Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
I don't.
Speaker 2 (00:13):
Good morning, and welcome to the Morning Show. I'm Grant Allen,
filling in for Preston again, filled in on Friday, filling
in today. Preston's taking some time off, and I'm very,
very glad to be here two days in a row,
I guess, even though the weekend separated it. It's a
lot of fun being able to come on in here
(00:34):
and share some thoughts about the news of the day.
And we've had some overnight breaking news. It was kind
of like late afternoon yesterday. We'll talk more about it.
But eight hurt after the suspect yelling free Palestine set
victims at an event on fire and Boulder, Colorado. We'll
talk more about that. I'll provide some more details as
(00:57):
the morning goes on, as we get more in information,
but there's already been some kind of fresh information that
has kind of gone viral on Twitter. But before we
ever get to that point, we must start our week,
start our day with the scriptures. And the scriptures of
the day are Hebrews nine Versus twenty seven and twenty eight,
(01:23):
and it reads like so and just as it is
appointed for man to die once and after that comes judgment.
So Christ, having been offered once to bear the sins
of many, will appear a second time, not to deal
with sin, but save those who are eagerly awaiting for him.
(01:43):
I want to hone in on that first part in
verse twenty seven. And just as it is appointed for
man to die once and after that comes judgment, considering
what man's state is. I was thinking about it, and
I've had a conversation recently about this kind of how
unnatural the reason that when someone passes, and whether it
(02:06):
be a family member, loved one, coworker, whatever, that it
is very unnatural. Right man, as prelaps arian man, before
the fall, we were intended to live with God forever
and ever, Amen. And our souls and flesh are designed
to be together. And so when when the flesh dies
(02:29):
and our soul goes to be with Christ, we kind
of instinctively know that in the end that that is
not the final state. The final state is when our
souls and our flesh are brought back together, as Christ's
flesh and soul was brought back together upon his resurrection.
He was the foreshadow, He was the first fruits of
(02:51):
that of all who are in Christ will have that
same promise to them that our nature is to be
fully insold individuals with human contact. It's like how you
and I are real right now. The reality around us
is real and tangible. That is what our final state
(03:11):
will be. Our souls being in heaven with Christ is
only the temporary state. He is going to reunite us
in soul and flesh in one, and that is the
hope of eternity in Christ and Christ alone. Ten minutes
after the Hour, History and More coming up.
Speaker 3 (03:30):
Next Monday, June.
Speaker 2 (03:50):
Second, twenty twenty five, the first show of the month
of June, and yes it's that month, the one that
cometh before for the Fall. I'll talk a little bit
about that today because Twitter has been amazing the last
twenty four hours. It's been very fun to watch all
(04:16):
of your favorite major sports leagues, major League Baseball, in
the NFL, your favorite sports franchises change their profile picture
and they're getting roasted out. I have to they're getting roasted.
This is what we call the vibe shift, Ladies and gentlemen.
There has been a substantial shift in the culture away
(04:40):
from secular humanism cultural Marxism, and it's palpable because when
the New England Patriots are getting ratio to oblivion. Anyway,
I'm I'll have to pull it up. I've got I've
got Twitter up here, I've got my news play pms
going here, got multi screens going on. But this segment
(05:05):
is for this day in history from the American Patriots
Almanac for June second. June second is the birthday of
Martha Washington, born on this day in seventeen thirty one
near Williamsburg, Virginia. By all account, America's first first Lady
was a dignified gentlewoman. Abigail Adams called her one of
the most unassuming characters which create love and esteem. One
(05:28):
visitor described meeting Martha Washington quote, we dressed ourselves in
our most elegant ruffles and silks and were introduced to
her ladyship, and don't you think we found and don't
you think we found her knitting and with a checked
apron on. She received us very graciously and easily, but
after the compliments were over, she resumed her knitting. Like
(05:50):
her husband. Missus Washington loved home life at Mount Vernon,
but during the war, whenever the Continental Army was in
winter camp, she left home to join her husband and
lift the troops spirits. I never in my life knew
a woman so busy from early morning until late at
night as was Lady Washington, providing comforts for the six
soldiers were called one woman who lived in the camp
at Valley Forge. Every fair day she might be seen
(06:11):
with basket in hand, going among the huts, seeking the
keenest and most needy sufferers, and giving all the comfort
to them in her power. Martha was a warm, hospitable
first lady, but she wasn't overly fond of the role.
Speaker 4 (06:25):
Quote.
Speaker 2 (06:25):
I think I am more like a state prisoner than
anyone else, she confided to a niece. Yet her willingness
to serve equal to her husband's cannot blame him for
having acted according to his ideas of duty in obeying
the voice of his country. I am still determined to
be cheerful and happy in whatever situation I may be,
For I've also learned from experience that the greater part
of our happiness or misery depends upon our dispositions and
(06:48):
not upon our circumstances. This is like, this is how
I know like folk traditions and family traditions are passed
down generationally because that kind of sentiment is absolutely the
kind of thing I heard growing up. It's like, I'm sorry,
and this is the kind of thing is you know
(07:08):
a young parent, and what you try to convey to
your children too, is that circumstances are going to change
throughout life all the time, but our attitudes must remain
joyful and cheerful in all things, giving thanks for all things.
It's just I this, it sounds so familiar. It's as
(07:29):
if this could have been like a family member, and
like this this reflects our national character. And so on
this day, June Tewod seventeen thirty one, the birth of
Martha Washington. Couple quick things. This day, in eighteen thirty five, P. T.
Barnum and his circus began their first US tour. This day,
in eighteen sixty six, Grover Cleveland becomes the only president
to be married in the White House when he weads
(07:51):
Francis Fulsom This day, in nineteen twenty four, Congress grants
US citizenship to American Indians. And on this day in
nineteen sixty six, Surveyor one becomes the first US spacecraft
soft land on the moon. Very cool stuff. Sixteen minutes
after the hour, Hey how about the knowles. I'll talk
about a little bit of that next.
Speaker 4 (08:21):
I like this bet.
Speaker 2 (08:24):
This goes shout out to Florida State baseball got the
win over Mississippi State yesterday. In case you missed it,
Florida State came from behind, they were down to nothing
and they ended up getting some late runs. Well by
late runs, I mean it took a little while for
(08:46):
the offense to get you know, any runs across the plate.
It was a very interesting game of I guess you
could say it was a bit of a pitcher's duel.
Mississippi State's pitcher was just absolute fired up, Like the
guy was just pure adrenaline. And maybe I don't know
(09:11):
if anyone's got a video of like what was said.
I think it was the third or fourth inning when
link Jarrett got tossed, which was crazy. By the way
of the ESPN broadcasters were commenting on how just you know,
it's the postseason. You just let it ride, you know,
keep everyone calm, but just you know, but man, what
(09:36):
a game. Cal Fisher had two run homer. I've really
come to love college baseball for the same reason I
love college football more than the NFL. College football leans
into the local and the current state of college football
(10:00):
is actually the sad part is that we've a lot
of these regional rivalries are going to inevitably fall by
the wayside because you know, I fell in love with
college football as as it once was, right when those random,
you know, rivalry games that have existed for like one
hundred plus years, and it's the battle between Arkansas and
(10:23):
Texas Tech for like, you know, well, actually I was
going to say Paul Bunyan's acts, but I think that's
Michigan State and Minnesota, Like that's that's the rivalry. I
don't know, Arkansas and Texas Tech probably don't have a rivalry.
But you get the picture is that you have these
schools that represent local populations, and there are certain traditions
(10:48):
that exist within these towns and these regions of states,
and the areas kind of reflect the school, and the
school reflects the people. This is where you send your kids.
Any of the schools, especially like in the in the Midwest,
were started as land grant universities, and so you would
have you know, people send their sons to go get
(11:10):
their agricultural degree from Indiana or Ohio State or you know,
Minnesota or Michigan was a little bit different because it
was on the backs of a lot of that Henry
Ford Detroit money, and so it was just fundamentally a
different socioeconomic status. But I love college baseball because similarly
(11:35):
major League baseball is you know, it's still I still
love Major League baseball, but college baseball is a reflection
of kind of the locales, a reflection of the local populations.
And so it's just dominated by you know, SEC teams,
and you know, you've got some West Coast teams that
(11:56):
play well. For example, you know, Oregon State and Oregon
are usually always you know, pretty good. California teams show
out pretty well. Teams in Arizona no surprise, the Sun Belt,
you know, teams in the ACC, in the South. I
just I've come to really love it. And so Florida
(12:16):
State had a big win yesterday, swept to the regional
and they're the number nine seed, number nine overall seed,
and Florida State will play the winner of the Corvallis
Regional between eighth seeded Oregon State and USC. So this
(12:40):
is it'll be fun to watch them in the super
Regional and hope that, you know, they can make it
through the super regionalll do another College World Series arrival
and get the long awaited national championship that has so
eluded Florida State baseball all these years. It was fun
(13:02):
to watch. It's this time of year when college baseball
is just super fun. You're just sitting on the edge
of your seat the entire time. It feels like every
pitch is so consequential. You only have so many innings
left before you know, potential double elimination in this case,
the regional one, and so it's just an electric time.
It's an electric time. Sorry about that. I was just
(13:27):
having to look away. Wes Mendes. I was talking about
how like the pitcher's duel was a little bit of
a kind of an odd pitchers duel because Mississippi State's
pitcher his last name Ligan, I think his name was,
he was up to nearly one hundred pitches through four innings,
and then Florida States West Mendes was much more efficient.
(13:49):
He made it all the way towards the end of
the ball game, and so it was just fun to watch.
Offense finally came alive and Florida State's big bats are
going to death finely be able to you know, be
an advantage going into the Super Regional and then hopefully
you know, the College World Series. They can get it
done in many ways, and having the long ball is
(14:11):
definitely huge. Obviously, we got big stories in the press
box coming up next, we'll get to some news.
Speaker 1 (14:20):
Started counting shows at the beginning because we weren't sure
how long he'd last. Now we're just proving to everyone
that week in count This is the Morning Show with
Preston Scott's.
Speaker 2 (14:42):
Prey six minutes after the hour on Grant Allen in
for Preston. Doctor Joe Camps coming up in about an
hour from now in healthy Expectations, So well, it'll be
good to talk with doctor Camps. Big stories in the
press box. It was initially I had once. I came
with one story and overnight kind of late afternoon into
(15:05):
the evening, and this morning things changed. The suspect in
the terror attack in Boulder there was a the The
FBI is classifying it as a terror attack. So far,
there are no fatalities, but there are injuries. From what
I'm seeing a as it turns out, an Egyptian national
(15:33):
who is here in the United States illegally overstayed his
visa and decided to go on. Well, as the kids say,
he was having a crash out moment. He was wielding
molotov cocktails and it was coordinated to happen and occur
(15:53):
at the same time that a pro Israel rally was
taking place. This is the FBI director excuse me, FBI
Special Agent Mark Miclek from the FBI Boulder office.
Speaker 5 (16:13):
We're early in the investigation, but some details have emerged.
I'm able to confirm there are six victims, ages sixty
seven to eighty eight. All of them have been transported
to local hospitals. This attack happened at a regularly scheduled
weekly peaceful event. Witnesses are reporting that the subject used
(16:35):
a makeshift flamethrower and threw an incendiary device into the crowd.
The suspect was heard to yell Free Palestine during the attack.
The subject has been identified as Mohammed.
Speaker 2 (16:50):
We're not going to say his name. You get the
picture years old.
Speaker 5 (16:54):
The FBI is processing the crime scene in the subject
vehicle and interviewing key witnesses. We're assisting Boulder Police and
providing technical, analytic and additional forensic resources. As a result
of these preliminary facts. It is clear that this is
a targeted act of violence in the FBI is investigating
this as an act of terrorism.
Speaker 2 (17:16):
So that's the quick, you know, sixty second clip of it.
There are other videos going viral. Here's here's the image
of him. There's you may have seen the video. He
was screaming like Palestine is free. He has heard yelling
en Zionists, and he's got these two things in his hand.
(17:38):
I mean, the FBI special agent there in Boulder said
like some sort of adjusted or like flamethrower. They look
like molotov cocktail kind of things to me. He's holding
like two glass bottles. But this is this is part
of like people video videoing it on this it's a
(18:00):
little bit of a chaotic scene. We're here, so yeah,
you can hear the guy. He's there's one guy behind
the camera who's trying to speak to him and he's
kind of yelling back in the background, and you can't
understand anything that's going on. It's uh, just kind of
pure chaos. A witness told a local news station here
(18:25):
that there was a woman burning on the ground and
two other people have been impacted by burns on their legs.
There were some videos going around of pires of smoke
going up, and you know, the Colorado Governor, Jared Polus,
you know, issued his statement saying that the suspects should
be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. And
obviously we're not going to say his name. The guy's
(18:47):
been apprehended, he's in custody, he's he's not at large,
so his name will go into the dust bin of
history to never be remembered. I'll break this down a
little bit more for three minutes after the hour here
on the Morning show.
Speaker 1 (19:06):
It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott on News Radio
one hundred point seven Dublin, uf LA.
Speaker 2 (19:21):
Some additional reporting happening of the Boulder incident here. Fox
News reported Sunday that the suspect first arrived in the
United States after landing at Los Angeles International Airport August
twenty seventh, twenty twenty two, with a non immigrant visa.
Very quickly thereafter, on September night, twenty twenty two, he
(19:41):
filed acclaim with the US Citizenship and Immigration Services. His
visa expired February second, twenty twenty three. Two months later,
March twenty ninth, twenty twenty three, the Biden regime awarded
the suspect for violating the terms of his visa by
granting him a work permit which was valid for two
year years. So if you track that March twenty ninth,
(20:02):
twenty twenty three to now, work permit is invalid. So
it's visas he's overstayed his visa. Work permits done put.
Stephen Miller summed it up, saying this, the Biden admin
granted the alien of visa and then when he illegally overstayed,
(20:25):
they gave him a work permit. Immigration security as a
national security No more hostile migration, Keep them Mountain, send
them back. Amen. This we don't have to deal with this.
We shouldn't. Functioning first world civilizations don't have to endure this.
(20:52):
The tribal, tribal level, that's that's kind of what it
has boiled down to. The tribal level. Feuds between different
groups in the Near East are not our problem, but
they're bringing it to our shores. What happens is I'm
(21:18):
not the first one to coin this term, so I
can't claim it. But if you import the third world,
the third world feuds come to your neighborhoods Boulder, Colorado,
home of University of Colorado kind of a from what
I've understood, kind of like an affluent area. And that's
(21:43):
where a lot of these types of events, attacks, threats
of violence have not really gotten to yet. Right, the
critique from the American right of the American left is
they flood our neighborhoods. Those of us who live in
(22:06):
say the South or the Midwest, a heartland state with
hordes of migrants from all over the world, and yet
their homes on Martha's vineyard and you know, these nice
(22:26):
hill top Los Angeles kind of southern California homes, they're
they're they're in. Their area is completely untouched, unaffected by
their own policies, and they know what they're doing. It's
more than just hypocrisy, you know, mass migration for thee
(22:47):
but not for me. It's it's more than just that.
It's a little more destructive, self destructive. There are actors
that want to see the destruction of the West in
migration is one of the ways in which they've gone
about doing this, all the while being on their high
horse and sitting in their ivory tower. But we don't
(23:15):
have to endure this. This doesn't these these third world
feuds Israel Palestine. You know, if I'd have the same
opinion if the Rwandan genocide of the nineties between the
Hutus and the Tutsis was in Oklahoma City, right, Like
(23:36):
it's so random that it sounds outrageous, right, but that
would also be my opinion, Like not on our shores, please,
thank you. We have nice communities. We like to be
able to walk our streets at night, take our kids
for a walk, go to the park. In essence, that
is really I'm not very ideologically driven. I have my principles, certainly,
(23:59):
but ideology is something that's kind of further out there
that you pledge fealty to. My politics is really just
what's gonna make sure that we can walk safe at night,
walk our streets safe that when we, you know, step
out of our cars and we're walking to our home,
like we can have a general assurance that like someone
(24:22):
from the other side of the street's not gonna come up.
And or you go to a public park and some
guy from Egypt is wielding Molotov cocktails. Sorry, that's not
Western American behavior. We don't do that here. There's a
meme that kind of went viral about that. I think
(24:42):
it was January of last year, like this cop in
New York City when they were investigating those tunnels that
they found in New York and he goes, we don't
do that in America. And honestly, that's my that's that's
legitimately how I feel. We don't do that here. Forty
seven minutes after the.
Speaker 6 (24:59):
Hour, it's the Morning Show with Preston Scott's.
Speaker 2 (25:22):
Coming up on seven AM Eastern, six AM Central. It's
six point fifty two here on the Morning Show. I'm
Grant Allen filling in for Preston. Well, well, well look
who's back in the news. Just can't stay away, John Bolton.
(25:45):
The headline, John Bolton vows to resurrect USAID USAID post Trump.
I like the writing here as a committed intervention, as
John Bolton is, You'll be shocked to learn not on
board with eliminating the Deep state's cash cow that is USAID.
In voicing his dissatisfaction with the work of Doge Visa
(26:09):
v USAID, he also pledged to bring back Voice of America,
the US government's global propaganda machine for the last decade
and longer. Prior to its dismantling by the Trump Admin,
Voice of America had also distributed to content domestically explicitly
targeted at a domestic audience. They've got a link here
to a story Voice of America. This is an old
(26:33):
article from May thirtieth, twenty fourteen. Voice of America programming
is now available in the US via mobile phone. So
the propaganda arm of the deep state operating not only
overseas but here in the United States. Not surprised. Here's
(26:54):
the quote from Bolton. And you're never going to guess
what podcast he was on where he was talking about this,
The Lincoln Project podcast. Those I can't say I have
a particular almost like I have, like I get this
(27:22):
twitch in my eye whenever people like uh like Rick
Wilson and Bill Crystal come up, you know the McCain's,
you know the Cheney's and John Bolton, I kind of
get this like irrational twitch. I start shaking them like
they They probably upset me more than the left does.
(27:42):
I know what the Left is. I know what they're game.
They're They're not my friends, they are not my allies.
But it very much upsets me when these people who
claim to be on the right when they are just
they're liberals. That's what they are. They are liberals. John
(28:05):
Bolton said, I speak as an alumnus of AID in
the Reagan administration, back when we were trying to reform
at the idea of using economic assistance to influence events
in other countries as an old, old phenomenon. They're just
admitting that we manufacture regime change. That's what happens everywhere
we go. Everywhere the military industrial complex and the deep
(28:30):
state goes, the CIA goes, and regime change destabilizing whole regions.
That's been the name of our game for a very
long time. After eight years of Obama and then four
more years of Biden, Bolton says, there are plenty of
things to reform. Frankly, I'm not interested in a lot
(28:50):
of reform. That's the difference. I'm interested in a dismantling
because we can't reform systems that are by definition parasitic
and self destructive, leeching off the back of Americans in
order to destabilize other regions. That is parasitic behavior. John
(29:11):
Bolton says, We're gonna build these capabilities back. I'll guarantee
in some future admin, good luck. Five minutes after the
(29:38):
hour here on the morning show, good morning, thank you
for tuning in. It's our number two here. I'm Grant
Alan filling in for Preston. Preston will be back tomorrow,
and I'm able to thankful for the opportunity to come
in and share some thoughts. Cover the news, cover some
you know, breaking things. Big story in the press box.
(30:01):
I'll get to that later, but obviously many of you
likely already saw the news targeted terror attack and Boulder,
Colorado Injures eight. As of right now, I'm looking at
Fox News. I'm looking at Bright Part on my screen.
Fox News on my screen. No fatalities thus far, but
people have been transported to the hospital. Deeper analysis at
seven thirty five for the big story in the press box,
(30:23):
tune in for that. In the meantime, I wanted to
take some time because there are caricatures that we deal
with all the time. There's reality on the ground, and
then there's utopianism. Grant, what are you talking about. There's
an article here published yesterday June first, entitled It's from
(30:50):
American Greatness. It's a good website. Go to it am
greatness dot com by Roger Kimball here in titled what
is American Conservatism and the subtitle conservatism at its core
is a cheerful fidelity to reality, skeptical of utopia, is
wary of unintended consequences, and unafraid to call things by
(31:10):
their proper names. On the whole, Yes, I would personally
phrase things in this piece a little differently and you'll
you'll see why. But he also makes some poignant points.
I shouldn't have said that back to back. That was
(31:31):
a bad That was a bad turn of phrase. There
were some good points being made here. Kimball starts the
article because, okay, why am I talking about this? What
is conservatism?
Speaker 4 (31:45):
Is? There?
Speaker 2 (31:46):
Is there a confusion about what conservatism truly is? Some
say no. Personally, I would say yes, because you see
different brands of it. So much of this, in my
mind is informed cause of what I see from the
academic and the intellectual class, even on the so called right,
(32:06):
people who call themselves conservatives, and if you heard me
at the end of the last hour railing against neo
cons like John Bolton, the Lincoln Project, right, those people
also claim the title conservative. So what is it? Kimball
(32:28):
starts the article by starting broad Let's start with the genus,
what is conservatism? The answer a cheerful allegiance to the truth.
Is especially true of conservatism's American variant. Conservatism in America
has some distinctive features. That's good. I am a fan
of particularism rather than universality of truth claims, because the
(32:51):
neo con trap, like John Bolton, is that if we
just ever that everyone in the whole world is just
waiting to become like a Western liberal in mind and disposition,
we just need to go there and take it to them.
That's in essence what Iraq was that there are these
(33:15):
people groups that are suffering under all sorts of little
mini hitlers. Willmar Kadaffi was one of them, you know.
Saddam Hussein was another one, all of these little mini hitlers,
and it's our moral duty as the world's arbiter and
the global hedgemon, to liberate them and to guide them
in the ways of Western democracy. Well, two decades pass
(33:41):
in the Middle East, and shocker, a different people group
thinks about politics, thinks about social cohesion entirely differently. Yet
they call it conservative to be able to go in
and destabilize regimes bring people along that may not have
(34:04):
any sense of tradition and custom of what the Western
mind see. We know the names like Locke and Hobbes,
and these figures like Jefferson and Washington. These it's part
of the air we breathe. And if we just expect
to take this kind of like English speaking kind of
Enlightenment infused secular democracy and you just PLoP it into
(34:30):
the middle of the Middle East, don't expect it to
take Conservatism, if that's even a term we want to
continue to use. I think it's a fine term. I
personally am open to the idea of another term. That's
(34:51):
why I've just started referring to myself as a man
of the right, one who recognizes natural realities around us.
That man is not totally all the time egalitarian. Not
all nations are made the same. Some of us have
(35:13):
different cultural expressions. And why I think conservatism in it
of itself can be looked at. There's a great screenshot
here from a sitting in congresswoman that I think can
explain what I mean.
Speaker 1 (35:27):
Next my news radio one hundred point seven UFLA.
Speaker 2 (35:50):
If now that I don't know, I guess in theory
anything I say, could potentially give me in trouble, but
when you put like a name to it, I feel
rather comfortable calling out guys like John Bolton and Rick Wilson.
They'll Lincoln project. But there are some others that I
critique as well. So, for example, I think congresswoman like
(36:11):
Nancy Mace is one of the most embarrassing representatives of
so called conservative politics. So here's a screenshot Elijah Shaeffer.
I don't know if you follow him on Twitter. I
like following his account. It's pretty funny. I think it
takes pretty good. The screenshot is of Congresswoman Nancy May
saying time for the LGBs to divorce the teas as
(36:36):
we kick off the month that cometh before the Fall.
As for the gender benders and groomers, Mace says, now
is a good time as ever to go touch some
grass and come back to planet Earth. The rest of
us are done playing make believe, so again, her opening
line was it's time for the LGBs to divorce the teas,
and Elijah Shaeffer's comment to go along with it is
(36:58):
the Republican Party is so embarrassing. And I agree Nancy
Mays and most of the Republican party, mind you, holds
to a more liberal view of social arrangement and things
(37:21):
like sexuality than Barack Obama in two thousand and eight,
Like he was more of a tightwad than most Republican
politicians are. So it begs the question, what have all
of these people with the Moniker conservative conserved absolutely nothing?
(37:46):
In fact, most Republicans elected right now end up And
of course I'm using the I'm using the term Republican
as a generalization. Exceptions abound. It's okay to it's okay
to paint with a broad brush because that's a rhetorical tactic,
and I am you painting with a broad brush here
because you have exceptions. But the exceptions kind of prove
(38:08):
the rule because when you hear the exception, if you
hear an actual socially conservative view on family formation or sexuality,
they're viewed as a pariah. Even in the GOP you
go to any like like the exact the log cabin
(38:30):
Republicans didn't exist like forty years ago. Maybe they did
in secret. I mean they probably did, right, I don't know.
I'm just thinking, but if your conservatism ends up conserving
progressivism from ten years ago. Then by definition, you're not
(38:52):
conserving anything. And that's what Nancy Mace is saying. It's
time for the LGBs to divorce the T. George Bush
wouldn't have said that in two thousand and five. Barack
Obama would not have said that in two thousand and eight.
What are we doing? And we wonder why it feels
(39:14):
like there's a uniparty because there is no functionally traditional
right wing party in America. There's really no voice for us,
and we're removing the ancient landmarks. It's like Chesterton's fence.
I don't know if you're familiar with GK. Chesterton. Chesterton's fence.
(39:35):
It's like you come across a fence that's in an
open field and rather than you know, the leftist instinct,
which is actually a lot of Republicans, the leftist instinct
is to just go ahead and remove the fence rather
than ask why that fence was there. There's an old
Chinese proverb, kind of an old Chinese custom, and I
think there's something to be learned here that when a
(39:58):
child inherits the date or the home from their parents,
they can they have full benefits of being the new
head of household, all benefits, all responsibilities, all duties flown
out to them, and it all becomes theirs. With one stipulation.
For the first year of living in that house, you
don't move anything to learn why your parents placed that there,
(40:23):
to learn why you know this is next to the microwave,
why this is next to this, blah blah blah blah blah.
But it's all yours, and so you learn the wisdom
of those who came before you. Has the Republican Party
ever thought about that at all? I don't know. Seventeen
minutes after the Hour and the Bright Close brought up
(40:58):
a good point as I'm talking about what is conservatism
in this next segment, the future, I think of conservatism
an article that I found breaking that down, and I
think it should be said. I still think Donald Trump
and the MAGA movement is like the best thing to
happen to the American right since Reagan, you know, since
(41:19):
like Pat Buchanan. Just recognize that in the world that
we're in, Donald Trump's like social views or to the
left of mine. I'm aware of that. But if we're
talking about MAGA in the America first movement versus neocons
like that's not even an argument. We have a chance.
Actually here you know, MAGA is the off ramp for
(41:41):
something bigger and better. That's what I think. That's how
I think the last ten years are going to be recognized,
you know, the era of Trump and the rest of
this term is going to be viewed as the American
rights off ramp into something more real, more formatively natural
and good, good, true and beautiful. And we're going to
(42:03):
double down on who we are, our heritage, our faith,
our practice. And so this is why I think this
the future here, what's the future? And I actually already
mentioned him, Pat Buchanan. This article in the American Conservatism
or excuse me, the American Conservative from Gabe Guirdini. Sorry
(42:23):
Gabe if I didn't pronounce your name right. The article
is the gen Z right, is Pat Buchanan's lasting legacy
of all things right. The article starts in December second,
twenty twenty three, in the modest gymnasium of a community
college in Cedar, Rapid, Iowa. President Donald Trump again, who
I by the way, I think is kind of like
(42:46):
the modern great man of our time. And by great man,
I mean kind of like larger than life in a
way captivates and mobilizes. No politician has done that in
my lifetime. Captivate like literally took a bullet. And the
truest thing that Donald Trump ever said was, They're coming
(43:07):
for you. I'm standing in the way, and I believe
that totally to be true. I hold that right up
there with all of my critiques of like the modern right,
so called right. That's the thing is, I don't think
we're functionally of the rights anymore. I think we've adopted
liberal framing on so much stuff. But the article continues.
Donald Trump addressed a raucous crowd of supporters as he
(43:29):
spoke about the enduring force of the movement he ignited
in twenty fifteen. He paused to reflect on a man
many had forgotten but whose ideas are increasingly animating the
rising generation of conservatives. This is just full transparency. This
is kind of where my thinking went. This was a
part of my political evolution over time. Trump said, you know,
(43:52):
there was a man, bab Buchan, and a good guy,
a conservative guy. Trump began a sudden collective cheer erupted
from the left side of the stage, unmistakingly youthful, unexpected
in tone, Trump says, Wow, young people, they know him.
The cheering came from a group of college Republicans, mostly
(44:12):
young Midwestern men. Their affinities lie not with Reaganite optimism
or bush Air globalism, but with the sobering, culture first
realism of Pat Buchanan. The heirs of the Buchanan Brigade,
animated by a blend of cultural traditionalism, economic nationalism, and
a deep seated skepticism toward America's post Cold War trajectory.
They're not interested in conserving the status quo. They want
(44:34):
to recover something lost. Hey man, and hallelujah. I've never
felt so kind of represented in an article right I
feel like I'm reading it and I'm like, wow, he's
literally me right now. Three developments defined the social fabric
of the twentieth century, the triumph of multiculturalism, the commodification
(44:55):
of the consumer, and the cultural conquest of the left.
The relative prosperity has all kind of fallen away, and
those are the things that remained. Tax cuts and platitudes
about the Constitution no longer sufficed. Legal immigration was no
longer seemed as harmless and endless. Foreign aid and wars
of choice were now understood as betrayals. Pat Buchanan's book
(45:20):
The Death of the West was incredibly popular. I've read it.
I've read a couple of Buchanan's books. Incredibly influential in
my thinking. But the old consensus is crubling. The article
starts to can conclude the new generation doesn't want talking points,
they want answers. They see through the empty gestures of
conservative influences who quote the Founders one minute and promote
(45:42):
materialism the next. The polite right has had its time
and it failed. I like the polite right kind of
done with that. Twenty seven minutes after the hour, here
on the Morning Show, this is the future. People hop
on board.
Speaker 1 (46:00):
With Preston Scott. Can you fly this plane and land it?
Speaker 2 (46:03):
Surely you can't be serious.
Speaker 1 (46:05):
I am serious, and don't call me surely. On News
Radio one hundred point seven UFLA.
Speaker 2 (46:20):
Thirty six minutes after the hour, halfway done with today's show.
Here on the Morning Show without Preston Scott, I'm Grant
Allan filling in for Preston today, Doctor Joe Camps and
Healthy Expectations coming up next. But first here the big
story in the press box. As I said last Dowery
(46:41):
was I had one story coming in, but as news
continued to cascade as it does, the the FBI pardon me.
The FBI is calling it a terror attack in Boulder, Colorado.
(47:02):
There was a planned Israel support rally pro Israel rally
in Boulder, Colorado, and an Egyptian national who has not
only overstayed his visa, but he overstayed a work permit,
was wielding what appeared to me. The FBI officials were
(47:26):
referred to it in a video that I played last hour,
and the FBI special agent at the FBI Boulder Field
office referred to it as some sort of like flame
adjusted flame thrower. I mean that I guess what it
looked like to me. He had like two glass bottles
(47:47):
in his hand in the video, and it looked like
Molotov cocktails. And there was another video that I saw
of a large pire of dark smoke. There were reports
of people suffering from burns on the ground. Local news
outlet spoke with another local man who was there, who
(48:09):
was in a store nearby when someone said there was
a fire outside. This is according to Breitbart's reporting. When
he exited, the man didn't see anything aflame although there
was someone on the ground being doused by bystanders. He
also saw a shirtless man holding squirt bottles and yelling
that sounds like the fella. We watched as the police
arrived a couple minutes later, and this guy, the shirtless guy,
(48:31):
went down on the ground, was handcuffed and taken away. Then,
so this suspect is not at large. We're not going
to use his name, but he was an Egyptian national.
He entered the United States proved through Los Angeles International
Airport LAX in twenty twenty two. During the Biden admin.
(48:52):
They gifted him a temporary visa, but he overstayed that
and the Biden admin was able to give him even
this work permit that lasted two years, that expired in
March of this year, so it's been in about a
month and a half two months since then. Colorado Governor
(49:13):
issued a statement thoughts go out to the people who
have been injured by the heinous, targeted attack on the
Jewish community. Boulder is strong, et cetera, et cetera. It
feels too cheap to just say I look at that
(49:35):
Biden admin and all of its failures, but that is
really the story. Here right. Like it gets talked about
on Fox News all the time, on all of these
major outlets, You're gonna hear it on all sorts of
podcasts all day long about how the failures of the
Biden administration caused this. It feels like an overplayed talking point,
(49:59):
but it is the truth. We're significantly less safe than
we were a few years ago. I personally take the
high number when it comes to questions about how many
people were let into the United States legally and illegally,
(50:20):
I personally I take the high number. I'm just gonna
go ahead and expect that it's way bigger than we think.
No one thinks this is gonna stop, right unless deportations.
Is this just what we're gonna have to deal with now,
(50:41):
unless the deportations ramp up. I pray not. I don't
want it to I don't want it to happen. I
really don't, because we need safe streets. That is really
the end of my politics. We're like, have our nation,
reverence the Lord, and protect your people. That's kind of
(51:04):
it for me.
Speaker 1 (51:05):
Man.
Speaker 2 (51:05):
It's kind of a short list. There's a lot of
things under those two things, but that's kind of it.
Forty forty one minutes after the hour, Doctor Joe Camp's
coming up next.
Speaker 1 (51:17):
Good morning, and welcome to the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 2 (51:29):
Forty two minutes after the hour. Here on the Morning Show.
Joining me now is doctor Camps, Doctor Joe Camps in
Healthy Expectations. Good morning, doctor Camps. How are you today?
Speaker 4 (51:39):
Good morning? How are you doing today?
Speaker 2 (51:41):
I'm doing very well. What do you have for us?
Speaker 4 (51:43):
Well? I found an interesting study and this was in
about eight hundred and eighty nine patients, so a large cohort,
and this happened in multiple countries including Canada, the United States, Argentina,
the UK, you name it. But what they did is
(52:05):
they looked at eight hundred and eighty nine patients who
were treated for colon cancer and they received various treatments.
I won't talk about that, that's not what the essence
of the article is all about. But they basically had
about half the patients were given information promoting fitness and nutrition,
(52:27):
and then the other half worked with coaches meeting every
two weeks who put down on an exercise routine rigorously.
And what they found was that in the control group
they had about twenty eight percent fewer cancers and thirty
(52:48):
seven percent fewer bests from any causes, really showing that
basically that in addition to the previous treatment, looking at
a core of patients, those who were fundamentally more active
actually had better survivor rates. And this is the first
time that I think I have seen a study which,
(53:12):
you know, sort of has lamented what we've thought all
along of just how important it is for us to
stay active. And this is the first time that I've
seen a study that substantiates this. Really excited about it
because that's something that we all can potentially do. Now.
Obviously there are circumstances where you know, certain people can't
(53:37):
get into an exercise routine, but this is very suggestive
that if we keep moving, it does have significant impact
on our overall quality of health and also potentially prevention
of death. So again, this is the first time I've
seen this. It's exciting. It's something that I've always thought about,
(54:00):
but certainly it's always good to see that it gets
documented in the literature.
Speaker 2 (54:04):
Yes, did it specify if there were different degrees of
levels of exercise that can help. I imagine it's probably
just your regular healthy day to day in going for
an evening walk after supper, just getting off your rear end.
Speaker 4 (54:21):
Really absolutely, and we're not talking about something that's going
to require three or four hours to playmah or it's
too complex. I think it's just you just got to
keep moving. And you know that's been part of a
whole reason behind this show started many many years ago
(54:44):
and it hasn't changed. We just need to keep moving.
And one last tidbit. The kids just got out of school,
right so they're going to be outside. Try and keep
them indoors between ten and three am, and you can
apply sp We have skin protection factor. Remember I've said
that there's not much difference between thirty fifty and one
(55:06):
hundred other than costs. They all block out about ninety
five percent of the ultraviolet race. So whatever you have,
just make sure you apply, particularly to the kids, and
if you're outside or sweating or swimming, you need to
reapply after about two hours. So that's my message for
(55:27):
the summer for our parents. You guys, have a great
day and I'll talk to you soon.
Speaker 2 (55:32):
Fantastic. Thank you so much, Doctor Camps. We will talk
to you as well, looking forward to it. Yeah, I
saw that story something as simple and easy. It's just
like your regular day to day exercise, getting off your
ear and just you know, getting the blood pumping had
a significant decrease in the amount of cancer present. Can help.
(55:55):
I saw the same study and I'm very, very glad
he brought it up because, as he said, it kind
of confirms intuition. You just kind of know, just feels right,
you know it, it makes sense. Great stuff. Thanks to
doctor Camps for coming on forty seven minutes after the
hour here of the Morning Show, fifty two minutes after
(56:21):
the hour here on The Warning Show. Brant Allen, almost
the end of our two hour three coming up, I
wanted to play this clip. It's just a couple of minutes,
but it's super good. As a young dad. One of
the things that we're working through, my wife and I,
(56:41):
we're always talking about the the confluence, the nexus of
you know, our our little ones and their young brains
and tech. I'm staring at a screen right now, staring
at a screen all day, and then you like come
home and you stare at a screen some more. You really,
(57:04):
I really need to get better at it personally, because
your kids pattern the behavior after you. And over at
the Blaze there's a podcaster she kind of got viral
maybe back in twenty fourteen twenty fifteen, doing these like
conservative like comedy sketches, and then she has podcast. Her
(57:25):
name's Ali Bastucki, but she's got on her show Claire Moral,
author and fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center,
to discuss the negative effects of things like screens. Particularly
they're referencing. They start the conversation around screens, and then
they move into the broader conversation about the very popular
show Cocoa Melon. And if you're a young parent or
(57:48):
you've got grandkids, you've probably heard of it because it's
designed to be incredibly attention getting and stimulating. And here's
them talking about just the generic question, good, a two
year old, you know, have tablet time? Should should these devices?
I sped it up at one point two five speed,
but it's not too bad, I'll play through it. Should
(58:10):
two year olds say not? Have tablet time every day?
Speaker 7 (58:14):
Yeah? So the brain is in really critical periods of development,
especially in those early years, and the problem is that
screens are way over stimulating for a child's developing nervous system,
and studies show that handing devices to these young children,
robs them of their ability to develop emotional regulation. It
really steals as opportunities away because instead of developing patients
and self control and frustration tolerance, they're just learning to
(58:34):
be calmed by a screen. And so it undermines really
parents' long term goals for their kids. We want our
children to be emotionally regulated, to have self control, to
be independent. But just even a daily screen time limit,
even if it's a short amount of time, is incredibly
habit forming that it's forming their habits towards the screen.
And the problem is that the devices are made to
be addictive to a child's brain. They are constantly drawn
(58:56):
back for more. And I think that's what parents don't understand.
They think, oh, I only give it for time minut
of the day. But the problem is that the screen
time limits don't map on to a child's mental or
emotional time that is then spent craving more and more
of that device. Because of the dopamine in the brain,
they're going to constantly crave more and it really disregulates
their developing nervous system. And so it's really actually important
(59:16):
to protect those young years.
Speaker 2 (59:18):
I've heard that they go on to say, actually the
smaller the screen kind of the worst kind of reactions
that you can get. And it was very interesting to see.
And they make the distinction that like, let's say you've
got a favorite TV show, you know that you watch
as a family together, and it's just like a half
hour show. The television screen isn't all that. It's the
(59:42):
television screen is not interactive like an iPad or a
tablet or a phone is. It's very passive. You're just
on the receiving end. You're receiving the transmission from the
screen and the screen is up there. And I've seen
that in our own home. You know, even if there's
a a little you know, kids show that we've vetted
(01:00:05):
and approved that is safe and we're okay with having
little eyes watch and little ears listen to, you know,
after a few minutes, the you know, little one gets
up to go and play. Anyway, I thought that was
a really interesting clip something to consider. You can find
the full podcast on YouTube. Alibeth Stucky Cocomelon is Frying
(01:00:28):
your Kid's Brain is the title of the episode. I
thought it was really good things to consider. Our number
three here on the Morning Show coming up next, our
(01:00:56):
number three on this Monday episode of The Morning Show
without Preston Scott Grant Alan. It's Monday, June second, twenty
twenty five. Summer. I know the summer. Is it solstice?
Summer Solstice technically doesn't happen untill later this month, but
it's summer. It's been summer for us for a while.
(01:01:19):
I wanted to take a couple segments here while I've
got the time, because I keep seeing stories like this everywhere,
and I think you ought to know about this. You've
probably seen it. Maybe maybe you're following it closely. Maybe
you don't know quite what to make heads or tails
(01:01:39):
about this. There are just some names that you need
to be aware of. There are some companies, some of
the funders behind these companies you just need to be
aware of. I'm not even making I'm not going all
the way and saying that these are names. Okay, I
(01:02:01):
think you could easily make the claim that these maybe
ought to be names you're concerned about. I think it
should be. But I don't think the die is cast yet.
It's possible that these highly influential names could become like
household names in the next year. This story broke on Friday.
(01:02:23):
I sent it around to you know, people that I know,
because this feels like a mistake. There's just so much unknown,
and that's this is a heck of a preface to Finally,
here's the headline for the New York Times, Trump taps
(01:02:44):
Pallenteer to compile data on Americans. The subheadline is, the
Trump administration has expanded pallenteers work with the government, spreading
the company's technology, which could easily merge data on Americans
throughout agencies. Okay. In March, President Trump signed an executive
order calling for the federal government to share data across agencies,
(01:03:05):
raising questions over whether he might compile a master list
of personal information on Americans. Mister Trump has not publicly
talked about the effort. In particular, they have turned to
one company, Palenteer, the data analysis and tech firm the
Trump administration has. This is some context about the size
of the firm. The Trump administration has expanded Palenteer's work
(01:03:28):
across the federal government in recent months. The company has
received more than one hundred and thirteen million dollars in
federal government spending since Trump took office, including additional funds
from existing contracts, as well as new contracts with the
Department of Homeland Security in the Pentagon. A seven hundred
and ninety five million dollar contract was awarded to Palenteer
(01:03:49):
by the DoD last week. This would be now two
weeks ago. Representatives of Pallenteer are speaking to at least
two federal agencies, Social Security Administration and the IRS about
buying technology. So what is Palenteer? Very simply, as they
stated in case you don't know, Palenteer is an American
(01:04:11):
publicly traded tech company. They specialize software platforms like big
data analytics. Based out of Denver, founded by Peter Thiel.
That's the name that One of the names you need
to know. Current CEO of Palenteer is Alex Karp. So
they one of their I guess subsidiaries, Pallunteer Gotham is
(01:04:38):
used by militaries and counter terrorism analysts. So these are
these are the These are big boys d O D uses.
Their technology uses the software from their firm with some
AI fusion. Uh, not too dissimilar than I saw some
(01:05:01):
clips going around about Palmer Lucky. He's the CEO at Anderill,
another kind of AI based firm that's had contracts with
the military for new missile systems. And I forget exactly
what Anderill's newest product was, but it was in essence
(01:05:24):
like a completely unmanned, you know, AI controlled I want
to say jet. It wasn't just a drone. It was
like a jet. It's some high end stuff. There are
many ways in which I could take this, but these
(01:05:45):
are just some of the companies you need to know.
I'll explain a little bit more of why I think
I'm concerned next here in the Morning Show without Preston Scott.
(01:06:09):
The selection by the Trump administration to go with Palenteer
was actually pushed by Elon According to The Times here,
palenteer selection as a chief of vendor for the project
was driven by Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency. At
least three DOGE members. Okay, so I should have amended
(01:06:30):
my statement I misread. May not have been Elon himself,
but it was DOGE. At least three DOGE members formerly
worked at Palenteer, while two others had worked at companies
funded by Peter Teel, an investor and founder a Palenteer. Apparently,
some Palentteer employees are concerned about the association with the
(01:06:52):
Trump administration. They don't want political blowback. I guess akin
to people have freak outs over Tesla's and cyber trucks
in public, maybe that's what they're thinking. There's a new
(01:07:15):
story nearly every day. Yeah, like here you go. There's
a new story every day about AI, and a lot
of these companies employ AI. And that was actually one
of the fears of a lot of the worldview that
(01:07:36):
a lot of these high end, super wealthy tech pros
as they're called. Sometimes they almost have this almost worship
at times of the tech itself. And you're already starting
(01:07:56):
to see trends in the masses of them refer to
to AI as like a dating coach. I don't know
if you've seen those stories or not. People people are
using chat GPT like a dating coach, like give me
an opening line to talk to this girl kind of thing.
People are relying it for all sorts of things. Don't
(01:08:16):
get me wrong, I use it. It's an incredibly useful tool.
Generally speaking, AI ought to be something that you're if
you use AI, be comfortable with losing that skill, right,
So whatever skill you're using AI to assist you with,
if you're comfortable with losing that skill, Go ahead and
(01:08:37):
use it. But if you're not comfortable with losing that skill,
maybe don't. And there was some talk around ELON being
so close to the administration at DOGE. Now obviously DOGE
has not quite met their mark, but questions remained of
(01:09:00):
is the ideal is what is Elon? And a lot
of these guys what are they hoping for to replace
the entire federal apparatus with AI? Now you save some money,
that's for sure, but what are the consequences of that.
I don't necessarily think that AI is going to gain
(01:09:21):
sentience like awareness of itsself and its distinction from humanity
as a separate entity as a thing I, but I
am concerned in which the masses are probably going to
attach to itself or attached to it almost divine like status.
(01:09:43):
Because you've already seen AI video platforms. I think it
was like VO three, like Unleashed, and all of the
videos that people were reacting to were entirely fake, like
those images from like a year ago of AI generated
images not being able to get fingers right, like you
could always tell like an image was AI generated because
(01:10:04):
one person had seven fingers on one hand. You could
tell that it was fake. That's been corrected already. It's
getting pretty scary. Did you see that viral video of
the kangaroo standing with the boarding pass at the airport?
That was fake? You can always look into the eyes.
You can see there's nothing behind the eyes. It's empty.
(01:10:26):
That's how you know. That's the tell. You have to
have an eye for it. But the federal government is
now apparently in close talks with all these guys rather frequently.
I'm just saying, Anderill, Pallinteer, Peter Teel, Alex Karp, we
know Elon. These are names that you're probably gonna need
(01:10:47):
to be aware of. I don't have a solution yet
because we don't know quite exactly what the threats are.
But the threats of like job loss being completely replaced
by an AI bot or some sort of AI servers,
totally real guys in code, in computer science and computer
(01:11:08):
software coming out of college right now. I've heard from
multiple that they're having a hard time finding work. All
those guys that were steered in the direction, like in
the middle of high school age, hey, learn to code.
Now they're struggling find work. This is a story we're
likely going to hear a lot more of seventeen minutes
(01:11:30):
after the hour. Not to be the profit of Doom
or anything, but you need to know. This kind of
sounded like some sort of PBS News Hour or something
(01:11:53):
like Hello and book to National Geographic. That's what it
sounded like. There. I was trying to find another article
that I had here. I just saw it. Don't know
where it went, but I've got my primary one here
(01:12:13):
for this story. This is so funny. Jerry Nadler, Democrat congressman,
he had an aid detained by Department of Homeland Security.
(01:12:33):
Looks like, yeah, it's DHS, it's not ice. Nadler's assistant
gets arrested. This is posted to Twitter by Maga cult Slayer,
So shout out to Maga cult Slayer the account that's
so funny. So here's the story. Democrat Rep. Nadler's aid
handcuffed when DHS accuses his office of harboring rioters. Federal
(01:12:58):
officials handcuffed and aid of Congressman Jerry Nadler of New
York at his Manhattan office on Wednesday, and the incensed
congressman is pointing his finger at Donald Trump US Department
of Homeland Security officers entered the office, and they handcuffed
an aid and accused staffers of harboring rioters. In the
(01:13:22):
video footage of the incident, one person is heard saying, no,
she did not, that is not what happened, while an
officer handcuffs the aid, who appears to be crying. She
pushed him back when the officer said, so, they're breaking down,
yells of stop persisting. How many congressmen do you think
(01:13:43):
probably have either rioters on staff or illegals on staff.
Probably more than Nadler's, probably not the only one. This
(01:14:11):
is an important point to remember at a time when
right wing patronage networks are kind of few and far between,
kind of having to build up patronage networks on our own.
And what do I mean by that? I've told this
depressed from before, and he's talked about this on the show. AOC,
(01:14:36):
for example, got her gig going from barista to congressional
representative basically through a Young Turk's casting call, Like she
was basically responding to an actor's gig. Now she was
(01:14:56):
probably a true believer, Like if she knew that the
Young Turks was having, like you got to be kind
of clued into that sort of world anyway, So she
was she's probably definitely a true believer. But that's what
the left has primarily done. So you take a stroll
on a college campus, say, and why are you know,
(01:15:19):
young college students carrying water for, you know, flying the
Ukraine flag for a nation halfway across the world that
they've never been to, probably are never going to go to,
and probably have never met anyone from. Because the academic
world is a patronage system that has benefits and rewards
(01:15:42):
with playing the game. So you fly the Ukraine flag
and you get promoted to like local Democrat student union
or whatever whatever kind of lefty group on campus they have,
and then you get hired out from the lefty campus
group to you know, join Planned Parenthood's you know, advocacy team,
(01:16:03):
the political group or lobbying group or whatever. You get
hired to some left wing lobbying group, and then you
get hired out from there to be an aid and
then you get hired up you eventually, like there's through
these networks and webs that the left has developed, these
deep pocketed patronage networks that eventually leads to things like
(01:16:23):
absolute crazies being hired by Nadler's offices. The right, by
and large doesn't have as deep of a patronage network,
but I think we ought to. And we're not gonna
mimic every practice that the left does because well it's
rather degenerate. But we can develop patronage networks say hello,
(01:16:48):
young man, I see you. You seem like kind of
right wing, Like, I'll get you an internship kind of thing.
Internships lead to jobs, Jobs lead to promotions, and that's
how young guys are able to like still get married
and have kids today is through patronage networks that whatever
opinion you have, we're not canceling you because you happen
(01:17:11):
to be a conservative where you happen to be right wing.
I think there's something to do on there. There's there's something,
There are things to be built, and we still have
a lot of work to do. Twenty seven twenty minutes
after the hour, final half hour of The Morning Show
is next.
Speaker 1 (01:17:29):
The Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 2 (01:17:50):
Thirty six minutes after the hour, Here on The Morning Show,
final half hour of the show, the third and final
installment of Today's Big Story in the press Box. If
you are just now tuning in and it didn't happen
to catch the news. Uh someone, Oh look at that. Yeah,
I see Jose's having a rather demonstrative Is that the
(01:18:19):
right word. It's quite Yeah, I'm gonna have to turn
my TV off. Yeah, the TV biological Man wins California
Girls State Championship. California trans athlete wins two titles in
girls state championship. Man, that's so twenty twenty one, like, like,
(01:18:52):
it's hard to believe that there's still that going on.
I know, I know, it's only been a few years,
but there's been such a cultural tide shift away from that.
Just how truly insane it is, and how so often
it's linked to like into the a person undergoing through that,
(01:19:17):
they're going through hormone replacement therapy oftentimes right, and of
course what does that do to your brain. There's a
study I recently saw. In it it looked at the
difference in thought processes from the male and female brain
to see if there was any overlap. And they had
kind of like a cluster map explaining the difference or
(01:19:40):
showing the results of how male brain reacted to the circumstance,
female brain reacted to the circumstance, and not only did
was there no overlap. They were on opposite sides of
the cluster chart, meaning we're different. We're not the same
male and female, we're not same. We think and see
(01:20:02):
the world differently. And yeah, it's it's hard to believe
that there's still this pocket of like it's of course
it's in California, right, it's not surprising, tart, but it
is hard to believe that there's still people kind of
operating under this like like have we That's when I
(01:20:25):
really start to realize that, Okay, this isn't just materialism.
As I talked about in the op ed about the
future of Z the gen Z right last hour, we
can't be materialists when it comes to people who are
confused about their sex. There is there's a spirit that's
(01:20:49):
animating this and they're captive to it. That's the thing
that needs to be pointed out more so. Yes, absolutely,
the hormone replacement therapy, the essay, eyes, all of it.
It's affecting your brain. Absolutely, it is. It's making you
real sick if you're undergoing those kinds of treatments, and
(01:21:12):
the world is not doing you any service by affirming
you in this The kind thing to do is to
actually say, no, what are you doing? You've lost your mind.
But there is a type of I mentioned this on Friday.
It's almost like there's an egregoric spirit. There's something big
(01:21:34):
that drives someone to make a decision to look at
themselves in the mirror and say that's wrong. Actually I'm
something else. Have we considered all of the people that
have undergone reassignment surgeries, they've gotten things removed or put on, right,
(01:21:58):
you do realize that those are going to be people
that are eventually Alzheimer's and dementia patients. Right, They're gonna
wake up one day in their seventies or eighties and
they're gonna look. They're gonna ask where did I go?
Where's the rest of They're gonna wonder because they've undergone
(01:22:20):
the reassignment surgeries and they're gonna be in Alzheimer's patient
They're gonna look down and say what the forty one
minutes after the hour here, that was not the big
story in the press box. I'll get to that next.
Speaker 1 (01:22:33):
This is the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 2 (01:22:39):
So yes, that was not the big story in the
press box. This is the suspect is in custody in Boulder, Colorado.
I imagine we're probably actually, uh, I'm not gonna say that. Actually,
I'm gonna I'm gonna think the opposite, because usually when
these types of events or attacks happen, it's only a
(01:23:04):
matter of time before someone unearths their social media accounts.
They're like, oh, look at that, he's got some really
edgy takes on his Twitter account, or like, hey, did
you know that he ran this, like like the he
was like this mod on some whatever, blah blah blah blah.
He was like a Reddit mod or something like that.
I don't know. That happens more times than not. Uh,
(01:23:26):
But then you get odd circumstances where there is no
manifesto and we still don't know anything, like the Butler
Pennsylvania Trump shooter. That young kid, Why don't we know
anything about him? Still like that just disappeared off the
face of the earth. And we're probably not gonna know
a lot of this guy's true motivations because he's illegal.
(01:23:51):
They're gonna bury that, They're gonna you know, he's also
still relatively new to the United States, so he may
not even be one of those guys that's got like
an account you know, on this site or that site
where he's saying things or they're gonna maybe find maybe maybe,
I don't know, but a suspect is in custody. There
(01:24:13):
was a pro Israel rally taking place in Boulder, Colorado,
and he is an Egyptian national that he entered the
United States in twenty twenty two, was granted a visa
by the Biden administration and then was subsequently overstayed that
(01:24:34):
and was granted a two year work visa that expired
in March. Here came through LAX actually funny enough, so
who knows what kind of resettlement program he was a
part of. But if he came through LAX, he's an
(01:24:58):
Egyptian national, where did he come from? Because like coming
from Egypt all the way around to Lax, that's taken
the long way. New York would be closer. I don't know.
(01:25:18):
The story is the Biden regime truly though, because I
pray this doesn't happen. But just keep it in the
back of your mind that these are not going to
be the only times of these types of incidents, because,
as they say, import the third World become the Third
(01:25:38):
World and all of the feuds that they bring with them.
So he's apparently an Egyptian who's not a fan of Israel,
and now he brings the sentiment to the United States
and causes chaos in our streets by h wielding what
(01:26:01):
looks like, in my eyes, Molotov cocktails. We don't have
to deal with this. There's a very very simple political solution,
mass deportations. They cannot stay, they must leave. Their way
of life is not compatible with ours. Just because you
(01:26:27):
set foot on the soil and you know, kiss the
magic dirt, you do not just instantly become an American.
It's a process that takes place. I would prefer a
long process, truthfully well, to be highly selective of who
can be an American. But this is not one of them. No, no,
(01:26:52):
we don't have to deal with this. This guy should
be sent back immediately. Man, where did the time go?
(01:27:15):
It's been a couple of real fun days being able
to be here and be with you all again, filling
in for Preston. It's a it's a real pleasure and
honor and a pleasure, as some say around here. But
I wanted to leave you with this, this Stephen Miller clip.
Just every time he goes I love when he goes
on like CNN or NBC or MSNBC, because we just
(01:27:38):
get gems like this, Stephen Miller talking about immigration. Uh,
defining an illegal alien? What is an illegal alien? What
does anyone even know? CNN doesn't seem to know. So
(01:27:58):
here's Stephen Miller.
Speaker 8 (01:28:00):
Curity Secretary Christi Noan posted a stunning allegation saying that
an undocumented migrant sent a letter threatening to kill the president,
promising to self deport after the assassination. Seeing in reporting
shows that investigators believe the migrant.
Speaker 2 (01:28:12):
Was set up.
Speaker 8 (01:28:14):
It was a victim of a setup. What is the
administration going to do now? And this is an undocumented immigrant.
I do want to note that, but this was someone
who came forward, was a victim of a crime, and
now law enforcement believes he.
Speaker 9 (01:28:24):
Was set up. Go ahead, I want to clarify what
you mean. So we're talking about the same thing. Are
you saying this this immigrant was here illegally? Yes?
Speaker 8 (01:28:33):
But I am, And that's why I said that I
clarify this.
Speaker 9 (01:28:37):
It just said undocumented and I wasn't clear what that means.
I'm assuming they have a fake ID. If you assuming
they have a seid.
Speaker 8 (01:28:43):
That's neither here the questions, Steve, I want I want
this to be and call me naive a good faith
discussion about what's happening right now.
Speaker 9 (01:28:51):
When we use language the design to obscure the truth,
that's not good faith. They're not an undocumented.
Speaker 8 (01:28:58):
Okay, that's fine, that's not I don't know the I
don't know the details of the assassination threat.
Speaker 5 (01:29:05):
Oh I.
Speaker 9 (01:29:05):
All I can say based on what you're telling me
is there's an illegal alien in our country who's making
menacing threats. Regardless of the facts of circumstances. We don't
want him here. We're going to get to the bottom
of it, and I would gladly come back.
Speaker 8 (01:29:16):
On just to be clear, but quickly.
Speaker 9 (01:29:21):
Unfairly. Yes, I'm sure the guy almost treated very unca
Where where.
Speaker 2 (01:29:24):
Is the white.
Speaker 4 (01:29:26):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (01:29:26):
Yes, I'm sure. Next question. It's just so funny. It's like,
I love how he goaded her too, because I know
that undocumented to them is as it's just a softer
word than illegal. I love how Stephen Miller is like, uh,
I'm I'm entirely unfamiliar with this term undocumented. Can you
(01:29:47):
inform me of what that He's totally gaslighting her, and
it's so amazing. I saw another report about Miller. He
was potentially rumored for another gig for you know, in
the administration or something, but he didn't like he didn't
want to because his real passion was immigration enforcement. Man,
(01:30:07):
you love you do you? If you love what you do,
you never work a day in your life.
Speaker 1 (01:30:11):
Brought to you by Baron No Heating and Air. It's
the morning show on WFLA.
Speaker 2 (01:30:19):
Oh man. I did the entire third hour standing. It
felt nice. I think I think better on my feet,
but maybe that's just me kept it cool in here
in case, you know, I got warm, which is possible.
A big story in the press box, the Boulder attack.
(01:30:40):
Egyptian national overstate is visa overstate of work, permit, work visa,
something like that. So he's an illegal. I hope he
goes home soon. Really Molotov cocktails out of pro Israel
rally wielding molotov cocktails where we don't do that. We
(01:31:05):
talked about Palenteer. I warned you about some of the
dangers of AI and Pallenteer and the future singularity and
techno futurism and all that stuff. What is conservatism what
is the future of conservatism? Is the term even accurate anymore?
Should we just be like right wingers? All that and more.
(01:31:26):
Preston's back tomorrow. Have a good day.