Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:02):
Yeah, it is. Welcome ruminators to another week of the
Morning show with Preston Scott. That's right, all week long,
all week long. Sorry, little lionel Ritchie and me there,
that's Jose. I'm Preston. It is July twenty first, and
it's great to be with you. Boy was hot over
the weekend. Whoop steamy. We'll talk about the weather tomorrow
(00:27):
with Greg Wrightstone, but first let's get to some scripture.
One Corinthians thirteen, verse eleven says this. When I was
a child, I spoke like a child. I thought like
a child, I reasoned like a child. When I became
a man, I gave up childish ways. Here's the question,
(00:56):
have you, and let's broaden this. It's not just about
being a godly man. It's about being a godly woman,
and it's not about losing joy and happiness and having
(01:17):
fun within the confines of adulthood. Are you behaving like
a person who knows Jesus and is not a child anymore?
Are you still held hostage by the same things that
(01:43):
have been holding you since you were a kid. Regardless
of what that is, you can be set free from
that stuff and walk in maturity. Ten past the hour,
take a peek inside the American Patriots Almanac. Next on
(02:03):
The Morning Show with Preston Scott watched a DBR recording
(02:25):
yesterday Kelsey Grammer's American History on great battles of American history,
starting with the start of the Revolutionary War at breeds Hill,
which was erroneously reported as a Battle of Bunker Hill,
which really was not. It was the Battle of breeds Hill,
but it was brilliantly explained. And I don't know, I
(02:49):
just thought i'd mentioned that case case some of you
were wondering, what did you watch yesterday on television, Preston, Well,
of course I watched the British Open. I recorded that
and watched the final round after Church got home, had
a little food and watched the golf tournament as Scotti
(03:10):
Scheffler did what Scotti Scheffler does, wins and more on
that later in the week because there is something worth
sharing that the lead research assistant found for me, and
so we'll do that later in the week. That's a
bit of a hint on what I think of it.
But Scotti Scheffler, I think this is the number. Even
(03:33):
if you're not a golf fan, you'll appreciate this. Tiger
Woods considered the greatest golfer of the modern generation. I mean,
I think Jack Nicholas might still be the greatest because
he won more major titles and came in second nineteen times.
I mean, get your mind around that. I've been alive
(03:55):
for the Jack Nicholas era, the Tiger Woods era, and
now the Scotti Scheffler era. Between Tiger Woods winning his
first major golf tournament in his second. I think this
is the right number. It was eleven hundred and ninety
seven days between his first major, and it's not second
and his fourth. First and fourth. Guess how many days
between Scotti Scheffler's first major and his fourth eleven hundred
(04:19):
and ninety seven exactly. It's either ninety seven or twenty seven,
but I think it was ninety seven eleven hundred and
ninety seven. But either way, it's exactly the same. It's
scary how good he is, and everybody around him is like, yeah, yeah,
he's and his ninth, his tenth tournament. Now that he
(04:41):
had the lead after three rounds and he went on
and won, he's ten and zero. When he has the lead,
it's like, uh yeah, that's intimidating anyway. Happy for him.
He loves Jesus, and he's not afraid to say it.
Love it, love it, love it all right. It's the
twenty first of July eighteen sixty one. Confederates win the
first major land battle of the Civil War. Up Manasses Virginia.
(05:04):
Nineteen twenty five in Dayton, Tennessee, the Scope's Monkey trial,
testing a law which forbade the teaching of evolution, ends
with a conviction of the teacher John Scopes. I'll stop
right there. Nineteen forty four. During World War Two, US
troops land on Guam, retake it from the Japs. Benize
(05:26):
nineteen sixty nine. Pollo eleven astronauts and al Armstrong buzz
Aldron blast off from the Moon nineteen ninety seven, restored
USS Constitutional Ironside set sail from Boston under its own
power for the first time in more than one hundred years.
I remember the news coverage of that. That was a
really cool thing. It's also cool to say I've been
(05:47):
on the USS Constitution. And in twenty eleven, the Space
Shuttle program ends with the landing of Atlantis at Cape Canaveral.
And if you've never been to the Kennedy Space Center.
Go and take the tour that gets you to Atlanta.
You will never ever regret that. Let's see here. Today
is National get out of the Doghouse Day.
Speaker 2 (06:12):
I make it up.
Speaker 1 (06:14):
Why today? That's kind of like every day for some people.
It's a National junk Food Day? Isn't every day National
junk food Day? And today is National be someone Day.
Here's what that's about. I did a little digging on that.
(06:34):
That's about taking ten seconds to try to make a
difference today. And they suggest that you do that by
simply taking cues from what's going on around you. It
might be just noticing that somebody's just got a look
on them that just says I've had a rotten day,
(06:55):
and you saying, hey, it's gonna be all right, or
hang in there, or just no words. If you know
them well enough, put a little hug on their shoulder,
you know what I'm saying. Guys, hug it appropriately, you
know what I'm saying. Anyway, seventeen past the hour, come
(07:15):
back with a did you know? In the Brothers segment
and robotic coyotes. All right, here's something to think about.
Ladies and some guys that sounded a little sexist, but
(07:37):
mostly ladies. Botox is actually pretty toxic. Did you know
it's produced by a bacterium claustradid Claustradeum botulinum, which can
cause botulism. Botox works by temporary paralysis and the effected area. Yeah,
(08:03):
that makes sense to me. Let's inject something that brings
paralysis to an area. I'm sorry, I just I understand,
and I'm getting way too heavy for this segment of
the show, but that's okay. I understand. If you've got
(08:25):
droopy eyelids and they're making it difficult for you to
actually open your eyes to see properly because your eyelids
are droopy, I understand. Getting that taken care of, that,
to me, becomes almost a medical necessity. But man, the
(08:45):
stuff that we do to try to keep young. I
joked about it last week that if if I all
of a sudden had dark hair, how silly I would look.
I mean, I'm not gonna look younger. I'm gonna look silly.
I really am, because I've got the golden Retriever face,
(09:07):
the old golden Retriever look. Anyway, So there's your did
you know the Brothers segment of the day. I mentioned
robotic coyotes. Get this US Army Engineer Research and Development
Center EERDC. Case you ever see those letters, that's the
Army is is trying something to patrol airfields that have
(09:31):
wildlife issues. You know, that's something that I spent some
time learning when I went through some pilot training, learning
how to be a pilot, and I mentioned, I'm not
a pilot. I don't have a license. I have soloed
in an airplane, but I do not have my license.
But I love flying and I love reading about it.
I love and I still see stories about bird strikes.
(09:53):
Bird strikes are catastrophic to airplanes. You get sucked, you
get birds suck into an engine and that engine's done.
And so there is an effort to reduce these kinds
of problems. But I mean it's not just that it's
it's rabbits, it's deer, it's all kinds of wildlife on
(10:16):
runways and so forth. When planes are taking off or landing,
I mean that can be a problem. And so what
they're working on. And if you've ever played golf, you
know that these are things and not just golf. People
put these plastic coyotes up and they're stationary where they
have problems with geese, and I marvel at how geese
(10:40):
will oftentimes just kind of adapt to them or other
times not. But they're a thing. Coyotes are the predator
of a lot of animals that a lot of animals
are just wired to respect. So what they've done is
they put these fully plastic coyotes on robot roughly basically
(11:02):
four by fours. They can go up to twenty miles
an hour, and they're starting to work on the programming
of them so that they go out as needed where
they if they recognize something or on a time schedule
and they do a perimeter or whatever it might be,
and it's working. They're keeping wildlife away from runways. They
(11:27):
only cost three thousand dollars a unit as of right now,
and so the first prototypes coyote rovers started as Boston
Dynamics spot robots, but these are now have been accelerated
by another company, traxis Xmax. Motorized cars are working now
(11:53):
and so they go up to twenty miles per hour.
And because coyotes are so good at deterring birds and
other animals, it's showing promise. So they're showing the possibility
programming these things and keeping keeping landing, taking off, and
the area right around the airport a little safer. And
(12:14):
that's huge, huge, very cool. All right. Twenty seven minutes
past the hour, back with the big stories in the
press box. Next on the Morning Show. Thanks for joining us.
It's The Morning Show with Preston Scott on News Radio
one hundred point seven double UFLA or on NewsRadio double
(12:35):
UFLA panamacity dot com. Thirty five minutes past the hour
of six am in the Eastern time zone, five in
the Central Hello, good morning, Welcome to your week. Ah,
(12:56):
here it is. We'll try to help you out a
little bit, but this might make you a little grouchy.
For a lot of you, this is going to be yeah,
knew it. For some of you, it's going to be
oh really, that's not good. And for a very small
(13:19):
number of you, it's going to be uh huh uh huh,
it's not true, okay. Director of National Intelligence Tulca Gabbard.
It's one of the most explosive revelations in modern political history,
(13:43):
wrote Sarah Arnold at town Hall. Newly declassified documents confirm
what a lot of us thought I remember, see, you
have to you have to keep in mind, I've been
in this since George W. Bush. I remember when Barack
(14:08):
Obama turned out, thinking to myself, well, we sort of survived.
America's been been altered, not to the degree that Obama wanted.
He was frustrated by that. I remember the reaction when
(14:28):
Trump came down the escalator. I remember the guffaws and
the laughter and the in fact, I had someone send
me a video compilation of the laughter about Trump being
the nominee and that he would never be elected. Nancy
Pelosi take it to the bank. She said, he will
not be president. But as we got closer, those comments
(14:53):
were based on a hedge. The hedge was based on Obama.
I remember thinking when Obama did not leave Washington, DC
and head back to Illinois or wherever he was going
to run a shadow government. He did, and there is
(15:18):
now documentation to prove it. And this is a problem
for the left. The Obama administration orchestrated the effort to
sabotage Trump after his election. The report released on Friday
found that intelligence officials at the highest levels acting under
(15:38):
direction from the Obama administration. Of course, Brock's got his
fingers clear in this It's just the administration weaponized false
information and manipulated national security agencies to undermine the will
of the American people the installation of a new administration. Friends,
(16:02):
unless you blow this off as another news report, these
documents are now in the hands of the Department of
Justice for the possibility of a criminal referral or sets
of them. These are documents that reveal an unbelievable effort
to subvert the vote of the American people. She called
(16:27):
it a treason, his conspiracy. The false information peddled by
the Obama siycophants led to years of unnecessary division and chaos.
Remember all the hearings, Remember the Adams shiff claims of
a smoking gun that he never produced. I'm just scratching
(16:48):
the surface of this. In each Big Story segment this morning,
I will reveal more depth on this information. Just remember this.
This is now going to be investigated, and there are
(17:08):
handwritten notes from people like John Brennan, who I've told
you is one of the singular most evil human beings
on the planet that corroborate their efforts. It's in his
own handwriting. Forty minutes past the hour with the Morning
(17:32):
Show Preston Scott. It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott
starring whosey can you see? Featuring the Morning Show band
(17:58):
and starring.
Speaker 2 (18:01):
You Hey.
Speaker 1 (18:05):
Anyway, speaking of traders, how's that for a segue? America
First Legal sent me an email. Here is the subject line.
Major victory. America First Legal uncovers documents conclusively proving the
(18:25):
infamous Garland memo was politically orchestrated and coordinated with the
Biden White House. These documents show the October fourth memo,
(18:48):
which you may not know what's that all about. That
was from then Attorney General Merrick Garland labeling concerned parents
as domestic terrorists, remember going to school board meetings? They're terrorists?
Domestic terrorists was a political operation, I'm reading from their email,
(19:11):
of weaponized government, not the normal lawful execution of federal
laws by the Department of Justice. Never before seen documents
from the federal government, uncovered only because of AFL's relentless
efforts over the last three and a half years, exposed
(19:32):
not only the Biden Whitehouse's involvement in pushing a weaponized DOJ,
but also strong dissent from careers within the department's Civil
Rights Division, who warned that there is no federal authority
or legal basis to target these parents in the first place.
Their speech is protected by the First Amendment. They were
warned it's on the record, and the Garland Department of
(19:55):
Justice said, screw that, We'll do what we want. It
shows a complete timeline of events that occurred between the
National Scoreboard Association memo which was sent to the Department
of Justice and the October fourth memo published by Merrick Garland.
(20:19):
On October seventh, twenty twenty one, the organization America First
Legal made this statement. The normal process was not followed.
Political leadership was circumventing and disregarding the advice of Department
of Justice lawyers. So the Department of Justice, the guy
(20:39):
who heads it, ignored their own lawyers, its own lawyers.
This is more documentation, and I have to avoid what
a lot of you are falling into, which is SOWA.
No one ever gets punished, I know, But we do
(21:09):
have a little bit of a different crew manning the
helm right now. Now. It may not add up to
much different. We're watching the Epstein file case kind of go.
But if I were to be totally transparent with you,
(21:32):
I have told you for years that Donald Trump carries grudges.
I do think he he is, I think a wonderful guy.
But I think he's mercurial, and I think he has
a very long memory, and I think he holds on
to grudges. And that's why I think this is going
(21:54):
to get pursued because this was an attack on him.
It'll be is an attack on us, and it was
that's fair, but it was an attack on us because
we voted for him. It was, at its core an
attack on Donald Trump. Forty six minutes after the hour man,
(22:16):
we're talking about a lot of traders here this morning.
Let's cue that guitar. Yeah, Good Morning Show banned Jose.
(22:38):
Can you see right after the break and began, I'd
noticed when I was talking in the last segment about
I know what some of you were thinking on the
other side of the glass, Jose's just pointing at me. Explain, sir,
why the point?
Speaker 3 (22:57):
Oh well, you just know your audience so well.
Speaker 4 (23:00):
A gentleman call, and he said, well, you know, tell
Uncle Preston that I'm not impressed. And until people start
getting arrested out, you know, everybody's saying they got a
document so yeah, well.
Speaker 1 (23:12):
They do have a document it. I mean, that's not
the question. The question is is there the political will
to do something about it? Completely agree, but don't doubt
the veracity of the document. You can look at them.
I mean, those documents are are are now there. But
(23:34):
but no, I completely agree. The Senate has been, you know,
unwilling to convict presidents of impeachment for a couple centuries now.
I mean, you know, anyway, I don't disagree with you.
I'm just saying it doesn't change the fact that Barack
(23:57):
Obama was and is in fact, the guy who was
responsible for all of this, in my opinion. I just
his proximity and the fact that despite his evil intentions
for this nation, there are people that are still in
(24:24):
our government that revere him. Why. I don't know. Is
it because he's half black. I don't know. He's you know,
he's an interesting person to listen to for a minute,
and then it's like, eh, whatever, he's condescending because he's
(24:50):
like the typical elitist leftist. He thinks he knows better,
he knows what's best for you and me. Rfk JR.
I still think it's a great appointment he just said
no to the World Health Organization on Friday, rejecting their
(25:12):
new pandemic rules. They were going to back it off,
you remember and just you know, okay, sovereignty of the nation, etc.
Said it. Well, they tried to bring back authority to
impose global lockdowns, travel bands, school closures, vaccine passports, and
digital health IDs. And it was a treaty that would
(25:33):
have bypassed Congress and allow the World Health Organization to
impose restrictions on Americans without any checks or balances, and
without the consent of you, the American people. So on Friday,
the United States, through RFK Junior, through the Secretary of State,
officially rejected those amendments. No, no, won't do it. Whitn't
(25:58):
be prudent. They flagged provisions inside for global surveillance, digital
health documentation, narrative control, raising fears of international censorship, institutionalized propaganda,
which is what we dealt with. We have been dealing
(26:20):
with that in mass since the days of global warmings onset.
Remember we played Paul Harvey last week talking about it
from nineteen ninety two. Al Gorge just took it to
another level. Why because he had the complicit press, the
American media, they were all in. So they've silenced, they
(26:44):
suppressed any dissenting voices and to that end. Tomorrow on
the program, I have our friend Greg Rerdstone. He is
author of a book called Inconvenient Facts. I think he's
got a follow up book to that one. He's the
ahead of the CO two coalition. He believes that the
Earth is just warming, ever so slightly, but naturally, just
(27:08):
doing what the Earth has done for years. It's not us.
And all of this dog chasing, tail chasing that we're
doing is a waste of money and a waste of time.
And it's all about control. Never forget that the Left,
it's all this other stuff. No, it's about controlling your life.
(27:31):
That's tomorrow on the program, when we come back, we're
going to talk about parenting. Interesting article. Second hour morning
(27:51):
show with Thrusting Scott a Friends. That's Jose. I'm Preston.
This was shared with me by the lead research assistant
and it's titled the twenty five one minute Conversations Parenting Rule,
and it's subtitled how to get kids to open up
about their feelings with short talks. And I don't know
(28:16):
where this came from. It's reviewed by Abigail Fagan, and
it hinges on boys, but it really applies to boys
or girls, tweeners, I would say, you know, tweeners and teenagers.
Getting kids to talk about their feelings is tough. It is.
(28:43):
We live in a society now with the irony of ironies.
Social media has created at least two generations of young
people that don't know basic decorum and don't know how
to have a conversation. They don't know how to look
each other in the eye, they don't know how to
(29:05):
look a parent in the eye, an authority figure. This
is not a virtue to be accepting of. To me,
it is one to be understanding of, to understand that
it exists. And so some of this that I'm going
(29:29):
to share with you take it with a grain of salt.
I'm sharing it because these are a compilation of what
experts may think on the subject today. But I don't
necessarily agree with a lot of this. Some sure, yes
(29:51):
or no, it's better to have twenty five one minute
conversations than one twenty five minute conversation. I would say, no,
twenty five one minute conversations is absurdity. Now, one twenty
(30:16):
five minute conversation. It could be too much. That could
be too much that you know, just your kids just
dying well and rolling their eyes, whether they're showing it
or not. They are the moment it starts going, when
will this be over? I get it, I absolutely get it.
(30:39):
But you're the parent, they're the kid. I do think
that you need to be tactical about your conversation. But
if it takes you twenty five one minute conversations to
make a point, you've lost because they're not learning. How
(31:02):
many twenty five how many days would it take to
have twenty five one minute conversations? And at what point
does someone does the kid go, oh, really, We've talked
about this twenty four times, so I'm sorry. I don't
think it's, you know, the twenty five one minute conversation rule.
I think it's not a rule. I think it's it's
(31:24):
it's an extreme exaggeration to make a point that one
twenty five minute conversation might be a little much. It
might not be, depending on the age of the child,
the maturity level of the child, and what you're discussing.
(31:45):
But there are some things in here that I think
are worth grabbing hold of. Goal number one when talking
with your kid, Learning a little bit more about your child,
getting to better understand how they're thinking at this stage
in their life, I think is really important. I also
(32:11):
think it's important to try to find a way to
make sure that the line of communication is open. They're
not closing off to you and shutting down. They still might,
(32:32):
But just because that's the way the world is operating
today doesn't mean you have to accept it. And I
think the premise of this particular article is kind of
accepting that, Oh, well, that's just the way kids are today.
I don't really care. We've got more to talk about
(32:53):
on this subject. Why conversations are tough for kids. There's
power in brief, in brevity. There's no doubt about that.
We'll get to that. So a little parenting thought or
series of thoughts here this morning ten past the hour
of The Morning Show with Preston Scott. Now, inside this article,
(33:24):
it says talking is stressful, especially if the conversation involves
problems or conflict. Now we're talking about how to interact
with your kids. Now this gets to something that I
think is really important. Are you only talking to your
kids when there's a problem, If the only time missy
(33:46):
or junior hears from you is when you're upset at something, Yeah,
they're going to just kind of like God and tune
you out. The way that you make your advice, your thoughts,
your rules understandable, reasonable, acceptable is to be involved in
(34:15):
your kid's life, to be talking to them. If the
only talks you have are about problems or conflict, there's
a problem. Brevity absolutely has a place, but again it's
not a rule. There's some topics that might take a
(34:44):
minute to talk about, like thirty of them or forty
five of them, but they need to be a talk.
You need to You need to find ways to get
your child to participate. You need to know your child
well enough, well enough to know are they able to
emotionally handle this? Are you suddenly awakening to the fact
(35:10):
that your kid's not emotionally mature. If you are, then
I suggest you begin addressing that like you know now,
and if you need some advice from people on how
to do that, find that advice. But the more we
(35:34):
know about what our kids are thinking and feeling, the better.
We don't have to agree. And that's another point here.
There's this mindset out there that kids are autonomous beings. Well,
no they're not. They're your children, and the Bible says
you're to raise them in the way they should go.
(35:57):
That's and what they do with that is going to
be up to them when they becoming an adult. But
you're supposed to raise them. They're on your dollar. You're
paying for their phone. Yeah, you ought to know the passwords.
You ought to know what's on their phone, their laptop,
their desktop, their tablet. You ought to know. Well, I
(36:20):
need my private No, you don't get privacy. You are
my minor, my child. It talks about choosing the right time. Well,
I don't think you make appointments to talk about something
(36:43):
that matters. That's just not the right time. There may
not be For example, your kids had a rotten day,
they got bullied at school, to get picked on at school,
they got a bad test, something went really bad. That
might not be the right moment to have the chat.
(37:03):
Unless it's life or death kind of have the chat.
That might be a good time to say, let me
leve on my child for a little bit here, get
around to it in a day or two or three
or four, depending on what the topic is. There are
some example conversations here. I think we ought to listen.
(37:28):
We need to learn to say. What are your thoughts
about this? What are you thinking? I think it's important
to be calm, just like you don't punish a kid
in anger. You just don't. You got you gotta be
gentle to an extent. You've got to be calm. I
like that word better calm, but you got to stick
(37:52):
to your guns. Here they give a couple of examples
here and let me get through them real quick. Mom, Hey, sweetie,
I just saw an email come through from a math teacher.
She mentioned you haven't turned in a couple of assignments lately.
What's up? Math is stupid? Sounds like you're getting pretty
frustrated with math right now. It's annoying. Can I go annoying?
(38:14):
Got it? Yep? Sounds like you're not really enjoying math
right now. Okay, you can go. Just wanted to check in.
I'm not sure. Here's their second conversation later that evening.
I've been thinking about what you said about math being annoying.
I remember math can be pretty hard sometimes. It's just
that we have to show our work. I know what
the answer is. Why do I have to show my work? Well?
That makes sense. The conversation ends with that no, no, no,
(38:38):
You have to show your work because the teacher asked
you to. And you point out that by showing your work,
you're writing through the process, which helps commit that process
to your brain. You remember what we talked about last
week about written notes versus type notes. See this is
where this article is just silly. Take it with a
(39:02):
grain of salt, but understand this. You're coming into a
new school year, and I think you need to because
the school system may or may not be smart enough
to say no to the phones. I think you need
to implement your own rule on phone use. It'll help
your kids. But the bottom line is, uh, talk to
(39:23):
your kids for some of you get to know them.
They're your kids. Eighteen passed the album Little Late Here
Morning Show with President Scott Epilogue. On that last segment
about parenting, Jose shared something when we came into the break, Jose.
Speaker 4 (39:52):
Oh yeah, so yeah, you're when you said parents needed Jose,
when you said parents need to know what what their
kids are doing on their phone, yeah, passwords and all.
Speaker 3 (40:03):
You made me think about this.
Speaker 1 (40:04):
PSA.
Speaker 4 (40:04):
I wrote down last week about a app called Me
twenty four that Apparently a lot of kids are on
and it is a pretty popular app for predators to
you know, hunt, yep, they're prey.
Speaker 3 (40:21):
So yeah, just me twenty four. Yeah, me twenty four. Yep.
So keep an eye out for that and make sure
you know who your child's talking to.
Speaker 1 (40:31):
One app stores pull. Oh it's meat twenty four. Oh
meet twenty four. Yep. What'd you say in the PSA?
Speaker 4 (40:42):
I just wrote it down, but I said me twenty four.
They kept saying me twenty four in the video. Hmm, yeah,
so be aware.
Speaker 1 (40:53):
Yeah, it's abbreviated as me twenty four, but it's actually
called meat twenty four, but they do, they do an abbreviation.
But yeah, there are a lot of problems and so
a lot of the I think Apple and Google have
pulled it. They were removed in twenty nineteen. Apparently this
(41:18):
is good news. That's like six years ago.
Speaker 3 (41:23):
Well apparently somebody who's using it recently to.
Speaker 1 (41:27):
I guess people are still still on it anyway, Yeah, problematic.
Hey have you seen the story the Coldplay concert? Everybody's
talking about this CEO of a software company called Astronomer,
(41:47):
Andy Byron, is hugging onto a lady he's having an
affair with that works in the company, and it's on
the big screen and the kiss cam. The guy with Coldplay,
the concert, the lead singer. It was hilarious in a sad,
sick way. Chris Martin, who's the front man, he basically said,
(42:11):
they're either very shy or having an affair. Hey, we're
having an affair. I can't imagine the damage that has
done to that man's wife. I would say. My first
reaction was, I hope she's got herself a good attorney
(42:32):
because he's worth millions. Then I thought, well, we should
hope they can reconcile. There's probably kids. Da da da
Da da da. And then I read this. The dude
has been living in a secret home that they owned
together the lady that he's having an affair with for
(42:57):
five months. Now you get rid of him, You get
rid of him. He's a piece of trash. Irredeemable. No,
not at all. He's redeemable. But there's no way I'm
remaining married to the guy if i'm her.
Speaker 2 (43:12):
No way.
Speaker 1 (43:14):
Can't trust that living that kind of secret life, having
a one night flaying. I mean, it still sucks, it's wrong,
But if someone's repentant and they move past it and
the other party though there's you know, you have your
biblical reason to get out if you choose to, says,
(43:35):
I can forgive you and move on. Okay, Praise God.
But this kind of scandal, this kind of skull lungery,
this kind of creep man. But it also you know
what it also look I hate what happened to the
(43:57):
wife and family embarrassed, right, But let me tell you something.
I love it when that kind of thing is shown
on the big screen. That's beautiful. Twenty seven twenty eight
minutes past the hour. By the way, he quit. He
has resigned his position mayor of Realville. He offers a
(44:21):
state of the nation every single day. This is the
Morning Show with Preston Scott. Last hour, we talked about
the big story in the press box, Tulsa Gabbard sending
documents to the Department of Justice claiming that Barack Obama's
(44:47):
goal with the whole Russia collusion, Russia and narrative was
to subvert the will of the American people. Quoting her,
it lays out over one hundred documents that idd classified
and released, spells out in great detail exactly what happens
(45:08):
when you have some of the most powerful people in
our country directly leading at the helm President Obama and
his senior most national security cabinet James Comy, John Brennan,
James Clapper, Susan Rice, and others essentially making a very
intentional decision to create this manufactured, politicized piece of intelligence
(45:33):
with the objective of subverting the will of the American people.
She went on to say, the year's long Mueller investigation,
the cost taxpayers forty million dollars to congressional impeachments, endless smears,
attacks on not only President Trump but his family. He
had senior members of his team who are investigated, some arrested.
(45:57):
We had heightened and increased tensions between the United States
in Russia. The list goes on and on about the
consequences of Barack Obama and his senior cabinet members politicizing intelligence,
and she is referring this to the Department of Justice.
(46:20):
This will be interesting if the mainstream media outlets become
a bit nervous about their role and decide to start
reporting on this. Honestly, see, I think you can connect
(46:43):
some dots to key media outlets and see what happens
is in the mainstream media. Let's say Againette, and we
will illustrate this perhaps later in this show, if not
this week, how Gannett reports things and then it filters
(47:03):
into all of its satellite outlets the exact same way
because they don't have the personnel to do actual real reporting.
So whoever they do have doing reporting, it gets repeated
and parroted in all of their their meg their their
newspaper outlets. And so when the mainstream media is complicit
(47:24):
and they've got this, you know, you've got a couple
of people writing with their quote sources. And these sources
are all plants from James Comy, They're all plans from uh,
John Brennan, Barack Obama's people, some of which Trump made
the mistake of allowing to remain in office when he
took over. He didn't clean house, and I distinctly remember
(47:50):
talking about this on the program and saying he better
clean house completely, and he didn't, and he paid a price.
Next hour, we're going to talk a little bit about
Greg Jarrett's view of all of this. Greg is with Fox,
but Greg is a legal mind. He's an attorney who's
(48:13):
got some significant chops and he has dissected this a
little bit and breaks it down, and we'll go into
a little bit deeper dive into the chronology of this
how it all unfolded. And remember everybody laughed when Trump
came down that escalator, even me. I didn't laugh for long.
(48:42):
I didn't laugh what he got on the stage with
all the other Republicans and that were running for president
for the nomination, everybody was laughing and then it got serious.
And we'll talk about that next hour. Forty minutes past.
We don't have doctor Joe Camps, but we do have
(49:04):
a medical segment Morning Show, Preston Scott. I set a
medical segment and that's a bit of a stretch, but
it well, this is just crazy. This is a crazy story.
(49:28):
Some of you have, I'm sure seen it. I've tried
to get as much information as I could before talking
about it. Happened July sixteenth, Nasau Open MRI in Westbury,
New York. Do you ever wonder why they ask you
about do you have any metal in your teeth or
(49:51):
any you know when you go in for an MRI,
no metal. Well, because it's a magnetic resonance imaging program
that uses high end magnetics high powered magnetics. According to
(50:16):
information from the CDC, about three hundred reports of adverse
events out of the millions of MRI scans that happened annually,
primarily burns and other thermal injuries. But in this case,
unidentified man for reasons no one knows to this minute,
(50:46):
walked in to the MRI room while a scan was
in progress, wearing a large metallic chain around his neck.
This is no joke. He got immediately pulled into the
(51:06):
machine from the magnetics grabbing the chain. Now imagine you're
sixty one years old. All of a sudden, that magnetic
field grabs it. Your chain doesn't break, It stayed on him,
and so whatever injuries he had, he died from the
(51:29):
next day. They're trying to figure out what in the
world was this dude walking in for. How does he
not get stopped? How is there not a lock on
that door with a punch number code. I don't know enough,
(51:56):
I don't know if somebody's getting sued. It would be
hard to sue the company for not having a lock
on there, because that guy was not authorized to walk
in there and he did. I mean, they tell you
up front, man, hearing aids, partial plates, dentures, jewelry, hairpins
out off none. Ya, I can't. I that's how powerful
(52:25):
that magnet is. He didn't even have time to get
the thing off of him. I'm I'm almost in my mind.
I'm picturing him being literally pulled in the air by
this thing. Not exactly healthy expectations with Joe Camps. I
(52:51):
grant you that that's not exactly the story. You know,
it's not a let's help you feel better type thing here,
it's not. But Dad gum Man, Yeah, yeah. Forty six
(53:12):
minutes after the hour, the Morning Show with Preston Scott
on US Radio one hundred point seven Double UFLA or
on NewsRadio double UFLA Panama City dot Com. Yeah, just
(53:36):
thanks to a friend. Just checked out the news interview
with the victim's wife. Blame shifting. Of course, he was
wearing a twenty pound chain around his neck with a padlock,
and she claims he did it all the time around there.
What an idiot. No, I don't think so. But this
(53:58):
is our culture, right, Blame blame blame them, Jerius. All right,
here's the headline. Ice arrests the illegal immigrant accused of
decapitating Illinois woman after judge set him free. True story
(54:19):
fifty two year old Jose Luis Mendoza Gonzales Jose Luis
Mendoza Gonzales fifty two first court appearance, Lake County Judge
Randall Bruno released him. He was arrested for concealing a
(54:45):
corpse and abusing a corpse, obstruction of justice. The woman
was missing and was found decapitated in a storage shed
that he had, and that's it. That and they let
him go, so Ice arrested him asap. He's in Ice
(55:08):
custody now. Missing woman Megan Boss thirty seven, which reported
missing March ninth, founder body in April and a container
in his yard, been in the yard nearly two months,
(55:29):
abusing her corpse. The mayor of Andioch couldn't believe the
judge released him. But okay, that story in and of
itself illustrates yet again the absurdity of what we're dealing
with now. As fate would have it, I have a
(55:54):
friend who is managing some of what's going on in
Alligator Alcatraz. I've learned that the conditions there are remarkably humane.
Three very good meals a day. Why are they very
because they all eat together. The staff, the security team,
(56:18):
and those confined are eating together at the same time,
the same food. The food's fine. They've air conditioning. These
are men, not families. They've got judges going down there.
They're processing. Remember I told you we went through the
math the sheer numbers that would have to be processed
(56:40):
a day for however many years to get through the
numbers that illegally entered this country because of Biden. So
they're bringing judges in there, and they are processing as
many as possible, as quickly as possible. There's some by
all accounts, just as we know, there are some people
that just want a job, and then there's some scummy people.
(57:06):
So we've got this story and we'll just leave that there.
But I wanted to point this out. In the article
written by Alexandra Coke and Bill Malugan with Fox News,
Jose Luis Mendoza Gonzalez fifty two of Juaukega, Illinois. No,
(57:29):
he's not of Juaukegan, He's of whatever country he came from.
That is an incorrect statement and that bothers me. No,
he's it is not going to ruin my day. It
(57:49):
he's not of Illinois of Juaukegan. He is of Mexico
or Honduras or whatever. That to me is lazy, sorry,
bleep reporting. Jose Luis Mendoza Garcia Gonzala is fifty two
(58:14):
of blah blah blah, Mexico living, found living or caught
living in that's what you say. You identify where, but
you point out he's not of he's here illegally, he's
not of he's not of the United States. Sorry. That's
(58:37):
a reader's guide to dissecting the news. Of course, Illinois, right, Illinois.
When we come back, Seven habits that baby boomers have
that are apparently driving everybody else nuts. All right, we're
(59:26):
going to take our time this half hour because it
involves a lot of us boomers. I want to say
the cutoff for boomers was maybe nineteen sixty five ish,
something like that, but it doesn't matter. If you're a boomer.
(59:47):
You know you're a boomer. We are into our twilight,
some a little more than others. Before we get to
the seven habits that make younger generations cringe, I want
(01:00:07):
to remind you it's going to be hot out today,
heat advisories in place. It isn't it crazy? How that
happens in the summer. Man anyway, don't mess around with
this stuff. If you've got to be outside, make sure
(01:00:29):
that if you are out in the heat of the day,
that you take breaks, keep yourself very hydrated, and know
the signs of heat stroke. There is nothing worth getting
in that kind of trouble because sometimes there is no
(01:00:50):
reversing it. So just saying, all right, so everybody in
the broadcast listening area, you're in it. You're in a
heat advisory, all right. Now. I saw this and it
was written by Mark Wales. Again, I don't know where
this comes from. I should have made note of the
(01:01:10):
source in terms of the website or whatever. Boomers think
these seven habits make them polite, but younger generations are
begging them to stop with a quote underneath it. They're
not trying to be rude, but are they? So I'm
going to just share without comment the seven habits, and
(01:01:37):
then I'll comment habit number one, calling whenever they want.
Boomers largely grew up in an age of landline phones,
which often rang unexpectedly. Instead of the horrors that millennials
experience from an unsolicited phone called, boomers find them normal
(01:01:59):
and inviting reach out to say hello means they care
and are interested. Younger generations feel it's an uninvited threat.
Where's the heads up? Nothing triggers like an unexpected ring
of the phone. So the writer here, Mark Wales, writes,
(01:02:25):
how about everyone just chill? Older people can learn to
text first. Younger people can acknowledge they don't have to
answer the phone. They often don't anyway. Ha At number two,
the unexpected visit. Boomers grew up in an age of
the unannounced visit. There was a time when neighbors just
(01:02:45):
rang a doorbell and Alfred some extra muffins freshly baked.
Today people guard their homes with intensity. A doorbell ring
is terrifying, especially if a pizza hasn't been ordered. Solution
Boomers send a text first. Younger generations, you can always
(01:03:07):
hide in the closet and pretend you're not home. Number
three comments on appearance. Boomers never seem afraid to comment
on someone's weight loss or ask questions like why aren't
you smiling? These are tools of connection for a boomer.
(01:03:28):
Younger people guard all aspects of self and body image.
Do they Solution? If you don't have anything nice to say,
don't say it. Even if you do, probably don't say it.
More of the seven habits that boomers have that apparently
(01:03:52):
drive younger generations crazy, and my rebuttal still to come
here on the Morning Show Preston Scott ten minutes past
the hour, a little check of weather and traffic and
this is the Morning Show with Preston Scott, but minutes
(01:04:16):
past the hour of the Morning Show, talking about seven
habits that boomers have that apparently upset the younger generations.
Number four unsolicited advice. Look, with age comes wisdom. Yet
somebody say not everybody wants to hear it, apparently, so
(01:04:44):
the solution listed here is I had a friend who
used to always ask do you want to hear my
opinion before they shared it. It was pretty amazing quality.
That gave me time to prepare for what might be coming.
In the end, it's best to get permission. I'm just
reading parts of this. I'll offer my view in moments.
(01:05:11):
Chain messages. Nothing quite like an inspirational chain meme that
your grandma found, especially when it's making the rounds eight
months later. I get it. I get it. Older folks
love to feel connected, and they feel a little hip
(01:05:33):
if they're sharing something that's making the rounds, even if
it is late. Here's the solution he lists. Can we
cut one another a little slack instead of attacks, reconnect
and appreciate the meme or image you already saw months ago.
Replying with yeah, that's a good one. Isn't much of
(01:05:53):
a stretch. It's not hard to do instead of showing disdain.
Include Number six lengthy conversations for business. Boom boomers have networked.
(01:06:15):
They know people. That's why we're boomers, been around, build relationships.
That's part of the business model. A chat about what's
trending is a great way to ease into an important conversation.
It's a way to be polite, build up a little camaraderie.
Younger generations don't want to waste the time. They want
to thumbs up emoji and be done with it. Common
(01:06:45):
ground is apparently found, according to some, by younger people
working on patients respecting the time offered by older people,
and boomers can learn to fire a quick text instead
of dragging every conversation into a life lesson. Then number
seven checking and rechecking replies. Boomers may not be totally
(01:07:09):
confident in how this whole digital world works. It's not
uncommon to receive texts and emails asking did you get
that email? Or curious on your thoughts of the text
I sent. Younger people find this Bothersome boomers can learn
do not treat texting and emails like a personal journal.
(01:07:31):
It's okay to be brief and to the point. I
agree a short message, does it mean someone is being
short with you? Younger generations can give boomers the benefit
of the doubt. The wrap up here is this, everyone
is trying to fit in the best they can with
each other, and it can be difficult to adapt and
(01:07:54):
move with the times. Someday younger people will be a
little out of time with the next generation as well.
It's been written all real living is meeting. The more
you help each other connect the better. Learn to be
(01:08:14):
curious about other people and their generation instead of dictating,
will build deeper and more mutual connections. Okay, okay, So
these are these seven habits that boomers have that younger
generations don't like. Calling whenever they want, visiting, unexpectedly, commenting
(01:08:37):
on personal appearance, unsolicited advice, chain messages, lengthy convos over business,
and checking and rechecking replies. I got a thought or
two on this, See if I come off as a
typical boomer or not. Next on the Morning Show with
Preston Scott. Yeah yeah, yeah yeah. Seven habits that apparently
(01:09:18):
a lot of US boomers have that drive younger generations
little nuts. I want to go through these real quickly
here with a thought or two, calling whenever they want. Okay,
can I back up and go with an assumption here
that we're generally talking about family. I don't call many people.
(01:09:46):
I don't pick up the phone and call many people.
I'll call businesses in my family. If you're on my
call list, consider you yourself grateful that I care about you.
And you know what, if you're my kid, I reserve
(01:10:11):
the right to call you when I darn well please,
And if you don't like it, you just need to
get over it. I will not go into the abyss
of accepting well, this generation just doesn't like that kind
(01:10:33):
of communication. All well, tough and too bad. Number two
the unexpected visit. Really so if the neighbor comes over
with some baked goods at Christmas time, you're gonna be
(01:10:55):
weird about that instead of that's so nice, nice, very
considered of you. Thank you. Is that really hard? Again,
back to the kids. If I'm in the neighborhood and
i want to stop by to see my kids, I'm
going to. If you don't answer the door, shame on you.
(01:11:20):
If you don't answer the door because of something you're
doing that you know mom and dad wouldn't appreciate, shame
on you. And if you're not home, no big deal.
Number three comments on personal appearance, that's fair. I think
(01:11:41):
that as boomers we have to be careful. I think
that that's where discernment comes in. If you're talking outside
your family circle and just a random person who does that,
I guess I can see a situation where you might
walk up to somebody that you know casually or not
(01:12:04):
and say, man, you look tired. You okay? Is that
a comment on personal appearance? Now, if you're dressing inappropriately
to the situation, yeah, I must say something unsolicited advice.
(01:12:25):
I think there's I think there's some fairness in that critique,
except with children. If they're your kids by virtue of
their being there, they are your kids. You have the
right to speak into their life forever. They don't have
to accept it, they don't have to agree. They don't
(01:12:46):
have to eat it, but I believe that wisdom. For example,
all of my kids are out of the nest, but
guess what I've lived through the next stage of their life.
I've lived through the thirties, forties, and fifties. I have advice,
(01:13:13):
So no matter how old they are, I've been there.
I will share advice. But I think you have to
use wisdom and discernment. Chain messages. Okay, so I just
saw it, you saw it five months ago. Was it
(01:13:36):
funny or not? It's still funny. I don't spend and
we boomers, generally, if we have a life, don't spend
eight hours a day staring at our phones, cruising through
social media to see the latest thing that's making the rounds. Okay,
(01:14:04):
lengthy conversations for business. I agree brevity matters. Brevity does matter,
and I agree that there are times that it doesn't
turn into a life lesson. It doesn't have to. I
think that we now get to something that I think
(01:14:26):
is a really big deal. Checking in in replies. Here
we go. I will never accept when I send a
text it not being acknowledged in some form or fashion.
If I'm inquiring, if it's just you know, Hey, just
(01:14:52):
thinking of you. I hope you're having a great day.
I don't need a thumb up. I don't need a heart,
I don't need a smiley faced emoji. I don't need anything.
I sent that just letting you know I was thinking
about you. However, if I say, excuse me, if I say, hey,
how are you doing, I hope you're doing all right.
(01:15:15):
Maybe an acknowledgment of the text. If I say, let's
meet for dinner next week, what's good for you? Maybe
an acknowledgment of the text. Not waiting five days, that's
just rude to send and to For example, I know
(01:15:39):
that ninety percent of people have their smartphones in their
hands much of the day, and I also know they
see that they got a text. I know that. And
if we're in a friends circle, a family circle and
you don't reply, that's rude. Stop making excuses for it. No,
(01:16:03):
stop making excuses. Reply. Acknowledge that you got it, that
you read it, that you saw it. Otherwise that's rude.
So I'm not making I'm not accepting that, not going
to do it. So that's my view of these seven
Boomer habits. There's some fairness in the critiques. Most of
(01:16:24):
it's rubbish, just is It's just rubbish. A bunch of
softies out there, Get over it. Buckle up your pants.
Twenty eight minutes after the hour, it's the Morning Show
with President Scott. Welcome to the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Well, Jose,
(01:16:52):
the younger generation just wasted my entire break making me
watch this old, tired stream of consciousness that has been
around forever that today's illiberal lefties or nothing but nazis
rolled out all over again.
Speaker 3 (01:17:11):
You know, it's rude not to laugh, just kidding.
Speaker 1 (01:17:19):
Big story in the press box. Tulsea Gabbard says more
documents are going to be released. That's what she's saying today.
There's not just the one hundred documents she's released thus far.
Greg Jarrett talking about how Obama, Obama and his pals
(01:17:41):
created the Trump Russia hoax. He writes, not surprisingly, the
genesis of the plot began with Hillary Clinton. On July
twenty sixth, twenty sixteen, she allegedly approved an illicit scheme
to sully her political opponent for colluding with Russia to
rig the upcoming presidential election. The bogus smear was intended
(01:18:01):
to distract from her own burgeoning email scandal, Hillary's campaign
commissioned and funded a dossier that was little more than
a collection of lies supplied by Clinton confederates. See a
lot of people forget that the whole Russian collusion dossier thing.
(01:18:22):
It was paid for literally by Hillary Clinton's campaign and
the Democrat Party, literally, as in they got the receipts.
The CIA discovered what Hillary had done and immediately alerted
the Obama Obama White House in two successive meetings on
July twenty eighth and August third, Then CIA Director John Brennan,
(01:18:46):
one of the most evil human beings ever to walk
the planet, briefed the President and other top officials, including
Vice President Joe Biden, Director of National Intelligence James Clapper,
and FBI Director James Comy. Brennan's hand written notes from
the situation room recounted how Clinton's plan to villify Donald Trump.
(01:19:10):
These are his words to villify Donald Trump by claiming
interference by the Russian Security Service. From that point on,
it was a closely guarded secret. It was all a hoax.
Everybody involved knew it, yet none of them had the
(01:19:30):
integrity to step forward and tell either Congress or the
American people the truth. Instead, they watched in silence as
Comy and his FBI acolytes launched a dilating investigation of
Trump dubbed Crossfire Hurricane. They weaponized the authority structures of
this country, including the FBI, almost from the outset. The
(01:19:55):
FBI had debunked the dossier later fired its author, Christopher Steele,
for lying the ex British spy had been a paid
source for the FBI. By concealing the vital information, Comy
sought and obtained a surveillance warrant from the Piza Court
on the Trump campaign. No evidence ever existed, and people
(01:20:18):
actually went to jail because of it. This has to
be not just uncovered. It's not good enough. Not just investigated,
that's not good enough. All of these people must be
brought to trial, prosecuted, and as needed, put in jail.
I don't care how freaking old they are. Forty minutes
(01:20:42):
past the hour. Florida Man coming back next, and this
is the Preston Scott Show. Let's talk about tomorrow's show
(01:21:02):
for just a quick minute. Here, got a manly minute.
Tomorrow We've got some money talk. Howard Eisman will join me.
Greg Wrightstone author of Inconvenient Facts. He is a geologist
by profession, reluctantly an author grew weary of the lies
(01:21:24):
that al Gore was telling, repeatedly, repeating, repeatedly, the changes
that were being brought about to this country by Barack
Obama after a four year respite than Joe Biden, which
was really the Barack Obama. I mean, Joe Biden is
Walter for Barack Obama.
Speaker 2 (01:21:46):
He's just Oh, I got a hairy legs.
Speaker 1 (01:21:52):
Anyway, So that's tomorrow's program. Cannot wait, but right now,
because it's in the news, we must. If you read
something insane, I probably did it. Come on, come on,
(01:22:16):
I'm father bout de bocks. Go ahead and google my name.
Now there is so many two sins I have committed and.
Speaker 4 (01:22:27):
We all feel better.
Speaker 1 (01:22:29):
Way, were now somebody to play? Yeah, let's talk about it.
Citrus County, then Hernando County. I can't say it was
a chase, but the writer was pulled over just just
(01:22:53):
south of the exit to US ninety eight. Perhaps you
know the area bound side of the sun Coast Parkway
State Route five eighty nine. My man Christopher Spain, thirty
eight years of age, showed signs of impairment when he
(01:23:15):
was pulled over. Small pupils. Now some you know, were
you not seeing other signs? You might just say beady
little eyes, But no, no, his pupils weren't moving a lot.
His skin was flushed, dry mouth, and a visible irritation
(01:23:38):
inside of his nose. Uh oh, I wonder why he
had a blue straw in his back pocket, repeatedly cleared
his throat, sniffed and spit during the traffic stop, refused
field sobriety exercises, and was arrested on the charge of
(01:24:00):
driving under the influence. What was he driving a gravely
zero turn mower? Here's the thing, I bet I'm just saying.
(01:24:31):
If he'd have been on the side on the shoulder,
like where the grass is off the shoulder, shoulder shoulder
and running his mower the blade, he might have gotten
away with it. Even if he was cutting somewhat erratic
patterns into the grass or the weeds, he might have
gotten away with it. But my man was riding on
(01:24:54):
the on the road in a lawnmower. It was a
zero turn. They're pretty cool, but that's consideration for Florida
Man Hall of Fame status. I'm not sure he gets in,
but he would get consideration. He would get a voter
to So, Christopher Spain, my man, you enjoy sobering up
(01:25:21):
in the county jail forty seven minutes past the hour,
and we come back.
Speaker 2 (01:25:28):
Rose Bud.
Speaker 1 (01:25:53):
Some of you know exactly what I was referring to
when I said Rosebud. Orson Welles film from nineteen forty one,
Citizen Kane chronicled the life of Charles Foster Kane. And
(01:26:20):
when he was little, the character had this sled that
was named Rosebud. And he was a little kid that
was happy and joyful, that loved being on his sled
(01:26:40):
having fun. And as he grew and as he aged,
he became this powerful, egotistical, self centered, rotten person. And
as he came to the end of his life, his
last war was rosebonded thinking back to those days of
(01:27:07):
being a kid. All right. The sled is a movie
prop the actual sled from the movie. There are only
three of those props from the movie known to exist.
One of them belonged to Gremlin's director Joe Dante. He
(01:27:28):
discovered it while working at the old RKO Pictures studio
lot in nineteen eighty four and he snatched it up.
He just put it up for auction. It sold for
fourteen point seven five million dollars, the only article of
(01:27:49):
Hollywood memorabilia to sell for more. Ruby slippers from the
Wizard of Oz sold for thirty two and a half.
There you Go, brought to you by Barono Heating and Air.
It's the morning show one on WFLA. I think he
(01:28:11):
did well by grabbing up that prop. Yeah, I think
he did. I wonder if he paid anything for it,
if he just grabbed it and took it home, or
if he said, hey, can I have this? I'd love
that would be the story. I would want to that.
It's an iconic movie prop. So yeah, that would be
(01:28:33):
a fun discussion. What would be other movie props that
you would love to have that are from you know,
that are just something that you could like have and display.
That would add that. Absolutely, that would be a good discussion.
(01:28:54):
I would take some calls on that. Maybe we'll do
that sometime today. Our scripture one Corinthians thirteen, verse eleven
about becoming a man or a woman of God, not
being a child anymore, growing up, growing up. Big story
in the press box, how the Obama administration betrayed the
(01:29:16):
American people. Tulsea Gabbert, Director Nashal Intelligence has released one
hundred documents. She's releasing more. Talked about twenty one twenty
five one minute at conversations you should think about having
with your kids instead of one twenty five minute conversation.
I would say that if it takes twenty five one
minute conversations to get something said no, no, that's not doable.
(01:29:41):
Then we talked about the seven habits that boomers have
that annoy younger generations. Oh well, covered a lot of
other stuff today. Got a lot done in today's broadcast.
Tomorrow we will do it again. I cannot wait already
the prep starts now, have an awesome day.