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August 4, 2025 93 mins
This is the full episode of The Morning Show with Preston Scott for Monday, August 4th.




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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:09):
With the Morning Show Band and singers. Welcome to the
Morning Show with Prestin Scott. How are your friends? It's Monday,
August fourth, show, fifty four to twenty three, and I'm
just going to tell you right now if you decide
to hit the snooze button and just sleep it a
little longer, because by golly, it's it's just gonna be

(00:33):
that kind of week. I mean, this is a week
where you're gonna have to fight to stay awake because
it's gonna be cloudy and rainy through the region all
week long. It's like forty sixty eighty percent chance of
rain every day, every day. Oh my goodness, I mean,

(00:57):
would I need to just stop? I'm just saying I
won't be offended if you decide to just hit the
button and not off for a while longer. All right,
I get it, I get it. He's joseh I'm Preston.
He's wearing a shark hat today. I have no idea
what causes him to put that on, but he's wearing it.

(01:18):
We go to Matthew four. I want to take some
time and look into this event, inspired in part by
Jose's decision to spend some time fasting, and it's the
temptation of Jesus, it says in Matthew four to one.
Then Jesus was led up by the spirit into the

(01:40):
wilderness to be tempted by the devil. Can I pause
for a second. The devil is not the adversary of
God in the sense that they're like coequals. Oh no, no,
no no, It's not like, well, there's God and there's Satan.
No no, no. Michael the archangel and Satan. Satan's an angel.
He's a creative. He just chose. God gave them free will.

(02:04):
God gave angels free will. Satan was like, yeah, I
can be just like you. I can be you heavy
lie of the crown. Anyway, he he's in a position
of testing Jesus. After fasting forty days and forty nights,
Jesus was hungry. The tempter came to him and said,

(02:26):
if you are the son of God, command these stones
to become loaves of bread. Jesus said, it is written,
man shall not live by bread alone, but by every
word that comes from the mouth of God. Satan always
twists and perverts God's word and God's principles, and the

(02:49):
best way to answer him is quoting God's word. He
was dealing with the son of God. The word of
God in the flesh. Didn't work out real well for him,
but it would work out really well for you, to
know scripture quote it in times of testing. Ten past

(03:13):
the hour, The Morning Show with Preston Scott is underway,
all right, early risers in and around Panama City, Panama City, Beach,
Bay County, the surrounding area. Hi, still crazy after all

(03:37):
these years. No, I'm not channeling Paul Simon. It's the
Morning Show. I'm Preston And at this time in the program,
we always take a dive into American history through the
American Patriots Almanac. It is for some of you who
are always interested this one. I probably ought to see
if there's a new version, although I would lose all
of my notes because I write notes in sometimes on

(04:00):
some of this stuff. And there's just something charming about
a book held together by tape. I can't explain it.
It's like, Okay, that's been used. It's like when you
have a Bible that you've studied since forever, how can
you get rid of that? How can you get rid

(04:22):
of the highlighted parts and the notes that's not to
say it's like I've got six Bibles, all with a
different point of emphasis. An Apologetics Bible, a Hebrew Greek Bible,
I've got different Young's Literal Translation Bible. I've got an
NIV Study Bible, I use, an ESV I've got I mean,

(04:44):
but there's that one that you have used for years. Man,
you can't get rid of it. I can't get rid
of this. It is August third, fourteen ninety two. Christopher
Columbus sails from Polo, Spain with the Nina Pinta and
the Maria on his famous journey to find the Western
route to the Indies. He didn't isn't that interesting? It

(05:11):
was a failed mission that became an incredible success. He
was trying to find the western route to the Indies,
and he ends up sailing and finding something else. It happens.

(05:37):
Mistakes oftentimes yield incredible results. So don't just throw you know,
something away. Abraham Lincoln elected to the US House on
this date in eighteen forty six. Eighteen fifty two. Six
years later, America's first intercollegiate athletic event really from Yale

(06:00):
and Harvard Race on Lake Winnipesauke sounds good to me,
Center Harbor, New Hampshire. So the first collegiate event for sports.
Intercollegiate event was rowing. All right. Nineteen twenty three, Calvin

(06:21):
Coolidge sworn in as thirtieth US president following the death
Warren G. Harding. Nineteen fifty eight, submarine Nautilus becomes the
first vessel to reach the North Pole in an enclosed
vessel under the ocean, under sheets of ice. Did they

(06:43):
I think they just like poked a hole through somehow
periscope went up. I don't know. I want to say,
there's I've seen pictures anyway. I don't know how you
get pictures of it, but they did. And then and
then there's this not much National Coast Guard. So for
those of you that serve, thank you. Those of you

(07:04):
that have served, thank you. I am absolutely in agreement
with the idea of making it an equal branch of
our military. You're guarding our coast, come on, heck yeah.
And then this, you know, it's food related. I get
a little misty eyed, my voice becomes a little shallower

(07:33):
with a breath. All right, it is National chocolate chip
cookie Day. M m hm, oh my yeah, we just
I gotta stop right there, or I will be in
the commissary in a minute with my my debit card.

(07:54):
I don't even know if they have chocolate cookies, but
I wouldn't buy them from that because they wouldn't be
the same as good for fresh baked chocolate chip cookies.
Sixteen minutes past the hour, come back with it? Did
you know? And some interesting news of biblical archaeology is

(08:19):
bringing it all right? Did you know Chicago Mayor Richard
Daily Richard J. Daily, gifted eighteen bluegills, the Illinois state fish,
to the Crown Prince of Japan in nineteen sixty. By

(08:39):
the way, that Richard Daily maybe one of the most
corrupt politicians ever, but hey offered eighteen Illinois state fish,
blue gills, to the Crown Prince of Japan in nineteen sixty.
Once in Japan, the bluegills spread and became an invasive species.

(09:04):
You're welcome, callie. What a goober of a gift. Maybe
maybe look into that before you hand that one out,
just saying it's like it's like handing out a you know,
here's a gift, a little something, you know, at the
ladies luncheon, and you're giving them a little moisturizer cream

(09:25):
that causes rashes. Enjoy. All right, this is great now.
I the story that I pulled was a little cluttered,
so I had to do a little digging pun intended.
This is an archaeological story. You're welcome anyway digging. Get it, Archaela.

(09:49):
Here's the headline arc of the Covenant, mystery blown wide
open as biblical relic is discovered. Now we're not talking
about the arc. They still don't know where that is,
although we know where it is. It's in a warehouse
in Washington, DC, in a box. Okay, we know this.
We've seen the movie. Doctor Scott Striplan, director of the

(10:15):
Tel Shiloh dig telling CBN Christian Broadcasting Network, we've uncovered
a monumental building from the Iron One period that matches
the Biblical dimensions of the Tabernacle. The structure is oriented

(10:36):
east west, divided two to one ratio, just as described
in scripture. Here's what's crazy. Okay, First of all, it's
easy to get a little confused here. The Tabernacle is
the mobile version of the temple. They could pack it
up and move it. The assumption here is that it

(11:00):
had a somewhat permanent location for about four centuries prior
to Solomon building his temple in Jerusalem. Here's what makes
this incredible. Not only have they found what they believe
are the outer walls to a more permanent tabernacle. It

(11:23):
wasn't like the full blown temple. They were stone walls
and all of that, but it wasn't like finely crafted
et cetera. They found it divided into two areas, which
would fit the need for an outer court and the
inner Holy of Holies or most holy place, where you
would have the only the chief high priest could go,

(11:44):
and that's where the ark of the Covenant would be kept.
But here's what else they found. In one location, they
found over one hundred thousand animal bones sheep, goats, and cattle,
and pretty dominantly from the right side of the animal,
which aligns with Leviticus seven. See Leviticus seven states that

(12:09):
the right side of the animal is what is reserved
for a priestly offering or sacrifice. So everything that they're
finding reinforces the Biblical account of the Tabernacle of levitical
sacrifice of the story of the Bible, once again illustrating

(12:30):
that the Bible is history. It is not just a
book of faith. It is a book of history reliable
in that, and it is that reliability. I'm convinced that's
why Jesus said, you can love God with your mind.
It's not just a matter of faith. And Jesus knew
Old Testament scriptures. He was the word anyway. He knew right.

(12:55):
He's dropping Old Testament bombs on Satan in the Mount
of Temptation. He's teaching with the Old Testament firmly at
the root of all of his parables. In one form
or another, He's pulling right out of the Old Testament
throughout his ministry life. Shiloh is located in the hill

(13:17):
country of Ephraim, described in the Bible as Israel's first
major religious center. Here's another thing that's fascinating about this.
This is when Eli, the high priest, presided over the Tabernacle,
and in First Samuel four, the Israelites were in a
war with the Philistines. They bring the ark to the
battlefield and the hope of securing favor, mistake. It backfires

(13:40):
when the Philistines capture the Ark. Eli's sons, Hoffani and
Phineas are killed. When a messenger brings word of the defeat,
back to Shiloh Eli, ninety eight years old, nearly blind.
Here's that the ark had been taken. He falls backward
from his seat, breaks his neck, and dies. Doctor Stripling

(14:06):
believes they have found the actual gait where Eli died,
the specific location. So yeah, how about that once again, archaeology.
We're digging up stuff that proves the Bible. Twenty eight
minutes after that, I don't need it, but it sure

(14:28):
doesn't hurt. Listening to the Mad Radio Network, you are
challenged to make a difference each and every day. Would
you do that for us? Please? Please, just a little
just try it, twid you.

Speaker 2 (14:45):
This is the Morning Show with Preston Scott.

Speaker 1 (14:55):
Be professional, be professional, talking to myself here, all right?
Thirty six minutes past. It's Monday, August fourth. It is
the Morning Show. He so osam Preston Show fifty four
to twenty three. Big stories in the press box. Briefly,
these are kind of boom boom boom kind of stories.

(15:15):
The President has ordered nuclear submarines moved into regions that
are well, let me just let me just kind of
quote the president here. This was in response to what's
being called provocative statements by the former Russian president now
the current deputy of Russia's Security Council. President said that

(15:42):
he's ordered two nuclear subs to be positioned in the
appropriate regions just in case these foolish and inflammatory statements
are more than just that. Dmitriy Medvedev, you may remember him,
putin quietly said, I think it will be president too.

Speaker 3 (16:04):
So you step aside. They will make you a good boy,
They will give you a good job.

Speaker 1 (16:15):
Trump. You may recall last week upset with Russia's continued
bombardment of keV and which some call Kiev whatever, and
he said, okay, the window for getting something done here
has gone from fifty days to ten. Well, he kind

(16:36):
of got fed up, and he said, I don't care
what India does with Russia. They can take their dead
economies down together for all I care. We've done very
little business with India. Their tariffs are too high, among
the highest in the world. He said that the United
States and Russia almost do no business together, and he
told Medvedev watch his words, because they are entering into

(16:58):
very dangerous territory. Medvedev criticized Trump for making ultimatums to
the Kremlin.

Speaker 3 (17:04):
Trump's playing the ultimate game with Russia fifty days or ten.
He should remember two things. One, Russia isn't I Isileel
or even Iran. Two with each new ultimatum is a
threat and a step towards war, not between Russia and Ukraine,
but with his own country.

Speaker 1 (17:22):
Oh really, okay, all right, sport So yeah, I mean, look,
the Russia Ukraine thing is a train wreck. Ukraine is
demanding a cease fire. Russia saying why we have the advantage.
We want an agreed settlement. They want the territory down

(17:45):
in the south. This is what it is. That's what
they want. Get this a USDA employee, United States Department
of Agriculture, and five there stole sixty six million dollars
in food stamp benefits. The fraud ring in New York.

(18:07):
I'll tell you about more. I'll tell you about the
specifics of it next hour. Once again government official. Her job, ironically,
was to stop food stamp fraud or LASSA. Davis. She
didn't stop it. She engaged in it. She's in twelve.

(18:30):
And then there's this. An appeals court, the Ninth Circuit
of Appeals, has said that the President is likely to
prevail in removing union bargaining status from some employees in

(18:55):
national security. President wanted to end collect to bargaining for
employees of national of government agencies with national security missions,
and the court is finding yeah, so we'll see where
this goes. The bottom line the court found, just to simplify,
is yeah, national security gives the president some leeway. If

(19:17):
he hasn't doesn't have confidence in what's going on, so
be it. He can make changes. There you go, Yeah, duh,
forty minutes after the hour, got some sound for you
to hear. Some of you will love it more than others.

(19:42):
I just jettisoned a gazillion packets of those toast cheese crackers,
the cheese crackers with peanut butter. I got addicted to
stuff like that. When I was a kid. We would
make roadies and my mom would always make She'd take

(20:03):
Ritz crackers and she would she would put peanut butter
in between them, and she would make these these giant
sets of them, and you'd just munch on them all
the way on your road trip. They were incredible. And
then Ritz finally got smart and made their own. But
Lance is another brand out there that makes these different
kinds of cheese crackers and peanut butter crackers and different things.

(20:26):
And I made the mistake of buying this batch of Walmart.
And it's like you can almost now having tried three
of the crackers of the first package and going oh no, no, no, no.
I mean, I wouldn't give them to my worst enemy.
And I can imagine how it happened. Some dude finds

(20:50):
a box in the corner of the storage area.

Speaker 4 (20:54):
He's like, oh, what's this silver here? Oh, there's some
lance toast cheese. I guess we better put them out.

Speaker 1 (21:03):
Did you look at the date?

Speaker 4 (21:06):
Well, yeah, I mean, what's a few years. They've never
been opened.

Speaker 1 (21:14):
And oh my just I took a bite into it,
and it's like the when when the cracker, it's like
when you if you've ever had oreos that stayed in
the cab in the in the drawer of the cabinet
too long. After a while, no matter how well you
seal them, they get soft. They kind of get soft.
They're not crunchy when you bite into it. They don't.

(21:35):
The cookie doesn't break crackers. When crackers are kind of pliable,
like you can sort of bend them a little bit.
Not good. And so I made the mistake of biting
into it even though they just felt different. Yeah. No, no, no, no, no, no,
no no no. All right for this, I said I

(21:56):
had some sound that some will like hearing more than others. Uh.
This is Harry Anton. He is the senior political data
reporter for CNN, their data guru. He is on CNN
News Central with host Katie Budowan. And they're talking about

(22:17):
Colbert's appearance and or rather Kamala Harris's appearance on Stephen Colbert.
And you know what, where's the Democrat Party? Since she's
not going to run, where's the party? There is no
front runner?

Speaker 2 (22:32):
Is that?

Speaker 5 (22:33):
What do you think is that because how people view
the Democratic Party right now? Is that contributing to this?

Speaker 1 (22:39):
Yeah?

Speaker 6 (22:39):
I think that that is in large part of what's
going on. Is one of the reasons why there is
no front runner, nobody wants to put anybody up at
the top of their ballot list is because at this
particular point, the Democratic brand is in the basement. It
is total and complete garbage in the mind of the
American public. The Democratic Party's net fabrul rating.

Speaker 1 (22:56):
Record lows and all three Wall Street.

Speaker 6 (22:58):
Journal thirty points on the water CNN twenty six points
underwater gallop twenty six points underwater. And that is being
driven in large pop by discontent within the Democratic base.
The Democratic base wants something different, will ultimately end up
seeing who they choose.

Speaker 1 (23:13):
It'll be quite the thing who ultimately gets the roads.
Here's what's interesting, he said, messier than the hoarder's basement,
referring to the Dems. Here's what I want. I want
to circle in on the Democratic base wants something different.
Who's out front now, the Bernie Sanders, the Alexandricasu Cortez,

(23:44):
the uber lefties. Let's go back. The Democrat base wants
something different. I don't think it's the extreme left, or
they'd be jumping on these people. They're not. They don't
want that. They recognize what a train wreck that is
for the economy. I don't know if you've noticed you

(24:08):
Democrats listening to the program, and I know you're out there.
A lot of Trump's policies are well liked by Democrats.
They don't want to they'll never admit it ever. Immigration check,
tariffs check. I mean, you got Bill Maher out there saying, yeah,

(24:29):
I was wrong, We're not killing the economy. I was
completely wrong. Well, I'm just saying, this is fascinating to
watch the implosion of the Dems. It also explains how
quiet things have gotten here in Florida's capitol City, which
is one of the last Democrats strongholds in the state

(24:51):
of Florida. And so I love being here, absolutely love it.

Speaker 4 (24:55):
But you don't have any representation. Preston, Yeah, I don't.

Speaker 1 (25:01):
I get to just watch them just train wreck all
over the place all the time, over and over and over,
forty seven minutes after the hour, it's the morning show. Hey,

(25:22):
don't forget Now, we are taking nominations for great teachers
to win a five thousand dollars grant to purchase school
supplies courtesy of our partners at Donors Choose public school
teachers the iHeartRadio Thank a Teacher campaign. So go to
iHeartRadio dot com slash teachers, iHeartRadio dot com slash teachers

(25:44):
and nominate a great teacher. You might be saying, and
then a little early school hasn't started. No, no, no, no, no,
you know, you know, you know, maybe you need to
wait a week or so, But that's up to you.
I'm just saying, nominate, Okay, get involved, do it. It
has been pointed out to me by the lead research
assistant of the radio program that I committed a gfaw.

(26:05):
That's right, a mistake was made, and so our history
segment once again for the correct date. August the fourth.
I had see. I thought I was going to outsmart myself.
I had paper clipped over through the weekend, and I

(26:26):
went straight to the left side of the page. And
the left side of the page. I mean, I've got
it on my rundown. It's Monday, August fourth. I'm an idiot.
So August fourth. In History, seventeen thirty five, An important
case for the freedom of the press, John Peters Zinger,
publisher of the New York Weekly Journal, is acquitted of

(26:47):
charges of libel against Governor William Cosby. Hear that Governor
Bill Cosby just saying seventeen to ninety Congress establishes revenue
cutter service, later to become the Why would the revenue
cutter service that would eventually be the US Coast Guard

(27:11):
revenue revenue Cutter. It's just it's interesting. Nineteen fourteen, Hoping
to avoid conflict, President World War would Row Wilson declares
US neutrality as World War One begins, that didn't work,
and in nineteen sixteen the US purchases the Danish West
Indies now the US Virgin Islands for twenty five dollars.

(27:34):
Obviously no twenty five million dollars, but still when you
think about it, not bad, not bad at all. You wonder, Okay,
Columbus is trying to find the West Indies, right, That's
that's what started yesterday. He started set sail yesterday in

(27:57):
history in fourteen ninety two, sailing the Ocean blue. So
the West Indies now the US Virgin Islands. Is that
so we can now say that Columbus discovered America because
we own it. I don't know, I'm just being stupid.
When we come back, we're gonna get you healthier. I

(28:18):
spent a little bit just a wee segment last week
talking about the ten thousand steps a day thing not needed.
You can cut that number down by thirty percent. We're
going to get into the reasons why getting some steps
in matters. And it's not just the weight we're carrying around,
it's other things as well. We're gonna get to that

(28:41):
get you healthier Monday here on the Morning Show with
Crustin Scott.

Speaker 7 (28:46):
Our two is next five.

Speaker 1 (29:04):
Minutes past our second hour here on Monday, August dot four,
on the Morning Show with Preston Scott, I inadvertently started
the show by doing the August third History Day. I
just yeah, anyway, I said it was August fourth to
start the show. I'm staring at it and I said

(29:25):
August third. Whatever, Okay, now that that's behind us. Now,
my thanks to the lead research assistant for saying it's
the it's the fourth. Oh yeah. We talked last week
about the study that revealed I mean it's not the study,

(29:49):
it's the study of fifty seven studies, a fifty seven studies,
ten countries. Because we've always heard ten thousand steps is
the goal, ten thousand steps a day, and people have
watches that what if you don't move your arms very much?
I mean, those things are kind of bogus, just they are.

(30:14):
Sometimes they read your steps and it's based on you're
supposed to be moving your arm, and it then it's
counting steps based on arm movements. So you could just
sit there at your desk and cheat and go back
and forth. And people do that, you know, to try
to just kind of convince themselves that they're you know,
getting some exercise. University of Sydney conducted the review of

(30:37):
fifty seven studies and they looked at how different daily
step counts impacted the risk of dying from heart disease
and cancer, the risk of developing cancer, type two diabetes, dementia,
and depression. And they found that walking seven thousand steps

(30:58):
a day was linked to improvement in eight major health outcomes,
including heart disease, dementia, and depression. I want you to
consider the breadth of that. There's something about getting at

(31:20):
least seven thousand steps in a day that limits your
risks in those categories, among others. Even an increase of
four thousand steps to getting to four thousand steps delivers

(31:42):
health benefits. If you target seven thousand, it reduce the
risks of a lot of chronic diseases and health outcomes
dramatically if you can get to seven. But here's the thing,
and this is something we've talked about with doctor Harts,

(32:02):
doctor Zadamen, doctor Camps, and there's an overlap in that.
You know, over the years, doctor Camps has talked more
and more about we're over medicated as a culture because
we it's become really well accepted that traditional medicine targets symptoms,

(32:28):
it does not address causation. Alternative based healthcare causes cause, sorry,
focuses on causes and delivers targeted nutrients that your body
for whatever the reason, your diet, the foods that we

(32:49):
eat now are just lacking some of the nutritional value
they used to have. And so you determined through targeted
testing what news you specifically need in your body. But
they've all said the same thing. Start small, slow, but

(33:16):
start now. I'm gonna challenge you in a very specific
set of ways here in a second, because I'm challenging myself,
and so we're gonna get to more of this seven
thousand steps, Start small, how do we get there? And

(33:39):
some things to think about doing and doing differently so
we'll get there. Ten past the hour, Look at weather
in traffic. Stay with me. We're gonna get healthier.

Speaker 2 (33:51):
I do what you're talking about, what you will be
talking and most importantly, what you should be talking about.
It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott.

Speaker 1 (34:10):
If you go from two thousand steps a day to
four thousand, you make a massive jump in health outcomes.
Four thousand incrementally up to seven thousand. You make another

(34:33):
massive jump. Seven thousand to ten thousand really not much.
There's very little gain from seven thousand to ten thousand.
Now the word here from the study and those who
have studied this studies. If you're at ten thousand steps
or more a day, stay with it, that's your routine.

(34:53):
Do it. You're getting a more benefit than someone doing
seven thousand. It's not getting as much more benefit. You're
getting a little, but seven thousand is the mark that
the again fifty seven studies, ten countries shows that seven

(35:16):
thousand steps is the mark you get to that you
are really making a difference in your outcome. The key
I think for anything, at least I've ever done, and
some people are different, and I understand that I'm using

(35:37):
me as a great example of just one one perspective. Okay,
I told I told my wife, I said, I am,
I'm going to be getting a new golf bag for
two reasons. Number one, my other one's breaking because I've
used it a lot and it's just straps are breaking

(35:57):
and stuff and time to replace it. And it's heavy.
It's not like a full tour bag. It's just it's
still heavy though, And I want to when the weather
cools a little bit. I'm not stupid. I'm not doing
it in this time of year, but I'm going to
start walking the golf course. I will walk at least

(36:20):
nine holes when I play, because I know that it's beneficial.
Plus I love walking a golf course. I love playing
and walking. I was so spoiled as a kid. My
dad loved to walk the golf course whenever possible, and

(36:40):
the buddies he would play with they walk the golf course,
and they hired caddies. The golf courses had caddies, and embarrassingly,
my dad would hire a caddy to carry my clubs
when I was a kid, and so I got used
to walking the golf course and playing golf as a
kid with someone carrying my clubs. Now, when I played

(37:02):
competitive golf, I carried my own bag. And any anyone
who's ever played golf as a junior or you know,
high school player or whatever, you carry your own bag. Today.
Some put them on little carts and some have motorized
car follow me carts, and I would I would absolutely
love to do that. But here's my point. I'm doing

(37:23):
something to expand my walking. I hate running. I've hated
running since I was a kid, I could run. I
hated doing it. I was the guy that when it
was basketball season, I got sick. For the first week
I worked myself into shape. I did not I did

(37:46):
not run and stay in cha I played basketball. But
when it was time for the season to start, I
got sick for the first week. After every practice it
was just like, ah, this is this, this sucks. And
then you were fine. But the idea of just running
to run nauseates me. To those that can do that,
good on you, do not invite me. I will say no, no,

(38:09):
not gonna do it. But walking, even though it bores
me to walk like the same neighborhood all the time,
walking a golf course is very different to me. Love
it now. I will walk the neighborhood. My wife and
I took a few walks last year. And you know,
if I'll walk it because if I'm with her, Okay,

(38:32):
we're we're together, we're talking and and I'm good at
being with my sweetheart. But anyway, here's my challenge to
you do something if you're not even getting two thousand
steps in a day, and things you can do is
you can park your car further away in the parking lot,
walk walk further. So you push your card from the

(38:57):
grocery store out to the very end of the parking lot. Okay,
so you got lots of steps in, lots of steps out,
and then lots of steps back to put your cart
into the cart corral, and then lots of steps. You
see what I'm saying. There are little things you can
do to help yourself. Get those. Get to two thousand,
and then get to three thousand, then get to four thousand.

(39:19):
All of a sudden, you're now, okay, this is good.
The trick is finding something to do when you're not
in your daily routine Monday through Friday. What do you
do on the weekends to maintain that's your trick. You
got to figure that one out. But I'm challenging it.
I'm challenging you to do it. Major outcomes, not just

(39:42):
physically but mentally. That is big, So go for it.
Seventeen minutes past the hour, New York Times in the
timeout corner again. New York Times once again has embarrassed itself,

(40:10):
and a friend of the program formerly still again in
the news media, but just not working for gun At
sent me this note, and as I looked at the story,

(40:31):
I was just dumbfounded. Front page, front page of the
New York Times. They show a photo of a woman
holding this emaciated child. And it's a real child. It's
a real photo. It's not Ai at all. But the

(40:57):
New York Times was trying to suggest with this photo
how they're starving to death in Gaza, and then they

(41:18):
had to walk it back because they showed this image
that is provocative without pointing out that the child actually
suffers from a genetic disorder, a version of cerebral palsy

(41:38):
that it has lived with since birth that keeps the
child from being able to basically swallow food. It had
nothing to do with Israel. It had nothing to do
with starvation. In fact, the mother of the child and
the brother of the child are being fed quite regularly

(41:58):
and quite well. Again, Israel is providing humanitarian assistance and food,
Hamas is frequently hijacking all of it and keeping it
and selling it on the black market to fund its war.
Here's the problem, and it's been pointed out all over them.

(42:23):
I've looked at an op ed in the Jerusalem Post.
To quote the op ed from the Jerusalem Post written
by Zevika Klein, a lie can circle the globe while
the truth is still putting on its shoes. You see,
they push this out in the front page paper with

(42:45):
fifty five million subscribers. Now why anyone would subscribe to
that piece of crap? I have no idea, no idea.
When someone sends me a link to a New York
Times article, I'm not paying for it. If it's a merit,

(43:06):
if it has any value, it'll be sourced in other places.
I'll get it. I'll get the gist of it elsewhere.
So when you hear me say a New York Times article,
it's because it was quoted by somebody else.

Speaker 4 (43:17):
I don't care.

Speaker 1 (43:18):
I don't. I'm not supporting that. My money is not
going to them. It's not going to go to Gennet.
They have they have, they have shirked their responsibility of
being a trustworthy friend of citizens of this country. They're

(43:41):
not to be trusted and so, and it's not just me,
it's it's not just people like me that are saying that.
Look at what's happening. Gannett's cutting another one hundred million
dollars in payroll. They're buying out people, They're they're cutting,
they're shuddering. They're printing facilities. They're in a free fall.

(44:07):
It's because people don't trust them, and why because of
stories like this in The New York Times. It's not
a Gannett publication, but it's representative of the industry because
the Time sets the pace for the industry in many regards.
So think about this. Fifty five million people see this
headline and it's the picture is horrifying. It is. Your

(44:34):
heart breaks for this child. Except it's not starvation because
they're being starved. It's starvation because of his disorder, which
God bless him. But here's the thing the retraction. Listen
to what it's said. This article has been updated to

(44:57):
include information about the child in Gaza suffering from severe malnutrition.
After publication of the article, the Times has learned from
his doctor that the child has a pre existing health problem.
That's it. Oh, by the way, that retraction, it didn't
go to fifty five million, It went to eighty nine

(45:22):
thousand on its pr account, front page, lie backpage retraction.
That is a standard game in the mainstream media that
they have used for years. And they wonder why they're
not trusted. How can you trust them? The only good

(45:49):
News is that the mainstream media is really largely responsible
for the creation of Rush. Limbaugh. Had Rush not had
the mainstream media to correct on a daily basis, hour
by hour, he largely wouldn't have had the following. So

(46:11):
in a way we can thank the media for Rush.
Russian turn gave birth the Fox News because Fox News
doesn't exist if they don't think that there's an audience
for it. Rush proved there was an audience tens of
millions a week. Fox News said, oh, okay, we'll go
for it. The rest is history shows like this across

(46:33):
the country. Rush why because the mainstream media wasn't trusted.
Twenty nine minutes after the own tell you about that
USDA that was stealing money from you and me. Getting

(46:58):
a lot of comments on the seven thousand steps, including
a suggestion that we do a study of our own.
We'll get one hundred ruminators to agree to take part
in a challenge for two months. I don't know if
I want to work that hard. I don't mind steps,
but I don't know anyway. Good, I'm glad. I'm glad

(47:21):
it's inspiring. Some thought. USDA employee Arlasa Davis. Her job
was to stop food stamp fraud. Instead, she accepted bribes
allegedly and caused thirty six million dollars of fraud over
three years by sharing government data. The Department of Justice
has now charged six people for stealing over sixty six

(47:45):
million dollars in food stamps from the SNAP program in
late May, that's when the charges got hit. In twenty nineteen,
a guy named Michael Keo, along with four others and
Arlasa Davis with the USDA, conspired to pull this off.

(48:07):
He supplied one hundred and sixty unauthorized EBT terminals to
smoke shops and other ineligible stores across the New York
area to illegally process more than thirty million dollars in
EBT transactions. They submitted about two hundred fraudulent USDA applications,

(48:28):
misappropriating USDA license numbers and in some case doctoring application
documents in order to obtain EBT terminals for an authorized stores.
They sold hundreds of EBT license numbers, enabling over thirty
six million dollars in fraudulent SNAP redemptions at unauthorized stores.

(48:48):
Davis photographed lists of licensed numbers intended for qualifying stores,
texted them to someone who then sold them to co
conspirators who then used those license numbers to fraudulently obtain
terminals for stores which were not authorized by the USDA process.

(49:10):
This is one person in one part of New York
sixty six million dollars. What do you think is happening nationwide?

(49:32):
This is just one program. When the accusation is made, Oh,
Trump is just attacking poor people, medicate and snap it.
No no, no, no, no no. The Department of Justice
under Donald Trump is attacking fraud, waste, and abuse. Anyone

(49:56):
that should be receiving assistance will get a st asistance.
Another way to think about it is this is preserving
money for these very programs that then goes to people
who rightfully need it. The waste being found in Social

(50:18):
Security is to protect Social Security. Forty minutes past the hour,
I just part out right there.

Speaker 2 (50:38):
Consider him your truth detector. The Morning Show with Preston
Scott on News Radio one hundred point seven WUFLA.

Speaker 1 (50:57):
Music Officionados from the seventies and eighties know this is
It's a steely Dan kind of sound. You know what
I'm talking about? Cool fusion jazz online. I don't know.
I can't remember who sent this to me. It might
have been the lead research assistant. I don't know, but

(51:21):
I immediately grabbed it, saved it and want to play
it for you. This is from Instagram. This gentleman happens
to be black, and he decided to go on camera

(51:43):
to describe the difference between a white liberal and a
white conservative.

Speaker 5 (51:49):
You want to know the difference between a white liberal
and a white conservative. See white liberals, they try to
fight for us, meaning they try to think that we're
inferior and they think they're superior. They think we're brandless idiots.
They think we're stupid, like we don't know how to
think for ourselves. And then they get mad when we
have a different political view than they do. So now

(52:12):
they feel like they got to fight for us even
more to try to get us back on the Democratic plantation.
That's a white liberal, a white conservative, or a patriot,
whatever you want to call them. They're not gonna fight
for us, but they will fight beside us. They'll fight,
they'll stand side by side with us. We wann't know why,
because they don't see us as they're in fears. They

(52:34):
see us as a neighbor, they see us as a
human being. They see us as Americans. That's the difference
between a white liberal and a white conservative.

Speaker 1 (52:44):
Well, now, I've been saying that for twenty three years.
I've been living that all my life. You would be

(53:04):
astounded at the number of listeners to this program that
we have that happen to be black. Right now. They're like, Yeah,
that's exactly right. That's why I left the Democrat Party.
That's why the walk Away campaign. If you look at
it on YouTube, the number of people of color that

(53:31):
are black or brown, that have been taught for years
that conservatism is evil. They have fled the Democrat Party
because they've seen the truth. They've recognized that what Democrats

(53:52):
have done and maybe some initially through the best of intentions,
if I want to be generous, but I actually think
it was all about keeping a class of victims inside
this country that would be a reliable voting block. And

(54:14):
Donald Trump began eroding that voting block in Hispanic and
Black communities significantly. That is I mean, if you looked
at the comments on this on Instagram, what do you

(54:36):
say to that. At first, as I was playing, Jose
was kind of furrowing his brow. He wasn't sure if
this was a compliment or an attack. It was like,
oh okay, because when you first hear the words democrats
fighting for us, now they're fighting for you to keep

(54:57):
exactly where you are, blaming others, being a victim, staying oppressed,
keeping those menial jobs. Conservatives don't see color. We see people.

(55:20):
We see people who were born with rights given by God,
not a government with gifts and talents as unique as
we all are, that have every right to pursue those

(55:41):
gifts and talents to wherever they may lead them. But
the law of diminished expectations has got a grip on
too many minority communities. That's why I save that. I've
said it for twenty three years, but when someone who

(56:03):
happens to be black says it, maybe it'll be hurt
a little bit better by some I don't know. Forty
seven minutes after the album way, do you hear? What
happened to the guy wearing a Maga hat? No, it's
not a joke.

Speaker 2 (56:16):
This is The Morning Show with Preston Scott. This story is.

Speaker 1 (56:28):
Interesting. I watched the video of this encounter. For some reason,
dude goes to an MLS soccer game Saint Louis City
sc soccer match, and he's a season ticket holder, so
he's a supporter of the program. I mean, clearly, you

(56:48):
buy season tickets to anything, you support it. Now, the
MLS has rules on conduct items prohibited in stadium. Let
me read displaying sign symbols, images, using language, or making

(57:08):
gestures that are threatening, abusive, discriminatory, including on the basis
of race, ethnicity, national orange, religion, a national origin religion, gender,
gender identity, ability, and or sexual orientation. So no gender
identity stuff, right, okay. Next, next bullet point displaying sign

(57:30):
symbols or images for commercial purposes or for electioneering, campaigning,
or advocating for or against any candidate, political party, legislative issue,
or government action. Fair enough. It's their club, they're renting
the stadium. Maybe they own it. I don't know, but
they're rules. Okay, fair enough. He's wearing a Maga hat,

(57:53):
so in the video he's asked to take the hat
off and not wear it anymore, or he'll be asked
to leave the stadium. Now, the security guy claims that
he's a Trump fan himself. He understands, but rules or
rules shortly following behind him our law enforcement. He asked

(58:18):
this point and now again he violated the policies, fair enough,
but he pointed to all the Pride flags in the
stadium that people were waving, and he said, what about those?

(58:39):
So as he's escorted out, he said, so if I
take the hat off and I put it in my car,
I can come back in. The security guy said sure,
and the police said no, it's too late for that. Okay, okay,

(59:00):
it's it's been picked up by a couple of outlets.
MLS of course, is going to be called to account
for this or are they gonna dump this on the team.
So even though you know Saint Louis is a obscenely

(59:23):
left community and you can put all the rainbow flags
in the stadium, he won, I guess, but the one
MAGA hat is apparently way over the top. Can't do that.
I have a feeling that once again, we still haven't
learned that lesson that Michael Jordan pointed out when he

(59:44):
was asked why he's not jumping into the fray when
it Ferguson and all that stuff, and he said, Republicans
by sneakers too. And apparently there are still places that
have not figured out yet that being woke is not
going to help your bottom line. But the battle continues

(01:00:05):
when we come back the promised sharing of Obama, Soros
and Clinton. Oh my, if I passed the hour Monday,
August fourth, he is Jose. I am Preston, and it's

(01:00:28):
already the third hour of the Morning Show with Preston
Scott just us. Today we're just hanging out. Tomorrow, Hans
von Spakowsky will join us. We'll talk about the latest
session of the United States Supreme Court and what the
fall looks like as well. Some important cases are coming,
so we'll do a little look past, present, future with Hans,

(01:00:50):
who is a constitutional law expert and a very keen
observer and well educated on all things constitution. So that's
coming tomorrow. I wanted to make time to talk about
the nexus that we now know exists between Barack Obama,

(01:01:12):
Hillary Clinton, George Soros, and the attacks on Donald Trump
preceding and during his first term. We've talked about the

(01:01:33):
declassified annex of the twenty twenty three Durham Report. That's
some of what was in the burn bags in a
secret room in the FBI documents found by Cash Patel, which, oh,
by the way, the claim now is that all of
those documents are Russian disinformation created by the Ruskies. Yeah. Yeah,

(01:02:08):
they got all those documents inside those burn bags inside
the FBI, with all the signatures of all the key players.
So let's go into it a little bit. Here information
was released. This is related to the twenty sixteen election,
revealing al Hillary Clinton approved a plan from a campaign

(01:02:29):
advisor to smear then candidate Donald Trump. The idea, the
game of it all was Putin's support for Trump and
subsequently steering public opinion toward the notion that it needs
to equate the influence of the campaign from Putin with

(01:02:50):
interference with the election. It is vitally important as you
listen to the quotes from the documents that you remember
that that this came after questions were being raised about
Hillary Clinton's email scandal that has yet to be investigated,

(01:03:12):
classified documents on personal servers, personal laptops, pay to play.
I mean, you could just assemble the circumstantial evidence how
donations to the Clinton Foundation dried up and disappeared when
she left office and was not elected president gone, So

(01:03:37):
what did the mission change? Did the Clinton Foundation suddenly
lose its benevolent direction or was it in fact pay
to play all along inside the documents. These are documents
quote Clinton approved a play proposed by one of her

(01:03:59):
Foreign Policies advisors, Julian Smith, to smear Donald Trump by
magnifying the scandal tied to the intrusion by the Russian
Special services in the pre election process to benefit Republican candidate.
A translated draft memorandum stated, quote as envisioned by Smith,
raising the theme of Putin's support for Trump to the

(01:04:21):
level of the Olympics scandal would divert the constituent's attention
from the investigation of Clinton's compromised electronic correspondence. In addition,
it goes on by subsequently steering public opinion toward the
notion that it needs to equate Pump's Putin's efforts to
influence political processes in the United States via cyber space

(01:04:43):
to acts against a crucially important infrastructure resembling a national
power supply network would force the White House to use
more confrontational scenarios vis A VI. Moscow that as a
whole suits Clinton's line of conduct. The annex noted of
March twenty sixteen memorandum, which stated, in relation to the

(01:05:05):
consensus reached by the among the Democrat Party leadership regarding
the candidacy of Hillary Clinton. Barack Obama sanctioned the use
of all administrative levers to remove possibly negative effects of
the FBI investigation of cases related to the Clinton Foundation
and the email correspondence in the State Department. We're going

(01:05:28):
to pause right there at this moment. Now Clinton's approved
the plan. Obama has sensed the opportunity to stop any
investigation into Hillary and use this and then use the FBI,
the CIA, any agency he has control over. He's the president.
He has control over all of them at his disposal

(01:05:51):
to help that narrative. This is inside these reports that
we never knew about. Isn't that interesting? Oh, but we're
not done. Ten past the hour. It's The Morning Show
with Preston Scott. Twelve past the hour. No, we're not done.

(01:06:28):
Town Hall, Fox News, multiple outlets other than ABCNBCCBSC and
n MSNBC USA today they're not going to touch this story.
And I've told you, We've pointed out how quiet after
initially pushing back on Tulsa Gabbridge's release. Nothing to see here,

(01:06:50):
it's a distraction. Barack Obama's had nothing to say. Hillary
Clinton's had nothing to say. None of the principles have
had a thing to say. They're not organizing media appearances.
They're not trying to do anything other than sh Maybe

(01:07:12):
it'll go away from town Hall. Emails contained in a
newly declassified annex from former Special Council John Durham's investigation
into the origins of the Russian hoax show the Soros
Foundation was in on the development of the false Russia
collusion narrative against then presidential candidate Donald Trump. The appendix

(01:07:37):
notes that quote two of the apparently hacked emails appear
to have originated from the Open Society Foundations, with emails
allegedly written by former Open Society Foundations regional director Leonard Bernardo.
Listen to what he wrote allegedly the media, I want

(01:08:01):
you to pay attention. This is an outside organization, not
inside the government that apparently was in on it as well.
Were they funding it? Were they funding the money through
the Democrat National Committee, through the Clinton campaign? Remember Clinton's
campaign and the Democrat National Committee funded the Steele dossier.

(01:08:22):
They funded all of this. The media analysis on the
DNC hacking appears solid. It will be a long term
affair to demonize Putin and Trump. Now it is good
for a post convention bounce. He cites communication with then

(01:08:43):
Julia Smith, who he talked about. Later, the FBI will
put more oil into the fire. Hold on, hold on,
hold on, hold, hold on. We have an email here
that states, wait a minut it Barack Obama's using levers

(01:09:05):
at his disposal, meaning the FBI, the CIA. This guy
outside of government working for George Soros rights later, the
FBI will put more oil into the fire. Okay, what
does oil do? Smoke? When you pour oil into fire,

(01:09:27):
it smokes. Here's a guy who knows or is directing Obama.
He either knows what Obama's doing or is directing what
Obama's doing. Understand this. There is a massive tie between
Barack Obama and George Soros. Now it goes on. We'll

(01:09:47):
run this segment long if we need to. This should
distract people from her own missing email, especially if the
affair goes to the Olympic level. Wait, where did we
hear that term? We heard that term from the advisor
to Hillary Clinton, who is allegedly the brain of this

(01:10:09):
entire operation, who came up with the term first sorrows
or her it's in the same email. One's inside the government,
one's outside the government. You start connecting dots here, right
goes on. The point is making the Russian play a
US domestic issue, say something like a critical infrastructure threat

(01:10:34):
for the election to feel manic since both Potis and
Vpotus have acknowledged the fact, I see would speed up
searching for evidence that is regrettably still unavailable. There's no
evidence of anything that's regrettable, but we're going to do
it anyway. Friends, it's as dirty as it comes. It

(01:11:04):
is as dirty as it comes, and that's why the
silence on the other side. They're hoping it goes away.
We cannot let that happen because of it. Listen, if
it happened, it can happen again unless it's investigated in

(01:11:25):
front of everybody and people are held accountable. Yeah. I
think Barack Obama needs to have a trial. I think
Hillary Clinton needs to be standing trial. I think James Comy,
I think John Brennan, I think William Clapper, I think
Adam Schiff, I think Chuck Schumer. I think all these

(01:11:46):
people should be standing trial. Seventeen minutes past the album
and we come back, well, just stick around, all right.
If that doesn't cause you to go, h great, press

(01:12:07):
wait to start the week, maybe this will you gotta laugh.
You have to find a way to just circle back
and just lean into There's nothing going on right now

(01:12:31):
that is different than what's happened throughout time from the
fall of man. Sin. It's just sin, just is and
you have to push yourself to remain anchored, and it

(01:12:54):
is increasingly difficult listen to this. I have been a
long follower of the work of George Barna, now doctor
George Barna, Cultural Research Center at Arizona Christian University. I've
followed George since late nineteen eighties, early nineties, maybe early nineties.

(01:13:22):
I've been following his polling is researching on just snapshot.
Here we are looking at the state by state analysis
of the Biblical worldview of alleged people in America, not

(01:13:43):
alleged people, of people in America and some obviously alleged Christians.
I say alleged because how else do you reconcile that
only twelve point six percent of adults in Alabama have
a biblical worldview, and that is three times the national average.

(01:14:11):
The national average is four percent. There's a lot I
could pull out of this. Alabama, Mississippi, South Carolina top
of the list, Rhode Island, Maine, Massachusetts at the bottom.

(01:14:33):
South out paces the Northeast. Problem is that the South
is while they have more by number, by percentage, it's
being diluted by people moving to states that are traditionally
Bible Belt states. But these people don't have a biblical worldview.

(01:14:55):
So here's what I want you to step back and
just Okay, there is all this data. You can look
it up. You can find it. It's the Cultural Center,
Cultural Research Center, George Barna, It's the American Worldview Inventory
twenty twenty five. American Worldview Inventory twenty twenty five. It's
a breakdown. You can look it up. Maybe I'll just

(01:15:17):
I'll find it. I'll put it on our X page.
Here's what I want you to think about. Even though
it's a diminishing number, consider the percentage of Americans that
are attending church somewhere in this country on a weekly
maybe every other week. Basis right, four percent, four percent

(01:15:45):
of this country take what they're learning in church and
apply it as a biblical worldview. That is staggering. That
is a stunning indictment. Of how shallow the Body of

(01:16:08):
Christ is in its knowledge, understanding, and maybe most important
of all, application of God's word. This is as stinging
an indictment of the Body of Christ that you can categorically, numerically,

(01:16:28):
tangibly grab hold of that I've seen in a very
very long time. My hope is that by just discussing
it it offers some conviction I would tag on to it.

(01:16:50):
If you're not going to take God's word and apply
it to how you view the world, what's the point?
What do you? What do you? What do you believe?
What do we believe? Do we really believe it? It
doesn't matter enough to apply to how we look at

(01:17:13):
things day to day? Right, Sorry, maybe I just ought
to just talk about something else for us today twenty
eight minutes after the hour, or maybe not. Don't worry,

(01:17:37):
We're here to make it all better. There you go, Yes,
it's okay, Yes, this is the Morning Show with Preston
Scott thirty six minutes past. I'm just gonna kind of

(01:17:59):
stay with this discussion we were having in the last
segment while pointing out it's gonna be wet this week,
lots and lots of moisture, in the air and it's
going to be sticking around. And now I ran my
app and I'm not seeing much of a chance of
a disturbance developing in the next week to ten days.

(01:18:19):
But you just don't know, and it could happen very quickly.
So remember our advice on hurricanes, and you know, do
your planning. I'll try to post a few things, just
reminders of some lists and so forth to help you out.
But I went up and dug a little bit deeper

(01:18:40):
into George Barney's work and found that right now, the number,
on average, we're sitting at about forty percent of people
in this country attend church regularly. That's, in and of itself,
is really I mean, it's unsurprising, right, I mean, if

(01:19:01):
you look at what happens in culture, in in just
basic interactions and common courtesies, lacking whatever, it's like, yeah,
that makes sense. But if we just hold to forty percent,

(01:19:25):
and it could be off a little bit, but roughly
forty percent, ten percent of the people going to church
take what they're taught, what they read, what they study,
what they claim as their own, and apply it to
their life. On one hand, yeah, yeah, makes sense, it

(01:19:52):
fits and I want to just remind all of you,
and I recognize this comes off as being a little preachy,
but that's okay. It is a scary thing to get

(01:20:13):
used to a dark room unless you're in a remarkable
situation of total darkness, nothing, no ambient light source whatsoever.

(01:20:34):
Normally everyone you know, the cable box, the alarm clock,
a night light, your phone charging, something's providing, a little
crack under the door, a light on out in the
other part of the house, in the hallway, a light
outside the curtains outside. Your eyes adjust to the darkness,

(01:20:59):
and if you're in it just long enough, you can
move around the room. You might not identify blue from
black socks, but you can find socks. You can find
what you need. You can manage. But it's scary to
get to the point where you can you feel like
you can manage without hearing the still small voice of God,

(01:21:24):
the Holy Spirit speaking to you. Developing that skill set
is something you don't want to do. And sadly this
number four percent ten percent of the church attendance apply
God's word to their view of the world. That tells
me we have a lot of people that have grown

(01:21:45):
used to being in the dark, the light switch got
turned off. They don't apply it outside that church service.
They don't apply it on their way home from church.
They've gotten used to it. They've gotten very comfortable that
don't be there people forty minutes past the arm forty one,

(01:22:27):
forty two minutes past. I have no idea why I
was drawn to this story other than it made me
unbelievably sad. And it's not a story now, listen, listen.
It's not a story of you know, children being harmed

(01:22:48):
or anything like that. I mean that stuff obviously, it
moves us all. But the night before their wedding Charles
and Diana, Charles cried he didn't want to marry her,

(01:23:15):
and she knew it. He was in love with and
remained in love with his former who became his next
when Diana died or was killed in that car accident,

(01:23:45):
I don't know. Diana was reluctant about marrying Charles, but
was told by her sister it was too late. The
tea towels with their joint images were already being sold.
Listen to this. Charles was given cuff links with a

(01:24:08):
Camilla insignia, which he wore on the wedding day so
that she could be included. According to royal expert Ian
Pelham Turner, they both cried the night before they were married.

(01:24:41):
The the reason why this stood out to me is
I just thought, oh, how unbelievably representative that is of
two men marriages where one or the other knows, oh boy,

(01:25:10):
this could be trouble. But because they feel obligated due
to the ridiculousness that we have turned weddings into. And
we have the lists, the demands, the requests, the expense.

(01:25:38):
We have put so much financial pressure into weddings that
the idea of saying I'm sorry, we're not ready is unthinkable.
And so as I saw this story a it did
not surprise me. Given did you ever see a photo

(01:26:00):
where the both of them looked happy? I mean, maybe
there's a couple where they forced it, But I thought
how accurate it was at pointing to one of the
biggest problems with marriages in general. Now, I'm setting aside

(01:26:27):
God here for a second, in that I don't know
where any either of those two are. They didn't seem
to indicate any profound faith in God. But you know,
I think it's an invention of God. God is you know,
God's plan is for procreation is through marriage. That's the plan,

(01:26:52):
and I call it His invention. And so outside of God,
I think it's tough. But you look at the number
of Christian marriages that have dissolved. It just makes you think, right,
it just does. Forty seven minutes after the hour, come back.
We're gonna end with some good news. What do you think, Huh?

(01:27:12):
I'm gonna lift things up just a little bit, sort of.
Eleven years ago, Ford Motor Company employee Richard Guilford of
Michigan was working on a Ford edge when his wallet

(01:27:33):
fell out of his shirt pocket into the open hood
of the car. It was a while before he noticed
it was missing, and with two thousand cars on the
floor of the plant, he and his buddies at work
had to just they just gave up the hunt for
the wallet. That is until a few weeks ago. Get this,

(01:28:00):
years ago this happened. He got a Facebook message from
an auto mechanic in Minnesota. The shop owner, Chad Volg,
had removed the SUV's air box and was attempting to
put it back when he found the wallet sitting on
top of the transmission, just where it had fallen. Eleven
years and one hundred and fifty thousand miles ago. Pulled

(01:28:24):
the wallet, found Guilford's employee ID as well as fifteen
bucks and two hundred and fifty dollars in Kabella gift cards.
So he tracked him down and asked him if this
was his wallet? Yep? Did you find that in a car? Yep?
And so he returned the wallet. Talk about honor. See

(01:28:47):
look at that, Look at that now, I said, good
news sort of the fact that given Guyle a guy
his wallet back is is a newsworthy story tells you
how unusual it is, which shows how bad we suck

(01:29:11):
as people.

Speaker 2 (01:29:15):
Brought to you by Barono Heating and Air. It's the
morning show on WUFLA.

Speaker 1 (01:29:23):
No, it's a it's a it's a cute story, right,
I mean, it's if nothing else, it's unbelievable that that
wallet remained intact in there, not burned up, not falling out,
not destroyed eleven years. That's amazing. They built a good
a good car, right there, that one. That one good job. Tomorrow,

(01:29:46):
Hans von Spakovsky, the Heritage Foundation, we'll talk about the
Supreme Court recent rulings and rulings that will be coming,
the cases coming up in the fall that could play
a role in transforming this cuntry tree one way or
the other, good or bad. Big stories in the press box,
and appeals court allows Trump to end union bargaining for

(01:30:08):
some federal workers. It's a win. Talked about how a
USDA that's right at the United States Department of Agriculture
and employee named Arlasid Davis. She had one job to
stop food stamp fraud. Instead she contributed to it to
the tune of about sixty six million dollars. Trump has

(01:30:31):
ordered nuclear subs moved after a former Russian president made
some comments. We went over the Obama, Soros and Clinton,
Oh my debacle and what the documents are showing. I
can already tell you that segment's going in the best
of season. Ticket holder to a MLS soccer game got
kicked out for AMaGA hat, but noticed Pride flags all

(01:30:54):
over the stadium. Apparently no problem with those. Listened to
a man who happened to be black. Talked about the
virtues of conservatives compared to liberals, namely white conservatives, and
how wonderful they are compared to the other. Tomorrow, we'll
do it again. Friends have a great day.
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