Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:23):
Hey, yo, they they should calm down. The show is
about to style Reese on the radio. Turn it up,
turn it up low, low, turn it up loud? Did
that a dream come true?
Speaker 2 (00:35):
On your.
Speaker 1 (00:39):
Due to the nature of this program, discretion does not exist.
It's Race on the radio right now on w t
I see News Talk ten eight.
Speaker 3 (00:49):
Happy Monday. Follow I was your weekend. Mine was eventless.
(01:10):
It's Rees on the radio on w t I C
News Talk ten to eighty. A pleasure to be here, folks.
I did get some good news.
Speaker 4 (01:21):
I can't really talk about that on the air, it's
against policy, but I did. I looked at some stuff
that was sent to me and it was really really
good stuff. So I'm happy. There was some not so
great news into stuff that I received.
Speaker 5 (01:34):
But we'll work on that. I'll talk to you about
it later, Roland.
Speaker 4 (01:38):
It kind of involves you to, oh, all right, so
we'll talk about all of that anyway. I have been
saying to myself over the weekend. You know, if there's
anything I cannot stand is that people.
Speaker 5 (01:56):
Are People don't know what to do with themselves when.
Speaker 4 (02:04):
They don't they don't have a hobby, they don't have
like things that are going on in their life.
Speaker 5 (02:11):
They don't have a lot of friends, so you're kind
of stuck in this sort of dulgrum. I'm that guy.
I am that guy.
Speaker 4 (02:19):
I realize that about myself that I have no one
to engage with, to have like visits with, like not
a lot of people invite me to places that is
a little different than in Connecticut.
Speaker 5 (02:36):
And I understand our circumstances.
Speaker 4 (02:37):
I know that my dance card is going to be
filled once I get there, which is very very soon,
and when I do, I know it's going to be
so bad where you know, I'm gonna have to tell people,
AH can't really make it. AH kind of have something
else going on. I'm hoping that I don't offend anyone.
(03:01):
But I've realized this. I've realized this that things aren't
always what they seem.
Speaker 5 (03:10):
They just aren't.
Speaker 1 (03:13):
And what.
Speaker 4 (03:15):
Else I'm realizing is that I have to dig deeper. Now,
what does all of this have to do with one another?
I'll explain. I think, and I really do truly believe this,
that people want to be engaged with one another. I
(03:40):
really do think that people want to have hobbies and interests,
but they're lost on what to do, Like, what can
I get involved with? What can I possibly invest in
or give my talents to when I am I, when
(04:00):
I don't have work, when I have a couple of
days off, what could I do.
Speaker 5 (04:05):
Well?
Speaker 4 (04:06):
Folks?
Speaker 5 (04:07):
I've figured it out and I'm going to help.
Speaker 4 (04:12):
I just I don't know why, but this weekend I
was thinking about it, and a couple of my good
friends and compadres they have all said to me, Man,
wait until you get to be back, folks. I think
we can start a movement of making everything a little
(04:32):
bit better, one small step at a time. Let's no
longer leave certain individuals in charge a beautification of our
body politic. Let's not leave those people in charge anymore.
Let's do it ourselves, and we can use our idle
(04:56):
time to do it. Forget about groups like Indivisible, Forget
about groups that are going to be standing on a
bridge too, I don't know, rage against the Resistan or
the regime, whatever that nonsense is, we'll talk about them.
Forget about all of that. I want to start something new, different.
(05:20):
It doesn't involve party politics. It doesn't involve like I'm
a conservative, your magazis and not in an you can
join up no matter what, and you can join the
cause that's important to you, where we can celebrate everything
(05:44):
and denounce everything, all in the same breath. You see,
here's the problem. Here's the problem we've all had, is
that people who are always saying it's like, oh, you're
against this, but you're for You're not for that. To
remedy that, I want to start a group of people
(06:05):
who are fighting against d quat right and in the
same breath, fighting for people in Waterbury with lead pipes.
Speaker 5 (06:20):
We don't have to stick with one thing.
Speaker 4 (06:21):
We don't have to be, you know, just a group
that says, ah, we don't get into that because we're
just focused on this. Because what I've realized is there
are people who are supposed to be involved in environmental
issues that don't even say a word about the.
Speaker 5 (06:38):
D QUOAD issue.
Speaker 4 (06:40):
Don't you find it odd? How did you not find
that odd? I did. Do you know the largest environmental
group in Connecticut that gets hundreds of millions of dollars
is a group called Save the Sound? Are you aware
(07:04):
of that organization? Probably not, But this political action group
for environmental causes has the weight, the gravitas.
Speaker 5 (07:21):
The I would say.
Speaker 4 (07:25):
Influence to stop the use of de quat in Connecticut waterways,
in particular the Connecticut River.
Speaker 5 (07:35):
But folks, take a.
Speaker 4 (07:36):
Moment, go on your little devices, be they your cell
phones or your laptops or iPads or Samsung pads, whatever
they are, and look up if Save the Sound has
publicly responded to the concern about the.
Speaker 5 (07:55):
Use of d quad. They have not. They're nowhere to
be found.
Speaker 4 (08:05):
But yet a small little outfit called the River Alliance,
with three full time staffers and a board of about
six people, that only pulls in a couple one hundred
thousand dollars in donations, is the leading voice on a
(08:31):
situation that involves the entire state. You see, this is
the reason why I want to start this new campaign
of a bunch of people who involve themselves in everything,
because we can't just leave it to the people who
are involved in this thing or that thing or this thing,
because they choose to get involved when it is important
(08:57):
to them, or they don't and it isn't important to them.
Some people will get the idea, oh they must have
been paid off. Oh there must not be any benefit
to them. Why should we leave it to them? Then
(09:18):
we can't get them to speak up when it's important.
It should be about every cause they should be right
there on the forefront, but they're not there.
Speaker 5 (09:26):
Now, this isn't to crap on save the sound.
Speaker 4 (09:30):
I know nothing about them, but this is the biggest
story in Connecticut outside of the lead pipe thing. Trust me,
we'll get into that. That's daunting in and of itself. Wow,
cannot believe Connecticut y'all drop the ball on this one.
Speaker 5 (09:48):
But not one word. The Connecticut Mirror.
Speaker 4 (09:54):
Dropped another piece about d quot Sunday, which turns out
to be a refurbishing of a article it did in
the beginning of July. Why is the Connecticut Mirror refurbishing
the same article over and over again other news outlets.
(10:18):
We had to force them a week and a half
down the line, after all of the protests, after everybody.
Speaker 5 (10:23):
Why did it take them so long to join suit?
Speaker 4 (10:27):
We have all of this environmental stuff going on in
the state of Connecticut, which, by the way, if I
remember correctly, just twenty twenty two and twenty twenty three,
we had the governor of this great state screaming and
hollering about our carbon footprint, about how we needed to
(10:48):
be eco friendly. How we needed to make an an
ev electric vehicle mandate for the folks who live in
the state. We wanted to enjuge join the environmental movement.
Now we've got dequot in water ways, lead pipes that's
(11:12):
contaminating drinking water. We got environmental groups that are silent.
We got an environmental group that is actually advocating for
the use of poison in the waterways. What happened in
a year, Connecticut?
Speaker 5 (11:28):
What happened.
Speaker 4 (11:32):
A lot of things. Connecticut can no longer call itself
eco friendly. Let's just face it, folks, because they never were.
It was politically expedient. There are no conversations about the
(11:52):
environment today because the most important person to discuss in
Connecticut is Donald J.
Speaker 5 (11:58):
Trump.
Speaker 4 (12:01):
All of the.
Speaker 5 (12:01):
Moral nonsense that they preach to us.
Speaker 4 (12:04):
When their guy was in power, it was always about
you and what you needed to adhere to. Now nobody's
even paying attention to it. And guess what happens when
they have all this stuff to focus on, They can
sneak in these crazy stories.
Speaker 5 (12:18):
You're learning about the state that you live in.
Speaker 4 (12:24):
You're reading articles, You're reading articles in newspapers where one
newspaper article inside that paper says that your waterways are
poisonous because of a runoff sewage, and then another article
in the same paper is advocating for the use of
(12:47):
d quat in the waterways. It's like the right hand
doesn't know what the left hand is doing. And if
you're confused, it's not your fault, folks, because I don't
know if it's by design or it's just reckless behavior.
This is the reason why you can't leave it to
(13:09):
others anymore. I'm sorry these folks have become government involved.
Dare I say government corrupt? Everybody's getting a kickback. Everybody's
got a financial hold on some of the positions that
they have that means they're without merit. That's the reason
(13:34):
why all of us need to be involved. Citizenry makes
the difference. And folks, I'm not talking about creating some
group where this person has that group, this person has
that group. No no, no, no, no, no, no no. I don't
want to create another ridiculous organization.
Speaker 5 (13:55):
That's a five oh one C three.
Speaker 4 (13:57):
No.
Speaker 5 (14:01):
I believe wholeheartedly.
Speaker 4 (14:05):
That there are powers, that there is power, I should
say in people. I think that everyone can be involved.
And again, it doesn't matter your stripe. If you've got
an issue that you want to address, bring it to
us and we'll address it. For those of you who
(14:25):
care about it, you can join that group and fight
hard to get that nonsense put away.
Speaker 5 (14:32):
But but it's gotta be good.
Speaker 4 (14:38):
Let those lunatics who are trying to get you know,
horrible books inside the libraries.
Speaker 5 (14:42):
No, we don't want no part of that.
Speaker 4 (14:46):
We want common sense, beneficial policy prescriptions for things that
benefit all of us, that understands that our freedoms stop.
Speaker 5 (15:02):
Where others begin.
Speaker 4 (15:06):
And we don't need to call it any particular group.
We don't have to hand out cards and pamphlets. We
just need to let people know that it exists and
they can all join in. They could have a secret
handshake if they want.
Speaker 5 (15:20):
I'm just saying.
Speaker 4 (15:23):
I'm just saying, there's a lot of stuff that we
can do. I mean, why leave it to them. I'll
be honest with you. I woke up this morning sick
and tired of reading another story about another group who
have said nothing about something in their own wheelhouse, and
(15:44):
no one calling up everyone saying hey, what are you doing,
Not even in news media going to those groups and
saying hey, we'd love to get a quote from you. Hey,
what's your stance on this? I thought you're here to
print the waterways? Why nothing? You're the largest environmental group
(16:05):
in the state.
Speaker 5 (16:06):
What's up?
Speaker 4 (16:10):
Who's not calling out these organizations? I believe that we should,
and I think we have the power to. I think
I should compile a list. That's what I should do.
We compile a list and say, hey, this organization, why
(16:31):
are they not speaking of? This is their thing, this
is the stuff that made them who they are. We
should get a quote from them, make them release a
press release, say what they're doing about it? And if nothing,
say they have no involvement. But get them on the record.
(16:53):
You are owed that, by the way, in case you
don't know, you are o that these organizations are allowed
to just spring up, collect millions of dollars and just operate.
Speaker 5 (17:11):
And remember they say.
Speaker 4 (17:13):
They do it, they're doing this on your behalf, but
yet don't answer to you.
Speaker 5 (17:19):
Well, let's change that.
Speaker 4 (17:24):
Let's create the organization that demands answers from those who
have taken it upon themselves to speak for us, just
like our elected officials.
Speaker 5 (17:40):
You prop up some organization.
Speaker 4 (17:43):
Look, let's take Black Lives Matter, eight sixty and NAACP.
These folks are running around on your behalf. Well, let's
make them accountable. Let's say, hey, where are you? Because look,
I've done this before. I've seen it before. How many
times have we had the discussion on this very show
(18:04):
about why Black Lives Matter or an NAACP or the
Urban League or whomever it might be, Larassa whatever. How
come they never talk up on this? That and the third? Well,
let's just stop asking questions to ourselves. Let's ask them,
Let's hold them to account, and let's pressure them into
(18:25):
responding inundate them. Hey, this is happening in this community.
Why aren't you speaking up? We demand answers. We demand you.
You come at us with the response. We want a
press release, we want something. Hell, hold a press conference,
(18:48):
We demand it. I'm done complaining, That's all I'm saying
to you, folks. I'm done complaining, aren't you. We already
know we can get answers. I've always known that, to
be honest with you, But we already know that we
can get answers, So let's get them. I'm wanna talk
(19:12):
a little bit more about this, about this organization, save
the Sound and give you some numbers. You'll you'll understand
why I'm kind of picking on them, but.
Speaker 5 (19:25):
Just want some accountability. Stick around.
Speaker 4 (19:28):
It's Monday, folks, got a whole bunch of stuff to
get to stand by. It's Reesa on the radio on
w t I see News Talk ten eighty. I'm Tom
o'hanlin and you're listening to Reese on the radio on
wt IVE Seen News Talk ten evy.
Speaker 5 (19:42):
Oh man, I love it, Tom. H My wife is
crazy about that. When you're heard on Friday, and thank
you Tom for that. We're back.
Speaker 4 (19:50):
As Tom said Reese on the radio, Mattio says, I
don't think Reese would ever get into politics. I think
he has more power where he's at. I don't know
about power, U, but yeah, politics not my bag. You
know what it is if I can say something on
that front, and I would tell you that and I
(20:13):
mentioned him enough. But Mark and West Hartford explains what.
I could never get into politics because if I ever
had to compromise my principles because of the importance of
legislation or whatever it was, I know I would be
called out on that and I would always feel icky
(20:37):
if I had to do that. That's the part of
the you know they always tell you know, the politics
is about compromise. I gotta give it to guys like
Massey and Ryan who rarely go against their principles to
vote for something, and again they get a crapload of
(21:00):
eight behind it. But that's again where my problem lies,
is that I don't ever want to be caught in that.
Speaker 5 (21:10):
Sort of greater good position.
Speaker 4 (21:13):
Politics is about that, and I understand, and we don't
always get what we want, but there is a compromise
in in that politics.
Speaker 5 (21:23):
It just is.
Speaker 4 (21:24):
And I know some people who just refuse I guess
the acceptance of going along to get along, and I
get them too, right, I guess it's even me as
a commentator or a pundit.
Speaker 5 (21:38):
I get both sides of it.
Speaker 4 (21:40):
I get the fact that you may have to compromise
your principles to get legislation passed, and I understand people
who are angry at those who do it, and I
just play across that line. I totally understand that, and
so people just it's a difficult place for me to be,
(22:01):
and I just refuse to be there. I'm on the
website for Save the Sound, which if you're interested in it,
it's savedthsound dot org. And I'm going over their press releases.
And we've been talking about this now for a month, Tequi.
So I'm just going to go over their July press releases.
(22:26):
July fifteenth, Save the Sound commend City Council's device a
decisive vote to halt Valley's casino bid. July sixteenth, Westchester
County Save the Sound reach agreement to end decade long Clean.
Speaker 5 (22:43):
Water Act lawsuit.
Speaker 4 (22:46):
July twenty fourth, Save the Sound testifies in proposed sale
of a quarry on water company. June thirtieth, Evin Governor
Lamont selects Marissa Gillett as pure chair person. So that
happened before the conversation about d quay and Saved the Sound.
Speaker 5 (23:09):
No press release, none.
Speaker 4 (23:12):
Why not? It is the premiere environmentalist group in Connecticut.
So they need to be called, they need to be contacted,
and they need to give a statement. Now, I've read
a couple of places so far that Save the Sound
(23:35):
without any links to an actual statement, supports.
Speaker 5 (23:42):
The let's just say careful use of d QUI.
Speaker 4 (23:46):
I looked for the quote anywhere where their actually actual
statement was.
Speaker 5 (23:51):
There is nothing.
Speaker 4 (23:53):
They made links to other newspapers and news articles that
I've already read, but Saved the Sound is not quoted
in there. I want an official quote from them, and
I want to know who they're trusting on this, because
I would imagine a premier environmentalist group has its own
(24:16):
scientists that they rely on, because I would hate the
idea that River's Alliance is running around without any scientific
experts and relying on the government and the government assessment
of the volatility of d quay as an environmental group.
(24:40):
You know, because I'm hearing what's the name Malicia Schlimut.
Her response is, I'm normally against the use of de quad.
I'm normally against the use of herbicides, but they've told
us that it's safe and effective, even though they have
to continue testing for three years. They told us it
(25:04):
was I don't know what environmental group. It's like. Save
the Sound is against fracking, as is Rivers Alliance. They're
against the use of fracking. Why, I'm assuming they have
some sort of scientific basis to be against it, don't they.
I'm sure that they have scientists who support their position,
(25:24):
don't they? Or do they just wake up in the
morning and they just pointed something and go. I'm against that.
It sounds bad. So I just again, I want to
know whether where the vetting comes in. And I want
a statement from them, and I want a statement from
them this week, and I'm gonna get it whether they
(25:46):
want to give it or not, not because they owe
it to me. It's because they owe it to you.
And I want to know who's the source of said statement.
Who have you reviewed? What have you reviewed? Who are
the scientists on your staff? You can't just stand for
something without giving us some sort of I don't know
(26:09):
representation as to why you.
Speaker 5 (26:11):
Support it, So we're gonna get to it.
Speaker 4 (26:18):
Speaking of Rivers Alliance, why aren't there those public filings
of how much money that they've been able to receive
since twenty twenty three? No, sorry, I apologize twenty nineteen.
Why are they no financials on them? Rivers Alliance? I
did some searching on my own, and it turns out
(26:41):
that there are no public records about your bookkeeping since
twenty nineteen.
Speaker 5 (26:47):
I believe in twenty nineteen.
Speaker 4 (26:48):
You guys pulled in a couple one hundred thousand dollars
for your three full time staff members, including Alicia Schallamut
and you're sick board members. I understand that your donations
are matched. I do understand that Deep Connecticut Deep and
(27:10):
the EPA actually fund a lot of your activities.
Speaker 5 (27:16):
We'd like to know what for.
Speaker 4 (27:20):
I would find it incredibly interesting to know what exactly
they're paying for. Why do you get to say or
get to have the final say on dec Why why
are you in all of these articles?
Speaker 5 (27:36):
I mean, you're a tiny outfit.
Speaker 4 (27:40):
I mean, I mean we're talking about infinitesimal as an outfit.
But yet, according to the news media, Alicia Shallaman is
on everyone. I mean, she is quoted, she is on camera.
Speaker 5 (27:56):
She's everywhere.
Speaker 4 (27:59):
You've got to stab for three full time folks, according
to reports. I mean you're like, literally minute, what do
you guys operate out out of a garage somebody's living room?
A then this is why are you the authority? And
who gave them the authority? I mean, didn't it fun?
(28:24):
Didn't it?
Speaker 6 (28:24):
Did?
Speaker 4 (28:24):
No one find it odd that these folks were a
go to. They were invited to speak at Dick Blumenthal's
event last Monday? Was it last Monday or last Friday?
Last Friday? Why were they allowed that? Why were they
(28:46):
allowed there? Why was Shallama given the mic. I mean
she's literally a drop in the bucket. I mean I
mean a drop in the bucket as far as their power,
their leadership. A couple of people know about them, but
do they really have the final word why. I think
(29:13):
it's worth asking. Maybe somebody will tell us. Let's go
to my good friend Fred Middletown. How are you, sir?
Speaker 5 (29:21):
Fred?
Speaker 4 (29:23):
That's okay, you probably stepped away from the phone, but
that's all I'm trying to figure out. You got one
company huge, one hundred million dollars, another company a couple
thou but yet everywhere you look, and I'm sure you
have folks rivers.
Speaker 5 (29:40):
Alliance is everywhere, and I just don't see it.
Speaker 4 (29:47):
That's like your I don't know, your local chapter in
the Boys and Girls Club.
Speaker 5 (29:53):
Speaking for the entire state. Sounds weird. All right, Let's
get Fred back. How are your Fred?
Speaker 6 (30:00):
Hey?
Speaker 7 (30:01):
Hey, sorry about that. I shut my phone off reaching
for it.
Speaker 6 (30:05):
Just a couple of real quick comments. So one politics
I believe defines is the art of compromise. Yeah, that's
not the field you want to toil in. And you
wouldn't want to hold office other than maybe some dinky,
little thing that you could do in a few hours
a week, which it's hard to.
Speaker 2 (30:24):
Even find that even these tiny little local things that
can be a huge timely. But what you might want
to do is run for office, dude, because.
Speaker 6 (30:33):
You get this platform and it's understood. It's a thing
people abuse.
Speaker 1 (30:36):
Like.
Speaker 6 (30:36):
I don't know if you know Clifford Wallace Thornton, he
ran for.
Speaker 2 (30:39):
Governors yes when yeah, right, dude got like one percent
of the vote, but he got a ton of attention.
Speaker 4 (30:46):
You know that, you know, I do know that if
there's anything, if you want to raise your profile, that
is the way to go. I also think that that's
Chris Murphy's tactic, by the way.
Speaker 7 (31:00):
But yeah, no, you should run.
Speaker 6 (31:01):
You should run, dude. I swear I ran for office
around here and people still remember it.
Speaker 2 (31:06):
I ran for common counsel and they remember it as
running from mayor.
Speaker 6 (31:09):
People still say here, I voted for you. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (31:12):
And yeah you're saying is you're like you're like a
shock troop, You're like a suicide mic dropper.
Speaker 8 (31:17):
Yeah, you kick the door down, man, You catch the
first time that you're crazy.
Speaker 6 (31:22):
You don't care.
Speaker 8 (31:23):
I know You're priceless where you are, man.
Speaker 5 (31:25):
Thank you, sir, much appreciated. Thank you, Fred.
Speaker 4 (31:27):
Let me take let me take a break. We'll come back.
More news, more views. By the way, we've got some
very very scandalous racial news to get into today. There
was a new community that's starting that's planning on expanding,
and apparently there's a problem with good genes.
Speaker 5 (31:46):
We'll talk about it. Stick around. It's three so on
the radio wt I see News Doc Dan eighty.
Speaker 1 (31:51):
Listen to wt I Seed News Talk ten eighty on
the free Honyssey app download and like wt I C
today for alerts on special programming.
Speaker 5 (32:00):
We're back WHESAW on the radio.
Speaker 4 (32:02):
And this is insane that up to eight thousand lead
service lines could still be supplying Connecticut residents and other
properties with water. And I don't know, like who missed this.
Speaker 9 (32:23):
This is like.
Speaker 4 (32:26):
I remember in the eighties when we found out about that,
I mean not the the nineties when we found out
about this going on. And I remember the uproar in
the early two thousands when people are like, yeah, we
gotta we got to fix this. Why is this so late?
Why how could this possibly be the case. And I'm
(32:49):
telling you, the outrage about it just baffles me because
as I've seen online, people are going, what's going on Connecticut?
This environmental record really looks bad. Not protecting the drinking
(33:12):
water in the state anywhere, even if it's just Waterbury.
Speaker 5 (33:17):
Is a bad look.
Speaker 4 (33:21):
For a state that's supposed to be on the cutting
edge of clean air and clean water. I mean, are
they only talking about, like, you know, just like removing
industrialism from the state, putting up wind farms, solar panels?
(33:43):
Is it that kind of deal? Because look, I gotta
look at all of this. I look at it today, folks.
How do you not look at it and go what happened?
We went from all of that, all of this stuff
that we listened to in the last what two three
years about can't have nuclear, gotta have wind, gotta have solar,
(34:08):
gotta have evs. Then all of a sudden abandoned, completely abandoned.
Now we find out lead pipes, poison.
Speaker 5 (34:22):
In the waters. Like what how do we turn into Detroit?
Like what's going on?
Speaker 4 (34:34):
What It's like all of this is being exposed, but
no one is saying anything, statements by public officials nothing.
What did Nick write? Let me read what Nick wrote here.
(34:56):
He says it's one hundred percent true. There's a huge
job down by the Connecticut shoreline to remove lead water pipes.
It's twenty twenty five, Nick, it's twenty twenty five.
Speaker 5 (35:10):
How late can you be on lead water pipes?
Speaker 4 (35:14):
Man? I mean, it makes Connecticut look like a twentieth
century state that we're just getting around to that, you
know what. Donald agreed. Even the Republicans are silent because
(35:36):
it's embarrassing focusing on a lot of the I mean, again,
the environmental nonsense was crazy, and now they've abandoned it.
And when I say abandoned it, it's the abandonment makes
no sense.
Speaker 5 (35:53):
It's going in a completely different direction.
Speaker 4 (35:59):
Nobody wants no nobody cares about the sewage, No one
cares about poison, No conversations about wind farms or solar nothing.
You got environmental groups who were silent. We got small
little outfits talking about, yeah, we're okay with it. What happened.
(36:26):
And I think, deep down, what we're really what we're
realizing here, I think, from the bottom of my heart,
what we're realizing is.
Speaker 5 (36:34):
That it was all jokes. It was all phony.
Speaker 4 (36:40):
Not one of these people believed a damn thing they
were saying for years, not one of.
Speaker 5 (36:44):
Them, all of them frauds.
Speaker 4 (36:52):
The end of the day, it's all about the almighty dollars. Sadly, sadly.
I all I want to know is how much money
you're getting for your silence if you're to acquiesced.
Speaker 5 (37:12):
I just want to know.
Speaker 4 (37:15):
Let's release some uh, let's release some tax turns for
the organizations we have five oh one C three status.
Speaker 5 (37:26):
Let's just see them. Let's find out what's going on.
Speaker 4 (37:30):
Is there a corresponding rise in crime and decline in
test scores in the lead pipe areas? You can damn
well bet there is, Mike, you can damn well bet
there is. I wouldn't doubt it. I wouldn't doubt it
for a moment. It's isn't it in the town of Waterbury. Yeah,
(37:56):
oh well, so it goes. We got more news, more views,
the expansion of a white nation. You don't want to
miss this. Let's get this news a for the WTIC newsroom.
It's res on the radio on WTIC news Doc tenn
eighty gree on.
Speaker 1 (38:13):
The radio making sense of the news. Yeah, even when
it makes no sense at.
Speaker 6 (38:19):
All at all.
Speaker 1 (38:19):
Now on wt I see news talk to eighty all.
Speaker 4 (38:23):
Right, we are back, and I got plenty of stuff
to talk about today, especially about this story that's garnered
a couple of online comments that have got people talking
about that you may have missed. Apparently there is a
white whites only community that is planning on expanding in
(38:45):
the Ozarks. We'll talk about that in a little bit.
But I always believe that these stories always have something
else happening that people are ignoring, and I won't ignore
them because it h it plays a huge part in
our body politic that we don't, uh, we don't often
(39:05):
like to talk about, and you know me, that's why
I do what I do. So, uh, you're not going
to be surprised at what the what I would say
the news media is ignoring.
Speaker 5 (39:21):
But we'll get into all of that. Let's uh, let's
start with some with some news in our headlines today.
Speaker 4 (39:33):
A Stephen Colbert protest in New York City was wildly
reported to take place, but quickly was ignored by the
news media when it materialized and astounding twenty people arrived
at the Ed Sullivan Theater to protest the firing of Colbert,
which I understand that there were three more people at
this protest than those who watch him at night. Also,
(39:57):
congratulations to Bubba Wallace. Congratulations Baba. Bubba Wallace made history
for becoming the first black NASCAR driver to not accuse
the rest of the world of races. I'm sorry, No,
he's already done that. Well, you didn't do it this
(40:19):
year anyway. He's the first black driver to win a
major race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, securing the Brickyard
four hundred title. Democrats like Colin Auhred of Texas and
Eric Swawall of California have now posted videos of them
pumping iron to appear tough.
Speaker 5 (40:38):
This is not working.
Speaker 4 (40:41):
They're running out of ideas and this, of course in
the backdrop of the Democrat Party's image that's been eroding
to its lowest point in more than three decades, according
to a new Wall Street Journal poll, with voters seeing
Republicans as better at handling most.
Speaker 5 (40:58):
Issues that decide elections.
Speaker 4 (41:01):
According to the new survey, sixty three percent of voters
hold an unfavorable view of the Democratic Party. That's the
highest share of Journal polls during the nineteen ninety and
thirty points higher than the thirty three percent held in
a favorable view. Here is none other than Thrill up
(41:22):
my leg Chris Matthews talking about the other side of
polling data that says that Donald Trump is underwater. Chris
Matthews doesn't seem to believe that, to be honest.
Speaker 10 (41:32):
With you, the country is moving towards Trump. Yeah, these
polls they come out and show him not doing well.
I don't buy that. I think strength, his strength is
still greater than the Democratic strength. He is a stronger
public figure than the Democratic people. I mean, Obama still
has tremendous charisma, but Trump has strength, and I think
(41:55):
that's what all the voters look for. But they wanted
president who was a strong figure, and and he's got it,
and he can. It's just there and half the country
buys it.
Speaker 4 (42:07):
Later on in the program, we'll get into a little
bit more of that pulling data that the Wall Street
Journal UH is talking about.
Speaker 7 (42:13):
UH.
Speaker 4 (42:14):
And now it's time for the stupidest thing I've read today, Yes,
you do.
Speaker 1 (42:26):
It could very well be the stupidest person on.
Speaker 10 (42:28):
The face of the earth.
Speaker 4 (42:33):
The American Eagle Gene Company is under fire for featuring
Sidney Sweeney UH with the tagline Sidney Sweeney has Good Genes,
which has been associated with eugenics. According to some online protesters,
many people are saying that because Sidney Sweeney is a blonde,
blue eyed woman showing her in a pair of jeans,
(42:55):
that says that Sidney Sweeney has good genes, it's somewhat
associated with you, Jen.
Speaker 5 (43:03):
And I mean when I say this.
Speaker 4 (43:04):
Is caused the cover story backlash, I mean it's for me,
it's just crazy that this is an issue, because I
couldn't imagine somebody like Sidney Sweeney promoting eugenics. I don't
know what her politics are, but if I'm certain, I'm
positive that usually these protesters always associated themselves with eugenics.
Speaker 5 (43:29):
Why would they have.
Speaker 4 (43:29):
A problem, I mean, their patron saint of killing babies.
Margaret Sanger, who started Planned Parenthood, is a person who
supports eugenics. If I remember correctly, this was a woman
who started Planned Parenthood to get rid of undesirable black
and brown babies and influence black pastors to get their
(43:55):
parishioners black and brown in the pews to a boy
their babies for the simple fact of keeping America. What
didn't she I mean, who are these people have a
problem with eugenics?
Speaker 5 (44:14):
I mean that she is a pillar of the leftists.
Speaker 4 (44:20):
She gives out a white eugenics award Margaret Sanger does
to every person who advocates for the dismissal, removal, hell
killing of their babies. Hillary Clinton, Martin Luther King Junior,
to name a few.
Speaker 5 (44:43):
Eugenics. Who are these people fooling?
Speaker 11 (44:46):
You know?
Speaker 12 (44:47):
What's so dumb about that?
Speaker 5 (44:48):
What's that? The lady is beautiful, right, gorgeous?
Speaker 12 (44:53):
So in fact, she does have good it just doesn't
she it has she has good genes?
Speaker 5 (45:02):
Is this and she has jeens?
Speaker 4 (45:03):
It's a metaphor, it's a play on words.
Speaker 5 (45:05):
That's all it is.
Speaker 12 (45:06):
Goodness gracious man, I know.
Speaker 4 (45:08):
But it's again the fact that this is turning into
and I'll tell you exactly where this is stemming from.
It's the left is so upset about the losses they
took at Target and at bud Light for aligning themselves
with woke, woke folks, the Dylan Molvania bud Light, and
(45:33):
the transgender swimwear at Target and Target allowing you know,
transgenders to go into women's bathrooms. They took an l
on that those businesses lost so much money. Target lost
ten billion dollars in a week behind that bind that
bathing suit.
Speaker 12 (45:50):
I'm trying to see who was in the border room. Yeah,
and said this is a good idea exactly.
Speaker 4 (45:56):
And to lose that ten billion dollars, But like, it's
still hemorrhaging money because of a decision to align itself
with just a small little campaign with Dylan Molvaney. It's
still And another part was, you know this, as I
always bring up, when it is conservative backlash right or
(46:18):
backlash against a conservative company or a conservative value in business,
it fails miserably. And this is exactly what's gonna happen
with the American Eagle. So think about this, folks. American
Eagle gets backlash from the left. Who doesn't buy jeans
from American Eagle.
Speaker 5 (46:38):
They wouldn't.
Speaker 4 (46:38):
The name alone is an affront to who they are.
They would never purchase anything from this company. They would
never waste their minuscule dollars because they don't have a
disposable income to boot. They would never buy these jeans
at all. So the left starts making an online campaign
to admonish American Eagle. They did the same thing with
(47:02):
Chick fil A. They found out that the CEO was
a traditional marriage guy, and they tried to hold the
entire Chick fil A franchise accountable, tried to rally against it.
We're gonna have sit ins and gay ins and whatever
they were calling it. So they're gonna show up at
the counter and they were gonna make out at every
Chick fil A across the country. The news media ate
(47:24):
it up, ran to every Chick fil A they could find,
but when they got there, lines were around the corner
to actually patronize the Chick fil As everywhere and what
would seem folks, folks do the work, go online?
Speaker 5 (47:39):
Local NBC, CBS, and.
Speaker 4 (47:41):
ABC's were seen minutes after arriving leaving. Some people taunted
the news media says, hey, guys, where are you going?
The place has got a line around the corner. Are
you leaving? Because it backfired and they wouldn't say anything.
Now when the news media again is supposed to cover
the news, what they should have covered was gay alliances
(48:01):
and gay groups came to protest Chick fil A, but
folks showed their support for their business by lining up
lines and waiting hours to buy Chick fil A. That
would have been a great story, but it was against
the agenda. Same thing's gonna happen here with the American
American Eagle, same thing's gonna happen. They'll be this onslaught
(48:22):
of all of the newspapers talking about how bad it
was that they would run this ad with Sidney Sweeney
and obviously obvious blonde hair, blue eyed white woman. And
what do conservatives do when they see the backlash online?
They say, hey, let's go buy some jeans American Eagles products.
(48:44):
Their market share will skyrocket. Levi's will be like, who's
the next beautiful white woman we need to get in
the head out now. Cancel the Beyonce ad. They'll all
do it. They'll all do it because they lose. Miserable.
You cannot cater to an audience that doesn't purchase the tickets,
(49:04):
doesn't purchase the items. You just can't. It works against
you every time. Stop marketing to people who have no
purchasing power.
Speaker 5 (49:15):
They just don't. So you know, this whole thing, Yeah,
it is nonsense. Because it is.
Speaker 4 (49:24):
Nonsense, and you'll see exactly.
Speaker 5 (49:26):
Where it goes.
Speaker 4 (49:27):
Now, folks, I want to tell you a part of
this story and why this is absolutely insane that there's
an uproar. Okay, white's only community is plotting an expansion
to another state as effort to build a white nation continue.
(49:50):
A far right etho nationalist group that has set up
a whites only community in the remote part of the
Ozarks in northeastern Arkansas reportedly exploring the possibility of expanding
into Missouri. Return to the Land, which describes itself as
a private membership association for individuals with traditional views and
(50:13):
European ancestry, opened its first community in Arkansas in October
of twenty twenty three and is now considering entering a
second state, likely near Springfield. According to NBC's regional affiliate KSNT,
the group is opposed to mass migration, multiculturalism, and forced integration,
(50:34):
and reportedly does not welcome non white, non Christian, or
LGBTQ people, explaining that its members are seeking to separate
ourselves from a failing modern society.
Speaker 5 (50:48):
And return to pistoral living.
Speaker 4 (50:51):
You want a white nation, build a white town, founder
Eric or Walls in a ex video promoting the initiative.
Speaker 5 (51:00):
It can be done, and we're doing it.
Speaker 13 (51:06):
Rt rttl's flagship community spans approximately one hundred and fifty
acres of land is home to forty inhabitants and features
its own cabins, roads, wells, and community center, and a schoolhouse.
Speaker 5 (51:23):
It is followed by a second site.
Speaker 4 (51:25):
Nearby that opened in January of this year, with the
group listing a further Ozark sites as upcoming and aspirations
to move into the Appalachian Mountains on its website. Now
people are already screaming and hollering, look at them, wats
building their own communities to get away from blacks. So
(51:51):
white supremacist town. Okay, okay, So I won't hear anything
else about Black Wall Street, will I? I won't hear
another word about blacks having separate dorms or having separate
(52:13):
graduations because segregation is wrong, right, Integration is the way, right.
I shouldn't hear anything about those things at all.
Speaker 5 (52:31):
Nobody should be building anything.
Speaker 4 (52:36):
Come on, folks, is this really an issue or is
it just exposing any hypocrisy? Because black communities as they were,
it's been a big deal for a long time. We
have to have them, We need to have them. We
need to go back to the days of Tulsa. Right,
(52:56):
Black Wall Street, tell us Oklahoma, why can't we get
there again? And if they're not doing that. There's also
another effort that was just promoted by the New York
Times and the Washington Posts about African Americans who have
decided to leave the racist country of America and go
back to Africa. By the way, it's a very few
(53:17):
people are going in the community.
Speaker 5 (53:19):
Refuse to go. Nobody's going.
Speaker 4 (53:24):
They might go as a joke, but they all come home.
Trust me, most of them can't deal with the heat.
They can't. But that's all of this is nonsense. Building
a white community for themselves should be okay in the
(53:44):
grand scheme of things, shouldn't it. I'm trying to figure
out what the biggest problem is, well, the fact that
they're openly doing it, that they're having interviews, that they're
not shy about their building their own white utopia. I'm
still trying to figure it out. But I will tell
you exactly what this is about, and it always.
Speaker 5 (54:06):
Has been white acceptance.
Speaker 4 (54:12):
Oh they won't tell you that, folks, But that's what
it's about. It's white acceptance. The fact that whites would
divvy up some land to themselves and live in their communities,
take care of themselves, and blacks be excluded. Why wouldn't
they be upset they are excluded, which means what what's.
Speaker 5 (54:34):
The opposite of exclusion acceptance.
Speaker 4 (54:38):
I can't believe that they would build the town when
they want to be by themselves. You want to be
accepted in there, I think we should be. Why what
do you need them for? That's simple.
Speaker 7 (54:52):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (54:52):
I watched this video a long time ago, not too
long ago, but it's this African speaking to some other
Africans about the word white supremacy.
Speaker 5 (55:04):
And he explains in the video you may have seen it.
Speaker 4 (55:06):
He explains where the term white supremacy comes from.
Speaker 5 (55:09):
It's not what people think it means.
Speaker 4 (55:11):
In Africa, they invented the term white supremacy because he
says that when whites came to Africa, they built things.
Speaker 5 (55:21):
They came with the gun that went boom.
Speaker 4 (55:24):
Said, you see the old pictures of everybody bowing down
the Ryan because they thought they were superior, because they
were showing up with things they had never seen before,
with medicine, with clothing. They saw their life, they saw
their life, and they saw them as superior. That's what
(55:46):
he says. It's a different meaning in Africa. Perhaps people
should investigate that, That's all I'm saying. But the same
is the case here in the United States, like it
or not. But the biggest argument is this constant theme
that you cannot just be accepted for who you are
(56:10):
and where you come from, and you put certain groups
on a pedestal while you're insulting them or admonishing them. Right,
it's the biggest confusing boondoggle I've ever seen in my
entire life. Admonish whites at the same time want their status.
(56:31):
It's jealousy. It couldn't get any more simple, any simpler
than that. If they were I mean, think about it,
if they saw themselves as valuable, these people who are
protesting this white town, if they saw their own value,
they wouldn't need somebody else's anything. If they had their
(56:54):
own value, they wouldn't need anything, you know. Kanye West
famously said this, and I bring up because you know,
people say that the guy's are pariah now, but even
if he is, even a broken clock could be right
twice a day. He said, you have all these people
who are running around talking about pro black this, pro
black that, and then buy European They got the Louis Vuitton,
(57:16):
the Gucci, they're buying, the Maybacks and the Mercedes and
the Audies, the BMW's and all. They're screaming about his
white supremacy, white supremacy, white supremacy, and improving that with
where they send their dollars. Ask an African designer whether
or not he can get anybody in the hood to
buy his wares.
Speaker 5 (57:34):
The answer is no.
Speaker 4 (57:36):
Karl Kanai, Fat Farm, Cross Colors, all of those companies
were owned by black folks. Where are they today? Put
you lucky if you can find them on eBay Sean
John Well, that may not be a good company, But nonetheless,
where are they?
Speaker 5 (57:56):
There's no where to be found.
Speaker 4 (57:57):
They don't even support their own Why they seem to
be fighting for what?
Speaker 5 (58:02):
For white acceptance? You're not a fly.
Speaker 4 (58:09):
Brother in the hood unless you're wearing everything that black
folks don't own or make.
Speaker 5 (58:17):
Damn, even Jordan's are half his.
Speaker 4 (58:21):
Let's just tell the truth, folks, Let's just tell the truth.
You don't have to like it. Let's just tell the truth.
Maybe if you just stop building these communities, they'll stop
building these communities. But as far as I'm concerned, hats
off to them. Not gonna tell me that I'm supposed
(58:45):
to be a pariah I'm supposed to be some sort
of evildoer and then not expect me to go out
and build my own y'all bucket.
Speaker 5 (58:55):
Let's take a break.
Speaker 4 (58:55):
We'll come back. More news, more views. We got trafficing,
weather coming up soon. It's recent radio on w see
I see news stock ten eighty.
Speaker 14 (59:01):
Hey, it's Judy Andbrosio giving a salute to the broadcaster
at one hundred.
Speaker 5 (59:06):
We're back rees on the radio.
Speaker 4 (59:08):
And I was thinking about this during the during the commercials,
about this this whole you know, white segregated place in
the Ozarks. Craig and the car thank you for your
your commentary. On Facebook, he wrote something that was so
creo I didn't even think about it. Isn't Chinatown racist?
Speaker 15 (59:28):
Then?
Speaker 4 (59:30):
Just isn't it it is? I can think of Chinatown
in New York, Chinatown in Boston, Flushing Queens, by the way,
if you've ever been there, I gotta tell you this
quick story.
Speaker 5 (59:41):
This I did this Jamie Montgomery. He was supposed to
meet me.
Speaker 4 (59:44):
There for a party at Flushing Queen's the last stop
on the seven train, and in Flushing, he had never
been there before.
Speaker 5 (59:51):
We're both Queen's boys. But he had never gotten off
the train.
Speaker 4 (59:53):
There, And I told him, Okay, when you get off
the train, make sure you go all the way to
the last portion.
Speaker 5 (59:58):
You're gonna walk forward.
Speaker 4 (59:59):
When you get off the train, walk all the way
to the front, go off the last staircase.
Speaker 5 (01:00:02):
I mean, you come upstairs.
Speaker 4 (01:00:02):
You're gonna be right on the main strip when you
get up there, stand in front of the Chinese restaurant.
And Jamie walks upstairs and gets outside and flushing and
every place is in Chinese restaurant. It's all everything's in
Chinese letters. But those of you know the town, and
he calls me up screaming on the phone. He goes,
everything is Chinese here. Yet nobody would ever say that
(01:00:27):
that was racist. Right, go to any one of their businesses.
You don't find any minorities working in there, you know,
I'm when I say minorities other than Chinese. No, And
you wouldn't know anyway. They could probably have Koreans or
Vietnamese working. You wouldn't be able to know, because again
it's hard to discern. That's without a doubt. Right, you
were just walking down, you would just think everybody, well,
(01:00:48):
you know, they were all Asian. Let's just say that,
but you wouldn't be You wouldn't bet an eye. You
would never complain about black folks not working in or
living in a Chinese neighborhood.
Speaker 5 (01:00:58):
You just wouldn't. Would totally exposes the nonsense.
Speaker 4 (01:01:03):
It's just the same reason why the LGBTQ community goes
after the Catholic Church and not the Muslim mosque, right
because some bigotry is acceptable. Catholic Church not allowed. Muslim Mosque.
Hedge all the way. Hedge, that's all it is. So
(01:01:30):
you can scream and holler about this, but you know
what the deal is, and it's all about extortion. At
the end of the day, it's always extortion. What can
you get out of it? Think about the opportunity I'm
gonna take. Take an opportunity here. Starbucks been around forever, right,
one of the biggest coffee a franchises in the country. Right.
(01:01:56):
Remember the Philadelphia issue with the two young black men
who refused to leave wanted to use the bathroom but
didn't purchase anything at the Starbucks were asked to leave.
Created a whole controversy because the police had to be
called and asked them to leave, which ended up having
Starbucks changed its policy where it unlocked all of its doors,
only to change them after all the homeless people started
(01:02:18):
using it and drugging up in there. Then they fired
one of its regional managers, only for her to sue
and actually win in court that she had been sort
of used as a scapegoat for that stupidity. Remember all
of that. What an opportunity for the African American community.
Shaquille O'Neill, Michael Jordan, any other billionaire in the black
(01:02:42):
community open up. I don't know, I don't know their
own version of Starbucks. They could have done it. Hey,
Starbucks doesn't want us in there. Let it know why
they used those poor kids as an extortion tactic. Make
Starbucks bend to our will. That's all it is. It's
(01:03:05):
all it ever is. These folks aren't serious about this nonsense.
Al sharp did when the cartoon came out in the
New York Post about the stimulus package by Barack Obama.
It's at the same time that the gorilla or ate
whatever it was, chimpanzee attacked the woman in Connecticut. Remember
that New York Post put an article what did Al
(01:03:27):
Sharpton do? He old protests outside of the New York
Post every day, all day until they brought them upstairs.
Speaker 5 (01:03:34):
New York Posts brought them upstairs, and what they do?
They said, Al, what can we do to get these
people to leave?
Speaker 6 (01:03:39):
Hey?
Speaker 4 (01:03:39):
Cut a check, and sure enough they did. It's all extortion.
They don't care about that. Be as racist as you want,
but have your check book ready. This is faux outrage.
It always is. It's an opportunity to take money or
to get money. But never once did any one of
these individuals decide, instead of being angry at the whites
(01:04:02):
only neighborhood, just create their black only neighborhood. No, why,
there's nothing in it. There's no leverage. There's no political leverage,
there's no moral leverage. There's no financial leverage at all.
(01:04:24):
That's all it is. Those By the way, if you
ever want to understand how these people operate, those are
your three pillars right there. Moral, political, financial, It's how
Al Sharpton does his business. It's the template. It's the
Al Sharpton rule. How can I bully you morally, politically
(01:04:44):
or financially. So again, I look at the say, same
deal with uh, what's her face? With Sidney Sweeney? With
the American Eagle Company. The objective is just so outraged
for what to extort American Eagle into an apology, to
(01:05:08):
then do an ad with some overweight black woman named Lizzo,
and then do the same ad saying that Lizzo has
good genes. No one's gonna believe that, but whatever, that's
if they if they buckled, that's exactly what you're going
to see, mark my words. But no one would have
(01:05:29):
actually gained from an other than Lizzo. And for them,
those who are protesting, they would have gotten. They've gotten
exactly the extortion they wanted, acquiescence. And I say, hell no,
you first desegregate the college dorms, now de segregate the graduations.
(01:05:57):
Now I don't want to hear another thing about a
black safe space. End it. You want to end this nonsense?
Now you first NDI, now knock it off. Everybody's equal,
get good, get to it. But no, they're doubling down.
(01:06:19):
So if now you're telling us that we have to
have multiculturalism, if you're telling us that we do have
to have this, that and the third, my response to
that is good, we'll double our efforts.
Speaker 5 (01:06:29):
Good luck on them.
Speaker 4 (01:06:30):
Hey, listen, if you got a white community out there
that's all white. God bless you. I don't care. You
want to know why, because I'm not begging to get in.
I don't see what you have is something that I
need to get I'm not dying for you to open
the door. It's not a nightclub. I don't want to
be down. That's the problem with these folks. They always
(01:06:51):
want to be down. They feel excluded some of that
that hurts their heart. They don't want us, so what
that's life. Everybody wants you. It's just a fabric of life.
Not everyone's going to You're not going to be everybody's
cup of tea. Cause my wife likes to say, they
don't all have good taste. But there's constant whining about you, like.
Speaker 5 (01:07:15):
They don't want to let us in. They're being segregated.
Let them.
Speaker 4 (01:07:22):
Maddio is not agreeing with me on this one. How
you doing, sir, Hello.
Speaker 11 (01:07:26):
Mister Hopkins. Well now you kind of.
Speaker 16 (01:07:30):
Brought me back, okay, down the level or two my friends,
because like I thought you were saying, there's nothing wrong
with it, there's no problem with segregation, and and you know,
I'm thinking, like no segregation in any form is bad.
Speaker 6 (01:07:46):
Oh, you know, all black colleges, they're all white communities.
Speaker 7 (01:07:51):
It's bad.
Speaker 16 (01:07:52):
But now I see the angle you're coming from. So
you brought me down about five levels.
Speaker 17 (01:07:58):
You know, I don't normally call you when I agree
with you, because I agree with you all the time,
you know, most of the time, so i'd be calling
all the time. I only call and I disagree with you,
And well you kind of brought me down.
Speaker 4 (01:08:12):
Well, well, I'm listen. What I'm saying is is that
under certain circumstances, segregation has to work, but only for
the betterment of what I would considered an endangered group.
Speaker 5 (01:08:28):
Hear me out Right.
Speaker 4 (01:08:29):
If you have a particular group of people at that
are in the threat of sort of dissipating or disappearing, right,
you have to stay within that because you're concerned with
your numbers. Right, This particular group is trying to expand
its lineage, so they're focusing on it. Now. A lot
of people can look at that and just go, well,
(01:08:50):
that seems racist. But in that case I would respond
to them by going, well, you know, we don't have
romans anymore, do we.
Speaker 17 (01:09:00):
Okay, let me push back a little bit, because you're
you're talking about like something like Chinatown or you know, Italian.
But the difference is when I just went to Chicago
a few months back, I stayed in Chinatown. They didn't
say get out, you're white.
Speaker 4 (01:09:20):
You know, it was.
Speaker 17 (01:09:23):
Yeah, I'm only like it was Chinatown and it was
you know, weared towards Americans.
Speaker 11 (01:09:30):
But it's not like I wasn't welcome there.
Speaker 5 (01:09:32):
Because I was white.
Speaker 11 (01:09:34):
Right, That's the difference.
Speaker 17 (01:09:36):
Like if you're saying white's only community or a black
only community or this only community, you're basically.
Speaker 11 (01:09:41):
Saying you're not welcome here if you don't look like us.
Speaker 5 (01:09:46):
Okay, well, let's let's take that. Let's take that on right,
Let's let's take that that on.
Speaker 4 (01:09:52):
Did you hear about this story in Cincinnati that happened.
Speaker 5 (01:09:55):
Over the weekend.
Speaker 11 (01:09:57):
I don't think so.
Speaker 5 (01:09:58):
Okay.
Speaker 4 (01:09:58):
So there's a huge story that very few in the
news media are covering. Let me read it out to you,
and I know that there's some people online who are
in the chatroom who know about this. Police say that
they're investigating a large fight that occurred on Fourth Street
on Friday night. Videos circulating on social media depicts a
man being punched by multiple people and falling to the
(01:10:18):
ground where he has repeatedly kicked.
Speaker 5 (01:10:21):
A woman is also seen being tact and knocked to
the ground.
Speaker 4 (01:10:24):
Authorities say that they were working to gather more information
about the incident.
Speaker 5 (01:10:30):
Now the story gives you no context.
Speaker 4 (01:10:34):
But watch the video and the man and the woman
are white, and the people who are punching them and
kicking them and knocking them to the ground unconscious are black.
These are white folks who are attacked by blacks, and
yet it is covered by no one. In fact, Fox
News finally covered it today. It happened on Friday, and
no one's covering. So no, when I see that, that
(01:10:56):
is a group of people who are saying that you,
as a white person, are not welcomed here. Now, if
those two individuals, after that beatdown, had decided to join
these folks in the Ozark to live there so that
they could never be accosted like that again, what would
you say to them?
Speaker 17 (01:11:14):
I would say to them, if a black person walked
into our community, we treated them like that.
Speaker 11 (01:11:22):
It's the same fucking thing. Oh, I'm sorry, sorry, I'm.
Speaker 5 (01:11:26):
All right, I got it. But no, I think we'll
I think we'll we'll delete it.
Speaker 4 (01:11:33):
That's all right, It's okay. I think you're obviously passionate
about it. I appreciate you. Let me take a break anyway,
it's that time. Thank you, Matt. Some people just get passionate.
We'll get to some more news and more views when
we returned. Stand by. It's Rees on the radio on
w t I C News Talk, Dannadys.
Speaker 1 (01:11:52):
On the radio. Ask your doctor if common sense is
right for you? Right for you news w.
Speaker 4 (01:11:59):
T I Yeah. I was asked in the chat room,
was is the uh oh, the black mob? Why did
they attack this white couple. I don't want to sound weird,
but what in God's name does that have to.
Speaker 5 (01:12:15):
Do do with it? Like, what does that have to
do do with it?
Speaker 4 (01:12:20):
They kicked him when he was on the ground, after
they knocked him unconscious. I'm still again in my head,
I'm saying to myself, you are you trying to find
a remedy for this in some way? Like am I
supposed to consider did they call people the N word?
Because then I can understand why they would knock them
(01:12:42):
out and then have a bunch of people kicked them
and almost killed them in the street. That makes sense?
Is that is that. Where are you trying to rationalize it?
Because don't don't get me wrong, I've heard that ridiculous
response before.
Speaker 5 (01:12:58):
I've heard that a thousand times for.
Speaker 4 (01:13:03):
So you just have to gonna have to ask yourself
a question and go, what warrants a man and a woman?
Speaker 5 (01:13:09):
Hell, a woman.
Speaker 4 (01:13:12):
Being beaten, unconscious, unconscious on the floor, on the ground.
Speaker 5 (01:13:16):
What warrant is?
Speaker 4 (01:13:18):
Huh? Yeah, exactly? A mob of people, folks? Never makes
sense to me. Anyway, Let's go to my man root dad.
What's going on?
Speaker 11 (01:13:27):
Sir?
Speaker 6 (01:13:28):
Hey, I tried to call Friday, but you were like
interviewing someone. Oh yeah, might have been your wife.
Speaker 5 (01:13:36):
What's going on? Oh no, I did see your call.
Speaker 4 (01:13:39):
Yeah, my bad?
Speaker 5 (01:13:40):
What's going on?
Speaker 17 (01:13:42):
So?
Speaker 6 (01:13:42):
Before I get into this, I wanted to ask you
this because you brought up your mom, and I've got
the reference to your mother. But in past references she
called you a two story house without uh.
Speaker 5 (01:13:55):
With outstairs right, yeah, because of my height.
Speaker 6 (01:13:58):
So I just want to say she's very insightful and intelligent.
I don't know how she treated you, what you think
of her as a mother, Okay, But the question coming
out of the whole thing was was your elders conservative Republican, Like,
how did you become?
Speaker 7 (01:14:17):
Oh?
Speaker 5 (01:14:17):
Yeah, they were.
Speaker 4 (01:14:18):
First of all, everybody in my family was was a Democrat,
with the exception of my grandfather Augusta, who always kept
his politics private.
Speaker 6 (01:14:26):
So how'd you become a Republican?
Speaker 5 (01:14:29):
Third grade teacher?
Speaker 6 (01:14:33):
Yeah, he was a personal question. I was curious about it, No,
he was, I was.
Speaker 5 (01:14:38):
I watched.
Speaker 4 (01:14:38):
I watched a couple of speeches by Ronald Reagan, and
the one speech that blew my mind was Rendezvous with Destiny.
Speaker 5 (01:14:45):
It's one he told over and over again.
Speaker 4 (01:14:47):
And I asked my third grade teacher, who was always
doing quizzes inside the classroom that involved politics and pop culture.
I asked him. I said, Hey, what's this guy Ronald
Reagan all about?
Speaker 5 (01:14:59):
And he looked at me.
Speaker 4 (01:15:00):
He grabbed me over to the side and he goes,
who sent you? Which, again, in the public school system,
somebody talking about conservatism was unheard of, And so he
asked me, like, why am I asking? And I told him,
and then he started talking to me about conservatism and
about Republicans, and I was interested.
Speaker 5 (01:15:15):
I was hooked ever since.
Speaker 6 (01:15:17):
So I got two things, the Cincinnati thing and the
overall topic you know.
Speaker 5 (01:15:24):
What, then hold on for me.
Speaker 4 (01:15:25):
You know what, hold on for me because I'll get
to in a seconds. I got to go to a heartbreak,
but I will hold you over. Let's get to weather
in Traffic, our first check of weather in Traffic with
Jason Canarina and Mark Christopher's back. He's in the bps
A Traffic Center. Welcome back, sir.
Speaker 1 (01:15:37):
It's on the radio, brind don't say we didn't mourn
you on News Talk ten eighty w T. I see.
Speaker 4 (01:15:46):
We'll get back to Rooney in a second, but I
gotta do this and congratulating so our between rounds winner
David B of Don't Drink the Waterberry. He is our
(01:16:07):
winner of a dozen bagels a month for six months
courtesy between rounds the Bagel Bakery and Sandwich Cafe located
in South Windsor, Vernon and Manchester. That's it, uh, If
you want to win, if you'd like an opportunity to win,
you gotta go to Resullerradio dot com. That's our E
E S E on the radio dot com in order
(01:16:28):
to enter. Get all of your name, your info, your
telephone number, your birthday. Get that in there in a
little fill out form. Please do not forget those things.
You must not live outside of Connecticut, and you must
not have won within the last six months of today
in order to participate, if not win again, that's Resullerradio
dot com. That's r E E s E on the
(01:16:50):
radio dot com. So you can participate and win between
rounds the dozen bagels a month for six months.
Speaker 5 (01:16:58):
We'll get into we'll get back to Rudy in a bit. Uh.
Speaker 4 (01:17:03):
But yeah, this uh, this story about the whites only,
and of course the attack on the white couple in Cincinnati,
and of course this now conversation about Sydney Sweeney and
her jeans is bringing race back into the fall. All
of this is gonna fall flat, folks. Uh, but you
know what, It's been a long time since they've had
something racial to be upset about. Now they have it.
(01:17:24):
Now they have it. But this one's gonna oh, this
is this is all this stuff is weak sauce. Well,
let's get back to some weather in traffic while everybody's
starting to head home. Jason Katine is going to tell
you how hot it is. It is hot, and Mark
Christopher's going to tell you whether or not you're going
to bake in your car in the traffic in the
BPS traffic center. Hey, Mark, who's not there yet? Oh,
(01:17:48):
he's about to be there. I hope he's not bacon
in the car? Mark?
Speaker 18 (01:17:55):
You there.
Speaker 5 (01:17:56):
We'll give him a second, I can.
Speaker 12 (01:18:00):
I don't know.
Speaker 4 (01:18:02):
Maybe maybe I had to run real quick and grab
some water because of all of the scorching heat out there.
Speaker 5 (01:18:09):
That's It's okay.
Speaker 4 (01:18:11):
Usually he just jumps in to say, hey, I'm here,
But it's not now. Maybe he's maybe he's not watching
a movie. He could be you're doing that. He doesn't
usually doesn't do that.
Speaker 12 (01:18:21):
But maybe bathroom break mate.
Speaker 5 (01:18:23):
That's possible.
Speaker 1 (01:18:23):
I'm here, President of the Chris Murphy Fanclub. Reese on
the radio on News Talk ten ad w T I C.
Speaker 5 (01:18:31):
I s let's go back to the phones. I promise
Rudie we bring him back. What's going on?
Speaker 4 (01:18:35):
Shirt?
Speaker 5 (01:18:35):
What was the last thing you wanted to ask?
Speaker 6 (01:18:37):
So I'm going to try to combine these two things.
I thought about it because.
Speaker 4 (01:18:43):
Sir, yep, okay, yeah, yeah, talks that you thought about them?
What were the two things?
Speaker 6 (01:18:49):
While you get one on the break, I think I
could dance it perfectly to combine white only and the
Cincinnati thing. Okay, and and just a premise. You've lived
in New England and New York, and New York's very
similar to Chicago. I grew up in Chicago, spent time
in New England. Now I'm in Florida. Chicago's very diverse,
(01:19:11):
biracial neighborhood. Sure, you can date whoever you want. And
then I had my experience in New England, which I'll
get into that relates to white only. And now I'm
in Florida, and everyone thinks to South as racist, but
I'm in a redneck, Republican white city and county. But
my neighborhoods are diverse. So you've got two types of
(01:19:33):
black people mainly, and you've got multiple types of white people. Okay,
what I mean by that is you got the people
in Cincinnati stabbing the white people.
Speaker 4 (01:19:46):
Okay, I'm trying to maybe I'm missing something, but go ahead,
I apologize.
Speaker 5 (01:19:50):
You need to explain further.
Speaker 6 (01:19:52):
That's the type of black person that Chris Rock tried
to describe. And everyonce you.
Speaker 5 (01:19:56):
Go oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah, Okay, No.
Speaker 6 (01:19:59):
We're where he goes. Where he goes. You haven't go
to jail. You're not supposed to go to jail. Right,
what do you mean you pay child support? You're supposed
to pay child so right right, those are the people
that don't live up to their responsibilities. And then I'll
take the second greatest black man since Chris Rock, Martin
(01:20:22):
Luther King.
Speaker 5 (01:20:23):
You're supposed to live by merit.
Speaker 6 (01:20:25):
You're supposed to be lived by merit and content. And
those are people like you who get on the radio
every day, try to give one hundred percent, try to
be professional. Has nothing to do with your race, nothing.
You want to do the best job you can. I
have a woman where I live named Zelda. She is
the CFO of the largest credit union in Florida, the
(01:20:49):
Templayers credit Union in the country. And she's a black woman,
and she's one of the smartest people ever met. And
she blows the average white woman professional out of the
water with her class and intelligence. So those are those people.
And then I can take my New England experience, which
you experienced because you are at w r K. O. Right, yeah,
(01:21:12):
So I dealt with Dorchester and Southee. Oh yeah, Irish
Catholic Democrats that would not let black people in. It
was it was never publicly announced that it's an all
white inclusive neighborhood. But it was the Italians in North
End did the same thing. They still do it.
Speaker 5 (01:21:33):
Oh yeah, it's still it's still very prominent.
Speaker 6 (01:21:37):
Right g Reece. If if you married Beyonce and moved
to Simsbury right now, you'd be the black family in
the neighborhood. It still exists in New England. It does
not exist in the majority of the rest.
Speaker 4 (01:21:50):
Wait an, hold on, there's a there's a deeper context
that you I think you're saying, but but.
Speaker 6 (01:21:55):
Not there's a real deep context.
Speaker 4 (01:21:57):
Well, hold on because you want to go because I
think what you're saying is is something that I've said
for a lot of years, back in the days, and
this is off air, but I think you're well, I
think I've kind of said it here on the air
that in the unlikeliest of places in the Northeast that
are supposed to be incredibly liberal, there's more of the
(01:22:21):
non inclusive neighborhoods like Southly, Like Massachusetts is an overwhelmingly
Democrat state, but they have some of the biggest presidents.
Speaker 6 (01:22:34):
Yes, and there's a no hate, no home here that
means they want to build housing projects in Middlefield and
Middletown to get black people in the bag people houses,
but don't do it in my neighborhood.
Speaker 4 (01:22:45):
Exactly, exactly, No, No, you'll make you make it the
exact point I'm making that.
Speaker 6 (01:22:50):
That is why I keep saying that there's like multiple
levels of white people with their racism, and but it's
so predominantly in the Northeast.
Speaker 5 (01:22:59):
Yes, with one liberal, yes.
Speaker 6 (01:23:01):
And often Catholics.
Speaker 4 (01:23:04):
You know what's crazy? I said, that was the first
time of my life I had ever experienced. I had
been to the South, and then I went to Buffalo,
New York in the nineteen nineties, late eighties, early nineties,
and I was going, I've never been treated like this
in the South that everyone told me I was supposed
to be fearful of Mississippi, Alabama. I get to Buffalo,
(01:23:25):
New York and people have actually had said some of
the most offensive things about my race that I couldn't
even imagine. And I'm going way, but this is.
Speaker 6 (01:23:34):
New York, Reece. So the last two things, like you
in the Northeast, Yeah, you have a white wife.
Speaker 4 (01:23:43):
Right, No, my wife's Mexican, but I've been married often white.
Speaker 6 (01:23:48):
And your son's mother is white, right, Yes, so your
biracial son, your ex wife is white. In Boston, you'd
be homeless because the blacks don't want you because you're Carlton,
and the whites don't want you because of your uncle Tom,
because they're all racist democrats. And the South, nobody would
(01:24:08):
care where I live.
Speaker 5 (01:24:09):
Oh, it's over. I couldn't believe it when I went
to Memphis.
Speaker 4 (01:24:12):
I went to Memphis, and I had seen a concentration
of of what do you call it, of mixed interracial
relationships in Memphis in nineteen ninety six that I couldn't
even find or was frowned upon in the Northeast.
Speaker 5 (01:24:28):
It was incredible.
Speaker 6 (01:24:29):
So me Paulk County, Florida, sits thirty two miles from
downtown Tampa and forty eight miles from Disneyland. It votes
sixty eight percent Republican. It's about sixty eight percent white. Wow,
what do you think we see more often a black
woman with a white husband or a white woman.
Speaker 5 (01:24:49):
With a black husband, probably the latter.
Speaker 6 (01:24:53):
No, we see more black women with white husbands.
Speaker 4 (01:24:56):
Oh really? Oh wow about f one? Damn.
Speaker 5 (01:25:02):
Okay, it's incredible, But you know what it's.
Speaker 6 (01:25:05):
There's such a strong black middle class in central Florida.
I'm not saying this exists in Miami or Jacksonville. Sure,
but when you get out to like the middle class
areas you I mean, the population is eighteen percent black
hair And if you get out of the urban inner cities,
the black population that's eighteen percent is like college educated
(01:25:28):
professional like Zelda that I talked about.
Speaker 5 (01:25:32):
It's interesting.
Speaker 6 (01:25:33):
It's a different world. Yeah, and the neighborhoods aren't segregated.
I mean I lived in Middlefield, Connecticut. I remember I
ran the census numbers in twenty eighteen. There was like
five black people, three Asian people, and two Hispanics and
a town of twenty five hundred people. Like, I mean,
that's what Connecticut is.
Speaker 4 (01:25:53):
Well, it's like, well, actually, the numbers of the numbers
have changed dramatically in the last twenty years. There was
a poll, there was an actual data has just came
out recently with those numbers. Now, if you were to
look at them, you would even recognize some of these
towns we're talking about.
Speaker 6 (01:26:06):
Number The bottom line is the silent white inclusiveness. Yes,
and it's mainly in the northeast in New York, New England.
Speaker 4 (01:26:15):
You one percent, right, thank you, Rudy. Let me grab
some others here. Thanks boss. Let's go to Aaron and
Goshen real quick.
Speaker 6 (01:26:21):
Hey Aaron, So I'll just piggyback on that a little bit.
Speaker 19 (01:26:26):
He kind of was making some points, so that was
gonna make Yeah. I like to call them the closet
racist of New England.
Speaker 6 (01:26:32):
There's plenty of them. It's like, oh, not in my neighborhood,
prime example.
Speaker 19 (01:26:36):
And I will say this, Democrats are the most racist
people in the face of the planet. Way more like
they call Republicans racists, not even close. Democrats put themselves
on a pedestal and look down on the African American
community as being unable to do normal tasks that they
can do easily, like, oh, they can't get an idea
(01:26:56):
to vote. That's racism because they're not smart. Let's help
them out. Let's do this to equalize the playing field,
because they're not equal to us. It's the most disgusting
thing ever. And they get away with it, where when
you're a Republican you're like.
Speaker 6 (01:27:11):
All right, you got to be equal. You're equal.
Speaker 20 (01:27:14):
There you go, Well, you have to remember that, you
have to remember that the preface of all of that
Aaron is the compassion right, The compassion shields the bigotry.
Speaker 5 (01:27:26):
That's and that's exactly how it works.
Speaker 4 (01:27:28):
It's sortos like, you know, like putting your right hand
in front of your left hand and the right and
the right hand that you're showing shows compassion while your
bigotry sits in the background, because all you're saying to
yourself is like, look, I'm not saying that you're less
than us. I'm just saying that you don't have the
same opportunities as us. That's why you need the help.
And then when you hear them's like, yeah, we need help,
(01:27:51):
and then you keep repeating that mantra over and over again.
After a while, people start becoming very sycophantic to that ideal.
I've talked to more people in my lifetime who are
black who have repeated the same nonsense that's promoted by this.
It was like, well, you know, we don't have so
many opportunities. I was like, who told you that? I'm going,
well you don't. I'm like, how do you know those things?
(01:28:12):
And We're going, well, that's just that's just commonplace. And
I'm like, no, it's not commonplace. That's what you were
led to believe. You were indoctrinated to believe that you
are in this position. And I try to put but
you can't push back on it because if you push
back on it, you are less compassionate. And that's the
overarching theme to all of that that you're talking about,
(01:28:32):
is that having a difference of opinion in that mantra
means you are you're not compassionate to their woes.
Speaker 19 (01:28:39):
And go against them and then see what happens.
Speaker 5 (01:28:42):
Yeah, indeed, exactly, if you.
Speaker 19 (01:28:44):
If you know, if you get off the reservation, if
you get off the plantation and start thank you for yourself,
then see how they treat you. Oh, exactly, then you're
it's they don't even know how to handle it.
Speaker 5 (01:28:53):
I've never heard the one thing I would say to
the guys, I'm sorry.
Speaker 19 (01:28:57):
The overwhelming issue with ways say Black America in our
country right now is that we have a cultural disconnect. Yes, essentially,
you were running fatherless household and promoting that. We promote
music that's all about shoot them up, sleep with as
many women as you can, deal as many drugs as
(01:29:18):
you can, make the money while you can, and that's promoted,
and that's that's that's put on a pedestal.
Speaker 4 (01:29:24):
Yeah, well, because everything else.
Speaker 19 (01:29:26):
Is being square, this criminal mentality.
Speaker 4 (01:29:29):
Yeah, well that's because you have to think about it
on this side Aeron. It's like everything else counter to
that as being a square. I've made this argument over
and over again. It's like, it's incredible that you cannot
give away the idea of education to a community without
it being smeared. Is trying to be white? Right?
Speaker 5 (01:29:49):
A matter of speech.
Speaker 4 (01:29:50):
Right, I've got more people to tell me that my
my syntax is against what my skin color is, which
then makes me abnormal and a square. Right, so knows,
in essence to ingratiate myself in the crowd, I have
to either sound ignorant or have no grasp of the
English language, which makes no sense to me when you're
saying to me that in order for to be I guess,
(01:30:11):
authentic in the black community, I have to diminish myself
to its base or it's it's uh, it's absolute minuscule levels.
And it's that.
Speaker 19 (01:30:25):
That's been designed since the seventies, Like that's that's been
commonplace exactly war on poverty started. That's been the design
to keep people oppressed and keep them in that mentality
where they're a victim. That victimhood mentality keeps them.
Speaker 5 (01:30:39):
Where they're at. Exactly.
Speaker 6 (01:30:41):
Once people figure.
Speaker 19 (01:30:41):
That out, like you have, you can then step away
from it and you can win.
Speaker 4 (01:30:45):
Oh yeah, but then and you know what control And
I always say that that's you know, a key part
of this eron and thank you for going man, I
appreciate you. A key part of all of this is
what I just said about the envy, right, So if
you step out of that mindset, you're a seller, right.
(01:31:07):
And if you stay in that mindset, then you're authentic.
Because it's not for you to step away and do
for yourself. It's not for you to step away and
actually do something that is productive in your own life,
get an education, or get a career, or join some
particular whatever the case may be.
Speaker 5 (01:31:26):
That's not acceptable.
Speaker 4 (01:31:29):
But to sit and wallow in a constant victimhood, To
sit and wallow and that constant you know, we're always
put down, or we're always going to be poor, or
we're always going to be a left behind and the
constant theme of screaming at those who do have and
being a have, not to scream at the halves. That
is what's considered authentic doing for yourself. On the other hand,
(01:31:52):
that's a sellout mentality. I've told people this, and I've
told people in the black community over and over again,
and I know they listen to this program. Is that
this idea that it's no noble to be poor, noble
to be uneducated, noble, or authentic to be a victim
(01:32:14):
is only going to do you what it does for you.
Speaker 5 (01:32:16):
Today, constant frustration.
Speaker 4 (01:32:20):
And if you think that you're gonna get me to
join your side by you know, the ridiculed and all that,
it's not save it. I'm not jealous of anybody. I'm
not I'm not jealous of what anybody else has. I
don'tly care about what I have and I want more.
We gotta take a break. We'll come back.
Speaker 5 (01:32:38):
More news, more views.
Speaker 4 (01:32:39):
Uh, and I gotta announce in the guest who's gonna
be on the program tomorrow. Another African American Republican who's
running in the fifth district. We'll talk about him in
a bit when we get back, So stick stick around.
Speaker 5 (01:32:50):
It's more news, more views.
Speaker 4 (01:32:52):
It's oh sorry, we gotta go to weather in Traffic
with Jason Katarina and Mark Christophers in the BPS traffic center,
and I think he's back now.
Speaker 9 (01:33:00):
Is good to go, right, Mark, that's correct.
Speaker 7 (01:33:04):
Thank you very much.
Speaker 5 (01:33:05):
Say Race on the.
Speaker 1 (01:33:08):
Radio is on w T I see news.
Speaker 4 (01:33:12):
Getting back to your phone calls in a little bit.
Stand by for that. Eighteen zero five to two two
w T I see eight and zero five two two
nine eight four two. We got plenty of other news
and views to get into, especially this, uh, these Hardford
resistance that's going on on the thirty first. Apparently there
(01:33:34):
is happening at the Riverside Park pedestrian bridge.
Speaker 5 (01:33:38):
Folks, be careful at these things.
Speaker 4 (01:33:41):
If if this gets a bunch of people on that bridge,
please be careful. I would never get with a bunch
of people to protests standing on a bridge, just wouldn't.
Speaker 5 (01:33:51):
I just wouldn't.
Speaker 4 (01:33:51):
Okay, construction purposes, Please please be careful if you're thinking
about going to this thing. Just really, I'm just saying,
I'm already afraid of heights. I would never ever do it. Uh,
just please be careful if you go in there. And
again that I'm saying that to even liberals who want
to fight against the regime. Please be careful, all right,
(01:34:15):
you get too much weight on that thing, you know,
please be careful. Also, tomorrow at four o'clock, we're gonna
speak to community leader, youth mentor, and lifelong Connecticut resident.
That's how he told me to introduce him. Jonathan Debauros
is gonna be on the program. He's running to represent
the fifth district against Joanna Hayes. So if you want
(01:34:38):
to check that out, please do it. Roughly about it.
We're gonna see if we can talk to him for
about an hour tomorrow.
Speaker 5 (01:34:45):
A but what he's doing.
Speaker 4 (01:34:46):
He just came back from the White House not too
long ago. We'll talk about his visit there as well.
So he's gonna be joining us. A lot of people
were telling me, he's like, yo, you need to get
this guy on, So I reached out. Soon's I got
word and we talked for a little bit. So he'll
be on the program tomorrow. We'll all get to know
him and see if we can help this guy out.
So again, that is Jonathan Debarrows. He's going to be
(01:35:08):
on the program tomorrow at four o'clock. Also coming up,
there is this article about oh.
Speaker 5 (01:35:17):
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:35:18):
It's the Wall Street Journal poll numbers. There's some very
very interesting things that Chris Matthews said that I played
earlier in the headlines, but there are some other polling
data that needs to be discussed as well, so we'll
get into that and so much more. Mom Donnie's got
some controversy going on about this wedding event that happened
(01:35:39):
in Uganda, which just I actually believe this from the
bottom of my heart. It may be the momentum is
starting to shift against Mom Donnie. This distance between the
primary and the election in November, that may be too
(01:36:00):
much time for Mom Donnie to actually stay in the lead.
We'll talk about that as well when we return, So
stand by your phone.
Speaker 5 (01:36:10):
Calls, of course, are next on.
Speaker 4 (01:36:13):
Res on the radio, Let's get some weather in traffic
again with Jason Catarinas and Mark Christopher's in the BPS
traffic center.
Speaker 5 (01:36:20):
Hey Mark, the.
Speaker 1 (01:36:20):
Self proclaimed love child of Rush Limba.
Speaker 6 (01:36:23):
Running a strange program.
Speaker 1 (01:36:25):
You already sell the radio on News Talk tennady WT.
Speaker 4 (01:36:29):
I see all right, let's go through the motions shere.
Anybody in every read body has got to comment. Let's
go to why Mike in Florida? What's going on?
Speaker 21 (01:36:37):
Sir hey Man?
Speaker 8 (01:36:39):
So this Sydney Sweeney controversy has me kind of befuddled.
Are these people trying to put ten toes on the
ground and tell me that she doesn't have good genes?
Speaker 4 (01:36:51):
Which again even Roland said it earlier. It's like she's
got good genes. You can't deny it. I mean, whether
you don't understand the double entendre or not. She's a
beautiful woman. I mean good grief.
Speaker 8 (01:37:05):
Like we all know there's some people who hit the
genetic lottery. We see them. I mean, Chris Himsworth.
Speaker 4 (01:37:11):
Exists, Yeah, exactly. I don't think, like I said, I
think that this was one of those things where they
thought they had their bud light moment, right. This is
just sort of like an antithesis of the Dylan mulvaney
thing that protesters are trying to get American Eagle to face.
Speaker 5 (01:37:33):
Some sort of backlash.
Speaker 4 (01:37:34):
But I was like, look, they're dealing with an audience
based American Eagle is for that matter, is dealing with
an audience base that will only further promote it because
of Sidney Sweetey. Now guys will be buying those jeans
for their girlfriends, and girls will be running to buy
the jeans, which will only make them a powerhouse.
Speaker 5 (01:37:51):
After the fact, bud Light suffered.
Speaker 4 (01:37:54):
Targets suffered because they were they were they were catering
to a base that doesn't purchase their products.
Speaker 8 (01:38:03):
Well, and it's a really smart campaign because the genes
they chose to put her in were kind of loose,
like boyfriend jeans. Yes, so the average woman sees that,
and she's not intimidated by Sidney Sweeney's perfect peach.
Speaker 4 (01:38:16):
Right, which I thought was interesting that they didn't go
the usual Beyonce or other gene routes where they they
sort of they promote.
Speaker 5 (01:38:27):
The rear end.
Speaker 4 (01:38:28):
They didn't do that. I was like, Oh, she's wearing
kind of loose fitting jeans. I was like, but it's
still it's tasteful and attractive.
Speaker 8 (01:38:35):
And another thing about that community that wants to have
like all white people.
Speaker 7 (01:38:39):
Or whatever in rural Ozark's Missouri.
Speaker 8 (01:38:42):
Yes, well, hey, you know, I'm still waiting for someone
to show me an example and don't piss anybody off,
but a place that got better the more black folk
moves in.
Speaker 5 (01:38:53):
I'm not gonna lie.
Speaker 4 (01:38:54):
No, no, I can't even say, because if I say
Bill Clinton go into Harlem, it did did improve Harlem.
Speaker 8 (01:39:00):
I'm not I gave, I gave my AI that question
this weekend. I was like, hey, can you find me
a place that you know? The crime went down and
GENP went up when it shifted from majority white from
Jordy black, and AI came back and said, I got
nothing for you son.
Speaker 4 (01:39:18):
Yours.
Speaker 5 (01:39:18):
Your AI would have exactly said that, Thank you, Mike.
Speaker 4 (01:39:21):
I you sir, you got it. Let's go to uh
Jim's in Waterbury. How are you Jim good? How are
you pretty good? What do you got?
Speaker 11 (01:39:32):
Yeah?
Speaker 22 (01:39:32):
I got I don't know if you're aware of it.
But there's this one hundred year old Hewogima veteran Don
Gray's okay. He just cut a big record deal in Nashville.
The man fought. He was in the third wave on
I Regima and he was on the flame Thrower and
they usually had a very short life expectancy. Wow, but
(01:39:52):
he's got all his faculties mentally and physically, and he
remembers all us experience. And he wrote a record with
another fellow from Nashville, and Lee Greenwood flew him in
from Michigan and they sang it to him on his
hundredth birthday.
Speaker 5 (01:40:09):
What's the name of What's the name of the artist?
Speaker 4 (01:40:11):
Again?
Speaker 22 (01:40:13):
Well, the veteran's name is Don Graves, and Lee Greenwood sings.
They flew him from Michigan to sing the song to
him on his hundredth birthday. But because all of his experience,
and he promised God that if he got out of there,
he'd serve him. Now, it took a few years till
he got his act together, but he became a minister
(01:40:34):
and served thirty six years on the pulpit. But it's
a really great story because and he was saying, after
the battle was over all the ships in the harbor
were ringing bells, blowing, a hordes, cheering. But he tells
his whole the whole history of when he was on
he regima.
Speaker 4 (01:40:55):
I'm looking at it now. Is it sands of your regima?
Speaker 22 (01:41:00):
No, it's called shand do Evil Jamas, the name of
the song.
Speaker 5 (01:41:04):
Okay, well, okay, I've got I think I've I.
Speaker 22 (01:41:06):
Haven't on your phone.
Speaker 18 (01:41:07):
Just look the better literally literally.
Speaker 4 (01:41:10):
Have it right in front of me. It was the
first thing that came up when I put when I
popped in his name. Thank you, Jim will actually check
it out.
Speaker 22 (01:41:17):
Yeah, maybe you can. You can get them on a
show nose.
Speaker 5 (01:41:20):
Why not? I appreciate you, sir.
Speaker 22 (01:41:22):
That'd be good.
Speaker 5 (01:41:23):
Thank you, Thank you you too.
Speaker 4 (01:41:25):
Let's go to Tommy Thomas and Thomason.
Speaker 5 (01:41:27):
How are you sir?
Speaker 6 (01:41:29):
Hey, I'm well thanks.
Speaker 18 (01:41:30):
Yeah. I believe those uh, those guys with the flamethrowers
were targeted. They had like a twelve or twenty minute
life expected. Way wow, because the because the enemy, you know,
one shot to those tanks.
Speaker 5 (01:41:44):
And they its just exploded.
Speaker 18 (01:41:47):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, so rees, I got a I'm glad
you're having that guy for the fifth in, but just
have a question. I'm almost positive you're going to answer.
You know the answer. I just found out about this
guy when I saw a YouTube, uh video of him.
Do you know who the white James Brown was?
Speaker 22 (01:42:09):
Oh?
Speaker 18 (01:42:10):
No, no, wait, have you ever heard of Wayne Cochrane?
Speaker 5 (01:42:14):
Okay, he was.
Speaker 18 (01:42:16):
In the group the CC Riders. He Uh, I saw
that video. He's saying, uh the high um shuffle, and
I swear to god REEF, I swear Michael Jackson had
to be influenced by this guy because he like did
a moonwalk on one foot. It was it was insane.
(01:42:37):
And he's saying, just like James Brown, they called him,
I guess the white the white Godfather or the white
James Brown.
Speaker 4 (01:42:44):
I'm looking at him up now.
Speaker 5 (01:42:46):
He is literally sitting in front of me.
Speaker 18 (01:42:49):
Are you looking at that big.
Speaker 6 (01:42:53):
Hair?
Speaker 4 (01:42:54):
Dude? My goodness, this guy is almost looks like a character,
like like an over exaggerated white version of James Brown.
Now I have to watch.
Speaker 6 (01:43:06):
This, yeah or be he looks like the beams and hair.
Speaker 4 (01:43:10):
Yes, yes, yes, yes, but listen to this song.
Speaker 18 (01:43:14):
He's a good singer. I never heard of him.
Speaker 4 (01:43:16):
I'm gonna check him out now, I promise I'll do
that during the commercial breaks. Thank you boss.
Speaker 18 (01:43:21):
Yeah, hey, yes, the guy for the fifth I I
just heard a minute of him on another show once
a week or so ago. He's got oh if you
ever heard of it. He's got a lot of ideas
just like you reath he does.
Speaker 4 (01:43:36):
I've literally I've gone. I've gone over everything that the
guy's ever produced, like in the last day or so,
and I.
Speaker 18 (01:43:44):
Was like, Wow, this is Reef running for a hey,
speaking of the fifth District, are you thinking it all?
Maybe moving into the fifth district.
Speaker 4 (01:43:55):
Area I had thought of that. I had Avon was
one of the places that were on the.
Speaker 18 (01:44:01):
Uh yeah, go Nord go Torrington and North You want
Avon or Canton.
Speaker 9 (01:44:08):
Okay, go Torrington and North.
Speaker 4 (01:44:10):
I will definitely, I will definitely consider some places it's
not gonna happen immediately, like I'm gonna stay temporarily immediately
in Farmington, in the Farmington region, and then I'm gonna
I'm gonna start expanding into where I'm gonna live.
Speaker 5 (01:44:24):
Good, good, I will definitely take care of it.
Speaker 4 (01:44:27):
Thank you, Tom. Let's go one more. I'm gonna take
let's take Dan calling in Connecticut.
Speaker 5 (01:44:32):
How are you Dan?
Speaker 7 (01:44:34):
Good? How you doing today?
Speaker 4 (01:44:35):
What's up?
Speaker 6 (01:44:36):
Sir?
Speaker 7 (01:44:37):
Hey? I just want you what are these things to do?
A show? I want you to look back and see
where the insanity of the transgender movement kind of started.
And in my opinion, I think it started with Rachel
Dolozol when the black community didn't completely come out and
riot against her for being a white Irish girl who
(01:45:00):
thought she was black.
Speaker 4 (01:45:02):
Okay, you bring up, you bring up a very very
good point in our history.
Speaker 7 (01:45:09):
It kept going where the trans everything community from that.
I think that was the nexus of she was trans
black and nobody crazy.
Speaker 4 (01:45:16):
Let me, let me, let me explain to you why
you're you're you're kind of you're pulling the right thread
on this thing that I would always say that was
what we call the uh the test launch.
Speaker 5 (01:45:30):
Of of being trans anything.
Speaker 4 (01:45:34):
And what was really really crazy about it was this
idea that the reason why Rachel Dolosol could not be
admonished because she started to, you mean, bring a very
good point. When it was revealed that Rachel Dolozol was
indeed white, there were some outlets like Ebony and what
(01:45:54):
do you call it? What was the other Essence magazine?
These black magazines were actually doing negative articles about her.
But then something switched and someone started suggesting that Rachel
Dolezol's let's say, want and need or want to need
(01:46:16):
to be identified as black was a positive thing. And
then the scrutiny sort of laid off, right, It's sort
of like a little bit of it died out. Then
she was universally accepted everywhere in black communities. And I
think that you're on the right track because Sean Luther King,
(01:46:38):
which that's why I called him. His name is Sean King,
but Sean Luther King, who wrote for the New York
Daily News, he was the other one that turned out
that he was identifying as black. And these were good
things that white folks who had grown up white were
identifying with African Americans, and this was a net positive
for African Americans sort of, you know, screaming their grievance
(01:46:59):
that they had white sympathizers, which goes right back into
my that's what every movement needs, is the antithesis to
show sympathy, and then you protect them so they get
that protection. But I think you're on the right track
that that may be the beginning. But what really happened
with the transgender movement and why it's there. I'm sure
(01:47:20):
that that played a role, but I think there was
something bigger in all of that as to why it
was a lovely and I'm not sure exactly if it's
universally accepted for that reason, but I don't know. I
just think that there's a little bit of that. But
I think Rachel Dolozol was definitely a nexus.
Speaker 7 (01:47:37):
Yeah, and the new this new promotional it's in the
in her genes. Yeah, I think that that should be
taken seriously. It should be right, it's in your genes, right,
that's where you go to the bathroom. You got it,
You go there, the other you go there.
Speaker 4 (01:47:53):
That's a good point.
Speaker 5 (01:47:55):
That is a great point.
Speaker 22 (01:47:57):
Dan.
Speaker 4 (01:47:57):
It is in your genes, whether you male or female,
it's in your genes that.
Speaker 7 (01:48:03):
Maybe that's what they're trying to get at.
Speaker 4 (01:48:05):
Maybe, yeah, maybe that's what they're trying they're trying to
push back on.
Speaker 5 (01:48:08):
Is a good point.
Speaker 7 (01:48:10):
Yeah, because in both in both sets of your genes,
you have you know, you have xxxy chromosome, that's right,
and you have something put in your genes that says
you're male or female. So maybe somebody's doing a subliminal
little thing there to try to get people to wake
up a little bit.
Speaker 4 (01:48:26):
Good point. Thank you that much appreciated that you got it.
Speaker 5 (01:48:30):
That's a really really good angle. I actually like that.
Speaker 4 (01:48:33):
Yeah, But like I said, that's this is one of
those things where you never know what you're getting into
until you've gotten you get into it. So you get
one guy who goes viral or one girl who goes
viral on protesting this thing, and then it gets all
the attention that sort of certifies what you believe. Right,
(01:48:55):
Everyone's like, yeah, you're right, absolutely, I'm gonna share this
with my friends, and it grows and grows and grows
and grows and grows and the intended audience they all
get it. So then the news media they look at
it and they go, hey, this subject is starting to
see a swell. Let's promote it on our outlets. So
(01:49:16):
they start, and then the other side sees it, and
then they go, hey, who are they talking about Sidney Sweeney?
Speaker 5 (01:49:24):
I like that girl.
Speaker 4 (01:49:26):
Oh what's this controversy? Oh they have a problem with it. Okay,
that's how listen. That's how the Chick fil A thing started.
That's how it started. They turn around and said, you
know what, We're gonna turn this into a protest. And
then turn around people said protesting Chick fil A. I
love that place. Nah, and then they counter it. So
(01:49:48):
sometimes things get too big for their breeches and it
has to get chopped down. That's why I'm telling you
this Sydney Sweeney thing. It got too big and out
of the control of the people who trying to turn
it into something. So it's got a backfire. I doubt
that this is gonna I doubt this is gonna hurt
American Eagle.
Speaker 5 (01:50:09):
I truly do.
Speaker 4 (01:50:11):
I doubt it will ever hurt them. People are gonna
jump on this light crazy when we come back. I
gotta play this audio from Harry Enton. Now, think about this.
We're being told that Donald Trump is underwater everywhere and
that the midterms are at stake. But these pulling numbers
(01:50:34):
that are coming out in Wall Street Journal paint a
completely different story. And they've prompted the likes of Chris Matthews,
formerly of NBC to say this with something he would
never say on NBC Morning Joke or any one of
those programs. He said this on a podcast with Charlie Rose,
(01:50:54):
formerly of CBS News.
Speaker 5 (01:50:57):
He got me too. Here's what he said about Donald Trum.
Speaker 10 (01:51:00):
To be honest with you, the country is moving towards Trump,
and they these polls they come out and show him
not doing well. I don't buy that. I think strength.
His strength is still greater than the Democratic strength. He
is a stronger public figure than the Democratic people. I mean,
Obama still has tremendous charisma, but Trump has strength, and
(01:51:23):
I think that's what all the voters look for. But
they wanted the president who was a strong figure. And
he's got it and he can. You know, it's just
there and half the country buys it.
Speaker 5 (01:51:36):
He's right.
Speaker 4 (01:51:36):
That number is growing and it's going to grow even further.
So you know, I just asked one simple question. I
thought about this the other night. Democrats, what's your policy
on anything, anything on improving the lives.
Speaker 5 (01:51:55):
Of Americans?
Speaker 4 (01:51:58):
Can you say it without using the term healthcare for all? Like,
what's your policy anything?
Speaker 9 (01:52:06):
Just name it.
Speaker 5 (01:52:08):
You can't come up with nothing, It's nothing. Anyway, We'll
take them break.
Speaker 4 (01:52:13):
More news, more views when we come back, and more
of this audio. Let's get to Jason Katarina and with
Weather and Mark Christopher's at a BPS trafving center.
Speaker 1 (01:52:21):
How are we doing, sir, Punch punch, It's Reese on
the radio on wti SE News Talk.
Speaker 4 (01:52:30):
I am not going to begin to tell you the
amount of hate I'm getting for certain areas in Connecticut. Gosh,
if people are ruthless, you're ruthless. I don't know where
you are. I haven't even told anybody where I'm trying
to move again. I'm just renting. I'm just renting. I
(01:52:50):
don't know where it's going to be.
Speaker 5 (01:52:52):
People are concerned about where I'm going to go. To
be honest with you, I would rather not take an apartment.
Speaker 4 (01:52:58):
If somebody had, like a house that they had for rent,
like something small like person, a person I could deal with.
That would be perfect because I didn't be quiet. I
don't have to deal with a whole bunch of other mess.
But that's that's neither here nor there. We'll talk about
that at another time. You know, it's five o'clock and
you know I gotta do it, folks. I do it
every day at five. It's Hollywood news. And I've only
(01:53:24):
got about a minute, so yours truly went to go
see the new Marvel film, The Fantastic Four, and I
gotta tell you, folks, it was damn.
Speaker 5 (01:53:38):
Well better than that Superman garbage.
Speaker 4 (01:53:41):
Way better then add some holes and some plot stuff
in it. But I will say this for those of
you who love the Marvel films like I do.
Speaker 5 (01:53:48):
I know all of you don't.
Speaker 4 (01:53:49):
I'm just gonna say briefly, they did the Galactis character justice.
It wasn't hokey or campy or anything like that. Was
actually a pretty good job. I didn't walk out of
there disappointed. So it's a good film. And watch it.
If you like, uh, these movies, you want to go
see something, go, you know, go maybe watch a Matt Nay.
You'll enjoy this about an hour, maybe just under two hours.
(01:54:10):
It's worth the watch if you like them. But I'm
really really excited to see, uh what happens next, so
I give it at the scale of one to ten,
I'm giving it a seven and a half. Let's get
to uh Jason, Katarina and Mark Christopher who doesn't even
bother to go see film, so this rating means nothing
(01:54:32):
to him. BPS Traffic Center. You ever watch? You don't
even I know you've seen the Iron Man movie at
the least. Nope, No, so you really no interest in
the Marvel? Do you run a comic book kid growing up?
Speaker 23 (01:54:43):
No?
Speaker 5 (01:54:44):
Really, you're that cha cha. I'm gonna tell you this
real quick.
Speaker 4 (01:54:51):
Do you know that? Do you know that I invented
uh audible? I invented it? You wonder how? Because I
had a friend, Jamie Montgomery, who loved to read comic books,
and I was the only person with money who had
a job. So I would buy the comic book, give
it to him. He would read the book and then
tell me about it.
Speaker 9 (01:55:08):
Oh even better that Amazon, exactly.
Speaker 4 (01:55:14):
So I didn't want to read this. I give it
to him, he'd read it, and then he'd read it
to me and tell me what happened.
Speaker 5 (01:55:18):
I invented it.
Speaker 9 (01:55:21):
This sounds like this sounds like something Seinfeld would do.
Speaker 4 (01:55:24):
It's real. I did.
Speaker 1 (01:55:28):
This.
Speaker 9 (01:55:28):
Sounds like an episode of sign.
Speaker 1 (01:55:32):
Race on the radio is getting ready to drop some
knowledge on w T.
Speaker 8 (01:55:37):
I C.
Speaker 4 (01:55:39):
Drop it all right, we are back Reesa on the
radio news Talk ten to eighty w T.
Speaker 6 (01:55:43):
I C.
Speaker 4 (01:55:44):
I'll get to the phones in the second, but I
want to read a couple of comments that are you know,
roll it around here? Stevie V says, well, Reese, perhaps
you did it. You did invent it. However, did you
know that Mayor Fiorella LaGuardia of New York used to read.
Speaker 5 (01:55:59):
The Sunday comics on the radio. I am aware of that.
Speaker 4 (01:56:03):
It's one of the things that I do know about
Fiarella LaGuardia in New York. But my response to you is, yes,
I knew that about him. But I was the first
person to pay for a book to be read to me,
So technically I invented the audiobook.
Speaker 5 (01:56:21):
Just saying I bought the book to have it read
to me.
Speaker 4 (01:56:25):
That's exactly what happened in buying the comic book and
giving it to James Montgomery for him to recite what.
Speaker 5 (01:56:30):
Was in the book.
Speaker 4 (01:56:31):
That's the audiobook right there, that's what that's the entire idea,
first to do it, nineteen eighty five, Just pointing it out,
That's all I'm saying. Also, was Robert b writes, So
Sidney's he goes Sidney's Sidney Sweeney would look good in
(01:56:52):
a trash bag, pushing her shopping cart full of cans
and capping gear, camping gear. The left's choice would make
me cross the street in the same attire. Couldn't agree
with you more. That's that's Robert b. In sending me
an instant message about Sidney Sweeney. So what are you
gonna say? We'll get to your phone calls in the
(01:57:13):
second stand by eight and zero five two two wt
I c As you know, the Wall Street Journal has
a new poll out that says that thirty three percent
of Democrats are approving of their party. And they've got
a bunch of people who are screaming and hollering about
how they're going to be able to win the midterm elections,
(01:57:36):
the Democrats for that matter, and there's just no way
that they can because this polling data that I'm looking
at is astronomically bad.
Speaker 5 (01:57:49):
Let's let's run through a couple before we play the audio.
Speaker 4 (01:57:52):
Here. On the economy, the GOP is plus twelve on inflation.
The GOP is plus ten on immigration. The GOP is
plus seventeen on illegal immigration. The GOP is plus twenty
four on tariffs, plus seven on foreign policy, plus eight
(01:58:14):
plus Ukraine in Russia war. Even though they've not been
able Donald Trump has not been able to put it
to an end, they are still plus five plus five
and by the way, this goes beyond the margin of
era of two point five. They're lowest rating for the
GOP is plus five on the Ukraine Russian War. That's
(01:58:39):
where it sits right now. According to the Wall Street Journal,
Harry Enton was on CNN and he breaks it down.
Speaker 5 (01:58:48):
How bad it is.
Speaker 24 (01:58:49):
This one was a surprising one to me, given everything
that's going on in Russia, what happened in Iran, what
happened in Gaza. But the bottom line is Democrats in
the American voter's minds cannot hack it. What do we
do talking about party trusted more? On foreign policy? Well,
the GOP halts an average six point leading the month
of July. Look at this Fox News came out last
week plus three points four Republicans on foreign policy over
the Democrats. You think that number is not high enough
(01:59:12):
for you? How about the Wall Street Journal GOP plus
a points when they match congressional Democrats up against congressional Republicans.
The bottom line is this, despite everything that's going on
in the world right now, Republicans are more trusted on
Democrats when it comes to foreign policy and the world
at large.
Speaker 5 (01:59:28):
Well, let's go one step further.
Speaker 4 (01:59:30):
As I said to you before, never mind what the
media is talking about. Donald Trump always has this foresight
that ends up in his favor after the fact. Dude,
does anybody realize in recent memory everyone was against Donald
(01:59:51):
Trump attacking Iran? Do you remember that everyone who was
anyone told you donald Trump may attack Iran, you may
end up in World War three. I can't believe it.
No wars. Even some folks in the maga world, the magisphere,
you know, all the bloggers and the guys who have
(02:00:13):
the podcast shows. Remember all of them screaming and dollary.
This president promised us he wasn't gonna get us into wars.
Harry Enton, how did that turn out?
Speaker 5 (02:00:23):
What about the strikes?
Speaker 19 (02:00:25):
On Iran because while they were being contemplated, they were
not universally popular.
Speaker 24 (02:00:30):
No, they were not universally popular, and in the immediate
aftermath they were not universally popular. Look at this net
approval rating. US air strikes in Run in late June,
the net approval rating. Look at that minus eight points underwater.
But as the American people learned more and more about it,
look at this a ten point rice. Now it's in
the positive. The American people like the move that Donald Trump.
Speaker 5 (02:00:52):
Put on Iran.
Speaker 24 (02:00:53):
The US air strikes in Iran a plus positive plus
two net approval rating. So again, the bottom line is this,
as the American people learn more about these airstrikes, as
the American people compared Donald Trump and the Republicans against
the Democrats, they see them far more favorably than.
Speaker 5 (02:01:08):
You might expect.
Speaker 4 (02:01:10):
So it only makes me go after one last topic. Now,
I don't know if you remember this, but I do.
Does anybody here remember when Elon Musk and Donald Trump
had the falling out?
Speaker 5 (02:01:30):
See anybody remember when that happened.
Speaker 4 (02:01:34):
It was around June fifth, when Elon Musk took to
his ex account and said it was Donald Trump who
was in the Epstein Files.
Speaker 5 (02:01:50):
Do you I remember that June fifth? Yes, it should
ring a bell.
Speaker 4 (02:01:57):
Well, do you remember what the news media had to
say about Elon Musk saying that Donald Trump was in
the Epstein files?
Speaker 5 (02:02:05):
Anybody, You probably don't.
Speaker 4 (02:02:07):
It's too far down the road, right, it's through back
in the day for you.
Speaker 5 (02:02:11):
Just what two months ago?
Speaker 4 (02:02:12):
Right, it's still way in the back of your memory. Well,
let's go to the senior correspondent of CNN who does
all the Internet stuff over them. You probably didn't know
him before, but you know him now. He's an Irish
buddy named Donie O'Sullivan. Oh, Donny, Donny, tell us everybody
(02:02:40):
on the CNN what the Internet is raving about.
Speaker 5 (02:02:44):
I love Donniel Sullivan, especially his accent.
Speaker 4 (02:02:49):
Well, what did donnieal Sullivan have to say about Donald
Trump being in the Epstein files just under two months ago?
He said this?
Speaker 25 (02:02:59):
I mean, when it comes to when it comes to
the Epstein files, Epstein lists, whatever folks want to call us,
it doesn't actually matter what it is in reality. I mean,
there have been names that have been associated with Jeffrey
Epstein that have been released through court. Trump's name came
out in documents last year. But there was absolutely no
(02:03:20):
accusation of wrongdoing on Trump's part whatsoever. But his name
was as somebody who knew Epstein.
Speaker 5 (02:03:29):
What do you say? What was that you say? Yeah?
Speaker 4 (02:03:34):
So a month ago CNN wouldn't even touch the topic
because Elon Musk was talking about it, and they even
reported it by their senior correspondent Donniel Sullivan, who said
that it means nothing. So again, two months ago, Donald
Trump told you that it was a nothing burger. Here
we are a couple of months later, and it's about
(02:03:54):
to be another nothing burger?
Speaker 5 (02:03:56):
Why not trust me? Why not trust me?
Speaker 4 (02:04:00):
Pooting says it again, because I pay attention to it
every day. You guys kind of you know. I don't
blame you. That's why you come here. I ran, oh,
I can't believe he's gonna strike. I ran strikes. I
ran maybe it was a good idea. Oh, the tariffs,
they're gonna be horrible for people. Now let me see
(02:04:21):
what is it that CNN is now saying about the tariffs.
Let's see if we can get that right here. Here's
CNN talking about the.
Speaker 26 (02:04:29):
Tariffs effort to effectively reshape the global trading order that
has been one of his central priorities. Since taking office
in January, he's been issuing many threats of tariffs, but
they clearly have been working in terms of bringing other countries,
allies and adversaries alike in some cases to the negotiating table.
(02:04:50):
And the latest example was today here in Scotland when
the the a leader of the European Commission, who of
course is negotiating a for the European Union, she agreed
to a fifteen percent across the board tariff. Now that
is significantly higher than the ten percent of tariff's in
existence now since, but it's much lower than the thirty
(02:05:13):
percent threat that was coming on Friday and the fifty
percent threat that was made in May. So clearly there
has been an instance where the President has been using
his threats of higher tariffs as a negotiating tactic, and
in this case it certainly worked.
Speaker 23 (02:05:27):
Is it all the bottom line?
Speaker 4 (02:05:29):
Remember why aren't we talking about that right here? And
I told everybody take a beat. So again the selective outrage,
the usual outrage by the news media telling you what
you're supposed to be outraged about, always ends up to
be And again no apologies, by the way, there been
(02:05:54):
no phone calls. My telephone is not run at all.
Not one person is text me, not even Tony. He
hasn't even contacted me. When he was over here screaming
about the terrorists, everybody remembers it, right, it's a terriff.
Speaker 5 (02:06:10):
It's a tax on people.
Speaker 4 (02:06:11):
What happened. Nothing, not even an apology, not an acknowledgment
of that. You don't know what you're talking about. Even
CNN that says, Okay, Richie, whats your props? You're smarter
than me.
Speaker 5 (02:06:27):
That's what I'm not. I'm not again. It's not about
being smarter than anyone.
Speaker 4 (02:06:32):
It's recognizing the outrage for what it always is. Remember
these folks, they don't have an opinion. When you watch
these folks on news, their opinions are written for them.
Their outrage is set up by producers and writers. There's
(02:06:54):
not an honest assessment amongst them. It's someone behind this
saying this is what they're talking about in the Washington
Post and the New York Times. Here's what I want
you to report on, based upon those reports in the
Washington Post and the New York Times, this is what
we think people should be outraged about, or what people
(02:07:17):
might be saying or thinking.
Speaker 5 (02:07:21):
They're not thinking at all.
Speaker 4 (02:07:23):
They're just repeating the same mantra what they're told. And
when I see it, when I read it, I read
the same papers that they do. I read the same
language that they do. They literally cross reference each other,
and they're reporting they sound like each other. There's no
independent assessment so as to say, you give this stuff
(02:07:48):
a minute. I'm just doing the obvious. I know exactly
what to do when these people start reporting that stuff. Okay,
obviously this is going to turn out the opposite way.
Speaker 5 (02:07:58):
They don't get it right. They don't have a track record.
Speaker 4 (02:08:00):
God forbid, if these folks were weathermen, if these folks
had to predict the weather, they'd always get it wrong.
You'll be wearing a jacket today in that scorching temperature.
You'll be wearing a bubble goose like they do in
the hood. At the rate that these folks are going,
I wouldn't trust them with the weather. That's why we
(02:08:22):
are Jason Knarina here. We'll get into that in a second.
But all of this stuff. You notice that Chris Matthews,
that audio that you heard of Chris Matthews saying that
the country's going towards Donald Trump. Go listen to him
when you see him on the Morning Joke the next time,
and see if you hear him say those words openly
(02:08:43):
on the network. Not once will you hear it because
on those networks they're not supposed to. That's why it's
making the rounds today. Chris Matthews being honest, Chris Matthews
giving an honest assessment of something. Why doesn't he do
that at NBC because he can't Again, I mean, that's
(02:09:08):
the that's the rub. I think it's sad and awful,
but you know that's where you get it. Uh, we're
gonna preview tomorrow's show talking about getting a Lamont out.
But from what people are gathering because of his approval,
Wreckerd is approval numbers in the sixties, that he is
going to run again. We'll talk about whether or not
(02:09:28):
he's got a clear shot if those poll numbers are accurate.
But I don't think Elliott would be running against him
if he thought that he'd lose.
Speaker 5 (02:09:38):
We'll talk about that tomorrow, and.
Speaker 4 (02:09:39):
Of course we'll get to more of your phone calls
when we return, so get him in before we close.
It's res on the radio. It's a zero five two
two w t i C. Let's get some more news,
weather and traffic. Jason Katarina has got weather and Mark
Christopher's at a BPS traffic center.
Speaker 5 (02:09:56):
Hey, Mark.
Speaker 1 (02:09:58):
Search w t i C News. Talk to Nady and
tap earlier today to get started.
Speaker 4 (02:10:04):
All right, we are back. We've got some traffic. Of course,
it's the weather coming up in a minute, and in
the next break we'll take some final phone calls before
we wrap this whole puppy up.
Speaker 5 (02:10:15):
Also, as I said earlier, the Hartford.
Speaker 4 (02:10:17):
Visibility Brigade is going to do what's called a rush
hour resistance on the thirty first at the Riverside Park
Pedestrian Bridge in Hartford. And I just want to say, folks,
it's very early in the morning, and you know, I
guess they're going to be a bunch of people who
(02:10:39):
are going to be on the bridge on there. I
don't know how many folks are going to show up
that a lot of people usually do. Please, if you're
gonna go up on this thing, it's a bridge, it's elevated.
It's dangerous for that many people to be on those bridges. Yeah,
I know they're supposed to be structurally sound, but please, folks,
please be careful. It's just one of those things you
(02:11:02):
don't want to see. I don't know exactly. I don't
know exactly how structurally sound this pedestrian bridge is, but
I can assure you it is not made for a
bunch of people to be standing on And I know
that if this thing is going to have folks who
are older, you know what I mean. Usually when you
(02:11:23):
go to these protests, you'll find some people who are
in their sixties, even seventies or on there.
Speaker 5 (02:11:29):
Folks, you don't want to be on there.
Speaker 4 (02:11:31):
If these lunatics are on there jumping up and down
and making a ruckus the amount of weight that's going
to be on there. You don't know if it's structurally sound,
So find out if it is, and if you're going
to be there, just be careful.
Speaker 5 (02:11:44):
If it looks hairy, don't be on that bridge.
Speaker 4 (02:11:47):
Protests as much as possible, but this is a dangerous
place to do it. I've looked at the bridge like
three or four times, and I keep saying to myself, ah, well,
it is steal and stuff and you know, concrete, but
it's gonna be over a highway. If something goes wrong
that it could be bad. And I don't think these
(02:12:09):
things are well thought out. These people are a bunch
of reckless yahoos.
Speaker 5 (02:12:15):
They're just not smart.
Speaker 4 (02:12:18):
If you look at the banner, which I will not post,
you know, it has a picture of someone what's supposed
to be throwing something. It looks like an anarchist poster.
And I know people are just so angry and outraged.
Just be careful, don't put yourself in danger with these
(02:12:39):
rabble rousers.
Speaker 5 (02:12:40):
Please be careful, be thoughtful of yourselves. That's all I'm saying.
Let's get another.
Speaker 4 (02:12:47):
Check of whether in traffic. All right, I'm just saying,
for the good of everybody, just end yourselves, be safe.
Speaker 5 (02:12:55):
Let's get weather in traffic.
Speaker 4 (02:12:56):
Jason Calerine has got whether Mark Crispher is gonna BEPS
traffic center?
Speaker 5 (02:12:59):
Mark, real quick?
Speaker 4 (02:13:00):
Are you familiar with this Riverside Park pedestrian bridge.
Speaker 14 (02:13:04):
Riverside Park in Hartford, in Hartford River, So oh yeah,
that's on the north end, right on the north end
by the boat launch. Yeah yeah, yeah, Okay, So you
know it's like a long bridge. Yeah yeah, it's a
long bridge that takes you over ninety one exactly.
Speaker 5 (02:13:17):
It exactly goes over ninety one.
Speaker 18 (02:13:19):
Oh, it's it.
Speaker 14 (02:13:20):
That's a that's a monster bridge. It's structurally sound, is it.
Speaker 4 (02:13:24):
Oh yeah, so they shouldn't have to worry about if
a lot of people are gonna be.
Speaker 9 (02:13:27):
No, no, no, no, no, no no, no.
Speaker 5 (02:13:28):
Okay, it looks like it just looks thin to me.
Speaker 4 (02:13:31):
I don't know why. I'm just looking at it, going, yeah,
I know what I've seen it.
Speaker 14 (02:13:34):
I've been Yeah, it's between thirty three and thirty two
on both sides of ninety one.
Speaker 18 (02:13:38):
Yeah.
Speaker 9 (02:13:39):
No, that bridge can take a lot away.
Speaker 3 (02:13:40):
Sure.
Speaker 5 (02:13:41):
Oh yeah, all right, what's up everybody? You know who
it is?
Speaker 1 (02:13:44):
It is?
Speaker 5 (02:13:45):
You know it's We's on the radio, Frederick Douglass of
the twenty first century.
Speaker 1 (02:13:50):
It's w t i C News Talk.
Speaker 4 (02:13:54):
All right, folks, right almost out of here. We'll take
your last phone calls before we do. But a couple
of things to get to. Don't forget. Go to Resellerradio
dot com. That's our E E S E on the
radio dot com. One. Check out my new article that
always comes out on Sunday. If I don't write other stuff,
but there's always an article on Sunday. You can find
it at the Connecticut Sentinel, or you can find it
(02:14:15):
at resellerradio dot com. To at my substack, just scroll
down to it. This week's article is titled how the
Epstein coverage is more than another cover up. It's a
rewrite and it pretty much breaks down all the things
about the Epstein case that many people have forgotten in
recent memory. So it's a good read and if you're
(02:14:38):
interested to always go to resellerradio dot com to find
out articles about that. Also tomorrow, as I mentioned, Jonathan Debarrows,
who's running to represent the fifth district, is coming.
Speaker 5 (02:14:49):
On the show tomorrow at four o'clock.
Speaker 4 (02:14:52):
We'll talk to him about his campaign, about his recent
visit to the White House.
Speaker 5 (02:14:57):
In Washington, DC.
Speaker 4 (02:14:59):
Overall, we'll talk to him about that and talk about
his campaign, talks about you know, him himself, when he
comes from and what his ideas are, and see if
we can get some information on him. Was there something
last but not least that I did not get into.
I can't think of it at all. I think that yeah,
that was it? Yep, that was it.
Speaker 5 (02:15:22):
Yes?
Speaker 4 (02:15:22):
And plus of course tomorrow's show where we'll talk about
the poll numbers with Governor Lamont and the likelihood that
he's gonna run for reelection if not with all right, now,
your phone call.
Speaker 5 (02:15:35):
Is eighteen zero five two two WT.
Speaker 4 (02:15:37):
I see he's been on full a while because I
wanted to save him for later. All right, My paisad
Frankie Woodbridge. What's going on, sir?
Speaker 21 (02:15:44):
Yeah, we were talking about this last night in Cincinnati.
Tell me what happened. This white couple was at Cincinnati
and a bunch of black people out of nowhere to
start a beating them up.
Speaker 4 (02:15:54):
Yeah, I don't know what. I don't know what started
this fight, but we do know that a lot of
people went up and beyond to harm these people to
the level of not just knocking them out, but by
the way a man punched the woman out to where
people were just sitting there videotaping.
Speaker 5 (02:16:12):
It took another woman to.
Speaker 4 (02:16:14):
Actually get involved and see, you know, get the woman
to safety. But what this melee turned out to be
what was so interesting, and I think what most people
paid attention to, was the fact that there was literally
no coverage of it. It happened on Friday.
Speaker 21 (02:16:30):
Is going to be any coverage They don't cover black
on black rimes? Yes, any claim the cover is white
on black and if you were at the statistics, it
doesn't happen that all.
Speaker 5 (02:16:39):
Well, we've noticed that it hasn't happened a lot.
Speaker 4 (02:16:41):
I mean right now we're looking at a draft of
reports within that kind of investigation or news report as
of late, which again is now forcing people to report
it because again they have been shamed into reporting it.
Elon Musk was a kind of for what's the issue?
He posted and post on x and named every one
(02:17:04):
of the outlets that did zero reporting, including Fox News,
which did.
Speaker 21 (02:17:10):
Nothing much of young guys come over drinking and gambling
on their phone. I told him, I've been with black
people all my life. I've never had a problem. Tell
me why, Frank, when was the last time you looked
in the mirror? What does that mean?
Speaker 8 (02:17:25):
Frank?
Speaker 21 (02:17:25):
Any's going to bother you? You're as big as King Calm.
Who's gonna bother you?
Speaker 4 (02:17:29):
You don't? Actually, I don't think that in any way.
What I think people recognize. You know, I always say that,
you know, if you ever represent reputation that precedes you,
you're usually not going to run into a problem like that.
You've been around long enough, Frank.
Speaker 21 (02:17:44):
Never had exactly and you're never going to No, you
got a few bad apples there. But I just always
find this amazing when I hear it. First of all,
you know, Cincinnati, you gotta be careful where you're going,
no matter who you are, Cincinnati is a very bad neighbor.
Speaker 4 (02:17:58):
Horrible.
Speaker 5 (02:18:01):
Out of doubt you one hundred.
Speaker 4 (02:18:02):
Right, thank you, Frank.
Speaker 21 (02:18:05):
Maybe that thing is catching up to Chicago on a urry,
it might be worse.
Speaker 5 (02:18:08):
Yeah, exactly.
Speaker 4 (02:18:09):
It's also the home of bone thugs in harmony, which says,
in and of itself, it's a horrible place.
Speaker 21 (02:18:14):
Don't beautiful over there.
Speaker 4 (02:18:17):
Yeah, but what are you gonna do? Thank you, boss,
I appreciate you. Let's go to us. Hey, Steve ev
how are you, sir?
Speaker 7 (02:18:24):
I'm doing well.
Speaker 6 (02:18:25):
How are you doing?
Speaker 4 (02:18:26):
I'm all right, sir. What's up?
Speaker 6 (02:18:28):
Good, Bob?
Speaker 23 (02:18:29):
Yeah, you mentioned the bridge, and that's an excellent point.
I also want to tell people they should bring plenty
of liquids with them.
Speaker 8 (02:18:35):
Yes, very highdrated.
Speaker 23 (02:18:36):
It gonn be so many people, you know, side by side,
and this gonna be real hot.
Speaker 4 (02:18:41):
Yeah, I hope it's not a big turnout in the
sense of where it's overcrowded and things like that. A bridge,
look even though I know market you know knows it
that bridge probably way better than I do. I've been
on it before. I don't remember it being like I'm I'm.
Speaker 5 (02:18:58):
Afraid of bridges. Let me just be you're concerned.
Speaker 4 (02:19:01):
About them, so i'm But again I'm just one of
those things where again I'm afraid of heights. Also. That's
probably not helpful, but I see something like that, and
imagine if you really get a considerable amount of people
up there, up in the heights, you got nowhere to go,
nowhere to hide.
Speaker 5 (02:19:19):
I'm hoping that you know, Mark is right, But.
Speaker 4 (02:19:21):
In my head, I'm going, don't you know, don't put
yourself because again there's the only way to go is down, Stevie,
that's it.
Speaker 18 (02:19:29):
Yeah, and you and you know what.
Speaker 23 (02:19:31):
It sounds like a senseless protest anyway.
Speaker 6 (02:19:34):
Just not going to do anything.
Speaker 4 (02:19:35):
Indeed, indeed, yeah, again I tend to agree anyway, But
was that. I'm sure you had something else? Okay, thank you, sir,
you got it.
Speaker 5 (02:19:44):
Let's get Paul and Infield in here. How are you doing, sir.
Speaker 7 (02:19:48):
I'm not bad.
Speaker 2 (02:19:50):
A couple of quick points what you and Frank would
make them reference of that incident in Cincinnati, you're both
each of you or both wrong. It was brought up
numerous times on your radio station last night on the
Cunningham Show. You should listen to that. Obviously you weren't.
Speaker 5 (02:20:03):
Isn't Bill Cunningham a national isn't he? Is he a
syndicated show?
Speaker 2 (02:20:08):
Yeah, but he's on t IC No.
Speaker 5 (02:20:09):
I didn't said it, but I said it wasn't covered.
Speaker 2 (02:20:11):
On he brought He brought it up numerous times Cincinnati, Paul.
Speaker 5 (02:20:15):
It wasn't on Fox, it wasn't on CNN, and.
Speaker 2 (02:20:18):
It wasn't whatever.
Speaker 5 (02:20:20):
But I mean whatever, that was the point we made.
Speaker 2 (02:20:24):
I heard it many times. Besides even Cunningham's that even me,
I'm I'm a big Trump fan, but I'm very concerned
why he's bringing up Epstein himself without being asked about it.
Speaker 5 (02:20:35):
That's not true. That is well, that's not true.
Speaker 2 (02:20:41):
And the fact of the matter is what he's doing
is he's really running panicky. He's scared Paul, and I'm working.
I'm working. Even though I'm a big Trump fan, I'm
more scared about bands being president. I don't want him
in the White House this. I would prefer to have
either Ran Paul or the Secretary's in the White House.
Speaker 4 (02:21:01):
Did you make it?
Speaker 5 (02:21:01):
Did you make this case last week?
Speaker 6 (02:21:05):
What? I like you?
Speaker 2 (02:21:06):
I make the case every day.
Speaker 4 (02:21:08):
Okay, I'm just saying, it's like you made the case
about Epstein last week. You made the case about the case?
Speaker 2 (02:21:14):
Now too, about this incident?
Speaker 8 (02:21:16):
What?
Speaker 6 (02:21:17):
Why?
Speaker 2 (02:21:17):
Why you make all the time? He brings it up
all the time?
Speaker 5 (02:21:20):
Who brought it up? Did you watch that press conference?
Speaker 8 (02:21:23):
I did look all the pictures.
Speaker 5 (02:21:26):
Of Did you watch the press conference?
Speaker 6 (02:21:29):
Yes?
Speaker 2 (02:21:29):
Or no? Why do you look at Why do you
have to be a yeller?
Speaker 4 (02:21:33):
Because you're not answering the question I answered, did you
watch that's my favorite turn. Did you watch the press conference?
Speaker 5 (02:21:41):
Yes or no?
Speaker 4 (02:21:42):
I watched everything so you know that he brought up
the Epstein stuff during the press conference? Or no?
Speaker 2 (02:21:50):
There's more than one incidents.
Speaker 4 (02:21:52):
Okay, okay, yeah, yep, he brought up the he brought
up the Epstein thing.
Speaker 17 (02:21:57):
Every take care, goodbye.
Speaker 4 (02:22:00):
Bye, Paul. It was a pleasure, sir. I don't know,
I don't know. I don't know.
Speaker 5 (02:22:10):
I don't know.
Speaker 4 (02:22:13):
To call up and repeat the same thing, Rand Paul,
not gonna happen. Marco Rubio got a shot, not gonna happen.
It's jd Vance is it's his presidency to lose. He
may decide after talking to his wife Usha, that they're
not going to run, but it's his Maybe you should
(02:22:35):
get to turn, you know, come to terms with that.
But everyone who is anyone knows that jd Vance was
chosen because he is perfect for the role. He's young enough,
he's smart enough, and he's capable enough. Who are you
(02:22:58):
gonna put him up against anybody on their roster on
the Democrat side?
Speaker 5 (02:23:06):
J d Vance will humiliate.
Speaker 4 (02:23:11):
I mean, it was a ridiculous effort for them to
put Tim Walls against him. But really, let's be honest.
You may not like JB or JD but think, just think,
just name the guy who's gonna take him.
Speaker 5 (02:23:33):
I only see.
Speaker 4 (02:23:33):
One, speaking of which, a guy I didn't mention before,
but he's the only guy I see with a snowballs
chance in hell giving jd Vance a run.
Speaker 5 (02:23:47):
That's this guy from Kentucky, Andy Bisheer. Listen to this.
Speaker 15 (02:23:52):
It's a little bit of the advocacy speak. And it
was meant for the right reasons, right, it was meant
to decrease stigma. But we don't decrease stigma.
Speaker 5 (02:23:59):
I changed words.
Speaker 15 (02:24:00):
We decrease stigma by changing hearts. And when we start
changing and sanitizing our language, things have less meaning. And
I'll give you an example that's personal to me. In Kentucky,
we are hit by the opioid crisis harder than just
about any other state. Every Kentucky and including myself, knows
about a dozen people that are no longer with us.
(02:24:21):
The child of God taken far too soon. I didn't
lose one of my friends to substance use disorder.
Speaker 5 (02:24:29):
I lost them all to addiction.
Speaker 15 (02:24:31):
Addiction is mean, it's nasty, it's hard to beat. It
kills people. And when you lose somebody, when you talk
about losing them to addiction, you feel it.
Speaker 17 (02:24:42):
But how about the other side.
Speaker 15 (02:24:44):
When someone triumphs over addiction, they've beaten something that is
so hard and so deadly. It gives them the triumph
that they deserve. And because we've approached it that way
in Kentucky, thank god, we saw a thirty percent decrease
in drug overdose deaths last year.
Speaker 5 (02:25:02):
That's your future, right there, Democrats, that's your guy.
Speaker 4 (02:25:07):
He's talking about God, he's talking about stop sugarcoating language.
That's your and no one's talking about him. Andy Basheer,
that's your guy. I'm not gonna lie. My wife listened
to him today was yes and no. Yesterday listen to him.
(02:25:28):
I played that video for She said, I may not
agree with him, but I like the way he puts it.
He's speaking straight, he's not using these stupid platitudes of
the left, and he's quiet. Where have you heard anything
about Andy Bisheer. You hear more stuff about Chris Murphy
than you do about this guy. But this guy sounds
(02:25:49):
like a guy.
Speaker 15 (02:25:51):
Another example, that big ugly Bill is not only going
to a gut rural health care and hit our rural economies,
it's going to decrease food assistance all over this country. Now,
we're not gonna be able to change and push back
on that. If we say it's gonna increase food in security,
(02:26:11):
what it's gonna do is make people go hungry. They're
gonna feel hunger pains at night when they go to bed,
and hunger pains when they wake up in the morning.
And remember, the two groups most at risk for hunger
and the two groups covered by Medicaid the most are
our parents and our kids. We even have a new
term that we're being pushed to use now. It's called
(02:26:33):
justice involved populations.
Speaker 18 (02:26:35):
Y'all know what that is.
Speaker 15 (02:26:38):
Those are our inmates, and I'm working on reducing recidivism
as much as any governor in the nation. The Bible
teaches me that second chance aren't just the right thing
to do, They're what we're called to do. We're teaching
a trade in every single Kentucky prison and trying to
help people get good jobs as they leave. But you
know what, our inmates call themselves thanks, And so we've
(02:27:02):
got to make sure that the ways that we're communicating
as public officials and as folks that are running are
the same ways you talk to your friends or your family.
That words have meaning in.
Speaker 7 (02:27:12):
A moment behind them.
Speaker 5 (02:27:13):
Tell me, I don't care what anybody says.
Speaker 4 (02:27:15):
Tell me that the guy doesn't have it on the
Democrats side. He doesn't it sound like a Democrat. He
doesn't even sound like a Democrat, but he is one.
And why because he refuses to buy to the guy
he's talking about. God, that's unheard of the Democrat party.
(02:27:37):
Just got to ask yourself, what's what? Check them out.
He could be a threat, folks or an ally just
saying that's our show. As I always say, radio is free.
So we thank you for paying attention. Remember to keep
JC in your hearts and in your mind. Sean Patrick,
we love you, have me, miss you. Remember that panic
is not planning, So planning your work and work you're
(02:27:58):
planning me. I'm recent rado. You have a good night.
Pleasant tomorrow. We'll see you back here? Was it twenty
one hours?
Speaker 6 (02:28:06):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (02:28:06):
I guess that.
Speaker 4 (02:28:08):
I love You'll be good to each other. Jason Canderina's
got weather, Mark Christopher, he's in the beat p S
traffic center. Good night, Mark, seem Manyana, have a good night,
rece If you're heading into Harvard right now. Eighty four
he's found some slow traffic forty eight capital at.
Speaker 5 (02:28:20):
Oh right, good sir, see you tomorrow and check those
numbers out.
Speaker 4 (02:28:29):
I looked at him.
Speaker 5 (02:28:29):
I don't know what I'm looking at.
Speaker 14 (02:28:31):
All right, I'll break them down for aproach station. All right,
south ninety one moving well north. The ninety one is
a little slow between thirty eight and thirty nine forty
one on the windsor winter.
Speaker 4 (02:28:41):
All right, everybody, Yes, the DNC will probably crush him.
Speaker 5 (02:28:45):
You're right, you're so right about that Michael A.
Speaker 4 (02:28:47):
That's again. He doesn't sound like them, but he could
be their last hope.
Speaker 5 (02:28:54):
He could be.
Speaker 4 (02:28:56):
But you, I mean, you can't tell me. You can't
listen to Andy we sheer CAITI, God, would he be good?
He would be good by the way. I want to
see if you guys notice and he changes, and he
changes in the show today, We'll see if you figure
it out, all right? I love you, guys, be good
(02:29:17):
to each other. We see him on Yana