Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:09):
Five minutes past. Good morning, How are you great to
spend time with you ruminators. I'm Preston, He's Jose and
this is the Morning Show with Preston Scott. It is
show number fifty four seventy nine, and before you know it,
we will be at show fifty five hundred. And I
(00:30):
don't know why.
Speaker 2 (00:31):
That just.
Speaker 1 (00:33):
Wow, that's just a lot of radio. I mean, that's
just that's that's eight thousand plus interviews. It's crazy, it
really is. And thank you for sharing for many of
you the entire journey with me. I I'm humbled. Let's
(00:55):
begin with scripture. Matthew nine thirty seven and thirty eight
says this. Then he said to disciples, the harvest is plentiful,
but the laborers are few. Therefore, pray earnestly to the
Lord of the harvest to send out laborers into his harvest.
(01:18):
Jesus was speaking of obviously a very you know, it's
like he's he said, we're gonna we're gonna make you
fishers of men. You're you're trying to catch some fish. Good, awesome,
Watch what I can do with a couple of fish.
But he said, I'm going to turn you into fishers
of men. In this case, he's saying, there's a harvest
(01:40):
out there. He's using agriculture. He said there, look at
there's a harvest. And he's talking clearly about people. Now,
Scripture tells us that that there are some that plant seed,
(02:04):
and clearly some water it and some harvest it. Jesus
is speaking in the macro of getting out there because
the field is ready for harvest. We don't know who.
(02:26):
You just don't know. And there are different ways that
people work fields. So rather than get bogged down into
the well, I'm just that's just not me. It might
not be It might not be you to go out
(02:48):
to a group and speak about God. That might not
be your thing. Your thing could be marketplace evangelism, where
you literally just you live your life, you do your job,
and by conducting yourself in a way that is different,
(03:13):
it causes people to say hmm. And maybe someone goes,
I bet he or she's a Christian. I bet they
love Jesus. You can tell they're different. There are you know.
(03:34):
I occasionally have run across people in my lifetime that
they question what their value is to the body of Christ,
and I will look them in the eye and say
to them, your value is you being here right now?
Given me a hug, because I'm encouraged when I see you,
(03:59):
I'm incourg I notice people, For example, in the church
I attend, there's one gentleman who comes in on a
wheelchair and he is suffering from a condition that is
just slowly ravaging him. But he's there every week, and
(04:25):
he's got a smile on his face and he shakes
your hand. And I say to myself, why isn't he
being healed? Well, he will be one way or the other,
whether it's on this side of eternity or the other side,
he'll be made perfect. And I sometimes think, you know,
(04:51):
seeing him go through what he's got to go through
with his family, to be here at church every sun day,
what am I complaining about? Why would I be reticent
to get up and go to church? Why would I
be hesitant to smile and shake hands and lift my
(05:13):
hands in praise? What? Maybe God's allowing him to carry
that cross for that purpose to encourage everybody else. I
don't know, But there's a harvest. The laborers are few.
It's what do you say? Ten past the hour? It's
(05:33):
the morning show with Preston Scott. Here we go twenty
third of the month. Month of October eighteen twenty four,
(05:55):
seventy six year old John Stevens of Hoboken, New Jersey
completes the first US steam locomotive to pull a train
on a track in eighteen twenty four, before our country
was fifty years old. That's incredible. I didn't know was
(06:17):
that early.
Speaker 3 (06:18):
Sheeez.
Speaker 1 (06:21):
Eighteen sixty four, Union forces prevail in the Battle of
Westport near Kansas City, Missouri. We don't really equate the
Civil War with Missouri, do we. We just don't think
of it that far east. We don't think of it
(06:42):
in Texas. It's that's one of those little nuggets that
caused me to go wow. It's one of the largest
Civil War and Aid engagements west of the Mississippi. Nineteen
forty four, the three Day Battle of Late Hey Golf
l e Yte, the largest naval battle of World War Two,
(07:05):
begins in the Philippines, ends in an Allied victory. Don't
forget Deep, Running Running Deep, Deep, Running Deep, the book
by Tom Claven Running Deep. All of a sudden, I'm
confusing it with the cool Runnings. The Jamaican Bob sled team.
(07:30):
Sorry about that nineteen eighty three suicide truck bombing Marine
Corps barracks and Beirut Hezbollah, killing two hundred and forty
one Americans. I just gotta stop. A Statue of Freedom
(07:50):
returns to the top of the US Capitol Dome in
nineteen ninety three. You probably don't even know what that is.
Look it up. Look up the Statue of Freedom on
top the US Capitol. It's pretty cool. There's a pretty
cool story behind it. She's certainly not as famous as
(08:10):
the Statue of Liberty, but it's a nineteen and a
half foot bronze statue of Freedom that is atop the
US Capitol, nineteen almost twenty feet tall, and its design
is very intentional. It's great backstory. Today is National Horror
(08:33):
Movie Day. You know there was a time that I'd
watch stuff like that. Yeah, I don't watch that stuff anymore.
National Boston Cream Pie Day. Okay, this is the Swallows
depart from San Juan Capistrano Day. National Mole Day. What
(09:02):
hang on a second here? No, no, no. This is
a day that recognizes a special number in chemistry. Chemists
and chemistry students mark the occasion on October twenty third.
It happens between six oh two am and PM time
(09:26):
and data written six oh two ten twenty three. They
are derived from Avogadro's number, which is approximately six point
two times ten and something. I don't even know what
that symbol means. It's like, yeah, whatever, I'm sorry I
(09:46):
ever mentioned that National TV talk show Day, iPod Day.
Remember iPods, those little digital things that you just store
your music. You'd get your music downloaded and it would
just yeah, man, those were cool. I remember the early iPods.
The early iPods were cool. They really were. Sixteen minutes
(10:10):
past the hour, we come back a did you know?
And then yeah, we'll get started Thursday on the program,
we'll talk about the heist at the loop. It's got
below your money and there's a PostScript to the story
(10:30):
that is just it is so wonderful. No, we haven't
recovered anything. I mean they haven't. They're likely not going to.
I think ten percent of stuff stolen out of museums
is ever recovered. And if you know that going in,
you're like, the odds are in our favor here, fellas.
(10:52):
Did you know we talked about Remember we discussed the
whole Brooklyn Dodger thing when we found out that that
there was a football team called the Brooklyn Dodgers, and
it's like, well, that makes sense, dodging on the football
field that no, apparently not had a listener. Send me
an article written by Ken Gernick back a few years ago,
(11:17):
The Long Road to the La Dodgers naming. The club
lists the beginning in eighteen eighty four as the Grays,
the color of their uniforms, the city name of Brooklyn,
or the city Church nine. Brooklyn was known as the
Church city who Knew. According to the club, the name
(11:38):
originated in eighteen ninety six as the Brooklyn Trolley Dodgers.
Heavy construction of electric trolley tracks in front of Eastern
Park caused fans to dodge the trolleys to reach the park.
Those fans became known as the Trolley Dodgers, and the
team took on the name, which then was shortened to
(12:01):
the Dodgers. So if you go back and trace its
roots to the beginning, beginning the Dodgers, which originated in Brooklyn,
not the La Dodgers they moved to La. The Brooklyn
Dodgers were named after fans who were dodging electric trolleys.
(12:26):
After six of their players were married during and after
the eighteen eighty eight season, the club was called the Bridegrooms.
In ninety one, after John Montgomery Ward became manager, the
nickname Ward's Wonders was used. In eighteen ninety three, Dave
Fouts became manager and the team was known as Fouci's
(12:50):
Fouts's Phillies. Nicknames have been a part of the persona.
In fact, at various times, the Dodgers had multiple nicknames.
The arrival of Ned Handlin as manager led to the
Dodgers being called the Brooklyn Superbas wokay. The first year
(13:13):
the Dodgers was written on the club's uniform was nineteen
thirty three, and then they brought the nickname with them
when they moved from Los Angeles in nineteen fifty eight.
So there you have the history of the Dodger name
the Dodgers. Of course, the World Series starts tomorrow night,
Los Angeles, and sho he Hatani Otani sho he Halatani,
(13:38):
shohe Atani is incredible. He did something that's never been
done in the game of baseball before just this past week.
I mean, it's it's it's incredible. Does it make my
best and worst of the week. We'll see, We'll see
could happen. That's tomorrow on the program. I've been fighting
(14:00):
it all half hour. What about fighting anger, I'm fighting it.
Democrats are creating an app, a program to track where
Ice is at all times. The party hates this country,
(14:26):
They hate America. They do not want illegals to be caught.
They want the borders open. The two largest longest shutdowns
in US history happened under Donald Trump, and Democrats brought
(14:50):
it about both times. We're gonna get to that in
just a few minutes. But still this is that the
animals city that is growing for the Democrat Party and
members of it and people that support it. I'm really
(15:12):
having to work. Friends. We have laws in this country,
and we have one party that is creating means for
people to violate the law and to hinder and create
in fact, danger for duly sworn officers doing their job.
(15:44):
Democrats are now openly showing their disdain for this country
and for the rule of law, and they have the
gall to merity to try to blame this shutdown on Trump.
(16:07):
Oh and by the way, another illegal immigrant truck driver
from India in California has killed three more people on
the road. Twenty seven minutes.
Speaker 4 (16:23):
Past the.
Speaker 1 (16:26):
Deep breath.
Speaker 4 (16:30):
You're listening on an old radio in your car, truck,
or streaming on one of those other things, yes, even
that John Deere tractor. Thanks for joining us. It's the
Morning Show with Preston Scott on NewsRadio one hundred point
seven Double UFLA, or on NewsRadio double UFLA Panama City
dot Com.
Speaker 1 (17:00):
Thirty six minutes past Big Stories in the press box.
There is no spiking of the football with this, but
I just I can't help but notice that the tropical
storm forecast for the Atlantic basin.
Speaker 3 (17:18):
Have you noticed.
Speaker 1 (17:21):
Any name storms approaching Florida this year? Have you noticed
hardly any named storms at all? Well, they're out there saying, well,
look at that. We pretty much called it. Melissa is
(17:44):
out there. It's just gonna start spinning up and growing
on Saturday. Now you might fairly say, well, what do
you know nothing? But I have an incredible simulator that
I've relied on for years and it has been far
more accurate than any other model that I've ever seen
(18:09):
or heard of. And the storm that, oh, you know,
be careful about Melissa Melissa, And yeah, I mean, anything
can happen. Weather is unpredictable. But as of right now,
here's what you're gonna probably see. It's gonna sit south
of Cuba. It's gonna spin up and get larger and
(18:30):
larger and larger, and then it's gonna start heading across
the island and go straight north. That's awesome. We're likely
not gonna get hit here in Florida by this storm.
Hurricane season runs through the end of November. It is
(18:51):
what it is. But there's a part of me that
just can't help but think. I know they feel as
though we were gonna get hit by major storms. And
generally speaking, the United States hasn't been touched along the
East coast in the Gulf, and I hope it doesn't happen.
(19:14):
We still have technically a month and a week to
go before the end of hurricane season officially, and what
does that mean. The weather could be weird for another
week or two into December. But generally speaking, the forecasts
were completely wrong in terms of any impact on this country.
(19:37):
I'm just pointing it out. What was claimed is settled
science isn't. That's my whole point. It just isn't we're
going to have years. We went years with no hurricanes
touching Florida, years, almost a decade. And that was right
when al Gore said they were going to be more
(19:58):
and bigger and harsher, more dangerous than ever. Well, it
turned out to be just shooting blanks. My point is
not to say there won't be storms, because there will be.
I guarantee you I'm gonna before I'm done doing what
I do, I will be doing a hurricane coverage at
(20:20):
least one more time, if not ten more times. I
know that. My point in bringing this up is so
much of a stink has been made of this, and
I just don't hear crap when we don't have a
storm season that they say they don't say anything about that. Well,
(20:43):
but no, they just go away. When's the last time
you heard heard from al Gore this season? I'm just anyway.
Governments shut down second longest in US history. You know what.
The longest was started in late twenty eighteen thirty five days.
(21:09):
You know why Democrats didn't want to fund the border wall.
They were wrong about that too. They're wrong about this,
They're wrong about that. Forty minutes past the out yes,
Democrats are generally speaking, always wrong. The Morning Show Preston
(21:30):
Scott forty one minutes past the hour, listener friend of
the program sent me this story another illegal immigrant causing
a fatal semi truck crash on a highway, killing a driver.
(21:52):
This one not from India. Broko Stankovich Portage Police Department
in Indiana, driving on US Highway twenty yesterday, slammed into
(22:18):
a truck turning. He had a suspended Illinois CDL that
wasn't even his, it was a family member's. His company
wasn't registered with the Department of Transportation. How many more
(22:39):
of that? Never mind? Just never mind, never mind? How
about some good news. You remember when I said that
the whole transgender thing was social contagion, And I'm not
the only one to say that that. Anyone with an
ounce of common sense knew it was being fueled by
(23:00):
a bunch of kids in lockdown during COVID and they
were fighting depression quotes air quotes around that. It's like, whatever,
I'm sorry, I don't, I don't. I don't buy the
whole They were just depressed to be out of their
social norms. Whatever. I Anyway, Well, it's the whole transgender
(23:33):
identity things in a free fall. Statistically, it is been
cut in half people young people identifying, so the tweeners
and teeners are moving on. What's interesting is this comes
from a study by Eric Kaufman, professor at the United
Kingdom's University of Buckingham, director of the News Center for
(23:55):
Heterodox Social Science, analyzing data from several large scale, high
quality youth surveys and notes a decided shift in American
teens and young adults moving away from identifying as either
trans or queer. His report is called the Decline of
trans and Queer Identity among Young Americans. Of the number
(24:17):
of young people once identifying as trans or non binary
nearly had among most data sets in the last two years,
they're moving on. He also notes what's interesting is the
number of people that just claimed LGBTQ status versus living
LGBTQ status was never one to one. That number was
(24:42):
always half. The number that we're actually living it in
some way, shape or form on its highest peak was
just half. It's a mind virus. It is a self
delusional mind virus. And as you as you hear frequently
(25:04):
said over the years, you can't sustain a lie, you
can't and and understand that most all of this was
among girls, and girls are the most susceptible to peer
(25:25):
pressures and conforming to those pressures, and the little chat
groups and the online you know, and the fears of
kids chatting and talking, and and it was it was
always a social contagion. And that's why the numbers claiming
(25:47):
status in this alphabet community exploded during COVID. If they
were always there, it would be consistent. And so good
news is that the transgender identity crisis is finally in
a free fall. It's not over. I can't believe what
(26:12):
the Minnesota Supreme Court just ruled unanimously that a male
weightlifter is entitled to keep all records lifting against females
the Minnesota Supreme Court. They will be humiliated before the
United States Supreme Court eventually. But I'm gonna ask my brother.
I'm gonna I'm gonna text him in just a minute.
(26:33):
I'm gonna ask him, what the heck are you doing
living in that state? Maybe I'll get him on the
air'll get maybe I'll get Pat on the air. We
won't talk about anything else. I'll just get I'll get
his thoughts forty seven minutes passed the out This Morning
Show with Preston Scott, Steve Stewart. Next hour, Doctor David
(27:04):
Hart's with us. Help you feel a little bit better,
talk about the achey joints and all that. Is it
just old age speaking of Next month, Chad Gray from
Joint Strong will join us and we will talk about
arthritis and we'll discuss the whole aging thing and ways
(27:28):
that you can promote your flexibility as you age. It's crucial, friends,
Like if you're if you're into your fifties and beyond
and you're not routinely doing flexibility related things, specific joint
related flex you are fallen behind. So I really encourage
(27:49):
you to be We're here to help. We don't just
talk about politics, you know, we're about life and no
more abundant life. Try to help you out. Tuesday. If
you are in Leon County and you are a grandparent
or a parent concerned citizen, you don't even have to
(28:13):
have kids. You pay property taxes to the school system.
You have every right, whether you have a kid in
the system or not, to have your voice heard. And
the next school board meeting is six o'clock this Tuesday,
and two weeks ago. It was the Charlie Kirk vigil,
(28:37):
the candlelight vigil honoring Charlie's birthday. So people just didn't
show up to speak on behalf of Charlie's memory, his
reputation and hold school board member Daryl Jones to account
for his ridiculous, inflammatory device of hateful lies. He took
(29:05):
it down, but I'm told privately didn't refute it, to
which you would ask, well, then why'd you take it down?
There is no way he can represent students and parents
(29:25):
in this community holding views that Charlie Kirk was a Nazi,
a homophobic, a misogynist, or whatever else he said. I've
got the screenshot of it. That part is relatively unimportant.
We know what he did and what he posted and
what he thinks, and he will not retract it. He
(29:46):
will not offer a public apology. I hope he sued.
And by their silence, you know, Lori Cox's chair of
the school board, just generally talked about didn't single him out.
He should have been singled out. He was the one
who violated the policy. Everyone knows that. Just say the
(30:09):
guy's name, Superintendent of Educations. Nothing crickets. He knows it.
Was wrong. He won't say anything either. You need to
make public. You need to show up by the hundreds thousands.
(30:33):
You need to show up and have your three minutes.
You need to ask for a retraction and a resignation.
He needs to step down. He's collecting a lot of
money between being a school board member, working for the
Office of Economic Vitality Leon County and as head of
the Children's Services Council as there. I don't know if
he's paid as the as the board chair there, but
(30:57):
but you know, we deserve better for our tax dollars.
We do. Got some other things coming up. We'll talk
about those tomorrow. Steve Stewart is standing by again. That's uh,
that's that's Tuesday night at six o'clock at the Akolina
(31:19):
Howell Building on West Pensacolas Street near Tallassee State College.
(31:43):
It's five past the hour. It's the Morning Show with
Preston Scott. We're wound up here this morning. I'll tell
you what. He is joining me in studio is the
executive editor of Talasar Reports. He is Steve Stewart. Let's
get right to it. Big meeting last night, it's in
our news. It's people need to know what's going on
downtown and you got it covered. Yeah, so you know,
(32:04):
wats the meeting at the City Commission.
Speaker 5 (32:06):
A lot of topics to be addressed, and you know,
so what will report is actually what happened. But also
you know, just watching the meeting is is what you know.
Our community is in so much trouble in terms of
a lack of leadership.
Speaker 1 (32:19):
And we can talk about that later.
Speaker 5 (32:20):
But the big items Capital City Country Club is wanting
to buy the property associated with a golf course, and
so that was one of the items that was touched on.
Speaker 1 (32:30):
They've already had this at one meeting, and.
Speaker 5 (32:33):
You know, the overall sentiment is everybody wants to keep
it as a golf course. However, what has happened because
our community is stuck in the past on every issue
that comes up, we got to go back thirty two
one hundred years and try to relitigate things. And so
what's come up now is you know, they've talked about
the racism and the segregation this associated with a club
(32:54):
back in the fifties when this dollar lease was initiated.
And you know, there's some interesting facts that have come
out because the Capitol City Country Club did have a
representative there last night. And you know, originally the land
was actually given to the city. So you know, there's
been this focus of how the city has given this
dollar lease in the nineteen fifties to run a golf course. Well,
(33:17):
originally the land was actually given to the city.
Speaker 1 (33:20):
They never paid for it.
Speaker 5 (33:21):
And the reason it was given is because there was
a federal program that was giving money to build golf courses.
I municipal owned property, well that wasn't owned by the city,
so they wanted to cash in on the Fed money. See,
some thing's never change, right, So they needed the land
to the city and then they built this golf course.
Well then the city couldn't run the golf course. I
mean they were losing money. So then that's when they
(33:42):
Capital City Country Club came up with a dollar lease
and then they proceeded to run over operations, took over operations.
And what you see from the people that don't are
that can't let go of the past is you know,
sort of revisionist history about the segregation which listen, and
it took place. It didn't take place here, it took
place everywhere. It's been addressed, okay, and you know you
(34:06):
could see from the Capital City Country Club representative that
he was a little annoyed that, look, we've taken care
of this, We've been stewards of this property, you know,
and it does take money to maintain a golf course
for seventy years, and people like the golf course.
Speaker 1 (34:20):
It's arguably one of the two or three best golf
courses in the region, right.
Speaker 5 (34:24):
And so you know, he was obviously a little bit
offended by that. Now, the question is, most people want
it to remain a golf course, but we can't get
past I guess some of the issues in the past
to sell it, and so a lot of people want
the city to keep it. The problem is when you
hear commister Mattlow talk about, well, you know, maybe we
could put some maybe we can develop this for affordable housing,
(34:47):
that makes some of the other people a little nervous
because they wanted to remain a golf course. And so
the bottom line is, the bottom line is I think
the best way for it to remain a golf course
is for it to be sold. It actually gets put
on the tax roll and you start generating some revenue
that way, which is a plus. You know, you have
a you had actually Fam, you come out and support
the sale because of the agreement that Capital City Country
(35:09):
Club put.
Speaker 1 (35:10):
For with the Fam.
Speaker 5 (35:10):
You to make it a you know, the home course
for Fame, you to allow them to practice there. And
also you've had d language that says that it will
remain a golf course. So you've got all the things
in place. However, what happened at the meeting was that
they're going to delay it to look at some other things,
possibly loaning the club money to because this is the issue.
Speaker 1 (35:33):
The club wants.
Speaker 5 (35:33):
To become the owner of the property so they can
go out and raise three or four million dollars and
redo the greens and update the infrastructure.
Speaker 1 (35:41):
Sure.
Speaker 5 (35:42):
Now the problem is this is that you can probably
get some loans for some money, but to get people
to invest into a club, they don't want to do
it when you're leasing the property from the city. Absolutely,
and so that's the issue. So it's been put off
to look at if the city could own the money
to the club and do the improvements. So we'll have
(36:04):
to see where that and there's a good enough argument
to put it off for another meeting. They're going to
come back with some more information and we'll see where
it goes from there.
Speaker 1 (36:12):
I will guarantee you this, if the city actually were
to go the direction of trying to develop that for
affordable housing quote unquote, they will have their pants suit
off by the homeowners. It's around that golf court, not
only that.
Speaker 5 (36:24):
And the thing is is the club pointed out, Look,
if we don't get this money, we could shut down
and then the land's going to go back to the city,
which is going to cost millions to keep it up
the way it is.
Speaker 1 (36:36):
So you know, I we'll see what happens. All right,
ten past the hour. More on that city meeting with
the commissioners. It was full of interesting things. We'll talk
about it next. Steve Stewart with me. He is the
(36:59):
executive editor to tell ASCI Reports. Go to the website
and subscribe. Just go to tellassireports dot com and you
can see the stories there. There's a print edition that
comes out twice a month and it's no it's what
might be coming in the future, but it's a newspaper
that's actually growing in circulation. Not many do that across
the country. I wonder why, Well, look, I mean the
(37:21):
TMH issue. We could and we will you know, when
this gets settled. There's so many behind the thing scenes
things that are happening. But yesterday was the second public
hearing on the MoU, the understanding, the memoram understanding between
TMH and FSU, which will transfer assets from the city,
the hospital assets to FSU, and they'll have this agreement
(37:44):
that we'll move on creating the academic Health Center, which
is the model that is taking that's been going on
for years. We should have been there already, we're not,
but we're going to get there. And so to watch
this the progressives, Mallow and Porter fight this even the
you know, the the issue was they've got this MoU,
and now Commission Matlow's argues that, you know, TMH had
(38:06):
a gun to their head to sign the mo OU,
even though the board voted unanimously to go forward with it.
And then there's a concern.
Speaker 5 (38:14):
That FAM you and TSC higher education institutions here were
being left out. So last night's meeting was to address that.
And so they're going to have some separate addendums to
the m OU which will have f SU is going
to give a board seat to FAM you, and the
idea is that TMH is going to give a board
seat to someone from TSC and so they're working on
(38:36):
those amendments to the m o U. And then the
next meeting, which they have, you know, they'll go ahead
and execute. All this stuff will be done. So they're
what they're doing is then the incremental step of trying
to address concerns. Okay, which and fam you showed up
the vice president of fam you said, yes, we're all
on board with this, but guess who is not on
(38:57):
board with this is Commission Mattlow.
Speaker 1 (39:00):
And so the interesting die like that happened.
Speaker 5 (39:03):
With Comsier Mattlow was trying to make it look like
that FA she was taking advantage of FAMU, and he
wanted them.
Speaker 1 (39:10):
To rewrite the MoU.
Speaker 5 (39:11):
And President mcculliffe was very direct Commishion Malow, that's not
going to happen. Okay, we have the MoU and it's
going to stay the way it is. It's not getting
opened back up. It took a long time to get
this put together, so we're not going to do that.
And it's interesting to hear someone with a little clout
actually say, you know, you may be a city of
the adult in the room, but this is not going
(39:32):
to happen. Yeah, and so at that point City Commissioner
Curtis Richard got offended by Mattlow's continuing discussion about trying
to represent fam you and Curtis Richardson correctly pointed out,
we just have the vice president of fam you stand
up and give their position and Commission Mattlow, I don't
think it's appropriate for his City commission to be questioning
(39:52):
that support.
Speaker 1 (39:53):
But that's what illiberals do. Steve across the board. They
take offense at things that have nothing to do with them.
And so anyway, it got a little contentious. They moved
on and what's going to happen? They voted three two
to move forward. We'll have one more meeting. It will
also happen at that meeting.
Speaker 5 (40:11):
Well, first of all, we'll have the amendments to the
MoU that will put FAMU and TSC on the board,
which was a concern. And then the evaluation what what
are we going to charge FSU or what is the
city looking for in return for transferring the assets. My
guess is this is going to be a trade off
between them continuing to provide indigit care and the value
(40:34):
of the assets.
Speaker 1 (40:35):
I think one of the things.
Speaker 5 (40:36):
And this is where Commission Matlow really poisons the well.
I mean arguing that that the assets are worth a
billion dollars. They're not because it's not the business. The
business TMH is what might be worth a billion dollars,
it's not the buildings. And so those buildings were turned
over in nineteen seventy nine. And so anyway, that will
(40:58):
be the next discussion in the next meeting, will address
the MOUs involving Famue and Tissy and then actually the
financial the financial agreement to transfer the assets FSU. We're
well on our way to getting to where we need
to be real quickly.
Speaker 1 (41:13):
Thirty second wrapped so we can put a cap on
the city meeting, the agreement on ice. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (41:18):
So look, this has been stretched out by the Progressives.
It finally reached ahead. Mattlow doesn't want to deal with
the immigration laws. He says, look, we need to break
this two eighty seven g agreement. The motion failed three
to two, so it will go on as is.
Speaker 1 (41:32):
He is three to two, three to two. He's misrepresented.
He's misrepresented for his own political gain.
Speaker 5 (41:38):
What's happening with the two eighty seven G And hopefully
that's a dead issue now, But it's always three to two,
isn't it.
Speaker 1 (41:44):
It is all right, We've got more to come. The
Children's Services Counsel among those things to be discussed next.
Here with Steve Stewart Talas, who reports website talasureports dot com,
(42:08):
who rips down the sign a Trump sign off someone's
property and then later drives by with his sunroof open,
sticks a handgun out and fires into the home. Can
I answer the question in a liberal You have to
(42:36):
understand this is not both sides need to calm down
the rit No. No, Now we're defending ourselves. We call
people that do that stuff on either side of the
aisle losers, dangerous reprobates. I'm sorry, just reacting to the news,
(43:04):
big stories in the press box. Let's take a little
bit of a deeper dive into the into the government shutdown.
The Senate has to get sixty votes. They're not there.
They have three Democrats that have broken ranks, maybe four,
but they need more because I'm not sure that they have.
(43:25):
I think there's one or two Republicans that are opposing
the agreement for different reasons. The last the next longest.
This is the second longest shutdown. Ever, the longest happened
in Trump's first term because Democrats didn't want to fund
(43:47):
the building of the border wall. How'd that work out? Now,
you you have a responsibility, and if you're a Democrat
listening to the program, you have a responsibility. So thrilled
because the country got invaded at the southern border during
Joe Biden's four years the Obiden administration, or you regret
(44:13):
that and you admit that the Democrats were wrong, which
they always are. The House is voted eleven times to
get things back on track. Senate endured a lengthy I
(44:34):
mean lengthy filibuster a Democrat senator from who knows where,
Jeff Murkley, spoke on the Senate floor for more than
seventeen hours for what. But what was the point of that?
(45:00):
They voted again fifty four forty six. They got to
get to sixty. They need six more. So you say
to yourself, okay, what was the point of the seventeen
hours to just talk and keep the Senate from voting.
It ended up voting, it didn't pass, and what did
(45:21):
you accomplish? Just so you know, the President has said
to the Democrats, I am not meeting with you to
negotiate anything relative to the Obamacare subsidies, and that's what
this is about. And to a lesser extent, NPR funding
(45:45):
National Public Radio. I'm not sitting down with you until
you end the shutdown. They're saying, we're not ending the
shutdown until you sit down and negotiate a deal. He's
not going to do it, he said, I'm not being
held hostage by you. Sorry. So that's where it is.
By the way, Ted Cruz predicted this. Ted Cruz predicted
(46:07):
this back in twenty thirteen. What was going to happen
with Obamacare when the subsidies run out? And I want
to remind you the subsidies were extended because of COVID
and they were sunseted. They didn't have to do that,
they but they did. They sunsetted them. Why because they
were only supposed to exist through COVID and the aftermath
(46:28):
of it. Forty minutes past the hour, let's talk about health,
better health, optimum health, naturally.
Speaker 4 (46:36):
Next, make a positive influence upon others, you know, you know,
be a good person. With the Morning Show Preston Scott.
Speaker 1 (46:50):
Let's talk about feeling better and in this case joining
us Doctor David Hartz, Hello, doctor Harts, how are you, sir?
Speaker 2 (46:58):
Good morning? Pressed and doing well?
Speaker 1 (47:00):
All right? Joint pain, joint fatigue. It's just old age, right,
We're just all getting old, getting to be old beetle.
Speaker 2 (47:09):
Yeah, well, that's kind of what we think, and sometimes
that's what we're told, which is what we want to
talk about, because, you know, as time goes on, and
I think this is happening earlier and early in people too.
I mean I seeing people in their twenties thirties, I
started saying, my joints are getting sore and I'm just
wearing out, and I got wearing tear. And sometimes you
(47:31):
can take a joint or a place of the body
and put excessive stress on it, you know, with something
you're doing at work or recreation or something. And we're
a joint quicker in one spot. But in general, this
pain that we get all over, and it seems to
be different and different comes from obviously inflammation, which most
(47:51):
people know about nowadays. Thirty years ago when we talked
about this, nobody knew about it, but it's becoming well known.
But what we do sometimes is leave that inflammation there
and then as we do use those joints they do,
we're quicker, and so the areas that even that we're
pretty more extra stress on can we're out faster. But
sometimes it's because there's inflammation in the body that shouldn't
(48:14):
be there. And then of course there's other problems with
the inflammation, of which we've talked about through the years
on this segment, but we want to talk about today.
It's just some basic things that some people are doing
but a lot of people aren't that we can do
to kind of help this because we get into this,
you know cycle where once this gets to a place
where it's consistent or kind of disrupts our life, and
(48:35):
we go into the cycle of getting you joint injections,
which is you know, sometimes might be helpful, but the
problem with them is when you only have so many
of them, and they do have detrimental effects as soon
as they joint themselves. And then then there's course over
the counter stuff that we start taking, which we have
problems with all over the place, with the ansets and stuff,
(48:55):
you know, the add those and differents and all that
kind of stuff, and they have other side effects. And
then then we get into prescription medications, and then we
got more problems with them. So if we can get
some of this stuff early, it really helps. And so
some of the supplements that we can take with this
just everyday process, which there are some really basic ones
and there's some more kind of advanced ones, but really
(49:17):
the ones that we all know about and a lot
of us aren't taken are just the good old fish wilds,
the omegas. I mean, they sound so simple, but they're
so important, especially if you can find one that has
a little bit more DHA in it, which actually is
more antoni inflammatory, and a good quality fish wild not
something you just don't get Walmart or something. Be sure
you go get a really good quality fish oil that
(49:40):
because we'll have less chances of having impurities like having
metals and stuff in it, which is really truly important.
And then tumeric, good old kukuman is. Everybody knows about
this now, but a lot of people aren't doing this.
I mean you probably if you ask people out there
that might be you know, maybe ten percent or less
than ten percent of people that even think about this.
You may know about it, don't take it, and that's
(50:01):
it's I mean, these all have really good research on
decreasing inflammation and overall body pain. There's a lot of
supplements out there, some advertise on you know, Dieheard and
so forth, that are out there that have these in
them that have helped a lot of people. You can
take those, or you can actually get you know, your
own and take it to your own separately. Good old
(50:22):
vitamin D. It's really important also to measure your vitamin
D levels if they are low. Increasing your vitamin D
when also K two will help your overall inflammation. And
then a good probiotic and a spore probiotic one that
actually comes with a spore, a type of administration which
(50:42):
is much more effective than just taking a planet uh
antibioto I a probotic that's not a spore. So those
four things you can do yourself which helps tremendously. And
then if you can get help there, then go see
some functional integrated type practitioner because there could be deeper
issues like chronic toxicity or food allergies or something else
(51:03):
that could be actually aggravating this good stuff.
Speaker 1 (51:06):
Doctor Hearts, thank you as always, we'll talk again next month.
Speaker 2 (51:10):
Okay, pressures, have a great day.
Speaker 1 (51:11):
Thank you, sir, doctor David Harts with us. I know
I got a T shirt that says, if I woke
up and something didn't hurt, I'd think I was dead.
Forty six minutes past the hour, It's The Morning Show
with Preston Scott. Fifty two minutes past the hour, Thursday
(51:47):
on The Morning Show. Road Trip Idea. This is from
the book Unique America, Strange, Unusual and just Playing Fun.
A Trip through America. It's a book you can get
through Amazon. It's a really it's a hard bound small book.
It's like a five by five maybe a six by
(52:07):
six book. It's small, and it offers the the breakdown
of the country into regions. And this is in the Midwest,
and it's in Delevan, Wisconsin. In the eighteen hundreds, when
twenty five circuses wintered here, the town of Delevan was
considered the circus capital of the world. Why in the
(52:32):
world would a circus winter in Wisconsin? Anyway, it was
the place that saw more than a few pacoderms, otherwise
known as elephants. Most of these behemoths did typical elephant
tricks and acted in a typical elephant way. And then
there was Romeo. Over a fifteen year period, the killer
(52:56):
Elephant erased the lives of five train through foot stamping,
crushing with just sitting on him or impaling them with
the tusks. Why wasn't the animal executed. That's where it
(53:18):
gets interesting. They say Romeo suffered a broken heart when
his beloved Juliet passed away, and so in effect his
attacks were really a form of grief resolution. But it's
not true. In reality, Romeo was one very ornery honary
(53:39):
elephant for reasons that people can't explain. The good people
of Delvin, Delvan decided to honor Romeo with a full
sized statue. And so if you go to downtown Delavan, Wisconsin,
will you will see a full size replica made of
fiberglass of Romeo the Elephant and you can have your
(54:01):
photo taken there. So there you go. There's your if
you're traveling, and maybe some of you have traveled through Wisconsin,
and maybe gunnies listening up in Wisconsin and maybe he's
been to Delivan. I don't even know where Delivan is.
It's so funny because as often as my dad was
(54:22):
in Green Bay, I've only been Wisconsin less than five
times in my life. Once was an otter farm when
I was a kid. Jose and I talked about that
off air earlier this week. Never been to a Green
Bay Packer game there. Went to the Hall of Fame
there when my dad was inducted and I accepted on
his behalf after he passed away, and I want to
(54:43):
say it was two thousand and one was the ceremony.
I was pretty cool. And I think I went to
Wisconsin another couple times on just road trips as a kid.
But I couldn't tell you where Delavan, Wisconsin is, But
perhaps somebody listening has been there and had their photo taken.
I'm gonna try and fit this in. Roger Goodell has
(55:06):
said that the choice of bad Buddy is not going
to be changed. He's all in. It's carefully thought through.
He said, I'm not sure we've ever selected an artist
where we didn't have some blow back or criticism. It's
pretty hard to do when you have literally hundreds of
millions of people that are watching Loser. So we're going
(55:27):
to have a cross dressing occasionally man kissing artist singing
in Spanish as the halftime performer. Remember, the All American
halftime show will be on somewhere else, featuring entertainment you
can actually show to your kids and understand. But here's
the line that just blows me away. Listen to this.
(55:50):
We're confident it's going to be a great show. He
understands the platform that he's on, and I think it's
going to be exciting and a united moment, United, a
united moment. Could Roger Goodell be any more tone deaf
than he is? Talk about a guy who does not
(56:13):
know how to read the room. So I'm hoping you
join the growing millions that are not going to watch
the super Bowl halftime show. You're just gonna park yourself
somewhere else, maybe not even watch the game. But all right,
hour three, next third hour of the Morning Show with
(56:44):
me and him and you, all of us together. Hey, everybody,
how are you? It's Thursday, the weather is just spectacular.
I'm loving this. I am absolutely loving this. We are
(57:08):
going to take some time first couple segments here. We
got lots to talk about today. Tomorrow is already just crazy.
Cannot wait for tomorrow's show. But we still have so
much to go through today. The heist at the Louver,
the Museum of Bali. It's not an uncommon thing. The
(57:33):
Mona Lisa was stolen from the Louver. Nine objects were targeted,
but how it happened is absolutely. You've got to be
kidding me. Stuff now, I don't want to get ahead
of myself. Just a few days ago, morning of October nineteenth,
(58:00):
thieves wearing ba laklavas, not a boklava. They're great, by
the way, if you've never had a boklava. They use
a truck mounted basket lift known as a cherry picker.
You didn't know this, did you. They go up the
(58:25):
outside of the building and smash a window on the
floor they want to go to and enter from the
outside of the building using a cherry picker. They struck
about nine thirty in the morning local time, about a
(58:48):
half hour after the museum opens its doors. They had
pulled up on a road along the sind River climb
the extendable ladder on the cherry pick to break into
a window. They didn't carry any conventional weapons, allegedly threatened
museum guards with angle grinders. That tells you all you
(59:10):
need to know about the guards and what they were
prepared to do, because they were they If that's true,
there are other reports saying they weren't encountered by anybody
other than people that videotaped them do it. They're caught
on tape. People in the museum have them on the
cell phone breaking in into the cases. When they went
(59:37):
two road in the truck, two road on scooters, and
they left on the scooters. They left the truck behind.
They left on little motor scooters. Nine objects were targeted,
eight were successfully stolen. They dropped the ninth item, a
(59:58):
crown of Napoleon the Third's wife, Empress Eugenie, has thirteen
hundred and fifty four diamonds and fifty six emeralds in
the crown. So complete listing of the eight items that
were stolen. What's interesting is they did not go after
the Regent diamond, accordingly valued by Sothhambies at sixty million dollars.
(01:00:21):
So the question becomes who's behind it. People that study
this stuff, that are involved in this world, if you will,
they surmise that it was either a commissioned job, that
(01:00:44):
a collector commissioned them to steal this stuff. Now you
have to pause for just a moment and say to yourself, why,
if you're a collector, what value is it to you?
(01:01:05):
You can't show it to anybody, right, you can't possibly
show it and the whole point of collecting is to display.
But let's just say you're that collector that just wants it.
I just want it for myself. Okay, you're gonna die
(01:01:25):
one day, then what is it? Literally gonna be buried
with you and no one's gonna know. The other option,
if it's not commissioned by a collector, is that it's
just thieves that just want the monetary value of the
jewels and the precious metals that hold them. But where
(01:01:48):
do you sell it? Where do you fence that stuff?
This stuff is in the louver. It's not in Bill's
Museum of Oddities, where there may or may not be
a list of the collectibles inside Bill's collection. This is
the louver. And so in this story we're gonna get
(01:02:12):
to a great PostScript here in a moment, the probe
is being led by a specialized police unit with a
high success rate in solving high profile robberies, having a
good authority. The chief inspector is Jacques Clouseaux, not Jacques Claude.
(01:02:33):
Claude is the is the guy we want. Jacques Cousteau
is the undersea explorer. Claude Clusseau is the name of
the Pink Panther. Uh investigator, remember the Pink Panther movies.
Peter Seller's brilliant Claude Clusoe Glusseau. It's just anyway, if
(01:02:53):
you've ever watched the movies, you're laughing right now, eleven
past the hour we come back. I'm gonna drop the
hammer on the best part of this story, whatever you
may be.
Speaker 4 (01:03:04):
From Florida Sunshine State to Washington State. No, No, not Washington, sorry,
Washington's also hopeless for crying out loud. Is this the
only bastion of physical wealth and mindset? Goodness? Yeah? And
this is the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 1 (01:03:28):
All right, we're talking about the jewelry heist at the
lou I mentioned the Mona Lisas stolen from the museum
in nineteen eleven. It was carried out by a former
employee who had knowledge of the layout the security of
the building, and that raised the question Jose's talking about
in the break he said, what no lasers? No? Uh,
(01:03:48):
you know, no security measures at all in this place.
That's the thing. See, I don't see that there's a
way that I mean, they're going to identify people if
they look at tapes. Who have cased the location for
a while, depending on how long they keep the tapes,
(01:04:12):
someone's been paying attention to the security at that museum,
especially in the early hours. Somebody paid attention or knew,
which brings up the likelihood in my mind, it's almost
impossible for there not to be somebody that works at
the Louver that doesn't have some measure of detailed understanding
(01:04:34):
of the security that it does and does not have.
You know, Hoasey said, how do you what? This is
just like a literal smash and grab? Are you kidding me?
That's all they got. Remember, the museum was open, this
was not after hours. So even if they have those
laser systems that you know, you trip when you walk
(01:04:56):
through it, and you don't even know it's there unless
you let the smoke bomb out, which tells you where
it is and you know where to shimmy and where
to jump. Right, it's during it's when people are there,
broad daylight. So I'm I'm putting my money on there
being some level of inside knowledge. Ten percent. Less than
(01:05:21):
ten percent of artwork and display items at a museum
that are stolen are ever recovered. So if you're just
looking at it from the standpoint of the practicality of
giving it a shot. You got a nine and ten
chance of getting away with it. But now we get
(01:05:41):
to the I told you the hammer was coming you ready.
Just over a year ago, the Louver made Domino Nique Buffin,
(01:06:02):
the museum's first female security head. The first female security
chief hired by the first female director of the Louver
becomes the first woman to lose the French crown jewels
(01:06:26):
DEI hire an old gay pally. Uh huh. Now, I've
of course realigned the letters DEI is actually die. I
think it's a far more accurate. But others have said no, no, no, no,
Let DEI stand for make it an acronym for didn't
(01:06:51):
earn it. That's not bad, But no matter what, you
can't help but note and in defense of the female
head of security and the female director of the museum,
they have been begging for funds from the French government
(01:07:13):
to enhance security for years. Oh well, but I still
circle back to now, okay, what does anyone do with it?
That to me is the problem that I don't know
how unless you're in a country like China, maybe Russia
(01:07:38):
that has crappy relationships with the United States, and you
want that for your collection, not even the United States.
Sorry with stupid me France who hates France. Where it
doesn't matter. They'll show it off to everybody. Nobody's coming
to get it. But you still have to struggle with
(01:08:01):
why why do you steal this? You can't sell it,
you can't display it. What's the point anyway? Seventeen minutes
past the hour, we come back Don Junior for the
win Tomorrow on the program. I am going to horrify you.
(01:08:36):
You'd think I'd save the story for a week from
tomorrow on Halloween, except it cannot wait. It is the
dangerous side of AI. If you think we're talking about,
you know, the whole video side of it. No, that's
a totally different level of the horrors of AI. And
(01:09:00):
don't misunderstand. AI can do some great things, but AI
the dangerous, ugly side of AI. Coming tomorrow on the program.
Also tomorrow, Lee Williams, the gun Writer, got a Florida Man,
we got animal stories, We've got good news. Jose and
(01:09:22):
I share the best and worst, and of course your
calls during What's the Beef? You get the idea. We
got a loaded radio program, tomorrow. Honest and truly, I'm
going to prep, but I wouldn't have to. That's how
much material I have. I don't need to prep, but
(01:09:47):
I will to make sure that I've got everything that's
the most important on the docket tomorrow. But I've already
got the big story. And then a Lee Williams with
the update on Tata Domiak. What's going on there? The
no kings protests, all of the nonsense. Donald Trump Junior
(01:10:15):
was on Sean Hannity on Fox TV and he summarized
and brilliantly put all of this nonsense on the left
into perfect context.
Speaker 6 (01:10:30):
I'm talking about having a no King's protest, and you know,
congratulations the guys here one. We don't have kings. We
have a president that was elected in a landslide electoral
college win, someone who won the popular vote, someone who
won all seven swing states in a landslide fashion. Someone
by the way, who if he was a king, probably
would just reopen the government, but it hasn't worked that way.
(01:10:52):
If he was a king, he probably would have never
left the office the first time. If he was a king,
he wouldn't allow his government to process and persecute him,
and he certainly wouldn't allow people to assassinate him or
try to at least twice. So this is just the
usual Democrat nonsense. They throw out the talking points. You
heard each one of these people say wrecking ball. You know,
(01:11:13):
the DNC wrote the talking points. They have to say that,
and none of it ever means anything, None of it's
for the good of the people.
Speaker 1 (01:11:20):
There you go, those are some really good repeatable points.
If he were king, why would he allow the government
to persecute and prosecute him? If he were king, why
do you ever leave office? If he were king, why
(01:11:42):
not just say screw you, We're going to open the government.
Doesn't matter what you think. I'm king. See, it's absurd,
and this stuff you can get away. Who's participating college
students that don't know any better and old saggy skinned, white, crusty,
old liberal hippies who are trying to relive the days
(01:12:04):
of Woodstock and the Vietnam War protests. That's who you got,
very succinctly done by Don Junior. Come back, We've got
the big stories in the press box and more. Twenty
(01:12:25):
seven minutes past the hour, It is the Morning Show
with Me and you.
Speaker 4 (01:12:30):
And him, started counting his shows at the beginning because
we weren't really quite sure how long he'd last. Yeah,
now it's just turned into a thing. Welcome to the
Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 1 (01:12:50):
So the government shutdown continues, and it's reminiscent of the
longest government shutdown in history, which happened to Donald Trump
as well. Isn't it an interesting how the Democrats are
always the ones behind the shutdown. They can say what
(01:13:10):
they want, but for some reason, all of a sudden,
Democrats won't sign a continuing resolution. That's all they've done
for decades. Why, well, I think to illuminate that, you
go back to what Ted Cruz had to say thirteen
years ago. Twelve years ago, Ted Cruz predicted that healthcare
(01:13:34):
premiums would skyrocket because of Obamacare, even in the face
of subsidies. Obamacare was supposed to bring down the cost
of health care. It did just the opposite. Despite the subsidies,
many will still be paying higher premiums in twenty fourteen
(01:13:56):
as a result of Obamacare, said Cruise. And that's exactly
what happened. He gave the speech on the floor of
the Senate, and he pointed the research from Avic Roy,
a healthcare researcher who at the time was senior fellow
at the Manhattan Institute. His research made the case that
subsidies passed by the Obama administration would do little to
(01:14:17):
stop the government backed health care plans from growing more
expensive over time or competing effectively with non government backed plans.
But those forecasts paled because of COVID. He knew the
prices were going up. He predicted it, he detailed it,
he noted it in research. But then COVID happened and
(01:14:40):
everything exploded. And so what did the government do. The
government put subsidies in place, but they put a sunset
on those. This is the bait and switch that democrats do. Friends,
let me paraphrase. Okay, look, COVID is a is a
(01:15:02):
just it's it's the worst. It's the perfect storm against
the health of this country. So here's what we gotta do.
We've got to buy down the cost of health care.
We've got to subsidize premiums. And this is a This
medical problem was created by the government and the pharmaceutical industry.
(01:15:23):
They killed any medications that were cheap, effective and able
to treat this stuff. Because you can't stop it. You
can't stop a flu. You cannot stop a coronavirus. A
cold is a coronavirus. You can't stop a coronavirus. So
(01:15:44):
just listen to me, friends, please listen to me. Because
this is transferable. You can take ownership of what I'm
sharing and share it. So here's what happens. The Democrats say,
we gotta, we gotta, we gotta, we gotta bring the
cost down, we gotta subsidize healthcare. So they get it
done because they controlled Congress. They get it done. But
(01:16:06):
they put a provision in there. Oh don't worry, we're
gonna send set it. We're soun setting it in twenty
twenty five so that we get the remnants everything, we
take care of it, and then we take the subsidies away.
Because you can't do that forever, right, bait and switch.
Here we are. They want to keep the subsidies. Here's why,
(01:16:27):
because when you remove the subsidies, the actual cost of
Obamacare is exposed, and Democrats cannot allow that to happen.
That's why they've dug their heels in. Because Obamacare was
the landmark legislation of Barack Obama, the promised one they
(01:16:51):
have to stay the course on this or the game
is over. I hope we've got thirteen Republicans that are
nudging towards a okay, if we agree to negotiate Obamacare
and put it in writing, once you open up the
government and vote to open up the government, will you
(01:17:13):
stop this shutdown? We got thirteen Republicans on that side.
I would say to the Democrats, screw you. You put
us in this spot. Own it. President needs to stay
the course. If the subsidies explode, If the subsidies go
away and health care costs explode in Obamacare, You're going
(01:17:34):
to know why because they did this. It's all on them.
Forty minutes past the other Glad I could help.
Speaker 4 (01:17:50):
It's in a positive way, improve the lives of others.
That's what this show is about. And this is the
President Scott Show.
Speaker 1 (01:18:24):
Forty forty two minutes. Pass me. Forgive me because I
really want to say a bad word, but I'm not
going to say it, so you don't have to forgive me.
Never Mind, what the heck is happening to the states
that I was born in and grew grew up in
(01:18:47):
my younger years, the states where I've lived, I was
born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. My dad's entire family is rooted
in Pennsylvania. I grew up in Minnesota, even when we
moved there when I was nine to Arizona. They they
(01:19:13):
were formative years, and I went back. I went back
and forth for eleven years, twelve years, and I look
at those two states and they're just shells of what
they used to be. And I'm just heartbroken. Minnesota is certified.
(01:19:34):
I mean if in Florida, we have some if you're
listening outside the state, we have something called a Baker Act.
A Baker Act is when you forcibly put someone in
the hospital because they're danger to themselves or others and
they need mental health help. Minnesota needs to be Baker acted.
The governor, the legislature, some of the citizens, they need
(01:19:59):
to be Baker acted. You're losing your state to foreign invaders.
And then Pennsylvania, Sweet God almighty, what are you doing.
They are ready to legalize the Kermit Gosnells of the world.
You remember who he is was He's the guy who
(01:20:22):
is murdering children left and right through abortion, hideous abortions
for decades. The Pennsylvania House Judiciary Committee is taking up
HB nineteen fifty seven, which, if approved by the state legislature,
(01:20:45):
goes to the voters on a statewide ballot, making abortion
up to birth a constitutional right. So please spare me
the indignation that you feign when you say nobody wants
(01:21:13):
to abort babies up until birth. Oh crap, Yes they do.
This is state lawmakers. They have no language in the
bill that limits abortion none. They want to make Pennsylvania
a tourist destination for abortion. That is not hyperbole, allowing
(01:21:43):
women from other states to cross the border and to
have their pregnancy terminated there. I wrote in the rundown,
what the heck has happened? What has happened to people?
I know the answer. I asked the question rhetorically. I
(01:22:04):
know the answer. I don't have to theorize the answer.
I don't have to. Oh boy, boy, it's a pickle.
I can't figure it out. No, it's sin. We've wandered
so far from God. We don't have a moral compass.
See God hammers down a north on the compass. This
(01:22:27):
is direction north. Now, you can go everywhere else. It's fine,
you have that freedom to do that. But there's north.
That's true north. That's where morality exists right there. We've
wandered so far from it. We now think of a
(01:22:47):
baby in the mother's womb as tissue fetal matter breaks
my heart, absolutely breaks my heart. All right, let's move on.
Forty six minutes past the hour. Can you believe it?
(01:23:10):
We're almost out of time.
Speaker 3 (01:23:12):
I want more, Sweet Lord, I get it.
Speaker 2 (01:23:31):
Fun.
Speaker 1 (01:23:34):
It was all accounted for. I had my final story here,
and I've lost it. I'm serious. I'm lifting up everything
on my console here. I've got my massive notebook, I've
(01:23:55):
got my run down there. All right, I'm treading water. Friends,
Just hang in there, hang on, hang on, hang on.
I'm not giving up yet. Let's see. I've talked about that.
I've talked about that, definitely talked about that. Sometimes the
staples stick together. It's like that, sometimes the frost makes
(01:24:19):
the bait stick. God bless it. Uh okay, here's what
I will do then instead, And maybe it's it's just
it's what needs to happen. Let me clean up what
I was saying about Obamacare. Uh. Good, buddy, Mine texting
(01:24:41):
me pointed out, he said, look, Obamacare was already subsidized
before we added we added subsidies, and so what you know,
keep in mind that's the that's the thing. Obamacare had
to be subsidized for it to be, for it to work,
(01:25:03):
taxpayers had to pay for it through taxes. And that
was the whole reason why I got so angry at
Justice John Roberts for being an activist judge, because nowhere
in the bill on Obamacare is the word tax tax
or taxes is nowhere found in that massive bill, thousands
(01:25:24):
of pages. Remember Nancy Pelosi, well, we'll have to read
it first to know what's in it. She passed it
without reading it, and the Supreme Court justice said, yeah,
this is what they meant's see. That was the mistake.
That's the definition of an activist judge. But I got
to set it this side. The point is Obamacare has
(01:25:45):
always been subsidized. What happened during COVID was additional subsidies,
and they sunseted it. And they were playing this game
all along. This was all bait and switch.
Speaker 4 (01:25:58):
I can't wait for Tomorrow, brought to you by Barono
Heating and Air.
Speaker 1 (01:26:02):
It's the Morning Show one on WFLA. Started the radio
program with Matthew nine, thirty seven and thirty eight, talking
about harvesting. What that looks like for you and me.
Big stories in the press box. Tropical Storm Melissa going
to be a major hurricane. It's likely gonna sit and
(01:26:23):
spin under under Cuba, maybe touch Haiti, Dominican Republic, and
it's going to get big and it's gonna As of
right now, all projections in my simulator show it's going
straight north into the Atlantic. It will not be a
threat to the mainland of the United States and certainly
(01:26:44):
not Florida. But weather's weather. You never know. It's very unsettled.
Science talked about Ted Cruz's predictions about ballooning Obamacare subsidies.
It's it's it's at the heart of this shutdown. Democrats
do not want you to know how much subsidies are
(01:27:08):
buying down healthcare costs. It's artificially done, friends, it's being
suppressed the costs. We're hiding them, and we're paying for
it in taxes. Gave a very thorough breakdown of the
government's shutdown. Interesting that Democrats have shut down the government
twice during Trump's terms in office, and they're the two
(01:27:29):
longest shutdowns in government history, and that interesting. Had a
great visit with Steve Stewart doctor David Harts went through
the heist of the century at De loeu vent Palais.
They used a cherry picker to get up to a
window and smash it from the outside and left on
motor scooters. Had to be somewhat of an inside job.
(01:27:53):
NFL doubling down on bad Bunny. Say it'll be a
united a uniting event. Okay, can't wait for tomorrow. Friends,
have an awesome day.