Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:13):
Hey, what's up? How you doing? I sound more manly,
don't I tough to do? I know, I know. Welcome
to Thursday on the Morning Show, May twenty second, Show
fifty three eighty five. I'm press, he is Jose and
(00:34):
we go straight to scripture. I just need to go
straight there, Matthew twenty five, Verses thirty one and thirty two.
These are red letters. You know what that means. These
are words spoken by Jesus when the son of Man
(00:56):
comes in his glory, all the angels with him. Can
we just pause for a moment, Come on, come on,
Then he will sit on his glorious throne. Not done.
(01:18):
But he had been getting prodded, and the expectation of
him was that he was going to be a king
like David and restore the throne over Israel and the
(01:40):
Red and Jesus is like, oh no, no, no. When
I come, well, I'm with my angels. Hello, And when
I sit on my glorious throne. Beforehand, before Jesus will
be gathered all the nations, and he will separate people
(02:04):
one from another, as a shepherd separates sheep from goats. Now,
let's just for a second, let's look at this in
a literal sense. And remember now he speaks in imparable
form to the extent that he draws images and things
(02:29):
that people can relate to in the time. So first
the gathering of the nations. What do you think that's
going to be like when Jesus appears and everyone sees it,
everyone and he basically says, come here. And then that
(03:02):
process of separation. Here's what's interesting about the choice of
words sheep and goats. Sheep are lead, goats are driven.
(03:26):
A shepherd has to drive a goatherd. A shepherd leads
a herd of sheep. So let's do a little triage.
Speaker 2 (03:42):
Here.
Speaker 1 (03:44):
Are you a sheep or are you a goat? I
don't see a third category here sheep goats one the
other which are you? Are you being driven to church?
(04:09):
Are you does your wife have to say, come on,
let's go, let's go to your kids, let's go, let's go.
Orre you led and thereby leading? Are you leading others?
I mean, if you're being led, you're leading others. Sheep
follow sheep, you know that, right? They follow each other.
(04:30):
And God calls for men to be priests of their
homes and to be loving leaders and to honor and
revere their wives as a precious gift from God. So
are you a goat or are you sheep? You're one
or the other. I know that sounds harsh. Take it
(04:54):
up with Jesus. Goats sheep? Which are you? My suggestion
is you likely know darn good and well, and if
you're a goat, I would think long and hard about
changing whatever it is in your heart and your mind
and your attitude that makes you somebody that feels like
(05:15):
you have to go to church instead of you get
to you get to go ten past the hour. I'm
going to whine in just a moment.
Speaker 3 (05:30):
The Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 1 (05:44):
All right, eleven past the hour, twelve now past May
twenty second, eighteen oh two, Martha Washington dies at Mount
Vernon at the age of seventy. Go to Mount Vernon
if you've never been to go to Mount Vernon. Eighteen
forty three, wagon train of a thousand Pioneers bound for
the Northwest leaves Independence of Missouri. I say that in
(06:05):
honor of doctor Edmore, who will be phoning in later. Yeah, phoning,
starting to feel a little bad. I told him, I said,
I'm I'm you know I'm not running a fever anything.
I'm just yeah. Steve Stewart though called in sick.
Speaker 2 (06:22):
Yep.
Speaker 1 (06:23):
Some of us play hurt and some of us don't.
Eighteen forty nine, Abraham Lincoln receives a patent for an
invention for booying vessels over shoals, which he never puts
to use. Eighteen fifty six and a sign of tensions
between the North and South, South Carolina Congressman Preston Brooks
(06:44):
beats Massachusetts Senator Charles Sumner with a cane in the
Senate chamber. Oh, if only we could bring back those
days when you could just smack someone in the head
some fisticuffs. We don't need duels, but it'd be great. Why, sir,
you be smirched my integrity? You, my friend, are a kadamite.
(07:07):
You have no integraty wa wap? Shall we step outside
and settle this as gentlemen? Why we shall, sir? Be awesome?
That would be really, that would be hilarious. And in
nineteen seventy two, Richard Nixon becomes the first president to
(07:31):
visit Russia. There you go. Today is National craft Distillery Day,
National Solitaire Day. How many of you have Solitaire on
your phones. Come on, be honest. National Vanilla Pudding Day.
(07:53):
Vanilla pudding is the wonderful creamy equivalent to vanilla ice cream,
totally unappreciated and underrated. What makes them both incredible is
they are vehicles for carrying whatever else you want to
put with it. Vanilla goes with everything. Put it in
(08:20):
a root beer, put it in a coke, put it
with apple pie, put it with oreos, M and M's
peanut butter cups. It doesn't matter. Vanilla pudding, bananas, oreos
(08:41):
crunched up fill in the blank, just doesn't matter. It's
wonderful dessert. National by a Musical Instrument Day, National Merit
Time Day. So there you go. There's your your national days.
I mentioned I I'm at the worst point of a cold.
(09:02):
My cold regimen usually works, and I now can say
nine out of ten times because this is the tenth.
This is that tenth time where it just hit me
out of nowhere so fast. I was with my my
grandkids human petri dishes. That's what children are, and uh,
(09:23):
next thing, you know, whammo. But I'm at that awkward
stage where the cough becomes ridiculous when you're when you're
when you're horizontal and you're laying down, your call, your
cough is just I apologize to my wife when I
left this morning. I say, I am so sorry because
(09:44):
I know I kept her up because I kept me up.
And after all, if i'm if I'm awake, my wife
is tending to me at all times, I'm just no,
She's she's incredible, but she's a light sleep and I'm
normally not. And so I'm normally not at all a
(10:05):
burden to her from a sleep perspective because I'm out.
But I know I was just brutal being with me
last night. But I'm also at that awkward stage of
having a cold where when you blow your nose, it's
like I didn't want to shave today. I just huh, huh.
I want to just sit in the hot water of
(10:27):
the shower. Yeah, it was incredible, but I didn't want
to shave. I didn't want to take the time. I
just wanted to sit, just stand there. Right. But I'm
at that stage now even if I had shaved, where
when you use a tissue, you have little tissue remnants
on your beard, on your most you know, or on
(10:47):
your face and cheek and all that from wiping. Now,
it's awful. You're just embarrassed. I'm embarrassing anyway. I'm going
to try not to whine about it. I'm gonna make
fun of it the best I can. Just know, if
there are awkward pauses and silence more than normal, because
I do like a pregnant pause, just think of it
(11:09):
as a pregnant pause, not me hitting the dump button.
So I'm not coughing in your ear? All right? Just okay?
We good? Awesome? Ten past seven. See, I don't know
what time it is, all right, twenty three past the hour.
(11:42):
We are three weeks away from what? Three weeks from today?
The season premiere, Season twelve Alone? Now, Jose, have you
done your homework yet?
Speaker 2 (12:01):
Have you?
Speaker 1 (12:02):
Have you watched an episode of Alone yet? I have not?
Sorry about that, I have not. Goodness, what's wrong with you?
Speaker 2 (12:08):
Man?
Speaker 1 (12:09):
Pol Cheese? Uh No, I have not. I have not
seen an episode yet. What in the world? YEP? I know,
I know, I know. I am interested. I am intrigued,
calcitron cur I am intrigued, very very intrigued. They're heading
to South Africa, which, wow, glad they got there before
(12:32):
all the going on, right, because they they were there
last year in the in the late summer fall for
us whenever, whenever that was there. They're in the Great
Carew desert. And and we are going through our ten items. See,
I think it's a great exercise. What would you choose now?
(12:55):
You listed three items last week? Did you modify it? Nope?
No modification? Okay? So what else would you bring among
your You can only bring You've got this list of
stuff that everyone gets, and then you have to pick
ten items out of a massive list. But the list
is what it is. You can't deviate from the list.
You get ten items to survive with, and they fall
(13:17):
into different categories. So what do you go through your
list from last week? What you what you announced last week?
And then add one more?
Speaker 4 (13:26):
All right, so last week I believe I I picked
I picked the the the flint.
Speaker 1 (13:32):
Pharaouh rod right right.
Speaker 4 (13:35):
That was pretty important, you know for fire, because you know,
fire is very very important.
Speaker 1 (13:38):
For hey, I don't know a commentary, buddy, come on.
Speaker 4 (13:41):
And then the second one was the most important for me?
Speaker 1 (13:45):
Is the tarp a tarp? Yeah, some shelter, Okay, you
listed that last week? What else? Oh? You went to
three items last week. Oh I did, Yeah, I did
not remember.
Speaker 4 (13:55):
Okay, and then a forty millimeters roll of dental flaw.
Speaker 1 (14:01):
Okay, now tell me why that. See, I'm interested in
knowing that.
Speaker 4 (14:04):
Well, I figure I could I could use it for
you know, multiple you know reasons, especially you know, most
importantly keeping the mouth clean, you know, getting stuff out
of there. Uh. And then yeah, I could use it
for other things, maybe times, some stuff down you know
that doesn't really need you know, something very strong, or
emergency fishing wire.
Speaker 1 (14:25):
Okay, okay, any of that sort. Yeah, I versatility matters.
You got to try to think through what can go
multiple directions here. So I've I've got the Pharaoh ride
as well a way to start fire. I don't want
to work. I want to start the fire. You don't.
You don't want to burn calories. Now, i have a
decided advantage because I'm a big guy. So I'm going
(14:48):
there with calories. I'm saying I got a spare amount
of calories I'm taking to the field with me, so
that that's an immediate advantage. And it truly is. Big
people tend to do really well if they're in shape,
other than being you know, carrying a few extra pounds.
I'm with you. Twelve by twelve tarp one, twelve by
(15:09):
twelve tarp. I go with the bank line as opposed
to a para cord, because paracord you're getting a few
hundred feet at most. With the bank line, it's got it,
it it it's cinch is better. It doesn't have the
strength that parachord has, but you can double it up
(15:31):
and you get fifteen hundred and eighty linear feet. Come on,
give me some of that. That's five hundred plus yards. Yeah,
and then I'm bringing a wool blanket. I'm bringing a
wool blanket. Can't bring a sleeping bag because it's not
on the list. I'm bringing a wool blanket. A. If
(15:52):
I take a dip, I can use it as a towel.
B Wool is remarkably resistant to water in the sense
that if it rains, you've got a little something there.
But that's why you have a tarp. But it can
(16:13):
keep you really warm, and you've folded up a few times,
and it makes nice betting on top of maybe some
you know, branches and things like that. So, yeah, we're
going through our list. We'll continue next week. I want
you to play along History dot Com slash alone and
when you're there, go to the gear list and pick
(16:35):
your ten items. Just read through it all. It's fascinating.
What would you do. It's a great mental exercise. It
really is. Twenty eight past the hour, come back, Big
Stories in the press box and wow.
Speaker 5 (16:48):
Yeah, thanks for listening. It's The Morning Show with Preston.
Speaker 1 (16:53):
Scott thirty six minutes past the hour Thursday on The
Morning Show, Big Story changed. Overnight. Two Israeli ambassador ambassad
(17:22):
Embassy good Lord staffers killed in a shooting near a
Jewish museum in DC. The shooter arrested screams out, Free Palestine,
Free Palestine, Free Palestine. He's a dude from Chicago who
(17:44):
will remain nameless because he's a freaking loser. And I
want to just take the opportunity to ask, are any
of the colleges in universities responsible for this? Are any
(18:05):
of the democrats responsible for the fomentation of hate and
the tolerance of hate in the name of free speech? See,
I have a very different view. The couple shot a
couple about to be engaged like next week in Jerusalem.
(18:28):
He bought the ring and was going to propose in
Jerusalem next week, young couple shot and killed. As Jose
said in the break, oh yeah, that advance is the cause.
Nothing says, let's find a peaceful solution in a free Palestine,
better than shooting a couple people. You know, this is
(18:49):
the same kind of ridiculous, mired thinking that the Left
is stuck in. But I want to get back to
this guy was part of an Illinois college camp and
a hate group, and we'll find out if he was
part of other college campus hate groups. I'm just curious. See,
(19:17):
I would handle things a little differently, you know. For example,
I would with all of the protesters burning their diplomas
because they're being shut down. If I'm the head of
those universities, I would say, if you burn your diploma,
we will burn the records of your attendance of this school.
(19:39):
You no longer are a graduate. Good luck. Yeah, no refunds,
see yourself at the out the door. Get your parting gifts. Now.
If you burn the evidence of your graduation, so be it.
(20:01):
We're not replacing it. Sorry. Now, we probably can't legally
say you never went to school here. I would just
lose your records. Huh. Bleep, bleep, blee bleep. Huh did
(20:21):
they did they get a degree? Here? Boy, we got
a lot of students. Let me get back to you.
We'll look. They couldn't present a diploma. Huh yeah, Okay,
well we'll do what we can. We'll be back with you.
(20:46):
There's another little sidebar here, and this is something Donald
Trump needs to address. That was brought up by a
listener that took an international flight to Indonesia and was
listening to the show and sent me note. His note was,
isn't this interesting? He took us a picture on their
(21:11):
TV in front of their seat on the airplane on
Qatar Airlines, and it does not identify Israel. It calls
it the Palestinian territories. I would have a problem with that.
If I'm Donald Trump, I would have a problem with that.
(21:39):
That is the type of thing that fuels this. They
want to erase Palestinians is the Islamis. They want to
erase Israel from existence, the Iranians, the houthis, anyone that
cozy's up to them. They're going to target at them.
(22:03):
Forty one minutes past the hour, tragedy.
Speaker 3 (22:11):
The Morning Show with Preston Scott on News Radio one
hundred point seven WFLA.
Speaker 1 (22:44):
How of you've seen the interaction between President Donald Trump
and the South African President Cyril Remaphosa. Maybe it's Ramaposa
h is silent, don't know. In case you have not heard,
there is a refugee crisis. President Trump has granted legal
(23:10):
refugee status to white South africaners because they are claiming
that they are being targeted and killed. They are farmers.
And after the President of South Africa downplayed the whole thing,
(23:33):
Trump played a four minute video that demonstrated calls from
leaders in South Africa that happened to be black for
the killing of white people. The South African president was
visibly uncomfortable, denied that it was happening. CNN correspondent, here's
(23:58):
the headline, did bunks Trump's claims of white genocide in
South Africa. Larry Modoo, the international correspondent for CNN, Here's
the problem. One of the invited guests to that meeting
was professional golfer Ratief Goosen, along with major winner both
(24:19):
he a major winner as well brilliant golfer beautiful golf swag.
Along with Ernie Els and Ratief Goosen wanted to add
something to the conversation and he said, my parents are farmers,
and he confirmed that, yes, they are being killed, not
(24:40):
his parents, but others. They're burning them out, they're they're
forcing them out and as needed, they're killing them. Now
South Africa is suggesting that now this is this is
a bill that allows the government to seize unused farmland
if it's deemed to be an the public interest. It
(25:01):
hasn't seized any land yet, it says. But the reporter
for CNN, of course, sources Southern Poverty Law Center in
talking about Afro Forum, a white African Er lobby group
that's considered a white nationalist group by the Southern Poverty
Law Center, which of course we know, oh well, if
(25:23):
they say so, they're absolutely not, because the Southern Poverty
Law Center is one of the singular most bigoted racist
organizations in our country. Talk about a group of people
that are living with white guilt. Oh MG, So yeah,
(25:46):
that was The audio is not good enough for me
to air, but it's worth checking out that encounter and
the video itself. You can. You can find it all
over the place, and I would strongly suggest you do that.
Take a look forty six past the album.
Speaker 3 (26:02):
So much to talk about here this morning on the
Morning Show. It's The Morning Show with Preston Scott, Steve Stewart.
Speaker 1 (26:17):
He texted me early this morning, which tells me he
was not feeling well because he was up when I
was up. So we have lots to talk about. So
we'll just we'll just rock right on and hope Steve
feels better. Doctor Ed Moore fighting the crowd a little bit, apparently,
(26:38):
so he will join us by phone in the third
hour with more history and appropriately in between doctor David
Hart's helping us feel better. That works out really well.
But you know, we talked about the mainstream media doing
all they can to try to cover their tracks because
(27:00):
they covered up for Joe Biden. Jake Tapper thinks that
just because he's written a book get the title original Sin,
President Biden's decline, its cover up, and his disastrous choice
to run again. You all, you all created the situation
(27:26):
where he did you ate it in embedded the the
the effort to rehabilitate himself is really funny. It's it's
it's comical. It'd be like this guy who shot these
(27:48):
two Israeli saying the gun went off, it was an accident.
I didn't say free Palestine, I said free Perogis. What
are you talking about? I didn't break So he's on
(28:14):
Megan Kelly, Jake Tapper is Megan just lays out all
of the evidence of things he said on television. It's recorded,
it's there, and Tapper finally says this, Yeah, I remember
the moment, the glitch at the immigration event not getting
(28:35):
much attention outside of conservative media at all. And Alex
and I are here to say that conservative media was right,
and conservative media was correct, and there should be a
lot of soul searching, not just among me, but among
the legacy media to begin with all of us for
how this was covered and not covered sufficiently. So I'm
(29:00):
I mean, I'm not here to defend the coverage that
I've already acknowledged. I wish I could do differently, but
you didn't do it differently. You made a cognitive choice
to lie to cover up. So then he goes on
Morning Joe and he says to Joe Scarborough, you know,
Biden really loved you. He watched your show every morning,
(29:24):
and he made it you were like campaigning to farmers
in the heartland. He was campaigning to you. It should
be noted what Joe Scarborough famously said late last spring.
(29:44):
I've said it for years now. He's coaching, but I
understold it when I said he was coging. He's far
beyond coging. In fact, I think he's better than ever
intellectually analytically, because he's been around fifty years. This is
March twenty twenty four. Start your tape right now, because
I'm about to tell you the truth and bleep you
(30:07):
f you, he says, you if you can't handle the truth,
this version of Biden intellectually analytically is the best Biden ever.
What an embarrassment. If any of you watch or listen
to that clown show, you should be ashamed of yourself.
(30:31):
You don't even go there for opposition research. There's just
no reason. The mainstream media, the legacy media is Jake
Tapper that refers to it, is incapable of doing the
news credibly. They're just not. And the sooner you accept
(30:55):
that and take on the responsibility for yourself to find
the news, you will be better informed, you will think
more clearly, and by golly, you'll be happier because at
least you'll have the truth. How are two next, all right,
(31:24):
five past the Hour Morning Show with Preston Scott. He's ose,
I'm pressed Don pressed Don Scott, not Scott, Preston, Preston Scott.
When I was in school, always had to look under
Preston for my records. They just just reversed it now
(31:45):
now I'm trust me. I'm a student look under p
for Preston. Oh sorry, does that happened to you often? Oh? Yeah,
like all the time? Thank you. I've only gone here
my whole life. Anyway. Steve Stewart not with us today.
He is under the weather, so am I. But some
(32:09):
of us play hurt and some of us don't. Just
saying no, Steve could really be really, really sick, and
so we're we're just He said, I gotta I gotta
tap out today, and I was like, hey, brother, you
tap out, you get you get well. We will carry on.
(32:30):
And as always, I have a file ready with stories
for occasions like this, for example, and and they're not
always evergreen stories, although I do have those as well.
Evergreen stories for those of you that are not initiated
into the world of radio. Evergreen are stories that are
(32:51):
ever green. I can use them anytime. They're not dated.
They're just interesting and I can do it whenever. I
can do it five years from now. I can pull
a story out that I've had since now and do
it five years from now. It's evergreen. But I don't
have that worry. We were talking about the rehab tour
(33:15):
of Jake Tapper, which you might go ahead and broaden
as the rehab tour for the mainstream media. There are
a series of issues that we are now presented with
that we need to know the answers to. Now there
is an admission to an undercover reporter with James O'Keeffe's
(33:35):
group O'Keefe Media Group, OMG, that Barack Obama was in
fact the quasi president, the de facto president for the
four years of Joe Biden. I'll only say I told
you that, and I didn't know sources. I don't have
(33:59):
sources in Washington, in DC, well, I don't have many.
But it was common sense what they were doing, the
radical nature of it all. See, Obama didn't want his
fingerprints on some of this stuff. He believes it. He's radical,
but he likes to present himself as moderate. Now to
(34:24):
some he is. That's why he and Michelle some of
you refer to Michelle as Mike, that's up to you.
It's it's apparent that he's not real likable right now
in the extremist circles, they're not asking Brock to show
(34:47):
up to anything. But the answer to who was running
the country is fundamental. We need to know, we need
to put people under oath. The question of the appointment
of Kintaji Brown Jackson to the Supreme Court, Biden made
(35:12):
the announcement that it was a very important thing that
a black woman be put on the Supreme Court. This
reveals one of the fatal flaws of the Democrat Party.
Instead of saying we want the most qualified person, they
(35:36):
define qualification first and foremost as skin color or gender,
not qualifications. I don't know how you place someone in
a nomination that does not know that men and women
(35:58):
are biologically different. When asked the question, she famously said,
I'm not a biologist. Well, neither is my six year
old grandson, and he knows the difference. What's your excuse
(36:19):
the list of pardons and communications. There is a story
floating around right now that is troubling, and we'll get
to that next. It's ten minutes past the hour we're
going through the things that we need answers to.
Speaker 3 (36:33):
On news radio one hundred point seven. Dousla.
Speaker 1 (36:54):
All right, they have just announced they have passed the big,
beautiful bill in the House. Let's listen to House Majority
Leader Steve Scalise who is talking to the media.
Speaker 6 (37:05):
Four hours.
Speaker 7 (37:06):
Rules Committee went over twenty hours. You had, of course,
the Budget Committee Chairman Arrington is the lead author of
the bill. All of the people that had to come
together in our conference, and I think a lot of
you know, we don't all think alike. Democrats made it
very clear they didn't want to have any part in
(37:28):
helping get America back on track again. But we were
never deterred when this bill could have failed ten times over.
We said we were going to get this done and
failure is not an option, and we meant it. We
knew we were fighting for the families who had been
struggling for way too long under the failed policies of
(37:48):
Joe Biden and all the Democrats who did have control
of Washington for too long. We watched higher interest rates
and higher inflation and lower wages in a demise of
the American dream that we knew should not be permanent.
But was only going to turn around if we passed
a bill to get.
Speaker 6 (38:08):
America back on track.
Speaker 7 (38:10):
We knew we had to prevent a massive tax increase,
so we put it in the bill. We knew we
needed to secure America's border, as President Trump ran on
all across this country and won the election on and
we put it in this bill. We ran on and
said we would produce more American energy, and we put
(38:30):
it in this bill.
Speaker 1 (38:33):
All the things that.
Speaker 7 (38:34):
We knew we needed to do to root at waste,
fraud and abuse, and government focus on those families who
were struggling. All of that is in this one big,
beautiful bill. And yes, now the House has come together
and passed this bill against all odds, but we're still
working on the rest of the process still goes to
(38:55):
the Senate. Senate has a lot of work to do too.
That's why we've been talking to the Senate for a
long time. But it's their turn to take this bill
and move forward. But I'll tell you, none of this
would be possible without the leadership of President Trump, who
every step of the way, not only laid out the vision,
ran a campaign on this vision, but every step of
(39:17):
the way too, said whatever you need let me know.
And he was there to help us. Our great Speaker
Mike Johnson, who was never deterred, probably hasn't slept in
a few days, but never wavered in his commitment to
get this done. And this whole team has come together,
(39:37):
and our whip has never relented and never stopped pushing
to get this done. With that, I bring up our
great majority Whip, Tom Emmer.
Speaker 1 (39:51):
Let's give him a listen for a second here. Thank you, Steve.
Speaker 8 (39:56):
On November fifth, the American people rejected the failed pol
U the Biden Harris administration and overwhelmingly endorsed President Trump's
America First Agenda. Using his executive authority. President Trump hit
the ground running on day one to deliver on the
promises he made to the American people. Today, House Republicans
(40:17):
followed suit. Our one big, beautiful bill fulfills the mandate
for change we were given last November. It allows President
Trump to continue his successful border security and deportation operations
by investing in more border patrol agents and ICE officers,
funding the continuation of the border wall, and equipping our
(40:38):
men and women on the front lines with the tools
they need to keep us safe. Not only will the
one big beautiful bill help to make Americas get right?
Speaker 1 (40:47):
All right, there you go. That's Tom Emmer. They're dumping
out of that on Fox, so we will dump out
of it as well. So preceding all this was HOWSE
Speaker Mike Johnson. They have passed the bill. It's done.
Tax cuts are going to expand there's a lot of
really good things in this bill. I'm not denying that,
(41:09):
but there's some other things that are not and so
we just have to try to make those things a
priority moving forward. And so we will be asking those
questions of members of the House and Senate that come
on this program. But anyway, I just felt it was
important to break in and let you listen to that
(41:30):
live from Washington, DC. When we come back some of
the things that need to be addressed as it relates
to the previous four years. And no, you cannot say,
well it's over and done with, don't waste your time.
No no, no, no, no no no. If we do not
learn from what happened and put things in place to
keep it from happening again, it will happen again. It
(41:51):
will be repeated. So we need answers. Seventeen passed the
hour more to come here on the Morning Show with
Preston Scott all right, before the program was so rudely
interrupted by Washington d C elected elites, which I voluntarily
(42:16):
put on the show. Anyway, set that aside, right now,
just a little update. This is what we do. The
show is ongoing, and while the show is on the air,
I'm getting notes from Byron Donald's staff and we're booking
him on the show. He may be joining us tomorrow,
(42:39):
he may be joining us next week. But really, who
does that?
Speaker 5 (42:45):
We do?
Speaker 1 (42:47):
You know why? Because we love you and other people don't.
That's that's just, That's just it. This is there's a
radio program that loves you. I can't help it. If
other people, other shows don't love you. We do. So
(43:11):
we are vigilant even while doing our job. One eye
is right there. Huh uh See. All right, we're going
through the things that we need, answers to pardons, presidential pardons,
who signed those. There is a story gaining traction. It's
(43:34):
gaining traction, which is why I'm not talking about it yet.
The story that's gaining traction is that the pardons were
sold that some staffers on the Biden staff knew the
old guide knew nothing about it. No better wouldn't he
was clueless. They had access to the auto pen and
(43:58):
literally sold pardons. We'll safe deposit box action. Now I
don't know. There is more information being alleged, but I
don't know. But don't we want to know? Don't we
(44:19):
need to know? And doesn't that then make those pardons void?
If Biden didn't actually sign him, say what you will
about whether he was the president or the resident, he
occupied the office. It was solely his authority. No one
else can administer that authority. They're prohibited with you're all
(44:45):
from Afghanistan. That costs thirteen US service members their lives.
Biden left billions of dollars of US military equipment behind.
(45:05):
Was he the author of this? Was he really in
charge open borders? See? I don't think Joe Biden, you
remember that. I don't know if we played the sound.
Mike Johnson, Speaker of the House, went to Biden and
(45:29):
then famously announced that in the conversation, he said, mister President,
why did you do X, Y and Z? And he goes,
I didn't do anything like that. He goes, mister President,
your signature's on the order, and Joe's like, huh, what
(45:54):
about COVID? Who was orchestrating all of that? Was doctor Jill,
who's not a doctor of medicine. You know, I'm just
saying there are doctors of all kinds of things, you know.
Doctor Ed Moore, he's just he's he's a doctor, but
(46:15):
he's not a doctor of medicine. So just because Jill
has the title doctor doesn't make her an authority on medicine.
But I'm just asking who made these decisions. And we
are scratching the surface of things that we need answers
to and yes we do, we do need those answers,
(46:38):
all right, still to come, doctor David Harts Optimum Health. Naturally,
we have a road trip suggestion, and boy is it timely.
See I saved this suggestion. I saved it for today,
and I'll explain why that comes up in the next
half hour. Then doctor ed Moore in a little more history.
(47:00):
So stay with us. All of the anti Semitism, all
(47:22):
of the hate, all of the rhetoric directed solely at
Jews for existing. I will strongly rebut anybody who suggests
that what Hamas did in October on the seventh day
(47:46):
year and a half ago was somehow justified. It was
an attack on civilians. It was not a military act.
It was a terrorist act. But we have a young
couple preparing to marry, about to be engaged. The ring
was purchased, the proposal was coming next week in Jerusalem.
(48:09):
Employees of the Israeli embassy in Washington, DC at a museum,
a Jewish museum, when they were targeted by a Chicago
thirty year old that decided he was going to do
(48:31):
something to quote free Palestine, Free Palestine, Free Palestine, so
he shot and killed them. I looked, you can carry
concealed in the nation's capital. You have to get permission,
(48:51):
which is an affront to the Second Amendment. But I digress.
It's run by Democrats. What role do these university uprisings?
This guy was radicalized more than likely by attending a
university in Illinois. It would appear he was part of
(49:11):
all of the anti Semitic groups, at least one prominent one.
You know, it's funny you don't hear anything from the
Southern Poverty and Law Clinic on these hate groups on
college campuses. You don't hear about those. You don't hear
any press conferences. There are no condemnations. It's them. They
are engaging in their First Amendment right of free speech.
(49:37):
Add to that a photo that I have sent to
US Senator Rick Scott from a listener of the show
who is vacationing in Indonesia. He's retired, he and his
wife are traveling just to experience different cultures. Good for you,
but had to fly Katar airlines to get there. And
he noticed while he was flying over the region of
the Middle East that the map did not show Israel.
(50:00):
There is no Israel on that map. It said Palestinian territories,
no Israel, no city, nothing. Now, I don't have an
(50:25):
issue with Trump accepting the jet from Qatar, because the
wealth of the wicked is stored up for the righteous.
I'm good with that. Fine. You want to give us
a half a billion dollar aircraft, cool, don't expect anything
in return, but thank you very much. And then you've
(50:45):
got on college campuses. Now apparently you've got hamas, enthusiasts, sympathizers,
supporters burning their diplomas because universities are taking and I
were if I were president of those universities, I would say,
you have just lost your right to claim an education
(51:09):
from this school. When an employer says, okay, so you graduated,
do you have a copy of your diploma? Well, no,
you'll have to explain why you don't, because when they
call and ask for a copy of it, or when
you ask for a replacement, it may take a while. Yep, okay,
what's your name said? If rude all right said, we
(51:35):
will get right to that. You do know that it
takes a while to get a replacement diploma, right, Okay,
It'll just take a while. We have to verify you
did attend here. We have to verify all of the
coursework that you burned your diploma. Brother, I'm sympathetic, power
to your cause, right on? All right? Your truth? Cool,
(51:56):
But it's gonna take a while. We're gonna have to verify.
And if the teach sure that taught you isn't on
staff anymore, we're gonna have to track him or her down.
If they died. Wow, sucks for you. We have to
verify your coursework all over again. And then it takes
a while for processing, shipping, and handling. I mean, if
you see in the postal service, that's how I would
(52:21):
be handling this forty minutes past the hour. It's a
tragedy and the left is responsible.
Speaker 3 (52:29):
It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Though I am
fighting the crud.
Speaker 1 (52:39):
I am a gamer, and so I am here anyway,
and it's time for some healthy expectations, which really is
all about optimum health naturally, because even Joe Camps, if
you've noticed, has has segued over to we're over medicated
and we need need more natural solutions. And so doctor Hart's,
(53:02):
good morning, how are you, sir?
Speaker 2 (53:04):
I am good, Preston, sorry to hear you. I'm feeling well.
Speaker 1 (53:07):
Well, it happens, spring, summer, cold stink. But whatever. Tell
me this when when you lay out a topic like
are we pulling weeds or producing good soil?
Speaker 3 (53:20):
Yeah, you're already laughing. Okay, so what what are we
talking about here?
Speaker 2 (53:27):
Well, I don't get a response back from me. I
know you're sitting there listening, looking looking at my topic
and going, what of the world is he talking about?
But anyway, what it this is is this, you know,
when you know we're we're obviously really engaging a chronic
disease epidemic, and now we're now we're actually seeing it.
It's been around for a long long time, and nobody.
I mean, I've been looking at it for forty years,
(53:48):
and now all of a sudden, it's wonderful someone's actually
recognizing it. But when we look at this thing, you
know this, if we don't do something about the way
we look at the way we look at healthcare in general,
and the way we attack these problems, it's not going
to really help too much. And what I mean by
this is that there's different ways to look at the
(54:09):
reason we are getting this chronic disease. And if I
like the farmer analogy, because I have these southern farmers
that used to come into me from South Georgia and
I'd ask them, you know, how do you get a
really healthy crop? When you grow a crop? Is it
the seed that you have or is it the soil
that you're trying to cultivate? And they always said to me,
he goes, well, the seed's important, but it's the soil.
(54:29):
We don't get the soil healthy, we don't get a
good crop. And what we've done with the body is
that our cells and our body really is our soil.
It's I mean, the cells are the seeds. Excuse me.
And there's the soil that we grow the seeds in,
which is the innerstition of the body, which is the
cells are in almost a lot of water, plus it's
(54:51):
connective tissue and interstisium, and therefore the environment that the
cells are in produces a healthy celler an unhealthy cell.
And what we're doing is we're trying to develop a crop.
And when you don't, when you grow crops that are
in very very healthy soil, they get high resistance. They
resist disease, they resist all kinds of they don't need
(55:13):
somebody pesticize. That's what they do with organic is they
just grow very very healthy crops, and they also resist
all kinds of different weather changes and so forth, and
therefore you don't need so much of that. So what
we've done is we've tried to have very unhealthy soil.
We've grown unhealthy crops. But basically we get weeds throughout
(55:33):
our body, which are cancer cells and different diseases, and
then we go after the cancer cell and try to
pull the weed. We try to actually just pull them,
which we need to do. Is something wrong with that,
We need to get the weed out, But we don't
do anything to change the innerstitionum or the soil, the
healthy of the soil, and therefore we end up producing
them right again. And until this is I believe the
(55:53):
reason I want to bring this up is this a
great motivation because we have to we have to change
a lot of stuff. We've got to look at boxes,
we've got to start to know have better food. We
got to change some things. It's going to be uncomfortable
in many cases, maybe change the way we eat. But
if we don't do this, we're not going to change
the biological train we call it, which we grow sells in.
And therefore we're going to continue just to pull leads.
(56:14):
We're not We're not going to be able to get
to the inline cause of the problem. So that's what
I mean by that. We got to we've got to
be able to get some changes in what we do
and what we eat, and by doing that we avoid
a lot of the other type of necessary procedures in
medicine that is existing.
Speaker 1 (56:31):
Great intel, Doctor Heart's good challenge for everybody right there,
and that's why we call this segment optimum health. Naturally.
Speaker 2 (56:40):
I hope you feel better, buddy.
Speaker 1 (56:41):
Thank you my friend doctor David Harts with us this morning,
and good wisdom as goalways, but no, really, that's why
building an immune system is about nutrients that allow your
body to function the way it's supposed to function. And
that's part of why imman. You know, therapy so important
right now, and traditional medicine is starting to lean on
(57:04):
it because you can't just pop a drug to fix things.
You can address a symptom. Maybe forty seven minutes after
the hour, back with a road trip suggestion and more
on The Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 3 (57:28):
It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 1 (57:43):
We're almost there. School season is about over. Some kids
graduating this week, maybe a few next, but we're there
Memorial Days Monday. Yeah, and so my road trip suggest
question opens today. It's the new Universal Studios theme park.
(58:08):
It opens today. If you've watched any TV, you've seen
the ads about the Epic Universe at Universal Resorts in Orlando.
The Epic Universe is the fourth theme park at Universal
Orlando Resort, and they have built on everything that they've
(58:29):
done previously. They've taken all that they've done and learned
and put it in this new park. It opens today.
A lot of different ticket options, of course, at the
center of it is the Celestial Park. It's going to
(58:49):
have its own rights to It has a bunch of restaurants,
The Blue Dragon, pan Asian Restaurant, The Atlantic, which is
surf and turf inside an aquarium. Wonder if that means
if you get wet, do you need to bring a
towel if you're inside the aquarium. There's the Oaken Star Tavern,
(59:11):
Barbecue and Pizza Moon, which I think serves pizza. I
think it's got its own rides. This Celestial Park has
its own rides. It's got a Constellation Carousel, which is
a carousel, but the characters that you sit on and
(59:32):
ride that normally just go up and down in a circle.
They spend three point sixty two no thank you, no, no, no,
no no, but uh Astronomika. Astron Mika is another ride.
There's Stardust Racers, and then we get to the Four Worlds.
(59:55):
There are portals to all four worlds from this center
place Ministry of Magic, which is Harry Potter. They've got
a it's kind of nineteen twenties France Flare to it
seen in the Fantastic Beasts movie. It will have Harry
(01:00:17):
Potter in the Battle at the Ministry. That's the key ride.
The second area is Dark Universe, and I know you'll
think less of me, but I can't help it. I
think this one's gonna be cool because it's got all
the Universal monsters, Dracula, Frankenstein, the Werewolf, Bride of Frankenstein,
(01:00:43):
the Mummy, the Invisible Man, creature from the Black Lagoon.
Are you kidding me? Who? Okay, got their own rides,
their own experiences. Then they're the Super Nintendo World. They've
got their own Super Nintendo World there, and the the
(01:01:06):
the centerpiece of that is Mario Kart Bowser's Challenge. Come on,
who doesn't love Mario Kart? Everybody loves Mario Kart. Come on.
And then there's how to Train Your Your Dragon. It's
kind of a Viking land, so you're dealing with interactive
dragons there, and they have an animated video tour on
(01:01:34):
that and you can stay there they have. It's got
its own hotel as well. So I'm just saying, there
you go, road trip idea. Summertime's coming right here in Florida.
Universal Epic Universe. Don't forget box fans. We need your
(01:01:55):
box fans. Drop them off at Ace Hardware. Pick them
up at it Is Hardware, drop them off in Bay
County and Walton County in Panama City area and here
drop them off at our building or Refreshment Services PEPSI
on Pensacola Street and our thanks to Westminster Oaks for
helping us with that. But we need We're way behind.
I don't know why we're way behind. We need your
(01:02:16):
box fans when we come back, Doctor Ed Moore will
join us a little more history. Here are the Morning
Show with Preston Scott. Our three is next and here
(01:02:39):
we go the third and final hour at least today
of the Morning Show with Preston Scott and Preston. Who's Jose?
It is Thursday on the program, and it's time for
a little more history. And joining me on the program
is our resident historian, doctor Ed Morgand morning sir, how
are you.
Speaker 6 (01:02:57):
I'm doing okay? How you doing?
Speaker 3 (01:02:58):
I'm just wonderful, absolutely good, absolutely incredible.
Speaker 6 (01:03:05):
Yeah, I missed seeing you face to face there having
a call in this morning, but always good to see you.
Speaker 1 (01:03:11):
Better safe than sorry for the both of us were
at that we're at that, we're at that stage in life. Hey,
for the sake of those who might have missed an
earlier segment or two set the stage the United States
World War One quickly? How did we get drawn into it?
And what are the circumstances that led to its ending?
Speaker 6 (01:03:32):
Well, I guess we should go back to how that
start and why did Germany basically start World War One?
As we talked about last month, there were a lot
of wars in the late eighteen hundreds in and amongst
various countries in Europe fighting each other, and then the
United States obviously in eighteen ninety eight thought Spain. You've
(01:03:52):
got to remember that we were ending an era, almost
at the end of an era of lots of oligarchies
and royalty and czars and that kind of governance. So
it was not a real stable situation in Europe, or
at first. In August of nineteen fourteen, Germany decided to
(01:04:13):
declare war on Russia, so you would think it was
just another one on one kind of thing. But a
few days later, now we're going to also declare war
on France. And then they started ignoring what Russia by
invading France, so they were at technically at war with Russia,
but not really fighting Russia at that point in time,
they were going to focus completely on France. They wanted
(01:04:35):
to influence all of Europe. Germany wanted an Austria Hungary alliance,
wanted to assert their power and influence all over the continent.
They invaded Belgium in order to attack France, thinking they
could push the British troops that were in France back
across the English Channel. Well, that invading Belgium brought England
(01:04:58):
fully into the war. Now you've got a bigger conflagation.
It's not I always founded a misnomer to call it
a world war. It was a world war because each
of those empires had people all the countries and areas
all over the world that they controlled. But the war
was a European war. That war was a European war,
(01:05:20):
unlike World War two that we'll talk about in another episode.
But it was a European war. That one side was Germany, Austria, Hungary,
the Ottoman Empire, which essentially was Turkey and Bulgaria fighting
against Russia, France, Britain, and then in nineteen eighteen the
United States. Italy interestingly was initially allied with the German group,
(01:05:46):
but then decided, now we're going to set this one
out and then later actually came in on the side
of the US and the Allies. Why did Germany do it?
They were largely surrounded, I think by powerful countries and
other armies, and they, I think probably felt that it
was a preemptive strike. We're going to take care of
(01:06:08):
the problems that might occur around us and boil boy.
It caused the war that we'll talk another later about
how many people died, but they were basically about eight
or ten events that led to the end of World
War Two. It started in nineteen fourteen August and ended
(01:06:29):
in nineteen eighteen, nineteen nineteen with the armistice, and millions
of people died because of arrogance, because of desire to
take land that was not theirs. Very unfortunate and circumstance.
Speaker 1 (01:06:43):
Joining me, Doctor ed Moore this morning, it's a little
more history. We're talking about World War One, which at
the time was called the Great War because there hadn't
been a World War II, so we didn't number it.
And so we're talking about what went into that war,
what it was about, and how we got drawn into it.
More to come with Doctor More next on the Morning
(01:07:05):
Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 5 (01:07:14):
The News radio one hundred point seven WFLA.
Speaker 1 (01:07:28):
Eleven Minutes past the Hour with doctor Ed Moore at
the method of fighting a war in World War One
was it was this transitional time, right it was. It
was the time from the Civil War and the Spanish
American War where you just lined up and you took
your best shot, and then it became a little more sophisticated.
(01:07:49):
But it was kind of a hybrid, wasn't it.
Speaker 6 (01:07:51):
Yeah, it was one of those weird circumstanses around the battlefields.
There'd be horses and carts pulled by horses and mechanized
vils and all, you know, all kinds of There's some
great movies about that. There was a movie about just
about a horse that from World War One.
Speaker 1 (01:08:07):
Yep.
Speaker 6 (01:08:08):
If you know, they had a long line that we'll
talk about in a minute that kind of separated France
from Germany. And when I look at these things, I'd
like to think about what would happen if the results
had been different, you know, what would have occurred in
the world? Says Germany had just attacked France only and
(01:08:28):
France didn't have allies, and Germany it took France. What
would Europe look like now if the US hadn't gotten
in the war, what would have happened in Europe? And
the events that led to the end of the war,
I think were really fascinating. There was a telegram called
the Zimmerman Telegram from the Brits intercepted, and it was
a telegram from the German foreign secretary to his counterpart
(01:08:51):
in Mexico. Now think of that. They wanted Mexico to
enter the war and attack the United States from below
as German ally, and the German promises were that they
would be able to reclaim Texas, New Mexico and Arizona
and the come back being part of Mexico. And then
they asked Mexico to enless Japan and the war. So
(01:09:13):
they were trying to use all these other countries to
further their aims. But it backfired on them because the
United States saw that was not pleased with that. If
you remember, we were we had just been down on
the Mexican border. My grandfather was one of the troops
from Florida that went down there, chasing Pontovia all around
(01:09:33):
in Mexico. The relations between the US and Mexico were
strained at that point in time, Germany tried to take
advantage of that. The second item was unrestricted submarine warfare
that Germany began in nineteen fifteen because they declared all
the waters around Great Britain to be war zones, and
in doing that they were trying to limit supplies, particularly
(01:09:55):
from the United States to England. So I started sinking
ships that were some of them were chartered in the
US and some in other countries, one of which was,
if you recall, was the Lusitania. It was a Cunard
line that had been a passenger line, big herald of
it being the fastest way to get across the Atlantic
(01:10:16):
from nineteen oh four to nineteen fourteen, but it started
carrying troops and supplies and other equipment in addition to passengers.
Just regular Preston Scott on the boat having a holiday
in the middle of a war. Kind of unusual. When
they sank the Lusitania off the coast of Ireland, right
off of Old Head May May of fifteen, Tuesday at
(01:10:39):
nineteen fifteen, almost twelve hundred people died in that boat
being sunk right off the coast of Ireland. A big
uproar in the United States that helped to add the
war fervor in our country. A third item would be
the Russian Revolution that occurred. Russia was in the war
against Germany and then had a revolution of their own
(01:10:59):
going on, the Bolshevik Revolution that occurred in Marsh of
nineteen seventeen. They deposed this Cizar, created a communist and
socialist government, offered peace proposals, and Ukraine decided Russia wanted
out of the world, that the people who now were
running Rossia just didn't want to be bothered with it.
(01:11:21):
Here you talk now with Russia and Ukraine at war. Well,
the Ukrainian Province of Russia, they proclaimed themselves to be
an independent state allied with Germany, and Germany tried to
occupy that area, but they got so busy on the
Western Front they really couldn't control it at all. So
now Russia and Ukraine and those areas aren't really engaged
(01:11:42):
anymore in World War One. So there's a lot of
changing players and people that were happening here. January nineteenth eighteen,
you and I did a show on this about the
flu planned pandemic. We just went through one of those,
which it was called the Spanish Flu. Started really in
the United States. I think it was a military base
(01:12:03):
in Kansas. But when we started sending people over to Europe,
we brought disease with us an estimated fifty to one
hundred million people. They really didn't have good count on
that died from that flu. The troop movements all across
Europe spread it rapidly. That caused a lot of lulls
and fighting in some places, bigger fighting in other places,
(01:12:25):
and people being sick all over the place.
Speaker 1 (01:12:28):
Ed stand By sixteen passed the hour. More to come.
How did the United States play a role in ending
World War One and extracting itself from it as well?
Next other Morning Show with Preston Scott. Our history segment
(01:12:56):
today with doctor ed Moore, a little more history World
War One, the Great War as it was called. Then,
Doctor Moore, how did we end this battle? How did
it come to a close.
Speaker 6 (01:13:10):
There was a spring offensive in March of nineteen eighteen
that Germany did. They decided they were really going to
hit France hard to push Great Britain back across the channel.
Over five hundred thousand troops died in that Spring offensive
between the Allies and the German side. Then there was
a rebellion of Austria. Hungary had a military rebellion that
(01:13:33):
screwed them all up. They were really interested in going
down the Balkans, but most of their military was comprised
of Siloeens and Serbians and Czechs and Ruthenians. There were
sort of conscripts. They didn't really have people who really
wanted to be in the war. There was one hundred
days offensive in August of nineteen eighteen. US is now in.
(01:13:54):
We're pushing hard. We pushed German back, pushing back across
the Hindenburg Line, which collapse and it opened up the
underbelly there of Germany. It gave the Allies momentum to
move hard, and that the Russians at the same time
we're attacking that had what was called the Brusolava offenses
(01:14:16):
that really weak, totally weakened the Austro Hungary forces and
Germany now had to fight on two fronts. The Russolava
Offensive said over half a million people died in that
spring offensive. Over a million troops like one point two
million troops died between the Russian sides and the German side,
huge casualties. Most of the fighting taking place again in
(01:14:39):
northwest Ukraine. So it brings us to today and the
problem we still have. Then Germany had a revolution in
the middle of a war. The people kind of overthrew
the imperial government formed a republic. So Kaiser Wilhelm was second,
was forced to create a He tried to create a
constitutional monarchy. The United States said no way, We're not
(01:15:02):
negotiating with the Kaiser, so he exiled moved in the Netherlands,
and that created the Weimar Republic. Leftists from the Soviet
Union that communism wasn't just in Russia. There were a
lot of them throughout Europe and they formed a significant
part of the coalitions that created the Weimar Republic and
(01:15:25):
created problems. Key elements and ending the war really were
the extreme economic burdens. They were running out of money
and supplies. There were huge impacts of defeat on Germany
in creation of the Weimar Republic and why it was weak,
and huge social tensions between the general population and the
(01:15:47):
former aristocratic elites. Royalty was on its way out. It
was done really the mainland of Europe, and communism and
socialism were attractive tonics for the downtroden so those movements
grow there was actually a group called the Spartacus Group,
which was the German Communist Party called it was from
(01:16:09):
the Spartacus League. I kicked picture in Kirk Douglas running
around Germany, but I'm not sure why they It was
put down that socialist rebellion was put down by the
Frey Corps excuse me, which was a paramilitary groups. Really
a lot of uniform stilled soldiers in Germany post war,
(01:16:31):
but we had limited them to only one hundred thousand
troops total after the end of the war, so Germany
was very shaky. In November nineteen eighteen, the armisist was
signed to the Victor Goes to Spoils. The treaty defined
German borders. Germany lost lots of territory. They had to
pay war reparations one hundred and thirty two billion gold marks,
(01:16:55):
which crippled, totally crippled their economy. They were forced to
take responsibility for the entire war, had the humiliation of
loss plus the economic burdens they were responsible held responsible
for the entire loss and damage, all of which you're thinking,
this is at the end of the teens heading into
the Roaring twenties. Well, the rowing didn't happen so much there.
(01:17:17):
Cabaret the movie kind of captured what the social life
was at that point, and that led to the depression.
In nineteen twenty nine, there was a worldwide depression, so
a lot of the current or issues of post World
War One. You could see the planet the seeds planted
from how World War One ended and how the world
(01:17:38):
treated Germany. It led to the rise of Hitler and
the rise of German social movement social movement, and there
was a new world order in the nineteen twenties. It
was the end of royalty in Czars in the beginning
of republic governments, but with strong socialist ingredients in those
republic governments that are still there. So when we see
(01:18:02):
split elections and things going on in various countries across Europe,
it's been that way since the end of World War One.
The cost of war was huge and this huge burden
on the economies, but people survived, except for the millions
and millions of people that died because of ambition and
(01:18:23):
desire to take land that was not theirs.
Speaker 1 (01:18:27):
Always good to visit with you, ad, Thanks for the
history lesson and feel better and we'll talk again next month.
Speaker 6 (01:18:33):
You too.
Speaker 1 (01:18:34):
Thank you, Thank you. Doctor Ed Moore with us a
little more history on the Morning Show with Preston Scott,
This is the Way.
Speaker 3 (01:18:48):
On news Radio one hundred point seven WUFLA.
Speaker 1 (01:18:56):
All right, thirty five almost thirty six minutes past the hour.
Lee Williams, the gunwriter, joins us tomorrow we may have
US congressman and gubernatorial candidate Byra Donald's with us tomorrow,
acting like your pants are on fire in there? You
all right, What's what's going on? No? I thought this
(01:19:19):
was a song. It's not okay. You had panic written
all over your face, and it concerns me. I worry
for you. This is the way I was born. With
panic on your face. Yes, okay, okay, fair enough. I
will file that away. But tomorrow, of course, your calls
what's the beef and best and worst good news, et cetera.
(01:19:41):
As tempted as I am to just bag it and
call call in sick tomorrow, I am not doing that
because I'm off on Monday. That's enough, especially since I'm
taking next Friday and Monday off. So yeah, so I'm
gonna burn a couple days next week and the week after.
Gotta use up the time, use it or lose it.
(01:20:04):
You know that drill big story in the press box
is not me being a little under the weather. I've
tried to keep my whining to a minimum, but I'm
not above it. I'm just not. It is a tragedy
(01:20:26):
that we are a world where people just get killed
because they're this, that or the other, didn't do anything
other than they were born Jewish. I want you to
think about that for a second. Whoever this sick putt
(01:20:47):
is that shot and killed this young couple about to
be married, who worked for the Israeli government and were
in our protection, our jurisdiction. This guy singularly targeted them
because they were Jewish. You know who else did that? Hitler.
(01:21:29):
Hitler is largely, though not completely, reviled around the world
as being one of the sickest, most evil humans that's
ever walked this planet. There's nothing that separates this guy
from Hitler, nothing other than he killed two Hitler killed millions.
(01:21:55):
Wants the final solution, whatever freaking lose. So we're now
killing people for solely that reason. And this is all
being fomented, bolstered, encouraged, if you will, on college campuses
(01:22:23):
across the country. I wonder how many vigils will be
held at Columbia and at Harvard, in the Ivy League
schools and the various campuses across America. Will they call
for an end of this type of violence? Will they
say this is not the way to Will they I'll
(01:22:49):
bet you they don't. I will bet you they don't.
And I wonder how many Democrats we'll I'm sure we'll
hear the Chuck Schumer's, the Nancy Pelosis of the world
say something about that we don't condone this type of violence,
(01:23:11):
blah blah.
Speaker 3 (01:23:11):
Blah blah blah.
Speaker 1 (01:23:14):
But I'm wondering if they will go beyond that, Will
they condemn these hate rallies? Will Congress finally connect the
dots between these rallies and these acts in this particular
act just something to ponder, But that doesn't do anything
(01:23:38):
for the families that lost their loved ones, now, does it.
This just sickens me. Forty minutes past the ho it
is the big story in the press box today.
Speaker 5 (01:23:52):
On news Radio one hundred point seven Double UFLA.
Speaker 1 (01:24:20):
Just a couple other little tidbits on that story that
I've written in my notes here. Today, students are apparently
burning diplomas over this, ashamed to graduate from a school
that's maybe starting to crack down on these pro to
I don't know. I mean, somehow these people think it's
(01:24:45):
okay to hinder the ability of a Jewish student to
walk from one place to another on a campus. No,
it's not okay. And so they're now burning their diplomas.
(01:25:05):
And I've shared this all morning long, and I'll continue
to advise presidents of universities near and far. Here's how
you deal with that. You make an announcement that if
you burn your diploma, you will have to have it
replaced officially. You know, with the embossed stamp seal signature.
(01:25:39):
There's a cost attached to that time and expense, and
until then you won't be able to say you graduated.
Because when an employer says, yeah, we've got a we've
got an application from Sarreed for Rizzi or Bill Smith,
(01:26:02):
I don't care. I don't care who it is. They've
applied for a job. They say they have a degree
from Colombia. Could you please verify what they didn't show
you diploma? No, they said they lost it or it
was destroyed in something. We didn't catch it. But can
you verify they don't have a diploma, Well, we can't
(01:26:25):
verify it. So here's what you do. You go to
the website, you fill out the application for verification, or
you can simply advise them that they need to apply
for a replacement diploma, and then you assign a ridiculous
cost to it, thousand dollars whatever. And it'll take time.
(01:26:52):
You know that. It just takes time. We got to
chase down and make verify all your coursework and everything.
You know, you burned it, You burned the evidence. We
didn't you did. Sorry, once you graduated, you're microfish, baby.
We don't know who you are because you're out of
the system. Now we've got you records, I'm sure, so
(01:27:16):
we'll have to verify your grades and you know that
you took the requisite number of classes to have earned
whatever diploma you say you've earned, and we'll let you know.
It could take a while. Just saying we got forty
thousand students that we're worried about that are on campus
taking courses right now, another fifteen thousand online. It'll take
(01:27:37):
a while. Good luck to you. Nah, no tolerance for that, none,
zip zero none. I think you make them very uncomfortable
deciding to do such a childish stunt. I mean, if
your child burned just destroys their toy at a temp pertensrum,
(01:27:58):
do you just buy them another one? Or do you
say to them, no, you'll live without your toy for
a while. You may not ever get that toy back again.
You destroyed it. Oh well, you see that's what I
would think. They destroyed it in a temper tantrum. Why
am I replacing it?
Speaker 8 (01:28:18):
No?
Speaker 1 (01:28:19):
Forty six minutes past the hour, I got more to
talk about next, wrap up the program in mere moments.
Box fans. We need some box fans. We need some
(01:28:45):
box fans.
Speaker 3 (01:28:47):
Lots and LUTs and LUTs and LUTs and lots and
lots of box fans.
Speaker 1 (01:28:52):
Sorry, that's all I got. It's best I could do.
Whether you are listening to us in the Warlton Bay
County areas, the big Bend with the hub being Leon County.
But it could be Jefferson, it could be Wacola, could
be Gadston, could even be Taylor. It could be le Fayette,
(01:29:20):
could be Franklin, could be.
Speaker 2 (01:29:25):
That.
Speaker 1 (01:29:25):
It could even be Thomas Grady in Georgia Tech. We
need box fans lots of box fans. If you are
in the Bay Walton County areas, check out the ACE
Hardware store near you and buy a box fan and
leave it with him. It will be picked up by
(01:29:47):
Bay County Council on Aging and will go to senior
adults help them. Well, it's hot enough right now, right,
That's why we did this in May. We tried to
beat the heat, and it'll get hot again. We got
but we're staying in the nineties. And then here in
Tallahassee Westminster Oaks partnering with us. Thank you very much,
(01:30:09):
And you can drop off at Refreshment Services PEPSI thirty
nine nineteen West Penzecola Street. They'll accept your fans there
or here at the iHeart Building. Now, the thing about
here is you just gotta if you need to, just
(01:30:30):
leave him by the door. Come around the left side
of the building and just leave him by the door.
If no one answers, all right, But we need your fans,
lots of fans. We need three hundred and fifty fans.
And I don't know how many have been dropped off
at PEPSI. I don't know how many have been dropped
off at ACE hardware, but we were looking for three
point fifty in each market. That's a heavy lift. I
(01:30:51):
think we did one hundred and some last year here
in Tallahassee. So do what you can. Box fans, thank you.
Speaker 3 (01:30:59):
Brought to you by Baron No Heating and Air. It's
the morning show on WFLA.
Speaker 1 (01:31:07):
The Red Letters. We started with Matthew twenty five verses
thirty one and thirty two. It was a pretty good
tap on the shoulder and we asked a very simple question.
Are you a sheep or are you a goat? Know
this you are one or the other. That's just it.
(01:31:34):
I love things that are simple. I'm a simple minded guy,
simple things. Thank you Jesus. Big story in the press
box today. Two Israeli embassy staffers killed in a shooting
near a Jewish museum in Washington, DC last night. This
guy's proud of himself, free postine, free Palestine. Whatever. No,
(01:32:00):
I will not use the loser's name. The Biden diagnosis,
that bid In diagnosis requires questions to be answered, and
we're going to keep asking those questions. We're gonna we're
gonna keep bringing it up. We're going to keep pointing
(01:32:20):
out we need to know who was running the country
for four years? How do we get into this mess?
It wasn't Joe. Joe is clueless. Joe was sucking down
ice cream. Man, he didn't know, he didn't know which
way the exit was. We listed the questions. Jake Tapper
(01:32:41):
doing his uh rehab tour. Yeah, well we missed it,
but uh you know the mainstream No you, you and
the mainstream media covered up. You were complicit. You were
You didn't miss it, you were engaged in it, the
cover up of Joe Biden's condition, talked about what's going
on in South Africa. President Trump dropped some bombs on
(01:33:04):
the South African president and he didn't have much to
say in response. Doctor Edmore joined us with some history.
Doctor David Harts talked about the soil of your body,
what are you planting seeds in? And covered a lot
of other grounds.
Speaker 3 (01:33:21):
So check out the podcast if you missed any of.
Speaker 1 (01:33:24):
It, and we will be back tomorrow. Lee Williams, the
gun writer, What's the Beef and more friends have an
awesome day, Thanks so much.