Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome to our show. No thanks, close attention because because
it's that time of the year again, tell me use
that that special time of year.
Speaker 2 (00:08):
It's the holiday's baby taking time out for a family,
for a company's gift giving.
Speaker 3 (00:14):
That's what that is.
Speaker 1 (00:14):
Figure out who's naughty and who's nuts?
Speaker 2 (00:16):
He gonna get call for Christmas?
Speaker 4 (00:18):
We're cotton headed, Ninny Muggins. Is it about to begin? Showtime?
Speaker 5 (00:23):
In this present crisis, government is not the solution to
our problem.
Speaker 1 (00:29):
Government is the problem.
Speaker 4 (00:32):
This is Charlotte County Speaks.
Speaker 5 (00:35):
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 Lovejoy.
Speaker 1 (00:50):
Haggy, Johnny News Radio fifteen eighty one hundred point nine FM,
Wccfradio dot Com, and your iHeartRadio app, Charlotte County Speaks.
Ten twelve is the time as we moved to the
phones to say hey to mister Dan Perkins, Dan, how
you doing?
Speaker 4 (01:06):
How's your weekend?
Speaker 3 (01:09):
Bummed out? Ohio state loss?
Speaker 4 (01:11):
Yeah? Well, what are you gonna do?
Speaker 1 (01:14):
I'm I think I'm bummed about Notre Dame they kind
of got screwed here.
Speaker 3 (01:20):
Yeah, yeah, they're they're a lot of people talk about
changing the committee or the rules or whatever. But I
think this was all a setup.
Speaker 4 (01:29):
That Pardon wouldn't surprise me.
Speaker 3 (01:34):
What I think is going on here is Ohio State
loss to Indiana by three points, and I think they
went Ohio State in Indiana to be in the final
for the national championship, and I think Ohio State will
be the Indiana. Now I'm not saying a high state
(01:55):
through the game. I'm just saying that if it was,
if it could have worked out that way, they would
be a much happier camper because you get a revenge
of the rematch and Ohistate gets to redeem itself be
back to back national.
Speaker 1 (02:11):
Champions Yeah, well we'll see. It's but the whole I
don't like the whole system now. It's I think they've
really sullied college football with that. Between the whole new system,
all the SEC and now these players being able to
(02:33):
get paid and they're doing one year at this college,
next year at that college. It's like, you know, they
want to go pro, Go pro?
Speaker 3 (02:43):
Right, you know? Right? Yeah, I'll tell you that the
defensive Lineman for Ohio State was a monster. I mean,
he was just he was huge, but he was also
incredibly effective. And if I was well, it was a
pretty well played game. I was disappointed at a High
State loss, but it was a close enough game that
(03:05):
they could have it could have tidn't gone into overtime,
which had been great for that for that particular game.
But we move on. Let's move on. Let's let's talk
about And I have to be careful. I don't want to.
I don't want to put you in an awkward position,
but you just gave me. You didn't but your You're
(03:28):
one of your commercials gave me the introduction for what
I want to talk about. We have an exploding situation
in Minnesota where there's maybe as much as two billion
dollars of fraud under the nose of the esteem governor
(03:48):
now and eighty people have pleaded guilty to fraud charges
and they don't The media is saying, well, it's not
really a smaller an issue, except that seventy eight of
the eighty people that were arrested and convicted were Somalia.
Speaker 1 (04:06):
It's all a Samalia issue. It is, it's it's a
total Somali issue. It's also an elan omark Keith Ellison
and tampon Timmy Walt's issue.
Speaker 3 (04:19):
Yep. And if you if you look at her response
to Margaret Brenner yesterday, she she she didn't deny that
it was a Somali problem, just that wow, there could
have been a lot more Somali people who could have
benefited from this program. But she never admitted that that
was a corrupt program and that money was going to
(04:43):
Shabab in Somalia from this billions of dollars.
Speaker 1 (04:48):
She also said that she gave the money back, and
I want proof of that. I want how much she
took from them, and I want to know that she
honestly did in fact give the money back, because I
think she's lying through her teeth.
Speaker 3 (05:02):
Well that that could very well be true. I don't know,
but I believe mister Trump and his prosecutors will take
a hard look at that particular question and come up
with an acceptable answer. I think. So. I know you're
not your sour on Pam. Yeah, yeah, but everybody's entitled
(05:26):
to their opinion.
Speaker 1 (05:27):
Yeah, Okay, we'll see, we'll see. Hope for the best.
I hope I'm wrong yeah, I'd be very happy to
say I'm wrong on this one.
Speaker 3 (05:34):
Yeah, but I've been reading about it over the weekend,
and you had a commercial for Feed the Children. And
one of the charges in this scam is that a
company admitted invoices that they were feeding sixty five hundred
children in a community where the census datus of there
(05:58):
were only twenty five hundred. So but nobody did think
about it writing a damn check. And lots of other
similar types of situations where individuals from the small persuasion
were receiving huge amounts of money, buying expensive homes and
(06:21):
cars and boats and vacation homes and taking elaborate vacations
and they just corrupted the system. And it appears, I'm
using that word specifically, it appears that many of the
charges that are now being levied against the Samali community.
(06:45):
Tim was aware of, and in fact, from what I've
been reading, did everything in his power to stop any
investigations and so, and we could have had him as
vice president, oh god, yeah. Now, But the only way
(07:05):
that would have would have happened is if if we
kept control of the House and the Senate. But the
American voters decided to vote on Kamala and make her
the president. But do you remember the famous governor from Baltimore,
as they used to say, Spiro Agnew who got indicted
for corruption money laundering. It would have been sphere Agua
(07:30):
all over again with an incumbent president vice president having
to be.
Speaker 4 (07:34):
No, it wouldn't have.
Speaker 1 (07:35):
No, it wouldn't have because none of this would have
come up.
Speaker 4 (07:38):
It would have been.
Speaker 1 (07:39):
Buried, just like most of the media has tried to
do with this. Trump is the only one who's gotten
who's gotten the ball rolling on this whole fiasco. If
Tampon Timmy and the wanna be Black Lady won, this
never would have come up. I'm in my opinion, I
don't think it would have been bury. It might have
(07:59):
come up a little bit, but it would have been
buried immediately. I mean, five hundred, five hundred state employees
have been trying to warn tim about this and what
happened to them. Most of them got retaliated against and persecuted.
Speaker 3 (08:13):
Right right now. I also believe this is perhaps a
little harsh on my part, but I also believe even
if she were indicted and convicted, the number of voters
in the Kamali. Is that part of Minnesota, in Minneapolis
where she's her district, is that those people would have
(08:38):
voted her back in. Oh yeah, she's.
Speaker 4 (08:41):
Because we got that.
Speaker 3 (08:42):
As long as the Somalis have that much control over
the district that she's in, she's going to serve as
long as she wants.
Speaker 1 (08:48):
That's the only reason that she won was because of.
Speaker 4 (08:52):
The Somali vote.
Speaker 3 (08:54):
M right, absolutely correct, and so I I just I
think it's going to be a tough case. I hope
that mister Trump gets the right gets the right attorneys
to investigate it and prosecute. But you know, seventy eight
out of eighty people who were convicted of the crimes
(09:14):
were talked about were Somalians. It's clearly, as you said,
a Somali problem in Minnesota. And it's become the America's
first Muslim state, you I know, I it's and Michigan
(09:35):
is not far behind. It really isn't much far behind.
And look at Texas that was something.
Speaker 1 (09:42):
Look at Texas, I mean, my god, they just threw
up like forty eight mosques.
Speaker 3 (09:49):
Yeah, what the hell?
Speaker 4 (09:50):
You know, our state.
Speaker 1 (09:51):
Department, our government, it's like, okay, how do we commit suicide.
Oh lettle, let's import a bunch of Mosques and Muslims
in here. That'll be a great way to destroy the
country from within.
Speaker 3 (10:03):
So I think that there are a lot of issues
that need to be addressed, but I think it's going
to be difficult because it's well, it's a problem in Minnesota,
it's also a problem in other states. California is going
under twenty billion dollars of cold money that went to
(10:24):
take care of illegals. I don't know how we get
oversight from the federal level into the activities of the
states without people being arrested and trying to get the information.
I just don't see there's a mechanism to allow the
federal government to have accountability. If somebody says I've been
(10:45):
treating sixty five hundred people where they were twenty five hundred,
and they say, okay, they write the check, and to
keep writing the check because he keeps sending in the bill.
But it's an issue that they clearly scan the system.
Those people would agree that they did. But it's going
to be hard to do anything other than the ones
(11:05):
that have already pleaded guilty. But it's going to be
hard to get Tim or.
Speaker 4 (11:09):
Well, I don't think it's going to be.
Speaker 1 (11:11):
I don't see why it would be hard to get
Tim on this, considering the number of people that reported
this to Governor Walls, and he did nothing but retaliate
and bury them. So I think, yes, the fact that
he is totally an utterly corrupt, yes, but also the
(11:31):
fact that the whole state seems to be corrupt because again,
the state wasn't investigating this at all. You had several
news organizations in the state trying to point out the fraud,
but nobody was listening at the state level. It was
only after Trump got elected and at the federal level
that people went in. So I would like to see
some any federal funds being stopped being sent to Minnesota
(11:57):
until they find out where all this fraud is and
just shut it down.
Speaker 3 (12:02):
I I agree with you. I totally agree with you.
I also believe that what's going on there in Minnesota
is emblematic of what's been going on for decades in
many other Democratic states. Oh yeah, And and the Republicans
have been reluctant to go.
Speaker 1 (12:23):
After it, even though they know, even though they know,
that's that's my whole that's my whole problem with the
Republican Party. They know this is going on, and they're whimps.
They're gutless cowards about enforcing the law. They're they're they're
they're almost worse than the Democrats.
Speaker 3 (12:41):
Yeah, you know, we will see no we will speak
no evil the three monkeys. So that was that was disturbing.
Now moving on, Yesterday was Pearl Harvard Day. There are
only four remaining survivors. Wow, none of them. None of
them were capable physically capable to go to the ceremony
(13:04):
remembering in Pearl Harbor. So with veteran less and the
story is will the story of Pearl Harbor survive if
there's nobody left who was.
Speaker 1 (13:22):
Yes, yes, I think the story will. But we got
to get K twelve in line with teaching some history
for once.
Speaker 3 (13:29):
There you go. It took the words right out of
my mouth. That was one I wanted to We've got
to look at the education system to see if it
has a chance to survive because it's being taught in
our schools and nine to eleven are we teaching the
story of what happened on nine to eleven and how
many Americans were killed in New York and in the
(13:53):
fields in Pennsylvania and at the Pentagon. If we don't
if we don't remember our pat we are prone to
repeating the same things that we failed before. Yeah, So
I really think that that you're right. We have to
(14:15):
pressure our education issues sure that we continue to tell
the story of the significant not just Pearl Harbor, but
all the significant events that have affected us throughout our history,
because they're important to remember. There's a story that I
did last week about Old Miss University where they have
(14:36):
a department that has has established a nonprofit encouraging and
providing information on the founding documents because they found a
huge percentage of American students and professors don't know anything
about the Constitution of the build the rights of the
Decoration of Independence. We have, we have schools that don't
(15:02):
teach it anymore.
Speaker 1 (15:03):
You don't it can't understand why?
Speaker 3 (15:09):
Well? H I Yeah. On my Wednesday radio show or
television show with My Moms, we started about five weeks ago.
Each episode we read, we read one of the provisions
of the Constitution di Membis the Constitution as a topic
for a start of our show that particular day. So
(15:29):
we're we're out there trying to help people understand what
it's going on, because there's so much going on in
the courts being out of out of control, trying to
decide that they're the ones that can decide what the
government does and not the government itself. There's there's a
lot of abuse, a lot of abuse in the court system,
(15:50):
the district court system, and and the Democrats have been
using that leverage for decades that they've off the court
to legis light from the bench. And while they're not
passing laws, they're they're they're they're making decisions that carry
the impact of laws, but they're there there.
Speaker 1 (16:09):
And what have the Republicans done in response? What have
they done in response?
Speaker 3 (16:15):
Not very much?
Speaker 4 (16:16):
Exactly nothing. Not a zillish right.
Speaker 3 (16:22):
So now believe it or not. How King Jeffreys yesterday
with Margaret Brennan admitted that Trump should be getting given
credit for solving the border problem.
Speaker 4 (16:37):
Get out, no moment of tape, a moment of.
Speaker 3 (16:42):
Weakness, no what he said. Yes, he should be given
credit for for solving the border crisis. However, there are
a lot of other issues that he has yet to deliver,
so it was back in his lap. But but he
openly admitted that mister Trump solved the problem.
Speaker 4 (17:04):
Could I mean, what did we do that was new?
Speaker 1 (17:06):
The only thing we did was start enforcing the laws
that are already on the books.
Speaker 3 (17:12):
Yes, you're absolutely right. That's see. That's the fundamental in
my opinion, that's the fundamental problem that we're dealing with here.
What Donald everybody thinks Donald Trump is a radical. No,
he's not a radical. All Donald Trump is trying to
do is to enforce the laws that are already on
(17:32):
the books. And that even more, the Democrats don't agree
with him, and they want to do something else, and
then they can't pass the legislation to change it. They
try and change it through the bench to the court system.
But all he's trying to do is have people obey
the law, and if they don't, there have to be consequences.
(17:55):
And I think a lot of people really ken don't
under stand that day. And what he's trying to do
is to say, let's bring back law and order and responsibility.
And and he's not trying to reinvent the wheel. They're
already there. They need to go out and do that.
And and the Democrats are absolutely opposed to anything that
(18:18):
he does. That's why I was so shocked that Jefferies
gave him credit for it calving the border problem. And
it's just it's just insane that that that that that
they're doing that we'll want to finish up with this.
You might seeing this story. There was this student at Oklahoma.
(18:39):
She was a Christian student and she had been getting
one hundred scores of one hundred percent on her on
her writings, her comments, her dissertations, whatever, And she responded
to a specific question and her PA teaching assistant gave
(19:01):
her a zero on the paper, and she complained, I've
been consistently getting a one hundred percent on the stuff
that I've been writing for a number of years that
I've been in this school, and now all of a sudden,
I get a zero on this paper. And she wrote
the issue was she wanted to. She was asked to
(19:27):
write a response to two people to deal with transgender
and what were her feelings about the transgender issue and
how they were being treated. She wrote it from a
Christian standpoint, and she said so in the beginning of
(19:51):
her document that this was being written based on her
Christian beliefs, and the teaching assistant gave her a zero
because he was not. He felt that she wasn't broad
enough and she wasn't inclusive enough of the transgender So
I read that story and then all of a sudden,
the flash of my screen is a news story the
(20:15):
television networks. You may have seen this, you may not.
It's kind of below the fold, as they say, the
television networks has collectively announced that the examples of transgender
people involved in television series will drop by forty percent
next year. They're starting to divest themselves of transgenders in television.
Speaker 4 (20:42):
Good.
Speaker 3 (20:44):
But we've got this young lady who's true to her
beliefs writes the paper about what she feels. She believes
you gets the zero on it, and Hollywood saying, well,
we did something wrong here. We should we should probably
do something about that, and and we're going to we're
going to cut transgenders into in television by well, okay,
(21:08):
if that, if that floats your book.
Speaker 4 (21:10):
I didn't know that there were that many.
Speaker 1 (21:12):
I didn't know that there were that many transgender people
on TV that that cutting it down to for.
Speaker 4 (21:19):
Is going to be noticeable.
Speaker 3 (21:21):
They're going to be cutting forty percent of those people
out of the shows.
Speaker 1 (21:25):
Yeah, I don't know who they are to tell you
the truth, so I wouldn't.
Speaker 4 (21:29):
Apparently I'm not watching those shows.
Speaker 3 (21:32):
I'm not watching them either, and my guess is that, well,
some of them may be network shows. I mean, ABC, CBS, NBC.
The other the shows that are going to talk about
are on the fringe networks and you know, Lifetime and
(21:52):
all that stuff, but they have good size audiences, so
they have some influence. So you know, a girl gets
get posted for writing her beliefs in when she's talking
about transgenderism and bathrooms and all that stuff, gets a
zero on her paper. And now Hollywood says, we've got
to cut We've got to kind of cut this transgender
(22:15):
of workers back by at least forty for the next season.
So interesting stories.
Speaker 1 (22:23):
Yeah, people are finally catching on to the fact that
we're not putting up with this mental illness crap. And
I can't tell you how many videos I've seen in
the last couple of weeks from gays and lesbians who
are doing exactly what I said was going to happen.
They're ruining the day that they ever allowed the te's
in because now the te's brought all them other funky
(22:45):
letters and it's basically sidelined the actual gays and lesbians
who were a little more old school and a little
more into some proper decorum.
Speaker 4 (22:57):
They and they're over it. They don't like them anymore
more than we do.
Speaker 3 (23:02):
Okay, I got I have one quick thing to tell you.
I thought it was terrific. I'm I'm driving for Uber
because I want to get firsthand knowledge of what local Americas.
Speaker 1 (23:16):
But but I hope you're packing a gun.
Speaker 3 (23:23):
I'm not going to say whether I am or not.
I would be a giveaway, all right. But I had
this I had this couple on Friday and we were
talking about what was going on in New York and
with Trump and all the other stuff, and she came
up with what I thought was a fabulous idea. And
she was a political science major working for City back
(23:45):
trading corporate security, so far from her politicals. But what
she said, I think that when you become eligible for
Social Security and Medicare at sixty five, you can't run
for Congress. Okay, so a set of term limits, age limits. Okay.
(24:09):
I thought that was a brilliant idea. If you're over
sixty five, don't run. And she was talking about Diane
Feinstein and Mitch McConnell and other people. Saturday night, they
honored Maxine Waters, who's celebrated her ninetieth birthday and seven
hundred years in Congress. Yeah.
Speaker 4 (24:29):
I don't know, just no, I'm with you.
Speaker 1 (24:31):
But again, you know it, really, if the system was
running the way it was originally designed to run, and
the people, and if our country was being run the
way that it was originally designed to run, the people
would be engaged more, the people would be more knowledgeable,
and the people would be the term limitters. But you,
(24:54):
through government and what government has done, it has made
the people so apathetic that they do not pay it
tension other than to bitch when their taxes go up,
and they just keep voting these same idiots in. So
we were supposed to be the term limitters, and so
everybody screaming for term limits, I get it. But at
the same time, there might be term limits on the
(25:17):
congressman and Senate. But these deep state, lifelong bureaucrats are
still inside screwing things up.
Speaker 4 (25:26):
So what do we do about them?
Speaker 1 (25:27):
We do we have term limits for bureaucrats. You can
only serve, you can only work here for.
Speaker 4 (25:34):
Twelve years, you know, what do we do there?
Speaker 1 (25:38):
Because because they're the problem, I mean, are the feckless
boobs that we elect are merely just facilitators that keep
going from fundraiser to fundraiser and rubber chicken dinner to
rubber chicken dinner and saying what they're told to say
because they don't know what to say otherwise, because they're
(25:59):
so busy doing other rap, they can't keep up with
what's really going on in our country, and they they're
just spouting.
Speaker 4 (26:05):
Off talking points.
Speaker 1 (26:06):
So if we you know, I would like to see
we the people do a better job of unelecting and
term limiting a lot of these just completely corrupt failures
that are destroying our country.
Speaker 3 (26:20):
Right, I totally agree with you. I think it's a
great idea.
Speaker 1 (26:23):
But ye sir, all right, it's Dan Bergins. Folks, make
sure you check out his website Dan perkinsmedia dot org
Dan perkinsmedia dot org and request him for your next
Uber drive.
Speaker 3 (26:38):
Have a great one to do that you can't request me?
All right, Thanks Dan, we'll t next week.
Speaker 4 (26:46):
All right, initiate conversation. You have some very very bad habits.
Speaker 1 (26:50):
Well, these people in my office building are a drain
on resources.
Speaker 4 (26:53):
It's a kind of dieting boot camp.
Speaker 1 (26:55):
Oh, it's about in the next two hours.
Speaker 4 (26:56):
Telling you to drop we get maybe.
Speaker 2 (26:57):
Various numbers is humiliating.
Speaker 1 (27:00):
It's show business, baby, You gotta start somewhere.
Speaker 2 (27:02):
We'll be right back with Charlotte County speaks on news
Radio fifteen eighty WCCF.
Speaker 6 (27:15):
WO. Do you know with a liver that's huge, a
big red nose and gostles down booze.
Speaker 7 (27:21):
Drunken Santas coming to town?
Speaker 4 (27:25):
Oh the round.
Speaker 6 (27:27):
He's ringing a bell, holding a cup playing Santa Claus
be sobering up. Drunken Santas coming to town.
Speaker 7 (27:38):
He talks to every boy and girl. This vodka in
his beard. He looks like he's gonna held this. Santa
is really weird.
Speaker 6 (27:50):
The kids all leapt when he's doing his dance, but
actually he's just wetting his pants. Sta you mean the
big pant man with the stoly breath.
Speaker 1 (28:02):
He ah Christmas Time at news Radio fifteen eighty and
one hundred point nine FM WCCF ten forty two phone
lines open nine four one two zero six fifteen eighty
over to JB.
Speaker 4 (28:21):
Shirk.
Speaker 1 (28:22):
Combining a couple of articles that I had that I
was going to touch on today, but it talks about
both of them, so we'll just do this.
Speaker 4 (28:30):
Europe.
Speaker 1 (28:31):
You see what these guys are doing. They've killed themselves,
they're dying. And the Trump Administration's new National Security Strategy
in the new NDAA, which you can find online today,
makes it clear too. Europe has squandered its post World
War two economic and military assistance from US by investing
(28:52):
in centralized socialist bureaucracies and expansive welfare states. By chasing
the climate change con as a means for European governments
to justify total control over the drivers of economic growth,
European nations have forsaken cheap energy exploration, private entrepreneurship, and
technological innovation, and by depending on US to defend its
(29:17):
territorial interests, European nations have destroyed their military capabilities. I mean,
they're over there talking like they can actually know if
the US doesn't want to get involved in the.
Speaker 4 (29:29):
Ukraine Russia war, we will.
Speaker 1 (29:30):
Well, you've got nothing, good luck. In an effort to
juice their economies with cheap labor and artificial demographic growth,
Europe has opened their borders to tens of millions of
foreign immigrants, many of them illegal, and the natural result
is that foreign cultures have steadily eroded and replaced millennia
(29:54):
old European cultures without a whole lot of resistance. The
Trump administration believed Europe could be effectively erased within twenty years.
And when living things die, they tend to lash out.
Europe's no exception at all. The political elites over there
have decided to pretend that everything's aoka and that the
(30:14):
continent remains the life.
Speaker 4 (30:16):
Force of the entire world.
Speaker 1 (30:19):
In order to buttress this delusion, European governments have embraced
censorship and state approved propaganda on a scale as obscene
as anything that might have occurred in communist China, and
controlling the narrative and silencing dissent are the last gasps
of every civilization on its deathbed. Every day, some new
(30:39):
horror emerges from the UK, in which an ordinary citizen
is treated as a terrorist for merely expressing an opinion
or defending a personal belief. Recent example, thirty four year
old mother of four Elizabeth Kinney Kinny and a former
friend were texting each other about a male acquaintance who
had allegedly caused Kinny harm and she called him a faggot,
(31:05):
and the former friend reported Kinney to the authorities because
the abusive and homophobic test mess text message caused her
alarm and distress. So while Kinny was naked in a bathtub,
eleven police officers forced their way into her home and
arrested her. Of course, she's crying. Officers denied her any
(31:26):
privacy she's standing there naked, and the female officer informed
her that she was being arrested for malicious communications and
hate crime. The Crown placed this offense in the highest
category of its type due to the effect related to
sexual orientation and the greater harm because it had moderate impact.
(31:47):
Prosecutors insisted Kenny faced ten years in prison, but her
attorney begged for leniency. She's been ordered to perform seventy
two hours of community service, attend ten days of rehab
and pay a fie of several hundred pounds. All rights
are property rights, and the lesson that the British authorities
are trying to teach Kenny and other citizens is you
(32:10):
don't own the thoughts in your head anymore. You don't
own the words you express, You don't own the private
messages that you text to other private citizens, and when
your thoughts, words and texts violate officially approved government narratives
and ideologies, you will be punished. Freedom of speech and
freedom of conscience do not exist under any government willing
(32:33):
to use force to control how citizens think, speak, and text.
The UK is dead. The UK has turned into the
Soviet Union, as is the rest of the EU, which
is happening. I want no part of defending them anymore.
They don't deserve our defense. In Kinney's case, British authorities
(32:56):
have no problem re traumatizing a woman who'd already been
physically abused by this dude by sending a dozen cops
into her home and then forcing her to be naked, vulnerable,
and afraid in front of male officers. Instead, the Crown's
upset that Kinney used a gay slur to describe someone
not even directly participating in her text conversation with another woman,
(33:17):
And when the state is more concerned about insults to
men who have allegedly harmed women than the privacy and
dignity of women who have allegedly been harmed, while the
government is complicit in the abuse of its citizens, and
that's not the only one. There's that other story were
the people the victims of an attacked of an attack
(33:37):
by a bunch of Muslim migrants in the UK lashed
out after the fact and called these Muslim migrants a
bunch of names. And after being beat up, severely beaten
by these Musslim migrants, they called them names and the
victims get arrested. So Europe's tatalitarian assaults on free spe
(34:00):
beach are therefore ongoing national security threats to us here
in the United States, and protecting people from hate speech
has always been a government contrived trojan horse for censoring
dissent and controlling the flow of information. So right now
we got tampon Timmy Walls whining about random Americans calling
him a retard. They're driving past his house and calling
(34:22):
him a retard.
Speaker 4 (34:23):
Now that's beautiful.
Speaker 1 (34:28):
If Americans don't vigilantly defend the First Amendments protections for
free speech, and a future democrap president will no doubt
follow Europe's example, So good luck stopping the tyranny. But yeah,
screw Europe.
Speaker 5 (34:46):
An audio engineer knows which gear there is.
Speaker 4 (34:48):
You need to run your source through the DNAs fifteen
hundred first.
Speaker 2 (34:51):
This always did feel like one of those shows that
will go for a while, will be right back with
Charlotte County speaks on news radio fifteen to eighty WCCs.
Speaker 8 (35:00):
I just got out of a pretty bad relationship. It
was hard because I was broken. She had a lot
of money. You know, she's very well off, miss her.
Speaker 4 (35:11):
It's a lot.
Speaker 3 (35:13):
Now.
Speaker 8 (35:14):
I had to be smooth though, even though I was broke.
I had to be smooth. I had to be clever.
I'd figure it out. Like one day for our first Christmas, right,
I was like, hey, baby, every year for Christmas, I
like to do bigger and better things. I like to
outdo myself. You know what I'm saying. If I get
you a car one year, I'm gonna get you a
bus to next year because I like going to that
next level. So Baby, for this first year, I'm not
gonna get you anything because.
Speaker 1 (35:37):
Because I gotta build.
Speaker 8 (35:38):
You know what I'm saying, Like, I gotta.
Speaker 1 (35:39):
Field News Radio fifteen eighty one hundred point nine FM WCCF,
Charlotte County speaks to fifty five before we learn some stuff.
(36:06):
I guess I am a little bit psychic. Remember I
said I thought there you know, along with Minnesota, there
was probably some Smali issues in Ohio too. Well look
at this, I mean therefore, I am over on the
X hosted this yesterday after learning about the Somali fraud
case of Minnesota. A TikToker who called for an investigation
(36:28):
into the Somali community in Columbus, Ohio, got doxed, and
early this morning somebody showed up at the boarding house
where she lives and began throwing objects at her windows.
Now she's worried about who shared her address. She knows
they're clearly trying to intimidate and silence her, but she
says she ain't going up.
Speaker 4 (36:47):
Back down. And now it's time for five random random facts.
Speaker 1 (37:03):
I guess it was the way Dwine was all trying
to pooh pooh on the eating of dogs and cats.
Speaker 4 (37:14):
That was my first hmm, it's de Wine, it's Ohio.
Something's a mess.
Speaker 1 (37:20):
Number one of your five random facts and the English language.
Four is the only number whose meaning is equivalent to
the amount of letters.
Speaker 4 (37:28):
In its name.
Speaker 1 (37:30):
Number two fifty three percent of the flags in the
world have blue in them. Number three. NBC created its
peacock logo in nineteen fifty six because peacocks are multi colored.
RCA owned NBC at the time and thought a multi
colored logo might inspire people to buy color TVs. That
(37:55):
wasn't the reason, but you know, I guess you could
say it helped if you don't include Super Bowls. The
biggest delivery day in Domino's pizza history is and I
think we did this too. I have to call Joel
just to remind me the day of the OJ Simpson
Bronco Chase in June of ninety four. That was the
(38:17):
biggest delivery day in Domino's pizza history, not including Super Bowls.
And finally, number five of your five random facts, approximately
sixty six hundred people worldwide die every hour, while sixteen
seven hundred and twenty are born. With those numbers, the
(38:38):
world population grows by more than ten thousand every year.
And there is your five random facts.
Speaker 4 (38:53):
So there there's a lot of people.
Speaker 3 (38:59):
You know.
Speaker 4 (38:59):
Doctor Tom A.
Speaker 1 (39:00):
Soul did a little mathematical problem here and showed that
you could take the entire world's population and put them
in half the state of Rhode Island, giving them two
point three square feet each. The whole world, you could
(39:20):
put in half the state of Rhode Island, which is
very tiny. That's just to suggest that we are not
overpopulated by any stretch of the imagination.
Speaker 3 (39:33):
Ah.
Speaker 4 (39:34):
Good news.
Speaker 1 (39:34):
Well, we have an aquarium in Missouri announcing the arrival
of a new baby human women went into labor last
Wednesday at Wonders of Wildlife Aquarium in Springfield. The whole
thing took four minutes right there at the aquarium. Both
mom and baby are fine. The British magazine Women's Weekly
(40:00):
help break a world record by asking readers to donate
handmade pet toys. Guinness recently certified the record. They knitted
forty six thousand, five hundred and six mice toys for
cat shelters across the UK. Huh oh, here's one. It's
on the tickety talk. Some woman found a very ugly
(40:22):
piggy bank at the Goodwill. She bought for eleven bucks.
Found two thousand dollars in the piggy bank.
Speaker 4 (40:29):
Have a great day. Anybody got any more jokes?
Speaker 3 (40:34):
It ain't funny.
Speaker 4 (40:35):
Nope, nope, all right, see you folks. If you are
not fad easily, you're close. If you're not the den,
you are the crew. Please leave.
Speaker 8 (40:48):
We are close.
Speaker 4 (40:50):
Make your way to the door.
Speaker 2 (40:52):
We're in News Radio fifteen eighty AM WCCF, Pondagorda and
FM one hundred point nine W two S five e A,
punder God
Speaker 4 (41:01):
W c c F an iHeartRadio station, guaranteed human