Episode Transcript
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(00:00):
What a time to be alive,right, I mean and noa. I
mean, certainly every generation has momentsthat are historic that you know, we
we all kind of talk about andlike, wow, they'll be talking about
this for the next three hundred years. Why do we have to have one
(00:22):
of those every other month? Youknow, like we every other month it's
some sort of historic moment, likewow, this this is unprecedented. By
the way, most of the timeswhen they say something is unprecedented, it
is entirely precedented. I think thatsome people don't know what that word means.
You keep on using that word.I don't know that you know what
(00:43):
it means. There's your eighties moviereference for this morning's program, this Princess
Bride. We got to keep moving. So but then it's like, yeah,
there's a thousand year flood every otherTuesday, you know, do we
have to have them all the time? Time? And then yesterday the timeline
(01:04):
is interesting. There was an allegedbusiness transaction between a consenting man and a
consenting woman. One is the hostof Celebrity Apprentice. The other one,
(01:25):
I guess wanted to be on CelebrityApprentice. He wanted to be on the
person who wanted to be on CelebrityApprentice. No money changed hands in that
transaction. Years later, the formertelevision host says, you know, I
(01:49):
think I'll run for president, Andthey said, all right, Donald is
we're hearing that there are a fewpeople trying to say, tell some stories
to those media outlets who purchase stories. Oh like Fox News, ABC,
CNN. No, no, no, they allegedly don't pay for stories.
(02:14):
Now we're talking about reputable news organizationsfor profit groups, the ones that people
look at and get their news from. The National Inquirer. What would have
happened if the conversation had been misterTrump, there's a Stormy Daniels who says
(02:38):
that you guys had a thing,and she's selling her story to the National
Inquirer. What are we going todo about it? Nothing? What else
do you guys need to talk abouttoday? Oh? Okay, So then
Stormy Daniels runs off to the NationalInquirer. That's right, we did it.
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The National Choir runs a big pictureand you know, kind of a
Trump with a look in his facelike eh, you know, Stormy Daniel
with a look in her face likeeh, and a big headline Donald Trump
alleged to have had an affair withan adult film star. We'd be standing
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there in line waiting to pay forour groceries, and you know, truth
be told, I don't see thoseheadlines as much anymore. It's not very
often I go to the checkout standswhere there's an actual human being standing there.
They got all those do it yourselfcheckout stands. Then there's like a
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dozen of them ready to go.I like the fact that the local grocery
stores are hiring in many instances,these kids to work. I think that's
great. It's not like, well, if we don't go to the checkout
stand with the person working there,they're not going to employ these kids.
Oh yeah, they are. Thesekids are jostling for superiority in the aisles
(04:11):
as they're trying to do your personalshopping. Oh, it says here,
Marianne needs a can of peas well, what kind of peace? We've got
fifty different kinds of peas It justsays peas well, we'll just we'll take
a guess at it. And they'reat their personal shopping. All that's what
all these guys are doing. SoI go to the self checkout stands,
I don't think that they have thosemagazines there at the self checkout stands,
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or if they do, I'm notstanding there waiting to use one and seeing
them. All right, But let'sgo back to the time and we're all
standing there waiting to pay, andwe look down to our left and there's
all the magazines. Glamour. Uhsays here Glamour has an article on how
to have better sex. This isgroundbreaking. I don't know if they've ever
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done anything in this vein before,so I might have to pick that up
Weekly World News. Ah, theincredible frog boy is on the loose again.
I knew it. I get oneof those on the National Enquirer.
Trump in an adult film star?H what do they think of next?
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Oh, it's my turn and thenyou start putting your items on the Would
the world have stop turning? Wouldit have made any difference to anyone?
There were already rumors, And bythe way, those go back to his
first couple of marriages. Who inAmerica was like? What? Trump might
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have a roving eye, and hemight be, as Jim Ross pointed out
today, he might be morally bankrupt. That's a different kind of Chapter eleven.
What would have happened if they'd goneto Donald J. Trump and said,
there's this broad like I'm running forpresident. Now clean up the language.
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We call them chicks, all right, there's this chick. She says
that you guys did a little badthing on the good foot, and she's
looking to get paid for a story. We can pay her off, offer
her twenty dollars, and if shewants anything more than that, we're not
paying her a dime. Next issue. All of this, the potential of
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jail time for a former and potentialfuture president of the United States, is
based on a couple of bad decisions. A couple of alleged bad decisions there,
one to do that, two topay her off and assume that she
could keep her mouth shut. Sothen then that happened in two thousand and
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nine or something like that. Imean, it happened a million years ago.
Maybe said I don't know. Idon't know that. So they pay
her off, they chalk it downas a business expense somewhere. Then there's
the accusation that the business records werefalsified. I don't know, and that's
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what the court determined yesterday. Ido know that the Statute of limitations for
this is like two or three years. So if they if she got paid
off in twenty fifteen or twenty sixteen, that means that this is, yeah,
the latest you got to file thesecharges by twenty nineteen. And by
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the way, the accusation here isa misdemeanor charge. Somehow they managed to
say statute of limitations be darned andmaking it felony charges. And we're doing
it during this election year. We'retying them up in court. And yesterday
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this jury at twelve people said makessense to us guilty on all charges.
Of course, there will be anappeal. We've got sentencing date set for
July eleventh. It's possible he couldsee jail time. I mean the maximum
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here is four years behind bars.It could be a fine, it could
be home detention, which a lotof experts say, well, it's more
likely if they want to detain him, they're probably not going to throw him
in the clink in the whuskal.They probably just say, all right,
(09:01):
home detention. He'll treat that aboutas seriously as he did. The judges
ordered to stop talking about me andmy daughter, stop talking about the DA.
You gotta hush up. You'll beheld in contempt of court. You'll
be held in contempt of court.All right, that's another one thousand dollars.
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You want to make a two thousand, you make it two thousand.
You know, just home detention that'lllast for what two minutes? Hang on,
I gotta change my shoes and we'releaving like you can't leave. It's
home detention. And then you addthe fun layer that Let's say they say,
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all right, that's we've never seencharges this serious before. We're sentencing
you to the maximum four years behindbars. He could still be elected president,
and he could still serve as presidentof the United States from a jail
cell. Now that's highly unlikely.But everything I just said and how we
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got to this point, all ofit's highly unlikely. None of this makes
any sense. All of this isunprecedented, like literally really unprecedented. Not
president because it's a president fun turnof phrase, but no, it's just
never, We've never done this,which then adds, you know, additional
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fun layers. He'll be sentenced Julyeleventh. What if they sentence him to
a week in prison. I guessit'd probably have to be like a week
and a half. They said,all right, ten days in prison.
What would be the significance of tendays in prison? The Republican National Convention
kicks off in Milwaukee a few daysafter sentencing date. If they put him
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in there for a week and ahalf, he'll miss the convention. And
then you'll have a fight at theRepublican National Convention, like, are we
really going to add our convention?Nominate a guy who can't be here because
he's in jail, and the peopleand attendants will go, Hell, yes
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we are, which is another interestingthing. After the charges were found to
be validated by this court, peoplewent to Trump's website before he even sent
out the fundraising email asking them toThey went to his website to donate,
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and so many people went to thecampaign's fundraising page it crashed within a half
hour or so after the verdict.It crashed because of so many people attempting
to contribute to his campaign at thesame time. Here's what the campaign posted
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on Twitter quote Manymerricans were moved todonate to President Trump's campaign that the win
read pages went down. We areworking on getting the website back online as
quickly as possible. It took anotherhour and a half or so. But
then a fundraising email went out fromthe Trump campaign, signed by Trump said,
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I'm a political prisoner. We hadto show people in a unified way
that we're going to fight back againstthis. You think he can chip in
a few bucks, I need aboutthree fitty, Politico says quote. The
immediate fundraising push is the latest exampleof Trump using his legal misfortune for political
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and financial gain. It could bethe most lucrative yet. His campaign has
repeatedly turned legal jeopardy into millions ofdollars to fuel his potential return to the
White House, with flashpoints of greaterperil driving more cash to his coffers.
Well, he didn't do this,He didn't orchestrate a district attorney in Manhattan
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to forget the statute of limitations andthe fact that something like this would be
a misdemeanor if fabricate charges to thirtyfour felony charges when no one involved even
did so much as call the policeabout it. Story Daniels can't. This
has nothing to do with that.This is about who marked what on a
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business report, which would mean thatyou'd have to have people within the business
call the police and go I'm awhistleblower. Something funny's going on here.
No one did that. None ofhis business associates, none of his potential
business partners, those who had grantedhim loans or signed partnerships with him.
None of them ever said, yes, is this the police, I'd like
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to report a potential white collar crimegoing on? No one did. No
one. By the way, PresidentBiden and Vice President Harris also set out
emails last night using this verdict asa jumping off point for fundraising, saying,
this conviction won't keep Trump for holdingoffice. You've got to support us.
(14:15):
I need about three fitty you know, give me some money, you
know. But Trump gets tagged forOh he's fundraising off of this. I
don't know if you saw the emailfrom the Biden campaign or Justice Democrats or
any of the rest of them.President Trump is going to address the nation
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at about ten o'clock this morning.Omaha Council Bluff's Ralston time. We're going
to bring that to you live.It doesn't mean that's not a MAGA rally.
He's not going to be introduced byLee Greenwood in front of throngs of
fans. This is not a Thisis not a rally. It's going to
be a Trump tower. So Idon't know. I don't know if he
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comes down the escalator. I don'tknow if he's going to take questions from
the media. But I know thatwhatever that sounds like, you will hear
it right here. Just after teno'clock, a couple of emails and the
Zonker's custom was inbox. Gene emailsscottikfab dot com says Scott the jury instructions
from the Trump trials sounded like whatwas said before the witches were dunked to
(15:22):
prove their innocence. If you comeup alive, you're not a witch.
I fear for the divisiveness that hasbeen unleashed upon our country. As Schumer
said about the Supreme Courts, asyou sow the whirlwind, so shall you
reap? That's from Gene sent toscottikfab dot com. Yeah, goodie.
(15:43):
Trump was proven to be a witchyesterday at this trial. As far as
the district Attorney Alvin Bragg, robemails says he should go to the casinos.
He parlayed one misdemeanor into thirty fourfelonies like Clay and Buck said,
this is a misdemeanor marijuana possession ofsomeone passing a joint back and forth thirty
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four times. That suddenly becomes felonydrug trafficking. And it's not even marijuana.
It's a regano. That's rob Ryansays. Ryan says Trump could potentially
be president and have a probation officerat that point, who runs the country.
(16:30):
Yeah, mister President, we needyour signature on this executive order.
Hang on, I gotta check withJean. Yeah, check with my probation
officer, lousey. Can you imaginethat probation officer when he first started the
job, if somebody would have said, hey, by the way, for
four years later down the line,you'll be answering to the president. The
president will be answering to you,right, that's hilarious. Yeah, the
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probation officer would be Mike Pence.Oh hello Donald. Here's here's what a
few of the nation's largest newspaper editorialpages have said about all of this.
The Wall Street Journal, Oh,what kind of dirty leftlet says the nation
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might soon regret this rough turn.Many voters will digest all of this and
conclude that while mister Trump may bea cad a cad, Yes, sir,
sir, you do not drink yourchampagne with your pinky in the air.
You know, gentlemen, you're aCAD, c a d cat.
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You are a CAD. That isgreat, and mister Trump may be a
CAD. This conviction isn't disqualifying fora second term in the White House.
We're witnessing the start, potentially ofa new destabilizing era of American politics.
I don't know if you guys beenpaying attention at the WSJ. We're in
(17:56):
it. It's been destabilized politics forthe better part of the last eight years.
You could make a case for earlierthan that. The Washington Post says,
the significance of this sordid episode thoughperhaps only tangential to the danger the
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defendant poses a see Washington Post isone of those who feels that Trump is
a danger to America. The significancelies in the fact that twelve of mister
Trump's fellow citizens rendered their judgment ona wealthy former president. What does wealthy
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have to do with it? Wegot it. We got a rich guy.
Yeah, has something to do withhim being wealthy here, the Post
sums up. But the ultimate verdictmight well have to arrive via a different
means the ballot box, and itwill not be up to a jury of
twelve. But whoever it is thatstuffing a ballot Oh wait, sorry what
(19:00):
they said, but an electorate ofmillions. It's the assessment of the Washington
Post. I'll tell you what theLa Times, Chicago Tribune, and the
New York Times said about this.After a Fox News updated moment, don't
miss this Trump live from Trump Tower, New York City just after ten right
here Scott Voorhees News Radio eleven tenKFAB. In about twenty five minutes,
(19:25):
President Trump will address the nation inthe wake of yesterday's guilty verdict. We
will bring that to you live hereon news Radio eleven ten KFAB with Lucy
Chapman. I'm Scott Voorhees give theassessment of the editorial pages from the Wall
Street Journal said the nation might soonregret this rough turn as voters digest all
(19:48):
of this and conclude that, well, Trump might be a cad their words
word, this conviction isn't disqualifying fora second term in the White House,
and which is true, even ifhe's in a jail cell, he can
still service president. The requirements fora presidential candidate are that they are at
(20:11):
least eighty years old. Is thattrue? No, I'm sorry thirty five
thirty five years old, a naturalborn US citizen and a resident of the
US for at least fourteen years.He might not be able to vote for
himself, but he can still serveas president. Washington Post says it's a
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sordid episode on a wealthy former president, like wealthy has anything to do with
it, but the ultimate verdict willbe the election. The Chicago Tribune,
their editorial page says this was anextraordinarily strange and sad day for America,
irrespective of party affiliation and of whatmight happen on appeal. Now. Of
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course, Trump for this, sayinghe should not have falsified business payments.
Well, yeah, you should havetold him that years ago. He wouldn't
be here. Los Angeles Time saysit shouldn't take a criminal conviction to convince
conscientious voters of Trump's epic unfitness.Epic unfitness. I don't know that I've
(21:25):
ever heard the phrase unfitness since mylast physical epic unfitness. Those who support
Trump must now reckon with the factthat their candidate of choice is a convicted
felon. I don't know if youguys have been paying attention. Those who
(21:48):
support Trump don't believe him to bea convicted felon. They believe him to
be here. Let me give youthis story. A court in Russia today
just ordered a detained American journalists tobe held until at least August fifth,
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pending an investigation. She's a journalistwith Radio Free Europe and they were allowed
to be in Russia, and thenRussia changed their mind after she was there
and said you need to register asa foreign agent, and you didn't,
so we're taking you into custody.And now she's being held on this trumped
(22:33):
up political charge from Russia. Nowsomething like this happens with Russia. No
one here bats and I like,well, yeah, that's how it goes
in Russia. They changed the rulesto fit whatever parameters they want to set
up. They've decided she's a politicalenemy, and they take her into custody
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and ultimately putin decides whether or notshe goes away forever or ever sees daylight
again. And we go Yep.Sounds like Russia to me. It's a
good thing. We live in America, where that kind of thing would never
happen. That's how Trump voters seewhat happened yesterday, and the rest of
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the world. You know, we'realways really concerned with how the rest of
the world looks at us, EspeciallyPresident Biden. He's always said, we
need to be able to, youknow, be the kind of America that
the rest of the world looks atas you know, for strength, as
allies, as partners. Here,I think we took a big step yesterday
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towards being like the rest of theworld, as nations all over the globe
looked at this and said, Americais finally getting it. You just find
someone that is a threat to yourpolitical power and you say that guy he's
guilty of what I don't have toanswer, and what that guy's guilty too
(24:04):
for asking questions. Both of yougo away, take him away. This
is what they do. This iswhat they've done throughout history. It's what
they still do today in places inthe rest of the world. You find
someone who's you're you know, athreat to your political power, you have
him arrested, and you throw himin jail. Big deal. The rest
(24:26):
of the world calls that Tuesday.Now, the rest of the world's looking
at this, going, ah see, they're finally getting it. Yeah.
I kind of like their style inAmerica. That's exactly what I would do,
says Kim Jong Un, says JiJenpang, says Vladimir Putin, says
Lucy. Who's in charge of Syriathese days? I don't know. It's
(24:48):
got a whole bunch of letters init. Yeah, David Lee Roth,
there you go. People wonder whathappened to him? There he is.
He's the leader of Syria, Leaderof Syria. What do you do when
you find yourself just pondering all ofthis that's going on and think, and
this is where you have to comeand bring it, to bring it all
around to is for what? Whatis the end game? Is it power?
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Is it money? They've got bothof those, all these people in
charge. You look at somebody whogoes into politics, you look at their
bank account, and we've talked aboutthis a thousand times. You look at
their bank account, and you lookat it coming out vastly different. If
it's power, you've got these mostlyDemocrats, but certainly Republicans that have been
(25:37):
in Congress for a very long time. They've got the power. Look what
they've done to California just through theirpower, their ability to say something,
and it is done. And Ifeel terribly heartbroken for the people that are
in California. You just love thatstate, but have never voted for this,
voted for the recall of news andthey get nowhere. So then you
(26:03):
set you have to say what isthe end game? Because Trump did something
that he wasn't supposed to do.He exposed them for the frauds that they
are. The whole that's exactly right. It goes much simper than that,
the whole system exactly right. Andthis goes all the way into it.
I know, here go the eyerolls. This all goes all the way
(26:26):
into trafficking. And the end doesthis have something to do with Hillary and
a pizza restaurant? We're not,No, I'm not going down that road
trafficking. But I will say this, when you've got that much information out
there, when you've got that manypeople talking about it, and that many
people with alleged photos and alleged videos, there has to be some vein of
(26:49):
truth. Is it all true?That nothing's all true? So so again
I just say, so, whatis the end game? What is he
going to expose. I wondered whosome of these shadowy figure figures are online
A q Andon and so forth.It's you, isn't it. No,
did you watch the video or doucimentaryabout q Andon, the one that you
(27:11):
made about yourself? Just turn yourphone around and film you? And do
you want to come out right nowand say you're q and on? I
do not, I am not.I don't know about all that I do,
I do know. I mean,look at all. I mean Republicans
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and Democrats have historically, Yeah,they've battled, they have a difference of
opinion, but largely and honestly,I'm not saying this like it's a bad
thing. But the days of PresidentReagan fighting against Tip O'Neil, the Speaker
of the House, and everyone fightingand all that, and at the end
of the day, like, allright, let's go get a drink.
You know, we both love thiscountry. We just disagree on a few
different policy procedures is how to getthere. But we don't need to take
(27:57):
all this personally. You know,that was a different time in America.
That time has gone, and sonow Republicans have been told like, all
right, stop putting in these agentprovocateurs, these change agents are gonna come
in there, like saboteurs are gonnablow the whole system up. We need
people or are just going to bestatesmen. And the Republicans are like,
(28:19):
well, yeah, we're good people. We're going to put out good candidates,
good people. Bob Dole, it'sgood person. Mitt Romney is a
good person. John McCain, goodperson. We're gonna put these good people
out there and they're not going towin, but we can at least look
at ourselves in the mirror and go, well, we're not going to stoop
(28:41):
to some level where someone's just gonnabe out there just throwing mud around.
We're just going to be good peopleand we're gonna lose elections. And Trump,
well, he got a little differentdance that he does along these lines.
And he came in there and hesays, the Obama campaign spying on
me and my campaign. Their Obambapresidency is spying on my campaign. And
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they said, you're crazy. Allright, it did happen. Oh,
okay, Well Trump is colluding withRussia. No, it's not. Well,
he probably could have been. Bythe way, how many people went
to jail, how many people werefound guilty of falsifying life in the Trump
Russia collusion thing. Who's sitting injail right now? Who had to pay
(29:30):
a fine? One more editorial hereto provide for you, The New York
Times. Lucy's not getting my handsignals. I'm just going to ask you.
Are they here? Yes? Okay, all right, bring him in
and tell him. We'll get tohim here in just a second. All
right. We got a little headsup on something fun happening this weekend.
(29:53):
Here's the assessment of the editorial pageof the New York Times. They said,
quote, the greatest good to comeout of this sordid case is the
proof that the rule of law bindseveryone, even former presidents. Trump tried
to sabotage elections and the criminal justicesystem, both of which are fundamental to
(30:17):
American democracy, when he thought theymight not produce the outcome he wanted.
So the New York Times is parrotingthis idea that Trump led an insurrection to
not have to leave office, triedto sabotage the election and the criminal justice
system and so forth. I don'tknow if you all remember what happened on
(30:38):
January twentieth, twenty twenty one.Remember that day. It wasn't a day
when Trump was dragged out of theWhite House kicking and screaming, like grabbing
onto door jams, like I'm notleaving, like a four year old you're
trying to take to the doctor orsomething like that. I don't want a
(31:00):
shot. I'm not leaving, andthey're dragging him out of there. It
wasn't any of that. It wasTrump's saying, all right, here's the
keys to the resolute desk. Trynot to scratch it up, all the
details about the aliens. I guessyou probably know that you were vice president,
you know your way around. WELPsee you. And he left,
(31:22):
and as far as the January sixthdeal, before that and so forth,
Trump has not been charged with insurrection. He's not been charged. They keep
calling him an insurrectionist. The NewYork Times says as much here, and
they're editorial. So it's not enoughthat we found a jury in New York
to find him guilty of thirty fourfelony charges. We have to just make
(31:45):
up that he's also an insurrectionist whowas clinging to power in his final days
as presidency when he just walked outthe White House, which sets up these
next cases. I imagine we'll hearmore about all of this from President Trump
(32:07):
when he addresses the nation. Herein about twelve minutes. We'll bring it
to you live Scott Boys, SnoozeRadio eleven kfab. We've got Mitch Beaumont
here in the studio, city ofLa Vista, Scott. Is it Lavista
Days already? The list to dayis already. I'm not ready for Lavista
Day. Well we are, sothat's good. Tell me what's going on.
(32:29):
We changed weekends this year. Weused to be a memorially weekend.
Tonight we have a free concert atthe Astra Amphitheater. It's it's sold out,
brand new, brand spanking new,brand new, like indoor outdoor,
and it's a private venue, sowe don't own it. We're renting it
from tonight. So we have neverMind here from the local area and Classic
Journey coming in from California. You'vegot the Nirvana tribute band never Mind there,
(32:50):
never Mind absolutely come as you areto this one. Yes, that's
a Nirvana song. Oh sorry sorry. And then tonight nine thirty we have
fireworks and drone show over the Amphitheater. Fantastic. And then tomorrow, full
day of activities starting with parade atten am along park Few Boulevard, followed
by free community cookout, games andactivities all for free. Car show,
(33:12):
got some food trucks, beer gardensfor purchase on the city hall came you
can buy an entire beer garden.Don't tell, don't tell my friends.
No, you go in there andbuy beer or beer or beer yeah or
by around whatever. And then inthe city Hall lobby we have the Labista
Giving Project, which benefits of movingve's forward are making hygiene kits for homeless
(33:32):
veterans in the area. Awesome websitefor more details or social media absolutely livistadays
dot org. And then any weatheror other announcements are on the City of
Leavisa's social media accounts. Mitch Beaumont, he's the city administrator over the area
location runs that place, you know, he's the czar of levis not at
all and it constantly engages in battleswith the communications director of Papilia and the
(33:55):
Ralston the dominion over this area ofour community. Collaborate, Mitch. Always
great to see you have a greatweekend. President Trump is going to address
the nation here in just over fiveminutes ish. We will bring it to
you live when he begins. Ifyou hear a Fox News report right at
ten o'clock, it doesn't mean thatwe're carrying that instead of Trump. It
(34:15):
means Trump hasn't started talking yet.We will break in and bring it to
you. I don't know how longhe's going to talk. I've got an
event to go to at six o'clocktonight. I'm am seeing the American Cancer
Society's Potawatamee County Fun Times event featuringdueling pianos tonight. Oh, Scott,
are you playing? No? Ithink these guys are playing. It's gonna
(34:37):
be a great time at Iowa WesternCommunity College Student Center. I got to
be there at six. Do youthink you'll be wrapped up by then?
Because he might take the bulk ofthe next hour. I don't want to
go any further into the weekend withoutmentioning the name Jamal Mitchell. Eighteen months
ago, in the wake of BlackLives Matter and George Floyd and all the
(35:00):
unrest up in the Minneapolis area,this young black man said, I want
to join the Minneapolis Police Force.I want to be a police officer here
in my community. I hear peoplein the community say we need more people
to look like us, I meanmore black people from this area to be
cops. I'm going to do that. I think it's a noble thing.
(35:22):
I want to do it. Heshowed up to help a guy who was
shot, and for that he gotshot and killed. Twenty eight years old,
engaged to be married. A yearor so ago, he helped an
elderly couple in a house fire andsaved their lives. Name. Will his
name be like we need to sayhis name? Will it be out there
(35:45):
as much as others in this entiremovement? Absolutely not. That's why I
wanted to say it. Jamal Mitchellend of Watch yesterday, we got Trump
standing by. We'll bring that toyou live in just a few minutes.