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July 22, 2025 93 mins
This is the full episode of The Morning Show with Preston Scott for Tuesday, July 22nd.

Our guests today include:
- Greg Wrightstone
- Howard Eisenman
-
-


Follow the show on Twitter @TMSPrestonScott. Check out Preston’s latest blog by going to wflafm.com/preston. 
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:16):
Welcome morning friends. Tuesday here on the radio program The
Morning Show with Preston Scott, also known as Common Sense Amplified.
How are you. Did you have a good night of sleep?
That should be dust in your eye? Come here, give

(00:37):
me a come on, come on go, let's have a
great day. I do think PM, a positive bental latitude,
has a lot to do with how your day unfolds.
If you just if you wake up and you say,
I am going to have a good day even when

(01:00):
garbage comes, because it will. Stuff happens, Life is full
of it. If you determine that you're gonna have a
good day, you attack that problem differently. You approach it differently.
You don't let it sink its teeth into you. So
let's have a good day. I'm gonna give you a

(01:20):
great scripture ready, Ephesian six twelve. It's so interesting. I've
talked about this passage before. But what's so interesting is
I think it was just last week I talked about
Frank Peretti's book and when remember the title hold on,
for we do not wrestle against flesh and blood, but

(01:42):
against the rulers, against the authorities, against the cosmic powers
of this present darkness against these spiritual forces of evil
in the heavenly places. This present darkness was the name
of the book. It's pulled right from this and what
this scripture shows us is behind everything that is just

(02:11):
wrong is is sin, and oftentimes it is nudged, manipulated,
orchestrated and courage suggested by demonic strongholds, demonic voices that
just sort of go come on, go ahead, I mean,

(02:35):
look at the look at the the coldplay incident that happened.
At some point the relationship between the CEO and an employee,
one of one of Satan's minions went.

Speaker 2 (02:54):
She'll never find out. Go for it, Go for it.
Come on, what are you chick in?

Speaker 1 (03:06):
What did it lead to? Ruination? His career is done
at that company. Embarrassment, humiliation, pain, hurt, and Satan and
his demons are just laughing. This scripture reminds us it
is a very orchestrated thing. I could take a long

(03:27):
time to talk about this and show you scripturally why
and how certain things kind of unfold the way they do,
How palm readers and seance mediums, how they operate, and
why there they are speaking to demonic spirits, how they

(03:51):
know what they know because they know things. You're saying.
It's true. I'm saying that demonic forces, demons are our
eternal beings. They're not making more of them, they just are.
They just exist and they've watched your life unfold. So

(04:11):
it does not surprise me one bit that a demon
connected to a person that's into all this stuff can
learn about your past. They just can't tell you about
your future. They use validation of your past, telling you
little details, little things to gain credibility to speak then

(04:33):
to your future. Rubbish That almost always leads to destruction.
If it doesn't, it's just to get you hooked a
little bit more, leave you wondering, well, they knew so
much about my past? Yeah, duh. It's also why I

(04:54):
refuse to listen to Georgiani and Coast to Coast am.
I understand people listen all over the world, and he's
got a huge audience. At what cost? Talk about gaining
the whole world and losing your soul? He places Jesus
on equal footing with demonic things. No, no, thanks, not nope,

(05:20):
I'd stay clear of that stuff anyway. Ten past the hour.
My boss won't be happy. I said that that's okay,
It's okay. I stand by my statement. I've in fact,
really challenged George on this front. What are you doing?
What are you doing? There's all kinds of things to
talk about, you know, I didn't talk about Satan world religions.

(05:41):
Either are a Christian or you're not. It's kind of
like being pregnant. Either are your arn Ten past the hour,
Let's take a peek inside the American Patriots Almanac, the
National Day of and let's start unpacking this five and
fourteenth edition in the Morning Show with Preston Scott. The

(06:06):
Morning Show with Preston Scott on News Radio one hundred
point seven. WUFLA got a new block going up as
we speak. Just just hang on. Bebel and Bees dropped

(06:35):
a satire video on and a Liberal going back in
time to and Hitler before he could become Hitler, and
their encounter is is hilarious and it, like all satires,
satire is just marinates in truth. It speaks to one

(07:02):
of my first rules of a liberalism. They are what
they accuse others of being. And the encounter between first
the dude played Hitler's really good and the lady playing
the liberal is really good too. It's just yeah moments
away on the blog page. Just hang tight. It is

(07:25):
the twenty second of July fifteen eighty seven. Englishman John
White establishes the lost colony of Roanoke on Roanoke Island,
North Carolina, which eventually disappears under mysterious circumstances. Crow it toing.
I just wanted to say it that way and leave it.

(07:47):
There is reason to believe that the colony was in
fact embraced and merged with the Crowatona Indian Settlement. There's
growing evidence in excavations as recently as this year. They
feel like they're coming a little closer to unraveling the

(08:10):
riddle a little bit. Sixteen twenty thirty five English pilgrims
who had taken refuge in Holland leave that country for
England to immigrate to America. Freaky diky Dutch. Seventeen ninety six,
surveyor Moses Cleveland chooses a site that becomes the city
of Milwaukee. Now I'm just kidding Cleveland. Sheboygan. Let's see.

(08:41):
President Amraam Lincoln Abraham Lincoln informs his cabinet that he
intends to emancipate the slaves on this date in eighteen
sixty two. I'm going to do it. I wonder how
he sounded. I'm going to do it. I feel like
that would be closer to his voice. I'm going to

(09:01):
do it. Could be wrong there too, Catherine Lee Bates
writes America the Beautiful in eighteen ninety three. Aviator Wiley
Post completes the first solo flight around the world in
nineteen thirty three, And it was on this date in
nineteen thirty four, federal agents shoot and kill bank robber
John Dillinger in Chicago in Jack Down. So there you go.

(09:27):
It is in case you did not know, it is
a National Mango Day. Do you like mango just by itself? Mango?
I love mangos. I ate a whole tree of mangos once.
Is it acidic like pineapple? Is it?

Speaker 3 (09:42):
No?

Speaker 1 (09:42):
It's if you get a good one, it's really sweet.
And there's different variations of mangoes. What's the closest other
fruit that it tastes like or is it totally unique?
Pe peachyeah peach flavor is used a lot to make
artificial mango flavors and other like drinks and really, yeah,
so it's peache. Been a fan of peach. It's National

(10:02):
Hammock Day, National banucche Fudge Day. Banucca Banucca is Italian fudge.
So there you go, sixteen minutes past the hour. Don't
say you didn't learn nothing on this program.

Speaker 2 (10:22):
Here to buy.

Speaker 1 (10:38):
The Brothers segment. Did you know London designer Dominic Wilcox
invented the finger nose stylus in twenty eleven so he
could use his iPhone in the bathtub. What could possibly
go wrong? It is a long Cyrano de Bergerac looking

(10:59):
nose that you strap onto your head and you use
your head to tap. Hey, I'm just saying I didn't
did you know? I didn't know that? Did you know that? See?
There you go. Now we bathtub's water. We're talking water here.

(11:22):
Would you live underwater? Okay, you're nodding your head furiously
up and down seriously. Oh yeah, I'm part fish. Yeah,
I love love the ocean. I would live most definitely.
So you'd go a couple hundred feet down, oh yeah,

(11:42):
oh yeah, and and whatever you you realize that you're
largely then captive inside that bubble that habitat well, depending
on the depth it I mean, I mean, you know the
pressure when you go down. My point in bringing this

(12:04):
up is this is where there's some growing focus. Instead
of lunar and Mars colonies, there's more and more interest
in under sea in the oceans. I don't know if
the if lakes hold the same appeal. I mean, I

(12:27):
don't know. You know, in the nineteen sixties, some of
you remember the undersea World of Jacques Cousteau. Jacques Cousteau
built an underwater habitat that he famously lived in an
underwater module, showing you could live for short periods of time.

(12:48):
Since two thousand and one, NASA's had a place off
Florida's coast that they send astronauts, the Aquarius Reef Base
off Florida's coast. They live and work for up to
two weeks sixty five feet below the surface. You obviously
have to deal with air. You got to figure that out.

(13:09):
You've got to figure out water. You've got to have
a desalination process. If you're in a saltwater environment, you
have to have a purification process if you're in fresh water.
I suppose I've not seen anybody talk about being in
a lake. A German engineer Rudiger Coke spent one hundred

(13:33):
and twenty days in a submerged capsule without health issues.
One hundred and twenty days. That's four months. Professor Joseph
Deturi lived one hundred days underwater. Emerge healthier, better sleep,
reduce cholesterol, even a younger biological age. As they measure that.

(13:56):
There are absolutely habitats being design right now that can
go down to six hundred and fifty six feet. That's pressure.
Withstanding that, that is pressure, and you could stay up
to twenty eight days. Some of these places look like
really cool apartments, big old windows and stuff. I don't know.

Speaker 4 (14:20):
I I don't know. I don't know if I could
do that? I could you do that? Could you really
do that? I think some people.

Speaker 1 (14:36):
Are just that kind of confined space. Uh huh. I
mean if you put if when when the curtain falls
on my life, you better darn well make sure I'm
dead before you put me in a coffin. You you

(14:58):
better know that. It's like the old movies where they
they would put a needle a poke through the sack
when they dump you overseas. They'd put it a needle
through the nose to make sure that someone didn't react

(15:20):
like okay, well, I guess he's done. I just ran
a giant needle and thread through his nose. He didn't move.
I don't know. I just but then again, I don't
know about living on another planet in some enclosed capsule either,

(15:40):
but I would if I had to choose, that would
be an interesting one. If you had to choose between
living on a colony on Mars or a colony in
the ocean, where would you go of the ocean? Well,
I knew your answer. That's like that was the lowest

(16:03):
of hanging fruit right there.

Speaker 3 (16:05):
You.

Speaker 1 (16:05):
I knew it. You would choose twenty seven minutes after that,
what would you choose?

Speaker 5 (16:10):
And we'll talk about that one day.

Speaker 1 (16:29):
All right. I hit save, I hit publish, and wa
llah a visit to the website w FLA FM dot
com or w FLA Panama City dot com. You will
see the new blog from the from the desk of

(16:53):
yours truly and the pages of the Babylon b directly
to you. It's really good. Please though not during the show,
it'll hurt my heart. Big stories in the press box.
Jerome Powell, the Chairman of the Federal Reserve, has been

(17:16):
referred to the Department of Justice for criminal prosecution, alleging
he lied under oath. Do you know anything about this
Federal Reserve renovation? The building, the eckless building. They were
told that there were some minor reservation renovations that needed

(17:39):
to be done. The cost is checking in between one
point nine and two point five billion dollars. Squeeze me
what so there's one Tulsa Gabbard has sent a criminal

(18:08):
referral to the Department of Justice on the Russian collusion hoax.
What will Pam Bondy do? Huh? We touched on it yesterday.

(18:37):
All of this is important. But until and unless you
have prosecutions, I'm not going to say convictions. I want
this to have its day in court. Lord knows we

(19:04):
had people sitting in prison for years for showing up
at a rally. These people were undermining the vote, the
will of the American people, the federal government as it

(19:24):
could have been. Now illustrating the old adage about getting
lemonade out of lemons, we're getting the best out of
it because we've got a far better version of Donald Trump,
not so much as a person, but as a president,

(19:47):
far better than we would have had we rolled into
a second straight term but the damage that was done
to our country, I don't know. I mean, it's right.
How do you weigh that looking at it's happened at
our border? And it will be a theme on the
program today, the illegal immigration problem, hunter Biden's opinion, notwithstanding,

(20:09):
which we will get to next hour. A shocking story
the Biden administration hotline for migrant children complaining about their
quote sponsors, some of them saying there are people coming

(20:33):
into my These are children that have called this phone
line saying I'm scared, I have concerns. In one case,
one little boy, men are coming into my room at
night and touching me. The call went unanswered, did not
get responded to. In fact, sixty five thousand calls went unanswered,

(21:03):
further illustrating the point that Democrats don't care. It's about
a means to an end, collateral, damaged children, whatever, It's fine.
Democrats don't care. That shocking piece of news is coming
in testimony in front of the House of Representatives in

(21:26):
a sub committee. We'll get to that next hour. Forty
minutes past the hour. Aren't you glad you're with us?
Of course you are, and we're happy too. It's the
Morning Show with Preston Scott, I'm sorry forty two minutes past.

(21:54):
It's getting interesting. A lot of pressures coming on, Pam Bondy,
What are you going to do? Pam careful what you
wish for? You wanted the job, you wanted, the job

(22:15):
sent you paid attention. Now we've got referrals on the
head of the Fed lying to Congress. He's trying to
cover his tracks by ordering an audit on the costs.
Why is it costing so much? Whatever? Brother, We've got

(22:38):
referrals on the Russian hoax, which involves a ton of people.
US Senate Committee on Judiciary Senator Chuck Grassley newly declassified
documents put out in public talking about the Clinton annex.
That's a quote an appendix to the Department of Justice

(23:00):
Inspector General's twenty eighteen report that shows that James Comey's
FBI deliberately ignored key evidence, stonewalled Congress, and prioritized politics
over national security. This from the Gateway Pundit. The documents

(23:20):
show how the FBI buried evidence, including thumb drives with
highly classified information that could have blown the lid off
the Clinton Obama cover up. What the FBI covered up
thumb drives containing sensitive data tied to the State Department, Congress,
even President Obama himself were seized and then ignored, and

(23:42):
FBI memo recommended further searches, but the bureau leadership squashed
it said no intelligence reports indicated coordination between then DNZ
chair w Wasserman Schultz and operatives from the four Soros
funded Open Society Foundation to suppressed the investigation. How is

(24:05):
it that I understand that Debbie Wasserman Schultz as pitiful
as she is as a member of Congress. I understand
that she was in Congress, but she's in her role
as the head of the Democrat National Committee, She's the chair.

(24:29):
How is she having to say whatsoever on ending investigations
or tamping them down and using George Sorow's funding and connections.
How is that even possible? Additionally, the FBI failed to
pursue leads that the Obama administration intentionally derailed the Clinton

(24:52):
probe to protect her twenty sixteen candidacy. Remember the laptop,
Remember this il dossier paid for by Hillary and the
Democrat National Committee. You see how dots are starting to connect.
Some of us knew all of this. We didn't know
the specifics or the details, but it's kind of like,

(25:13):
you know, you know, it's like when the homeless guy,
he's smoking a heater, he's got a fresh shirt, he's
got a phone, he's checking his phone. Well, he's asking
for money, and then over time someone decides to follow
him and he jumps into a late model seday In
and drives home. You don't know, but you know, you

(25:41):
know what I mean. Huh forty six minutes after the Allen.

(26:02):
There are certain challenges that we have here in America
that make my head hurt. The size and scope of government.
How to rail it in, rein it in rather reel
it in? Sorry, how do you do it? We're trying

(26:25):
sort of a little kind of but as a group,
we're addicted. We are addicted to the size and reach
and scope of government. Tax code. OMG, just for a second,

(26:54):
think about all of the CPAs out there, tax preparers
that if you ended the tax system as we know it.

Speaker 2 (27:07):
Think about them.

Speaker 1 (27:10):
There's pressure from all of them on Congress to keep
a tax code. They're livelihood's based on it. I get it.
So you have to create a glideslope to transition people.
If you're making that type of change healthcare. Healthcare is

(27:35):
the one that is just oh my, I mean, it's
I don't know if this is a little gross. You
may not remember the story years and years ago. I

(27:57):
will never forget the the nuts and bolts of it.
A guy that was so obese and overweight, same thing.
He sat on one piece of furniture and could not move.

(28:26):
I'll let you go from there to figure out how
he everything. His skin grew into the fabric of the furniture,
and so that had to be separated from him, and

(28:47):
he had to be removed with a crane to be
brought to the hospital. That is our healthcare system. It
has grown into the fabric of this country to such
a degree that to fix it, to change it requires

(29:10):
incredible intervention and heavy lifting. I'm reminded of a sit
down I had with medical professionals in Tallahassee, literally a
roundtable I had. A surgeon explained to me that his

(29:33):
medical malpractice went up over one thousand dollars a month
because he was named in a lawsuit but was dismissed.
It was a lawsuit involving another doctor in his practice,
but because he was named, though the judge dismissed it
because he said, you had no role in this. You

(29:53):
are cut free from this lawsuit. His insurance went up.
Regardless that the bureaucratic red tape for healthcare is so
extreme the numbers of people needed to be employed by
doctors to just pedal paperwork raises the costs the Affordable

(30:22):
Care Act. The subsidies are coming to an end. And
so this is a reminder to anybody that's signed on
to the ACA that your premiums are going to go
up more than likely next year. You just need to

(30:45):
be thinking about it. You need to be thinking about options. Look,
Obamacare was a scam from the get go, and the
point of Obamacare was to crash the industry. Wrong way
to do it and forces many Americans under government healthcare

(31:06):
i e. Control as possible. And now we're gonna pay
the piper. Five passed the hour, second hour of good morning, Tuesday,

(31:34):
July twenty second, fifty four or fourteen. It would be
just fine for this ridiculous heat spell to just move along,
and it will. It will. Summer's hot, winter's colder. I mean,
it just happens. Anyway. I've got another blog coming up
in I'll probably post it in a couple of days.

(32:01):
It is so cool now to me, it might not
be to everybody, but it's very cool. Cannot wait for
you to see it. Got a new blog up right now.
Babylon Bee has released a video. Unbeknownst to Osey, he

(32:21):
shared this with me yesterday. He didn't know it was
from the Bee. I knew the moment I looked at
it as the Bee, because I just know, you just
you know, at least I knew. Christy dom the Director

(32:42):
of Homeland Security Secretary of Homeland Security. Second illegal migrant
apprehended in connection with the shooting of an off duty
Customs Border Protection officer in New York City over the weekend.
So we have Miguel Francisco Mora Nunez, really Miguel Francisco

(33:10):
Mora Nunnez, Dominican national, caught by border patrol in April
of twenty twenty three. So what the heck? Oh you
mean he was released. Here's a little more to this story.
Check this out. Second suspect Christian A Barbarrow. That's how

(33:32):
I do. That illegal immigrant from the Dominican Republic entered
the country illegally in twenty twenty two. Under the Biden administration,
ordered for final removal in twenty twenty three by an
immigration judge. What's he doing here? He has a criminal record.

(33:54):
In New York City, detainers were ignored thanks to Mayor
Eric Adams and trust me the socialist Marxist comedy guy,
He's not gonna help sanctuary city. No one posted. He
was arrested for reckless endangerment larceny and was released before

(34:16):
Ice could get him off the streets. They intentionally released
these people in certain parts of the country to not
be apprehended. It doesn't it literally doesn't matter the crime.
So what happened? These guys end up finding each other.
They are believed to be involved in a armed robbery

(34:36):
in Massachusetts in February, caught on video. This time they
shot a guy they approached off duty officer with his
girlfriend fiance wife. They're sitting at a park. They roll
by on a scooter. Losers see them sitting there and

(34:59):
just we're gonna rob them, pulled a gun, shot them.
This is the type of garbage that democrats justify. It
is unfair that there are some good people trapped up

(35:20):
in all of this that just want to work in
this country. And hold down a job and make a living.
But here's the thing. There's a way to do it,
and they chose not to do it that way. They
chose to ignore the legal way to enter this country.
And I'm sorry that they're caught up in all of this,

(35:41):
but they are here illegally, and you just have to
get them all out and start over. Fix the immigration system.
But understand that there's a difference between immigration and illegal immigration,
something we've talked about and we'll talk about again. Thanks

(36:01):
to our friends at gannet, I got to say this
next segment brought to you by our friends at Gannet Media,
the home of newspapers listen, watched by a handful and
used as fish rappers by many more in the entire
listening area. Yeah check check check out the next segment,

(36:24):
ten past the Hour, Weather in Traffic on deck. Here
in the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Thanks for joining us.
It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott. My disdain for Gannet,

(36:51):
the local news outlet here, the local news outlet, the
print outlet in Panama City. They're Gannett, and Gannett has
been the author of its own demise. There was a
time that The USA Today was a good publication, it
was a great read, It was a great investment of

(37:11):
your fifty cents or dollar. But then they decided that
they wanted to carry the water of the left. Illiberalism
took over in the newsrooms. Publishers, news editors. They're just terrible.
They're just bad at their job. They don't know eighth
grade journalism. They don't understand how to do it. And

(37:35):
they sit down and they try to figure out, why
in the world isn't anyone watching reading our news. Why.
I remember being made fun of by the former publisher
of the local paper, Skip Foster. Skip wrote a letter

(37:56):
to me banning my comments on the Letters to the
Editor page because I was pointing out factual mistakes in
their articles. And he couldn't take it anymore, and he
demeaned me, belittled me, and by the grace of God,
look I'm still doing what I'm doing all these years later.

(38:17):
Skips no longer in the newspaper business. He orchestrated the fall,
along with his predecessor and his successor of the local newspaper,
Tallassi Reports, is now I believe the paper of record
for this community. Gannett engaged in deception. It was something

(38:41):
internally because I had people that worked inside the newspapers
that sent me the documentation. It was called the Butterfly project.
And what they did is they inserted a few pages
of USA Today inside their local papers for a period
of time, and they did that to inflate the circulation numbers.
They could claim greater circulation because they used USA Today

(39:04):
circulation and combined it with local circulation to inflate the
numbers in charge higher rates. It was deceptive, it was wrong,
but whatever I mean that was then they've they've reaped
what they've sown a train wreck. Had a former employee
send me a note talking about a story originating here

(39:29):
in the local Gannet outlet. The feeling in the room
was a mix of joy and excitement, even as across
the nation, sentiment towards immigration has grown increasingly hostile. No,
that's just a lie. It's it's either a lie or
embarrassingly horrible writing and reporting, because hostility towards immigration is

(39:52):
not at all a problem. It might be for a
handful of people, but no, no, no, no, it's illegal
that we have a problem with. We want to fix
legal immigration. We want to stop illegal immigration and kick
those that took part in it out of the country.

(40:13):
Try again, there's the door. Turn right around and stand
in line. That's what we want to believe. What we believe.
It is not a sentiment hostility, sentiment towards towards immigrants
and immigration. No, no, no, no illegal immigrants. And it's
not so much them, although some of them, like the

(40:35):
really bad criminals, but it's the fact that they broke
into this country. And then, as my friend points out,
others the newspaper outlet locally spoke to said that they
were pushed to seek naturalization due to wanting to become
part of the biggest country in the world. We're not.

(41:03):
I mean, Russia is bigger, and so is China, as
he points out, depending on how you count land masks,
both India and China have more people. So it was fact.
It's just it's a laziness. It's just it's a laziness.
It's bad reporting, and and it's this is what is

(41:25):
creating part of our problem here. So you have a
problem with immigration, huh no, no, no, no. I have
a problem with illegal immigration. And I pointed out ten
years ago the attempt to conflate the two to erase

(41:46):
the illegal, take it from the and just make it
all an immigration issue. They just hate immigrants. No words
matter people. The left has been trying to sanitize this
issue for years. When we come back, one of the

(42:09):
proudest pieces of editing I've ever done ever. Ever. You'll
hear it yourself next on The Morning Show with Preston Scott.

(42:38):
All right, I have listened to this multiple times, and
I think I got it all. I better you better
have your finger on the button just in case. Hunter
Biden decided to do an interview and call out democrats,

(43:02):
not all some for actually agreeing that we have an
illegal immigration problem in this country. And this is thirty
six seconds of what the privileged entitled should be in

(43:25):
jail in prison. Former first son had to say about democrats.

Speaker 6 (43:32):
All these democrats say you have to talk about and
realize that people are really upset about illegal immigration. You
how do you think your hotel room gets cleaned? How
do you think you got food on your table? Who
do you think washes your dishes? Who do you think
does your garden? Who do you think is here by
the sheer, just grit and will that they've figured out

(43:58):
a way to get here because they ought that they
could give theirselves and their family a better chance. And
he's somehow convinced all of us that these people are criminals.

Speaker 1 (44:12):
You're welcome. Never have I thoroughly enjoyed an editing session
as much as I enjoyed that one this morning. First
of all, kids don't do drugs because your brain turns

(44:36):
into mush and the only words you can say are profanities.
He can't express himself without using profanities. Can't do it,
not possible, and he's doing it on an interview. Okay, now,

(44:56):
I understand Joe Rogan use a profanity too. He does
not fan of it. I've never listened to a Joe
Rogan show. I just I have no interest in that.
But it's interesting that Hunter would take this take this tack, because,

(45:18):
after all, he blamed illegal immigrants for his tossing of
a gun into a trash can. You may recall, the
story goes back to a police report where Hunter told

(45:42):
police officers that Mexican males in the loading dock area
there were some suspicious people working for it. He said, yeah,
probably legal. So he's just complaining because the cheap slight
labor that he wants isn't going to be so accessible.

(46:05):
Someone else put a little bit more of a pointed
I guess thought on this by simply suggesting that Hunter
is just lamenting the fact that he might have to
pay more for drugs and prostitutes. The White House said

(46:29):
a CBP agent was shot in the face by two
criminal illegal aliens that Joe Biden led into the country,
But Hunter is more concerned about who's going to clean
up his hotel after his benders. This is the sort
of callous, self interested maliciousness from the entire Biden crime family.

(46:51):
Exactly why Joe Biden left office with record low approval ratings,
and oh, by the way, with pardons for his son,
his brother, his sister, maybe sister in law the family.

(47:13):
By the way, Hunter Hunter said his dad didn't do
well in that debate performance because he was jacked up
on ambient Well, one drug user out to know what
the others what another one looks like. I guess I
don't know. Twenty seven minutes after the hour, come come
back with the big stories. Got some sound for you?

(47:33):
Next Geologist author chairman of the CO two coalition, Greg
Wright Stone joins US next hour. Haven't talked to Gregan
a minute. Sorry in a while. Got a little two

(47:54):
hip there, even though that's probably old now our kids
even saying that anymore, I have no idea. That's just
one of those annoying boomer habits, you know what I mean.
It just kind of just happens, all right. During a
hearing this week House Committee on Homeland Security, US Congressman

(48:25):
Eli crane Man, who minces no words in committee with
a witness, this.

Speaker 7 (48:36):
Is what the American people voted for because they saw
four years of the carnage that these open border policies
plagued on the United States. And we're talking about the
NGOs that they used as middlemen to carry out their operations,
like the Catholic charities they used to facilitate, normalize, and
accelerate illegal immigration into this country. Miss Hopper, you've closely

(49:00):
with trafficking victims and survivors. I'd like to explore the
role that the NGOs have played in enabling the trafficking
and exploitation of unaccompanied alien children. Under the last administration,
what safeguards were put in place to protect vulnerable unaccompanied children.

Speaker 8 (49:21):
I previously discussed the close post placement welfare checks, which
consisted of two phone calls. Again, if the sponsor didn't answer,
the case was no longer followed up on. But there
was also a Notice of Concern hotline where people could
report concerns about the unaccompanied child's safety. But what this

(49:42):
administration found was from August twenty twenty three to January
of twenty twenty five, sixty five thousand calls went unanswered.
Those calls step spanned from complaints about sale bread all
the way to being abused, to one case where a

(50:04):
child's call was reporting that grown men were coming into
his room at night and they were touching him. Nothing
happened with that call. That call went unanswered until this
administration took office, went through those sixty five thousand calls,
made follow ups, conducted a welfare check, and now that

(50:25):
child has been rescued and that sponsor has been arrested.

Speaker 1 (50:35):
I remember a few people, not many, but a few
people really taking issue with my statement that for the
most part, all illiberals and most Democrats don't care about
these victims, whether their children, whether they are the Lake

(50:57):
and Riley's of the world, they don't care. It's it's
it's an it's unfortunate. They would tell you that it's
it's just, it's it's sad, it's unfortunate. But they don't
care because they continue to espouse for grand stand for

(51:23):
opine four, write editorials, for give monologues for illegal immigrants.
They just need another victim class that they can somehow
get to vote. All of this works together, all of it.

(51:49):
Two other big stories in the press box. Department of
Justice has received a criminal referral from the Director of
National Intelligence Tulsa Gabbard relative to the Russian collusion hoax,
and Florida Congresswoman Anna Paulina Luna is referring Federal Reserve

(52:10):
Chair Jerome Powell to the Department of Justice for criminal prosecution,
alleging that he lied under oath discussing the Federal Reserves
Eckless Building, where renovations were characterized to the committee as
minor but are now looking at one point nine to
two point five billion dollars. Here's my proposal. Let's just

(52:42):
raise it. Let's just demolish the building, and let's use
some of those unused storage shipping containers. Let's renovate some
of those. Can probably do it for take care of
the whole need for less than a million bucks. There
you go, Here go, Jerome, here's your box car. Forty
minutes past the autum Redskins and Indians. Next on the

(53:05):
Morning Show with Preston Scott, I did not say cowboys
and Indians, Redskins and Indians. This this is one of

(53:33):
those deals where the President just just leave it be, buddy,
just leave it be. He is claiming that Native Americans
want the monikers' mascots, the Washington Redskins, not commanders. They
went the Redskins back, and they went to Cleveland Indians,

(53:55):
not the Guardians. Now, it should be pointed out that
the Cleveland Guardians does have a historical trail to it.
It does have a connection to the city of Cleveland,
and does make some sense. Obviously, we know political correctness
was the reasons why we dumped Redskins and Indians. Trump

(54:19):
is claiming that Native Americans are wanting the attention back.
They liked the attention that came from it. They liked
that their heritage and legacy. Though you know, for example,
Chief Wahoo, you could argue lampooned the American Indian the

(54:39):
redskin mascot not so much red skin, red skin logo. Sorry,
was very very manly, very very sporty. You know, Florida
State has avoided all of that because of its overtly good, positive,

(55:04):
ongoing relationship with the Seminal Indian tribe. It is a
matter of pride for them to be affiliated with Florida
State University, and the university does not make fun of,
mock belittle that relationship. They've They've handled this entire navigated
this whole thing brilliantly. Trump is even suggesting that he'll

(55:30):
railroad the Washington Commander's ability to build a new stadium.
He'll muddy the waters and make it difficult. It's like, dude,
if American Indians feel this strongly about it, and maybe
some do and maybe some don't, I don't know, let
them make a stink of it, Let them deal with it.

(55:52):
You have far more important things to worry about than that.
But you know the part of this story though, that
just this is the Trump that we some of us,
at least I cringe at, threatens to block DC's stadium

(56:18):
deal if they don't change their name back. Dude, So
because someone doesn't do what you want, you're going to
try to make things make like difficult, life difficult for them.
Stop it now, that's childish.

Speaker 6 (56:36):
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, Well I'll make things hard on you.

Speaker 1 (56:45):
I can do it. You know, I'm the president. There
are times you've seen those little videos, the AI videos
with the babies portraying different political leaders sitting around talking,
telling jokes and all that, and they're hilarious. The right
ones are hilarious. These are the times that Trump is

(57:08):
one of those. He's just childish. Forty six minutes after there,
come back with a manly minute and an interesting study.
It is time for a manly minute mailed by birth

(57:30):
man by choice, we choose to be one. And these
are skills, ideals, mindsets, virtues to teach your young son now,
so that you are crafting and molding a man. Now,

(57:57):
this is going to hit really hard some of you.
And I will tell you up front. It is an
opinion of that I hold. It is just an opinion
that I hold. Real men don't wear ear rings. I

(58:18):
know that. If you look it up. History says that
ear rings in guy's ears have been a thing for centuries,
usually revealing a social status. In some man, it reveals eligibility.
You know what I'm saying you know what I mean

(58:41):
by that, I would maintain that distinct separation from the
feminine variety of human Homo sapien is important. Look, I
just think that it's best to just kind of yeah,

(59:07):
but that's just again, that's just I'm offering my thoughts.
Do with it what you will. This segment of a
Manly Minute, brought to you by Jose Can you see
no comment? Maybe I should have said this segment of

(59:31):
the Manly Minute inspired by Jose can you see Wait?
But I build houses and stuff, barbecue. Yeah he's manly.
But yeah, No, it's just like I said. You look
it up and there's definitely a sizeable history of men
wearing earrings. I just think it's it's like men wear

(59:55):
an eyeliner. To me, it's like, you know, if you're
in the theater and you gotta for the stage or whatever,
and you gotta put a little bit whatever. That's fine.
You know, when I was doing television, there was an
incredible pressure for me to wear makeup. I never once
wore it. I never wore it for Network. The people

(01:00:16):
at Fox were like, you gotta put on some pancake.
I said, no, I don't, No, I don't I don't
need it. Look at this skin. This skin doesn't need pancake.
Are you kidding me? You'll you'll, you'll, you'll, you'll shine
in the camera lights. No, I'm not. I'm not gonna
shine in the camera lights. I might shine because those

(01:00:38):
lights get too stinking hot. Change the LEDs will be better.
Ended up changing the LEDs anyway, I told you how
to study here. Mom of five has come up with
a plan. Woman named Charlett Mason from the eighteen hundreds

(01:01:03):
and said kids should be outside forty six hours a
day whenever the weather is tolerable. Lady named Ginny Urick
got her master's in education turned that into a thousand
hours outside. It's a plan that advocates it actually offers

(01:01:24):
a plan whether you live in a place that has
scorching summers or harsh winters, a plan to get your
kids outside so that they're outside one thousand hours a year.
And she says it's life changing for the kids. Now,
it's interesting because there's a study that shows that more
screen time and children results in smaller brains and lower intelligence.

(01:01:50):
So if you think you're helping your kids by letting
the screen be the babysitter, you're not get them outside safely.
Of course, you know, we do live in a different world.
You can't just let the kids out in the front
yard let them play. You gotta have somebody watching. I've
got to be on people's radar that you trust. But anyway,

(01:02:13):
we're gonna come back with the third hour. Greg Rydstone, geologist, author,
chairman of the CO two Coalition, next here on the
Morning Show with Preston Scott. Good night, mates, and welcome

(01:02:39):
if you're just joining us. It's the third hour of
the Morning Show with Preston Scott. And we do have
a podcast of the program. We've had it for a
very long time. So if you miss the first two hours,
just look up the podcast on the iHeartRadio app and
there you go. You'll get caught up. But you've tuned
in at the right time because I am joined by

(01:03:00):
friend of the program. We have known Greg Wrightstone for
a number of years. He's chairman of the CO two Coalition.
He's author of a couple of books, Inconvenient Facts, The
Science that Al Gore Doesn't want you to Know and
a very Convenient Warming, How Modest Warming and CO two
are benefiting humanity. He is Greg Wridstone.

Speaker 9 (01:03:18):
Hi, Greg good Marning, how are you?

Speaker 1 (01:03:22):
I am terrific. For the benefit of those that have
missed our previous visits, do a quick reset here. You're
you're a geologist by profession. What was it that you
finally had your popeye moment and you've stood all you
could stand and you couldn't stand anymore, and you decided
you were going to take this challenge on?

Speaker 3 (01:03:43):
Yeah, Well, as a scientist, I knew that some of
what this goes back to about twenty fifteen is when
I really started getting very interested to learn the truth.
And I heard the things as a geologist that we
were being told that I knew were just false. In
particularly that's that oceans are becoming acidic. You've probably heard

(01:04:05):
of ocean acidification. That just a terrible thing, and I
knew that that was actually incorrect. It cannot happen. We
won't go into the science of why it can't happen.
We could do that on a different show. But I
knew that, And so I said, they're lying to me
about this, What else are they lying to me about?
And so I did it? I didn't. So I'm going

(01:04:26):
to do my own research. I'm going to do a
deep dive into various claims that are being made of
increasing wildfires, sea level rise. You've heard them all, and can.

Speaker 1 (01:04:40):
I ask you, did you start this process of researching
through the lens of as a professional, trained, academic geologist,
or were the claims so much that you pushed yourself
outside of your normal silo into other areas well.

Speaker 3 (01:04:59):
If we look at climate change, there are probably thirty
or forty different disciplines that are involved. Climatology, geology, chemistry, meteorology,
all of those things combined are part of this. And
so I took this just as a scientist. It was
with my geologic and scientific background, and I started going

(01:05:21):
into these and frankly, what I found anchored me is
that most of what we're being told about the climate
crisis is just false and that this was my own
personal search for the truth that led me to this
because I went back to the base data. I said,
I'm not going to trust anyone. I'm going to look
at my own through my own research. And that led

(01:05:41):
me to write my first book, which was Inconvenient Facts,
which was a runaway bestseller, and it was it was
that and then my most in that book, I pretty much.
I documented that there is no climate crisis and in
fact Europe is getting better. My second book that was
just published is the name is a Very Convenient Warming,

(01:06:03):
How modest warming and more CO two are benefiting humanity,
and it's the story about the facts of what's actually happening.
We see by almost every metric we look at, Earth's
ecosystems are thriving and prospering, and humanity is benefiting from
increasing CO two and modest warming. And it's I call

(01:06:23):
it the greatest untold story of the twenty first century,
that of a thrift and the thriving and proving of
the human condition. And we can celebrate that. It's it's
man life is good in getting better, and it's because
of more CO two modest warming. Means that it's the
greatest advantage we're seeing from the two of those are

(01:06:46):
agriculture that's breaking records year after year after year from
the coldest countries to the hottest countries like India, their
agricultural spector and productivity or outpacing pop growth. Isn't that
a good thing that does a really, really really good thing.
We should celebrate that.

Speaker 1 (01:07:06):
Greg Ridestone with me and the author of Inconvenient Facts,
the latest book of Very Convenient Warming. Also the CO
two Coalition. Lots more to talk about here this morning
on the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Thought or story
you want to share, write them at Preston at iHeartRadio

(01:07:29):
dot com. Yes he knows how to read. Well, actually
his producer reads him. He doesn't know how to read.
Welcome to the Morning Show with Preston Scott, geologist. Share
the CO two Coalition. We'll get to that in just
a moment, Greg, before we get to the email that

(01:07:52):
kind of brought this visit around. Is it an oversimplification
to say the Earth is simply being the Earth?

Speaker 3 (01:08:04):
No, that's that's probably the truth because if we look
at the facts, let's let's get to the heart of this.
Is it all goes around carbon dioxide, carbon dioxide or
CO two, And this is the other people pushing this
climate arm called it the demon molecule. We call it
the miracle molecule. And so everything they're doing for net zero,

(01:08:27):
their regulations that were systematically stripping your listeners from their freedoms,
their freedoms to die. Now, bear with me when I
said I'm a big, very big proponent of I'm strongly
pro choice, and by saying that, I mean your listeners
should have the choice what kind of car to drive,
how to heat their home to, what temperature to heat

(01:08:51):
or cool their home. If you look around, look around
you right now you're in the comfort of your home
or your office. Everything you look at, it's based on
the electricity has been regulated under the bidener orma EPA
or Department of Energy. For your ceiling fan, no more
incandescent white bulbs. They're they're limiting what kind of washer

(01:09:16):
and dryer you can buy, what dishwasher you can buy,
and so they're telling you, for the most part, they're
much more expensive, they don't use as much energy, probably,
but they're telling you you should not have the choice
to buy a dishwasher that can clean your dishes in
forty minutes and get them clean instead of a dishwasher

(01:09:37):
that takes an hour and a half like ours does,
and they're not so clean. Or flush your toilet two
times instead of once. And so that's what they're using.
Is all is revolving around carbon dioxide and limitations, and
so carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas. It does have
a warming effect like other greenhouse gases, over which the
main one is water vapor. But it's very very very

(01:10:00):
very small and overwhelmed by again water vapor and natural
forces that have been heating and cooling and driving temperatures
since the dawn of time. And it's just thank god.
Now we're seeing in the Trump administration, they're rolling these
restrictions back. They're taking away these limits of your freedom,

(01:10:21):
allowing us the ability to choose what to buy.

Speaker 1 (01:10:25):
Greg, you and I have talked about this a couple
of times over the years, but I am still convinced
that the rank and file American does not understand the
distinction between carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide. They know that
one is used to off yourself. You know, you want

(01:10:46):
to kill yourself. You take the gas pipe and you
put the exhaust pipe rather in your car, and you
turn it on, and you'd kill yourself. And I don't
think there's enough understanding of the benefits. You call it
the miracle molecule. I don't think enough people understand this
is carbon dioxide, not monoxide.

Speaker 3 (01:11:07):
Yeah, carbon dioxide is not a pollutant. It doesn't there's
no direct harm with increasing carbon dioxide. Carbon monoxide is
a poison it's a pollutant that can kill you. So
carbon dioxide, that's what we're breathing out. It. With every
breath you breathe out, you're exhaling about forty thousand parts

(01:11:27):
per million. The ambient error in that if you walk
outside right now and if there's a bit of a wind,
you're going to see about four hundred and thirty parts
per million, and you're exhaling forty thousand. There's no direct
harm even if above five thousand parts per million, So
we could carbon dioxide could get fifteen to twenty times

(01:11:50):
as high as this right now, and there's still will
be no direct harm. In fact, submarines I believe they're
they limit there as you ually over six thousand parts
per million for the sailors or the submariners that are
therese of course, you've got forty or fifty men in
a submarine and they're all excealing forty thousand parts per million,

(01:12:12):
and so the air in the submarine they need to
keep cleansing the CO two in the sub But again,
during over Earth's history, the average of CO two in
the atmosphere is twenty six hundred parts per million, six
and a half times what it is today life thrive.
Plants love more CO two. They do, and they do.

(01:12:35):
All life thrive much much higher CO two levels. And
so we're actually in a period of CO two starvation.
We don't have too much CO two, we don't have enough,
and that's really what is not understood. The other big
point that they failed to mention is that in my
new book, A Very Convenient Warming, I have an entire

(01:12:58):
section devoted to this.

Speaker 1 (01:13:00):
Well.

Speaker 3 (01:13:00):
One of my favorite subjects is the strong correlation between
a relationship between human history and climate temperature history. And
we find that each of the previous warming periods, and
we are in a warming period by the way, thankfully
each of the previous warming periods, which is hugely beneficial

(01:13:20):
to humanity. Great empires arose and civilizations arose. But dating
back to the very first in the Bronze Age, the
Manilan Warm period, Babylonians, Hittites, Assyrians, the Horop Empire in
the Indus River Valley, all these first civilizations rose up
during a really really warm time. In fact, it was

(01:13:42):
so warm they were growing a crop called millet in
Scandinavia would would be grown in subtropical areas, so we
know it was a lot warmer and life was good.
And then it started getting cold, and man, it was
horrific every time throughout Earth's history, and it started getting called.
It led to crop failure, famine, pestilence, and masty population.

Speaker 1 (01:14:04):
Greg I got a hold right there. We got a break.
We got to get to seventeen past the hour. More
to come with Greg Reriidstone of the CO two Coalition,
the book Inconvenient Facts and a Very Convenient Warming. He's
author of a couple of books, Inconvenient Facts and a

(01:14:28):
Very Convenient Warming. He is Greg Reriidstone. He's a geologist
and he's also chairman of the CO two Coalition. Greg
I remember when we talked to here a few years
back about the formation of this group. Tell us real
quickly what it is, and then tell us about the
email that you sent our way, the reassessing of the
National Climate Assessment.

Speaker 3 (01:14:49):
Yeah, the CO two Coalition, we're now nearly two hundred
of the top experts and scientists in the world that
are skeptic. We pushed back tell the truth about what's
actually happening about climate change. With on our board, we've
got doctor Patrick Moore, who was a co founder of
GREENPA Peace. Believe it or not. We have doctor John

(01:15:12):
klaus or sits on our board. He was a twenty
twenty two Nobel Laureate in physics. So it's hard to
call us science deniers. I would call these other people
pushing this climate scam. We just talked about human history.
I call them history deniers because they deny what human
history tells us. And so it's our mission to promote

(01:15:34):
the truth about the benefits, mostly of carbon dioxide, but
also of modest warming. And so we're pushing back against this.
We're fighting for your freedoms, for your listeners' freedoms, and
we've been active. Our office is based in the DC
area Fairfax, Virginia, and we are actively promoting our politicians

(01:15:59):
to enact sound scientists, science based policies, which they haven't
before again, and we're providing that information directly into the
hands of people like Lee Zelden at at e p A,
Environmental Protection Agency, Chris Wright and Energy Doug Bergham An

(01:16:20):
Interior Sean daff Duffiat Transportation UH. And there they've been bold.
They've been just refreshingly aggressive in pushing back against the
climate hoax laws and UH it's it's great. For example,
e p A, two days before Lee Zelden was sworn
in as EPA administrator, they fired every single one of

(01:16:42):
the members of their scientific Advisory Board. And we were
contacted not long after asking us because we're we are
the I'm not going to say again, we basically, of course,
we're the pre eminent scientific organization in the world fighting
back against this UH And we got a little birdie
whispered in my ear that we should make a list

(01:17:05):
of experts that we could populate these panels with. And
so we've provided a list last month of almost fifty
highly qualified experts to sit on these EPA Scientific advisory boards.
We've written a number of reports by doctor Richard Lindzen
of MIT, Steve Coonan who was physics PhD. He was

(01:17:31):
Obama's science advisor, Doctor William Happers, our chairman. We published
these provided this information to Congress, to EPA, Energy Interior
and the others to give them the information they need
to make decisions. And they've been again just almost it's
not maybe on a daily basis, but almost every week

(01:17:53):
they are new just tremendous either executive orders or things
proposed by these agencies, these regulatory agencies to again roll
back these restrictions on your listener's freedoms, and we're proud
to do it. It's it's might be the most important
thing I've ever done in my life. And we're not stopping.

(01:18:15):
We're moving forward. In fact, we've got a series of
two sixty second ads right now. We're doing polling right now.
We're going to be running national television, so hopefully you
put on put it on when you tile up Fox.
I don't think anybody of your listener's going to be
watching MSNBC unless they're forced.

Speaker 1 (01:18:34):
Yeah, but that's where they need to be. The ads
need to be there.

Speaker 3 (01:18:38):
Yep, exactly. And so we're doing polling right now. Hopefully
within thirty days we'll be able to roll this out.
I'm going to be starting. It's not cheap, it's not
inexpensive to do these. We're talking about millions of dollars.
But I think people would be motivated to get that
truth out. Surely there's a billionaireror or billionairerors out there

(01:19:02):
that would love to say, look what I you know,
here's here's X dollars. I want this, I want this
information out in the public. I wanted on MSNBC. I
want it on CNN. Uh and we're well also the
other non standard tell Hulu whatever. We're going to get
it out there. And and I believe when I talk

(01:19:22):
to people, I find that people are just thirsty for
this information that we provide as thirsty because they've never
heard it, and we need to. Once we get this
information out there, it's game over for the climate crisis.
Climate industrial complex is what I call it.

Speaker 1 (01:19:39):
Greg, I gotta go. We're up against the news break.
I appreciate the time this morning and friends, the executive
director CO two Coalition CO two Coalition dot org. You
can donate and support the cause right there, Greg Ridstone,
my guest here on the Morning Show with Preston Scott
Morning Show with Preston Scott, Boy, that escalated quickly. I

(01:20:04):
mean that really got out of hand fast. On WFLA,
what will she.

Speaker 7 (01:20:20):
Do?

Speaker 1 (01:20:22):
In what I'm saying a little bit of rhythm into that,
what's she going to do? Who pam Bondi Department of
Justice underneath the United States Attorney General. Pambondi is being
flooded with criminal referrals on political people. I would say

(01:20:46):
that the bet is that I would guess ninety percent
are probably of the opinion nothing's going to happen. Maybe
higher might be ninety five percent nothing's going to happen. Now,
I am of the thought I don't need someone to
be just thrown on trial because I want these matters

(01:21:13):
brought before a grand jury. I don't want Pam Bondi
to make the decision. I want a federal grand jury
to make the decision. I want a group of people
to look at did Jerome Powell lie under oath when
he testified before Congress on the minor renovations of the

(01:21:37):
Eckliss Building that the Federal Reserve occupies, that in fact,
we'll run between one point nine and two point five
billion dollars? Did he lie? Or was he just not informed?
Was he just basing it on el? You know, all
I see is a little paint and furniture, when in

(01:21:59):
fact they're there is far more that needs to be
I don't know, but I sure think that a grand
jury ought to be asked to weigh in on this. Now.
I don't know if a grand jury can be asked
to talk about things like this. I don't know. I
don't know what the rules and guidelines are on a
federal grand jury. I probably ought to know that. I

(01:22:20):
don't I know about a criminal grand jury because I
served on one. What about the decision that has to
be made on the criminal referral from the Director of
National Intelligence Tulsey Gabbard? Honestly, just a part of me

(01:22:43):
that thinks Tulsi's calling the bluff. Yeah, you really you
want to do something? Okay? Here former president, former head
of the FBI, the CIA, national security. Here you go, Pam,

(01:23:09):
Here's a couple hundred pages of documents, some of it
in their own handwriting. Here you go. What will she do?
Biden administration? The Hotline for Migrant children sixty five thousand

(01:23:32):
unanswered calls, including a call from a young boy who
was telling the hotline that men were coming into his
room at night and touching him. Biden did nothing. Does
it really surprise you? Forty minutes past the hour? Money

(01:23:53):
Talk Next, we'll change gears, talk about other things. Time
for money talk with investment advisor Howard Heisman with Enhanced
Financial Services securities and advisory services offered through NBC Securities Inc.
Member FINRA and SIPC. NBC Securities Inc. Is a wholly

(01:24:18):
owned subsidiary of RBC Bank USA on opinions that are
expressed are not those of NBC Securities, Inc. Or iHeartMedia.
An inappropriate matter is seek professional tax and or legal advice. Howard,

(01:24:41):
I would guess that to someone making a minimum wage,
wealthy means making sixty seventy five thousand dollars a year.
But it's subjective. What do most people think wealthy means?

Speaker 9 (01:24:55):
Yep, sure as subjective. According to a survey done by
the Financial Charles Schwab, the average American would need a
net worth of two point three million for them to
feel wealthy. Okay, yeah, and thirty five percent of Americans

(01:25:15):
think they're either on track alretty wealthy. A little surprising
to see some of those stats, but you know, there's
a big differential presston between which generation when you were born,
which age group. The gen Zers those are the adults
between eighteen and twenty seven. For them, they say they'd

(01:25:37):
feel wealthy if they could get to one point seven million.
And the Baby Boomers born in the twenty years after
World War Two, for them, well, they're feeling like they
need a little bit more two point eight million.

Speaker 1 (01:25:52):
Let's talk a little bit more about the gen zers
out there.

Speaker 9 (01:25:56):
Yeah, and again, these are the adults between eighteen and
twenty having recent survey said a little over three quarters
seventy seven percent of them spend more than they can
really afford. And that's made easier to do with the
so called buy now, pay later plants. And as a result,

(01:26:20):
half of the gen z ers, Preston say they're very
pessimistic and don't even really see a need to plan
for the future.

Speaker 1 (01:26:29):
Oh my goodness.

Speaker 9 (01:26:30):
Yeah, Yeah, that's the divergence, isn't it.

Speaker 1 (01:26:33):
The Yeah, I think a lot of people are struggling
to get their arms around the market. They saw the
headwinds of the economy for years. They saw the market
continue to grow, then it pulls back a little bit,
but then it grew again. What's the latest three months
telling us?

Speaker 3 (01:26:52):
Sure?

Speaker 9 (01:26:52):
You know, and I heard your segment a little bit
earlier this morning about the warming cycle that we're in. Well,
the market's been warming. In fact, the market's really been
hot over the last three just three plus months. The
Nasdaq composite, that's the real growth part of the market,
is up over thirty three percent. In fact, it's up

(01:27:15):
about thirty five percent as of this morning. And that's
the largest three month gain for the Technology NASDAK Growth
Index since June of two twenty. When you know, when
things hit bottom and then began to you know, ponder
around a bit. So you've got to go back a

(01:27:36):
long ways to see a rally of such magnitude. And
the good news is is that historically when we've seen
a gain of thirty three percent in such a short time,
the median gain for the following six months was plus
seventeen percent, and the year, the the year as a

(01:28:00):
whole ended up very positive.

Speaker 1 (01:28:03):
But positive how often?

Speaker 9 (01:28:06):
Yeah, positive six of seven times after that type of.

Speaker 1 (01:28:12):
Game, which of course I sit here and go, but
there was that seventh time.

Speaker 9 (01:28:20):
That's a fair point in this field. Nothing's really guaranteed.

Speaker 1 (01:28:27):
Yeah, it's like six out of seven. Yeah, but there
was that other time.

Speaker 6 (01:28:32):
Oh man, Uh, if it was that easy, we could,
you know, financial advisors would all be able to tell
their clients what the market.

Speaker 9 (01:28:39):
Was going to do tomorrow and where it was going
to be next month and the month after.

Speaker 1 (01:28:44):
Not that easy, No, it's not how variable. Howard, Thanks
as always for the intel. I appreciate the time.

Speaker 9 (01:28:50):
Yes, sir, have a great day, Howard.

Speaker 1 (01:28:52):
Eisman with us this morning, a little money talk on
the Morning Show with Preston Scott, just a few minutes away,

(01:29:13):
eight minutes from Glenn Beck. Okay, maybe a little longer
than that, more like thirteen. Glenn starts five past the
hour two, but Glenn Beck comes up next, then Clay
and at noon eastern eleven o'clock Central Tomorrow, Doctor Bob McLure,

(01:29:34):
James Madison Institute. Also tomorrow, Church Obligation. I want to
ask a question of you. I'll go ahead and let
you think about it. Okay, how late is it that

(01:29:55):
you think is cool to be late for church service
before it's too late to make the effort? What's that? Mark?
I want to talk about that. And I have a
thought that occurred to me over the weekend and I
want it. I wrote it down. I want to share
it and discuss that. We'll do that tomorrow as well.

(01:30:16):
On the program. British Columbia woman phone flooded with calls
about her missing cat, except that she doesn't have a
missing cat. She's getting calls from dozens of people claiming
they have found their cat Torbo. Some want money, some
just want to help return the cat. Except their cat's

(01:30:38):
name is Mauser and it's not missing. Here's the deal.
A T shirt company in Wisdom, New York has a
shirt with a missing cat poster, and it happens to
have Natasha Lavoy's phone number on it, her actual number,

(01:31:02):
and so she is getting deluged with calls. The representative
from the store said the shirt has been pulled from
the online store. The use of a real number within
the art created was not intentional. She's like, look, I've
had the number twenty years and I'm not giving it up.
I would love at least an apology. How about a

(01:31:24):
T shirt? Maybe they could send me one of the
T shirts? Could you imagine? Brought to you by Barno
Heating and Air. It's the Morning Show one on WFLA
Ephesian six twelve. That's where we started this adventure known
as Show fifty four to fourteen or we you Wrestle

(01:31:48):
not Oh, that was a good one. It was a
good one. Today, A good one. Today. You missed the
devotional Check out the podcast stream those first few minutes.
Big stories in the press box, shocking Biden administration, hotline
for migrant children complaining about their sponsors, left sixty five
thousand calls unanswered. Oh, that cares so much.

Speaker 2 (01:32:12):
They care so much.

Speaker 1 (01:32:15):
Apartment of Justice has received a criminal referral from the
Director of National Intelligence over the Russian collusion hoax. The
Department of Justice has also received a criminal referral from
a Member of Congress referring to Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell,
claiming that the renovations under oath of the Reserve Building's

(01:32:38):
eckless building were minor and the price tag now is
one point nine to two point five billion dollars. That
is obscene. I'll put a group together and do it
for I'll do the whole thing for fifty I'll keep

(01:32:59):
the difference. President Trump calls for the Commanders to go
back to their old nickname, as well as the Cleveland
Indians once the Redskins in the Indians back. We played
a wonderfully edited Hunter Biden SoundBite. To those that say,
why do we care what he has to say? I
don't care. I thought it was awesome. It was just funny.

(01:33:21):
Little profane mouthed little boy. Great conversation with Greg Rdstone,
executive director of the CO two Coalition. I called him
the chairman used to be. Now he's the executive director. Tomorrow,
we're going to do it again and I cannot wait.
Have a blessed day,
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