Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:20):
Welcome Thursday Ruminators October all the second here on the
Morning Show with Preston Scotti's Oseiah.
Speaker 2 (00:30):
I'm Preston.
Speaker 1 (00:31):
Great to be with you, Show fifty four sixty four.
It's funny how it works out when I take a
day off here or there, the math changes just a
little bit. So now I'm back where I want to be.
I'm going to end the week tomorrow a Friday with
show fifty four sixty five. Just nice round numbers, and
(00:52):
I know that's anyway. It's a it's a stupid thing,
but it I just I feel more ordered. I just do.
But we welcome you to Thursday. We have a very
busy program as always. But first things first, huh huh huh.
Have I got any of you doing this yet?
Speaker 3 (01:14):
Like?
Speaker 1 (01:14):
Are are you being encouraged to spend more time in
God's word?
Speaker 2 (01:28):
You know?
Speaker 1 (01:28):
One of my challenges is I've got like six Bibles
in my bookshelf behind my desk at home, and I've
got a two shelves, well, one shelf dedicated to study
material and then another shelf with with just books related
to and and I've had to take I got a
(01:54):
Bible fork. I think it was Christmas last year, my
Chronological ESV. I wanted a chronological Bible, and my wife
got me that. I believe it was my wife that
got me that, And it's on my desk. I moved
(02:15):
it from my bookshelf to my desk, and just as
an encouragement to be more active, because there is not
a chance even though I studied scripture for so many
years vocationally, it's like, so there's so much to learn,
(02:44):
there's so much to know. And the reality is every
stage of life opens up some of the same scriptures
to new, deeper meaning without ever being contradictory to its
original meaning. When you first read it, some of you
(03:08):
know exactly what I'm talking about. You'll read a passage
and then years later read that exact same passage and
it speaks something very different to you because of the stage,
the season you are in in your life, or because
of life experiences. So I'm just I'm begging you get
into it. Read it, read it, read it. Let the
(03:28):
Holy Spirit speak to you through reading his word. Listen
to what Scripture says here first Chronicles, first Chronicles, Old
School right Old Testament sixteen thirty four, Oh give thanks
to the Lord for He is good, for his steadfast
love endures forever. Give thanks to the Lord. I start
(03:54):
my day thanking God for the day. There is absolutely,
positively a correlation between confessing a thank you to God
for the day that is about to begin and how
that day will go for you. It does not mean
(04:18):
that it will be a day without trial or trouble,
or challenge or difficulty. What it means is that when
you say to God at the beginning of your day, God,
thank you for this day. Give me the wisdom that
I need for this day. Give me the strength that
(04:41):
I need for this day. When you encounter challenges, God
is going to answer the bell. He's just going to
be there. He's going to help start your day with
a thanks for that day, a thanks for the people
(05:02):
in your life, your family, your friends, your coworkers, your
your clients, whatever it might be. And remember what if
the only people you had in your life today were
the people you gave thanks for yesterday. So give thanks
for those in your life today, so though they just
(05:22):
be blessed. Ten past the hour, It's the Morning Show
with Preston Scott. All Right, we've got the second day
(05:44):
of the month of ah over.
Speaker 2 (05:50):
I'm probably getting a little carried away on that, sorry.
Speaker 1 (05:57):
Seventeen eighty and Tapping New York. British Major John andre
Is hanged as a spy after he is captured carrying
papers for trader Benedict Arnold. There are names like there
(06:19):
are names written down in God's word that are not good.
Bad people didn't bad things. Imagine being having your name
written down in scripture for being a jerk right now,
(06:45):
I can't not ever say something like this when I'm
talking about Benedict Arnold. For all of history, a trader
is called you, Benedict Arnold. Can you imagine your name
(07:07):
being synonymous with dog doo doo?
Speaker 4 (07:13):
Like?
Speaker 2 (07:13):
How horrible would that be?
Speaker 1 (07:16):
That you are so reviled as a human being that
your name is now it's taken on its own meaning
as trader Benedict Arnold, you trader. Oh my gosh, history
(07:47):
it's just and it's not like he doesn't deserve it.
Eighteen thirty five, The Texas Revolution against Mexico begins as
America and settlers resist Mexican troops at Gonzales. Nineteen nineteen,
President Woodrow Wilson suffers a stroke that leaves him an invalid.
(08:11):
Nineteen fifty, the comic strip Peanuts by Charles Schultz is
first published. Boy he had a run. What a beautiful
what a what a beautiful contribution to comic strips and cartoons.
Charlie Brown.
Speaker 2 (08:27):
It just.
Speaker 1 (08:30):
I mean, who doesn't watch the specials that are coming up.
We've got the special for Halloween, what is it? The
Great Pumpkin Charlie Brown or something like that, and then
there's Thanksgiving a Charlie Brown Thanksgiving, and then Christmas. Those
specials are iconic, they just are. And then in nineteen
(08:53):
sixty seven, Third Good Marshal, the first black justice on
the Supreme Court, is sworn in. Yeah, oh well no,
I just he's an activist judge.
Speaker 2 (09:01):
He was the first.
Speaker 1 (09:02):
And you know, I doesn't bother me that he was
any race or whatever. He was just a bad judge,
bad justice. But whatever. It's National Smarties Day. Do you
like Smarties? Yeah?
Speaker 2 (09:21):
Not a fan. Yeah, they're like powdery. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (09:26):
When you put one in your mouth, you're expecting because
your mind tells you that's a sweetheart, and sweethearts are incredible.
Sweethearts are They are incredible. And you put it smart
in your mouth and you're like, why don't I just
go eat some chalk?
Speaker 2 (09:44):
But whatever.
Speaker 1 (09:45):
It's National Custodial Workers Recognition Day, National Name your Car Day?
Speaker 2 (09:50):
Does your car have a name?
Speaker 1 (09:54):
No, sir, not yet, at least National Fried Scallops Day
with garlic butter and blackened. Garlic butter and blackened that's
how you do your scallops.
Speaker 2 (10:14):
And it's National.
Speaker 1 (10:17):
Produce Misting Day sixteen.
Speaker 2 (10:22):
Pass the Hour. Good debut with us this morning on
the Morning Show with Preston's Guy.
Speaker 1 (10:38):
We try so hard to make sure that when we
talk about something and say this is going on, we
do the follow up kind of the epilogue and let
you know how it ended up. For example, I am
quite certain that thousands of you are wanting to know
who won the Fat Bear twenty twenty five competition. The
(11:03):
Chunky Champion has been named. It is the eleventh annual
Fat Bear Week. It is a contest of a bracket
where they put the photos little description of each bear
and it's a winner's bracket type thing.
Speaker 2 (11:21):
You know.
Speaker 1 (11:21):
It's a single elimination tournament. Winners advance. They got it,
they got it boiled down. These are bears that live
near Brook River within the Catmai National Park in southern
Alaska and the winner thirty two Chunk. Thirty two chunk.
And I'm showing Jose a picture of thirty two Chunk,
(11:47):
and I mean he and I don't know if you
can see from there.
Speaker 2 (11:50):
He's got a massive scar on his snout. That's a
big old bear.
Speaker 1 (11:54):
Yeah, I can't see it. Yeah, he's a big fella
adult brown bear. The scar across the nuzzle, he muzzle.
He has a broken jaw apparently now it's healing, but
apparently he got into a fight with another bear during
(12:14):
mating season, got his jaw broken. It is healing, but
he's managed to keep his weight by eating salmon in
massive numbers and avoiding any fights with other bears. While
as jaws healing, he's just being cool.
Speaker 2 (12:37):
And so he has won. He's the winner.
Speaker 1 (12:45):
He unseated one twenty eight grazer who is the twenty
twenty four winner, and it will happen again next week.
So there's your winner.
Speaker 2 (12:55):
Now.
Speaker 1 (12:55):
I thought to myself, Okay, that's good, we have a winner, right,
But you know it's this time of the show. We've
got a chunky champ to honor, and so I thought
(13:22):
broken jaw and scars. Still he ate enough to win
King of Fat Brown Bears.
Speaker 2 (13:46):
I'm dying over here.
Speaker 1 (13:49):
Well, you know what's really fun about this is for
those of you that do not know, we just occasionally
drop a haikup on you. That is a spot on
perfect haiku written by Ai. I've figured out the code,
(14:11):
and so what you do is you give the appropriate topic.
And I'm not using any of the big AI machines.
I'm just using a generic AI thing and I give
them the topic. And in this case, the topic was
haiku on Fat Bear winner thirty two chunk, and so
(14:34):
it pulled up a little mini write up about him winning,
and then it said, here is a haiku celebrating his victory.
Don't you feel like you're enriched? I mean, check us
out right dropping hiku bombs on you on a Thursday morning,
(15:03):
beautiful day. And listen to the music. I mean, the
morning show band is just crushing it. You can't get
this anywhere else.
Speaker 5 (15:18):
This is.
Speaker 1 (15:21):
High end radio. Oh you can't play anything else. You
just got to leave this right, Let's just yeah.
Speaker 5 (15:36):
This is the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 1 (15:48):
Scott got a call from a listener no idea what
a haiku is, but we made his day welcome.
Speaker 2 (16:11):
Here is what a haiku is.
Speaker 1 (16:12):
It is a It is a traditional Japanese three line
poem based on syllables five seven five five syllables. Seven syllables,
five syllables. So you simply count out the number of
syllables and follow the format line one, five syllables, line two,
(16:37):
seven syllables, line three, five syllables, and you got your
haiku boom. And then you you know, obviously you have
to have the morning show band, and I understand that
you don't have that. We've gotten calls from you know,
Salnuzo reached out and said, hey, I need that music
for my morning meditations. I you know, personally wouldn't be
(17:03):
using that for my morning meditations about Jesus. But hey,
you do you, Sal, you do you? Okay, let's get
to the big story. Story one one one. Here's the headline.
Seven man grooming gang jailed in UK for total of
(17:28):
one hundred and seventy four years. The men were convicted
of a total of fifty offenses, including rape, starting when
their victims were just thirteen years of age. These grooming
gangs have been a problem in the UK for a
few decades and authorities have turned their eye away from it.
(17:52):
They've ignored it. It's become an issue again in part
because the Prime Mini Ker Starmer was one of the
guys who ignored it. See before he became the Prime
Minister of the UK, ker Starmer was the Director of
Public Prosecutions for Britain, which means he ignored this problem.
(18:15):
He denies it, but the evidence is overwhelming. He ignored
it and so did cities across the UK. It is
so prevalent these occurrences that it's now called grooming gang's scandal.
Speaker 2 (18:38):
Now we're going.
Speaker 1 (18:39):
To just push to the side the issue of the
UK arresting people for what they post online, otherwise known
as free speech, arresting people for being critical of things
or not using the proper pronouns, all of that nonsense.
No people are being arrested for this, and they've been
(19:04):
ignoring these grooming gangs. So point one, they exist. But
there's a deeper, much bigger issue that is so important
to communities in this country. Inside investigations, they're finding children
(19:26):
as young as ten ten years old are being picked
out for these groomers. They're sexually attacking these children. They
pick on young people that are poor, that might have
(19:51):
developmental issues, in other words, the most vulnerable.
Speaker 2 (19:56):
But now let's really drill down here.
Speaker 1 (20:02):
Court cases, investigations reporters have revealed that local officials turned
a blind eye to the abuse.
Speaker 2 (20:09):
Listen, listen.
Speaker 1 (20:14):
For fear of being labeled racist or destabilizing community relations. Really,
why would that be. Let's read the names of those convicted.
Speaker 2 (20:30):
Shall we?
Speaker 1 (20:33):
Mohammad Zahid Kasir, Bashir Mushtaq, Ahmed, Mohammad, Shahzad, Nissar, Hussein,
Nahim Akram unanimously convicted by a jury of fifty offenses,
(20:55):
including thirty counts of rape. And these cases happened in
two thousand and one through two thousand and six and
it's just now being dealt with. Why Because England has
turned itself over to an Islamic invasion. If you do
(21:21):
not know it, there are communities in England that have
Sharia courts. I have picked this as the big story
in the press box because this is a warning. Can
(21:42):
you worship Islam in this country? Absolutely? Can you be
an extremist and adherent?
Speaker 2 (21:47):
Nope? Nope, m M.
Speaker 1 (21:50):
It's incompatible, It's not compatible with this country, our way
of government, our rule of law.
Speaker 2 (21:56):
It's not compatible.
Speaker 1 (22:02):
Forty one minutes after the hour, and that is the
big story in the press box. Thanks for joining us.
Speaker 6 (22:11):
It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott on News Radio
one hundred point seven Double UFLA or on NewsRadio double
UFLA Panama City dot Com.
Speaker 2 (22:24):
This half hour of the radio program.
Speaker 1 (22:26):
Sorry, this half hour of the radio program has a theme.
Multiple people have been arrested after FEDS have uncovered a
massive immigration fraud ring involving hundreds in Minnesota. Now, my
(22:48):
brother is in Saint Paul, and it has been known
for decades the growing problem of Somali's taking over parts
of Minneapolis and Saint Paul ilhan Omar, a Somali who
should be kicked out of this country for violating her
(23:14):
oath of allegiance to this nation, who never should have
been allowed to serve in Congress. I'm sorry. If you
are an adherent to Islam, you shouldn't be serving in government.
I know that sounds harsh, but if you read, if
you know anything about the writings of Mohammad, it's incompatible
(23:35):
with this form of government because this form of government
is based on the Judeo Christian Bible. You can deny
that until the cows come home, and you'll still be wrong.
You're just wrong if you don't understand that. And so
someone could someone just you know, hey, I like going
(23:57):
to mosque and I believe in praying, you knowlah blah blah, Okay,
But if you really believe in the writings of Muhammad,
they're not compatible with this form of government. They're just not.
They're just not. And so listen to this. The enforcement sweep.
They've got over eighty two thousand Somali refugees and immigrants
(24:21):
in Minnesota, eighty two thousand. According to an article in
the New York Post citing immigration officials, nearly fifty percent
of inhabitants in one thousand homes targeted were involved in
some type of fraud, marriage fraud.
Speaker 2 (24:40):
You'll hand omark.
Speaker 1 (24:42):
Visa overstay, people claiming to work as businesses that can't
be found, forged documents, abuse of the H one B
visa system, abuse of the F one visa, and other discrepancies.
We're just scratching the surface. This article's from the Western Journal.
(25:05):
Nearly fifty percent. Imagine, now, what's happening nation wide. Now
we're not done with Minnesota. Minnesota is a beautiful, incredible
state that is governed like the biggest trash heap on
the planet. How Minnesotans went this route, I'll never understand.
(25:30):
There was a time when Hubert Humphrey was like an
icon former Vice president. He was a friend of our families.
I knew Vice President Humphrey. I met him multiple times
as a young man, as a child. What a good man.
Where he was politically and where that state is now
(25:52):
is night and day. We've long talked about the Democrats
have back in the day would be welcomed in the
Republican Party today and would be a from the Democrat
Party wouldn't stand a chance, and Hubert would be one
of those. Minnesota has received an ultimatum for violating Title nine,
allowing transgenders to compete against against girls. Finally they've had enough.
(26:16):
There's a Department of Justice referral that's standing by if
they don't comply. A notice of violation has been sent
just a few days ago from the Department of Education
and the Department of Health and Human Services. Among the
problems which we highlighted on this program, they have found
that there are boys competing against girls and skiing, Nordic skiing, lacrosse,
(26:39):
track and field, volleyball, and fast pitch softball. How extreme
did it get? The male pitcher at Champlain Park High
School overpowered female athletes during five consecutive games, giving up
one earned run over thirty five innings and striking out
twenty seven batters because he's a dude. And they feel
(27:08):
no sense of shame for the girls that could have
won titles in all these different sports and in all
these different competitions. The state of Minnesota Governor Tim Walls, mister,
let's put feminine products in the men's restrooms. Tampon, Tim.
(27:32):
They have no sense of shame. These are two stories
that are on the surface don't connect, but they connect completely.
It's the common thread is illiberalism. It is so uncomfortable.
I don't know that I can ever go back to
that state. It's ridiculous, how to attached from reality. Minnesotans
(28:02):
have allowed the land of ten thousand Lakes to become
forty eight minutes past the hour. I'm not done with
the Midwest or the story of illegal immigration.
Speaker 2 (28:18):
Have you been following the Aslee? I just want to
get going.
Speaker 1 (28:31):
Have you been following the story of the des Moines,
Iowa superintendent of education know anything about this?
Speaker 2 (28:42):
Ian Roberts.
Speaker 1 (28:46):
The superintendent of education for des Moines, Iowa. No small
town is des Moines, no small area. He's an illegal immigrant. Oh,
but it gets better, it gets better. Let's put some
(29:08):
context to this. My man Ian.
Speaker 2 (29:21):
Came into this country.
Speaker 1 (29:25):
Over state a student visa from nineteen ninety nine, had
a student visa overstayed, has active voter status, and is
registered as a Democrat in.
Speaker 2 (29:41):
Maryland, not Iowa. Maryland.
Speaker 1 (29:48):
His registration means that he is eligible to vote in
all federal, state, and local elections despite not being.
Speaker 2 (29:58):
A US citizen.
Speaker 1 (30:02):
He also hasn't lived in Maryland for at least ten years,
but he's still registered to vote and has received allegedly
five mail in ballots since being an Iowa resident.
Speaker 2 (30:15):
So please, lefties, spare me.
Speaker 1 (30:20):
Yes, illegal immigrants are voting in elections. He's had two
speeding tickets in Iowa. But somehow they didn't notice that
his address was Maryland and he's the superintent was the
superintendent of education.
Speaker 2 (30:41):
How does this happen? How?
Speaker 1 (30:50):
Let's come back with Steve Stewart of Tallassi Reports. It's Thursday.
Let's find out what's going on in Florida's capital city.
No shortage of new whose events, things to discuss. Well,
you can get ahead of us. Just go to Tellassireports
dot com and better yet, while you're there, subscribe for
(31:10):
the paper, get it delivered, and support good journalism.
Speaker 2 (31:30):
Ready to take a deep breath.
Speaker 1 (31:33):
This morning's been a little saucy, a little spicy. Welcome
to the second hour here of the Morning Show with
President Scott. I happen to be Preston. That is Jose
and this is the executive editor of Tellassie Reports. He
is Steve Stewart. Hi, good morning, Preston.
Speaker 2 (31:48):
How are you well? You've been listening? Way to get
my blood boiling early? Well, I mean it.
Speaker 1 (31:56):
We'll get to that, right, because there are some commonalities
here in some of these stories and things that we
see unfolding. But first, I think the most important news
for people to kind of get updated on is what's
going on with Tallahassee Memorial Hospital.
Speaker 7 (32:11):
Right.
Speaker 8 (32:11):
And look, this is a very complicated issue in one
you know, in one sense, in another sense, it's it's
pretty much out there in the sense you know, you
want to f s U and TMH. Those are big organizations,
ye in this community. And so as has been the
news is FSU is looking to merge with TMH to
create an academic health center, which has been is the
(32:33):
model to take advantage of sort of the that industry
sector and communities all over the country and within this
state have done it. We are behind years behind for
whatever reason we could talk about. It's probably another segment.
Is it usually done successfully? You know, if there's a
lot of studies on how these mergers and agreements work,
(32:56):
and yes it is. You know, again, the health sector
has got their own their own issues, but it's a
growing it's a growing sector in terms it's in terms
of an employment, in terms of money coming from the Feds.
And so what happened, you know, so this is something
we've should have done. And look the people around the
state that have already done this, Tampa, Miami, Gainesville. You know,
(33:18):
they're gonna lose out when when f s U and
tm H merged, because then the state's gonna have another
another medical center that they're gonna they're gonna fund, and
so dollars is gonna come away. So again we should
have done this ten years ago. We've gotten to this.
Part of where the agreement is is in writing and
the city, as most people know, on the build the
(33:40):
land and the buildings of tm H. And then TMH
is actually the not for profit organization that has come
in and is running the hospital. And so what has
to happen in this the big touching point are the
big uh. I guess some issue with this agreement is
that the city needs to vote to transfer the assets
(34:03):
to FSU and then FSU is going to lease those
assets back to Team HS for a dollar.
Speaker 2 (34:08):
Just that is done now. And TMH is the provider
of last.
Speaker 8 (34:12):
Resort in this community's regards to healthcare, and that means
that they have to take all commerce and you know
that comes with a cost, I mean hundreds of millions
of dollars of health care for people that can't afford it,
don't have insurance. And so that's called that's the community
part of this hospital. There are other private sector hospital
organizations that don't do this. They're in this to run,
(34:35):
you know, their business and make money. And so they
had this big meeting yesterday.
Speaker 2 (34:39):
It's City Hall. All the players were at the table
and the progressives don't want to give up hospital.
Speaker 8 (34:46):
There's obviously, as we've talked, they're pulling in this national
narrative that you know, the Republicans that run the state
of Florida and governor of the Sanders are going to
be in control of your health care and that's going
to be a negative thing. Despite the fact that the
president of f SU tried to push back on and
say this is you know, that's.
Speaker 2 (35:03):
Rhetoric, it's overblown.
Speaker 8 (35:05):
I don't see that, and talked about the benefits of
this agreement in terms of jobs and finances for our community.
Yet those two Porter and Mallow continue to look there's
nothing about asking probing questions.
Speaker 2 (35:20):
Absolutely, but when.
Speaker 8 (35:21):
You start getting to the point of saying that you know,
we'll take nothing less than a billion dollars, because well,
first of all, you're arguing that you're selling it to
the state and government, Ron de saying this is going
to come down and run the hospital. But then on
the next and the next breath you say we'll take
a billion dollars and let ron to say it has
come in and run the hospital. It's just, you know,
it just doesn't make sense. He's struggling for an issue
(35:43):
to run for mayor and it and it really looks foolish.
I mean if you watch some of the videos here,
because the point is this, it's the transfer of the
assets will can will allow TEAMHS to continue to be
the community hospital, and that's what's so important for a
lot of people in Leon County and tew See. And
so they're going to have another hearing in the end
of October, and I suspect that the city will vote
(36:07):
three to two to go ahead and move forward with
this agreement, which is long overdue.
Speaker 1 (36:12):
If I'm not mistaken, Steve, this model has worked in
Democrat runs states as well.
Speaker 2 (36:20):
Oh, no doubt.
Speaker 8 (36:20):
It's all over the country, and it's you know, obviously
Tampa in us F is the big example that a
lot of people talking about here, and so it's just
something that should happen. And again, probing questions are good,
but they're taking this ideology and trying to, you know,
basically provide an obstacle to something that's I think best
for the community.
Speaker 1 (36:39):
Steve store with us. He's the executive editor Tallahassee Reports.
Go to the website Tallahassee Reports dot com. All past
(37:00):
the Hour Steve Stewart with us from Tallastic Reports. You know,
yesterday Steve we ended the show talking about Joe Bullard's
unfortunate gaff at the family football game cracked a joke
at the expense of the visiting dance team. But there
are some unfortunate comparisons to be made because much has
been made of that. But yet a story we talked
(37:21):
about last week has been basically met with silence.
Speaker 8 (37:24):
Yeah, and I don't know if you saw he got
suspended for two games, Jay, you saw that, and so
I thought it was ironic. And you know, this is again,
this goes back to our community as whole. I remember
when I first ran from Mayor fifteen years ago, it
was like you're doing what you're asking questions.
Speaker 2 (37:39):
You know.
Speaker 8 (37:40):
It's like people in their little silos, they want to
be left alone to operate. We've got it, We've got
it structured the way we want it, you know, and
so and nobody wants to say anything to hurt anybody's feelings.
Speaker 2 (37:51):
Now there are a couple of politicians that they don't care.
Speaker 8 (37:55):
Commissioner Proctor's won right. He'll say what's on his mind
and then he'll he'll take people responding to him and
I appreciate that, you know what he's thinking, all right,
But you know, the issue with the Leon County School
Board member Daryl Jones, I think is befuddling to me.
And it's you know, the vile comments that he made
with an opportunity to Yeah, so Charlie Kirk, obviously this
(38:18):
is going around the country and the state. Uh Facebook
message he responded, you know, to a letter from the
DOE telling teachers, look, you have first mindment rights, but
there are consequences of what you say. And you know,
he took humbrage with that message and labeled Charlie Kirk
a racist and a homophobe and a clansman. That's my
(38:39):
you know, that is just that which is slanderous, right,
And so again when called out, you know, I had
a chance to apologize and say I disagree with some
of the positions that Charlie Kirk have, but I should
not have used that vile language. Did not apologize And
even more troubling, I think from a community standpoint, and listen,
(39:02):
mister Jones is h he's a leader in the community.
I mean, he's spoke at a commencement for FAM. You
he's the chairman of the Children's Services Council, he works
in local government, he's on the school board, and nobody
has called him out, not even nobody at all other
than the state Republican Party.
Speaker 2 (39:22):
So so fellow school board members silent. Not yet.
Speaker 8 (39:25):
Now there's a meeting coming up and we'll see what
happens on that. Yeah, but I'm very disappointed in the
fact that, first of all, I'm disappointed that someone at
his level did not apologize. I can completely understand if
you've got disagreements and we can actually talk about those,
because I think he probably doesn't know Charlie Kirk's position.
Speaker 1 (39:42):
No, and he's ignorant, like a lot of people are,
on what Charlie Kirk actually said about things, because he
gets little clips.
Speaker 8 (39:48):
Intellectually lazy. And again, the thing about this is that, yeah,
you know, did Charlie Kirk say some things you might
disagree with or you got to look at the broader
contacts and no doubt, but it's to use that VI
language is just especially as someone who is in that situation.
Speaker 2 (40:04):
It gives cover for those.
Speaker 1 (40:06):
Who want to continue absolutely to do that. And you know,
and so we're gonna we'll see what happens. But this
is This is the It's really is.
Speaker 8 (40:15):
A reflection of how immature are some of our leaders
are in this community.
Speaker 1 (40:20):
And I hate to say that, but it's like, just
just engage. Well it's a lack of moral courage, right,
I mean, I don't I'm not asking for him to
resign that this is an opportunity. It provides clarity where
he stands. Okay, people that hear him talk, you know,
and hear him advocate for the south Side. This provides
clarity and to where he stands a right, So we
know that now. But now we have an opportunity to engage. Okay,
(40:42):
can I not be Can I not question DEI policies
and affirmative action without being called a racist? I mean,
clearly he doesn't think so, and so let's engage on that.
And clearly he's not listened to what blacks say. Who know,
Charlie c Van Jones has.
Speaker 8 (40:58):
Got a clip out that would almost brings you to
tears if you watch that. But it's again, it's laziness,
and it is disappointing from a person who is such
an integral part of the community.
Speaker 1 (41:10):
But it's But what's worse the statement by Darryl Jones
or the fact that none of that his employer or
his colleagues will not address it.
Speaker 2 (41:18):
What's worse. I agree, and that's what that's why it
continues to be an issue for me. Steve Stewart Tallassi Reports.
Speaker 1 (41:23):
The only way you're gonna get a lot of stories
a ton that are not covered anywhere else, and I
mean literally nowhere else, is by subscribing. Go to Tellhassie
Reports dot com. The final segment here with Steve Stewart
(41:51):
of Tallahassee Reports Tallahassee Reports dot Com. We're covering a
lot of ground here today. Let's let's update folks what's
going on with Capitol City country So.
Speaker 2 (42:01):
This is an interesting topic and I've given it some thought.
Speaker 4 (42:04):
Here.
Speaker 8 (42:05):
Capitol City Country Club is on two hundred acres downtown
and borderline on a very sketchy area.
Speaker 1 (42:13):
No doubt the gang there's there are gangs that are
subseet gangs of big gangs that are in the neighborhoods
around the years.
Speaker 2 (42:20):
The golf course has a lot of history. Is built
in the thirties. It's landlocked, right, landlocked.
Speaker 8 (42:26):
It's uh, but again, what happened in nineteen fifty six
is the land was there's a lease given to the owners.
And this is a lot like TMH. So the city
owns the land, but they're leasing it to a group
to run a golf course.
Speaker 2 (42:40):
Okay.
Speaker 1 (42:41):
And the lease was given a nineteen fifty six during
a time of racial strife.
Speaker 8 (42:45):
There was segregation. No blacks were allowed to be in
this club, and so the lease was one hundred years
to twenty fifty six. That obviously has since changed decades ago,
and so but there's always been difficulties in that club.
Speaker 2 (43:01):
I remember.
Speaker 8 (43:01):
I always remember back way back in the nineties and
it was run very from an ad hoc basis.
Speaker 2 (43:08):
You know, people would just write checks.
Speaker 8 (43:09):
They would need money for improvements because they own the
actual club. They do own twelve acres of the land
with the buildings on it, so it complicates a little bit.
And so it's it's been able to hang on. They've
maintained the golf course, and I guess the neighbors around it,
which is sort of old Tallahassees and verse homes, they
like the golf course and the green space. So now
(43:29):
what's happened is the club has said, look, we want
to buy the land so that we can go get
loans and improve the property. Okay, and so they have
made a proposal to the city Commission could go ahead
and buy the land for about one point one million
dollars two hundred acres. Seems low, Yeah, it is, okay.
(43:50):
And so but the thing about the discussion at city
Hall is what we just talked about, how Matt Low
and Porter liked to bring the national there. It is
progressive ideality. Here's an opportunity to basically trash all white
people who you know might have any kind of connection
to the club. And that's what they did. They talked
about the slavery and they used to be a former plantation,
(44:12):
which is all true. But again they're bringing instead of
looking what's best for the community and say, okay, this
is what we're going to try to figure out they
are they're being very vindictive because this club has been integrated.
Speaker 2 (44:24):
For the last thirty forty years, if not longer.
Speaker 8 (44:28):
And so and so that's the issue and it they
obviously so this is so you start reading what people
want to do with this club, and this is the
irony part present is they want the city to buy
the property back and they you know, they're talking about
making it a petting zoo or putting you know, walking trails,
or putting somebody who said putting a ferris wheel, you know,
(44:49):
and so hey, affordable affordable housing. The irony here is
the neighbors who've probably lived in those homes for years.
They wanted to main a golf court, but they don't
want those club members to own the property. Well, the
irony is this is that's the best chance they have
for that as to remain as a golf course and.
Speaker 1 (45:11):
To keep a buffer zone from what is the activity
in the area that land.
Speaker 8 (45:16):
Do you sell that land to the city And I'm
telling you there's no telling what it would be if
the city buys it, and so this is going to
be an interesting decision by the city commission. Also, Now,
my conditions for selling it to the club owners are this,
it completely remains, it remains a golf course. Okay, there
also are some graves from one hundred years ago of
(45:39):
former slaves that are on that property that they want
to be that wants to be recognized, and that's in
a part of the land there that that should be
part of the agreement. But you can write an agreement
that will keep that a golf course okay, giving the
city the rights of first refusal. If they have to sell,
you can do that, and I think that is the
best way to go. Make it the home course for fans.
(46:00):
Family was right there. If that, you know, if that,
if that's something.
Speaker 2 (46:03):
That that works. I'm not sure where their home course
is now.
Speaker 8 (46:06):
But my point is this is an opportunity to do
something in the best interests of the community instead of
trying to score points for something that has happened years ago.
And what marked my word, that's going to be the
approach now. Again, as I said, when the neighbors really realize,
you know, they start reading these my views of what
they want to turn this into, they're going to go, oh,
(46:27):
my gosh, you know we want we want a.
Speaker 2 (46:29):
Petting zoo, here, a ferris wheel and so.
Speaker 8 (46:34):
And your point is, you know, it'd be better to
keep it in the private sector where they have the
financial interest to maintain.
Speaker 2 (46:40):
That is a golf course.
Speaker 8 (46:42):
And the value one point one million dollars seems low,
but it is well, it seems low. But as a
golf course at a green space, what is the value
you know, I mean, it's not as a golf course
in green space it's limited, but as a developed space
it's pretty high.
Speaker 2 (46:59):
Right, So well wait, do you want development or not?
So yeah, that's the thing.
Speaker 8 (47:03):
So anyway, that'll be an interesting issue to.
Speaker 2 (47:06):
Keep an eye on. Thanks so much. All right, thank you, Preston,
Steve Stewart.
Speaker 1 (47:10):
Each Thursday we get caught up on what's going on
in Florida's capital city, which is why we do this
here on The Morning Show with Preston.
Speaker 6 (47:17):
Scott in Sense of It All, The Morning Show with
Preston Scott on News Radio one hundred point seven, WUFLA.
Speaker 2 (47:52):
Do we add something else here? Uh huh, Morning show Man, thirty.
Speaker 1 (48:01):
Six minutes past the hour of the Big Story in
the press Box one. And it's a lesson. It is
a lesson that needs to be learned. The UK is
losing itself. It's gone socialist in many parts of its
(48:26):
governance society. It has opened the doors to Islam by
being scared of it and not addressing the incompatibility. Muslim
adherents that live the Book of Muhammad the Quran cannot
(48:56):
live under a form of government that is based on
the Judeo Christian Bible. It is no more complicated than
that they oppose each other. And you have this story
of a seven man grooming gang jailed in the UK
(49:19):
for crimes that happened to children in the early two thousands.
And they're just now going to jail because authorities turned
a blind eye because they are a bunch of Islamists.
Speaker 2 (49:36):
I'm giving you.
Speaker 1 (49:37):
The short version here. They have found court cases, investigations,
reports that the fear of being labeled racist, of destabilizing
community relations cause them to not prosecute and deal with
(50:03):
these issues. What do we do. There's a bunch of
these guys. Are these grooming gangs are all Islamis, They're
all coming from this same Oh my gosh, what we get?
Just gotta we gotta just work this thing. We gotta
just no. When I said what I did a decade
(50:29):
and a half ago, I just made this statement on
this program and Islamas should not be allowed to serve
in a government capacity as an elected official in this country.
People went nuts. But I'm being proven right over and
over and over. I want you to think about this.
(50:51):
I shared this with somebody just just in the last
few minutes. I keep this on my desk right here.
I rundown to refer to this is the oath of allegiance.
If you want to be a citizen of this country.
Speaker 5 (51:08):
I have it.
Speaker 2 (51:09):
It's what they swear.
Speaker 1 (51:15):
Ilhan Omar is a member of Congress, and she is
openly stated, repeatedly that she is a Somali. First, listen
to what the oath of allegiance is. I hereby declare
on oath that I absolutely and entirely renounce and abjure
all allegiance and fidelity to any foreign prince, potentate, state,
(51:37):
or sovereignty of whom or which I have heretofore have
been a subject or citizen. I'm gonna stop right there.
She is violating her oath as a citizen. She should
be stripped of her of her responsibilities in Congress on
that basis alone. You're out. You're not censured, you're out.
(51:58):
Those statements that she'sus some Mali first is a direct
violation of her oath of allegiance to be a citizen
of this country. And anyone who thinks like her should
be thrown out of this country, no questions asked. She
should be returned to Somali Somalia. And oh, by the way,
she probably committed visa fraud. But friends, look at what's
(52:25):
happening in the UK. They have Sharia courts in cities
in the UK, Sharia courts courts that are run by
the law of the Qoran. I am begging you people,
talk to your members of Congress. Wake up America. There
(52:54):
are communities like Dearborn, Michigan, like Minneapolis it's of Saint Paul,
that are being turned over and being run by Islamis.
It is our demise that we allow this welcome to
be in this country. You're not welcome to govern in
(53:17):
this country. It's just that simple. Forty one minutes after
the hour, pause for thought is next?
Speaker 2 (53:53):
All right?
Speaker 1 (53:56):
Something might have come up for doctor Steveson, and so
we will not have his expertise during but that's not
gonna stop me from talking about our pets.
Speaker 2 (54:10):
Not a chance.
Speaker 1 (54:16):
Pause for thought normally with doctor Stevenson. But again, when
you're a vet, you could be in an emergency situation
helping somebody. So we'll we'll catch up with Steve in
a couple of weeks. But I had a story sitting around.
Have you ever noticed what happens when you ask your
dog like you come home and you find you know
(54:39):
something a deposit left somewhere that shouldn't have been, or
a piece of clothing chewed up and torn and or
a pillow destroyed. And you walk in and you just go, really,
that's all you have to say. Really, you could go
what in the world? And the dog goes like this.
(55:00):
They just they slouch over. They start giving you the
side eye, looking through the top of their their eye.
There and there they right, the guilty thing. And so
the question was do dogs feel a sense of guilt?
(55:22):
And apparently it's not so much a sense of guilt,
but it's a a long standing.
Speaker 2 (55:34):
Wired feeling inside of.
Speaker 1 (55:38):
An animal when they are outside their their their boundary.
You see it happen, for example, when groups of dogs,
there's always going to be an alpha. There's always going
to be an alpha among animals always. And one of
the ways that the other show sub mission is that guilt.
Speaker 2 (56:03):
Look.
Speaker 1 (56:05):
They'll sometimes roll over on their back and they'll put
their paws up and for us, it's like, oh, I'm sorry,
dump beat me, rub my belly.
Speaker 2 (56:16):
That's that's what we please, rub my belly. I'm so sorry.
Speaker 1 (56:21):
But it's it's a it's a hardwired thing in dogs.
I think that they kind of do understand a level
of guilt. I really do. But it's combined with this
long standing predisposition that dogs have when the alpha you
(56:41):
you're the alpha. You you are in charge of your
dog when you communicate disappointment. But I have to tell you,
when you watch a dog act guilty, you have to
fight last thing right because it's so obvious. It's almost
(57:04):
like if dogs could talk, they might say, I pitdled there,
and by the way, I left something behind the planter.
It's like they're just gonna fess up to everything. Oh,
check the closet too, by the way, I chewed up
some stuff in there too. I remember growing up, we
had a black lab that ate the leg off of
(57:29):
a hand carved dining room table. I mean a unbelievably
expensive table. The dog ate the leg off of it.
You can't just replace that. Oh the look that Charlie
gave us forty seven it makes me laugh to this day.
(57:53):
Forty seven minutes. Of course I didn't pay for the furniture.
Forty seven minutes passed the hour.
Speaker 3 (58:03):
It's the m A D Radio Network where we challenge
you to make a difference in your world.
Speaker 2 (58:10):
M ad again it you know, try to make a.
Speaker 3 (58:13):
Positive influence upon others, you know, you know, be a
good person.
Speaker 2 (58:17):
With the Morning Show, Preston Scott.
Speaker 1 (58:29):
Socialism collapsing in Venezuela. Back about five six years ago,
inflation was over I think sixty three thousand percent. Now
it's down to just two hundred and twenty five percent.
It's because because socialism is collapsing. There's the dirty little
(58:55):
secret of socialism is that when left on its own,
it cannot sustain itself. The rich get richer, the poor
stay exactly where they are. There is no ladder. See
(59:15):
in our world, you can come here penniless and be
a millionaire. You've got a shot. You can create a business,
you can be an entrepreneur. You can invent something and
the state doesn't take ownership of it. It's not the
way it works in socialist countries. Where you're born is
(59:38):
where you stay, and that's just the way it is.
But I digress. It's time for other things.
Speaker 2 (01:00:08):
Road trip suggestions. We're giving you some dude ranches to
think about going to. And we've been.
Speaker 1 (01:00:17):
Sort of marching across the country giving you some suggestions
for places to go. And it's not just for guys.
They're called dude ranches because guys love them. Man, And
we've gone to Idaho, in California and Colorado. Now central
Utah Homestead Ranch Resort, Hidden in the shadows of the
(01:00:40):
Pine Valley Mountain, Homestead Ranch Resort is Southern Utah's best
kept secret. It is a pick between luxury lakeside cabins,
forest flank cottages or check this out. You can do
the glamping. You can glamp in ConA Stoga covered wagons.
(01:01:01):
How sick and cool is that it is an easy
drive within some of the state's best attractions, Snow Canyon
State Park, the Zion and Bryce Canyon National Parks.
Speaker 2 (01:01:13):
It's absolutely beautiful.
Speaker 1 (01:01:15):
And then there's Geronimo Trail Guest Ranch in Winston, New Mexico.
The weather's temperate year round. If you've not been to
New Mexico. Despite its governance, it is a beautiful state.
It is absolutely gorgeous, the land of enchantment. Geranamo Trail
(01:01:39):
Guest Ranch was founded as a hunting lodge in the
nineteen eighties. It's a family owned ranch and it has
now been transformed to a horse lover's paradise. Nestled in
the Black Range Mountains southwestern New Mexico. The ranch is
enveloped by more than three million acres of the heal
(01:01:59):
and Now National Forest. It's pronounced HeLa as in Heelo monster,
but it is g I l a heel A monster
is is a lizard that has poison in its bite.
Spectacular scenery. So if you like horseback riding, that might
be your go to.
Speaker 2 (01:02:19):
Good stuff.
Speaker 1 (01:02:20):
All right, when we come back, I'm doing something I
don't do very often. I shared something yesterday that is
so important, so impactful. I shared it at six point
twenty one Eastern time yesterday morning. I have to share
it again, and I'm going to do that next on
(01:02:43):
the Morning Show with Preston Scott. I chose not to
(01:03:05):
schedule a guest for this third hour of the Morning
Show with Preston Scott. Friends, Hi, I'm Preston. He's Ose
Show fifty four sixty fourth, Thursday, October second. If you're
writing a check, and who writes checks anymore? But in
case you are there, you go. Or if you're writing
a document something like that, there's your date. Because I
sat back yesterday and thought about the third segment of
(01:03:31):
the show in yesterday's program and decided now I needed
this this needs a little more time. We are in
a time in America right now where a lot of people,
young and not so young are awakening to this, the
(01:04:03):
tapping of the Holy Spirit, the still small voice that's saying,
come to me, all who are weary, burdened, heavy laden,
and I will give you rest. And I wanted to
(01:04:25):
share a story written by Paul Gardner, and he simply
writes two tangible reasons for a bold faith in Christ.
One is prophecy. I talked about the fact that biblical
(01:04:50):
prophecy has been a real centerpiece for my faith, my
study of God's Word. I used to tea each of
course apologetics one oh one and apologetics one oh two.
They were two different courses I taught years ago at
our church. And apologetics is not apologizing. Apologetics is a
(01:05:19):
term is a word that comes from the Greek word apologea,
which means to give a defense. The Bible talks about
always being prepared to give a defense for the hope
that you have. And this information I first came across
in Josh McDowell's book Evidence That Demands a Verdict. McDowell
(01:05:42):
wrote a piece that was just I mean, it's tough
reading evidence. The Demands of Verdict Part one and Part
two put together is thicker than the Chicago phone Book
back in the day. I mean it's thick full of material.
And he probably got it from the book Science Speaks,
(01:06:05):
authored by mathematics and astronomy Professor Peter Stone and doctor
Robert Newman in nineteen fifty eight. Professor Stone addressed the
questions was the Jesus of the Bible who he claimed
he was? Was he really the Son of God? Was
Jesus the Messiah? And for his initial calculations, Professor Stone
(01:06:30):
used eight of approximately three hundred prophecies about Jesus and
his life his coming that exist in scripture. He used eight.
The eight he used Micah five to two, born in Bethlehem,
Malachi three to one. A messenger will prepare the way
(01:06:52):
for him, that would be John, his cousin, that he
will enter Jerusalem writing a donkey Zachariah nine to.
Speaker 2 (01:06:58):
Nine, wounded by his.
Speaker 1 (01:07:03):
In his hands by his friends. Zechariah thirteen six, betrayed
for thirty pieces of silver. Zekari eleven twelve gave thirty
pieces of silver to a potter. Zekari eleven thirteen remained
silent before his accusers Isaiah fifty three seven, and wicked
men pierced his hands and feet Psalm twenty two sixteen.
(01:07:28):
In evaluating the prophecies, Professor Stone asked this singular question
one man in how many men has fulfilled this prophecy?
He states, I realize that some will object to this question,
saying that these prophecies were made with respect to Christ,
and no other man has or even can fulfill them.
(01:07:53):
But he did the math. Fulfilling just eight of thirty
three biblical prophecies about Jesus came to the number of
one in ten to the seventeenth power, that is the
number one, with seventeen zeros after it. Those are the
(01:08:18):
odds if you double that and add eight additional prophecies
and take it take it to the number sixteen. The
odds of one man fulfilling all sixteen would be one
times ten to the twenty eighth power times ten to
the seventeenth power, or one in ten to the forty
(01:08:41):
fifth power, that is the number one, with forty five.
Speaker 2 (01:08:46):
Zeros after it.
Speaker 1 (01:08:49):
He didn't fulfill just sixteen prophecies, though Christ fulfilled three
hundred of them. And what makes that significant is that
while you could say, well, he chose to enter writing
a donkey, he knew what that prophecy was fair?
Speaker 2 (01:09:06):
That's fair. Did he know the donkey was going to
be there?
Speaker 1 (01:09:13):
Did he know it would be given to his disciples
for him to ride? And even if he did, if
it was just a chance? I mean, come on, what
about the other two hundred and ninety nine plus prophecies?
What about being born in a certain town? Did he
have control of that? Well he did as the son
of God because it's prophetic. Did he have control of
(01:09:37):
the trial? Did he have control of the betrayal? Did
he have control of the fact that a townful of
people screamed his praises one week and called for his
crucifixion the next?
Speaker 2 (01:09:50):
Did he control that?
Speaker 4 (01:09:53):
What?
Speaker 2 (01:09:53):
Did God know?
Speaker 1 (01:09:54):
And he laid out a trail of breadcrumbs for us
to know. That's just heart of what I want to
share with you.
Speaker 2 (01:10:02):
Twelve minutes past the hour.
Speaker 1 (01:10:03):
I know I'm running late, but that's okay.
Speaker 6 (01:10:06):
It's my show, The Morning Show with Preston Scott on
NewsRadio one hundred point seven double UFLA or on NEWSRADIOUBFLA
Panama City dot Com.
Speaker 1 (01:10:42):
This is how Professor Stone concludes his mathematical calculations, any
man who rejects Christ as the son of God is
rejecting a fact prove perhaps more absolutely than any other
fact in the world, which is why some have written
a book basically stating that it takes more faith to
(01:11:07):
believe in evolution and that there isn't a God than
that there is. But then there's this the Shroud of Turn.
Speaker 2 (01:11:23):
Now.
Speaker 1 (01:11:23):
I have long been a follower of news surrounding the
fourteen and a half foot by three point seven foot
wide shroud. It contains the face up image of a
man with bloodstains on his forehead, wrists, and side and feet,
exactly the areas of the body where the Christian Bible
(01:11:46):
describes how Jesus was crucified by Roman soldiers. But it's
really a photographic negative research indicates that the fabric of
the shroud is characteristic of fabric's woven in Israel during
(01:12:07):
the first century. The fabric contains microscopic residue of plants
known to exist around Jerusalem. In a story from Newsmax,
doctor Robert Harrington, renounced skeptic and scientist, recently shocked his
colleagues and peers when he announced his conversion to Christianity.
After the investigation into the Shroud of Turin, doctor Harrington
(01:12:30):
embarked on his study of the shroud, intending to debunk
its authenticity. However, as he delved deeper into the analysis,
employing cutting edge technology and methodologies, he encountered findings that
challenged his scientific and personal beliefs. Quoting doctor Harrington, I
approached this study with a critical mind, ready to expose
what I believed was a longstanding historical fabrication. But the
(01:12:53):
evidence we uncovered was so compelling that it left no
room for doubt. This is the burial shroud of Jesus
of Nazareth. And then he gets to the Shroud of
Turin research project, which included thirty five physicists, chemists, NASA
(01:13:15):
image specialists, electrical engineers, forensic pathologists, and they determine that
the shroud's image, and here we get to the important
part appears to have been created by an oscillating strobe
of high intensity coming from inside the body. The event
(01:13:41):
happened in one fortieth of a billion billionth of a second,
like a laser beam moving two point five billion watts
of electricity. To create a similar light, one would need
all the electric power generated on Earth, with all of
(01:14:06):
man's science and advancements, they can't replicate the image. It's
not pigments, it's not paint of any kind. It's not dirt.
It's a resurrection emblazoned as a photographic negative on the
(01:14:27):
cloth that was used that is described in the Bible.
It's the one that was used to bury Christ. Put
them together, and you have some remarkable evidence for your faith.
Eighteen minutes past, government shut down continues, and while everybody,
(01:15:05):
well not everybody will, the mainstream media is doing its
darnedest to try to spin this and say to you, see,
it's the Republicans all over again. Well, let's just listen
to the Democrats.
Speaker 2 (01:15:21):
Okay.
Speaker 1 (01:15:22):
In this case, Representative Shri Fenadar. He is from Michigan,
and he posted this while walking through the airport.
Speaker 2 (01:15:35):
Let's let him tell.
Speaker 4 (01:15:36):
You returning back to Detroit this morning after the Republicans
failed to show up in the US House. We got
to make sure Americans have the healthcare that they need.
And if that means you got to chuck this government down,
so be it.
Speaker 1 (01:15:54):
If that means we got to shut this government down,
so be it. There's a Democrat for you, a member
of the House of Representatives. He's got fantastic eyebrows.
Speaker 2 (01:16:04):
By the way, I.
Speaker 1 (01:16:10):
Don't know what to say. Let's go back to Barack Obama.
See what this boils down to is. Democrats are shutting
down the government because of a policy issue. Primarily, they
(01:16:30):
want money for immigrant healthcare, illegal immigrant health care. Barack
Obama tries to talk down to people on this subject,
talk about how petty Republicans are being. Really well, let's
go back to twenty thirteen when he was in office
and facing a government shutdown. Let's listen to what the
(01:16:53):
Big bo had to say.
Speaker 7 (01:16:54):
At midnight last night, for the first time in seventeen years,
Republicans and Congress chose to shut down the federal government.
Let me be more specific. One faction of one party,
in one House of Congress, in one branch of government
shut down major parts of the government, all because they
(01:17:16):
didn't like one law. So once again, I urge House
Republicans to reopen the government, restart the services Americans depend on,
and allow the public servants who have been sent home
to return to work. It is only going to happen
when Republicans realize they don't get to hold the entire
(01:17:38):
company hostage over ideological demands.
Speaker 1 (01:17:44):
Isn't it funny what happens when you're sitting in the
White House perspective? I love the fact that we can
pull up sound the drop of a hat, Guy Benson wrote,
(01:18:05):
every so often, when we are truly blessed as a people,
Barack Obama descends from his exalted, fabulously wealthy purge to
impart his wisdom upon us. Often this comes in the
form of expressions of disappointment. We constantly seem to let
him down, the poor guy, but we should be deeply
honored whenever he speaks to us at all. In recent days,
(01:18:30):
Saint Barack has waited into the government's shut down discourse,
apparently endorsing Democrat's decision to force a partial shutdown in
pursuit of various ancillary policy demands. This is what the
out of power party is insisting upon in order to
keep the government open. Via editors of the National Review,
and they break down the demands of Chuck Schumer and
(01:18:52):
write smack dab in the middle of it is the
demand to keep money for NPR and for illegal immigrant
healthcare at the expense of all of you. That's why
the government shut down. Don't forget that. Twenty seven past
the hour, back with the Big story of the press
(01:19:13):
Box on The Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 3 (01:19:17):
Washington's also hopeless for crying out loud? Is this the
only bastion of physical wealth and mindset goodness?
Speaker 2 (01:19:26):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:19:27):
And this is the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 2 (01:19:50):
Big story.
Speaker 1 (01:19:51):
We have one singular big story in the press Box
because I think it's it's a giant beacon and flashing.
It's a warning, you know, you know, you get a
lighthouse and that light that moves in a circle or
oscillates back and forth, and it's there to say to boats,
(01:20:15):
be careful. And this story is a lighthouse with a
beacon shining, saying friends, be alarmed by this and be careful.
In the early two thousands, a group of men began
(01:20:36):
raping young girls, and they were not convicted until recently
fifty offenses one hundred and seventy four years of punishment,
which honestly isn't enough for seven men. These occurrences have
(01:21:03):
been so prevalent in the UK that they've become known
as Grooming Gang's scandal. Children as young as ten have
been exploited by sexual grooming gangs. I want you to
(01:21:26):
just for a second think about what that term means.
Sexual grooming. Let me help you. How would someone be
groomed to become.
Speaker 2 (01:21:48):
An alcoholic or a drug user. Let's use drugs.
Speaker 1 (01:21:53):
You might start with just one little hit on a joint,
one and a few days go by, so it goes,
come on, man, you want to do it again, only
you're basically held hostage and you don't have a say
in the matter. And then they go, come on another,
(01:22:19):
do it again, and then they leave you go, and
then this progression continues until you are addicted to weed
and then come on, try this some crack or some coke.
And it starts with just a d just a little bit,
(01:22:42):
and then it grows and it grows. See that's grooming.
Grooming is acclimating people to whatever the evil is, to
try to get them accustomed to it, and then going
further and further and then further. That's my way of
(01:23:05):
explaining to you what sexual grooming is without having to
explain it to you, because that describes the evil that
these men engaged in over a period of years, preparing
(01:23:25):
these young girls to be raped repeatedly. I just think
it's important to point out that the reason this got
buried for so long is because communities didn't want to
be labeled this is the story racist. They didn't want
(01:23:47):
to destabilize community relations. Why well, let's listen to the
names of the men who have been convicted. Mohammed Zahid Casir,
by Sheer mush tak Ahmed, Mohammad Shahzad, Nissar, Hussein Nahim Akaem.
(01:24:19):
They were let alone and not prosecuted for twenty years
because of their names and what they are. And I'm
not talking about evil monsters that are hideous. This is
the beacon that's flashing. This is happening in the UK.
(01:24:44):
They've let people like this be and instead are arresting
people for what they post online. That's mean, it's not
very kind. Me stating what I just said in the
UK would get me arrested. I would be arrested. It's
(01:25:11):
a warning, friends. Forty one minutes after the hour change,
gears next on the morning show.
Speaker 6 (01:25:20):
Started counting his shows at the beginning because we weren't
really quite sure how long he'd last.
Speaker 2 (01:25:26):
Yeah, now it's just turned into a thing.
Speaker 6 (01:25:28):
Welcome to The Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 2 (01:25:42):
This is brilliant Daily Caller.
Speaker 1 (01:25:47):
Hey an anonymous writer known as mister Wright, the Daily Caller,
masculinity consultant. All right, he answers the question, is there
a glimmer of hope for bitter single liberal women? Listen
(01:26:10):
to this, Listen to what he goes to a new
study from the Institute for Governance and Civics at Florida
State University. You know, that's the group that we interviewed.
The guy who heads it up, the professor at FSU,
We had him in studio here. He said that, yes,
(01:26:32):
there might be hope yet for single liberals who hate
conservatives so much that they would be never willing to
date one. The study found that generally, as liberal women age,
they become more open to dating a conservative man. However,
their openness with age might be all might all be
for nothing, because as conservative men get older, they actually
(01:26:55):
become less open to dating a liberal. The results of
the study are not definitive, but there is certainly a
kernel of truth to it. There are plenty of young
men in the world that may not be full on
MAGA diehards, but hold conservative beliefs. They're not so far
right as to be unwilling to date a liberal. They
(01:27:17):
might have voted for Trump but are fairly open minded.
Yet young liberal women, on the other hand, would outright
reject this person as a potential romantic interest or life partner.
It doesn't matter if he voted for Trump but disagrees
with the president's tariff or deportation policies. There is no
nuance for liberal women. They are completely intolerant. He ends
(01:27:39):
with this, They will probably ask themselves, where are all
the good guys? Well, you rejected all the good guys
when you were in your twenties and obsessed with politics.
Let me tell you what's happening. That analysis is fine,
but it's shallow. Let me take it a little deeper.
(01:28:00):
There's an old adage that, to be paraphrased, goes something
like this. When you're young, if you're not liberal, you
have no heart. When you're old and you're not conservative,
you have no brain. Let me express it now within
(01:28:22):
the realm of the study. As men get older, they
become more assured of their conservative.
Speaker 2 (01:28:37):
Bonafides.
Speaker 1 (01:28:39):
They're credentials, and they recognize how destructive and dangerous liberalism is,
which we now must call illiberalism. Women conversely blow up
men when they're younger. They want no part of it,
not all, not all women, but enough to hurt the
(01:29:02):
birthrate of this country, which is staggeringly low.
Speaker 2 (01:29:09):
So as they get older, they start to realize, well.
Speaker 1 (01:29:13):
You know, maybe I'm been a little too militant, see
that that aging process. But the problem becomes they've been
so militant for so long it shows.
Speaker 2 (01:29:30):
No see that.
Speaker 1 (01:29:30):
Bitterness shows, bitterness and anger shows on the countenance of somebody.
The most attractive woman in the world that's bitter and
angry is an ugly person. They're an ugly person, and
so this is not attractive. I just thought it was great.
(01:29:56):
Forty seven minutes past the hour when we come back
a she did what story? Tomorrow on the radio program,
(01:30:17):
we'll have What's the Beef? Will work in your fall
decor your Fall Yard? With from the ground Up Mary
Rock will join us again from f Balztal Garden Center.
We got good news, great good news story involving Cal Rawley,
(01:30:38):
former Seminal great, now the leading home run hitter in
Major League Baseball for this season. I think he's going
to be the MVP he ought to be.
Speaker 2 (01:30:48):
But we'll see.
Speaker 1 (01:30:50):
And we've got headlines from the b and of course
of dad joke. We've got a ton to do tomorrow
on the program. But as I said, she did what
a new mother going viral winning a video game tournament
in Florida. She goes by the handle Legion as in
(01:31:11):
l EGI capital O or zero n entered the Mortal
Combat XL tournament Saturday, hosted by Juicy Game Night in Orlando,
defeated three other players, including her own husband. She earned
(01:31:34):
a small prize and a trip to a DreamHack Atlanta
gaming festival in October later this month. But here's what
she did. She did it all while holding her newborn child.
She gained the entire time holding her baby. Child was
(01:31:58):
born September twenty seven. I buy a C section, her
uterus nearly ruptured. That's incredible. What a mom, what a gamer,
and a winner.
Speaker 2 (01:32:14):
Brought to you by Barona Heating and Air. It's the
Morning Show one on.
Speaker 1 (01:32:19):
WFLA first chronicle sixteen thirty four is where we began
scripture today, an impassioned plea to wake up and to
read Scripture and to spend time with God every day.
Our big story in the press box after a visit
(01:32:41):
with Steve Stewart, not after, but in terms of resetting
the program. Seven man grooming gang jailed in the UK
for a total of one hundred and seventy four years,
and what they did deserved more than that, much more
than that, And they were basically allowed to do what
(01:33:06):
they did because the authorities didn't want to upset community
relations or be accused of being a racist or a bigot.
There's a lamas I mean. And that's not to say
that all islamis engage in such things, no, but it
(01:33:27):
speaks to the incompatibility of Yeah, Barack Obama, boy, he
had something different to say about shut downs and reasons
for them back when he was president. We let you
hear that Democrat from Congress admitting that it was Democrats
who shut down the government.
Speaker 2 (01:33:46):
We did it.
Speaker 1 (01:33:47):
He was proud, smiled about it and said so on tape.
A des Moines superintendent is an illegal immigrant and has
been voting illegally in Maryland in federal elections for better
than a decade. Now it never happens. Minnesota is a
train wreck, and the fat Bear Champion of twenty twenty
five is thirty two Chunky There