Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:02):
I have to have everything just so we're ready. Good
morning Tuesday on the Morning Show with Preston Scott, November
the eighteenth. He is Jose, I am Preston. Great to
be with you. Show fifty four to ninety seven, counting
down the days to Thanksgiving, and then we are in
(00:23):
a full sprint to the end of the year. Twelve
days of Preston will be taking over for us as
we go on our little vacation. We will start each
show with a devotional. We will do exactly what we
do to start the program, So just be shifted a
little bit, segments rearranged just a bit, and we'll go
through the entire year of twenty twenty five one day
(00:47):
at a time. And so the first show on the
eighteenth of December Thursday the eighteenth, will be the month
of January twenty twenty five, and then the second show
February and so on. So we're getting ready for you,
so we don't leave you in the lurch while we're gone,
taking a little time away, recharge the batteries, freshen up
(01:09):
the show a little bit maybe, and and prepare for
twenty twenty six and the two hundred and fiftieth anniversary. Well,
at some point between now and and the end of
the season, we are going to take some calls on
what you think would be the best way to celebrate
(01:30):
what what? What's the thing that we ought to be
doing to celebrate the the birth of this nation the anniversary.
But as always we like to start with scripture. I
made some notes here, and I thought it would be
(01:50):
good to take a little bit of time Genesis three.
We don't, we don't. We don't go back there very often.
There is one thing that has never ever changed, and
it never will change until God throws him into the
(02:11):
eternal prison. Satan's way of sowing confusion and discording people
is to get you to do what he did in
the garden, to question God. It says in Genesis three,
(02:34):
beginning in verse one, Now the serpent was more crafty
than any other beast of the field that the Lord
God had made. He said to the woman, Did God
actually say you shall not eat of any tree in
the garden? Now? I'm just gonna pause there for today
(02:57):
he knew exactly what God said. That's not what God said.
But Satan takes just a little bit of what God
says and amidst a word, rephrases things just a little bit,
(03:18):
and you know why, because he's counting on you not
knowing any better. It's the same ploy today. People get
roped into cults, they get roped into bad theology, they
(03:45):
get roped into churches that are just misguided and based
on man's traditions, not God's word, by doing the same thing.
Did God really say that? And most often the answer
(04:11):
is no, God didn't say that. But you and I
fall prey to being deceived and misled because we don't
know what God said. Because we don't know his word
well enough. You are not above beyond being fooled. You
(04:42):
can be fooled just like I can be fooled if
you're not reading God's word. And then the parts that
you haven't maybe read yet, you're able to discern, now,
that doesn't sound right, that's not consistent with what I've
read about God. And then you go look and you go, oh, no,
he didn't say that. This is what God said. You
(05:04):
just there's the Holy Spirit starts to work in you
and helps you discern right from wrong until you learn
more fully, and then even then you're gonna still be
prone to that same tactic. Of deceit. Ten past the hour.
Good way to start the morning show with Preston Scott. Guy,
(05:27):
do what you're talking about? It's the Morning Show with
Preston Scott. I think I'm gonna give Jose a new nickname.
We're gonna call him Pancho. This man? Is that homemade?
(05:50):
Is that a homemade Pancho too? Yeah? Yes, sir, A
funny story about the Panchos.
Speaker 2 (05:55):
I didn't think about the idea until we were having
a Bible study and we're going over the Armor of
God in the various pieces, and then Jamison said in
the poncho of peace.
Speaker 1 (06:07):
And I was like, doing it Jamison, our oldest son. Yeah,
he's uh yeah, so there it is. He's got how
many do you have? How many ponchos self made ponchos
do you have? The collection is growing? So you take
a blanket, do you hem it? No?
Speaker 2 (06:28):
No, I just I just grab him from Goodwill, right,
and then I fold it and cut a little thingy
in there, and it's.
Speaker 1 (06:35):
This so you don't put a ham on it, and
so you just orient sideways, cut a little Is it
always a circle or is it an angle? Is it different?
Nexts VNX and they come out differently. Okay, I haven't
developed a and and do you put a snap or
do you know? It's just yeah, it's just a pretty
(06:55):
much blanket with a hole in it. Okay, Pancho, Jose, Poncho,
can you see that works? It is November the eighteenth.
Inside the American Patriots Almanac eighteen twenty, Captain Nathaniel Palmer
becomes the first American site Antarctica. Eighteen seventy two, Susan B.
(07:18):
Anthony arrested in Rochester, New York for trying to vote
in the presidential election. You imagine we we arrested women
for trying to vote? How dare they? Oh?
Speaker 3 (07:35):
My?
Speaker 1 (07:37):
Eighteen eighty three, the urging of the railroads led to
the United States dividing into time zones. So that's how
time zones came to be railroads. Eighteen eighty nine, Battleship
Maine launched at Brooklyn Navy Yard, and in nineteen twenty eight,
Steamboat Willie, the first Mickey Mouse cartoon with sound, premieres.
(08:06):
You know why I talked so high? Uncle Waltz had
an eraser. Never mind, let's see. Sorry. Today is National
Princess Day. Daughters and granddaughters, princesses. All Today is Mickey
(08:30):
Mouse's birthday. We just noted that. And today is National
Viciousis Day. You ever heard of vishu swa? It is
a fascinating backstory that I knew nothing about. This is
this is. It's a thick soup made with perade leaks, onions, potatoes, cream,
(08:56):
and chicken stock and usually served cold. Now, Culinary historians
debate the origin of Vishi suis. The man most credited
with the reinvention of the soup is French chef Luis Dia.
(09:16):
Back in nineteen fifty, New Yorker Magazine interviewed him. He
was the chef at the Ritz Carlton in New York City.
He told them, and I quote, in the summer of
nineteen seventeen, when I had been at the Ritz seven years,
I reflected upon the potato and leak soup of my childhood,
which my mother and grandmother used to make. I recalled
(09:38):
how during the summer my older brother and I used
to cool it off by pouring in cold milk, and
how delicious it was. I resolved to make something of
the sort for the patrons of the Ritz. Recipes that
are very similar though, date back to eighteen sixty nine,
(10:01):
so not necessarily from our founding, but certainly from the
heart of it. So there you go. Was you made
a face the second I said it is that something
that you would even consider making a cold soup? Vishou
sois no why cold soup just sounds weird to me.
(10:23):
I would imagine in the summer it might be different,
but I don't know. I've never had it because of
the same reason. Cold soup it's like green ketchup. It
just doesn't work in the brain. Cold green ketchup doesn't
work through the with the eyes, though, But soup is
(10:43):
meant to be hot, I think. But hey, it's a thing.
Seventeen past the hour, come back with a fascinating email.
Next the iHeartRadio app and on hundreds of devices like Alexa,
Google Home Ex and Sons. So here we go and
Iheart's radio station two. Almost twenty three minutes past the hour.
(11:24):
I mentioned yesterday that I had written the Heritage Foundation
because of their sponsorship of Tucker Carlson, and I got
a very thoughtful reply. Now most of you know by
now Tucker is is getting a little wayward. I don't
(11:47):
know what's going on. I can't speak to the man's
heart and motivation. A very bright guy, he's a great communicator,
he's curious, but he's just wrong on some things, and
he is fallen into some just thinking that I can't support.
I won't, I won't listen to him. Don't bother sending
(12:07):
anything my way. You know, he needs some time, he
needs a time out, and he needs to sit and
think about some things. And I would submit, really prayerfully
needs to do some reflecting. But I wrote to the
Heritage Foundation. I said, look, I'm gonna have to back
away until something changes here. And so I got this
(12:29):
reply and I'm just going to read parts of it.
Heritage maintains no formal partnership with Tucker Carlson. We did
run an advertising campaign on his network, as Heritage does
on many platforms, but that campaign ended earlier this year
and is no longer active, so they're done. It has
run its course. She sent me some comments from doctor
(12:53):
Kevin Roberts as it relates to Nick Fuentes, who has
been a guest, and many have said that, you know,
Bucker has got Nick down there to expose him, and
that might be partially true. The problem is that that
Tucker seems to have embraced some of what Nick is peddling.
(13:13):
Heritage Foundation and I denounce and stand against Nick Fwende's
vicious Antisemitic ideology, his Holocaust denial, and his relentless conspiracy
theories that echo the darkest chapters of history. We're disgusted
by his musings about rape, women, child marriage, and abusing
his potential wife. Twente's made grotesque analogies to try to
(13:33):
cast doubt on the murder of six million Jews during
the Holocaust and has said quote, I think the Holocaust
is exaggerated. I don't hate Hitler. Fwend has called for
the death penalty for Jews and for other non Christians,
stating that when we take power, they need to be
given the death penalty. Nick Fwende's anti Semitism is not complicated,
(13:57):
ironic or misunderstood. It is explicit, dangerous, and demands our
unified opposition. As conservatives Onwentes knows exactly what he's doing.
He is fomenting Jew hatred, and his incitements are not
only immoral and on Christian, they risk violence. Our task
is to confront the very challenge those poisonous ideas at
every turn to prevent them from taking America to a
(14:19):
very dark place. As it relates to Tucker Carlson, he
said that everyone has a responsibility to speak up against
the scourge of anti Semitism, no matter the messenger, and
there is no official relationship between the Heritage Foundation and
Tucker Carlson. I said, thank you for that. That satisfies me,
(14:45):
and I know that sounds I mean. Here's a statement
from the Chief Advancement Officer Andy Olive Astro. He said,
the Heritage Foundation is rooted in principles and policies, not personalities.
Not make the mistake of placing individuals, even friends, above
the critical mission of the institution that all of us
(15:06):
are entrusted to steward. Here you go. Look, this is
they were clearly prepared for my comments because this was
their hearing from people. And so that's good and they're
responsive to it, and that's very good. And so I
don't begrudge anybody for making a mistake. I make mistakes
(15:28):
all the time. I just want to see course correction,
and I believe that's what Heritage Foundation is offered here.
I think they've learned a very important lesson the question
now becomes Will Tucker. I'm not going to believeror things
with Tucker Carlson. I'm personally I'm dismissing what Tucker has
(15:48):
to say right now. And you might say, well, but
that's just one thing. It doesn't take a lot of
poison to ruin a meal. And I just I don't
I don't need I don't need Tucker. I need Jesus,
I need God's word. I'm fully capable of reading and
(16:11):
studying and considering and analyzing and offering insight. And I'll
continue to draw wisdom from others that I trust, and
we'll go from there. Twenty seven past the hour. Big
stories in the press box are next. I will eat
some eggs like you care. Big stories in the press
(16:45):
box this morning, and I got one. New York Post
is not having any of the narrative that we are
being told about the Butler, Pennsylvania shooter of Dinald Trump,
the attempted assassin. This is from the New York Post.
(17:11):
Then FBI Director Chris Ray told Congress after the July thirteenth,
twenty twenty four attack, that the bureau had found nothing
in crooksonline history, meaning the shooter that pointed to a
motive or political ideology. A week later, Raised Deputy Paul
A body or a bait, told Congress the comments posted
(17:35):
on one of the shooters social media accounts appear to
reflect anti Semitic, anti immigration themes, to espouse political violence,
and are described asn't as extreme in nature. Well thanks
to people that did a little more digging who looked
at the shooter's real digital footprint. The Deputy director of
(17:58):
the FBI miss led Congress by omission, he left out
an entire section of the shooter's online interactions from January
to August of twenty twenty, where he did an ideological backflip.
What we now know, based on online post by the
shooter is that he went from being rabidly pro Trump
(18:23):
to rabidly anti Trump in a matter of months, then
went dark, dropped off the internet, seemingly never posting again.
According to the source that worked with the New York Post,
he had seventeen at least online accounts YouTube, Snapchat, venmo Zell, group, Me, Discord,
(18:51):
Google Play, quizlitchest dot com, and Quorra, among others. The
danger he posed was visible for years in public online spaces.
His radicalization violent rhetoric, and obsession with political violence were
all documented Under his real name, the threat was not hidden.
(19:13):
He promoted the idea of assassinating government officials. Even more
disturbing is that none of these details are mentioned in
the congressional report that was published in December. He promoted
the idea of murdering Democrats before switching his attention. He
(19:35):
described cult described as a cult Trump supporters. How can
you people call others sheep? But you are too brainwashed
to realize how dumb you are. This is from February
twenty twenty. I mean literally, you guys sound like a cult.
At times, he described Trump as racist. He had developed
a furry fetish, had been delving into gender ideology. He
(20:01):
began using the pronouns they then for himself on the
platform Deviant Art. He befriended neo Nazis. According to The
New York Post, members of a Norwegian Nazi group encouraged
his radicalization. Here's the bottom line, this guy fired off
(20:26):
eight shots at Donald Trump. FBI director Cash Patel gave
a report. Four hundred and eighty FBI employees were involved
in the investigation, conducted over one thousand interviews addressed over
(20:46):
two thousand public tips, data extracted from thirteen seas digital devices,
reviewed nearly five hundred thousand digital files, but said that
he had limited online footprint and that there was no
(21:10):
indicating of any radicalization. People are asking online, what's your
definition of limited online interactions? He had nearly twenty online accounts.
He was posting under his real name all over the place.
So here's the question. Are you satisfied with what the
(21:30):
FBI is now saying about this? And then the secondary
follow up question would be, this is troubling. Have they
gotten a cash? Betel is not? Are we not digging
(21:51):
deeper into this, into the offshore accounts and all of
the I mean, there's a mountain of questions that we
have without having any intimate knowledge of any of this
stuff that they allegedly have seen. Has cash? Ptel learned
(22:14):
how troubling things are inside our federal government? Forty one
minutes after the hourum This Morning Show with Preston Scott
s Joe with Preston Scott, Go ahead, Make My Day
on News Radio one hundred point seven wn UFLA. All right,
(22:54):
we gained a little ground yesterday for Orphan Shade. Not
a ton we're just short of nineteen thousand dollars our goal.
We're better than a third of the way there. Our
goal is fifty five and I'm just going to continue
to encourage you to do what you can. If everybody
(23:22):
just gave a little bit and we have a handful
more of people do a little bit more, we can
get this done. Friends. You know, the old idea that
many hands make work not so burdensome really applies here.
(23:43):
The more we can get to take part in this,
giving ten dollars, twenty dollars, twenty five dollars, fifty dollars
one hundred and for a few that you're in business
and your business has done great and you're looking for
a little last minute end of the year right off,
(24:03):
maybe a gift of twenty five hundred, five thousand, few
of those go a long way. We can't get to
this goal without some people digging deep, and we have
had some people do just that and it's been amazing.
Now we have two challenges and we're raising funds for
Orphan Shade. I forgot to say that, my goodness. Orphan
(24:26):
Shade builds homes for little girls that have been orphaned.
Both mom and dad are dad in Malawi and they
build homes for eight girls. And this is not an orphanage,
it is this is their new family. They're going to
be raised with with sisters and a mom and a
dad that have volunteered to be their parents that are
(24:49):
from a local church in Malawi and a Christian church
by the way. They're educated, they're clothed, they're fed, and
they're in a home that is safe that is now
going to be blown down by the seasonal weather and destroyed.
If you can take part, go to Orphanshade dot com.
(25:09):
In the donate button you'll see a dropdown menu build
a house. It's House number six. You want that. If
you're in the Panama City area and listening and you
want to give, there's a two thousand dollars challenge sitting there.
If we raise two thousand dollars from listeners in Panama
City in the next few days, someone's going to give
a two thousand dollars gift. They're going to match it.
(25:32):
For the Leon County Tallahassee Capital City area, we have
a five thousand dollars offer for a private one hour
concert with Marvin Goldstein. He's a world renowned concert pianist,
recording artist and what a wonderful man. And he is
offering an hour of a private concert to the first
five thousand dollars or more gift for home number six
(25:54):
if you live or work in the surrounding area in
and around the surrounding area of Leon County. All right,
So what you do is you if you want to
give to those, if you're wanting to give to the
Panama City challenge, you put House number six PC challenge.
And if you give the first gift of five thousand
dollars or more, I'll know who you are and well you'll,
(26:16):
uh you'll you'll get a private one hour concert if
you'd like it from Marvin Goldstein. All right. So Orphanshade
dot com learn all about it and UH be satisfied
to your you know, whatever you're liking is I we've
worked with them before and I know the founder and
(26:36):
uh personally co founder. He co founded this program with
a itinerant pastor in Malawi, Pastor Prince Compona. So orphanshade
dot com drop down menu when you click the donate button,
build house number six, put PC or put you know
(26:59):
w f L a House number six anything like that.
Will work just fine, and we would appreciate you giving
forty seven minutes past the hour. We're gonna come back.
Continue with the news here on the Morning Show with
Preston Scott on News Radio one hundred point seven Double UFLA.
(27:23):
Have you ever heard of something called Jolene's Law? No, yeah,
it's only a handful of states have it. It's nicknamed
Joline's Law after the song Joline by Dolly Parton, which
(27:43):
is about a home wreckord. Now, this story is about
a TikTok influencer who has been ordered to pay one
point seven five million dollars for allegedly destroying her manager's
(28:05):
marriage under the Jolene Law of North Carolina. Lady named
Brene Canard has nearly three million TikTok followers and allegedly
seduced her manager, a guy named Tim Montague, and the
ex wife said, I'm not having any of this, so
(28:30):
she filed a lawsuit and proved to a jury that
Brene was in fact a home wrecker. Under the law,
the plaintiff has to prove they are in a loving marriage.
The third party had knowledge of the marriage, and the
(28:51):
marriage continued while the affair was going on. North Carolina,
one of under only six states that have such a law.
The attorney representing the former Miss Montague. When you're thinking
about alienation of affection, you have to think about the
humiliation that the spouse went through. Ms Cannard flaunted her
(29:14):
relationship with a married man. Of course, it went viral,
and my client was humiliated as a result of that.
There was a cheering public gallery. The people in the
courtroom when the verdict was read cheered. Here's the point
(29:38):
I wanted to make, first of all. Yes, Secondly, I
took a look at some pictures of Miss Brenet. What
is this man thinking. I mean, oh, my gosh, she's
(30:07):
not hot. She's not she's no no, no, no, no,
no no, she's nasty. And maybe some of that is
because she's that type of person that tries to get
(30:29):
men to have affairs. I don't know. Maybe that's the ugliness,
you know what I mean. You know, people engaged in
sin they oh And I mean I'm looking at a
picture of her, and I'm looking at a picture of
the former, the missus, and I'm thinking, son, what are
(30:52):
you what? What are you thinking? But that's the thing
about sin, it mind you and trust me, this is
a blinding situation. You know what I'm saying. Oh oh man,
hour two is next. If I passed the hour Tuesday
(31:20):
in the Morning show with Thrust and Scott, I'm counting down.
I've just everything's in a sequence right now because i
didn't get around to making this table. I'm making a
nightstand for my grandson for his little part of his birthday.
And I mean, I've got it now together, had a
(31:42):
little bit of to do, and today is a finished standing.
I've got it down to like im. I think I'm
at a two forty grit and so I've got it
down really nice. So it's poly time today. We're gonna
(32:04):
polly it and put a few coats of quick drying
polyurethane on the inside. It's a it's kind of a
mid century modern kind of end table and made of
ambrosia maple. Look it up. It's a spectacular, beautiful wood.
And then I'll put I had pre cast legs ordered
(32:29):
and so I'll put those on it and rounded it off,
got them matching wood grain on the sides and then
circling around to the bottom. And so it's it's been
a it's been a bit of a challenge because I
don't have like a big, full official workshop, and so
getting it done has been has been something. So today
(32:52):
is a very important day on that project, and hopefully
we'll have that delivered and then I get to restore
the best I can my wife's toy chest from when
she was a child. It's old school and cool and
(33:15):
it's got a painted dog on the side of it,
both sides, and so just making a few modifications a
little more user friendly, clean it up, but leaving the
older kind of paint, patina and all of that in
place so it retains its nostalgic feel. So I'm just
like mister Woodman here. Welcome friends to the second hour
(33:38):
of the Morning Show with Preston Scotti's Ozam Preston cat
Camick next hour, this hour, manly minute and plenty of stories,
including a segment of guests who said it, which is
gonna be a lot of fun. This is a story
that scientists studying existing blood pressure drug called hydralazine or hydrolazine.
(34:08):
It's hydrolazine. I think it's been used since the nineteen
fifties to deal with blood pressure, to reduce it, to
treat high blood pressure, and now normally those kinds of
things historically have been thinners, and I'm assuming that this
accomplishes the same thing, except they have now determined through
(34:29):
testing that this drug also targets a crucial enzyme called
and I can't pronounce it, it's two eighty zero. And
this enzyme acts like cellular oxygen sensor. It helps cells
(34:50):
survive when oxygen levels are low, and it enables fast
growing tumors like glioblastoma, an aggressive form of brain cancer
that resists treatment and almost always comes back. This little
enzyme helps those kinds of cancers continue to grow and multiply,
even in low oxygen environments that that might take place
(35:12):
in the bloodstream. So they're finding that this drug stops
the growth. Now it doesn't cure and get rid of,
but it stops the growth. It slows down fast growing cancers.
(35:33):
And so the question that I've got as they you know,
they're going to go through all of the testing and
so forth, because if you can, if you can control
the growth of it and stop it from growing, let
mean it just wherever it's at then because these tumors
frequently come back, and so if you can get rid
(35:56):
of the tumor get rid of that cancer and then
administer a drug that stops it from growing. Whatever comes
back from multiplying. Well, that's a huge step forward. But
now we're going to get to the ugly question if
it works, will they let it come to market? Well, well,
(36:17):
I mean, let me rephrase that it's already on the market.
I'm one of those that is at the point with
the pharmaceutical companies. I just I wonder if we haven't
in fact got cures for various kinds of cancer sitting
(36:39):
in some vault somewhere, and they're just not going to
let it come out because cancer treatments make billions of dollars.
So I wanted this on your radar and not just
necessarily sow it canspiracy theory into your brain, but so
(37:02):
that you recognize that it is out there. It is
a common blood pressure medication hydrolazine hy d R A
L A Z I N E, and that it is
showing signs of stopping, not curing, stopping the continued growth
(37:22):
of cancer eleven minutes certain cancers, fast growing cancers, eleven
minutes past the hour. What all right, let's stay on
(37:43):
the subject of health. We always like to drop little
nuggets in your basket, not just healthy expectations and optimum health. Naturally,
we carejse Jose and I care. I want you to
realize that this is not just a program that talks
(38:06):
about the news that upsets you, that follows Florida Man
and all of his adventures, but that we are invested
in you feeling better and being on top of every trend,
be aware of every breakthrough that might be going on
(38:29):
out there. They have found, they meaning scientists doing an
eighteen month randomized trial of three hundred adults, that a
plant heavy green Mediterranean diet was linked to lower levels
of galected nine, a blood protein associated with markers of
(38:50):
faster brain aging on MRIs Journal of Clinical Nutrition. Researchers
at Harvard Bengurien University in Israel and the University of
Leipsig in Germany looked at blood proteins and compared them
with MRI scans that estimated participants brain age. Those that
(39:12):
followed the green Mediterranean diet rich in plants, lower in
red and processed meat showed the biggest drop in colected nine,
a protein tied to faster brain aging, and so reducing
galectin nine means dampening the inflammatory processes that contribute to
(39:35):
cognitive decline, memory loss, and neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's. So
what is it. It's green tea, walnuts, and a tiny
swamp plant called manki ma and kai manchi. By the way,
(39:58):
little factoid I learned in the looking into this is
the world's smallest flowering plant. So there you go. It
caught researchers attention because it packs an unusually dense nutritional profile.
It is a complete plant based protein. It contains easily
(40:20):
absorbed vitamins B twelve an iron, and they've linked it
to better blood sugar control, improve metabolism, gut health, reduced inflammation,
and all of that impacts the brain. Now they acknowledge
though manki might be tough to get a hold of
unless you're living out let's swamp somewhere. I mean, I
(40:42):
don't know how you harvest it, grow it, and what
kind of derivative you get from it, but they did
say you will still gain by the green tea and
the walnut thing. Now, are you a tea drinker? I
know you drink some coffees. Oh yeah, I love me
some unsweet tea Okay, I could chug that down. Cold teas?
(41:03):
Oh yeah, what about hot teash? Hot teas not so much?
Have you ever had green tea? Yes? What does it
taste like? It tastes like tea? I was gonna say,
it's like it doesn't seem to me that it would
have a flavor profile. Yeah, I mean, is it? Is it?
There are things that, for example, I describe it as
(41:24):
it tastes like grass weeds.
Speaker 2 (41:27):
Yeah, that's very green, slightly stronger, really yeah, and really
good with honey.
Speaker 1 (41:33):
Well, isn't anything good with that? I mean true? All right,
seventeen minutes past the hour. There you go, just help
in your brain, because that's we feed it here on
the Morning Show with Preston Scott on hundreds of devices
like Alexa, Google Home, Xbox and Sonos and Iheart's Radiozation.
(42:08):
I have an obligation, as a matter of calling, I
feel like to do my very best to try to
convince those of you hanging on to being a Democrat
to leaving the party. I am not lifting up Republicans
(42:39):
as the paragon of virtue. I am saying that from
a matter of affiliation, you will find the platforms of
the two parties to be vastly different. And as we
pointed out yesterday, I shared the words of a black
pastor who talked about how how foolish it is for
(43:01):
blacks to be aligned with the Democrat Party. Now, the
lead research assistant came up with this from Instagram. Young
lady that goes by the handle spill the T five
point fifty. She happens to be black, and she compiled
(43:23):
this interesting observation about Democrats. I thought you might want
to hear it.
Speaker 4 (43:28):
Let's play a game, shall we. It's called guess who
said it? But none of these quotes are from Trump
or any Republican. These quotes are straight from top Democrats,
and you'll see real quick that they don't change for morals,
they change for votes. Let's again, shall we? Marriage is
between a man and a woman. I do not support
gay marriage. You assume conservative, right.
Speaker 1 (43:47):
Nope?
Speaker 4 (43:47):
Joe Biden two thousand and six. Now he pretends he's
been pro LGBT forever.
Speaker 3 (43:53):
Nope.
Speaker 4 (43:53):
Turns out he just waited until it's politically safe. Next quote,
marriage has always been between a man and a woman,
and he guesses. Hillary Clinton two thousand and four. When
public opinion flipped boom, So did she and not out
of conviction, just calculation. Next one, we simply cannot allow
people to pour into the US undocumented and unchecked. Sounds
like Trump, right, Nope, it was Barack Obama two thousand
(44:16):
and five, and now his party calls border control racist.
They didn't grow compassion, they just grew poll numbers. This
is fun. Let's continue. Who said I don't want my
children growing up in a racial jungle. It was Joe
Biden nineteen seventy seven. He was talking about school bussing
and integration. Now he lectures everyone about racism, but back
(44:36):
then he was afraid his children would be on a
school bus with black kids. And in case any liberal
wants to make the claim, that was nineteen seventy seven,
Joe Biden changed. Here's another quote. This one's from two
thousand and seven, when he was referring to Barack Obama
and I quote, I mean, you got the first mainstream
African American who is articulate and bright and clean.
Speaker 5 (44:55):
Excuse me?
Speaker 4 (44:57):
What about twenty twenty Biden? And I quote A if
you have a problem figuring out whether you're for me
or for Trump, you ain't black? Sorry? What next quote?
I voted for the border fence. I don't think we
should reward people who broke the law to get here.
That's Chuck Schumer two thousand and nine. Now he's crying
on camera talking about inhumane policies. Amazing how fast they
(45:18):
switch up. And here's the kicker. None of them have
ever really denounced these quotes. No real apologies, no big
speeches saying hey, I was wrong. They've just quietly pretended
that they've always believed what's popular right now. They don't
evolve out of morality. All they did was pivot for power.
These people don't stand for principles. They stand for whatever
poll's best this week. So next time that they call
(45:40):
conservatives extreme, just remind them that their own words tell
a whole different story.
Speaker 1 (45:45):
Thank you very much, young lady. All I can do
is continue to point out, Now, look, there are all
kinds of problems on both sides of the aisle. I'm
not saying that there aren't. What I'm pointing out is
that at least on one side, there is some reason,
(46:09):
and there's some conviction that is in the at least
with some anchored in something bigger, something more important, something
that doesn't move you know, rhinos have their convictions evolve
over time. You know, the David Jolly's of the world,
(46:30):
the Charlie Crists of the world. Whatever. Marjorie Taylor Green's
going through it in Georgia. She is softening. This isn't
about toning down rhetoric, which she's all of a sudden
now on CNN apologizing or contributing to the inflamed rhetoric
of today. Well, yeah, you should apologize for some of
(46:52):
the things you say because you're loopy. But the principles
of the things that she used to believe they're not different.
But she is. This is an example of what happens.
And so all I'm saying to you Democrats is this
is two days now of just sharing from someone who
(47:16):
happens to be a minority. And this is growing. And
I've been predicting this. I've been telling you about this
for a decade now. The shift that's happening happening in
Black America. Now, it's not happening fast enough. There's still
way too many beholden to the Democrat plantation. But it's there.
(47:39):
The truth is there. Twenty eight minutes past, We're gonna
do quick check of weather traffic news and the big
stories in the press box. Next, tell the UFLA just
(48:00):
listening to Charlie kirk Teach, a young lady who is
very peacefully engaging in good dialogue on immigration, just dismantle
her arguments, calling those who believe in legal immigrations xenophobic.
And he just points out that you claim diversity, but
(48:22):
diversity by definition is division. The words are connected, and
that when you import people from countries and they do
not assimilate I'm paraphrasing, they do not learn the language,
they do not become part of the culture, they do
not take ownership of American ideals or values because we
(48:44):
don't make them do it. We just allow them to
come flooding into the nation. You're going to have a
more dividedation. Let me just add one thing, duh, Come on, girl,
you're college educated. See that's the thing. All right. Let
(49:08):
me take the big story in the press box and
let me broaden it. Just the big story in the
press box is the FBI saying that the shooter and
butler of Donald Trump who killed a fireman injured others
(49:33):
had limited online footprint. And we're finding just the opposite
We've been told really no political motivations in there. We're
finding just the opposite. We're finding, in fact, that he
was starting to move into transgender ideology and personal pronoun
changes and the furries in the whole nine yards. Now
(49:54):
was he doing it for effect? Was he truly one
of them? I don't know. I don't care. Here's what
I care about. Why aren't we being told? I can't
(50:14):
help but look at the progression. Trump came down the
escalator said he was going to be president of the
United States, he was going to make a run, and
everybody laughed. I still remember the scene and Colter, I
don't know if it was with Bill Maher, I forget
(50:38):
the Actually I think it might have been. It was
on one of the shows. And you know, so who
do you think Donald Trump? And everybody laughed Donald Trump's
Because she said Donald Trump's going to be the nominee.
Everybody laughed. She was right. So they spent four years
(50:58):
after he won the Oval office trying to ruin him.
Didn't work. There was nothing there because they lied, They
made it all up. Then they cheated him, thinking he
would grow too old to run again. Even with his
(51:19):
sizeable ego, he wasn't going to make a run again.
They just angered the guy, and he's like, no, no, no, no, no,
no no, you guys stole the election. I kind of
think they did. Remember, Republicans don't really like the guy
all that much. Some do, some absolutely, but a lot
(51:40):
of them don't. The rank and file, the powerful, the entrenched,
they don't like him. He's an outsider and he's not
a pure conservative, He's not even close. He's better than
the rest. Then he announces he's going to run and
oh my god, his polling is showing them and he
(52:00):
could win. And then you got Joe Biden, who's a
doddering old man who's being his pants and getting lost
in the rose garden and brain freezing all the time
on ice cream and he's useless. So you were, Okamala
out there. She can't win, and they realize they're in trouble,
(52:22):
and so they tried to kill him. And I believe
that they I believe they did. I don't necessarily think
active government people were in the plot, but I do
believe that the federal government, in mass and form and function,
in some way played a role in attempting to kill Trump.
(52:43):
I'm not satisfied with where we are. I'm not satisfied
with what cash Patel isn't saying and what he is
saying about that. I think they might have gotten to him,
but I don't know. Forty one minutes after the hour,
(53:09):
Preston Scott on News Radio one hundred point seven doubusla
(53:35):
And there's another silence that's going on right now, and
it's inside the Trump administration on the subject of Ukraine
and corruption. I don't know if you've seen the news,
White House not commenting on a corruption scandal inside Ukrainian
President Vladimir Zelenski's government an inner circle. You remember now
(54:00):
that Ukraine has been the hub of corruption. Ukrainian government
was looking the other way at the behest of the
Obama administration at the request of Joe Biden, when his
son was getting fifty thousand dollars a month sitting on
the board of a Ukrainian energy firm, Barisma. How in
(54:20):
the world does Hutter Biden get that gig. Well, it
was funneling money and it was giving access. That fifty
thousand dollars a month was nothing. That was for access
to the big guy, which was Joe Biden. Well, now
(54:42):
it turns out that the National Anti Corruption Bureau and
the Special Anti Corruption Prosecutor's Office spent fifteen months on
Operation Midas, a probe that included one thousand hours of wiretaps.
And get this, investigators say the inquiry uncovered a kickback
(55:07):
scheme in which contractors for the state owned nuclear company
called uh ener joam entered Joa Tome ener Joatum paid
ten to fifteen percent bribes totally one hundred million dollars
to keep government contracts. Wait, stop the presses. This is
(55:30):
a state owned company that paid bribes to keep contracts
with the with the state. Now, I'll tell you what
that look. I'm I'm no expert, but that looks like
money laundering to me. They're owned by the state. Of
(55:50):
course they have state contracts. What do you mean paying
bribes to keep them? You're owned by this what what?
That's why the state owns something is that that service
is provided directly to them with no interference. There's something
(56:11):
so wickedly wrong about this, according to prosecutors. The alleged ringleader,
timor Minditch, longtime associated with Zelensky, co owner of his
former production studio. Who are we to laugh at that?
We got the guy who hosted The Apprentice, as I mean, right,
(56:37):
ye fyed. Now, Zelensky hasn't been directly implicated by this,
but this is swirling all around him and the White
House has got nothing to say about it. Now, I'm
not suggesting the White House is involved in this. I
am suggesting that Biden certainly was funneling money to Ukraine
(56:57):
because they had the goods on him. I'm absolutely certain
of that. Of course, they have the receipts written in
otherwise of Joe Biden's corruption, absolutely, and that's why we
kept funneling money over there. Trump is trying to broke
her a deal. He can't get Russia to cooperate. It
(57:20):
leaves him in a bad spot. I think the White
House is trying to figure out what to say, and
I'm not I can't explain the silence. It It might
mean something. It might mean that they're just sitting back going,
oh crap. I don't know, but it's not helpful. The
(57:46):
silence is not helpful. Get out there and address it.
Come on now. Seven minutes after we got a manly minute,
a couple other stories to go. Then Cat Camick joins us.
It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott. All right, I'm
(58:11):
going to take this opportunity to hammer home an idea
that I have espoused in a manly minute often over
the years. And the manly minute is about teaching your
son virtues and ideals, values, skills that will last his
entire life and will separate him not just as a male,
(58:35):
but to become a man. And this goes to the
heart of the spirit of Christmas. It goes to the
heart of operation Thanksgiving, it goes to the heart of
being a Christian, and it is considering others first. And
(58:55):
so whether it's challenging your son to be part of
raising five for orphan shade or raising five dollars to
buy a gift for his little sister or his big
sister or his big brother, or his mother or his dad,
teach him to do things with the focus of others,
(59:20):
not to buy something for himself. Now, there's nothing wrong
with earning money and taking money that's available and buying
yourself a pair of sneakers or a bike, or a
fishing pole or a new baseball. Nothing wrong with that.
But this time of year is a really wonderful time
(59:43):
to use Thanksgiving and Christmas as a platform to teach
your son to think of others first. So I'll offer
orphanshade dot com. Check out the project and ask your so, hey,
do you want to do something to donate some money
to them to build this home number six for little
(01:00:06):
kids that don't have a mom or a dad. Pooh,
Come on, the Bible says Jesus said, if you do
this for the least of these, you do it unto me? Right,
tell me this, Who could possibly be more least than
a little girl in a country like Malawi that doesn't
have a mom or a dad where they both have
(01:00:28):
died and their orphans. Who could it possibly be that
is more deserving of help? So orphan shade dot com
and learn about the project and consider having your son
(01:00:51):
help with some chores or doing something or raking the
neighbors leaves. There's leaves everywhere. Right, help out earn five
dollars and that five dollars gift will be blessed by
God in such a mighty way, and your son can
smile from ear to ear knowing he took part in this.
(01:01:12):
Or buying a gift for somebody else this Christmas season?
Hey mom, what would you like for Christmas? Getting them
to think outside themselves is one of the single biggest
lessons you will ever teach your son. And so there's
(01:01:36):
your mainly minute here in the Morning Show with Preston
Scott whed we when we come back. US Congresswoman Kat
camic will join us. Well, first time we've talked to
her since the shutdown ended. We talked to her just
before and now we'll talk to her just after. Get
her thoughts on that, as well as some other things
(01:01:57):
that are in the news. Always a good visit with
uh Florida's third congressional representative. So Kat Camick will join
us next. Always look forward to that visit. Got a
lother sorry, another set of stories to talk about as well.
Sixty minutes is doing a piece trying to slam gun
control down your throat with emotional sob stories. We'll talk
(01:02:19):
about that and six months later, what a difference six
months can make. That more coming in an hour three.
(01:02:39):
Here we go with the third hour of the Morning
Show with Preston Scott. Great to be with you. US
congress Goman Cat Cammick just sent me a note saying
she's running just a little late. Absolutely fine, She'll call
us when she can. I just want to take a
pause here. Some of you heard it, some of you
might not have little blurb there with Donald Trump saying
(01:03:00):
Marjorie Trader Green. See that's reckless. I'm sorry you're laughing
in there. There's nothing funny about it. And I'll tell
you why, because there are people that listen to a
word like that and they'll start making death threats against
(01:03:23):
her because back in the day, being a trader was
punishable by death. And that's the way some people will
view it. See, this is the challenge that Donald Trump
presents people like me. I don't know if it presents
that challenge for you. For some of you, it doesn't
(01:03:47):
for some of you. Ah, that's why we love Trump.
But see the ability to quote, change the rhetoric and
take down the temperature of the country gets really negated
when you got the president of the United States making
statements like that, And it's it's an achilles heel for Trump.
(01:04:10):
If you're on his side, man, life is good. You
disagree with him, you you're a trader, you're you're stupid,
and and and then the the name comes you know,
(01:04:33):
I I don't have a problem with with calling groups
of people and someone stupid for saying something that is stupid,
and that's stupid. It's stupid to say things like that.
It's it's inappropriate for the commander in chief to make
a statement like that because someone and you know what,
(01:04:56):
Marjorie Taylor Green, she's been different for for a long time,
and she has said things at times that I am
one hundred percent in agreement with. She has said things
at other times that I make It just makes me
scratch my head and wonder what she drank with her coffee,
what she put in with her coffee. I don't know
what she's thinking. But when you're the president. You know,
(01:05:20):
if you're the host of a talk show, let it fly, man,
if you're sitting around the water cooler, whatever. But when
you're the president of the United States and you're responsible
for trying to conduct yourself with a degree of decorum
and appropriateness professionalism, when you see stuff like that, When
(01:05:45):
you hear things like that, it sets us back because
how can you then single out and talk about and
criticize the hateful rhetoric on the left, which absolutely exists
(01:06:08):
When the guy who's the president of the United States
says stuff like that, and I think What frustrates me
more than anything else is he's capable. He's capable of
showing restraint, He's capable of remarkable kindness.
Speaker 4 (01:06:30):
I just.
Speaker 1 (01:06:32):
Wish we Yeah, but what did I say when people
were lamenting that they were having to vote for Trump
the first time? We are who we elect? Donald Trump
is a great representation of this country in many regards.
(01:06:55):
There's some qualities in him that are incredible. There's some
qualities in him that, quite honestly, I would expect in
a twenty year old, in an eighteen year old, I
would not expect in a man as advanced as he
is professionally and now politically. I would never expect the
(01:07:16):
immaturity show up that shows up at times. And you
can be mad at me for that, but I'm right,
it's okay, It's okay. Ten past the hour, hopefully, UH
Congresswoman Chemic will join us next here in the Morning
Show with Preston's.
Speaker 5 (01:07:32):
Kotub ufla FM dot com keyword Preston, and we're.
Speaker 1 (01:07:46):
Joined by US Congresswoman Catchemick, Florida's third district. Cat, how you.
Speaker 3 (01:07:50):
Doing, good morning, Sorry for the delay, any mom or dad?
In the Newborn Princes No, it is unpredictable.
Speaker 1 (01:07:58):
Absolutely, it is what's Thanksgiving shaping up to look like.
Speaker 3 (01:08:03):
You know again, having having the baby makes it real
easy for us, like we bring the plates or a desert.
We are not doing the turkey, we are not doing
the sides. We are we're keeping it.
Speaker 1 (01:08:18):
Simple, making making the run of publics grabbing the pecan
or the pumpkin pie and head nine.
Speaker 3 (01:08:24):
Yes, yes, but I will say I will say for
our family Thanksgiving, while there is pie everyone team, we
tend to gravitate towards like the dumb cake or like
I do a total cheat a apple cobbler in the
crock pot, and that to me is the easiest thing
in the world.
Speaker 1 (01:08:43):
There you go. Crock pots are a thing of beauty.
Cat gets there. How frustrated should Americans be by what
follows the shutdown ending and the fact that we are
we're gonna what be looking at this again in January?
Speaker 3 (01:09:00):
I would say frustration absolutely, But also we should be
constantly optimistic and use that to push members to get
the appropriation bills done. So just recap for everybody listening.
You got twelve appropriation bills. You have to pass them
out of the Committee of jurisdiction as an authorizer, get
(01:09:23):
them to the appropriators. Appropriators pass them out, we then
vote them on the floor of the House. We're representative,
and we could come to the Senate and then we
conference them. That hasn't been done in thirty years, and
so that's where you get all these crs and the
omnibuses coming from. For the first time, we actually the
House and the Senate. We agreed on three of the
(01:09:43):
twelve in the reopening of the government, so that is
a sign of hope. Last night I was in a
meeting with about forty five of my colleagues and they
were saying, listen, we're ready to rock and roll. We're
gonna get all of our appropriations done. The scary part
is the Senate hasn't even taking up a bill or
we're on their side on many of these. So basically
(01:10:04):
it's going to be the House leading and we the
people have to keep the pressure on the House and
the Senate, but mostly on the Senate because they're just
going to drag their feet and then they'll stick us
with another omnibus and I don't want to do that,
and so I think it's important that we say engaged
on this and be pushing for a full blown appropriation
season to take place by January thirtieth.
Speaker 1 (01:10:24):
What would happen if the House just dug in its
heels and said to the Senate, just like we didn't
budge on on Obamacare getting subsidized any more than it
already is, we're not budgeting on this. It's time for
us to do a proper set of appropriations. Until you
do them, we're not moving.
Speaker 3 (01:10:47):
I think you would see a lot of the same
kind of gnashing of teeth that you saw in the
shutdown of you know, you had senators coming out of
the woodwork being like, well, but what if we did
a three year And I can tell you from my standpoint,
I was checked my senate colleague saying I will be
an absolute hard no on anything that involves keeping Obamacare
(01:11:08):
in place. It is the Unaffordable Care Act. It is
a broken system. Throwing money at it does not fix it.
And in the House, we only have two votes to lose.
They can't tinker with our margins, and so they know
like they're basically unnoticed. And this, this, I think is
going to be the key going into not only the appropriations,
but then addressing the broken healthcare system. The House has
(01:11:30):
to lead on this because the Senate, the Senate just
they don't have the capability to lead in this space.
We're the ones with the tight margins. So I think
I think the message has been sent and.
Speaker 1 (01:11:42):
Received inappropriations help those of us that may not fully
understand the process. And the Senate do they have to
get to sixty.
Speaker 3 (01:11:49):
They would have to get to sixty in order to
if we have the filibuster in place. And you know,
we've heard that Trump and others have President Trump and
others have said, you know, it's two away with a filibuster.
I am torn on this because it was designed specifically
to avoid rash decisions, but we've also seen where it
(01:12:12):
can be used to obstruct. And we know full well
that not a matter of if, but when. Because the power,
you know, it swings back and forth all the time. Eventually, Democrats,
some point down the road, many years from now, will
be in charge and they will make Puerto Rico estate,
they will make DC estate, they will pack the Supreme Court,
(01:12:32):
they will do all the things. And that's why abolishing
the filibuster is very dangerous at times. But we look
at it and we say, well, hey, we need to
get our election integrity measures through, we need to get
our budget on track, we need to you know, reduce
the size and scope of spending. We've got to fix
all these things. And if we can't get seven Democrats
(01:12:54):
to join with us and that, then we're going to
have to make decisions. And so that's where that sixty
vote thresh versus a simple majority is kind of the key.
Speaker 1 (01:13:02):
Right now, Joining us Kat Camick, US congresswoman from Florida's
third District, one more segment here on the Morning Show
with Preston Scott. Joining us for one more segment here,
(01:13:28):
busy member of Congress, busy mom, busy wife. And with
us here on the Morning Show, Cat Camick, congress Woman,
tell me this what can be done to you talked
about the the unaffordable Obamacare. What can be done to
(01:13:49):
start to move the needle in the other direction to
get a handle on healthcare in this country?
Speaker 3 (01:13:56):
Oh well, I don't think we have enough segments to
go through it, all right. I mean, obviously it has
been proven. We said it back when Obamacare came into existence.
You know, when you hurt from Nancy Pelosi herself, you
have to pass it to see what's in it. They claims,
you know, if you like your doctor, you can keep them.
It was supposed to drive down costs. We know all
(01:14:16):
that to be completely false. It was a lie, and
we knew it then. It's been proven today. So this
notion of we're going to send four hundred billion dollars
to insurance companies, No, that's not going to fix the problem,
especially when people are finding that there's less access, less
opportunities to get with a specialist or a doctor, and
(01:14:39):
nine times out of ten you've got insurance companies making
medical decisions for you, basically going around your doctor saying, sorry, doc,
we're not going to do that. We're going to recommend this,
and we're only going to pay for that. And that's
just wrong. So we need to get back to a
place of a mindset that is preventative not maintenance. Right
(01:15:00):
and foremost, we need to acknowledge that the system in
place is a sick care system, not a healthcare system.
We need to put the decision making capability back in
the hands of doctors and patients, not insurance companies. I
would love to see us get rid of the in
network versus out of network. I think we should expand HSAS,
increased choice, get the price transparency back into it, because
(01:15:26):
if people are actually seeing what everything is costing, then
it puts these companies on notice, like, oh, maybe you
can't charge one hundred and forty five dollars for an aspirin.
Speaker 4 (01:15:36):
You know.
Speaker 3 (01:15:37):
It's things like that. I think competition is the way
to go. There's a number of things that we're working
on right now. In fact, we're working with the White
House on an expansion of HSAS that anyone who needs
that that help to cover a plan would go directly
to the consumer rather than to the insurance companies. And
(01:15:58):
that's something that we're looking at, and some cost reduction
savings element. There's so much we could do, but it's
clear that the system is broken. We have to address
maternal health deserts. Under Biden, thirty eight percent increase of
maternal health deserts across America, meaning women have to drive
(01:16:18):
hours and hours and hours to see an ob or
a gynecologist. I mean, heck, in our area, if you're
in Valdosta or Lake City, you got to drive to
Gainesville to find an ob that can deliver your baby.
It's just stuff like that. It's common sense and putting
people back in the driver's seat and taking the bureacrafts
(01:16:39):
out of it. That's what we're aiming for. And there's
going to be a lot of proposals here in the
next few weeks and months, and we're excited to be
a part of that conversation.
Speaker 1 (01:16:47):
Kat does tort reform fall into this? Is that a
federal issue or is tort reform need to be left
to states?
Speaker 3 (01:16:54):
You know, everyone, I've always talked about tort reform as
part of it, and it is incredibly important, right, but
we have found that typically when the states are leaving
the charge on tor reform, and in Florida we've done
that a few years ago, we need to make another
round at it because it affects all of the insurance elements,
absolutely the home insurance to the car insurance, and in
(01:17:15):
Florida we have been clamoring for relief. And I can
tell you I have talked to my state representatives and said,
you guys got to do something. This is out of control.
That is something that typically I think is best left
at the states because that also will help foster competition
and driving costs lower across the country. But there's elements though,
certainly regulatory reform. You and I have talked about that.
(01:17:38):
That's my passion is really taking on the red tape
and the regulatory bureaucrats that are driving costs up everywhere.
That's a huge part of it, for sure.
Speaker 1 (01:17:49):
Kat, thanks for the time. I appreciate you letting us
break into mom duty and congresswoman duty and husband and
wife's duty and all that. But hey, I have a
great Thanksgiving and don't get bullied into anything beyond the dessert.
Speaker 3 (01:18:02):
I appreciate it. You have a good one and Thanksgiving.
Happy Thanksgiving to YouTube.
Speaker 1 (01:18:07):
Thanks so very much. Kat Camick with us this morning
from Florida's third congressional district. Our guest here in The
Morning Show with Preston Scott. Welcome to The Morning Show
with Preston Scott. And I have to laugh at people
(01:18:30):
in the media that think that Trump is somehow not
able to do the job as president. He does more
pressers in one month than Biden does in an entire year,
if not four years. Trump takes questions until the questions
run out. He'll talk anytime. And you compare that to
(01:18:57):
they shuttled Biden out of the way of media as
often as possible. They knew one part of the big
story in the press box. I haven't gotten to yet.
Now we've talked about the fact that the FBI saying
that there was a limited online footprint with the shooter
at Butler, the guy who tried to kill Donald Trump,
(01:19:17):
and nearly did I think the FBI saying that this
is you know, his online presence was limited. That's that's nonsense,
and it's now being demonstrated. There are there are some
good reporters out there that are uncovering the truth. And
it's not even close and we still have yet to
You remember, I still think there might be some connection
(01:19:41):
between Michael Waltz no longer being the Director of National
Intelligence and do you remember he was the first one
that said, what is this guy doing with offshore accounts?
Will this is now ambassador maybe to the UN or
(01:20:04):
something like that. I don't know what his role is,
but he's he got moved out of that role. Was
that an inadvertent disclosure? Was he not supposed to say that?
But still, what about it? Have you noticed how the
mainstream media has dropped that has anyone brought up the
offshore accounts that this jerky little nerd had. But then
(01:20:32):
there's this Miranda Divine with the New York Post. The
Shooter and Butler. His accounts on right online range from
you know, Google Play to that site called deviant art,
which is probably the biggest or one of the biggest
hubs online for the sexual fetish called furries, where people
(01:20:54):
dress up or fantasize about animal characters, cartoon characters that
are sort of humanized but listen. And so it's very
bizarre because we also saw that with Charlie Kirk's killer
or alleged killer, who was also involved in this bizarre
furry culture. The Shooter and Butler started changing his pronouns
(01:21:19):
today them he did one eighty. From a political standpoint,
as a kid, he was all in on Trump, and
then suddenly he flipped and was violently opposed to Trump.
Was that manipulated? Was that just? Was he radicalized by
(01:21:41):
a group of people on these websites? See this? This
is what I'm saying. We don't know the truth, and
we look. I don't care about his name. I care
about learning what happened so that we can set markers
out there to warn others to be on the lookout
(01:22:04):
for others. People are posting their intentions somewhere. They're telling someone.
It's one of the ways that a mass church shooting
got stopped. The guy was posting and he named a church,
(01:22:24):
and he got stopped with firearms in his vehicle casing
the church. He was taking classes inside the church to
learn the layout of the church. He had issues, and
he was telling everybody. This guy made threats to Democrats first,
then he flipped politically ideologically, and it was all Trump,
(01:22:48):
the guy in Butler. I still believe that former government
officials played a role in the attempted assassination on Trump.
I personally, only thin Get can convince me otherwise. Forty
minutes past the hour. That is the big story in
the press box Here on the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
(01:23:27):
Sixty minutes. Back at it again next week. Sixty minutes
reports on a project imagined by CBS News Steve Hartman
and photographer lou Bob. They visited the bedrooms of children
killed in school shootings to see what was left behind.
(01:23:52):
In the promo, Anderson Cooper says this, they visited the
empty rooms left behind by children killed in school shootings,
rooms that have become sanctuar worries for their grieving parents,
with toys and keepsakes left undisturbed. They speak to Jada
and Chad Scruggs, whose daughter Hallie was killed in twenty
twenty three at the Nashville Covenant Schools shooting. She was nine.
(01:24:15):
It's heartbreaking, absolutely, But I promise you this sixty minutes
will not go into the motivations behind the shooting or
the fact that the shooter was transgender. If they mention it,
they're going to try to normalize it. These families are
(01:24:40):
being exploited by CBS. These are children killed by leftists,
by people with an ideological bent and hate for anything
that represents God or conservatism. I doubt they're gonna talk
(01:25:05):
about protecting children in schools. And people are wondering online.
Are they gonna maybe talk to the bedrooms or go
to the parents in the bedrooms of Joscelyn Hungary, Ivy
Smith or Moragarrity. Those are girls killed by illegals. They're
(01:25:28):
gonna talk to them? Are those are those parents grieving?
Are those bedrooms memorials? So this is journalism today. Journalism
(01:25:49):
today is cherry picking and then exploiting parents victims of
tragedies for political agendas, political purposes, to try to drive
home a message of see if we just controlled firearms,
(01:26:14):
But yet they don't say anything about trucks or cars,
or knives or baseball bats or any other thing that
is used to kill other people. You need to outlaw fertilizer,
after all, they use that to make big bombs. To
saying I wrote in my rundown sixty minutes one hour
(01:26:40):
too long. That's television that is one hour too long.
It used to be something as a child, this is
where my brain was as a kid, as a preteen,
I looked forward to sixty minutes because I loved their stories.
(01:27:05):
I don't I wonder if there's a moment you could
you could just watch sixty minutes. And I bet that
if you just watched hour after hour of the show's
going back from the seventies whenever it started. I don't
know if it started in the sixties, but wherever sixty
Minutes got it start, I bet you can find a
point where it was like, oh boy, there they go. There.
(01:27:31):
I bet I bet you can find it. I wonder
if I asked one of these AI platforms, when did
sixty Minutes go go woke, wonder if it would tell me?
I don't know. Forty six minutes past this morning show
with Preston Scott playing a little tell phone tag with
(01:28:00):
the staff of US Senator Rick Scott trying to get
him booked on the program, talk about his healthcare plan
ideas presidents rolled his out Trump Care. Of course, it's
got to have his name Trump, bar X. Oh my tomorrow,
Seamus Bruner from GAI You remember we put him on
(01:28:23):
the air. We've had him on before, but it's been
a while. Seamus is works with Peter Schweitzer and met
with the President and his cabinet disclosing details of their
investigation on riot inc. Remember that all the money that's
(01:28:46):
going into funding these professional protesters. We'll talk with him
about that. Robald Nicholas Tomorrow, chairman of the National Flag
Foundation and part of the Flag Sojourn two fifty movement
the Flag. It's the flying of the flag for the
(01:29:07):
purpose of drawing attention on to the two hundred and
fiftieth anniversary of this nation. Also tomorrow nowe Jose, Yeah,
it's already Wednesday and Thanksgiving. Hosting some interesting things on
some numbers as it relates to Thanksgiving that's tomorrow as well.
(01:29:31):
Orphan Shade, we are doing well. We're ahead if you will,
but we're kind of falling behind this week, and so
if you can Orphanshade dot com, if you have questions,
just send me an email. I won't reset the whole
thing here. I'll just tell you that we are trying
to raise fifty five thousand dollars for Home number six
(01:29:54):
in Malawi. And this is a home for little girls
that are orphans. They've lost both their mother and their father,
and so a couple volunteers to be their parents and
we'll raise them. This is usually a couple that's raised
their children. They're in a church, a Christian church, and
they agree to become the parents to these eight little girls.
(01:30:18):
Talk about a calling and this is a home that
will last. This is a home that's not opulent, it's basic,
but it provides protection and shelter and a place to
call home for these children that will then they'll be
clothed properly and fed properly and educated. And if you
(01:30:40):
can help, we need your help. We just do Orphanshade
dot com. Click to donate in the drop down Build
a house House number six. If you want to be
part of the Panama City Challenge, just put pc challenge.
If you want to be part of the offer by
Marvin Goldstein and the Leon County surrounding area, it's a
(01:31:00):
donation of five thousand dollars or more from your business
or your your personal account, and you'll get a private
one hour concert with Marvin Goldstein at a time you
choose later. All Right, Orphanshade dot com brought to you
by Barno Heating and Air. It's the Morning Show one
on WFLA. Yeah, we had a lot of stories in
(01:31:22):
the press box in that a lot of various components
to one singular story. And that is the big story
in the press box is are you buying what the
FBI is telling us about the Butler shooter. We're just
(01:31:46):
asking you, So, what do you think about the FBI
update that the guy didn't have an online digital footprint
when he clearly did. There's just more, There's there's a
lot more to this story. And and I just I
sense this is going to get deep. Sixth Like a
bunch of other things, Trump administration staying silent about the
(01:32:08):
massive Ukrainian corruption scandal. That's rocking Vladimir Zelenski's inner circle.
I think they're staying silent, not because they have anything
to do with it, but because they're just perplexed. Now what,
Because this is something that's been floating around for a while.
Biden was paying off Ukraine. They were given money. It
(01:32:29):
was it was money to keep quiet because I believe
Ukraine has all of the evidence of the corruption involving
Joe Biden and Ukraine. Once you listen to spill the
T five point fifty, we played a game of guess
who said it. That was interesting. Gave you some health
news on brain aging as well as ways to slow
(01:32:52):
down fast growing cancers. A home wreckerd got hit with
a one point seventy five million dollar judgment. She's got
to pay that to the uh former wife of the
guy she was having an affair with. That's what they
do in North Carolina. It's called Joe Lene's law. Jolie
Jolie little little uh tip of the cap to Dolly Parton. There.
(01:33:16):
All right, we're gonna be We're gonna be back at
it tomorrow. I cannot wait until then. Friends, enjoy the
beautiful weather and help us out. Orphanshade dot com