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March 25, 2025 • 32 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Scott Vorhees, yesterday was day one of Senior Assassin. I'll
bring you up to speed. This is a nationwide movement
whereby seniors in high school, not seniors and assisted living communities.
Though I wouldn't, I would encourage them to give it
a good thorough thinking as to whether they should do this.

(00:24):
And they're assisted living in elder care communities. So seniors
in high schools would pay to be a part of
basically a bracket, and then the proprietor of the local
bracket would set up the bracket and they would say,
all right, So Lucy's in Senior Assassin. Lucy's a senior
in high school and her target is fellow senior in

(00:48):
her high school, Scott Vorhees. And you have so much
time to shoot me with a squirt gun, and there
are rules. You can't do it at school, and you
can't do it at the person business. Outside of that,
pretty much all bets are off. The only security you
have is goggles. If you're wearing goggles, even if someone

(01:10):
hits you with the scot gun, you do not die.
You're not taken out of the game. So if you
want to survive, you wear goggles. Twenty four to seven.
And I say that because I have a senior in
high school. My daughter is a senior in high school.
She's playing the game, and yesterday was the first day
of it, and she said she had friends of hers

(01:33):
who the assassins went to their home when they knew
that their target wasn't home and asked their mom, Hey,
do you mind if we case the joint. We're going
to hide out here in the bushes and assassinate your kid.
And the moms are like, that's fine, have fun. You
guys do a great job. This is fun and so like.
And they're like, well, if you get invited into their home,

(01:57):
you could be under their bed. I mean, you don't
want us safe during Senior Assassin. And I think it's
absolutely hilarious. My wife thinks it's terrible. Police officers say,
there's gonna be a problem with people not seeking permission
to hide in someone's bushes, and dad's gonna come out

(02:17):
armed to the hilt and it's gonna be a problem.
So let's not do that. So as long as everyone's
being smart about it, it should be nothing but good fun.
Yesterday was day one of Senior Assassin. Over the weekend,
my daughter purchased a squirt gun, even though I'm pretty

(02:39):
sure we have several in the deck box in the backyard.
Don't think she looked. I don't think they remember that
the deck box is back there. Frankly, I don't open
it very much myself. I don't know what's going on
in there. It's full of all their toys from childhood
that would be strewn about the backyard. Hey, pick that
stuff up, put it in the deck box. There might
be a kid in there. I don't know. I don't know.

(03:02):
My daughter went out got a new squirt gun. It
was a shark squirt gun, very scary, certainly not anything
that would be mistaken for a real firearm, which is
also a big part of the game. Do not take
anything that looks like a real gun. So my daughter
was ready to take out her target. But my daughter's busy.

(03:26):
She had school yesterday, had tennis practice after school, and
then she had to work last night. So not exactly
a great day to start stalking her prey. But she
went to work last night and she forgot her goggles
walking to and from you from the workplace to the car.

(03:47):
So she gets into work fine, works a few hours
and then last night, after nine o'clock, dark, quiet there
at the mall. She works outdoor mall area, and she
sticks her head out the door and she's looking, you know,
kind of up and down the rows of stores. The

(04:10):
coast appears to be clear. She says to her co workers, like,
all right, I'm gonna make a run for it. Is
heading out to her car. She gets about halfway between
the business and her car. She is now fair game.
That's when two of her friends slash classmates, jump out

(04:32):
from behind a building, and that you also, I forgot
about this. You have to film the taking out of
the victim. So with the smartphone camera rolling, they're now
chasing my daughter around village point and my daughter's running
and screaming, and they're running and screaming, and finally my

(04:54):
daughter's like, there's nowhere to go. I'm cooked, and they
scort her several times. And then I had to watch
the video of this happening to my daughter, and I said, well,
at least you turned and you faced your fate like

(05:15):
a man. And I was proud of her. I said
I'd been more proud. And I said, now what about this.
These people are not your targets, but they're targeting you.
If you turn around score them before they score you,
are they out of the game and you're safe. She goes,
I don't think so. I think it has to only
be your target, Like you can't even defend yourself. She's like,

(05:37):
I don't think so, but it's not. Yeah, I know,
but it doesn't matter. She is. She's out. She's out
of the game. And she says there might be a way,
because I guess they have partners. There might be a
way she can get back into the game. But I
don't know. I've already expended all of my mental energy
on this. I was rooting for my daughter all day yesterday,

(06:00):
even texted her throughout the day. You're still alive. I
think this sounds like fun. My wife, though, is like,
I'm just so glad that the game is over for
her and no one got hurt.

Speaker 2 (06:15):
Yeah, yeah, but not yet. But if they're running around
and she's screaming and looks like she's being chased by
somebody who has no clue about what's going on.

Speaker 1 (06:23):
That thought occurred to me, you know. And bystander is like,
I'll save you and goes and tackles these kids right, Well,
that's how might go I until people start getting actually shot.
I'm still maintaining that this sounds like.

Speaker 2 (06:40):
Fun, But it does sound like fun.

Speaker 1 (06:43):
This is my daughter's out out of the game. One
more high school note. Perhaps you've seen the video of
a basketball player after losing it the Class D state
championship game this past weekend in New York. The Northville
High School team lost and there's a player, a senior

(07:04):
player named Haley, standing with their teammates and she's visibly upset.
And that's when her coach, longtime basketball coach, like he's
a member of the state Hall of Fame for like
high school athletics or whatever, eighty one year old guy
comes up behind her and yanks her by the ponytail,

(07:25):
like yanks her back. Another player, girl, this is the
high school girls basketball player, gets between the coach and
the player and said, don't do that. Don't do that
to her. And now this coach is getting in the
face of this player, you know, pointing a finger at her.
And people looked at this and said, what is going on. Well,

(07:46):
that coach, if you've seen that video, that coach has
rightfully been fired and charged with harassment. If you start coaching,
you start charging coaches with harassment, there'd be no good
coaches left. Every coach occasionally harasses a player, but you
don't get a chance to yank on a girl's ponytail.

(08:07):
I don't think I didn't like it. Now this is
where and this. I got some grief on the radio
show yesterday because Lucy was pressing me for being a
sexist because I said I wasn't interested in girls' basketball. Now,
A big part of that is when I was growing up,
girls' basketball wasn't really a thing.

Speaker 2 (08:25):
I mean, I'm not interested.

Speaker 1 (08:29):
You're hey, how come we're both not interested? I'm a
sexist pig, and your lack of interest is fine? Got it?
Just making sure double standard out there? Got it? So
it wasn't I mean the girls basketball player, the girls
played basketball. My little sister played basketball. Go watching him.
My dad was one of the coaches for the team,

(08:50):
and I would go watch and I cheered on my
sister's team, and uh, you know, it's fine. But as
far as like having a big rooting interest in girls basketball,
I really don't. And I don't know. So people were
giving me grief about that yesterday. Go your pig, well,

(09:10):
thanks for letting me know that's harsh. You don't think
girls can. I'm just not it's not my I don't know.
I just so I do think there's a double standard
though here, because I had I grew up playing sports.
I had a football coach who would take a giant
ring and come up behind you and he would hit

(09:31):
you in the head with it.

Speaker 2 (09:32):
See, and that's what I kind of I was kind
of interested more in that story. What did this girl do?
Maybe nothing, she did nothing wrong.

Speaker 1 (09:43):
Right, Well, we don't see that in the video. But see.

Speaker 2 (09:46):
I also there's ever any reason for him to polar hair,
That is right, salt.

Speaker 1 (09:52):
I but I have a different standard here. If this
is a boy's basketball team, you got a boy with
the long hair, because I yes, that kind of thing's
allowed to happen these days, damn hippies. So you got
a guy with long hair, A coach comes up, grabs
him by the hair real quick, pulls him back, and
gives him the business. I'm like, yeah, some coaches do that.

(10:14):
I don't know the full story between these two, I
don't know. I can tell you that some of the
coaches who were the roughest on me at the end
of the season, one of those coaches who was just
rough on me my entire football career gave me a
big hug and kissed me on the head and that
meant so much to me. I don't know. I was like,

(10:37):
I don't know. I'd grown to love my abuser. And
finally I was released as a hostage, and I was like,
you know what, I miss him. I don't know. Call
it what you will, it's just different. It's different for guys.
And if I saw this happen where a male coach
did this to a male player, I'm like, yeah, I
mean sometimes some of the stuff isn't pretty. Yeah, guy,

(11:00):
a guy does this to a girl, I'm like, you don't.
You don't do this to a girl, right, you know why?
Because I'm a sexist pig And that's just what's right,
just the way I see it. But if you've seen
that video, that coach has been fired charged with harassment.
Though again, if you card you start charging coaches with harassment,
there be there'll be no coaches looft, there'd be no

(11:23):
coaches left all right. Up next, who is Michael Waltz
And does he know how to work this app This
is the national security leak situation. We'll talk about it next.
Scott Boardes News Radio ELEVENFAB A lot of people right
now wondering about the political future of a guy named

(11:43):
Mike Waltz. Mike Waltz is our national security advisor, and
like everyone in this Trump administration, he is new on
the job. Mike Waltz says, I don't know Jeffrey Goldberg,
an editor for a left leaning magazine mostly online publication
called The Atlantic, but it appears that through how whatever

(12:10):
channels this happen, Mike Waltz invited jeff Goldberg, editor of
the left leaning online magazine The Atlantic, to participate in
a group chat on an app called Signal, which is
kind of like if you're familiar with what's apps, it's

(12:30):
a rather encrypted way that you can send messages. And
this is a way that apparently Trump's national security team
was chatting with each other. And on March fifteenth, about
a week and a half ago, a couple saturdays ago,
on March fifteenth, there was a lot of chats on

(12:51):
here when Jeffrey Goldberg was invited to participate, So he
starts seeing the back and forth go on here, and
it says it's not just numbers on there, it's got
the names involved. So a lot of this is between
Vice President j d Vance and Defense Chief Pete Hagsith,
and they start going back and forth about what the

(13:12):
Hoothy rebels are doing over around Yemen. And Jeffrey Goldberg
is a reporter and suddenly he's invited to participate in
this chat. He accepts the invitation and starts seeing the
details go around and at first he thought this is

(13:34):
a hoax. Why in the world would I. I don't
work with Fox News, I'm not generally not a friend
of the Trump administration. Why in the world. And he's
kind of watching this go back and forth, and then
he says, suddenly it starts going into operational details of

(13:57):
forthcoming strikes against the hoy rebels and Yemen, and he said,
I still wasn't sure the chat was real until about
two hours later bomb started falling on Houthy rebels and Yemen.
And that's when he says, I removed myself from the

(14:18):
chat and started writing about what I'd seen, And he
posted screenshots, not of the operational details, but mostly about
some of the disagreement about what the Houthi rebels were
doing there. Jd Vance was saying, most these guys are
going after European shipping, and I don't need our strikes
against these Iranian backed Houthi rebels to be bailing out

(14:41):
the Europeans. We're already bailing out the Europeans all the time.
So this was a pretty bare bones, transparent way. Now
the Trump administration's secret conversations are now out there thanks
to this journalist. But this journalist didn't report about any
of this before the bomb started. He could have warned

(15:05):
the Hoothy rebels and those with Iran their supporters in
Russia and Syria. He could have said, hey, watch out
to this terrorist organization. America's coming for you. He didn't
do that. After the fact, he could have started posting
operational details to show further terrorist operations, how exactly we
might do some of this stuff. It's not real hard

(15:28):
to figure out. First we find out where you are,
second we kill you. It's not real hard. But he
didn't do any of that, and he removed himself from
the chat. And he's asking a legitimate couple of questions.
Number One, why wasn't I invited? It looks like I
was invited here by Mike Waltz. I don't know Mike Waltz.
Mike Waltz says, I don't know Jeffrey Goldberg. I don't

(15:49):
know how this happened. So he says, how was I
invited to this chat? How did no one notice I
was invited to the chat? Then? When I left the chat?
I presume they get a notification and Jeffrey Goldberg has
left the chat? Didn't anyone look at that and go, wait,
Jeffrey Goldberg isn't part of our national intelligence operation? Who's

(16:09):
he says here? He's an editor with the Liberal or
the liberal organization in the Atlantic. Well, how the hell
did he get in here? How did this happen? And
no one apparently knew about it until he said something
about it. Now President Trump and others are going after
this guy, going, oh, this is a terrible publications going

(16:30):
out of business. This guy is a horrible reporter. To me,
the person who looks the best in all of this
is probably Jeffrey Goldberg of the Atlantic. And then you
kind of look at what he's posting, and yes, he's
making the Trump administration look like a bunch of bungling idiots.

Speaker 2 (16:53):
Here.

Speaker 1 (16:54):
How did I get invited. How did no one notice
I remove myself from the chat. No one questioned, there's
nothing until I said something. But then you look at
what was going on here, And I actually don't mind
the conversation between the Vice President and the Secretary of Defense,
like why why don't we tell Europe what's going on

(17:16):
and let them handle it? After all, this is their problem.
Why do we have to do it again? I imagine these
questions are going on on this security level. So I
don't know that anyone in the Trump administration, based on
the conversation, looks really bad here. The whole situation looks

(17:37):
pretty bad though, And now there are people Congressman Mike Lawler,
a Republican, says, quote classified information should not be transmitted
on unsecured channels, and certainly not to those without security clearances,
including reporters. Yep. So now they're having a conversation about how,

(18:00):
oh in the world this happened. The question is, is this guy,
Mike Waltz, our national security advisor. Is he going to
keep his job? Right now, he's saying, I don't think
I did this. I don't have any So they're gonna
they're tech people. I'm sure, Elon Musk can spare a
couple of his teenagers from Dose take a look at
this and find out what happens. Someone's gonna figure out

(18:22):
how this happened. Is it really just as simple as
you ever? I mean, when you start typing in someone's
email address or name into whether it's Microsoft Outlook or
a text message, someone with the same name comes up
and you don't realize you've sent this email to the
wrong person until it's too late. Is it really something

(18:43):
as simple as that? But in order to do that,
this guy would have to be in the NSA, you know,
National Security Advisor's contacts. And he says, I don't know
this guy. I've never had any contact with this guy.
Maybe he didn't didn't remember former Congressman from Florida. Could

(19:06):
be that they'd had a chat at some point down
the line and number got saved, or at least was
in the context. I don't know. But who was he
thinking he was putting in there? Goldberg the wrestler, So there.

Speaker 2 (19:22):
Have you, the kid who wrote the Goldberg Show.

Speaker 1 (19:24):
Yes, he was wanting to tell people in the chat.
I don't know if you've seen this TV show, The
Goldbergs but anyone of the gen X vintage should absolutely
watch this. It's weird that the show has been on
longer than the decade, but still it's a wonderful show.
Have you seen the Goonies episode? It's the best. Here's

(19:46):
the Goonies episode. What's the kid's name? Mike Goldberg, little
kid in there, he's the Adam Adam Goldberg, thank you.
So he's getting his friends together because he just saw
the Goonies and he wants to go on a adventures.
So he gathers his friend together as friends together, and
he's deciding who's gonna play what character. And there's in

(20:07):
their friend group there's one Asian kid, and Adam's like,
and you can be Data, Why because I'm Asian. No,
it's just that, you know, like I don't want to
be I want to be Mike. You know, I want
to be the head of the Goonies, Like, no, you
can't be. I gotta be well because I'm Asian. It's
so funny. It's such a great, great episode, The Goonies

(20:27):
episode of the Goldberg one of the best TV shows
of all time. So maybe he was just trying to
tell people in this group, like, look, I know, the
who thies are a problem, But have you seen this
show the Goldbergs and then next thing, you know, Jeffrey
Goldberg from the Atlantics in there. They'll figure it out.
Right now, they're having a hearing about it on Capitol

(20:50):
Hill because everyone has to grandstand. You don't need to
grand stand on this. You can have the tech people
look into it and see what happened and then let
us know and then we deal with that. Right now,
there's a bunch of grand standing and you'll get a
Fox News update on the latest. Next Scott, go, Lucy,
do you want to sponsor the White House Easter egg roll?

Speaker 2 (21:11):
Sponsor it?

Speaker 1 (21:12):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (21:13):
Probably not.

Speaker 1 (21:14):
I'll give you the details in a moment. First, you know,
those just seemingly been a little quiet here if you
missed our conversation at the start of the program, which
is at nine o'clock and welcomed in here the president
and CEO. He's both of Lutheran Family Services of Nebraska.
This is part of the Lutheran Family Services organizational structure

(21:38):
that was called out online by, among others, Elon Musk,
who stopped payments to that organization. Had some questions saying,
you know, there's hundreds of millions of dollars going to
this group, and it looks like some of the higher
ups are a lot of Obama and Clinton people. And
how many of these dollars went to the refugees who

(21:59):
nest necessarily needed to be resettled here. How many of
these dollars went to our buddies, especially since a lot
of these payments went flying out the door after Trump
whin the won the election in November. So we had
that conversation with Chris from LFS. If you missed it,
it'll be posted later today on the Vintage Varheas podcast

(22:22):
link Scott Vorheas page at kfab dot com. But that
all came out a month and a half or so ago, Musk.
You know, Trump got sworn in on January twentieth, and
it seemed like every day it was like and you're
getting cut off, and you're getting caught off. It was
last call for a lot of these nngos, these non
governmental organizations US AID gone, you know, is all this stuff.

(22:46):
And the judges are like, you can't do that. Oh yeah,
well everyone's getting fired. You can't do that either. All right,
you're fired. You can't fire me. I'm a judge, all right,
your mom's fired. I mean, all this stuff is going on. Well,
then they got a little quiet and some people are like,
what happened at Doge? Did they already do all the cutting?
And now you missed something? And we told you about

(23:08):
this at the time it happened. And this is what
quieted down a little bit of Elon and Doge. See
if this sounds familiar. There were a lot of people,
including some cabinet heads, that said, why is Elon Musk
doing all of this? And Trump said, good, idea, you're
in charge of your department. You've got this many days.

(23:32):
You tell us who needs to be cut, You tell
us how many people need to be cut. You don't
like that Elon's going in there with this hatchet, and
just like, all right, this whole department is gone. And
then you take a look at as your department. You
take a look. Tell me how many people are going
to be fired, tell me how much waste and fraud
has been discovered and can be rooted out. And you've

(23:53):
got this many days to get it done. Remember this,
any of this sound familiar. That was around like March sixth,
So that's why for the last few weeks. Doze has
been pretty quiet because Trump told the department heads, you
do it well. Now we've got all the department heads

(24:16):
coming out. They had a department head meeting the other
day and one by one all of the Secretary of
the Interior, the Administrator of the EPA, the Department of
Health and Human Services, they were all one by one
in this cabinet meeting going We've had a great relationship
with Elon Musk and the Department of Governmental Efficiency DOZE,

(24:38):
and we are, with Elon's help, eliminating the redundancies. We're
streamlining our department. They're all saying, yeah, we're moving full
steam ahead. There's no slowdown in the doze in. We
are doze in our faces off. And so this is
all still happening. It just hasn't gotten as loud or
as much attention as before. President Trump told the reporters

(25:04):
yesterday what's happening now is the reporters are beyond our
wildest expectations. Far be it from Donald Trump to exaggerate
or over state something, but apparently it's all going swimmingly
this now. The President put out for corporate sponsorship possibilities

(25:30):
the annual White House Easter egg roll. I've never paid
a lot of attention to this. It kind of looks
like the president comes out, there's kids all over the
one of the lawns of the I don't know, East
West lawn, North, is there a north lawn. They're all
over the lawn there outside the White House, and there's

(25:50):
Easter eggs hidden all over the place. And the President
comes out and there's someone dressed as the Easter Bunny
and he pardons a bunny. I don't know, maybe that's
Thanksgiving and he says, okay, go and all these kids
go running around and they find Easter eggs and apparently
I mean, have you seen this the news coverage of

(26:11):
this over the years, Lucy.

Speaker 2 (26:13):
You know, little bits of it here and there. I
don't know that they hide them. They might, but I don't.

Speaker 1 (26:19):
A lot of these are little kids. They just kind
of put them on the launch.

Speaker 2 (26:22):
Yeah, maybe that's it.

Speaker 1 (26:24):
Any idea how much that costs?

Speaker 2 (26:26):
Gosh, I wouldn't think it would cost much. Maybe, well,
unless you're going to put in the Secret Service costs, and.

Speaker 1 (26:33):
Now the Secret Service is with the president no matter what.

Speaker 2 (26:36):
He's okay, so I guess the cost of a oh.

Speaker 1 (26:41):
Oh, the cost of eggs. I hadn't thought about that.
I don't think they're real.

Speaker 2 (26:45):
Can't afford it.

Speaker 1 (26:45):
Yeah, I don't think they're real eggs. I think they're
a little plastic eggs. Is there money inside their gum drops?
Inside dollar? We have little plastic eggs hidden all over
the east lawn to the White House, and most of
them are filled with Nikels, but one of them's got
a billion dollars in it. Have fun. Parents are elbowing
little kids out of it. Get out of the way.

(27:06):
Let me see here. But apparently this thing costs a
couple hundred thousand dollars to do this, So the White.

Speaker 2 (27:12):
I get to put my name all over everything.

Speaker 1 (27:14):
Well, yeah, the White House said, why are we funding this?
How come parents can't have the Easter bunny come to
their own houses? So the White House is now saying
that they put forth corporate sponsorship possibilities. So let's see here.

(27:34):
You could do naming rights for key areas or elements
of the hunt, sponsorship logos featuring on event signage signage.
When did signs go to signage? What happened to just sign.

Speaker 2 (27:47):
Two thousand and four?

Speaker 1 (27:48):
Is that what it was Okay, thanks Lucy. You know
everything October custom branded baskets, snacks and beverages, souvenirs, mentions
and official event communications and social media posts, acknowledgment and
printed and digital event programs, inclusion and press releases and
media interviews and take us to the event. Plus an

(28:09):
invite only brunch hosted inside the White House by the
First Lady, and a tour of the White House. So
there's also a corporate booth availability there. So it's going
to look like lollapalooza. You're gonna all these sponsors out there.

Speaker 2 (28:21):
And I here's the thing. I'm mixed on this because
I am all about tradition. I love tradition, and I
don't like to see any tradition stuff go away. However,
I don't think that we need to be spending money
on this. I think every single dime of frivolous, unneeded

(28:45):
money that we're spending should be just done away with.
But that means that the traditions would go away, so
I'm kind of mixed up. I also don't want to
sell the the White House.

Speaker 1 (29:00):
Amazing how the event has usually been privately funded and
a lot of the funding plus the eggs I guess
they are real eggs coming from the American egg Board,
a marketing group affiliated with the egg industry that gives
money to the White House to feature their eggs. Illegal
and ethical experts say this is a problem, and there

(29:23):
are regulations that would seem to prohibit this kind of thing. Yeah,
but Trump said, hey, no problem, Let's do a corporate sponsorship. Hey,
if you're going to be the beneficiary of this, and
maybe he's looking directly at the American egg Board, if
you're the beneficiary of this, that pay for it. You know,
we'll just make it the White House Easter egg Roll

(29:44):
brought to you by the American egg Board. And you're
covering all the costs. You're getting all the marketing exposure
for your eggs. Like, people don't know what the what
are these eggs? They come from? Hens? Is that a chicken?
I'll be What do they taste? Like? What can you
do with it? You can fry it, proach it? Wow?
Can you hard boil it? Really? Tell me more about eggs?

(30:06):
What do they cost? I'm out? You know, so, I
mean it looks like he's just saying, I'm tired of
you guys getting a free ride. Pay for it, and
we'll give you a corporate sponsorship. Which is interesting. Though.
Trump administration also yesterday did something else that ticked people off.
Everything they do tick somebody off, and I'll tell you

(30:26):
what they did next. Scott Boyes News Radio of Levinson
len kfab there was one thing that the president I
think might have been right about the portrait in Colorado,
the Governor's mansion. There are the capitol building. They have
portraits of all the US presidents, and they put one
up during Trump's first term. It's getting attention now because

(30:48):
Trump said it's stupid, it was purposely made to make
me look dumb. It doesn't look like me and should
come down. And of course the governor, Democrat of Colorado
is saying, well, we're glad the president is such an
officionado of our Colorado State capitol and it's artwork. Have
you seen the portrait of Trump. It's not that cartoony,

(31:09):
but it does look a little weird.

Speaker 2 (31:12):
I saw it from a distance, like on some small website,
and it looked weird. But I wouldn't have said just
like you said, I don't know.

Speaker 1 (31:21):
I think if he really doesn't like it, calling attention
to it so everyone could look at it now is
probably the wrong thing to do. There was something else
that Trump administration did yesterday. They decided that when you
get a passport or you get your passport renewed, you
have to choose a gender and it has to be
your gender. You can't put X as a gender. That's

(31:41):
not a gender. And he said, look, it's male or female.
That's how it goes. Of course, the ACLU is suing
because right Scott Boys Mornings nine to eleven on news
radio eleven ten KFAB
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