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October 28, 2025 93 mins
This is the full episode of The Morning Show with Preston Scott for Teuseday, October 28th.

Our guests today include:
- Howard Eisenman





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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:05):
Hey, good morning, and welcome Tuesday. On the Morning Show
with Prestin Scott On Preston, he is Jose. It is
October the twenty eight show, fifty four eighty two. A
delight to share time with you all. We appreciate you
tuning into the program. As always, we'll tell you about

(00:26):
the show in just a few minutes. But let's start
with God's word. Tewod Corinthians four eighteen says this in
the ESV. By the way, sorry, I had a gentleman
write me yesterday. He said, I really appreciate how you

(00:48):
bring God's perspective into so much of the program. I'm paraphrasing,
and then he dropped this, I need to start reading
my Bible again, and I can't tell you how my
heart leapt at those words. And so we talked about

(01:13):
different versions of well To. He shared what he was
thinking about. I offered another thought on a translation, and
just when I saw that I'm reading from the ESV,
I thought, I wanted to share that there is a

(01:34):
move of God happening. But let me understand, let me
help you understand that I've described it this way. The
Holy Spirit, the wind of God, if you will is
always blowing. There are just times when our sales aren't up.

(01:58):
So when we hear, oh, there's move of God, it's
like I think that there is unintentionally a communication of
you know, God just kind of snoozing on the rocking
chair and he kind of woke himself up and went, oh, well,
guess they need a little help down there. No, God

(02:20):
is always interested, sorry, just fighting fighting out. Not a
lot of sleep here. God is always interested. God is
always moving, His spirit is always at work. Always. There

(02:42):
is an awareness of God right now that we have
not seen in Mass in a long time. And honestly,
it's because of Charlie Kirk. The death of Charlie Kirk
has awakened a whole lot of young people, but it

(03:02):
has also touched because it has touched so many young people,
it has touched a lot of not so young people.
It has reawakened something in them that has been lost
or forgotten or put on the side. And so let's
go back to this scripture where it says in two
Corinthians four eight, as we look not to the things

(03:26):
that are seen, but to the things that are unseen.
For the things that are seen are transient, but the
things that are unseen are eternal. Can you see the wind? Nope?
Can you see the effects of the wind? Yep. I

(03:52):
remember the very first time that I saw somebody. And
for a lot of people, they don't like the idea
of an open caps. I get that, I I absolutely
get it. But I remember the first time I saw one.
My first thought was, Oh, they're gone. The essence of

(04:16):
a person, you cannot see the spirit. The soul of
a person is expressed through their body, their words, their actions,
but you can't see it, just like you can't see
the wind. The things that are unseen are the things

(04:37):
that are eternal. Ten past the hour. This is going
to be a fun one today for reasons I will explain.
It's The Morning Show with Preston Scott. The Morning Show

(04:58):
with Preston Scott all Right eleven passed the hour. Tuesday,
October twenty eighth, sixteen thirty six. Massachusetts General Court establishes
Harvard College eighteen eighty six Statue of Liberty dedicated in

(05:19):
New York Harbor. Nineteen nineteen, Congress passes the Volstead Act,
which enforces prohibition. In nineteen forty two, the Alaska Highway
connecting Alaska to the Lower forty eight through Canada is completed.
You have to go through Canada to get to Alaska.
That's unusual. I've always been curious and someone knows the

(05:42):
answer to this. Do you have to have a passport
to drive from the United States through Canada to Alaska?
Or is that highway different? You know what I'm saying.
I mean, it seems odd that you would have to
have a passport to just drive to another state. But

(06:03):
that'd be I'd be interested to know that. And in
nineteen sixty five, the Gateway arch in Saint Louis is completed.
Today is National First Responders Day, National Internal Medicine Day,
and National Chocolate Day. But my friends, today is also

(06:34):
a special day because one hundred years ago today, Miss
Lindell White was born and she is celebrating her birthday
listening to The Morning Show with Preston Scott Lindella.

Speaker 2 (06:59):
Happy do you? Heavy birthday? Heavy Birthday? Happy birthday? Do you?
Every birthday?

Speaker 1 (07:10):
To you?

Speaker 2 (07:12):
Happy birthday to oh yeah, have a birthday, half birthday,
heavy birthday.

Speaker 1 (07:22):
We're gonna take a little time each hour to celebrate
Miss Lindell. There aren't a lot of listeners that reach
one hundred listening to this program, and we're gonna celebrate it.

Speaker 2 (07:35):
Ebby birthday. Do you have a birthday? Do you every birthday?
Have a birthday? Have a birthday to you? Happy birthday.

Speaker 1 (07:51):
From the Morning Show Band to you. Yeah, I just
how could I say no to the request? The uh,
it's great? The note said, I know you might not

(08:13):
want to set a precedent, but I bet there aren't
too many listeners who turn one hundred, and you aren't kidding,
and so we're going to celebrate that. You know, I've
got I wonder how many shows I would be doing
if I were doing this show till I was one hundred.
I wonder if I could do this show that long?

(08:34):
That would be? That would be like crazy? How old
are you? Jose twenty seven? Stop thirty seven? I'm gonna
be thirty eight in January. So if we just stayed
in our locked positions right here, you if I if
I did this show till I was one hundred, you

(09:00):
would be you would be you would be seventy three. Well,
oh my, I can barely move now, you and I'd
be kind of that would be hilarious. You would definitely
be the longest tenured producer in the show's history, no

(09:21):
doubt about that. Today, besides a few impromptu and there
will be a birthday haiku, there will be a birthday
haiku for her, Miss Lindell. It's just us today and
Howard Eisman in the third hour. We have a lot

(09:43):
of stories to go through. This is a great day
because I am getting to some stuff that I have
been wanting to get to. So stick around sixteen past
the hour. We are just beginning here on the Morning Show.
Happy birthday, MS. White. All right, We've got some sound

(10:16):
for you to hear today. I'm really encouraging you to
show up tonight at the Leon County school Board meeting.
If you are in Leon County and you pay taxes,
that's pretty much all of you who live in Leon County.
You gotta pay taxes and show up at the school

(10:38):
board meeting. And I'm gonna remind you why that's coming
up this morning. Got some sound for you to hear
from Senator John Kennedy. Big stories in the press box
are definitely noteworthy. Today we're going to help you physically,
just us. Don't have a doctor coming in for this segment. Now,

(11:01):
we will have Chad Gray coming next month, and we're
gonna talk to those of you that are suffering from
arthritis and chad from joint and Strong is going to
offer some help. There are things that you can do,
not a bunch of injections, not that you can do

(11:22):
to help your body. And you know, I mentioned the
whole flexibility thing last week. It's it's vitally important. But
we've got a mainly minute. We've got Florida man, We've
got We've got just so many different stories to get
through calendar time though, real quickly. Yes, the school board
meeting tonight. Some of you may be interested in the

(11:45):
fourteenth Annual Remembrance dinner. It's at the Champions Club that
is tonight as well. Cocktails at five thirty, dinner at
six thirty if you're interested. Holocaust Resources dot org. It
supports hollow cost education and awareness in our community. There
is the the Big Ben Hard Hats with Heart tonight,

(12:08):
a proof brewing, so that's another thing that's going on.
And then a reminder, Jose, can you see his name
is in the press release. I'm looking at the press release.

Speaker 3 (12:23):
Here.

Speaker 1 (12:24):
It is Saint Paul's Episcopal Church hosting the second annual
bowls and booze, not booze, but booze as in Blue
Bloo Halloween. The Chili cookoff is now. They they probably
might want to You might want to let them know

(12:44):
that they got the day wrong. It's not Thursday, October
thirty first, It's Friday, October thirty first, so their press
release is oops, uh, it is Friday though. From five
to nine for ten bucks, you can eat you can
get it all. You can eat bowl of chili with

(13:05):
corn bread and beverage. Up to three children twelve and
under allowed to eat free when accompanying a paid adult.
Takeout Chili can be ordered for fifteen bucks for a
court but there will be a contest. Three celebrity judges
led by I Love This led by mister Jose Can

(13:27):
you See, renowned foodie and one hundred point seven senior
producer of The Preston Scott Show on iHeartRadio Network. It'll
be joined by davey Owen, chef and owner of Big
Pappis chop House, and Roger Rankin, chef and owner of
the Burned Bread Brewery, both located on Courthouse Square. So
that's going on Friday night. You gotta be fired up now,

(13:50):
do you not eat all day long Friday in preparation
for consuming all the chili? That is correct, I'm going
to be saving up some room. Okay, Now what it
probably wouldn't be fair or would it, to say what
you look for in a good chili.

Speaker 4 (14:05):
Yeah, yeah, I'll keep that a well guarded secret.

Speaker 1 (14:10):
Okay, okay, now me, if you're putting onions in your chili,
they better be finely chopped and they better be cooked.
Put raw onions in chili that texture just destroys me.
I can't stand it. I go, I bite into it
and goes that crunch of an onion. No, no, no, no.

(14:34):
Now you know what, maybe a deep fried, crispy onion
chopped up might not be too bad. Like those onion
the little fried onions that you get that you'll put
on a green bean casserole at Thanksgiving time. Those Diurkys,
I think they're Jurkis, little mini fried onions. I'm that

(14:54):
might not be terrible. And chili I don't know, but
generally I'm a chili with light beans and uh and cheese.
You gotta put some cheese on the top of it.
You gotta let it. You gotta put some cheddar on there.
That's kind of that's just how I roll. And and
if you if you leave the beans out, then that
chili belongs absolutely on on hot dogs. Chili dogs are

(15:18):
a thing of beauty. And lastly, if I'm eating chili,
when I order it at a restaurant, I will say
to the waitress, bring me an embarrassing amount of saltines,
and they'll look at me and they'll bring like four
crackers and I'm going, oh, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no no, you can save those four for the rest

(15:40):
of the restaurant. I want the rest of what you've got.
So anyway, that's the calendar for the for the day,
and uh yeah we come back. We've got the big
stories in the press box and uh my own mind,
don't miss those. The Morning Show with Preston Scott on

(16:06):
News Radio one hundred point seven do w UFLA. That's
a big storm out there off Jamaica, a big one

(16:26):
and I'm grateful it's not coming here, but boy, keep
those folks in your prayers. We had a missions outreach
and connection many many years ago when I worked with
a church and had the pastor of this church. He
had a couple of different churches, one in the inner

(16:50):
highlands of Jamaica and one on the coast, and it
was Pastor Delbert Blair. Never forget that. But I have
always had a heart for the people. There big stories
in the press box. This is a significant set of stories.

(17:10):
The American Federation of Government Employees, the largest union of
government federal government employees. First of all, where are unions
aligned virtually all? I don't know of a union that
is not directly aligned with Democrats in the Democratic Party,

(17:32):
I don't know of one. They have. They have called
for a passage of a clean continuing resolution and opening
up the government. You know who's been pushing a clean
resolution a cr Republicans. The largest union of federal workers

(17:59):
is citing with the Republican Party, telling Democrats open up
the government. If this thing goes to November, friends, you
will see some disruption. It is important to remember that

(18:25):
a Democrat aligned union is siding with the Republican Party.
Second big story. If you getting to the shutdown, and
this was a point, I did a pretty good job

(18:45):
of breaking down the Democratic strategy behind the Obamacare subsidies
that they are demanding continue. With one exception. They are
all ready without the COVID added subsidies. They threw more

(19:06):
money at Obamacare than they already did during COVID. Democrats
did that, and Democrats set the deadline. They said that
the money would stop at the end of twenty twenty five.
Now most of us would rationally say COVID ended a
couple of years ago. No, but there's still COVID. Now,

(19:31):
we have the flu like we always have. And oh,
by the way, there is growing evidence that the flu
jab opens you up to getting COVID. It is it
turns into a receptor. But we'll set that aside for
right now. But if you take away this whole Obamacare

(19:51):
subsidy argument, the shutdown just disappears they got nothing. So
someone did some digging here. Premiums are expected to rise
by roughly twenty percent. You know how much the expiring
subsidies account for that? Of that, the subsidies that Democrats

(20:17):
are fighting to keep, even though they put them in
on a temporary basis, four percentage points out of the
twenty percent four percent, four percent of the twenty percent
increase four percent of that. So let's break that down

(20:39):
a little bit further. This is added cash that the
Democrats threw onto Obamacare. The taxpayers pay ninety three percent
of the average premium for Obamacare recipients ninety three percent.

(21:03):
So if we strip all this away, taxpayers are still
going to be paying eighty percent, still higher than what
it was when Obamacare went into action in twenty fourteen,
which was sixty eight percent. Do you see what's happened.

(21:24):
Democrats have incrementally added more and more socialized medicine into
these bills to the point where it's ninety three percent
right now, and they set this whole thing up to
end in twenty twenty five. Republicans are right to hold

(21:48):
the ground on this. They should have done it long
before now forty one minutes after the hour.

Speaker 5 (22:01):
I yeah, I traveled with a radio taped to my bike.
This is the Morning Show with Preston Scott.

Speaker 1 (22:22):
This is how credibility vanishes in the mainstream media. MSNBC's
Nicole Wallace denies that Democrats ever made Trump Hitler comparisons.
She said, I I don't believe democrats ever made that comparison. Okay,

(22:48):
Howard University professor of journalism. Now Howard is a private school.
I believe it's still in the MIAC where FAM you
used to be FAMI is now the Swack Southwest Athletic Conference.
Stacy Patton is her name. She wrote a blog recently,

(23:09):
John Brown didn't ask enslaved people how to be a
good white ally.

Speaker 2 (23:19):
And.

Speaker 1 (23:21):
She's discouraging white illiberals from asking her how to be
a better ally to minorities. And she's encouraging them in
her written piece to just emulate John Brown. Let's go
back in history. October of eighteen fifty nine, Brown led
a twenty one man raid on a federal armory in

(23:41):
Harper's Ferry, part of Virginia. At the time, his goal
was to start a slave uprising. A few slaves joined
the fight. Local militia confronted Brown and his men fought back.
Four townspeople, including a freed slave, Hayward Shepherd, were caught
in the crossfire and killed. After ten of his men
were Brown was captured, later tried for treason, eventually hanged.

(24:05):
So the professor Paton writes, so when white allies ask
what can I do? Here's the answer. Be like John Brown,
ask yourself what am I willing to burn so somebody
else can breathe? She said that trying to guide white

(24:29):
people in their allyship was exhausting as Bleep. Even the
well intentioned versions drag you back into the same cycle
of having to translate pain into curriculum. It's the paradox
of white goodness. They want to be seen trying, but
trying itself becomes another demand on the people that are
already harmed. I would love to know how she has

(24:54):
been oppressed as a professor at a private school. This
is a fantasy world. It is a fantasy world. Does
racism exist, Yes, there are black bigots, There are white bigots.
There are Asian bigots, there are Hispanic bigots. There are

(25:16):
bigots all over the place. You know why, because it's
sin and it's a matter of the heart. But the
fact of the matter is this is fantasy, this constant repetition.
But here's what it does. John Brown, this whole John
Brown thing, I'm not gonna give his name, but he's
the longtime Clantifa agitator who has just been charged with

(25:38):
three counts of attempted murder of federal agents at the
Ice facility in Texas. He was a member of the
John Brown gun Club. This whole John Brown thing has
led to this where's the violence coming from one place,

(26:04):
and one place only the left, the I liberal left.
That's just a fact. Forty six minutes past the hour,
I think a lot of you are going to enjoy this.

(26:28):
I am asking you to go on my behalf because
I will not be there meetings that start at six
and have public comments. Who knows when not my friend
when I go to bed at seven seven point thirty,
just not my friend. So I'm sorry. But we have

(26:49):
a group that is going we meaning listeners of this program,
people that care in this community, and are just over it.
Over this school board. They're over this superintendent being silent
about the comments of Daryl Jones who slandered and libeled

(27:16):
Charlie Kirk. He libeled him, slander if he speaks it
out loud. But so he's a racist according to according
to Daryl Jones. Meeting tonight's at six o'clock at the

(27:36):
school board on Pensacola. And let's just listen to one
exchange of Charlie Kirk with a young man who happens
to be black, who came up to ask about the
importance He came with the idea of the importance of
DEI do.

Speaker 6 (27:57):
You think people should be hired based on their race
or their competency.

Speaker 1 (28:01):
I think that they should be out the competency they We.

Speaker 6 (28:04):
Totally agree, right, Okay, So what DEI does in practice,
not in theory, is it focuses on race more than competency.
That is our concern for your life. I want you
always to be judged on the content of your character,
not the color of your skin, where DEI says, no,
we're actually going to care more about skin color than competency.

Speaker 2 (28:25):
Mm hm.

Speaker 6 (28:26):
And so what we want is an America based on merit,
America based on how hard you work, an America based
on what you bring to the table, not just what
you look like.

Speaker 1 (28:34):
That's a racist, all right, So let's stop there. Daryl
Jones didn't just call him a racist, he called him
a homophobe. Let's listen to this exchange with a self
proclaimed gay young man.

Speaker 7 (28:54):
I'm a gay conservative, and I just want to kind
of ask you, like, what do you have to say
from people like me who kind of feel like I
guess it's kind of hard for gay conservatives because there's
not a lot of us, So, like, what do you
have to say to other gay people who need to
realize like they do have a choice.

Speaker 6 (29:10):
Yeah, first of all, welcome to the conservative movement. I
don't think you should introduce yourself just based on your
sexual attraction.

Speaker 7 (29:16):
I like, because that's not who you are.

Speaker 6 (29:17):
I like to be thought of as a person, and
for sure, you are a complete human being, and I'm
sure you treat people well and you're studying something, so
I want to get away with this idea that you're
gay anything. I just think that we have gone a
long way in the negative direction of this country, where
we act as if the most important part of your
identity is what you do in the bedroom. It doesn't
mean that much to me, but if you ask from

(29:38):
a perspective as a Christian, I don't agree with that lifestyle.
But politics is about addition and multiplication. I imagine you
agree with a lot of what we talk about right,
strong borders, strong country, and for that, you know, we
welcome you into the conservative movement.

Speaker 1 (29:51):
Thank you. And that's a real homophobe, he politely, calmly,
And I want to point this out. Isn't it interesting
that a young person who identifies himself as gay but
conservative had no problem walking up and asking a question

(30:15):
and engaging in a discussion, getting his thoughts, what's the
denominator being conservative? See, being conservative means you're willing to listen,
You're willing to exchange ideas. I chose those soundbites because
they are representative of how Charlie interacts with people that

(30:41):
school board member Darryl Jones claims he hates. Remember that
when you go to the school board meeting tonight. Mister
Jones needs to retract his statements and he needs to
step down. He needs to resign his post. And if
he doesn't retract this statements, he could be facing a

(31:01):
lawsuit and the school board could be facing one as
well for not addressing this problem. All right, Five past
the hour Morning Show with Thrust Sin Scott. I'm Preston,

(31:23):
He's Jose could be with you. I when I saw
this story as we start the second hour of the show,
We're gonna help you out. We're gonna help you feel better, Okay,
and it's gonna be, it's gonna be. It's it's gonna
shock you, it will. It brought back memories one of

(31:48):
my few skills as a basketball player. I could score
a little bit, I could rebound a little bit, I
could pass a little bit. I was that guy on
our teams and when I played after playing competitively in
school intermural, I was that guy that did a little
bit of everything pretty well. But what I really did

(32:13):
well is I could backpedal. I considered it a real
talent and I did it from when I was a
little kid learning the game. When you play offensively and
you go back, I always, unless I was just in

(32:33):
an out, just an all outsprint because somebody cherry picked
and was, you know, trying to beat us back, I
would backpedal from the offensive end to the defensive end.
I would backpedal, and I was very good at it.
That's my probably my single best skill on a basketball court.

(32:56):
And then comes this story. Walking backward could be a
key to longevity and injury comebacks. It could have meaningful
benefits for joint health, chronic pain, and even brain health,
and there's now evidence to back it up. I can't

(33:18):
wait to talk about this with Chad Gray from Joint Strong.
Multiple studies show that simply changing direction can engage the
body in ways traditional exercise can't. What seems like a
novelty might actually be one of the simplest, most accessible
ways to move better and hurt less. The study, published

(33:39):
in the Journal of Orthopedic Surgery and Research, focused on
people with mild to moderate knee osteoarthritis. Listen to this.
Participants who added backward walking to their routine several times
a week for six weeks reported significant get improvements in

(34:01):
knee function and pain reduction compared with those who stuck
with standard forward walking. Researchers found that walking backward changes
how muscles around the knee work. Because the stride is
shorter and the landing is softer, it reduces compressive forces
on the joints, meaning less wear and tear over time.

(34:25):
Now Jose's walking backwards for like three feet in his studio. Now,
here's what I want you to do in the next break.
Listen to me. In the next break. I want you
to walk around the hallway down and back a couple
times in the break, and then we'll compare notes. Here, Son,
sounds like a plan. Okay, well, we'll compare notes at

(34:46):
some point in the program. Another study showed how backward
effe walking affects people with chronic lower back pain m
After several weeks of incorporating the exercise, participants show both
lower pain levels and better control of their lumbo pelvic movement,
which is the coordination between the lower back and the

(35:07):
pelvis that stabilizes the spine. The finding suggest that backward
walking uses a wider range of stabilizing muscles than forward
walking does. It forces the body to maintain balance and
alignment in a different way, waking up muscles that can
go under used in our day to day routines. You

(35:28):
know what this is. This is the language that Chad
talks about all the time about we were constantly leaning forward,
We're constantly bending forward. We're constantly doing and that you
have to exert forces back the other way. It makes
perfect sense that backward walking wakes up parts of your

(35:50):
body that aren't awakened with your regular daily routine. Cleveland
Clinic noted that it's not only good for the joints,
but it also good for the mind because working in
reverse challenges spatial awareness, coordination, and concentration. Boom, mic drop.
What a great This is one of those This is

(36:13):
one of those little tidbits that I love doing this
show for finding things like this, because right now I
can imagine like thousands of people walking around their office
today backwards on their lunch break. Walking backwards, Now, I

(36:36):
should point out you do have to add that spatial awareness,
you know, if you're walking backwards down a sidewalk, just
saying I think your driveway call to sack. You know,
someplace safe is the way to go. But in that
interesting it absolutely is ten minutes past the hour, back

(36:57):
with more in the Morning Show with Preston Scott.

Speaker 5 (37:00):
Don't worry, We're here to make it all better. There
you go, Yes, it's okay, Yes.

Speaker 1 (37:08):
This is the Morning Show with Preston Scott.

Speaker 8 (37:16):
Oh.

Speaker 1 (37:17):
I love my research team. We have research assistants near
and far. We have a lead research assistant of course,
we have the research assistant supervisor, and together I just
get so many great leads on stories that I would
have otherwise missed. This one comes from zero hedge. Now,
if you're not familiar with zero hedge, zero hedge is

(37:41):
it's worth your time. A lot of economic related news
on zero Hedge. This particular piece, though, is a reprint
from Epic Times by Molly Engelhart, and the title of
it is what can we do about the Agrarian Collapse?

(38:07):
Let me simplify, what can we do to stop small
farmers from going out of business, and that part of
our culture drying up and going away because it's literally
being absorbed by these monolith massive farms. The small, individual,
family owned and operated farm is going away. And in

(38:34):
this article Molly writes, the truth is our local farms
cannot survive without us. Supporting them isn't optional. It's essential.
Go to farm to table dinners, visit your farmer's market,
buy a meat box or a community supported agriculture share,
drive out to the farm, use farms as venues for weddings,

(38:56):
baby showers, birthday parties, Every single action matter. But inside
this article she details some interesting things. Individual support isn't
going to get it done though it's necessary, but it's
not enough. Don't take that as an excuse not to support.

(39:18):
It's still the most critical piece of the puzzle. But
without systemic change, our support can only go so far.
This is a matter of national security. Farmers are aging
out and young families who want to farm simply cannot
access the land. Why because banks currently require thirty percent
down on farmland loans. Do the math. In Central Texas,

(39:43):
farmland averages fourteen thousand dollars an acre for two hundred
acres that's nearly eight hundred and forty thousand dollars cash
upfront with a monthly mortgage of fourteen thousand dollars. No crop,
no herd, no vegetables can sustain that. The numbers don't work.

(40:08):
Economist Richard Werner, famous for coining the term quantitative easing
and for his ground baking brown ground breaking studies in Japan,
show that this isn't consumer spending or government policy alone
that drives inflation. It's how banks create and direct credit.
When credit flows mostly into real estate speculation, it inflates

(40:29):
bubbles and destabilizes economies. Listen now. Werner determined, though, when
banks direct new money into productive sectors such as small
businesses or in this case, farms, communities thrive. He demonstrated
that economies that support credit creation for productive use consistently

(40:51):
outperform those that allow credit to be swallowed up by
property speculation. Imagine if we apply the same principle to agriculture.
Instead of fueling housing bubbles, our banking system could be
fueling a generation of new farmers growing nutrient dense foods
for our communities. In closing, she makes this point Fannie

(41:19):
May and Freddie Mack allow first time home buyers to
purchase homes with as little as thirty percent down. Veterans
can access zero percent down, no mortgage insurance with low
interest rates. As a society, we've decided that helping families
and veterans is worth supporting with government backed loans. While
not a fan of government subsidies, maybe it's time for
a product for farmland. I wonder if the lending institution

(41:49):
is listening. This is a great story. We're going to
talk about this with Catcamick. There has to be attention
paid to reversing and saving the agrarian culture of this country.
Sixteen minutes. It didn't just build this country, it fed it.

(42:15):
It was shuffling the deck. Sorry, or I was just
so excited to share. We did a little lap around
our office here the studios. We have a long hallway
of studios and then it l shapes it goes up
to the bullpen and the offices and all that. So

(42:36):
we did a little mini lap where we walked backwards
down to the and took the l and then we
reversed and we basically jogged backwards back. Your reaction, sir.

Speaker 4 (42:53):
Well, I'm perplexed right now. I'll tell you what, my
legs are sore, like I've been working out all day
at the gime.

Speaker 1 (43:01):
Did you start feeling it just walking?

Speaker 4 (43:04):
Yeah, like halfway like on our way back, that's when
I started feeling it.

Speaker 1 (43:07):
Yeah, But you were jogging a little bit. Then as
you walked down though, what was your first reaction you
you were getting this?

Speaker 4 (43:12):
Yeah, yeah, I was getting a little nauseous, started kind
of going left and right, and uh yeah, it was
just very odd, uh crazy to me that my legs
are a little sore.

Speaker 1 (43:22):
After that, I mean, yes, it's different, I don't think
I First of all, you're obviously you're activating different muscles, right,
there's no doubt about it. But the spatial awareness thing,
it's good for you. It is good for you. So
my advice is, obviously, you know, if you're under in
doctor's care for a condition or whatever, you know, go

(43:44):
talk to your doctor and be sensible about trying this.
But if you can try this and go up and
down your driveway for example, safely, just very slowly walking backwards,
very slowly. We walked pretty quickly and then we jogged back,
you know, so that was a first for him. I
hadn't done it in a while, I'm feeling it, so

(44:05):
uh yeah, just keep that in mind. Oh yeah, we're
gonna squeeze a couple in here. Florida man, if you
read something insane, I probably did it. Come on, you
know you want to sing.

Speaker 4 (44:23):
I'm fond of food the marks, go ahead and google
my name.

Speaker 1 (44:29):
Now there is no man to the sins I have
com man, we all falls shortened, and.

Speaker 2 (44:34):
We all feel that we have somebody.

Speaker 1 (44:37):
All right, let's sing it. Come on whatever the man. Yeah,
Now we've got ourselves a real Florida man here. And
you know what a Florida man's story like this, I've
not come up with one because we've we see the
Florida man as in yeah Florida Man, and the Florida
man as in yeah Florida man, all in the same person,

(45:04):
the same guy. William Mullis fifty three, seen in surveillance
video at the Sun Sunecoast station on US Highway one, Coco, Florida.
He's walking towards a car that a lady jumped out

(45:28):
of the car ran into the convenience part of the store.
And what she do She left the car running. Guy
jumps in takes the car that's the yeah, Florida man.
But then it's the ah, Florida man. There was a

(45:49):
one year old in the back seat, and he saw
the child, and he turned around and he drove back.
He didn't abandon the car. He didn't abandon the child.
He brought the car back. He said he never would
have taken the car if he'd known there was a
kid inside. Obviously, parents very fortunate. Right. So you've got

(46:15):
the story of a Florida man, right, and then you've
got the story of a okay and and you know what, First,
hopefully mom learned a lesson, right parents learn. Secondly, I
hope the judge thinks about it. Yes, he needs to

(46:37):
be sentenced in some form of fashion. I don't know
what his record is. But the fact of the matter
is that showed a conscience, didn't it. I mean, if
you're judging this guy and you have the you have
discretion over what kind of sentence, aren't you giving him
some credit? I would if i'm if I'm judge, I'm

(46:59):
looking for the best path to get this guy walking
differently by saying there's a quality in you that was
on display by bringing this child back and bringing the
car back. I'm gonna credit you for that. Now, you
still did something wrong and you need to pay for that, however,
and then you know what I would do. I would

(47:19):
do everything possible to make people up the chain know
about it so that you can get this guy some
He's got a conscience. That's celebrating. I'm gonna celebrate that.
I'm celebrating him as a Florida man with a conscience
sort of. Twenty seven minutes past the out, guy, do

(47:47):
what you're talking about.

Speaker 9 (47:48):
It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott.

Speaker 1 (48:03):
Thirty six minutes past the hour. It is Tuesday on
the Morning Show. I'm Preston Manly mant and a little bit.
We have money talk next hour. But between now and then,
we've just got more stories, more things to talk about,
big stories in the press box. This was intriguing to me.
This was funny. Have you paid attention at all to
how much grief Trump is getting over construction of a ballroom? Okay,

(48:30):
let me be the first to say, I don't know
the specifics of the funding of this. I don't know
if he's paying for it himself or if this is
tax payer money being used.

Speaker 4 (48:47):
You know, Yeah, I hear that he's footing some of
the bill, and then another large part of it is
coming from donors.

Speaker 1 (48:54):
Okay, like that, so no tax payer money. He needs
to really do a good job of getting that word
out because the optics in a government shut down when
there's a bunch of people not getting paid is pretty rough. Right,
So let's just say, okay, there we go. Did you
know that when Barack Obama was president, he made the

(49:14):
same offer. He made the offer to build a ballroom
on the connected to the White House. Quoting this is
from David Axelrod, Obama's longtime advisor. He said, you have
these state dinners in he used the sah word little tents.

(49:41):
He said, I build ballrooms. I build the most beautiful
ballrooms in the world. You can come to Florida and
see for yourself. First of all, let's just pause. Hit
the pause button. You can absolutely hear Trump say those words,
I build ballrooms. I build the most beautiful ballrooms in
the world. All right. He offered to build a modular
ballroom at the White House that could be deconstructed. Axelrod said,

(50:07):
I was thinking, we're in the middle of a recession.
I'm not sure about this. He suggested that Trump get
in touch with Obama's social secretary about the ballroom, and
he said they didn't connect. So there you go, brilliant,
you have these big galas for foreign leaders and you

(50:28):
don't have to worry about the security issues. Love it.
I just thought it was hilarious. He made the offer
to Obama. American Federation of Government Employees, the largest union
of federal workers in the nation. Unions are joined at

(50:49):
the hip with the Democrat Party. The national president, Everett Kelly,
wrote a post, its past time to end this shutdown.
Both political parties have made their point. Still no clear
end in sight. Today I'm making mine. It's time to

(51:10):
pass a clean continuing resolution and end the shutdown today.
No half measures, no gamesmanship. Put every single federal worker
back on the job with full pay to day. He's
representing eight hundred thousand federal workers. By the way, you

(51:35):
know who has a clean continuing resolution that's been sitting
there waiting to be signed for weeks. The Republican Party.
In fact, it's the exact same one that Democrats have
asked for back in the I believe the spring. Here
you go, and it all goes back down to those

(51:57):
Obama subsidies, and it's a mirage. Obamacare is already subsidized.
They want more subsidies, and they want them to be permanent.
This is the incremental way of socialized medicine. They are
literally going to the boiling of the frog. Obamacare started
at sixty four percent subsidized, then it bumped up to

(52:19):
nearly eighty percent. Now that it's at ninety three percent,
they want to keep it there. Remember, Democrats put the
end date on the current COVID subsidies on Obamacare. They
want to keep them. This is bait and switch. This
is Democrats doing what they do. They are incrementally trying
to socialize medicine in this country. Forty minutes past the hour.

(52:40):
Those are the big stories in the press box. More
on all of.

Speaker 5 (52:45):
This moments, and then women who serve our communities as
first responders.

Speaker 1 (52:50):
Thank you. It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Emailer
points out when Trump offered it was one hundred million
dollar project. Now because of inflation, it's over three hundred million.

(53:11):
Democrats are stupid. The Adelson Family Foundation Sheldon Nagelson, longtime
Republican donor, casino owner Stephen Brody, Betty wol Johnson Foundation,
Charles Marissa Cascarilla Foundation, Edward Cherry Glazer, Harold Ham, Benjamin

(53:37):
Leon Junior, the Lutnick Family, Lauren Isaac Pearl, Mutter Foundation,
Steven Schwarzman. I mean, the list goes on and on,
teaming up with Reynolds, America, Next Era Energy, HP Booz,
Allen Hamilton, Caterpillar, Micron Technology, Union, Pacific Railroad, Tether, America,

(54:00):
A hard Rock International, Ripple, t Mobile, Palanter Technologies, Coinbase, Altria, Comcast, Microsoft, Lockheed, Martin, Google, Amazon, Apple,
and Meta platforms all donating money. What are they crying about?

(54:27):
Besides you? I think Trump called it an ice free zone.
So now I'm just kidding. I'm teasing. That's a joke
that was from the Babylon b last week. It was funny,
though it was very funny. Recently, US Senator John Kennedy

(54:48):
Committee meeting hearing testimony from the Energy Secretary Chris Wright
about the final days of the Obiden administration and what
they did financially did this country in their final days.

Speaker 3 (55:07):
Listen, It's rare that I'm speechless, but I want to
be sure I understood the people running the Department of
Energy for President Biden's administration shoveled ninety three billion dollars,
not million, ninety three billion dollars out the door in

(55:32):
seventy six days. And it just happened to be the
time between when President Trump was elected in President Biden
their boss was leaving.

Speaker 2 (55:42):
Is that right?

Speaker 1 (55:44):
It is correct and distasteful, confidence undermining.

Speaker 3 (55:52):
So you're telling me that the Department of Energy in
the seventy six day period before their boss was going
to leave office, gave our loan money to instities that
had no business plan, correct, no financials.

Speaker 1 (56:14):
Correct, My god, this is what Democrats and the Biden
administration did to this country. This is illustrative of the

(56:39):
disconnect that exists between too many people in Washington and
your wallet, because that was your money. It's shameful. It

(57:02):
is absolutely there's nothing shocking about it, but it's shameful.
We should be incentivizing saving money, not spending it. Forty
six minutes past the OUM. Manly Minute and a special
announcement coming next time for another edition of a Manly Minute.

(57:29):
That's right. These are skills, virtues, ideals, different different things
to teach your young son so that he will one
day be a man male by birth, man by choice.
This comes inspired by the movie Grand Tirno with Clint Eastwood,
which though has some very strong language, is a brilliant movie.

(57:53):
And he has this friendship that eventually is is made
with a young boy who is of Asian descent, who
is a neighbor who originally was caught trying to steal
his car to be part of a gang. But he's
really a good kid. He was being bullied by the
kids in the neighborhood. Anyway, they have this meeting and

(58:14):
they start to strike up a friendship and eventually Walt Kowalski,
Clint Eastward's character, becomes his benefactor, his friend and is
not just his neighbor but a real friend and mentor.
And he said, you need some tools. Well what kind
of tools? Well, my goodness, you don't know what tools.

(58:38):
And he starts to build him a toolkit. And he said,
you gotta have a pair of vice grip pliers. You
gotta have some WD forty, you need to have some
duct tape.

Speaker 9 (58:52):
You know.

Speaker 1 (58:52):
He was going through the basics. A good hammer and
a belt to hold it. Here's my point, teach your
son what makes up an appropriate toolbox set? Of basic
tools that every man should have and know how to use.
There you go, there's your mainly minute for the day.

(59:15):
Here in the Morning Show with Preston Scott, Exclusive presentation.
I don't know that anyone else is doing stuff like this.
I mean, that's why you tune in. This isn't just
another radio program. This is life speaking of We're celebrating
a life today. We are celebrating the birthday of Lindell White. MS. White,

(59:39):
her daughter wrote in said, Mom's turning one hundred would
you could you like, oh, come on your darn right.
I could, and I would, and I will and I've done,
but I'm gonna do it again one hundred years of
age today. She calls the grove at Canopy Oaks home. Now.

(01:00:02):
I know it's an adjustment, those kinds of things, but
we want to wish a very happy birthday. But I
could not. I couldn't just stop with a simple birthday
song like we did last hour.

Speaker 2 (01:00:16):
Huh.

Speaker 1 (01:00:23):
And so today we pause on the program to honor
missus Linde L. White on her one hundredth birthday with
a high coup one hundred years past, a lifetime of

(01:00:48):
bright moments, Happy birthday now it's okay if you have
to pull out a tissue. I understand. I bet not once,

(01:01:13):
not once in her one hundred years, Ms White, she's
listening to the program. Probably, MS White, I bet not
once in one hundred birthdays has anybody shared a personally
written high coup honoring you on your special day. But

(01:01:42):
by golly, that's what we do here and have done here.
On the Morning Show with Preston Scott told isay, we

(01:02:02):
were gonna do this. Uh, we were gonna We're gonna
remember her birthday on each hour of the program here,
because I mean, it's not not all the time that
you got a listener turn in one hundred Now she's
been listening to the If just think about this for

(01:02:22):
a second, maybe she's been listening since I started the program.
That would mean that I've I've been in her life
since she was in her late seventies. Yeah. Hour three
of the Morning Show with Preston Scott is.

Speaker 10 (01:02:38):
Next third hour of the Morning Show with Crusty Scott, Friends, ruminators,
ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, males and females only, Hi,
how are you?

Speaker 1 (01:02:59):
It is? Is common sense amplified for Show fifty four
eighty two. He is Jose, I am Preston Howard Heisman
money talk in a little while and as a brilliant
as we left things at the end of the last hour,
we're gonna just drag you right down here as we
start this hour, we're gonna we're gonna take that balloon

(01:03:21):
up in the beautiful blue sky with the sunshine and
birds chirping, and we're gonna just put a giant, massive
anvil on the bottom of it, and it's gonna go bam,
and we're just gonna bum you out because this is
troubling news. I love these shows where we really don't

(01:03:44):
have many guests, if any. Howard is is obviously a
long time part of this program. I've had Howard with
me for maybe twenty years on this show, so he's
part of the show. I don't consider him a guest.
He's part of the show. I love these days because

(01:04:08):
we get into stories. We get to talk about things,
different things, not always and not often, things that you
really know much about. Now, this story, its headline is shocking.
Top sociological journal says young kids should be sexualized. Now

(01:04:36):
here's why I'm sharing this. You cannot live your life
in a bubble to the point where you are not
aware that there are people who think this way, that

(01:04:56):
this what I'm about to share. You know what it does?
It leed didimizes sick, perverted, twisted minds. This is the
American Sociological Association three thousand word commentary on the need
to explore and de pathologize predolescent children's erotic capacities. The

(01:05:29):
article was entitled Childhood Sexualities on Pleasure and Meaning From
the Margins. The first line of the abstract laments the
following as a bad thing. This is bad. According to
this post, sexualities scholarship marginalizes childhood's sexual pleasure, positioning children

(01:05:54):
as vulnerable subjects. This article repositions childhood sexualities within a
pleasure centered, globally oriented, and power aware frame and formed
by feminist, queer, and decolonial perspectives. The article stated objective
is to and I quote interrogate dominant narratives of sexual

(01:06:17):
innocence that suppress young people's desire and show how children
negotiate pleasure and meaning amid intersecting hierarchies of age, race, gender,
and class. Age. Of course, of course, age age, yes,

(01:06:41):
the idea of keeping children free of this is of
course a colonial construct. It's us limiting the role of children.
I'm not going to belabor this any further. I don't
need to. I've made my point. This is a mainline

(01:07:04):
American association that I don't believe is printed a retraction.
I don't believe its membership has rebelled. The objective of

(01:07:25):
this article is to pave the way to violate children.
And again my point is to make you aware that
this article legitimizes sick, perverted thought, sin in the minds

(01:07:53):
of people that would love to commit it. It says,
it says to them, Oh, I'm not that, I'm not
out of line. Look, this is a sociological journal that
says I'm doing the right thing thinking this way about children.

(01:08:15):
I distinctly remember warning this audience better than a decade
and a half ago of this group based in California
that believes that men should be allowed to engage in
sexual perversion with young, young children, boys boys, that they

(01:08:40):
were made for that purpose. I warned of it, and
here we are. This is mainstreaming it fifteen years or
so later. This is mainstreaming eleven minutes past the hour.
That's troubling news part one day on news radio one

(01:09:07):
hundred point seven Double USLA twelve past the hour. It's

(01:09:34):
not just the deviance and and I know you don't
have to convince me, Preston, that there's evil in the world.
I get it, but again, I have a reason. Guy
named Ian Tatro, twenty eight years of age, South Carolina,

(01:09:59):
played guilt to child abuse against his daughter. He admitted
to twenty counts of unlawful neglect of a child in
one count of obstruction of justice. The daughter one of
four children taken into emergency protective custody, but she had
to spend two days in the hospital. Eight year old child.

(01:10:28):
They received an anonymous tip and investigated the residents. Back
in twenty twenty two, workers with the Department of Social
Services said they'd gone to the home several times to investigate,
but the girl had been hidden by four adults who
lived there. When they were finally able to find the girl,
they determined she had temporary tattoos attempting to hide bruises

(01:10:50):
on her legs. She had a noticeable limp. The court
documents detailed the torture this child went through. She was
made to eat cat food, she was made to eat
cat feces. She was force fed laxatives. She was beaten

(01:11:11):
with cords, a frying pan, and boards. She was made
to kneel in a crate, which left her with scars
on her knees, which tells you how frequently that took place.
The father told the child that he wished he could
kill her and get away with it. Three other adults
were arrested and charged, not just the father, the father,

(01:11:34):
the father of a child, the prosecutor after he was
sentenced to fifty years in prison. The amount of abuse
this child suffered at the hands of adults who should
have loved and cared for her is staggering. The abuse

(01:11:57):
was not just physical abuse, but repeated psychological abuse. When
the child was rescued, spokesperson for the office said quote,
she said, this is the best day of my life. Now.

(01:12:25):
The reason why I'm sharing this. If you see something,
say something. If there was a child living next door
and suddenly there's not a child, you see very often

(01:12:49):
something's changed. Make note, something seems out of place. Make
note changes in a child's behavior are signs. Children aren't

(01:13:10):
able to hide that kind of thing very well. Eye
contact is different. Changes, maybe an out and an outgoing,
bubbly child suddenly becomes withdrawn, doesn't make eye contact. It's
constantly looking down. Something's up. Changes in personality that are dramatic.

(01:13:34):
Something's up. I shared this story to point out that
just as there are people in story number one that
are looking to abuse children sexually, that they are out there,
that they are predators, there are parents that are not
fit to be parents that are just rotten, horrible people.

(01:14:00):
Redeemable absolutely, but short of being redeemed are evil, rotten,
miserable parents that do not know how to love their
child that God has blessed them with. They're out there,
they exist. Hopefully if by chance you're one of them.

(01:14:25):
Listening to me, repent, get help, get your child help
before you end up in jail. To the rest, be observant.
Eighteen past the hour. While on the subject of kids,

(01:14:48):
slightly better news next.

Speaker 9 (01:14:52):
On your phone with the iHeartRadio app and on hundreds
of devices like Alexa, Google Home, Xbox, and Sonos.

Speaker 1 (01:14:58):
Soon Yes and iHeart all right. Short segment here on
the topic of children. About eighteen percent of children that
are missing are likely victims of sex trafficking operations. Shine

(01:15:25):
the Light took place in Hawaii, and they rescued ten
missing children and teenagers earlier this month. Additions, several arrests
were made, child victims were identified. Investigations are ongoing, according
to the FBI. Amanda Leonard, quoted in this article from

(01:15:47):
Epic Times, coordinator for Missing Child Center Hawaii Total local
news station, the reasons why children run away are multifaceted.
They may have substance abuse issues. They may have an
older book boyfriend or an older girlfriend. They may have
met someone online and thus the journey begins. I wish

(01:16:11):
I could tell you what to do if you've got
to run away child, if you've got a child that
just insists on heading out the door, not following the rules,
and I don't I don't have an answer for you

(01:16:34):
because it's hard to it's hard to understand why a
young person thinks that they are just invincible out there.
But what I can tell you is that when a
young person ends up in that situation where they think

(01:16:59):
they are big bad and they've got it all under
control and they know what they're doing, I know, I know,
I know, they don't know, and by the time they
figure it out or do know, it's too late. By
that time they are, they're in they're in the wrong
place with the wrong people, and then they are in

(01:17:21):
sex trafficking, then they are in human trafficking. It happens,
and so I'm grateful that there seems to be a
renewed focus on breaking up this stuff. What I can

(01:17:41):
tell you is, and this is too late for some
of you, but it's it's something that I've shared for
a long time. When your children are young, insist on
knowing the families of the kids they spend time with.
Know the moms and dads, Know the brothers and sisters.

(01:18:08):
Know before you allow them to spend the night anywhere,
and expect to be known if someone spending the night
with you, expect it. Expect have your children expect that
when they go somewhere, you're going to call and check
on them, that you're going to want to hear their voice,
You're going to want to talk to them. Why. Here's why,

(01:18:34):
Because if that's how they are raised to be trusted
but verified, the old Ronald Reagan, it's Ronald Reagan parenting,
trust but verify. If they grow up with that, then
as they become young teens, they expect it and they

(01:18:55):
know that if they say they're going to spend the
night at Sally's house, they better darn well be at
Sally's because you're gonna check, because that's just how you do.
Too often, you only start checking or caring when they
get old enough to get in some serious trouble. It's
too late by then, they've developed the skill sets and
the networks to get around it. I'm advising you on

(01:19:19):
how to intercept that type of behavior and not allow
it to form. On the front end twenty seven, almost
twenty eight minutes past, we've got the big stories in
the press box, Howard Eisman, money talk and more. Still
we go the Preston Show with Morning Scott. What and

(01:19:46):
we told you last week that storm was gonna sit
and spin and just get massive. That's exactly what's happening.
It's nudged a little south, which takes it into Jamaica.
But wow, wow, wow, wow, big stories in the press box.
Here in the morning show, listeners chiming in on the

(01:20:07):
ballroom expense, pointing out that FDR had a pool put
in and Barack Obama had a basketball court put in,
very personal types of things, and they did those with
tax dollars. Donald Trump is doing something that is more

(01:20:27):
for the a spree decorps of the nation, hosting dignitaries
from other nations for grand events. And it's being paid
for with private donations. See there's a just a And
he's getting lambastard for this. I mean, he is just

(01:20:48):
getting skewered by this for this, and the difference is huge.
He's doing this for massive events involving lots of people.
Obama built a basketball court for himself to play with
some of his homeboys, so he could invite you know,

(01:21:10):
Lebron James and Michael Jordan for a game of horse whatever.
I could thump him on a basketball court, could beat
him like a drum, beat him like a drum. That's
one big story, not that I could beat him like
a drum, but the ballroom thing being done with private donations.

(01:21:36):
American Federation of Government Employees, the union, the largest union
in the country representing federal employees, is saying Democrats sign
a clean continuing resolution bill period and stop. That's what
Republicans have been offering all along, no change, nothing different.

(01:21:58):
This is the bill Crats have insisted on. The other
big story, making this contingent on Obamacare subsidies. Obamacare is
already massively subsidized. What we're talking about is a minute
subsidy that was added to it that made it even
more subsidized. During COVID, they threw more money at Obamacare.

(01:22:22):
During COVID, they sunseted this. They chose for it to
end in twenty twenty five. No one made them do it.
They did it. And here we are and the union
representing federal employees, which is always I mean, they are
like conjoined twins, Democrats and unions. The Union is saying,

(01:22:53):
sign the bill, get the government back open. Now. I
know that for most they don't notice, but there are
things happening that you will notice. There are things going on.
The repercussions you will notice. It will impact our economy

(01:23:14):
if this doesn't get done. And as of November first,
it's going to get uglier. So it's it's made its
way as a big story in the press box. They
all just kind of tied together today, didn't they. Forty
minutes past Howard E's been standing by with a little

(01:23:34):
money talk. Next time for money talk with investment advisor
Howard Eisman with Enhanced Financial Services, Securities and Advisory Services
offered through NBC Securities Inc. Member Fender and SIPC. NBC

(01:23:57):
Securities Inc. Is a wholly owned subsidiary of OURBC Bank USA.
The opinions expressed are not those of NBC Securities Inc.
Or iHeartMedia and inappropriate matters, seek professional tax and or
legal advice. Howard, good morning. Tell me what are young

(01:24:19):
people doing today with their money?

Speaker 8 (01:24:22):
Well, young people today, I'll tell you what they're not doing.
Not a lot of them are becoming first time home buyers.
This past year, pressed in first time home buying fell
to just slightly over a million homes. And that's actually

(01:24:44):
just barely half of the historical average if you look
at the last twenty years, and if we're talking about
gen Z mid twenty age Americans, only sixteen percent off
home this past year, and that compares to about twice

(01:25:06):
that number of twenty five year old's. Answer to your question,
they're opening up investment accounts thirty seven percent.

Speaker 1 (01:25:14):
That seems high, Yeah, it is.

Speaker 8 (01:25:16):
It's very high. It's actually up from six percent a
decade ago. Opening up investment accounts and with a strong
preference towards the more emerging, exciting, higher return type investments.

Speaker 1 (01:25:34):
So young people are investing more now than they did
a decade ago by thirty one percent. That's crazy.

Speaker 8 (01:25:43):
Yes, well, I think it speaks pressed into the fact
that I have more options today. Yeah, we have exchange
traded index minds. And just to give you an example,
there's a company frankly that I've never heard of, called

(01:26:04):
Volatility Shares that filed for the approval to have twenty
seven single stock and crypto crypto currency index funds. Here's
the drum roll that are levered up five times. Okay, okay,

(01:26:25):
Now just for the listeners to get a little bit
better understanding, Okay, well, what does it mean to be
levered up five times? It means for every dollar that
they invest in that index fund, they're borrowing an additional
five dollars from the management company to give it extra juice.

(01:26:47):
But you know, folks have to remember that works good
when things are moving up, but you capture five times
the loss when things turn the other way.

Speaker 1 (01:26:56):
And there's a record amount of money flowing into these things,
right at least in the US, Yeah, there really is.

Speaker 8 (01:27:02):
If we look at the flows through the end of September,
you had over one trillion new dollars bring into index funds.
Now that's all index funds, leveraged and unleveraged, single stock
or not. But that type of flow is three times

(01:27:24):
the normal amount when we look back at the month
of September historically, and as a result of that, you've
had in the neighborhood preston of one and a quarter
trillion dollars moving into index funds just here in the
very near term.

Speaker 1 (01:27:43):
How many EFTs have launched this year?

Speaker 8 (01:27:46):
A bunch, A bunch is the answer. Eight hundred that
have already launched this year. And since we talked about it,
with a third of those employing leverage within their structure,
and I'd like to make a comment about that. So
we talk about leverage in the market. It's a little

(01:28:09):
different than you know, borrowing funds to buy your first home.
There's currently one point one three trillion in margin debt
and the investors, you know, you pay interest when you
take a loan out right, So there's one point one
three trillion in margin debt. That's a new all time

(01:28:32):
high buy a wide margin, surpassing the margin debt that
we had or the leverage that we had in the
markets back in nineteen ninety nine, right before the dot
Com boom Us and well higher than the financial housing
market peak back in two thousand and five and six.

(01:28:55):
So I was simply in by the note that up
this is certainly not a low risk investing environment today.

Speaker 1 (01:29:04):
Yeah, no kidding, Howard is always great details. Thanks very
much for the time. We'll talk again next.

Speaker 8 (01:29:09):
Month, look forward to Preston. Have a good one.

Speaker 1 (01:29:11):
Thank you, sir. Howard Eisman with us on The Morning
Show with Preston Scott. Tomorrow on the program, Jerome Hudson
from Bright Bart will join us. Can't wait. We love

(01:29:32):
all kinds of other things. I'm sure we'll talk about.
I mean, we've got three hours to fill, right, so
we better. But as we have done throughout the morning,
Jose asked for an opportunity to give a special birthday
greeting to Lindell Why Ms White has turned one hundred
today and listens to the program, and so we have

(01:29:54):
made time each hour to honor miss White. Jose, the
floor is yours.

Speaker 4 (01:30:01):
Felice White translations Happy birthday.

Speaker 1 (01:30:06):
Hey, thank you, well done. Yes and and as a
matter of fact, Jose went a step further and got
the the Morning Show singers together and uh and and
they have a this is something that only Jose could
put together for you. Okay, enjoy MS White. Yeah, that's uh,

(01:30:55):
that's that's straight from the heart. That is uh Jose
and the morning show singers with a special rendition. I
was asked by MS White's daughter if I would make
the exception because she said, I know that it's a precedent.
You might not want to start what few people may

(01:31:17):
know unless you are a longtime listener. Early in my
radio career in Phoenix, I did birthday calls. I would
select a birthday call to do every day, and when
I didn't have one, I didn't do one, but I
would have listeners send in and they would give me
a little background information and I would prank them. I

(01:31:38):
would call in pretending to be somebody, and with my
vast skill and repertoire of voices, I was able to
do that. And then the FCC went and went ahead
and said you can't put anybody on the air without
them knowing, and that just kind of ruined that whole thing.
But no, this is special, a one hundred year birthday
Come on, and so Ms White, we really pray God's

(01:32:01):
blessings over you and hope you have a great celebration.
Brought to you by Barono Heating and Air. It's the
Morning Show one on WFLA. Yeah, boy, did we have
some sound to share today. We let you listen to
Senator John Kennedy question how ninety plus billion dollars were

(01:32:26):
shoveled out the door by the Biden administration in the
final seventy some days of being in office between election
day and being kicked out. That's that's Obama. That's Obama.
Just always remember whatever Biden did, it was, it was,
it was Barack Obama. Also, let you hear from Charlie

(01:32:47):
Kirk because Daryl Jones, Leon County school Board member will
hopefully be asked to resign and step down today. Now
he won't be by the by the school board because
I don't believe they have the courage to ask and
suggest that. They're just they're lacking the courage to do
the right thing. And it's a shame. They know right

(01:33:08):
from wrong. They just don't want to offend. I'm sorry,
I have no patience for it anymore. None, zip zero none.
Hopefully you go to the meeting tonight, Hopefully you are
respectful and appropriate. But mister Jones should step down from
the school board effective immediately for his comments regarding Charlie
Kirk that he posted and then took down. If you

(01:33:28):
believe it, why'd you take it down. If you don't
believe it, then why not apologize. That's tonight at six
If you're interested, Big Stories in the press Box did
a couple three different takes on those. You can check
those out on the podcast Florida Man, as well as
some great sound from Charlie Kirk that we shared on
the program that blew up anything Daryl Jones had to say.

(01:33:49):
All right tomorrow, can't wait to do it again. Friends,
have an awesome day.
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