Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:13):
Hey, it's Tuesday. Good morning friends, June Live fifteenth. For
many of you, it's payday. Can I get a what
what it's good to be with you? That's Jose. I'm
preston show fifty four to nine. More on this day
and history and mere moments, but we welcome you to
the radio program. I hope you you know what. I've
(00:35):
never said this in five thousand, four hundred and eight shows,
now this is five four hundred to ninth. I've never
said the words I'm about to say. I hope you
had a good night of rest. Never I've just I
don't know why you. I mean, most of you are
(00:58):
just waking up or have just awakened. There's some traveling
the fruited Plaine listening to this show on iHeartRadio. We
have a lot of truck drivers that listen to this
program a lot, and I am proud to keep you
men and women company. Let me tell you bring America's
(01:20):
gear and goods across the country, across the asphalt jungle.
Thank you for what you do. We appreciate you keeping
America open for business. Let's begin with some scripture. One
of my favorite scriptures to dig deep into is this one.
(01:43):
It just popped up in today's devotional. Jesus said to
them again, peace be with you, as the Father has
sent me. Even so I am sending you. That's John
twenty twenty one. Again he said again, because he said,
(02:03):
peace be with you. And they're freaking out. Why, because
this is Jesus appearing to them. They were locked up
in a room, scared because Jesus had been killed, and
they'd heard rumors, fanatical stories that he was, that his
(02:24):
grave was empty, and they thought they would be next,
that the Romans, that the Pharisees would arrange for them
to be put to death. They're scared. They're locked up
in a room, literally locked up. Jesus just says, what's up? Okay,
(02:45):
He didn't quite say that, although he might have suck, suck,
Peace be with you first of all, isn't that just
like Jesus? Right? They're all freaking out, and he says,
peace be with you. It's all good, everything's fine. And
(03:09):
then he said again, peace be with you, as the
Father has sent me, Even so I am sending you. Now.
I just happen to have done a deep dive on
these verses years ago in a teaching and we see
(03:31):
the words sent and sending or send as the Father
has sent me, I send you. We see those words
and we think, well, it's the same word, just different
tenses of it, different versions. Not at all. Actually, what
(03:51):
Jesus is saying here, as the Father has sent me
with all authority, I send you with delegated authority. Jesus
has all of the authority. The only authority we have
has been delegated to us by Christ. We don't have
(04:13):
the authority. We are ambassadors speaking encouragement or correction to others.
And so that's why he said, hey, if you say
somebody is forgiven, they're forgiven. It's not by your authority
(04:35):
or my authority that they're forgiven. We are. We are
saying that, expressing that with confidence based on the authority
that comes from Christ, knowing what his word says about
forgiveness and grace and mercy. We're not the ones that
do it. That's why you don't have to go to
(04:56):
a priest to seek forgiveness. You can, but you don't
have to. It's not the priest that gives you forgiveness.
Jesus does. And you and I are a kingdom of priests.
We are a royal priesthood. We are all capable, under
delegated authority to say that, to guide and instruct and
(05:19):
help others. Ten past the Hours, The Morning Show with
Preston Scott. This is the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
(05:54):
Inside the American Patriots Almanac, July fifteenth, eighteen sixty two.
The Confederate iron Clad Arkansas. The Arkansas pounds its way
through a fleet of Union warships blockading Vicksburg on the
Mississippi River. In nineteen twelve, it was on this date
(06:15):
that Jim Thorpe, one of the greatest athletes in US history,
shatters the world record in the decathlon at the Olympics
in Stockholm, Sweden. Did you watch it? Did you watch
the Jim Thorpe special on the History Channel? It's incredible, incredible.
(06:39):
I didn't watch it on the History Channel. I got
because I'm a member of the media. I got a
screening of it, so I watched it whenever I wanted to.
Speaker 2 (06:55):
It.
Speaker 1 (06:55):
It was so good, it really was. Thorpe Man nineteen thirteen.
One year later, Augustus Bacon of Georgia becomes the first
Senator elected by popular vote before the seventeenth Amendment. Senators
were elected by state legislators in nineteen sixteen. Pacific Arrow
(07:18):
Products later named Boeing, founded in Seattle by William Bowing. Boy,
they've had some tough times lately, Boeing has. We've chronicled
those tough times here on the program. All right, it
(07:39):
is National Pet Fire Safety Day. Now what that means
is it's encouraging you, if you have pets, to have
a plan of escape in case of a fire at
your home that includes your pets. Have a plan, know
(08:01):
what you're gonna do. They're part of the family. They
just are. Now, I don't have any pets. I have
pet peeves, but I don't have any pets. But I
love I love animals, love them, especially when they're in belly. No,
(08:24):
just kidding. It's National Give Something Away Day, National I
Love Horses Day, and I do love horses. Horses to
me are just they are, they are gallant, they are
(08:46):
they are such statuesque animals. I mean, they're just they're beautiful.
National Tapioca Pudding Day. My wife cannot stand tapioca pudding.
I love it. And today is National Gummy Worm Day.
(09:15):
Who invented a gummy worm? And how is it that
you come up with just the right texture, Because if
a gummy worm is too chewy and you're just you're
just gnawn on that thing like it's jerky, it's awful.
(09:39):
It's got to have just a little resistance and then
give way, little resistance, give way. That's how you know
you've got a good gummy. It can't be it can't
be one of those. It's like there's certain gummy bears like, Okay,
I'm gonna call them out, Harbo. They're too chewy. They're
(10:05):
just too much, too much chew required to get through
those things. Huh huh, that's almost rubber. I know. No, no, no,
no no, And then you just like give up and
you just swallow the thing and then you've got this
wad in your belly of just gumminess. Yeah, I know.
(10:26):
Sixteen past the hour, come back with it? Did you know?
Speaker 3 (10:30):
And some interesting things about dreams.
Speaker 1 (10:49):
The Brothers segment. Did you know? The term martial arts
generally refers to any fighting style that has been standardized
with a set of rules. Annie The term marshal is
derived from the Roman god of war Mars. Huh who knew?
(11:18):
Now you know? So there you go, all right, This
from the lead research assistant of the program. Did you
know that your diet can influence whether you experience suite
dreams or nightmares? According to researchers, the answer is a
(11:49):
definitive yes. Now let me just pause for a second.
I'm trying to figure out where night terrors comes from.
My wife says that I'd never heard the expression until
(12:10):
my wife said it. I always thought nightmares dreams that
were pleasant, didn't really have a title, they were just dreams.
They were like whatever. And then there were nightmares, which
(12:32):
is suddenly called night terrors in a lot of circles.
And I've always been curious where that came from, although
I guess it makes sense, right because nightmares night terrors,
they're they're communicating something that, you know, intense, intense, kind
of creepy stuff. But according to the study, eating certain
(12:55):
foods before you go to sleep influences how well you sleep.
It also influences the nature of whether you're having pleasant
dreams or unsettling dreams. For example, the culprits that worsened
sleep were desserts, spicy foods, and dairy What an unusual
(13:21):
collection that is twenty three percent of participants experienced negative
dreams after consuming sweet foods. Well nineteen and a half
percent had nightmares after eating dairy. Sorry, sweet foods twenty
(13:51):
three percent, nineteen and a half percent, spicy foods, dairy,
fifteen point seven. Clean foods produced better sleep. What are
those fruit? Herbal tea, vegetables, vegetables? Okay, hey, I'm just
(14:21):
reading the research. Bad dreams, bizarre dreams were blamed thirty
eight percent on sweets, twenty seven percent on dairy, eight
percent on meat. I try not to eat before I
go to bed. I try to eat, you know, a
(14:45):
couple of hours before I go to bed. But I'm trying.
I'm thinking about it right now. I don't know that
any of that is ever. I've never let's put it
this way, I've never connected dots that anything that I've
eaten has led to a good or a bad dream
per se. But there you go. Eating certain common foods
(15:10):
could trigger good dreams or bad dreams, depending on what
you're you know, dealing with. There all right? Today on
the program, Yes, Congresswoman cat Camick will join us. She's
about a month away from giving birth. She's expecting her
first little and I gave her an out. It's like no, no, no,
(15:36):
we have things to talk about, sir. So the congresswoman
will be joining us this morning. We got a manly minute,
Big Stories in the press Box coming up next twenty
seven past the hour. Good morning friends, you're just joining us, Ruminators, Welcome,
It's the Morning Show. It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
(16:11):
Welcome back to the Morning Show. Welcome back to the
Morning Show. Thirty five minutes past the hour, Big Stories
in the press Box, Smart and Safe Florida has submitted
(16:34):
six hundred and thirteen thousand, two hundred and six valid
petition signatures. According to Florida Politics, they need eight hundred
and eighty thousand, sixty two signatures to make the twenty
twenty six ballot. This is to put weed back on
(17:00):
the ballot and give you a chance to say yes,
we want to ruin the state because I promise you
will regret that decision, because every state that's done it has,
every single state that has legalized weed has regretted it.
(17:26):
The initiative is titled Adult Personal Use of Marijuana. They've
made some changes, but I will only tell you marijuana
use for miners will go skyrocketing because it will be
more accessible. They will get it far easier because it
(17:51):
will be legal. Just consider this alcohol is obtained by minors.
Why because it's legal, it's easily obtained, get it from
the cabinet, You get it from adults that have absolutely
(18:15):
no clue and make it available to kids intentionally. The
evidence of damage to people's health is unquestioned, and it's growing.
(18:35):
What's interesting to me is I thought, now US District
Judge Mark Walker, who, Well, we won't waste time on Mark.
What's interesting is that I thought, and I'm getting this verified.
I thought changes were made that required a driver's license
(19:01):
to be presented or the last four of a social
to verify that someone was a State of Florida resident
and of age to sign the petition. Now, why does
that matter? Because I've been in the presence of people
(19:21):
seeking signatures on at least three occasions, a Walmart parking lot,
outside the department or the tax collector's office here in
Leon County, and at the chain of parks during an
art festival. At no occasion, not one time, did anyone
(19:47):
signing a petition present any ID or any other information.
So I'm just wondering, how do we know these are
valid signatures? How do we know these are state residents?
How do we know that these people are of age?
We don't and I could be wrong. I know that
(20:08):
that's what was discussed. I thought that's what was passed
and required. But anyway, that's one big story. The second
big story is Ghislaine Maxwell. Gislaine Ghislaine Maxwell allegedly ready
to speak to Congress, willing to talk to Congress about everything.
(20:34):
Now I've got something for you to listen to. I'll
play it next hour. It's a reporter from ABC tape
that has been obtained by James O'Keeffe. Interesting. James o'keeff
appears to be back with Project Veritas. Apparently they kissed
and made up. I don't know what happened, but he's
(20:55):
in front of a Project Veritas thing or you know.
I don't know, but Amy roback a tape. They've got
an insidered ABC that is releasing tape of her on
the set lamenting what's happened with Jeffrey Epstein And you
(21:16):
need to hear it. And it kind of goes back
to what we discussed yesterday that yeah, it does matter anyway,
those are your big stories. Just laid Maxwell in a
Tallahassee federal prison. She has been in Tallahassee since she
was sent to prison, so she maybe, hey, good morning,
(21:38):
he's lame. Forty one minutes passed the hour. It's the
Morning Show with Preston Scott. Then this music just make
you feel happy. Come on, this is good walking music too.
(22:04):
A little pace to it to your walking room. You
ever see somebody walking down a sidewalk and they're walking
to the beat of the music you're listening to in
your car. It makes me laugh every time I feel
like I'm watching a music video, or those rare occasions
when the beat matches my windshield wipers perfectly. Am I
(22:29):
the only one that thinks that's fun? I don't know.
Probably so uh did not get to this story yesterday.
It just it it. It leaves me just shaking my
head that.
Speaker 4 (22:45):
Los Angeles, Los Angeleans, Los Angelens whatever, that they that
they tolerate this, that they are fine with their tax dollars.
Speaker 1 (23:01):
Hold on, I had a bug land on the microphone.
I did not want it in my mouth. I had
to take action. Sorry, I don't know if I got him.
I think I did not sure. Oh, yep, there he is,
I got him. Okay, rest in peace, little buddy. Los
(23:26):
Angeles mayor Karen Bass has signed an executive order. First
of all, why are mayors signing executive orders? I know
there are different kinds of mayors with different kinds of authority. No, no, no,
mayors should not be signing executive orders. Anyway. She's giving
(23:50):
out cash to illegal immigrants because they're scared to come
out and go to their jobs because of ice. Well, yeah,
if you're here illegally, you know who else ought to be?
Upset employers, it's on you. You're hiring illegals. What are
(24:15):
you doing? And I say that knowing good and well
that there are people listening to me right now and
you are employing illegals. Shame on you. The rest you
don't understand these are just good people that what broke
the law, broke into this country. Are you letting them
(24:36):
break into your home? Are they sleeping in your home?
You realize that a lot of them, not all, There
are some, I'm sure delightful people, but you do realize
that some of them are criminals beyond breaking in to
(24:58):
this country, that they break into people's homes, that they
commit murders, that they commit rapes, that they commit all
kinds of crimes, robberies and burglaries, and you're making it
easier for them by providing them with a job. You
(25:18):
don't understand that's how I make my money. Well again,
shame on you. Raise your prices, pay people properly. There
are people in your trade that hire legal residents or
green card holders, people verified to work in this country.
(25:41):
Their prices are higher. You're undercutting them because you're using
slave labor and you know it. So shame on you.
You're contributing to the problem. You're part of the problem.
So Los Angeles, Now, at what point do the citizens
of La saying, No, that's not what we want to
(26:02):
give our taxes. Wait, sorry, that's not where we want
taxes taken from us to go to. I don't know,
don't have the answer. Forty six minutes past them, I
don't have it. Don't have the answers for a lot
of things.
Speaker 5 (26:16):
I don't have that one.
Speaker 1 (26:30):
It sounds like the Pointer Sisters, doesn't it. It is.
It's a rip off of the Pointer Sisters. It's not
the Pointer Sisters, it's not their song. But it just
has that vibe to it. Shit anyway, Tonight Capitol Conservatives
(26:51):
at the Elks Lodge on North Magnolia. Charlie Ward, Charlie,
Charlie Ward will be the guest speaker. Come on, what
do you say the most awarded? I think he still
holds the record for the most awards one when he
(27:14):
captured the Heisman Trophy that year. He won everything. And
had he been playing in the NFL college football now
the way the pro game is now, he would have
been the top draft pick. But back then they thought
(27:39):
Charlie was too small to play in the NFL, and
so he took his talents to the NBA and was
the starting point guard for the New York Knicks for years.
So he was a first round draft pick in the NBA.
He wasn't even drafted in the NFL, in part because
he said, yeah, I'm you know, if you're not going
(27:59):
to play me, don't draft me. Just for giggles. But
it's just amazing because his skill set, what does it
fit today's game? Mobile quarterbacks that can hurl the magic bean?
My goodness, gracious. So he'll be speaking tonight at the
Capitol Conservatives. The Dinners at five point thirty for those
(28:23):
of you that have the reservations, if you don't, just
show up about six fifteen. And also tonight being honored is
mister Bob Bailey, one hundred and one years young, Double
Bronze Star recipient Battle of the Bulge. Need I say more?
(28:47):
That is going to be awesome. They will be honoring him.
Charlie gets to follow that. Good luck Charlie. Charlie's such
a humble good man, he really is. And the new
basketball coach at Florida A and M. He didn't have
to take the job. He chose to. It's like he
(29:09):
didn't have to, he didn't need the job working at
Florida High. He just took the job to help boys
get better and want a state title or two. Good job,
that's what you do. I wrote on my rundown the
words standards, question mark. I've lamented where we are with
(29:31):
media today. I talk about it frequently. I write about it.
It's just it's almost depressing how bad the writing is today.
Talked about a story yesterday. It was just just terribly written,
And I think to myself, who is teaching? I literally
(29:55):
had I had journalism courses available to me in middle
school in high school and what passes for writing today
in mainstream newspapers like Gannette would have gotten you red
marked all over in middle school and high school. Check
out this headline from US magazine. You ready, brooks Nader
(30:22):
stains crisp white skirt during her period after trying to
be chic at Wimbledon. Really, first, that's a story. Whoever
brooks Nader is, I don't know who she is. That's
(30:42):
a story. Second, we need to put that in the headline.
How about brooks Nader has uncomfortable moment at Wimbledon? Or
and I mean bury it in the story at least
if you feel like you got to write about it.
(31:02):
But this was a headline featured on a push out
by a mainstream media outlet. Back with a second hour
(31:28):
of the morning show Morning Friends, how are you You're
doing well? Well, I've got I got a stack of
stuff here. We're gonna we we certainly will unpack a
lot of this with Kat Cammick, US Congresswoman Florida, Florida's
third congressional district next hour. I want to get her
take on the OBBB, the One Big Beautiful Bill. She
(31:53):
certainly was very pointed in her comments about the bill
when we spoke with her prior to its passage. Just
want to ask her what she thinks beyond the tax
cuts being made permanent, which needed to happen, what are
(32:14):
the best parts of the bill most important, and what
are the worst? What has to get more attention? Has
to There are ten non tax policies that Epic Times
highlighted that the bill will they claim affect The bill
(32:39):
will affect Americans. It is a huge piece of legislation
that in and of itself bothers me because when anything
is that big, there will be things in there that
just shouldn't be. It's almost a rule. It's the famous
(33:02):
line of Nancy Pelosi with Obamacare. You have to read
it to find out what's in it. And you didn't
read it. She was asked. She said, you have to
read it. I have to read it find out. It's
your job. But these are the areas that the Epic
(33:24):
Times highlighted. Air traffic control and in no particular order,
mind you. New law provides twelve and a half billion
dollars to the Transportation Department to bring long overdue reforms
to the air traffic control system, Border and immigration one
(33:47):
hundred and fifty billion dollars. About eighty billion of that
is slated for domestic immigration enforcement operations. The single biggest
item in the law as it relates to immigration is
the forty six and a half billion dollars dedicated to
(34:08):
the construction of the border wall. So hopefully we're gonna
get busy get that wall built again. I still think
we ought to have our military patrolling our borders. But
education another one. These are non tax related, although they're
(34:31):
all tax related, right, because that all of this is
funded by our taxes. But by not being tax related,
we're talking about different things inside this bill that will
impact our lives that do not lower our tax rate
or deal with the taxes we pay directly. Does that
(34:52):
makes sense? Rates of taxation. Education reduces the Pelgrim eligibility
for high income students and students with full ride scholarships. Yeah,
don't need pell grants, Medicaid and rural hospitals to reduce spending.
(35:16):
It would impose an eighty hour monthly work requirement for
able bodied adults to receive benefits. Is there anything wrong
with that? Able bodied people working a minimum of twenty
hours a week, is that a problem? Again? Able bodied
(35:45):
and this has to take effect no later than December
twenty twenty six. There are cuts and snap benefits, and
by that it simply means requirements food stamps. Able bodied
recipients currently between the ages of eighteen and fifty four
must spend eighty hours a month volunteering, working or looking
(36:08):
for a job or being in school. The bill expands
it to the age of sixty four. But again it's
important that you take some of these notes away able
bodied people. Is it so much to ask for twenty
hours of something a week if they're able to receive
(36:32):
these benefits. The idea, of course, is that as you work,
you gain experience, you get a better job, you need
less and less benefits, and that's the way the system
should be working. It isn't always working that way, however.
Ten past the hour. More of the things inside the
(36:52):
bill that we will discuss again next hour with cat Camick.
Trump accounts for newborns. Every child born between January first
(37:13):
of this year and December thirty first of twenty twenty
eight gets a prefunded one thousand dollars account from the
Treasury Department must be invested in a broad stock market
index that allows Americans to contribute up to five thousand
dollars a year to these accounts for their children. Children
(37:35):
born before twenty twenty five January first will be eligible,
but not for the seed money. Well that's first of all. No,
we don't need to be doing that. I'll just stop.
(37:58):
There some changes in the Federal Communications Commissions a spectrum authority.
It's a term that describes the ability of the agency
to auction off specific radio frequencies to the private sector.
It expired in twenty twenty three. It got deadlocked in
(38:19):
Congress because Biden did nothing with it. So it reinstates
that defunding planned parenthood. That's a win. It ends Medicaid
funding for planned parenthood for one year. One year. Huh,
Well that's one year at least. The legislation does not
(38:42):
explicitly mention planned parenthood, but instead references abortion providers that
are nonprofits and receive more than eight hundred thousand dollars
in Medicaid reimbursements in the fiscal year twenty twenty three.
Federal judge has put that on hold, but anyway changes
Obamacare some substantial. It shortens the enrollment open enrollment period.
(39:08):
It was lengthened nther Biden. It's back to the original
November first to December fifteenth. It requires marketplace consumers to
re enroll every year. Yeah, teet, you and I have
to do. If you're covered by your your work, you
(39:28):
have to re enroll. Expands Medica expands military housing and
support programs. So those are the key items. I got
this note sent to me. I won't say from who,
but it highlights this is a This is an organization
(39:53):
based in Alexandria, Virginia. Key provisions supporting US manufacturing and
workforce training. It streamlines the permitting process so America can
get building again. Incentivizes made in America. The bill rewards
companies that build their products in America with lower taxes
(40:13):
and allows Americans to buy American made vehicles to fully
deduct their auto loan interest. Supports building new factories to
grow domestic business operations. The bill renews one hundred percent
immediate expensing and interest deductions, increases small business deduction, and
establishes one hundred percent immediate expensing for equipment and machinery.
(40:38):
Enhances the capacity of America's naval fleet. The bill provides
billions of dollars to revitalize America's shipbuilding thank you, falling
woefully behind the Chinese in shipbuilding, and this particular email
highlights the changes to PEL grant to make sure that
(41:01):
the money is available to kids that truly need it,
not those who don't.
Speaker 2 (41:09):
I e.
Speaker 1 (41:10):
They've got scholarships, their college is paid for. Why in
the world would they be applying for a PELL grant
that's designed to help people that are working part time
jobs and going to school full time or part time whatever. Anyway,
(41:30):
it's a step in the right direction. Sixteen minutes past
the hour, we're going to come back, and I want
to circle back to something I talked about a little
bit ago with Local Journalism listener of the program. Still
(42:06):
my work in the world of photo journalism. Part time
freelance That, by the way, is just a wonderful word.
I'm a freelance fill in the blank. That means I
go where I want, I do what I want. I'm freelance.
(42:33):
This is an article from Pointer. It's subcategorized journalism, Truth, Democracy,
and whatever. Article written by Rick Edmonds, says loss of
local journalists may be even worse than you think. New
(42:54):
report from Muckrack and Rebuild local News shows sharp decline
in local journalists and last twenty plus years estimates that
there has been a seventy five percent decline in the
number of local journalists since two thousand and two. Seventy
five plus percent. Now, the rest of the article is
(43:18):
irrelevant to me. I don't care. I wanted to use
this as an opportunity to underscore why the field of
journalism has failed. Thus people no longer rely on it.
(43:43):
They just don't because the world of journalism, over a
period of four decades, decided to throw all of its
weight behind one political ideology, behind unproven hysterical claims, and
(44:13):
people enough people just said, yeah, I'm not interested. Why
would I subscribe to that? Why would I subscribe to
writing that I know is biased, that I know is
only sharing half of a story, if at all half.
(44:38):
Why it's playing a role in marginalizing any critical thinking
that would maybe oppose a given mindset or thought. And
the same is true of the right. I don't need
anyone to be a reporter and allow their reporting to
(45:03):
be impacted by their personal biases. Now, I remember having
this discussion with Eric Eggers, Eric a bright guy. He said,
it's impossible to shield your personal biases from your writing.
It will always come out in some form or fashion,
and there may be some truth to that. But the
(45:26):
role of a reporter is to filter all of that
as often and as thoroughly as possible, to scrub their
your reporting from any personal biases, scrub it, and to
(45:48):
just leave these are the facts. Leave any hyperbole out,
leave any descriptives out. That's what it appear onion piece
for what an editorial piece is for. The whole point
is this, The loss of local journalism is the fault
(46:08):
of local journalists and their publishers and their editors. They're
the only ones to blame, you know, the editors and
the publishers that are standing around right now in mostly
empty buildings or have been relocated to other places, have
only themselves to blame for the loss of jobs of
(46:29):
all of their former colleagues, only themselves, because all they
had to do was right objectively report the news. But
they took up causes, They made friends with the people
they're supposed to cover. They picked sides. That's not what
people want. That's people choose that in shows like mine,
(46:53):
or in watching Mark Levin or Sean Hannity at Night
or or whatever but those aren't news shows. Those are
opinionated shows with the opinions of their hosts. That's fine,
nothing wrong with that, but don't try to masquerade that
as news. And so when you see seventy five percent decline,
(47:16):
does it surprise anybody with how poorly the world of
journalism is reflected in the writing and the reporting of
alleged journalists. Not at all, And honest reporters will tell
you right now their work is not is not popular,
is not wanted. Tough to find a gig as an
(47:40):
honest reporter. Twenty seven minutes past the hour, Come back
with the big stories in the press box. Some sound
that you will find interesting. I heard it pronounced gizlane.
(48:03):
I've heard it pronounced gizzlane. I don't really care. She
was an associate to Jeffrey Epstein. She's serving twenty years
in federal prison for her role in basically sex trafficking.
She claims that her attorneys are saying, despite rumors, she
(48:29):
was never offered any kind of plea deal, she would
be more than happy to sit before Congress to tell
her story. No one from the government has ever asked
her to share what she knows. She remains the only
person to be jailed in connection to Epstein, and she
would welcome the chance to tell the American public the truth. Okay,
I want to get back to does it matter? This
(48:56):
is presented by James O'Keefe and Project Veritas, and it's
on the set at ABC News. Amy Roback, unbeknownst to her,
tape was rolling when she was off air, ranting a
little bit, and listen to what she had to say.
Speaker 2 (49:22):
I've had the story for three years. I've had this
interview with Virginia Roberts. We would not put it on
the air. First of all, I was told, who's Jeffrey Epstein?
No one knows who that is. This is the stupid story.
Then the Palace found out that we had her whole
allegations about Prince Andrew and threatened us a million different ways.
We were so afraid we wouldn't be able to interview
(49:43):
Kate as will that that also quashed the story. And
then and then Alan Dershowitz was also implicated in because
of the planes. She told me everything, she had, pictures,
she had everything, She was in hiding for twelve years.
We convinced her to come out. We convinced her to
talk to us. It was unbelievable what we had Clinton,
(50:03):
We had everything. I tried for three years to get
it on to no avail, and now it's all coming
out and it's like these new reil of revelations and
I freaking had all of it. I'm so pissed right now,
Like every day, I get more and more pissed because
I'm just like, oh my god, it was what we
had was unreal. Other women backing it up.
Speaker 1 (50:26):
Hey yep.
Speaker 2 (50:28):
Brad Edwards, the attorney three years ago, saying like like
there will come a day when we will realize Jeffrey
Epstein was the most prolific pedophile this country has ever known.
I had it all three years ago.
Speaker 1 (50:40):
Now. I don't know how old that SoundBite is. Doesn't matter.
And the heartbeat sound was added dramatics by Project Veritas
at the time or currently. I don't know. It doesn't matter.
It doesn't matter. That's what does matter is the story.
(51:03):
It matters. Other big story in the press box. Recreational
pot petition for the twenty twenty six ballot has passed
six hundred thousand signatures, allegedly, how many of them are valid? Well.
The article in Florida Politics says that six hundred and
thirteen two hundred and six petition signatures are valid. I
(51:27):
don't believe that. I don't because I've watched three different
occasions people gather signatures, and I've not seen anybody corroborate anything.
I've seen people scribble. I've not seen anybody give out
their driver's license, their social Security, the last four of
(51:49):
their social I'm just I thought there were requirements to
determine that you could sign a petition to begin with.
But let's back away from that. Lord help us. If
we pass this, this will be the single biggest mistake
this state will have ever made. Forty minutes past the hour,
(52:12):
is it DEI or d I E? Well, we've got
(52:36):
some interesting developments here on the attempted assassination of Trump. Now,
I listened to Glenn Beck talk about this. Glenn Beck
is of the opinion that Trump is satisfied. Therefore, if
he is, then I have to be, even though I've
(52:59):
got questions if the guy who was shot and the
subject of the assassination attempt, the target of the assassination attempt,
is satisfied by what he knows. Now, remember not too
long ago he didn't know anything. He was talking publicly,
Donald Trump was talking publicly that he didn't know anything.
We still don't know about the offshore accounts. We haven't
(53:22):
had that settle one way or the other, have we.
I personally still believe that this was a government effort.
Government meaning former members of the United States government, former
people and leadership of the CIA, perhaps perhaps the FBI,
Perhaps that they orchestrated the effort to have Trump killed.
(53:47):
I believe that absolutely. I think that there is strong
reason to think that this kid would all but given
access and a clean shot, and he missed. There are
too many things that are just unexplained. I'm looking at
(54:10):
a report here. Government Accountability Office found the classified intelligence
had been presented to Secret Service officials ten days before
the assassination attempt, but the agencies siloed practice for sharing
says sensitive information resulted in few being aware of the threat.
(54:38):
But buried in this report is something that a listener
of the program pointed out to me. I mean, the
mistakes we know right that that building not being secured.
I mean it's just it's it's it's Keystone cop esque.
But buried in the report is this the Secret Serve
(55:00):
VISs site agent in Butler, tasked with quote identifying site vulnerabilities,
was new to her role, which notes the rally was
her first time planning and securing a large outdoor event.
Friend of the show wrote, this is it dei orde?
(55:34):
Why on this side of eternity? Just step back for
a second. Let's just look at just this portion. Right,
you're the Secret Service. You know that you have information
suggesting that there may be an attempt on his life.
(55:59):
How do you put somebody in charge of the site
evaluation that's never done it before. I'm gonna skip the
dei portion. Though, there's growing evidence to suggest that there
are just certain situations where women just should not be
(56:19):
in charge. Now, I'm not suggesting this is one of them.
I'm just saying that there are I mean there are
there are countless examples of cops, female cops having their
firearm taken from them. I mean, they're just it just
it just is right. I know that upsets some people,
but that's okay. But if we just look at this situation,
(56:42):
why would you put someone who has never done this
job before in a situation where there is a viable
threat that's been identified ten days earlier without having someone
alongside of her, saying, Okay, you're gonna watch me. We're
gonna do a site evaluation together, and you're gonna learn.
(57:03):
That's right. Isn't that what I mean? Honestly, is that
what you and I would do? By the way, this
has just I've got to get this. In this segment,
Project Veritas released a text message from a Secret Service
agent inviting a stranger to the White House, disclosing operational
(57:24):
details and disparaging President Trump. They have named the Secret
Service agent. The text was sent to a citizen journalist
working with Project Veritas. I'm just saying, just saying, secret Service,
(57:50):
forty seven minutes past the hour, got a manly minute?
More coming back time for a manly minute then awhile, huh. Yeah.
These are tips, skills, virtues, ideals to teach your young
(58:13):
son so that one day you can say you have
turned into a young man, a manly man. Remember mail
by birth, man by choice. Here we go model for
your son. Good cell phone etiquette. Okay, first, no, the
(58:42):
phone is not turned on and up during church. Have
the ringer turned off. Don't be that person whose phone
goes off in the middle of the message or a
moment of prayer or oh my gosh, No, make sure
(59:03):
that your son sees you not using the speaker phone
when you're in public. I don't care about your conversation.
I shouldn't need to hear it. I shouldn't have to
hear it. Put it to your ear if you have
(59:25):
to take it. I still remember the days when we
didn't have phones wherever we went, and I'm just fine
not answering a phone call now. If it's my children,
my wife, i will step out and I will take
the call. You will seldom see me take a phone
call with other people. In fact, most of the time,
(59:50):
if I'm in a meeting with somebody, unless I'm using
my phone to make notes, I don't have my phone
with me. I leave it in my car, I leave
it away. But please don't subject other people to your conversations.
Model that for your son. This is cell phone etiquette.
It's like other issues of etiquette. Teach by doing, by
(01:00:16):
showing by modeling. Don't make exceptions for yourself. Well, I
I can't tell you how uncomfortable it is to listen
to somebody have a conversation on their speaker phone that
you know you're not supposed to be hearing and they're
just oblivious to it. So there you go. All right.
(01:00:43):
We have been informed as in just now that congress
Roman Camick is not feeling well today, and so with
great apology, they have asked for us to reschedule the segment.
I cannot reschedule it for this week or now next.
We'll just reschedule to our next segment again, excepting that
(01:01:04):
she is due to have her baby. Yes, and I
expect and have no issues with somebody that says I'm
about to have my first child. I'm not feeling really
good today, gotcha, no problem, No, it's look, things happen.
It's fine. So we will not have congress Woman Camick
with us in our in our next segment. But that's okay.
(01:01:29):
You know why I'm here. He's here. So in the
next half hour, everything you ever wanted to know about
Jose can you see, will not be shared. He's back
to breathing. He stopped breathing for a second. There. We've
(01:01:52):
got the third hour coming up next, lots to talk
about and some observations of the of the last week
when I was not here year coming up next. Don't
leave us, okay, don't don't don't leave. I know that
a lot of you were waiting for congress Woman Camick,
but it's okay. Whether we have her in August, it's
all dependent on when her little one comes right, So
(01:02:15):
we'll see. I just saw that Pastor John MacArthur passed away,
age of eighty six, died of pneumonia yesterday. He has
(01:02:39):
been a very prominent theological figure in the Christian world,
oftentimes standing as a bit of a bulwark against heresy.
Didn't always agree with John, but but love and appreciated
his work for the cause of Christ very very much.
(01:03:01):
Welcome to the Third Hour if you missed it us
congress Woman Katkamick will be not, will be not, will
not be able to join us this half hour. She
has awakened not feeling very well, and asked if we
could move it to Thursday. I cannot. We have a
show booked on Thursday, but we will endeavor to get
(01:03:24):
her back on the program the first Tuesday in August
if possible. She's due, if I'm not mistaken, to have
her first child mid August. You just never know how
those things are going to go, right, So we'll see
if she's if she's willing and able to join us
then great. Will not expect her to join us honestly
(01:03:44):
until probably September, but we'll see. But keep her in
your prayers and for the safe delivery of her young child, who,
by the way, has been involved in some significant negotiations
over the last eight months. Oh the stories she'll be
able to tell her child. Yes, you were there when
(01:04:06):
we met with the President, you were there when we
met with I mean, that's just really cool, It really is,
all right. Last week I mentioned yesterday that I took
the week off to spend the week with my wife,
who was attending a conference in Orlando related to the
(01:04:28):
Department of Corrections. She's an educator, not working for DOC,
but she works for a state college. I'm very very
proud of my wife and her accomplishments and who she
is and has her master's degree in education. She has
her specialist degree in autism and is piloting. She did
(01:04:54):
reading research at Florida State University, but has piloted a
program after teaching reading and literacy to students in high school,
middle school primarily, but she really felt called to do
something different, just a stage in life where she felt
(01:05:16):
like it was important for her to be available to
go back home to see her mom and dad in
Ohio as they are getting a little bit older and
needing a little more flexibility. She piloted a program that
is teaching literacy skills to men and women incarcerated, focused
primarily her program on men right now, but it's the
(01:05:40):
idea is to scale it up and to bring it statewide.
And I'm very proud of her accomplishments. She's very good
at what she does, and so she's writing even another
new program this summer that will involve inmates doing teaching
of other inmates to prepare them for literacy and so forth.
Because you know, it occurred to us, and I say
(01:06:02):
us because it's been something that we both share a
bit of a passion for helping men and women be
successful when they come out of prison, because they are
coming out of prison twenty to thirty thousand a year,
and we either help them be successful or not. And
so one of the things that occurred to us is,
(01:06:24):
you know, one of the reasons why they struggle is
the inability to read, to read a job application, to
read an employee manual, to read and understand what is
expected of them, and in job guidelines and so forth,
and it has led to just a remarkable blessing, it
(01:06:47):
really has. I spoke to one of her graduating classes
back a month or so ago, a month and a
half ago, and it was just just a delight. But
we ended up in Orlando for the week and so
she had her conference. I got to just kind of
(01:07:08):
fiddle around and just do different things. So I did
some you know, I spent a little time on the
golf course, spend a little time working on a project
in the room, read read a little C. S. Lewis.
It was, it was just it was a nice time
and it was really delightful being able to, you know,
(01:07:30):
when she would finish a session for us to spend
some time together, have lunch, and we always had dinner
together and just spend time together. And so it was
it was great. But there were some observations. When we
come back, I will I will share a few observations
with you from our trip. And I had wanted to
(01:07:52):
do this. I wasn't sure when I was going to
do it this week because there was so much to
fit in, and so with kat Camick not being of available,
this is like the perfect time stay with me, ten minutes,
eleven minutes, now past the hour. It's the Morning Show
with Preston Scott. It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott
(01:08:22):
recounting a trip to Orlando. Left on Sunday, arrived Sunday
night for registration and stayed at a very large facility
that could handle up to, you know, a couple thousand
(01:08:48):
people for the conference. And beautiful hotel, absolutely beautiful. I
will not name it. It has multiple restaurants. It had.
It had a spectacular little deli that had a very
(01:09:09):
limited menu. But whatever they did for breakfast, lunch, dinner
was exceptionally good. I mean they knew how to make
a roast, a corn beef and pastromi sandwich and do
it right. That in and of itself was But the
first night we uh we tried to sleep, you know
(01:09:41):
it was it was a bed not befitting such a
nice hotel. The room was very nicely appointed, although they
were sneaky. No microwave. See that becomes very very tactically
(01:10:01):
important if you're traveling, because when you order a meal,
you now have to take into account you can't reheat it. Oh,
sure you can use the microwave down at the deli.
But that's going down sixteen floors, walking into the big,
(01:10:21):
massive hallway that leads to the convention center, and who
knows who else is microwaving and it's one of those
low powered little microwaves. And then what you got to
go back up to your room and eat it? No? No, no,
no no no. So that was like, okay, I see
what you're doing here. You're forcing us to eat at
(01:10:43):
the restaurants here in the hotel. Okay, I see. So
that was a bit of a bummer. But that first night, well,
let's put it this way. I will be seeing my
chiropractor as soon as possible because of how poorly I slept.
The only reason I slept was sheer exhaustion because the
(01:11:07):
bed was so bad. And you're thinking, what, I'll set
aside the fact that they don't have fitted sheets. You
know what I mean by there's a fitted sheet that
goes over the mattress. No, no, mm hmm. Just the
top sheet was over the mattress, so it comes up
(01:11:27):
all night long and you're battling with that. That's one problem.
But the fact I sleep on a firm mattress, and
you know, my wife and I looked at each other,
and it's like, this is why we don't like being
away from our home, because our bed is perfect, our
(01:11:49):
bed adjusts. But I have I sleep on a firm
mattress and this was this gave My mattress was soft
and compared to this one, this one was. It was
so bad my wife took six pillows and laid on
(01:12:10):
top of them just to have some level of cushion
and underneath her. I on the first night got so
tired of hurting. I just went downstairs to the lobby
at two am. Couldn't sleep, could not sleep. I just
(01:12:33):
I sat down there. I could have slept on the
couch down in the lobby and one of those little
restaurant grill things by the pool that had four TVs,
and so I just watched all four screens and just
killed time. But it's like, I understand, you can't have
a mattress that pleases everybody, But how about just medium,
(01:12:57):
A little softer than some like a little firm than
others like, but a medium. This was just barely above
sleeping on the floor. That's how firm that mattress was.
It was brutal. Seventeen past the hour, more to come
more observations from our trip from workers to the Highway.
(01:13:37):
The bed was back, really was. But now let's leave
that to the side. Talking about being in Orlando, and
Orlando's a cool city. There's always there are places to go,
things to do. I saw the Titanic exhibit with the
(01:14:00):
actual artifacturer covered from the Titanic. No matter what you
think of that, it's incredible history, great tragedy. It was
very well done. Went to the Ripley's Believe it or
Not House, that's weird. Spent a little time at Shingle Creek,
the rosen at Shingle Creek or something like that, and
(01:14:21):
a lovely golf course and great practice facility. Enjoyed that
very much. But just some observations. The money grab that
takes place at a lot of these hotels. Now, okay,
you drive up and no, no, no, no, no, you're not
bringing your luggage. You can bring your own luggage, but
(01:14:44):
you gotta park over there and then you gotta huff
it up to your room with No, you can't get
one of those luggage carts. Luggage carts are only for
their staff to use. So you're gonna drop You're gonna
drop a ten to the guy who unloads your vehicle.
You're gonna drop another ten to a different guy who
brings it up to your room, and then you're gonna
(01:15:06):
reverse it on the way out. Now, that just annoys me. Sorry,
I love tipping people when I want their help. When
I don't, then I get annoyed. I just it annoyed me.
Another thing that annoyed me was the housekeeping staff in
(01:15:30):
the hallways watching YouTube. They're just literally standing in the
hallways watching YouTube on their phones. And I know that
because I walked by them and saw it. Were they
English speakers? Probably not good morning, eh, that's what I heard.
(01:15:53):
Ah yeah, Okay. Then you get to just coming and going,
and I don't know what you do about this. Many
(01:16:14):
of you know, driving the interstates anywhere, but certainly in Florida,
where we live, where most of us call home, it
is agonizing the stupidity on our interstates, the people that
(01:16:35):
just drive recklessly and cause recks and cause delays, And
I don't know what you do about it. I really
don't know what you do about it. When traffic is
(01:16:57):
stopped on the interstate, you have the annoying idiots who
drive on the shoulder. I sew badly want FHP to
send an extra person every time there's something like that
that happens, and just park them on the shoulder and
(01:17:17):
just bust people left and right, the motorcycles, trucks, cars,
you name it, and they make a bad situation worse,
and then they're the gaper blocks. You've got something on
northbound lane and everyone in the southbound lane slows down
(01:17:39):
to look at it, and that starts to blockage on
the southbound lane. But you just inevitably have the res
the accidents caused by people that are texting and driving
or just driving recklessly. And again I don't know what
you do about it. I really don't. Maybe what you
(01:18:05):
do is you really punish people who are caught on camera.
People have video cameras on their cars now more and
more are that are caught driving aggressively recklessly tailgating. You know,
right there on your rear, you're going seventy eight and
(01:18:27):
you're just getting roasted with somebody right behind you. So dangerous.
Maybe you just have to make example of enough people
then run those commercials across the state and show the
one thousand dollars fines for ridiculous driving on the interstates.
(01:18:49):
I don't know what you do, but that would be
maybe a starting point for my suggestion. Anyway, I'm glad
I went. It was great spending some extra time with
my sweet wife, but it was inexperience. It was come
back with the big Stories in the press Box. Next
(01:19:10):
here on The Morning Show with Preston Scott. Tomorrow on
the program, Randy tera BURRELLI, we've had him on the
(01:19:33):
show before. Wrote a massive book on Jacqueline Kennedy and
has now written a book called JFK Public, Private Secret,
and this will be interesting. A lot of interest in
JFK in the wake of Donald Trump saying We're going
to see everything. Of course we haven't. I don't want
(01:19:59):
to get sidetracked here too much. But a new big
story in the press Box is and understand, the big
stories are not necessarily the stories that are making the
biggest headlines. They can be, but the press box is
(01:20:24):
prees as in press Ton and the things that I
think need to be on your radar. And when you
look at what's happening in New York City with a
(01:20:45):
really he's not a socialist, he's a Marxist who now
is the odds on favorite to become the mayor of
New York City. And I mean he's a very overt socialist,
but he's really a Marxist. Pay attention to Jakim Jeffries,
(01:21:09):
the House Minority leader. If he gives his endorsement as
the House Majority leader to a socialist Marxist, you need
to you really need to understand the significance of that endorsement.
(01:21:31):
It matters. It matters. A lot secondary story that goes
right along with it. There's a very low profile congressional
race in Arizona with a social media influencer, a twenty
five year old young lady named Deja Fox. Five candidates
(01:21:56):
running in the primary today to fill the seat of
late Democrat Representative Raul Grijalva. Or Grialva died in March
from complications related to cancer treatment, and so the winners
of the two primaries face off in September special election
(01:22:17):
to fill out the term. She's a socialist and she's
getting the support of David Hogg and is surging in
the polls. David Hogg has been removed as the vice
chair of the DNC. He stepped down because they were
over it. But don't underestimate what's happening. These are two
(01:22:42):
significant indicators of where the left is going now. They're
swinging hard, hard, hard left. Just need to have it
on your radar forty minutes past the hour. Also, paying
(01:23:16):
attention to a weather system off the southeast coast of
Florida that's going to cross over and enter into the
Gulf today probably just could be something something to pay
attention to and probably bring some moisture. And so just again,
that's why you listen, right, That's why you have a
(01:23:38):
hopefully you have a portable radio now, little transistor one
hundred point seven here locally in Panama City ninety six
to three or one oh two point five in Panama
City Beach. Got a high death radio. Come get some
of that ninety two to five WPAP. That's what we
are in Panama City area. You get us a high
(01:23:59):
death radio. Mm hmm. It's called HD two. But you
really ought to have a trans battery operated transistor radio.
So we can do what we do and help prepare you.
We probably need to take some time, don't we go
through supplies and things like that. I need to uh,
(01:24:21):
I need to hold on. I'm writing a note, Jose
tell that joke. You know, yes, Uh, they can't hear you.
Why do clowns like spoiled milk let that sit there
(01:24:43):
for a little because it tastes funny. Thank you for that,
my leisure. It might be the last time I ever
surrender a portion of the show directly for you to
tell a joke. He hit the talkback button. That's why
you might have heard him on my microphone instead of
(01:25:04):
on the air. This is I wrote on the rundown
three words throw it out or take it back. Walmart
is recalling nearly a million stainless steel water bottles. Here's
what's going on. You know those really large sixty four
(01:25:30):
ounce bottles that people put water in to carry around
with them all day long. Well, they're recalling eighty eight
hundred and fifty thousand stainless steel water bottles because somehow,
and it's that Ozark brand, the Walmart Ozark Ozark trails
(01:25:52):
sixty four ounce stainless steel insulated water bottles. They've been
sold since two thousand and seven. Notice got pushed out
by the US Consumer Products Safety Division, and it says,
if you open these bottles after food, carbonated beverages, or
(01:26:13):
perishable beverages, are stored inside. Over time, the gas could
literally cause the lid to blow out. It has blinded
two people. So I mean, obviously, who lets food and
(01:26:36):
methane gases and whatever from decomposing food? I mean, but look,
people do it right. People put carbonated beverages, look to
keep it cold, seal it up. Think it's the thing
to do. The bottom line is three reports of consumers
were injured struck in the face by the lids, two
of whom suffered permanent vision loss. So I'm just making
(01:27:02):
you aware. If you've got one, throw it out or
take it back. I'd take it back because they'll probably
swap it out for you or something like that. But
just be advised you turn that that that top and
then it just gets away from you because of the
gas that's built up inside of it. So just just
(01:27:25):
saying it's probably just fine for water, probably, but I'm
not vouching for it. Forty six minutes past the hour. See,
we'll just see what we do around here to help
you keep you afloat and with both eyes seeing. Remember
(01:27:48):
the movie The Toy Story, the claw.
Speaker 3 (01:27:55):
Little little things in there.
Speaker 1 (01:27:58):
And they're oh the claw sees claw. And I mean,
who hasn't played the claw and it's so rigged it is,
you know, very few people ever get. And it makes
me wonder, is it set where there's a little tensioner
that happens every so often, where those those little jaws
(01:28:20):
really grab something and other times, oh it slips out
just as you're getting it over the little bucket to
drop it in. Well, one kid was having none of it.
At the Mason Community Center in Ohio, security cameras showed
the little fella decide that he was he was just
gonna get himself a toy, so he climbed in. He
(01:28:43):
literally made his way in. A volunteer noticed the boy's
legs disappear into the machine. Next thing you know, they're
calling ems because he's just in there. He's just sitting
in there with all the stuff, toys and animals and
everything that's in there, and so they had to partially disassemble.
Here's what stood out to me about the story. When
(01:29:07):
the child was reunited with his mother, he presented her
with a new stuffed animal. Wait what we're gonna let
him steal? Because the little kleptomaniac climbed in. Nay, nay, now, no,
you riped that toy from that little kid. No, okay, son,
(01:29:27):
we've got you. Now, you're alive, you're back with your mom.
Give me the toy, give me back, get that, give
me the toy. You didn't win it. You had to
climb in there and steal it. You give me the
toy back? Or would you or would you cave in
and give him the toy? What would you? What would
you do? What would you do? Mister volunteer fireman? I
(01:29:48):
would give him the toy? No, why, I'm a sucker.
But why what did he do to earn it? He
he climbed in and stole it. Yeah, I mean i'd
get a buck from his mom or so. But uh
how you would not, like, man, we need a dollar
for that toy. No, you wouldn't. You wouldn't do that.
But you really would reward him with a toy? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yep, Yeah,
(01:30:13):
he's just so, he's just what lessons he gonna learn
from that? Well, you know, embarrassment, embarrassing, the embarrassment. He
got the what he wanted, he got the toy. Well,
I'm pretty sure he's gonna get a talking to you.
You think so? No, I bet he's got a parent.
He's got a parent that's like, Oh, he's so cute.
You see what he did. Look at the video. It's
on YouTube. No no, no, no, no, no, no. Brought
(01:30:35):
to you by Barono Heating and Air. It's the morning
show on WFLA softy give me a toy, not a chance.
Big Stories in the press Box Today. Well, no, no, no, no, no.
Back up. We started today with John twenty twenty one.
That's where we started today. All right. We did not
(01:30:57):
get to visit with Cat Camick not feeling well. Just
keep lifted up in prayer. She's at the tail end
of having her first child and want nothing but the best,
and so yeah, we let her. We let her pass
on appearing on the show today. Big Stories in the
press Box pot signature is up to six hundred thousand plus.
They need to get over eight hundred thousand. Uh, they'll
(01:31:19):
get they'll get it. But whether they're valid that's another story.
I'm still not certain that they're following the rules on this.
But I'm not certain of the rules. I thought I
knew what they were, but now I'm not so sure
based on all the you know, uh appeals and Mark
Walker's the type of judge. It's like, yeah, whatever, she's
(01:31:40):
like maxwell ready to spill the beans. What does she know?
What is she willing to say? Don't know? I mean
she's the only one serving time. I mean think about
that for a second. This oh no one cares out
doesn't matter. Well, someone's so in twenty years, so maybe
(01:32:03):
it does matter. Talked about the OBBB, the ten non
tax policies that will affect Americans. Secret Service still having
problems far beyond Butler categorize that. Talked about journalism, the
(01:32:26):
state of journalism today, or the nonstat LA offering free
cash to illegals because that's what you do. When we
talked about how food can trigger good or bad dreams
and what kinds of foods do that? Tomorrow The truth
about the new Superman movie. Ooh ooh, do we have
(01:32:49):
a movie we can actually go see? Also tomorrow, author
Randy Terra Borelli, the book JFK Public Private Secret. Till then, friends,
have a great day,