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October 31, 2025 • 78 mins

Trump just told Thune to NUKE the filibuster!. Soybean farmers love the China deal. But will they see sales? Arctic Frost investigation getting hotter. Prince Andrew losing his title. Trump's order to Pentagon to resume nuclear tests. Don't be a creepy clown today. This is not 4D chess, it's a poor political move

Braun meets with Noem regarding illegal alien CDL drivers. Heritage and Tucker Carlson. Aquatic Erotic for sale. Are the Irsay daughters also planning to sell the Colts? 

We know who the illegal aliens are, no need to "ask for papers" Trump caps refugees at 7,500, earmarks most slots for White South Africans. IPS changes Office of Racial Equity amid national backlash to DEI. WIBC celebrating 87 years on the air. Jack's Donuts filing for bankruptcy

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:15):
I have no idea what the Republicans are going to
do now, I have no idea why President Trump decided.
You know what I'm gonna do.

Speaker 2 (00:23):
I'm gonna put out a lengthy.

Speaker 1 (00:25):
Social media post that says we should nuke the filibuster. Okay, sure,
sure if caving to the Democrats are giving them exactly
what they want so they can get control of the
Senate and then have a nuked filibuster, is what you want?
Go right ahead. Tony Katz ninety three WIBC, Good morning,

(00:49):
Good to be with you. President Trump put out a
post on truth social saying do this. Why are we
allowing this to happen? We need to get the country
running again. I don't disagree. John Thune is already on
record saying he will protect the filibuster, thus requiring the

(01:09):
threshold to end debate at sixty votes, preventing a simple
majority from making things happen in the Senate. And here
comes President Trump saying why are we doing this? It's
time to play the Trump card and go for what

(01:33):
is called the nuclear option. Get rid of the filibuster,
and get rid of it now. Never have the Democrats
fought so hard to do something because they knew the
tremendous strength that terminating the filibuster would give them. They
want to substantially expand and pack the US Supreme Court,
make Washington, d c. And Puerto Rico states, thereby picking
up Senate seats and House seats and many other highly

(01:55):
destructive things. Well, now we are in power, and if
we did what we should be doing, it immediately end
this ridiculous, country destroying shutdown if the Democrats ever came
back into power, which would be made easier for them.
If the Republicans are not using the great strength and
policies made available to us by ending the filibuster, the
Democrats who exercise their rights and will be done in

(02:15):
the first day they take office, regardless of whether or
not we do it. Okay, you have Democrats saying that
this is going to end after the election, which is
the New Jersey governor's race. In the Virginia governor's race.

(02:36):
Maybe you have Democrats looking at their party and saying
you're gross. And President Trump is more concerned about the
talking of trolls on social media. I have nothing left
to offer, guys on this subject. Republicans handled everything perfectly.

(02:59):
This is all the fault of Chuck Schumer. Ten. Trump
pulled the rug and the floor and the floorboards and
the basic foundation out from the Republicans who now have
to look at him and say, we're not getting rid
of the filibuster, and so now they got to fight
a two front war. I don't think they can do that.

(03:23):
I have no idea how they think they're going to respond.

Speaker 3 (03:26):
What I know is.

Speaker 1 (03:30):
Trump took victory and said not today, Satan can it'
spin ho. We'll get into that, but I have no
idea why he would do this.

Speaker 2 (03:46):
None.

Speaker 1 (03:48):
And his acolytes, well, they're going to say, yeah, we
should do this. This is not strategy. That's that's my
first take. I'll dig deeper in a little bit. Tony Katz,
ninety three ib C. Good morning, soybeans. Oh I know
it's Halloween. I was just saying, I'm dressing up as

(04:09):
a soybean. It's my very on top of the news
cycle costume.

Speaker 2 (04:20):
No.

Speaker 1 (04:21):
Tony Katz at ninety three w ib C, Good morning,
good to be with you. As reported by News Nations,
soybean farmers are grateful for Trump's trade deal with China.
I would assume they're grateful when they see dollars coming in.
We've been through this and it's not that I don't
want this. I desperately want this. I want it for

(04:41):
our farmers right here and across the country. You have
got this deal where Trump Trump was just in Asia,
he's back.

Speaker 3 (04:58):
They're gonna buy soybeans again.

Speaker 1 (05:01):
They promised to buy at least twenty five million metric
ton tons of soybeans annually for the next three years.
Now to the soybean farmers or any farmers in general
who know the subject, Tony and tonycats dot com. We
haven't done a farmer's roundtable on a long time. I
think we're due. But is compared to what is normally

(05:23):
purchased by China? Can someone give me a kind of
understanding of twenty five million metric tons? What it sounds
like is a lot, you know normally. That's the answer
to the question of how much light beer has Nigel
consumed in his lifetime? What is twenty five million metric tons?

(05:45):
But I don't know what it is comparatively speaking to
what China would buy in any given year or in
any level of historical average. Anybody can get me that information,
I'd love it. Now we have something to compare it to.
People are just gonna say, look how much they're gonna buy.

Speaker 2 (06:08):
I don't know how much they used to buy before.

Speaker 1 (06:10):
And people who aren't farmers like me, how do you
even associate that to anything? Just repeat a number and
just decide, well, that's good as reporting goes from the
associated present. That's why I want to double check it.
China's going to buy twelve million metric tons between now

(06:32):
in January. That's half the typical annual volume. So clearly
I'm on to something with this subject. But I can
understand the concept of grateful. It's a step in the
right direction with all of these trade deals. I don't
think people should be hitting on Trump for saying, okay,
we've got a framework here, we've got an opportunity here,

(06:54):
far more than you got from Biden. What you should
be asking is when does the salts show in all
of these trade deals?

Speaker 3 (07:03):
The result is what matters, and so now how do
we get there?

Speaker 1 (07:08):
How do we see that a step in the right direction?
That's good. There are some discussions about how even though
they're buying, the pricing isn't right and Swabean farmers are
going to lose out. There's a lot here and tonyatonycats

(07:29):
dot com. I want to hear everything. I want to go.
I want to go to Soybean School and I want
to understand what it is that we're dealing with. It's
like Operation Arctic Frost, the document dumps that have been
going on, where the Biden Justice Department, via Jack Smith,

(07:50):
the Special Council going after and investigating conservative activists, donors,
organization centators. What they were investigating ding Senator Ted Cruz
two thousand pages of subpoenas issued by the Central Council
Jack Smith for their targets banking, data, communications and other informations.

(08:17):
Now it's two thousand pages of subpoenas. It's one hundred
and ninety seven subpoenas, so pages versus the total number
of subpoenas was about show me the man, and I'll
show you the crime. They didn't have crimes, they were
just looking for them. They didn't have inklings of crimes,
they were just looking for them. The Department of Justice

(08:40):
surveiled Senator Ted Cruz's office landline that got revealed in
a press conference on Wednesday, and the six attorneys who
signed the subpoenas are no longer employed by the Department
of Justice. Was there any question that the Biden administration

(09:03):
DOJ under Merrick Garland was engaged in a political attack
against their opponents? The answer is no. Well, Trump's engaged
in a political attack. He at least tells you he's
doing the attacking. We're not sending the DOJ to engage

(09:25):
in a clandestine operation to surveil you. This is not
the first time this has happened. And the Bidens want
to say, and the Democrats want to say, my gosh,
scandal free. Oh holy hell, it wasn't scandal free when
they found Hunter's coke in the White House. I'm saying

(09:48):
it was Hunter's coke. That's my take. That is my take.
It was Hunter's. If you want to prove it me wrong,
show me the videos. Oh wait, the video doesn't show
who put cocaine in a cubby, of course it doesn't. Well,
why would that be the only place in the White

(10:08):
House that doesn't have a camera on it?

Speaker 3 (10:12):
That and whatever the private room.

Speaker 1 (10:14):
Is off the Oval office where Bill Clinton could get
a little extra curricular.

Speaker 3 (10:18):
Only two places that don't have a camera.

Speaker 1 (10:23):
Gosh, and then sorry, I know it's a story about
the royals. It doesn't matter. It's a great story King
Charles lowering the freaking boom on Andrew, who is no
longer a prince Andrew his brother. He is now Andrew
mount Batten Windsor lost the title and lost the home.

(10:49):
This because of Jeffrey Epstein. By the way, released the
Epstein files. I don't know what we're waiting for. Oh,
if we can nuke the filibuster, we can release Epstein files.
What does it all matter? People very often on social
media will be like, you just don't want to release
the Epstein files. I'm like, I, you've never listened to
this show at all from day one, clear record, of course,

(11:11):
release the Epstein files. Everything that you can release, you
should release. Are people going to be mentioned to are innocent?
Absolutely true? Just because you're listed doesn't mean you're guilty
of anything. That's what investigations are about. Who was engaged
in the sexual impropriety? If we know that answer, I
want people in jail. Andrew, it seems, was involved in

(11:34):
the sexual impropriety, and he will not say he did it.
He's denying everything, and the Palace has said their majesties
wish to make clear that their thoughts and utmost sympathies
have been and will remain with the victims and survivors
of any and all forms of abuse. So he lost

(11:55):
the lease to his house. He is no longer prince,
and he's going to be moving to a private estate
and the King is going to basically pay the rent.
That's what I don't I don't even know what that's
comparative to. Right, is that like when a college loses

(12:19):
it's it's football team and they're given the death sentence
and they're they're not allowed to do it. It's it's
like that, it's over It's over all. The protection that
Queen Elizabeth gave him is gone.

Speaker 2 (12:33):
Gone.

Speaker 3 (12:35):
Now you say to me, Tony Royals, I don't care.

Speaker 1 (12:38):
I'm discussing how Andrew must see this thing, the Charmed
life all gone something else. I appreciate the soybean farmers
that are reaching out. Ducer Carr will be in touch.
While we're gonna get together. I gotta get I gotta

(12:59):
get an understanding, make sure I see it the way
I see it. Major Mike Lons scheduled be with us
on Tony Katz today at noon because President Trump has
said we need to start doing some nuclear testing. We
need to retest, be testing our nuclear weapons stockpile, and

(13:21):
people are losing their minds. And I put forward to
you that the people losing their minds have no idea
what is in our nuclear stockpile and whether or not
these things need to be tested at all. They simply
have a reaction. And reaction is not intellect. Reaction is
emotional problem from children. I reached out to people and

(13:45):
the response has been, yeah, yeah, you got to test
these things. We're actually overdue. The constant continual refrain of
I can't believe Trump is doing this.

Speaker 3 (14:03):
It's so freaking boring.

Speaker 1 (14:07):
And what it is meant to do is to put
you on this heightened state of alert, so everything is
always shocking all the time. And no one ever asked
a question, well should you test these things? I'm told
I have to test the batteries and my smoke detector

(14:27):
every six months. Is it really so crazy to think
that you might have to test a nuclear weapon? Well,
we shouldn't have nuclear weapons. It would be a different
argument than whether or not we need to test them,
because the other guys have them, and as much as
you may not like them, you can blame Oppenheimer. I say,
make sure they're in working condition if we're going to

(14:49):
have them, and we are going to have them, so
we can all be grown ups in the room and
not be out there holding up some ridiculous picket sign
like we're gonna make any difference or any change in
this reality.

Speaker 3 (15:06):
Look what Trump did.

Speaker 1 (15:07):
He's got China buying soybeans again, how many soybeans? And
compared to what they used to buy. You cannot look
at a number and say wow. The only way to
understand a number is to engage in some level of comparison,
to see what was happening before, what can happen from it,
what can happen in the future. That's it. But what

(15:29):
they do is create this shocking, this amazing, this. I
can't believe this. Look what he's doing now, he's building
an event space for the White House.

Speaker 3 (15:41):
He didn't stab a puppy. It's not that shocking.

Speaker 1 (15:48):
Testing the nuclear capability of the United States.

Speaker 2 (15:53):
I don't know when's the last time.

Speaker 1 (15:55):
I was tested? Oh guaranteed. These people on social media
all screaming and yelling, catterwauling like they're people of intellect.
They don't know, so we're gonna talk to people who know.
That's gonna be on Tony Katz today at noon. Do
not miss it. Tony Katz ninety three WIBC, Good Morning.
I gave a producer, Carl license to play Michael Jackson.

(16:17):
I did that. It's on me. Tony Katz, ninety three WIBC,
Good Morning. It is Halloween, people, and uh, you know,
some people may have the inclination to say, you know,
and I'm gonna dress up like a creepy clown really
scare people, and and and and really cause a scene.

Speaker 2 (16:34):
And I just want to I just want to warn.

Speaker 1 (16:36):
People not to do that. We have a series of
PSA's we've been playing all week. We'll hit them all
today to help people so they don't dress up like
a creepy clown. Uh this Halloween. Here here's one of them.

Speaker 4 (16:47):
And now a public service announcement for anyone who's thinking
of dressing like a creepy clown. This Halloween shuit well's
fake hearing devices, so far up your ass you can
hear the satires all tested as it produces. This has
been a public service announcement for anyone thinking of dressing
like a creepy clown as Halloween.

Speaker 3 (17:10):
Just trying to help, just trying to help.

Speaker 1 (17:14):
I don't want anybody dressing me up like a creepy
clown this Halloween and having bad things.

Speaker 2 (17:21):
Happen to them.

Speaker 1 (17:22):
No, no, no, no, no no, no, not going to
I'm going to try and help the very very best
I can. I wanted Donald Trump to do the same,
and he's like, nah, now I don't want to help.

Speaker 3 (17:38):
I want to cause the seam.

Speaker 1 (17:40):
And he comes out on truth Social and he says, hey,
what are we all doing here? It's time to end
the filibuster. I've got the Washington Post saying of the
Democratic Party vote for the continuing resolution. I've got unions saying,
what are you doing? Democrats vote for the continuing resolution.

(18:01):
And I've got Donald Trump saying, in a massive post
untruth social nuke the filibuster, pass continuing resolution. Let's go
run the country. I cannot make sense of it. And
for the people who want to say to me, will Tony,
this is really forty chess to put pressure on the Democrats.

(18:23):
Could we stop, just stop, just stop? Oh there you
go again, Tony not supporting Donald Trump. Dear Lord idle worship,
is ugly and incredibly daft. People make mistakes. I have
no idea why Donald Trump did this in every way.

(18:47):
Chuck Schumer failed in every way. The Democrats are responsible
every way. John Thune, who is the leader of the
Republicans in the Senate, has said he is going to
protect filibuster. And Donald Trump said, well, now I'm in charge.
I'm the captain now, And you're like, well, he's the
president of the United States, he's in charge. Is that strategy. No,

(19:11):
there is no strategy. There's just whatever he puts out
on a post at the moment. And everybody, like lemmings,
like progressive says, oh, absolutely, that's it. It's not always it.
Everything's possible, everything's possible. It could still work out. But

(19:33):
if you get rid of the filibuster, you're giving the
Democrats what they want.

Speaker 2 (19:38):
You're giving the Democrats what they want.

Speaker 1 (19:40):
Let's it. There's nothing else, there's nothing more, there's nothing
else to engage in. You're just doing that. And I
don't know why you would do that publicly. Why wouldn't
you have that conversation privately? Now you say to me, Tony,
we don't know if he had that conversation privately, very
very true, we don't. But now it's out in the public.

(20:01):
If you're the Democratic Party, you feel any pressure to
put this to an end, you could argue with me
and say, well, by putting this out publicly, Democrats have
to say to themselves, man, we don't want the filibuster
to be brought to an end because that could mean
bad things for us. So therefore we're going to vote
for this to prevent the Republicans from doing it.

Speaker 2 (20:24):
One could make that argument.

Speaker 1 (20:26):
Note here, how I cover every side in every part
of the conversation. So when they come and say, oh, Tony,
you're just parroting this, that and the other, point them
to this and then tell them to sit down. One
could argue that that is the methodology here. That's the
great strategy here. I think that that is a that

(20:52):
would be luck. That would be luck. There's no strategy
here that can be scene. There's no a strategy here
that can be appreciated, none. Zero.

Speaker 3 (21:12):
I've got unions, I have got.

Speaker 1 (21:14):
Editorial boards saying, Chuck Schumer, you have failed. Keep the
pressure on to make him make this change. Now you
say to me, Tony, put the pressure on. But people
are actually gonna go hungry. I'm gonna start where I started.

(21:34):
I'm sickened by the fact that we elect people, send
them to DC and they won't do their job. No budget.

Speaker 2 (21:40):
What are we doing here?

Speaker 1 (21:43):
You want me to get worked up by continuing resolution.
I won't. I flat out refuse. Vote for better people,
the end, the end. President Trump's argument about the filibuster
is if the Democrats had the power, they would get
rid of the philibuster immediately. Maybe maybe, But if you

(22:10):
remove the filibuster, you're not going to be able to
have the subject.

Speaker 3 (22:12):
Tony, we don't need the subject. We need to win.
Can you name for me.

Speaker 1 (22:16):
The other subjects where the filibuster has been an issue.
You didn't give me ten things. You give me one thing,
and the one thing is the thing that Chuck Schumer
is losing with.

Speaker 3 (22:31):
So yes, this is not good strategy.

Speaker 1 (22:35):
Could it work out. I've lived long enough to know
everything can work out. But I don't know why you
would put this out. I don't know why you would
make this public. I have nothing that shows that there
is an ounce of strategy going on behind this, except
for John Thune to have to come out and say no, no, no,
we support the filibuster, which is now putting Thune against

(22:59):
Trump and not what you want. Ending the philibuster is
what the Democrats want. They just want it when they're
in power. So this is all strategy to get it,
to get them to say no, no, no, keep the filibuster,
and you've got another year of being able to have
this possibility learning over you. Maybe. But the more you

(23:24):
talk about, the more it doesn't seem like it's the
right strategy. Nothing of this seems like it's the right strategy.
Mister President can't wait to get all the tweets yelling
at me, so it goes. I just wrote a.

Speaker 3 (24:08):
Straightous email, possibly of my career, but.

Speaker 1 (24:14):
Life is short. Tony Katz ninety three WIBC, Good morning,
What is going on? Everybody? Operation Midway Blitz. Christy Nome
was in town. She was in Gary, Indiana on Thursday
with a Governor Mike Brawn, to discuss the immigration enforcement

(24:36):
initiative that was in and around Chicago Land Department of
Homeland Security saying there's an increase in master armed agents
arresting I legal immigrants with criminal records. This according to
our own Jarrett Lewis at WIBC, dot com. For the record,
I have zero issue, zero issue with the removal of a.

Speaker 3 (25:03):
Legal immigrants from the United States.

Speaker 1 (25:07):
I have incredible issue with any law enforcement walking up
to anyone and saying do you have your papers? And
I've seen some of those videos and I would be
firing people today. We are absolutely aware in a large

(25:28):
measure of.

Speaker 3 (25:29):
Who is and who isn't in the United States.

Speaker 1 (25:32):
Legally, we know a lot of information already and we
can utilize that for the majority of sweeps we can.
If you are engaged in a sweep for some other
related criminal activity, you can ask the question. This goes
back to Arizona and SB ten seventy centate built ten seventy.
Whether someone's involved in a lawful detention or arrest, stop

(25:57):
attention arrest, they can be asked their citizenship. I have
zero issue with that as well, walking up to someone
in the United States and saying are your papers in order? Now,
that's the line, and ICE has to accept the line.
There is a line the masks, well, maybe if you'd
stop trying to kill ICE agents, let them do their job.

(26:20):
The real argument here is that the left doesn't believe
that they should be allowed to do their job at all.
I think they absolutely should be allowed to do their job.
I just want to make sure we're always defining what
the job is. If you think you can walk up
to an American citizen and say to you, are your
papers in order? You got it wrong. That's just wrong.
Easy enough to say. Let us break down a statement

(26:44):
from the Heritage Foundation. Oh, it's gonna get me yelled at,
but that's okay. What doesn't get me yelled at? Tony
Katz at ninety three WIBC, Good morning. I'll let you
know if I get a response. Huh. I'm told nothing ventured,
nothing gained. Let's find out. Tony Katz, ninety three WIBC,

(27:07):
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there is more. I am not surprised that would come

(28:49):
back to me, not surprised in the slightest. Let's see
this one. I can't, I can't. I can't share it yet.
I can't share it yet. We'll see if I get
any luck. There was a statement made. I want to
break this down because you might argue this is happening

(29:12):
in social media, this isn't part of real life. But
rather I would say to you that when the president
of the Heritage Foundation makes a statement about cancel culture
and engages a full throat of defense of Tucker Carlson,
who recently had on his show, Nick Foyintes, Nick Poyntes

(29:37):
is an anti semit. He's a white supremacist. However you
want to call him. I don't know how he would
decide himself. He's just an American. Maybe I think he's
just a caricature at times. But why would you platform
that guy? That was the conversation. I mean, then Tucker
got into a conversation about Christian Zionists, and it's always

(30:01):
back to this. It's funny and on social media every
was like, on Tony, you're always so talking about Israel. No, no, no, no,
Tucker is always talking about Israel. Yet I'm told to
give it a rest, and he's like, whoo, cheer him on.
It's very it's it's it's very strange. And when I
say it's very strange, it's strange that somehow people are

(30:22):
gonna think that it's not gonna get noticed. That guy
gets cheered on and I get told no, it's odd.
But having Nick Foants on your show is about platforming
a bigot like this is is nuts, is surreal.

Speaker 3 (30:51):
Why in the world, Why in the world would you
do it?

Speaker 1 (30:56):
That's the question I wanted to share with you what
it is that Kevin Roberts, the leader there of the
Heritage Foundation, said, I want you to hear it for yourself.
I want you to be able to make your own
mind up about it. And the reason that it matters
is because the divide it.

Speaker 3 (31:16):
Is creating seems to be.

Speaker 1 (31:21):
One of this is vile versus one of this is Christian.

Speaker 3 (31:29):
And that.

Speaker 1 (31:31):
I think it's a very odd and upsetting place to be.
So let me start with this. Is Kevin Roberts, he
heads up the Heritage Foundation.

Speaker 2 (31:43):
This is what it is.

Speaker 1 (31:46):
That he had to say. I'm sorry. I apologize right there.

Speaker 5 (31:54):
I'll have more to say on this in the coming days,
but today I want to be clear about one thing.
Christians can critique the state of Israel without being anti Semitic,
and of course anti Semitism should be condemned. My loyalty
as a Christian and as an American is to christ
first and to America always. When it serves the interests

(32:14):
of the United States to cooperate with Israel and other allies,
we should do so with partnerships on security, intelligence, and technology.
But when it doesn't, Conservatives should feel no obligation to
reflexively support any foreign government, no matter how loud the
pressure becomes from the globalist class or from their mouthpieces
in Washington.

Speaker 1 (32:35):
It's at that moment I stop. He hasn't gotten into
Tucker yet.

Speaker 3 (32:40):
Support of Israel is proof of being a globalist.

Speaker 1 (32:47):
The argument of you can disagree, well, yeah, of course,
go right ahead. Does it make you an anti cinemite.
I'm telling you it doesn't. That's insane. It's insane. What
if I disagree with you now, Kevin Roberts, am I
now part of the globalist class.

Speaker 2 (33:06):
Am I anti Christian?

Speaker 1 (33:09):
Well, it seems to be part of what you're purporting here,
and I think is where a lot of this division
is coming from. This what in the world are you
putting out there versus good for you for standing up
for Christian values. A divide, ladies and gentlemen.

Speaker 5 (33:30):
The Heritage Foundation didn't become the intellectual backbone of the
conservative movement by canceling our own people or policing the
consciences of Christians, and we won't start doing that now.
We don't take direction from comments on X though we
are grateful for the robust free speech debate.

Speaker 1 (33:48):
We also don't take direction.

Speaker 5 (33:50):
From members or donors, though we are inherently grateful for
their support.

Speaker 1 (33:56):
I'm not one hundred percent sure how accurate that is
in that donors don't have any level of sway. I
would hope that donors understand this is the organization we have,
and this is the message we put out there, and
sometimes you might disagree with parts of it, but if
you agree with the overarching that's what we ask your

(34:18):
support on. I would hope that that's the case, and.

Speaker 5 (34:23):
We're adding more every day. This is the robust debate.
We invite with our colleagues, our movement, friends, our members,
and the American public. We will always defend truth, We
will always defend America, and we will always defend our
friends against the slander of bad actors who serve someone
else's agenda. That includes Tucker Carlson, who remains and as

(34:48):
I have said before, always will be a close friend
of the Heritage Foundation. The venomous coalition attacking him or
sewing division their attempt to cancel him will fail. Most importantly,
the American people expect us to be focusing on our
political adversaries on the left, not attacking our friends on
the right.

Speaker 1 (35:10):
If I disagree with Tucker Carlson, it's a slander. I'm
a globalist and I'm not focused on the right things.
I reject the premise Kevin Roberts with everything in me.
As a matter of fact, I want you to apply
that in any other place. If I disagree with Heritage, well,

(35:31):
what if I disagree with libertarians like Cato? Or what
if I disagree anywhere? If I disagree with Tucker, What
if I disagree with Dana Perino, Or what if I
disagree with Rob Finnerty Over there at Newsmax. It's proof
I'm part of the globalists. I can't note something that
Tucker Carlson says or does. I can't note that he

(35:54):
said Russia has great supermarkets and we should be more
like them, and how radically ridiculous that is. It's a
ridiculous thought. I can't notice that he platforms Nick quents
and say that's wrong. It doesn't sound like a conversation
of robust free speech when you then declare that by

(36:16):
doing so, you're giving ammunition and energy to the left,
and you're a globalist.

Speaker 5 (36:24):
I disagree with and even at poor things that Nick
Flintess says, but canceling him is not the answer either.
When we disagree with the person's thoughts and opinions, we
challenge those ideas and debate. And we have seen success
in this approach as we continue to dismantle the vile
ideas of the left. As my friend Vice President Vance

(36:47):
said last night, what I am not okay with is
any country coming before the interest of American citizens. And
it is important for all of us, assuming we are
American citizens, to put the interest of our own country first.

Speaker 1 (37:01):
I believe we should put America first. Absolutely.

Speaker 2 (37:07):
I do.

Speaker 1 (37:08):
And I'm not in favor of canceling Tucker Carlson. I
think that's a silly idea. But I think I can
note without being called a globalist and without engaging some
threat to Christianity that platforming Nick Foynts is ugly because
it is doesn't make me a globalist, doesn't make me

(37:29):
anti Christian. The statement from the Heritage Foundation is something else.
And people surprised at the response of what's wrong with you?
I'm surprised at them. We'll discuss it more on Tony
kat today, right now today on the Marketplace. It's a

(37:51):
quatic erotic. I'm sorry, I'm sorry. Maybe there should have
been a warning before help. Every one of you kids
is enjoying going to school today. This is about to
be a very interesting lesson about fish. Tony Katz at
ninety three WIBC, Good morning, Good to be with you.
During downtime, clearing my head, getting ready for it's the
next on the show. I find myself on Facebook marketplace,

(38:13):
odd stuff, cool stuff, weird stuff, strange stuff I bought,
I've sold, It's.

Speaker 3 (38:15):
All there on the marketplace.

Speaker 1 (38:17):
The whole Marketplace segment is brought to you by Indiana
Unclaimed dot gov. It's your cash. Go get it Indiana
Unclaimed dot gov, fast easy, free to use. My gosh,
there's a final paycheck waiting for you. It's your money,
you earned it. Go get it Indiana Unclaimed dot gov.
And of course you can watch what's happening is we're
live streaming on the YouTube YouTube dot com slash WIBC.

(38:39):
Matt Bear is there wearing a kind of low cut shirt.

Speaker 2 (38:43):
Yeah, that's a little it's low cut.

Speaker 1 (38:45):
It's a little low Matti booboo showing off the Matty booboo.

Speaker 2 (38:50):
Yeah, what's going on right there?

Speaker 1 (38:53):
Producer Carl is there. Uh, he just got his new
members only jacket off of eBay and he looks fantastic.

Speaker 2 (38:59):
He looks great.

Speaker 1 (39:01):
And then there's me in the official TK swag. How
you doing. You'll get yours January twenty fourth. I should
have it set up for Christmas, but there's.

Speaker 2 (39:10):
Only so many things one can do.

Speaker 1 (39:13):
By the way, I'm hiring a director for the midday
show for the midday live stream. If you know how
to do those kinds of things, Tonytonycats dot com, send
your CV. I'm serious, this is happening.

Speaker 2 (39:23):
Matt Bear.

Speaker 1 (39:25):
Do you like dolphins?

Speaker 2 (39:26):
Oh? I love them. I love swimming with them.

Speaker 1 (39:28):
Do you like Do you like the mermaids?

Speaker 6 (39:30):
Oh? Do I mercy? I have a computer full of
videos of them.

Speaker 1 (39:36):
Do you like the idea of a mermaid a topless
seductively perched atop a dolphin.

Speaker 2 (39:42):
They're singing my song, baby, this is life?

Speaker 1 (39:45):
Well? Have I got your fan fiction come to life
for you? This is antique mermaid and dolphin cast iron bookends.
What a stunning pair of antique cast iron bookends featuring
mermaids riding dolphins. Oh, that's an interesting way to say.

Speaker 2 (40:07):
Okay, I found it here. This is at Tony Kats.

Speaker 1 (40:10):
Yes, you to find on the Twitter ex at Tony
Kats and they are riding over green ocean waves.

Speaker 2 (40:15):
This unique.

Speaker 1 (40:16):
These unique pieces capture the elegant mythology of the Art
Deco period with rich detailing and original hand painted accents.

Speaker 2 (40:24):
It's a great read the figure.

Speaker 1 (40:27):
The figures exude both strength and serenity. That's a way
to put it. Yes, yeah, I think she's exceeding something else.

Speaker 2 (40:35):
There's some nudity here, I think. Yeah, now, yeah.

Speaker 3 (40:40):
Yeah, When I said aquatic erotic, I was not kidding you.

Speaker 6 (40:44):
Were not kidding. This is a this is full on round.
I'm surprised this didn't get flagged by the corporate security.

Speaker 1 (40:51):
Here.

Speaker 2 (40:51):
So we have a naked woman.

Speaker 6 (40:53):
You say, that's a dolphin that she's writing here because
it kind of looks like a sack of potatoes.

Speaker 2 (40:57):
Nope, okay, dolphins, you make.

Speaker 6 (40:59):
More sense of she was on the Mermaid. But it
does look like there's a like a Santa sack here.

Speaker 1 (41:05):
Right right. She is definitely riding a mammal.

Speaker 6 (41:08):
Yeah, okay, good, good, good, good, because that wouldn't make
any sense.

Speaker 1 (41:11):
Hold on, hold on. Just going through my years in radio,
that's a first. I have never said she's definitely riding
a mammal. And if you listen closely, you could hear
all the moms who have turned off their radios.

Speaker 2 (41:26):
Well, no, this is bookend. It's for literature.

Speaker 1 (41:29):
I mean right right, we're trying to get the kids
to read.

Speaker 6 (41:33):
Your previous life as an English professor, and here we
are come full circle.

Speaker 1 (41:38):
These come from the nineteen twenties or nineteen thirties, and
you can get them both.

Speaker 3 (41:41):
They're six inches tall.

Speaker 1 (41:42):
Matt Bear, Yeah, for one hundred and seventy five dollars, yes,
sign me up.

Speaker 2 (41:47):
I mean these are great. I mean I'm put these anywhere.

Speaker 6 (41:51):
You have a beautiful naked woman on top of a
beautiful naked dolphin. Yeah, I can just picture them have
it a little, you know, a surf through the ocean,
up and down and.

Speaker 1 (42:01):
Just right, just having a happy naked time.

Speaker 2 (42:04):
Happy naked time with the dolphin and the woman.

Speaker 1 (42:07):
Oddly enough, guys, happy Naked Time is the name of
Matt Bear's third podcast, seem to be available widc dot com.

Speaker 2 (42:15):
How did you know I was doing a third one.
That's amazing.

Speaker 6 (42:19):
This is the beauty of the ocean, Tony, and I
think everybody should have a pair of these, right, So.

Speaker 1 (42:25):
So you are a believer that it's not about the
size of the wave but rather the motion of the ocean.

Speaker 2 (42:31):
Absolutely, yeah, this is good stuff. This really is.

Speaker 1 (42:36):
Honestly, I'm not sure if we have a show tomorrow. Well, no,
it's Saturday.

Speaker 2 (42:40):
On Monday, it could be a very very long weekend.

Speaker 1 (42:42):
I don't know. I'm saying though, I'm out for one
hundred and seventy five dollars on these, but if somebody
wants them, they're there.

Speaker 6 (42:51):
The dolphin has a miserable look on his face. I
don't understand that. I mean, you know, you have a
beautiful woman on top of you, that's that's not clothed.
You have a blowhole I mean going on here, and
the dolphin just looks like it's just a hell. And
I feel bad for the dolphin, but I'd still buy
the book ends.

Speaker 1 (43:07):
Hey, Matt, Yes, it's just you and me. No one's listening, right, okay, sure?

Speaker 3 (43:13):
Have you have you ever you ever heard the expression
lessons more?

Speaker 1 (43:17):
No?

Speaker 6 (43:18):
Actually about every day in my life. I don't know
where that applies here, because I was talking about books.

Speaker 3 (43:25):
I think I think we should apply it to everything.

Speaker 6 (43:28):
Okay, I'll work on it, man, But I just I
don't see the offense here.

Speaker 2 (43:32):
I mean, they're beautiful. It's art. I love art, and
this is artistic.

Speaker 1 (43:37):
You can find the art over there at w obviously
dot com, where we have all of the Facebook marketplace
segments and subjects listed presented by Indiana Unclaimed dot gov.

Speaker 3 (43:47):
Oh wait, hold on, that's Todd Rakeita pulling a sponsorship there.

Speaker 1 (43:49):
Just went okay, they're just there. Just went the attorney
channel's office just said nope, no, thank you. That's sad.

Speaker 2 (43:57):
I love dolphins Gone too soon.

Speaker 3 (44:00):
Tony Kats ninety three WIBC.

Speaker 7 (44:02):
Good morning, Ah, Halloween, it is today candy will be
given out and ladies and gentlemen.

Speaker 1 (44:13):
I discovered, well, I discovered two things that my wife,
a glorious woman, honestly truly a blessed guy. We have
a difference in candy, which is to say, I know
what candy is, and she is still experimenting. And sometimes

(44:34):
things have come to this house. I'm like, that's not candy.
And there was a bag of Reese's Peanut butter cups,
which is perfect candy. Ladies might be the very top
of the candy. Tony Kats ninety three WIBC, Good morning.
But no, it wasn't just Reese's Peanut butter cups. It
was Reese's peb and Jay's. That's right. They added jelly

(44:54):
to the Reese's Peanut butter cup. Now, we tried these
on the E Drink Smoke Show. You can catch that
this weekend at WBC dot com and of course get
the podcast, Eat Drink Smoke Show. Where did you get
your podcast? We tried these. Do they either come with
grape or they come with strawberry? You have to listen
to the show to find out what whether or not

(45:16):
this is an abomination. I'll give you a hint, it's
an abomination. And I said, I don't know why you
did this, And then she said, fear not. I also have.

Speaker 3 (45:27):
Full sized candy bars, ladies and gentlemen.

Speaker 1 (45:29):
I am now a house that gives away full sized
candy bars. Can I just can I just a little
bit taking care of the children of Carmel, Because in Carmel,
if you don't give out full sized candy bars, you
have to give out bearer bonds. And honestly, who has
time for that? Carmel good lord, But it is every

(45:50):
Halloween I like to remind people that you should not
dress up like a creepy clown. You know, people like
to dress up like the creepy clown and they like
to scare people and they like to intimidate people. Well,
it's very, very dangerous. So we've come up with a
series of public service announcements, public service announcements to remind
people not to dress up like a creepy clown this Halloween.

Speaker 4 (46:11):
And now a public service announcement for anyone who's thinking
of dressing like a creepy clown.

Speaker 2 (46:16):
This Halloween.

Speaker 1 (46:17):
I'll regard your on your brain.

Speaker 4 (46:20):
This has been a public service announcement for anyone thinking
of dressing like a creepy clown this Halloween.

Speaker 2 (46:26):
That's right, that's that is that is accurate.

Speaker 1 (46:29):
Now you might say to me, hey, Tony, that's a
good warning, but I could use one more. Okay, I
just just in case we didn't get through to people.

Speaker 4 (46:38):
Here you go, and now a public service announcement for
anyone who's thinking of dressing like a creepy clown this Halloween.

Speaker 1 (46:44):
I know where you live, and I've seen where you sleep.
I swear to everything holy that your mother's will cry
when I see what I've done to you.

Speaker 4 (46:51):
This has been a public service announcement for anyone thinking
of dressing like a creepy clown this Halloween.

Speaker 2 (46:58):
There it is, there is so we're trying to help.

Speaker 3 (47:01):
We're just trying to help.

Speaker 1 (47:04):
I have been watching with great curiosity the sale of
the properties of the late Colts owner to Mersey, the daughters,
whom I do not know. They all seem lovely.

Speaker 3 (47:24):
I'd love to meet.

Speaker 1 (47:25):
I'm not I only want to do an interview. I
only want to talk.

Speaker 3 (47:29):
And it doesn't even have to be on air.

Speaker 1 (47:32):
You all come, you come to the house. I have
a cigar. It's on me. It's happy to do it.
I'd be I'd be thrilled to kind of dig into
how you how.

Speaker 3 (47:40):
You see things, because I have a question.

Speaker 1 (47:44):
When uh mister passed and you sold the house, it's like, okay,
they don't need that house. And then they sold this
lake house, like okay, you don't need the lake house.

Speaker 2 (47:52):
And then you realize they're selling a lot of things.

Speaker 1 (47:55):
And then you learn that the Erthsay collection is not
going to go into a museum, something we can do
right here in Indianapolis. It's not going to get donated out.
It's going to be auctioned off. The story coming out
that the guitars and the cultural artifacts they're going to
be sold. Christie's is going to sell the collection in March.

(48:23):
I have questions. I don't.

Speaker 3 (48:28):
I know what it's like. I'm guessing here.

Speaker 1 (48:34):
I want you to know this is pure speculation on
my part, but allow me in a moment of personal
I know it's like to grow up with a father
where the relationship ain't easy.

Speaker 3 (48:45):
I know it all too well.

Speaker 1 (48:47):
I do not know what your relationship was like, I
want you to know what it looks like from the outside,
and it's not that.

Speaker 2 (48:54):
It matters what it's looking like from the outside. I
want you to know.

Speaker 1 (48:58):
It looks like you're doing a way with every single
piece of your father. That's what it looks like.

Speaker 3 (49:05):
Now.

Speaker 1 (49:06):
It's not that that is the worst thing in the world.
Those were his things and this is your thing now.
I question, though, with all the sales, I'm gonna ask
the question maybe nobody else is asking, nobody else is
willing to ask, is your plan to sell the Indianapolis Colts.
I've seen nothing that shows that that's your plan. I've
seen nothing that indicates that that's your plan. Regarding the team.

(49:28):
What I've seen is a real interest in the team.
But everything's going. I'm I'm curious as to where your
thoughts are, how you see things the not even taking
this collection to where you have the dollars to say, hey,

(49:49):
we're going to share this with the world. No, no, no,
we're selling it off. I always thought the selling of
all the properties was interesting. This I think it's okay
to ask the question, and I would love to talk
to you on air off about it. I don't I'm
surprised by this move, and I admittedly selfishly a bit disappointed. Halloween, everybody,

(50:29):
there will be so much diabetes tomorrow. Tony Katz ninety
three WIBC, Good morning, Good to be with you. Jonathan Taylor,
he plays for the Indianapolis Football Colts, named the AFC
Offensive Player of the Month. What did he say, Oh,
offense offensive got it? Thank you very much. Third time

(50:52):
he's received Player of the Month honors in his career
October and November of twenty twenty one. I'm surprised he
took this long for the NFL to get there. Honestly,
guy's been out of his head. As for Operation Midway
Blitz taking place right here in parts of Indiana, of course,

(51:14):
based on everything in Chicago, no issue, none, whatsoever. We
should be focused on removing illegal immigrants from the United States.
We should not accept lawbreaking.

Speaker 3 (51:28):
And yes, the idea.

Speaker 1 (51:31):
That well, no one is illegal, no person could be
illegal is a nonsense, silly, childlike argument. People who break
the law have to deal with breaking the law. That's
all there is, and to say otherwise is laughable. So

(51:51):
very very happy to see this going, but I do
at all times want to keep an eye on them,
because if you're walking up to people walking down the
street and saying show me your papers. No, no, no no.
If you have a reason to ask somebody for their ID,
that's one thing. Just walking up to a random purpose person.
Prove that you actually live here, prove that you're a citizen.

(52:14):
I didn't say it was going to be easy, but
I don't give up my rights because they're doing their job.
Their job is to ensure that my rights are secure.
We have a good understanding in a lot of places
of who's here legally, who the problems are, who the
criminal element is. Let's go get them. Let's go get
them right now, immediately, if not sooner. You can find

(52:37):
the full story on Operation Midway Blitz over at WIBC
dot com and there's a see these are the stories.
I don't know how the newsroom does it. This is
the headline at WIBC dot com. US marine arrested for
kidnapping twelve year old Indiana girl. What good Lord, I

(53:02):
don't have the capacity to read the restless story. I've
told this story before. When we were doing it was
during the trial of Jared Fogel, the subway guy and
the child pornography. I'm like, yeah, I can't. Like I
think like after day one, I went to our program
director David Wood and our Executiveroducer Matt Heaplin, I'm like, yeah,

(53:22):
I can't do this story.

Speaker 2 (53:24):
News is gonna have to do the story.

Speaker 1 (53:25):
I'm not gonna. I'm not. I can't. I don't have
any capacity to do it. That's why I'm not a
news guy. This is just two nuts for word for words.
This involves North Carolina, involved Chicago, involves Indianapolis. Check it
out for yourself at WIBC dot com. Much more to

(53:45):
get to, including Trump, refugees and racism. Yeah, there are
plenty of things that you can disagree with President Trump on.
There are some things where people just have no idea
how to handle their emotions. This is indeed one of

(54:05):
those stories. I have got that coming up. You are
not going to want to miss it. Tony Katz ninety
three WIBC, Good morning, Halloween, dear people, Halloween, And of
course some people still don't get the message. Tony Katz,
ninety three, WIBC, good morning, good to be with you,

(54:27):
and they're going to continue to dress like creepy clowns
on Halloween and try and intimidate and scare and frighten.
And you should know. It's like people who block traffic
or try and stop law enforcement from driving. Expect to
get run over, Expect bad things to happen. You dress
like a creepy clown, it's gonna get rough. So we

(54:48):
hear Tony Katz in the morning News, We've got some
public service announcements to help people who are considering dressing
like a creepy clown.

Speaker 3 (54:58):
We want to help them help themselves.

Speaker 1 (55:01):
So here just a public service announcement for anybody thinking
of dressing like a creepy clown this Halloween.

Speaker 4 (55:08):
And now a public service announcement for anyone who's thinking
of dressing like a creepy clown this Halloween.

Speaker 1 (55:14):
You die first.

Speaker 6 (55:15):
Getting your friends might get me in a rush, but
not before I make your hit into a canoe.

Speaker 3 (55:20):
You understand me.

Speaker 4 (55:21):
This has been a public service announcement for anyone thinking
of dressing like a creepy clown this Halloween.

Speaker 1 (55:27):
Just doing our part to help anybody who's thinking of
making this grave, grave mistake. If you need one more,
If you need one more, here here's one more to
help you.

Speaker 4 (55:39):
And now a public service announcement for anyone who's thinking
of dressing like a creepy clown this Halloween.

Speaker 1 (55:45):
You hear me talking here, billy boy, I ain't do
with you, my damned sight. I'm gonna get medieval on
your ass.

Speaker 4 (55:52):
This has been a public service announcement for anyone thinking
of dressing like a creepy clown this Halloween.

Speaker 1 (56:00):
Trying to help, guys. I'm just trying to help, that's all.
That's all we're doing. So don't do it. I'm just
telling you don't. Don't don't do it. Yes, President Trump
coming out and saying, you know, Republicans, stop dealing with
these Democrats, go for the nuclear option, get rid of

(56:21):
the philibuster. I can't, I cannot believe he said it.
What an absolute mistake, a mistake. You're winning this conversation.
America's with you. This is Schumer's because it is this

(56:41):
government shut down, and here comes the President to say,
you know, Republicans should change the philibuster rules and end this.
You're gonna tell me that there's a good strategy here
that now the Democrats are going to immediately vote for
this so they don't get rid of the philibusters, so
they can have it for other things and hold John
Thune Senate majority leader to his word. The Democrats they

(57:04):
have no word. If Democrats had power, would they get
rid of the philibuster? I say so. They were all
about getting rid of the philibuster and then they lost
the Senate and they were like me, my gosh, we
have to have the filibuster. Of course, they're like, this
question is do we have a standard or not? You
were already winning. Why are you doing this a mistake

(57:27):
and cutting the legs out from Republicans? And if you're
John Dune, you wake up, you read this, You're like,
what is happening here? One could make a very very
hard argument that this is all just forty chests and
here's what things can turn. They could work on your favor.
But you had it and you gave it up. You

(57:49):
saw victory and you were like, nah, not. You're like
Ady Mitchell heading for the end zone. I'll drop the
ball here too soon? Is that not? Is that not? Kind?
By the way, it's been a while for him in
the doghouse. I don't know how long these things last.

(58:09):
The wide receiver for the Colts, But I mean, if
you're winning the way you're winning without him on the field.
I mean, that's worse for Ady Mitchell. But that said,
I don't know what the plan is here. If you're
not going to allow him the shot at redemption, cut him,

(58:29):
trade him seriously. Jonathan Taylor got the shot at redemption.
He did this. Oh, but he's Jonathan Taylor. You've got
other people over than Adie Mitchell. There comes a moment
where it's beyond ugly. But the story I wanted to
get to was a story about refugees. And there's this

(58:55):
new bit of regulation. I guess we'd call it where
President Trump is cap being the amount of refugees for
fiscal year twenty twenty six at seventy five hundred. In
twenty twenty four, the US resettled more than one hundred
thousand refugees. It's the lowest number since the modern refugee

(59:18):
system was established. Even in twenty twenty and twenty twenty one,
we're dealing with COVID, we had over eleven thousand people.
What has people more upset when I say people the left,
is that the vast majority of these people are going
to be Africaners, and they're white, and they're saying, my gosh,
this is nothing but racism. Allow me if not the

(59:43):
white Africaners whose refugee status is predicated on the black
leadership in in South Africa screaming and chanting, kill the boar,
kill the white farmer, and quite literally killing white farmers,
who do you want it to be? I would argue

(01:00:04):
that the only thing we should be asking ourselves is
whether or not these people want to be Americans, are
going to appreciate America and follow the rules of America.
These are the questions, which is why I disagree with
groups like what is this group heritage? Say save Indiana

(01:00:25):
Heritage or save Heritage Indiana who heard me on the
show the other day and were like, well, Tony's not
really getting it right.

Speaker 3 (01:00:34):
I put forth to you, I do get it right.

Speaker 1 (01:00:36):
And their argument was, you know, we can't have this
mass migration because look what's happening in Dearborn. I said,
it's a very different conversation. I never said mass migration.
I never said I favored mass migration. I do favor
legal immigration, and I vehemently oppose illegal immigration. And I
believe in deporting anybody who's here illegally, and I believe

(01:00:59):
in supporting pep people who are here legally who support
the concept of America.

Speaker 2 (01:01:04):
But if you're coming to the United.

Speaker 1 (01:01:05):
States and saying America is terrible, I throw you right out.
If you're an able bodied man, I throw you right out.
We don't do that here. We don't that we're going
to pretend that every single bit of the workforce can
be covered by Americans. Sorry, that hasn't shown up in

(01:01:25):
the data. That we're going to argue that somehow Americans
can't do this work or refuse to do this work.
I don't know that has proven itself true either. But
this is a conversation about how you keep America America,
how we keep the constitution going strong. And indeed, you
cannot as allow Islamists into the nation, you cannot allow

(01:01:48):
communists into the nation. You can't. And you have to
say goodbye to people. And if there's some woman from
Nicaragua who believes that we should be under a communist system,
or you know, the worker should rebel, goodbye, you're not
an American. You're out. I think we can say that.
I never once questioned whether or not we should be

(01:02:08):
allowed to uphold a standard, which takes us back to
this conversation about refugees, the people upset that they're white Africaners.
Who do you want? You think it should be a
little bit of this group, a little bit of that group,
a little bit of other group, and every there's this
perfect even mix here. You're going by characteristics of skin
color or something about geography. I want to know who

(01:02:30):
wants to be an American. That's the only standard give us.
You're tired, you're poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
who want to do it our way and recognize where
they came from probably sucks or at least isn't as
good as where they are now.

Speaker 2 (01:02:49):
I think that's fine.

Speaker 1 (01:02:51):
You should want to be an American and you should
engage the American way of life and understand how we
do things here. And if you're not willing to do that,
if you think where you came from is better, if
you think we should change, maybe this isn't the place
for you. So no, this idea of ending mass migration,
I think you're grasping a straw there. Ensuring that our

(01:03:15):
legal immigration system brings in people who want to be
Americans absolutely in, all day and no question, all day
and no question.

Speaker 2 (01:03:25):
I think my arguments better than yours. I think it
connects with more people.

Speaker 1 (01:03:30):
I think it solves the problems, and I do believe
that we have problems that we need to solve. The
people upset with President Trump are bringing in white africunters.
They think we should bring in people based on skin
color or based on some other characteristic. I think the
only thing that matters is who wants to be an American.
You're telling me white Africanners don't want to be Americans,
or you're telling me they can't come because they're white.

Speaker 2 (01:03:53):
The first one to be like, Okay, that's interesting.

Speaker 1 (01:03:54):
The second one is just flat out racism, and I
dismiss the leftists who make that claim. Time to fill
up on the news. Tony Katz, ninety three WIBC, Good morning,
Good to be with you. Doubt futures are up one
seventeen naws that futures up three eighty four. Interesting, you

(01:04:16):
have got oil prices at sixty dollars and forty one
cents on the West Texas crewed.

Speaker 3 (01:04:20):
That's the barrel price.

Speaker 1 (01:04:22):
You have got Brent crude coming in at sixty four
dollars and eighty four cents per barrel the tenure treasury
four point zero nine to nine. So it is now
for the second day above that four percent threshold. Gold
back up four thousand dollars and sixty four thy sixteen dollars.

(01:04:47):
That is the big price right now on gold, silver
ticking back up to forty eight ninety two. Gold has
had a high of four thousand forty five today and
silver has had a high a forty nine forty one.
So hope people were able to cash out and things
to dip the little bit bit and we might see
it come back. We might see that this is the

(01:05:08):
way it is over there at IPS. That's Indianapolis Public Schools.
Oh wait a second, I forgot to do something I
always seem to forget. And they're such lovely people. I
should not forget. Philip on the News, brought to you
by Simple Quarters. Need to help sell your home without
the hassle, sell your home to people you can trust.

(01:05:31):
Call Simple Quarters three one seven nine hundred Home three
one seven nine hundred h O m E. Here's what
we're gonna do. Producer Carl, you have to put this
together today. We need a whole Philip on the News
intro presented by simple Quarters. I can't forget. These are
lovely people, great sponsors. I want to take care of them.
Three one seven nine hundred home. Sell your home without
the hassle three one seven nine hundred home. So you

(01:05:53):
have to build a new intro with the intro there,
or you can create a new intro producer, Carl, but
you're in charge of that that happens today, that's to happen.

Speaker 2 (01:06:00):
I need you, I need Can you handle this.

Speaker 1 (01:06:02):
Sir as I can hot dignity producer Carl. Everybody heck
of a guy.

Speaker 4 (01:06:08):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:06:09):
Indianapolis Public Schools also brought to you by Simple Quarters
three one seven nine hundred Home. Not really.

Speaker 5 (01:06:15):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:06:16):
They have changed over their at IPS it's Office of
Racial Equity into the Office of Strategic Excellence because schools
are getting pressure to abandon DEI efforts.

Speaker 3 (01:06:28):
Renaming something is not changing the effort.

Speaker 1 (01:06:34):
It's not it's it's it's a new name. It's like
when you said you change global warming to climate change.
It's just a new name. It's it's the same exact nonsense.
So no, you have to get rid of the office altogether.
You have to get rid of the ideology altogether. IPS

(01:06:57):
needs to be better. Stop promoting bigotry, stopped promoting hatred,
stop promoting division.

Speaker 3 (01:07:02):
That's what DEI does.

Speaker 1 (01:07:03):
Don't be in favor of.

Speaker 3 (01:07:04):
Any of it, that's the answer.

Speaker 1 (01:07:08):
And when you take a look at your declining enrollments,
as has been noted and reported, ask yourself what may
cause that? And it could be, yes, some of these
exact things that we're talking about. It could be the
absolute failure of leadership in Indianapolis, which is an absolute failure.
And I was involved in a conversation a couple days

(01:07:29):
ago about how sure am I that Joe Hodgest will
win reelection if he runs for mayor for a fourth term,
And the answer is one hundred and seventy four percent. Sure.

Speaker 2 (01:07:40):
I don't want it.

Speaker 1 (01:07:42):
Indianapolis shouldn't want it, But Indianapolis doesn't seem to want
what's good for it. I only have five members of
the city county Council calling for his resignation. And what
have they done about that? Said we call for his resignation,
that moved on with their day. Well, what are we
supposed to do about it?

Speaker 3 (01:07:56):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:07:57):
How about spending an hour in front of his office
every day demanding he resigned? How about bringing five hundred
people with you, demanding he resigns. He allows his staff
to be sexually inappropriate. He's sexually inappropriate with people, and
he has no agenda. He does not keep the people safe,
he can't plow the streets, and.

Speaker 3 (01:08:16):
People are gonna vote for him again. Well lease, he's
not a Republican.

Speaker 1 (01:08:19):
Good Lord, Indianapolis, you sound silly, you do, You sound ridiculous,
And I know it's just me once again speaking about this. Honestly.
No civic leaders no, no, no, the pacers nothing, the
cults nothing, Lily nothing, the great once vaunted MS Communications

(01:08:41):
right there on the circle, nothing, anthem nothing, nothing. He
can't get the leadership the people who live and breathe
this city to want to live and breathe a better city.
He can't really get much done. And here we are. Yes,

(01:09:02):
if Hogseet runs her fourth term, I believe he'll get it.
It is gross, but it is factual because the leadership
in Indianapolis does not want to lead.

Speaker 3 (01:09:15):
It's the last thing in the world they want.

Speaker 1 (01:09:18):
Because the civic leaders only want to say yeah, yeah, yeah, problem,
prom problem, what's in it for me? And if you're
offended by that, whether you're Jeff Smullian or Herb Simon.

Speaker 2 (01:09:28):
Or Dave Ricks or anybody else? How else should we
view it? I've got five microphones and no waiting.

Speaker 3 (01:09:35):
You tell me.

Speaker 1 (01:09:37):
I'm right here. Tony Katz ninety three w No, no,
don't tell me. Tell Indianapolis how they should view it.
Tony Katz ninety three, WIBC, Good morning, Ah, Producer Carl,
thank you. Tony Katz ninety three, WIBC, Good morning. It

(01:09:59):
took me a moment.

Speaker 3 (01:10:00):
I will admit I had to go through the rolodex.

Speaker 1 (01:10:03):
It's time to play America's favorite game. What the heck
is that television theme song? Here is how we play
our game. Producer Carl has picked a television theme song
from yesteryear.

Speaker 3 (01:10:14):
I have to guess what it is.

Speaker 1 (01:10:16):
Now I can utilize the chat room there watching the
livestream YouTube dot com slash WIBC. Or I can go
to Matt Bear and just phone a friend. And if
I were to do that and phone a friend, if
I were to phone a friend, let's let's try the
sound effect one more time. Thank you, and I would

(01:10:41):
go to Matt Bear in the WIBC traffic center. I
would say, Matt bear. What is a television theme song?
That's single down, Tony, that's full MTV ladies and gentlemen.

Speaker 6 (01:10:50):
Jenny McCarthy, Oh, that's gold or carbon electer, whichever.

Speaker 1 (01:11:00):
I need a moment.

Speaker 3 (01:11:02):
That is the theme song right there to the monsters.

Speaker 2 (01:11:06):
You're welcome, Grandpa Al, you.

Speaker 1 (01:11:10):
Are welcome right there. You want a weird story, interesting
story that so one of the trades has it as today?
Is that it was? It was an email I got

(01:11:33):
from Denny Smith. Denny Smith, of course, home and garden,
Denny Smith, of course, a billionaire, Denny Smith. Yesterday mark
the eighty seventh birthday of WIBC. The station got its

(01:11:57):
start October thirtieth, nineteen thirty eight, officially went on the
air for the first time from the Indianapolis Athletic Club,
originally on ten fifty AM with a thousand walks, operating
as a daytime only station owned by the Indiana Broadcasting Company.

(01:12:20):
It wasn't until nineteen forty one they moved to ten
seventy cool. That is uh, that's pretty groovy. It's fun
to be here. That's a great story.

Speaker 2 (01:12:37):
How long the station has been here?

Speaker 1 (01:12:40):
How long this has been building up on Tony Katz.
Today at noon, President Trump says we should get rid
of the filibuster, under cutting Republicans. He's just wrong and
I can't believe he did it, except it's a totally
Trump thing to do.

Speaker 3 (01:13:00):
And if someone wants to tell me.

Speaker 1 (01:13:05):
That this was uh see, it's all part of the plan.
He's just playing forty chess.

Speaker 2 (01:13:13):
I don't see it that way.

Speaker 1 (01:13:19):
You're winning the fight. Why not just win the fight.
You've got unions saying that Democrats are causing this government
shutdown because they won't vote for the continuing resolution.

Speaker 2 (01:13:31):
It's on them.

Speaker 1 (01:13:32):
You got the Washington Post editorial board saying Democrats are
causing this government shutdown. Vote for the continuing resolution. And
then you come in and say, oh, Republicans should just
go a nuclear and get rid of the filibuster and
then vote for this with fifty one votes. It's yeah,
what do you want me to say? What do you
want me to say? It's a mistake. It's just it's

(01:13:54):
it's silly, it unnecessary. You created a wrinkle. You were winning,
and you're like, yeah, let's not win. No, no, Republicans
can't win. I have to be the one who wins,
which is of course, a very trump thing to do.
Don't ask me to defend it, don't ask me to
understand it. I just won't. I have no idea what's
going to happen next, none, But if you tell me, well,

(01:14:17):
this is a strategy. Yeah, Jack's Donuts filing for bankruptcy protection.

Speaker 3 (01:14:31):
This has been in the offing for a while.

Speaker 1 (01:14:36):
The story here with Jack's Donuts is that they were
growing and they made a decision that we're going to
start opening stores that utilize a commissary, so you can
have a storefront, but you don't need the kitchen, and
we'll supply you the donuts every day. And then as
the reporting went and the stories went, the commissary either

(01:15:00):
couldn't keep up or wasn't to well run, whatever the
case may be, and stores weren't getting donuts. And then
the quality of the donuts absolutely was not there wasn't
there at all. And there have been stores that have
been suing in stores I think, going out of business,
finding ways to get out. And now we are here.

(01:15:25):
They say, you may have seen that Jack's Donuts's filed
for Chapter eleven bankruptcy protection.

Speaker 3 (01:15:29):
This is a court supervised process.

Speaker 1 (01:15:31):
We have plans for continued and uninterrupted future operations that
will be.

Speaker 3 (01:15:36):
Filed in the case, our stores remain.

Speaker 1 (01:15:38):
Open, our teams are at work, and our commitment to quality,
tradition and community remains unchanged. The Jacks franchise or and
certain related entities are the subject of the bankruptcy proceedings,
and no independently owned franchise is subject to this action.
They continue for more than sixty years. Jack's Donuts has
been about more than donuts. It's been about people. As

(01:15:59):
we move through this problem, says, our focus is the
same to ensure that the Jack's experience continues for generations
to come.

Speaker 3 (01:16:09):
I don't know how it goes from here.

Speaker 1 (01:16:11):
There are multiple lawsuits regarding debt. There is a bankruptcy
filing lists fourteen point one to nine million in liabilities
against only one point four million in assets, and then
it goes through who has the claims the bigger, swimming

(01:16:32):
Old National Bank with a claim of three and a
half million dollars. So we'll follow it. We will follow
how this works out and how this plays out. I
would still argue that the donut business seems in and
of itself, seems to be all right, you know. COVID

(01:16:55):
certainly did damage to a great number of businesses, and
these saw closings and I've seen things go out. But
as a matter of just course, if there's a local
place that can, that does the job, that brings it consistently,
I haven't seen anything but thriving in that regard.

Speaker 3 (01:17:14):
And it's like one of those things.

Speaker 1 (01:17:16):
Like I talk about with the coffee the other day. More
of that local, more of that success, and talking about it,
I think is very important. It's a big story because
people's livelihoods are on the line here, and we'll follow
the story as it goes and grows. I will catch
you guys at noon. It's Halloween, and just a reminder
for anybody thinking of dressing up like a creepy clown

(01:17:37):
this Halloween.

Speaker 4 (01:17:39):
And now a public service announcement for anyone who's thinking
of dressing like a creepy clown this Halloween.

Speaker 1 (01:17:45):
I'm to keep you in the back of the head.
I'm ten years old, but i'll bat your ass. I
don't come at you. I'm a monkey.

Speaker 4 (01:17:53):
This has been a public service announcement for anyone thinking
of dressing like a creepy clown this Halloween.

Speaker 1 (01:18:00):
Happy Halloween, once and all be very careful,
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