Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:16):
Well, guess who's back seated in the chair. We are
now back to the Morning Show with Preston Scott as
opposed to the Morning Show without Preston Scott. Great to
be with you. My thanks to Jose and of course
Grant Allen for stepping in yesterday. Look, when I take
(00:38):
a little time off, sometimes we'll have Grant able to date.
Sometimes we won't, so I'm grateful every time he gets
a chance to do it. I sent him a note.
I got up burly and played golf yesterday. I took
advantage of just taking the day and went out and
beat most everybody out onto the golf course and had
a beautiful morning and a nice round off as well.
(01:00):
I might add, But but I wrote to Grant, I said,
doesn't it feel good to get some things off your chest?
He said, better than therapy? And I could tell. I
could tell he add some things that he wanted to share,
And so it was a lot of fun listening. I
hope you enjoyed it as well. Let's start with some
scripture one Peter five, verses six and seven. Listen to
(01:25):
these words humble yourselves therefore, under the mighty hand of God,
listen to this so that at the proper time he
may exalt you, casting all your anxieties on him because
he cares for you. Before the show started, I was
(01:52):
I was listening to some praise and worship and what
I was listening to was Chris Tomlin and he was singing,
good good Father. He's a good good father. It's who
(02:13):
he is. We humble ourselves so that when God chooses
to lift us up for his purposes, people know it's God.
Does that make sense? People just know that it's God.
(02:48):
When you walk in humility, it's and not false humility.
There's a difference humility that is found in the recognition
that whatever successes, whatever achievements, whatever things come your way,
(03:12):
it is because of God's grace period end of sentence.
And then when God lifts you up for some extraordinary purpose,
everyone that knows you knows you walk in humility and
that this elevation is strictly of God. And it causes
(03:37):
people to just go, whoa, look at God, not look
at you, not look at me, look at God. And
then it says is part of the same, you know,
words of encouragement here casting all your anxiety, He's on
(04:00):
him all all you know what that word means. You know,
if you look at it in the Greek, you know
what it means all. And why can you do that?
(04:26):
Because he cares for you. God is God, because He's
able to care for all of the sheep in his
flock and look to each one of us and our
(04:52):
individual lives, our individual needs. So we start there, ten
past the hour, take a look inside the American Patriots Almanac,
start unpacking. What is the Tuesday, June third, June third
edition of The Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 2 (05:22):
Dubn u fla vn't passed the hour?
Speaker 1 (05:36):
He is Jose, Jose, can you see if you want
to add a little flare?
Speaker 3 (05:44):
Jose?
Speaker 1 (05:45):
Can you see at at dawn's daily light? I knew
someone that sang it that way, Ose. Can you see
by the dawns dearly light? What's a down's dirty?
Speaker 2 (06:00):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (06:05):
Let's see. Seventeen seventy June third, Gaspard di Portola and
Junepata Satta officiate the founding of a mission at Monterey, California.
Union forces gain a victory at Philippi, West Virginia in
(06:29):
the first land battle of the Civil War. It's like
it's like, both sides are like, are we going to
do this? Are we really doing this? Are we going
to war? I can't imagine. There had to be a
(06:51):
level of shock after that that we're in this now.
Three years later, seven thousand Union troops were shot down
at Cold Harbor, Virginia, one of the bloodiest days of
the Civil War. Eighteen sixty four. Oh my gosh, Americans
fighting each other. Oh well. Eighteen eighty Washington, DC, Alexander
(07:17):
Graham Bell sends the first wireless telephone message on his
newly invented photophone. Nineteen sixteen, Lewis Brandei's first Jewish member
of the Supreme Court is sworn. In nineteen sixty five, Edward
White Gemini four becomes the first American to take a
space walk. So there you go. Let's take a peek
(07:40):
in the national day of calendar. It is National egg Day.
Who knew that eggs would be so a chickens? Think
of the usefulness of chickens. Without chickens, you have no
(08:04):
chick fil A, my friends, you have no chicken fries,
you have no chicken nuggets, you have no chicken wings.
You don't have chicken Cordon blue, you don't have chicken Kiev.
(08:26):
You don't have a lot of things that we have
come to know and love without chickens. You don't have
eggs you're you're eating, Like, have you seen the size
of a coil egg? They sell those at the grocery store,
quail eggs. They're they're like, why would you? Could someone
(08:50):
email me please that has ever used coil eggs for something?
I need to know. Why in the world would you bother?
What potential use could come out of a quail egg.
They're the size of those little, teeny tiny chocolate eggs
(09:13):
you get at Easter. They're tiny. What good could they
possibly do? You'd need a hundred of them to make
a decent scrambled egg breakfast. I'm serious. I would love
to know the purpose of coail eggs other than I mean,
(09:33):
in nature obviously to give birth to quail. But in
the grocery store, why what would ever be the point
unless they have some incredible seasoning factor to them, which
I don't believe. I don't believe they have some ridiculous
amount of protein aside from a standard egg. I just
(09:56):
that blows my mind. Anyway, it is National Egg Day.
Think of what you use eggs for all the recipes,
the dredges, the different things that just breakfast breakfast without eggs,
without chickens, we wouldn't have egg mcmuffins, eggs, benedict, the
(10:19):
good old fashioned scrambled eggs, a breakfast burrito, you would
have none of it. Today's National Chocolate macaroon Day. Oh
coconut with chocolate. Yeah, And it's National Repeat Day. It's
(10:43):
National Repeat Day. It's National Repeat Day. It's National Repeat Day.
It's National Repeat Day. It's National Repeat Day. Oregon State
(11:12):
winning last night over Southern Cal. Watched a little bit
of that game. Really wanted Southern Cal to find a
way to win, but Oregon State clearly the better team.
So f SU will travel out of town. Link Jarrett
said last week, Hey, it is what it is. Would
(11:34):
be great to host for the sake of the fans.
But he said there are advantages to playing on the road.
He said, you just you kind of have everybody's attention.
There's nothing that can distract your team when they are
on the road. And so that's good. So Florida State
will travel to Corvallis, Oregon to take on the Beavers,
(12:00):
and so that ought to be good. Florida State swept
the regional against UH Mississippi State, primarily two of its
three wins came against them. Did not have to play
North Northeastern got a lesson in UH in playing with
the big boys. You know. They entered the regional with
(12:22):
the longest winning streak in the nation, had I don't
know how many games of pitching shut out baseball, and
and a good team. But they got absolutely hammered by
Mississippi State. And the opener barely survived Bethune Cookman before
being knocked out by Mississippi State. And so it was
(12:45):
not quite a one and done for Northeastern, but it
was close. Bethune Cookman good baseball team. That's a good
baseball team. And and so miss Mississippi State ends up
playing Florida State two days in a row and gets
to win a very emotional a lot of energy in
that final game. I thought some inappropriate conduct by players
(13:10):
started by the Mississippi State players. Pitcher for Mississippi State
used to be at Miami. He was throwing well, he
was thrown well. But the right team won. And so
Florida State moves on to the Super Regional again. It's
more Super regionals than anybody else. But you gotta at
(13:32):
some point win the national title, and I'm hoping this
could be a year, but North Carolina advance. I think
right now North Carolina is the best of the surviving teams.
The number one and number two seeds in the tournament
got knocked out Vandy and Texas. They're done, which just
(13:55):
proves there it's no small accomplishment to win your regional
and so congratulations to Link, Jared and the Knowles. On
that Friday, I was out because I was speaking to
a class of graduates at the Wacola Correctional Institute graduating
(14:15):
from a Literacy for Life program that my wife has
piloted and teaches. This is the second facility she is
doing the program in. She has a facilitator in the classroom,
she teaches remotely, goes to the facility once a month,
(14:35):
but working on scaling it up to be able to
offer this coursework across the state. But she asked if
I'd be willing to come and give remarks to the graduates.
I don't know if I offered anything that's useful to them,
but boy did they offer things that were useful to me.
(14:56):
It was just inspiring to hear three of the students
share and to meet them all, to shake their hands,
to look them in the eye, to congratulate them, to
see the joy when they're wearing a cap and gown,
and for many of them the first time ever, it
was rewarding. It was just unbelievably rewarding, and I thought
(15:19):
it was just terrific. It was really really a wonderful,
wonderful time, and I thank Grant Allen for filling in
for me so I could go and speak to the
guys enjoy a little fellowship time with him. They little
praise and worship team that usually is in the chapel service,
(15:42):
but they came over to do the national anthem to
start the thing and had some family members of some
of the incarcerated. I've got a lot more to talk
about with regard to this stuff, but I'll do that
on another time. Twenty seven minutes past the hour, Come
(16:04):
back with little news and the big stories in the
press box Here in the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 4 (16:12):
On News Radio one hundred point seven Doublufla.
Speaker 1 (16:32):
Thirty five minutes past the hours the Morning Show. Happy
Tuesday to you. Great to be back with you. I
feel like I played hooky yesterday, not Friday Friday all
about business sort of. I mean, you know, when I
(16:55):
don't do a show on a Friday morning, that means
I have Thursday afternoon off. And it's lovely, but you know,
and for example, not working Monday, it's really a pretty
cool weekend for me because I'm sort of off from
Thursday afternoon until Monday afternoon because I start, you prep
in the afternoon and evening to lead into the next day.
(17:17):
And so it was lovely, it really was. But glad
to be back with you. The big stories in the
press box. Supreme Court rejects a challenge to two state laws,
one in Maryland, one in Rhode Island. And this is
a very interesting story. There is really strong dissent to
(17:40):
the decision. They did not get a fourth justice. Maryland
has a ban on AR fifteen's Rhode Islands ban is
on magazines that hold more than ten rounds. The Maryland
law is the assault weapons ban, ironic from the free state.
(18:00):
It's called the free State of Maryland. Whatever. Here's what's
what's nuanced about it. Clarence Thomas sam Alito, Neil Gorsich
All agreed they would have they would have granted the
petition to hear the cases, but they needed a fourth vote,
(18:21):
and Justice Roberts Kavanaugh and Cony Barrett declined. However, Kavanaugh
claimed in his statement respecting the denial of the Maryland
case that it does not mean that the court agrees
with the lower court decision or that the issue is
not worthy of review. The AR fifteen issue was recently
(18:44):
decided by the First Circuit and is being considered by
several other courts of appeal. So we put a caveat
on there. It's almost like not this case, but another case,
or we're waiting to see where this all see. I
think this is dune. Settle it, just settle it. But
(19:05):
they did not choose to do that. Clarence Thomas had
stronger words. He tore his colleagues apart, and he basically
concluded that that the fears of the Fourth Circuit relating
to AR fifteens that it would lead to absurd consequences
(19:26):
such as a constitutional right to own a bazooka, rice
and pellet firing umbrella gun, or even a W fifty
four nuclear warhead. He said, it's just outrageous. When I
read that. My immediate thought was, wait a minute, there
are such things? Really, where can they get one? No,
(19:47):
just kidding. It's to fend off the fantastical threat of
Americans lobbing nuclear warheads at one another. The Fourth Circuit
has allowed the very real threat of the government depriving
America of the rifle that they most favor for protecting
themselves and their families, looking to the standard set by
American society rather than our judicial colleagues. And I cannot
(20:10):
see how ar fifteens fall outside the Second Amendments protection.
He's spot on right as he usually is, So we'll
see where this goes. This is going to be challenged again,
there's no doubt. But we're trying to figure out. Okay,
what is it the Kavanaugh's hinting at Kavanaugh's hinting at something.
I think it was wrong. He should have joined the three,
(20:31):
gotten the case and decided the merits of it, because
it might have ended the other cases. You can't define
that as an assault weapon. And I'm going to illustrate
that point later on the other big story is it's
hurricane season. I just wanted to say it because it's official.
(20:53):
I doubt Grant got to it yesterday because I think
he was kind of unloading some things that and I
don't think that was one of them. But hurricane season
is here. The forecast is thirteen to nineteen named storms,
six to ten hurricanes, three to five major. We'll see
(21:14):
there's more to that. I'll talk more about that next hour.
Forty minutes past.
Speaker 4 (21:23):
The Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 1 (21:42):
Got to get caught up and post some interviews on
the Conversations podcast. Remember, the Conversations podcast and the Morning
Show with Preston Scott podcast are available on the iHeartRadio
app and they are free. Like everything else. Now there
is a paid service and you're welcome to it, and
it's a great bargain and value if you're paying for
(22:03):
other services. You just get so much with our paid service.
But you're not only getting playlists of all your favorite
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(22:28):
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(22:50):
you can stream the station live on the app. And
if you miss something, you can, oh say, look up
Presson Scott or the Morning Show with Preston Scott. But
if you just put Preston Scott and then go to podcasts,
you will find my two podcasts. If you just type
(23:11):
in Preston Scott, you may find a music artist that
stole my name. Trust me, I had it first. I
did I know this for a fact, but it's okay.
I share anyway. It's a very easy way for you
(23:32):
to catch sections of the program that you may have missed.
It's the iHeartRadio app. I was shocked at the number
of men at the Correctional Institute that knew my radio program,
that listened to the show. Shout out, shout out, will
collor come on, Thank you very much. It's a delight
meeting them. I knew I heard your voice you on
(23:58):
that station, same station as yep, I'm on before Glenn Beck.
I'm first this kid, but not really saw this story
and it really Israeli's finance Minister Basil El Smotrich has
(24:26):
called publicly at in a speech for the rebuilding of
the Jewish temple on the site of the alak Samosque.
He also wants an expansion of Israel's borders Jewish settlements
in Gaza. But let's circle back to the temple. There
(24:49):
are some that believe that you could rebuild the temple
next to it. I'm just telling you right now, the
moment an attempt is made to rebuild that temple, whether
next to it or in place of or is on,
(25:09):
It is on. It is on. Like Donkey Kong, as
the kids used to say back in the day, he
is fearless. With God's help, we will expand Israel's borders,
bring about complete redemption, and rebuild the temple here. I've
(25:31):
told you that that has been a wish for decades, centuries.
The backstory to this temple and it's rebuilding and what
needs to happen is just one of the most fascinating
stories of history. It really is. Forty six minutes past
the hour, come back. You remember the feature on ESPN
(25:52):
called Sports Science.
Speaker 4 (25:55):
This is the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 1 (26:05):
Huh, look at that new Gingbridge on Fox and Friends
talking about a new book. Oh yeah, that's right. He
was on my show first. Yeah, it's true. Though, it's true.
We had nut on last week. I recorded the interview
and aired it the very next day. Yeah, that's pretty cool,
(26:28):
all right, John Brincus. Most of you have no idea
who he is. If you are a sports fan and
ever watched ESPN, you would know his work. He is
the co creator former host of a series on ESPN
(26:53):
called Sports Science. Sports Science was a brilliant piece. In fact,
the guy won six Emmy Awards for Sports Science. They
were short, little clips. They were longer clips. He explained
(27:14):
the science behind the things that you watched on sports
The science behind a curveball, the difference between a curveball
and a slider versus a knuckleball, a two seam fastball
versus a four seam fastball. Why a cutter does this
versus that basketball? Why shooting at an arc of this
(27:36):
leads to more made baskets versus that The amount of
force needed to generate this, that or the other result
in a baseball hitting it with a bat. I mean,
it was just one thing after another. Running How running
in this position leads to better aerodynamics than this position.
It was just fascinating stuff that showed and would in
(28:01):
fact inform trainers how to better help athletes achieve Why
a golf swing generates this much clubhead speed with this
type of motion versus that this kind of shaft versus that,
I mean, just incredible stuff. Here's why I'm talking about
John Brencis. Because John killed himself and committed suicide at
(28:29):
the age of fifty four. He battled depression for years.
In fact, he talked about the fact that he had
attempted suicide before his dog intervened and saved him. I
don't know if he had a specially trained dog. There
are dogs, I don't know if you're aware of this.
There are dogs that are trained to smell a certain
(28:53):
chemical that is exerted when someone is undergrowing, undergoing personal stresses.
The dog recognizes it and kind of interacts and engages
with the person, saying come on now, kind of snap
out of it, almost type of thing. I don't know
if it was that type of dog or just having
the dog there. I don't know which it was, but
(29:16):
his family it is with release. This statement is with
profound sadness. Sadness that we share the news that John
Brencis has passed away, and then they talked a little
bit about his resume. John lost his fight with this
terrible illness of depression on May thirty one, twenty twenty five.
His heartbroken family and friends request privacy at his time
(29:38):
and encourage anyone who's struggling with depression to seek help. Absolutely,
here's what I wanted to share first, with all due respect,
suicide is an incredibly selfish act. You may think you're
(30:07):
stopping your pain. You have just heaped coals of it
on your family and friends, heaping piles of it on
family and friends, and so anybody listening right now battling it.
(30:28):
It is the worst thing you can do for your
family and friends. Satan wants to convince you, Oh, everyone,
it'll be better, You'll be better off. No, it's the opposite.
Of course. Satan about subtraction and division. God's about addition
and multiplication. The other thing is success does not equal
(30:54):
happiness and enjoy. And I would suggest that you you
zero in and focus on your faith. Hour two of
the Morning Show with Preston Scott is next. All right,
(31:31):
let's do the second hour of the radio program, shall
we ruminators? How are you Preston here? Jose there still
with the lingering effects of the cold a couple of
weeks back, still coughing occasionally, so there might be an
extended pregnant pause. That's okay, it's all right. It's good
(31:54):
to be here though. Had a wonderful long weekend. And
who've got cat camick? Next hour? US congresswoman got a
manly minute this hour, some really interesting stories, including I
think we need to go ahead and refer to him
instead of his name, Let's not use his name the
(32:15):
bolder O Biden terrorist, because he is in this country,
because Joe Biden brought him here. He was able to
commit these crimes because the Biden administration gave him a
(32:40):
visa that, oh, by the way, expired. He decided, just
what difference does that make? He just stayed. He was
actually applying for asylum. Why you're from Egypt. If you're
undergoing persecution in Egypt, you certainly can't be shouting free
(33:04):
Palestine and hitting people up with Molotov cocktails and improvised flamethrowers.
Just for a second, I want you to think about
the fact that a woman that survived the Holocaust was
among those that were attacked. Eighty eight year old woman
lived through the Holocaust as a baby, as a child,
(33:30):
only to be in this country and attacked by this loser.
So he used a makeshift flamethrower and Molotov cocktails. He's
not alleged, He's on video. He did this. He confessed
(33:54):
to the crime, and he said he would do it again.
That's all I need to hear. Now, seriously, there's no
need to go to court with this kind of thing. None.
Enjoy your time in a US prison for the rest
of your life. Sixteen counts of attempted murder, the crime
(34:21):
that the attacked victims committed. They were holding a march,
a run, a walk for the remaining hostages to be freed.
So this loser shouts, free Palestine. Funny, why are you
(34:50):
in America? I would love to dissect why are you here?
And if you weren't here just to commit this type
of act. Now, he arrived before the attack on October
of twenty twenty three, so he preceded that is he
(35:11):
a lone wolf? Is he among others? Well, certainly there
are others. There's no doubt there are lone wolves. There
are lone There's no doubt that there are sleeper cells
in this country. But why not carve out some space
for all the Palestinians in Egypt. Iran big country, Iran, Iraq.
(35:43):
Carve out some space for these folks. Now, this is
about eliminating Israel. But I want to take this a
step further. I want to dig into the Molotov cocktail.
(36:04):
The entomology of the Molotov cocktail is fascinating, and share
that next because it begs some questions that must be asked.
Speaker 4 (36:15):
Wing Show with Preston Scott mon on News Radio one
hundred point seven Double UFLA.
Speaker 1 (36:42):
I decided it was worth doing a little digging. Do
you know where the term Molotov cocktail comes from? Where?
How it originated? This is fascinating. Listen to this. During
the Winter War of nineteen thirty nine, the Finns Finland,
Finnish people came up with the term. It was a
(37:09):
pejorative reference to the Soviet foreign minister by Atschoslav Molotov.
It's a guy who is one of the architects of
the Molotov Ribbentrop packed on the eve of World War II.
The name's origin came from propaganda Molotov produced during the
Winter War, mainly his declaration on Soviet state radio that
(37:33):
incendiary bombing missions over Finland were actually airborne humanitarian food
deliveries for the starving. As a result, the Finns sarcastically
dubbed the cluster bombs as Molotov bread baskets. Then later,
when the Finnish military developed a bottled fire bomb used
(37:59):
to and destroy Soviet tanks, the Fins came up with
the actual bottle bomb. They named it a Molotov cocktail
because they used it against Soviet tanks and he was
(38:19):
a Ruski. So the term is actually a finish term
used as kind of a slap in the face in
our sarcastic ah at the Russians, namely the Foreign Minister Molotov.
So that's where the term comes from. Okay, what I
(38:41):
want to get to is what it is. It is
a glass bottle. Obviously, this is a mass attack of
sixteen people. Clearly we need legislation to end the production
of glass bottles. But that's not all. It's commonly used
(39:08):
with a cloth wick. I'm sorry, friends, we're going back
to fig leaves. Chafing will be a little bit difficult.
There will be some uncomfortable chafing in some sensitive areas, shoelaces, cloth,
(39:34):
just saying shirts, shorts, jeans, underwear, it's cloth, clearly, it's the.
Speaker 2 (39:47):
Cloth.
Speaker 1 (39:50):
And then there's the flammable liquids. Anything that's flammable must
now be eliminated. I'm sorry. If you are of the
your chef and you prepare you know, desserts that have
a little flambay where you light the alcohol on fire,
(40:15):
I'm sorry, sorry that it doesn't matter. It was used
in a mass attempted killing, and whatever else he used
to improvise a flamethrower. All of those parts must now
be seized wherever they're manufactured. But you start with glass bottles.
(40:47):
Gotta do it. Sorry, it's uncomfortable. I know. I'll wait
for the cases to be filed. I'll wait for all
of the Blue States to file, and we can sit
and giggle at this all day long, but I'm gonna
continue to make the point. We have to it, we
(41:11):
We've got to we have to nip these types of
things at their source. It's not the person, No, it's
the stuff. It's the cars and the trucks, it's the
fertilizer and the timers, it's the it's the the the cloth,
(41:32):
wicks of the world. It's it's the glass, it's it's
the bat, it's the wood. We gotta stop. We gotta
stop with trees. No more machetes, no more knives. Gonna
I'm sorry, You're just gonna have to tear your food
old school, eat that steak with no cutting. No knives,
(41:55):
no knives, knives. Can't have a knife, not even a
plastic one. No, no more plastic toothbrushes. Do you know
what a toothbrush? Can be? Turned into a shank? Can't
use a toothbrush. I'm gonna have to go back to
(42:17):
using See I was gonna say, you know, the the
bristles on a pine tree or something, but then you're
back to wood trees. Can't have the trees. See what
we're facing as a culture. Gotta get rid of it all,
(42:38):
all of it.
Speaker 5 (42:40):
Seventeen past the hour, just consider all of it.
Speaker 1 (42:54):
All right, let's just for a moment here, set this up.
Greta Thuneberg, Greta, how dare you? Thuneburg, the twenty something
habitual complainer who has taken a break from her global
(43:22):
warming tour to join eleven other left wingers on the
Madleen sailing from southern Italy and they're going to try
to break through the Israeli naval blockade of Gaza. Do
(43:45):
your best to stay on the road.
Speaker 6 (43:48):
Hello, I am currently standing on the Madeline, the ship
that on Sunday, June first, will attempt to again sail
towards the Gaza and to try to break the siege
and open up a humanitarian corridor by delivering aid like
food and medical supplies. The last time we attempted this
(44:12):
about a month ago, the both conscience that we were
about to board. Just a couple of hours before we
were planning to board and set sail, it got bombed
twice and all evidence suggests that it was Israel who
did it. So now we are here in Katania, outside
of Sicily to try to continue our mission, to try again,
(44:33):
because currently we are watching a systematic starvation of two
million people, a livestream genocide, and the world's silence is deadly.
That is why we have to keep trying everything we can,
even if the odds are against us, to try to
(44:58):
protest and do everything we can, and to stand against
Israel's atrocities and war crimes, and to support and stand
in solidity with the people of Palestine. So keep your
eyes on deck, continue flooding the streets, organize, boycott, and
do everything in your power to stand for Palestine.
Speaker 1 (45:21):
Silence. Huh, you've seen what's going on in America. Little girl,
little impotent, little child, clueless. What do you think happened
in October when they use paragliders motorcycles stormed across the
(45:50):
border and attacked men, women and children, families, concert goers.
They weren't attacking military installations, they didn't have the courage
for that. They were attacking homes and apartments and kabootses.
And I'm just I'm shocked. But let me just step
(46:15):
back for a second. And I want to circle into
what were her parents doing when she was ditching school
for climate protests. Her mom's an opera singer, her dad's
an actor. Are they just grateful she's out of the house.
Thank god she's out. She's been lecturing us for years
(46:45):
with her little hell you comments, and why she's given
platforms is beyond me. I'm gonna paraphrase Senator Lindsey Graham.
I hope her parents taught her how to swim, because
(47:06):
if this boat tries to break through, the Israeli Navy.
She's going to need to know how to swim. This
could end very ugly. Yeah, the lack of context. She
(47:27):
has no knowledge the atrocities and war crimes. Does she
not know that the humanitarian aid gets grabbed by hamas
and sold on the black market or kept for themselves.
Twenty seven minutes after be out, I think this is
(47:47):
why parents said be seen and not heard. The Morning
Show with Preston Scott thirty six minutes past the hour
are the big stories of the press box this morning
here on the Morning Show on Preston, he's Jose, good
(48:08):
to be back with you. My thanks to Grant Allen
for filling in yesterday. Expecting thirteen to nineteen named storm,
six to ten hurricanes, three to five major hurricanes. Those
are the expectations. But it's weather forecasting. How often do
we get it right a week from now, let alone
all season long. I mean, we just don't know. We
(48:30):
could have more, we could have less, we could have many,
we could have none that impact the state. What's interesting
is we have a global pattern called enso neutral El Nino.
(48:51):
When you see that there's an El Nino season, that
means that there is more wind likely to shear off
storms in the Atlantic basin, and usually seasons of El
Nino result in fewer storms because the wind currents just
(49:12):
kind of take them apart. Now you'll still get storms,
you'll still have significant weather, but it won't allow for
as many or the severity. Then there's La Nina.
Speaker 2 (49:32):
La Nina.
Speaker 1 (49:37):
Decreases wind shear in the Atlantic basin. So it's El
Nino and La Nina. La Nina is a reduction of
the wind shear. That's not helpful this year. When they
talk about an and so neutral, it means you got neither.
(49:57):
You don't have the wind share, but you don't have
you have average. You don't have an increase, you don't
have a decrease. You have average. It's not El Nino
or La Nina coming out of the Pacific that then
hits the Atlantic. So those are the reasons why the forecast.
(50:23):
I mean, look, you go to all of the different
forecasting models. Whether it's Colorado State, they're predicting seventeen named
storm nine hurricanes, four major, the Weather Channel nineteen named storms,
nine hurricanes four major, ACU Weather thirteen to eighteen named storms,
(50:45):
seven to ten hurricanes three to five major, and the
National Weather Service National Hurricane Center, Noah, if you will
thirteen to nineteen six to ten hurricanes and three to
five major hurricanes. Knows, but I feel a sense of
obligation once we turn to June. To simply mention it,
(51:11):
the likelihood of storms goes up as we go into
the season. It increases a little bit June to July,
July to August, August to October through October is that's
your meaty part of the season. So if you are
(51:32):
new to the state of Florida, much like you cannot
afford to go on the beach without knowing what the
flags represent and understanding the importance of those flags and
its connection to your safety in the waters off the beaches,
(51:54):
to know what a rip current is and how to
survive one. If you're new to Florida in a peninsula, friends,
I think someone said to me, there's not a part
of the state that's more than an hour or an
hour and fifteen minutes away from the ocean in one
way or another. And so as a result, you're in
(52:21):
a peninsula, we will have hurricanes. You need to understand
what's required to prepare for one, because it's really smart
to prepare gradually. For example, maybe now would be a
great time to grab some bottled water, just to have
some gallons of water storm in the attic, put them
(52:44):
in the storage room or wherever in the garage. Just
have some bottled water. Maybe next week it's grab some batteries.
Make sure you've got a few flashlights. Make sure you
have a radio transmitter, a radio transistor radio sorry where
you can receive this radio station. Maybe you get one
(53:04):
that has the weather built into it as well. But
do some progression so you're not hit all at once
trying to beat the crowd when a storm is forecast.
That's my advice to you. Forty one minutes after the hour,
we will do a comprehensive list as we get closer
to the real meat of the season. Thanks for listening.
It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Forty two minutes
(53:32):
past the hour. I woke up early Saturday morning, as
I normally do, and just wandered into my office at
home and popped open my email box because I didn't
spend a lot of time going through my email on
Friday because I was off on Friday and speaking at
one of the correctional institutes here in Florida, and I
(53:53):
got a note, and I'm going to leave the name out.
I'll simply let you know that the note came from
someone that is a regular contributor to the program, whether
it's phone calls during What's the BF phone calls during
phone in segments. I always look forward to his emails
because they're very They're funny, but in a very direct,
(54:19):
kind of pointed way, based on whatever it is we're
talking about. I know this is a really odd time
to write an email eleven thirty on a Friday night,
but there's really not much to do at this moment.
Plus my time could be getting a little short, so
(54:40):
I wanted to tie up some loose ends. On May eleven,
I've suffered a major heart attack, and the fine folks
at TMH and Southern Medical Group got me fixed up
with a couple of stints and scheduled a triple bypass
for June sixteenth. That thirty five day period was going
(55:00):
to give my heart time to heal from the major
heart attack I had on the eleventh. Well, as the
old saying goes, announcing your plans is a great way
to make God laugh. He had other plans for me
and I suffered another event Memorial Day weekend and have
been in the hospital ever since. We're going to try
for the surgery this Monday, June second, if my heart
(55:23):
is healthy enough and my blood thinner level is purged
from my system. Anyway, I just wanted to tell you
how much I've enjoyed your show. Feel like I've been
with you since the beginning, and even though we've only
met a couple of times, I think of you as
a friend and mentor. Your teaching has definitely helped me
(55:44):
and my walk with christ. I may not write in
or call every day, I'm usually there in the background
listening to your ruminations. My sleep schedule has been off
for the past few weeks since this cardiac mess, so
I haven't been listening to you as frequently as I
used to. Plus, I found out that TMH doesn't appreciate
your show being played at top volume on the speaker
(56:06):
and me yelling at the phone. Also, I've got two
box fans sitting in my truck that I purchased back
prior to this event happening at the beginning of May.
Not quite sure how I'm going to get them to
you after I get out of the hospital, maybe I
can make a field trip one day over to John
Knox Road. I know you like to call the program
make a Difference, and you certainly have in my life,
(56:27):
and even more importantly, you have in my nine year
old grandson's life. He listens to your show with me
on days I take him to school. You've given us
lots of fodder for conversations and discussions about right and wrong.
I'm going to sign off now, but again, I just
wanted to give you a heartful thank you and tell
you about the difference you've made in my life. I
(56:53):
get these notes from time to time, and this man
has been in my prayers. I do not know. I'm
hoping i'll get another note, I replied to him, and
I say with all sincerity that.
Speaker 3 (57:12):
You know.
Speaker 1 (57:17):
We're We may not be besties, all of us, right,
but we're friends. And I talk to you as a friend,
and I feel your friendship and your notes, and even
in your disagreements, and I don't agree with this or
(57:39):
that or the other. I shared this with Grant the
other day because this is a reminder of first it's
unbelievably humbling. I hope we're not done with this gentleman,
(58:01):
because he's been a really important contributor to this program
on a lot of different levels, and I know who
he is, and like you said, we've met a couple
of times. I'm humbled by this platform that I've been given,
(58:24):
and I just I want you to know how much
it means are spending time together every day. This really
impacted me, as have other letters over the years. The
(58:46):
notes of encouragement, the well wishes when something's gone a
little haywire, the whatever. That this gentleman facing what he
was facing would take twenty minutes to write to me
(59:10):
is just humbling. I don't know how else to put it,
but it speaks to what I think our role is.
And I I don't really worry about what anybody else
does on their radio program or doesn't do. I do
(59:32):
what I do, and there are a lot of people
that do what I do better than I do it.
I get it, but I will promise you this, We
appreciate you. And when someone says I have a need
in my life, we're praying and we're trusting this man
(59:54):
in God's hands, whether it's on this side of eternity
or the other side of it. Eternity. We're grateful, and
I just wanted to take a moment and just say
thank you to this man. He knows who he is,
and I'm hoping he's listening on the radio right now.
This note meant a lot to me and to all
(01:00:17):
of you. Just thank you for sharing time each and
every morning here on the Morning.
Speaker 4 (01:00:23):
Show, The Morning Show with Preston Scott on News Radio
one hundred point seven WFLA.
Speaker 1 (01:00:38):
Before we get to the third hour of the Morning
Show with Preston Scott, it is time for another manly minute.
Remember mail by birth, man by choice. These are skills, ideals,
virtues to teach your son so that he will be
a well versed, well rounded, complete man. Ready, teach your
(01:01:03):
son terms that are correct for the sports that are
in season. There is nothing worse than talking about points
scored in a baseball game. No, they're runs, They're not points.
(01:01:28):
Applying the wrong sports term to the wrong sport is
an immediate forfeiture of the man card. It just is.
So make sure. And look, I'm not worried about cricket
(01:01:49):
or bachie. I'm really not. I am worried about soccer
and hockey and football and basketball golf, baseball, volleyball, tennis,
certain things that are even if you don't play the sport.
It's actually really cool if you don't play the sport
(01:02:10):
and you still know and understand a little bit of
the sport. That way you can look at your son
and say, you, sir, are a man, and what a
man you are. Time for the third Hour. US congress
Woman Cat Camick scheduled to join us next. I always
say that, hoping she didn't get pulled into some committee meeting.
I think we're good to go next. It's gonna be
(01:02:31):
a great conversation. It always is on the Morning Show
with Preston Scott. Back with you on Tuesday, after taking
a couple of days off. Great to be back in
the Morning Show with Preston, Scott, Jose and Studio one A.
(01:02:52):
I am here in Studio one B, and I am
joined by our favorite member of Congress, US Congresswoman Kat
Cammick from Florida third District. Hello, Kat, how are you?
Speaker 7 (01:03:02):
Good morning? How are you We are in the middle
of a power outage here in Gainesville. Oh really yeah, yeah,
but no no worries. You know, when you're married to
a very industrious man. He always has the MKIDA batteries charge.
So I've got a construction fan blowing, you know while
(01:03:25):
we're doing this. So that's the background noise that you're curious.
Speaker 1 (01:03:27):
A mere inconvenience to a person of substance like yourself.
Speaker 7 (01:03:33):
We make it work, you know, That's that's just how
you gotta do it.
Speaker 1 (01:03:35):
Hey, last last month, we got we got rained out
a couple of things going on, like it's not busy
up in Congress or anything. Right, Uh, one of those
meetings got called off because you got called into a
meeting with the members of the caucus with the president.
What can without talking about any of the specifics or
the policy or anything like that, describe to us what
(01:03:58):
that literally looks like when you are asked to come
meet with the president? Where do you meet? Are you
hanging out at a dunkin donuts? I mean, what's going on?
Speaker 7 (01:04:09):
So it changes, It depends on It depends on who's
all going to be there, how it's gonna work. Sometimes
it's oval. Sometimes there's a room right off the side
of the oval in the west wing. The thing that is,
I don't know why, but people seem to be surprised
about this, But you don't get as far in life,
(01:04:29):
and you're not as successful in life if you don't.
I believe in plot and employ these practices. This is
what the president does. He he'll lay something out and
then he will solicit feedback from everyone in the room.
He really does take off of what everyone says, and
he will He'll go around the room and you give
(01:04:49):
your opinion, you weigh in, and then he makes the
decision and he runs with it. I don't know why
there's this narrative out there that he's just arbitrarily running,
you know, know, whatever he wants, doesn't matter what anyone says.
He does solicit feedback because he understands that there are
so many fundamental truths, the one of the big ones
(01:05:11):
being who don't know what you don't know? And every
one of us represents a very unique district and part
of the country and different constituencies. And so I always
find that to be the most impressive thing is his
capacity and willingness to listen and solicit feedback. But then
on top of that, we've all known, you know, paralysis
(01:05:31):
from analysis. Sure he does, he does not suffer from that, right,
He will gather the feedback and then he runs. He
makes the decision, and he runs with it, and he doubles,
triples down on it. And you see that in all
of the policies, whether we're talking trade, whether we're talking
domestic policies, he really does stick to his guns. And
(01:05:54):
I think that that's something that isn't talked about enough
because everyone thinks this, you know, oh, we're operating in chaos.
If you take a step back, it's very deliberate. It's
very structured in how he and his team, particularly folks
like Susie Wilde and Stephen Miller and those that are around,
they have a thought process of this. It's not just
(01:06:16):
kind of Millie Willie. And so I always say that
people would be surprised they think that he's some kind
of reality show character. He's the same in front of
the camera as he is behind the camera. He's always
been very, very kind. I've never seen him yell. I've
never seen him do what he has his stuff that
he accuse him of, and I wish people more people would.
Speaker 4 (01:06:38):
See that side.
Speaker 1 (01:06:40):
Joining US US congress Woman kat Camra cat stand by,
We're going to take a quick check of weather and traffic.
We're going to get to some issues, including the absurdity
of what happened in Boulder, Colorado. And now the reports
are indicating that he had USAID paperwork in his vehicle.
(01:07:00):
What in the world might that be about? Now, again,
we don't have it confirmed. It's coming from Fox News
right now, but we're not using his name. Never do that.
But we will talk about it next on the Morning Show.
Speaker 4 (01:07:19):
It's The Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 1 (01:07:27):
I almost think I'm being charitable by calling the bolder
Obiden terrorist by that name. Congresswoman, what have you learned
about what happened in Boulder?
Speaker 7 (01:07:41):
You know, this is yet another example of innocent citizens
being targeted and victimized by a person who should have
never been in our country in the first place. Right,
there's a couple of things here that should have been
red flags, and a few things that we've seen and
(01:08:01):
heard that need to be run down for accuracy. But
what we have heard, unconfirmed at this point, was that
he applied for a B two visa under the Bush
administration and was denied. He applied for a B two
visa in the Biden administration and was approved. Subsequently, a
(01:08:23):
month later, applied for asylum. Now tell me why wasn't
that a red flag? Clearly here under false pretenses. Then
overstays his visa. Biden, of course, was doing everything he
could to keep illegal in the country rather than get
them out, and he overstays that visa, turns it into
(01:08:43):
a work permit. All of a sudden, the guy is
driving for uber Why. I have no idea. You have
to have a social Security number, you like, there's a
whole process, right, he didn't have that, and he was
never deported, so he but what it was all said
and done, his initial visa, his claim for asylum, and
his temporary work visa all had expired. So he's in
(01:09:04):
this country illegally. I cannot emphasize enough the need for
a zero tolerance policy when it comes to our broken
immigration system. There can be no gray area. And I
say that because you give an inch, they'll take a mile.
And this is what is happening. You see this with
(01:09:25):
the student visus. Listen, they can hate us for free.
We don't need to pay for education for kids that
want to come here in cite violence and unrest in
our country. They can do that from whatever crap hole
around the world they want to do it from. And
if these free Palestine. Kids want to go free Palistine,
so bad, go to Daza. Go to Daza and see
(01:09:47):
what happens. I am so frustrated with the lack of enforcement,
and this spans Republican and Democrat administration and we've never
had a s furious attempts that has even gotten close
to fixing it. President Trump has been excellent at securing
the borders. We're ninety eight ninety nine percent border secure,
(01:10:09):
which is incredible considering where we've come from under the
totally open, open borders of Biden. But on top of that,
we have millions upon millions of individuals who have overstayed
tourist visas, work visas, and that needs to be addressed.
There should be very simply a process by which you
(01:10:30):
self support. If we know who has overstayed because they
haven't left the country, if they don't have a paid
ticket in thirty days of when they're supposed to be
out of the country, then we need to go pick
them up. Like That's that is very simple in my mind.
And so there's other things coming out the USAID seft
(01:10:51):
have I read a little bit about it, and it
looks like there was a piece of paper that said usaid,
it doesn't mean to me that there's any real connection there.
I think it's important that we focus on the fact
that this guy was in the country illegally won that
was a failure of the system to get him out.
Two gun free zones kill people, they hurt people. And
(01:11:14):
yet another example of a gun free zone where someone
was committing an act of violence, an act of terror,
and everyone's standing around recording on their phones. A lot
of people were helping victims, but this guy was walking
around shouting free Palestine and not what I tell you.
One person who was concealed carrying could have taken him down,
(01:11:35):
and a lot of people probably wouldn't be injured today
if that had been the case. But Comber is an
exceptionally liberal city, and this is going to continue until
people start waking up.
Speaker 1 (01:11:46):
We're about to go to break. But do me a
favor and make note of any Democrat members of Congress
in the House that are going to make some kind
of legislative proposal to ban glass bottles and cloth because
of course those were used to create a device that
(01:12:08):
was used in a mass attack, and so I think
it's important that we get rid of glass bottles, and
all clothing, don't you absolutely you.
Speaker 7 (01:12:18):
Know, I think I'm gonna I'm gonna go talk to
AOC when I see her later today.
Speaker 1 (01:12:23):
Yes, on the floor. Yes, yeah, yep, thank you, Thank you.
Kat Camick. With us more to come here in the
Morning Show with Preston Scott, a few more minutes with
US congress who win Kat Camick from Florida's third Congressional
(01:12:45):
District Cat We've we've talked in the last few weeks
here on the show about several stories where courts have
stepped in, and I think sometimes it's about defining boundaries.
And I know that the President and the Admministration is
trying to nudge certain issues in front of the Supreme
(01:13:05):
Court to get some definition. But I want to use
the issue of the illegal immigration thing because it's obviously
it's very newsworthy right now. And we did some math
and if we use the number, which is probably low,
of ten million illegals, it would take seven and a
half years if we adjudicated eight of them per day
(01:13:25):
among the six hundred and seventy seven authorized federal district
judges to deal with this. I say all that to
ask this question, are are members of Congress talking about
the things that Congress has to do in order to address,
for example, this issue. This was intentionally done, we know
(01:13:46):
this to crash the immigration system. Biden, Obama, whoever was
behind it all, it was orchestrated. What can Congress do
now in response to address it?
Speaker 7 (01:13:58):
Oh boy, I don't know if there's enough time for
us to go through all the things that Congress can do.
The much shorterless is what Congress will do. It comes
as no surprise, certainly that there is a lack of
will or desire to undertake immigration in Congress. And that's
(01:14:20):
not unique to this particular Congress one hundred and nineteenth.
It's something that we've seen. It's, you know, partially what
I ran on. You know, we need no more chicken
craft politicians. And you get up there, you start talking
about the need to really fix the broken immigration system,
and people say, oh, we'll deal with that after the midterms. Oh,
(01:14:44):
we'll deal with that after the next election. Oh we'll
deal with that. It's always the next election. That's the
you always hear. The border security thing was absolutely wild
to me, because I don't care if you're Republican, Democrat, Independent,
Green Party, you know, it doesn't matter. No nation is
a true nation, a sovereign one if you don't have borders.
(01:15:06):
And they effectively broke the borders under the Biden administration,
and so the fact that we've had to spend as
much money, time, resources dedicated to just enforcing the laws
on the books at the border is wild to me.
Then you get into all these specialty things, the high
tech visa, the you know which, by the way, why
(01:15:30):
are we giving high tech visas out in these these
weird lotteries, arbitrary cap things That doesn't make sense because
you see where it becomes an unfair playing field where
companies will hire the so called high tech people at
lower wages and basically exploit these people instead of hiring
(01:15:53):
people here in the country already. And so there's a
lot of things that we could do to fix it.
H Two A the low skilled worker that our agriculture
industry depends on. That system is so fundamentally broken, and
by the way, it doesn't work here in Florida, where
you're around producing states, it does not make sense. You
have to address the guest worker side of it. You've
(01:16:15):
got to actually simplify it. But then you have to
enforce the dang laws on the books so you don't
have people like that wacko who's overstaying their vivas. People
who have saved and sacrificed and done this the right way.
It's a real slap in the face of those that
are now in the country illegally and are going through
an amnesty process with no real case to be made
(01:16:38):
as to why they qualify. It's going to require outrage
and the demand from the American people. That's really what
it comes down to. Because Congress is scared of their shadow.
With a margin of four votes in the House, people
are just not willing to take it up. And I
know for me it's a huge issue. We talk about
(01:16:58):
it all the time. I've asked the chairman of the
ad Committee countless times when we can do something. Oh,
we'll do that after the Farm bill. Oh, Kat, we'll
do that after the next election. Kat, We're gonna sell
that next. It's always the next thing.
Speaker 1 (01:17:12):
But Kat, let me just ask you. The calculus is done.
That's why Trump got elected. He got elected. He's the
only one in Congress around Congress in Washington elected by
the nation. The nation decided that. And I know you
agree I'm not I'm preaching to the choir, but yeah,
(01:17:33):
but how can they keep saying, oh, well, we got
away when this is one of the main main reasons
and it still is why he was elected.
Speaker 7 (01:17:41):
I honestly, I know this is gonna I don't mean
to sounds trite, but winning that election is just the
first step. Really seriously making the reforms to drain the
swamp and fix the systems that are broken requires eternal vigilance.
That is the problem is. I think we forgot long
(01:18:03):
long time ago, when they were still teaching civics in school,
that it's not enough just to go out and vote.
But you have five tenants of the First Amendment for
a reason, which includes petitioning your government and assembly peaceful assembly.
I should add the people who petition their government. When
I mean that, it's very rarely do I see everyday
(01:18:25):
folks coming up to Washington or coming to our office
to voice their concerns and talk to their member. And
we try to encourage people to come to our office
and meet with me. Just this last week, I met
with twenty five different constituent groups in our district offices,
and I mean it was everybody from as liberal as
you can get to as conservative as you can get.
(01:18:45):
I met with honeybee keepers, I met with clam farmers,
I met with teachers. You know, you meet with all
these people, but you have to and you've got to
get people out to actually do it. And I think
people all think that yelling on Facebook and being a
keyboard warrior and leaving some nasty comment on their politician
(01:19:07):
or their member of Congress's page is doing something. You
have to engage and really make your voice heard. And
that's where I'm always trying to say. The part of
the people is unrealized and we can only do so
much in Congress. We need the backing of the American people.
This is the call to get involved. It's not enough
(01:19:28):
just to get out and vote. You have to exercise
your First Amendment right and stay engaged.
Speaker 1 (01:19:33):
Kat As always, thanks so much for the time. We
appreciate all you do and what you're doing when trying
to do on Capitol Hill. Thanks for the time.
Speaker 7 (01:19:40):
Today appreciated go getor that was cold?
Speaker 1 (01:19:44):
That was so cold? She dropped that in? Are they
still playing baseball in Gainesville today? Did I did Florida
advance to the Super regionals? I'm just curious. But look, hey,
they've had a good year on a lot of sports,
just not all of them. Twenty eight minutes after the hour,
(01:20:04):
I love cat Camock here on the Morning Show with
Preston Scott.
Speaker 4 (01:20:13):
Thing Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 1 (01:20:14):
Sixty percent of the time.
Speaker 3 (01:20:16):
It works every.
Speaker 4 (01:20:18):
Time on news radio. One hundred point seven doubufla, oh my.
Speaker 1 (01:20:40):
Thirty seven passed. The hour went just a minute or
two long with cat Camick, but always worth the time.
If we had four hundred and some cat Camicks in Congress,
the stuff we would get done, Big stories in the
(01:21:03):
press box. Supreme Court not taking up two different cases,
one involving AR fifteen's the other involving ammunition limits magazine capacities,
the former from Maryland, the latter from Rhode Island. What's
interesting is, I mean, it's it's sad to me that
(01:21:26):
they didn't take it up. I'm hopeful there's a reason
they could only get three justices to agree to hear
the cases, Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, and Neil Gorsich
Brett Kavanaugh of I mean the activist judges, which now
I personally include Justice John Roberts didn't surprise me. Kavanaugh
(01:21:52):
and Amy Cony Barrett did. Barrett not so much, because
she's becoming it's it's becoming more and more clear that
she is not a reliable originalist. She is in certain settings.
But see that's the thing. You either are you're not.
I mean, it's kind of like being pregnant. You're either
(01:22:14):
pregnant or you're not. You know, there's not I'm kind
of pregnant. No, you either are you're not. You're either
an activist judge or an originalist. If you're not an originalist,
you are an activist Judge John Rowbert. There is no
(01:22:37):
middle ground. There just isn't anyway. Justice Brett Kavanaugh hinted
inside his statement, it does not mean the Court agrees
with a lower court decision or that the issue is
not worthy of review. The AR fifteen issue was recently
decided by the First Circuit and is currently being considered
(01:22:58):
by several other courts of appeal. Why are you waiting?
Do your job? See, this is the thing. In my opinion,
the role of the Supreme Court is to clear out
the courts settle issues. If there's just hypothetically fifteen cases
(01:23:26):
dealing with attempting to limit quote, assault weapons though it
can never be defined. Then the Supreme Court, I think
would be prudent to settle the issue. There is no limit,
(01:23:47):
thank you very much, and I mean, and then all
those cases go away. It's done. Who It's like they melt,
It's like they dissolve. It's like a weird version of
Back to the Future where the where you know, Marty's
playing the guitar and he sees the pictures of his
(01:24:08):
brother and sister going away. Their their their faces and
their bodies are going away in the photo because the
event that needs to happen hasn't happened, his dad kissing
his mom. You remember the scene, and if you don't,
how could you not have seen Back to the Future.
But I digress. Solve the problem anyway. That's one big story.
(01:24:34):
The other big story is ready it's hurricane season. Forty
one minutes after the hour, back with more of the
Morning Show.
Speaker 4 (01:24:44):
WUFLA.
Speaker 1 (01:25:10):
I almost I almost hate interrupting the Morning Show band
when they're playing like this, come on, yeah, yeah, all right,
(01:25:39):
I've got my I mentioned this last week I picked
up just randomly at the store and a new edition
of Popular mechanics fairly new. I mean it's March April.
I'm sure they've got a Mad June issue coming, and
magazines are going to these really cool textured papers. On
the outside. Of by textured, I mean it's it's not
(01:26:02):
textured in the way that it sounds like. I mean it.
It's it's just got to it's got to feel to
the paper. It's just it's a different stock, and it's
got kind of a i don't know, almost like a
leather kind of feel to the material. I've seen this
in more and more magazines, and I think it's really cool. Anyway.
(01:26:26):
I'm just I'm randomly flipping through the pages and talking
about what's in here. One of the things that's in
here is scientists have recently analyzed Vincent van Goes Starry
Night painting. Now, Vincent van go there is not a
(01:26:47):
chance on if someone said, here, here's an original Vincent
van go You want to display it in your home? No,
you can have it for free. No, dude painted some
dark stuff. I'm not talking color scheme. I'm talking oh no, no, no, no,
(01:27:14):
no no. I do not want to be inside this
man's melon. Uh huh uh uh. Interesting character but they
analyzed the painting, which if you saw it, I would say,
a lot of you would recognize and go, oh, that's famous.
You wouldn't necessarily know it was him, but you probably
(01:27:37):
have seen it somewhere. What's interesting is they did a
they did a study of it to see how how
well the swirls that he painted in a night sky
match up with what is known about atmospheric physics. I
guess they're suggesting that Van goh just in two suitively
(01:28:01):
understood things about the cosmos and put it in paintings
because they find that there's some pretty even the colors
that he used were insightful, would be one way of
putting it. But it was just it's a story published
(01:28:23):
in Sky and Telescope magazine, and they just pulled a
little bit of it and put it in Popular Mechanics
by permission. Just one of the many things. And there's
more in here that I'll get to here in just second,
but I just thought it was interesting. Forty six minutes
after the hour, a random pickup of a magazine.
Speaker 3 (01:28:41):
It's fun to do.
Speaker 1 (01:28:54):
One of the best parts of this Popular Mechanics, it's
in the back osey. This is going to speak your language.
Here you ready, It's a breakdown of not just how
to build your own DIY router sled, but right behind
(01:29:17):
it is a listing of Popular Mechanics twenty twenty five
tool Awards all of the really cool tools that have
been released for twenty twenty five. And they're inexpensive and expensive.
(01:29:41):
They're everything in between. It's everything from a plate compactor
to an impact wrench to specific saw blades that are
used for cutting certain things with a bandsaw. I mean,
it's craziness stuff. A precision screwdriver said in other words,
(01:30:02):
father's days coming up. One of the things that was
in here was like, and where was this a few
days ago? When I needed it? At my one of
my kids places. The Irwin Quick Lift construction jack. It's
think of it as an inverted vice or clamp where
(01:30:26):
it's got a flat plate that sits on the ground
and another plate that you can then lift and you
just pull the handle and it just ratchets up to
three hundred and thirty pounds and holds it for you.
Speaker 7 (01:30:37):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:30:37):
I love those things. They're incredible. I can install a
door all by myself with it. A door cabinets level
of the cabinets. It's like, where was that. I'm stacking books.
I had to put this thing up in one of
my kids places and I'm stacking books. I'm putting things
under a tool chest. I'm lean against it quick drilling
(01:30:59):
into this stud It's just it's crazy. But the tools
that the tools for a tool freak. That's like this
is like this is this is Christmas in June looking
at this thing all right? Tomorrow in the program, Jad
Johnson of the Talent Training Group in our personal Defense segment.
Speaker 4 (01:31:20):
Brought to you by Barno Heating and Air. It's the
Morning Show one on WFLA.
Speaker 1 (01:31:28):
Great visit with US Congresswoman Kat Camick on the program.
As it always is, it will be on the Conversations
podcast in the next day or so. I'd like to
let it linger for a little bit before we put
it back out there. That's a nice way of me saying,
I'm giving myself time. Okay, I'm just giving myself time.
(01:31:49):
Big story in the press box. Supreme Court rejects a
challenge to a Maryland a R fifteen band and a
Rhode Island amo limit. Supreme Court said, no, we're gonna
let those bands and those limits stay in place for now.
Speaker 2 (01:32:02):
That sucks.
Speaker 1 (01:32:06):
I wish I had something more eloquent to say, but sometimes, yeah,
it just sucks. Hurricane season forecasts, we got them. I'm
promptly throwing it away because at this point it means nothing.
What I will tell you, though, is we will take
the time to help you prepare. We're going to go
(01:32:27):
through the checklists because we have a lot of new
people in the state. We always will, we always have,
and we want to do this as a service, just
to kind of remind you put together your list. Let's
start there. What do you think. Let's make this the
week of doing the list if nothing else. Got a
note from a listener that just blessed me, and based
(01:32:53):
on the email, I've got blessed a lot of you.
And so we're remembering this listener and our prayers, hoping
for a good out come. But this is a note
that is that's a keeper. Greta Thunberg, how dare you
lectures that?
Speaker 3 (01:33:09):
Ever?
Speaker 1 (01:33:11):
TWERP talked about the entomology of the Molotov cocktail. It's
a fascinating backstory, isn't it that? It's it's it was
an insult to some Russian foreign minister named Molotov. Hilarious story. Tomorrow,
Who knows what else will unpack. I've already printed some things.
(01:33:33):
I cannot wait. We're just twenty one hours away and
we're gonna do it again. Friends, have an awesome day.
Thanks for sharing time with us,