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November 17, 2025 91 mins
This is the full episode of The Morning Show with Preston Scott for Monday, November 17th.

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


Follow the show on Twitter @TMSPrestonScott. Check out Preston’s latest blog by going to wflafm.com/preston. 
Listen live to Preston from 6 – 9 a.m. ET and 5 – 8 a.m. CT!
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:09):
Morning Friends Monday on the Morning Show. I'm Preston, he
is Jose. It's Show fifty four ninety six. As we
get closer and closer to Thanksgiving, short week next week,
of course, just two days of the program. But let's
begin with some scripture. In Hebrews four, verse twelve, it says,

(00:32):
for the Word of God is living and active, sharper
than any two edged sword, piercing to the division of
soul and of spirit, of joints and of marrow, and
discerning the thoughts and intentions of the heart. Oh, let's

(00:55):
go from the beginning of that to the end of that.
The Word of God is living and active, discerning the
thoughts and intentions of the heart. Living and active. There

(01:21):
are words that we can read that can encourage us
right and help us boost our confidence, give us new perspective.
But there is only one set of words ever written

(01:45):
that are described as literally being alive. The words are
living and active. That's different than words that inspire. Oh,
those are words that inspire. Well, yeah, that's fine, yawn.

(02:12):
When you find a way to grab a hold of
the concept that when you open up God's Word, you're
reading something that is able to discern. Think about this
for a second, your thoughts and your intentions. The reason

(02:41):
why is because the word of God expressed is Jesus.
It's a concept that is so remarkably simple and at

(03:03):
the same time mind blowingly complex. But just know this,
God's word is living and active, and it just cuts

(03:25):
past all the fat and gets right to the meat
of the matter. Ten past the hour, take a peek
inside the American Almanac American Patriots Almanac. Next here on
the Morning.

Speaker 2 (03:37):
Showcome to the MAAD Radio Network, where we challenge you
to make a difference in your world in a positive way,
improving the lives of others. It's the Morning Show with
Preston Scott. Eleven twelve minutes. Now past the out.

Speaker 1 (04:09):
Here on the radio program, Let's take a peek here.
It is the seventeenth of November. In seventeen thirty four,
John Peter Zinger is arrested for criticizing Governor William Cosby
in his New York Weekly Journal. I think you are

(04:30):
a scoundrel, sir. Why fine, you're under arrest. What we
had to get there, We absolutely had to get there.
Eighteen hundred Congress Cruise convenes for the first time in Washington,
d C. In the partially completed Capitol Building eighteen eighty one.

(04:50):
In Pittsburgh, Samuel Gompers Helps found the Federation of Organized
Trades and Labor Unions, front runner of the American Federation
of Labor. There was a time, but that time is gone.
Labor unions are bad. They just are. Nineteen seventy three.

(05:12):
In Orlando, President Richard Nixon famously declares, people have got
to know whether they're a president it's a kirk or not. Well,
I'm not a crk, I'm not a crook.

Speaker 3 (05:24):
Not a crook.

Speaker 1 (05:25):
Anyway, Let's see here it is National Butter Day. You
know I didn't know this. You know why it's called butter.
I think it has something to do with the fact
that it is a massively important source of buttery, which

(05:50):
is for your gut health. National Homemade Bread Day. I
will say this, when you get it right, homemade bread
is a warm, homemade bread right out of the oven.

(06:17):
That's special. But if you don't get it right, it
can be tough. By tough, not meaning like to chew,
although that can happen, just not enjoyable, like a lot
of things homemade. I mean, sometimes you get it right,
and sometimes you don't. National Take a Hike Day, Take

(06:43):
a hike. Okay, today's National take a Hike Day. So,
and this is National Baklava Day. Have you ever had baklava?
Of course you have, You absolutely have had baklava. Oh yeah,
I love it.

Speaker 4 (07:00):
Stuff, those wafer thin layers that crunch, and then the
brown sugar and the nuts and oh my goodness, gracious.

Speaker 1 (07:15):
If you've never had baklava, you are missing one of
the great treats. Ever. It's Greek, isn't it. I want
to say it's Greek. Yeah, I think so. Anyway, today's show,
we will talk with Irishchafel for a couple segments. In

(07:38):
the third hour. FSU football gets a win Virginia Tech. Good, good, good.
They gotta find a way to win the final two
games to finish seven and five, which would be obviously
a great improvement over the season last year. But still
I think a lot of people would CAT would probably,

(07:59):
we'd probably consider them selves disappointed because of the way
the season started. You know, if you can beat Alabama,
you probably should have won most of the rest of
your games, but they didn't do that. I think the
inconsistency at quarterback is a really big deal. I love
Tommy Castellanos, but he's not a consistent quarterback. But we'll

(08:22):
talk with Irishafell about that, and then next hour we're
going to take something Joe Rogan talked about. I thought
it was interesting and I'm happy to take inspiration from others.
Are we? Where are we? On the scale of one
to ten on a civil war II path? And I

(08:46):
mean literally a literal civil war on a scale of
one to ten, ten meaning it's happening. Nine meaning so
I wouldn't expect to hear a ten. Ten means it's happening.
There is a civil war. Nine is We're right there?

(09:09):
So where are we? He had a number. I have
a number in mind. I'd love to know what your
number is. We'll talk about that as well. Seventeen minutes
past when we come back.

Speaker 5 (09:20):
Oh yeah, all right.

Speaker 1 (09:30):
Capital Conservatives tomorrow night at the Oaks Lodge on North Magnolia, Georgia.
Kapelman will be we'll be speaking. So if you're interested
in showing up, I would say they're going to serve
dinner to their crowd about five fifteen, so i'd say
get there by six. So if you're interested in hearing

(09:50):
what Georgia has to say, give it a shot and
coming before you know it. Just planting the seed. The
Living Christmas Story out at clar Methodist Church Friday, December twelfth,
Saturday the thirteenth, Sunday the fourteenth, from six thirty to

(10:11):
eight thirty in the evening. It's a drive through extravaganza
if you're interested. I don't know if you can walk
through that thing. You can do a hay ride, but
it's free and open to anyone in the in the area.

(10:33):
So that's that's coming up soon. Let me give you
the update on Orphan Shade ready. Here's where we are
after the weekend. We're a third of the way there,
eighteen thousand, forty one dollars. As I had hoped, a

(10:57):
couple of nice, generous blessings to this project. A lot
of people that were involved in the first one are
involved in this one as well, So I really want
to encourage those of you that are that have that
did not participate in Home number three to get out

(11:20):
there and be part of this. It's it's a wonderful
program and it's about making a difference and changing a
family tree for eight little girls and a village, and
perhaps when added up with all the other children that
are being helped, changing a nation. We're building home number six.

(11:46):
We build home number three and are supporting it. Home
number six. It's about buying land building a house in
Malawi for children who have been orphaned, little girls five
to ten who lost both their mother and father. You
can read about the entire mission and learn about it
online at Orphanshade dot com. But the price to do

(12:10):
all that needs to be done is fifty five thousand
US and so that's our goal. It's a very ambitious goal.
The most we've ever raised was for the last time
we assisted Orphan Shade, which was back in twenty twenty two.
We raised a little more than forty thousand dollars. It
was actually thirty eight and some change, I believe, and

(12:31):
then just some money kept coming in. So I would
just love for you to pray about being part. This
is our operation Thanksgiving, and then it'll transition to Spirit
of Christmas. This is our project, this is it. Jay Sherlow,

(12:55):
co founder of Orphan Shade, will be with us on
December first. He might be in studio, he might be
on the phone, but he's meeting with people that are
helping and supporting this project. And we have two challenges
out there. One for those of you listening in the
Panama City area, we have someone that is given a

(13:21):
three thousand dollars gift. They're gonna put another two thousand
dollars in there. If two thousand dollars comes from Panama City,
the Panama City area, he'll match it. So if you're
listening in the Panama City area, go to Orphanshade dot com.

(13:44):
In the donate button, drop down that menu, you're gonna
click build a house house number and in the comments
you're gonna go house number six and put pc challenge
and if we can get that number to two thousand,
we're going to get another two thousand. That's challenging. That's
that's one challenge. The second challenge is from concert pianist

(14:07):
Marvin Goldstein. For those of you in the Capital City area.
The first five thousand dollars donation to Orphan Shade that
we have verified, and you send me a note saying
you got it or we have have it verified, we'll
know when it came in. You get a one hour
private concert from Marvin Goldstein. He's donating that, So what

(14:30):
do you think? What do you say? I mean right there,
that would be another almost ten thousand dollars between those
two challenges. But no matter what you can do, and
I'm begging you if you didn't give in twenty twenty two,
go for it. Give what you can, whether it's one time,

(14:50):
monthly or quarterly. Go to orphanshade dot com. Come back
with the big stories in the press box. All right,

(15:17):
time for the big stories in the press box. And
it's really it's sad. I hate to start a Monday
this way. It is part of my commentary for this week,
first part of the weekend. Another thing, friends, I'm gonna

(15:38):
really strongly suggest you reconsider any time you spend listening
to Tucker Carlson. He's now attacking Mark Levin and Ben Shapiro.
And while you know anyone prone to make, you know,

(16:01):
I make stupid statements, I certainly don't intend to, you know,
I do my best to get my details in order
and to have thoroughly thought through my positions. But but
he claims that Levin and Shapiro routinely label political opponents

(16:23):
as Nazis. And so he said once you start calling
people Nazis, we really have no choice but to start
shooting them. What And then he goes off on Dietrich Bonhoeffer.
You know who he is. Bonheffer is one of the
great Christian martyrs of history. Bonhaeffer was leading people to

(16:49):
christ during the Holocaust and was actively opposing Hitler as
a German and he was hung for it to be
Dietrich Bonhoeffer and sort of reached the end of reason
or even Christianity. Bonheffer decided Christianity is not even He

(17:10):
was a Lutheran pastor. Christianity is not even enough. We
have to kill the guy. And so he's Tucker's out
there saying that Dietrich Bonhoeffer advocated murder. Tucker Carlson doesn't

(17:30):
know enough about scripture to be weighing in on biblical matters,
because in Tucker's strange, bizarre evolution, he would then equate
David as a murderer of Goliath as opposed to it
being a victim of war, and that in war people die.

(17:54):
I mean, if you were to be very honest, Hitler
had Hitler died years before the holocaul started, at the
beginning of the war millions of lives would have been spared.
But the bottom line is Bonhoeffer, if you know anything
about his story, Bonheffer was in great travail over his
participation in a plot to try to kill Hitler, but

(18:19):
to then equate that with being an advocate of murder
when it was an act of an ongoing and just
war to fight Hitler. I'm just cautioning you because this

(18:42):
watered down view of Christian theology, and where where is
this embrace of Hitler? I mean, Nick Flentes loves Hitler,
he denies the Holocaust, and he and Tucker our pals,
and I don't I don't think it's to try to
win him over that the Holocaust happened. And for some reason,

(19:05):
Tucker seems to have embraced aspects of Sharia law. It
has gone to the point where Heritage Foundation has been
sponsoring Tucker's podcast, and I am going to be backing
off of Heritage Foundation until that changes. We have a

(19:28):
lot of great friendships and guests, but I wrote their
media specialist and I said, until this changes, I'm going
to be backing down from booking Heritage guests. I cannot
be part of anything that lifts up Tucker right now.
Tucker needs to be really thinking hard about what he's saying.

(19:53):
He's got sixteen million followers, and he's saying things that
along with Candas and Megan, Candace Parker or Candace Owens
and Megan Kelly that are just weird. So this is
a big story in the press box this morning, and

(20:15):
so I'm just cautioning you, Okay, I'm not going to
take this much time the rest of the show when
we get to the big stories, but in this setting,
I'm just because a lot of you in this early
part of the show. I know you're Tucker Carlson fans.
I'm a Tucker Carlson fan. He does He's a remarkably
bright guy, but he's he's lost his way. Forty one

(20:40):
minutes after.

Speaker 3 (20:41):
The album, this is the Morning Show with Preston Scott
This listen.

Speaker 1 (21:03):
And tell me where have you heard this before? Because
this is an excerpt little music added by somebody else
of a Bishop Patrick Wooden, Upper Room Church of God
in Christ, Raleigh, North Carolina. He happens to be a

(21:26):
black pastor. Listen to these words.

Speaker 6 (21:30):
Are we actually in a place where the only way
you can be black and stand with your people is
to be a Democrat. Now, if that's where we are,
we're the dumbest people on the face of the planet
and we're the only people in America who operate that way.

(21:51):
You can be white and be a Republican or Democrat.
Hispanic and be a Republican or Democrat, praise the Lord whatever,
and a Republican or a Democrat. But if you're black,
if you're black, the only way you can be an
authentic black person is to be a Democrat. That's stupid.

Speaker 1 (22:13):
You know what I means.

Speaker 6 (22:14):
It means that explains why we spend half the time
or maybe even more, out of power. And God is
on our side. Now, if we want to talk about
whose side God is on, it's the Democrats who are
pushing same sex marriage. It's the Democrats who are pushing
letting children get mutilated, little eight year old boys getting

(22:37):
turned into girls.

Speaker 1 (22:39):
It's the Democrats who.

Speaker 6 (22:40):
Are one hundred percent in their platform behind abortion and
abortion rights up to the time of birth. If we
start talking about whose side God is on, you got
to dismiss most of the scripture. To be a Democrat, Well, well,

(23:03):
there are other things.

Speaker 1 (23:04):
What other things?

Speaker 6 (23:05):
What's more important than life.

Speaker 1 (23:13):
Trump ain't no good.

Speaker 6 (23:14):
Yeah, but he's signed an executive order to protect Christians.

Speaker 1 (23:21):
He's no good.

Speaker 6 (23:22):
But the polls show that Christianity now has leveled off
and it's going back on the rise again since he's
been in office. You just got to do your homework.
Now you start talking about whose side God is on?

Speaker 7 (23:40):
Now?

Speaker 1 (23:40):
The question not whose side.

Speaker 5 (23:42):
God is on them?

Speaker 6 (23:43):
The question is the question Moses asks, who's on the
Lord's side?

Speaker 1 (23:48):
Yeah? Where have we heard that kind of hmm? Oh,
it's coming to me? Hang on, hang on, hang Oh, no,
was me? I've been saying that for the last twenty
three years. That's right, But isn't it different to hear

(24:11):
it from someone who happens to be black? He and
I could not be closer in our thinking. Why, Because
it revolves around what God's word says. It's so brilliantly phrased.

(24:34):
It's not about whose side God is on, who's on
the Lord's side, because God's side is very clear. And
that's why I've been saying it for years. You can't
be a card carrying member of a Democrat party and
be a Christian. You can't be on the side of

(24:58):
what that organization in it's platform states I'm not telling
you to be a Republican, never would, but I will
tell you this, there isn't anything in their platform that
is against God's word. That doesn't mean you ought to
be one. You gotta be a Christian and that should

(25:20):
impact all your other affiliations and associations. And that does
not mean well, then don't no, you associate with people
that need Jesus. But to have nothing but unsaved friends
makes you susceptible to trouble and watering down forty seven

(25:43):
almost forty eight minutes past the How that was pretty good?

Speaker 8 (25:50):
I don't.

Speaker 1 (26:18):
All right. We have this story from Hamilton, Ontario. Bus
is at the terminal. The driver's just taking a quick break.
He's got about ten to fifteen passengers on the bus.
Some random thirty six year old dude jumps on the
bus and just starts driving. Bus driver is away from

(26:43):
the bus, so someone gets on the bus, backs it
up and takes it out. Here's what's crazy. No one
really noticed until he was not going the normal bus route.
And he's driving one of those articulated buses, those massive
long ones that have a little accordion thing in the middle.

(27:06):
He's just driving. He stops and picks up people, looks
at their bus pass if it's expired, says hey, you
gotta pay, takes their coins. It took about fifteen minutes
for police to figure out where he was because those
things have GPS and then they can find them real quickly,

(27:27):
and so he was actually getting directions from some of
the passengers on where to turn and where to go
to get back on the route. They didn't name the guy,
but that could have ended ugly. It didn't. That was it.
I mean, they they safely got him, and they're checking

(27:49):
to see if there are mental health issues, which is
probably a very good thing. All Right, I want to
take some calls. Joe Rogan on a recent program, quote
Charlie Kirk gets shot and people are celebrating, like whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa?
You want people to die that you disagree with? Like,

(28:11):
where are we right now? On a scale of one
to civil war? Where are we are we at seven?
Because I thought we were at a five. I thought
we were like maybe a four, four or five. But
after the Charlie Kirk thing, I'm like, we might be
at like a seven. This might be like step seven
on the way to a bonafide civil war. Remember when

(28:36):
I asked what's worse the assassination of Charlie Kirk or
the celebration of it. Rogan said that his eyes were
opened up after the assassination watching people celebrate. So here's
my question for you. On a scale of one to ten,
one meaning ah, just normal disagreement in society. Ten, I

(28:59):
would take off the table because that means we're at
civil war. It's happening. I would say, on a scale
of one to nine, where are we on there actually
being a civil war in this society in America? I'd
love to hear your thoughts. Eight five zero two zero
five WFLA eight five zero two zero five ninety three

(29:21):
fifty two. Meaty topic for a Monday morning. I grant
you where are we? Zero one to nine? All right,
here we go, second hour of the Morning Show with
Christ Scott eight five zero two zero five WFLA. Is
the number eight five zero two zero five WFLA And

(29:46):
do you have the call screener turned off? Okay, turn
it back on now, and we're going to try to
get this synced up here so we can start taking
some calls. Eight five zero two zero five WFLA eight
five zero two zero five WFLA. We're asking a very

(30:07):
simple question on a scale of one to nine, one
to nine. I don't believe we are in a civil war,
because a civil war. And Jose and I had this
discussion in the break. He said, I think we're there.
No we're not, because we're not firing back. No we're not.

(30:33):
The left is committing acts of violence right now. We
have people that celebrated the assassination of Charlie Kirk. These
are signs, you know. I've shared how in the wake
of Charlie's murder, I had people saying there should be
martial law, declared they hate us, we are Charlie Kirk,

(30:58):
and I don't disagree with the latter. I disagree with
the former. I don't think we're at martial law. I
don't think we're even close. But I do believe that
Joe Rogan is hitting on what I hit on immediately
after the assassination, the murder of people that are influential.

(31:25):
There are irrational people all over that just decide they're
going to just do something and stop them. And it's
still surreal to me that a little better than two
months ago, Charlie Kirk was assassinated for just talking, and

(31:54):
then the misrepresentation of him, the character assassination of him,
the cell abration of that murder. And so I'm asking you,
on a scale of one to nine, nine meaning civil
war is imminent, where do you think we are and why.
Charlie certainly has brought this about by virtue of the conversation,

(32:18):
I should say, by virtue of just how he conducted
his life and the fact that he was killed for
just engaging in discussion. But Joe Rogan asked this question
and he said, it's just bizarre. Like normal people that
I think are they're good people, and they think they
genuinely think that this guy was a bad guy. And

(32:39):
I don't think they're right. I think they were indoctrinated.
And I don't agree with everything that Charlie Kirk said
or did, so he's saying as somebody that I don't
agree with everything he says. But this is nuts, and
there's a large number of nuts out there. David, thanks

(33:02):
for calling into the Morning Show. What do you think?

Speaker 9 (33:05):
Well, I think we're in green sixty seven, maybe higher,
But then again, Jefferson is sin wants to a letter
in a letter in the Dames. Madison got a little
revolution every now and then, a gig thing not of
his generation. So we're a little bit overdue.

Speaker 1 (33:21):
But is that the revolution that you think Jefferson was
talking about?

Speaker 10 (33:26):
Yeah?

Speaker 7 (33:27):
Necessary, Yeah, see, I took I completely.

Speaker 9 (33:30):
They went to war over taxms. We weren't play at
higher taxes now than they were two hundred years ago.

Speaker 1 (33:36):
Yeah, but that was a government. But that was a government.
I'm talking a civil war, a war among people.

Speaker 9 (33:45):
Well, the government, the government's going to get involved. Government's
already involved. I think the government's actually pushing it.

Speaker 1 (33:52):
Okay, thanks very much, David. I appreciate the phone call.
That's what I want to hear. I want to engage
in a discussion with you. See, I I think the
government is complicit on a whole lot of things in
allowing us to get to a place where they are.
But it's coming from the left side of the aisle.

(34:14):
The question that I have is how far will this
go before people on the right just say enough? Trust me.
I'm not advocating that because the winner there is Satan.
Satan laughs at civil war because a bunch of people
die and he loves seeing God's image bearers killed, period end.

(34:40):
But I just want to hear your thoughts John, and
then another John. We got John to the second power
coming here? What about you? Eight five zero two zero
five to WFLA scale of one to nine, nine meanings
civil war is imminent in this country. David just said
seven he agrees with Joe Rogan. Ten past the hour

(35:17):
eight five zero two zero five wfl A. We have
one line open and going back to the phone lines,
we're asking about civil war and and just your thoughts
on whether or not we are edging closer. Some are

(35:39):
saying social media is stoke in the fires. The mainstream
media is stoke in the fires. Just what do you
think we've got? We really we got John, John, and
then John John Europe.

Speaker 11 (35:55):
Hello, Yeah, I think it's about a five.

Speaker 1 (35:58):
Okay.

Speaker 11 (35:59):
Why we got a religious cult on one side and
the socialist people on the other side, they're going to
try to win over votes. Well that's basically what they're.

Speaker 7 (36:13):
Going to do.

Speaker 1 (36:14):
What's the religious cult.

Speaker 11 (36:17):
On the right side?

Speaker 1 (36:19):
So are you calling Christianity a religious cult?

Speaker 11 (36:24):
No, I'm saying that Republican Party has become a religious cult.
How so, well, I mean that's basically all the decisions
are based on religions.

Speaker 1 (36:42):
I would love for you to give me an example
of that. Well, I mean, because I'm seeing just the opposite.
I'm seeing a godless society and godless decision making.

Speaker 11 (36:54):
Wouldn't you agree that the socialists are on the democrat side.
Of course, they're becoming increased, they're becoming increasingly socialist, of course.

Speaker 1 (37:06):
Yeah.

Speaker 11 (37:07):
And the right side has become increasingly of religious.

Speaker 1 (37:12):
Well, there's a difference between religion and Christianity. Yeah, but
you're talking about it as if it's a cult and
Christianity is what this nation was based on.

Speaker 11 (37:25):
No, I'm saying the Republican Party has become a cult,
not not the religion itself.

Speaker 8 (37:31):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (37:31):
See, I don't see that at all. I think it's
just the opposite. I think the Republican Party has distanced
itself from its its fundamental conservative Christian base.

Speaker 11 (37:42):
Since the Tea Party has taken over.

Speaker 1 (37:45):
Tea Party hasn't taken over.

Speaker 11 (37:46):
Friend, Are you still you still call the Tea Party?

Speaker 1 (37:51):
I'm not called anything but a Christian, but the Tea
Party hasn't taken over anything. Tea Party movement came and
went John thanks very much for the phone call. Let's
talk to another John.

Speaker 12 (38:02):
Hello, John, Hey, good morning, Preston.

Speaker 10 (38:06):
I think I think Rugen's probably right on the money
with a seven. And rational for that is, I mean,
we're in a in my opinion, we're in a coal
civil war. We're not shooting at one another. But if
you look at how people are treating one another, and
when you celebrate, you celebrate the death of someone like

(38:28):
Charlie kirk uh And it's not just it's not just
a fringe movement that's doing it.

Speaker 8 (38:34):
This is there's.

Speaker 10 (38:35):
Elected people and saying it out loud, and there's people
in leadership positions at colleges and not just the goofy
students and taking the example of a state that is
doing exactly what the Confederate States did. Uh, like Prisker
in Illinois, Newsom in California saying it doesn't matter what

(39:00):
federal laway is, it doesn't matter what you want. We're
gonna do things like we walk and we we're we're
gonna hype up the people and our citizens to challenge.

Speaker 7 (39:10):
You on it. Uh.

Speaker 10 (39:12):
It's got all the ingredients for it. And I don't
know what's gonna take to set it off. I hope
it don't. I really don't.

Speaker 12 (39:18):
I hope people.

Speaker 10 (39:19):
Will calm down and cooper heads will prevail. But look
at who's being elected by Seattle, New York City. Uh,
it's uh, it's all all the all the pieces are
coming in place. Let's just hope the kid don't go off.

Speaker 1 (39:35):
Thank you very much. John. We have another John standing
by and we'll get to that call next eight five
zero two zero five to b F L A. Is
this country coming closer and closer to a literal Civil
War two? As in the Second Civil War? More calls
next on the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Morning Show

(40:20):
with Preston Scott, Jose over there and John. Hi, John,
welcome to the program.

Speaker 5 (40:26):
How are you good, sir?

Speaker 12 (40:30):
I can tell you what's feeling this fire. It's really
uneducated people. In my opinion, in order to vote, you
should have an education and a long time ago, at
one time you had to be a property owner to vote.
The problem is we got elected officials who don't know

(40:51):
what world history is, US history or civics. They're just
a bunch of stupid people standing up hollering and they
don't know what they're talking about. And the other thing
that's feeling this fire with this country is money gas.

(41:12):
If we'd stop buying oil from overseas and get it
out of the ground here, gas could come down big time.
And that's what's got a lot of people. I know
how it is. People get up every day and gas
is so outrageous. They can't pay for simple things like food,
a babysitter. Things are outrageous where you have to get

(41:35):
a second job. You can't get a second job because
your kids are at home. There's a lot, there's just
these are the things that are feeling the fire in
this country. People are at each other's necks. That's pretty
much really all I got to say. People need to
get an education. You shouldn't be allowed to vote unless
you have an education. You just just another stupid person

(41:57):
out there hollering and screaming. You don't even know what
you're screaming.

Speaker 1 (42:00):
How do we define to say, Okay, a couple things,
don't leave me yet? How do we define what an
educated person is?

Speaker 12 (42:08):
A diploma?

Speaker 1 (42:09):
Really?

Speaker 12 (42:10):
Am I right?

Speaker 1 (42:11):
I don't think so pretty much.

Speaker 12 (42:13):
No, I'm talking about from when you're in from grade
school up so you get out of high school, yeah,
but see should be at least that smart. You see
what I'm saying, us history, yeah, history, but American history, and.

Speaker 1 (42:28):
John, I agree with your overall point of uneducated public.
The problem we have, though, is not all diplomas are
created equal. A high school diploma today is meaningless compared
to a high school diploma in the nineteen seventies and
early eighties and before it's meaningless.

Speaker 8 (42:48):
Correct.

Speaker 12 (42:48):
I grew up yes, sir, I grew up there in
that time. I'm sixty years old. I had US history,
I had civic.

Speaker 1 (42:55):
Exactly, had world history. Yep.

Speaker 12 (42:58):
Well, I'm saying, sir, yeah, but but but what I'm
too easy for everyone.

Speaker 1 (43:06):
I understand what you're saying. I understand what you're saying. John.
What I'm driving at is that if we if we
determine education is based on a diploma, and kids today,
young people from the from the late eighties on are
getting a diploma that really is only a piece of paper.

(43:27):
It is not an education. They did not get an education.
That's why I would argue we are where we are
right now, John, Thanks for calling in, But we are
where we are right now because the mainstream media, the
public education system has failed us the overall point that

(43:48):
he was driving at. I agree one hundred percent. We
are where we are because we've got people that are
truly low information voters. And as our founders pointed out,
when you hand the checkbook over to the citizenry and
they can write themselves a check and a portion of

(44:09):
the public is getting what the other portion contributes, we
have a redistribution of wealth going on right now. That's
not to say there's not a need for certain programs
that help people, but we've created this cauldron ourselves. We've
created this generation of dependency. And then you've got a

(44:34):
bunch of ne'er dowells that don't know any better, that
haven't lived any life. I can't wait to see what
these Clantifa people become in their forties. While there are
some that are in their forties, the generation that is
wearing masks and wandering around committing acts of violence and

(44:57):
are paid protesters, I cannot wait to see what becomes
of their life. Whether I'm around to see it is
another story. Twenty seven minutes past the hour, It's the
Morning Show with Preston Scott. Thirty five minutes past the hour,

(45:26):
Monday of the Morning Show halfway through the program already,
doctor Joe Camps standing by in just a few moments.
Irish Chafell next hour. A lot of things to talk
about in the program, but first let's get to the
big stories in the press box. I've touched on last hour,
the fact that Tucker Carlson I think you need to

(45:47):
give yourself a break from I can only hope he
comes to his senses. I'm getting a ton of reaction
to that, very little pushback. There's a few saying, oh,
you've misjudged. No, I've not miss judge anything. Don't be
that person. I don't care who it is. Don't be

(46:09):
that person that elevates somebody else. Don't even me. I
think I'm pretty rational when it comes to stuff. I'm
pretty balanced. But you need to check everything you need to.
You just don't put Tucker on a platform that says

(46:30):
he's never wrong, because he's wrong a lot of late,
and so is Candae Owens, and so is Megan Kelly.
They're all on this thing that's just weird, and so
I'm just advising you be careful. You do you, But
that's my advice and I'm sticking to it. Gallup poll
record number of young women say they're done being Americans. Really.

(46:55):
Survey found that forty percent of women between the ages
of fifteen and forty four say they would move to
another country given the chance. Well, what I would say
to that is, let us help. Wouldn't you think there'd
be a love offering that could be had to pay

(47:16):
for plane tickets for anybody who wants to leave the
country and stay gone. That would be something. I would
voluntarily give money to a fund that allows people that
hate this country to leave this country for good. They

(47:36):
have to be Rosie O'Donnell. They have to leave only
never come back. You can't come back. You're done. You've
renounced your citizenship. You're leaving for another place and pick
the socialist nation of your dreams. Go there, you know,
let me do the Spock thing, Live long and prosper man.
Go see you. I will give money to that. I

(48:00):
would give money to that fund to afford people that
hate this country the opportunity to leave it and go elsewhere.
I'll pay the plane ticket, I'll help, I'll contribute. And
then the last big story in the press box Toyota
opening up a North Carolina battery plant. Now you say,

(48:23):
what you want about batteries, I'm like, whatever you know,
if you're going in the EV world, you know what
you're getting. At least you better know what you're getting hybrids.
You're still dealing with an expensive battery, but not nearly
what you're dealing with with an EV. But regardless, Toyota

(48:43):
spent thirteen point nine billion on this plant North Carolina,
and they are committing to another ten billion in the
next five years. So say what you will about the
Trump tariff plan. I personally don't think it's added a
whole lot to us inflation wise. I'm okay with whatever

(49:04):
it has added. If it leads to a more stable
US economy that is not dependent on foreign nations, I'm
good with it. I'm absolutely good with it. I think
that that that needs to be articulated better. But the
bottom line is the quote tariff wars are leading to
positive investment in this country, which means jobs, which means

(49:28):
a better economy. So that's that's a win. Forty minutes
after the hour, Doctor Joe is next with Healthy Expectations
on The Morning Show with Preston.

Speaker 13 (49:37):
Scott dispensing information at the Speed of Sound and if
you're lucky. He'll be wearing his Clark Cat glasses.

Speaker 1 (49:44):
Today the Morning Show with Preston Scott's time to get
some healthy expectations. Joining me, Doctor Joe Camps. Good morning,
Doctor Camps.

Speaker 8 (49:57):
How are good morning?

Speaker 7 (49:59):
How are you today?

Speaker 1 (49:59):
Press the outstanding?

Speaker 7 (50:00):
Sir?

Speaker 5 (50:00):
Are you No?

Speaker 8 (50:02):
I'm doing great? Got some I think good news. We
all know that estrogen plays an important role in normal
sexual development and reproductive development and females, and many years
now there's been a black box warning on estrogen therapy.
And lately what has happened is with the support behind

(50:26):
the Gnecological Associations and the American Neurological Association, they have
now given the FDA evidence to support the removal of
the black box warning on estrogen therapy. And you may say, well,
what does this have to do well in menopause of women.

(50:48):
I mean, it's essential that they have estrogen and it's
most appropriate, and it marks a significant step forward in
women's health to remove this black black box rating. And
that's something when you say it's in the black box,
that usually means everything stops, pay attention to it, and obey.
So that's been removed, and I think that it's going

(51:10):
to play an important role, uh and critical in the
therapy for postmenopause.

Speaker 7 (51:16):
And you know.

Speaker 1 (51:19):
The most Joe, we're losing you, buddy. The phone is
cutting out, is it?

Speaker 8 (51:24):
Is it there?

Speaker 1 (51:25):
Yeah? Now I got you back just barely.

Speaker 8 (51:28):
Oh I'm sorry. I don't know this this technology these.

Speaker 1 (51:31):
Days you're in the bunker.

Speaker 8 (51:33):
Yeah. What I was going to say is that it
just goes to show you that now we're rethinking some
old ideas and thoughts that we've had for a number
of years. So this is one of those things, an
important step in the therapy for postmenopause and women and
you know, the older I get. Now there are a
lot of people joining me, uh in this aging process

(51:57):
and boy, it's uh, it's a journey. But we'll keep
you informed as much as we can.

Speaker 1 (52:02):
Joe, my wife and I have said for a few
years now, growing old is not for sissies.

Speaker 8 (52:07):
Go well, there are a lot of things that began
to deteriorate, and you can you can feel it happen
every day. But my suggestion is to keep moving, keep listening,
keep reading.

Speaker 7 (52:21):
And.

Speaker 8 (52:22):
Do the best you can to make this life as
prosperous as you possibly can.

Speaker 1 (52:28):
Doctor Camps thanks as always. I appreciate the time.

Speaker 8 (52:31):
All right, you take care president of a great week.

Speaker 1 (52:33):
Thank you, Sarah. Doctor Joe camps with us on Mondays
most of the time. Every now and then he'll take
a little time away. He's actually retired now sort of.
I don't think Joe's ever going to retire, but he's
not doing what he did for years, which was urology.

(52:53):
And and so I've Joe has been part of this
show since we started less than a year in so
he's almost been with me the whole twenty three years plus.
I would say that it's probably been twenty three years
at this point. We'll celebrate our twenty fourth anniversary in March,

(53:15):
and wow, twenty four years. That means we'll be starting
year twenty five. Now, that'll be one to celebrate the
twenty fifth anniversary of this show March eighteenth, in twenty
twenty seven. So you get to you can. Here's some
things to look forward to. You've got the two hundred
and fiftieth anniversary of the Nation next year, and the

(53:38):
year after that, you've got the twenty fifth anniversary of
the Morning Share with Bristin Scott. I mean, come on,
that's awesome. But now you know the whole estrogen testosterone thing,
but with men and women and as you age, you know,
I wish I could say that I'm fully understanding what's

(54:01):
the best way to approach that. I know that generally speaking,
I've always kind of coined the idea that mena pause
was aptly named as men pause before you approach a
woman in men pause, and then we just kind of anyway.

(54:24):
Forty six minutes past the hour, got a little update
on what's going on with Orphan Shade coming up. If
you don't know, you'll probably be excited and encouraged. Irishchapfelle.
Next hour. Also next hour, we're gonna let you listen
to something in the US Senate that happened right before
the shutdown ended. I think you'll find it very enlightening

(54:48):
and a deportation story that I've I'm scratching my head about.
We don't always get it right, friends. Forty six minutes past.

Speaker 13 (54:58):
The hour, Consider him your truth Detector The Morning Show
with Preston Scott on News Radio one hundred point seven WUFLA.

Speaker 1 (55:18):
I recognize that there will be people that think differently
on for example, the subject is Tucker Carlson, Jose and
I were just talking about somebody who's trading some thoughts
with on X. All I'm telling you is pay attention.

(55:46):
I can assure you this much. Tucker doesn't know enough
about what God's word says to be pontificating about Christianity
and a Christian's responsibility or relationship to Israel. He just

(56:08):
doesn't know enough. So take it for what it's worth.
We have gotten a great update over the weekend. We
started our campaign Operation Thanksgiving benefiting Orphan Shade one week
ago and in the first week, because of some very

(56:32):
generous gifts, we have raised eighteen thousand and forty one dollars.
We're a third of the way there now again, the
goal is fifty five thousand. And for those of you
that have no idea what I'm talking about, Orphanshade dot

(56:52):
Com is the website. It's about helping eight little girls
at a time that have been orphaned. Their mother and
their father are both dead and in Malawi, those girls
are frequently trafficked, abused, left to starve. And this is

(57:21):
home number six. So that's what forty eight girls that
Orphan Shade will be helping. We've built home number three
raised the money for it back in twenty twenty two.
This is home number six. They have the money for
home number five. They're going to build it this year
or next year, and they hope to build number six

(57:42):
next year. The cost has gone up. It's fifty five
thousand dollars now to build a permanent home, not the
type of structure that most people live in Malawi. Those
structures are generally very seasonal. They are destroyed by the
weather each and every year and they have to rebuild.
That is not the case. This is not an opulent

(58:03):
home in any way, shape or form. It is cinderblock
on cement with an appropriate roof and solar electricity for
light in the in the evening, a wall for safety
and security. These girls are educated, they learn about Jesus,
their clothes, they're fed, nothing opulent at all. If you

(58:30):
would give I've said this before and i'll say it again,
it's going to take some heavy lifting. It's going to
take some bigger gifts. If you have a business, if
you can, if you can afford to give a big gift,
that's what it will take to get the fifty five
thousand dollars. But any of you, if you've never given
to this project. I just ask you to look at it.

(58:51):
Just take a look Orphanshade dot com and decide, and
we would love for you to be part of it.
Right now, about ninety percent of what's coming in is
coming in from people that supported Home number three, and
that's amazing, but I'd love to cast a broader net

(59:11):
and get more people involved. We have two challenges. If
you can give, and you're listening in the Panama City area,
go to Orphanshade dot com and the drop down menu
click you know, click build a house Home number six
and then put pc challenge because we have a two
thousand dollars match waiting. If we can raise two thousand

(59:32):
dollars in the next few days from Panama City, someone's
giving two thousand dollars to match it, so that'll be four.
And then we have a second challenge here in the
in the Capital City region, a five thousand dollars gift
will get you a one hour private concert with Marvin Goldstein.
He is just look him up and you will love it,

(59:56):
all right, So we'll talk more next hour. We're not
gonna just talk day after day after day. All segments
of the program but we are gonna mention it day
after day after day. We'd love your support. It is
Operation Thanksgiving, it is uh, it's a it's a great program.

(01:00:17):
Orphanshade dot com. Our number three is next. All right,
I passed the hour. It is Monday here in the
morning show, and that means when Florida State plays a

(01:00:38):
little football the weekend before we talk about it for
a few minutes, because Florida State football is news, at
least in this part of the world. And joining us
from warschand dot Com is the managing editor. Our good friend,
Irish chaffelle Ira, Good morning, How are you?

Speaker 7 (01:00:57):
I'm good?

Speaker 8 (01:00:57):
How are you?

Speaker 1 (01:00:58):
I'm doing well? You you came away away from that
game on Saturday night feeling as though Florida State actually
acquitted itself as well as they have all season long
since maybe Alabama I did.

Speaker 7 (01:01:12):
And you know, listen, you know the score of the
wake Forest game probably looks more impressive on paper. It
certainly looks more impressive on paper forty two to seven
against the wake Forest team that's now seven to three.
And you could say, well, Virginia Sex only you know
three and six or three and seven, So how could
you say that one was more important to me. It's
the way the game played out. Wake Forest fell behind
and just never really challenged Florida State, so you could

(01:01:35):
kind of cruise. They kind of played with confidence, never
really got challenged, and just dominated that game. This game
was different, you know, Virginia Tech. After FSU scored early,
Virginia Tech scored a touchdown to take the lead. Then
when Florida State started to kind of get away, Virginia
Tech scored to kind of get back in it. But
Florida State kept counter punching and kept playing better as
the game went on. To me, that says more about

(01:01:57):
where they are now. Virginia Tech's not a good team,
but again, when I look at this Florida State team,
where I think they've struggled is when they faced some
adversity and they have not really kind of handled it well.
That was a game where I felt like every time
they had a chance to maybe falter, they came through.
And so I'm going to take that as a positive sign,
and I understand when people who don't, but I was

(01:02:18):
encouraged by that.

Speaker 1 (01:02:19):
When you look ahead at the schedule, they play two
more games on the road and then potentially, you know,
there could be a Bowl game depending on what happens.
Does Mike Norvel's future rest on these final two games?
Do you think or do you think a decision has
been made? What's your gut tell you?

Speaker 7 (01:02:37):
I think and I'm actually writing something. They'll be up
on our website about this, But I do think the
last two games are gonna have a huge part. I
don't know that any specific result guarantees anything other than
if you win these last two games. I mean, I
just cannot imagine how you would make a change you
if you finish seven and five, go to a bowl game,
have a chance to win eight games, and you've got

(01:02:59):
wins over or you know, Alabama at NC State at
Florida and your your three of your losses are you know,
really down to the wire games against good teams. Miami
is a good team, Virginia is a good team. Pit
it turns out as a good team. So to me,
I don't know how you if you didn't fire them
after Stanford, I don't see any way you're firing Mike
Norbel at the end of a seven and five seasons. Now,

(01:03:22):
if you lose both of these games, I think it
could be really difficult to bring him back. So I
do think that that's why. And then the big question
is what happens if you split them and can you
go down to the wire. Can you wait till after
the Florida game to really make a decision because of
all the things, the implications and recruiting and all that.
So yeah, I think there that, you know, I'd be

(01:03:42):
very surprised if the decisions already made made because if
you made a decision and then those two games went
the other way, uh, you know, I think you'd look foolish.

Speaker 1 (01:03:52):
One of the things that I think is interesting about
this whole scenario is how the whole recruiting portal and
recruiting in general is just so dramatically shifted in the
last five years. And I just want, what are you
seeing on the recruiting end in terms of guys decommitting
guys saying Okay, I'm looking past that. I just like

(01:04:13):
the trajectory. I like Tony White, I like gusmels On.
What are you hearing?

Speaker 7 (01:04:19):
Yeah, it's definitely different than it used to be because
you know, again back in the day, signing day wasn't
until February. Now with it being in December. You know,
there is a kind of a panic, you know, in
the fan base certainly. I don't know about the coaching
staff in terms of okay, well, if you don't make
a decision until late in the year, if this is
in limbo, how's that going to effect recruiting. What we've

(01:04:39):
seen so far is it has affected them with a
few of their top recruits. They lost a big commitment
about a week ago. Jay Timmins, who is the son
of Lawrence Timms, who played at FSU, one of the
top cornerbacks in the country, had been committed to Florida State.
He ends up flipping to Ohio State. You know, it's
kind of hard to argue with that at this point.

(01:05:00):
You know, they're defending national champions and the number one
in the country. You know, there's been a couple other
kids who have backed out as well, but the vast
majority of the class, I mean, they have well over
twenty commitments, The vast majority of us stuck together. They
believe that Norvelle is gonna stay as head coach. They
believe in the program. They like the offer that they've
been told they're going to get in terms of revenue

(01:05:22):
sharing in nil, and so they're pretty locked in and
they've actually picked up a few commitments recently, so it's
not like the class is falling apart. But that is
a concern if you do make a change, some of
those guys who are committed to this staff likely would
move on because they wouldn't know what this next coaching
staff has in sore for them.

Speaker 1 (01:05:41):
Irishufel wathers for one more segment, we'll look ahead to
NC State, which comes up Friday night. Next. This is
the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Just about twelve past
the hour. Final segment here with Irishchafell nor Caro Line
of State on a Friday night. Raleigh has not been

(01:06:03):
particularly kind FSU, going back to the Chuckamato days.

Speaker 7 (01:06:08):
No, it is not. I've certainly been to a lot
of losses at car Finley Stadium. It's not one of
my favorite places to go. And like you said, good
Florida State teams have struggled there. This is not a
good NC State team. But yeah, man, that's a tough
environment and you know, certainly a game you can lose.
If you can lose at Stanford, you can lose anywhere.

Speaker 1 (01:06:28):
So what do you think this comes down to, you know,
there are times on Saturday night I thought, Okay, this
team is playing better. There are times I thought, oh
my goodness, they're not tackling well and Tommy Castellanos can't
throw it in the ocean.

Speaker 7 (01:06:45):
Yeah. Well, NC State, I mean, their story all years.
They their offense has had some good nights, their defense
has been terrible pretty much all season. They looked awful
against Miami, but they gave up you know, they've given
up over thirty points. That pretty much every you know,
almost everybody play. So Florida State's offensive it looks confident,
should be able to score the ball. But the problem

(01:07:06):
is this offense does not looked good at all on
the road. And you know, we talked to Gus Miles
on about that last week and he said that, you know,
when it happened at Stanford, they felt like, okay, you know,
it's a one time thing. But then it happened again
against Clemson, who does not have a very good defense,
and so now they they're looking at everything they do
offensively before they go on this road trip to kind

(01:07:28):
of see if they have to change anything and get
some confidence in these players. So, you know, We'll see
what they can come up with. If they can play
like they did against Virginia early in the year that
seems like a year ago, when they scored over forty points,
then I think they've got a really good chance to
win it. But the way the offense lift these last
two road trips, you know they can certainly lose to
an averagency state team.

Speaker 1 (01:07:49):
I wasn't at the pregame ceremony honoring the seniors who
took the walk and who didn't.

Speaker 7 (01:07:57):
There's about twenty players that walked generally, if there's any question,
and people now know that there's a lot of uncertainty
with players because of the COVID year. You still have
some players that were affected by that that have gotten
extra years of eligibility. But then also just how the
rules have changed in terms of transfers and how many
games you can play in the season and still play.
The most notable one is Tommy Castellano's he did walk.

(01:08:22):
He's played four seasons of college football, but that first
year at UCF he only played him five games for
regular season games. There's a pretty decent chance if he
appeals for or applies for a fifth year of eligibility
he'll get it because that fifth game was in a
championship game, a conference championship game, which now no longer
even counts towards eligibility. So I think he would probably

(01:08:43):
get that year back. When we asked him about it,
he was pretty noncommittal about it. And even if he
asked for that year back, there's no guarantee it's gonna
be at Florida State. He could choose to go somewhere else,
or they could want to go in a different direction.
But in general, everybody else that walked is probably going
to be done at Florida State. Tommy Castalanos is the
one to watch. I think he'll apply for that fifth year,

(01:09:04):
but again it may be determined whether or not he
plays here or not.

Speaker 1 (01:09:07):
Let's speak on behalf of war chant dot com Irish chaffeld.
Do you want Tommy Castellanos back at quarterback?

Speaker 7 (01:09:16):
I would look to go in a different direction just
because I don't think he can stay healthy at that
size and to run him as much as you want to.
I mean, that was the concern coming into the season,
is if gust wants to run him, you know, ten
to fifteen times a game at that size. Kenny hold up.
And the problem is, once he gets hurt, he's just
he does He's not effective in this offense. And so

(01:09:37):
you know, there are quarterbacks that can play hurt if
you're a passing quarterback, but so much of what he
brings is that running ability. So when he's slowed, it
really just to me, it brings the entire offense to
a halt. So for that reason, I would go in
a different direction. But you know, it also probably depends
on who you can get in the open market.

Speaker 1 (01:09:55):
Yeah. I just look at a five foot nine quarterback
throwing it below his shoulder lige level, and I just, man, yeah,
I can. I I know the mechanics of why he
floats a football, and I don't see them wanting to
change it. And I don't think he's gonna change it.
I just I love the guy, I love his courage,
but I think they got to move on.

Speaker 7 (01:10:17):
Yeah, I'm with you. I think it's a it was
a good it's a it was a good effort to
raise the floor after such a bad season last year.
I think he did a good job of getting floor
state to where they could be a threat offensively. But
if he can't run, you see what he is as
a passer, and it's just it's just not good enough.

Speaker 1 (01:10:34):
Well, it'll be fun to talk about whatever happens on
Friday night on next Monday, Iris, So thanks very much
for the time. I appreciate it. Thank you, prest Iris Chaffelle,
Managing editor, Get your Info at war chand dot com.

(01:11:10):
I think we would all agree that deportation is needed
in many cases, if not most, when someone is in
this country illegally. Right, this story, even with the level

(01:11:33):
of complexity that it has, defies my ability to understand it.
And maybe one of you can explain this to me.
You probably don't know the name Jose Barco. He has

(01:11:54):
been deported to No Gallas. We think the court had
previously ordered that he'd be deported to either Mexico, Cuba,
or Venezuela. You're thinking, why he must have broken into
the country. Well you would be wrong. Now listen. His

(01:12:17):
father was a political dissident in Cuba, spoke out against communism.
His family fled to Venezuela in the nineteen eighties, four
years after Barco was born. His family entered the United
States with asylum. They were given lawful permanent resident status.

(01:12:41):
Barco enlisted in the Army at the age of seventeen,
served two tours in Iraq. Was injured by an ied
during one of his two deployments, received a Purple Heart.
He was also awarded Combat Infantry Badge. During his military career,

(01:13:03):
Barco had filed paperwork for citizenship, but his application was
never processed for reasons unknown, despite his submitting it. His
legal team says his former commander attests to helping him
complete and submit the application. He got in some trouble
after leaving the military. He served fifteen years in prison

(01:13:26):
for a felony conviction of attempted murder, but he served
his time. In two thousand and nine, he was sentenced
to fifty two years after being convicted of firing a
gun at a house party in Colorado Springs suffering from PTSD.
One of the bullets fired hit a nineteen year old
woman in the leg. He was paroled in January of

(01:13:49):
this year after serving fifteen years due to good behavior.
Upon release, Ice took him into detention and he has
now been deported. I understand he was in trouble, but

(01:14:13):
he paid his debt to society he was released. He
was legally in this country he fought and served in
our military. This is all he knows is America and
they've just sent him and the family doesn't know exactly
where he is. Do you see why I say this

(01:14:42):
is I don't understand this. How do you deport somebody who,
though born in Venezuela, it would appear, grew up in
this country, he lived in this country, was legally in
this country, his family was legally in this country. And

(01:15:05):
how do you then just pick a nation and send
him away. We have to be better than this. Now
you can say, ah, it's just one case out of millions,
I would argue, what a very important one case out
of millions. I don't know where this will lead. And

(01:15:34):
like I said, you can take a shot at explaining
this to me. But I they're trying to fight, but
they don't know where he is right now, twenty seven
minutes past the hour. That is a bad deportation, That's
what that is. Well, new's just breaking. A group of

(01:16:08):
armed gunmen abducted twenty five girls, killed a staffer, injured
another at a high school boarding school in northwestern Nigeria.
What does this sound familiar? I can promise you these
are Aslamist Jahatis. I don't need to see anymore. I
that's who does this. That's what's happening in Nigeria. Happened

(01:16:36):
at four am local time today. They are described as
having quote sophisticated weapons exchanged fire with guards prior to
abducting the girls. These are animals. This is what Islamic

(01:17:01):
extremism looks like. Friends. I just and in a way,
this kind of this kind of dovetails into my concerns.
And one of the other big stories in the press
box today, and that is Tucker Carlson, and you can

(01:17:21):
add Candace Owens and Megan Kelly. Megan is back and forth.
She's hot and cold. Once she left Fox News and
sort of got off on her own. I want to
say she was at CNN for a minute. I don't
know if that's exactly true, one of the other networks.
And you know, she's a bright lady, but she's also again,

(01:17:45):
like Candace, Candace was the first to show signs of
uh not right. She's just not right. You read her
commentary and it's all self focused. It's all about how
incredible she is and being your own biggest cheerleaders. Never

(01:18:07):
a good thing, you know, believing in yourself. That's awesome,
but publicly promoting yourself over and over and over. But
more importantly, she's just wrong about a lot of stuff. Now,
there's some things that she speaks very eloquently on, but
then you get to Tucker Carlson, and Tucker's just you know,

(01:18:28):
the idea here is that people are there's a few
people suggesting that he can outstand Nick fuantes, that he's
just he interviewed him to expose him. And all I
can say is Tucker has said enough things outside of
that interview that leads me to think that's not necessarily
the case. But you've got to form your own opinion.

(01:18:53):
I'm merely doing what I think is appropriate, and that
is issuing a pause button and saying you need to
maybe consider pushing it if you're all in on Tucker.
Tucker's a human being like all of us. But when
you got sixteen million followers, I think you have to

(01:19:13):
be very very responsible. Heck, I try to be responsible
and I don't. I don't have near that influence. I'm
accountable before God for whatever level of influence I have.
Period end. It starts as a husband and a father
and a grandfather. It continues here, it's I'm accountable for

(01:19:39):
my life. I can only tell you that if you're
one of those that lifts Tucker on a platform. Yeah yeah, yeah.
You gotta check everybody. You gotta check what they're saying.
You gotta just be careful. I'm just telling you, pump
the brakes. He's given you reason, giving you ample reason.

(01:20:02):
And so a number of young women, now that's say
they're done being American. They don't like it. They are
forty percent of women fifteen to forty four. You could
argue fifteen women now female yes, woman no, But forty
percent in a Gallup poll said they would move to

(01:20:24):
another country. Have given the chance, I say, give them
a chance. If if that's the prerequisite, I say, wouldn't.
Now what would happen if we put together an organization
or if an organization started to fund and and we
put them you know, we pay their first month's rent,

(01:20:46):
We get them to the country of their choice, they
take care of all the passport stuff, and they have
to then sign a paper saying they they no longer
want to be a citizen of the United States. And
the fact that forty percent of women, Okay, I'm good

(01:21:10):
with forty percent of the women that hate this country
not giving birth to children. Here that works for me.
For forty minutes past the hour, I'm gonna let you
listen inside the walls of Congress. Next, this is the
Morning Show with Preston Scott. All Right, just before Congress reopened,

(01:21:43):
the federal government debate was going on. Where was it
all stopped? It was stopped in the US Senate, right.
I want you to listen very carefully. This is a
three minute exchange. This is US Senator Bernie Moreno from Ohio, Republican,

(01:22:05):
and the other voice you'll hear is US Senator Bill
Cassidy of Louisiana. Moreno is the man doing most of
the talking and questioning. And I want you to understand
because this perfectly frames what just happened.

Speaker 14 (01:22:25):
So zero, not one single Democrat is in the chamber listening, debating,
having a dialogue with you.

Speaker 1 (01:22:33):
Question number two.

Speaker 14 (01:22:35):
If you're a union worker in my state, Ohio, do
these Biden Obamacare covid Era subsidies lower.

Speaker 1 (01:22:44):
Their health costs?

Speaker 11 (01:22:45):
Absolutely not.

Speaker 14 (01:22:47):
If you're somebody on Medicare, no matter where you are
in America, do these covid Era Biden Obamacare subsidies lower
your deductibles.

Speaker 11 (01:22:57):
Absolutely not.

Speaker 14 (01:22:58):
If you get private insurance through a small business like
the one I used to own, do these biden era
COVID subsidies lower your health care costs?

Speaker 11 (01:23:09):
Does nothing to benefit those people you're describing.

Speaker 14 (01:23:12):
If you're unfortunately somebody who is having a tough time
and you're on Medicaid, you're disabled children, do these biden
era COVID subsidies lower your deductibles.

Speaker 1 (01:23:24):
Or you're out of pocket costs?

Speaker 14 (01:23:27):
So none of the people I just mentioned, not union workers,
not people on medicare, not people on Medicaid, not people
on private insurance, not unions that negotiated incredible rates, none
of them will see lower healthcare costs.

Speaker 1 (01:23:43):
Am I accurate?

Speaker 8 (01:23:44):
That?

Speaker 1 (01:23:44):
You're absolutely accurate?

Speaker 14 (01:23:46):
Who stands the gain by the federal government writing a
check for twenty six billion dollars to do what the
Democrats want in order to open the people's gut me well?

Speaker 11 (01:24:01):
Insurance companies most directly, and there.

Speaker 14 (01:24:03):
Will be loyal But just to be clear, the money
goes directly to the insurance company, correct, It doesn't go
through the pocket of the consumer. So if I, for example,
I want to go find a doctor that's going to
offer treatment for less money because my deductible's too high.
This doesn't help me because I'm not getting the money.
It's going to go to the insurance company.

Speaker 1 (01:24:24):
Correct.

Speaker 14 (01:24:25):
And Senator you're so smart on this topic. And you're
you're the chairman of the Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions committees.

Speaker 1 (01:24:33):
That's true?

Speaker 7 (01:24:33):
Correct?

Speaker 14 (01:24:34):
Who was the previous chairman, Bernie Sanders?

Speaker 1 (01:24:37):
Bernie Sanders?

Speaker 14 (01:24:39):
Okay, Bernie Sanders was chairman when again, just to be
clear for less Congress, which would have been through twenty
twenty four. Yeah, he's for two years, and the Biden
era Obamacare subsidies were made extended in twenty.

Speaker 1 (01:24:57):
Two, is that correct?

Speaker 5 (01:24:58):
Correct?

Speaker 14 (01:24:59):
I think that's expire in twenty five.

Speaker 1 (01:25:02):
To inspire in twenty five.

Speaker 14 (01:25:03):
So who voted for the expiration date of twenty twenty
five Not Republicans rather Democrats. So just to be clear
that Democrats voted to have these substies expired this year.

Speaker 5 (01:25:15):
Correct?

Speaker 1 (01:25:16):
Correct?

Speaker 14 (01:25:17):
To your knowledge, was there a hearing last year in
twenty twenty four in which the Democrats got together and say,
whoa these Biden era COVID Obamacare subsidies, we set them
to expire in twenty five. We should really make them
permanent or extend them. Was there a single hearing in
your committee about that topic?

Speaker 7 (01:25:37):
There was not.

Speaker 1 (01:25:44):
I mean, there you go, and no one Democrat was
in the chamber to discuss this, to debate, to dialogue.
Is the healthcare system in this country broken? Of course
it is. Obamacare has made it worse, and it said

(01:26:07):
it was going to make it better. It said, costs
we're going to go down. Costs of exploded since Obamacare.
That's what happens when you, in essence, create a single
pair system. And that's what we're moving to. Forty six
minutes past the hour, I just thought, you don't want
to hear that. I'm gonna give myself a hair cut

(01:26:39):
in a few minutes. It's getting a little bushy. I'm
grateful to have hair, mind you, but I have that
very fine, thin hair, and I just I go back
and forth. There's part of me that just would love
to just get it cut short. And but I'm told

(01:27:02):
by many that when my hair is cut short, I
look like a drill sergeant. And I'm not. I'm a
much I'm a much more approachable person with my hair
not quite as short. And of course you're now sensitive.
I am why Jose is laughing at that statement, I

(01:27:23):
don't know. In fact, today it kind of hurts my heart.
But hey, we are. We are at eighteen thousand plus
for Orphan Shade. Unbelievable gifts have come in in the
first week, and so now we're into week number two,
so we're a third of the way there. I'm just

(01:27:45):
I'm hoping you'll do it. We have two challenges. One
for the Panama City listeners, if you give the Orphan Shade,
we get a couple thousand in the next few days
from Panama City. We have someone that lives in the
area that wants to donate another two thousand dollars. So
it's a match. If collectively you'all can kick in what
you can and get us to that two thousand mark,

(01:28:07):
we're going to get another two thousand. And then for
those of you in the Capital City area, we have
a challenge from Marvin Goldstein. First five thousand dollars donation,
we'll get a private one hour concert with the piano
afficionado extraordinary himself, Marvin Goldstein playing at a party, a

(01:28:28):
private gathering maybe for clients, whatever, you know, whatever you
want to put together. Marvin will be there with a
one hour concert. And so that's for the first five
thousand or more dollar offering. So if it's there, you
could also just do it to help. Whatever the dollar

(01:28:50):
figure is, whether you can give one time, monthly or quarterly,
we would love your help. Just learn more at orphanshade
dot com. In the dropdown menu when you click donate,
you're going to give to building a house and put
in the notes home number six. And if it's for
the Panama City Challenge, put PC challenge and we thank you.

Speaker 2 (01:29:13):
Brought to you by Barono Heating and Air.

Speaker 13 (01:29:16):
It's the Morning Show one on WFLA.

Speaker 1 (01:29:21):
We took a few calls in the second hour on
whether or not we are approaching a civil war. I
was actually a little surprised we didn't get more calls.
I wonder if it's just one of those topics people
don't want to talk about because it's too out there.

(01:29:48):
It was inspired by something Joe Rogan said. He said,
I think we're on a seven. I don't think we're
at a seven, but I do think we're on the scale.
I put the scale at one to nine because I
don't we're not in a civil war. Ten is civil war.
So I put the scale at one to nine. We
had most people saying around to seven that gave an

(01:30:08):
opinion on it. I personally would put us in the
four range. Four or five that would be where I
would put it. Record number of young women say they're
done being Americans for between fifteen and forty four said
they would move to another country given the chance. I say,
let's give him the chance, put the money in, let's

(01:30:32):
do it, let's help him go. If you're one of those,
I'm all for letting you go go, just don't come back.
Gave my thoughts on Tucker Carlson. I think he's wayward.
I think he's The Bible says there is a way

(01:30:52):
that seems right to a man, and in the end
it leads to destruction. I think Tucker is he's wayward
right now that he's a little lost. Talked a little
bit about deportation. Talked with Iris Sheffel about FSU football.
That you listen to some sound and tomorrow US Congresswoman

(01:31:13):
Cat Camick a manly minute and a whole lot more
to talk about. Have a great day, friends,
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