Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Scott vordiez.
Speaker 2 (00:01):
We have been here for about one hundred years. We
have been a lot of elections. We will be here
through this election. And you know what, we even keep
the transmitter on after the election and talk about a
great number of things, generally with this nod towards exasperated bewilderment,
no matter what that is. And you're always welcome to
(00:24):
join us here for that. I'm on each morning from
nine to eleven. Anytime you are wanting to listen, you
can catch the podcast of alleged highlights, the Vintage Warheas
Podcast on kfab dot com. If you are a felon
and you've been released from prison, you've served your debt
(00:44):
to society, you've just had your voting rights in the
state of Nebraska restored. The Nebraska State Supreme Court has
ordered Secretary of State Bob Evnan to follow this new
state law that gives felons who are out of jail
the right to vote. Now, the Secretary of State had said,
(01:06):
after the legislature said, oh, come on, let the felons vote,
Secretary of State Fnin said, I don't know that this
is something that the legislature can do. We're checking to
see the constitutional viability of it. Well, how long is
that going to take? I don't know. Certainly, we can't
get it done here before the election. And people, of
(01:26):
course went up in arms, and well, the state Supreme
Court took a look at it, and according to this
ruling that just came down moments ago, this is not
an unconstitutional decision by the legislature, and any election commissioner
in the state is to implement the new law immediately.
(01:48):
So if you are again a felon, you have served
your time, you can go register to vote, and you
can go vote in the twenty twenty four election. And
I've got I have more non issues with this than
I do issues. I don't have as many problems with
(02:10):
it as I do. That I think it's all right.
I mean, first of all, if the politicians are gonna
be criminals, why not let criminals vote. That's one that's,
by the way, sarcastic tongue in cheek. Because right on
top of that, I feel the need to point out
there are so many people who in their wild misspent
(02:34):
halcyon days of their youth. This could be thirty forty
years ago, they committed a crime. You know, they got
really hungry and they tried to eat a guy's arm
off or something like that. Any port in a storm,
I mean, sometimes the restaurants are closed. You ever pull
into small town, Nebraska late at night and you're like, man,
(02:54):
I just want something to eat, and it's like and
I'm not even that late at night. It's like ten thirty.
Everything's closed. So what do you do. You'd find a
guy and trying to chew his arm off, or you
pack your own snacks. There's any number of things you
could do. So guy tries to eat a guy's arm
(03:16):
off or whatever. He spends twenty years in jail, he
gets out, and now society has determined that he's all right.
He can live among the rest of us. But they
might issue a little bit of a you won't like
him when he's hungry, you know. In this instance, there
(03:38):
are some people who have to sign a registration site,
a registry. These are the people you need to be
aware whether or not they live in your neighborhood before
you send your kids trigger treating here in a couple
of weeks. That's the sex offender registry. I think it's
interesting that we have a sex offender registry, because that
(04:00):
could be any number of things. It could be anything
from the creepy guy with the van and the candy
to a nineteen year old who had a relationship with
a sixteen year old or whatever. Again, I'm always happy
to point out I don't know the now. I can't
(04:22):
even think of the term. I'm so old now none
of this applies to me. The not the statute of limitations,
but the age of consent, the age of consent, the
age of consent in Nebraska. I don't know what that is.
It hasn't been an issue in my life. Even when
I was the age of consent. I think I turned
(04:43):
that age. I was like, I consent and everyone said,
we're good. So I don't know what it is. Never,
never been an issue. I've managed to remain abstinent my
entire life based on my personality. Somehow, I've got two kids.
I don't know science, I guess so where was I. Oh, yeah,
you got your your registry of people who have served
(05:05):
their deaths to society and now they're out, and now
you're on the sex offender registry. That's everything from the
age of consent you're on the wrong side of it,
to the creepy guy in the van with the candy.
It could be a guy who came out of a
bar and decided to take a whiz in the alley. Well,
it was within five hundred yards of a school. It's
(05:25):
like one o'clock in the morning. Yeah, you never know
you're a sex offender. You got a register. Could be
any number of things. Meanwhile, you could go out and
shoot a guy in the eyeball, rob from his business,
go spend years in jail at some point. Yeah, you've
(05:46):
been behaving yourself. We're gonna let you out of jail.
Does that guy have to be in a registry. No,
the guy who a few years ago tried to take
in some instances, it could be a kid. He tried
to take a kid and cut him up like one
of those paper snowflakes. He doesn't have to be in
our registry. Your kids can be triggered treating at his house.
(06:08):
I'm just saying that the way that we deal with
criminals is from start to finish pretty asinine. This is
a bit of a side road on felons being restored
with their right to vote, I admit, but I think
it's worth it to point out that most people who
have a problem with felons losing their right to vote,
(06:29):
I think that they see that we have this injustice
in our society. There are people who have committed very
serious crimes over and over again, and it seems like
they're right back out in the streets, right back out
in the streets. Whether it's the illegal immigration issue we
talked about at this time yesterday, to recap during the
(06:51):
year twenty twenty one, counties like Douglas County, Nebraska told
Immigration Customs Enforcement We're not going to detain anyone you
want to to detain, even though ICE. That's Immigration Customs Enforcement,
not Vanilla or Cube or t though I celebrate all
of their music. Yeah, even Vanilla, that's right. We told ICE,
(07:15):
we're not going to take your bunch of money and
detain dangerous people. We're not going to do that anymore.
Why what happened in twenty twenty one that caused counties
like Douglas County, Nebraska to want to be sanctuary counties.
Oh yeah, it was the Biden Harris administration. I read
that letter on the area yesterday. So we see issues
(07:39):
with injustice and society. People who could be Venezuelan gang
members or Haitian cat eaters or whatever are just unleashed
onto our streets committing crimes in places like Springfield, Ohio.
I told you a couple of weeks ago about a
cop and a neighboring community said, we can't even hear
(08:02):
the nine to one to one dispatch traffic anymore. They've
cut off Springfield, Ohio from the rest of the country.
We've asked, like, do you need us to come in
and help respond to some of these things. Nope, we're okay,
And they said, we know there are crimes being committed,
including by this influx of migrants in the community, but
they don't want it to look like there's crimes being
(08:23):
committed that would be bad to certain administrations and towns
like Springfield, Ohio to get money from certain Biden Harris administrations.
So therefore we're just not going to report any of it.
We see this injustice, and that's the migrant injustice. Then
you got the people born and raised here like these
two little angels. Potentially they weren't taken into custody about
(08:48):
one o'clock this morning. Seems like they tried to break
into a gas station at thirtieth in Lake in northeast
Omahak tried to break into the building, apparently thinking I
would a gas station at thirtieth in Lake maybe have
a few security measures up to prevent people from breaking in.
Turns out someone saw him doing it, and here come
the police. Here comes the police helicopter, and here comes
(09:12):
the canine unit. Both these guys were apprehended. I don't
even know their ages right now. They said, well, they
were miners one o'clock in the morning. And when I
say miners, I don't mean they had their miners caps on.
They weren't going to go spill lunking. They were going
to go break into a gas station at one am
(09:32):
on a Tuesday night into Wednesday morning. Now, for some
of us with kids, we know that as a school night.
What will happen to these guys probably exactly Jack. So
when we see people like, all right, this is your
seventeenth DUI stop it, okay, you know, and then they're
(09:54):
right back out they drive away from that hearing. When
we see this lack of justice, suddenly we see this
now this new issue. We need to restore Felon's right
to vote, and people go there should be more people
locked up for a longer time in the state of Nebraska.
(10:16):
I'm not interested in giving any rights to any criminals.
If they wanted to vote, they shouldn't have broken the law.
So that's I think one of the biggest issues that
people have with it. We have too much criminal coddling
in Nebraska as it is right now, and of course
across the country as well, too much of it. Of course,
(10:39):
the other problem is you've got conservatives who say, I
don't want felons to have the right to vote because
I'm afraid they're all going to vote Democrat, and we
don't need any more Democrat voters, especially in Nebraska's second
district and some of these legislative districts and so no way,
(11:00):
which is interesting, who pushed this, Who constantly pushes restoring
felon's right to vote. It's not the Republican Party, though
it certainly could be. I'll get back on that in
a second. It's Democrats. It's Democrats and the ACLU and
a lot of these liberal leaning organizations. They're always pushing
(11:20):
for felons to have the right to vote. It's like
a voter drive, and we need more people to vote Democrat. Well,
have criminals and felons and ex felons, X cons and
people incarcerated to be able to vote, let to legal
immigrants be able to vote. Republicans are like, we need
a voter drive. When's the last time we canvass that
church over there? And people say, you can't have a
(11:42):
voter drive at a church. Separation a church and state. Now,
if you'll excuse us, we're going to go sell to
sell and try and sell the merits of Preston Love
Junior or whoever the Democrat is running for state wide office.
So that's another issue people have with it. They're like,
we want to give more probable democrats the right to vote,
(12:05):
and Republicans are like, I'm gonna try and find a
way for that not to happen. So that certainly is
part of the case too, But mostly I keep thinking
about that guy who committed a crime, did something so bad,
so dumb, so long ago, and since that time, he
(12:27):
served his time. He was in jail during the Clinton
administration and during half of the Bush administration. Now he's out.
He's miss voting for Obama. He misvoted for voting for
Trump or Hillary missed this twenty twenty Shinola Show we had,
(12:47):
and now he's thinking, how am I not going to
kill cast to vote for either Trump or Kamala? Here?
How do we it's I mean, I committed this crime
thirty years ago. I'm being out of jail for twenty,
you know years or whatever. Come on, man, I've been
a decent guy. I've raised a good family. YEA, when
(13:10):
they need a volunteer to help out with the school
booster club, I'm right there. I can't vote for president.
I have a hard time telling that guy no. So
I'm fine with it, which no one asked me anyway.
And this was the legislature that did it. Secretary of
State tried to block it, and in the last hour
(13:33):
the Nebraska State Supreme Court unlocked it and they said, yeah,
they felons will be able to vote in Nebraska in
this election. Now, don't worry. Most of the felons right
now are not old enough to vote. If you're concerned
about any of this, all right there, thank you. I
finally got a laugh on that one. I said that
to Gary and Jim and no one even listened to me.
(13:54):
But I just said that, and Lucy got it and
gave me a little courtesy laugh. Thank you.
Speaker 3 (13:59):
It's not courtesy, though. That was sadly funny.
Speaker 2 (14:01):
Going to turn your I know, gotta turn your microphone
on left. I'll add that later when we posted to
the podcast.
Speaker 3 (14:08):
Here you go. I think it's curious that this is
being from what I'm hearing, what I understand, this is
kind of being pushed by Democrats. Maybe, Yeah, you were
coming back.
Speaker 2 (14:23):
You were on the phone when I was talking about that. Yeah,
we'll put our heads together, and I want to hear
your thoughts on this, Lucy. I want to hear your
thoughts on this as well. Scott at kfab dot.
Speaker 1 (14:33):
Com, Scott Voice, news Radio eleven ten kfab.
Speaker 2 (14:38):
Lucy Chapman one of those who provides you Timesaber traffic.
She's in the morning Steve Parker in the afternoon here
on news radio eleven ten KFAB. Was just about to
make a point or ask a question about the Nebraska
State Supreme Court in the last hour restoring Felon's right
to vote, and that is effective immediately. Lucy, you can
(15:01):
you've you sold all those rocks you stole, right, all
that ice, you've sold it. You were arrested, you've served
your time as an ex con. You can go register
to vote now today. Isn't that exciting for you?
Speaker 3 (15:14):
Well, if that were any any of that were true,
then yeah, that'd be totally exciting.
Speaker 2 (15:18):
Grand theft larseny. What was your pointer question?
Speaker 3 (15:21):
Well, no, I have never been a felon and I've
never been to prison.
Speaker 2 (15:25):
But yeah, it's hard to catch you.
Speaker 3 (15:29):
Do we think that all of these felons are mostly Democrats?
Is that kind of where this is coming from?
Speaker 2 (15:37):
Democrats do, But I wonder if they're misplaced in thinking that.
As I said a moment ago, it seems like when
there are discussions about we need to add more voters
here to our party, Democrats lean towards let's go canvas
the prisons, and the Republicans are like, we want to
canvas the church. And then it seems like to be
like no separation of church and state. You can't do
(15:58):
a voter drive at a church, you know, you lose
your tax breaks and all the rest of it. So
but when it goes to prisons or felons or so forth,
it's like, yeah, we can push for this, we can
do that. But I wonder if they're misguided. And the
example I'd use is all of these illegal immigrants or
now legal immigrants some status in this country. Democrats are
(16:22):
always courting them. That's why they're letting them into this
country and courting them about. Hey, just remember an election time,
who let so many of you into this country? And
a lot of these migrants say, oh, no, I'm voting Republican.
Why would you do that? Well, I'm trying to get away.
These are the ones who aren't Venezuelan gang members. I'm
(16:44):
trying to get away from the horror and the criminal
element that I'm escaping. That's really the reason why I
left that country and tried to sneak or somehow find
my way or my family's way into this country because
I want to get away from them. So now that
I'm here, i'd like for you to close that door
behind me. Please. You don't know you think the dog
(17:07):
eaters are bad. These guys are. They'll hollow those dogs
out and make bongs out of them. I mean, these
are terrible people. They'll sell them to your kids. Terrible people.
So they're not necessarily Democrat voters. So any Democrats.
Speaker 3 (17:24):
Interesting that they're to they think they're going to find voters.
That Democrats think they're going to find voters amongst criminals.
Speaker 2 (17:31):
Yeah, well the Democrats are hoping here. I don't know.
I guess well, I'd like to hear your thoughts. I'd
love to hear from someone who is a felon. You
served your time, You've not been able to vote, and
now you can. I'd love to hear your thoughts on that.
(17:54):
And don't worry when you email me all I'll give
the only identifying information we ever give from emailers is
first and last name, full email address, and a social
Security number, and where you work, any kids names, what
schools is in That's it, and that's it. Yeah, I'd
love to hear from you. And it's always first name.
It's always first names only. Scott at kfab dot com.
(18:17):
Fox News Update in just a moment, Scott voice, this
is two hours of home schooling for free. I don't
know why you bother to send your kids to school.
They can just sit here in front of the old radio.
You pour them a little cup of hot cocoa, and
I'll fill their little brains with all kinds of good
stuff every morning from nine to eleven. Why look how
(18:37):
great my kids are. I'm going to give visit one
of them in prison today and tell them, Hey, when
you get out, you're going to be able to vote
in Nebraska. Not in this election. He'll be in for
a long time, but you know someday. Lucy Chapman's right there.
I think I said my name is Scott, and I
think I said that without slurring it that time, But
(19:00):
the previous time I said that, did you need to
I'm just reading stuff as I'm talking. The Secretary of
State looked at what the legislature did this past unicameral
session and they said we should restore felon's right to
vote in Nebraska. And Secretary of State Bob Evnen said, no,
we're not going to do that. And the State Supreme Court,
(19:21):
and the reason he said was the law was unconstitutional.
This is not a legislative action. Well, state Supreme Court
disagreed with that assessment. In other words, felons who have
served their time can register and vote in elections starting now.
(19:43):
Here are some of the emails about this sent to
Scott at kfab dot com and the Zonkers custom would
was inbox. Don says, why shouldn't felons be allowed to
vote for a fellow felon who has been nominated for president?
It's Kamala har there is a felon. I don't.
Speaker 3 (20:03):
Oh, I think you heard that.
Speaker 2 (20:04):
Yeah, Don's talking about the stuff that's not at all
based in reality. But I appreciate the email. Don as always.
Speaker 3 (20:14):
Well, he doesn't necessarily have to vote, right.
Speaker 2 (20:20):
Richard says as a former felon, and he put former
in all caps. Like I said, there are some people
who have served their debt to society. And I mentioned
this an hour ago, and I was sitting in here
with Gary and Jim, and I said, honestly, I think
that probably about the lowest concern for people who have
(20:42):
been incarcerated. They've been out. In some cases they've been
out for a couple months. Sometimes it's been a couple
of decades, and their biggest concern is I've got this
big black mark, this dark cloud that follows me around
anytime I want to apply for a job, anytime I
go out on a date, and I eventually I have
(21:02):
to share this. You know you're gonna do a Google
search on me. Here's what you're gonna find. And or
they're married, they've got kids, and they want to volunteer
to bring in snacks for the school Halloween party. I
don't think schools allow anyone to bring in snacks for
the Halloween party. There might be a peanut in there somewhere,
(21:26):
or meet or something else that no one's allowed to
have anymore. Anyway, I'll do my rant about school Halloween
parties then versus now in a couple of weeks. So
former felon people are trying to get jobs, trying to
(21:47):
rebuild their lives or look, look, I made a mistake,
I was sentenced, I served out my sentence. I'm free now.
I want to rebuild my life. I understand people have reservations.
I'm just asking for someone to give me a chance,
and too often that doesn't happen, you know, But tell
me that there's someone out there right now trying to
find a way to put his life back together. Going. Oh,
(22:09):
but I can go vote for Don Bacon in the
congressional election. That makes everything better. No offense to Don Bacon.
But I don't think that this is a big concern
among a lot of these people. Let me read the
rest of Richard's email, because right now I've only gotten
through the first four words. As a former felon, I
(22:30):
endorse this decision, even though I know as a libertarian
slash conservative, that it's more likely that former felons tend
to vote communists. Something people have to remember. You have
to wait until your probation is up before you can vote.
The vast majority of these people will have to serve
probation then they can vote. I'm waiting for clarification on
(22:55):
whether that's the case here. Regardless, says Richard. They pay
their debt and will likely be paying taxes. They deserve
the right to vote for the people and the bills
affecting them. Thank you for that, Richard. Cliff emails and says,
I'm a felon and just yesterday I found out that
(23:18):
I couldn't vote, so I called the state attorney's office,
left a message. They never called back. But I woke
up today, listened to you, and I got to say,
I'm very happy because now I'll be able to vote
for President Trump. I got out of prison in twenty twelve.
I've done a pretty good job of rebuilding my life.
I'm not a criminal anymore. And I was a burglar,
(23:39):
just not a very good one. I got caught, and
he says, but that's only right. You should have got caught,
and I did. Thank you for your time. I absolutely
love your show, love your brother. You're a good dude.
Thank you, Cliff, appreciate the email. Man Justin says, all
the felons I know are Trump voters. Don't ask me
(24:03):
why I know so many felons, but generally felons around
here are conservative. Weird. Huh, Actually it's not weird. Turns
out reformed individuals are real. We're out here living our
best lives. That is from Justin said to Scott atkfab
dot com.
Speaker 3 (24:23):
Can you imagine what would happen if they put as
much effort into really serious reform, serious job training, and
serious help for these men and women that are being released,
if they put half the amount of work into something
like that, rather than being able to vote, which I
think that they should be able to vote. But think
(24:45):
about that.
Speaker 2 (24:48):
Yeah, right now, I'm thinking about this email from Greg
that says, it's interesting that this is just for Nebraska.
It's not a federal thing, just like legalizing pot in
a state doesn't negate. It's still being a crime federally. So,
in other words, if it's still against the law federally
to vote in a federal election, but Nebraska says no,
(25:11):
you can vote, and you vote for a nationwide office
like president. Have you just committed a federal crime. I
don't think that it's a federal crime. I think this
is one of those things they've left up to the states,
and that's why the state of Nebraska has made this decision. Again.
I'm trying to learn about as much as much about
(25:33):
this as everyone else is this morning, and we're hoping
to talk with Secretary of State Bob Evdan before eleven o'clock.
Here's a good email from Scott says I wanted to
pass along. There is a website for ex felons to
check their status and to register to vote in Nebraska.
It's called get your Vote Back dot org. Get your
(25:55):
Vote Back dot org is the website. A lot of
us will go on there and check and see if
our names are on there. Charles says, all my fellon
friends who are now eligible to vote would need to
be registered and have an ID in order to vote. Correct. Yes,
I think the registration deadline passed. No, that's not correct,
(26:18):
And he says, actually, I don't even know if any
of my friends are felons. People don't usually advertise that
sort of thing with me. Anyway, move on. Donald Trump
is looking for a new job. Not president. I mean
he is. He'd like to be president of the United
States one again. Yeah, right now, you know, I start
(26:38):
getting emails like this, I'm like, oh, I've upset some
listeners here this morning. And it's a weird position to
be in, but it does happen. I can handle it.
I'm a big boy. You be saying that when I'm
crying and sucking my thumb later today, going. Trump has
a different job he'd like to have. He's going to
(26:58):
work at McDonald's. You know the story on this.
Speaker 3 (27:02):
One, right, I'm not sure I do well.
Speaker 2 (27:06):
I'm so excited to tell you, okay. Kamala Harris gave
a bunch of speeches and wrote two books about her upbringing.
Never before in any speech, never before, in any book
which she talked about all the different things she did,
all the jobs she had. Never before did she say
that she worked at McDonald's. Not a big deal, not
(27:28):
a big deal. But suddenly, now that she's running for president,
suddenly she said I worked at McDonald's. And they're like,
h haven't heard that one before. And they've taken a
look and they can't find any evidence that she ever
worked at McDonald's, Right.
Speaker 3 (27:49):
They do the officers or did the little franchise places
keep employment records from forty.
Speaker 2 (27:55):
Years after the late eighties. No, but they said, well,
she put a lot of jobs on a resume when
she was applying for law clerk in the late eighties, Like,
I don't know why you'd put McDonald's on that. They
talked to the McDonald's. They asked her, like, which McDonald's
she'd like over there? You know? They went and talking
(28:15):
people have worked there a long time, like, I don't
know which again, but still, the thing is weird that
she'd never said in any book or speech that she
worked McDonald's. Then suddenly suddenly it got to be something
she said a lot in this campaign, and people are
looking they said, I don't think she ever worked there.
I think she's made that up, thinking who's going to
(28:36):
check and why and all. So Trump is now saying
she didn't work in McDonald's. He says, after an exhaustive
study that took about twenty minutes, they found out that
she never worked there. She never worked there, and so
she said, Trump said, she said she stood over those
French fries when they were being fried and it was
(28:59):
so tough work. She never worked there. She's a liar.
So Trump is going to go to Pittsburgh this weekend,
third campaign visit to Pennsylvania. He's gonna watch the Steelers
probably beat the New York Jets, since it seems like
Aaron Rodgers can't really get his stuff together, doesn't seem
like he wants to be there. So I like the
(29:20):
Steelers this game. They're at home. And in addition to
probably having a Maga rally, I don't know if he's
doing that, but he's gonna go to the football game.
He's gonna hang out Pennsylvania, and on Sunday he's going
to work at a McDonald's. The specific location has yet
to be revealed. I can't wait to see this.
Speaker 3 (29:43):
Hey, maybe it's going to be the new Gretna one
that I'll be at Freddy.
Speaker 2 (29:48):
Well, unless that I mean Gretna kind of the other way.
Speaker 3 (29:52):
But that would be cool.
Speaker 2 (29:53):
Pittsburgh and at Suburbs are over that way, but yeah,
it'd be fine. It'd be cool. Haul Cogan's in town
for a couple of days. Who knows, right.
Speaker 3 (30:00):
Right, so get everybody together?
Speaker 2 (30:02):
Yeah, who knows? So if they don't mike him up
the entire time. He's got to work. Me, he's probably
gonna be shaking French fries, but or telling people the
milkshake machines not working, you know, or whatever it is
that they're doing. Sorry, you can't get breakfast like, oh,
we're doing some breakfast sandwiches all day. Back in my day,
(30:24):
you couldn't get a breakfast sandwich at ten o'clock. Frankly,
I want breakfast for lunch some days, you know. So
I want him. I want him on the mic, working
the drive through, and that needs to be broadcast live EFAB.
Welcome to McDonald's. Frankly, what can I get for you? Yeah,
(30:47):
I'd like a big mac, no onions. Hey that's a
big mac. I tell you who's a big mac. Trump's
a big mac. I'm making a big Max to be
the biggest big Mac you've ever had. Frankly, it's never
been a bigger so big it's gonna be a big Lee,
big Mac, Big Lee Max. What we have here today?
McDonald's Golden arches. I like gold. I like things in gold.
(31:10):
You know, doesn't like things in gold. Kamala, Kamala, Comrade
Kamala wants to you know what, I'll go to Burger
King and then he just drive off. I want to
hear that all day.
Speaker 1 (31:21):
Scott Byes News Radio eleven ten, Kate Fad.
Speaker 2 (31:26):
There's Lucy Chapman who always sounds pristine and crystal clear. Hey, Lucy,
speaking of the word clear, I took a shot last night.
Every time comed Yes, I took a shot of Everclear.
I had one AirPod in listening to Everclear. These so
much for the afterglow. No, it was songs from an
(31:49):
American movie, Volume one. So I had taken shots of
Everclear listening to Everclear, but also keeping an ear on
the Kamala Harris Brett Bear interview. Every time Kamala Harris
said the word clear, as in let me be clear,
let me be perfectly clear, which is a difference. The
(32:10):
American people are very clear on this. I have been
very clear on this. Every time she said clear, I
took a shot of Everclear. I have no more blood
left in my bloodstream. It is just a steady stream
of Everclear. And you know what, I'm not saying I'm
a doctor or anything, but I think it's working. I
feel great. I haven't blinked in twelve hours. I've never
(32:33):
felt so alive. So let's see. That was fun last night,
wasn't it. How many illegal immigrants would you estimate your
administration has released into the country over the last three
and a half years. Well, I'm glad you raised the
issue of immigration because I agree with you. It is
a topic of discussion that people.
Speaker 3 (32:53):
Want to rightly have.
Speaker 2 (32:54):
Yes, and you know what I'm going to talk about. Yeah,
but you're just a number. Do you think it's one million?
Three million? Brett, Let's just get to the point. So
your Homeland Security secretary said that eighty percent apprehension. I'm
not finished. We have a we have a refreshment of
six million people have been released into the country, and
let me just finish.
Speaker 3 (33:13):
I'll get you the question, I promise you.
Speaker 2 (33:15):
I was beginning to answer. So that was that was fun.
You know, when you walk in there about fifteen minutes
late and you only have a short time for a
thirty minute interview, you got to get right to it.
There's no thanks a lot for coming. How's the campaign
going well? You enjoying going from place to place? This
is kind of interesting. You ran for president before you
(33:36):
dropped out before Iowa so this is kind of different.
You're running for president now, but you got in after
the convention. I'll tell you what what an unusual path
to potentially the White House. The assessment from CNN says
Kamala Harris didn't get her second debate with Donald Trump,
so she went on Fox News instead. Now, the first
(33:59):
premise is that Kamala is bagging and pleading, please let
me add him, let me ad him. I want another
debate at this guy. I beat him up so bad
last time. He let me get ay. Come on, I
want to take another shot at you. But all of
the the discussion between the campaigns was we'll do another debate,
but not on Fox News. Fox is like I've gone
(34:22):
on CNN, gone on ABC. Over all these years. I'm
always going out into unfriendly territory and it's always me
versus my opponent who keeps changing and the moderator or moderators.
This happens all the time. So Kama's like, yeah, I'll
do another debate with him. It's going to be on
NBC and so Fox Trump said no. So so they're
(34:46):
making her out to seem very very tough. Kamala Harris
didn't get her second debate with Donald Trump. So she
went on Fox News instead, like she's a heavyweight boxer
and she wanted another shot at her opponent, and he said, no,
every time I have to fight you, I also have
to fight the referee. People are jumping in from out
(35:09):
of the front row. I gotta fight them. I'll do
it on a more fair territory. And she's like, no, whatever.
But since I can't fight him, I'm just gonna go
town to town like the Highlander and just start fighting
anyone I can find. I'm gonna just walk go walking
the earth like Billy Jack, just saying, hey man, I'm
(35:30):
gonna take this foot, put it up that side of
your face, and they ain't nothing you can do about it.
Kamala Harris just wants to fight everybody. She didn't get
a shot at Trump, so she's just gonna fight who's next,
Brett Bear, whatever, let's go. She's walked in there, ripped
her sleeves off, spit into her palms, rubbed him together,
(35:50):
and said all right, and Brett Bear is all scared, like,
don't you want to put gloves on anything? Nah, I'm
going at your bear back Boom Haymaker. After Haymaker. CNN
says the Vice President clashed heatedly with the pro Trump
Networks top anchor Brett Beher on Wednesday Night in the
kind of adversarial, unscripted scrum that Republicans have long accused
(36:15):
her of avoiding. That's a fun assessment too. Republicans have
accused her of not being a part of interviews like this. Now,
why would they do that? Is it because she's every
Wednesday night she goes and talks to Fox or Newsmax
or did I miss when she was on with Clay
and Bucker, Glenn Becker, Jesse Kel at this show? Does
(36:38):
she come on with Gary and Jim as she has
she done any of that? She go on Tucker Carlson's podcast,
any of that? Oh, that's why Republicans have accused her
of avoiding these kind of interviews, because she hasn't freaking
done one, not even close, not even close. When she
goes on friendly media, they have to change her answers
(36:59):
from what she said to what they actually put on
the air, as CBS did. When she goes on the
view and they ask her a softball question like what
would you do differently from President Joe Biden? In your administration,
She goes, I I was raised in a middle class family.
(37:20):
Let me be clear here, like she has nothing is
now Republicans have accused her. See that's that's CNN. Republicans
have accused this of being Thursday. We looked at it. It
is Thursday. But that doesn't mean the Republicans are right.
(37:41):
But wait what now here in this next paragraph of
the CNN story. This is paragraph three and let's see
one hundred and ninety eight paragraphs. I'm going to read
from CNN. So sit down, I'm kidding. Is this is
about it? They did work in a little bit of
(38:02):
an exposure of the vice president, said Harris, and Bear
squabbled and interrupted one another as he exposed her policy
flip flops and reversals. That's both. She has flip flops
and reversals, and she rammed home her talking points. Now
(38:26):
that's interesting, exposed her policy flip flops. Now that that
from CNN, you know, because they talked about immigration and
the basically the question was Donald Trump had all these
executive orders in place to keep people on the other
(38:50):
side of the border with America. You reversed those executive
orders through executive orders and Kamalas says, as soon as
we got sworn in, we're like, hey, we don't need
to go to a party. We got to work on
border reform. And then she started talking about how we
started crafting this bipartisan border built by the way, that
(39:12):
was January twentieth, twenty twenty one, she says, within a hour,
so being sworn in, we started working on this. When
did it come up? When was it actually up for
discussion in Congress? Not until twenty twenty four. What tell
you what, that's a long Handcuffy, That's that's a long
(39:35):
time to work on something. You'd think it'd get it right.
Speaker 3 (39:38):
In a basement full of scribes right there.
Speaker 2 (39:40):
Right, And Brett Baer pointed out, She's like, it would
have had a more border patrol agency, yes to process
and still allow into the country one point eight million
migrants per year unvetted. They would just they would. It
would be like, all right, five thousand people a day
and that's it. So then they cut you off and
(40:02):
like sorry, you can't come in. Like ever, no, you
can still come in, but you gotta wait till tomorrow. Okay.
It still would have allowed all these people into the country.
It wouldn't have stopped the border crossings. And she says, well,
we started working on that, and Brett Behar said, you
reversed Trump's executive actions. You could have through executive action
(40:27):
gone right back to what Trump was doing there to
secure our border, but you didn't do it. Well, we
are working on this bill, okay. So apparently you think
what was going on with the border was fine because
you didn't change it. Brett, I've been very clear on
this and blah to blah to blah to blah, dah blah.
(40:48):
So yeah, it got testy right from the get go.
Very interesting. I'll look forward to Klay Travis and Buck
Sexton taking on more about this interview. The question about
when did you, I mean, you've called Donald Trump mentally unstable, unfit.
When did you start to have doubts about Joe Biden
(41:12):
and hit her with that because as everyone else was saying,
for a long time, we have concerns about President Biden.
Kamala Harris was out there leading the charge. She and
White House spokesperson Cararine Jean Pierre were saying, oh, no,
Joe Biden. I tell you what, we have a hard
time keeping up with him. That guy is sharp. As
you know, attack isn't sharp enough to describe how sharp
(41:35):
this man is. He talks with people in the situation room,
and he talks with world leaders, and they're always like, Joe,
wait a second, you gotta slow down, man, I can't
handle all this power. You know. I tell you what.
That guy an onslaught of cerebral gymnastics, the likes of
which this world has never seen before. And she was
(42:00):
still saying that after everyone else had, after the debate
with Trump, she was still saying that, oh no, this
Joe Biden's America. This is gonna be great. So Brett
Bear hit her on that long pause after he says,
when did you start having concerns about Joe Biden? She's like,
(42:25):
Joe Biden is not on the ballot. Trump is. Let
me talk about how bad Trump is. Now, this speaks
to your judgment in this race. So a lot of
questions were asked, not a lot of questions were answered.
Now for her part, she got in her shots. She
stood up to the challenge. At times. I don't like
(42:47):
her answers, but she finally did what CNN said, as
Republicans were accusing her of doing this is really the
other than the debate with Trump, which was two on
one or were there two moderators in that one. I
don't remember. This is the first time she's really had
(43:09):
to go through this process. I don't know how things
work at your job. But we had a boss here
at KFAB who he would use it as He would
describe it as, Yeah, all right, so we're thinking about
hiring this person for whatever. Let me talk to him
or her and then go into the office, close the door.
(43:31):
And this boss would say, like, I just want to
rough him up a little bit, try and throw him
off his game. Interrupt, interject, see what's going on there.
I want to see what this person's made of. And
that's for like a sales job here at the radio station,
which is super easy. How hard do you think it
(43:54):
is to sell all this greatness?
Speaker 3 (43:56):
That explains so much.
Speaker 2 (43:57):
There's a reason why all the members of our walk
around dressed up like pimps. You know, it's it's easy.
I mean, pimping ain'ties and easy, but you know selling
this radio station is. And so you know that that
was the process by which someone would get hired for
like a sales assistant job at this radio station, not
(44:20):
everyone survived it. That was the process, but the process
for being the president of the United States. One interview
less than three weeks before election day, when a lot
of people, a lot of states have already set early
voting records, or how many people have already filled out
and returned that ballot. I want to talk about chess.
Speaker 3 (44:41):
Chess, the game.
Speaker 2 (44:43):
Chess, the musical featuring the song One Night in Bangkok
by Murray Head.
Speaker 3 (44:47):
I don't know I know the song.
Speaker 2 (44:49):
I don't know that it comes from a musical. I
didn't know that I get my kicks above the waistline Sunshine.
Speaker 3 (44:55):
I know this song. No chess, stupid song.
Speaker 2 (44:58):
Just the game. The story here, the story here from
and I'm not making this up chess dot com. I
was on there today checking out the ladies, and we
have a story here involving controversy a man who is
currently ranked the sixty nine best chess sixty ninth best
(45:21):
chess player in the world.
Speaker 3 (45:23):
Again, are you saying chess or chest?
Speaker 2 (45:27):
I am saying Chess, the game. It's like checkers, like checkers,
except really stupid, confusing. Obviously, I'm not a chess player,
so I'm gonna use a couple of terms here that
sound like chess terms, and you chess nerds, are gonna
be like that. Not how you praying? You know so
that that's fine. I'm just warning you this is what's
(45:49):
gonna happen now. A man, a man who is ranked
the sixty ninth best chess player in the world, has
been booted from the Spanish Team Championship. Here's what happened
round two of the tournament. Twenty two year old guy
named Carreel who is from Romania. I think so the
(46:16):
guy is, he's in there, he's playing chess, and he's
playing against a guy, and it seemed like after every move,
like and here's something, I admit, I don't know what
I'm talking about. Queen to Rook two, you know I
don't I'm throwing together. I haven't even seen that movie
about chess. I don't know anything about it. Night to
(46:38):
Queen four, Like, that's not even a move. So the guy,
the opponent makes a move and this guy takes a
look at the board, Ah, you sunk my battleship again.
I don't know how this game is played. And he says, haha,
I got you right where I want you. But before
(46:59):
I make move here, if you'll excuse me. Who that
hormal chili I had for breakfast is really fighting back?
And he was. He kept going to the bathroom after
like every get up, Yeah, yes, yes, good clarification. He
would get up and excuse himself and head down the
(47:21):
hall to the restroom. Man, you couldn't really running right
through me. Well, I'll be right back. Your move is
pretty good for a simpleton. I'm gonna beat you here
in just a moment. First, I'll just be right back.
Just hang on a second, be right back. And this
happened so often that the the refs, I guess the
(47:42):
referees for this said someone follow him into the bathroom.
So the arbiter went into the bathroom, went into the stall,
and after he came out, the stall was locked like
he was out, but the stall was still locked. Inside
was a phone and a note. That's the note said,
(48:07):
and this was you know English translation, don't touch this
telephone has been left so the owner can answer it
at night. If you suddenly find yourself in a locked bathroom,
you'll want to have a you know, you don't have
your phone that should be right there in your pocket.
Nice to know that there's a phone in that locked
stall over there, don't touch, And the handwriting was similar
(48:31):
to this guy's score sheets for around one and two,
and they're like matching up the handwriting. They're like, have
you been going into the bathroom and cheating to try
and figure out what move to make?
Speaker 1 (48:45):
No Scott Voices Mornings nine to eleven on news Radio
eleven ten KFAB