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July 21, 2025 • 40 mins
Monday 07/21/25 Hour 2. With Dan Perkins.
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
What are you listening to a show about junk food?

Speaker 2 (00:02):
Today? We give you permission to cheat on your diet.

Speaker 1 (00:06):
Welcome to July twenty first.

Speaker 3 (00:07):
Today is National Junk Food Day, chump.

Speaker 4 (00:10):
Food, rank junk food?

Speaker 5 (00:12):
What else for the junk food junkie for breakfast? Who
came mister chunk food.

Speaker 2 (00:16):
To grit junk food Time?

Speaker 3 (00:18):
Our junk food pieclas happy National junk Food dank Shoot.

Speaker 5 (00:22):
In this present crisis, government is not the.

Speaker 1 (00:26):
Solution to our problem. Government is the problem. This is
Charlotte County Speaks.

Speaker 6 (00:34):
Your chance to let your voice be heard on local, state,
in national issues, and now broadcasting live from a dumpy
little warehouse behind a taco bell, the host of Charlotte
County Speaks, Ken love Joy.

Speaker 1 (00:49):
Hey you, Johnny beg you, Johnny News Radio fifteen eighty
one hundred point nine FM, WCCF Radio dot com, and
on your iHeartRadio app see Charlotte County Speaks. I am
Ken Lovejoy. It's ten eleven and via teams it's Dan Perkins.

Speaker 7 (01:07):
Dan.

Speaker 1 (01:08):
How you doing. How's the weekend?

Speaker 7 (01:10):
I'm fine, I'm fine. It was it was terrific. By
the way, I think this is the the the day
I like the best, even better than Thanksgiving for food
because today is National Junk Food Day.

Speaker 1 (01:22):
Gotta love that.

Speaker 7 (01:23):
Yes, I'm an aficionado with junk food.

Speaker 1 (01:26):
What's what's going to be your celebratory junk food of
choice today?

Speaker 7 (01:32):
I'm thinking about an Arby's with some curly fries at
cheese Sauce.

Speaker 1 (01:35):
Oh you know they got that new Philly cheese steak
that looks pretty good there too.

Speaker 7 (01:41):
By gosh, yeah, I might try that. We'll see. Okay,
how was your weekend?

Speaker 8 (01:49):
Good?

Speaker 1 (01:49):
You know, just the usual. It was a fun watching
Scottie Scheffler run away with it and everybody complaining that
he's ruining golf.

Speaker 7 (01:59):
Douse, He's won three out of the for major tournament.

Speaker 1 (02:01):
Yes, why yeah, that's what I said.

Speaker 7 (02:06):
Is it like Tiger? When Tiger first came on, he
on the tour and started winning everything in sight by
huge numbers, going to ruin golf. No, you don't think he.

Speaker 1 (02:14):
Did, No, I think you know. In my my response
was ruin it. He's inspiring younger golfers the way he
was inspired by the golfers that came before him. The
guy's got game. He keeps bringing it every week and uh,
you know, he you know how golf is. Eventually he's
going to hit a slump. They all do. So I

(02:35):
think we need to celebrate and enjoy his time at
the top.

Speaker 7 (02:40):
Absolutely as long as he's there. I mean, he obviously
got the talent and he can hit the hit the
right shot when he has to have it at least
for now, let him run and if he doesn't and
we're having I mentioned to you we're doing our annual
golf outing in October and I'm going to get this

(03:01):
this stuff on that. But we have a very unusual
prize on the on the par three hole in one,
not a lease, not a look at, but you win
a brand new Mercedes three hundred automobile.

Speaker 1 (03:16):
Nice. How long is this tell us about the par three.

Speaker 7 (03:23):
It's about one hundred and seventy five yards. Okay, there's
no water, it's just a lot of carry. And if
you if you hit a hole in one, the Mercedes
is valued at about seventy thousand dollars.

Speaker 1 (03:38):
Do is it just a straight shot you're looking for?
You know, what do you what do you need to
do on this hole?

Speaker 7 (03:44):
You got to hit the ball and you got to
hit the ball in the hole. Off the fur shot.
I've done that twice in my life.

Speaker 1 (03:52):
God bless I have never come close, not even at
Putt putt.

Speaker 7 (03:55):
So in fact, I have I believe I have one
of the longest distance, one of the longest times between
poles and one over fifty years. And you know, and
I had a lot of I had a lot of
holes where I was maybe one more roll of the

(04:16):
ball into the hole. Even on Pebble Beach, a famous
back mind part three, I was within a role of
going in the hole. So I've been blessed in where
I've played and the game that the Lord gave me.
Although I haven't played in probably now three years with
with a heart attack, I just never never got interested

(04:37):
in going back. Ye I'm I'm nibbling at it. Tomorrow
I may come back. But anyway, I have a couple
of things to talk about this morning. One is pretty serious.
I want to help your audience understand that when CBS

(05:01):
decided to get rid of the Late Show, and this
was different than than joy Read being fired off of
her show, the show continued with other people, they're they're
they're basically abandoning Late Night in the in the traditional
comic way. We found out after he made the announcement

(05:22):
that in fact, CBS was spending one hundred million dollars
a year on the show and losing forty million dollars
a year. And they decided that the economics don't look
very good, and it's because the audience declined and their

(05:44):
ad revenue decline. But it's interesting. I was curious as
to what the other two major networks and NBC what
their late night shows cost and about the same amount
of money. Oh yeah. The point that I'm trying to

(06:04):
make here, I want to make is that we are
in a period of dramatic change. The media has been
a media, I mean radio, television, and newspaper. The media
has been in the pocket of the Democratic Party for
a long time and very aggressive against Donald Trump from

(06:26):
the very beginning. But what's happened is the radio, television
and newspaper business is about eyeballs, and listeners are readers,
and the major networks are all down significantly in their
viewership and as they continue the rhetoric like they did

(06:47):
before the election after the election, they're losing more. When
Norah O'Donnell, who hadn't seen her CBS Evening News ratings
fall dramatically when she left and they put people on
after her. The people who came on after her, their
ratings of the show fell even further. When Rachel Maddow

(07:14):
gave up her five nights a week and went back
to her one night a week for twenty five million dollars,
Agansaki took over, and her numbers when she was replacing
Rachel were about half of what Rachel was doing. So
what's happening is there's a situation where not only are

(07:36):
ABC and CBS now having to pay Donald Trump fifteen
sixteen million dollars each for their inaccuracy. He went after
the Wall Street Journal on Friday for a false Epstein story.

Speaker 1 (07:50):
I mean blatantly.

Speaker 7 (07:53):
Yeah, blatantly false. It was like the guy who was
on I believe it was on uh Friday night. I
think when I saw it, there was a panel discussion
on DNN, and this particular reporter made the statement, is, well,
I don't think Donald Trump was really shot about the

(08:14):
Pennsylvania And what was amazing is that the panel the
other six or seven people like, we are you nuts.
I saw the bullets, I saw the blood. Don't tell
me he wasn't shot. Yeah, he believes that it was
that did Donald Trump already, he saying, I don't know

(08:36):
whether he's trying to do it for effect, but anyway,
thinking he thinks that Donald Trump wasn't really shot now.
But what's happening is that the media and his partner
of the Democratic Party both haven't figured out what their
message is and they haven't figured out who their leaders are.
But the mainstream media our businesses that are in business

(09:00):
to make money, and as their audiences have dropped and
they're dropping talent and they're dropping shows, they still haven't
been able to turn the corner to turn revenue up.
There has been a huge uproar in the Washington Post
as Bezos changed the editorial staff, who try to be

(09:23):
more neutral in what they're trying to do. The Times
is suffering tremendously and loss of paid subscriptions, and so
the whole media structure there are. There's a gentleman by
the name of dam Anthony who started a network called
Your News about three years ago. I started working with

(09:44):
him shortly after he introduced the product, and he believes
that he keeps track of how many people in print
media have lost their jobs because of newspapers closing, downsizing, whatever,
and some over five hundred thousand people over the last

(10:06):
several years who have lost their jobs in the print
media because there's there's no people aren't interested. If you
look at the size of newspapers and how much they've
shrunk in size in order to try, paper costs are
expensive and their production runs are expensive. So they're trying
to reduce the size of the newspaper to a tabloid size.

(10:30):
And I loved borderating Columbus, Ohio that the Plumba's Dispatch was
the paper of record in Columbus and it's nothing more
than a tabloid today. And look at the New York Posts.
It's shrunk dramatically. So what's happened is that there's a
whole what I call a redistribution of power that's taking place.

(10:54):
And right now the person in charge is Donald Trump.
He is controlling the agenda. And because he went against
ABC and CBS and got them to settle, their credibility
was shot. As I said, he's going out to the Wall,
Tree Journal, the Washington Post and the Times are trying

(11:15):
to adjust so they don't get sued. And so the
whole media Democratic Party relationship is under fire, and they
don't and they don't have a common message. And without
a common message, you can't be you can't communicate to
a group of people what it is you want to do.

(11:38):
They don't have a leadership structure. I mean, the one
of the commentators was talking about the possible leadership of
the Democratic Party being Bernie Sanders, AOC and Gavin Newson,
and he said Bernie's too old, AOC is too stupid,
and Gavin Newsen needs more hair. Joe. I mean, there's

(11:59):
there's just Gavin.

Speaker 1 (12:03):
I mean Gavin. I mean, he's got the highest unemployment
rate in the state, in the state of California, I mean,
and what he's done to the people of what he
and Bass, mayor Bass have done to the people of
Palisades and the rest who lost their million dollar homes.
Only a handful of permits have been gone out. And
now they want to they pass some bill and Sacramento

(12:28):
that they're going to buy up this land that all
these people own and haven't been allowed to rebuild their
homes yet and use it for public housing. Right, how
does Gavin win? How does he even get close?

Speaker 7 (12:45):
Right? And the mayor of Los Angeles wants to start
paying people cash because they can't get back into their
homes or they or they can't find a job because
the business burned down. It's just, it's so, I just
it's it's typical of what's going on. You've got a

(13:07):
a series of events that are making the mainstream media
not viable in its current form. You know, when they
when they decided that they were going to take off
The Late Show, they didn't say what they're going to
replace it with. And I have no idea what they're
going to replace.

Speaker 1 (13:26):
Syndicated reruns would probably do better.

Speaker 7 (13:31):
Of David Letterman and Johnny, probably more profitable to them.
So you got that going for you. Now we've got
a major, major investigation going on between Comy Clapper Brennan
and now Barack Obama and what's happening. We've got Telsey

(13:57):
Gabvill releasing one hundred pages other documents in implicating and
these are her words, not my words, implicating Barack Obama
in a case for treason, and that's what it was. Yeah,
I understand that, but but but my point is, you

(14:19):
know what, when was the last time we've ever seen
a president like Donald Trump who's been indicted, who's been
tried and convicted the thirty four counts of fraud and
tax evasion, and uh, we've never seen a president we're
about to. We're about to see. I believe the potential

(14:40):
of two ex presidents who are going to be arrested
and tried, one on treason and one on uh malfeasans.
I think that And I said when I I broke
my story of on the Auto and on your show

(15:01):
before anybody else some time ago, and I still believe
that will be the story that will will impact what's
happened in the in the Trump administration in his four years.
I think that the autopen story will be We're going
to look and see the possibility for the first time

(15:24):
in the history of our country, thousands of pardons being removed.

Speaker 1 (15:31):
Yeah, yeah, and uh arguably that's the right thing to
do when you look at the fact of who has
the actual authority to issue pardons and who actually issued
these pardons.

Speaker 7 (15:44):
Yeah, we have the former chief of staff indicating that
on the on the Fauci Millie Biden family and others
pardons that were that were issued that he or the
issuance of the pardons, he can't do that. The law
is very clear. The president is the only person who

(16:08):
has the power of pardoning and it has to be
him who does it. He cannot and he can't delegate
it to anybody else to do so. So so now
we have the possibility, as we saw Ran Paul in
Kentucky on last Friday send a notice to the Justice
Department that they want to investigate doctor Fauci, because I

(16:32):
think Rand Paul believes that that. Since then, we now
know that the pardon was not signed or ordered signed
by the president, but was ordered signed by the autopen
by the Chief of Staff, that we have a pardon
that that's null and void, and they want to be
they want to go after doctor Fauci. So so all

(16:53):
these things that happened that that you and I for
the last few years, And I was on a show
last week and we were talking about is anybody going
to be arrested? And I said, well, if you're a Republican,
you get arrested and you do jail time. If you're
a Democratic, you do these things, you get away with it. Well,

(17:15):
the question now becomes are the Democrats going to get
away with it? And that's that's another thing. That's that's
part of this process is that the democratic structure of
how they were able to run the government and manipulate
the government to their benefit as collapse under the weight
of Donald Trump and his desire to do things right.

(17:37):
So we're looking at a historical change in the country
and in the political parties. And I'm not sure that
the Democratic Party can survive.

Speaker 1 (17:51):
No, I don't either, But I also don't think that
Biden and nor Obama are going to suffer it all
through this. I think that they're going to go after
the low hanging fruit, as has been discussed the wise men,
the accords, Susan Rice, Brennan, Comy, you know Clapper. Yeah,

(18:14):
they got a real good shot. And and there's a
bunch of others, you know, in the cabal of people
that were involved in this. But when it comes to
Biden actually suffering any consequences or Obama, I think the
best I think that we're going to be able to
hope for with Obama is that he his reputation is shot.
He will be publicly humiliated for the rest of his life.

(18:36):
He will get no respect from the American people. But
I don't think you're ever going to see him get
purp walked much as he deserves.

Speaker 7 (18:46):
I understand, I understand your your your concern and your
your belief, and I appreciate that. I do think, however,
that that because that as somebody said, the times they
are are changing. Those the times are We're going to
see things that we never thought were going to be
possible to be seen. And it's interesting when we when

(19:07):
we look at the amount of information that that came out,
and the and the and the document that the the
Obama situation, which is the the most deadly for him,
is that it appears, based on the one hundred documents
that tells the Gabbard released that that he sat at

(19:30):
the top of the whole strategy and he was.

Speaker 1 (19:32):
He was the initiator of the coup.

Speaker 7 (19:36):
Mm hmm right. And and so whether that comes under
is a presidential protection, I'm not smart enough to know,
but I do know. I have a friend that I
talked to who's a constitutional lawyer, and he says, there
are a lot of things going on here that could

(19:56):
be very surprising to the American people as to the
ability of these individuals to escape prosecution. You know, Combe's
daughter was fired from the Justice Department out of the
Southern District because she was apparently lead lead prosecuting counsel
in the Daddy Combe's situation, and it looks like that

(20:22):
that he got off charged with a lesser charge. The
major charge was it was not guilty.

Speaker 1 (20:31):
She just did what she was told to do, right.

Speaker 7 (20:35):
I understand. But my point is that is that these
things that are happening which don't seem logical or possible,
that are happening. I mean, if you look at any
of the documents that were released on Friday, and you
look at the complicity that Barack Obama was in deciding

(20:57):
and orchestrating how they were going to go after Donald Trump,
and that was done started while he was president, but
continued after he was president. Uh, I'm not sure that
he has immunity on that.

Speaker 1 (21:17):
Yeah, because the majority of this stuff happened after the fact,
after he was out of office, so.

Speaker 7 (21:24):
Right, right, and so that that that that presidential immunity
doesn't transfer once you're no longer president. So it's it's
it's amazing to see.

Speaker 1 (21:33):
Yeah, but we're talking Pam Bondy here, we're talking Pam Bondy.

Speaker 7 (21:40):
I know you don't like her.

Speaker 1 (21:41):
Well, I'm just saying I'm hoping for the best. I'm
willing to be pleasantly surprised. But I just think that
she's going to go after the low hanging fruit. And
I don't think as much as he deserves to be
purp walked and humiliated publicly in a court of law
for what he has done to this nation. And I
I'm not holding my breath just yet, but I'm keeping

(22:04):
a good thought.

Speaker 7 (22:06):
Yeah, well, you know. And and it's interesting the the uh,
the FBI and the Intelligence Agency seems to be finding
all the documents that's that produce the evidence that Pam
Bondi needs to do her job, not the Justice Department
and uh, but but they're they're arresting people bad guys

(22:29):
and and drug lords and and helping uh, mister Holmes
and find more terrorists. But but it's I do want
to ask you one more quick question, but uh, I
don't know how to I don't know how to scale it.

(22:51):
But I'll just ask you you scale it. What do
you think of what the job in general that Donald
Trump has done in his team in the.

Speaker 1 (23:04):
First and eighty days outstanding, amazing. I mean a couple
of hiccups with the Epstein debacle. But outside of that,
it's kind of hard to say. They haven't done a
miraculous amount of work in a short amount of time,
and they've still got a lot of stuff on their
plate that they're working on. So I love the fact

(23:24):
that he's doing all that. You're not hearing reported on
a lot of this stuff that's actually going on behind
the scenes until it's already you know, tell okay, boom
here we are like the Tulsa Gabbard. You know, you
could see, you could see how the deep state, you
could see that something was going on because they were
trying to get rid of her. They were trying to
set her up and for Trump to get rid of her.

(23:46):
The problem that you have now is the again, the
Senate Select Committee on Intelligence trying to draft a new
Senate bill I forget the number of it again, which
actually re it repeals a lot of the powers of
the Director of National Intelligence. They've got new twenty twenty six,

(24:07):
a bill that would be going to effect in twenty
twenty six that would not allow the Director of National
Intelligence to do ever again what Tulsey just did. And
so you know, you got the SSCI and the HSCI
the House Select Committee on Intelligence. Those guys are the

(24:29):
bane of our existence. And the SSCI is almost worse
than the Intel community because these guys are, you know,
Tom Cotton and the rest of these guys are, and
gals Susan Collins are also aiding and abetting the deep
state and trying to prevent anybody from finding out crap.
Ever again, and to me, that's just again. They're outing
themselves as blatant traders, and Cotton's just going to say, hey,

(24:51):
I didn't write this legislation. I'm just moving it forward
here now that dog won't hunt. These guys are just
as bad, if not worse than the Intel community, and
they need to be dealt with as well.

Speaker 7 (25:05):
They need to be replaced.

Speaker 1 (25:06):
Yeah, ended, yes, boom, I agree, all right, sir, all right,
it's Dan Perkins. Folks, check out online. Dan Perkinsmedia dot org.
Dan Perkinsmedia dot Org. Thank you, my friend. Hey, I'm
on vacation. I'll be on vacation next week. I'll be
up in Spokane, so I won't be here all right,

(25:30):
Thank you, sir. We'll talk to you again soon, Dan Perkins.
Ladies and gentlemen, we'll be right back.

Speaker 7 (25:35):
I love the radio.

Speaker 4 (25:36):
It's so random.

Speaker 7 (25:39):
Radio radio and a big.

Speaker 5 (25:52):
Quality radio.

Speaker 7 (25:57):
When I'm driving.

Speaker 4 (25:58):
I got a guy on the radio, Coogle Talks today.

Speaker 5 (26:00):
He will be right back with Charlotte County Speaks News
Radio fifteen eighty WCCF.

Speaker 3 (26:07):
I don't like how my tax dollars are being spent.
I make that perfectly clear all the time. And here's
another way. I'm sick and tired of funneling money money
to Israel. I don't know about you. It's making me
sick to my stomach. You've got settlers killing Christian Americans.

Speaker 1 (26:24):
Yeah, oh yeah, it's happening.

Speaker 3 (26:26):
You got settlers pushing trying to destroy Orthodox churches, Catholic churches,
and they're succeeding. Bombing churches, Catholic churches, Orthodox churches in Gaza,
barring Christian visitors, barring Christian visitors in the country, not
allowing them to have visas, so much so that one
of Israel's biggest supporters, Mike Huckabee, he's actually ambassador to Israel,

(26:50):
is complaining, at what point in time do we start
reevaluating this relationship. It has gotten completely out of control.
Watchdog on Wall Street dot Com.

Speaker 2 (27:22):
Sumostresious Monday, Black.

Speaker 9 (27:33):
Cave s.

Speaker 4 (27:39):
Good, got me so far?

Speaker 1 (27:43):
Stop News Radio fifteen eighty one hundred point nine f
m W C CF ten forty two. Here Charlotte County
speaks over to the Gateway pundit uh hoss Ran talking
about Seymour Hirsch, who very influential, rather polarizing individual. He's

(28:08):
an investigative journalist, Pulitzer Prize winner, but he get a
lot of criticism for all of these anonymous sources, and
he's had some missteps lately. But nevertheless, Hirsh writes, people

(28:29):
still pay close attention. So he came out Friday with
the article titled the End for Zolensky. We can only hope,
but he reports that Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky's leadership is
under great pressure and that signs from Washington indicate that

(28:50):
his time and power may be nearing an end. Hirsh
goes so far as to suggest that Zelensky could face
exile or even forced removal, and this would come under
US influence and the decision apparently would be up to
President Donald J. Trump. Quote Zelensky's on a short list
for exile if President Trump decides to make the call,

(29:13):
If Zelensky refuses to leave his office, as is most
likely an involved US official told me he's going to
go by force. US officials believe that an eventual refusal
by Zelensky to step down could lead to his removal
by force occurrding. According to hersh support for the little

(29:36):
man in Olive Drab isn't great. Rather than forced removal,
how about we just say, look, dude, you're going to
get removed if you don't have elections. Now, time for
the people to decide and they'll get rid of him.
But he goes on to say that there are many

(29:58):
in Washington, Nyan, Ukraine who believed that the escalating war
with Russia must end soon, while there's still a chance
to make a settlement with Putin. But what about the
day after? The article notes that General Valerie Zalunzi, Ukraine's
former commander in chief of the military, is the most
viable successor in quote. In the fall of twenty twenty three,

(30:22):
Ukrainian General Valerie Zealuzni, the commander in chief of the
country's armed forces, gave an interview to the economist and
declared the war with Russia had become a stalemate. It
took three months for Zelensky to fire him after that,
and the general, who was the most popular public figure
in Ukraine, was named ambassador to London a month later
and has served there with distinction, if rather quietly. Zeluzni

(30:46):
is now seen as the most credible successor to Zelensky.
I have been told by knowledgeable officials in Washington that
that job could be his within a few months. We'll see,
but it would be a good thing to see him
go and the dictatorship of Zelensky end.

Speaker 7 (31:06):
That would be nice.

Speaker 10 (31:07):
Today's show is brought to you by Stay Put full
Body Condoms. These days, you can't be too careful, So
cover it all with stay Put full body condoms. Oh,
and make sure you put it on properly. That hole
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Speaker 1 (31:25):
Stay put, We got you covered.

Speaker 5 (31:28):
We'll be right back with Charlotte County Speaks on news
radio fifteen eighty WCCF.

Speaker 11 (31:36):
Speaking of bodies, mine's getting too fat. Independently of myself,
that's what it wants. But that's why I dress like this.
I'm not trying to look nice. I'm just trying to
hide everything. And I gotta wear a tirels. This button's
gonna fly off and hit this lady in the face.
These pants are so tight it's making my farts louder.

(31:59):
It's not even a nice suit.

Speaker 4 (32:00):
I started.

Speaker 11 (32:01):
It's a George Foreman. It came with my grill. When
I go to the grocery store, people ask me where
the junk food is. They're like, hey, dude, where are
the Twinkies. I'm like, it doesn't matter, I have them all.
I got this one friend. He's always trying to help
me lose weight. It's like Bill losing weight. It's not hard.
All you gotta do is watch what you eat. Like,

(32:21):
what do you have for breakfast? I'm like cereal. He's like,
how many bulls you have? I'm like, how many bulls
are in a box? What kind of milk do you use?
Whipped cream?

Speaker 8 (32:30):
It's so good, it's really good.

Speaker 4 (32:40):
Snuckszing very shabby trying.

Speaker 1 (33:08):
In the news radio fifteen eighty one hundred point nine
f m w CCF ten fifty two. Here Charlotte County
speaks and good gully, Miss Molly. I this this one

(33:35):
won't shut up and she rhino. Rep. Maria Salazar over
my my Miami Way. Yes, she is lost.

Speaker 8 (33:49):
She is.

Speaker 1 (33:51):
She kind of lets the quiet part out loud here.
Of course, if you haven't heard, they've put together the
Dignity Act. The Dignity Act, Essentially, she's calling for amnesty
for a bunch of illegal aliens. No nagatory there, big Meyer.

(34:16):
Congresswoman Maria Elvira s Alazar Rhino from Florida announced last
Wednesday that she introduced a bipartisan bill co sponsored by
Veronica Escobar, Democrat from Texas. She says the Dignity Act.
She says the bill is not amnesty, but reasonable people
would beg to differ due to the work visas that

(34:40):
she's are part of this deal. Moreover, although she claims
the bill does not include amnesty or a path to citizenship,
it gives a seven year legal status, allows illegal aliens
to renew their status, and grants legal status and a
path to permanent residency to so called dreamers. And the
Dreamers include MS thirteen Merkill mar Garcia another violent criminals

(35:02):
as well. This broad's an idiot. Isn't her husband in agriculture?
So a kind of a little bit of a conflict there,
tutz huh huh. Anyway, her proposal also caused many to
wonder what would happen when these illegal aliens with legal
status don't renew their status. Now, Salazar's revealed her answer

(35:23):
during a Sunday appearance on This Week with South Florida,
Salazar tried to sell her bipartisan immigration legislation to her
constituents and made a telling remark that completely blew up
her argument that her legislation would not result in a
full blown amnesty for these people. Quote, we give them dignity.

(35:44):
At some point in the future, another legislator will write
another law to give them a path to citizenships. So
what are you talking about?

Speaker 9 (35:51):
You?

Speaker 1 (35:51):
So this is exactly what you're talking Well, this is
just a first step right now. What we need to
do is buy peace for these people, allow them to
stay and continue to work because they're needed. Mow your
own damn lawn, Salazar, how about you do that. I
can mow my own why can't you? Hell, you probably
got a rider anyway, a little rich individual. So anyway,

(36:19):
my point is she's an idiot. Two O six fifteen
eighty toll free eighty eight four four one now five
random random random facts. Number one of your five random facts.

(36:42):
The harmonica player on Thin Lizzie's nineteen seventy eight album
Live and Dangerous. Here's one from you, Huey Lewis. Yeah,
forget that he had another band back then, but he

(37:04):
was actually opening for Thin Lizzie on their tour and
he was credited as Bluesy Huey Lewis and you can
hear him jam on the song Baby Drives Me Crazy.
Number two. For the first five US presidential elections, only
white men who owned property could vote. Number three. The

(37:26):
world record for bench press three hundred and sixty four
pounds back in nineteen sixteen. Now it's almost could quadruple
that a guy named Jimmy Colb did fourteen hundred and
one pounds in twenty twenty three. That's insane. The raw
record without the help of a bench shirt is seven

(37:47):
hundred eighty three pounds, and that was set in twenty
twenty one by Julius Maddox. Insane amount of weight. Number four.
In Europe, cool ranch doritos are called cool American dury too.
And finally number five of your five random facts. The

(38:08):
tongue twister she sells Seashells by the Seashore, was inspired
by a female paleontologist named Mary Anning who sold fossils
out of a little stand on Dorset Beach in England
in the early eighteen hundreds. And there's your five random facts. Yeah,
who knew? Who knew? She sells seashells by the seashore?

(38:34):
What else we got here? We do have some good
news available for you here. Pizza delivery guy up in
Michigan saved an elderly woman who fell and couldn't get up.
She didn't answer the door, so he looked through a
window and saw her on the floor, barely conscious. He
called nine to one one, got out of the hospital
and went back to her home to make sure her

(38:55):
dog was taken care of. Picked up some of her
belongings while he was there and brought them two her
at the hospital. That's a good guy, very good news
for her. Great guy right there. An indoor walking group
in Portland, Oregon is in the news for blending exercise
with nostalgia. They dress up in eighties gear and go

(39:16):
on long walks at the mall. Probably the you know
Jane Fonda, you know, the little leggings a little fuzzy
what do they call those? I don't know, but looking
like that. That's the group is called food Court five thousand.
The world's tiniest pig just welcomed some tiny piglets. A

(39:37):
boar in England named Pluto was in the news last
month because he's less than fifteen inches tall and his
owners are still waiting on Guinness to confirm the record
for smallest adult bore ever. But in the meantime he
just became a dad. Another pig on his farm named
Bambi just had four little piglets. Big name Venus is
also expecting and they think Pluto might be the dad

(39:59):
of those two. Oh he's a randy little big, isn't he. Well, kids,
that's all we have time for today. Be safe, be saying,
keep your head on a swivel. The Dems ain't gonna
go away quietly. This is probably gonna get a little

(40:19):
ugly kind of looking forward to it.

Speaker 7 (40:22):
Tell you the truth.

Speaker 1 (40:23):
Have a good day.

Speaker 2 (40:25):
Anybody got any more jokes, any funny?

Speaker 7 (40:28):
Nope? Nope? All right, see you folks, you are not sad.

Speaker 9 (40:33):
Easily you're clothes. If you're not the then you are
the crew. Please leave. We are close. Make your way
to the door.

Speaker 5 (40:45):
We're in news radio fifteen eighty AM w CCF Punda
Gorda and FM one hundred point nine W two sixty
five EA, Punda Gorda.
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