Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:20):
All right, this oughta be fun Good morning, and welcome
Wednesday in the Morning Show with Preston Scott May twenty. First,
he's Jose. I'm Preston. The Moneymaker is hanging in there
by a thread. I am once again downing my throat
coat and hoping for the best. But we thank you
(00:45):
for tuning in. You know, I'm that person that when
I'm not feeling great. My wife has had to learn
a lesson over the years. Just leave me be. I
think I know now relate to why dogs when they're
about to die just go off and just leave. They
(01:13):
just want to be alone. Now I'm not gonna die.
I'm just I'm fighting the crud and I'll be successful
in this. I will mutter through the week and then
we've got a long weekend, and then I'm taking another
long weekend next week. But Grant Allen will be in
on Friday and Monday the following week. But at any rate,
(01:38):
I just maybe you can relate, maybe you can't. I'm
just one of those people. I appreciate it, appreciate the
offers for this, that and the other. Just leave me alone.
And now by that I mean I mean I'm fine.
(01:59):
Just you know my sweet wife will PLoP right down
next to me and not worry about getting sick because
she's got an immune system that's even better than mine.
And mine's not bad, but hers is next level. And
I'm fine with that obviously. But it's like, I don't no, don't,
don't don't dote on me, don't don't no, just leave
(02:23):
me be. And I have no idea why I shared
all that. I just I just wanted to. So there
you go. Our verse today is appropriate. It's Romans eight
thirty eight and thirty nine. It says, for I am
sure that neither death nor life, nor angels, nor rulers,
(02:48):
nor things present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor
height nor depth nor anything else in all creation we'll
be able to separate us from the love of God
in Christ Jesus our Lord. I think that's that's one
(03:17):
of those blessed assurances that when you truly give your
heart over to Christ. And I mean, you know, there's
always been a theological battle between some denominations. Do you
believe in once saved, always saved? I mean, do you
(03:37):
believe that once saved you're always saved? Well, how about
if I put it this way, I believe once saved,
always saved, if you're truly saved, because I think that
if you are, if you've truly given your heart over
to Christ, you're not gonna Very few people are going
to transform their life overnight. It is. It is work,
(04:04):
and I don't necessarily think it stops ever. But what
I do think is I think that there's a maturity
that comes, and I think it can come rather quickly
if you've truly surrendered yourself to Jesus. There's a sober
(04:25):
mindedness that comes with that, with a true commitment. That's
why baptize. Baptizing children and thinking that that somehow gets
them saved, that's folly. Children are covered by grace of acknowledgment.
They they don't know and understand the gospel. God's got them.
(04:49):
We come to an age of accountability, and for some
it's it's maybe a little bit earlier than others, but
we come to an age of accountability, and that's when
you make that decision. And a baptism is simply Scripture's
words it this way. A baptism is a pledge of
a good conscience towards Christ. It doesn't save you, it's
(05:10):
just it pleases God, it honors God. It shows to
the world that you've made a commitment. But in and
of itself, that doesn't do anything. But I think a
surrendered mind walks in those blessings of not being separated
from God by anything. The love of Christ is felt regardless.
(05:33):
Ten past the Hour.
Speaker 2 (05:43):
On us Radio one hundred point seven Double USLA.
Speaker 1 (05:50):
It's kind of an interesting day in history. If you're
new to the program, we take a dive into history deeper.
I have Tomorrow on the show and the third hour
Doctor had More. But each morning just kind of a
a day starter type thing where we're just you know,
we're not day starter as in, like we just did,
(06:13):
we're talking about God. That's the best way to start
your day, but just you know, huh, how about that
kind of thing. It's fifteen forty two May twenty first,
when Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto. I just feel like
saying it that way. Hernando de Soto.
Speaker 3 (06:31):
No helen Nando de Soto. You must say it heron
hell Nando. You gotta add a little flare. Ernando de
Soto died on the banks of the Mississippi River. Do
you know he died there died on the banks of
(06:54):
the Mississippi. Eighteen nineteen, the first bicycles in the United States,
known then as swift walkers or velocipedes, appear on the
streets of New York City.
Speaker 1 (07:13):
Hey, what's that. I don't know what's that? I don't
know what is that. It looked like swift walker's to me. Actually,
I think they're velocipedes. Huh. First Democratic Party National Convention
begins in Baltimore in eighteen thirty two. Eighteen eighty one,
(07:36):
Claire Barton founds the American Red Cross. Charles Lindbergh lands
the Spirit of Saint Louis in Palis nineteen twenty seven,
completing the first solo, NonStop flight across the Atlantic. I
bet he he had to nearly cry when he saw
(07:57):
the coast of France. I'm sure there's a breakdown of
did he hit England first and then cross over the
English Channel or did he just France and that was
it his first sighting of land. He had to absolutely
ball his eyes out. I'm not over the ocean anymore.
(08:22):
I don't know where I am, but I'm not over
the ocean, thank you God. And then in nineteen thirty two,
Amelia Earhart lands in Ireland to become the first woman
to fly NonStop across the Atlantic. Just five years later,
Amelia Earhart crazy. Today is National Juice Slush Day. Slush
(08:48):
is I don't know who decided to do it. First,
chisel up some ice and then go, you know what,
I bet, I bet we can pour some flavor on that,
and then and then that's incredible. National Memo Day. I
(09:16):
have a note about that here somewhere, National Strawberries and
Cream Day, National Weight Staff Day. Wait staff as in
waiters and waitresses. Do we call them waitresses anymore? I do,
just like I call them actresses. I don't care are actors. No,
(09:39):
you're an actress. You're the female version of an actor.
You are an actress. I will not blur that line
waitress stewardess, although I'm okay with flight attendant. That doesn't
bother me as much. But I grew up they were stewardess.
Never a dude in that role ever. National American Cross
(10:00):
Founder's Day we covered that, and so there you go.
Today is gonna be a fun show. Hans van Spokowsky
hasn't been with us in a while. When the Heritage
Foundation he's smarter than you and me. He knows the
Constitution like the back of his hand, and he will
talk to us about the Supreme Court important rulings that
we should be paying attention to. That's coming up today.
(10:22):
Later on, we have a bunch of sound. In fact,
I've got some sound coming right back that'll just kind
of get us started chuckling. So it's yes, I have
worked hard in the midst of my illness. Still working hard.
That's what I do. Seventeen past the hour, we're gonna
(10:43):
have a laugh here in a second, stay with me.
(11:04):
Elon Musk just savaged Bill Gates and it was breathtakingly beautiful.
Usaid was a cesspool of fraud and waste, and it's
(11:26):
one of probably hundreds. Now, the headlines dealing with Doge
have backed off dramatically since Musk kind of pushed himself
away a little bit. The work is still going on,
but Musk is doing an interview at the Qatar Economic
(11:53):
Forum and the person interviewing him brought out Bill Gates,
accusing Musk of putting the lives of children at risk
and causing millions of deaths. Gates said that those will
cost two million lives. Elon said, I would play it.
(12:20):
It's just it's sketchy quality, all right. He said, who
does Bill Gates think he is to make comments about
the welfare of children? Given that he was very close
with Jeffrey Epstein. I wouldn't want that guy to babysit
my kid now. Apparently the association with Epstein, which Gates
(12:48):
diminishes and says, you know, it was a regrettable, bad mistake.
It cost him his marriage. So whatever went on there
cost him his longtime marriage. Apparently Epstein tried to blackmail
(13:12):
Gates in twenty seventeen because of a relationship he had
with a Russian bridge player named Mila Antonova. Yeah, yeah,
I bet he tried to blackmail you, because isn't that
(13:33):
what close friends always do? But that's not the funny.
This is the funny. I don't know what interview this happened,
but this got posted recently on TikTok, and this is
Donald Trump.
Speaker 4 (13:52):
They're like throwing it up. How is your breakfast today?
What kind of ice cream are you having? It's a
vanilla it's vanilla chocolate. Oh great. Nobody ever asked me
what kind of what flavor ice cream? I'm meeting okay.
Speaker 1 (14:08):
He's pointing out the media's treatment of Joe Biden.
Speaker 4 (14:12):
They're like throwing it up. How is your breakfast today?
What kind of ice cream are you having? It's vanilla,
It's vanilla and chocolate. Oh great. Nobody ever asked me
what kind of what flavor ice cream? I'm eeting?
Speaker 1 (14:25):
Okay, that is breathtakingly good. Nobody asks me what kind
of flavor ice cream? I meeting? Trump is up at
I mean at probably before sunrise, no doubt, going to
(14:47):
bed after and and now we know, I mean, Joe
Biden was a sick man, not just sick with bad ideas,
but all of this stuff was being authored by they
have to figure out who was running the country. They
(15:09):
withheld information about his mental acuity or lack thereof, and
they clearly withheld a cancer diagnosis of clip surfaced of
Biden announcing at one point that he had cancer and
no one paid any attention to it. But it happened
while he was in office. I just saw the clip yesterday,
(15:33):
I think it was, and it was like, well, now
that's interesting. Anyway, twenty seven minutes after the hour, we
got the big stories in the press box coming up
lots of sound next hour for you to hear as well.
And Welcome to the Morning Show with Preston Scott, Morning Friends,
(15:56):
Ruminators Morning Show. He's Jose, I'm Preston and at Show
fifty three eighty four. The big stories come from email,
not the news, though you could argue that the emails
that I've received should be news. I got a note
(16:17):
from Matt Staver at Liberty Council. Matt, as you likely know,
is one of the leading proponents to end abortion in
this country. He shared some numbers that are well. The
(16:40):
lead research assistant of the program said, these are appalling.
The leading cause of death globally for the last five
consecutive years, and the third leading cause of death in
the United States is abortion in a Plan pair and
Hoood clinic. Let me say that again, the leading cause
(17:07):
of death globally is abortion and a planned parenthood clinic.
More than forty percent of Planned Parenthood's annual revenue is
paid by taxpayers through Medicaid funding. You and I fund it.
(17:29):
So if the US House Committee on Energy and Commerce
wants to cut eight hundred billion dollars from the budget,
I know a good place to start. But listen to
these numbers. Ninety seven point one percent of Planned Parenthood's business,
according to their own annual report, is abortion. So all
(17:55):
of these claims women's health lies. They kill eleven hundred
and two babies a day using our tax dollars. That
is one child every seventy eight seconds. Only cancer and
(18:20):
heart disease killed more people in America than Playing Parenthood
in twenty twenty three. I don't care who you are.
(18:41):
That that's just. And don't think for a second God's
just sitting up there going, oh, well, you know people.
Second big story comes courtesy of our research assistant supervisor, Rob,
(19:12):
who sent me a post from Mike Davis. There are
at least ten million illegal aliens in America. A court
hearing would take thirty minutes per A judge would take
another thirty minutes to draft an issue in order. That
is ten million hours of judicial work. Remember when I
(19:36):
said to you the idea that the Biden administration otherwise
known as the Oh Biden administrator, Oh oh oh Biden anyway,
their goal was to crash the judicial system as it
relates to immigration. I did the math here. There are
six hundred and seventy seven authorized federal districts district judges apparently,
(20:05):
so that means that each judge would have to take
fourteen thousand, seven hundred and seventy one cases. And if
you did eight a day, that is eighteen hundred and
forty six days. If you divide that by five, that's
(20:25):
three hundred and sixty nine weeks. Divided by an average
of say forty nine weeks a year in which a
judge may work. It could be fifty, it could be
forty eight. I don't know. That's seven and a half years.
If every single judge took on fourteen thousand, seven hundred
(20:46):
and seventy one cases. You see what Biden was doing,
what the Democrats, what the Liberals were doing. That's why
there have to be measures taken. Congress must act to
change the law to allow for mass deportations and to
(21:12):
just tell them start over, come through, come through legally,
and then fix the channels. Forty minutes past the hour,
interesting big stories.
Speaker 5 (21:22):
Huh, gargling my throat coat in the brakes.
Speaker 1 (21:34):
I think it's it's it's really an amazing thing how
that stuff works. It really is. Yesterday I talked about,
you know, cac Hamick couldn't join US congresswoman from Florida's
third district, all of all of the Republicans in Congress
were summoned to Capitol Hill to meet with the President,
(21:57):
the president shoring up support, and so the story started
coming out, you know, verifying what we were told, and
if you don't follow it, rapid response forty seven At
rapid response forty seven is the President's own kind of
(22:18):
media barrage that happens on issues large and small. They
pushed out, referring to Speaker Mike Johnson, This man has
done a fantastic job. This is quoting Trump. He's a
real unifier. We've had a majority of one period of
five months. He kept it together majority of one, sorry,
(22:40):
for a period of five months. We have a very
very unified party. And then he lays out the stakes
for the one big, beautiful bill, the b to the
Third Power. I'll call it the Killer Bees. The alternative
is a sixty eight percent tax increase, and you can
(23:00):
blame the Democrats for that, and one or two grand standards.
What did I tell you yesterday? I was worried that
he was going to try to make enemies of people
that have earnest problems with the bill. He's talking about
(23:22):
lawmakers that are opposing this bill because we don't have
a plan to pay down the debt and to stop
the deficit spending. We have more than enough money coming
into this government, more than enough. It's like someone who
(23:47):
has twenty five hundred dollars in monthly expenses. They make
one hundred and twenty thousand dollars a year and they
need to borrow money from mom and dad because they
can't pay their bills. But what are you spending your
money on? My gosh, you've only got twenty five hundred
dollars a month in expenses. You're making better, You're making
(24:10):
better than ten grand a month. What are you doing?
That's what we need to be saying to the government.
What are you doing? Now? Maybe there is a plan,
but I don't know it. And Trump is and again
(24:33):
we said it yesterday even town Hall. Town Hall is
out here posting. Trump is on his way over here.
He's going to tell the House Republicans get in line.
They're going to do a full vote on the floor
on Thursday, and they can't afford many defections. But I
(24:58):
just I want to remind all of you it's wrong
when Democrats do it. It's wrong when Republicans do it,
this continuing reconciliation packaging instead of passing a budget. And
I get that you have to get from here to there.
I get that, but we've had time to get from
here to there. And I get that we're cutting spending,
(25:22):
so we should be needing less money, and cutting taxes
will actually increase revenues. So I I have a problem
with where we what we're doing here. And Trump is
demonizing people that have legitimate and fair concerns, and I
have a problem with that. Love the guy, but these
(25:47):
are these are important issues, and so Trump is using
the tax cuts. If we don't, if we don't continue
and extend the Trump tax cuts of twenty seventeen, then
there's gonna be a tax increase. Well I would reverse that.
(26:10):
If you don't put a plan together to cut the
deficit to zero and take excess revenue to start paying
down the debt, then then by god, you're gonna lose
your tax cuts. Two can play this game of who's responsible.
I would submit it's the responsibility of the majority party
(26:32):
to go ahead and pass a bill that cuts pending.
And if you don't do it and taxes go up.
That's on you, It's not on the people that are
fighting for a budget. That's right, that's moral anyway. I
just I love the guy, but I will always be
(26:57):
honest with you on what I think is going on
and cannot hold maintain any level of credibility if you're
going to blame Democrats for ridiculous spending and then just
watch the Republicans do the same thing. It's not acceptable.
(27:29):
Do you remember when Donald Trump called US Senator Marco
Rubio Little Marco just personally assaulted him, and now he's
(27:49):
a potential successor, would be a great president. It's because
Trump does not view Rubio as a threat. This is
one of the flaws in Donald Trump. Dissent is viewed
(28:09):
as traitorous. That is a very dangerous quality, not even
a quality that would be that is a dangerous personality trait.
While I completely agree with Glenn Beck who recently you
(28:34):
may have seen the video. He and his wife were
guests of Trump at the White House, given a private
tour and were made to sign a paper to not
ever disclose the things that they saw and or discussed
with Trump at a certain point and Glenn Beck was
(29:01):
visibly and auditorially moved by the fact that he couldn't share.
He said, because quoting, not quoting, paraphrasing, Donald Trump is
a remarkable man and people need to know the type
of person he really is. And so it pained Trump,
(29:22):
or rather back, that he couldn't share some of the
wonderful things that he observed in Trump. And I don't
know if it's because Trump wants to keep this perception
of you know, this tough to go. I don't know.
It doesn't matter to me. I just know you can't
(29:50):
just attack people because they think that there's a better
way to go about climbing the mountain. We all identify
the mountain. I think we're climbing it wrong, and for
some of you that might make me an enemy. I
don't know. That's okay. I'm just fine with that. But
(30:15):
I think I'm correct in my appraisal of what needs
to happen. We need to be focused on the debt
and the deficit and run everything through that. This is
maybe the post of the year, according to one Guy Online.
Congresswoman Sarah McBride, you might know her as the transgendered
(30:36):
representative from Delaware heartbroken to learn of President Biden's diagnosis.
My prayers are with him, Doctor Biden, their entire family,
and someone posts underneath it. Let this be a reminder
routine prostate exams save lives. Make sure to schedule yours,
Congressman to the dude who pretends to be a woman
(31:04):
serving in Congress. Second hour begins here Wednesday in the
(31:26):
Morning show. Hey, how are you? That's Jose bopping around
in studio one a looking like a ghostbuster actually looking
like a Ghostbuster and a US astronaut combined and maybe
somebody that's come into your house to clean the asbestos out.
Kind of a combo thing we're getting here, Hans von Spakowski.
(31:50):
Next hour, we'll talk about the Supreme Court rulings that
are the most important that have already happened, as well
as those that are coming. What we are anticipating in
the month of June. June is always what is the
Court going to rule? And what we hoped when we
voted for Donald Trump in twenty sixteen was that we
(32:12):
would get actual originalist justices, and we didn't. George W.
Bush when he appointed John Roberts, gave us a coin toss.
He's an activist at times. The Obamacare ruling that he
(32:34):
authored and gave the deciding vote on is absolute perfect
illustration of what an activist judge is. An activist judge
does what he or she thinks ought to be done,
not what the law says. Now, with the text of
what is submitted, what it says, they infer can't do
that by law. You take what's written, and if what's
(32:58):
written is flawed, you rule accordingly, and you make the
lawmakers go back and fix it. But we'll have a
good conversation with Hans coming up next hour. I said,
I had some sound for you to hear. This is
going to be a fascinating thing to watch unfold if
(33:19):
the guy who appears to be the pick for the
next president of the University of Florida in Gainesville becomes
the next president. First of all, his name is Santa
sa nta Ono, Santa Ono. Now he has a remarkable resume.
(33:41):
He's the current president of the University of Michigan. I
don't blame you for wanting to get out of Michigan
and get into get into Florida. I don't blame you
at all. Now this has a little music underneath it.
It's shared by Christopher Rufo. This is uh, this is
what the president has to say on the subject of Well,
(34:04):
I'll let him explain.
Speaker 6 (34:05):
Systemic racism is embedded in every corner of any institution,
and so the only way to saw what is to
have everyone doing their part first being truthful about the
fact that there is racism, but second, actually we're looking
at themselves inside and asking what parts of me are racists?
(34:26):
And what steps do I have to take to move
beyond that. Everybody has an implicit bias, and an institution
can only change if everyone takes ownership of and responsibly
for changing the place.
Speaker 1 (34:43):
Now, the first time I hear any of these academics
apply that bigotry and its existence to anyone other than
white people, I'm all ears. The first time an academic says,
(35:05):
inherent in the human condition is sin, and one of
those sins is bigotry and racism. It is a condition
of the heart. It is not a condition in which
you can legislate it away. You can only marginalize bigotry
(35:30):
and reveal it for what it is, which is sin,
and hope that the possessor of it absolve themselves of it.
But we know what this all meant. Here's what makes
this interesting to me. The Board of Governors will have
(35:54):
to approve the appointment of this president. The State of
Floor has taken a very hard line against DEI. So
this is your candidate, Gators, and I'm not I'm not
(36:16):
picking on you. If this is your guy, boy, you
better hope that he doesn't think that way anymore. But
I suspect he does. And so it's going to be
very interesting to see what unholds through the confirmation process.
(36:36):
Here ten past the hour, more sound coming back, But
brace yourselves.
Speaker 7 (36:44):
And always pointing out and correcting what is not. The
Morning Show with Preston Scott now I said brace yourself.
There are sounds. There's certain voices. Listening to the Solicitor
(37:06):
General arguing a case before the United States Supreme Court
last week, I can't remember his name. I think it's
sour uh, Solicitor General sour oof.
Speaker 1 (37:19):
That's tough. It's a tough voice to listen to. Robert F.
Kennedy Junior. I feel bad for his condition. He has
a condition that has just ravaged his vocal cords. It's hard, right.
There are just certain voices, aren't there that just uh
it's it's painful. It's painful to listen to Kamala. Russia
(37:49):
is a big country. Oh and here's another. So I'm
warning you in advance, Hillary Clinton. Hillary Clinton is nails
on a chalkboard. She's a knife on china. Oh oh.
(38:16):
She's been interviewed by Margaret Hoover, and it would seem
that she has not learned a thing from her days
of deplorable comments. Remember referring to anyone supporting Trump as
a deplorable. This is the Newmark Civic Life series, and
(38:44):
Margaret Hoover asking a question of the United States, Well,
what advice do you have the first female president of
the United States.
Speaker 8 (38:58):
Well, first of all, don't be a handmaiden to the patriarchy.
Speaker 1 (39:09):
Witch, by the way, handmaiden to the patriarchy. So she's
attacking men right out, right out of the gate.
Speaker 8 (39:23):
Kind of eliminates every woman on the other side of
the aisle.
Speaker 1 (39:29):
Oh boy, So if you are a female that happens
to support the reduction in government, the saving of money,
the reduction in taxes, the tightening at the border. You
are a handmaiden to the patriarchy. Say he's over there
in the other studio, just gesturing wildly, and I will
(39:56):
not I will not describe the things he's gesturing. They're
not profane, they're just very violent. Let's let Hillary continue.
Speaker 8 (40:05):
Except for very few. Yeah, there's a few.
Speaker 1 (40:12):
Lisa Murkowski and Liz Cheney are exceptions to the rule.
According to her, look, first.
Speaker 8 (40:21):
We have to get there, and it is, you know,
obviously so much harder than it should be. So, you know,
if a woman runs who I think would be a
good president, as I thought Kamala Harris would be, and
as I knew I would be, Yeah, we'll stop there.
Speaker 1 (40:44):
By that statement alone, she discredits anything that comes out
of her mouth. The majority of people on the other
side of the aisle don't think Kamala Harris was going
to be a good president. They know she's a flaming,
totally incapable. I for one, would have zero issues voting
(41:12):
for a female for president if she's qualified, she has
the right set of values and views. Wouldn't bother me anyway.
When we come back, more sound, and it comes from
Van Jones on CNN, and it's going to shock you
(41:34):
in a good way. Next on the Morning Show with
Preston Scott, another piece of sound from Research Assistant Supervisor
(41:57):
Rob And I'm gonna warn you up front, whoever Van
Jones is talking to in this podcast. You know, Van
Jones is on CNN. Whoever he's talking to has a
proclivity to use the word h double toothpicks. So you're
(42:23):
gonna hear that three times Towards the beginning of this SoundBite.
I just ran out of time and could not edit
it out all right, but I want you to listen
to this discussion where the host is talking to Van
Jones about the the Trump movement and how Trump has
(42:46):
managed this.
Speaker 9 (42:47):
How the hell did Donald Trump figure out the mainstream
media is the fringe and the fringe is now the mainstream.
How the hell did Donald Trump figure out? I mean,
Joe Rogan is obvious, right, Like we knew the guy.
Speaker 10 (42:59):
Had big audience.
Speaker 9 (43:00):
It's not like we were like stun but like, how
the hell was he the seventy eight year old guy
who doesn't even have a computer and still like writes
handwritten notes. How did he become the guy who cracked
the code? On to your point, running a cultural I
don't even want to say campaign running it is a movement, movement,
heading a cultural movement.
Speaker 11 (43:21):
Versus every one of your people knows Elon, Elon listen, Yeah,
so everybody keeps I mean, the problem is you have
a framework in your mind that how can Donald Trump?
How can Donald Trump? How can Donald Trump? Guys, can
we cut it out? Donald Trump is not an idiot
Donald Trump. Let me just be very clear. Donald Trump
(43:43):
is smarter than me, you and all critics. You know
how I know because he has the White House, the Senate, the.
Speaker 9 (43:51):
House totally agree or the popular vote.
Speaker 11 (43:55):
He has a massive media ecosystem bigger than the mainstream,
built a round him and for him, and a religiously
religious fervor in a political movement around him. And he
is best buddy, is the richest person in the history
of the world, and the most relevant Kennedy is with him.
This dude is a phenomenon. He is the most powerful
(44:16):
human on earth and in our lifetime. And we're still saying, well,
how was this God? We look like idiots or.
Speaker 9 (44:23):
You're He's right.
Speaker 1 (44:28):
That is a candid appraisal about somebody on the other
side that gets it. We look like idiots. Well, who
am I to say that Van Jones is wrong? But
(44:49):
it's honest and truly. This is one of the very
few voices out there that the Left can't marginalize because
A he's articulate, b he's black. If the Left tries
(45:10):
to silence Van Jones, they fall into their own exclusivity
game that they play. They claim it's inclusive, but it's
not so. Guys like Van Jones present a real problem
for them. He has figured out that, I mean, he
(45:38):
doesn't know the Secret Sauce because he belittles it. As
doctor Bob McClure says, good policies good politics. The Secret
Sauce is good policy. The problem with the right is
they don't know how to tell people about it. The
left knows how to message. They're just wrong about it everything.
(46:07):
It's just to me fascinating to hear the quote truth
bomb dropped by Van Jones and the reaction out there
is because they can't do anything about it, will they
listen to it? Probably not. Wouldn't be great if just
(46:32):
somewhere the Democrat Party just said, guys, let's look at
our platform. Are we just wrong about stuff? See? That's
what I think needs to happen. I think there needs
to be a real coming to Jesus moment on the
(46:54):
left but they're not going to have that because the
left is now controlled by extremists, evidenced by what's happening
here in Florida's capitol city. The extremists are trying to
fool Tallahassee citizens into thinking that Jeremy Mattlowe Is, who's
(47:14):
a city commissioner, has somehow suddenly seen the light and
wants to play nice. No he doesn't, No, he doesn't
ill No anyway, twenty seven past there, we're going to
come back reset the big stories in the press box.
We have something from RFK Junior as well.
Speaker 2 (47:33):
The relative you actually enjoy having around.
Speaker 1 (47:36):
And not just at the holidays.
Speaker 2 (47:38):
This is the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 1 (47:58):
With the Morning Show Band. He's oseia Im Presston. Good
morning on von Spakovski. Next hour. Supreme Court is our focus.
Some rulings that we really want to be paying attention to.
It you want to be looking for in the month
of June, as well as a quick snapshot of his
take of the court as it's made up. Is he
(48:19):
disappointed by this court, how it's constituted. But big stories
in the press box Mike Davis posted online. Don't know
who he is? But did some digging found out based
on roughly ten thousand, sorry ten million illegal aliens in
(48:42):
the country, a court hearing would take thirty minutes. A
judge would take another thirty to draft an issue in order.
And so if you look at the number of authorized
federal district judges, there're six hundred and seventy seven of them.
Taking that ten million, that is, that is fourteen thousand,
(49:03):
seven hundred and seventy one cases per judge. If the
judge just steamrolled and did eight cases a day, that's
eighteen hundred and forty six days divided by five puts
you at three hundred and sixty nine weeks divided by
roughly forty nine weeks a year in which a judge
(49:24):
may work. If you assign fourteen thousand, seven hundred and
seventy one cases to each and every one of those
six hundred and seventy seven district judges, keep in mind,
now that would be all that they could do. They
couldn't do any other cases. It would take them seven
(49:45):
and a half years to get through that number of cases. Again,
no other district court cases, just those. That is the genius,
if you will, of the Obiden and Democrat plan and
(50:06):
the border invasion, and that is why there have to
be measures taken that streamline the process of deporting these
people without court hearings. If they've come into the country illegally,
(50:26):
that ends that they have human rights, and that's it
that the Congress has to has to address it that way.
And this is something I'm going to use with the
lawmakers that I bring on the show. I'm going to
ask them about it. The bigger of the big stories
is this, and this is as troubling as anything I
(50:54):
could share. Ninety seven point one percent of Planned Parenthood's business,
according to their own annual report, comes because of abortion.
Forty percent is funded by you and me. Our tax
dollars go to this through medicaid, and Planned Parenthood kills
(51:20):
an average of eleven hundred and two babies a day
using our money. That is one child every seventy eight seconds,
and we are being forced to pay. Only two things
(51:41):
kill more people in this country than Planned parenthood, cancer
and heart disease. That's it. This is the planned extermination
of people, and our tax dollars are being used to
(52:07):
support it. Those are not abortions due to rape, incest
in life of the mother forty minutes past the hour,
(52:27):
just thought y'all to know him. I don't know if
Ron De Santis somehow listened to my radio program when
he was a young man, but he was in his
twenties when I started this show, and he was in
(52:49):
his twenties when I was advocating for an abolition of
property taxes. Listen to this statement. Anyone that listened to
this show since its inception, these words will ring so true.
Listen what he said to say that you buy a home,
(53:12):
then every year for the rest of your life, they're
just going to keep sending you a bill. That's not
the American way. You never ever truly own your own
home because property taxes are how the federal government, state government, sorry,
(53:40):
how state and local governments keep you under their thumb.
They can put local county, city government can put a
lean on your home. I am all for paying whatever
is appropriate for infrastructure and so forth. That's supposed to
(54:06):
be why we have a blueprint sales tax to help
pay for that stuff. But I know that the costs
are greater than that. Okay, so let's figure it out.
But let's stop the property taxes. I'm all for it.
One hundred percent, because I've been advocating for it for
twenty three plus years. It's just funny. My wife has
(54:30):
his habit of encouraging me. She's just she's encourager. And
she just looked at me and she said, you know,
and she said this a lot over the years. You
just have this knack of thinking ahead of things. It
(54:51):
doesn't mean I'm right about a lot of stuff. I'm
right about some things, just like you are. I think
I'm right about everything, and if you don't think that way,
then you haven't thought enough. It's one of my favorite pushbacks.
You always think you're right, You're darn straight. I do.
(55:19):
Hopefully you do too. Hopefully you think about whatever it
is you're talking about enough to believe that you are right.
I try to arm you with enough information and poke
a little bit and prod and encourage so that you
formulate a worldview that you believe in and you believe
(55:43):
is right. I mentioned Robert F. Kennedy Junior. He's delivered
a video statement to the World Health Assembly in Geneva, Switzerland.
Listen to these words. This is now. Remember this is
the group that Biden wanted to surrender a degree of
sovereignty over to during COVID. Let them make the shot,
(56:06):
make the decisions on how we do everything. Like many
legacy institutions, said Kennedy, the WHO has become mired in
bureaucratic bloat, entrenched paradigms, conflicts of interest, and international power politics.
While the United States has provided the lion's share of
the organization's funding historically, other countries, such as China have
exerted undue influence over its operations in ways that serve
(56:29):
their own interests and not particularly the interests of the
global public. Not only has the WHO capitulated to political
pressure from China, it's also failed to maintain an organization
characterized by transparency and fair governance by and for its
member states. WHO often acts like it is forgotten that
(56:50):
its members must remain accountable to their own citizens and
not to transnational or corporate interests. We need to reboot
the whole system, as we're doing in the United States,
he said. We have already been in contact with like
minded countries, and we encourage others to consider joining us. Boom,
(57:13):
love it, absolutely, love it all right, We come back.
Tensions flair at a school board meeting in Chicago, why
we will define the arguments on both sides of the issue.
Next here on The Morning Show with Preston Scott, Chicago,
(57:49):
Naperville two three Community school Board District. The fight was over.
The disagreement was over a young man, a biological seventh
grade male, who was sweeping all of the awards and
(58:14):
first placed trophies against girls at the track meet. Supporters
of the transathlete wave blue pink and white striped flags.
Opponents protect girls' sports, defend Title nine signs, and I
(58:37):
just wanted you to hear quotes from those supporting the
idea of transgenders competing against their biological opposites and those
that are opposing it. These situations place feelings over reason
(58:57):
and force other students and families to participate in something
we all know is a lie, said Doug McGregor, another parent.
Many of us knew the achievement gap was just a
trojan horse for dei's real objective pronouns and the radical
(59:19):
LGBTQ plus agenda. Naperville parents will spend literally tens of
thousands of dollars on sports throughout their daughters' lives. Travel teams, coaches,
summer camps, travel to tournaments and meets, and when their
daughter steps up for her chance to win a state
championship or medal, she'll lose to a biological mail that
(59:43):
once in a lifetime moment is gone because of Dei's
political defense. So in defense ending the transathlete, A parent
of six who declares herself non binary would love to
(01:00:06):
know how she's a parent anyway. When a student is
forced to compete in a gender with which he or
she does not identify, education is a choice. America began
providing public education in sixteen thirty five. Well, Naperville, continue
the proud American tradition of forward progress or try to
(01:00:27):
justify exclusion for those who are non binary. Of course,
I include, I encourage inclusion. Another parent, don't be fooled.
This was never about a race, who was never about
an athlete. This was an attempt to further marginalize the
group and tell them they don't belong, that they're not
good enough. Well, part of that's true. They aren't good enough.
(01:00:51):
They're dudes that aren't good enough to compete favorably against
dudes I to seize that opportunity. You're right, the young
man's not good enough. And here's the shame. It's a
seventh grader. What are the parents doing? That's child abuse.
(01:01:15):
Then you've got this comment in twenty twenty five, you've
got boys stealing girls' victories, leaving young girls sobbing on
the track. This is an inclusion, it's impression. I think
for women, I don't think we stand a chance against
a male. I know a lot of these girls practice
their entire life to try to get a scholarship, and
there's a lot of lost opportunities. So I want to
(01:01:36):
come and support women in women's sports. Those are the
arguments at this school board meeting. It was emotional as well.
It should be. I really, I think it's important to
consider that lifetime spent trying to achieve and you get
to the moment and you're defeated by a boy, a male.
Speaker 9 (01:02:05):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (01:02:07):
Wow. When we come back, Hans von Spakowsky Heritage Foundation,
we will talk about the Supreme Court of the United States. Next.
(01:02:33):
All right, Ruminators, third and final hour at least for
today of the Morning Show with Preston Scott. He is
Jose I am Preston, and it is great to have
back with us on the program. He's a friend of
the show. Hans von Spakowski is the Senior Legal Fellow
for the Edwin Mees Center for Legal and Judicial Studies
at the Heritage Foundation. How are you, sir, Preston.
Speaker 10 (01:02:58):
I'm doing just great and that's glad to talk to
you again.
Speaker 1 (01:03:01):
It is delightful to have you back on the show.
I prepped your team with what I wanted to talk about,
but I'm gonna throw you a curveball to a certain
extent what I got to talk talking with the audience
yesterday just about I wondered if Donald Trump was We
know now that in his first term he had a
(01:03:22):
lot of people around him that were not his friends,
and I'm curious, do you think he got bad advice
on his choices for the Supreme Court? What is your
appraisal of the makeup of the court right now.
Speaker 10 (01:03:38):
Well, my appraisal is that Alito and Thomas are rock
solid conservatives. They seem to always get it right. The
other Conservatives, Amy Cony Barrett is proving to be a disappointment.
(01:04:00):
Cavanaugh and Gorsic often get it right, but occasionally they
signed Kavanaugh more than Gorsach side with Justice Roberts, who
you know on a lot of a lot of cases.
He's good. You know, he was great. For example, in
(01:04:21):
the case a couple of years ago where the Spring
Court finally told American colleges, this is the Harvard you
know You're North Carolina case, you cannot discriminate in your
college admissions based on race. On the other hand, you know,
he sometimes I think is too politically politically motivated and
(01:04:47):
not wanting to do something that really might have set
the left and so, for example, but hadn't been for him,
Obamacare would not be enforced today.
Speaker 1 (01:04:58):
I use that as the example. I have tried to
avoid saying conservative and liberal justices because it's my tendency,
and I've tried to go with activist and originalist. And
when Justice Roberts to me in that ruling defined what
an activist judge is an activist judged in my definition.
(01:05:19):
And you tell me, Hans, if this definition works or not.
An activist judge does what he or she thinks they
meant or what it ought to be. They don't rule
on what is written, what the law is, and if
the laws flawed, so be it. Let Congress fix it.
Speaker 10 (01:05:38):
Yes, no, that's exactly you do what the law says,
what the Constitution says, and you know it was Justice
Scilla once said, Congress often did things that are totally stupid,
but it wasn't his job to fix that. His job
(01:05:58):
was to apply the Constitution.
Speaker 1 (01:06:01):
And that's where we are today. And I feel the
unpredictability of the court right now is in a lot
of ways, it's creating its own set of problems.
Speaker 10 (01:06:11):
Yes, no, I agree. And the refusal of Chief Justice
Roberts apparently starting to change, but the refusal of him
until recently just to start stepping in and stopping some
of these and staying some of these nationwide injunctions that
(01:06:32):
have been issued all across the country, that was a
real problem.
Speaker 1 (01:06:37):
Give me your bottom line on those district nationwide injunctions.
Do district judges have that level of authority? Yes or no?
Speaker 10 (01:06:47):
Only and very rare, very restricted circumstances. And from what
I have seen, every single one of the nationwide injunction
so far issued by judges have been unlawful and totally unjustified.
Speaker 1 (01:07:04):
Joining me on the program is Hans von Spakowski with
a Heritage Foundation. We've got a lot to talk about.
We're gonna cram it into the next two segments. He
is with us to help us better understand what the
Supreme Court has done in recent months and what may
be coming the cases that we need to be paying
attention to. It's next here on The Morning Show with
(01:07:25):
Preston Scott.
Speaker 7 (01:07:36):
From Florida Sunshine State to California. He scratch that California
is hopeless for the rest. We're your Morning Show, The
Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 1 (01:07:53):
Talking Supreme Court with Hans von Spakovsky with the Heritage Foundation. Hans,
what rulings that we've seen of late are the most consequential?
Speaker 10 (01:08:06):
Well, we haven't really gotten the most consequential yet. Okay,
we're still we're still waiting oral arguments normally and in April,
and the Court spends May and June riding up all
their opinions. Last week actually was very unusual because, as
you know, they held oral arguments in the Justice Department
(01:08:30):
asking for an emergency stay of the injunctions against President
Trump's executive order on birthright citizenship. Like I said, that
was rare. Arguments aren't usually held in May. But look,
we're there's more than a dozen important cases that we
are now waiting on decisions on, For example, the US
(01:08:53):
versus Scrimmetti case. That's the case out of Tennessee in
which Tennessee, along with Oh Gosh, more than a dozen
states banned the surgical mutilation and abusive drug treatment of
minors children to do so called gender transitions, and they
(01:09:14):
were sued. The Supreme Court is going to say whether
states have a right to stop that kind of abuse
of a treatment. There's a porn case, Free Speech Coalition
versus Paxton, Texas passed it's just a common sense law.
They passed the law saying that if you are a
(01:09:34):
porn site, you have to verify that somebody as an
adult before they can use your site. And these porn
of groups all got together and have sued over that.
There's another there's another case. If you can believe this
(01:09:57):
government of Mexico as suits within Wesson saying that their
production and sale of firearms is the approximate cause of
injuries in Mexico stemming from violence committed by the drug cartels.
That is a ridiculous lawsuit because most of the cartels
(01:10:19):
are equipped with military weapons which they get from corrupt
Mexican military officials. But again that's an important case. Uh,
there's a big registricting case out of Louisiana, and look,
one of the most important ones that were waiting on
and they just had arguments. A couple of weeks ago
(01:10:42):
is a case out of Maryland that could affect kids
are kids all over the country. A school board in
Maryland said, no, parents are allowed to opt their kids
out of the instructions on gender and sexuality that we
(01:11:04):
are putting into the school program. And this is goes
down as low as pre kindergarteners teaching them about gay
sex and drag queens and things like that. And this
wasn't in one class, you know, a class on sex education.
They are infusing it into the entire curriculum, including English classes.
(01:11:28):
And they told parents, dope, can't opt your kids out
of that. That's a really really important case.
Speaker 1 (01:11:35):
It's it's remarkable the things that we find being litigated now.
You know, when when you, when you and I were younger,
the difference between what was legal and what was right
was pretty narrow. Now it's massive in some places.
Speaker 10 (01:11:50):
Oh yeah, no, no it is. And look, the the
problem in Maryland I just to talk about is so
bad that it was a coalition of Jewish families, Muslim families,
Christian families, all of whom sued this school board which
(01:12:11):
absolutely refused to take this basically propaganda of the left
out of the school curriculum and refuse to let their
parents parents opt their kids out of it.
Speaker 12 (01:12:24):
Even though, as they pointed out before the Supreme Court,
the school lets parents opt their kids out of all
kinds of other stuff, including you know, visit and.
Speaker 10 (01:12:38):
All kinds of other activities. But no, they're not allowed
to opt out of this. Why well, because the whole
point of this is to spread this left wing propaganda
into the schools and to basically brainwash these kids.
Speaker 1 (01:12:52):
Yeah, it's grooming, it's trying to normalize something that is abnormal.
All right, More to come. Hanswan Spakowsky carbon out time
Force with the Heritage Foundation here in the Morning Show
with Preston Scott not wasting a moment of time. Hans
(01:13:18):
von Spakowsky with me from the Heritage Foundation. Hans. We
talked a little bit in the break. It seems that
you know, President Trump this time around very very different
than the first time around. He knows what he's facing.
He has surrounded himself with different people that I think
mostly are signed on are the executive orders. You mentioned
(01:13:39):
in the break how busy things are for you is
are the executive orders designed to do exactly what they're
doing to force cases before the Supreme Court?
Speaker 10 (01:13:51):
Well, I think some of them are, but I think
the main thing is he's trying to get as much
done as he can or the full extent of the
executive authority. Yeah, I mean, I actually just totaled up
the numbers President yesterday. President in the first four months
of his presidency has signed one hundred and fifty two
executive orders, thirty eight memoranda, and fifty seven proclamations. Proclamations
(01:14:16):
are important, that's it. For example, how he used a
proclamation to declare that Venezuelan TDA gang a terrorist group.
So he realizes he's got one term. He wants to
get as much done as possible. And I got to
(01:14:37):
tell you, he and his people have been doing a
really good job. Despite some of the setbacks in the
Lower Court, they've been doing a great job. And I
actually think that in many ways, Democrats shot themselves in
the foot. And the reason I say that is that, look,
(01:14:57):
if he had gotten reelected to a second term right away,
he still would have been dealing with so many of
the problems he encountered in the first term, agreed those
four years out of office, and the fact that I
could tell you this was a real phenomenon Washington. Liberals
in this town, in the law firms, in the corporations,
(01:15:21):
did everything they could and try to make sure that
none of the top people in the Trump administration got
regular jobs. They tried to keep them out of private industry,
out of law firms. So what did they do. They
formed all these NGOs, nonprofit groups, and what do they
(01:15:43):
do During that four year period, They worked on and
developed all of the policy changes they were going to make,
all the stuff that we have now seen in those
one hundred and fifty two eeos. Basically, they spent four
years preparing to be back in office, and that is
why we have seen. So we've seen more accomplished in
(01:16:06):
the first four months of this presidency than I think
any president ever in our history.
Speaker 1 (01:16:12):
Why do you think, circling back to the Supreme Court
for a second, why do you think MS thirteen members
have more standing than say, people questioning voters, citizens questioning
the twenty twenty election.
Speaker 10 (01:16:24):
Well, that's one of the problems with our judicial system
right now, and in particular, this problem is caused by
the fact that if you look at the individuals that
Barack Obama and even more so Biden appointed and got
confirmed to the federal court, they are the most left wing,
(01:16:47):
radical ideologus that have ever sat on the federal bench.
And they apparently think that in their courtrooms their kings
and queens, and they can do anything they want until
and unless some higher court overturns them, and that's the
way they're acting, and that that is a real problem
(01:17:08):
throughout our judiciary.
Speaker 1 (01:17:10):
Hans. We did some math based on a ten million
figure of illegals in the country, which could be significantly off,
but it's at least that that. If you look at that,
it's about an hour of judicial work per person if
you get them into federal district court. There's six hundred
and seventy seven federal district judges. That's seven and a
(01:17:31):
half years of hearings and court appearances if they do
eight a day for the rest of the you know,
and take no other cases. Does in Congress, does Congress
have the opportunity to address this, pass a law to
allow for this process to be changed.
Speaker 10 (01:17:52):
Yes, because the Supreme Court has said on more than
one occasion that aliens who are illegally country are entitled
to some due process, but it's not what people believe
under the Constitution. What Congress has said is the new
process they're entitled to is what Congress gives them. And
(01:18:13):
if Congress, for example, were to change the law to
say the only hearing you get is your opportunity present
your case before an employee of the Justice Department or
the partner Homeland Security, and that's it, Congress could do
that and that would be perfectly legitimate under what the
(01:18:33):
Supreme Court has said.
Speaker 1 (01:18:35):
Last question for you before we let you go, what
will it take before the Supreme Court settles the issue
of protecting women's sports and Title nine as it was written.
Speaker 10 (01:18:47):
It's going to take the Supreme Court finally issuing a
tough decision on this, the same way they issued a
very tough decision like we were talking about the beginning
when they, you know, three years ago, when they finally
said to American college and universities, you have to stop
discriminating on the basis of race in your admissions. And
(01:19:11):
the Supreme Court is going to have to get a
case once again where they tell colleges, athletic associations and
others that Title nine of the Civil Rights Act, which
protects women in colleges and universities, particularly in sports. It
means what it said. I mean, that's that's what they
(01:19:34):
have to tell them. It means what it said.
Speaker 1 (01:19:37):
Hans always love the time, and I appreciate you carving
out some for us. Thanks you very much. Sure, thanks
for having me my pleasure. Hans von Spakowski with the
Heritage Foundation on the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 2 (01:19:55):
Just start with the presumption that he's right.
Speaker 7 (01:19:58):
Believe me, it works around he This is the Morning
Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 1 (01:20:20):
Oh no, the first tropical wave of the season is
forming off Africa's coast. Oh no, yeah, we'll be watching.
(01:20:42):
I'll just go ahead and tell you we may have
a hurricane this year. I don't know why, but it
seems as though every single year there's a threat of
a storm, a bad one, and I don't want it
for anybody, but it could happen, and when it does,
(01:21:10):
we'll be here, don't you feel better? Will be your buddies.
You heard me talk about one of the big stories
in the press box seven and a half years, and
my theory was right. Congress could end this pass a
law give administrative authority to people right at the border.
(01:21:36):
It is the authority that Congress grants. It is the
due process as determined by Congress. They're not entitled to
the due process that is afforded United States citizens. They
are not United States citizens. They're human beings. Never forget
(01:21:58):
that some of them are animals. Will not quibble over
that at this exact moment. And then and then the
other big story, which is horrifying that according to the
records of Planned Parenthood, it aborts a thousand, one hundred
(01:22:21):
and two babies a day and they use our money
to do it, one every seventy eight seconds. That that's
just horrifying. It is, as the lead research assistant of
(01:22:47):
the program wrote in notes, appalling, that the most unsafe
place for a person to be is in the womb
of their mother. If you've done that, there is grace
(01:23:12):
and there is forgiveness that God extends, and we all
make mistakes. Get on the right side of this. This
is ending a human life, and it's got to stop.
Forty minutes past the hour, we're gonna take a breath here,
(01:23:32):
talk about something else next.
Speaker 10 (01:23:36):
Good Morning.
Speaker 2 (01:23:40):
On News Radio one hundred point seven.
Speaker 13 (01:23:42):
Dousla box fans, box fans, box fans, box fans, buy
them Panama City, Bay County, Walton County and go.
Speaker 1 (01:23:57):
To Ace Hardware. Buy a box fan, leave a box fan,
Tallahassee drop it off here at the studio. Do your best.
I'm just telling you, you just get you roll the dice,
you take a shot. Hopefully someone answers the door. I can't.
I just we're doing our best. Or you head to
(01:24:19):
Refreshment Pepsi's Services. Refreshment Services Pepsi and they're on West
Pensacola across from TSC. Drop it off there. M simple
as that, and our thanks to Westminster Oakes for stepping
up with us and helping push out this this need
(01:24:42):
to help senior adults as the heat starts to build.
Speaker 2 (01:24:48):
In the wild or in our homes. We love them Critters,
large and small.
Speaker 7 (01:24:53):
Time for another edition of Animal Stories on the Morning
Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 1 (01:25:00):
Oh Yeah, we take you to Jackson, New Hampshire the
Jackson Police Department. Using social media this morning, we received
a report of a camera theft in town. Fortunately, the
suspect was caught on the camera in the act. Does
(01:25:24):
anyone recognize this suspect. He was described as wearing all black.
It occurred in the very early morning hours. Very suspicious.
This kind of conduct is un bearable. The theft was
committed by a black bear that stole the trail camera
(01:25:51):
using its teeth and claws while another bear watched in
the distance, so he had an accomplice. It's hilarious. It's
beard comes up, it's nose right in the camera lens.
(01:26:12):
Now we go to the city of a Veto, Florida.
Workers that were checking a pipe underneath the road noticed
something moving around in there and it was a remote
(01:26:34):
controlled camera that they used to check the pipes under
Lockwood Boulevard for cracks and leaks. And there's a video
of an alligator just chilling. Not a big one, smaller guy,
but big enough to cause some damage to you. You
loved him the first time around, and now he's back.
(01:26:55):
We did a routine check of the pipe under Lockwood,
discovered our friend was back just chilling. Are good, no leaks,
but they they did have to capture the alligator. We're
not sure if it's the same one from a few
years ago. But it's just fun to watch. Could you imagine,
like if you didn't have the Cameron, you're sending people
(01:27:16):
down there. And it's not a little one, it's a
big one. And then this story is just a little older.
I've had it for a couple of weeks. Saint Cloud, Florida.
A kangaroo escaped from a private owner's enclosure and there's
(01:27:39):
video of Hickory hopping down a busy Ossiola County road,
fleeing any effort to capture him. Just doom doom, doom doom,
just jumping along. It's hilarious to watch. Take into the
amazing animals Wildlife Preserve until the owner pays his fines,
(01:28:03):
upgrades his facilities, gets the appropriate licenses. He twenty seven
year old man facing several charges for having this not
so little I mean, this is a full sized kangaroo.
And how if you I don't know, if you've seen
the videos online, kangaroos they will stand their ground. Let
(01:28:24):
me tell you something, you better have game if you're
gonna fight a kangaroo. Forty six minutes after the hour,
Animal Stories, an exclusive presentation Best I Know of The
Morning Show with Preston Scott. They're finagling to try and
(01:28:55):
get the big beautiful bill across the finish line. And
I hate to be the Debbie downer, but maybe we'll
learn that they're going to address the debt and the deficit.
(01:29:15):
We have to We cannot buy into the new monetary policy,
the modern monetary policy that they're trying to push, which
says you don't have to worry about it. How classic
is that you have to worry about it with your wallet,
but they don't have to worry about it with our
(01:29:37):
wallet because they can just keep taxing us and take
more money. That's how socialism. It's like a boa constrictor.
If it just loosens up a little bit, you feel like, okay,
we're good, and then it just clamps down tighter and tighter.
(01:29:58):
That's why there has to be an overhaul of tax code.
That's why these fundamental issues of taxation are so important.
You have to you have to rethink the model of
how we do things. You have to cut the government off.
They're addicted to your money. You just you just got
to cut them off and as sure as Sunday, you
(01:30:22):
and I have to live within our budget. One of
the ways they get around it is they don't have
a budget. You see, that's what this reconciliation is. We
live within our budget because we have to have one.
Even if you don't do a sit down. We spend
this on this, and that on that, and that on that.
It doesn't matter. You have a budget. Your budget is
(01:30:46):
your your income, your liability is what you have to
your bills and and if you have any money left
over that that's what you have to you know, to
put into savings or what have you. And there's your budget.
You have one. They don't have one, which is part
(01:31:07):
of the problem. Tomorrow, Steve Stewart joins us doctor Ed
Moore a little more history, Optimum Health, Naturally and a
Root Trip Idea.
Speaker 2 (01:31:16):
Brought to you by Baron No Heating and Air.
Speaker 1 (01:31:19):
It's the Morning.
Speaker 2 (01:31:19):
Show on WFLA.
Speaker 1 (01:31:24):
It feels weird, but Memorial Day is coming up Monday,
and it seems like it ought to be a week away,
but it's not. It's Monday, Memorial Day weekend holiday is
this weekend, so we're off on Monday. I'm just telling
you now because I'm thinking about it, because I want
(01:31:45):
to I want to feel better by next week. I
have a big speech I have to deliver next week now. Seriously,
I gotta what I'm gonna say. It's so weird for
a guy who does what I do to be laboring
over what am I going to say? But yeah, the
(01:32:10):
big stories today were huge and they came from email,
which is really quite remarkable when you think about it.
We talked about the number of abortions happening every single day.
Every seventy eight seconds, a human being loses their life
(01:32:35):
inside their mother's womb. It's yeah. Talked about how the
Democrat strategy to flood the courts is working, why it works,
and what it will take to fix it. Had a
good talk about I mean, don't you feel much more
informed about the cases coming from the Supreme Court that
(01:32:56):
are going to be decided, and just a little better
in into how the court is functioning right now and
why there are issues. The unpredictability of it is not good.
It just isn't. It should not be unpredictable how to
interpret the Constitution. But there we are friends. Thank you seriously,
(01:33:19):
thank you buy some box fans, and we appreciate you
spending time with us today. We're going to do it
again tomorrow. Until then, you be blessed today and you
know you play a role in that, don't you. Thanks
for listening.