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November 23, 2024 51 mins
Thanks, as always, to Captain Paul Tyre for joining the show. If you’re interested in going fishing with Paul, visit his Facebook page.  

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:04):
And welcome to a tight outdoor show. I'm Charlie almost
said an't welcome.

Speaker 2 (00:07):
Back Fred, Captain Paul turn But Grant.

Speaker 1 (00:13):
Fred, you should be more confident about that, you, I'm Fred.
Well yeah, it's like you almost didn't want to admit
it or something. I mean, I wouldn't either if I
were you.

Speaker 2 (00:22):
But still, yeah, I mean, I gotta get this, zapA chest.
I've been thinking all week, Oh.

Speaker 1 (00:27):
Here we go.

Speaker 2 (00:29):
I think we need.

Speaker 3 (00:32):
Got the beat button ready.

Speaker 1 (00:33):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (00:34):
So you know, I've been watching some of these celebrities.
I think we need to sort of emulate them and
start our show off with the land acknowledgment. So let
I'm gonna I'm gonna go ahead and give it a shot. Here.
We should acknowledge today that we are broadcasting this show
on stolen land, once occupied by the and I did

(00:56):
some research on this.

Speaker 1 (00:58):
The note no, I see what you're fixing is saying
no shop, don't you read that, meth no?

Speaker 2 (01:07):
And well, no, no, no, we're no friend.

Speaker 1 (01:11):
No. No, I'm glad I read that before you did,
because no, I see what you're know show it to Grant.

Speaker 2 (01:20):
You know these were the uh uh huh.

Speaker 3 (01:24):
No, we got to have some standers on the show
just stop, take take the phone away from it.

Speaker 2 (01:28):
I mean, the real people, I don't understand.

Speaker 1 (01:33):
It's a good thing.

Speaker 2 (01:34):
That was in like a bold font at like sixty points.

Speaker 1 (01:37):
So I glanced over there and I'm like, what, uh huh, No.

Speaker 3 (01:43):
It's a silly world we're living in nowadays, ain't it
that there? That is a thing. That's what it really is,
really is the thing.

Speaker 2 (01:50):
Where Taylor Swift the other day I had a land
acknowledgment broadcast on her show or on her concert. I mean,
so what they don't seem to realize is that every tribe,
every occupier of land, beat beat up the previous occupier
of the land.

Speaker 1 (02:10):
Yeah. Even even in Native American culture, they there were
wars and people taking things from other people.

Speaker 3 (02:17):
And I can probably name you the different I mean,
there were some cultures that are just paleo that were
here that really don't have a known name for them. Yeah,
that's where it comes from, the meat eaters, you know,
hunter gatherers. But people have been occupying the land we're
standing on here for ten thousand years, and they.

Speaker 1 (02:37):
Keep having discoveries where they're finding older.

Speaker 3 (02:40):
I'm just being conservative when I say, ten thousand years.
But then you had the you know, lady, you had
the Appalachian and the Mikassooki and then the Creek, and
then the then then the the white folk showed up,
and then you know, and yeah, I mean it's it's
so yeah, it's been going on forever, and why are
we beating this to death still? I mean, I don't
get it.

Speaker 1 (03:00):
I had this thought the other night. I was looking at,
you know, how politically correct team names are, and how
you can't do this and you can get that and
culture appropriation and all the things about well that so
and so on slaves back in the day, and so
we can't honor them. And I was looking at it was, uh,
I forget which two football teams gonna play, and one
was Trojans or something, and there was a guy out

(03:21):
there in the middle of the field with a with
a like a Roman soldier Trojan Greek soldier uniform on
and jam and a sowred down in the ground, and
I'm like, you know, okay, so you know what back
in that society in Greek and Roman times, they enslaved
people regularly. I mean, and now it wasn't always of

(03:43):
a particular race or anything like that. It was just
whoever they conquered, they killed and slaughtered a bunch of
people and enslaved everybody else. And that's been going on
dynasty since the don't and absolutely Anyans did the same thing,
and so, you know, but we don't cancel that. It's
it's whatever's more recent. We have to think about the

(04:03):
more recent ones. And so I get it. I get
that people don't want reminders of stuff. But at the
same time, I don't know of anybody that I've ever
met that has been directly want I mean, I get
I get that there's there's generational issues and things like that,
and it's been you know, less than a couple hundred

(04:25):
years and all that, But I mean, if you just
keep going back and back and back, that's been. And
if society falls apart, If our society, if the United
States government falls apart.

Speaker 3 (04:36):
And we come strong, dissitation will come in here and
take us over it, or it will.

Speaker 1 (04:42):
It will turn into chaos, and this same stuff will
happen again.

Speaker 3 (04:46):
I promise, inevitable kind of social hierarchy.

Speaker 2 (04:48):
We have something collapses, something's gonna fit.

Speaker 1 (04:50):
We have slavery in the United states. Today's nature. We
have slavery in this country today. It's the human trafficking
and the stuff that's coming in our that's coming through
the southern border, it's coming in that's going on today today.

Speaker 2 (05:05):
And that is getting ready to stop, I know, and.

Speaker 1 (05:08):
It needs to be corrected. And the thing is is
the person that wants to correct it's the ones that
on the left that hates the most, and he's the
one that's going to stop a lot of that stuff
when because if you drive up the demand, then you'll
drive up the supply. And if there's no demand for it,
then people will quit grabbing kids and doing these things
and shipping them in here.

Speaker 2 (05:26):
Let me give you a piece of good news. Okay, say,
as you know, I wound up going to Disney World
last week, and I didn't really want to go to
Disney World.

Speaker 3 (05:38):
You had to do what you had to You.

Speaker 2 (05:39):
Had to do what I had to do. But being me,
I figured I might agitate a few people. I'm sure
that probably shockshaw. And so I got down there and
it was little chili the first morning, said a little
pull over. But under the pullover I had a golf
shirt that I had bought in Miami at the Trump Deral,
I had big truck letters across the thing. When it

(06:01):
warmed up, I probably wore my Trump sirred around Disney World,
thinking I was going to get into some arguments because
I was feeling kind of bored.

Speaker 3 (06:11):
That's good to Disney World and at his place on
Earth and pick a fight.

Speaker 2 (06:16):
I was ready to. I was ready to let them
have it. It had the opposite effect. I had Disney employees,
what love your shirt man? And I'm like, what is
wrong with.

Speaker 1 (06:30):
They were using that reverse psychology on you.

Speaker 2 (06:32):
I don't know. I mean that there are other like patrons.
I mean they come back fist bump. I mean it
was I think things happened here.

Speaker 3 (06:43):
Well, you're seeing it in uh professional sports.

Speaker 2 (06:47):
Yeah, doing the trumping, the Trump dance, and not just
not just I danced anyway, not just.

Speaker 3 (06:52):
The not just the you, not just John Jones from
the UFC, but you're seeing football players doing their doing
their end zone celebration.

Speaker 2 (07:00):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (07:00):
And so I think you've had a pivotal shift.

Speaker 1 (07:04):
We have well, clearly more than half the country voted
for him.

Speaker 3 (07:10):
The quarters of the country, and then they cheated another quarter.

Speaker 1 (07:14):
But the point being is that people now that he's
in he's going to be back in office. People are
starting to say I can say what I want now
and do what I want.

Speaker 2 (07:23):
Yeah, even and he's out there saying, yeah, like what's happening.
I think that guy may have switched parties. I don't
know what's up with him.

Speaker 1 (07:31):
Well, rise of the day he got where he could
talk again.

Speaker 3 (07:36):
He's had some.

Speaker 1 (07:37):
Y'all heard a lot of the brain issues.

Speaker 2 (07:38):
We have corrected some things. Maybe y'all hear about.

Speaker 4 (07:41):
Joe Yarborough and his wife went went down there to
see Trump and yeah, is going.

Speaker 2 (07:48):
Yeah, what's the name Joe Scarborough?

Speaker 3 (07:51):
Morning Joe?

Speaker 2 (07:51):
And that now they call him Ki or whatever.

Speaker 1 (07:56):
Well, they just want to reach out to try to
build bridges so that they could actually.

Speaker 2 (08:00):
Keep their jobs.

Speaker 1 (08:01):
Yeah, keep their job and and and be part of
the conversation instead of being outside just pointing fingers and criticized.
And they wanted to be part of conversation where he
might actually talk to him. And now they're getting probably
run off of the That just true.

Speaker 3 (08:16):
That just proves that they none of them actually believed,
because you can't tell me. I mean, if I truly
believe somebody was a fascist and Hitler reincarnated, and I
wouldn't never talk to them. I mean I wouldn't be Yeah,
why would you want to if you truly believe all

(08:36):
those bad things that you said about him? Why would
you want to sully yourself with being in their presence.

Speaker 2 (08:42):
I wouldn't god believe the country if I thought that
was Yeah, okay.

Speaker 4 (08:47):
The generous generous did move to Great Britain or England somewhere.

Speaker 1 (08:53):
Well, here's the thing, is a lot of a lot
of what happened.

Speaker 3 (08:59):
We lost quip. Somebody doesn't unplug?

Speaker 1 (09:03):
Is it still? We're still on the air, But I
can't hear myself. Well, a lot of celebrities already have
houses all over the world, in different countries and different
and and some of them have dual citizenships, so you know,
what the heck, they're just doing what what they want
to do. It's not like it's very disconcerting when all
of a sudden you quit hearing yourself. I don't know

(09:25):
if i'd lost my hair and I had had a stroke.

Speaker 3 (09:28):
Or the.

Speaker 1 (09:32):
Little power supply over there for the.

Speaker 3 (09:36):
Under the table, and then how long we got little
just a few seconds? A few seconds? Well, well, we'll
give me a finger when it's time to that one.

Speaker 2 (09:46):
Of the more professional broadcasts we've done, a.

Speaker 1 (09:48):
Whole family friendly version. Then they will be back and
then we get this thing figured out. Have you been
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or neck? Doctor Joseph Miller, d C at the Tallahassee
Spine Center may have a druglest and non surgical solution
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(10:53):
we got a little technicalises was none of you folks,
You were inconvenienced. Inconvenienced by it simply by the fact
that we got all sideways because our headphones quit working.
If y'all could see Fred with yeah, yeah, yeah, who

(11:14):
was that? Fred's wearing fake teeth. Looks like he's he's
looks like he's a British dude on methave some butt heads. Yeah,
you do kind of look like that. I act like
that sometimes too.

Speaker 2 (11:31):
You ever wear them in the court?

Speaker 1 (11:33):
Oh? Okay, anyway, now we were talking before the show.
We were actually having a conversation before the show about
vehicles and stuff, and I had recently gone and trade.
I drive one every day just to get good mileage
and slave gas. And then I drive my truck when
my truck and I wish his phone would hush that

(11:54):
gun that people have no idea when I'm I don't
know how to turn it there you go? Maybe that,
So I just, uh, you know, I think about fuel efficiency.
And Paul, we've got to talking about electric vehicles and
all that stuff, and you'd mentioned something about Trump maybe
cutting out, and I do expect that, uh that he's

(12:14):
gonna well, he's gonna.

Speaker 3 (12:15):
Cut out the tax breaks, some.

Speaker 1 (12:17):
Of the tax breaks with some of those are on
the books for a little while already, and I you know,
I don't. I don't disagree with that, even though I
have we we we have one electric vehicle, and we
did benefit from some of that, just didn't have to
pay taxes. It's it's different when the government gives you
a subsidy for something. If they take tax dollars and

(12:39):
give it to you and say I'm going to give
you this, that's a subsidy. I'm gonna take somebody else's
tax dollars and give it to you. That's I don't.
I think that's absolutely wrong. Now a giving you a
tax deduction, on the other hand, I'm not necessarily opposed
to be can say, okay, if you if this, they're
encouraging you to do something and that is better for

(13:02):
the environment or better reduce reduce this, or do this
or do that. You know, So tax deductions, it's kind
of like kids. You get a tax deduction for having
a certain number of it is tax credit so well,
credit or a deduction is just an expense. I think
you get a tax credit.

Speaker 2 (13:19):
Credit fakes it off the tax you pay. Deduction takes
it off the gross income that you pay taxes on.
So that's a deduction. To me is much more moral
thing to do with government, because all that does is say, okay,
we're not going to count that as the income you
have to pay tax on.

Speaker 1 (13:33):
So if you made fifty thousand dollars this year and
you get a five thousand dollars tax deduction, they are going.

Speaker 2 (13:38):
To pay tax on thousand.

Speaker 1 (13:40):
If you get a tax credit, then.

Speaker 2 (13:42):
You take the tax that you pay on that fifty
thousand dollars, which is what.

Speaker 3 (13:46):
Ten grand eight, and take take it off of there.

Speaker 2 (13:49):
Take it off of the tax that you pay.

Speaker 1 (13:51):
Okay, all right, Well, then depends on how they structure it.
But when we did it, we did take the advantage
that we put solar on the house and we got
an electric vehicle. Now that sounds left wingish, but I
didn't do it because of the environment. I didn't do
it because of the tax break. I did it because
if the if the world ends, I got electricity at
the house. If the grid get the Chinese send the

(14:12):
virus over and shut down the power grid, I got
electricity at the house. And if they can't deliver fuel
to the gas stations anymore because you can't take credit cards.
Because now that works, I ain't still drown the town
and back based on what's going through from the sun
to the car, and we have the ability to do that.
Beuse EM we were well and we have MP protection

(14:33):
on all that as well.

Speaker 2 (14:34):
Does it protect your car?

Speaker 1 (14:35):
Yes?

Speaker 2 (14:35):
Absolutely, So you're telling me if there was an MP
that your electrical system in your car will work.

Speaker 1 (14:40):
Yeah, with the MP protection that we have installed on
the now they can. I can't tell you for sure
that on that electric vehicle. So I mean, but the
point being is is I'm I'm not as worried about
the MP as I am worried about a virus because
I involves I said, direct attack, now a computer virus

(15:02):
or something. So all that said, I do things because
I look at the economic sense that it makes to me.
And that's why electric vehicles won't won't go anywhere. Elon
Musk builds tesselas and he's all part of the Trump administration,
He's all part of this. Here's the thing is that
it makes economic sense for you to do something. If
you crunch the numbers, then I think, I mean, some

(15:24):
people have electric golf carts and some people have gas
golf carts. Why do you have an electric golf cart?
Why do you have a gas goof car? Well, some
people say, I don't want to I don't want to
charge it. I have it on the hunting lease. I
want a gas golf cart because I don't want to
have to worry about it. But you got to keep
clean gas in it, change fuel filters, you got to
service it and all that stuff. Well, I want an
electric one because it needs to be quiet, and my

(15:45):
hoa says I can't have a gas one. There's all
these different reasons why people make these choices, and.

Speaker 2 (15:51):
So basically the freedom to choose.

Speaker 1 (15:53):
So people should have exactly that Paul is perfect, That
hits the nail on the head. People should have the
freedom to choose based on a free market economy. The
government should not get involved in what we choose, I mean.

Speaker 3 (16:06):
Or the manufacturer thereof like mandate.

Speaker 1 (16:10):
You know we're we're having we're having a shoved deaf
fluid and all of our diesel pickup trucks. What kind
of nasty corrosive crap that is your rhea going into
our to clean our exhaust systems and that I mean
that's something that the government mandated, this ethanol, but not
for themselves.

Speaker 2 (16:28):
By the way, get to use the goods.

Speaker 3 (16:31):
The diesel trucks that the Air Force and the Army
and the Navy and all the vehicles that they have
are factory death deleted. That's a fact.

Speaker 1 (16:39):
Look that up. Well, and then we can delete stuff,
but we're not supposed.

Speaker 3 (16:43):
To take Yeah, if you want to get fined a
lot of money, you can delete it.

Speaker 1 (16:47):
And so the government gets so involved in and I
would love, love, love, love love for the government to
just get out of all this match.

Speaker 2 (16:53):
I think that's getting ready to happen.

Speaker 1 (16:54):
Yeah, well, I'm all for it, but I'm not going
to get rid of an electric vehicle or get rid
of myself old doything. We're doing it for other reasons.
That makes so and so you want to So when
we bought an electric car, my wife and I and
my family had moved to Marianna and we were driving.
She was driving to work an hour a day from
Marianna to Tallahassee driving a pickup truck and she was

(17:17):
spending right at thirty dollars a day in gas.

Speaker 2 (17:20):
That's a lot of money.

Speaker 1 (17:21):
Okay, we bought her an elect We bought her an
electric car.

Speaker 2 (17:25):
Can you charge it off of your solar?

Speaker 1 (17:28):
What we do now? But before we did, we just
plugged it into the house and I calculated what we
were burning. We were spending seven dollars a day in
grid power off the electrics, off the electrical grid. So
we went from thirty dollars a day seven dollars a day,
and then we went to solar. Guess what it doesn't

(17:48):
cost us anything we've had that Now, that's.

Speaker 4 (17:52):
A seven hundred and eighty dollars savings just in making
that switch a month.

Speaker 1 (17:56):
Yeah, carpet car payments, lap so so, and the net
effect of that is we're paying two hundred dollars a
month for a car that's extremely nice. We got one
of the k EV six is back in the day.
We've put sixty five thousand miles on that thing. And
you imagine the amund of fuel savings that we've saved
in sixty.

Speaker 2 (18:15):
Thousand dollars a year. I want you to get sa
moon wagon picture so just's got out.

Speaker 1 (18:20):
Holy crap. So so tell me that doesn't make it total.
Now you look at trade in value. Now, the trade
in value is in fact less because as you put
that many miles on one of those and people look
at the battery and all this kind of stuff, and
then it ain't my job to figure out what to
do with a battery at the end of the thing,
when the battery goes bad. The fact is I crunch
the numbers. I have a whole spreadsheet on this. I

(18:42):
mean I sat down and I crunched all these numbers.
It does not make sense economically for someone who drives
ten miles a day, but for someone driving that distance.
Now she's at the sheriff's office in Jackson County and
she doesn't drive that far. So we charged the car
once a week. Does it make as much economical sense.

(19:03):
We keep gas vehicles and I drive a hybrid and
a diesel pickup truck because you know, that makes a
lot of sense, and we have vehicles that we can
go on trips with. You don't want to buy electric
car if you're going on a long family trips on it,
because you do not want to be one of those
that's charges at the dead gun, at the at the
quick charge thing. But it costs more than gas.

Speaker 4 (19:23):
Well that really when you pull up these places like
they talk about and you pluck charge up.

Speaker 2 (19:28):
You got to pay for that.

Speaker 1 (19:29):
Oh yeah, well, depending on what plan you're in. If
you like what you get a tesla. I think they
have a just waiting.

Speaker 3 (19:34):
Somebody home has got one of them outside plugs on
the house and slip up in the driveway and you know,
help yourself.

Speaker 1 (19:40):
I mean I've been I've been considering it gaining We
you know, have a security company and we do some
patrol around town and we never put more than a
certain miles a day on one. We could put an
electric car in that and charge it maybe once or
twice a week. And you know, the problem is is
where you go and park it? And where do you
have a place to charge it at because you don't
want to stop somewhere. There's a whole This is what

(20:01):
it boils down to. And this is my whole point
on all this. It doesn't make sense for everybody, It
doesn't make sense for even most of the people. But
it does, in fact make really good sense for some people.
And so when you get so I hate electric cars,
well you hate electric cars because somebody You think somebody's
trying to make you get.

Speaker 2 (20:19):
One, right, But if.

Speaker 1 (20:21):
But you don't think twice about getting the electric golf
cart versus a gas golf cart, or getting this or
getting that or having you know, the thing is is
if somebody came out with a abutane powered cell phone
as opposed to a lithium eye powered cell phone or
something to go, well, you just push a button and
it internally generates blah blah blah blah blah, which is

(20:42):
stupid technology. But let's say it happened. You know, if
you could see the economic sense behind it, because there's
when you have when you have new technology, you have
something called early adopters, Okay, and then those people look
at new technology and they're the people that run out.

Speaker 2 (20:56):
And get it right away, innovators in it, yeah, and
send in.

Speaker 1 (21:00):
Business schools yeah something, and then there's different layers of
it and then it becomes mainstream somewhere down the line. Well,
what has happened is that some we're still not mainstream
on all this, and you know what we may be
one day, we may be where everybody drives an electric car.
I mean that may be the future. At some point
in time, you got to get away from frost fuels.
I think the hydrogen fuel cells is probably where we're

(21:21):
going to end up going. I'd love to do that
because to me, that makes sense for the environment, and
it makes sense for the ability to refuel quickly.

Speaker 3 (21:29):
I'm for the I'm for the the fusionator three thousand
that you know, the little drop your garbage in the back.

Speaker 2 (21:36):
Of the n I'm looking in. There is an electric
There is an electric drone coming out. That's one man.
That'll carry one dude.

Speaker 1 (21:48):
Here, one and a half of you.

Speaker 2 (21:49):
Yeah, well I can put two of me in there,
and uh, this thing is going to be like one
hundred thousand dollars and I'm seriously.

Speaker 1 (21:58):
You'll have one. Seriously, think what did you ask?

Speaker 4 (22:01):
What have you looked into Sallar powel? Your buildings now
still run with it? Okaycause I don't think. I don't
think that just strictly trying to save on utilities right
now is economically sound advice to go solar. I think
you're better to buy it off the grid.

Speaker 2 (22:18):
It sure was on that car.

Speaker 1 (22:20):
Well here, it's to me, it's a matter of being
energy independent when things go bad. That's the only reason
I got into it. I didn't get into it for
saving money on the utilities. I don't have a utility build.
They've charged me with twenty something dollars stay connected to
the grid, but I run hot water heaters and everything
off solar, and you know, but it makes economic sense.

(22:41):
At this point, we'll be right back.

Speaker 3 (22:46):
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leg or down the arm? Called doctor Joseph Miller, d C.
At the Tallahassee Spine Center and ask about spinal decompression
therapy at eight five zero five eight zero five two
five two.

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(23:22):
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(23:45):
range and the fact that today Saturday and Sunday is
the first GSSF match at the Talent Range of Dathan.

Speaker 3 (23:56):
A big outdoor match. I've been having them here and
been having them in Tallahassee for a long time now,
since we first opened here. In this block thing, yep,
this GSSF Block Sports Shooting Federations plaint works. So you
have to join GSSF. I think you can do there
what you can do at the Yeah, you can come

(24:17):
in there, you can join. One of the perks of
joining is that you get a certificate. At the end
of your first year of gss IF membership, you get
a certificate to buy a clock pistol of your choice
at blue label prices. So basically, just for instance, retail

(24:39):
on a block forty three X is somewhere around five
hundred bucks. Blue label price on a block forty three
X is three hundred and eighty bucks, So you're getting
your money back for the membership in that certificate. At
the end of your get a little coupon and even
if you so if you're not Blue label eligible meaning
law enforcement or military, if you're not Blue level eligible,

(25:01):
you get a certificate to buy one at blue level price.
So that's a big perk of being a member of GSSF,
And as long as you maintain your membership, you get
at least one of those certificates or one of those
cards per year, so you can have one per year
that great greatly reduced price. The way the GSSF matches
work is there's three different stages. You come out, you

(25:25):
register for the stage. I think it's like a fifteen
dollars entry fee per per stage or not per stage,
I'm sorry. Per gun, you decide you want to shoot.
So if you have a let's just say you have
a full size clock nine millimeter, and you have a
full size clock forty five or ten millimeter, and you
have a block forty three, subcompact little ten round or

(25:49):
six shot nine millimeter or three eighty, you can shoot
all three of those guns in three separate categories. You
register for those three and you shoot all three stages
with your three guns and with your three entries into
the match. You get put you get three entries into
a random drawing at the end of the at the
end of the match, and glock gives away at a

(26:11):
big match. The matches we have here, they give away
thirty or forty sometimes fifty depending on how many people
enter the match. Uh, they'll give away fifty guns free,
free gun certificates. You don't get a free you don't
get me. Even if you really don't shoot well at all.
You get in. You get a chance to win based

(26:31):
on how many you know, based on the I understand.

Speaker 1 (26:34):
We are raffling off a glock certificate at this match
as well, so you can go buy raffle tickets.

Speaker 3 (26:40):
And when they're going to do in tallis when it's
in February.

Speaker 1 (26:43):
In Tallahasse, we do it every year February, and now
we're gonna be doing it every year in Dothan because
I think I turnout and we'll tell you next week
what the turnout was, but just hadn't happened yet. But
if you're listening to the show right now in Dothan
or the Wiregrass area, then you can zip out to
the range and the match is going on this afternoon

(27:04):
and we'll be going on tomorrow Sunday as well, and
you show shop.

Speaker 3 (27:08):
You can come out shoot one stage on Saturday, and
then come back tomorrow and shoot the next two stages,
and you can go watch watch, and then you can
go watch.

Speaker 1 (27:17):
Yeah, and so you've got a couple of different blocks.
You can shoot a couple of different the first one
for kind of a practice. But here's the thing is
there are we've got about like under nine bays tied
up out there. We've got there's three different stages and
it will be spread out. But you you can literally
show up, register, go shoot, and be out of there
in a half an hour to an hour at the most.

(27:37):
If that's what you want to do, we invite you
to stick around. We've got Ammo in the shop for sale.
We've got guns that you can rent one of our
glocks and go down and shoot the match with it.
If you don't want no holsters, no moving. You literally
go down there with a with a glock in the
box and some Ammo loading magazines there at the shooting station,
shoot the stage, unload it, make it safe, go to

(27:59):
the next one in the next and do the same thing.
There's no working behind cover, running and gunning and drawing
from holsters. It's just a simple basically a speed and
accuracy drill. It's a lot of.

Speaker 3 (28:10):
Fun, yep, it is there we get the first I
think we've had as many as eight hundred entries or
close to eight hundred entries here in Tallahassee over a weekend.
So it'll be a lot of fun and it's a
good entry point into competitive shoeing, something never done that.

Speaker 1 (28:26):
Y'all come out and see today tomorrow at the Talent
Range a day for.

Speaker 3 (28:32):
Are you looking for a place to buy quality shoes
but want to work with a local small business that
greets you like a friend and still knows what they're doing.
I'm JD. Johnson. Both Charlie and I use the Shoe
Box for all of our work boots, casual shoes and shirt.
Jeff Wildon runs a great store that carries men's, women's,
and children's shoes and a number of major brands. They
know how to fit shoes properly and can even fit
you in orthotics to make great shoes fit even better.

(28:54):
If you see us, we're probably wearing a car heart
shirt and bordered by Jeff and shoes from there as well.
They're located twenty eight twenty South and Road Street, just
north of the Fairgrounds. Tell them we said hello, Hey,
it's Charlie and j D from Talan. Do you have
residential or commercial roofing needs? What about a bathroom or
kitchen remodel? How about commercial construction? If you do, call
our good friend Travis Parkman at Teespark Enterprises. They do

(29:16):
roof replacements, roof repair, and new constroction.

Speaker 1 (29:19):
Travis does commercial and residential work. Has come to my
rescue on more than one occasion, so I trust him
to get it right. Find him at tespark Construction dot
com or call him at eight five O seven sixty
six thirteen forty And we're back. So legal disclaimer, we're

(29:40):
about to let Fred station legal stuff.

Speaker 2 (29:42):
He's leaving.

Speaker 1 (29:44):
I just told you this little stuff.

Speaker 3 (29:45):
He has stayed at a holiday and express.

Speaker 2 (29:48):
At some point. That guy that certificate.

Speaker 1 (29:50):
So you were talking about the fact that people are
calling our newly elected president.

Speaker 2 (29:56):
Fell convicted Felling, All right, so let's let's unpack that.
If I want to use the new slang that when
you go to a trial and you're found guilty at
a trial, that does not mean you are convicted. You
are not convicted until the judge sentences you, and the
first part of the sentence is called the adjudication phase.

(30:18):
In many cases, a judge can exercise the discretion to
either adjudicate you to be guilty or to withhold the adjudication.
There are certain offenses where that discretion has been taken
away from the judge. Dui for example, the judge must
adjudicate you guilty. So if jury finds you guilty, judge
sentences you've been convicted of dui grand theft felony, judge

(30:42):
can withhold the adjudication, so you could be convicted, or
you could be found guilty at trial of grand theft,
a felony, but the judge could withhold the adjudication and
then you would not be convicted. The adjudication takes place
during the sentencing. He has not been sentenced. Trump has
not been sentenced to anything. As a matter of fact,

(31:03):
I just heard on the news today that they've postponed
the sentence in yet again. And then I'm gonna be
able to send it in and then and that's till
after the inauguration. They won't be able to send it
during the inauguration. So he is not a convicted felon.
So are all these people running around out out there saying, oh,
he's been convicted thirty four times, No, he has it.
You're wrong, Stop saying it.

Speaker 1 (31:24):
Well. Another thing is is that that case has so
many flaws in it that it eventually is probably going
to be overturned.

Speaker 2 (31:32):
The question about it. They've admitted evidence that the Supreme
Court has since said should not have been used against him.

Speaker 1 (31:38):
Implicitly said can a president pardon himself?

Speaker 2 (31:41):
Yeah, that's a good question. There's two schools of thoughts
about that.

Speaker 1 (31:46):
So I think I'm sick today J D. E. Vance
as the president, he's going to pardon me?

Speaker 2 (31:52):
Yeah, I mean, I guess you. The more probably the
better route to take, the more safer legal route to take,
is for whoever the Attorney general is, which is probably
gonna be pam body.

Speaker 1 (32:03):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (32:03):
Uh, to go ahead and just drop the case, which
is what's gonna happen.

Speaker 1 (32:08):
Well, that.

Speaker 2 (32:10):
The state case she can't do anything about. And the
president can't pardon himself on a state case anyway, he can't.
Part president can't pardon anybody.

Speaker 1 (32:20):
State his case was in which state?

Speaker 2 (32:23):
Or New York?

Speaker 1 (32:23):
New York but the governor there is not going to
health him out any that's for sure.

Speaker 2 (32:26):
But the mayor might.

Speaker 1 (32:31):
But was it a city.

Speaker 2 (32:33):
It was it was a state. All, yeah, it's a state.
State Charles would have to do that. The governor would
have to do that. I don't think she's interested in
doing that.

Speaker 1 (32:41):
I'm pretty sure she's not.

Speaker 2 (32:43):
But I'm not so sure that Alvin Bragg is going
to wind up being re elected, uh, because he he'll
face election during the term.

Speaker 3 (32:52):
I think that'd be funny if they did charge him,
telling you to remanda self to jail, and he walks
up in there to pair of sunglasses, own cigarette hanging
out of his mouth, you know, the gangster gangster Snoop Dogg.

Speaker 1 (33:08):
I don't think you're I don't think you don't have
enough room in here for the entire United States government
to bring in here. We're gonna have our meetings. Yeah,
that's that's Uh. It'll sort itself out.

Speaker 2 (33:19):
And I think I think that judge is going to
realize that, wait a minute, this thing is not going
to withstand. I've already burned my bridge.

Speaker 1 (33:28):
His whole purpose in doing all that was to help
the Democrat get elected anyway, and that didn't work for him.
So now he's probably regretting the decisions he made.

Speaker 2 (33:36):
I'm sure that he probably is, and he probably wants to,
you know, worm on out and get retirement. And I
mean he's sitting there looking at the popular vote and
he's going, wait a minute, more than half the country
does not like what I did. I don't know that.
I don't want to be that guy.

Speaker 1 (33:54):
Well he's that guy regardless of what he does. If
if he came out right now, I said, you know,
I made some mistakes in this and in retrospect that
went back and looked at my decision and based on
facts has been presented to me, we're going to reverse
all this because it just you know, this is going
to get reversed on appeal. There was some political pressure

(34:16):
on me, and I need to resign from this position
because it's put me in a position where everything is confident.
He did something like that, then he's not going to
be playing golf with Trump or anything. But at least
he could. But he's gonna lose all his left wing
friends and the right wing people already hate him, so
he probably needed to move something.

Speaker 2 (34:33):
Like Yeah, listen, jan Mrshawn I started to sending him
a meme the other day and had a picture of
a guy on there said, a Mexican word for today
is nacho. A picture of Kamlo on there, the Kamela
Nacho president.

Speaker 1 (34:46):
Yeah, so anyway.

Speaker 2 (34:49):
Because he yeah, he's he's he is not he is
persona non grata, I think.

Speaker 1 (34:55):
But Trump is not a convicted felon.

Speaker 2 (34:57):
He is not.

Speaker 1 (34:57):
All right, So that there came from the scholarly mind
of Fred Conrad Squire.

Speaker 2 (35:06):
It's only say scholarly in my name in the same sentence.

Speaker 1 (35:09):
Yeah, That's why I had to pause for a second,
because I'm like, well, I can I can say there's
enough pause. I can go back edit that and put
stuff in there.

Speaker 2 (35:16):
Also, one, as you know, duck season coming up, Disney
World had something for me. I got a new duck call.

Speaker 1 (35:25):
Oh this is a this is something you would get
at Disney. It's a little mask uh Donald duck lips
uh huh so pretty good.

Speaker 3 (35:38):
Probably do a good feeding chatter with that. Yep, that
sounds like Charlie blowed a duck call.

Speaker 2 (35:45):
For real, it said Donald Duck duck call.

Speaker 3 (35:50):
I've heard Charlie try to blow a duck call.

Speaker 2 (35:51):
Before I was walking.

Speaker 1 (35:53):
Hasten at all the way in Mississippi one time, while
I was practicing.

Speaker 3 (35:56):
Nine hours in the whole time, nine hours in the
truck with Charlie him practice in a duck colony of like,
is that it? No? How about this?

Speaker 1 (36:07):
No?

Speaker 2 (36:08):
Yeah, I got it right before we got on the
It's a Small World ride. And I must have aggravated
every obese person in that park because I was blowing
that thing the whole way through.

Speaker 1 (36:20):
Why would that aggravate these people? Fred, I don't get that.

Speaker 2 (36:26):
There was you know, they.

Speaker 1 (36:29):
Don't offend half don't offend most of our country or
clinically including me.

Speaker 2 (36:34):
We are all yeah, And they were at disney World.
On the right in front of me. Was disney World
still woke? They were not. I mean that I didn't
see a lot of that the last time I was
there a couple of years ago. I did. There were
there was a lot of going on, and you know,

(36:56):
and you know, there was a few you know, folks
with orange hair and pink hair and well that's okay
Pierson's like in their eyebrow and eyelid and whatever else.
They had, Uh, not a lot of that, though not
near as much as I have seen before.

Speaker 3 (37:14):
Like I said, come getting to be out of ogue.

Speaker 1 (37:17):
Yeah, that's good mindset. You know, we had a really
good conversation on the break. I hate that we didn't
have it on the air about critical incidence, stress and
things that people were going through, and I hate that
was just I wonder if I could maybe edit some
of that on a YouTube channel. But so one of
the things we were talking about, I.

Speaker 2 (37:36):
Was gonna say, you could just make it a YouTube exclusion.

Speaker 1 (37:38):
Yeah. Yeah, well we'd have to take out a few things. Yeah,
some references to some stuff going on. But you know,
one of the things we were talking about was, and
I like to go back to, you know, we are
we do talk about guns and personal safety and stuff
and what to do if things are happening, and I'm
trying to figure out how we can might wrap that

(37:59):
back around here, something can talk.

Speaker 3 (38:00):
About Well, you know, it's it's easy to make really
bad decisions under stress, no matter which end of it
you're on, if it's a stressful situation and things are bad,
if you get the sense that something bad is about
to happen, and that's we're all kind of born with
that sense, and it's you know, and I say this
a lot. Any there's only one certain way to win

(38:23):
a fight, and that is to avoid it, to to
take yourself out of the equation, get away from it,
whatever else. That is the only sure when is to
is to escape.

Speaker 1 (38:34):
Well, we talk about this a lot when it comes
to road rage. We talk about this when it comes
to arguing with people in parking lots. It comes to
the better part of aler's discretion is just to get away,
walk away. It's tough. Now when you when you have
a certain skill level, and I've discussed this a lot
with people that if you have a level of competence,
it gives you a level of confidence and if you

(38:56):
carry your way that way, and if you will keep
that mindset that I'm capable of fighting my way out
of this, so I don't have to. And it's okay
to walk away from something.

Speaker 3 (39:05):
Yeah, you're gonna if you call me. If I walk
away from a fight and you call me a chicken,
it's not gonna hurt my ego.

Speaker 1 (39:11):
Yeah, I mean, just one.

Speaker 3 (39:12):
It's the bottom line.

Speaker 2 (39:13):
I prefer that you call me that.

Speaker 1 (39:14):
Well, So if you if you are in a situation
where and we talk about breathing, you know, taking a
few deep breasts and calming down autogenic breathing, rescue breathing.
How can you get away from that? Maybe we have
a little bit of time. In the next segment we'll
talk about fishing. But maybe all the circle.

Speaker 2 (39:29):
Band is just as part of our.

Speaker 1 (39:31):
Public service and we'll be right back.

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(39:58):
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Speaker 1 (40:03):
Remember fdi c Hey, it's Charlie and JD from Talent
Tactical Outfitters. Are you in the market for a firearm?

Speaker 3 (40:09):
How about Holster's optics, cleaning gear or apparel.

Speaker 1 (40:12):
We offer all of that and more and provide expert
advice and a one of a kind try before you
buy a program.

Speaker 3 (40:18):
We can even help you build your own Talent tac
ops AR fifteen from our huge selection of parts in
our Armors class.

Speaker 1 (40:24):
You can build a nine millimeter for personal defense or
a larger caliber hunting rifle with optics. It's all up
to you, your color, your style. Come see us a
midway right off ien or call us at five nine
seven seventy five point fifty.

Speaker 3 (40:36):
It's a driving.

Speaker 1 (40:39):
I'm sure, and we're about so anyway, what we're talking
about full event on the break real quick. Just what
just because you put a gun in your hand, or
you go out and you get trained and do that,
should reduce the likelihood of you using force, not increase
the likelihood of you using force. It's all about your mindset, folks.

(41:01):
If you if you are confident and confident and your
ability to defend yourself. As while people who study martial
arts and get really good at fighting, they get they
don't get in fights, and people who are really good
with guns typically don't get in shootouts. It's the people
who run out and buy a gun and think they
have a gun or a kid with a gun and
to go, oh, I'm going to do this and do that.
You don't have the level of maturity to go with it,

(41:21):
or the level of training or the level of confidence
to go with it, then you tend to get yourself
in trouble, which is why we recommend having like you know,
right to bear insurance so.

Speaker 3 (41:32):
You can get an attorney when you need some training, and.

Speaker 1 (41:35):
Get some training and learn and be good at this stuff.
But I mean, honestly, it goes, Hey, do I need
to get a gun to protect myself? I said, well,
I highly recommend you do if you have the right mindset.

Speaker 3 (41:46):
Willing to put forth the effort and have the right mindset.

Speaker 1 (41:49):
Otherwise maybe maybe not. I don't know. Speaking of guns,
we just took a break and jad disappeared for a
little while and he didn't come back, and had to
go to look for him, and he wasn't in the bathroom.

Speaker 3 (42:02):
I was cleaning, cleaning the drool off my face, I apologize.

Speaker 1 (42:05):
Which had nothing to do with you been in the bathroom. No, No,
found it. I found him at the front counter, drooling
over this pistol on the counter and I'm like okay,
And then Jeddy looked at me like, hey, you need
to come look at this. I wanted to looked at it,
and I'm like, I can't. I can't touch that gun.
I'm I'm no, that's that's so tell us about it.

Speaker 3 (42:27):
It's a smith and Wesson Model three like from the
late eighteen hundreds, in immaculate condition for its age. I
don't think it's been refinished. If it was refinished, it
was refinished at the factory factory, and it's fully engraved,

(42:49):
I'm pretty sure at the Smith and Wesson factory well,
with a set of mother of pearl grips, real mother
of pearl grips.

Speaker 2 (42:56):
Still, I don't know.

Speaker 3 (42:59):
Gentlemen got it in. It was out of a state
and he somebody didn't want it anymore, and he ended
up with it, and uh yeah, and it was it
was one of those I mean, it's one of those
that I don't I can look at it and tell
you if it was just the gun in its original
state and original blue, it'd be worth five or six

(43:20):
thousand dollars. That gun's got a guy's name on it.
Look the guy's name up. And the guy's written books
and was a Air Force guy with the that's written this,
authored books. And so not only was it all this
gorgeous beautiful.

Speaker 2 (43:35):
Thing, it was in a state.

Speaker 3 (43:38):
Sale didn't know, No, he didn't. Somebody just came traded
it to him for a modern polymer pistol for a
for a smith. It was an M and P or something.
I don't know. It's one of those Oh my gosh,
I mean it's one of those. Like I felt like

(43:58):
I was looking for the cameras. Where's the pawn Stars
guys getting over there? Yeah, I mean that gun potentially
thirty forty thousand dollars if you went to the trouble
of I gave him some advice, which was to contact
Smith and Wesson get a factory letter on it. It's
absolutely worth the one hundred bucks that you would in

(44:20):
one hundred hundred and twenty five bucks you go on
pay Smith and Wison to get a factory letter on it,
especially if it was all done by them, and then
you get provenance on this thing, and you know that's
a big deal with and by the same token, I
had a gentlemen come in right before we started the
show with three firearms, a Winchester Model ninety two from

(44:44):
the eighteen hundreds, a Winchester Model eighteen ninety four from
the late eighteen hundreds, and an eighteen seventy three Colt
Peacemaker forty five that was manufactured. We looked it up
manufactured in eighteen eighty three, and all of those guns, unfortunately,
in my professional opinion, had been refinished. I would rather

(45:09):
see those guns silver or brown patina with not reblwing,
because the minute you take a gun like that and
you reblew it, you have taken any original finish that
was on it and taken it down to nothing to zero.
So you went from having if the guns had been

(45:29):
original condition, original bluing, and in the condition they were
currently in. You took a four thousand dollars gun and
you turned it into an eight hundred and seventy five
dollars gun and an eight hundred and fifty dollars gun.

Speaker 2 (45:42):
Same thing.

Speaker 3 (45:43):
The Colt Revolver, if it was in ninety five percent condition,
might fetch as much as forty thousand dollars in an
auction in one hundred or ninety plus percent condition because
it's one hundred and However many years ago eighty three
was one hundred and forty years old, in one hundred

(46:05):
and forty year old gun and with any finish, original
finish left on it. But instead it's off the scale
for a collector. Uh, they're not going to give you
anywhere close to the to the ten percent if it
had ten percent of its original finish, that gun would
have been worth a couple thousand dollars, maybe three thousand dollars.
It had zero finished because it somebody had polished the

(46:28):
prancing Pony off of the The cold insignia was almost
completely gone, the scroll and the scroll work on the
the roll stamp. Sorry I'm having a moment there. The
roll stamp off the barrel was almost unreadable. It had
been polished off and reblewed at some point in time.
So it's down to, you know, no collectible value to

(46:51):
unless you just somebody that just a cat what I
call a casual collector, that just wants a real one.
And it's just it breaks your heart to see that.
And then this guy walks in with a thing like,
oh my goodness.

Speaker 4 (47:05):
You can tell that one wasn't.

Speaker 3 (47:08):
Not at all, not at all. So you know, one
hundred plus year old gun that's in this just unbelievable, unbelievable.

Speaker 1 (47:16):
Bash fire and looked like it just rolled out of
the custom shot last week. I mean it's in really
really good shape.

Speaker 2 (47:23):
Yeah, what did they do with that?

Speaker 1 (47:25):
It was?

Speaker 3 (47:26):
It was I guarantee you it was a presentation to
somebody because of the name engraved finally engraved on it,
and the guy's initials engraved on it, and all the
fully engraved from I'm talking about from the muzzle to
the probably was in a presentation case and cared for
over the years, and that's and probably you know, not
ever taken out and shot.

Speaker 1 (47:47):
So listen, if you got an old gun, don't get
it refinished unless you have somebody that knows what they're
talking about. Look at it first and tafe it's worth anything,
or you just may be shooting yourself and well, I
mean not shooting yourself on the foot. Don't do that.
But you know what I'm saying. So, uh so let's
let's let's get to Paul.

Speaker 4 (48:05):
Yeah, why Paul, Hey fish, I tell you what they
have been backing last week.

Speaker 2 (48:10):
Aren't y' all liking this cooler weather?

Speaker 1 (48:12):
Yeah? I got a bag of oysters in the truck.

Speaker 2 (48:14):
Can we eat them when we get done?

Speaker 1 (48:16):
Well, the trucks in Marianna, of course, when I get
home today.

Speaker 2 (48:20):
You're gonna be eating them.

Speaker 3 (48:21):
You see how he does.

Speaker 1 (48:22):
Yeah, that's that's I want to put the oysters in
the back of my new car.

Speaker 2 (48:27):
Well, that's true. Yeah that you don't want that smell
all right, So the water temperter, it's getting cold. This
we well, I tell you what.

Speaker 4 (48:33):
In the last when I was out right before this
front came through, it was seventy two in the morning, okay,
and then we got this cold weather. I haven't been
back out yet, but I'm going this afternoon. I bet
you that water temperater now is about sixty seven. It's
probably dropped seven eight.

Speaker 2 (48:51):
So so Rainbow had sixty eight degrees or less. They
are baking the ramp. They're moving into creeks. Uh did
you say rain Yeah. One of the gas I don't
know boxes pawn with rainbow, trout and fly fish. He's
putting trout in next weekend. Got to be sixty eight
degrees for those to survive.

Speaker 3 (49:11):
Talked. Talked to one of my fishing buddies at a
soccer game Wednesday night, and some friends of his went
to down to the lower end of the Applatic Color
River Lake Wimico down that area and said that in
the day a day trip they caught over one hundred
large mouth bass and several red fish Lake Wimico. YEA, yeah,

(49:32):
you're not gonna catch generally speaking, down there. You're not
gonna catch a big bass. You think their biggest I
think their biggest fish was three pounds or so, three
and a half.

Speaker 2 (49:41):
Pounds catch bass and Lake Womico.

Speaker 3 (49:43):
Oh yeah, that's and red fish in the same trip.
That's a that's what makes it kind of awesome. And
they were just swimming swimming worms.

Speaker 2 (49:50):
You can do that in Louisiana.

Speaker 3 (49:52):
I mean, well, that's similar territory.

Speaker 2 (49:54):
I guess I didn't think about it. I didn't know
there was any passing there because that's kind of like
the International Waterway.

Speaker 3 (49:59):
Yeah, but yeah, there are there are There are a
lot of.

Speaker 2 (50:04):
Trimp start moving in that. That's probably what's going on
down there.

Speaker 3 (50:08):
But they caught a pile of fish in a day
trip down there.

Speaker 2 (50:12):
I want to know about strippers. I tell you what theyre.

Speaker 4 (50:15):
I'm I'm I'm excited to say that is starting just now.
I pulled up onto a spot out there. You know
where it's at we called the stripper hole. You know
where's that where it's at the down image and side image.
I ain't never ain't I don't remember seeing that many
fish on it. So I turned around, put the put
my four face and so on. Our down started looking. Yeah,

(50:36):
I couldn't find them the thing, you know how fast.

Speaker 1 (50:38):
The things moved.

Speaker 4 (50:39):
But that that was a big school fish I've seen
a long time.

Speaker 2 (50:42):
So it's coming. It's coming. I'm gonna be checking some
of that fish is imminent because you know we got
a date.

Speaker 4 (50:48):
That's right, We're going all right, But I'm I'm gonna
have to have a rope to hold him in.

Speaker 1 (50:55):
Welcome.

Speaker 3 (50:56):
I'll come to you. I'll come to your videographer and
Fred Holders.

Speaker 2 (51:00):
Think you'll put me in. He'll try, he might. You
just put your foot up like that and hold on.

Speaker 4 (51:05):
We're gonna be controlling some Alabama ricks. He'll help im
chert that thing out of your head.

Speaker 2 (51:09):
AND's so fun. So I got to tie the fishing
rod in my hand as well.

Speaker 3 (51:13):
I'm gonna hold on to your belt.

Speaker 1 (51:14):
Yeah, So we run out of time here. Before we go,
I want to wish everybody happy Thanksgiving, cause that's this
next week. Say y'all, spend time with your family, eat
all you want to eat, and we'll talk to y'all
next week
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