Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:08):
Matthew sixteen, Jesus said to them, but who do you
say that I am?
Speaker 2 (00:22):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (00:23):
Yeah, that's how we start Morning Friends, Brandon Lake and c. C.
Winans is how we started the program. I know a
name and yeah, good way to start Friday here on
the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Who do you say
(00:47):
that he is? What name do you give him? Lunatics?
A liar? Or is he your lord? To your healer?
Jesus period? Who do you say that he is? Come back?
(01:09):
Open up the American Patriots Almanac, and friends. We have
got a show today, so stick around and do not
leave us. Ran a little long with the opening running
a little late here, so we're gonna get caught up.
It is the twenty seventh of June sixteen fifty two,
(01:32):
New Amsterdam now New York City, and acts a early
Traffic Law and early traffic law. No wagons, carts, or
slaves shall be run road or driven at a gallop
within this city. Man, they were making rules and slamming
and keeping the people down since the beginning eighteen forty four.
(01:53):
A mob kills Mormon leader Joseph Smith and his brother
Hiram in Carthage, Illinois. Eighteen ninety eight, Joshua Slocum becomes
the first person to circumnavigate the world alone when he
lands his boat The Spray in New Sorry in Rhode
Island eighteen ninety eight, My goodness. Nineteen fifty, President Truman
(02:16):
orders the Air Force and Navy into the Korean War.
Nineteen eighty five, Route sixty six from Chicago to La
ceases to be a US highway, replaced largely by the
Interstate System. It's making a comeback, though, Route sixty six.
Get your kicks en Route sixty six. Sorry, all right.
(02:40):
Today is also National Orange Blossom Day, National ice Cream
Cake Day. Oh yeah, Now I have to say, give
me a regular layer cake any day of the week,
but an occasional ice cream cake is yeah, chef's kiss.
(03:04):
National Onion Day, just don't mix onions with your ice
cream cake. And it's National Sunglasses Day, National PTSD Awareness Day.
M hm. So yeah, there you go. Okay, I'm caught up. Good,
(03:27):
I've got a minute here. Today's show, buckle up. We
got the gunwriter Lee Williams. Obviously the third hour, We've
got what's the beef. We've got the best and worst,
best and worst gonna take a minute, just saying, gonna
take a minute. Good news headlines of the be got
(03:49):
a dad joke submission from a listener, and I mean
so in the next two hours we're cramming everything in.
I've got some un believable sound for you, terrifics. It
is sixteen past the hour. Let's go, let's go, Come on,
(04:10):
let's go. It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott. All right,
there will be a podcast. The podcast will be back today.
Problems have been fixed, allegedly. We won't know until we know, right,
so we'll we'll know, so hopefully there'll be a podcast
(04:31):
available today. I appreciate all the email on the subject.
And yeah, a couple reminders today, Tomorrow and Sunday the
thirty fourth annual Big Bend Model Railroad Association Model Railroad
(04:51):
Show and Sale in Tallahassee at the North Florida Fairgrounds
nine to five Saturday, nine to five Sunday. Ten bucks
for ages thirteen and up to adult kids twelve and
under getting free free parking, ten bucks to get in
great time. I will be there. I'm gonna be coming,
no doubt about it. Don't know when, but I'll be
(05:12):
there if you see me there, say hi, love to
say lo to you. I will have my grandson with me,
make him unhappy. I'll ruin your world. And now I
can't wait to spend some time with my grandson. Did
you know? In eighteen seventy two, Scottish law stated that
(05:37):
no one can be drunk when in charge of a cow,
horse carriage or steam engine. But it doesn't say one
thing about sheep. Yeah, don't understand. It's a ship. Of course,
(05:58):
I can have a paint. Strange laws. All right, we
gotta get going here, here we go. Ready, we're starting.
We're starting right now. It was it was part of
my commentary. If you have not heard the story. Switzerland
(06:19):
is hosting the Women's Euro twenty twenty five Cup starting
in July, so they're doing what a lot of teams do,
getting a little warm up. So they decided to take
on the boys under fifteen team from Luzerne. I remember
a similar story when the US women's national team took
(06:40):
on a boys under fifteen team from Texas. They got beat.
The Swiss team got smoked seven to one. You might
be thinking, if you're not a soccer fan, seven to one,
what's the think of it as forty nine to seven
(07:02):
in a football game. That's a smoking, right, seven scores
to one score. Here's the point. Boys, barely pubescent boys
smoked the national women's team. Boys. Now, let's let's just
(07:24):
say what would have happened had it been men not boys?
Do you understand? You understand where I'm going here? Yeah?
You catch you catch what I'm I'm tossing out?
Speaker 3 (07:37):
Huh, you're catching it.
Speaker 1 (07:40):
Leanne Rhymes, you hear what happened to her? You know,
Leanne Rhymes is forty two years old already.
Speaker 4 (07:46):
Huh.
Speaker 1 (07:47):
She was just a little kid when she started. She
did a show last week and in the middle She's
had a lot of dental surgeries and the bridge her
front teeth fell out mid song. They just came popping out.
(08:09):
She made the best of it, she said, hold on,
before running to the side of the stage, putting her
teeth back into her mouth. Told the audience what was
going on. She said, as you know, I've had a
lot of dental surgeries. I have a bridge in the
front and fell out in the middle of my song.
You saw it pop out. She went on to say,
(08:31):
I usually don't have first in my career. That was
a first, hopefully a last. We shall see front row
get ready for something to fly out. If you catch them,
please return them. That's a pro. On with the show.
On with the show, she went, I mean she was
(08:53):
kind of holding them in the whole night. They're coming
loose and popping them back up there. I mean, I
guess what you use polyodant or something, I mean a bridge.
I anyway, I don't know some of you know about
that stuff. I don't. I don't know how you keep
that in. But boy, front teeth tough, and I know
(09:16):
some of you deal with that, but you still gotta.
You have to applaud somebody that is. I mean, she's
a star, right, She's a big name star, and she
just rolled with it. She wasn't attitudinal. She didn't cancel
the show. I can't perform. She'd made fun of it
and had had a good time, and the audience loves
her even more, I'm quite sure. Posted Instagram on it,
(09:40):
talked about it. Had a girl, had a girl all right?
Twenty seven past the hour, Big stories in the press Box,
lots to go through today. On the Morning Show with
Preston Scot thirty five minutes past the hour, Good Morning,
(10:11):
Good w with Us, Friday, June twenty seventh. You're on
the program. Your calls in the third hour. What's the beef,
Lee Williams the gun Rider? Next hour? Update you on
the story of Patrick Tate, a domiac. If you don't
know anything about it, stick around Big stories in the
(10:33):
press box. Our friend, US Congresswoman Kat Camick. She was
on Fox and Friends, first thing this morning, Fox and
Friends first. I mean she was early this morning. Her
office was evacuated, death threats against her, her family, her staff,
(11:02):
following an interview with The Wall Street Journal in which
she spoke about her topic pregnancy last year. She's pregnant,
expecting their first child. But she had a very dangerous pregnancy.
It was not a viable pregnancy. It endangered her life.
The things that people said as a result of the
(11:24):
interview referring to this pregnancy, too bad. This one wasn't
ectopic as well. I wish you would have been left
to bleed to death in a hospital bed in your
last moments of life. Perhaps you would have had clarity
as to the fact that the end of your road
was the end result of your insane ideology. Sick people.
(11:51):
Now she is anti abortion, but she does believe in
the option for rape incest in life of the mother.
A lot of people share that view. She is a
national legislator, she is not a state legislator. There are
people that said she voted for the six week ban
(12:13):
in Florida. She has nothing to do with the six
week ban in Florida. She thinks that that particular law
may have gone too far, that there are things to discuss.
Bottom line is death threats really sick people. Second big story,
(12:35):
Supreme Court ruled six to three that South Carolina did
not violate anyone's rights when it excluded planned parenthood from
its medicaid program. That is huge because the Supreme Court
has now ruled that states can exclude planned parenthood from
(12:56):
any funding. Huge ruling huge. Neil Gorsich wrote the majority opinion.
But it was six to three. You can probably guess
who the three are. Iran doing exactly what Iran was
(13:18):
going to do. First of all, it is confirmed that, yeah,
the damage was pretty big. There's video showing literally what happened,
how the bombs worked. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs said,
(13:40):
every single bomb did its job exactly as it was
supposed to. Exactly on target, exactly what they had planned.
Iran is performing mass arrests and executions around the country.
(14:01):
As of right now, the Human rights activist News Agency
said seven hundred and five have been arrested on political
or security related charges. Some executions have already been carried out,
claiming that they were spies for the Masad or what
have you. There may have been spies for the Massad,
(14:21):
don't know. Iran is the leadership of Iran is in
is in a precarious spot and they are right now
doing exactly what snakes do. They're recoiling and tightening the
(14:41):
grip on what power they have left. It would not
take much to topple the Supreme Leader and the iatolas.
So we'll see. Forty minutes past the hour, you must
hear what is next on the Morning Show with Preston's Guy.
Speaker 5 (15:03):
Good morning, and welcome to the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 1 (15:12):
All right, I'm just gonna let you listen to this
exchange US Congressman Brandon gill with I think it's Shawn
doctor Sean Harper USC. He's provosted Southern cal and I
just want you to listen.
Speaker 6 (15:34):
Do you believe that America should be a colorblind society. I,
for instance, should people be treated differently based on their race?
It's just a yes or no question. It's not a
yes or no question. It's it's no question.
Speaker 7 (15:49):
It is a as I said in the beginning of
my testimony, was done right by indigenous peoples, by black people,
by Asian American and Pacific.
Speaker 6 (16:00):
Islander people be treated differently based on their race, Yes
or no.
Speaker 7 (16:05):
People should receive the services and the support and the
remedies that.
Speaker 6 (16:09):
You're into to them. That they should be treated differently
based on their race.
Speaker 7 (16:12):
They should receive the remedies that are owed to them
because of the systemic racism you believe.
Speaker 6 (16:18):
Do you believe that race should be considered an employer
hiring practices?
Speaker 7 (16:23):
I do not believe that white people are the only
qualified people for.
Speaker 6 (16:28):
I didn't say that. Nobody said that. I asked you
if race should be considered an employer hiring practices. And
you're not going to intimidate me by slandering me as
a racist. You're also I did not call you a racist.
You're not going to intimidate me. I called your question
it's a yes or no question. Should race be considered
an employer hiring practices.
Speaker 7 (16:47):
Yes or no, I believe that diversity ought to be
considered as companies and other organizations attempt.
Speaker 6 (16:55):
Their customers and our country. I'll take that as a yes.
Which race you think should be preferred? I do not
think that a single race should be preferred. You just
you just said that you believe that race should be
considered an employer hiring practices.
Speaker 7 (17:10):
I there's going to be a transcript of this hearing.
I didn't say that in that way. Okay, why why
don't you explain what you believe? What I and what
I believe is that the demographic composition of workplaces Military
Congress ought to reflect the diversity of the ration of a.
Speaker 6 (17:31):
Meraphic composition racial demographic?
Speaker 8 (17:34):
Is that?
Speaker 1 (17:34):
Is that what you're saying racial gender?
Speaker 6 (17:37):
Okay, so race should be a factor in employer hiring practices. Yeah,
that that's what you're saying, Is it not?
Speaker 7 (17:44):
Organizations ought to attempt to match the diversity of prop
been around the question.
Speaker 1 (17:49):
No, I am answering quite straightforward.
Speaker 6 (17:52):
Which races are preferred?
Speaker 1 (17:57):
I don't. I already told you I don't have a
single just.
Speaker 6 (18:01):
Told me that you believe that the demograph. The racial
demographic makeup should be taken into account in hiring practices.
Speaker 7 (18:07):
And it should be reflected in all levels of companies
and other organizations.
Speaker 6 (18:12):
Let's let's talk about college admissions. If two different children
are applying for college, Let's say one is white and
one is black, and there's one slot available, should they
evaluate be evaluated based on the same objective criteria test scores?
Speaker 1 (18:28):
For instance, are you familiar with holistic admissions?
Speaker 6 (18:31):
Should they be held to the same standards regarding test scores?
I am a proponent of holistic admissions, yes or no question? Yeah, no,
I can't answer that question for you as a proponent
of holistic admissions.
Speaker 1 (18:47):
This is a guy who's in leadership at Southern cal
University who happens to be black, who cannot let it go.
This is This is a beautiful example of the rule
of diminished expectations. There are certain demographics that simply just
(19:10):
cannot achieve. Therefore they must be given preferential treatment in
any and all things except the NFL the NBA. I'm
(19:33):
just saying, they are not many that look like the
majority of this country in the NBA. But see, we
don't care. I use that as an example to point
out the hypocrisy of the nonsense of this continued meaning
(20:00):
of races of people they cannot achieve because they are
fill in the black. But yet the rule that they're
trying to establish, he said, all companies, all businesses, all organizations.
Well he doesn't mean.
Speaker 3 (20:17):
That, that's just not true.
Speaker 1 (20:28):
I just I wanted you to hear how hard he
worked to avoid answering direct questions and to cling to
this absurd notion of preferential treatment based purely on the
race of someone on their skin color. Perhaps forty seven
(20:51):
minutes past the hour, I told you more from the newsdesk. Next,
(21:11):
all right, the news desk just some other stories we
just have to fit in, and so I'm fitting them
in here. Eighteen year old kid who stabbed He stabbed.
Speaker 2 (21:28):
A young man.
Speaker 1 (21:31):
In a track meet in Frisco, Texas, Carmelo Anthony, seventeen.
A grand jury has returned a first degree murder indictment.
So all of the bullying and all of the tactics
(21:52):
by the defense and the family did not dissuade the
grand jury. The defense is out there saying that we'll
see we think that there's a reasonable case to be
made for self defense. Whatever you say, boss. He went
(22:18):
into an opponent's track tent where other where another team was.
One of the kids said you need to leave. Anthony
said to him, it has been corroborated. Admitted to the
event is on tape. Touch me and see what happens.
(22:38):
He was pushed as in leave, He was not threatened,
he was not hit, and he pulled out a knife
and stabbed the kid and killed him. What's happened here
is the downside of the go fundme stuff that's out there.
(23:03):
This has been this case has been race baiting at
its worst. We'll let the court settle it, he admitted,
not alleged. I did it. I stabbed him. Okay Bross
a young man with a very bad complexion indicted earlier
(23:28):
this month in connection with the car bombing outside the
California fertility clinic. Remember that this is connected to a
group that believes that humans are evil and shouldn't exist.
I guess, and we don't need to have more of them,
and so they decided to bomb this fertility clinic. Well,
(23:48):
a guy who was allegedly involved was arrested has been
found unresponsive in his jail. Cell I don't know if
his bad complexion caused him to offer himself because he
really had a bad complexion, I mean, poor guy, my goodness,
gracious Asian kid. Or perhaps he was living, forgive the expression,
(24:19):
living his beliefs that humanity's a problem, and so he
just reduced the number by one. And then finally John Katzimatitis,
he is the CEO of a grocery chain called Gristetties.
He said, if Zoe Ran Mamdani wins the mayoral race,
(24:42):
he's shutting down his grocery stores. Guy's a billionaire ceo,
he said. I'm not having any of this, So be careful,
New York City, Be careful what you vote for. M
same decisions will be made in communities large and small
(25:03):
throughout this nation over the years. All Right, We've got
the second hour coming up next Lee Williams the gun Writer.
You can read his work the latest piece thegun Writer
dot substack dot com in preparation to our visit next
here on the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Known as
the gun Writer. His work is found at the gun
(25:26):
Writer dot substack dot com. You can subscribe and get
his columns, investigated pieces sent directly to your email box,
and it's as simple as just going to the website
and he's Lee Williams. Good morning, Lee, how are you?
Speaker 9 (25:42):
Good morning? I'm doing well. How are you, sir?
Speaker 1 (25:44):
I am doing great. You and I both are compared
to Patrick Tate Adomiak. Let's catch everybody up who is
Tate and tell us about his life, what he was doing,
what he was involved in before he came into the
crosshairs of the ATF.
Speaker 9 (26:04):
Kate was a Navy E six. He was their version
of an MP and military policeman. He had been accepted
to go to Seal school as an officer. He had
a degree, has a degree, and he was going to
go to basic bugs as a seal officer. Just getting
there is amazing. In the meantime, he had another life
(26:28):
where he had a website where he sold military surplus.
I'm not talking guns, I'm talking gun parts, and that
was thriving. He would buy junk basically the way I
look at it and sell it. Guys would buy parts
for their guns. The ATF got a tip that he
was selling all kinds of illegal stuff, so they hit
his house nine separate law enforcement agencies. They didn't find
(26:52):
a damn thing. Illegal. So they bring in this kid
the first time you were testified in court ate everything illegal, illegally.
Took a RPGs that he'd bought Rotha Republican ad launchers
that he had bought at some Darren, California. They were
dub they had never fired a rocket. They were made
(27:14):
for training. He paid a hundred bucks for him. They
turned those into rockets. He had a toy submachine gun,
a toy you can buy one right now and have
it sent your home out of Spain. They made that
into a machine gun. I mean, they just went absolutely crazy.
I think at this point in their career the ATF
was tired of looking like buffoons for trusting their wrong informants,
(27:38):
which they did. In this case, Tait was the prosekers
wanted him sentenced to thirty years, but Q and A
I'm sorry, a special agent, a senior special agent, Daniel Kelly,
who was hired by his defense team, talked about a
ten year so he was only sentenced to twenty years
in prison. He's on his fourth year right now, prison
(28:00):
up in New Jersey. I got to tell you, I've
been doing this for a long time. I've never talked
to anybody who has eaten that much time that did
not do anything wrong. And I tell you, brother, I've
gone through everything that he's done. There's not a crime there.
Speaker 1 (28:17):
You've literally searched out and found everything that was in
the ATF's case and shown that all of those items
are available for purchase legally online in stores in secondhand
marts all over the country right now.
Speaker 9 (28:37):
Yeah, And some of them were very high dollar items.
These were not items yet for sale. These were items
you had in a safe like mac ten the fires
from an open bolt, semi automatically. If you want on
right now, presson. You're gonna pay about six to seven
grand for that. He had several of those, which, of
course the idiot from the ATF called machine guns. He
(28:59):
had and seventy seven flat pieces of metal that were cut,
but they were flat pieces of metal that needed to
be bent and termed. They wanted to charge him with
possessing nine and seventy seven machine guns. Again, they're flat
pieces of metal that need to be bent and tooled,
and I don't know what to make them many machine guns.
(29:21):
That's what our great guy Dan O'Kelly was able to
talk to Judge out of doing, thus saving him ten
years in prison. Now I interviewed Dan O'Kelly. He's spent
twenty four years in the ATF as a senior official.
I mean he joined in ninety eight having been a
(29:43):
cop for ten years. Ran the ATF in Delaware, ran
the Atlanta Tampa Field Division. Was a hell of an
instructor in the National Academy, wrote a technology course for
ATF personnel, which they're still using. This is the guy
that the defense brought in. This is the guy that
the prosecution wouldn't allow to testify except for those nine
(30:07):
and some flat piece of metal they wanted to call
machine guns. This is the guy that got him ten years.
And I asked him, I said, should a Domiak be
in prison? He said no, No, I mean did the
ATF covet forerjury? And he basically said yes.
Speaker 1 (30:26):
Hang on right there, Lee Williams with us. We're going
to pick up on the story. I'm bringing this to
you because we have to keep talking about this. We
have to keep this circulating, we have to keep the
pressure on the federal government. I am continuing to send
information to Senator Rick Scott and members of Congress that
(30:50):
we know through this program ten past The Hour More
with Lee Williams. Next in the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 5 (31:01):
The Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 1 (31:09):
With Lee Williams. Thegunwriter dot substack dot com is where
you find the work. There's all kinds of articles here
on the young man. We're talking about Patrick tat domiek Lee.
When you talk about the prosecution wouldn't let him, didn't
want him to testify, referring to retired ATF senior special
Agent Daniel O'Kelly, Well, how do they have say in that?
(31:33):
I mean, how is it that his entire testimony was
not allowed?
Speaker 9 (31:39):
They control the issues, They agreed to the issues that
he was there to talk about, so therefore they rendered
him moved. It was, Oh, it was not the best
defense in the world. Let me say that. Say that
about his attorneys. But he's got a good crew getting
(32:02):
ready for his appeal, and I think they're going to
do if it gets that far. Now here's what I've
been dying to tell you. We're getting movement on Tate.
My boss Alan Gottlieb, head of the Second Amendment Foundation,
said Sunday that that Tate's case has reached d C.
They've talked about it in the White House. What Alan
(32:24):
wants to do is for Tate to be released immediately
and then given some money. I mean, his life has
been up ended. He I don't know if he's going
to file suit or I don't know if the Trump
administration will just give him some money for the basically
four years that he's spent in prison for no damn reason.
But that's where we're at. We've got people in New
Jersey that are having a huge event tomorrow for Tate.
(32:49):
They're setting up there having people come in and sign
papers that they're going to present to the court. You know,
it's taken off around the country and I've never been
followed like this. I've never seen my stories turn out
like this before. I think people are angry that, you know, here,
we've got a kid who basically committed himself to the military,
(33:11):
committed his life to the military, and then he was
taken out by this damn atf What are.
Speaker 1 (33:18):
The you've shared just a fraction, but of what you've covered,
what are the most egregious fabrications and anomalies that took
place in the trial and the sentencing.
Speaker 9 (33:31):
Basically, the toy submachine gun you're buying a toy they put,
they took it apart, they put a reel barrel in it,
real action in it.
Speaker 1 (33:41):
Well let me again, I've got to stop you. I
gotta stop you right there. How was that allowed as
evidence when they took quote the evidence and then cut
it apart and remanufactured it. I mean that is in
my mind and helped me out because I'm not the
sharpest knife in a drawer here, Lee. That to me
is taking a clock and some fertilizer that's separate, and
(34:05):
then somehow pulling it all together, adding a detonator and
say see it's a bomb.
Speaker 9 (34:10):
Yeah, exactly. Well you'd have to ask firearms Enforcement officer
Jeffrey Bodell why he did what he did, because he
got that toy submachine gun. Again, this metal costs you
a couple hundred bucks and everyone sent your home in
a couple of days. It's made in Spain. He turned
that and he got it to fire one round. It
wouldn't take around from the magazine. It wouldn't take around
(34:34):
to the magazine. You had to put one in there,
one at a time. What did he call it? Of
course he called it a machine gun.
Speaker 1 (34:40):
All that proved is that he's a crappy fabricator.
Speaker 9 (34:45):
Yeah, this was his first time and he went completely
nuts on everything. Why because they were sick of these
type of warrants where they have bad investigators who work
in bads the eyes, who kick down doors and don't
find anything legal. And let me tell you something was
playing with his career in the seals. He was extremely
(35:07):
cautious about what he had and about what he offered
for sale. He had nothing illegal because he didn't want
to screw up his career in the Navy or break
the law.
Speaker 1 (35:18):
Lee stand by, We got more to talk about Lee
Williams again, the gun writer dot substack dot com. Making
a difference here in the Morning Show with Thruston Scott
(35:40):
twenty two minutes past. Few more minutes here with Lee Williams,
thegunwriter dot substack dot com. That's where you find his work. Lee,
you mentioned the appeal and the movement that seems to
be happening around the case of TATEA Domiak any sense
of time here do we know how? Because I mean
sometimes the lethargy of the judicial process is agonizing.
Speaker 9 (36:05):
That's a very polite way of putting it. I would
say His appeal is scheduled for September. I hope that
he's pardoned before then. I think he's the buzz around
the certain circles in DC right now. They're trying to
figure out how to help this kid. Getting him out
of prison would be the first step. He's in a
cell with eleven other dudes. The whole prison knows the tate.
(36:29):
If he's in a federal prison New Jersey, the whole
prison knows he's innocent. So let's get him out. Let's
get him out first thing. And I think we're getting
close to that, brother, I really do.
Speaker 1 (36:41):
Is there a chance? This is so egregious, that's the word.
I keep circling back to how the charges were fabricated
out of thin air, how the evidence was even more
so fabricated, literally fabricated and poorly done. Is there any
chanced that members of ATF, namely the one member of
(37:04):
ATF you mentioned, is there any chance they face charges?
Speaker 9 (37:09):
I hope so. I think. If you know Dan O'Kelly
was considered to run ATF, they went another direction. He's
a guy interviewed. I asked him hard questions, whether he's
lost faith in the ATF, and he said, he's lost
faith in the ATF for years because he's seen these
(37:33):
firearms enforcement officers testify about things they knew were not
true under oath. That's a huge issue that is going
to kill you. You know, ATF agents go out and
make an arrest, they arrest the guy, they throw him
in prison, he gets a trial. The firearm enforcement officers
the one who testifies about what he had and why
(37:53):
it was illegal. And if you can't trust that part,
that huge part of the organization, why do you have
an organist?
Speaker 1 (38:01):
Did Dan o'kelly's sense, was there anything that a domiac
did that was even remotely against the law?
Speaker 9 (38:09):
No? No, And I asked him that five different ways,
and no, there was nothing he did wrong. I mean,
he's he's strong. I said, what should happen to the
ATF who falsely testified in the Domiak's case? He said,
any FEO testified to something different, and it's a wilful falsehood.
(38:30):
There's supposed to be the gun experts of the gun police.
He said, they should be charged with perjury and jailed.
Not to mention being fired. He said, this is the
worst case he's ever seen.
Speaker 1 (38:41):
I suppose you could maybe push back on that and say,
the case of the guy in Arkansas who lost his
life is maybe worse.
Speaker 9 (38:53):
Yeah, yeah, another case of someone who did nothing wrong.
Speaker 1 (39:00):
Boy, this is this is the best and the worst
of what you do for a living lee. The best
is uncovering digging. The worst is having to uncover and dig.
Speaker 9 (39:14):
Yeah, well, gladly give it up. As long as the
ATF promises to leave people alone.
Speaker 1 (39:20):
Is there a role for ATF?
Speaker 9 (39:23):
No, not in my opinion. I mean, I know the
Trump administration wants to pair ATF with DEEA, my employer.
Second Amendment Foundation opposes that that would actually give ATF
access to more money and more agents, and they don't
need that right now.
Speaker 1 (39:40):
Brother, ATF has not shown itself as a whole I'm
sure there are individual people within the agency that are
good people, but the bottom line is as a whole entity,
they've not shown themselves trustworthy enough to have the authority
it has.
Speaker 9 (39:58):
No When I was a cop years ago, there were
something we used to especially when I was a detective,
We used to talk to ATF occasionally and they were
good guys. They were all extremely pro gun. There were
fun guys to go to the range with. They knew
what their job was. Their job was not harassing incent people.
They were there as kind of a well we made
(40:20):
this arrest and we caught it with this gun. What's
going on here? And then they would bring in their
experts and they would do a fantastic job. Nowadays, they
want the spotlight. They want to go out there and
commit the big case and find somebody who's doing something wrong. Unfortunately,
they don't know how to do that, so that's how
we end up with Tata Domniacs.
Speaker 1 (40:40):
Yeah, to be fine if they found the right people
that are actually doing things that are wrong.
Speaker 9 (40:45):
They're not doing that unfortunately. Lee.
Speaker 1 (40:48):
As always, thank you, thanks for the hard work on
this case, and hopefully we'll soon be talking about it
in a rear view, mirror sense and repercussions coming to
ATF as a result.
Speaker 9 (41:00):
Let's so hopefully you can have Tate on your show soon.
Speaker 1 (41:03):
That would be lovely. All right, Lee, thanks very much, brother,
Talk to you all right, Lee Williams with us Thegun
Writer dot substack dot.
Speaker 10 (41:11):
Com audio magazine, a journey into whatever is left of
journalism and always pointing out and correcting what is not.
The Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 1 (41:45):
Thirty six minutes past the hour got an amazing social
media story here in just a moment, but first big
stories in the press box. Supreme Court is allowing the
state of South Carolina to block medicaid funding for planned parenthood.
(42:09):
This is a settled case. South Carolina had argued that
no one's rights or violated when it decides to not
give Planned Parenthood any money. Supreme Court said, yeah, it's
(42:29):
your call. Planned Parenthood now is going to face a
loss of funding potentially from every state that doesn't support abortion.
So it'll keep funding in places like California and New
York and Illinois and other liberal states like Minnesota. But
(42:54):
now this is green light territory for other states to
just cut funding, and that is hugely good news. The
ruling was six to three. Neil Gorsich penned the majority opinion.
While on the subject of children our friend, US Congresswoman
(43:20):
Kat Camick, she her family, her staff receiving death threats
and had to shut down their office and evacuate it
after an interview that she granted the Wall Street Journal
was published and she talked about an ectopic pregnancy. The
(43:43):
baby was not viable, was not alive, and it was
a risk to her literally because of the way that
the abortion industry and its advocates in the House and
the Senate have been trying to frame this entire issue.
(44:05):
She nearly didn't get the medical care she needed because
people were afraid of being prosecuted in Florida for violation
of the six week heartbeat rule or law. She had
to literally fight for her life. So she talked about
the story, the need to have clarity on the subject
(44:28):
for medical professionals, and in return, the sickos on the
left unleash their threats, of course, almost always anonymously. But
the FBI is investigating as well it should, and iron
(44:48):
is trying to figure out who helped out Israel in
the United States. And so thus far better than seven
hundred have been arrested, some executed already. This is what
happens almost always. There's a pattern that happens when governments
are in danger of being toppled. They do everything possible
(45:12):
to gain control through fear, intimidation and execution, get in
line or else. So it'll be interesting the special police
wearing their black masks providing anonymity to them because they
don't want to be seen rooting out their own people.
(45:36):
They're cowards themselves. Hey, if this is never mind, I'm
just forty minutes past the hour. You've got to stay.
Speaker 5 (45:49):
With me, the relative you actually enjoy having around, and
not just at the holidays. This is the Morning Show
with Preston Scott.
Speaker 1 (46:01):
Oh, we're gonna get you ready for what's the beef
in a little bit, the call screener extraordinaire, Jose Can
you see it's standing by a call screener software operational lovely? Okay,
this is from not the Bee, Okay. Not the bee
(46:23):
is the companion to the Babylon b The Babylon Bee
is satire. Not the Bee is not satire. These are
all true stories from the news. Read the replies to
this woman who wants to find a liberal man in Florida.
(46:44):
So she posts this video wanting to find a liberal
man to date, perhaps Mary one day, who knows? And
the thread roasting this poor girl is and now she's
deserving of all of it because she's one of those
illiberal women. But this is a roasting of campfire proportions.
(47:12):
Quick question she asked, where's everyone finding liberal men, specifically
in Florida? And this is Kelsey Lauren, it's awful here.
Listen to some of the comments. You ready, young girl
looking for liberal men. Response, liberal men are also looking
(47:37):
for liberal men. So the question is where are liberal
men buying tampons at Walgreens on women's swim team check
the women's bathroom. The term liberal man is an oxymoron.
(48:04):
Oh my gosh, that was good. They're in the arms
of other liberal men shopping for skirts. You can't have
it both ways. You can either have a man, or
you can have a liberal California hope. You like trans women,
(48:27):
that's your best hope. Saint Petersburg, but they're old. She
tried to come back at a handful of these. One
guy writes in their safe space. She said, we love
a man that knows how to regulate his emotions and
(48:48):
doesn't take it out on his loved ones. Good suggestion.
The another reply on the pdf file section on the
Crime Crime Watch website. Those would be Christian Republicans. I asked,
liberal men, better luck next time, though.
Speaker 3 (49:07):
She got toasted. She got so toasted.
Speaker 1 (49:12):
But we've talked about this before. We've talked about the
dilemma facing liberal women. There are no real men that
want to put up with you. I'm sorry.
Speaker 2 (49:32):
You.
Speaker 1 (49:33):
You hate everything that a man is. And this says,
this is not about you know, the the prototypical definition
that that the left wants to throw on manhood. It's
about what a real man is, a leader, the priest
(49:57):
of his home, not apologizing for being a man. I mean,
you want someone Illiberal women are like dominatrixes without the
leather and the spikes and whatever else. The whips and chains.
(50:21):
That's what illiberal women are. You just want someone to dominate.
That's all. Save yourself the trouble. Go spend a couple
bucks and go go do that somewhere. Then you don't
have to worry about being married and have to deal
with the inevitable headaches and come with divorce unless you
(50:43):
find that person that you can hold to a whip
and chain. Forty six minutes after the hour, come back,
get you ready for what's the beef? And something you
must hear about what's going on in England WUFLA. A
(51:05):
little background checking went into this to verify as much
of the information that I could verify pretty easily, and
this is this is just shared on social media, and
I thought it was it was something worth listening to
(51:27):
because it speaks to the concerns that many have raised
across the country about the infiltration of Islamis into the
government of our nation. If you're if you know someone
(51:50):
that truly adheres to the teachings of Muhammad is a
is a threat to this to freedom period end. Ask
an Iranian woman, did you listen to who was on
Glenn Beck's program earlier this week? She's now an activist,
(52:12):
she escaped it. It's horrifying. There's celebrations going on for
what we did in Iran a week ago, but listen
to what's happened to the UK.
Speaker 11 (52:27):
The Mayor of London is Muslim. The Mayor of Birmingham
is a Muslim. The Mayor of Leeds is Muslim. The
Mayor of Blackburn is Muslim. The Mayor of Sheffield is Muslim.
The Mayor of Oxford is a Muslim. The Mayor of
Luton is a Muslim. The Mayor of Oldham is a Muslim.
The Mayor of Rochdale is a Muslim. All of this
(52:49):
was achieved by only four million Muslims out of the
sixty six million people in England today. In England there
are over three thousand Moss. There are over one hundred
and thirty Sharia courts in England and there are more
than fifty Sharia councils. Seventy eight percent of Muslim women
(53:11):
do not work and receive state support and free accommodation.
Speaker 1 (53:16):
They don't work, but they're supported by the government.
Speaker 11 (53:21):
Sixty three percent of Muslims do not work and receive
state support and free housing. State supported Muslim families have
an average of six to eight children, who all receive
free accommodation. Every school in the UK is required to
teach about Islam. The number one most common baby name
(53:45):
in England is Muhammad. This is not immigration, this is invasion.
Speaker 1 (53:58):
Islamis that seek freedom and embrace the ideals of freedom.
I'm gonna say it and say it and say it,
(54:21):
are not true adherents of Islam. People like the Ayatolas,
the leaders of the Taliban, They would view such a
(54:41):
person as a backslider and they would be either forced
to adhere to their interpretation of scriptures or be shot
and killed after the rest of us infidels. We are
(55:06):
allowing this by not just saying, uh, yeah, we're welcome
to come to the country. If you go through all
of the right steps to be in this nation. But
know your view of government and governance is not in
keeping with the US Constitution. Sorry, Sharia courts, Are you
(55:31):
kidding me? Just look at what's happening in the UK
and how it is an absolute representation of the boiling
of the frog, four million out of sixty six million people.
(55:54):
And look at the leverage and control that's being gained.
And now look what's happening in New York City and
in small communities across the country. Already in Michigan and Minnesota.
We have someone in Congress, Ilin Omar who hates this nation.
Why was she allowed to be in Congress? Why was
(56:15):
she allowed to run? What's to Be Friday is next
eight five zero two zero five WFLA. We've got three
lines open call. Now it's time What's to Be Friday
(56:40):
on the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Whatever's got you upset,
We're here for you. The lines are busy, so as
you hear us and a phone call, we are on
a timed delay of roughly eleven seconds, which means as
you hear us wind up a phone call, you can
kind of anticipate it and dial in because the line
(57:01):
will already be free. If you're if you're following.
Speaker 3 (57:05):
You, if you if you're catching what I'm throwing out.
Speaker 1 (57:09):
But we have we have Greg and John and John
and Patricia standing by in that order. Just remember the rules.
No profanity.
Speaker 12 (57:19):
You can do it. You can do it without cussing.
You can testiny, he can do it. And don't make
it personal. If you have a bad experience, even if
you want to complain about me, that's fine.
Speaker 1 (57:33):
Just don't make it personal. Do you have a bad
experience at a business, tell us what happened. Leave the
name of the business out of it. So we're here
for you. Whatever you want to get off your chest,
you just call right in eight five zero two zero
five w f l A. Let's go to Greg. Hi, Greg,
you're up.
Speaker 13 (57:50):
The three justices who were in the minority for Tennessee's
no transcender surgeries for adolescents law. In other words, if
you watch progressive media MSNBC and that ILK, then you
would have heard, oh, this is just a right to
(58:12):
suicide bill for transgenders under eighteen or clear violation of
the equort to protection clause of the Constitution. Well, thank
you to Chief Justice John Roberts. It was an age thing,
not a right thing. In other words, puberty blockers should
(58:34):
be restricted, like alcoholic beverages and tobacco. In other words,
no under eighteen, and the genital mutilations should be banned
until completion of puberty, just like donating a kidney. So
I'm ready to give them the Heidi Klume Tim Gunn
(58:57):
Project Runway Award for Outside the Ending achievement in threading
a needle.
Speaker 1 (59:02):
Thank you very much, Greg. That was I don't know
how long it took you to prepare that, but I
admire and appreciate the time and effort that frees up
a line eight five zero two zero five w FLA.
We go to John number one, which is in fact
online two.
Speaker 14 (59:21):
Hi John, Hey Preston, I got a beef and a
question for you about my beef.
Speaker 15 (59:28):
Now.
Speaker 14 (59:29):
My beef is with professional sports teams feeling the need
to get involved in this foolishness that is the Gay
Pride Month celebration. Right now, the guy who put the
reference to Genesis on his hat there about the rainbow.
That was a great response to that, And I just
(59:49):
got to believe that the overwhelming majority of professional sports
players a that stuff. And my question to you is
does this come from the league forcing it on the ownership?
Is that the ownership on their own that this stuff's
come from? Where did it come from?
Speaker 1 (01:00:08):
It can be both. Oftentimes it is the league that
sends out a mandate and says we will do this.
You can do it in however way you so choose.
Sometimes teams take it upon themselves. It could be either
or if you know, go back to the NFL and
the taking of a knee during the Colin Kaepernick era.
Jerry Jones, the owner of the Dallas Cowboys, said, it's
(01:00:31):
not going to happen in Dallas if you don't want to,
If you won't stand for the national anthem, stay in
the locker room. But everybody who's out on the field
is going to stand. That's the bottom line. I own
the team, You'll do what I say. So, Jerry Jones
sort of said to the NFL, whatever, everybody, every every
situation is different.
Speaker 14 (01:00:50):
Yeah, the gay pride stuff. You know, you don't have
to be a Bible scholar to pick up on God
saying that he hates pride. He's not real key, you know,
on homosexuality either. So it's like a slap of both sides,
Odd's face and the people pre taking in it. Man,
they're gonna be in for such a surprise.
Speaker 16 (01:01:09):
On judgment day.
Speaker 1 (01:01:11):
John, thanks for the phone call. I appreciate it. I've
got a T shirt that says let's make June great
again and it's got a picture of a heterosexual couple
with a couple of kids. Sorry, that's just something I love.
One of my sons gave that to me and it's like, yeah,
that'll work, that'll work. All right, we got another John,
We've got Patricia standing by. We have two lines open
(01:01:31):
eight five zero two zero five WFLA eight five zero
two zero five ninety three fifty two. Look, if it
matters to you, it matters to us because we're we're
that way. We just care. We want a kinder, gentler
version of you the rest of the day. So let's go.
(01:01:54):
Come on, It's what's to be Friday call. Now, we've
got lines open, John on your neck st in the
Morning Show with Preston Scott. All right, those lines are gone,
(01:02:15):
but we will have another one that opens up maybe
two maybe three shortly eight five zero two zero five
ninety three fifty two eight five zero two zero five
wfl A, John, thanks for calling in. What's the beef?
Speaker 4 (01:02:29):
Good morning Pressing. Thank you. I'm afraid this morning my
beef is with you. Brother. Earlier in the week, you
were poo pooing the idea of releasing the sterilized flies
to combat the screwworm.
Speaker 1 (01:02:42):
I that's exactly what all I asked you is where
could go wrong?
Speaker 4 (01:02:47):
Well, I know what scared you when you look at
AOC that girl can look around corners and that little
like something that might have morphed from the program. But
I think she's too young for that. We would have
had other specimens before then. But the screw rom eradication program,
let me say, is one of the few government entities
(01:03:08):
one to go, one of the few government programs that
worked and worked well. And seriously, deer hunters and everybody
need to be concerned because it doesn't just affect cattle.
The deer population was decimated around here for years on
account of it, and it can affect your pets. So
but anyway, keep the eye outs for those flying. I
(01:03:28):
hope now that you know they've done it before, surely
they can do it again now and get it knocked out.
But I don't think there's no problems, but thank you
anyway for.
Speaker 1 (01:03:40):
Straight now I stand corrected, John, Thank you, Thank you, brother,
appreciate it. There you go, just one of the many
stories we talked about through the week. Patricia, you are up.
What's the beef?
Speaker 17 (01:03:53):
Well, I have to say that that John number two
made me feel a lot better today.
Speaker 1 (01:03:59):
Already.
Speaker 17 (01:04:00):
That was pretty funny. But so my complaint is, and
it's it's quote Pride Month according to the people and
the news and so forth in Central Florida down here,
and they regularly during the month of June had special
interviews and things like that, and it's just really nausegating.
Speaker 18 (01:04:20):
It's not as bad as.
Speaker 17 (01:04:21):
It was in the past. But the bad news is
that they were talking to somebody about some kind of
special project that's going to be unveiled during Pride History
Month in October. I can't believe it.
Speaker 13 (01:04:39):
Good on really, I'm serious.
Speaker 4 (01:04:44):
I'm serious.
Speaker 17 (01:04:45):
It's gonna be Pride History Month in October.
Speaker 14 (01:04:47):
Look it up.
Speaker 17 (01:04:48):
I can't believe it.
Speaker 1 (01:04:52):
All right, thanks, well, at least you're laughing and feeling better,
even if you caused me to move into complete and
total depression.
Speaker 14 (01:05:02):
Sorry about that.
Speaker 1 (01:05:03):
That's Okay, I can take it. I can take it.
I'm a big boy, Patricia, Thank you very much. You
know what, somewhere I think I knew that. I think
I made fun of that last year. I think, but
you know what, I'll tell you what happened. I now know.
We never mind, let's go, let's go to Terry. Terry,
(01:05:24):
thanks for calling in. What's the beef?
Speaker 16 (01:05:27):
Good morning, Preston. And I never call in on his
beef thin because I'm not one to complain. I kind
of take care of problems. But my complaint is a
certain streaming service that I use to listen to out
of town radio station and I'm hoping it's Rainbow month.
The stereotypical lispy men in the commercials. Honestly, the commercials
(01:05:50):
are every commercial break there's a lispy commercial in their
or billion pharmaceuticals. They're less than one percent the listy people.
I just find it insulting. Yeah, why, why, just why?
I mute? I mute. I mute that service anytime those
(01:06:13):
commercials come on.
Speaker 1 (01:06:14):
I don't blame me.
Speaker 19 (01:06:15):
So it's Saturday Night.
Speaker 16 (01:06:17):
Live disgusting, So I just mute it, and then after
about ten minutes, I'm like, Oh, I never unmuted it,
so I don't know they're losing a listener every time
they do.
Speaker 1 (01:06:27):
Understood, Terry, I can only say I understand it.
Speaker 16 (01:06:33):
Yea God bless you have a great day in a
beautiful weekend.
Speaker 1 (01:06:36):
Thank you, and just keep listening to this radio station
for manly advertisements and content. Unless I'm talking of romatherapy
in my backyard garden, it's manly. I talk about it
in a manly way whenever I you know, But Pete,
(01:06:58):
you're going to be first when we come back. But
Pete right now is an island to himself. We have
room for three more callers in the next segment, or
Pete's gonna be talking for a long time, just saying
hope Pete has a lot to complain about. Just in case.
Eight five zero two zero five to w FLA, It's
(01:07:18):
what's the Beef? Final segment of therapy comes up next.
Join us eight five zero two zero five to BFLA.
Here we go, final segment of audio fund known as
(01:07:39):
what's the Beef? This is where you call in and complain.
What could be more American than that? Let's go to Pete. Hi, Pete,
you're up, What's the beef.
Speaker 15 (01:07:49):
Good morning. What is irritating me beyond believe is we
are not talking about the true danger this nation faces
from Iran. They are ruled by the Twelvers. They are
suicidal maniacs. The Twelvers believe in the return of the
Twelfth Emom, their version of Jesus. Before this can happen,
the world must be washed in blood and reduced to chaos.
(01:08:13):
These people will gladly die for that goal. If we
allow them to have a tom weapons and missiles, they
can create over the United States what is called an
emp electromagnetic pulse, which will reduce our electric system to
the stone ages. Hundreds of thousands of people will die
over a period of years. The other serious danger, the
(01:08:35):
cheap man's mass destruction weapons are dirty bombs. It is
time to wake up. We need regime change in Iran
to get rid of these suicidal maniacs who would gladly
kill each and every one of us. Thank you.
Speaker 1 (01:08:51):
Let's say, all right, Pete, we actually kind of did
talk about that. We pointed out that there's a reason
why Russia, China, and North Korea haven't given them a bomb.
There's a reason, and you certainly got that taken care of.
Let's go to Jeffrey. Hi, Jeffrey, thanks for calling in.
What's your beef?
Speaker 9 (01:09:10):
Hey, good morning.
Speaker 19 (01:09:11):
Too bad Iran doesn't have the Second Amendment, now, Preston,
I really appreciate the fact that you warned people about
the flags at the beach, and there's a lot of
good cautions that you put on your program throughout the year.
One thing I think that needs to be a little
more expressed in this Florida, South Georgia environment is the
(01:09:33):
alligator in these lakes and rivers. Now, a friend of
mine and I we went out to delete a pretty
big alligator in this little lake we live around. And
I'll tell you one thing. That was the first time
I had been in the situation where we had shot
this gat three times. And I'll tell you what each
(01:09:56):
time we shot this gaate and we still don't know
if we kill them. I'll know sometimes a day or
tomorrow when he floats to the top. But I'll tell
you something. I saw this gator up front close flail
in the water. And if you are in a canoe,
or you're in a kayak or even a small boat,
I want to tell your listeners that this is probably
(01:10:19):
about a six and a half maybe seven foot gator.
They'll knock a boat over easily. To see an alligator
flail in the water is something that should be a warning.
And usually an alligator's not gonna come near people for
the most part. But if as an accident there in
South Florida, somebody's in a very shallow area and comes
(01:10:43):
across the gator and that gator hits their new boat,
they're gonna flip over. So that's something needs to be
a little more increased in regard to warning people about.
Speaker 1 (01:10:54):
Thanks a lot, Preston, Thank you, Jeffery, appreciate the call.
Gotta move quickly here, Mary Anne, you're up. What's the beef?
Speaker 8 (01:11:00):
Yes, hi, good morning. I'm calling because my husband is
a retire from the veteran for twenty years in the military,
served during Korea up through Vietnam time. Thank you of them, oh,
thank you, And just recently he was hospitalized and we
come to find out that Medicare won't pay for his
(01:11:22):
They call this sad medication self administered drugs. If it's
medicine that you could take at home, then they won't
pay for it unless you have part D And we
never bought Part D because he gets Trycare for Life
secondary insurance and that we have a very good prescription
(01:11:45):
plan with them, and like the co pay is just
like thirteen for ninety day supply pills.
Speaker 17 (01:11:51):
So why would we foolish.
Speaker 8 (01:11:52):
They want to buy Medicare Party. But it looks like
maybe we're going to have to buy it because if
the ever hospitalized again, we were only in the hospital
for he was only for two and a half days,
and there was an exorbitant bill that Try Care paid
their portion.
Speaker 1 (01:12:07):
Okay, I've got to go, Marianne, but I appreciate you
calling in and letting folks hear your beef. I've got
one more caller here. I got to fit in, Jamon,
you're up. What's the beef?
Speaker 9 (01:12:18):
Hey, pressing, Good morning.
Speaker 18 (01:12:20):
My beef is with the folks that say their believers
they use scripture. They post their social media posts saying
things about talking about taking care of the poor, loving
immigrants and all that good stuff. And I just look
at that and I think to myself, you know, no
one's arguing what the Bible.
Speaker 9 (01:12:38):
Says, well, at least not believers. We shouldn't be, but no.
Speaker 18 (01:12:42):
One said it never says in the Bible that the
government's supposed to supply all of that. So it's just funny.
Speaker 9 (01:12:47):
You know, a lot of those things.
Speaker 18 (01:12:48):
I look at those things as personal things that I'm.
Speaker 9 (01:12:50):
Supposed to do.
Speaker 18 (01:12:51):
I'm supposed to love everyone. I'm supposed to help take
care of the poor and the folks that I need to.
But nothing in the Bible says Rome was supposed to
take care of it, or any government we're supposed to take.
Speaker 9 (01:13:01):
Care of that.
Speaker 18 (01:13:01):
So I just drive it crazy when people are posting that.
Speaker 9 (01:13:04):
Stuff to kind of back up their liberal agenda.
Speaker 1 (01:13:06):
Thank you, thank you, Jabeon appreciate it. Yeah, Illiberalism has
a habit of asking people to pay for the things
they want to instead of pulling out their own checkbook.
They want our taxes to pay for it instead of
them personally paying for it. Anyway, twenty eight past the hour.
We're a little late, come back with the best and worst.
Speaker 10 (01:13:30):
We're your Morning show, The Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 1 (01:13:43):
Time for the best and worst of the week. Jose
you're up, alrighty. My best for the week is today.
Speaker 20 (01:13:52):
I'm going to be going to Jacksonville to see Vivaldi's
Four Seasons. It's a it's a classical opera concert thing
by candlelight.
Speaker 1 (01:14:05):
Okay, yes, so it's gonna be neat. So you're going
to Jacksonville, Yep, going to Jacksonville. And then my worst
never heard of Jacksonville. I thought that was a dish
served at a steakhouse Jacksonville. Yeah yeah.
Speaker 20 (01:14:17):
And then my worst is the death threats and the
vile creatures that are threatening cat camick Yeah yeah, that's yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:14:25):
Yeah, she's family around here, that's true. My worst is, well,
I talked about the lifted truck dude's driving that. I
hate those tacky and I know it's my taste, I
get it. But where someone lifts their truck and it's
higher on the front than the back, it's just it
just looks stupid. I'm sorry, you look stupid. You do.
(01:14:50):
And this dude thought so much of his refurbished whatever
truck that he parked and took up four parking spots.
I mean, he pulls into a Walmart parks where older
people park, not handicap the next set of spots and
takes up two on one side and two on the
(01:15:13):
other four spots. Thinks it's funny. Then in that same store.
I shared this briefly, an old man yelling at his
wife in the store yelling, screaming, and then later this
week it's raining storm, lights are out. It's not a
(01:15:35):
four way red, which means what four way stop? It's
yellow and red. That means the yellow doesn't stop but
proceeds through the intersection. It's a flashing yellow with caution
and the red side. The two sides that are red
(01:15:57):
stop and wait until you can proceed. What do I have.
I've got a bunch of people on yellow turning it
into a four way stop sign. No no, no, no, no,
no no. That's how you cause accidents. It's my worst
of the week, my best of the week. Joint Chief
(01:16:19):
of Staff Chairman General Dan Caine talking about the return
and the crews flying the B two's.
Speaker 21 (01:16:28):
The crews that attacked Fordeaux were from the Active Duty
Air Force and the Missouri Air National Guard. The crews
ranked from captain to colonel, and most were graduates of
the Air Force Weapon School, headquartered at Nellis Air Force
Base in Nevada. I will state for the record that
there is no beach, volleyball or football at the Air
(01:16:50):
Force Weapon School. They were male and female aviators on
this mission, and a crew member told me when I
talked to them on video the other day that this
felt like the Super Bowl, the thousands of scientists, airmen,
and maintainers all coming together. One last story about people.
When the crews went to work on Friday, they kissed
(01:17:12):
their loved ones goodbye, not knowing when or if they'd
be home. Late on Saturday night, their families became aware
of what was happening, and on Sunday, when those jets
returned from White Men, their families were there, flags flying
and tears flowing. I have chills literally talking about this.
(01:17:34):
The jets rejoined into a formation of four airplanes, followed
by a formation of three, and came up overhead White Men,
proudly in the traffic pattern, pitching out to land right
over the base and landing to the incredible cheers of
their families who sacrifice and serve right alongside their family members.
(01:17:56):
Like I said, there were a lot of flags and
a lot of tears. Commander told me, this is a
moment in the lives of our families that they will
never forget. That, my friends, is what America's Joint Force does.
We think we develop we train, we rehearse, we test,
we evaluate every single day, and when the call comes
(01:18:17):
to deliver, we do so. I could not be more
proud standing up here today of our joint force. I'm
filled with gratitude that I get to tell their story.
And as we stand here right now, our forces remain
on a high state of readiness in the region, prepared
to defend themselves. And one last thing, our adversaries around
(01:18:40):
the world should know that there are other Ditri Team
members out there studying targets for the same amount of
time and we'll continue to do so. Thank you very much.
I apologize for the length I look forward to.
Speaker 1 (01:18:54):
Your yeah and to our adversary. Hi there, America is back.
Speaker 12 (01:19:05):
M m.
Speaker 1 (01:19:08):
Yeah. Good news. Next on the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 5 (01:19:19):
This is the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 1 (01:19:43):
Always look forward to the opportunity to share some good
news where we push everything away and just kind of
take a deep breath. This is cool, this really is
And yeah, let me tell you about a guy named
(01:20:04):
Buford Childress went by the name Hody Hodi was born
and raised in a small town Geraldine, Alabama, served in
the Air Force for eight years, was a farmer for
fifty worked at Lockheed Martin's Alabama Space Center until he retired,
(01:20:25):
continued farming another couple of years before he passed away.
He knew that his time was coming and he had
something he wanted to share with one of his children,
and so he was with his daughter. She said, I
(01:20:50):
was going to the drug store one day and he
told me I've been doing something for a while and
I would like to continue doing this as long as
I'm alive. I said, OK, Hey, what is it?
Speaker 3 (01:21:01):
Dad?
Speaker 1 (01:21:02):
He said, I've been carrying a one hundred dollars bill
to the drug store on the first of the month,
and I give it to Brook the pharmacist, and she
has the liberty to do what she chooses to help someone.
I told her, just tell them it's anonymous and it's
a blessing from the Lord, and so she said, well, yeah,
(01:21:23):
I'll do it. So she handed the bill to the pharmacy,
Geraldine Drugs, and had no idea until her dad passed
away New Year's Day twenty twenty three, exactly the extent
of this gift giving. People started walking up to her
(01:21:47):
at the funeral and telling her stories about the help
that her dad had provided the pharmacy, in fact, started
a fund with this money to help people that needed
medicine and couldn't afford copays and so forth. His donations
(01:22:12):
alone added up to more than thirteen thousand dollars, and
as word got out, others gave as well. I was
(01:22:36):
struck by how a man who certainly did not live
an extravagant lifestyle at all, but even in his advanced years,
but four years starting in his sixties, took one hundred
(01:22:59):
dollars every month and said, let this help somebody else.
I don't know how many Hodi Buford's there are out there,
how many pharmacies, how many? All I know is that
inspired me. It did. The guy paid pharmacy bills for
(01:23:25):
people secretly for better than twelve years.
Speaker 2 (01:23:31):
That is good news.
Speaker 1 (01:23:50):
Let me just say, however, Starbucks got permission to play
clips from ELO's Mister Blue Sky Brilliant. I wish you
hadn't gotten it, but it's brilliant because that song always
makes me smile. It just does. It's a happy song,
(01:24:13):
speaking of happiness. The thirty fourth Annual Big Ben Model
Railroad Association Tallassee Model Railroad Show and Sale say that
three times it is this Saturday and Sunday. Tomorrow and
Sunday nine am to five pm. North Florida Fairgrounds. They're
gonna have layouts of every scale from Z to G.
(01:24:35):
Vendor tables one hundred and fifty of them. Kids twelve
and under get in free, thirteen to adult, ten bucks
free parking. Go just go, take the grandkids, Take the kids,
have a great time. There's probably gonna be a way
to place to get a little sandwich there if you
want to do that too. I think it's fun. I'm going.
(01:24:57):
I'm bringing my grandson. We're gonna have a great time.
So there you go. Time for a dad joke. Where
do lizards go when they lose their tails? The retail store?
That's from Greg. Congratulations Greg, he made the cut on
(01:25:19):
the air with a dad joke. Now, ladies and gentlemen's
time for satire. Courtesy of your our my trusted source
for satire. These are headlines courtesy of the Babylon b
Obama distraught is Trump bomb's cool nuke factory he paid for?
(01:25:40):
Trump announces he has evidence Thomas Matthey is only weeks
away from acquiring nuclear weapons. Millions of Britains drop dead
after seeing strange shiny yellow thing in the sky for
the first time. It's called the sun. Declaring war is
our job. Declare congressmen who never do their peace in
(01:26:02):
Middle East. Last record twenty seven minutes. Second edition copy
of Communist Manifesto currently leads New York City Mayor Race
Hamas claims responsibility for New York City mayoral primary and
politicians Warren ceasefire is slippery slope toward peace in Middle East.
Speaker 10 (01:26:21):
Brought to you by Barono Heating and Air. It's the
Morning Show one on WFLA.
Speaker 1 (01:26:32):
Ah, you're welcome, You're welcome. Hey, we've got a great
show already planned for Monday. We've got guests lined up,
We've got and remember now, next week is a four
day week. Fourth of July is a week from today.
Can you believe it? Craziness July halfway through the year,
(01:26:58):
days getting shorter. Of course, we're going to get into
the meat a storm season, and you know what comes
with that, cold cuts, lots of cold cuts. Oh and
having an emergency weather and supplies and stuff like that.
(01:27:18):
All right, have an awesome weekend. Maybe I'll see some
of you at the train show. Maybe I won't. I
don't know, and we'll be back on Monday and the
podcast should be coming next