Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:13):
Two Tuesday, right out a bushytail. As always, I am here
with you. It is show fiveand sixty three, and I do not
count the shows where I am nothosting. They don't show up on that
number Morning show with Thruston Scott Greatto be with you. May twenty first,
(00:36):
Grant Allen running the show and ourverse today one Corinthians won ten.
I appeal to you, by thename of our Lord Jesus Christ, that
all of you agree and that therebe no divisions among you, but that
you may be united in the samemind and the same judgment. I left
(01:04):
one word out. I appeal toyou brothers. You could very easily include
sisters, because what this is talkingabout is the body of Christ. I
(01:27):
appeal to you Christians, in thename of our Lord Jesus Christ, that
all of you agree, that therebe no divisions among you, but that
you should be united in the samemind and the same judgment. Now how
do you do that? Well,this is pretty simple. This to me
(01:52):
is all wrapped in theology, theGospel of Gijesus Christ, God's word.
This isn't talking about division between believersand non believers. There has to be
(02:20):
Jesus spoke of that himself when hesaid I came to divide. The parable
of wheat and chaff speaks to adivision, Jesus speaking to division between even
family members, those who would beChristians and those who choose not to be.
(02:49):
And there's an that's important in andof itself. The whole idea of
Calvinism is dangerous, the idea thatyou've that there are those that believe you
have no say. The fact thatGod knows the choice you'll make does not
(03:09):
mean you were predetermined to make thatchoice. He just simply knows what you're
gonna do. Calvinism is ripped toshreds with the most popular verse of all
scripture. For God so loved theworld that he gave his only son,
that whosoever it's an invitation to all. This verse, though, is important,
(03:42):
because it speaks to having a veryclear understanding of what the Bible says,
because it's in that that you findno division, that you are of
the same mind. This is whatscripture says. He rubs a little bit,
(04:05):
maybe a lot, might make usuncomfortable. This is what it says.
This is what is being explained inscripture. And you don't cherry pick
a verse. You look at thetotality of what God says on a subject,
you bring it together. And thisverse is saying being united in the
(04:26):
same mind and the same judgment.You can't do that, And sadly we're
watching that happen in denominations across theworld. Mainline Christian denominations are leaving sound
doctrine. They're codifying sin. Tomorrowin the program, talk about an early
(04:51):
push. Huh Tomorrow on the show. I'm setting aside time and I'll explain
why tomorrow. But we're gonna talkabout bridge building. Do you build a
bridge? America is divided? Doyou build a bridge? If so,
how? If not? Why not? If so why? We're going to
(05:15):
talk about that tomorrow. Ten minutesafter the hour. Who I'm wide awake.
It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Welcome to the Morning Show with
Preston Scott. Inside the American Patriots, I'm gonna act for May twenty first,
(05:49):
fifteen forty two, Spanish explorer Ernandode Soto dies on the banks of
the Mississippi River. I wonder norcare real quick burial spot of Hernando not
(06:18):
known. One source said De Soto'smen hit his corpse in waited blankets with
sand and sank at the middle ofthe Mississippi m died of a fever.
There was some fever. Let's seehere. Eighteen nineteen, first bicycles in
(06:42):
the United States known as swift walkersto up here on the streets of New
York City. Velocipedes is another word. Eighteen thirty two, first Democratic Party
Nation, no convention mcginns in Baltimore. I wonder if they had the white
hoods then, I wonder if theybroke out the white hoods then, since
(07:11):
slavery was slowly coming to an end, very slowly. Huh. Yeah,
that's an uncomfortable reality for some ofyou that the Democrat parties the home of
the clan. It's the birthplace ofthe clan. It's yeah, anyway,
just learn your history people. Andthen in eighteen eighty one, former school
(07:36):
teacher Claire Barton she had begged generalsto let her go to the front line
to help the wounded during the CivilWar. A battlefield's no police for a
woman, they told her. Shehounded them until they gave in. Loading
a wagon with supplies, she headedto the front, nursed injured men as
shells whistled overhead. The Battle ofAntietam, a bullet tore through this of
(08:00):
her dress, killing the wounded soldiersshe was tending. She kept risking her
life at the front lines from Fredericksburgto Charleston. Grateful soldiers began to call
her the Angel of the Battlefield.After the war, she directed a search
for missing man help mark the gravesof nearly thirteen thousand Union soldiers who died
(08:22):
at the Andersonville Prison in Georgia.On a trip to Europe, she helped
organize the relief efforts of the InternationalRed Cross in the Franco Prussian War.
A decade later, on May twentyfirst, eighteen eighty one, Barton founded
the American Red Cross. For thenext two decades, she was on the
(08:43):
scene delivering relief in times of naturaldisaster and war, including the Johnstown flood,
which my family tree was saved fromthat So there you go. Nineteen
twenty seven, Charles Lindbergh lands theSpirit Saint Louis and Paris, completing the
first solo NonStop flight across the Atlantic, and five years later, Amelia Earhart
(09:07):
in nineteen thirty two lands in Irelandto become the first woman to fly NonStop
across the Atlantic. Look at that, go Amelia. All right, fifteen
sixteen minutes past the hour when wecome back History for sale now, seriously,
it was twenty one past the hourjust us today got a mainly minute
(09:43):
next hour. Good reaction to ournew feature yesterday Sons of Thunder, Tip
of the Spear on Mondays. Incase you mist guys, go back and
check out the Monday segment. Can'tdecide if I'm going to release that as
(10:09):
a separate segment somehow, not quitesure. Might put that on the blog
page as a separate thing so thatyou can listen to it by itself as
a little four or five minutes segment. The idea is to raise the bar
(10:33):
for men to step into their roleto be the priest of their home,
to be a godly man. We'reall under construction, but to strive towards
that. So thanks for the kindemails, but we'll keep pushing, always
(10:54):
paying attention to auctions just because it'shistory. In a lot of cases,
these auctions mark a time I wishI were Glenn Beck. In one regard,
I do not would not want theheadaches that I'm quite certain he has
(11:16):
to deal with in his show beingso popular. But he has used his
resources for very good things, andamong them preserving American history, and I
have great regard for that. Ido what I can. But Rock Island
(11:39):
Auctions, some of you know RockIsland, You're like Rock Island Auctions in
Illinois. Formerly the owner, whois a lifelong Illinois resident, said yeah,
I'm out. Got sick of thewokeness of the state, the difficulties
of doing business there, and hemoved to Texas. He had had enough.
(12:07):
And so we now come to thelatest auction over the weekend. I
don't have final numbers. Their websiteit's a it's a brilliant website, Rock
Island Auctions. If you just typein Rock Island Auctions, it'll pop up
in whatever search engine you use.And it's a brilliant, brilliant website to
(12:28):
show you in detail the things thatare being sold. But they sell largely
handguns and rifles, and you knowhistoric pieces. A handgun carried into the
Battle of Little Bighorn by Captain MilesMoylen, who survived, was a Medal
(12:48):
of Honor recipient and had an estimatedprice of up to one and twenty thousand
dollars every shocked if it did notblow past that. He he decided that,
you know, being a hero thereby just surviving wasn't enough. This
(13:11):
guy, this guy had a legendarycareer. But his cult single action revolver
went up for sale, and Imean, it's it's a beautiful gun,
(13:31):
but they I mean, he foughtfor the Union at Gettysburg in eighteen sixty
three, little big Horn, andsurvived that, had his revolver by his
(13:52):
side. Served at the Battle ofWounded Knee in eighteen ninety but earned a
Medal of Honor when he was woundedin battle at the Battle of Bear Paw
in the Nez Perce War of eighteenseventy seven. Several firearms belonging to Gerald
(14:13):
Ford, former President, were offered, as well as some notorious ones.
Winchester eighteen ninety five lever action riflethat belonged to Bonnie and Clyde gang member
and Public Enemy number one author FloydHamilton Remington eleven sawt off shotgun carried by
(14:37):
the infamous outlaw Ford Bradshaw, wasup for sale. He was a rival
of Pretty Boy. Floyd was agangster of the time. Several battle tanks
were offered for sale, estimated priceup to four hundred thousand. These are
World War II Stuart light tanks.Man, you look at these pieces of
(15:03):
history now, I'm more drawn to. My interests are largely Revolutionary War,
Civil War and World War Two.That's kind of my I've got something.
I have some other little things,but that's kind of where I really one
(15:28):
of my goals is get my handson an M one Garrand from World War
Two, matching, not restored.I don't want necessarily a restored one,
but they're hard to find unrestored andmatching anyway. Twenty seven minutes after the
hour. History is always for sale, just so it's not altered, right,
(15:50):
Preston Scott Boy, that escalated quickly. I mean that really got out
of hand fast on WFLA. That'sof epic segments coming on the program today.
(16:15):
But let's do the big stories inthe press box, brought to you
by Grove of Creative Marketing and DigitalExpertise. Remember, these are the stories
that are not necessarily the most talkedabout, though they might be. They're
not necessarily the stories that you willbe talking about, though, they might
be. Often these are the storiesI think you should be talking about,
(16:44):
and hopefully you will be. Nowwe have talked about how polling is done
to manipulate outcomes, but inside ofalmost all polling that's done, there's useful
(17:07):
information. I am so opposed tothe abortion amendment. I have to reel
it in as I talk about it, to try to maintain some sense of
(17:27):
communicative skill and ability, because tome, what is going to be on
the ballot is so irrational. Evenif you buy the argument, and I
(17:47):
know that some of you do,because the polling tells me that nearly half
of Florida Republicans forty one percent thinkabortion should be legal in all or most
cases. That just blows my mind. But the poll, the CBS poll,
(18:18):
that shows sixty percent. That's wherewe are now, sixty percent according
to the CBS poll, supports it. Listen to the wording in the CBS
article about it. The hotly watchedamendment to protect abortion access constitutionally in Florida
up to viability around twenty weeks hasthe magic number of sixty percent to pass
(18:44):
up to viability around twenty weeks.Profanity warning, Where the hell is that
in the amendment. It doesn't exist. This is what you've got to understand
this. And if you're sitting theregoing, okay, you've talked about this,
(19:11):
but you're not talking about it.Not only is this polling likely wrong
because they're not disclosing the actual languageof the amendment in the poll, which
is unrestricted abortion even past birth,there is no limit. But the fact
(19:45):
of the matter is the question istotally misleading, and it's almost as if
they're trying to convince opponents of theof the measure to give up. Says
it's already passing. They can't passthis if they don't lie. I'll just
put it that way. It isnot possible because most people, even those
(20:11):
that support abortion, do not supportunrestrained at all times, all the way
through and beyond. They just don't. More polling New York Times, Siena
College, Arizona, Georgia, Nevada, Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania. Fourteen
percent of those who backed Biden intwenty twenty will not in this cycle.
(20:33):
And what's interesting is they acknowledge theydon't like Trump, but they're voting for
Trump over Biden. They're not votingfor Biden. Some calling it the biggest
mistake of their life. Interesting though, Pennsylvania the margin's only three, Wisconsin
one, and Michigan Biden as aone percent lee. I mean grant over
(20:56):
there. Mister Buckeye could explain theMichigan thing very easily by just saying,
well, it's Michigan. But that'sunbelievable. And then this, lastly,
a new study by Just Facts tento twenty seven percent of non citizens are
now illegally registered to vote. That, by the way, would represent roughly
(21:21):
two to five million illegals set tovote. They're already registered. This is
why the border has been open.Do you really think that states that want
(21:56):
Trump beaten are going to work hardto purge your legal voters registered. If
they get them to vote by thetime it's litigated, it's too late.
We saw that in twenty twenty andwe never even got the chance to get
(22:22):
the questions answered. I there canbe no doubt as to why Joe Biden
has kept the border open. Youhave to make him pay. You have
to make Democrats pay. You haveto you have to just It's like a
(22:48):
child that doesn't learn the lesson ifyou don't let them learn the lesson.
They'll just keep doing it. Alittle follow up here on the Baltimore Key
Bridge collapse. The merchant vessel Dallywas refloated yesterday morning at high tide about
seven am. And man, youtalk about bringing in some floaties. Yesterday
(23:17):
we talked about a summer job whereyou could make fifty to one hundred grand
swimming in pools across the country ina short period of time and throwing pool
parties. No, it's an actualjob that's out there. And part of
the initial fifty thousand dollars payment wasfor whatever, you know, travel expenses
and so forth to do what you'regoing to do, which is swimming pools
(23:40):
in fifty states in a short periodof time. But that included cost of
floaties. I'm thinking to myself,what kind of floating would you have to
have to float a damaged cargo shipwhich apparently had all cargoes still on board
based on the the video I lookedat. And so they were able to
(24:03):
float that thing, and then theyhad tugboats move it into a temporary position,
docked and towed to a port.That skyline was the first time since
that bridge was built that it lookedthe way that it looked. Wait,
there's no there's I mean, theship wasn't there, so it was totally
(24:26):
unobstructed now and so now they gotto they've got to offload the cargo,
and then they've got to get thisship to a place where it can be
repaired. I can't even imagine,you know, it's where they It's like
where you build cruise liners and aircraftcarriers and stuff like that. I mean,
(24:47):
the space needed. It's not likeyou're using a little bondo. You
are cutting replacing massive panels. Andthen there's this, For the first time
since it's happened, the ship's crewis going to be allowed to leave the
ship. Just put some context tothat. We have people flooding this country
(25:15):
illegally. These poor souls have beenstuck on a ship because we wouldn't let
them leave. Apparently they are mostof them from India, one from Sri
Lanka. I don't know, maybethey want to be here. Maybe forty
six minutes after the hour, comeback with interesting note from a listener coming
(25:44):
up next hour, Bill Gates twentyten, Ted talker. What he said,
what it means, We're gonna letyou listen to it, and you
know there are spin doctors out theretrying to say, well, it's being
(26:07):
taken out of context. Oh no, it's just it is what it is.
It's very plain. He's not tryingto be deceitful. He's got it
up on the screen. He's gotthis math equation he's spelling out. We're
going to go through that in justa little bit. Always remember you can
send me a note. I geta lot of material for the show,
(26:29):
a lot of useful links, alot of and now a lot of us
think alike, and so I getstories that yeah, I've got it,
thank you, but thank you becauseI appreciate you sending me stories that I
already have, because that tells mewe're thinking about a lot of the same
things and they matter. So don'tever hesitate and assume he's probably got this,
(26:49):
because they get a lot of emailsthat say, you probably have this,
you've probably seen it, And everynow and then I do reply with
actually we talked about it last week. But but I still appreciate the heads
up because I miss things. I'mone person, and so that's why we've
got this massive research staff for theprogram. We've got the lead research assistant,
(27:12):
we've got research supervisors and then theresearch team and it's it's incredible.
But I got a note yesterday.We were talking about about drugs, and
I got a note here from Michaelwho said, I have friends that overdosed
(27:33):
and died from fentanyl heroin. Ican tell you that when word gets out
listen to this, When word getsout on the street that someone has overdosed
and died from a certain dealer's product, everybody wants that product. They want
it because they consider it good product. It's a it's a sad deal.
(27:53):
But it happens that blows me away. It just blows me away. You've
heard me ask k Zeus Rodriguez whatis the point? And in case you
don't know, Jose heyesus the wehave him on every few months. He's
(28:22):
retired US Border Patrol agent, workedSouthern Arizona District for better than two decades.
I asked him, what's the pointof the cartels bringing in fentanyl that
kills their their their client. Imean, a dead client doesn't buy any
more drugs, it does. Itdoesn't make sense in my brain. I
(28:44):
mean, if if if I putmyself in the shoes of the cartel,
it just doesn't make sense. You'reliterally killing your market. But yeah,
so anyway, I I wanted toshare that. It's a perspective I had
not considered I would. I justit doesn't make sense to my brain.
(29:07):
It just doesn't. Yesterday put alittle team together took part in a golf
tournament benefiting Team Challenge. Team Challengehas the greatest level of success of any
drug rehab program in the country,and I would say it's it's not even
close to me. Its success isbased on it being a faith based program.
(29:33):
It can be a diversion program,but someone's got to want to be
there. They don't take anybody therethat doesn't want to be there, and
they've got places around the country.Former national director for Team Challenge was a
frequent guest of mine on a radioprogram I did in Phoenix, Arizona years
ago. And and so yesterday wegot to hear a young man's share some
(30:00):
of his story, Trevor. Ibelieve it was his name, and it
was first time he'd ever shared it. He did great, but hopefully they
raised some good funds. But ifyou're looking for a project that makes a
difference, if you know of somebodythat would need help. Just reach out
to Team Challenge again. They haveplaces all over the country and they do
(30:22):
have women's facilities, they have men'sfacilities, and the one we raised money
for yesterday was the guy's facility herein the area. We got a little
hardware. The golf team got alittle hardware. Didn't win, but we
came in third straight. No handicap, just play your ball and we were
(30:45):
eleven under and so yeah, soway to go team. But on Matt
Andrew Jamison, I contributed a shotor two, but not a lot,
had a great time. But reallyteen Challenge. That's good, all right?
When we come back. What hesaid, Bill Gates, what it
(31:08):
means. It's the second hour Tuesdayhere on the Morning Show with Preston's got
(31:30):
on Preston, He's Grant. Goodmorning friends, ladies, gentlemen, boys
and girls, yes, just boysand girls, ruminators. It's May twenty
first had a listener, I thinkit was Jeff sent me this and it's
Bill Gates and it's twenty ten andit's a Ted talk. And Bill is
(32:00):
in this quasi intimate setting though notlike you know, one hundred people,
and he's got slides in the technologyand he's just you know, wearing his
loafers, looking very very cosmopolitan ina work sense or casual workday sense.
(32:32):
And of course Bill Gates is viewedas one of the smartest men in the
world. He's not, but he'sviewed that way. He's a tremendous businessman.
But the context here is global climatechange, notably CO two, And
(32:57):
at this point in the talk,Bill Gates is breaking down the math equation
of CO two equals and then he'llbreak this down. We're gonna give this
a listen a couple times. Thisequation has four factors, a little bit
of multiplication. So you've got athing on the left, CO two that
(33:20):
you want to get to zero,and that's going to be based on the
number of people, the services eachperson's using on average, the energy on
average for each service, and theCO two being put out a per unit
of energy. So let's look ateach one of these and see how we
can get this down to zero.Probably one of these numbers is going to
(33:42):
have to get pretty near to zero. That's back from high school algebra.
But let's let's take a look.First, we've got population. The world
today has six point eight billion people, that's headed up to about nine billion.
Now, if we do a reallygreat job on new vaccines, healthcare,
reproductive health services, we could lowerthat bye perhaps ten or fifteen percent.
(34:12):
Did you catch that? Twenty ten? Now, if we do a
really great job on new vaccines,healthcare, reproductive health services, we could
lower that bye perhaps ten or fifteenpercent. Wait, if we do a
really great job on reproductive services,vaccines, and healthcare, we could reduce
(34:37):
what now, the world today hassix point eight billion people. That's headed
up to about nine billion. Now, if we do a really great job
on new vaccines, healthcare, reproductivehealth services, we could lower that bye
perhaps ten or fifteen percent. Viewerright now, going what some of you
(35:05):
are going, Well, clearly that'snot what he meant, except that's exactly
what he meant. There were noretractions, There were no corrections. There
have been no statements to contrary tothat when he's been asked about it.
In twenty ten, Bill Gates talkedabout the likely population of the world moving
(35:31):
ahead, and that if we handlereproductive services abortion, he can't just say
abortion, vaccines, and healthcare,we can reduce that more. Next,
(35:54):
on the Morning Show with Preston Scott. It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott
on news Radio one hundred point sevenWFLA eleven minutes after the Aurum, listening
(36:23):
to a twenty ten TED talk byBill Gates. Now we start with his
presupposition on his math problem here aboutCO two. This equation has four factors,
a little bit of multiplication, Soyou've got a thing on the left
(36:44):
CO two that you want to getto zero. Now, surely he's talking
about man made CO two, right, because he is of the belief that
we are causing all these problems.But now he's also said that he has
(37:08):
no problem flying private and using hisyachts and all of that, because after
all, he's doing so many goodthings. That's a paraphrase, but that's
dead on what he believes. He'ssaid as much. Just like John Kerry,
just like I, Liberals always believethey should be the exception to the
(37:31):
rules they create for the rest ofus. But I remind you carbon dioxide
is not a problem. Carbon monoxidecan kill you. Carbon dioxide is required
(37:52):
for life. Plants don't survive withoutit. They have to have it,
and that's why whatever increases of carbondioxide. Man puts into the atmosphere is
actually healthy for the planet because itexpands the growing areas of this planet.
But I digress, and he continues, and that's going to be based on
(38:15):
the number of people, the serviceseach person's using on average, the energy
on average for each service, andthe co two being put out a per
unit of energy. So let's lookat each one of these and see how
we can get this down to zero. Probably one of these numbers is going
to have to get pretty near tozero. That's back from high school algebra.
(38:38):
But let's take a look. First, we've got population. Now,
the world today has six point eightbillion people. That's headed up to about
nine billion. Now, if wedo a really great job on new vaccines,
healthcare, reproductive health services, wecould lower that by perhaps ten or
fifteen percent, two or three ofthose. Two of the three of those
(39:01):
factors as it relates to population haveto do with reducing population, if you're
charitable with your definition of healthcare.But let's look at vaccines for just a
(39:23):
second. What's the point of avaccine? Now, seriously, this is
the low hanging fruit. Vaccines arecreated to save lives. He just said,
(39:47):
if we do the right things withvaccines, new vaccines, we can
reduce the population by ten to fifteenpercent. The growth of the population is
what I think he's referring to.But just get your mind around that.
(40:08):
Now, look at how money gotfunneled. It was hidden, it was
light about, and they've been workingon man made viruses, using nature's viruses,
manipulating them so that maybe we're notgoing to be so successful with the
(40:32):
vaccines. And then we've got vaccinesthat are in fact changing people, harming
people, killing people. Piece ittogether. Bill Gates in twenty ten gave
(40:52):
a statement that he probably thought noone's going to remember, except it has
remembered, and it was recorded,and it's available for you to see anytime
you want to find it. Sixteenminutes past the hour, This morning ship
(41:28):
keeps happening, and I refuse tostop talking about it. Aiden Gallagher one
state title Oregon Girls six a twohundred meter race except Daidan's a dude.
Now tomorrow on the program, I'mgonna go over some intel. Scott Beacon
(41:52):
shared in a this and that it'skind of funny he does this and that
thing now and then, and II've been doing this and that on my
Rundown. I've been writing those wordsfor years. It's just kind of funny
how people think and share ideas andthoughts without knowing. The meat took place
(42:13):
in Eugene, same stadium where theUS Championships and Olympic Trials are going to
take place. I think it's StevePrefontaine Track and Field at the University of
Oregon. It's a world renowned facility. The dude wins the state title six
a big schools state title. Aguy wins the state title. Riley Gaines
(42:39):
posts video of the awards ceremony andrights. Look at the girls on the
podium of Plouding wins second place,the rightful winner is announced, then watch
them when the boys name is announced. Stop saying girls are okay with this,
because they aren't. This is heartbreakingand deeply regressive. Here's what's important.
(43:04):
Last month, this same guy competedin the Sherwood Need for Speed Classic.
We talked about it, We talkedabout it on this show, where
he dominated the women's races, especiallythe two hundred meter. If he had
competed in the boys two hundred meterrace, his time would have finished sixty
(43:32):
first in the State of the besttimes offered in the state of Oregon this
season. These girls are having theirdreams, scholarships, awards stolen from them.
(43:57):
The crowd during the podium ceremony booed, They booed. The guy said
libs of TikTok, TikTok. Themale just one the girls two hundred meter
varsity in Sherwood, Oregon sets anew record. These high school girls just
(44:17):
had their dreams stolen from them becausethe high school is catering to the delusions
of a boy who pretends to bea girl. He's a cheater? Are
we are so beyond manly minutes stuffwith this? This is this is this
(44:43):
is about I don't care. Iwant to win an award. I don't
care if I cheat, care ifit's against girls. I won. I
mean, I suppose I could identifyas a sloth and win some kind of
(45:05):
record, because sloths are notoriously slow, and I can outrun a sloth,
and so I can set all kindsof world records. But get your mind.
I mean, we're gonna We're gonnapaint a portrait of the difference between
men and women, boys and girlswith a group of dudes who run track
(45:30):
in Texas in high school and wherethey rank. It's it's a total lack
of courage. It's total cowardice onthe part of all of these governing bodies.
(45:53):
And so we circle back, aswe often do, to advice offered
here and elsewhere, but certainly here. When this all started, I knew.
I was shocked. The NAIA tooka stand. I knew the NCAA
(46:13):
wouldn't. I knew that the Olympicgoverning bodies wouldn't. I wonder if you're
going to see this happen in footballwith girls trying to compete against gott and
no, of course not. It'sonly where guys don't have enough skill to
(46:37):
get it done against guys, sothey'll compete against girls. The only way
out from this is for girls andwomen to not compete. There will have
to be some people sacrificing. Ifeverybody across the country agree to not compete
(47:00):
against pretend boys or men, itwould stop. It's the only recourse left.
Dispensing information at the speed of sound, It's The Morning Show with Preston
Scott. Thirty five minutes after thehour of the Morning Show with Preston scat
(47:27):
Good Morning, Big Stories in thePast Box brought to you by Grove,
a creative marketing and digital expertise.Now this isn't necessarily a big story,
but it's a big story to formerLeon County Athletic Director Ricky Bell, he
just gave me a phone call.His son, Parker, who plays golf
at the University of Florida, justqualified for the US Open. But go
(47:50):
young man. Congratulations. I knowRicky is proud as can be, the
family is, but let me goahead and throw this in as well.
To get to the US Open,Parker beat player in the playoff with a
little experience. He knocked out SergioGarcia. Sorry, I probably shouldn't be
(48:14):
laughing. I mean still look,Sergio's okay. He's a little feisty when
it comes to talking about live golfand all that. I don't blame him
for going to live golf because hewas at the end of his career.
But well done, Parker, Welldone, sir. That is no small
task, and playing big boy golfis not for the faint of heart because
(48:36):
they're playing those courses long. Ithink we're realizing that we're making these courses
too long. That you can letthe legacy golf courses that are shorter,
be there'll be just fine. Youjust make it difficult for them to hit
the ball off the fairway, growthe rough you know, I'm a big
(48:57):
believer, And you make the pairaysnarrow or as they go along. That's
how you solve the distance problem.You don't roll back the golf ball.
But they're going to do all thatstuff anyway. Big Stories polling showing that
right now, fourteen percent of votersin the battleground the swing states Arizona,
Georgia, Nevada, Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania, fourteen percent of voters this
(49:22):
according to New York Times Santa Collegesurveying, fourteen percent of voters who voted
for Joe Biden are not going tovote for Joe Biden and will vote for
Trump, even though they admit toTrump not being their favorite person. All
(49:44):
coming to the realization that the countrywas far better off, far safer,
far more secure, far better economically. That's not debatable. It just isn't.
I just question why that number isnot sixty percent. I mean,
is that is that how much koolaid has been drinking, been been consumed?
(50:07):
I should say, I just Idon't I don't understand that mindset.
I don't care if you hate Trump, I really don't. It doesn't matter.
He right now represents kind of ablockade to the uniparty. You know,
(50:37):
I heard the criticism. I waslistening to an interview with Aaron Rodgers
and Tucker Carlson, and it's afascinating interview, it really is. I've
always admired Aaron's thought process. Don'tagree with everything he thinks, but he's
he's a deep thinker. And uhand and as he's you know, as
(51:00):
he was talking about, you know, the political landscape of things, and
I was just considering the whole reactionto Trump, It's like he said,
you know, well, Trump didn'tdrain the swamp. How's he going to
drain the swamp when Congress is opposinghim now? He didn't do what he
could have done in the area wherehe had authority. I grant you that.
(51:23):
Another poll, CBS News poll,found that the abortion amendment will pass
in November, but the CBS polllied to those they were surveying. The
hotly watched amendment to protect abortion accessconstitutionally in Florida up to viability around twenty
(51:45):
weeks. That's not what it says. There is no number in the amendment,
there is no up to twenty weeks. That doesn't exist. So the
polling is fraudulent and that needs tobe remembered. And one thing inside this
pulling that is the most harmful tome in my heart is it nearly forty
(52:08):
one percent of Florida Republicans think abortionshould be legal in almost all cases.
That's what breaks my heart. Wegot to do better than that. Welcome
to the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Is going exactly as planned in the
(52:36):
WNBA, the largest gates ever towatch Caitlin Clark play, paid admissions,
the largest ever in the history ofthe league. She might save the league,
not the NBA. She might.Dave Portnoy from Barstool Sports talking about
how the WNBA is making things miserablefor her and even to the point where
(53:02):
they're calling For example, I lookedat at a tape of some of her
plays and they're they're giving her turnovers, and they're making comments on their running
stats like bad pass on perfectly deliveredpasses that were dropped by teammates, and
they're they're calling it turnovers on onCaitlin Clark. So the league is is
(53:25):
very sensitive to not wanting to buildher up anymore than her her preceding fame
has already done for herself. They'renot gonna help, even though they're stupid
for thinking that. I mean,the w NBA has never used the words
bad pass in their running descriptive ofa game. They just turnover bad pass.
(53:49):
And when you look at the tapesof what they're calling bad passes,
they're not. They're they're actually brilliantpasses that the average professional women's basketball player
can't handle. I don't know howelse to put it. But there's also
a video going of her getting agetting screened by Brianna Stewart. Now,
(54:14):
Brianna Stewart, former Yukon player,is a great basketball player, but she's
not Caitlyn Clark. And the peopledidn't gravitate to Brianna Stewart when she played
at Yukon like they did Caitlin Clarkwhen she played at Iowa. They just
didn't. They're both white. Idon't know if Caitlyn Clark is the only
(54:39):
of the two. I don't knowif Caitlin is the one who's heterosexual.
I don't know. I don't knowone way or the other about Brianna Stewart.
I don't care. But what's interestingis this is this is where this
this thing is getting out of control. So Portenoy puts up this this screen
that was set and and Caitlyn Clarkgot just dropped to her knees by this
(55:05):
screen, and they're talking about whata rude welcome she's getting in the WNBA.
That screen was perfectly legal and perfectlyexecuted. That's on Caitlyn Clark's teammate
who said nothing, did not callthe screen, And I, in fact
(55:25):
decided to comment on the story onbehalf of the Morning Show with Preston Scott,
and I said, yeah, okay, predictable, the hard screens,
whatever the case might be. Butif I'm Kitland Clark, I'm talking to
my teammate. When I coached,I benched players for not calling out screens
and picks. You say, screenright, screen left, pick right,
(55:51):
pick left. You call these thingsout and then you hedge if you play
a hedging defense or you don't.Her teammate said nothing and let her get
absolutely ripped. Now her teammate happensto be black. Was this a hey?
Is a teammate, A teammate ora hater, I don't know,
but that's who I'm talking to.But the predictability of how this is unfolding.
(56:15):
Jamil Hill Jamel Jamel Hill, formerlywith ESPN. She's a race baiter
of the worst kind, she said. We would all be very naive if
we didn't say race and her sexualityplayed a role in her popularity. While
so many people are happy for Caitlin'ssuccess, including the players, some this
has led to an enormous impact onthe game, there is a part of
it that's a little problematic because whatit says about the worth and marketability of
(56:37):
players who are already there. Aswe've learned from Lebron, from Michael Jordan,
from Pat Mahomes, from fill inthe Magic Johnson, for Pete's sake,
we don't care about race when itcomes to popularity and marketability. They
need to be good. That's whatwe care about. That's what we care
(57:05):
about. But they're gonna keep doingthis, and I told you they would.
It was. It was one ofthe easiest calls ever in my twenty
three years of doing this show.Top of the Hour News just a little
(57:29):
bit away, you got a manlyminute, a few minutes. But the
first Toyota is rolling out. Itsfirst Forerunner in fifteen years has rolled out,
and it's not an ev that's significant. It's the first major update that
(57:52):
they've got out now on the Forerunnerfor twenty twenty five. It is.
It's going to be available in thefall, so it's not out just yet,
but it will have a hybrid version. Hybrid version available now. Toyota
has really nailed down the hybrid model. They do it very well. Hybrids
(58:19):
still have a battery that is muchmore expensive to replace than a standard battery.
So there there, you know,there is that when it it inevitably
needs to be replaced, it's goingto cost you a few thousand dollars,
not a few hundred. But what'ssignificant to me is Toyota is out there
(58:44):
there there. There are certain brandsthat to me are are kind of the
the bell Cows of fill in theblank Publics. To me, in the
world of shopping and grocery stores,Publics does not drop a store where it
(59:05):
will not succeed. They're just reallygood at market analysis in a big picture,
big world sense. I viewed Toyotathat way. Toyota just doesn't make
mistakes. Now. I think theirstyling has been really boring and dated for
a while. They're really slow onthe trigger there. But what Toyota does
(59:30):
they do very well. And it'sinteresting to me that they have looked at
the scene, the landscape of electricvehicles and they've gone yeah no with one
of their most popular iconic brands,Forerunner. I think that's significant. I
don't think I'm reading too much intoit. I don't know if you've seen
(59:52):
Mercedes Benz is they're no longer electriconly that's done. They are all in
on combustion engines moving forward, they'regonna produce evs because they almost have to
they're in Europe. But Mercedes Benzhas abandoned. They ran those ads for
(01:00:14):
just a few months. We're goingall electric by twenty thirty five or something
like that. Oh no, they'renot. It might've even been twenty thirty
I don't know. No, they'renot. They've they've scrapped it. Why
when reality pushes up against fantasy,reality wins the renewable energy thing, it's
(01:00:36):
fantasy reality wins. It's interesting timefor manly minute mail, my birth man,
my choice. These are tips,These are These are things to consider
when raising a young man. Now, I will confess to you I'm not
(01:00:57):
good in this one. I'm justnot. But I can tell you from
my life experience. See my look, my dad was not an outdoorsman.
My uncle was my uncle Hal.He was like, he's hilarious. Uncle
(01:01:17):
Hal was just hilarious. But Dadwas not into this stuff. Teach your
son how to tie knots, andif you need to sit there and learn
him yourself with him, Learning totie the right knot for the occasion is
gold. It absolutely is gold.There are so many. I've got a
(01:01:43):
book here. There are so manydifferent kinds of knots that are useful,
everything from a square knot to abowline to half hitches to clove figure eight
knot. I mean, the listgoes on and on. So sit down,
maybe look at a YouTube video,but learn and teach your son to
tay not. Trust me, he'llbe the one that pushes the guys that
(01:02:08):
side. And let me fasten this. Let me let me latch this down
properly and safely. The love ithowur three? Next third laugh? Third
(01:02:30):
period? I can't say a thirdquarter words are inherently before anyway, Welcome
to May twenty first, Tuesday onthe Morning Show with Trust this guy just
us Today tomorrow do we build bridges? Not talking about Baltimore. I'll explain
(01:03:00):
tomorrow. Today I mentioned that Iwas going to there is a worldwide alert
for Americans. Fbis issued it.Every security agency of this country's warning Americans
are being targeted everywhere. Thank you, Joe. We're hated. Of course,
(01:03:28):
We're going to be hated just becausewe exist by some Jihatis hate us
because they hate the West, theyhate freedom, they hate anything other than
their view. And that gets toI mean, look, the attack at
the concert hall in March killed onehundred and forty four people, bunch of
(01:03:52):
jihatis. I came across this thanksto one of the research assistants, Kurt
Schleister. And and I'm guessing onthe pronunciation his last name, it's spelled
a little bit differently. It couldbe Schlichter. He is He's authored a
(01:04:13):
book. It's it's written in thenovel form. It's called The Attack and
Uh, and it goes into detailhow he believes we are we are vulnerable.
And it was his way of tryingto say wake up and I'm probably
going to talk about this with J. D. Johnson in our first visit
(01:04:34):
in June. But the headline onhis article here, and it's an article,
it's a commentary, is America isgoing to be targeted for a massive
terrorist attack. Will you be readynow? I immediately thought about and and
this is probably going to spill intothe next segment. I immediately thought about
(01:04:55):
the movie Act of Valor and myconversation with the lead actor who was a
Navy seal. All those dudes wereNavy seals. One of them is now
in Congress, maybe two of themare in Congress now. But Rourke Denver
was the lead character in that,and I had him on the show and
I asked him, I said,is is this a compilation? He said,
(01:05:20):
Everything in that movie happened. Theyjust happened separately. We brought them
together into one storyline. But everythinghappened. And one of the things that
happened was a group of Jahatis gettinginto the United States through a tunnel,
of through a network of tunnels,and with the plan that they had uncovered
(01:05:47):
to go to major cities at onceand commit terrorist acts coordinated at one time.
Think of jan the election of twentytwo money only coordinated by terrorists with
guns and explosives. Just think that. So this is not a surprise that
(01:06:12):
this is a growing concern. Imean, you've got the head of the
FBI blinking lights and sounding alarms.And keep in mind, Christopher Ray is
normally busy just attacking abortion protesters andpeople that took selfies in the Capitol on
(01:06:33):
January sixth, So if it's gothis attention, it's significant. But Kurt
writes in his piece, you theindividual, you in your small community,
you in your red state. There'sno one else who's going to help you.
He said, there will be abloodbath here in America. It will
(01:06:57):
dwarf nine to eleven. It willdwarf what happened in Israel. It will
be Moscow times a thousand, andyou're gonna be caught in the middle of
it. You have to make thedecision to be ready for yourself, for
your community, perhaps for your state, if you live in one that's not
run by leftist idiots. The enemy'snot just coming, he writes, it's
(01:07:20):
probably already here. Now we pointto the border, right, we look
to the last three plus years ofinvasion of this country, our border has
been pride wide open. There's nothingto stop them from coming in, and
we know what they'll do. It'sjust hard to accept. Some of us
(01:07:40):
see Muslim terrorists as insane because ourminds don't work like theirs. We don't
want our minds to work like theirs. How they think, how they act
is alien and alien to us.That's because as a culture, we're narcissists,
self absorbed, utterly unable to imaginethat other people not only are not
like us, but they have nodesire to be like us. They desire
(01:08:05):
to rape and murder us. Howdo we know, because their track record
is raping and murdering us. We'llpick up there ten eleven minutes past the
hour in the Morning Show with PrestonScott. It's The Morning Show with Preston
Scott. Twelve past the hour.Kurtchleister writing a column on what he believes
(01:08:35):
is a coming terrorist attack. Hesaid, it's inevitable, quoting our ruling
class refuses to acknowledge this, refusesto act. It actively subverts attempts to
stop the jihad. It won't shutour border. It opposes Israel's plan to
go in on the last infestation ofHamas and blow up its tunnels. It
(01:08:59):
won't work effectively with the Russians tofight Jihadis, even though we share that
enemy, despite our other conflicts.True statement, specifics of what will happen
are beyond this column's death. Hewrite depth, he writes, he said,
we're vulnerable. We've seen them walkinto packed venues in France. Here
(01:09:25):
in America at the Pulse nightclub nowin Moscow. America has hundreds of thousands
of packed venues. What America needsis millions of packed Americans. Buy guns
and AMMO. Get trained, getready. You are the first line of
defense. Remember those two untrained idiotsin Boston with some handguns and pressure cookers.
(01:09:46):
Just two idiots shut down a wholemajor US city. What happens with
a thousand guys with effective weapons anda little training. And then he gets
into a likely scenario, and hedescribes the likely need of people, yes
(01:10:14):
with their handguns, fighting against guyswith fully automatic submachine guns. But his
point was what happens when that armedcitizen that has a little training steps up?
He said, what happens is whatalways happens when there's a sniper positioned
(01:10:35):
somewhere everybody forgets everything else and focuseson the sniper. The jihadis stop what
they're doing and they focus on endingthe threat to them because having someone shoot
back. We've talked about this howmany times in our Personal defense segment.
The reason why you think in advanceof what can happen is so that when
(01:10:59):
something happens, you have a conditionedreaction to it. You have a response
that becomes a reaction because you don'thave time to think about it when it's
happening. You need to have thoughtabout it first. And here's the importance
of it. The second you thinkabout something and then put that into action
when the moment comes, you havechanged the plan of the attacker, and
(01:11:25):
now they are reacting. They areoff their plan. They are having things
happen that they didn't plan for becauseof all the things they don't do.
Bad evil people don't think about thewhat ifs very often, what if this
doesn't go as well. They justsee it as they are executing their plan
(01:11:45):
perfectly. So my point in bringingthis up, not waiting for the next
Personal defense segment, is to makeyou aware of the importance of all of
these things. Converging our border ourelections and your responsibility to prepare to defend
(01:12:05):
yourself and your family and your friends, your community, your state, your
nation. Sixteen minutes after the hour, it is rightfully being regarded as one
(01:12:40):
of the more egregious, shameful,disgraceful decisions on behalf of the United States.
And it happened yesterday at the UNSecurity Council meeting when the United States
(01:13:02):
Ambassador Robert Wood stood with the othernations in a moment of silence to pay
respects to Iran's dead president. Whatare they paying respects for? Would they
(01:13:29):
have done it for Hitler? No, I'm asking would they have stood in
a moment of silence finding out thatHitler put a gun into his brain?
It is unbelievable to me that westood for this guy, that anyone's The
(01:13:58):
only Iranians not celebrating this dude's deathare Iranians that are scared to death,
the of the Ayatola, fearful fortheir life to be seen smiling and celebrating,
or are part of the Jahadi network. The Iranian people as a group
(01:14:19):
are celebrating this dude's demise. Don'ttake my word for it. Listen to
what the Foundation for defenseive democracies,and we can take issue with the word
democracy because we know what it meanswhat they said about Raisi, the Deputy
Prosecutor General of Tehran from eighteen eightyfive nineteen eighty five to nineteen eighty eight,
(01:14:43):
facilitated the regime's nineteen eighty eight slaughterof thousands of jailed political dissidents by
serving on a four member panel knownas the Death Commission, which decided who
would live and who would die.The commission would conduct interviews of prison often
just a few minutes long, aimedat determining their loyalty to the Islamic Republic.
(01:15:06):
Questions could include, what is yourpolitical affiliation? Do you pray?
Are you willing to clear minefields forthe Islamic Republic? The wrong answer meant
death. The executions were usually byhanging or firing squad typically the same day
as the interrogations. Commissions allowed neitherlawyers nor appeals. Burials occurred in unmarked
(01:15:30):
mass graves. The regime waited monthsbefore notifying relatives of the victims, refused
to tell them the locations of theirbodies, and told them not to mourn
in public. The victims included womenand children as young as thirteen. Raisi
has defended the killings, saying intwenty eighteen they were one of the proud
(01:15:51):
achievements of the system he presided overthe prosecution, imprisonment, torture, and
execution of countless Iranian officials. TheUnited States expresses its official condolences for the
(01:16:16):
death of the Iranian president. Blahblah blah blah blah. W t H.
Really, I'm glad he's dead.He's the butcher of Tehran. Remember
(01:16:46):
the little girl that refused to coverup her face in public. They tortured
her, They made an example ofher. He was behind all. And
oh, by the way, theguy runs the country's the Ayahtola. And
(01:17:12):
they're just gonna put a puppet rightthere back in place. They're probably gonna
put the vice president there. Youwatch, Let's see if the vice president
suddenly starts growing a beard and putsturban on his head and starts playing the
game and looking the part. Ifhe gets the job he's in or him
now, he'll have to be asas ruthless and has committed to it.
(01:17:34):
The Ayatola wants because keep in mind, this guy was just the president.
The Iatola is the supreme leader.Sweet God, I feel like I'm looking
at Star Wars the Emperor do it. I'm I'm embarrassed that we stood for
(01:17:58):
that pos and I'm embarrassed that wedon't have the curve. I mean,
this is a guy who led deathto America. Really were we should have
been applauding the moment it was announcedhe died. Trust me, he'll get
(01:18:23):
his reward. Twenty seven minutes pastthe hour, come back with the big
stories. It's the Morning Show withPreston Scott got an email question from a
listener. Do you think the storesthat are closing this year across the country.
(01:18:46):
We gave a partial list of likelystore closings and they number in the
thousands, went all added up.Do you think it's a result of crime
in these areas defund the police andso I would say in some cases,
limited cases, it plays a role. But what we've seen is the retailers
(01:19:08):
just close a store or three ina crime ridden area. We'll get to
that in just a second, butthat this is really all about the economy,
the closing of entire stores. It'sthe economy, and in fairness,
(01:19:30):
it needs to be pointed out.It is. It is the evolution of
business. I mean, how muchshopping are you doing online? How much
did you do twenty years ago?It's changed, just has I mean,
can you imagine how much time youtake walking into an Amazon to warehouse?
(01:19:51):
No, seriously, just think aboutshopping there. Yeah, it's just it's
different. So that plays a role. It's it's it's changing. And now
I think I think brick and mortarwill always exist, and I think that
(01:20:12):
what we'll see more than more thanlikely is a handful of national chains.
But you're going to see the momand pop niche stores figuring that out.
And I heard a quote once Iforget who it might have been, Jack
Ma who said it something to theeffect of find complaints in there, you'll
(01:20:33):
find opportunity. My wife and Ihave already made the transition to like buying
our beef exclusively local, and there'sa huge market for that, you know,
finding these different co ops or farmersmarket locations where people bring their you
know, buy and direct buy anddirect from your rancher, from your farmer.
(01:20:56):
Yeah, truck load of black anguscattle or whatever the case. Maybe
and boom, you've got your localsource of meat right there, and that's
that's yeah. I think that's right. It's only going to grow and those
may develop into little little doorfronts,little markets. Yeah, yeah, well
we'll have to see. But that'sthe answer to the question. Big Stories
(01:21:18):
in the press Box brought to youby Grove Creative Marketing and digital Expertise.
Study finds up to a third ofall non citizens in the United States are
illegally registered to vote. Get yourbrain around that. You hear me use
(01:21:38):
that expression a lot, and Iuse it because I think sometimes we're dismissive
because it becomes noise. But trulythink about the immigration invasion, the illegal
invasion, the breaking into our country, and now view it in terms of
(01:22:00):
it being coordinated, enabled assisted toregister voters illegally because the Democrat Party is
hemorrhaging voters. They are sorry itis. Polling shows Trump winning swing states
(01:22:29):
And what's important about this is thenumber of voters percentage wise that voted for
Joe that, even though they don'tlike Trump, begrudgingly admit the country was
way better off, way more secure, way more safe protected under Trump and
his policies. Now, if onlyCongress could get on board with that,
wouldn't that be wouldn't that be?Novel? And then the final poll here,
(01:22:53):
which is the one that to meansthe most egregious, is a CBS
poll on the abortion amendment in Florida, passing two points number one. Republicans
forty one percent in the poll supportthe amendment. It's shameful. We have
to do better. We have toexplain it better. And that gets to
(01:23:15):
the second point that needs to bemade, and that is the polling dishonestly
represents what the amendment is by puttinga date viability up to twenty week.
There is no There is no limitto abortion in the amendment. It doesn't
exist. It's not in fine printanywhere. We have to keep arguing this.
(01:23:40):
We have to. And that's whyI'm going to keep repeating it,
because only in the repetition of merepeating it will you remember it and you
repeat it. You have to dothis. This is your fight. Forty
minutes, forty one minutes, nowpass the hour. This is the Morning
Show with Preston Scott. There's somany examples of little becoming much in a
(01:24:25):
bad way. I talked about howearlier in the program Little Fundraiser, I
took part in yesterday fourteen Challenge teenChallenges an addiction recovery center, and it's
usually drugs or alcohol, drugs andalcohol, but it can be other things.
(01:24:47):
But I've interacted with that particular programsince nineteen eighty three, maybe when
I was doing radio in Phoenix,Arizona, and I interacted with it not
because I had any personal connection toit at the time. I didn't.
(01:25:15):
I just had a heart for peoplethat wanted to get past their addictions.
Still do. And so one ofthe things that you learn in talking to
recovered addicts and recovering addicts is italmost always starts with just a taste,
(01:25:42):
just to fill in the a littleof whatever, starts with just a little
sample, and then it grows becauseyou think you have control of it,
but you're always trying to recover thatfirst buzz, that first high, that
first whatever the sensory overload was thatwas brought about by the alcohol or drugs
(01:26:05):
or whatever you're chasing, and andyou become desensitized to it, so you
need more of it. That's howour bodies work, and that's how the
addiction works. In the same way. When we do not deal with issues
(01:26:25):
in our communities, and we justthink that they'll just it's just one or
two or ten or one hundred.It spirals out of control in the same
way because you get acclimated, youget used to you don't see it anymore,
and then you have Oakland. Oaklandis like many communities run by illiberals.
(01:26:53):
Conservatives are not unsympathetic to homelessness.Conservatives just believe enabling homelessness does not
solve it. Compassionate toughness, compassionatelove, love is sometimes tough love.
Do you realize what's happened in Oakland? Not only is crime up, homelessness
(01:27:15):
is so out of control. Nowyou have these encampments and these people will
do whatever they have to do tocreate a revenue stream. Do you realize
there are intersections now in Oakland,a major city California, without stop lights
(01:27:36):
because the cities remove them and putin stop signs. Why because they're stealing
the wiring inside the electrical stop lightsand selling it. So instead of addressing
(01:27:58):
the root of the problem, homelessnessand the crimes that are associated with it,
they just take out the stoplights andreplace it with stop signs. And
maybe it's one intersection, maybe it'stwo or three, and then it becomes
(01:28:20):
four or five, and then itbecomes ten or twenty, all because of
the lack of courage to address theroot problem. How different is that than
really addiction. I've gotta go seean en o'donnist about a two in a
(01:29:00):
half hour out, Yeah, preliminaryor actually had a root canal done on
this one previously, and tooth hasa deep root and they didn't quite get
to all of it. Is ithurting you? It kind of has been
for about a month and a halfnow, Okay, all right, yeah,
(01:29:23):
so I'm kind of rolling that.Are you ready to see my new
end of Donnis? So? Yeah, all I need to do is schedule
appointment with my proctologists on the sameday. That'll just be just a wonderful
day. Our buddy David Rush isback in the news. Remember the name
(01:29:44):
sounds familiar. I'm trying to playBook of World Records. That's right.
He's the guy that has the recordfor the most records, or he's trying
to get to the record for themost records. Yeah. His goal is
one hundred and eighty one concurrent titles. He now as one hundred and sixty
nine. He just tied, sohe's the co holder of the title of
(01:30:08):
the most pencils snapped in a minute. Amount of crazy stuff. This guy's
gotta do. I'm looking at hisfour and a half minute, five minute
video describing the attempt. He's gota pretty big YouTube following does, Yes,
he does. He's got right nowfifty thousand subscribers. That's pretty good
and not bad. And he talkedabout going into training with the forearms and
(01:30:32):
all that for this record, becausebreaking one hundred and some odd pencils in
sixty seconds means you're breaking a bunchof them right in a hurry. You
know, you're you're you're averaging twoto three pencils a second, which is
crazy doing like what grabbing those weights, just doing a ton of wrist curls
or something. Yeah, burning yourwrists up and getting your forearms. Yeah,
(01:30:57):
it was a controversial effort. Itwas witnessed by a room full of
people. And he went around atable where the pencils and he just just
goes around and they had to verifyit, and then they found out that
the timer, the official timer,had inadvertently stopped the watch for a couple
(01:31:19):
milliseconds. Oh just saw the sixcoming up instead of sixty and kind of
brain froze and hit it and went, oh, hit it again to start
it. So I'm guessing they hadto do some math and make sure.
And so he's holding at one hundredand ten pencils and the co holder of
the title, and so he's nowat one hundred and sixty nine concurrent titles.
(01:31:44):
I don't know what the payoff isnotoriety. I suppose you're fifteen minutes
of fame plus well that the fiftythousand YouTube subscriber channel. That could be
the long term thing, like,just do more things. But that's the
problem. Yeah, you gotta domore things. That's the and you run
all door of content creation. Yeah, that's exactly right. Brought to you
(01:32:05):
by Barno Heating and Air. It'sthe morning show on on WFLA. Who'd
have thought, what do you dofor a living? I'm a content creator
and there's so much money in it, it's unreal. What do you do
for a living? I'm an influencer? Yeah, hey, good on you
(01:32:27):
man, I'm a radio show host. What you know? Who am I
to say anything? Right? Westarted the show with first Corinthians one ten.
That was our verse of the day. Big stories in the press box.
Polling shows the abortion amendment would wouldpass in November here in Florida.
But they have to lie inside thepolling question to get the number. And
so it's up to you to makesure that people understand what they're what they're
(01:32:50):
going to vote for or against.Biden voters regret is setting in and switching
the polling numbers in favor of Trump. However, the number of illegals registered
to vote in this country is upto two to five million, according to
one study. We stood in silence. It was disgraceful to honor the Iranian
(01:33:13):
presidents who's dead. I'm thinking goodbye, good riddance back tomorrow. Can't wait