so that you don't get ahead
of somebody who is in Mexico City applying legally. I
think the American people they appreciate and believe in immigration,
but they can't have a situation where you just have
half a million people pouring over the border without any
kind of mechanism to control it.

Speaker 8 (59:25):
We all in this body, and I know I can
speak very firmly for the Democrats support strong border controlled
and it must be part and the first part of
any comprehensive first immigration reform.

Speaker 9 (59:41):
Illegal immigration is wrong, plain and simple. Until the American
people are convinced that we will stop future flows of
illegal immigration, we will make no progress dealing with the
millions of illegal immigrants who are here now and on
rationalizing our system of legal immigration.

Speaker 3 (01:00:05):
I want to thank the listener for sending that to me.
I've seen that several times. I just forgot about it.
Thus ended the lesson, right, I mean, thus end at

(01:00:29):
the lesson. I mean, it's as clear as can be
that that is how Democrats feel about about illegal immigration,
when it's convenient for them to feel that way.

Speaker 1 (01:00:44):
What I want to notice is that.

Speaker 3 (01:00:51):
When they said learn English, did you notice the applause
that was Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton, separated by years.
It is something that people know is common sense. Here's

(01:01:11):
what a lot of people don't realize though, is that
when you make people learn that the language of the country,
you are helping them.

Speaker 1 (01:01:26):
It's called assimilation. It's expected.

Speaker 3 (01:01:31):
If you move to France, try being successful in business
not speaking French. If you move to Japan, try being
successful without learning Japanese. It doesn't matter where you live.
It's the expectation. We have now made it part of
almost law that we have to educate people in their

(01:01:51):
native language. If they're from a Hispanic speaking you know country.
What so if you speak Spanish, we got to teach
you in Spanish. No no, no, no no no. If
you come here legally, you learn English first first, then

(01:02:13):
you can be educated in our school system if you're
a legal citizen of this country. That's how you do it.
If you really care about people, you know that assimilation.
Learning the language brings about more opportunities for success and growth.

(01:02:36):
That's how you really show that you care. All Right,
we come back. I haven't even gotten to a story.
I'm going to talk about it with US Congresswoman Kat Camick.
If time allows. She joins us next for hour number
three here on The Morning Show with Preston Scott. All right,

(01:03:11):
let's get rolling here, third hour of the Morning Show
with Preston Scott turning the page on the Rundown Show
fifty three oh nine.

Speaker 1 (01:03:18):
But who's counting?

Speaker 4 (01:03:19):
That's Jose over there in Studio one A.

Speaker 3 (01:03:21):
I am here in Studio one B, and I'm thrilled
to have back with US congressional representative from Florida's third District,
US Congresswoman Kat Cammick. Kat, how are you?

Speaker 10 (01:03:33):
Good morning? It is foggy here in Gainesville. I don't
know how it is. Were you up there in the panandle,
but it is foggy down here this morning.

Speaker 3 (01:03:39):
Yeah, it's covering the entire north part of the state,
central north part of the state, So yeah, we're in
a fog zone as well here.

Speaker 1 (01:03:46):
Hey, I've got to.

Speaker 3 (01:03:47):
Ask, how cool was it to be honored and go
through the process of the Q and A to be
considered for becoming Florida's next US Senator.

Speaker 8 (01:04:01):
Uh?

Speaker 10 (01:04:01):
It was a whirlwind, We'll say, really really cool. I mean, honestly,
when you sit back and I thought about it, I
just I was like, holy smokes, people like me are
not supposed to make it to the House of Representatives ever.
And so even the idea that that we were being
considered and shortlisted for United States Senate was mind blowing

(01:04:23):
and really really humbling. But yeah, the process actually was
a bit of a headspin. And I actually we had
known that we were being considered for a while. We
had been put on the list, right, I'm using air
quotes the list, but no one, you know, you don't
have any information about like, oh, you're on the short

(01:04:45):
list now, or you know, there's there's nothing that's telling
you or anyone telling you that it's It was a
bit of a rush at the end. And you know,
we get a call that, hey, the governor wants to
speak to you, and it's Sunday, and you know, Sunday afternoon,
my one today off and I'm in sweatpants and flippers,
and uh had a had a very long but great

(01:05:06):
conversation with the governor and his team and we it
was honestly one of one of the best conversations that
I've had because we were just talking about principles and
policy and and philosophy and you don't ever really get
to have those conversations very much, and so, uh it was.

(01:05:28):
It was awesome and to have have made it down
to the wire was was pretty crazy. But the margins
in the House. They got us, you know, uh, that
was a big worry for the Speaker of the House.
I had a conversation with the Speaker and with President
Trump's team, and the margins in the House was something
that they were very, very afraid of tinkering with. So

(01:05:52):
I think that excluded us in the very end.

Speaker 3 (01:05:55):
Well, you knew that on the Senate side, the margin
was going to stay the same because it's a gararantee
that a Republican is going to get that seat by
appointment to the governor. But you're right, the margins in
the House, I knew that was going to be a
challenge to overcome. Tell me this, how would you describe
the first two weeks of the new administration.

Speaker 10 (01:06:17):
I decided that the legacy media, bless their hearts, they
would call it chaotic. But I think what we see,
especially being in the mix of all of it, is
it's strategic, or as Bush would say, strategicy. When you
have so many things happening at once, it's impossible for

(01:06:39):
your opposition to focus in on a single thing and
really mount an aggressive, effective attack on you, which has
really been the playbook of the legacy media. They want
to hone in on one thing and drive entire news
cycles on one thing. But the way that I think
President Trump has really learned from the first administry to

(01:07:00):
now is throw as much out there as you possibly
can and let them just spin in circles and then
they end up looking like the crazy ones. But that's
I think the strategy around how we've been able to
throw the traditional legacy media attacks off of their game.

(01:07:21):
But from an actual standpoint of what are we doing
to get things done, it's been remarkable. I mean, it's
like seeing four years worth of work in the span
of a handful of weeks, and it's just hard not
to keep smiling from ear to ear because these are
all the things that we've talked about for years and
we're actually seeing them get across the finish line.

Speaker 3 (01:07:43):
US congress Woman Kat Camick with US. Former producer of
The Morning Show, Grant Allen says, I never get tired
of winning ten past the Hour More with the Congresswoman.

Speaker 4 (01:07:53):
Next, This is The Morning Show with Preston Scott.

Speaker 3 (01:08:04):
She represents Florida's third congressional district, and I'm honored to
call her a friend of the show. US Congresswoman Kat
camick with us Kat if you just look at what
President Trump decided to do with tariffs on Mexico and
Canada alone, and what happened in the last twenty four hours.
We're back to play in a little chess and it

(01:08:26):
feels really good.

Speaker 4 (01:08:28):
Yeah.

Speaker 10 (01:08:28):
You know, we saw under the Obama years where there
were these movable red lines that really eroded and undermined
the confidence really of enemies and allies alike in the
credibility of America's word. Because if we all remember, you know,
there was that red line and then that red line
got crossed and instead of thinking true to his word,

(01:08:50):
Obama well he kind of just like erased it and
touched it and redrew it. And you know, that was
the moment, I think when the world said, oh, okay,
so they're not really serious. And now you're seeing where
President Trump is saying, no, we've been wronged for decades
and we're going to right those wrongs and we're going
to start here. And if you're not willing to come

(01:09:13):
to the table, then it's on you. You'll pay the
price for that. We've seen that now with Canada, of course, China, Mexico,
and we saw immediately Mexico came to the table and said, JK, JK,
we'll send ten thousand troops and we'll protect the border.
Look at what happened with Columbia. Their president tried to
be cute on social media, turning around the planes saying, oh,

(01:09:35):
they're not being treated well. These are rapists, murderers, gang members,
and the president of Columbia is concerned that these individuals
are in handcuffs. Like what does that say about him?
I mean, absolutely ridiculous. And then he caved immediately. And
I have to say I was down at Trump Trump
Deral in South Florida for our GOP retreat where we

(01:09:58):
are working through the reconciliation package, and I ran into
my friend Mike Waltz, who's now President Trump's national security advisor,
and I said, how did that day go? And he
said it was insane. We were on the golf course
and between whole three and whole five, that whole deal
got done. And I said, you know, in a normal administration,
that would have taken like a year, and he said, yeah,

(01:10:19):
it's ridiculous. That is the difference is Trump knows there's
no time to waste and he is not going to
allow the United States to be bullied or pushed around anymore.
And so the message is getting sent and people are listening.

Speaker 3 (01:10:33):
You mentioned the GOP retreat and reconciliation package. Are we
going to see a budget in this Congressive Congress?

Speaker 10 (01:10:43):
Yes, So there's two elements here. You have the budget
resolution that is tied to the reconciliation package. And this
is where everyone really is going to become very wonky
and nerdy, but it's all for our benefit because if
people know how this stuff is put together, they become
better advocates for better government. And so there's a couple

(01:11:06):
of things here. You're going to have the budget resolution
for the reconciliation which is separate from the budget resolution
for appropriation, and so stick with me here. The reason
why that's important is because reconciliation is a tool that
we get to use that allows us to bust the

(01:11:28):
filibuster that you can only use one and it is
where we only need a simple majority in the House
and the Senate in order to actually move a pile
of policy and spending and spending reduction bills. That is
something that's coming very very soon here in the next
two weeks. So you'll hear about a budget resolution that

(01:11:49):
is simply for the Reconciliation Package, which leadership peg that
at three hundred billion dollars and cuts. Many of us
feel that that is not near enough. We have a
very very long list of items of things that we
feel the taxpayers could not fund and their everyday life
would not just be non interrupted, but it would be

(01:12:11):
it would improve. We want people to have more money
in their pocket, and so that is one thing. Then
you look at the appropriation side, and this is where
people get frustrated, because the appropriators have to appropriate to
a top line number. And the frustrating part is always
they're squabbling over a little belta that's a billion or

(01:12:32):
a couple billion here or there whatever. And I know
I say that, I don't mean to be glib, but
the reason I point that out is because they're like, well,
I'm going to fight for this number, and then the
next person says, well I want it lower, and it's like,
you know, let's let's just say it's twenty billion dollars.

(01:12:53):
At one point, I actually, and I think I told
you this. I stood up in confidence in front of
all my colleagues and I said, you guys, you're gaslighting
the American people. Stop saying that you're fighting for fiscal
sanity because.

Speaker 4 (01:13:04):
You're full of crap.

Speaker 10 (01:13:06):
We borrow seven point eight billion dollars a day. Don't
tell me that what you borrow in effectively a week
is going to make a difference in anything. All you're
doing is this this dog and pony show for political reasons.
Stop pretending you're not being fiscal conservative. So we need

(01:13:27):
to actually get to that budget and stick to that
top line number, whatever it is, because regular order is
going to actually get us away from the Nancy Pelosi
spending priorities which we're still living under.

Speaker 3 (01:13:41):
Cat stand by, hang on, we got to take a
quick break. We're going to come right back. US Congresswoman
Cat Camick with us one more segment here in the
Morning Show, a few more minutes with congress Owan Kat Camick,

(01:14:06):
Florida's third congressional district, and our guests heading back to
the nation's capital in the next day.

Speaker 1 (01:14:13):
Kat. Tax policy.

Speaker 3 (01:14:15):
Obviously, there are things being floated around about what may
or may not come in terms of reductions of taxes
or even the mechanisms for paying taxes.

Speaker 1 (01:14:24):
I wanted to ask this question.

Speaker 3 (01:14:27):
I have been opening on the program that as I'm
nearing quote retirement age, I mean some would say I'm
past it already at sixty four, but that the government
tells us when we have to start taking social security,
when we start have to we have to start taking
money out of our four oh one k Why is
it the government's business on any of that.

Speaker 10 (01:14:50):
You know, it's so funny that you say that, because Jess, yesterday,
I was having that conversation with a group of stakeholders
here in Florida as we're going through the reconciliation, and
it's an idea that doesn't get talked about very often,
and no one has actually taken the time to sit
down and put a put a score on it, meaning,

(01:15:11):
you know, how how this would positively impact people and
their their finances versus you know, any impact whatever to
the economy. And so I got very curious and I
actually sent it to my team and I said, hey,
start working this up, because it really is not any
business of the government. If you have a job, you

(01:15:33):
want to keep working, there should be no requirement that
you have to take money out at their schedule. This
is the part of government that has gotten so big
and bloated and overgrown is that they want to tell
you how to live your life, and they basically dictate
the terms by which you have to And so it's
your money, you should be able to keep it in

(01:15:53):
savings if you want, pull it out at the time
of your choosing. And it's just one of those things
that I'm very, very curious how the economic impact that
he's going to come back on it, because I think
it's actually going to come back very favorable. And there's
probably a reason for decades and decades that they've had
this setup because they think that once again, it's the

(01:16:14):
government's money, when in fact, we all know it's our money.

Speaker 3 (01:16:17):
Well, and if you if you carve out Social Security,
because we all know it's it's sort of kind of
a pyramid Ponzi kind of scheme. We're taken from others.
Our money's already gone. We know all that. But if
you look at strictly the four o one K, So
what if someone wants to take forty thousand dollars out
of their four oh one k when they're fifty years
old because they want to, So what why should they

(01:16:39):
pay a penalty for doing that when it's their money,
it's in the private sector in the sense of it's
privately invested. And the fact of the matter is, so
they have forty thousand dollars less in the market to
earn interest on.

Speaker 1 (01:16:51):
That's their penalty.

Speaker 10 (01:16:53):
And the thing to even take it one step further,
and a lot of people don't realize this, but for
those that have roth iras, you put in say seven
thousand dollars a year into your roth ira, right, which
again I think that the limit on that is ridiculous
as well. But let's just say you put in your
seven thousand dollars a year into your roth ira. Everyone

(01:17:14):
has been conditioned from the time that they've opened that
account that they will get a penalty if they take
that money out with a ross ira, and the irs
is not very transparent on this, but they ought to be.
You can take that money without penalty so long as
it's not the gains that you've made in the market
on it.

Speaker 5 (01:17:32):
Right.

Speaker 10 (01:17:32):
So if you put in fourteen thousand dollars and now
it's maybe twenty thousand dollars because of what's gained in
the market, you can take that fourteen thousand out at
any time. And I'm not a tax professional nor financial advisor.
So for my display mark, here we go. This is
not official advice, but from a policy standpoint, that to

(01:17:53):
me is ridiculous that people have paid penalties on that
because the irs they're little known thing. You can report
that on your taxes and they can't penalize you for it,
but people still end up paying a penalty. So there's
all these little weird loopholes and things that I feel
like we need to close. I think we need to
do a much better job of getting people in the

(01:18:16):
mindset of letting them know that it's your money. Like
I have such a hard time, especially with colleagues who
continue to come at this from the perspective of, well,
you know, if we don't do this, and we do,
and I said, how did we get to this this
mindset in the first place. It's ridiculous that the American

(01:18:39):
people pay for ridiculous programs. I mean USAID, and that's
in the news right now heavily. We're paying for all
these programs overseas for individuals that Congress never authorized, and
then we pay penalties for, you know, touching our own money.
That to me is just so bizarre and really a

(01:19:00):
mindset that needs to change. In the country because if
we the people make these demands of our elected officials,
things will change. But we have to be engaged. And
so I'm really grateful for your program and everything that
you do to keep people up the speed of what's
really going on in our nation's capital.

Speaker 1 (01:19:18):
Kat.

Speaker 3 (01:19:18):
Thank you, and I volunteer to testify if you ever
get to that place. I'll bring my show up to Washington,
DC for a day to testify on this subject.

Speaker 10 (01:19:29):
Hey, no cutwords, but that's fun.

Speaker 3 (01:19:31):
Hey, I never I never well, I can't say that
that would be a lie.

Speaker 1 (01:19:35):
I've seldom used a bad word on this show in
twenty three years.

Speaker 3 (01:19:39):
But anyway, Kat, feel better, safe, travels back to the Capitol,
and thank you for all you're doing.

Speaker 10 (01:19:44):
Hey, appreciate you so much. Have a good one.

Speaker 1 (01:19:46):
Thank you. US Congresswoman Kat came at twenty eight past
the hour.

Speaker 3 (01:19:57):
WUFLA always a terrific visit with congress women. Camick just

(01:20:17):
we are so fortunate the number of members of Congress
that are as forthright as Cat, not just on radio programs,
TV appearances, interviews like this, but behind the doors in
committee rooms during legislative retreats. The number that are as

(01:20:43):
authentic as cat is. You can count on maybe two
hands out of the four hundred some odd members of Congress,
and we have one of them on this show. We
have two if you include Tommy Tellberville.

Speaker 1 (01:21:03):
Think about it.

Speaker 3 (01:21:04):
They both just don't care what any of them think.
Isn't it interesting how we've found favor with people in
Congress and the House and the Senate that just think
like you and me and aren't afraid to say so.

(01:21:27):
I love the I love Michael Waltz's comment. I got
to get him back on the show. He used to
be a regular on the show. Now he's the National
Security Advisor. Maybe he can't talk about anything anymore, but no, seriously,
he might not be able to. But the fact that
he said, yeah, you got it done between the third
and the fifth holes.

Speaker 1 (01:21:47):
Mark my ball. I'm I'm with the Colombian president. Hang on, Yeah.
Failing to allow our plans to land would.

Speaker 3 (01:21:57):
Be very bad. It would be very bad for you.
It would be like the worst decision you ever made
in your entire life. That's the type of hyperbole you
probably engaged in. All right, big stories in the press box,
real quickly. It took one day for Canada and Mexico
to say, yeah, Okay, China's gonna be a little bit

(01:22:18):
more difficult. We're not dealing with border issues, but with
China it could very well be something as simple as
stop fentanyl from leaving your country and quit subsidizing your
businesses and whatever degree you're subsidizing your businesses, we're going
to have to tear af you. You know you can

(01:22:39):
go ahead and go through the history lesson with the
President of China with you you just say, look, we
know you've secretly love us. Come on, come on, you
try to grab hold of capitalism back a few decades ago,

(01:22:59):
but you've not gone all in.

Speaker 1 (01:23:02):
I get it.

Speaker 3 (01:23:04):
But you either have to go all in or we
have to put tariffs to level the playing field because
we don't do what you do.

Speaker 1 (01:23:15):
Now.

Speaker 3 (01:23:15):
The previous president was wanting to and I know that
you had Joe in your pocket. I know that, and
you know that, but we're not doing that again. And
so we're we're going to level the playing field. And
we're fine trading fairly, no problem. We love the electronics

(01:23:41):
you guys make, but quit sticking stuff in there that snoops. Okay,
Chinas hit us with a fifteen percent tariff. I'm not
sure that's going to make a big difference because I
don't know how much China consumes our stuff because they're poor.
Yeah there's some, but anyway, I'll be honest with you.

(01:24:05):
If I pay ten percent more on a product made
in China, awesome if that helps us manufacturing by me saying,
let me see if I can find that somewhere else
and the prices now are even or close to even,
and it's made in America or the Philippines, or Japan
or South Korea or Manila. You get Philippines, safe thing.

(01:24:30):
You get my point. I'm buying that. Need to be
reading labels a little bit more. And fired service members
are beginning to get their reinstatement notices to the military.
They got fired because they wouldn't take the jab. They're
getting put back active duty, back to their old jobs
and with back pay. How much is that going to

(01:24:53):
cost us? Bad decisions, But we're doing the right thing
that will be honored. More notes coming back next forty
one and passed the hour. I feel like I haven't
taken a breath in this show. It's The Morning Show
with Preston Scott. Should someone should be screaming right now

(01:25:20):
in that bump maybe with a rasp wow, something like that,
only much better. They call me a tire because I'm
always flat anyway. Some other stories here, uh the uh

(01:25:46):
the Department of Government Efficiency that has, oh, by the way,
a killer mascot. That dog looks so friendly? Was it?
What's it called an ebu? She knew or she knew
ebu or what's that breed called neighbor has one?

Speaker 1 (01:26:02):
Yeah, I think you got it right. I think it's
a knew something.

Speaker 3 (01:26:05):
So yeah, anyway, it's like a little miniature husky. It's
a little miniature guy. Anyway, it's adorable, and so how
can you be mad at that?

Speaker 1 (01:26:14):
Right? Wouldn't that be great.

Speaker 3 (01:26:15):
If all of the government agencies had funny little mascots
like that, sort of like pro sports like the Philly
Fanatics still is the best, and and any that are
kind of designed after the mascots that have the fat,
big bellies. Kansas City Chiefs mascot is hilarious. It's hilarious,

(01:26:42):
The Colts mascot is hilarious, The Orlando Magic mascot is terrific,
the big the big belly man. But the Philly Fanatic
is next level and clever. I think I've shared the story.
One of my one of my buddies in Phoenix was
the original Phoenix Gorilla, and Henry Rojas Henry was the

(01:27:07):
guy was the Phoenix Son's Gorilla kind of came on
the heels of the original one, which was the San
Diego Chicken. San Diego Chicken was the first popular, make
me laugh mascot that did somewhat of reverend things. The
Son's Gorilla just brought cheerleading to a whole nother level.

(01:27:27):
I can't say that the subsequent Sons Gorillas do that
good of a job. Got a little bit crazy into
the theatrics of it all, But the original Son's Gorilla, Henry,
Henry was just a dude.

Speaker 9 (01:27:40):
Man.

Speaker 1 (01:27:40):
He was so fun, so much fun, such a good
guy anyway.

Speaker 3 (01:27:44):
Wouldn't it be great if all the government agencies that
we keep get new mascots and then we made like
real ones that that could walk around at appearances and
have big bellies and stuff like that that would actually
be fitting for a government mascot, wouldn't it have a
big belly? But they are already working to shut down
the US Agency for International Development?

Speaker 1 (01:28:07):
What good?

Speaker 3 (01:28:11):
Yeah, I mean they've literally changed the locks and they're
not letting them in. Democrats elect a guy named Ken
Martin as he was the Minnesota Party leader. He's now
in charge of the National Democratic Committee. And Stephen Hogg,
that little brat from Stoneman Douglas High School that has

(01:28:35):
turned being an anti Second Amendment clown into a career. Hey,
he's a smart kid intellectually, he's just not smart in life.
He's like a lot of young people. He doesn't get
it and just doesn't get it. He has not lived
the requisite amount of life. But they named him vice chair.

(01:28:56):
Sweet Jesus, what are they thinking? This is the guy
they put in charge. Our fight now is against Donald
Trump and the billionaires who bought this country. Excuse me,
fight for our values? You mean like killing babies, like
racial segregation and bigotry. I mean, is that what we're

(01:29:17):
talking about? They just they haven't learned. And then in
a rocky man who burned Quran's shot dead during a
live stream, Saltwan Mamica, thirty eight years old, kind of
spicy in his rhetoric against Islam. Those people don't take

(01:29:40):
that stuff lightly. So yeah, forty seven past the hour,
But wrap up with something a little bit lighter next
on the Morning show. It's not Stephen Hawk. That's a

(01:30:00):
dude who ran for office around here years ago. No, no,
David Hawk, he's the little Cretan that is now the
chair of It still makes me laugh.

Speaker 1 (01:30:13):
Chair. That's how bad it is for the Democrats.

Speaker 3 (01:30:20):
They've pegged the kids still going through puberty to be
the device chair who is so cosmically wrong on the
one issue he seems to talk the most about and
knows nothing about anything else. Okay, good choice, Yes, yes,

(01:30:41):
well done. Hey, I was remember what I said about
Punk Satani Phil yesterday. Just flip it around, man, it's
actually about what I said. Only now the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration they released who gets it right most?

(01:31:04):
You know, Punk Satani Phil is the most famous, but
he's not the only one, apparently. Staten Island Chuck, which
is to me one of the great names of all time,
accurately predicts the arrival of spring eighty five percent of
the time. See they must have a different metrics. Georgie's

(01:31:28):
General Beauregard Lee eighty percent of the time. Wyoming prairie
dog statue named lander Lill seventy five percent. The mythical
West Virginia groundhog named Concord Charlie at sixty five percent.
In Illinois's Gurdy the Groundhog was sixty five percent. Punk

(01:31:48):
Satani Phil gets it right only thirty five percent of
the time. What did I say? Just flip it around
and you'll be where I think you ought to be
in how you make the choice, and you'll be right
more often. Look at that.

Speaker 4 (01:32:02):
Brought to you by Barono Heating and Air.

Speaker 1 (01:32:04):
It's the morning.

Speaker 4 (01:32:05):
Show on WFLA.

Speaker 3 (01:32:10):
Man, It's it's like, if I just keep hitting slices
out of bounds, I'm doing something different.

Speaker 4 (01:32:17):
I'm not gonna keep hitting slices out of bounds. If
nothing else, I'm gonna aim way left.

Speaker 1 (01:32:24):
Then you hit it straight anyway.

Speaker 4 (01:32:28):
Today week it's I've got a I've got.

Speaker 3 (01:32:32):
A I've got a small book worth of material today
that we went through. Rather than reset the show, I'll
simply say go back and listen to it. Had an
incredible visit with Congresswoman Cat Camick. It's gonna be on
our Conversations podcast that'll post at ten am Eastern. If

(01:32:53):
you're not subscribed, subscribe you get notified every time we
drop a new conversation. Of course, the show podcast will
be up within the next hour or so. We can
check that out and listen to the whole thing, everything
you've missed. Because I'm looking back at the rundown here
I can do that. We started at six twenty Eastern time, rolling.

(01:33:16):
I mean, yeah, we have a devotional that we start
a little history, but the history turned into a little
bit of a devotional and then we got rolling with
the news and oh wow, just NonStop stuff to talk about.

Speaker 1 (01:33:31):
Tomorrow JD.

Speaker 3 (01:33:32):
Johnson will join us from the Talent Training group. We'll
pick up where we left off last time. Fundamentals, basic
things on firearms and training, animal stories.

Speaker 1 (01:33:42):
Tomorrow we'll do that. So I can't wait.

Speaker 3 (01:33:46):
It's only twenty one hours, right, Have a great day, friends,
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