All Episodes

July 29, 2025 94 mins
This is the full episode of The Morning Show with Preston Scott for Teusday, July 29th.

Our guests today include:
- U.S. Rep. Kat Cammack





Follow the show on Twitter @TMSPrestonScott. Check out Preston’s latest blog by going to wflafm.com/preston. 
Listen live to Preston from 6 – 9 a.m. ET and 5 – 8 a.m. CT!
WFLA Tallahassee Live stream: https://ihr.fm/3huZWYe
WFLA Panama City Live stream: https://ihr.fm/34oufeR Follow WFLA Tallahassee on Twitter @WFLAFM and WFLA Panama City @wflapanamacity and like us on Facebook at @wflafm and @WFLAPanamaCity.
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:07):
The news is a heavy lift today, friends, but we'll
do it together, you him, and yes, yours truly, President Scott.
It's the Morning Show. Great to be with you. Tuesday,

(00:28):
July twenty ninth, Show fifty four nineteen. We really, boy,
if there is a day to start with a little scripture. Huh,
my goodness, gracious, all the sudden shootings, it's ridiculous, and
of course all of the typical voices. Anyway, John eight

(00:53):
verse twelve, Read Letters, Read Letters. Jesus spoke to them, saying,
I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me
will not walk in darkness, but will have the light

(01:16):
of life. I want you to think about something. Imagine
someone walking with a minors light on right on the forehead, right,

(01:36):
You got a cap, and you got a light that's
shining and it's illuminating a path. Maybe you're inside this
massive cave complex. Maybe you're just out and it's a
moonless night and it's dark, but there's one person with

(02:04):
that miner's light on. You're staying close. I mean, let's
let's let's let's keep it to one context.

Speaker 2 (02:18):
Here.

Speaker 1 (02:19):
You're in a cave. There's all manner of tunnels and paths.
One person knows the way out. One person has a light.
Are you staying close? Are you following that person? You're
going off on your own. You don't have a light.

(02:39):
You don't have one. Isn't it funny how when you
simplify and take what Jesus said there and apply it
to something very very tangible, like a dark spot with

(03:00):
multiple ways you can go, but only one way out
and one person with a light. How the biblical truth
here when Jesus says, I am the light of the world.
I'm the one who can show you the path to
get you out me. I'm it. You can try anything

(03:28):
you want, but I'm walking this way. Follow me. You'll
have the light of life because you're following me. You'll
be walking in the trail of the light that I'm illuminating.
So you can step confidently where I go. You can
go read letters. You and I can try all we want.

(04:03):
We don't have any righteousness on our own. We have
no ability to create our own light. All we can
do is take the light that He gives us by
us connecting to him, to his word, to walk in
his steps the best we can. His word our ability

(04:27):
to walk in it illuminates a path. Scripture says in
the Old Testament, I mean think about this, he says
in John A twelve, I'm the light of the world.
Whoever follows me will not walk in darkness, but will
have the light of life. In the Old Testament, it
says the path of the righteous are illuminated. They're ordered

(04:50):
by God. That path is illuminated. It was a precursor
to Jesus, and Jesus said, Oops, I'm that light. Ten
past the hour Tuesday. Take a peek inside the American
Patriots almanacs. See what National Day of what it is?
Next on the Morning Show.

Speaker 3 (05:18):
Thanks for listening. It's The Morning Show with Preston Scott.

Speaker 1 (05:33):
Here we go. Seventeen seventy three, July twenty ninth. Bravian
missionaries in Shoon Brun, Ohio. Maybe it's Shone Brun, Ohio.
Build the first schoolhouse west of the Alleghany Mountains. My

(05:54):
wife would probably know, being a Ohio girl. Seventeen eighty six,
The Pittsburgh Gazette, the first newspaper west of the Alleghenies,
begins publication. Nineteen fifty eight, President Eisenhower signs the legislation
creating the National Aeronautics and Space Administration otherwise known as NASA.

(06:21):
Nineteen fifty eight, NASA starts, and within twelve years, we're
on the moon. Sweet or were we? Two thousand and five,
astronomers announced the images taken at the Palomar Palomar Observatory

(06:43):
in California have revealed evidence of a distant object larger
than Pluto orbiting the Sun. A distant object larger than
Pluto orbiting the Sun. Today is National Lipstick Day. All right, ladies,

(07:08):
there you go, real ladies, not you know it is
National Lasagna Day. Confession I love lasagna. Second confession. I

(07:28):
don't consider anything other than the real lasagna to be
real lasagna. I don't believe the chicken Lasagna's chicken is lasagna.
I don't believe that faux noodles are lasagna. I don't
believe that if you have lasagna without were called cheese,

(07:50):
that it's lasagna. It's pasta with cheese, but it's not lasagna.
And it's fine. Pasta with cheese is fine. Well, meat sauce,
that's fine, But without the the cheese, it's not lasagna.
I've got one one of our boys cannot stand we're

(08:10):
caught the cheese. Cannot do it, just can't. And I'm like,
oh my gosh. Every now and then I'll make a
pizza at home and put some a couple some dollops
of lasagna on it, just to cream it up a
little bit. It's just a thing of beauty. And today

(08:32):
is National Chicken Wing Day. How do you do your wings?
How do you do your chicken wings? You were reaching
for the mic, you were reaching. Come on, now you're
part of this show. You're allowed to talk and you
love food. Yeah? Oh yeah, yeah, absolutely still fasting. Yeah, yes, sir, Yeah,

(08:54):
this is this is an awesome topic. Huh.

Speaker 4 (08:56):
Yeah, you're a great segment.

Speaker 1 (08:57):
And is it's great talking about food in your Yeah,
heirse soul, not my stomach, I think the Lord. But
let's talk about chicken wings in lasagna. Yeah. Aren't I
a good guy? Yeah, I'm a little weird and I
like my chicken wings grilled and tossed in a barbecue
teriaki with some garlic kind of sauce. Yeah, I'm I'm

(09:17):
good with a lot of different sauces. I'm good with
the traditional barbecue. I'm good with traditional tarioaki. I'm good
with traditional buffalo I'm good with. I'm not a lemon,
you know, pepper, lemon pepper thing. I'm not. Lemon belongs
around fish. To me, that's that's what lemon belongs around

(09:38):
it just it doesn't know. But but I will say,
to me, the best and smartest way to cook wings
is to par boil them and then slap them on
the grill. They're cooked, and you know they're fully cooked.
You don't have to ever worry about whether they're cooked.

(10:00):
And then you put you know, you put some good
seasoning on them so that you can eat them without sauce,
and then you put them on the grill real quickly.
You don't have to You just you get a nice
little sizzle on there, little just maybe a couple pieces
of char here and there, and you're good because they're
fully cooked by being parboiled. That to me, I've stumbled

(10:24):
around with different ways of cooking wings, and I've always
been unsure whether I really cooked them all the way through,
because there's always little spots in wings that you're not
quite exposing to as much heat as other places. And
I don't want to burn them. I don't want to
turn them in a nonsense so to me, parboiled, then grill.
That's that's that's the way to go, and do a

(10:46):
dry rub so that you've got some flavor. If somebody
doesn't want to do a tossed sauce wing. There you go,
You're welcome, seventeen minutes past the own come back with it?
Did you know? And an unbelieve will recovery got to

(11:08):
get a few other stories in the day because some
of the stories are just almost a little just a
little anger inducing, not just because of the evil on
display and loss of life, but because of the reaction
that predictable sources have. But anyway, uh, did you know

(11:34):
dice games preceded the Romans. You know, you famously see
in scripture how the Romans cast lots Roman guards to
determine who would get what of Jesus Jesus's garments. The
Romans did not invent dice, but they were the first

(11:57):
people to bet, to wager to put something on it.
Romans called double ones instead of snake eyes. They used
to call them a dog throw. There you go. Now,
you know I told you there was a discovery kid

(12:19):
going for a run remote beach on a Scottish island
found an incredible find in eighteenth century warship. It was
later called the Earl of Chatham. What it ended up

(12:42):
being was a ship used by the Brits during the
American War of Independence Revolutionary War. February twenty four, twenty
twenty four, storms swept away sand covering it on a
a rugged island that lies off Scotland's northern tip called

(13:06):
Orkney Islands. And I mean it is absolutely you can
see this. This is clearly a massive part of the ship.
The island only has about This is all fascinating to me.
It's an island of five hundred people. Talk about knowing
your neighbors. I will gather together and we'll have a meal,

(13:35):
all of us. They are about two hundred and seventy
shipwrecks that have been recorded around the twenty square mile
island since the fifteenth century two hundred and seventy. So
as the boy discovered it, researchers heard about it, and
then the locals heard about it. So farmers use their tractors,

(13:56):
their trailers. They hauled twelve tons of oak timbers off
the beach. They used dendro chronology. Dendro Chronology is the
science of using the rings of a tree to determine
its age, and you know, you can literally date back
and figure out, you know, all that tree was planted

(14:17):
in such and such or started growing in this time
or that time. And they came to find that they
knew where the wood came from. They put the wood
in water. They immersed it in water to help preserve it,
which is kind of odd when you first think about it.
But it was originally the HMS Hind, a twenty four

(14:41):
gun Royal Navy frigate built in Chichester, Chichester on Anglan's
southern coast in seventeen forty nine. It helped Britain rest
control of Canada from France served as a convoy escort

(15:01):
during Britain's failed effort to hold on to the American colonies.
It was sold off by the Navy in seventeen eighty
four and then renamed the Earl of Chatham and was
a whaling vessel. So that's the history. You never know
what you're gonna find when you take a runner or
walk on the beach. So you know what the moral
of that story is, keep your head down. You just

(15:23):
never know what you'll see. That says stuff like that
man history being uncovered in the strangest ways and places.
Twenty seven minutes past the hour, we're gonna do the
big Stories Be Brave Friends next thirty five minutes past

(15:51):
the hour. For those of you that might be stumbling
into this program for the first time, let me this
is unusual the big stories because they will mirror some
of what is discussed on the National Stories, the national
syndicated programs. I normally not by intent. It just happens

(16:13):
that we just do this program differently, and so'll you'll
pick up on that throughout the show because we talk
about different things. We do have Congresswoman Kat Camick joining
us in the third hour, very excited about that. Just
kind of created they reached out and created a special
space for us and makes my heart happy. We love cat,

(16:35):
We love what she stands for, how she represents the
Sunshine State and certainly her district, but she really represents
a ton of people across the country that I mean,
she she lets her voice be hurt. She doesn't win
all the time, but she sure tries. But the program

(16:56):
usually we just touch on a whole lot of topics
throughout the day. We don't beat up one or two
all day long, and so it's just different. This is
just I'm not saying it's the right way to do it.
I'm not saying that everyone else is wrong. This is
just how we do it here. And so the big
stories in the press box are the stories that I

(17:19):
think just need to be touched on each hour, and
we just take a few minutes. So we've got a
mass shooting. Mass We've got a mass shooting yesterday in
a Manhattan office downtown. Dude walks in. There are different reports.
There's some say that he had a semi automatic rifle,

(17:42):
some say he had converted it to a fully automatic.
I don't know. He had a concealed carry. It certainly
wasn't legal in New York because I know how New
York works. They don't honor other people's concealed kerry permits
if unless it's changed. Didn't matter. He drove from Las Vegas.

(18:02):
He has his private investigator's license and somehow a record
of mental health issues. But he's carrying, so we got
a lot of issues there. He just walks into the lobby,
starts shooting, kills a couple of folks, including a police
officer who is working security off duty. But he's still

(18:25):
a police officer, armed, didn't matter. Hits the elevator, lady
comes down, doesn't know what's going on. Of course, he
lets her just walk out of the elevator. He goes
up to the thirty third floor and intentionally went to
that location. It was a business located on the thirty

(18:51):
third floor, Rooting Management, real estate management and development firm.
He seemed to be targeting it. We don't know. We
don't know what this point, shot and killed a lady
up there, then shot himself in the chest and died.
He had another shooting yesterday at a casino in Nevada,

(19:16):
the Grand Sierra Resort, at seven twenty five in the morning.
He survived, gotten a shootout with police. Here's what stands
out in that whole story. Police said that the report

(19:38):
from the police department, Reno Police Department, police were there
within minutes. That's the problem, isn't it within minutes most
active shooter situations, most are done within minutes. It's over.

(20:04):
Damage is done unless they're stopped. There's a third story
here that we didn't get to yesterday. Arkansas State Police
Devil's Den State Park, husband, wife, two daughters, ages nine
and seven camping husband and wife found dead. They were murdered.

(20:32):
The girls were not harmed. Don't know if they were there,
they weren't there, but they are with family. Now looking
for a white male, medium build, wearing long sleeved shirt
with sleeves rolled up, dark pants, dark ball cap, sunglasses,
fingerless gloves, carrying a black backpack, likely driving a black

(20:53):
four door Mazda Sedan. Tape was covering the license plate.
That tells you all you need to know. There was
somebody in there looking for a victim. That's it. It's
just and now we have to endure the voices, especially

(21:17):
with these shootings in Manhattan and Las and Reno, Nevada.
We now have to endure the voices. See see we
need common sense gun control. Not one law. Just remember this,
not one law they ever propose will stop these. Just
take the law that they propose, apply it and you'll

(21:41):
see it wouldn't have stopped any of them. Forty minutes
past the out forty one lead research assistant of the
Morning Show with Preston Scott notifying me WNBA's absurdity reaches

(22:02):
peak after players fallen wig causes stoppage. There's something you
don't see in the NBA dudes wearing wigs, But sadly,
in the WNBA, you got wigs, you got weaves, you
got extensions, you got all kinds of problems. I need

(22:27):
a time out. My mass scara, my false eyelashes are
are bothering me. I need a timeout please. I lost
a rhyinestone on my fingernails. I mean, I'm sorry, I

(22:49):
can't watch. I'll watch a little Caitlin Clark now and
then because she's unique. But the WNBA game has one
thing to offer, three point shooting. They're not making three.
There's no point watching because they fall down all the time.
They doubled, they get jump balls all the time. They
they don't they don't elevate and dunk, and they don't

(23:10):
do crazy physical, insane things that cause you to go
I can't do that. But you got some shooters in
the league, Sabrina I and Esco obviously Caitlin Clark. You
got you got some people that can shoot it. That cool, awesome,
But I'm not gonna watch it. There's nothing interesting to

(23:33):
me about seeing a bunch of girls that are wearing
wigs and extensions and ridiculous eyelashes and just looking silly
falling down. There's just nothing interesting to me about that. Sorry.
Marco Rubio interviewed on Fox asked about perhaps running for

(23:54):
president in twenty twenty eight. Listen to this, well, I
think JD. Vance would be a great nominee if he
decides he wants to do that. I think he's doing
a great job as Vice president. He's a close friend,
and I hope he intends to do it. I know
it's early, but being in the role that I'm here
at Secretary of State, I really don't play politics. He
wants to be Secretary of State for as long as

(24:15):
the president wants him, loves what he's doing. I will
tell you he's killing it. Rubio is killing it, he said.
I believe if I'm able to be here through the
duration of this presidency and we get things done at
the pace that we've been doing it the last six months,
I'll be able to look back at my time in

(24:35):
public service and say I made a difference, I had
an impact, and I served my country in a very
positive way. Here's where it gets interesting. One poll shows
the leading candidates on the Democrat side get a hold
of these names, Pete Boodage, Gavin newsom Alexandria Cassio Cortez.

(25:04):
Just get your brain around one of them being president.
That is horrifying. And one other little quick note here,
Office of Personnel Management sent out guidance federal Federal Department
of Office of Personnel Management detailing new requirements which protect
federal workers' ability to display Bibles, crucifixes, or messusa's on

(25:31):
their desks, invite colleagues to worship or pray with them,
and to speak openly about their religious beliefs in public spaces.
They can't do that. It's protected now, it's not going
to be attacked. Love it, Love it forty six minutes
after the hour, catch them back up here This Morning
Show with Preston Scott. Thing Show with Preston.

Speaker 4 (25:53):
Scott sixty percent of the time.

Speaker 1 (25:55):
It works every.

Speaker 3 (25:57):
Time on news Radio one hundred point SEVENSLA.

Speaker 1 (26:08):
The Bible says, out of the abundance of the heart,
the mouth speaks. So let me ask you a question.
Out of the abundance of the heart, A person posts,

(26:36):
I'm just asking, isn't social media today reflective of what's
in someone's heart? I would argue that social media, with
the anonymity it affords so many people. Gives us the

(27:00):
clearest indicator of the moral character, beliefs, values of society
in general than anything else, because people can express themselves

(27:20):
on social media and fear no repercussions. Unless you're a
public person, then you have to think to yourself. If
somebody that's a public person posts something that is like
over the top, then you really know that's what's in
their heart right because it's pushing past Okay, I'm a

(27:43):
public figure. I can't say that. I think it, I
feel it, but I can't do that. But that governor
is gone if you blow out the little bit of
restraint that you might have because of the position you hold.
Maybe you own a business and you want to say

(28:03):
I can't do that because I've got customers, you know.
But you blow it out and you say it anyway,
then you really feel that right? I mean, am I wrong?
Am I? And and you know preston aiheartradio dot com,
I don't think I am. I think I'm absolutely right.
You oway think you're right, of course I do. I've

(28:26):
thought about it. I think I'm right about everything. I
know that I'm not. See I know that I'm not.
Someone says, no, you were wrong about this. I wrote
to somebody about a story and I said, I think this,
this is this and I was wrong, And I said
I was wrong. Yeah, I was wrong. Get this Elachua County.

(28:51):
The chair of the Alachua County school Board, Sarah Rockwell,
Oh did hulk die? I didn't even know good one
less maga in the world. She is the chair of
the school board. And she posted it publicly. She got roasted.
So then she says that and she had some other

(29:13):
comments on it too. She didn't just post that and
let it go. She added to it. She then says,
a few days ago, I made a cruel and flippant
comment on my personal Facebook account on a friend's post
regarding the death of hault Cogan. I deeply regret making
that comment have since removed it. I want to make
it very clear I've never ever wished to harm anyone,
regardless of whether we share political views. While I strong

(29:34):
strongly disagree with some of the comments, hall Cogan made
no excuse for my comment. Then she adds, I sincerely
apologize for the way my comment has eroded confidence in
my ability to represent all students, families, and staff at
Alachua County. And she goes on from there. See there's
the problem, of course, it's eroded confidence. In my opinion,

(29:57):
unless you go have a talk with Jesus and you
deal with that, that issue that's in your heart. You
can't represent all students and families. Why because a lot
of them think hul Cogan was a pretty good dude
playing a part. But I don't know if you all
know this. He loved Jesus in a big way, about

(30:23):
as big a way as he is as a person,
was as a man. But it's not about hull Cogan.
It's about what's inside. What's buried inside comes out, and
it comes out in our words, It comes out in
our actions, and it comes out. Listen now in your posts.

(30:49):
Scripture doesn't say out of the abundance of the heart.
The mouth speaks, but scripture might as well say, or rather,
scripture says that, but it might as well say out
of the abundance of the heart. A person posts. Think
about that, all right, the spice things up a little bit,

(31:13):
but not like that. Last segment didn't. Last segment was
a big time uh oh to a whole lot of people,
a lot of people posting on social media. I don't
have personal social media anywhere. We have a morning show

(31:36):
page where comments pop out now and then on stories,
post on other things here and there. But I don't
do social media stuff. I've got a radio show. My
personal feelings are expressed five days a week and seven
days a week around my family and friends. But I

(31:59):
think if you really step back and say, is social
media really good for me? I bet for a lot
of you it's not, and you probably ought to just stop.
It leads you out to stop until you can find
a way to corral what's inside your heart and heal
that up. Get a little bit better now on the
same subject of what's going on in someone's heart. This

(32:21):
is data from the General Social Survey. It has been
a national survey of adults in the United States since
nineteen seventy two, every single year, so that's fifty three years.

(32:42):
According to its research, Democrat men who happen to be
Democrats are more likely to have lenient attitudes towards infidelity
and marriage than Republican men, and are more likely to
admit to having sex outside of marriage. The analysis shows

(33:10):
there's been a decline of fidelity over the past decade
among Democratic men in the group. In the surveys between
twenty ten and twenty fourteen, three quarters of Democrat men
sampled said extramarital sex was always wrong. But in the
surveys from twenty sixteen to twenty twenty two, that number

(33:34):
is now just fifty three percent, So half say yeah.
You know, men who identified as religious of faith in God,
even among Democrats, that changed. They're the attitude. Crats who

(34:01):
went to church held that fidelity was important. It was
never acceptable to be unfaithful to one's vows in marriage.
Ninety percent of Republican men who were married between the
ages of eighteen and fifty five, who attend to a
service once a month or more, sextra menorial affairs are

(34:23):
always wrong ninety percent. Who's the ten What are you
smoking or drinking? Seventy four percent of non religious Republicans,
So there's a there's there's roughly a fifteen sixteen percent
jump if you go to church. But even if you don't,
Republican men hold that fidelity in marriage matters at a

(34:47):
much higher rate than Democrat men. And that interesting. Now,
you know, I could certainly form a conclusion or two,
but I think for most of you it makes perfect
sense because though Republicans are full of faults and flaws

(35:09):
just like everybody else, the political view connects more closely
to values and standards that do not move. They're anchored.
They don't change with societal winds blowing one way or another.
They just don't. They are locked in because there are

(35:32):
certain things that's right, that are right, that are wrong,
and that doesn't change. With Democrats. There really is a
lacking there. Now, again, there will always be exceptions to rules,
but the rules do exist. And when you're looking at
a surveying of America that's been going on for fifty

(35:54):
three years, yeah, I think we have a pretty good
handle on where we are. And ask and answer this,
do those findings shock you? Do they even surprise you?
And I would say for most of us, no, it

(36:14):
kind of makes sense. Guys who happen to be Democrats
and married are far more accepting of cheating in marriage
in relationships than Republican dudes. And now let's just put
a bow on this. Go back to the stories we've

(36:36):
talked about over the last couple of years of liberal
women posting online wanting to find a real man, and
it just all fits, doesn't it. Ten past the hour
Speaking of Democrats.

Speaker 3 (36:59):
Show Preston Scott on Use Radio one point seven Double USLA.

Speaker 1 (37:16):
I'm taking this supplemental drink. It's six eight ounces of
water with this stuff mixed in it once a day. Yeah.
I can smell it on my hands. It's like and
it's like it's supposed to be okay, and it's not
like the worst thing I've ever had to drink, but

(37:40):
it's not the best. I'll just say that. Jose walked
in in the break showing me his T shirt that
he's wearing. It's a goose holding a firearm. It's a
long gun and it says on the back of it today,
I'm a serious goose. And I just I stared at
it and I kind of tilted my head a little

(38:02):
bit and I was like, I'm sorry, I don't get it.

Speaker 4 (38:06):
And he.

Speaker 1 (38:09):
Had to explain it to me and he's like, oh, okay,
now I got it. He said, instead of being a
silly goose, I'm a serious goose today, said haven't you
noticed how serious I am? As he's sitting over there laughing.
Now go falling. Now the goose holding the firearm is
pretty funny, I will say that, But all right, I

(38:30):
mentioned about Democrats President Donald Trump's envoy for Special Missions,
Richard Grennell, calling out Gavin Newsom. Remember the fires we
talked about last year in California, Palisades eating that whole

(38:50):
region decimated, he wrote on Acts. Gavin Newsom lied. He
said he wouldn't grab the land where homes burned down
and the Palisades to build low income housing facilities, But
he and Karen Bass just did. They are changing the
character of the Palisades in Malibu to fit their woe agenda.

(39:11):
They don't care what residents want. They don't care. They
can't deliver building permits properly. The mayor has appointed a developer,
Steve sober Off, as the city's chief recovery officer, without
any public process, none whatsoever. Just put him in charge.

(39:33):
He's a developer, oh, by the way, pushes for low
income housing because he develops the land and builds it
and makes millions. So let's put this in some context here.
Newsome said he would never do it. He did it.

(39:54):
So California under Gavin Newsom continued its long standing process
of not allowing prescribe burns in areas that are likely
to be a danger to housing to infrastructure because they
wanted the brush to grow. They wanted everything to grow grow,

(40:15):
Go co Cow. So when wildfires hit California, that happens
every year, they burn and burn and burn, and in
this case they burn some very very expensive homes where
people live. And then you see the stories of the

(40:40):
rebuilding permits. They're not being approved one here, one there, dragging, dragging, dragging.
Why this is why they didn't plan on approving them.
They took the land they're gonna put They're gonna build

(41:05):
low income housing. And by the way, I'd love to
know what the definition of low income housing is in California.
Doesn't this make perfect sense? Why? Because it's run by Democrats?
How long before everybody understands, don't flee to the Republican Party.

(41:30):
The Republicans have all kinds of problems, but leave, flee
run from being a Democrat. Don't elect them, Just don't
elect them. Sixteen minutes past, believe it or not. Speaking
of California, next.

Speaker 5 (41:50):
Ula on your phone with the iHeart radio app and
on hundreds of devices like Alexa, Google Home, Xbox, and Sonos,
say so here we go in Ihearts Radio.

Speaker 1 (42:16):
US skuy, Who's Roman Catcamick next Hour. California just can't
get out of its own way. Listeners sent me a
note this week just saying, you know, how long before
other really deeply blue states like Hawaii and Washington and
Oregon just follow the same train wreck. I would submit

(42:39):
they already are, and that's why you're seeing an exodus.
It's hard for me to believe that, if you strip
away illegal immigration, that these states are growing. I don't
see how it's possible that New York and Chicago and

(42:59):
Illinois in California and Hawaii and Oregon and Washington are
growing overall in populations. Hard to believe that they would be.
I wonder if people are fleeing Minnesota and Michigan. You know,
if you like the four seasons, there are other states
where you can go. You know, I lived in Minnesota

(43:22):
for years, a beautiful state, beautiful, Absolutely loved it. My
brother still lives there. I've got family cousins that still
live up there. But there's not a chance I would
put myself under that general type of leadership. There's not
a chance as a citizen, wouldn't do it, wouldn't be prudent.

(43:45):
Look at what California's thinking of doing. They want to
rewild reintroduce grizzly bears into the state, the California Grizzly Alliance.
It is in part a group funded, encouraged, propped up

(44:14):
by the Holdfast Collective, which owns ninety eight percent of
the clothing brand Patagonia, as well as Rewild, another enron
environmental group founded by, among other people, Leonardo DiCaprio, who's

(44:37):
a flaming leftist, tremendous actor, flaming leftist. So here's what
they're trying to do. They're trying to put twelve hundred
grizzlies back into California. Here's the problem. Grizzly is top

(45:01):
of the food chain predator and they think, these conservationists,
they're just going to put them into the higher altitudes
in the mountains and that'll be that. Not considering apex,

(45:23):
predators need massive amounts of animals to survive. Those animals
are not found in abundance in the mountains. They're found
in the lower altitude areas, which, oh, by the way,
happen to be where the ranches are with cattle and sheep,

(45:56):
various livestock. There's there's no getting along with grizzlies. One
notable animal biologists said, you don't get along with a
grizzly bear, the native deer, the elk in the state.
The populations cannot sustain grizzlies in this number, then there's

(46:25):
the likelihood of population increase, not decrease. A grizzly hasn't
been spotted in California since nineteen twenty four. They're doing
just fine in Alaska, in parts of Montana and Idaho, Wyoming, Canada.

(46:52):
Isn't that enough? They're good enough? I mean, are we
importing polar bears to the northern reaches of Minnesota, in Michigan,
northern New York? This is just patently stupid, but this
is California. Twenty seven minutes after the hour, come back,

(47:18):
we'll do the big stories in the press box here
on the Morning Show with.

Speaker 3 (47:20):
Presents sen Say of Sensibility, communicator of common sense amplified.
It's The Morning Show with Preston Scott. There is nothing worse.

Speaker 1 (47:51):
Than the loss of life in these shootings that sadly
are populating the news right now. We've got the shooting
in Manhattan where who has documented mental illness issues somehow
had a concealed carry permit and a private investigator's license,

(48:15):
and you know, my mind says, well, okay, let's let's
go through this. What if his mental illness issues surfaced
after he had his license and his CCW okay, Well,
one would think then if you have been diagnosed with

(48:36):
mental health issues, that that would be on a database
somewhere and would you know, I mean, that is that wrong?
I mean you need your ID to go to buy paint, glue,

(49:02):
certain products at a hardware store, grocery store. I don't
get it. But that's irrelevant. That's not irrelevant. That's a
topic for another day. This is about we've got victims,
we've got a police officer dead, and oh, by the way,

(49:23):
we want the new mayoral likely can't. The guy who's
likely to be mayor wants to defund the police and
wants to do away with jails and prisons. Did a
rule Islam the police officer who died. He's from Bangladesh,
thirty six years old, two children and expecting a third.

(49:48):
The shooter, documented history of mental health issues, targeted Rootent
Management on the thirty third floor, but went in blasting,
just shooting people. He was going for a body count.
Been a whole lot worse. He often himself did everybody
a favor. Shooting at a casino in Reno, Nevada, Grand

(50:12):
Sierra Resort yesterday morning. The shooter there was shot, injured
and hospitalized. So we have a surviving shooter there. Perhaps
we'll learn a little bit more whatever there is to
be learned. But now you've got the victims. That's the
worst right that anyone dies like this is and I

(50:37):
mean this is ridiculous. But also ridiculous are the the comments.
Dan Goldman, New York Congressman. He drove from Las Vegas
to New York with an AR fifteen, which cannot be

(50:58):
purchased in New York. He walked to it and do it?
Can I just stop? Thank you? You just proved the point,
you foolish man. He walked into an office building and
started spraying the lobby with that AR fifteen, killing a
police officer whose handgun was no match for the AR fifteen. Oh,

(51:21):
it would have been a fine match. It would have
been fine. He got caught off guard. He wasn't prepared
for what happened. And guess what. Sometimes good guys shoot
get killed. When bad people do bad things happens it

(51:42):
just does. He might have been in the process of drawing,
who knows, don't know, he didn't expect someone to walk in.
But you just proved the point New York. We're not
going to allow such things. Really, you're gonna stop it

(52:02):
with a law, are you? You're gonna stop it with
a sign? You're gonna stop it with a You can't
bring that. Say hey, hey, you turn right around, mister
and march back to your car. You're not allowed to
bring that here. You're in New York. Absolute foolishness. Now

(52:28):
we're gonna hear it all over again. I posted on
his website. I said, do you realize not one thing
you'll propose would have stopped this, not one thing, And
you realize that you're going to now then what are
you going to ban? Cars, trucks and SUVs? Are you
gonna ban knives, baseball bats, bricks, fertilizer, timing devices, etc.

(52:58):
Wake up, Wake up people. This actually points to our
personal defense segments and why we do them. Do you
think anybody in that lobby, in that office on the
thirty third floor thought someone was going to walk in

(53:19):
and shoot him that day? Forty one minutes past the
out and then there's another story. Subjects will just make
you furious.

Speaker 3 (53:31):
Don't worry. We're here to make it all better. It's
the Morning Show with Preston Scott.

Speaker 1 (53:45):
All right, Perhaps you have seen the video of the
brutal beating of two people in Cincinnati. Apparently it was
a verbal thing that turned into a physical thing after
a jazz concert of some kind. I don't know. The

(54:07):
beating was horrific. The victims happened to be white. I'm
going to let Brandon Tatum say something here. He goes
by the title Officer Tatum Online. He was a police officer.

(54:30):
He has turned his background in police and law enforcement
into a career on YouTube and writing books and etc.
I don't agree with everything he has to say, but
agree with a lot of what he has to say.

Speaker 6 (54:46):
Can I say the choir think out loud? Can I
say the choirt think out loud? Why do we not
see the reverse of these incidents? Somebody may argue, well,
I don't know. Fifty sixty years ago, seventy years ago,
maybe there was a reverse. But in my entire lifetime,
I have not seen the refers of this type of behavior.
It's not one time have I seen white people beat

(55:10):
up black people like this.

Speaker 1 (55:13):
I mean, I get it, bro.

Speaker 6 (55:14):
I haven't seen the full video, and I'm not gonna
say who started it, but what I can see is
who was way more aggressive and who will probably go
to jail for the way they acted.

Speaker 1 (55:30):
What I saw again, like he I don't know what
started it, but what I saw was some dude holding
up the phone comment given commentary while he's videotaping it,
not trying to stop it, not trying to help, just
going oh and dropping expletives and rejoicing in it. I

(55:52):
saw a man who is largely unconscious and another man
do literally a wrestling move where you drop an elbow
on top and body crush him. I saw a man
hit a woman and knock her out. Oh, she happened

(56:13):
to be white too, girlfriend wife. I don't know of
the person who was originally attacked. I saw women kick
this man while he was largely unconscious. They happened to
be black. Here's what I also saw. I saw it

(56:39):
reported on Fox. I saw it reported on Gateway, Pundit
and town Hall. Didn't see it on CNN, didn't see
it on MSNBC. I could be wrong. Maybe it populated
somewhere deep down, wasn't above the fold? Didn't see it

(57:01):
the USA Today's website. Now again, it could be there
by now the mayor finally spoke up. He didn't for
a while, or she didn't. I don't know what. Whatever.
Isn't this a hate crime? Wouldn't it be if it
were reversed, called a hate crime if a group of

(57:21):
whites attacked a black couple, And wouldn't it in fact
be on the cover of every single newspaper and media
outlet if it were reversed. The lady was hit by
a dude and oh, by the way, blindsided. Now they've

(57:45):
allegedly got five of them at last, the lead research
assistant told me yesterday, I thought it was four. They've
apparently arrested five. There's a whole lot more than that.
I decided I'd let somebody, a brother in Christ who

(58:06):
happens to be black, say what needs to be said
about this, because if I say it right. Forty seven
minutes after the album, This Morning Show with Preston Scott.

Speaker 3 (58:27):
Remember the days when times were good and life was simple.
He still lives there. The Morning Show with Preston Scott
on Used Radio one hundred point seven wfla time for mainly.

Speaker 1 (58:43):
Minute male by birth, man by choice. We're encouraging you
parents to teach your son virtues, ideals, traits skills that

(59:03):
will forge him into a man. All right, school years
starting the start of school offers endless opportunities for your
son to refine himself to becoming a man. And we're

(59:26):
going to talk about that for a couple of weeks.
Plant seeds. Now, teaching your son to look around to
see new kids, To see a kid sitting alone that's

(59:50):
in his class, that's new and doesn't have any friends.
Teach your son to make friends with that person, at
least give them the chance to be part of a
larger group. Maybe your son is in a class and
they've been together for a couple of years and they
all know each other, and there's a new kid. Have

(01:00:15):
your son teach your son to use discernment? Yes, at
a young age, you can teach your son discernment to
just be observant of the people around him and be
a leader, be the person that offers to be helpful

(01:00:36):
to a teacher, to an instructor, and to be a
difference maker with their classmates. So there's your manly minute.
This morning on the Morning Show with Preston Scott, Florida
Senator Rick Scott. We got to get him back on
the show. Frequent guest once again on the program. Do

(01:00:57):
you hear what he did? I don't know if you
know this. Rick Scott's rich. He's the wealthiest member of
Congress by far. He uh he paid for an airplane
to fly a banner around Coney Island and Jones Beach

(01:01:18):
over the weekend. It said this hates socialism, us too
moved to Florida. Brilliant, he told Fox News. While many
New Yorkers are out enjoying the beach this weekend, we

(01:01:39):
will be giving them a friendly reminder that, in addition
to our world class beaches, Florida is a state where
you can escape socialism. We're the land of opportunity. Oh
and we do have better beaches. Well yeah. He went
on to say, you know this isn't new, referencing the
uh zo ran mum don. It's just an old, barbaric,

(01:02:02):
discredited idea that's failed every time it's been tried. Just
look at Cuba and Venezuela and the many families who
fled those brutal regimes to live where in Florida. Yes,
you heard a little spice on that Florida. Mm hmm.
A little saucy there, little saucy. Love it. I love it.

(01:02:24):
When we come back, US Congresswoman Kat Camick is going
to join us. We will talk about her Truth in
Women's Healthcare Act that she has introduced, as well as
a few other things, including maybe this message from the Senator.
Don't miss our three of the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
It's next. We literally turned the page on the rundown

(01:02:55):
and here we go into the third and final hour
at least for the today for to day of The
Morning Show with Preston Scott Show fifty four nineteen. He's ose.
I'm Preston and this is US Congresswoman Cat Cami.

Speaker 2 (01:03:06):
Hi, Cat, good morning. How are you.

Speaker 1 (01:03:10):
I'm terrific. You have got to be about like really ready.

Speaker 2 (01:03:15):
I am so pregnant. That's the only way to explain it.
And all of the ladies out there will know exactly
what I mean when I say I am so pregnant,
meaning you can't walk, you can't move, you waddle, you
kind of roll around like a roly poly.

Speaker 1 (01:03:33):
It's the phase and let's just throw into it one
hundred degree temperatures, heat indexes of one hundred and ten.
Let's just make it miserable.

Speaker 2 (01:03:42):
Oh, I know, we really did the trifecta here of
insanely hot weather, very very uber pregnant, and managing to
trigger every single liberal in all at the same time.

Speaker 1 (01:04:01):
Let's talk about that. The last time we visited, we
discussed the absurdity that you, your family, your staff had been
exposed to because you made some comments about a pregnancy
that you were not able to keep back a year
better a year or so ago. But last week he

(01:04:23):
introduced a piece of legislation. Let's tell let's tell people
about that.

Speaker 2 (01:04:28):
Yeah, you know, and as we're having this conversation, I
look out my window and I see, you know, a
deputy right outside my window. That's that's our new normal, unfortunately,
because of the threat environment that we now operate in
and live within. You know, it was the end of

(01:04:49):
June we had a profile done on us by the
Wall Street Journal detailing an ectopic pregnancy that I had
experienced actually ended up being rarest and most dangerous type
of ectopic pregnancy last year, which for anybody who is
not aware it is not a viable pregnancy, they've never

(01:05:09):
been viable, and they typically end up rupturing and causing
internal bleeding to the point that it can kill the mother,
and so it's classified as a life threatening situation. And
for women who have ever experienced this, which there's about
one in twenty five women experience an A Topic and

(01:05:30):
of course one in four women will experience a miscarriage
in their lifetime. Both require treatment. And the thing that
is really scary is we learned firsthand how the misinformation
and the politicization of the issue can really scare doctors.
And in my case, this was about a month after

(01:05:54):
Florida's heartbeat bill passed, and what ended up happening was
the pro abortion lobby had spent millions of dollars running ads,
even going so far as to geo fends, meaning they
literally would target hospitals and they would push ads to
people's cell phones that were in these areas saying that

(01:06:15):
if they treated women who were undergoing a miscarriage or
experiencing an A Topic pregnancy, that those doctors or those
nurses would lose their license and go to jail. And
so we experienced firsthand how that caused a lot of
fear and confusion when I showed up at the er,

(01:06:36):
you know, late one night, and I ended up having
to read the law to the doctors in the room
and making my case. And it's really just crazy because
it then turned into people saying, oh my gosh, you
had an abortion. By the way, not a single professional
medical association has ever classified treatment for miscarriage or topics

(01:06:58):
as an abortion. That's just a life that the left
likes to perpetuate. And then they said things like I
voted for the bill, also highlighting that there's a real
problem with literacy and civic understanding in this country, and
it turned into something really nasty where my family, my team, myself,
my unborn child, you know, we were all the subject

(01:07:20):
of a lot of death threats and still are. And again,
this piece was intended to highlight the real lack of
access and resource and the fact that it's difficult to
have a conversation about healthcare in this country and without
it turning political and low and behold, the left prove
my point.

Speaker 1 (01:07:38):
Hang on a second, kat, I want to talk specifically
about the legislation that you've crafted, what it would do,
But we got to take a quick break here weather
in traffic now ten past the hour in show with
Preston Scott. This is the Way My News Radio one.

Speaker 3 (01:07:58):
Hundred point seven double U LA.

Speaker 1 (01:08:08):
Mainstream media never lets truth stand in the way of
a story, and sadly there are enough people that read, watch,
and follow that nonsense that we just have a bunch
of misinformed folks. And as a result, Congresswoman kat Camick
joins us this morning. She represents Florida's third congressional district
and has introduced the Truth in Women's Healthcare Act. What

(01:08:30):
does it do? Kat?

Speaker 2 (01:08:32):
So, this really came out of our experience, but also
wanting to set the stage for what's to come down
the road, which is an effort to tackle real challenges
in our sick care system, because I think collectively we
can all agree we don't have healthcare in this country.
We have sick care, and it's pretty depressing that you

(01:08:54):
have health you know, insurance companies making health care decisions
for folks. So we started out with this really setting
the stage for never allowing someone to go through what
I went through. You have heard these stories where, like
I did, I was sitting there, you know, eminently about

(01:09:17):
to bleed out and people are saying, well, you know,
we're not really sure if we can, and I'm like,
I just read you the law, and they're like, yeah,
but you know that we keep getting all these advertisements
and there's got to be some truth to that. You know.
Little did they know or could we know at that time,
but the State of Florida actually had to sue these
groups in order for them to take it down. And

(01:09:38):
when you're living in this this era of just mass overload,
people say anything and it gets taken as truth. You know,
it's kind of like, oh, I saw it on Facebook,
so therefore it has to be true. I can't tell
how scary that is. And then you look at the
broader healthcare space and you know, people are absolutely completely

(01:10:01):
taken down rabbit holes and craziness. So the Truth in
Women's Health Care Act was really just making it very
clear that there is a fundamental difference between an elective
abortion where someone says, you know, a woman says I
just don't want to have a kid, and it is
a viable pregnancy, and they terminate the life of their child.

(01:10:21):
That is something that I am fundamentally against, and I
know so many people who are right, and we're going
to continue that fight for all life because I believe
all life has value. When you have a situation of
a miscarriage or an ectopic pregnancy, those are not viable pregnancies.
They never have been, they never will be. And again,

(01:10:43):
if you're pro life, you're going to fight for the
life of the mother, and so really making clear that
the abortion lobby can no longer use women as ponds
in conflating what treatment is for those versus elective abortions.
That's what this resolution does, and it will set the
stage for us to start tackling this with insurance companies

(01:11:07):
and then getting resources to women in particularly rural and
underserved areas. The entire time I was going through this,
I kept saying to my husband, what happens to women
who don't have a doctor. What happens to the women
who don't have a car. You know, it was really
really scary for me, and I feel really lucky because
I've got a car and a husband and I could

(01:11:29):
pick up the phone and call my doctor. Not everybody's
in that situation, and so we need to make sure
that we're addressing the real gaps and shortfalls in our system.

Speaker 1 (01:11:38):
Kat if I may just we got about a minute
in this segment, but let me take it a step further.
What happens to the woman who's not a member of Congress,
who oh, by the way, knows what the law in
her state is.

Speaker 2 (01:11:52):
Yeah, I mean, that's what's so crazy. So we actually
started reaching out to the different medical associations, the American
Medical Association, the Association, the College of American College of
kind of collegists and obsess obstetrics like, we started reaching
out to them and saying, you guys need to be
pushing out accurate information and you can't let the politics

(01:12:17):
cloud where things are at based on the era that
we're living in. We have to be true to the
science here. And so this resolution, like I said, it
reaffirms that not a single professional accredited medical association believes
that abortion is what happens. When you go through this right,
that's going to then translate into tackling the insurance companies

(01:12:39):
and how they build. And then it's going to also
create some legal precedent so that again the pro abortion
lobby can never use this as a weapon to hurt women. Ever.

Speaker 1 (01:12:50):
Again, US congress Woman kat Camick with us this Morning
More to come. She's our fave This Morning Show with
Preston Scott. Final segment here with congress Woman Cat Camick

(01:13:11):
and her final appearance for a while on the show.
We don't know quite how long, but we're you know,
we're going to extend whatever time is needed for you
to get your young one properly acclimated to lobbying on
your behalf. Kat tell me this. We know the tax

(01:13:34):
cuts had to get done. It got done. What is
the one thing that is most important in the o
BBB other than the tax cuts?

Speaker 2 (01:13:46):
Oh? Oh man, there's so much.

Speaker 1 (01:13:50):
What's the one that's on top of the list though,
outside the tax.

Speaker 2 (01:13:53):
Cuts, Outside the tax cut, I would have to say
border security. Okay, honestly, there is no country without borders, right.
You can't have a sovereign nation if you don't have
secure borders. And the hell that we have lived under

(01:14:14):
for the previous four years of open border policies, the
Americans that have lost their lives, the families that have
been broken, the crimes that have been committed by people
who never should have been here in the first place.
I think about those angel families all the time. And
the one big, beautiful bill, it gave the most significant

(01:14:36):
investment into border security for not just keeping the border
secure because President Trump he's actually in the first six
months he made it so that those borders are shut
down like they're completely secure. But now it's a matter
of putting up the infrastructure. That's the multiplier effect, and
then giving the resources to ICE and to customs and

(01:14:56):
border patrol. They really have a lot of work to
do at the commercial ports, but then also the interior enforcement.
And so I would say outside of the tax cuts,
right like no tax on over time, no tax on tips,
locking in taxes to avoid the largest tax increase in history,
border security was the most significant thing to come out

(01:15:18):
of that bill.

Speaker 1 (01:15:19):
All Right, what's the worst that has to be addressed asap?

Speaker 2 (01:15:25):
Uh? There was, of course I'm biased because it was
my bill, But the Rains Act. We made it through
the House with the Rains Act, which is the largest
regulatory reform effort in American history. Passing the Rains Act
saves US taxpayers two point five trillion dollars with a

(01:15:50):
t every single year. So when we talk about spending
and the national security threat that is our debt, I
would say that if we don't address regulatory reform that
is going to continue to put us on that autopilot
spending spree that is going to be it's going to

(01:16:12):
ultimately take us down. And so I think that the
worst thing was we didn't make enough of a substantial savings.
We didn't cut enough of the deficit, and we need
to go back and we need to be absolutely ruthless
in getting our fiscal house in order.

Speaker 1 (01:16:32):
Where is allowing us, you know, it's a pet issue
for me, total control of our own retirement where the
government doesn't tell us what age we have to take
anything out. We can take it. It's our money, we
can take it whenever we want without penalty.

Speaker 2 (01:16:46):
So there's a lot of talk right now, especially since
the Big Beautiful Bill included the MAGA Trump accounts for babies.
It's ignited a conversation about five twenty nine about roth
iras about raised in general for a one case. Really
that has simulated a conversation in ways that I haven't

(01:17:07):
seen previously. So I think the talk of a second
reconciliation package, which is happening right now, will include additional reforms.
But I don't think it's just retirement right where people
should have the ability to make decisions about their own
retirement accounts and how they want to use that money
and win. But I think it should also extend to

(01:17:28):
health savings accounts. People should be able to take their
health savings account and use it in a way that
they see fit. I think, I really think that money
for children that goes towards their education should follow the child,
not the school. I really think that there is a
conversation that has started that is going to carry on

(01:17:51):
through the next couple of years that we're going to
see serious reforms to long standing programs that's going to
really change the way that we operate.

Speaker 1 (01:17:58):
All right, Well, I'm saying I'm sixty five. You got
five years to get it done.

Speaker 2 (01:18:04):
No pressure, right, I needed for the people. Let it
be known, Preston has put me on the clock.

Speaker 1 (01:18:14):
Come on, come on, Kats. In all seriousness, you're a delight.
We look forward to these visits and so appreciative that
you carve out time for us over here in the
Panhandle and Big Bend. And we wish you nothing but
the very best in the delivery of your little baby girl.
And thank you so much for the time. And we'll
talk soon.

Speaker 2 (01:18:34):
I appreciate you so much. God bless take care by bye.

Speaker 1 (01:18:37):
US Congresswoman Cat Camick with me this morning in the
Morning Show with Preston Scott. Thing Show with Preston Scott. Hello, Hello,
anybody home?

Speaker 2 (01:18:57):
Hi?

Speaker 3 (01:18:58):
Say fly on News Radio one hundred point seven. Double
US law now down.

Speaker 1 (01:19:19):
So the big story in the press box is the shootings.
It's just it just doesn't stop. Manhattan. Guy drives from

(01:19:44):
Las Vegas. He's got his concealed carry from last from
from Nevada, which last time I checked here, let me
let me pull my app up here. Last time I checked,
it does not Uh, it does not travel to New York.

(01:20:17):
New York does not recognize other states. Let's see here
as a Florida concealed carry person, do not. I do

(01:20:38):
not have the option that I can see of carrying
in New York. Isn't that interesting? They got a law
you can't bring a gun here. Hmm, says the bad guy.
You don't say he did anyway. Wait, you're telling me

(01:21:06):
that a sign and a law won't stop a bad
guy whoa game changer. That is a game changer.

Speaker 2 (01:21:22):
So he.

Speaker 1 (01:21:25):
Just he's walking into the building carrying his firearm, his
long gun, which some reports say was converted into a
fully automatic whoa, whoa, whoa. If it was, that's against
the law. That's two right there, And I'm not even

(01:21:47):
digging deep. You have to keep in mind that all
of the gun control arguments out there do not stop crimes.

(01:22:08):
They just don't. Do you think this guy, with whatever
grudge he was carrying against that company that he went
up to the thirty third floor after killing a couple
people two or three down below, do you really think
that you're not allowed to do that is going to matter?

(01:22:28):
You don't think that people that commit these crimes know
that there's laws against them. I am going to reinforce
the counter argument that we have to be able to
make against gun control fools. Do you really think someone

(01:22:51):
intent on committing a crime? Have you seen, by the way,
do you see what happened at the Walmart in Michigan
use a gun, used a knife where the knife control
advocates right, what do you do? What do you do there?

(01:23:17):
Think about how many knives you have in your kitchen,
from the butter knife to the tableware knife, to the
cutlery that you use for steaks, to the knives you
use to prepare meals to the chef's knife. Think about
how many knives. All of them are weapons, all of them.

(01:23:42):
Wait a fork? Kill someone with a fork, be a
little tougher. You can do it, and I can feel
the email coming about. You can do it with a
spoon too. Look, these shootings point a couple of things out.

(01:24:06):
The one in Nevada that happened yesterday morning. Police were
there within minutes. I'm not mad at them. Police. They're
a reactive force. Rare conditions and circumstances. Can police law
enforcement be a preventative force? They are a reactive force.

(01:24:27):
I'm not mad about that. I'm just illustrating and underscoring
and highlighting within minutes, within minutes, it's too late. That
is a small portion of why the Second Amendment exists. Small,
but it's for that purpose, so that you and I

(01:24:51):
can protect one another and ourselves. Forty one minutes.

Speaker 3 (01:24:55):
Past decades of doing morning drive radio differently, doing it
his way like old Blue Eyes, except he has a
little more hair.

Speaker 1 (01:25:11):
The Morning Show with Preston Scott.

Speaker 4 (01:25:25):
Let me taste something. Trees give their all for this show.

Speaker 1 (01:25:31):
I can't believe that much I print. You can't believe
much I read, I uh it is. It is impractical
for me to do it any other way, Okay. According
to a lawsuit, Layla, fourteen year old cat, died on

(01:25:59):
August even last year following a battle with heart disease,
But Lauren and Lombardi said in her federal's civil complaint
that it was the Blue Angels doing flyovers that led

(01:26:26):
to her cat's death. That the final days of the
cat in Seattle were spent in terror. Her word, her word, terror.
She wrote on the Instagram account last year, stop with
your bleeping bull bleeping you are terrorizing my cat and

(01:26:49):
all other animals and wildlife. Nobody gives a bleep about
your stupid little plains, and she posted a picture of
her cat wearing a ballerina outfit. Miss Lombardi has some

(01:27:17):
issues and it's not the loss of her cat. Blue
Angels blocked her from their social media account. Her cat
had heart disease, had been fighting it, but it's the

(01:27:40):
Blue Angel's fault. She put in her lawsuit that she
put thick blankets in the windows and physically put her
hands over Layla's ears to no avail, as the cat's
walnut sized brain was stricken by pure debilitating terror. Even

(01:28:05):
though her cat was heavily sedated, her primitive limbic system
overruled her medication as she fled in primal panic beneath furniture,
her labored breathing escalating to clinically dangerous levels. Wrote her attorney,

(01:28:34):
Oh my, I I got nothing. Forty six minutes past
the hour. What a world? Huh?

Speaker 3 (01:28:48):
What a world?

Speaker 1 (01:28:58):
Hey? Some PSAs here real quickly. If you happen to
know of any businesses hiring work from home type. Somebody
reached out to me and is got a couple kids
and wants to try to work from home to be

(01:29:19):
able to be home with the kids. Just looking for
some temp work make a few bucks. Let me know.
I've put out a few feelers through some people I know,
but I just figured why not Preston at iHeartRadio dot
com let me know. Maybe you're hiring people to work
from home remote work. I don't know, sales something. Dairy

(01:29:43):
Queen Treat Day, Miracle Treat Day coming close. Not tomorrow,
but it's Thursday. Thursday is Miracle Treat Day. Participating dairy queens,
it should be all of them are donating a dollar
or or to the Children's Miracle Network Hospitals for every
blizzard purchased. Come on, come on, buy some wizards by

(01:30:08):
like ten, freeze them and then just pull them out,
let them soften a little bit. There you go, put
them in the freezer, just ten of them, get one
of each flavor. How about that. iHeart Thank a teacher.
Multiple five thousand dollars grants are going to teachers across

(01:30:29):
the country, but you have to nominate. Nominate a great teacher,
somebody that you know, your kid's teacher. I mean, we
all remember a teacher that made a huge difference in
our life. I've got I mentioned this when I first
talked about this last week. There are so many teachers
that I remember from my days in school. That's how

(01:30:51):
positive of an impact they made in my life. Mister Keasley,
Missus Johnson, mister Miller, mister Jones, mister Goddard, I mean,
and then the one Jerry Dawson. It's just it's mister Mahallack,

(01:31:13):
Ms Trimble, I mean, I mister Henley. I'm just remembering
teachers that I remember because they were great, it was awesome,
had a great time. Just go to iHeart dot com
slash Teachers and nominated teacher, Nominate a great teacher. You
never know. Five thousand dollars that would go to supplies

(01:31:38):
in the classroom courtesy of donors choose which work with
us at iHeartRadio, and they're turning loose some cash to help.
That's pretty cool.

Speaker 3 (01:31:48):
Brought to you by Barono Heating and Air. It's the
Morning show on WFLA.

Speaker 1 (01:31:57):
Today was a brilliant devotional because God gave me a
really cool way to explain the importance of following Jesus,
to define it, to describe it, and our verse today

(01:32:18):
was John eight twelve, And so if you missed it,
check out the beginning of the podcast. You just have
to listen the first five minutes of the show and
you'll you'll get the devotional big stories in the press box,
five dead, including a police officer and the shooter in
a Manhattan office building shooting another one an executive at

(01:32:41):
Black Rock. Apparently I understand that in that building is
also the headquarters for the NFL National Football League, not
that that matters any more than any of the other businesses,
but we pointed out the ridiculousness of the Democrat hand
wrangling about you know, we need they didn't stop the

(01:33:03):
guy from crossing state borders. I looked it up. New
York doesn't allow, it doesn't recognize any other permits. It
didn't matter. It didn't matter. Shooting in a casino in Reno, Nevada.
Lives have been lost. Police got there within minutes, within minutes.

(01:33:28):
You get the point. Personal defense. I'm just telling you.
Had another great visit with Kat Camick Us, congresswoman from Florida.
She's just a delight. Just keep her in your prayers.
First baby, she and her husband, and very excited for them.
I think they're gonna be terrific parents. Introduced legislation, the

(01:33:52):
Truth in Women's Healthcare Act, shared what was behind that
covered a lot of other topics. Talked about California, talked
about Democrat men. Talked about Electual County school board chair.
She's a train wreck. Back tomorrow
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Special Summer Offer: Exclusively on Apple Podcasts, try our Dateline Premium subscription completely free for one month! With Dateline Premium, you get every episode ad-free plus exclusive bonus content.

The Breakfast Club

The Breakfast Club

The World's Most Dangerous Morning Show, The Breakfast Club, With DJ Envy, Jess Hilarious, And Charlamagne Tha God!

Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.