All Episodes

November 12, 2024 • 67 mins
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Scott Vorhees.

Speaker 2 (00:01):
Did I mention my name is Scott Vorhees because it is,
and it will be for the next couple of hours.
I will remind you constantly, even Rush Limbaugh after thirty years,
Rush Limbaugh and the like, we know who you are, Rush,
but it's I don't know, It's just one of those
radio things. It's great to have you with us on
news radio eleven ten kfab. We've got racist flyers in Waterloo, Iowa.

(00:27):
We got planes getting shot at going into Haiti, which
I would think is part of the experience of going
into Haiti, Like, honey, look those rogues are shooting at us.
I think they call them thugs and drug lords down here.
Isn't it exciting? We're getting the full Haitian experience, a
spirit airline flight, flighting into hate and flying into Haiti.

(00:51):
People are like, what is that thing? I don't know,
shoot it just shooting at planes coming into Haiti. And
the first story here comes from dear old Nebraska you,
but it also has to do a lot with rural Nebraska.
According to the story here from the University of Nebraska

(01:14):
at Lincoln, a Husker research team is leading a first
of its kind project to help rural children establish healthy
eating habits to lay the foundation for lifelong wellness. All right,
first question, and this is one of my favorite questions

(01:36):
from childhood. Who died and made u king? Who asked?
Who called the university? Hello? Is this the University of
Nebraska at Lincoln, Omaha? Shoot? I'll try again. Hello? Is
it Carney? Dang it? Hello Curtis Agricultural College. I didn't

(01:56):
know this is part of the university system. I'll try again.
So they kept calling and calling, and then they finally
got to the University Nebraska, Lincoln. So I need to
talk with someone. You guys got a lot of money
and influence. How about you make my kid less fat?
Who decided at the University of Nebraska what we need
to do is spend millions of dollars to try and

(02:18):
slim down these chitlins. Three point two million dollar project
over five years funded by the National Institutes of Health. Well,
where do they get their money? It's all taxpayer funded.
This is this is this is the University of Nebraska,

(02:41):
via the federal government, taking your taxpayer dollars, routing them
through at least two different sources to come back so
they can come on your doorstep and tell you, hey,
your kid's a little hefty. Your kid's got a BMI
index that's a little towards the B side. Like my
kid is a a rural farm kid. He plays nose

(03:04):
tackle for the local football team, and that's always fun.
I'll never forget the day that my son and a
bunch of kids that played football for West Omaha. I
was on Elkhorn team. They were going, where the heck
did we go? Blair? I think, well, no, north of Blair.

(03:25):
We went on and played some town and these kids
are like, we don't know where this place is. I
don't remember where we were. It was some po dunk
town up north. And I remembered when I felt that way.
We went up from Ralston High School to play South
Sioux City basketball, and we were saying the same thing,

(03:46):
we got to go teach a bunch of farm kids
how to play basketball, got to go up and take
care of these po dunk kids. Well, they had a
couple of big kids that just pushed us all over
the court. We got destroyed, and our coach let us
hear it. You know, I heard you guys talking about
pods up here. These podunks just tat you gotta play basketball.
So my son and his friend's same thing. We gotta

(04:06):
go teach a bunch of farm kids how to play football.
I said, tell you what, guys. First of all, the
temperature is about twenty degrees. There's snowfalling. You guys are
gonna be out there shivering and cold because you're all coddled.
Where are heaters on the sideline? Who's gonna get me
my jacket? These kids won't even be wearing long sleeves,

(04:28):
and they're gonna kill you guys. Oh no, no, And
the guess what happened killed these guys? Po dunks? These
farm kids up there. Yeah, you know why, they got
maybe a little extra heft to them because they're out
there working, because they're out there battling the elements, and

(04:50):
maybe they reward themselves by eating a little extra ham.
I don't care if these kids up there got a
little more beef on them. I don't know if you've noticed,
but Nebraska needs some more offensive and defensive linemen in
the years to come. No one asked the University of
Nebraska to try and slim these kids down. And that's

(05:13):
the end of that part of the questioning The second
part I think is all right, well, apparently they're going
to do this anyway, how do they do it? And
why do they think these kids are so big? Research
shows that rural children are twenty six percent more likely
to experience obesity than their urban peers. I don't know

(05:38):
that I believe that, But if they're looking at this
and they're saying, this is what our research shows, all right,
so why is it? And they said, the reason why
these rural Nebraska kids are so big is because they

(05:59):
don't have access to healthy food. This is rural Nebraska.
There's not a Kentucky Fried McDonald's king right down the street.
There's not you know, Old Tom's lard Hut with its
several locations right there in this area. Maybe I'm maybe

(06:24):
I don't know what I'm talking about, but it seems
like rural communities have grocery stores, grow their own food,
make their own food. Maybe some of it's a bit
more comfort food, but I bet that they're working it off,
I know, And maybe they're not. Maybe rural kids have
fallen into the same trap that so many urban kids have,

(06:45):
which is we just eat whatever we want whenever we
want to eat it, and we live a sedentary lifestyle.
We're sitting here playing video games and licking lollipops, and
the Lockliho pop in this instance is made of lard lardipops,
and this is how we live. We don't really help
our parents out. The parents don't ask us to help.
All right, Well, in that case, the problem isn't access

(07:07):
to healthy food. The problem isn't the prevalence of too
many snacks or processed foods or fast food or whatever.
The problem is the parents. So let's see here five year,
three point two million dollar project where the University of
Nebraska is try and slim down all these fat farm kids.
How much is that per family? How do you do that?

(07:29):
Do you go by there and say, Hi, we're from
the University of Nebraska. Oh, are you recruiting my son?

Speaker 1 (07:34):
Eh?

Speaker 2 (07:34):
Not yet. First we think he's a little tubby. So
we're going to try and get him to eat more
fruits and vegetables and whole grains or are you bringing that
food with you? No, we're just going to try and
convince you to do it. So, now, if the idea
is is that these parents have been just funneling processed

(07:59):
food into their kids' throats over and over again. Gotta
get our five square meals a day, and they're just
like for breakfast, it's like, how would you like some
maple syrup? And they just put a bunch of maple
syrup in a Stanley cup and the kids just drink
maple syrup all morning. And that's kind of how the

(08:20):
feeding goes throughout the day. They just hook a trough
up to their faces full of frank and berry cereal
and send them to school. Here you go, which actually
sounds great, by the way. And so the parents are
the ones who are force feeding these kids like they're
a fatted calf. We have to eat when the family
comes over. And then the government says, hey, we think

(08:42):
that perhaps these kids could eat better. How about you
get them to eat better. I don't know if you
notice or know how a household works, but apparently the
parents have been the ones doing all of this, allowing
all of this, probably because they're got a little heft
to them themselves. What is the University of Nebraska going

(09:06):
to do that's going to change any of these habits?
They say, well, we're going to have a program called
EAT for Prevention. EAT is an acronym. It stands for
ecological approach to for prevention. Now, first, grammatically, that's a
nightmare EAT for prevention. EAT stands for ecological approach to,

(09:29):
So that means ecological approach to for prevention. That's back
to back prepositions. I haven't heard anyone speak so awkwardly
since Jim Rose tried not to end a sentence with
a preposition midway through the sentence. Good morning, Jim. Jim's
still in the studio, by the way. It's an online

(09:51):
rural community engagement program telling kids, Hey, try eating some
veggies once in a while. This apparently costs three points
two million dollars. Tell you what, Give me one million
dollars and I'll jump on the radio a couple of
times every morning and say the time is nine to sixteen.

(10:14):
Let's feed your kid an apple. This message from the
University of Nebraska. I'll do that for one million dollars. There,
you have just saved you two million dollars. I'm getting
the message out to these families, and it's accomplishing the
exact same results, which will be Jack. Nothing's gonna happen

(10:35):
with this. We just blew three million dollars. Why do
these guys do this, But they do. They think that
the parents don't know. Hey, if we continue to eat gravy,
we get fat. I think they know that. Maybe they've
decided they're fine with that. And what do you care?
What do you really care? Anyway, I don't care. All

(10:57):
I can do is you realize that I could probably
stand to eat a little more healthy, lose a few pounds,
And occasionally I do, and I make sure that my
kids are sitting down for a meal time, my son.
And this is the other thing. Everything that it talks

(11:18):
about in the story here is about well, kids are
just grabbing snacks, and kids are eating the wrong things
at meal time and all the what makes them think
the kids are left to their own devices here, that's
the problem, not what they're eating, the fact that they
are apparently the ones who get to choose. If left
to my own devices, my son would eat nothing but

(11:38):
sour candies. You just eating sour gummy worms and some
sort of powder that's a sour thing that I'm surprised
he has any teeth left. You know, he would eat
nothing but sour candy. But he's not left to his
own devices. He has annoying parents, Dad, Can I spend
four hundred dollars on basketball shoes? Let me see? Oh

(12:03):
those are nice shoes, very cool. How much are they
four hundred dollars?

Speaker 1 (12:07):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (12:07):
Well, then the answer is no. But but can you
not afford four hundred dollars shoes?

Speaker 3 (12:13):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (12:13):
I can afford four hundred dollars shoes. But the question
is not whether I can afford these shoes. The question
is why in the world would I buy you four
hundred dollars basketball shoes. You're fifteen years old. You don't
need four hundred dollars basketball shoes. I would allege that
there are people in the NBA who don't need four
hundred dollars basketball shoes. So you know, it's not about

(12:35):
whether I can buy them for you. It's whether I
will buy them for you. And the answer is no,
I won't. Now, please go mow the lawn. You know this. This,
this is my horribly unpopular parenting style. It's called parenting.
It's easy and it's fun and it's free. And there's

(12:55):
nothing the university is going to do by checking money
down the toilet here that's going to cause this problem
to be any better. But I don't even know that
it's a problem. Let's say that every single farm kid
it could probably stand to lose thirty pounds on average.
All right, and so what why don't you mind your
own business?

Speaker 3 (13:15):
Why is everybody assuming that a rural kid is a
farm kid, Because when you think about it, how many
family farms are actually still operating?

Speaker 2 (13:24):
Now. See, that's an excellent question, Loosey, because I grew
up here in the city in Omaha, and I never
really leave Omaha, so I don't really know what's going
on out there. Apparently you've been outside the boundaries of Omaha.
What have you seen? Tell me? Tell me these tales,
what you've seen from the front.

Speaker 3 (13:43):
Ear you have to get past the gate first.

Speaker 2 (13:44):
See, I watched Yellowstone, and I figure that's kind of
how it works out there.

Speaker 3 (13:48):
Not only that, even if they were all farm kids,
which that's ridiculous to even think, most of these kids
live in small towns, if they're ruled, they're live in
small towns, and they go to school and they're just
like normal kids here in the cities. But is it
possible that all the genetic modification of our food if
you believe in evolution.

Speaker 2 (14:07):
Which is stopped by the studio.

Speaker 3 (14:10):
Some aspects do believe in evolution. Speed up evolution. When
you've got nothing but genetically modified food, and pretty soon
that infects all of us and our bodies, can't they
start our bodies start to adjust to the not being
able to process this food. All you have to do
is look around.

Speaker 2 (14:29):
But some of this food you're talking about is flipping delicious.
Of you don't eat it every meal of every day.
Everyone knows this. So more money to try and influence
this is not going to solve the problem.

Speaker 3 (14:49):
No of that.

Speaker 2 (14:50):
We agree everything in moderation and get some exercise once
in a while. Sure, Or if you don't want to,
how about this, You say you're walking around and you
see someone who could probably stand to lose a few pounds,
You know what you can do? What you can shut
your face and go on about your day and mind

(15:11):
your own business. Let me know, and I'll be here
until eleven o'clock this morning. Please don't hesitate to ask
if I can solve any more of the world's problems
for you. But if if the researchers at the University
of Nebraska are listening, you're going to spend three million
dollars over five years to tell kids eat a vegetable

(15:33):
once in a while. You can give me that money.
I'll only take one million dollars. Yeah, I'm not selfish.
To give me one million dollars, and I will tell
the kids to eat fruits and vegetables and whole grains.
I'll jump on the radio.

Speaker 3 (15:49):
People care about people?

Speaker 2 (15:50):
No I do. I'll just jump on the radio the
for the low, low price of one million dollars, and
I'll tell these kids, Hey, are you you eating a
whole box of oatmeal cream pies? I know they're delicious, right,
We'll tell you what, Maybe only eat half a one
and then eat a pair so you don't look like
a pair. This message brought to you by the University

(16:12):
of Nebraska and Scott Vorhees on news radio eleven ten
KFAB see that, and you end it with the chime
because it's just it sounds. It sounds nice. It's pleasing
to the ear, as is everything else I do here. Hey,
you want me to sing again? All right, So here's

(16:32):
something else that involves our kids. I love this story.
You know they're making a live action movie, not that
the original is a cartoon, but the original is a
Broadway production, and it's one of my very favorite Broadway productions.
This is the part in the program where I remind

(16:53):
you that I'm straight. I have favorite Broadway productions. I
love Phantom. Sarah Brightman is coming to Omaha here in
less than a month, and guess what she's gonna be
on this radio show next week. More details to come.
Love Phantom of the Opera. I love Les Miserab, which

(17:17):
is a French term that means the miserab, and I
love that. And I love Wicked. Love it, love it,
love it, love it totally straight love it. Love it,
love it, love it, love it. The movie looks terrible,
but I'll probably be somehow tricked into watching them. There's

(17:40):
two movies, Part one and then Part two. They're gonna
do the first movie and then they're gonna do it intermission,
and then they're gonna do part two. Now I'll probably
end up watching it because Jeff Goldbloom is the Wizard,
and who doesn't love Jeff Goldbloom.

Speaker 3 (17:58):
So the second one's already made.

Speaker 2 (18:00):
No idea. I know the first one comes out at
some point here in the weeks to come.

Speaker 3 (18:06):
So when you say intermission, you're talking about months or
or whatever.

Speaker 2 (18:09):
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah yeah. So the funny thing about
this story, though, is they've already got the merchandise ready
to go and they've got these Wicked dolls. By the way,
in case you don't know this, do you know the
story of Wicked? Yeah, this is it's the Wizard of
Oz before and as Dorothy gets there, but it has

(18:32):
nothing to do with Dorothy and most of those characters.

Speaker 4 (18:36):
What was the movie with milacunas the returned I don't know.
You know the movie I'm talking about? Yeah, great, great
and powerful oz Okay, I saw that. I don't know
what that is. I have seen it.

Speaker 2 (18:47):
Wicked, though, is the witches. They go to school together,
they form a friendship, and it's maybe the story of
the Wicked Witch that you know from The Wizard of
Oz is not the story that you've come to know.
There's a whole backstory and different angle to it, and
it's incredibly well done. The music's great and I love

(19:09):
seeing it at the Orpheum when it comes around. So
they've got these dolls here based on the movie. And
here's the funny part. These little dolls. You can get
Gahlinda with a guh an alphaba the Wicked Witch. You
can get these dolls. They're like little Barbie dolls, but

(19:30):
they're these characters. And right there in the packaging it says,
this is Glinda from the movie Wicked. If you want
to learn more about this movie, go to this website.
Here's the problem. They put the wrong website on all
the packages of these dolls, many of whom have many

(19:54):
of which have already been bought. They've been sold here
over the last few weeks at Target, Coles and Amazon.
People have got these probably all wrapped up ready to
go for Christmas, give to the little kids and all that stuff.
And one problem. If the kid says, I want to
learn more about this, let me go to the website
that's here on the packaging. What was supposed to be

(20:16):
the website is wickedmovie dot com. But that's not the
the website that they put on there. They didn't put
wickedmovie dot Com. They put a different URL that goes
to a porn site. Now, I don't know why the
people made the package and put pornhub dot Com on there.

(20:40):
I'm kidding. We're all adults, right.

Speaker 3 (20:43):
Did that get past?

Speaker 2 (20:44):
Yeah? Don't. I don't need anyone to listen to this
and go. The guy on the radio told me to
go to the website, and boy, the things I saw.
But I don't think it's impossible to figure out that
they didn't put they were supposed to be Wicked movie
dot com. Instead it was only Wicked dot com. And
apparently the stuff on that website is, uh, well it's wicked.

Speaker 3 (21:09):
How old are the kids that are supposed to be
getting these preteens?

Speaker 2 (21:13):
It's a it's a show for kids. Yeah, yeah, but
they're yeah, you're right, they're probably not gonna but they could.

Speaker 3 (21:22):
They might, well, they certainly could. But it's a simple fix.
You're down. The parents know, and you don't let them
see that part of it. Put tape over it, whatever,
mark it out.

Speaker 2 (21:34):
Yeah, they're trying to recall them at many of them.

Speaker 3 (21:36):
It's fine too, But is somebody setting this up for
a lawsuit? My child was damaged? Well, and they could be.

Speaker 2 (21:43):
But it's just not Christmas season unless the hot Christmas
toy like I pulled the string on this Elmo doll
and he told my kid to blank off. You know,
it's it's not Christmas season unless we get some good
old fashion. You're right, filth and flora in the holiday season.

Speaker 1 (21:59):
Scott boy these news Radio eleven ten kfaby.

Speaker 2 (22:03):
Here's what they see in Waterloo, Iowa. Waterloo police are
investigating flyers found in the community. And as best as
I can tell here because the picture from this news
story from KCRGTV has got the piece of paper on

(22:25):
the flyer, but it's kind of at an angle and
someone's fingers in the way. But what I think I
get the gist of what these flyers are saying. They
say Aryan Freedom Network, the Aryan Freedom Network. You know what,
there are probably some young people that don't know, they

(22:46):
don't have a connotation associated with the word Aryan, and
they probably think this is some sort of sale on
rugs or something, you know, arian rugs. You get a
nine x thirteen Arian rug. Isn't that what it is? No,
it's an area rug. Oh well, then I need to
call these people back and say I'm not interested, because

(23:08):
they're coming over tomorrow at three. The Aryan Freedom Network,
and it says we are your neighbors. We are the
random stranger holding the door open for you. We are
blue collar, we are white collar, and everything in between.

(23:29):
What collars are in between? White and blue. Are they
saying they're members of the clergy. Oh we are blue collar,
we are white collar and everything in between. We are brothers, sisters, fathers, mothers,
daughters and sons, but most of all, we are everywhere

(23:54):
says your race is calling, will you answer? Take a
stand joined today? And then there's a website which if
you don't know the connotation of arian and how much
this conjures up the old Nazi Germany Third Reich Hitler stuff,

(24:18):
then you're reading all of this going, well, this sounds great,
this all sounds nice. I just it's just a nice
message telling people, Hey, we're around and we apparently get
the door for you. So it says we're your neighbors, Well,
thank you. We're the random stranger holding the door open

(24:38):
for you. Well, isn't that nice? Not everyone does that.
I think they're just saying that they're here and they're
ready to open the door for me. They're looking out
for it. It's like a citizen's watch. Isn't this nice?
And then there's a website that I'm not going to
give you this website, but the phrase white power is involved.

(24:58):
And that's when you're like a weight as second I've
heard of you people. I'm not shaving my head. I
don't want anything to do with this now. The mayor
of Waterloo is a guy named Quinton Hart, and he's
released a statement. It's a long statement, let's breeze through

(25:21):
most of it. Says, as the mayor of Waterloo, a
city that prides itself on its diversity, I am deeply
disturbed by the recent reports of racist extremist groups distributing
recruitment materials in our community. As a dedicated public servant
who has recently been the target of discrimination and threats,
I want to be clear there is no place for
hate groups in Waterloo. These actions not only target individuals

(25:45):
based on their race or ethnicity, but also stoke increased
division among us. The literature being circulated promotes intolerance and
creates an environment where community members feel unsafe and unwelcome.
It's unfortunate that on a day dedicated to our veterans
that have fought for our freedoms, regardless of race, gender
or difference, we have to pause to comment about racist

(26:06):
supremacists that want further division. Then he says, you know,
call the police if you know who did all this stuff.
We stand against hate and ensure our community remains a
place where all individuals can feel safe and valued. Well
not all individuals. Apparently those with the Aryan Brotherhood should
not feel safe for valued, which is fine. I don't

(26:29):
know this guy, he says he's recently been the target
of discrimination and threats. Was that just an election? I
don't know anything about that in Waterloo, But I do
know a little something that it all just seems so convenient,
doesn't it. It's the same thing we talked about last
week right after the election, where a lot of black kids,

(26:52):
we're getting these text messages. You've been selected to pick
cotton go to Field B on novembernumber twenty third, five
am sharp, first of all, November, late November. I don't

(27:12):
know that I know what I'm talking about here, but
I think that's I think we're out of cotton picking
season at that time. Plus where's Field B. I did
a Google map search and came up with nothing. So
in both instances, one of two things is true. Either
these are emboldened racist groups looking to threaten and intimidate

(27:38):
anyone who isn't a white nationalist, and they're doing it
through text messages to black teenagers, young black people, and
they're doing it through these flyers posted on light poles
in Waterloo, Iowa. So either it is white nationalist groups

(28:02):
looking to threaten and intimidate, scare people, terrorize people, or
it's someone who wants you to believe that there are
white supremacist groups now emboldened, of course, by the election
of d J Trump, the greatest American mixed master we've
ever seen. It's DJ Trump? What DJ Trump? Y'all? So,

(28:27):
now that DJ Trump has been re elected president of
the United States, these racist groups are like, we're coming
out of the shadows and we're going to send anonymous
text messages and put flyers on light poles in the
middle of the nights and no one sees us because
we're here and we're proud. I'm going out during the
day to put one of them. And oh, you can't

(28:48):
go out during the day. You're gonna get us all
in trouble. Sneak around and put these things out there.
I want to send a text message. I just wanna
call this person to tell them, let's go over to
the houses like we used to do. Are you crazy?
We're not going out of their houses. So it's either

(29:14):
shy racist groups. You know, their grandparents used to go
around intimidating and terrorizing. Now apparently it's anonymous text messages
and flyers under cover of dark You know why, you
know why these shy racist groups, if indeed, I mean
it's either one thing or the other. It's either a
hoax or it's real. So assuming for a second it's real,

(29:36):
you know why these shy racists won't go out there like,
all right, here's what we're gonna do. We're gonna go
over to that black guy's house. We're gonna intimidate him.
You know why they don't do that? That black guy
over there, kick their butts. He and his friends and
family of all different races and racial identities and backgrounds

(29:56):
and anything across the social stratosphere. They're all gonna come
up here and they're gonna beat these guys to maybe
within an inch of their life, and maybe they won't
even respect that last inch. They might just kill these guys,
and then the police will show up and go, hey,
we got a bunch of dead racists in the streets
who saw this, and a bunch of people with bloody
knuckles and like shovels and bats with blood splatter on them,

(30:20):
were like, I didn't see anything. Are there dead racists
in the streets? And the cops are like, come on you,
certainly someone saw something. We didn't see anything. Well, I
gotta go to work. That's why they're not going to
go out and actually do anything, because in the society

(30:40):
that I've grown up in my entire life, no one's
gonna stand for that kind of stuff, which leads us
back to option two, that this might be a hoax
for people who want you to think. Now that Trump
has been elected, hoops are out there very brave and

(31:03):
emboldened by the election. So brave and emboldened they're sending
anonymous texts and leaving anonymous postings all over the place.
Oh quite brave. And what does this flyer say? We
are your neighbors. We are random strangers holding the door
open for you, all of us. It doesn't have an

(31:25):
asterisks on here. We're holding the door open for you
as long as you're pale. If you got so much
as a decent tan, you gotta get your own door.
Holding the door open for you. Is that the threat?
If you're black or Hispanic, or a gay black Hispanic

(31:48):
in our community, We're not going to open the door
for you. Get your own door. I think that there
are people who really honestly want you to believe, and
maybe in their hearts, actually want racists to be parading

(32:09):
through the streets. They want every community to look like Charlottesville.
They want women to feel like they've lost all their
rights and now they have to be subjected to whatever
treatment that the men want in the community. That's what
they're saying on social media. They this is the America

(32:32):
that they actually hope is going to happen. So they
can sit there with their lips pursed and their arms
folded and go, see, I told you not to vote
for him. They want this to happen. It's not going
to happen because it didn't happen when he was in
office the last time, and it's not going to happen
when he's in office this time. But they still and

(32:55):
I hope they're kind of rooting for this to happen.
So who's the one terrorizing black people with anonymous text
messages people of color with these flyers. Probably the people
who claim to be fighting for minorities in this country. Meanwhile,
the minorities are like, stop calling US minorities. It's a

(33:18):
statistical phrase, I understand, but when you start talking about
us as minorities, it makes us feel less than I'm
not a minority. My name is Tony. I work at
the bank, and I don't need you to do anything
for me. Here's another thing. I voted for Trump because
I want cheaper groceries, I want safety from my kids

(33:41):
in school. And I'm tired of seeing people come across
the border and get stuff handed to them by the
government that I can't get while I'm trying to work
for it, and my tax dollars go to pay for
all of it. So, yeah, I voted for Trump. So
thanks for trying to terrorize and intimidate me. Oh, I'm working.
I'm trying to make a life better for you. My
life's fine. This is twenty twenty four, it's not nineteen

(34:04):
sixty four. I don't need you to do this. But
black lives matter, I posted on my Instagram. Yeah my
life mattered before you posted that on your instagram. You guilty,
white lady. I'm good. So maybe it's that or it's
really shy racist. I don't know, but I think you

(34:25):
know which way I'm leaning towards here, Scott Voriez.

Speaker 1 (34:29):
NewsRadio eleven ten KFAB.

Speaker 2 (34:32):
And in case you don't, I'm leaning towards I hope
it's a hoax. I certainly hope it's a hoax, and
I hope they catch them. That'll be fun. Congratulations and
thanks to the Nebraska State Patrol. They just arrested a
guy who was on the run from Ohio and he
was driving on I eighty in Nebraska, way out near Overton,

(34:53):
and they thought, I think this is our guy that
we're looking for who kidnapped a girl in Ohio and
was on the run, so troopers attempted to stop the
twenty seven year old male driver. Is first named Diego.
I don't think it's Dora's cousin. There's your two thousand's

(35:16):
cartoon reference for this segment of the radio program. Isn't
that Dora? Is it a brother or his cousin or
her cousin? You got Dora the Explorer, And then I
believe it's Diego the Xplaygo. I don't know what.

Speaker 3 (35:30):
I have no idea. Where's Walden? I don't know.

Speaker 2 (35:33):
All I know is I told my wife our kids
are not allowed to watch these shows. Why because I'm
racist against Hispanic cartoons. No, because they're dumb. The cartoons
we watched growing up left a lot of room for imagination.
They didn't just slam us in the face with a

(35:55):
bunch of here's an average cartoon of da if that's
his name. Uh, Diego will be standing there next to
a turtle, and then Diego would say, do you see
the turtle? Where's the turtle? I can't find the turtle.
Do you see the turtle. I'm like, I'm gonna throw

(36:17):
this remote right at that turtle on the TV screens
right next to you. My kids are not this dumb.
Let's watch Sesame Street. Sesame Street would give you some
lessons and they wouldn't treat you like an idiot. All right,
So this guy's name is Diego, not Dora's Familia. Twenty

(36:41):
seven year old driver named Diego. Do you see the
speeding car? Where is the speeding car? It's on I
eighty near overten. There's the car. So cops try and
pull this guy over. He speeds away, hitting speeds of
over one one hundred miles per hour. What is he
on a rural street in Omaha. Nope, he's on the

(37:02):
interstate and passing drivers on the shoulder, weaving in and
out of traffic. So then they get the stop sticks out,
but that didn't stop him. So now he's driving on
the rims, still speeding along, and now they go out
get another set of stop sticks. This time he drives

(37:23):
off the road, almost hits the trooper there on the
side of the road, goes into a fence, and ends
up in a field. According to the Nebraska State Patrol,
that's when he finally gave up. He's facing child charges
of reckless driving, speeding, and also child abuse. In the

(37:46):
car was a three year old child. I presume it's
his child, but he's not. I wonder why the mom
doesn't want his Is the three year old to be
with old d Is it possible that he makes really
bad decisions. The child's in protective custody until she can

(38:07):
be returned to her mother. But the Nebraska State Patrol
saved this three year old kid and took this guy
into custody. That is awesome.

Speaker 3 (38:20):
How do we not know if they're related.

Speaker 2 (38:23):
Because they haven't given us that information. I think they know, okay,
but we have not been given that information, and I
I don't know that's that's for this poor kid to
sort out. Do you have any memories of being three?
I have just a flash or two of things that

(38:44):
happened to me that young. I would think that this
memory would probably stick, but it'll just be a flash
where you'll look back and go, do I even remember that?
Or I just think I remember that.

Speaker 3 (38:59):
I think that's most of our three year old memory.

Speaker 1 (39:01):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (39:01):
I have a memory of me at two or three.
But my memory is like of a photograph showing my
grandma holding me. And I'm thinking, well, clearly, I just
remember the picture of this, but there is no picture
of that. No photograph exists of that moment. You want
to know what it was, Well, was it? I don't

(39:22):
think you can do this anymore anywhere unless you're unless
you're somewhere in China. No, it's much better. We were
at a zoo in Arizona. My grandparents used to go
down to Sun City, Arizona, and we went and visited
him a couple of times. And one of those times
and I was two, and we went to the zoo
and you could walk right into the monkey cages and

(39:44):
the monkeys would just crawl all over you and like
you know, slap in the face and pull your hair
and poop, yeah, poop everywhere, monkey poo as much monkey
poo as you want. And you're just in the cage now.
I don't know, Oh if that's because my grandpa was like,
it's fine, come on in long line of vorhe's men

(40:05):
just deciding that they're going to gain access to places
that they probably shouldn't be. But I have a very
vivid picture in my head my grandmother holding me and
there was a monkey right there and Gary saddlem I
speaking of monkeys, Gary Sadlemyer's probably made it his way
here into the studio. Gary, thank you. Yeah, sorry, I

(40:27):
uh what?

Speaker 1 (40:28):
I texted John Bulldock, head of the State Patrol, yeah
about that this morning.

Speaker 3 (40:32):
He said, this guy was the non custodial parent.

Speaker 2 (40:36):
Okay, yeah, did you have that? No? I think we
just assumed.

Speaker 3 (40:40):
Well I did too, but the information hadn't been out,
so I didn't want.

Speaker 1 (40:43):
To right assume.

Speaker 2 (40:45):
That's why I didn't say anything. But Gary went right
to the source there with the State Patrol. Thank you,
Gary Sadlemeyer. Best in turn we ever hired here in
news radio eleven ten kfab that monkey works for Peanuts,
So I don't know if this kid, in this particular instance,

(41:06):
is going to have any kind of memory of I
have a very vivid memory of the police holding me.
I like my monkey story. Better this kid, Well, we'll
root for this kid. And the more that this kid
is away from dear old Dad sad to say, the
better off that kid'll be. Now on this radio show,

(41:32):
we've gone back to the childhood show open that technically
is not a show open because it opens each hour
of the show, but semantics aside. Each hour the show
starts off with if this was your childhood, or if
this is your child it was your child whatever it says,
Well here as it was or is how do we

(41:56):
phrase this? If this is your childhood, this is your childhood?
And then it features a movie, a song, a commercial,
a TV clip from anywhere from the late seventies through
the early nineties. This is gen X stuff right here,
And I know there are gen xers going what about

(42:18):
the early to mid seventies. There's a few things in there,
But I tend to base this off my childhood and
I was born in the mid seventies, so I don't
really have those memories.

Speaker 3 (42:28):
Oh why think it's all about you.

Speaker 2 (42:30):
Well it's it isn't it's And then it plays the
clip and then it says, even if it's not your
if it is your childhood, you're in the right place.
Even if it's not, we love you too. And here
we go doing this radio show. But for all those
across the spectrum of Generation X, which I'm on the
younger end of I guess, but there's a reason why

(42:54):
that designation is for those I think it's probably born
in the late sixties through born in the early eighties.
There's a reason why that's an all encompassing generational term
for kids in that age range. And as it turns out,
the way we were raised, not every single one of us,

(43:17):
but the way we were raised they say, had a
major impact on this year's presidential election, as well as
Senate and House and all the rest of it. I
will explain next.

Speaker 1 (43:29):
Scott Boy's News Radio eleven ten k.

Speaker 2 (43:34):
FA radio program here from nine to eleven. That's a
very proud jen X radio show that also embraces all
the other generations as well, even though we tend to
spend a bit of time mocking the younger generations. But sorry,

(43:55):
that's just how it goes one of those younger generation
kids like this eighteen year old kid and I I mean,
we always like, oh, these kids are worthless. That's technically
not what I say, but there's a lot of jokes
about you know this, this generation believes this or that.
Here's an eighteen year old kid in Mills County, Iowa,

(44:19):
just got elected to the Mills County Board of Supervisors.
Eighteen year old Jack Sayers, recent graduate of East Mills
High School, says he wants to shake up the system.
I love it. There's one member of the board who's
very concerned about this. Her name is Carol Vinton, and said, well,
he hasn't paid his first taxes and he thinks he

(44:42):
can control others taxes. He'll find out. There's a lot
that gets discussed and make a lot of hard decisions. Yeah, well,
you guys apparently do all this stuff, and apparently there
are enough people who felt like, maybe you're not doing
the best job and maybe we need a different perspective sides.
Mister Sayers is going to turn nineteen in March and

(45:05):
he's now a member of the Mills County Board of Supervisors.
Good for him. Oh, he's a Republican. That's reversing a
trend because most younger generations tend to be more liberal,
but there was one generation that did a majority, and

(45:25):
it was a big majority vote for Trump in this election,
and it was gen X. The other generations tend to
vote a bit more for Kamala, but a huge pile
of gen xers fifty three voted pretty much straight conservative

(45:49):
tickets in the election this year. And Megan Fox, not
the actress who I understand is pregnant with machine gun
Kelly's baby. That's the kind of information that you come
to KFAB four and I'm happy to pass out along.
Good luck to the happy couple. This is Megan Fox,

(46:10):
a journalist with pjmdia pjmedia dot com. The headline gen
X delivered for Trump and They're not afraid to tell
you why. And it starts off talking about from the
perspective of the author. She says, I'm a proud gen xer.
I grew up running wild into the until the street

(46:33):
lights came on, unsupervised, unchained, independent and free. When I
was seven years old, I would go get my four
year old neighbor and we would walk a couple blocks
up and across a busy street to the white hen
to buy candy before heading to the park where we
would play all day with no adults anywhere in sight.
At a young age, I was left home alone and

(46:54):
came home to an empty house when my parents were working.
I learned to cook from myself. I entertained myself and
never ever admitted I was bored lest my mother assigned
me chores. I was given specific lies to tell people
who called asking for my parents when they weren't home. Oh,
she's in the shower, can I take a message? I

(47:14):
had my TV line up after school which included I
Dream of Genie and Gilligan's Island. My generation gen X
is unnervingly quiet. No one talks about us. We don't
make the headlines very often, and we generally like it
that way. We've been left alone for so much of
our childhoods. We enjoy being left alone. We own alone.

(47:38):
One of the reasons no one notices us is that
millennials take up all the air in the room. For one,
they dwarf us in size, and secondly, they're often very
loud and whiny. When Millennials entered the workplace, they caused
no end of annoyance for everyone around them, demanding special treatment,
coffee bars, mental health days, Prona, and other things gen

(48:01):
xers thought were lame. They job hopped and created article
after article about how to keep millennials happy, while we
put our heads down and made our careers, often in
the same company for our entire work lives. Gen X
is the last generation raised without smart technology. We were
wild and untethered to the approval of strangers on the Internet.

(48:25):
Gen X doesn't care what you think about us. We
learned that skill on the playgrounds in the seventies and eighties.
If you weren't there, you can't appreciate how dangerous that
actually was. When we weren't dodging rusted metal edges of slides,
we were suffering the verbal assaults of the school yard
bullies that often escalated to physical fights. The adults in
charge didn't even care to intervene. We were told sticks

(48:49):
and stones will break your bones, but words will never
hurt you. It goes on to talk about how we
memorized the raunchiest parts of Eddie Murphy's raw and that
we can rattle off George Carlon routines. It goes on
to hale gen X, which I'm so glad. I turned
my head from the article and looked over to Lucy Chapman,

(49:11):
a fellow gen x er, with a big nod of
approval and smile on her face. Is this sounding like
your childhood as well?

Speaker 3 (49:19):
One hundred percent? Except for the white hen We don't
have those here.

Speaker 2 (49:22):
Yeah, we don't have those here. I don't know where
the author is from. But you know, we didn't get
participation trophies. We actually kept score. There were winners, there
were losers, and if you're a loser, everyone was happy
to tell you.

Speaker 1 (49:36):
You know.

Speaker 2 (49:36):
So it just goes on and on talking about gen X,
and so now we get to the political part of it,
she says, She says, So why did I vote for Trump?
It's very simple. I'm in the stage of my life
where I have one child in college and the other

(49:57):
two will be following, which will see my family paying
for college for the next twelve years without a break.
My husband and I have aging parents who need extra
care and attention. This means expensive flights, travel, expensive care expenses,
so more and so on. And when the government decides
to let inflation get so wildly out of control that

(50:17):
our higher than average salaries are strained by buying a
week's worth of groceries and a tank of gas. We
have a month where we've accidentally overdrawn our account for
the first time in a decade, and we watched the
American government turn into Soviet style thugs who physically harmed
our children by unnecessarily locking them down, destroying two years

(50:40):
of their lives, forcing them to wear masks, forcing people
to get vaccines they didn't want. And then the state
of New York broke down someone's door and executed their
pet squirrel and raccoon. So that's she sums up, saying,
we worked too hard to get to a place where

(51:01):
we don't live hand to mouth, and we will not
go back to living like twenty year olds in our
first apartment, and we will not allow the government to
step on our next and the nexts of our children.
No amount of mean tweets will stop us from inflicting
as much pain on the people who did this to
us as possible. They all hate Trump, that makes him
the perfect guy for the job. Gen X is burying

(51:23):
the brunt of this terrible government and has been for
some time. We're the ones with the mortgages, the children
the responsibilities. We don't have the luxury to sit around
in safe spaces on college campuses whining about gender. We're
the generation that embraced tomboys and boys an eyeliner with
long hair and earrings. We invented gender bending pop culture,

(51:44):
but we didn't pretend it changed biology for us. It
was about freedom and expression, not a way to control
others and impose forced speech. We're not bigots. We remember
a time in America when television was diverse without checking quotas,
and the most famous face on TV was a black
family beloved by everyone. We accepted everyone, and Democrats then

(52:06):
tried to paint us as racists. So this is a
bit of not how every single member of Generation X
feels today. But boy, the author Megan Fox, not the
actress with Pjmedia Pjmedia dot Com, I think absolutely nailed it.

(52:35):
And as much as women were saying, you women, you
moms need to go out there and provide a better
future for your daughters by standing up for women's right
to choose and women's access to healthcare and all the rest,
you know what the moms are really thinking here that
no one really talked about in this election these moms

(52:58):
were still, as this author said, she's in that position
two years of our kids' lives. I don't know where
she lives. Here in Nebraska. It wasn't two years, but
the schools certainly tried to make it two years. It
was off and on two years of their school years.
But these moms were furious at what happened to their

(53:22):
kids during COVID, as these kids and the parents missed
out on everything from being with their peers in school
in some cases, graduating from high school, getting a chance
to go to prom, and then next year's homecoming what
some school district said, we're not going to play sports.

(53:42):
They missed out on all of that, and they wanted
to go and talk with their parents about it, but
their parents weren't assisted living and they weren't allowed to
go visit them. And then when mom went to the hospital,
they weren't allowed to go visit her either, And they're mad,
and they're still mad. You want to get a gen
X mom fired up, asked her about how COVID impacted

(54:05):
her kids, and they carried that directly into the twenty
twenty four election.

Speaker 3 (54:10):
And as bad as it is, the repercussions of the
last four years. I don't think we've seen the worst
of it yet. I don't think we're done anyway. I
think we're still going to see adverse effects of the lockdowns,
and mostly in the young children.

Speaker 2 (54:26):
You're saying the ripple effect from what has already been done,
not a return to it. There are a lot of
people rooting for a return to it.

Speaker 3 (54:33):
No, no, no, no.

Speaker 2 (54:34):
Chief among them probably political strategists, so looked at it
and said, we benefited when we had lockdowns in a pandemic.
Let's find a way to get there again.

Speaker 3 (54:45):
You're going to have a part of a generation that
were between one and maybe five or six or seven
years old in the last four years that have not
grown emotionally and academically, I suppose as they should have.

(55:07):
And we're going to see that.

Speaker 2 (55:09):
Saturday morning basketball game where the rule during that time
was only two members of the house are allowed to
go and watch that kid play in a basketball game.
A lot of these kids are out there wearing masks,
or when you got back to the bench, you had
to put your mask on. Everyone had to have a
mask on. In the bleachers, and there was a mom

(55:30):
sitting there with her young daughter with a baby on
her lap, and the gestapo kicked her out. Sorry, there's
three of you here. It's only supposed to be two.
And she goes, what am I supposed to do? Leave
my toddler or my baby home alone or in the car.
I'm here watching my son play basketball.

Speaker 3 (55:47):
They didn't care.

Speaker 2 (55:47):
They didn't care. Sorry, you've got three people here, you're out.
This mom went crying out of the gym. Maybe she
did have some concerns. And by the way, all the
other parents were protesting, and I said, you know, I
only had me there. I said, your daughter can come
sit with me, she can be my plus one. I'm

(56:08):
sitting right behind her. And she bravely stood up, tears
in her eyes and said no, I'll leave. And she
decided to leave. And I get emotional thinking about that.
So maybe that mom did think about, you know, her daughter.
Maybe she did, with strong democratic opinions about, among other things,
of women's right to choose. But you know what she's

(56:30):
really thinking about how unfair and unreasonable that was, and
that how they let it happen. They made it happen.
They're furious about what happened to their kids, and that
didn't really come up in this election until you get
to the results and you talk to some of these parents,
like how could you vote for this monster? Because I
know what your mindset looks like and I don't want

(56:51):
to go back there again. Fox News Update next Scott Boys,
These darn kids today and their feelings about money. The
first one is and the story from CNN in the
hours after the election when the stock market was like yay.
And there's a couple reasons for it. One of them

(57:13):
is rooted in we feel that Trump is the better
candidate moving forward in terms of deregulations, some of these
burdensome regulations that stifle business and growth in this country,
domestic energy exploration, maybe bringing some of these jobs back
from overseas back to America. The stock market likes that
kind of thing. There's also the cryptocurrency angle to it.

(57:35):
Bitcoin's doing very, very well. But there's something else about
the election. I think the election would have seen a bump,
maybe not as sustained as this, but there would have
been a bump higher even had Kamala Harris won and
Democrats to control the House and Senate. You know why,
because the stock market doesn't like uncertainty and at least

(57:58):
then investors know, so okay, so here's where we're going,
and they can plan accordingly. Stock market doesn't like uncertainty,
so some of that bump, it's not all the Trump train.
Sorry to throw a little wet blanket on that one,
but I think how it's been sustained since the election,

(58:22):
and we'll see some good days and bad days. It is,
after all the stock market. But the sustaining of this ride,
that's the Trump train. Anyway, Young people hate that the
world's top ten richest people got a record sixty four
billion dollars richer after Trump's reelection. That was the day

(58:48):
after Trump's reelection, the top ten richest people got sixty
four billion dollars digging amongst them because of that giant
increase in the stock market.

Speaker 3 (58:59):
Great the jobs it can create, right.

Speaker 2 (59:01):
And it's and CNN points out the biggest gainer Elon Musk.
All right, so let's see Elon Musk, who has approximately
eleventy bazillion trillion dollars, wanted Trump to win only so
he could have eleventy billion trillion dollars and one or

(59:22):
whatever it is that that would that would be. That's
why Elon Musk wanted Trump to win so he could
get more money. Never mind that the other and it
also says, well, Jeff Bezos, who you know, he owns
that newspaper that didn't endorse Kamala Harris for the presidency
like it was supposed to. He got seven billion dollars

(59:42):
richer last Wednesday. And Larry Ellison, co founder of Oracle,
he's a Trump supporter. He saw his net worth rise
five and a half billion dollars on Wednesday. Well, then
what about Bill Gates? What about the Google executives? What
about a little guy out of Omaha, Nebraska who owns

(01:00:03):
a small conglomerate that deals in anything from real estate
to dairy queen to railroads? What about Warren Buffett? Not
exactly a Trump supporter now is he? You know? They
got more money too. It has nothing to do with politics.
Here's how it works. Let's say that you have ten
dollars and someone else has one hundred dollars, and the

(01:00:26):
stock market just gave each of you a ten percent bump.
You got ten dollars, Hey, congratulations, here's another dollar. Guy
with one hundred dollars, here's ten dollars for you. Hey,
how come he gets ten dollars, I only get one. Well,
you each got ten percent. That's how it works. If
you have more money and the percentage increase benefits both

(01:00:47):
of you. The actual real dollar amount is going to
benefit the rich person more because they're rich. So what
do you want to have happen? You want to take
all the money from them and just divide it up.
That's equity, that is socialism, that's communism. And that's why
a lot of people were mad about this on Wednesday. Hey,
we're not gonna get Sergey Brinn's money, the executive former

(01:01:13):
executive of Google. How Come I don't get his money
because you didn't earn it. And that's that's how it works.
I don't care. So Warren Buffett got another couple of
billion dollars, Good for him.

Speaker 3 (01:01:27):
You should have a new sounder of not just one explosion,
but just a whole bunch of smaller ones. Mine's exploding
all over.

Speaker 2 (01:01:35):
The bunch of heads exploding and the button doesn't work
that way. I can do this and have two of
them at the same time by going I can take
it there, I do with some of there, I can.
I can do a little bit here. But it's the
best I can come up with on the fly. Yeah,
there's a bunch of people's heads exploding because they don't

(01:01:55):
know how money works. Now, a lot of the people
complaining about this seeing an and young people. As some
new studies this from ABC, some new studies are sounding
the alarm about the financial stability of Generation Z. Who
are the They says here that the adult members of

(01:02:18):
Generation Z are between eighteen and twenty seven. So today's
teenagers are gen Z, and they're between gen X and
gen Y, and the kind of the gen Y and
the millennials are all.

Speaker 3 (01:02:32):
Kind of a they're kind of the same thing in their.

Speaker 2 (01:02:35):
Thirties early forties. But yeah, Gen Z adults between eighteen
and twenty seven, about half of them rely on financial
help from the bank of mom and dad. Now here's
an example. This is Tiffany. She says, well, if the parent,
if you don't have parents who are willing to help

(01:02:56):
you out, what do you do? She says, I'm working
and my husban's been working, so you know, the dual
income helps, but outside of that, it's impossible. Now I
shouldn't care because, like I said, I don't care how
Elon Musk lives his life. And what he does with
his finances. So therefore I shouldn't care what gen Z

(01:03:17):
adult Tiffany and her family do to manage their finances.
I should leave it alone, but I can't help. But
wonder are you living beyond your means and asking mom
and dad to bail you out if you've got a
dual income. I know that the costs of everything and

(01:03:41):
everything from housing costs to healthcare costs have absolutely skyrocketed,
and that's a big part of why the election happened
the way it did last week. We've got to reign
in these costs so that families like this can who
are working hard, probably and they probably have kids. And
if you've got kids in childcare right now, then one

(01:04:04):
of the working parents is working just to pay for
the childcare and probably losing ground on that financial treadmill.
It's all over the place, crazy and there's a lot
of reasons why this is inflation. Don't discount the effects
of the car the Cash for Clunkers car program that
Obama instituted that took a lot of affordable pre owned

(01:04:26):
vehicles off the streets and jacked up the cost of
the rest of them. I understand it's very hard to
get by. But I also see a lot of people
who aren't exactly living to make you know, we're stretching.
And this is going to sound infuriating that I say this.

(01:04:46):
Of course, there are a lot of people doing this,
but I wonder if there are some people like, well,
how am I supposed to get by? You know, I
live in a house that's well beyond my means because
this is the mortgage we tacked out for ourselves. And
I've got I got the latest, brand new this and that,
and I've got car payments for vehicles I really can't afford,
and I'm putting my kid in private school, and I've

(01:05:09):
got eighteen different streaming services and cable and internet and
all their I'd like, is there a way that maybe
we can.

Speaker 3 (01:05:17):
You might be able to pair down. But they're in
that position because four years ago, five years ago, you
didn't have double digit insurance or mortgage rates, and you
didn't have gas at four dollars a gallon or milk
at seven dollars a gallon. Not here, we don't see
seven dollars milk here. But a lot of the big

(01:05:37):
cities are.

Speaker 2 (01:05:38):
I know, and I was lastly going to say, I
wonder where Tiffany's living. I know someone who lives in
a California big city suburb where it's very, very pricey
to live. And this person complains all the time about
the high cost of this and that we can barely
afford it. And I'm like, move, how about you move?

(01:06:02):
I don't know, we talk about it. Well, then everything
you're complaining about is of your own doing well.

Speaker 3 (01:06:09):
Moving is very expensive too. And if they own a
home then then they might be in the same boat
when it gets down to the dollar for dollar. Now
if they have to buy a house today, the.

Speaker 2 (01:06:21):
Things you can do so it says about forty six
percent of Gen Z adults really can't get by unless
mom and dad helped them financially to get by. Well.
In case my kids are listening at school today, I
presume the teachers just put this radio show on as
education for the entire classroom. Here's a word from my kids.

(01:06:42):
I'm not going to let you be destitute in the
streets unless I feel like that's the best thing for you.
But just real quick, but I'm not going to support you, right.

Speaker 3 (01:06:52):
But just real quick, When when you were growing up,
when I was growing up, well, you grew up through Reagan,
We grew up through Bush and Clinton, even with great economies.
So yeah, our parents probably didn't expect us to expect help.
In fact, most of our parents probably said can you
help us.

Speaker 2 (01:07:08):
Out in some instances? Yeah, but I want to see people,
and that includes government and political figures. Shave everything right
down here too. All right, We've cut everything out of
our monthly budget except that which we need to survive,
and then say can you help someone out? Can you

(01:07:29):
help help us out? You know, I think a lot
of people are living well beyond their means, and they're like,
how can I afford all of this stuff? I just
got back from a cruise, and I'll tell you what,
you know, buying a pineapple? Like, all right, well, that's
not how I lived, nor is it how I live now.

Speaker 1 (01:07:48):
Scott Boys Mornings nine to eleven on news Radio eleven
ten KFAB
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

24/7 News: The Latest

24/7 News: The Latest

The latest news in 4 minutes updated every hour, every day.

Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.