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September 8, 2025 90 mins
This is the full episode of The Morning Show with Preston Scott for Monday, September 8th.

Our guests today include:
- Dr. Joe Camps
- Ira Schoffel 




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!
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:10):
Good morning friends. What a weekend, What a great weekend.
Watched my granddaughter get dedicated. I watched my wife's favorite
football team beat poor Grambling State University seventy to nothing.

(00:38):
And then I watched in person Florida State beat poor
East Texas seventy seven to three. Those two teams that
lost listen to this. They lost by a combined score
of one hundred and forty seven to three. And those

(01:01):
two teams play each other this weekend. You know, I
know we're gonna get the scripture. Trust me, I just
had to. Here's what I imagined. The coaches are gonna walk out,
and they're just gonna see each other and cry and

(01:23):
just console each other and hug. He's like, I'm so
glad it's over thought. We never go home.

Speaker 2 (01:38):
Oh, I'm so glad to be playing you. The other coach,
I'm so glad to be playing you, Joe. Can we
be Can we just tie? Can we just score some
points and die?

Speaker 1 (01:58):
Oh? My goodness, Grace. Our scripture today comes from Acts one,
verse eight. Jesus. This is incredible. This is after the resurrection.

(02:19):
This is on the day of Pentecost, Jesus shows up.
Actually it's not the day of Pentecost, it's prior to.
It's leading up to. He's teasing, but you will receive power.
Listen now, when the Holy Spirit has come upon you,
and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem and Judea

(02:40):
and Samaria and to the end of the earth. Here's
what's cool about this. He's speaking this to a group
of people that had received the Holy Spirit the night
of the Resurrection. He breathed on them and they received
the indwelling Holy Spirit. So what's he talking about here.

(03:02):
He's talking about the out poored Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit,
as the Old Testament prophesied, would serve two purposes, take
residence in us when we become a new creation in Christ.
That's the indwelling Holy Spirit. It happens to anyone who

(03:25):
claims they're a Christian, and you actually receive Christ, you
ask for forgiveness, you receive the in dwelling Holy Spirit,
you get a new heart. The process begins. But he
said right here, you will receive power when the Holy
Spirit has come upon you. It's different than in you.

(03:48):
This is a different, separate work of the Holy Spirit.
And it's honestly, it's kind of your choice. It's your
call whether you want to walk in that or not.
Eleven past the hour. I know I'm running late already. Okay,
it's my show. It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott.

Speaker 3 (04:08):
Welcome to the Morning Show with Preston Scott, Monday, September
the eighth.

Speaker 1 (04:23):
Here on the Morning Show. Hose's over there running the
show as always. Show show number five four four seven.
That's the number on the program today on this date.
In fifteen sixty five, Spanish expedition found the first permanent
European settlement in the first Roman Catholic parish in the
United States, where on our friendly shoreline of Saint Augustine, Florida.

(04:54):
Sixteen thirty six, the General Court of Massachusetts appropriates four
hundred pounds to start Harvard College, Harvard, sixteen thirty six. Oh,
how wayward Harvard has become pledge of allegiance first published

(05:15):
in Youth's Companion magazine in eighteen ninety two. Nineteen hundred,
the Galveston Hurricane strikes Galveston, Texas, killing six thousand people.
Nineteen twenty one, in Atlantic City, New Jersey, Margaret Gorman

(05:39):
of Washington becomes the first winner of the contest that
becomes known as Miss America Miss America Pageant, and it
was on this date. It's hard to believe it's only
been three years since since we lost Queen Elizabeth. I
have her babble head over here with her Corgi to
honor her. Did you know that, at the age of

(06:04):
ninety six, she was the longest ruling monarch in England's history.
Think about all of the kings and queens of England
over the years, Shia lasted them all. Now the power

(06:26):
of the royal family has dramatically been reduced, which leads
to longevity. You're not having a bunch of people vying
for the crown, and you're not have to worrying about
you don't have to be concerned about what you eat
or what you drink. You know what I'm saying. It's

(06:47):
not like someone's going to kill you, which is what
the previous you know, mostly, you know, basically, the turn
of the to the nineteenth century forward kind of got
us away from all that, but still just remarkable. By

(07:07):
the way, if you've ever been interested in any of that.
One of the singular best movies I have ever watched
ever in my life is a movie called The King's Speech,
and it's a movie about Queen Elizabeth's father who was
king because his brother abdicated the throne to marry a

(07:31):
divorcee from the United States. He gave up the throne
and his younger brother became the king. And he had
a profound speech impediment. He was a stutterer. And it's
the story of Queen Elizabeth's dad working with a guy
from Australia and it's an amazing true story, brilliant acting.

(07:58):
The King's Speech. I've never seen it. Highly recommend that movie.
It does have some bad words, but they're used in
a charming manner. At the British come on sixteen minutes
past the out. It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott,

(08:22):
you know, and all my excitement over the FSU win
and I don't know what's more impressive, them beating Alabama
or them coming out and beating that team with the
focus that they had. We'll talk to Irischeffel about that
in the third hour. But I neglected to mention my
beloved green Bay Packers beat Datois for the season opens,

(08:42):
first time in like seven or eight years. Green Bay's
played as season opener at home, which is just a travesty.
No team should have to start on the road seven
straight years. That's ridiculous. Anyway, green Bay took advantage and
there's a lot of fun to watch. It was a
pretty dominant performance for a first game. Sorry Detroit fans,

(09:07):
Sorry Division fans, back is back, just saying at least
for one week. Today is also National Star Trek Day.
I never I've never been a Treky. I've watched the
Originals with William Shatner and Leonard Nimoy and and you know,

(09:29):
I love Bones Jim. He's just a man. I mean,
it's just it was just classic stuff. I've never gone
gotten into the new iterations of it all, even though
it's technically from a production standpoint better. But I was
never a Treky. I just it was something you watched
when you were sick. You'd watch Star Trek because it

(09:51):
was like, Okay, this is better than something else. National
Pediatric Hematology Oncology Nurses Day, well okay then, and it's
National Boss Employee Exchange Day offers an opportunity to see
how the other half of the business works. During this day.

(10:18):
The idea is everyone walks in, everyone else's shoes. Okay
for like half a day. Okay, I'd be down with that.
Bob Pittman, come on, brother, you do my show. I'll
go up to New York for day. I'll fix a

(10:40):
few things too. I'll tell you that. Sorry. Did you
know I gotta fed a lot into this segment? Did
you know? Tracy t r Acii Tracy Guns was one
of the founder of the band Guns N' Roses. He

(11:04):
left in nineteen eighty three, stating it just wasn't fun anymore.
Do you think he regrets it? No, I'm asking do
you think he regrets the fact that, I mean, Guns
N' Roses. I mean, I've never been a big fan
of anything that they do, but you know whatever, I
know that there are people that love their music. But

(11:25):
do you think he regrets not staying in there when
they I mean, because it was after that that they
really they hit. They became a thing. It's like that
story that YouTube band member that was like, eh, got
booted and then it becomes you two and you know,
Ted and the Screamers or whatever that band was he
was part of, became a thing. Also, two people won

(11:50):
the Powerball one point seventy nine billion dollar powerball jackpot.
Two people are gonna split it. One in Texas, one
in Missouri. It's not the largest ever. The largest ever
is two point just better than two point oh four
billion dollars. Here's how it'll break down. The numbers, by
the way, if you're interested, eleven, twenty three, forty four,

(12:12):
sixty one, sixty two, and then the powerball was seventeen.
The power play was two. But the winners have a choice.
You can get an annuity for eight hundred and ninety
three point five million, and if you do that, you
get one immediate payment followed by twenty nine annual payments

(12:34):
that increase by five percent a year, so you get
a lot more money, but you have to wait for it.
You get it in increments. There's some wisdom to that,
some if you're younger, if you're my age, No, the
lump sum is four hundred and ten million for each

(12:55):
of them, but that doesn't include taxes, so take forty percent,
thirty thirty five percent, something like that. Anyway, the jackpot
resets the drawing today twenty mili and the odds are
winning are one in two hundred and ninety two million.

(13:16):
I'd be curious to know if they did a quick
pick or pick their own numbers. Those numbers would seem
to be a quick pick, but who knows. I have
no idea. Twenty seven minutes past the hour back on time.
Big stories in the press box are next, man, I

(13:40):
can't help it. I just drink cold water, and it's
terrible for your vocal cords. You should be drinking room
temperature water. But I just love cold water. It's so
much more refreshing to me. I just anyway, That's probably

(14:03):
why from time to time I have this little in
my throat. Sorry, I just room temperature water does not
quench my thirst. It leaves now. I would imagine room
temperature water, get water whatever, when you're out in the
desert would be awesome because it's replenishing what you're losing.

(14:25):
But when you have a choice, it's like, no, it
leaves me thirsty. Room temperature water leaves me thirsty. You
get ice water, and it's like, ah, yeah, yeah, as
long as it's good ice, you know, clean ice, not

(14:46):
funky ice. Big stories in the press box. What a
shocking development here. Sarlent University in Germany clinical trial found
that an over the counter nasal spray reduces the risk
of coronavirus by two thirds over the counter. Oh wow,
you don't say, you mean we didn't need the vaccine.
Huh No. Wow, So the unproven vaccine that the FDA

(15:16):
probably illegally cleared the deck for doesn't really work. It
perhaps hurts people. And we could have just squirted some
stuff up our nose and it had been much better.
No really, Yeah, as a lasting it's an over the

(15:40):
counter treatment for hay fever. Boom, there you go. I
want to take a little time here to talk about
not the specifics of what happened to a young Ukrainian
twenty three year old. You're in a Zarutski zarutska she was.

(16:05):
She fled Ukraine, received asylum in the United States. Yeah,
I think you could say that's a war torn country.
And yeah, and jumped on public transportation in Charlotte, North Carolina,
and got stabbed in the neck three times by just
some dude, no provocation whatsoever. They didn't know each other,

(16:27):
dude just sitting behind her, fidgeting a little bit. She's
a white young lady. He's a black male. And then
you see him opening up his pocket knife and with
people just sitting there next to him, around him. He
just stands up and stabs her three times in the throat.

(16:50):
She bled out and died right there. He had been
arrested and I think it's fourteen times for violent crimes
and was free. And it has been pointed out in

(17:12):
some media outlets. Had the victim been black and the
perpetrator white, there would likely be rioting in the streets
of Charlotte right now. Here's what I wanted to point out.
I did a little digging digging of the makeup of Charlotte,
their twelve member city council, eleven or Democrats, including the mayor.

(17:42):
You know Trump out there is Trump is thinking about
sending the National Guard to Portland, Chicago, Baltimore, New Orleans.
Maybe I have to think about Charlotte. Here's the thing. All
of the places where these crimes and look bad crimes
happen everywhere, there are just many, many more murders and

(18:06):
violent crimes in Democrat run communities. That is a fact.
And it's really tough for some of you to get
your brain around. But there's a connection there. Correlation doesn't
necessarily mean causation, but it does in this case. Democrat

(18:28):
controlled communities where judges turn people loose, where they don't
prosecute to the fullest extent of the law, where they
just I mean, this is it. Where they cut funding
to law and order. I mean, this is what you get.
And that's why even in Washington, d C. They're begrudgingly

(18:49):
giving Trump credit because it's safe to walk the streets.
Right now, forty minutes past the hour, speaking of DC,
we're going to go inside the belt schedule, Damn Dodger.

(19:16):
Joe Camp's back with us today. Iris Chafelle in the
third hour, tucking a little Florida State football. Yeah, it's
so nice to just not be terrible. And they're good. Now,
this is a good football team. I told you. The

(19:37):
difference is that coach Norvel his assistance that he brought
in are brilliant hires, and they brought in football players.
There's a difference. There's a difference. There are four stars
and five stars that are football players. Don't misunderstand me,
but give me football players over four stars and five

(19:59):
stars that are Give me guys that know how to
play as a team, that have the right makeup and
mental attitude. Yep, that's what you want. A former FBI official.
This from Matt Vespa of town Hall, currently serving time.
I didn't know this. Listen to this guys serving time

(20:22):
for colluding with Russian businessmen on how to evade US sanctions.
Apparently he also tipped off a Chinese energy firm that
the Justice Department was investigating and could be subject to arrest.
Charles McGonagall is his name, ironically a key person in

(20:44):
the counter intelligence probe regarding Russian collusion. So this guy
is doing time. What was he sentenced to. I think
he was sentenced to fifty months in federal prison for

(21:05):
colluding with the Russian oligarch to evade US sanctions, but
now was leaking info to the Chinese Energy Fund committee
that's connected to Joe Biden Hunter Biden. This guy was
leaking intel to all of our enemies while working for

(21:28):
the United States FBI. This just speaks to how deeply
embedded the dirt and filth is that the leadership. The
James Comey's, the William Clappers, the John Brennan's of this world.

(21:52):
These are evil men and they had evil people working
for them. Second little note inside the Beltway document obtained
by Just the News outlines that the Biden administration's internal
process for clemency decisions, and it shows the former president

(22:15):
relied on Kamala Harris to approve pardons during his final
year in office. The memo also confirms that many pardons
were signed using an auto pen. There's no evidence that
Biden reviewed or approved any of them. According to the memo.
Quoting from the memo, the vice President's approval was sufficient

(22:37):
to obtain his approval. They gave up running anything through Joe.
They just ran it through Kamala. Coming to the conclusion,
even though White House staff had been previously advised in
February of twenty twenty one, that is literally days after
he took office that the president should personally sign all

(22:59):
actions requiring his approval, following procedures used in the Obama
Biden administration, that guidance was ignored and they handed it
over to Kamala Harris. They claim because they couldn't get
Joe what like what he was running away from you
the human rumba. Here's the thing. This is power constitutionally

(23:28):
vested in the president of the United States. It is
not able to be outsourced to somebody else. This is
a problem. We need to know what was going on
forty six past the owner.

Speaker 3 (23:47):
When we come back, what a sorry thing. This is
the Morning Show with Preston Scott.

Speaker 1 (24:07):
Some time ago we shared a story that was not
talked about a lot, and it interests me because my
in laws were farmers. There's really there's a lot of
farming done on the land that the family owns to

(24:27):
this day, just not by them. Other farmers in the
area farm the land the lease agreement type thing. My
mother and father in law are older now and do
not actively run or manage the farm in any way,
shape or form. But one of our nephews might do

(24:52):
some farming down the road, but more than anything else,
he's interested in doing cattle ranching type stuff. But it's
farm and so I was interested when I heard about
John Deere. And you may not remember the story, but
the short version paraphrase goes something like this. Most of
the equipment that farmers think they buy, they don't really

(25:16):
ever get to own because John Deere controls everything. It's
the story came out when Russia started screwing around with Ukraine,
which is considered the bread basket of Eastern Europe, and

(25:39):
when Russia started taking control of the tractors that John
Deere had on the farms there he he meaning John Deere.
John Deere used to would shut them down. They could
shut down the tractors remotely. It was crazy, like they
can do that. Well, it turns out if a farmer

(26:01):
doesn't give data that John Deere wants, they just shut
down the tractors. Well, now it's gotten worse. In fact,
Congress has introduced the Agricultural Right to Repair Act. It
was introduced a few years ago by US Senator John
Tester to give farmers an independent repair shops access to

(26:23):
necessary diagnostic and repair tools. Back in January of this year,
the Federal Trade Commission filed a lawsuit against John Deere,
accusing the manufacturer of unfair practices that increased repair costs
for farmers while also preventing them from the ability to
make timely repairs on critical farming equipment. Short version, if
something goes wrong with a John Deere tractor, you have

(26:45):
to use a John Deere repair process, which could take weeks,
and so you're out three quarters of a million dollar
a piece of equipment and you can't run your farm.
They've got you locked out. It's incredible. As you read

(27:06):
into this, and it's it's not just the data component.
John Deere wants the data. They want to know what's
happening on your farm, and if you don't tell them,
they shut your stuff down. You're thinking I bought it. Oh,
in the fine print of that purchase gives John Deere control.
So you don't own it. They do even when you

(27:27):
think you own it. So right now we've got the
story of a Virginia farmer. One of his John Deere
tractors has a diagnostic trouble code and his equipment shuts
down until a technician approved by John Deere arrives. They're like,

(27:50):
we need the opportunity to repair our own tractors. You think, Look,
you do you. I'm just telling you. If I were
a farmer right now, I would be buying every brand
but a John Deere, and I love John Deere. They
make great equipment, and I think you could safely say
that you could own your lawnmower without any problem. They're
not gonna shut your lawnmower down. But for high end

(28:12):
farming equipment, late model stuff, you are selling your soul
to John Deere. There are a lot of other brands
of tractors and farm equipment that will do the job
for you without that just saying if you're in the farming,
you're looking at equipment, read the fine print. John Deere's

(28:36):
stimulating congressional action not a good place to be at
five past the hour. It is Monday here on the
Morning Show with Preston Scott. I'm Preston, he is Jose
and it is September the eighth, Monday Morning too. Yeah,

(28:57):
Show fifty four to forty seven. That we're getting some
of the lawmakers and their aids floating around in town.
Committee weeks will be coming up in a little while
and if not even this month. But I hope we're
getting the message out and I want to address specifically

(29:20):
float to Republican lawmakers. And I know that some of
you may roll your eyes saying, really, we're going to
get this old sorry broken take again. It's not sorry
or broken until they fix it. We all agree, I think,

(29:43):
back up, most of us agree that there are many
people that have broken into this country illegally and they
just want a job, and they're willing to work for
a portion of what an American wage journer would earn. Now,

(30:03):
I personally think that's bad for the economy. I do.
I would rather pay more for my fruits and vegetables
and the products that I need to purchase, or the
services that I need for my home. I would rather
pay more for that than to undercut American workers. But

(30:24):
I'm sensitive to the argument that there are jobs that
Americans traditionally don't want to do and that laborers from say,
other countries, are willing to do. Okay, let's clean that
up and make that process legal and equitable. That's fine,
But fundamentally, before you do any of that, you have

(30:46):
to stop employing illegal immigrants. Now, when I saw James Uthmeyer,
the Attorney general files, you know, he was subpoenaing the
company that was employing the truck driver that's responsible for

(31:07):
the death of three on the Florida Turnpike. We know
the story. We've heard the story, Harjinger sing. It was
just yeah, he pulled a U turn on a turnpike
and a vehicle had no chance and slammed into the trailer.
They were killed instantly. Great, we're suing. We're going to

(31:33):
look into suing the employer. I underscored that story last week.
Well how about that, Well, how about Florida employers of illegals,
and then we see the story of Eduardo Rivera Villarreal,
fifty three years of age in this country, illegally charged

(31:57):
with human trafficking, loud and Lascivia's battery, rape of a
victim under seventeen Pasco County. Now, he took advantage of
a young girl sitting on a bus stop, propositioned her,
gave her some alcohol, and then he kept doing it.
But at some point it turned bad and he raped her.

(32:18):
When sheriff deputies got to the scene, she was inebriated.
She explained to an adult at the hospital what happened.
He gets arrested. Here's my question, who's employing this guy?
How is this guy earning his money to stay in
the state of Florida, to have an apartment, to have
a shelter of any kind? Who is employing these people?

(32:43):
How many victims do there need to be before you? You,
Florida lawmakers who happened to be Republicans, summon the courage,
find your your backbone, develop a conscience greater than politics,

(33:04):
and do the right thing. When will the big businesses
that are members of the Florida Chamber of Commerce step
out and take the lead and do something about this.
When will the Florida Chamber do something about this? When
will they call a press conference? We have loopholes and

(33:25):
e verify they need to be closed down. How many
victims do we need to have in Florida for Florida
Republicans who talk tough about immigration actually do something about
the employment of it. You don't understand preston, the agricultural industry,

(33:47):
the food and beverage industry, the hospitality industry, the trades.
Fix it, fix the problem. That's what you're paid to do.
Fix it. Don't give me political answers when people are
being harmed. James Uthmeyer, don't just sue a company a

(34:12):
business in California. Turn your attention to your state and
do something here without closing everify loopholes. There are still
laws on the books forbidding the employment of illegal immigrants.
Do something about it. This is a young girl under seventeen.

(34:35):
We've detailed these crimes across the country. We've detailed these
crimes here in Florida. What will it take. Do you
have to wait for some young co ed to be
murdered jogging on a path somewhere? Is that where we'll

(34:58):
finally put a side. Well, we can't give somebody a
legislative win. I hate to drop this card on you,
but I wish you well when you try to explain
that one to God, you know, the Lord, we would
have dealt with this, but you know we were protecting
our supermajority. Yeah, good luck with that. Come on, do

(35:25):
the right thing. From the governor's office, to the Attorney
General's office, to the Speaker, to the Senate President to
the individual lawmakers, do the right thing. Deal with the
employment of illegal immigrants in the state of Florida. If
it costs us more to have certain things, so be it.

(35:49):
How many how long? Twelve past the hour? While I'm
on the subject, short segment here, ICE is finally going

(36:13):
to be allowed to deport kilmar Abrago Garcia. Guess where
he's going, The African nation of Swatini. Why Because his
legal team said he feared persecution in twenty two other countries.

(36:39):
So ICE officials notified him that his new country of
removal is Swatini, Africa. Garcia claimed to fear twenty two countries,
basically the entire Western Hemisphere. Department of Homeland Security reposted
news with a sharp message on social mediam he is

(37:00):
afraid of the entire Western hemisphere. I gotta admit that's
pretty funny post. He is fearing persecution and torture in
Uganda and twenty other countries. In't that interesting for a
guy to fear persecution and torture when he's a member

(37:20):
of MS thirteen, a human trafficker, a serial domestic abuser,
and a child predator and he's fearful. Yeah, I guess so,
sort of like guys like that are fearful in prison.
You're a child predator, Yeah, you're not going to have
a nice stay in an American prison anywhere. You're just not. Now,

(37:45):
his attorney's flatly deny any of those allegations. I'm sorry,
but they're pretty well established. And that's just I'm just
trying to understand. Okay, we're finally now going to deport
him to somewhere he approved. How does that work? And

(38:06):
what was the point of bringing him back? Whatever? Sixteen
past the hour, come back and well let's just start.
Who will talk a little lets football next hour with

(38:30):
Irishfellowwarchan dot com. We'll talk with the first captain of
a Bobby Bowden coached FSU football team in just a
little while. Doctor Joe Camps is back with us with
healthy expectations. But a listener pointed out to me sent
me a screenshot a snapshot of the front page of

(38:52):
the Sunday local Gannett newspaper. Not a mention of FSU
football on that front page. And it's a noontime game.
I mean, you would probably want to put the single
biggest economic driver for the capital city just a little

(39:17):
teaser on the front page of your coverage, if you
had any coverage. I don't know if they did or not.
I don't care. But it just shows you a noontime
game on Saturday somehow didn't make the front page. And
again I'm not saying it should be a headline. It
should be just on the front page somewhere, a listing that, oh,

(39:41):
take a look, this happened. Details in the sports page.
I don't even know if they have a sports page anymore.
I mean, I don't know, I don't know. I mentioned
to you in the break it's a start. Two girls
at and Drupa Valley High School in Riverside, California, will

(40:04):
not compete on their own girls volleyball team because they
have a transgender player playing on their team. This is
one of the first times I've seen teammates say no,
We're not playing now, it's not enough. Alissa McPherson said,

(40:29):
deciding to sit out was a difficult decision to make
because I love this sport and I love to compete,
but this current situation with a biological male on the
team is very unsafe and unfair, not only for me,
but all female athletes, said Hadil Hazema. Although sitting out
was a very difficult decision for me because of how
much I love this sport, I don't feel comfortable sharing

(40:50):
the locker room nor the court with a biological male
because I chose to play on a girls volleyball team,
and it's just unfair and unsafe to everyone being affected
did by this situation. I was scared to stand up before,
but I realized someone must make the initiative to stand
for what's right. So I hope my actions encourage others
to use their voice as well. So far, four confirmed

(41:15):
opposing teams have forfeited games to Jerupe Valley High School.
This athlete had competed in track and field previously, and
this guy is now competing in volleyball. California law in
twenty thirteen enables biological males to compete in girls' sports,
even though the governor. The governor has said that he

(41:36):
thinks it's wrong from a competitive standpoint, but he's a
coward and he wants to run for president. He personally
thinks it's wrong, but he's not going to do anything
about it. Okay, here's the point I wanted to make
with that story. This is what it will take. We're
not competing on all sides, teammates, competitors, we're not competing.

(42:01):
Good luck having a sport. People always have to suffer
to advance a right, to make something right, people always do.
I've said for decades that a generation is going to
have to suffer to fix the welfare system of this state,

(42:22):
of this country. Rather a generation will suffer to fix
social security. A generation will suffer to fix any number
of things. It's just that is the requirement of making
bad choices and allowing them to have roots and to grow,
pulling out those weeds disrupt and then I don't know

(42:46):
if you've seen the story of the young Philadelphia Phillies
fan went to a Miami Marlins game and was forced
to give up a Harrison Bader home run ball. I
watched the video. A young boy's dad beat this woman
to the baseball and got it. That's how it works.

(43:09):
It's hey, whoever gets it? Now, some people say, oh,
here you go, they'll catch it, and then they'll see
a young lad and they'll go, here you go, and
they'll give it to the kid, and everyone plaps, and
it's really sweet and kind. But then there's this white
woman who I will promise you, I guarantee you she's
an illiberal I guarantee it. Now they think they've named her,
but they didn't name her. They've got the wrong name,

(43:32):
or at least it's the wrong version of the person.
And so that person's had to come out and say, hey,
it's not me, but this woman. The video has gone viral.
She screamed and yelled in the face of this dad,
and he took the ball from his son. His son's
eyes were just like, are you kidding me? Little nine
year old boy? Really? Dad, Dad gave her the ball

(43:55):
went go away well. To their credit to Miami Marlins
crew heard about it. They brought a gift package for
the boy but they did it one better. Harrison Bader
heard about it, heard that there was a young fan
in Miami for the Phillies, called him back, gave him
an autographed bat. This lady is going to be scorned

(44:22):
because she will be identified because she's she's very viv vizy,
she is very recognizable. Great video, great face. I mean,
you got it, you got her, and I'm going to
guarantee you right now. She's just one of those crusty,
white illiberal women, and boy, shame on her. She said

(44:45):
the ball got stolen out of her hands. N he
beat her to it. She didn't get a grasp of it.
If she'd have had it in her hands, she'd still
have it. She does have it, but only because she bullied.
Because that's what white illiberal women do. Twenty seven minute past.

Speaker 4 (45:00):
Them, thought or story you want to share, Write them
at Preston.

Speaker 3 (45:11):
At iHeartRadio dot com. Yes he knows how to read. Well, actually,
his producer reads him. He doesn't know how to read.
It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott.

Speaker 1 (45:24):
You're all ready for this. That's such shapeful. It just
it just is Monday of the Morning Show, Doctor Joe.
Just a few minutes away. Big stories in the press box.
Charlotte Area Transit System video inside the train commuter car

(45:52):
twenty three year old Irina Zorutska of Ukraine. She fled
Ukraine and boarded public transportation. She had some earphones on
while she sat down and was just mining her own business,
no interaction, just looking at her phone. And behind her

(46:15):
is a thirty four year old man named Carlos Brown Junior.
She a white female, he a black male. No interaction before.
Literally every moment the two of them have ever spent
together was captured on that video, So there's no previous altercation,

(46:43):
there's no provocation, nothing. She sat down, He was sitting
in a seat by himself. Behind There are other passengers
to his right an island between, so he's right behind
this young lady and all of a sudden starts fiddling
with his pocket knife. He pulls it out, extends the blade,

(47:03):
stands up and stabs her three times in the throat.
She bleeds to death and dies twenty three years old.
Now there are a couple of things to mention here.
One is if this had been a black young lady
and a white male, there would be riots in the streets.

(47:25):
Of Charlotte, and there would likely be all kinds of
media coverage, but there's been virtually none. Now why would
that be the Other thing I want to point out
is that this is the type of thing that happens

(47:45):
more frequently in Democrat run communities than Republican It is
a fact. It is a statistical fact. The most violent,
high murder eight communities in this country, from East coast
to West coast are run by Democrats. It does not

(48:07):
mean that bad things don't happen in Republican run cities.
Yes there are, there just aren't many of them. That's
a fact. You can shake your head all you want,
then just go look it up and I will end
with this, isn't it interesting? The makeup of Charlotte. This

(48:30):
guy had been arrested fourteen times, he's a repeat violent offender,
and he's free. Don't know why, but I tend to
think that where you have Democrat run communities, you have
Democrat attorneys, prosecutors, attorney offices, judges, and this is what

(48:53):
you get. The Charlotte City Council is made up of
twelve members, eleven are Democrats, including the mayor. Just saying
Chicago been run by Democrats for decades, I mean decades
and decades and decades, Baltimore and New Orleans and Portland
and Seattle, New York, and of course Chicago, I mean

(49:19):
Saint Louis. I mean the list goes on and on,
and then the other big story, COVID risk is cut
by two thirds with an over the counter nasal spray,
according to a study from Sarland University in Germany. Studies
been published in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
And over the counter nasal spray cuts COVID by two thirds,

(49:42):
And we made people get vaccines that were never ever
properly studied. Forty minutes past the hour, Let's talk more
about our health next with doctor Joe Camps.

Speaker 5 (49:54):
The greatest trick the Devil ever pulled was convincing the
world he didn't exist.

Speaker 6 (50:00):
News Radio one hundred point seven, double UFLA.

Speaker 1 (50:10):
He's back, joining us, back here on this Monday morning,
doctor Joe Camp's healthy Expectations. Good morning, sir, how are you.

Speaker 7 (50:21):
I'm good good. Preston had a little time off vacation
with the grandkids and had a great time. And the
football season is often ruling, and we've got a few
things to be thankful for in Tallahassee, and so everything
is going well this morning. Excuse me, I wanted to

(50:42):
talk about AI, and you sent me a nice article
to review on this, and I know and as you know,
it plays an important invited role, and it's finding this
way to be a powerful two and many aspects of
our lives, and obviously medicine there's no different. But I

(51:02):
did want to highlight the study that I read, and
this was basically a study done with gastroenterrologists, and to
break that down, those are the physicians that do the
colonoscopies and evaluate the colons for at nomos polyps and
that kind of thing. And so this is a study
that had fourteen hundred patients looked at our cases looked

(51:25):
at and AI. If it was used with that physician,
they basically were able to perform the procedures very well
and they sort of went hand in hand. However, if
you looked at colonoscopy and without AI in those physicians,

(51:52):
there was a six percent drop in detection rate, suggesting
that basically AI had an effect on the physician's ability
to determine the basically the detection of those tumors. And

(52:15):
so what I'm getting at is that if AI is available, great,
If it's not, then there was a decline in the
physician's ability to detect folding cancers. And so, you know,
physicians basically are trained with the eye. Their judgment is
at stake, and their experience plays an important role. You

(52:39):
just can't rely on AI. And it's sort of like
I had envisioned a long time ago that you might
just go sit in some booths and some machine diagnose
all your problems and tells you what you need to do.
I don't think that's gonna ever take place. I think
the humans are important. Behavior can be changed. I look

(53:02):
at AI as a tool and as something that we
can utilize, but certainly the human aspect of this in
terms of judgment, in terms of the eye integrating all
of these things to make a decision. I don't think
we can totally rely on the machine to do that

(53:22):
for us. And so I do think the human aspect
of medicine is going to be around for a long time.

Speaker 1 (53:28):
Well, Joe, if I read from the study, it says
that tumor detection rates decrease significantly, going from twenty eight
point four percent percent before AI to twenty two point
four percent after, so, as you mentioned, it's a drop
of six percent. It almost reminds me of how we
don't know phone numbers anymore. Remember when you and I

(53:48):
were growing up, we knew dozens and dozens of phone numbers.
We don't know anymore because we rely on our phone
to tell us. And what I hear you saying is
we cannot lose the expert tease that trained professionals bring
to the equation.

Speaker 7 (54:04):
That's exactly right, and otherwise we'll find ourselves in that
same behavior. You know, I found myself using my maps
to get around town. Sometimes. I used to be able
to go anywhere in tallasses because I had a photographic
memory of it. But now I'm finding that sometimes I
have prefer on my GPS. So I think it's I

(54:27):
think it's the same aspect of human life and experience
that we all are experiencing, and we just need to
embrace it and work with it. I think we'll do well.
But the human aspect is still very important part of
our lives, and we cannot depend on machines or our

(54:48):
decision making and the things that we do and shape
our opinion about how we go about our business. So
I thought it was a great article. Thank you so
much for sending it to me.

Speaker 1 (54:58):
Doctor Camps, thank you. Good have your voice back on
the program, my friend be well.

Speaker 7 (55:03):
Well, it's always great to come back when you win, and.

Speaker 1 (55:06):
So thank you. Joe. Take care. Doctor Joe Camps with
us this morning, Healthy Expectations forty seven past the Hour.

Speaker 6 (55:21):
On news Radio one hundred point seven Double USLA.

Speaker 7 (55:28):
Oh My.

Speaker 1 (55:36):
Carlos Acutest canonized as first millennial Saint. I'm just gonna stop.
All that I'm gonna do is upset a few people.
Just shake my head. Boy. It is uh. It is

(55:56):
tough out in nature sometimes three stories. One seventy two
year old man in Arkansas had to be airlifted to
a hospital this week after being mauled by a seventy
pound black bear. Critical condition, moved a stable condition, remains hospitalized.

(56:30):
First known bear attack in Arkansas in the decades. A
seventy pound black bear. That tells you the tenacity of
a black bear. Normally a black bear is frightened away
by by a person looking big. Now maybe this was

(56:54):
a small, frail man. I don't know, but my goodness,
then Australia veteran surfer out with his mates, five or
six buddies. You hear the guy screaming, I don't want

(57:16):
to get bitten. I don't want to get bitten. Don't
bite me. And a massive shark you would expect, it's
probably a great white, took multiple limbs of this guy
off and he died right there. His buddies fled and

(57:45):
then went out and got him, but by then it
was too late. I mean, you know, at that point, yeah,
I don't know, you know, I don't know that there's
a heroic thing to do at that point. Once you
get your bud's been bitten. Basically, you know he's lost
two limbs, he's done, if not three. But they described

(58:08):
the dorsal fin as just massive. That's likely a great white.
But it's man. Then this now, this one doesn't involve
an animal. This involves just awareness. Forest Lakes, Arizona woman
camping with her friends Mongolian rim. She got out of

(58:32):
her tent in the middle of the night looking for
a place to you know, use the restroom. I guess
the moon wasn't out because she walked off a cliff.

(58:55):
Oh my goodness, lady walked off one hundred and twenty
foot cliff. She must have either walked too fast and
her eyes hadn't die, you know, dilated, or you know,
her pupils so that she could take in enough light

(59:18):
to see, or there was just no light. But man, live,
talk about preventable. Ever heard of a flashlight. I can't
even imagine what might have gone through that young lady's
brain as she's free fallen. Oh Lord, to have mercy

(59:44):
on her soul and receive her warmly. I hope she
knew you.

Speaker 5 (59:51):
Just three.

Speaker 1 (59:52):
I don't know why those stories just it was like
what and then what and then what? And we're gonna
come back and talk a little FSU football. Irishchafell is
going to join us from war chant dot com. It's
the third hour already of the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Third hour already here Monday on the Morning Show with

(01:00:14):
Preston Scott. That is Jose, I am Preston and this
is Iras Chaffell, the managing editor at war chant dot com.
That's where you go, my friends, to get all the dirt,
all the details. Some really good columnists are there. You'll
get all the information on Florida State recruiting on the
different teams. It's your go to war chant dot com

(01:00:35):
and you will be very happy you went there and subscribed. Ira,
good morning. Is it too early to sing happy days
or here again?

Speaker 5 (01:00:43):
I don't think so, Preston. I actually have my piece
that's going up on the site probably shortly after we talk.
I started off by talking about that I've seen enough.
I think when you look at the characteristics of a
good football team, this team has them now, whether or
not the season ends in the play so, whether or
not the season and with an ECC title, I can't
predict that, but I think we've seen enough to know

(01:01:05):
this is the twenty twenty five Florida State football team
is a good college football team.

Speaker 1 (01:01:10):
It could be one of the single most remarkable stories
in the history of the sport. Granted the asterisk might
come in the nil transfer portal era, but to go
thirteen and oh slash thirteen and one, we know that
that one loss wasn't Florida State to then drop to
two and ten and then to come back, And I

(01:01:33):
agree with you, I am seeing the signs of a
football team. I remember something you said, Ira last year
to me you said, it looks like they don't have
football players. They've got a lot of maybe four stars
guys they wanted to recruit. This year, it looks like
they went out and found themselves some football players.

Speaker 5 (01:01:54):
I agree a one thousand percent. It really is a
difference in evaluations. I mean, I think that's the biggest thing.
And you know, listen, Tony White, the defensive coordinator, deserves
a ton of credit. Gus mals On, the offensive coordinator,
deserves a ton of credit. Yep. But the biggest difference
in this football team is the roster. You you went
out last year and you signed a bunch of guys

(01:02:16):
that looked pretty that were kind of combined warriors, you know,
the guys that maybe had the right size and dimensions,
but really hadn't done anything at their previous schools in
college football. So this year they went back to getting gritty,
proven college football players. Maybe they played at Western Kentucky,
maybe they played at Coastal Carolina, but they they're they're

(01:02:37):
football players. And I think that's the biggest that's the
biggest change. And and uh, you know, and again I
give the coaches credit for accentuating the positives and minimizing
the weaknesses. But at the end of the day, it's
it's you've got better players, you have a better roster,
and you're singing on the field.

Speaker 1 (01:02:50):
I listened to Nick Saban talk about Gus Melzon on
College Game Day Saturday morning, and I don't know if
you had the opportunity to listen, but you sense just
this begrudging respect for the fact that when Gus has
his offense running properly, it's really hard to defend.

Speaker 5 (01:03:11):
I think it is, and I think we're going to
see that as the year goes on. And now listen,
there may be a game here or there where it
doesn't fire all that well. We'll see. I can't predict
that it's gonna be humming every week, but I think
they do so many things from so many formations that
I think it's very difficult for teams in a one
off to prepare, and you know, from week to week.

(01:03:35):
If you go from preparing, you know, for some other
offense one week, and then your Gus Maleson's the next week,
I think it's gonna be a challenging, especially when you
have a quarterback like Tommy Caslanas. And I'll give males
on credit because he's not taking all the credit. He
has talked about repeatedly over the last two weeks about
Tommy Casalanas is a guy that he can make a
wrong play look right, and we've seen that. We saw

(01:03:58):
it in the Alabama game where you know, they had
a couple of plays where it looks like they're going
to be snuffed out for a loss on maybe a
third down, and Tommy just is so athletic that he
turns it into a first down. Again, he's not gonna
be perfect. There will be days where maybe he's a
little bit off, but overall, yeah, I think they're gonna
be a really tough team to defend because of the
pieces that they put together and in Gus Malzan's offense.

Speaker 1 (01:04:21):
What's impressed me about Tommy Castellanos, besides some intangibles that
I'm sure we'll talk about here today for a few minutes,
is he has a really big arm and he has
a very accurate arm. On that deep ball to Deuce
Robinson that was contested where there was a pass interference called,
he threw it in the only spot his guy could

(01:04:42):
catch it, and he threw it perfectly over his shoulder
on the deep ball early in the game. He's throwing
it really well.

Speaker 5 (01:04:50):
He is. And you know, one of the things that
Tommy talked about, you know, earlier this season, before the
games even started, was that, you know, he went and
he worked with a quarterback trainer this summer and it's
the same quarterback trainer who works with cam Ward and
Shador Sanders and a lot he's you know, every few
years we have these cycles of a hot quarterback trainer

(01:05:10):
right and right now. The guy that is that guy
right now worked with Tommy this summer and Tommy said
it was the first time he's ever done that. You know,
he was not a highly recruited quarterback coming out of
high school. A lot of schools, most colleges wanted to
move him to running back or receiver. That's why he
didn't come to Florida State because that's what Mike Norvell
wanted to do. So he didn't have growing up in
South Georgia, he didn't have a QB guru to work with.

(01:05:33):
Then he goes to UCF for a year, then he
goes to Boston College for a year, and I think
everybody's just trying to figure out what to do with him. Well,
now he has established himself as a quarterback. He's gotten
trained by professionals who know what they're doing, and I
think we may see the best of Tommy as a passer.

Speaker 1 (01:05:48):
Joining me is Irisha Fel. He's the managing editor at
war chant dot Com. More to come on the Morning
Show with Preston Scott.

Speaker 3 (01:06:02):
Good morning, and welcome to the Morning Show with Preston Scott.

Speaker 1 (01:06:13):
Back with warchand dot COM's Irischaffel, who has been following
Florida State athletics and certainly football for a long time
and far closer than me. What impressed you more, Ira,
the win over Alabama or the way they won and
the focus they showed against a team that, well, it's
an FCS team they should have beaten.

Speaker 5 (01:06:36):
Yeah. Man, I would say both just in different ways,
you know, And I think that I, you know, both
were very impressive, you know. I think the Alabama game
clearly was showed that this team is further ahead than
maybe anybody could have predicted. I think the coaches honestly
were a little surprised by how well they played. I
think you worked so hard to have that result, but

(01:06:58):
you don't know if it's really going to come and
then to see the way they played, the way they executed,
how hard they played. Everything that they wanted to happen
happened in that Alabama game. So you have to be
thrilled with that. But then if you think about these
last seven days, they went from you know, nobody thinking
they were going to be good to shocking Alabama to
getting a ton of credit moving high up into the
college football polls. You have one of your players shot

(01:07:20):
in the head and is in a hospital room and
you don't know how he's going to be. And then
you come back and play a team in East Texas
A and M that nobody expects to be a challenge,
but you play completely, thoroughly, dispatch them quickly, get the
starters out of the game in the second quarter. That
was just super impressive as well. So two different assignments,
but I think they just aced them both.

Speaker 1 (01:07:40):
You know, sometimes in training camps, you know this, you'll
hear that, well, we don't know how good our defensive
line is because our offensive line is so good, or
vice versa. It might be that they both are so
very good because they showed it against Alabama. They were
more physical than Alabama in the trenches, on both sides
of the ball and buy a wide margin.

Speaker 5 (01:08:02):
Yeah, without question. And I think that again when I
go back to why I've seen enough to know this
is a good football team is Listen, you have a
good quarterback. I don't think anybody can dispute that at
this point. And yeah, I think you have two good
lines of scrimmage. Now, whether or not they're good enough
to push around a Georgia or an Oregon or you know,
in the playoffs or something of that, or even to

(01:08:22):
win at Clemson, I don't know if they're that good yet.
We'll see. But it's a good college football offensive line,
it's a good college football defensive line. It's a good
college football quarterback. And if you have those three things,
you're going to be a good football team. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:08:34):
And if you've got good schemes to work as well.
And that's where going back to what you said about
Tony White and gusmals On, Hey, I just I had
a really strange observation. My wife is a huge Ohio
State fan, and so we came home after the game,
went to the game on Saturday and watched Ohio State
throttle Grambling State. And then it occurred to me Ira.

(01:08:55):
Grambling State and East Texas State A and M play
each other this Saturday. They lost by a combined score
of one hundred and forty seven to three. Do you
think the coaches just meet at the fifty and give
each other a hug.

Speaker 5 (01:09:10):
That's a good question. They at least know where they've been.
Maybe they'll at least trying to hit two hards today.
I'm sure their guys are still pretty sore.

Speaker 1 (01:09:18):
I just imagine these two head coaches showing up at
the fifty to shake hands and they just start tearing up.
They have their former PTSD or something.

Speaker 5 (01:09:33):
They've never been so happy to see each other. I
can tell you.

Speaker 1 (01:09:35):
That, no kidding, all right, We got more to talk
with Irishafell about next here on the Morning Show with
Preston Scott.

Speaker 7 (01:09:51):
Oh.

Speaker 1 (01:09:52):
Time flies when you're having fun and when your team
that you're talking about is winning. Man, I still remember
the days of being on the broadcast team of the
Arizona Wranglers and they were owing forever, and I had
to go into the locker room every postgame and interview
the head coach and they kept losing. That is the
worst assignment in the history of broadcasting. Iris Chaffell with

(01:10:13):
me from Warchant dot com. Ira was just talking about
how I watched the game a couple of times from
the just this past weekend, and what stood out to
me not just the fact they got Tommy Costellanos out
of that game early, and I'm glad they did. You
don't want to take a chance of losing him in
a freak injury. We've seen that happen. But there were
some leadership things that I saw out of him. Not

(01:10:35):
just everybody including him celebrating his backup quarterbacks, the guys
on the field getting a chance to play and play well.
But I noticed him high five and people on the
support staff, not after a great play, but just in
simple interactions they were making and just acknowledging the people
that support the football team. To me, it spoke volumes

(01:10:57):
of him recognizing the world, world's bigger than just himself.

Speaker 5 (01:11:03):
Yeah, and I think there's two things that player. One is,
you know, I do think he's got that natural charisma,
you know, going back to when Floresday brought him out
of the transfer portal, I went back and read some
articles from him about him in high school, and his
high school coach talked about how when Tommy walked into
the cafeteria, like everybody lit up. He's just one of
those guys that he's always positive, he's got a good
attitude and he makes guys feel better around him, so

(01:11:25):
that those are really positives the other thing, and so
I think he's got that intrinsically. But the other thing
is he you know, think about where he's come through
and where he is now. You know, he's never been
the guy that was was He's never had a team
that that trusted him to be the guy. When he
was a freshman at UCF, he was a backup. Then
he goes to Boston College, he gets thrown into the
starting lineup and they try to make it work, but

(01:11:48):
it's there just going by the seat of their pants
that first year. Then they have the coaching change. Jeff
Hapley goes to your Packers, and so now you've got
a new coach and Billip Brian who clearly does not
want an offense built around a running quarterback like Tom Caslanas.
So it's a square peg in around hole that whole
season until he finally gets benched and leaves the team
and now here he is. He gets plucked out of

(01:12:09):
the Portal by Gus malzan who says, I want to
build my offense around you. I want to I want
to tailor this thing to your skills, and you're he's
got to be on top of the world. So I think,
naturally he's that kind of guy. But man, he could
not be happier with the situation he's found himself in.

Speaker 1 (01:12:24):
You look at the quarterback situation around the country, and
so many teams do you do what we did? They
find that guy out of the portal that's got experience
and and would be the perfect fit. But why do
I feel like no offense to Brock Glenn. He's a
he's an FSU guy, and maybe he'll end up back

(01:12:44):
at the number two spot when he gets past whatever
injuries he might be fighting. But do they have their
future with Kevin Sperry? Because I saw a guy, a
freshman with an arm that actually displayed touch, which is
what most freshmen don't do.

Speaker 5 (01:13:00):
Yeah, you know, Kevin Sperry is super impressive and if
you go back to the spring, you know Gus malzo
On first saw him the couple first couple times in practice,
he was blown away. I thought, you know, that one
touch pass you had where he kind of has to
float it over a defender, but he didn't loft it
like twenty five feet in the air, right, you know,
like it's that's a hard throw to make where but
to put enough arc over it but not too much

(01:13:23):
arc over it to where the defense can get there. Now,
he's he's a big talent. Talent And what I'm excited
for for brock Lynn is I thought that was the
best he's ever looked. I agree, I thought, you know, yeah,
I mean, now you have a chance for the first
time in his career really to see him with a
competent offense and a good offensive line and give him
a chance to actually show what he can do. But

(01:13:43):
I think Kevin Sperry's probably, you know, clearly, I think
got the higher upside, and I don't know that he's
the number two guy for sure right now, just because
I do think part of the reason he went in
first in this game was the Brooklyn did have an
ankle or foot injury in the in preseason, missed a
lot of time, So I think it it from that standpoint,
I think I'll get blocked the benefit of doubt, and

(01:14:03):
maybe it's not clear that Kevin Sperry has beat him out.
But yeah, over the course of time, I think Kevin
Sperry will be the guy unless something changes. But so
far as first nine months on campus, they are super
impressed by what he's done.

Speaker 1 (01:14:16):
All right, look at the calendar. We've got a nice
off week. Everyone can heal up a little bit and
then get focused. Kent State comes to town, so three
in a row at home before heading to Virginia. Virginia
is a decent football team, but man, I am looking
at October fourth, and I'm seeing the potential of an
unbeaten FSU and an unbeaten Miami And that's a good

(01:14:39):
old days game. Ira. That is that is that could
be incredible.

Speaker 5 (01:14:45):
Yeah, I really hope both teams can take care of
business before then. And you know, Miami still got Florida.
Florida doesn't look as good as maybe some people thought,
but obviously that's gonna be a really tough game. And
then you know, Florida State has to go win to Virginia,
and we've all seen enough to know that going on
the road sometimes can be different from from playing at home,
and of course they probably won't be as sharp and
Virginia will be good. But I do think the way

(01:15:07):
this team is built should should be able to travel.
They hit hard on defense, they run the ball really well.
It's not like they need a young quarterback to be
on the money in that game. So you know, I
think they'll play well at Virginia. But I really hope
both teams can hold surf because, yeah, I think College
Gamdale will be here. I think it'll be a great
It'll be a return to what we haven't seen from

(01:15:28):
for State and Miami in maybe two decades.

Speaker 1 (01:15:30):
Okay, quick prediction. I If FSU and Miami take care
of business as you State and they are both unbeaten,
is that the national primetime game an eight o'clock kick
at Doe Campbell.

Speaker 5 (01:15:42):
I think it is. I mean, I think there's going
to be there's one other big game that day, but
I think that's going to be the game that everybody
wants to watch it. People in college football fans today
all grew up on the nineties. They want a return
of that era of football they're starving for. That's why
every year people think, oh is Miami back? Because everybody
he wants these two programs to be on top. And

(01:16:03):
I think everybody except the people in Gainesville, and I think, uh,
you know, the country will embrace that matchup.

Speaker 1 (01:16:10):
I rah good to visit with you as always, Thanks
for the time. We'll see you next week.

Speaker 5 (01:16:14):
Sounds great.

Speaker 1 (01:16:15):
Thanks Bressing, Thank you, sir. I Rischafell with us from
war chant dot com. Remember subscribe war chant dot com. Alrighty,

(01:16:43):
big stories in the press box. This morning, mugshots released
two teams charged in the fatal shooting of a Capitol
Hill intern. This was one of the things that triggered
Trump's actions in Washington, DC to young black men as
perhaps relatives teenagers, but Democrat run city. Democrat run cities

(01:17:19):
are filled with repeat offenders that shouldn't be on the
streets or should live in fear of their actions and
therefore don't commit crimes. But in Democrat run cities, they

(01:17:42):
don't have those repercussions. The case in Charlotte we've talked
about this morning. Twenty three year old Ukrainian asylum seeking immigrant.
She's just sitting on this commuter train, no interactions with

(01:18:02):
the guy behind her. She's a beautiful young lady, I
mean a beautiful young lady just from a you know,
just snapshot she's model material, she's gorgeous. Doesn't matter. She's
a human being. She's a beautiful human being. No provocation whatsoever.

(01:18:28):
People seemingly ignoring the fact that he's unfolding his pocket
knife looks like about a two and a half three
inch blade, and he proceeds to just stand up and
stabber in the throat three times. She had no idea
her life was going to end at that moment, and
it did. Charlotte is run by Democrats. This guy was

(01:18:54):
a fourteen time arrested violent felon. If I were to
analyze the tape and offer my thoughts, it would be
he looked mentally disturbed. He looked demonically possessed. Was he
on drugs? I don't know, and I don't care. It
doesn't matter. The Charlotte City Council has twelve members, eleven

(01:19:20):
of them are Democrats, including the mayor. I don't know
what more. I don't know what evidence you need other
than to go look for it yourself. And if you're
unwilling to look it up and not take my word
for the fact that Democrat runs cities, lead and violent

(01:19:40):
crimes and murders all the time, does that mean that
there are no bad crimes in Republican run cities, of
course not. There are bad people everywhere, and there are
bad people who happen to be Republicans. That's not my point.
My point is that the predominance of Democrat run cities

(01:20:02):
will be on the higher end of all of the
violent crime and the murder rates. Just is. It's just
a fact. And then you add a Democrat run city
inside a Democrat run state, and you're you're totally screwed.

(01:20:27):
This young lady fled a war torn country, came to Charlotte,
North Carolina, only to get stabbed and murdered by just
some dude who decided to kill her. It's it's I
couldn't watch the video. I watched the video up to

(01:20:48):
the moment. I couldn't watch it. Had somebody with any
level of courage been sitting nearby, perhaps it wouldn't have happened.
They'd have pulled a gun and shoot him. I don't
know what North Carolina's laws are on concealed carry, I
don't know, but it's a Democrat run community. So big

(01:21:16):
story in the press box. Forty minutes past the hour,
its Morning Show with Preston Scott related story on our
blog page, not blog page, our website. Go fundme is
pulled multiple fundraisers intended to help the guy who killed
this girl. In terms of service that go fund me

(01:21:39):
explicitly state that you can't raise money for legal defense
if anyone formally charged with an alleged violent crime. So
they're pulling them as fast as they're going up, but
they're going up. Listen to this. Fundraisers suggested that the
thirty five year old homeless man with a criminal history
was the victim of a racist, broken judicial system, quoting quoting.

(01:22:02):
While what happened on the blue line was a tragedy,
we must mustn't lose sight of is the fact that
the named individual was failed categorically by the judicial system
and the mental health services of North Carolina, and as
such is not entirely to blame for what happened. Raising

(01:22:23):
money to assist with legal fees for him, anything helps
fight the racism and bias against our people. What if
it were a white guy, and what if the victim
were black and someone put that post up. Not entirely responsible? Wow,

(01:22:49):
all right, Well, he'll be in prison for the rest
of his life. Hopefully. We talked to Correction Secretary Ricky
Dixon last week for the State of Florida Department of Corrections,
and he talked about the challenge of dealing with drone

(01:23:14):
operations smuggled in cell phones. It's an issue people flying
drones and dropping drugs or contraband or what you phones.
People smuggling phones in and then they're running criminal enterprises
from inside the prisons. Well, guess what. Guess who's doing

(01:23:38):
something about it? Donald Trump. FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr announced
a policy shift today. I announced a plan to allow
prisons to jam contraband cell phones. These devices have been
flowing into prisons by the thousands and used to run
gang and criminal enterprises. The federal government had previously blocked

(01:24:06):
this technology despite repeated warnings from prison officials that inmates
were using smuggled phones to orchestrate violent crimes, traffic drugs,
and coordinate hits from behind bars. That policy now is
finally being reversed. This is huge. Cell phone jammers come

(01:24:30):
into the correction facilities across the country will reduce violent
crime outside of the prisons. This is wonderful news. That's
not fair. Whatever course it's fair. It's not only fair,

(01:24:56):
it's smart. You have to then ask the question what
was the federal government thinking in banning the jammers? To
begin with? Why wouldn't you? That's absurd? Forty six minutes

(01:25:17):
past the hour, come back with a final story that
made me just go ouch. Tomorrow, Justin Haskins expected to
join us Paul Renner, former Florida Speaker of the House,

(01:25:37):
running for governor. We bumped him from today to tomorrow
at his request, have a manly minute money talk. So
a busy Tuesday already, and I even even I haven't
even gotten busy myself. Well like it busy? This just

(01:25:58):
I only wrote in my rundown ouch with an exclamation point.
I can't even fathom this. Gabrielle Wall decided she wanted
to break the Guinness World Record for the fastest one
hundred meters barefoot on lego bricks. A three hundred and

(01:26:24):
twenty eight foot sprint on lego bricks in christ Church,
New Zealand. Track was covered in six hundred and sixty
one pounds of lego bricks, dumped out and off she ran.
She spent two entire months barefoot to build callouses in
preparation for her attempt. She even intended a wedding without

(01:26:46):
shoes on, and she did it in twenty four point
seventy five seconds of absolute torture. Guinnis wrote in our video,
Gabrielle is wearing sunglasses, presumably to hide her tears from
the pain of standing on all that lego Can you

(01:27:09):
even get your brain around that? Why would you? I mean, look,
I don't need to hold a record that involves pain.
Can you imagine running barefoot over one hundred meters on

(01:27:33):
lego blocks? That's insanity? No, no, no, no, no, aren't there
are other records. Surely there's got to be records that
don't involve you doing something like that. But she did it,

(01:27:55):
So she's got the record. Brought to you by Barono
heating an air.

Speaker 3 (01:27:59):
It's the morning on WFLA today.

Speaker 1 (01:28:06):
We started our program with Acts one, verse eight. Pretty
cool encounter right there. What happened? That was very cool?
So check that out. Big stories in the press box today.
COVID nineteen infection risk cut by two thirds with a
simple over the counter hay fever nasal spray. Given that

(01:28:33):
the vaccine doesn't act as a vaccine and it isn't
a preventative because it doesn't stop people from getting COVID.
One would think that getting something that doesn't involve injecting
yourself with potentially blood clotting whatever, DNA changing whatever, and

(01:28:54):
going with as a lasting or a zealostein. It's over
the counter nasal spray hey fever. Apparently it has some
really good anti viral properties. Well, there you go. Sniff
Sniff talked about the refugee slain and cold blood in

(01:29:16):
public transit on public transit in Charlotte, pointing out the
fact that Democrat run communities are crime hubs, violent crimes, murders.
They just are the worst in the country, are always
run by Democrats. Please talk about that amongst yourselves. President

(01:29:40):
Trump might send troops to Portland. He's thinking Portland, Chicago, Baltimore,
New Orleans, all Democrat run cities as well. He should
if they won't protect the citizens. If the citizens are
out there begging, we'd love to be able to walk
our streets again. We can't. You know what I imagine
seen Back to the Future part two, when Biff gets

(01:30:04):
hold of the Sports Almanac and bets and wins and
turns whatever that city is into just trash. A lot
of Democrat run cities are Biffco. They are a biff.
Biff Tan in Land challenge Florida lawmakers Republicans, namely to

(01:30:25):
deal with the employment of illegal immigration. Employment of illegal
immigrants shared the story in Pasco County. If you had
another victim. Talked about the deportation of Kilmar Abrego Garcia.
Apparently he's scared of being transferred anywhere in the Western Hemisphere.

(01:30:46):
Covered a lot of other ground visited with Iras Chaffel.
Talk to the FSU football friends. We're going to tee
it up and do it all over again tomorrow. I
cannot wait, just twenty one hours away. Have yourself a
blessed day and thanks for listening.
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