Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:02):
And here we are together again. Hey, good boy, everybody,
it's day and wake up. Come on, come on, we
gotta wake up. It's time. It's a play new week,
because it's gonna be great fun. We're gonna be together
and we'll talk about stuff and have some laughs and
(00:28):
stuff and stuff. Hey, good morning, though, Welcome to Monday,
July twenty eighth. He's Oseaiah. I'm Preston Show fifty four
eighteen of the Morning Show with Preston Scott. And as always,
we begin with some scripture. This is brilliant. This is
(00:48):
the end of our sermon yesterday in church, and I
wrote it down because I love this. Josea. We're doing
a study on the minor prophets, ending the study on
the book of Hosea. And again I strongly suggest you
(01:12):
read Hoseah, because if you end up on the right
side of eternity, you're gonna bump into him. I I
didn't read it. I'm sorry. I should have read your book.
You want to you want to know that you read it.
(01:35):
Hoseah fourteen nine says, whoever is wise, let him understand
these things. Whoever is discerning, let him know them first.
Wise discerning means I think this is important. You discern
that this is this is important, and so wisdom says
(02:01):
this is important. Discerning says know it. For the ways
of the Lord are right, and the upright walk in them,
but transgressors stumble in them. The ways of the Lord
are right, and the upright walk in them, but transgressors
(02:22):
stumble in them. So how you doing? All right? Hate
to huh? So there's your goal. Walk in them. Walk
in the ways of the Lord. Ten past the hour
we are, Yeah, don't don't just stick around this morning.
(02:48):
You will be glad you did Monday on the Morning
Show with Preston Scott. All right, let's take a look
here inside cheese. No idea why my voice got a
(03:13):
little crackle there inside The American Patriots Almanac, eighteen ninety six,
July twenty eighth, City of Miami is incorporated. Nineteen thirty two,
Herbert Hoover, President, orders the US Army to evict the
Bonus Army of World War One veterans who had gathered
in Washington, DC seeking cash payments for bonus certificates the
(03:37):
government had issued nineteen forty five US Army bomber crashes
into the seventy ninth floor of the fog shrouded Empire
State Building. Do you know that I knew about that
killed more than a dozen people. Yeah, all right, let's
(04:00):
take a peek inside. This is national day of It's
kind of interesting. Today is a National milk Chocolate Day.
I never appreciated the nuanced difference milk chocolate semi sweet.
(04:25):
I'm a semi sweet chocolate fan. In my chocolate chip cookies,
some prefer milk chocolate. I get it. Milk chocolate has
its place, but the subtleties in chocolate and the varying
degrees of For example, I like dark chocolate. I really
(04:47):
do enjoy it. I don't know that I would use
the word bitter. It's just got a it's a sharper
kind of taste. It's not for everything. There's certain things
that dark chocolate doesn't work with. But anyway, enough about that.
It's milk Chocolate Day. Today is National water Park Day.
(05:11):
I have no idea why that would be. It ought
to be at the beginning of the summer, not as
we push towards the latter part of the summer. But
still it's National water Park Day. And this is the
interesting one. To me, it is national Buffalo Soldiers Day.
Know anything about the Buffalo Soldiers. It commemorates the formation
(05:37):
of the first regular Army regiments comprising African American soldiers.
In eighteen sixty six, Congress established the first peacetime all
black regiments in the regular US Army. At the end
of the Civil War. The Buffalo Soldiers, one of many
(05:57):
African American regiments raised during the Civil War, were the
first instituted. Since they were frontier regiments. Buffalo Soldiers of
the Ninth and tenth Cavalryes protected unsettled lands as pioneers
moved westward. They also faced the hardships of the wild
wild West. Even though army desertion rates were very, very
(06:19):
high during the Civil War, Buffalo Soldiers they had low rates.
I think a lot of it had to do with
the treatment of blacks at that time in our American history.
Why they didn't desert. They're like, no, I finally can
fight for something. I'm now considered a man. There are
(06:43):
times in our country's history that just make you shake
your head. But as I like to point out, what
makes America great? To the question when was America great?
America was great when we solved problems, and our constitution
affords us an ability to solve problems. Our founders did
(07:06):
not have the courage to deal with the slavery issue,
which was a worldwide issue. It's not just an American issue,
a worldwide issue. All people's at one time or another
have been slaves. But the Constitution afforded us an ability
to solve the problem, which we did. In honor of
(07:29):
the first Buffalo Soldier's Day, in nineteen ninety two, General
Colin Powell dedicated a monument to the Buffalo Soldier located
at Fort Levenworth, Kansas, where the tenth Cavalry Buffalo Soldiers
were based. And there is a Buffalo Soldier Museum located
in Houston, Texas. It was back in September six, two
(07:50):
thousand and five, the oldest living Buffalo Soldier died. Mark
Matthews lived to be one hundred and eleven years old.
And a boy, there you go, team passed the hour?
Come back with it, did you know? And some sound
you must hear? All right? Did you know? More? County, Tennessee,
(08:23):
the home of Jack Daniel's Distillery is a dry county.
Isn't that crazy? It's still a dry county now state
lawn Tennessee. Technically, unless the county adopted formally a different position,
(08:45):
the state of Tennessee's dry. Since prohibition, much of Tennessee
is no longer dry, meaning alcohol can be served and sold.
Not more county except for the Jack Daniels Distillery. They
made exceptions. You can sample Jack Daniels whiskey and you
(09:09):
can purchase it.
Speaker 2 (09:10):
There.
Speaker 1 (09:12):
Just a little interesting fact, fascinating right all right, now,
this has nothing, It doesn't go one bit with this
following piece of sound. But I wanted you to hear
this as close to the beginning of the show as
possible as we think about church. Listen to what this
(09:36):
Chinese immigrant had to say about what goes on with
the Christian church in China.
Speaker 3 (09:41):
It's not illegal to be a Christian in China, but
it's a catch twenty two situation for Christians school want
to worship God in a church. There are almost sixty
five hundred registered churches in China, and the CCP meant
this that all of them use only hymns that are
aligned with the Communist principles. Confrequence must stand sing the
national anthem and offer praise to the Commons's party before
(10:03):
beginning their worship. The sermons must be revealed and approved
by government officials in advance, with any message lacking socialist
themes subject to censorship. In addition, all registered churches are
required to install facial recognition cameras, including at the pulpit,
to allow the government to monitor individuals would dare to attend.
(10:24):
In twenty twenty three, the CCP rewrote portions of the
Bible to align with the parties. Dotrine and the Gospel
of John, where Jesus tells the crowd that he who
is without seeing cash the first stone. The CCP's version
twists the narrative Jesus himself storms the woman to death
to underscore the party's message of zerial tolerance for crime.
(10:46):
Since twenty eighteen, the Bible has been available only in
government controlled churches, which raises a haunting question if these
are the only places the Bible is legally available and
those Bibles are altered in China now have access only
to the CCP's version of scripture. So here is to
catch twenty two. Attend a state approved church and risk
(11:09):
being inductrinated with CCP altered teachings or worship in an
underground gos centered the fellowship and risk being harassed, arrested,
or locked up. What would you do? God bless you?
Speaker 1 (11:25):
So what kept you from church this weekend? Let me
tell you a true story. And again, look, this is
not this is not for those. Stuff happens, Okay, things
come up, But if it's a priority, it's a priority.
(11:50):
If you have forty kids, you get up early and
you get them ready and you get there on time.
I just want you to consider that for a second
and just juxtapose that to going to church in America,
(12:14):
and then I just want you to consider what keeps
you from being part of a church family. God said,
you know in scripture. Paul wrote about it. Don't forsake
the gathering, you know, attending church. I talked about it
(12:38):
last week. It isn't checking a box. It's about what
you bring to the congregation, the fellowship of believers, and
what the fellowship of believers brings to you. There's something
different about corporate worship. Worshiping in your own home and
your own time and your own car awesome, but there
(12:59):
is something unique about corporate worship. There just is the
hearing of God's word, and that's just a way to
get you into it routinely through the week. That's why
we start every show with it. We do our very best.
(13:22):
But that's some interesting sound right there. Twenty seven minutes
past the hour, come back with the big stories in
the press box. Why do we do the personal defense
(13:47):
segments on the Morning Show with Preston Scott and have
for years? Eleven people hospitalized after a dude decided to
just start stabbing people at a Walmart in Michigan. Five
are in serious conditions, six are in critical condition. It
(14:09):
got stopped by a guy with a gun. I'm told
guys stopped it until police arrived. Because you just never
ever know.
Speaker 2 (14:31):
That.
Speaker 1 (14:32):
Obviously, I will not be naming the guy. I'm pretty
much alone on that. There's very few that across the
country that take a similar position. Six critical, five serious.
Add that up, all eleven are in serious or critical condition,
(14:58):
many of them senior adults. That is why we do
our personal defense segments. Study shows the California's twenty dollars
minimum wage. The lead research assistant of the program said,
(15:19):
you called it. That was the note on the on
the link. You called it. Of course I did, so
did everybody anybody with an ounce of common sense and
can do math and has even a modicum of insight
into how a business operates, knows twenty dollars minimum wage
(15:41):
costs the state eighteen thousand jobs in the fast food industry. Yeah,
so those eighteen thousand probably were on the you know,
on the bandwagon of yes, a living wage, and then
(16:05):
they got their job cut or they got their hours cut.
Target bragged about being one of the first fifteen dollars
an hour businesses, and then what did they do? They
cut hours and Florida's stuck in this We're stuck. Sorry.
(16:32):
I told you, I begged you not to vote for
the minimum wage because it will go up and up
and up and up and up and up and up,
and that means jobs go down and down and down
and down. The only way that we avoid that is
by expanding the number of businesses that are operating. You
have to offset it somehow anyway. But here's the biggest
(16:55):
of the big stories. I'm going to read the headline,
and birth rates drop to levels of civilized suicide. Civilizational
sorry suicide, meaning we are birthing children in America at
a rate that America will cease to exist we're not
(17:20):
having enough kids that are Americans. You know there's a
nuance here. Yes, you can always bring in labor. We
can allow migrants into the country and sort out the
legal issues. But we're not making those migrants Americans. We're
not requiring assimilation, we're not requiring them to speak the language.
(17:41):
We're just okay, so we'll let them in. Here's the problem.
When you're not giving birth to Americans, you're replacing them.
You will soon not have an America because you're not
having Americans. You can't import a culture. You can import workers,
(18:03):
but those workers are coming from other places, not America.
The levels are they're irrefutable. They're from the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, the CDC. The levels are of
civilizational suicide. The country is dying. And in other news,
(18:36):
I know it stinks, right, but isn't that a big
story in the press box? Don't you think we ought
to have that on our radar? Forty minutes past the.
Speaker 4 (18:49):
Hour, Welcome to the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 1 (19:03):
This is quite the story. Texas man has filed a
landmark federal wrongful death lawsuit against a California abortion provider.
Alleging the physician murdered his unborn children by mailing abortion
(19:25):
pills across state lines. Case was filed July twentieth Southern
District of Texas. The lawsuit accuses doctor Remi Cowito of
aiding illegal self managed abortions in twenty twenty four by
mailing abortion inducing drugs to Galveston County, Texas, where they
(19:49):
were allegedly used to end to pregnancies. The plaintiff, Jerry Rodriguez,
claims his girlfriend's estranged husband. Problem number one one. Estranged
husband means she's still married though they're not necessarily living together,
(20:14):
et cetera. They're still married. Problem number one stupid. Okay, now,
let's move on. The estranged husband purchased the pills through
(20:35):
Venmo and pressured her to take them, ending the pregnancy.
Rodriguez says they were his children.
Speaker 2 (20:47):
God.
Speaker 1 (20:50):
The complaints legal foundation is what is drawing attention. The
lawsuit revives the long dormant Comstock Act in eighteen seventy three,
federal anti obscenity law banning the mailing of abortion related
materials eighteen seventy three. Though unenforced for over a century,
(21:14):
the Comstock Act remains law. It's on the books. Jonathan Mitchell,
the attorney behind the Texas Heartbeat Law, represents Rodriguez in
the case. He argues that the doctor violated the federal
Comstock Act by knowingly using the mail to send abortion
(21:36):
inducing drugs from California to Texas. The suit also alleges
the doctor committed felony murder under Texas Penal Code by
knowingly aiding an illegal abortion. Cites multiple violations of Texas law,
including statutes that require abortion drugs to be administered get this,
(21:57):
only by in state physicians, after informed incent and a
mandatory ultrasound, and only at a licensed abortion facility. The
doctor is not licensed in Texas. He met none of
the requirements. Oh boy, this is going to be fascinating
(22:19):
to see unfold how this case goes. But we mentioned
problem number one. Mister Rodriguez, with all due respect, I
appreciate your desire to be a dad, but what are
you doing sleeping with a married woman. And I'm going
(22:39):
to continue to offer the birth control method that works
every every time because prophylactics don't. And here's the dirty
little secret about handing out birth control in schools, which
is what we've done for a few generations. Now, you
(23:04):
teach children to engage in an addiction that is natural
to man to mankind to man and woman, to engage
in something before a they're emotionally mature enough to understand
the consequences of what they're doing. But you engage in
any addiction, well, at some point they're going to be
(23:26):
without the protection, if you will. But they've gotten into
the habit of the addiction, and they say to themselves, oh,
it's just once, So you're sowing into the person a habit. Okay,
(23:47):
it's like any other sin of the flesh. It's addictive.
It's meant to be Intimacy is meant for marriage. It's
meant to be addictive. It's meant to be something for
a married husband and wife to engage in. So it's designed.
(24:07):
But the problem comes when you get outside that world.
And so here we've got a single guy sleeping with
a married woman. Though there is the couples of strained.
But here's the birth control method that works every time.
Don't engage in it unless you're married. It works every time.
(24:29):
Don't have secks every time. Just God bless forty seven
minutes past the hour, did I tell you today it
was going to be a great show, The Morning Show
with Preston Scott. I love this, come on, let's play
(25:02):
this is I was talking with my neighbor yesterday and
he said, I can't believe some of the things they
let you get away with talking about on that show.
And we make them money. It's just whatever, just make
us money. That's all they care about. It's an iHeart thing. Now,
I say that's all they of course not they. iHeart
(25:25):
really does a great job of caring about some you know,
whenever there's a disaster anywhere in the country, it is
rally the troops. There's some causes that I Heeart embraces
I don't agree with, but they, like I've said, they
embrace me. And that's good. We're good. But one of
the things that we've talked about is the incompatibility with
(25:51):
a practicing all in Islamist and this country's It should
never be accepted. Let me give you the latest example.
Doctorate is at Gaza's Islamic University. That is, by the way,
that is a title. Gaza's Islamic University instructs Palestinian husbands
(26:14):
they are obligated to beat their wives but only in
a way that avoids breaking bones or damaging vital organs.
Is justification quoting wife beating should be therapeutic, not vindictive.
Let me quote further. The purpose of wife beating is
to warn the wife that the life of the family
is in danger, and that the marital relations are in danger.
(26:35):
She needs to be cautious and not let the family
be destroyed. And of course that's always the woman's fault,
right this is And you wonder why young girls who
come to the West come to America say, I don't
(26:56):
want any part of this. You're not marrying me off
to a traditional Islamist. You're not marrying me off to
some guy that's gonna beat me if I ask a
question wrong, or if I look him in the eye,
forget that. No, just don't make it visible, is what
(27:20):
the doctor's saying. Don't, don't raise suspicion, don't don't beat
her in the face. No vital organs. But yeah, you
need to beat her. And and here are the here
are the rules according to the Quran. If a wife
(27:41):
is disobedient, and let's just pause for a moment and
consider who defines that the husband may advise her refuse
to share her bed. I think atly it's interpreted the
other way. She's not allowed to share his bed. She
(28:06):
sleeps on the floor, she sleeps in the other room,
she sleeps on the couch. And as a final measure
to beat her, to strike her people. Come on now,
Americans have to start making babies and getting them into church.
(28:30):
We've got the second hour coming up next, and oh
my gosh, the first story doing the Trump shuffle as
we start Hour number two, Monday, July twenty eighth, Good
Morning Friends, Ruminators Show fifty four eighteen of The Morning
(28:54):
Show with Preston Scott cleverly titled because I Am Preston Scott,
jose in there wearing the biker leather jacket with the
two stripes on the arms, zippers everywhere, the black beanie
(29:15):
over the hair, well what hair there is, but he's
looking gangster in there this morning. You will not believe
this story. You just you, okay, all right, Mike On
(29:36):
during What's the Beef? Not What's the Beef? Last week Friday,
we talked about conspiracy theories you believe with all of
your heart, right and if you remember one of the
theories that we read that prompted the phone segment was
(29:57):
organ harvesting that the people are not in necessarily dead
when hospitals are starting to harvest organs because they're making money.
Remember that.
Speaker 2 (30:10):
Yes, unfortunately, yeah, uh oh.
Speaker 1 (30:15):
I am just going to read. The US Department of
Health and Human Services confirms it has launched a major
initiative to reform America's organ transplant system after it's stunningly
revealed that dozens of organ donors may not have been
dead when the process to procure their organs was started,
(30:39):
and dozens more exhibited neurological signs incompatible with donation. Quoting
HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Junior quote, Our findings show
that hospitals allowed the organ procurement process to begin when
patients showed signs of life, and this is horrifying. The
(31:00):
organ procurement organizations that coordinate access to transplants will be
held accountable. The entire system must be fixed to ensure
that every potential donor's life is treated with the sanctity
it deserves. According to the report, it reviewed three hundred
and fifty one cases where organ donation was authorized but
(31:22):
ultimately not completed. It found one hundred and three cases
showing quoting concerning features, including seventy three patients with neurological
science incompatible with organ donation. I guess it's not a
conspiracy theory. You know this is going to devastate the
(31:55):
organ donor database. At least twenty eight patients may not
have been deceased at the time organ procurement was initiated.
This is from the report. Evidence pointed to poor neurologic assessments,
(32:16):
lack of coordination with the medical teams, questionable consent practices,
and misclassifications of causes of death, particularly in overdose cases.
If you were to write down classic conspiracy theories, the
(32:40):
ones that are just, and this would be one of them.
We are slowly checking boxes off. Not a conspiracy. Not
(33:00):
It's unbelievable, isn't it. This is coming from the head
of the United States Department of Health and Human Services.
And I might add to all of you that were
leary of having Robert F. Kennedy Junior in that position,
what do you think now with what he's uncovering with vaccines?
(33:23):
By the way, on the subject, do you know that
there are people now worried because some of the vaccines
might not be forced or might be taken off the
shelf because they're not safe. They're mega vaccine their kids.
Getting them all done right now? Sweet god, people, ten
(33:46):
past the hour. What a start to the second hour. Huh?
Speaker 4 (33:52):
And just hold on, Uncle Preston, the relative you actually
enjoy having around.
Speaker 1 (33:58):
And not just at the holidays.
Speaker 4 (34:00):
This is the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 1 (34:12):
Enter screaming vocal let me go back just again. We're
seeing so much traction. Changes in the food industry, changes
in the production of food, elimination of things that are
(34:37):
have long been accepted as harmful. This is good. Can
I add another one to the list? Children's Hospital of
Los Angeles has shut the doors on its trans clinic.
(35:11):
On July twenty second, America's largest transgender youth quote clinic
shut its doors. The Center for trans Youth Health and
Development at Children's Hospital Los Angeles has been administering experimental
hormonal transgender treatments for over thirty years. They've been providing
(35:33):
puberty blockers. They have been doing Genitalia's surgeries to thousands
of children and young adults, despite a complete lack of
data to support such things. After a thorough legal and
financial assessment, the hospital decided to cut its losses and
they are shutting it down. Center team members were heartbroken
(35:57):
to learn of the decision. One protester of the center's
closure referred to her inability to love herself in her
biological body. Boy, does that not just underscore how mental?
Speaker 2 (36:09):
This is.
Speaker 1 (36:16):
What's interesting though. You know European nations are banning this
stuff now too. Why because the data is showing Listen
to this. They've got at least one lawsuit they're facing.
Twenty twenty four, a student from UCLA sued several of
the doctors for malpractice after puberty blocking hormones were administered
(36:38):
to her as a twelve year old wait and then
her breasts were removed at the age of fourteen. The
young girl, Kea Breen, was treated by doctor Johanna Olsen Kennedy,
the Senator director who made headlines when she refused to
(36:58):
share data from a twenty eighteen million dollar government funded
study on transgender healthcare. Why didn't she share the data
because it showed the problems. The problems are that the suicides,
(37:20):
et cetera, that they that are because of the treatments.
People aren't killing themselves because they don't fit in. They're
killing themselves because they have these irreparable, irreversible procedures and therapies,
and they realize they're they're they're butting against their hardwiring.
(37:47):
That's why they're not happy. Instead of helping a kid
through this time, praying with them, counseling them, letting them
age and realize, saying yeah, I'm a guy or I'm
a gal, these people are performing these surgeries, in these treatments.
(38:14):
That's the reason for the deaths in the suicides. Case Sorry,
case cast review data failed to show any psychological benefit
from transitioning children in adolescents, but it did reveal irreparable harm.
(38:34):
And that's why the data was suppressed by the head
of the center. And that's why she's being sued. And
she needs to be Children's Hospital Los Angeles. They are
looking ahead. They are going to have to in my opinion,
they are going to have to settle in this case
(38:58):
and hope more don't come. Sixteen minutes passed out. Why
is this happening because we have a new president. This
(39:24):
one hurts. Now, this story, I'm telling you now, this
one really hurts. So I want you to just be
advised that this is this is going to be tough
(39:53):
to hear. I'm not kidding. Alabama police have uncovered a
pedophile sex ring that used a shock caller to torture children.
(40:19):
Ten victims drugged, tied to a bed, raped for money,
and a shock caller was used to punish the kids
(40:39):
and for the pleasure of the adults. Some of the
pedophiles who have been arrested provided their own children. I'm
not done. The victims were between the ages of three
(41:17):
and fifteen. Okay, this is pure evil. This level of
evil has existed four centuries. One of the things that
(41:47):
I I predicted when we started doing this program. I
talked about political correctness, and I talked about how the Internet,
for all of its wonderful purposes and uses, avails people
(42:08):
of porn involving children, and that the nature of this
type of deviant is eventually the access to the visual
stuff just doesn't get it done. You know how someone
(42:36):
becomes an alcoholic right they have a beer. I don't
know of Maybe it's happened, but very, very seldom does
anyone just take a sip of a beer right their
first beer as a kid and become an alcoholic have
a first drink and become an alcoholic, have a first
you know, hit on on some weed and become drug addicted.
(43:03):
That's not how it works. It starts small, It starts
with a little bit of a rush and a little
bit of a high. And then the way Satan works
is Satan lets people think they're in control, because we
love to think we're in control. Right, isn't that our nature?
(43:26):
Our nature is I've got this, I'm under control. But
the nature of any addiction, whether it's drugs, whether it's alcohol,
whether it's gambling, whether it's porn, is that you think
you're in control. Oh no, you're not. You are not
in any control. It's controlling you. And part of its
illusion is to let you think you're in control. And
(43:52):
those of you that have had experiences with addiction, you
know what I'm talking about. These people, it's not This
is a sickness that goes beyond because they're they're harming children,
(44:12):
their own children. In some cases. Here's what I can
tell you, if I understand the charges correctly, here they
are Homeland Security is looking into it just to make
sure there's not some connection to something beyond our borders.
(44:37):
But most of the crimes they're charged with come with
a mandatory life sentence. But let me tell you, the
same thing's gonna happen here. In my opinion, that's going
to happen to the Idaho killer. They're not going to
survive in prison. Then they're gonna be killed. So it's
really a death sentence. And that's honestly. Oh well, so
(45:03):
here's why. Okay, I'm talking about this because of a
If you are dealing with addictions in any form or fashion,
deal with it. If you're in the process of it,
stay the course. If you're dealing with porn, stop just stop.
(45:31):
And parents be aware of what your children are engaging
in online. I don't know the background of these victims.
Some of them were the children of the perpetrators, but
some of them were not. How were they lured in?
How were they they roped in? How literally did they
(45:51):
come to this somehow? I'm betting at social media they
pick off kids that are feeling left out, isolated, whatever
be advised. Twenty eight minutes after thirty seven minutes past.
(46:29):
It went a little long in that last segment, So
let's get real quick here. Big stories in the press box.
American birth rates are at a level right now of
civilizational suicide. We cannot sustain America at the birth rates
we are into. And you can thank a lot of
(46:54):
reasons for this, the decline of the family in general, husband, wife,
having children. If you don't have Americans, you don't have America.
(47:20):
We'll get into a little bit more depth in the
next hour. Eleven people hospitalized after a stabbing at a
Walmart in northern Michigan. I'm doggier in this story so
that we can talk about it with J. D. Johnson
next week. Personal defense at the store. I promise you
(47:47):
not one person in that store thought they were going
to be a victim of some dude just randomly stabbing them.
We have no idea what in the world he was thinking.
He's published two books, self published two books, describes himself
(48:11):
as a born again Christian. You never ever think you're
going to be a victim. Not here, not now, not
at this place, not while I'm doing the shopping at
(48:35):
a Walmart in northern Michigan, near the Lake Michigan, literally
on the shore of Lake Michigan. And five are in
serious conditions, six critical all eleven No one got away
without a wound that was registered at either critical or serious.
(49:03):
Never expected it happened. And then the last big story
in the press box studies showing the California's twenty dollars
minimum wage hike costs the fast food sector eighteen thousand jobs.
I told you, I'm not spiking the football. There's nothing
(49:26):
to be happy about. When you artificially increase wages and
you demand that people doing a minimum skilled job be
paid a higher skilled wage, it's an imbalance that will
cost jobs because businesses have to maintain margins to stay
(49:48):
in business. Either your hours are going to be cut,
your prices are going to go up, jobs are going
to be lost, or a combination of all all three.
It just is what it is. Forty minutes past the
own little medical stuff. In lieu of not having doctor Kim,
(50:19):
I learned things every single day, I really do. It
could be something that's not all that important, you know,
like today Jack Daniels and Tennessee and the county that
(50:41):
it's in is a dry county. How ironic. But I
didn't know until last couple of years that people have
adverse reactions to different kinds of pain relievers. I knew
(51:04):
about aspirin. I knew aspirin could be really tough on
the stomach, but I knew that there was a period
of time when aspirin was being recommended for people with
heart conditions. Why because, like a lot of these products,
it thins the blood. But you only do it if
a doctor's advising you. And even now that particular protocol
(51:27):
is not necessarily held as strongly to as it was
a few years ago. What I didn't know is, for example,
I thought iboprofen acid of minifin, which is, if I'm
not mistaken, like advil versus thailand al I think I
(51:48):
know the latter is thailandhol a cid offin. I thought
that they're the same thing, and for me they are.
But for a lot of people, oh no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
they're not. There are five groups of people that iboprofen
(52:11):
poses a very serious health risk that outweighs any benefits
that they offer. Now you need to look into this yourself.
I'm gonna give you just a snapshot, all right, and
you dig deeper. This is the from Epic Times under
Drugs and Treatments. People with liver and kidney problems should
(52:35):
not take iboprofen and it's not good. This one borderline
shocked me. People with asthma. Asthma affects one and two
(53:00):
twelve causes inflamed airways that produce excess mucus leading to
breathing issues. People with asthma should avoid hyberprofen. Hyberprofen blocks
inflammation pathways, but can increase compounds, causing bronchospasms, the tightening
(53:20):
of the muscles that line the lungs airways. This goes
back to a twenty sixteen and a twenty nineteen study.
Number three. People with hypertension or heart failure don't take hyberprofen,
Pregnant women don't take yberprofen, and people with a stroke
history don't take hyberprofen. Those are your five groups. Who knew?
(53:45):
I don't know. I'm one of those fortunate people. I'm
not on any medications. I mean, I'm I'm sixty five
years old. I take nothing. I'm grateful, I take hell,
I take nutrients. I take targeted nutrients that really help me.
(54:06):
I just need to lose just a few pounds of
my belly. But I'm blessed with good health, and so
you know, we do the segments. Doctor Camps will be
back with us next month, sorry, in September. And then
(54:26):
we do the segments Doctor Hearts and Doctor z Adaman
on helping you get to causes, nutrients, that kind of
thing to feel better. Forty six minutes past the hour,
come back, a couple announcements and a little bit about
my weekend. Fifty one almost fifty two minutes past morning
(54:47):
Morning Show with Preston Scott. Great to be with you.
Quick reminder, we're getting just a little closer to Dairy
Queen's Miracle Treat Day. By your favorite blizzard at participating
Dairy Queen and a dollar or more will be donated
to the Children's Miracle Network Hospitals. That's this Thursday. This Thursday,
(55:12):
gets yourself a blizzard, Get get five of them, bring
them to the office, order them for everybody in the office. Secondly,
we are taking nominations for public school teachers that you
think are great public school teachers. That's not fair, sorry,
(55:33):
that's who it's for. Teachers across the country will win
grants of five thousand dollars each to purchase school supplies
courtesy of our partners, our being iHeartRadio at donor's choice. Sorry,
donors choose and to nominate, just go to iHeartRadio dot
com slash teachers. iHeartRadio dot com slash teachers. All right,
(56:00):
speaking of teachers. Saturday, I made a drive to Niceville. Now,
the first thought any rational person would have would be,
why are you going to Niceville to visit a teacher?
(56:22):
Not just any teacher, my friends. I went and visited
Rob Strano. Rob has been a guest on the show
once or twice over the years. We got to know
Rob through our Panama City radio station. Our we used
to have a really big signal. Now we've got two
smaller ones. They cover about eighty percent of the area.
(56:44):
But we used to have a boomer signal, but they
decided to put it on a rock station. Whatever. And
through this show though, I Rob and his wife started
listening to the program each morning, and we became friends
through operation you know, Spirit of Christmas, and he and
(57:08):
his wife were kind enough to help us with a
fundraising project. They gave a very nice donation. Marvin Goldstein
and I went out there to their home. Marvin did
a concert. I just stood there and smiled. But Rob
and I have become good friends. He loves Jesus and
He's a heck of a golf coach, and you know,
(57:30):
I love golf. He has a brand new studio. It's
just been open a few months at a new location.
It's all indoors, and it is awesome. It is absolutely awesome.
He puts it this way, tech driven training, tour level care.
There's just nobody in the area that offers the level
(57:52):
of teaching instruction the technology that Rob does. You know.
Rob's a former tour player and coaches a lot of juniors.
I watched a couple of juniors come in and out
while I was there just hanging out with him, and
then he and I spent some time together stop motion
(58:13):
type I mean high end tech. Not look, I'm a nerd.
I watch all the videos. I do all that stuff
because I like learning about the golf swing and I
love seeing the technology. I love seeing, you know, different parts,
and if you're a golfer, you know what I'm talking about.
He has all of that times ten, and he found
(58:36):
something that for me was absolutely, oh yeah, small, but
unbelievably important. So I recommend if you're looking for top
of the line golf instruction, you're not going to find
it around here. I'm sorry, you're just not make the drive.
It's worth the two hour drive. Go to Niceville's Book
(58:57):
of Time. He's got a really amazing studio. Stranogolf dot
com s t R A n O golf dot com,
stranogolf dot com. Just trust me, Trust me. I've sent
a couple of players his way, very happy with the
results that they've had. I you know, obviously I love
(59:18):
him as brother in Christ, but I just and I
value his friendship. But man, there you go. When we
come back. Jerome Hudson joins me for hour three of
the morning show at Crossing Spot. If I passed the
(59:47):
hour third hour already, we were just talking about how
quickly today just has felt. But the news cycle is
just endless, and as we're result, there's so many things
to discuss. And that's why when I get the opportunity
to have this gentleman with us, I jump at it.
(01:00:10):
He is a friend, I love him as a brother,
he is a former intern on this radio program. And
then he transcended all of that, and he overcame the
obvious handicap of being part of this show for a
period of time to become a author of the Fifty
(01:00:33):
Things books. And now the entertainment editor and has been
for how many years have you been the entertainment editor
at Breitbart dot com?
Speaker 2 (01:00:40):
Jerome Hudson, twenty seventeen. I believe come on, yeah, come on.
The Harvey Weinstein story sort of broke the me too
wave showed improved. I cut my teeth, as you said,
(01:01:01):
in the right place at the right time.
Speaker 1 (01:01:03):
Well or not, you learn what not to do, how
not to talk, how not to report, how not to
do any number of things. I mean there there there
could be an argument made for a special T shirt
that says I survived tms w slash psh.
Speaker 2 (01:01:22):
No, no, no, no. Anytime I'm behind a lectern, I usually uh,
I usually do a name drop to what might seem
to the audience it's just you know, a random person.
Speaker 3 (01:01:35):
But I.
Speaker 1 (01:01:39):
Stop it, stop it, Tell me more, tell me more. Now,
I'm just kidding. I'm just kidding. Hey, I want to
get your unadulterated, unfiltered view of this absurdity known as
the Colbert reaction.
Speaker 2 (01:01:57):
Yeah, it's it's about what you might expect, preston from
a media and entertainment media landscape that is just almost
completely devoid of independent or critical thought. I think if you,
if you wanted to just look at the sheer finances
(01:02:20):
of putting on The Colbert Show at one hundred million
dollars a year with a staff of two hundred people,
and you're losing forty million dollars a year if you're
CBS and if you're Paramount, forget the Skydance merger. That's
a lot of money to be losing on a show
(01:02:41):
that is the number one rated show, but it's still
pulling in less than one percent of the American TV
viewer every year.
Speaker 1 (01:02:48):
Can I ask you, Jerome? You you this is your world?
You know? Yeah, you have a lot of knowledge on
a lot of other topics outside of entertainment, but this
has been your focus for your going on to a
decade soon. When when you say he's number one in
his time slot, but he's losing forty to fifty million
(01:03:09):
a year, how does that reconcile? Is that on the
sales department at CBS? Is that? Why is that? How
does that math add up?
Speaker 2 (01:03:20):
Well? If Stephen Colbert was not an appendage of the
Democratic National Committee five nights a week, he would have
a larger audience. I can't really say it better than
Jayleno did over the weekend when he says the political
partisan lectures at Stephen Colbert not only does in his monologues,
(01:03:44):
but on the night that he announced Preston that CBS
was canceling his show in ten months, he had Adam Shipp,
the Senator from California, on as his guest. I mean,
there are a few people in elected office in this country,
Tree who are more deviant and undeserving of of the
(01:04:09):
of the office of the United States Senator. But it's California, right,
I mean, the guy is just uh, a bludget for
the worst kind of politics. And that's and that's Stephen
Colbert's guest. And I mean it just it just it
just shows you. It just shows you everything you need
to know about the show.
Speaker 1 (01:04:30):
Hang on a second, we got to take a break.
We're gonna pick up right there. We're talking about Stephen
Colbert's show being canceled and the uproar. Boy. They care
about that. They don't seem to care about a whole
lot of other things, but they care about that. They
being the illiberal left. More with Jerome Hudson at brightbart
dot com. Next back with Jerome Hudson the books Fifty
(01:05:01):
things they don't want you to know the follow up,
fifty things they don't want you to know about Trump,
Entertainment editor at Breitbart dot Com. As I so rudely interrupted,
you were saying, so, the.
Speaker 2 (01:05:14):
Stephen Colbert's Late night show is bad business has been
bad for business for the better part of a decade.
Just losing forty million dollars a year. You can't justify that.
And the product is bad. And I know this not
because you know I have my biases, but because again,
(01:05:35):
the numbers don't lie. In the weeks before Colbert's show
was announced that it was going to be canceled, he
was averaging about one point nine million viewers at night.
He got half a million viewership bump Preston just because
of all the fanfare and drama around the shows, bringing
his total average viewer up to about two point four million.
(01:06:00):
That still less than Greg Guttfel's show in the same
you know, timeframe. Greg Gutfeld was getting three point one
million viewers in the same week that Stephen Colbert was
riding a half a billion viewership bump. And again, Fox
News is available in tens of millions of few homes
(01:06:22):
than CBS. And you know, it's the same people, right,
who are ostensibly the same audience staying up around the
same time to watch, you know, the same kind of show,
but it's a very different product. And so you're losing
tens of millions of dollars if you're Stephen Colbert, and
it's a very partisan show. So you're not going to
(01:06:43):
get any favors, you know, even even if you wanted
to make the free speech argument. I mean, CBS runs
over public airwaves and it is again just a reliably
nightly forty four minute propaganda out it for you know,
the Democratic Party. Basically. It just there's just no other
(01:07:04):
way of looking at that. I mean, just look at
the guest list every week for Stephen Colbert. And so
you know, this is how you might expect the left
to react. Once again, they're losing, you know, a foot
soldier right. If you look at the left, they've had
just an asymmetrical advantage over the right. Of course, you
(01:07:29):
know this, but we probably don't talk about it enough.
Whether it's in the media or academia and in education
K through twelve, it is a left leaning slant. And
if the election of Donald Trump last November has done anything.
It has weakened President, the left and just about every aspect.
(01:07:53):
You look at the universities, you look at the cash
on hand for the DNC versus c RNC, look at
the polls. I mean everywhere you look. The left and
the Democratic Party, they're crumbling. And Colbert being canceled was
just another seismic shift. It's beautiful. I think, God bless America.
Speaker 1 (01:08:19):
What does CBS do to fill the time slot? Do
they stay with the late night show formatic and try
to find somebody that's not going to be so insulting
to both to the other side or what.
Speaker 2 (01:08:31):
No one knows the answer to that question because CBS
did not answer it. They answered it in so far
as to say Preston that they will actually cancel the
late night franchise. And you know, I'm looking at a
story I need to edit and publish from David Letterman.
I think it's his third time in a week Preston
(01:08:52):
coming out publicly trashing CBS, trashing paramount for canceling Colbert,
and it is sort of one of those stunning situations.
I mean, this is this is business at the highest Edgelons,
and to just cancel not only Colbert, but the entire
(01:09:12):
franchise and then not sort of lay out at least
to your investors or you know, potential viewers who have
grown up with that franchise.
Speaker 1 (01:09:23):
It really is stunning. They just knew that.
Speaker 2 (01:09:26):
They had to cancel it, and that was more important
than rolling out some sort of half baked idea to
fill it with. But I do think, I mean, Byron
Allen is a media mobile. He is a comedian in
his own right, and so I think that there will
be some sort of variety, comedic, sort of far less
(01:09:50):
partisan show to fill that slot. But that's all rumors.
Speaker 1 (01:09:55):
So Jerome Hudson with me this morning. We got more
to talk about when we come back here in the
Morning Show with presh In Scott.
Speaker 4 (01:10:07):
Usla on your phone with the iHeart Radio app and
on hundreds of devices like Alexa, Google Home, Xbox, and Sonos.
Speaker 1 (01:10:13):
Say, so, here we go in Iheart's radio station. Twenty
one past. Jerom Hudson, Bridebart dot Com entertainment editor, author
of the Fifty Things books. I told him lightning round.
Will there be a third Fifty Things book? Yes or no?
(01:10:37):
Yes there will be, Yes or no it will happen
in twenty twenty six.
Speaker 2 (01:10:48):
No, no, no.
Speaker 1 (01:10:50):
No sooner or later.
Speaker 2 (01:10:53):
A little bit later, Okay, a little bit later.
Speaker 1 (01:10:55):
Okay, all right? Next? Is Superman worth going to see?
Speaker 2 (01:11:03):
Yes?
Speaker 1 (01:11:04):
Why?
Speaker 2 (01:11:07):
But it's not worth going to see twice? Because it
is well not at these prices, right, I mean maybe
if you ask me at Multiplex nineteen ninety six ticket prices. Okay,
it's a good movie, not a great movie, and James
Gunn has made great superhero movies. This one is not that,
(01:11:29):
but it is work on see once.
Speaker 1 (01:11:31):
Is it worth seeing because of how unwoke it is?
Speaker 2 (01:11:39):
The subtext and quite literally the context politically, the messaging
is just really clear, and you know, if you if
you go in, it's nothing that you haven't seen before. Right,
there are there are countries with political leaders that you
can you can sort of see real, real life, real
time analogs. And I just don't think that most viewers
(01:12:03):
are like you or I walking into the theater in
that mindset, and so you don't really get a lot
of wokeness. And despite the just absolute, you know, mildpractice
of the way that James Gunn and his brother Sean
Gunn promoted the movie on the Red Carpet, saying that
if you if you don't like the immigrant story and Superman,
(01:12:27):
then you're not American and essentially don't go see our movie.
You know. Again, just mind bogglingly dumb to promote the
movie that way. But the story of Superman is truly American,
has been for one hundred years. Means a refugee from
a dying planet. His parents ostensibly were good people and
(01:12:50):
wanted good for their son. He just was blessed to land,
you know, in a farm in the middle of America
and was raised by as salt of the earth human beings.
Is something beautiful about that?
Speaker 1 (01:13:02):
I told jose and I talked about the subject of
superheroes back a couple of weeks ago, and what always
stood out to me about Superman is he's the only
superhero that the inside, who he is undercover is the
true superhero. It's who he is. Everybody else wears it
on the outside.
Speaker 2 (01:13:23):
Yeah, I will say I love because you can't really,
or at least it's hard for me to sort of
bifurcate the story of Superman from the story of Christ.
Because even in James Gunn's movie, there is something that
is just manifest in his character and that he will
die for this world, right, and you could just see it,
(01:13:50):
like he doesn't even want to kill, you know, but
but he will. He will take it there if it
means saving innocence. I know this is lightning around and
you're at the helm. But since we're on the subject
of superhero movies, I did go see Fantastic four First
Steps and the way that this movie frames life and
(01:14:12):
the life of the unborn. Sue Storm is not pregnant
when we meet her, but her and and her husband,
mister Fantastic or trying to make a baby. They had
been trying to make a baby for two years, and
the movie opens with her getting the positive pregnancy test.
You know, the bad guy Galactus comes to Earth, wants
(01:14:34):
to devour Earth, but says, I won't if you give
me your son, and he just like looks into Sue
Storm's wound. I mean, it's it's pretty incredible given the
fact of just how leftist Disney was. I mean Disney, well, I.
Speaker 1 (01:14:49):
Was gonna say, how did Pablo Pascal get through that
blind without choking? Because he's a he's an insufferable weaponist.
Speaker 2 (01:14:57):
Yeah, he's he's like flaunting his transgen her brother turned
sister around to push transgender politics. He's certainly a favorite
of the Rogue's gallery of characters at Breitbart News. But
I guess he's a He's an actor in the sense
that he really dove into the part where he is
defending life, defending the life of his unborn child, even
(01:15:21):
even at the cost of risking his entire world.
Speaker 1 (01:15:26):
He probably had to donate money to play in Parenthood
as a guild offering for playing the role.
Speaker 2 (01:15:31):
I'm pretty sure his a pre sure his salary was
at least five million dollars. But again, Disney was one
of the first companies to come out against George's Heartbeat rule.
I know, well, yeah, it's it's it's stunning in some ways.
I don't even really know what the endgame is, what
the larger agenda is, or if there is one. But
(01:15:52):
that movie was written, shot, and produced to the tune
of hundreds of millions of dollars over the course of
a few years. And so this the intentionality of this
is there, What it means going forward? I don't know, man,
So I love job, okay.
Speaker 1 (01:16:09):
And then lastly, thirty second answer I need from you
is the is the Coldplay kiss cam, the halfway point
to the year, winner of Story of the Year.
Speaker 2 (01:16:22):
Oh absolutely, hands down, there is no second that comes close,
you know. And now that Wynneth Proutrow Putro, the ex
wife of Chris Martin, the Coldplay lead singer, is basically
like the official spokesperson for Astronomer. You know, it feels scripted,
(01:16:43):
but also, I mean there have been real life consequences,
and oh yeah, I don't think people would have blown
up their lives just to push up the stock price
of the company.
Speaker 1 (01:16:53):
No, kidd, Jo as always, thanks for the time, my brother.
I appreciate it. Be well, love you, thank you, Love
you too. Jerome Hudson with us this morning, twenty minutes
past the hour. Time to time, he can catch Jerome
hosting on I think It's Patriot Radio on SiriusXM. That's
(01:17:14):
where he shows what he didn't learn from me, and
he's actually a really good talk show host. Back with
the Big Stories. Big Stories in the press Box. Study
(01:17:46):
shows that California's twenty dollars minimum wage has cost the
state eighteen thousand jobs in the fast food sector. Fast
foods growing nationwide, it's contracting in California. How see, this
(01:18:11):
is your petri dish. Federalism at its very core allows
states to operate as as practice games, as testing ideas
(01:18:33):
across the board. Broadly and generally speaking, California is a living,
breathing example of the failures of illiberalism, of the democrat
ideals way of doing things. And I begged some of us,
(01:18:58):
did all we could to war. You don't vote for
the minimum wage and put it in the state constitution
here in Florida. But Preston, wages are going up. And
if it weren't for that, if it weren't for that,
wages would go up where they should go up. The
(01:19:20):
market sets those demand supply, those crazy old things that
I learned an econ in eighth grade. These were principles.
We got the we got the daily newspaper, and we
(01:19:43):
would sit down with a five hundred dollars account at
the start of the economics class, and we were taught
about investing, and we got to pick stocks, and we
had to do research the old fashioned way by looking
things up on microfish in libraries, in magazines and newspapers,
(01:20:05):
learn about companies. We invested our five hundred dollars and
at the end of the semester, we would receive a
grade small and insignificant in the grand scheme of the grade,
but a grade on how our portfolio did. In eighth grade,
we learned about how wages impact a business. We learned
(01:20:31):
about how the cost of employing people determines the cost
of providing a good or a service, and at what price.
We learned this stuff in eighth freaking grade. And here
in Florida. Now, you know, we can ah ha at California,
(01:20:53):
but we're stuck now because in Florida, the minimum wage,
once it gets to fifteen dollars, will be forever tied
to the consumer price index. It has to adjust, has
to But if I'm not mistaken, only up, never down.
(01:21:20):
And so the fact that these jobs were lost just indicates, well,
that's what happens when you force a business to pay
people more than the value of the service that they're providing.
We have to let them go. We're automating, we're doing
more with less. Okay, we'll pay them fifteen twenty dollars.
We'll pay them twenty dollars an hour, but we'll only
(01:21:41):
employ one versus two, so that one's going to work
their butt off, they want the job, and all those
other people out of a job unemployed forty one minutes
after the hour. Just one of the big stories in
the press box this morning in the Morning Show, The
Morning Show with Preston Scott. Okay, this is perfect. Final
(01:22:32):
segments of the program, fair Miken, it is. Now did
you ever, as a younger person lick at nine volt battery? Absolutely?
I don't know a guy who hasn't done it, regretted it,
(01:22:55):
oh yeah, and then did it again. If it has
any charge in it at all, you regret it immediately.
But it's so weird because everybody done it. It's done it.
I mean, it's crazy. Dexteto is introducing a chip that
(01:23:24):
tastes like a nine volt battery. E squeeze me. The
flavor replicates the metallic, tang and tongue zapping sensation of
licking a battery using ingredients like citric acid, sodium bicarbonate,
and mineral salts. It's designed to trigger nostalgia and spark curiosity.
(01:23:48):
That's from the marketing material. It goes on to say
the chip is part of its mission to revive retro
memories through unexpected snack flavors and of course where they
launching this first, The Freaky Dieky Dutch, the Netherlands. The
(01:24:10):
battery inspired chip is part of a broader lineup that
includes cheese and onion. They're wrong with that tangy saracha.
That's that's a trending flavor. I mean, sacha has been
trending for a few years now. It's growing. It's it's
like the honey heat thing is becoming a thing now.
Chipotle has been a thing for a while now. Creamy paprika,
(01:24:34):
barbecue and honey, that's gone together for years. Uh, it's uh.
The companies rewind as Rewind positions itself as a nostalgia
first brand with modern twists. Where did they get.
Speaker 2 (01:24:49):
Hold on?
Speaker 1 (01:24:52):
Oh no, no, no, the public The publication or website
that published it was Dextero. The brand is Rewind. They
want to start strong with a delicious tribute to a
weird universal memory licking a nine volt battery. Now just
(01:25:12):
for a second here, let's just let's just pause. Any
of you that ever sit in brainstorming sessions with your
staff or with your coworkers, imagine the brainstorming session that
led to that. Guys, we want to we want to
go back, and we want to create a flavor of
(01:25:33):
a chip that is nostalgic that's never been done before.
What about a battery flavor? Who thinks of that? Really?
I mean, that's the See, that's what fascinates me about
this story. Who's sitting around the table throws their hand
(01:25:53):
up and says, anyone else ever lick a battery? Can
we make a chip that tastes like that? That was
kind of weirdly cool. I would never want to recapture that.
Are you at all curious what it what it'll taste
(01:26:13):
like a little bit? Yeah, all right, I figured you
would be. Yeah. Forty seven minutes past the hour, rewind
is the brand tomorrow on the program? Maybe a little
(01:26:49):
adjustment being made in the midst of the show. We
are we're perhaps going to have Congresswoman Cat Camick with us.
Her baby is in August, but as we know, babies
have their own schedule, so I don't know, but we've
(01:27:10):
not been able to have her in July, so we're
working on having her tomorrow and then just cutting her
free for the month of August.
Speaker 5 (01:27:23):
She can do the show whenever she wants. I mean,
come on, let's face it, she's she's controlling this, she's
she's she's a beast, she's incredible, she's a woman.
Speaker 1 (01:27:37):
Sort of connected to that story. Dems have hit a
thirty five year favorability low. Inside the Wall Street Journal poll,
sixty three percent hold an unfavorable view of the Democrat Party.
(01:28:00):
The eight percent hold Democrats very favorably. Only nineteen percent
hold Republicans very favorably. Well, here's what the polls show.
The polls show that Democrats aren't winning anybody back. They
think that Trump's policies are unpopular and they'll win the
(01:28:20):
midterms based on it, and historically that's what happens, except
that it's not polling that way. Inflation GOP holds a
ten point edge, tariffs trade seven point edge, illegal immigration
twenty four point edge. The issues people care about, Republicans
(01:28:42):
are winning because Trump is winning. So this will be interesting.
I normally I end the show with something kind of
funny and uplifting. Well, it's kind of funny and uplifting
to me. A people don't like the Democrats. Good. It's
Better for America brought to you by Baronet Heating and Air.
It's the Morning Show on WFLA and Trump winning more
(01:29:10):
trade deals. The EU Britain UK started today with Jose
fourteen to nine and with how we ended in service history.
I just made note of it. Powerful scripture, big stories. Today.
Eleven hospitalized after a stabbing incident at a Walmart in Michigan.
(01:29:31):
You know it stopped it? Ex marine? Well, a marine,
former marine, You're not a former, you're once a marine.
You're always a marine. A marine with a gun. That's
that's who stopped it. Good guy with a gun. American
birth rates dropping to levels of civilizational suicide. That, my friends,
(01:29:54):
is not good. You can replace workers, you can import workers,
you cannot import Americans. We got a lot of problems
on that front. Study shows the California twenty dollars minimum
wage hike cost eighteen thousand jobs in just the fast
food sector alone. There's five different groups of people. Should
(01:30:18):
not use ibuprofen or you in one of those groups.
Sex ring in Alabama children from three to fifteen drugged
and used as victims, some by their own parents. Transclinic
in LA shuts down pro life. Well, we'll talk more
about it tomorrow