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August 28, 2025 • 161 mins
  • Hartford Mayor Arunan Complains About The Thing... He Does
  • The Curious Case Of Kevin Rosero Moreno
  • The Trans Shooters Have A Lot In Common
  • Hollywood News - The Toxic Avenger
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
H hey, yeah, they calm down.

Speaker 2 (00:25):
The show is about to style on the radio.

Speaker 3 (00:28):
Turn it up, turn it up, turn it up aloud
like a dream come true.

Speaker 2 (00:39):
Due to the nature of this program, discretion does not exist.

Speaker 4 (00:42):
It's race on the radio right now on w T
I see News Talk ten eighty.

Speaker 5 (00:49):
Thanks a minute, Yeah, yeah, oh my stelly wags where
you're at?

Speaker 6 (01:07):
We got to get ready to go. What's going on?
It's reesund the radio on WTIC News Talk ten to eighty. Now. Look,
it is important to note that even though we are
online today, you can go to res Ondradio dot com.
You gotta listen to us at WT. I see other
than that, the Red Sox are playing and they look good.

(01:29):
It's two to nothing, two to one, two to something.
I don't know what the Red Sox in the league.
And all I care about is the fact that the
Yankees ain't in first place.

Speaker 7 (01:38):
Can we applaud that?

Speaker 6 (01:39):
Please? Not a Yankee fan, and I say that with glee,
born raise Hollish queens, don't care. I grew up a
Met fan, Let's be honest. I grew up a Met fan.
But they've been garbage for a lot of years. I

(02:00):
don't even consider the turn of the century. Mets a
good team, you know, even though there are a couple
of guys on that squad that I liked, but I
wasn't a fan, you know. I there's some guys that
I like, but not a lot of them. But I
grew up with the with the real the real Mets,
you know, the ones, the bad guys. Those are the

(02:21):
guys that I've chasen. Watch your mouth, what do you mean,
go Yankees? You live in New England? Now, kept with
the program. I don't want to get into that. We'll
get the score as we always do while listening to
the show.

Speaker 7 (02:35):
We'll keep your breast of that.

Speaker 6 (02:37):
We got plenty of news and plenty of views to
get into today. And because we are online for the
first two hours until the game's over, you know, go
real fast, quick fast, and hurry.

Speaker 7 (02:46):
We'll get back.

Speaker 6 (02:47):
We'll get into the meat of the stories that you
care about after the fact. But can I take a
moment here to do something off the beaten path. I'm
kind of gonna do two monolog at the same time
because I think in some way they intersect in theme.

(03:10):
Because I promised you today that I was going to
talk about the curious case of Kevin Rossaro Moreno. And
this was the teenager, the honor student at the Meridian
High School, that went to an immigration hearing with his dad.
Both were detained and currently sit in a IC detention
center in Texas. Now we can go through the whole

(03:34):
thing of finding out why they're there, why they're being held,
and go online and get all that information. But I
gotta be honest with you, folks. I got other stuff
to do. I'm too busy. I am not the person
who made Kevin Rossero Moreno the subject of everybody's I
don't know, consternation concern. I didn't they did, Which is

(03:59):
kind of my point. What happened to the story of
Kevin rossetto Moreno. Why is it no longer a story?
We had to deal with at least two years of
Michael Brown, we dealt with four years of Trayvon Martin.
We're still talking about George Floyd. EVERT Garner didn't get

(04:23):
that much love because he was overweight and he was
selling cigarettes. He was obviously living in a very very
foul lifestyle and people really couldn't ride that wave for
too long.

Speaker 7 (04:33):
Freddie Gray we had to deal with for an entire year.

Speaker 6 (04:37):
Until they found out that the police officers that Marilyn
Moseby was charging were black.

Speaker 7 (04:42):
Then people had to run for their hills, you know
the deal.

Speaker 6 (04:46):
But nonetheless, usually when it is one of those issues
we're all supposed to get weep beyyed about, the story
never goes away. And in this case, when it comes
to immigration, it seemed odd that a high school student,
honor student, that everyone was running to the high school
to cover FSBTNH, Fox sixty one Conticut, NBC Connecticut. They

(05:12):
were all running to get on the scene news coverage.
The mayor was talking about it, everybody was talking about it.
And now all of a sudden, the story's gone. And
it's not like immigration isn't a hot button issue. We
got the Newington seven. And let's not forget the granddaddy
of immigration that this kilmar Abrego.

Speaker 7 (05:33):
Gotta see yu.

Speaker 6 (05:36):
He's the poster boy of due process for iligas. He's
who the left references every given day. But say, when
I first started talking about Kevin rosetto Moreno, I talked
our colleague. I talked to our colleague. I called him
at home. Well, he was on his cell phone, but

(05:57):
he was at home Max A Royce US Sports in
the morning for Brian and Company. I called him and
I said, hey, you got a number on this guy,
the mayor of a murder. Sure enough he did. I said, hey,
can you reach out to the guy. I'd love to
talk to him and see if he knows anything about
Kevin o'dosto wanta no story about why he was detained.
Never got a call back. Never I reached out to

(06:19):
his office, Never got a call back. And it turns
out that every time I tried to get in touch
with somebody in a mayor's office, we're talking about the
mayor of a Connecticut city, small time. We're not talking
about big city mayors, right, like the mayor of Hartford, Hell.
I even got Justin Ellicker to come on the show

(06:39):
last year, and he won't come back. By the way,
he won't come back. He's got too much to answer for.
And you notice he's not asking for an equal time,
even though I had his opponent, Steven Roskill on a program.

Speaker 7 (06:51):
Anyway, I digress.

Speaker 6 (06:52):
My point is is that when you try to reach
these people, no one ever wants to pick up the
phone we tried to get. They are ruining on the line,
can't answer. We tried to get Chris Murphy's office on
the line, can't get him.

Speaker 7 (07:06):
Take momental Nope.

Speaker 6 (07:09):
We ask these people all the time. We try to
get in touch with a g tong, Hey, a gent tong,
what's going on with elvirus? Ad? No response. They won't
even respond to emails or letters. Hell, the Republican Party
in Connecticut sends letters, too deep, sends letters to the CIEs,
sends letters to everybody they can and no response. And

(07:36):
the story is over. I looked it up with Kevin
rossetto Moreno's story. We were all told to stop what
we were doing and be outraged. And I told you
it was nonsense. I told you after a while, they
weren't gonna care. They just move on, And sure enough
they did. But why do these stories intersect, you know,

(07:58):
about not getting any answer? Imagine my surprise when I
saw the mayor of Hartford, mayor a Aruna. What's the
name rounin. I'm never gonna pronounce his name right, I'm sorry,
I'm trying. I'm trying. I don't want to be disrespectful
to the man's name. I have to say it the

(08:19):
way that I've always said it. Ap up rupp apollum
like up up on bum and a little boy Drumbell boys.

Speaker 7 (08:27):
It's the only way I can do it. I'm sorry.

Speaker 6 (08:30):
He knows it's a difficult name. That's why everybody calls
him mayor runin. But imagine my surprise when I look
at wfsp's live feed and I hear the mayor at
a press conference talking about the Connecticut son.

Speaker 7 (08:52):
Talking about how the w.

Speaker 6 (08:55):
NBA is going to take the team from the Mohegan
Tribe and sell it on their own, and they're gonna
buy it for the Mohican tribe at seventy five million
dollars less, that's the going rate.

Speaker 7 (09:10):
For the Mohegan Tribe.

Speaker 6 (09:13):
But while he was giving this speech, he said something
that I had to laugh out loud about.

Speaker 8 (09:18):
I want you to sell the team to us for
two hundred and fifty million, which is seventy five million
less than the offer that is being talked about to
pay the owner current owners, which is a tribe of
Native Americans.

Speaker 9 (09:30):
Seventy five million dollars less than the market value of
this team is ridiculous behavior from the league, and it's
ridiculous because they should be playing here. The Sun should
be playing right behind me.

Speaker 8 (09:39):
At the People's Bank Arena, in front of what would
be one of the largest arenas in the WNA, in
front of over sixteen thousand screaming fans who have a
love and appreciation and understanding of this game that.

Speaker 9 (09:52):
Dates back decades. We have been a place that has
loved women's basketball.

Speaker 8 (09:57):
Long before anybody was talking about Katon le Clark, long
before anybody he was talking.

Speaker 9 (10:00):
About multimillion dollar deals.

Speaker 8 (10:02):
Look, half the WNBA cut their teeth on the hardwood
right behind me, playing either four or against the most
storied basketball team in all of women's basketball, the Yukon Huskies.

Speaker 6 (10:12):
He's one hundred percent right. I was with them the
entire way, and I said, look at him go favorishly
fighting for the yuke. I almost called them the Yukon Sun.
Might as well right fighting for the Connecticut Sun. So
they can stay right here at Hartford. I'm not gonna lie.
Even though I laugh at the WNBA, I do agree

(10:34):
with the fact that they should be in Hartford if
they're going to be successful.

Speaker 7 (10:37):
Hartford's the place to be, not Mohegan.

Speaker 6 (10:39):
Nothing against the Mohegan tribe, it's just too far and
in the city. What a vibrant image that would be
for the city people coming out. Anyone who usually can't
drive all the way to go to a game at
the Mohegan can now go right into Hartford. It's the
epicenter again. It would it would be such a welcomed

(11:02):
thing in the area, without a doubt. So I agree
with the mayor. Then he lost me.

Speaker 8 (11:11):
And this is how the league shows their appreciation for
that history by saying, to Connecticut, you don't get to
have a team anymore.

Speaker 9 (11:18):
So I'm calling on Connecticut residents to fight back.

Speaker 6 (11:20):
It is okay, Mayor of Rooney, You're asking for Connecticut residents.

Speaker 7 (11:29):
To fight back. What would you like them to do, sir?

Speaker 8 (11:33):
Time to fight back to the league officers with calls
hit him up on social media, tag them at WNBA,
call them at the number right here listed below, and
tell them to not steal the.

Speaker 9 (11:44):
Team from Connecticut.

Speaker 8 (11:45):
And I'll tell you I tried to express my displeasure.

Speaker 9 (11:47):
I tried.

Speaker 6 (11:48):
Okay, So he wants everybody in Connecticut get on the phone,
call the WNBA, everybody in Connecticut, rally, get him on
the phone. Let him know that Jorge displeased by this.
You don't want the team to go to Boston. You
don't want the team to go to some other major city.
You want it right here in Hartford. And then Mayor
Rounin started talking about trying to reach the WNBA. I

(12:12):
wonder what happened, Mayor. Care to tell us, and I'll
tell you.

Speaker 9 (12:17):
I tried to express my displeasure. I tried to.

Speaker 8 (12:21):
I look for a number they've taken down their contact
me page that the best we can find is an
AI operated line. And I guess the WAB doesn't want
to hear from their fans anymore. But let's call them
and leave enough voice messages until they respond, until they're
forced to respond to the fans and to the people
of the state.

Speaker 7 (12:39):
Because surely you just.

Speaker 6 (12:44):
You are calling out the WNBA for changing their telephone
number and putting in an AI telephone number and not
returning your phone call. Surely you are.

Speaker 7 (12:55):
Not the pot calling the kettle black there, Mayor.

Speaker 6 (13:00):
How many phone calls that you've been answering, How many
requests for information are you answering? How many phone calls
emails have the people of Hartford sent you that you ignored. Now,
all of a sudden, you upset that the WNBA, a
private company, doesn't They don't answer to you. You answered

(13:22):
to us, but you pretty much give us the same
crap that they gave you. And you've seen me be
miffed by it. I guess they don't want to hear
from us. Yeah, we're getting the same impression. I couldn't
help but laugh. I was like, any people serious?

Speaker 7 (13:37):
Is this dude serious? Yes they are.

Speaker 6 (13:40):
He see the irony in that, and look, this is
the reason why these guys should not riff don't wing it.
It was the only thing I cared about in the
whole press conference was when he said that I was
on board with him. And I've even said, look, I
said a long time ago, I don't think that people
in Connecticut are gonna fight this as they want to,
because the only way they're gonna say is if you do,

(14:03):
if you fight for them. Why isn't Lamont there? The
Mayor's there, but not Lamont? I found that odd. Whatever,
where's Chris Murphy? How about Dick Blumenthal? Blumenthal, he at
least showed up the poison the water. You think he's

(14:25):
show up. You think he show up to at least
keep some revenue into in the city. In the capital city.
I was completely miffed by that. I was like, really, really,
this guy is upset that he's not getting his phone
calls return.

Speaker 7 (14:45):
How's it feel? How does it feel?

Speaker 6 (14:48):
And then, because you, the mayor of Hartford, can't get
your calls answered, really bizarre. You then say, well, you
guys leave some messages. They're not even answering the Mayor's calls.
This does not exude confidence, my friend, at all. Dare

(15:12):
I say, does this show have more influence than you mayor.

Speaker 7 (15:18):
Not that I would ever be so arrogant.

Speaker 6 (15:23):
But when I call up the WNBA, I get my
calls answered. Oh yeah, you damn well right I do,
because I know who to call. Perhaps you should give
reason a radio call and I'll tell you how you
can get your calls through.

Speaker 7 (15:42):
But it'll come at a cost.

Speaker 6 (15:45):
Oh I don't want any money, see a guy like me,
I deal with a different kind of currency, Mayor, I
want answers. That's the price that you both aren't willing
to pay for. That that's a that's a price too high.

Speaker 7 (16:09):
That price is really really high.

Speaker 6 (16:13):
That's okay, go on hold another press conference there, mister,
whatever we gotta go. I didn't hear it about them.
Oh we go straight to the bottom. Okay, that's fine.
Let's read some of the comments. Christine in Middletown says,
let's go Mets.

Speaker 7 (16:32):
You're dead to me, no kidding. They gotta play the
Red Sox.

Speaker 6 (16:37):
Okay, if they playing anybody, they have to play the
Red Sox if they were to go. And I want
the Red Sox in the World Series. I don't want
the Mets there. They'll be going through. Not enough people
watch the w NBA. Jason writes, Ah, yeah, but enough
people go to the games. And it would be helpful revenue.

(16:59):
Why to get people into the city. No, even a
little bit. I mean that burger king on the corner,
the one that's right across the street from Morton's, it's
still there. I was driving through the city the other
day and I saw that burger king right there on
the corner. I'm like, damn, the burger king is there.

(17:22):
Twenty years later, I couldn't believe it. I was like,
that's a burger king there. That's really there. It's been
there forever. Big sal says, my vote to keep them
in Connecticut as well. I don't want weak aspread the
basketball in Boston big sall. Okay, sala is up in Boston.

(17:47):
Sal Let's tell the truth, my friend. When the Connecticut
Son was there, they sold out the place. They loved
basketball up there. I don't think I know that a
lot of people say it was because Caitlin Clark was there.

Speaker 7 (18:03):
That may be true. That may be true.

Speaker 6 (18:07):
But Boston's got a lot of support for its sports teams.
And I think this sounds like I'm being mean to them,
but I don't. I don't mean. I don't mean it
in a bad way. It's not to be subversive. I
think that Boston always be being in competition with New
York because that is their direct rival. They support their

(18:29):
teams in a way New York can't can't. And I
think primarily because like the Knicks, this time around, it
was like it was like half it was like half
that was half assed. It just was like, we don't
have stars on the Knicks anymore. We used to, but

(18:50):
we don't anymore. They know big names. We got to
drag somebody's old bones from another team, you know the
last way. Who we are Mari Stottomeyer, camel or Anthony
who else? Who? What big name did we get over
in the in the Knicks. No, we just I'm just
saying we have Jalen Brunson. But you ask any of

(19:13):
the critics, they think Jalen Brunson is a bust. Really, yes,
most people think he's a bust. They think he doesn't
have what it takes to be a leader. I mean,
he's okay player, He's.

Speaker 7 (19:24):
Well, everybody can't be a leader. He's a phenomenal player.
I didn't say nothing about being a leader.

Speaker 6 (19:29):
I know, but I think he's kind of a runt.
You know, he's no Rajon Rondo, and he should be
raj Rondo. I mean, think about raj Rondo. He led
that Celtics team. I don't care what anybody says. I
love what Doc Rivers said about raj Rondo. He called
him the quarterback of that team.

Speaker 7 (19:47):
And Newton that big names there.

Speaker 6 (19:50):
Damn it. All right, we gotta go to break. We'll
be back, more news, more views, stand by an hour
and a half. Will be back on the regular radio
because I got plenty of stuff to get into, all right.
Top of the News comes up now with John Silva
in the w t i S newsroom and Dave Makers
in Today.

Speaker 7 (20:04):
Hey, Dave Hey, sorry about that.

Speaker 6 (20:08):
We were trying to get some other stuff ready. Here
reson radio wt I see News Talk ten. We're gonna
talk a lot more about.

Speaker 10 (20:18):
Uh.

Speaker 6 (20:18):
Of course the school shooting that took place in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Uh,
there was an incredible headline today that we saw on
ah NBC Connecticut.

Speaker 7 (20:31):
Uh that just blew my mind.

Speaker 6 (20:33):
Imagine this, folks, Connecticut police departments step up presence as
precaution at schools. Really what what led that?

Speaker 11 (20:48):
But?

Speaker 6 (20:48):
What? What?

Speaker 12 (20:48):
What?

Speaker 7 (20:48):
What would be the reason for that?

Speaker 6 (20:52):
I can't seem to think where anybody would have gotten
that idea from after the constant No, we can't do that, No,
we're not going to do it.

Speaker 7 (21:00):
I remember it well, I was there.

Speaker 6 (21:05):
Remember Chris Murphy never ever stopped or tried to bring
legislation to put an end to it.

Speaker 13 (21:11):
Does removing a trained armed officer make schools safer?

Speaker 2 (21:15):
You have ninety seconds?

Speaker 14 (21:17):
Well, I actually haven't introduced legislation to remove school resource officers.
I've introduced legislation to direct federal funding towards social workers
and psychologists that I think are very badly needed.

Speaker 2 (21:28):
I actually think it should be up to all new
for you tonight at eleven. Police shouldn't be in schools.

Speaker 6 (21:33):
That thought coming from Connecticut Senator Chris Murphy.

Speaker 15 (21:37):
Now he, along with three other lawmakers, are introducing a
bill that would pave the way to get officers out
of schools.

Speaker 7 (21:44):
Channel three I went and sues. Reporter Matthew Campbell takes
a closer look.

Speaker 16 (21:47):
Well, Mark and Aaron, we've got some familiar recently with
the term defund the police. In many cases it means
diverting some of the funding to other areas, and that's
what this proposal is calling for. But it also really
does seem to call for getting police out of schools.

Speaker 6 (22:03):
Yeah, police have got to get out of schools. It's insane.
But now, all of a sudden, NBC Connecticut five hours ago,
Connecticut Police Department step up presence as a precaution. Police
departments across Connecticut are stepping up patrols as a precaution
after the tragic shooting in Minneapolis on Wednesday. What prompted that?

(22:28):
Let me give you an idea of what may have
prompted it. Perhaps somebody would get it again, never working
in law enforcement, not a psychiatrist or a lesser known psychologist.
But let me break it down to you because I
can't figure out who amongst us is a whack job
killer who believes that they should take their vengeance out

(22:52):
on a school. Because I can't, we don't have pre
crime like in the old Tom Cruise movie Minority Report,
because I cannot isolate you by looking at you, going
he looks like a school shooter.

Speaker 7 (23:08):
Because I can't do that, I figure.

Speaker 6 (23:11):
I would go to where the target is, the school
and put a deterrent there because even though we can't
figure out who the whack job is, we know where
the school is. Right, do what you can instead of
the stuff that you can't figure out. It's real simple. Yeah,
they're going after schools. Protect that. See how that works.

(23:36):
If a pretty woman is known for being harassed because
of the neighborhood that she's in, she does more to
protect herself because she doesn't know which one of these
lunatics out there are going to actually take it one
step further and probably.

Speaker 7 (23:52):
A cost her because guess what, she is the target.

Speaker 6 (23:56):
So instead of just targeting people randomly, he looks it's weird,
he looks crazy, she arms herself the potential victim.

Speaker 7 (24:07):
I mean, it's easy as one, two, three, ain't it.

Speaker 6 (24:12):
And now, all of a sudden, everybody woke up in
the morning after the shooting, after the really really bad shooting,
all of a sudden, somebody turned around and says, yeah,
you know, maybe we should protect the actual target here.
And then we're supposed to applaud these people for showing
up late. You're not getting an applause for tardiness. She's

(24:32):
not gonna happen. But we appreciate you figuring it out.
We've only been telling you since Newtown. Some of us
have been telling you since Columbine. I'm just saying, is
it Columbine, Yes, it's Columbine. Yeah, that's right. Hey, doctor
Steve is on the line. I love doctor Steve. How
are we doing, sir? Do I not have him? That's weird?

Speaker 7 (24:57):
Danger phone over? Yeah, change it over, hold on, let
me see. I'm almost certain I did. I fixed my phone.
Yeah it's there. Yeah, I switched over. Let me see
if you could pick it up on your right. I'm switched.

Speaker 6 (25:13):
Let's say he shows up on yours, which is kind
of weird.

Speaker 7 (25:17):
Let's see, Hey, doctor Steve, Hey, what's going on?

Speaker 10 (25:19):
Sir? Hey?

Speaker 17 (25:21):
Hey, reads, I thought that was something on my end.

Speaker 6 (25:22):
No, no, it was definitely on something weird going on here.
What can I do you for today?

Speaker 17 (25:27):
I have two potential topics, and you decide which one
I wanted to talk about, because I won't burn you
with both.

Speaker 6 (25:33):
Okay.

Speaker 17 (25:34):
The first one is the gun violence issue, which is
of course when you were just talking about this. Other
one is the issue about the closure of the wind
farm off the coast of Rhode Island. Choose your own adventure?
Where do you want to go with you?

Speaker 6 (25:48):
I used to love these games back in the days
to choose your own adventure once so when when farms
are boring?

Speaker 7 (25:56):
So I'm gonna go with the school shootings? What do
you got?

Speaker 17 (25:59):
All right? I figured I figured as much. You know,
I think if you look at the well, forget what
I think. What I know is that when Connecticut enacted
a whole bunch of gun safety legislation back in like
twenty ten twenty twelve, there was a twenty percent reduction

(26:20):
in the number of handgun deaths in the state of Connecticut.
And if you look at gun safety legislation all over
the country, those states that have the most robust gun
safety legislation writ large have lower rates of gun violence.
And you can do pre post statistics too. It's not
just like you know, some states maybe just be less
given to violence for whatever reason and they have more

(26:42):
more restrictive blows. You can actually look at pre post data,
which means you look at gun death prior to legislation
and then after, and the data is incontrovertible. There's reductions
when you have more strong, more robust gun safety things,
things like you need to have a certain period of
time between when you apply to get a gun when

(27:05):
you can get it. So those kinds of delays dramatically
reduce the suicide rates across the nation. When you have uh,
you know, universal background checks, you reduce the rates of
gun violence. When you have just more restrictions on red
you know red what's it called, uh red uh red
flag laws? Red flag you have more red flag laws,

(27:27):
you have less gun violence occurring. So there's a lot
of really good common sense UH gun legislation that works
without starting to invoke like having you know, the national
guards show up to protect schools or churches.

Speaker 6 (27:42):
All right, don't go don't go there down, don't go
down the road with the national Guard, because that's another debate.
But I'll have that with you at any time. Let's
stick with this one. Now, with everything that you just said,
I'm gonna I'm going to concede to you, doctor Steve.
I'm going to concede that those laws that you're talking
about drove down the number of those incidents. Right. We

(28:03):
talked to suicide rates, the mass shootings and things like that,
which almost flies in the face of this idea of
trick and trickle down economics or trickle down effect, because
what we're seeing here is a trickle down effect, right,
because other people can't get guns, like in other words,
if you're a legal gun buyer selling them nefariously, illegally

(28:27):
in other words, you know, if those laws are stronger,
you can't do the illegal sales or the sales that
go to this person that where and those guns ending
up in the hands of notorious or nefarious individuals. So
you're right, the trickle down effect works. So I would
like everybody in the government to hear that. Myself and
doctor Steve agree that trickle down works. Okay, just so

(28:50):
you know, no, but but fair right, trickle down works.
But but we also have to take into consideration, doctor Steve,
that Minnesota has a red flag law, and that didn't
deter this individual.

Speaker 7 (29:09):
What do you say to that?

Speaker 6 (29:10):
And can we say that even though we get a reduction,
it doesn't mean we get It's no, we don't absolve
ourselves from the tragedy because even when Bill Clinton was right,
it doesn't mean we didn't get mass shootings because we did.

Speaker 17 (29:24):
Yeah, no question. I mean, seatbelts they don't prevent every
motor vehicle death, but God knows, I'm gonna still wear mine,
and I presume you're gonna wear yours. There is no
such thing as a single act of legislation that's going
to stop all gun depths. And as you alluded to earlier,
the majority of gun depths, it's not it's not these
mass shootings. I mean, while there's a mass shooting happening

(29:46):
literally every day in America, and that's I'm not exaggerating.
There's a mass shooting defined US three or four people
killed at once by a single gun happens once per day,
every single day of the year. But that is that
pay in comparison to the gun depths happening in the
inner city amongst black and brown people. As you said earlier,
which is it just so far outstrips that. So you're

(30:09):
not going to have you know, more gun security in
schools and churches and other places is not going to
alleviate that problem. So you just hope that you can
patch together enough enough laws, enough legislations, enough actions, and
enough politicians willing to act to start to decrease the number.
You can't possibly stop the numbers always going to be

(30:29):
some way for some meget a gun and do something crazy.

Speaker 6 (30:32):
It's crazy because I, you know, I was thinking about
this yesterday as I was having that discussion with that
with with that first caller that you're referring to, is
you know, I looked at two numbers that blew my mind.
And it was the rate of which mass shootings were
happening by rapes. And he was talking about the he
was talking about the the explosion sense, you know, the
Columbine situation of nineteen was it ninety nine?

Speaker 7 (30:54):
Was that ninety nine?

Speaker 17 (30:56):
Around there? Yeah, round down there.

Speaker 6 (30:57):
So he was talking about the explosive rise in school
shooting since Columbine, and he was saying that that was
happening far more off, that was happening at schools far
more often than it was happening in black schools.

Speaker 7 (31:10):
He was saying white schools versus black schools.

Speaker 6 (31:12):
The interesting part is that I then was given a
statistic immediately, you know, and I love the listeners here
because they're.

Speaker 7 (31:18):
Always online getting more and more data.

Speaker 6 (31:21):
I then saw a poll immediately after that broke down
these mass shootings because doctor Steves. You know, there are
many of these arguments that are made, especially by those
in the liberal intelligentsia, that white you know, the white boys,
they got to kill each other at the schools. But
somebody sent me a statistic that says mass shootings overall

(31:42):
are committed more by blacks than they are by whites,
even considering the school because when you see a mass
shooting is always at a school. When it comes to
white suburban neighborhoods, with the exception of Uvaldi, however, when
we talk about mass shootings or MA mass killings, it
turns out that the African American community far out ways

(32:03):
white kids are doing it. So I would separate, and
I would tell people please stop making it about whether
or not it's happening in suburban areas or versus the
urban areas. What I would make an argument is is
that if there is a gun issue that we need
to address. Fine, let's find some common ground there. But
the thing that we know for certain is who the

(32:27):
targets are, and we should protect those because we can't isolate.
We can't walk around saying this person, that person in
this person might be a potential killer, and we need
to make sure that we keep the guns out of there.
There's no way to do that because in some cases
we may be doing the thing that many people are
concerned about, taking guns out of people who don't deserve
to have their guns removed from them.

Speaker 7 (32:48):
Let's go after the targets of said shooters.

Speaker 17 (32:51):
I just don't think you can because why not.

Speaker 7 (32:55):
Why can't you protect schools?

Speaker 17 (32:58):
No, but think about the shooting. And I mean again,
you and I are both focusing on the mass shootings
and they're the tiniest fraction of death. But even if
we do focus on the mass shooting, think about where
they occurred in the last last five years. A grocery store,
a nightclub, a rock concert. Yes, of course, some occurred
at churches, some occurred at schools. But they're everywhere. Man,

(33:21):
there is no oh.

Speaker 6 (33:22):
No, no, I'm not denying that.

Speaker 17 (33:25):
I'm not a building, walls I'm not.

Speaker 6 (33:27):
Denying that they're not everywhere, But what I'm saying is
is that when we tell people that having armed guards,
and I mean police at certain places, are are more
affected by optics instead of doing the job that they're
supposed to do. Remember, everyone believes that the police are
the only ones who should have guns because they protect people.

(33:48):
But on the other on the other side of their mouth,
they're going, but we don't want them here, And I'm
going no, no, no, no, no. You can't have it
both ways. You don't want everybody to have a gun.
So if nobody is allowed to protect themselves and the
police should have the job of doing that, then let's
have the police everywhere where these soft targets are. That's all.

(34:09):
That's what we're asking. We're asking for a police state,
aren't we aren't we?

Speaker 17 (34:18):
I just think there's other things to focus on rather
than then.

Speaker 6 (34:21):
How about this, doctor, Steve, Let's ask you this, who
would you rather have guns? If you had to make
a choice, and I'll give you three Okay, We'll give
you multiple choices. Would you like the police and government
to have guns? Would you like citizens to be armed
to defend themselves, or would.

Speaker 7 (34:40):
You like both.

Speaker 17 (34:43):
Number one. I'll take number one police.

Speaker 7 (34:45):
Okay, so only police to have guns.

Speaker 17 (34:49):
I mean I think people you know, in New Zealand,
even in New Zealand where they dramatically banned or have
very high gun legislation rates, citizens can still have guns.
They just have like right to shoot for go hunting, wow,
their sports, but they don't have handguns or for the citizenry.
And there's a lot of regulations around who can can't

(35:11):
own a gun. Well, okay, now I'm gonna put you know,
I know, I don't know.

Speaker 6 (35:17):
I'm gonna put you in a corner, though, I'm gonna
put you in a corner. This is this is where
it gets a little hairy. So what do you say?
What do you say to some communities I'm not gonna
say which communities they are black? Who say, I got
it that Africa that police officers with their guns target

(35:40):
black folks and put a target on their backs and
have an intentional Like.

Speaker 7 (35:44):
What do you say to those communities?

Speaker 6 (35:46):
Because again, remember you're telling everybody that the people that
you want to the only people you want to have
the guns are the people that many communities believe are
out to kill them. So what do you say to
the black community when you propose only police has guns,
what do you say to them?

Speaker 17 (36:01):
Well, I don't. I don't think in general the violence
perpetrated by law enforcement is a law enforcement officer generally
going out of the way to shoot a black person.
I think a lot more often than not, it's over zealous,
more physical violence. If you will, hand to hand violence,

(36:23):
that's that's committed, you know, So I you know, I
don't think that. Again, I'm a white person.

Speaker 18 (36:31):
I live in.

Speaker 17 (36:32):
Suburbia, so my perspective is by nature invalid.

Speaker 6 (36:35):
But I think, no, no, no, it's not no, no, no,
not listen to me. You're on with a black man. Okay,
who's telling you? And I don't care any one of
those rabbel rousers civil rights is tell you you have
every right to opine about this subject. Is anybody else
just because your skin color does not omit you.

Speaker 7 (36:54):
You're asked, you're giving.

Speaker 6 (36:54):
An opinion because look, and I'll tell you this one
thing I can always say about you. Doctor. See, we've
never met, but we've had enough conversations on this program
to know you are coming from a genuine place. You
have no malice in your heart. You are trying to
be honestly, you're trying. No, you have. You've always been
that way, and I really respect that about you. You've
always been honest and given your honest perspective that you

(37:15):
never cast an aspersion. You and I don't agree, but
you've done it respectfully. I consider you a friend of
this show and I love having you on. So please
don't ever think that you can't opine. It is imperative
that you opine on this subject.

Speaker 17 (37:28):
Well, thank you very much for that reason. In that case,
I would say, I feel like a young black man
on the streets of New Haven should not be worried
about getting shot at by law enforcement, and perhaps law
enforcement may be less given to shooting if they know
that there's fewer guns on the streets. You know, it's

(37:50):
a little bit of a cycle, if you will, of
less gunfire. If you you know, if you walk into
a knife fight and no one has a gun, one's
gonna get shot. It's just you instinctively don't. Don't. It's
like a nuclear arms race, right if you know your
ponent's got a nuclear nuclear weapons, but if your ponents
don't have them, then you don't. You don't worry about that.

(38:12):
I think it would be the same thing. And in
the inner city, if there's less guns on the streets,
there's just less people worried about getting shot at and
less you know, trigger happy folks. Trigger Happy is not
the right word, but you.

Speaker 6 (38:22):
Get pun un pun unintended, but I get it. God
bless you, doctor Steve. I love it when you call
me and thank you'd never ever hesitate. I know you
come in sparingly, but when you're here, you put a
big smile on my face. And I love no when
I see your name come up on here. You have
no idea how much joy I have when you call up.

(38:43):
Really respect you.

Speaker 17 (38:45):
I appreciate it.

Speaker 6 (38:45):
Thanks Doc, all right, doctor Steve. Ladies and gentlemen, good
a good call. And again that's as I tell people
all the time. And you liberals out there, you know
I say it. Doctor Steve is a testament that guy
rep presents well.

Speaker 7 (39:00):
Not all of you. That guy's more rational.

Speaker 6 (39:02):
Than a lot of you are.

Speaker 7 (39:04):
But you guys know who you are. You're dying to
call in. You go like, he's not gonna respect us.

Speaker 6 (39:10):
Doctor Steve. And he loves this show. He loves this show.
Totally disagrees with me regularly. Oh man, it's so crazy.
It's so crazy. I'm not gonna take any more. We're
gonna get into some calls later on because I got
more stuff to get into as it revolves around this
story in Minneapolis. Why why is this story still important?

(39:35):
Let me run through a couple of ideas for you.
One in my hands. I have the scariest part of
this story, and that is the similarities between the Coventry
shooting and the one at the Annunciation School.

Speaker 7 (39:55):
This list is glaring.

Speaker 6 (40:00):
Another part of this on that it's so I tell
you guys all the time, I believe in God and
there's no such thing as coincidences. Why is it that
both of these transgender shooters have a problem with black folks?

(40:22):
They are liberals through and through. When you get the
makeup of these individuals, when you go through their manifesto,
and what.

Speaker 7 (40:32):
Is the thing that agree that I agree?

Speaker 6 (40:37):
What's the term I'm looking for that aggrieves them, that
makes them angry, that puts them in this tail spin?

Speaker 7 (40:44):
If you will.

Speaker 6 (40:47):
Both of these individuals, as the dishooter at Tops in Buffalo,
they have this problem with black folks, and it's really
interesting that they do. Let me lay, I'm gonna give
you an idea. This I want you to think about it.

(41:07):
We always say those of us who are conservative blacks,
They say African Americans are as conservative as they get,
but they still keep voting Democrat.

Speaker 7 (41:17):
I don't get it.

Speaker 6 (41:19):
Do they not know that liberals hate them? Do they
not know that liberals only want.

Speaker 7 (41:24):
Them to live a particular potential.

Speaker 6 (41:28):
They never want them to actually ascend and be self sufficient.
They need them as a permanent underclass because they get
to use their race and their poverty and of criminal
justice system as the means to keep themselves elected.

Speaker 7 (41:42):
They need them there. They can't have all of them
assending what are they? They're not used to them.

Speaker 6 (41:47):
Then, and then you listen to these shooters talk about
black folks. The top shooter in Buffalo said that black
folks didn't care enough about global warming with their SUVs

(42:08):
and their gas guzzling cars. Yes, you brothers are riding
around in cadillacs and escalades. That offends Then the tree huggers.
You didn't know that, Yeah, it happens. And these two individuals,
the one in Coventry, was upset because black folks wouldn't

(42:33):
accept them.

Speaker 7 (42:34):
Even though they had.

Speaker 6 (42:35):
Done everything they could to care about their causes. Ohing
the shooter yesterday, Oh hated the black community. It's sad.
We gotta take a break. News is coming up with
Dave Meger, plus your phone calls. Maybe in a little

(42:57):
bit when we return. Let's get to the WTI newsroom.
To day maker.

Speaker 7 (43:01):
It's Resa radio, Riz on the radio.

Speaker 4 (43:04):
Ask your doctor of common sensus, right for your for
yout I sees.

Speaker 6 (43:11):
For Pete's sakes, red socks, gott it to Gallor for
the love of Pete. Okay, now it's three to two. Okay,
can we maintain the lead? Socks? You're playing the bombs orioles.

Speaker 7 (43:26):
They're bombs. They're bombs, and be careful you're playing in Baltimore.
They will mug you.

Speaker 6 (43:33):
Every public bathroom in Baltimore is locked with a keypad.

Speaker 7 (43:38):
Did you know that? It's a hellscape, all of it is.
I'm not kidding. I am not kidding. To go to
a public.

Speaker 6 (43:46):
Bathroom anywhere anywhere in Baltimore. You gotta put a keypad
in there because it's been overrun by the homeless.

Speaker 7 (43:56):
Wes Moore running for president can't wait anyway.

Speaker 6 (44:01):
More news, more music, sakes the guy. We'll get it
to all that in a second. I'll get to Mark
and West Hartford. He was the one who alerted me
to this story about the about the school police presence.
Now that everyone is by the way, if Rotowski's out there,
I know he's somewhere, I need to ask what's going
on in that area. Let's go to a couple of
phone call. Sally d is in New Hampshire. Hello, Sally,

(44:23):
are you doing long time?

Speaker 7 (44:25):
And long time? What's what's our buddy?

Speaker 19 (44:28):
So let me just pose a scenario and you tell
me if you think.

Speaker 17 (44:32):
That's that this is the case as well.

Speaker 19 (44:35):
The thing, the thing that's so disturbing about this and
everything that's happening is that I don't think you can
take this incident and put it in a box right
and just say we have a problem with the trans community.
You know, the issue is and it's such as a
larger issue that affects that I don't think and you
can combat, which is they're hitting you at every turn

(44:58):
when it comes to anything.

Speaker 17 (45:00):
That's a core value or anything.

Speaker 19 (45:03):
That's conservative or any you know, they're trying to attack
the country from within at all angles. The same reason
you couldn't pick off some that job on a roof
when Trump was in Pennsylvania. Is the same reason this
thing just happens, and it's going to continue to happen.
You can't cover all the schools, you can't cover all
the churches, and so you destroy the country by creating

(45:26):
these Manchurian drones just at some point go off.

Speaker 17 (45:32):
But I don't think it's random.

Speaker 19 (45:34):
I really don't.

Speaker 6 (45:35):
So you think you think that there is really an
effort to root out right with this constant theme, this
zeitgeist going on within liberalism that will eventually you and
you're sort of calling it Manchurian right by constantly promoting
that theme through a major news organizations, be it television,

(45:56):
legacy news, be a television print or what have you.
And eventually what it does is gin up that lunatic,
if you will.

Speaker 7 (46:05):
And I'm using that.

Speaker 6 (46:05):
Term loosely to be the one to go out and
say I'm going to be the person to avenge this
mayhem that I'm seeing every day in the news. James
Hodgkinson's is a perfect example. What was he? What was he?

Speaker 7 (46:19):
Motivated by?

Speaker 6 (46:21):
Rachel Mattowen, Bernie Sanders constant theme of Republicans are killing people.
This person becomes the one I will avenge them. You're
sort of using that term, right, I mean that's the
long and short. Right.

Speaker 19 (46:32):
You say hate so many times, you call somebody hitler
so many times. You build this false narrative that is
so powerful that these people who are weak minded that
when they're we're all come closing down, the only thing
they can do is go out and lash out mm hmm.

Speaker 10 (46:50):
Right.

Speaker 6 (46:51):
And then the news media works as a political arm
of said group that again operates, you know, with their
inch and say and then divert us to other things. Right,
it becomes the gun control issue as opposed to the
one the individual who who plotted this and actually you know,

(47:12):
executed it, instead of those things. Right.

Speaker 19 (47:16):
Look, I mean look at this immigration issue. All these
cartel members, right, and they're trying to spin it like
it's we hate migrants. Yeah, all part of a greater scheme,
and it actually is happening. You know, I don't want
to use the war, you know, the civil war term.
It's a dangerous term, but it's a different kind of thing.
But it's tearing the country up from within. And I

(47:38):
don't know what you do to stop it other than
the media add on like they're doing.

Speaker 6 (47:41):
I would say, the best way sally D to combat
it is to consistently and and I would say repetitively
repeat the truth. I'm going to take you back to
something I always mentioned in this story. You know, because
you sally D has been a support of Reason and
Radio for a lot of years. I want to say,
maybe even what is it what fifteen twenty years now

(48:04):
twenty Yeah, so sally D knows me very well.

Speaker 7 (48:07):
But you know I've expressed this before.

Speaker 6 (48:10):
I always harken back to that sixty minutes episode that
I can't find anywhere, and if anyone can find it,
please send it to me. But it was one of
the Black Ops guys was talking about the waterboarding of
Khalegue Sheik Muhammad, and he expressed he was talking about
his exchanges with Khalid and Khaleide Scheik Muhammad kept saying that,

(48:31):
saying to the Black Ops guy that your liberal media
is going to in essence, if not challenge you, admonish you, right,
they are going to criticize you and blame you for
the things that you are doing to me. Khaleide Schek
Muhammad was saying as the architect of nine to eleven,
that your own people are going to turn against you

(48:54):
and side with him over cruelty, which to me said
I and I talk about this all the time because
I say, people go, well, I don't know what that means, Reese.
Let me break it down deep down. What they are
doing is and guys like this are doing are going
after the compassionate wing of our country and excusing the

(49:19):
behavior of guys like colleague shik Muhammad and looking at
us as the people who wish to thwart it as
the bad guys that we should accept what they've done
because they were oppressed not too long ago. And you guys,
remember this last summer, if not the summer before, we
had a TikTok uh phenomenon where kids are online reading

(49:42):
Osama bin Laden's letter to America and agreeing with it.
So here's a guy who is remember we you And
these are the same people who were when he was
killed under Barack Obama's watch, who were shouting at me
midnight in Times Square. Now those same people are sitting

(50:04):
back going, oh, maybe he was right.

Speaker 19 (50:07):
I'm gonna say one thing, and I'm gonna let you go.
You just I can't believe you touched on this because
what I'm gonna say ties directly to what you just said.
So here's what I'm gonna say, and I'm gonna say
it very carefully. If I told you that TICS were
a bio weapon, you'd be like, oh, look at this,
listen to this conspiracy theorist. But if you actually go
look it up, our CIA used tics and created line

(50:30):
disease and dumped it on a populace to see what
would happen that's out there.

Speaker 17 (50:36):
H So I'll say this.

Speaker 19 (50:39):
They've been manipulating governments and people forever. You mentioned Khalid
Shaik Muhammad and the mastermind of nine to eleven. I
propose to say the mastermind of nine to eleven is
not yet defined, and it's all tying into this chaos
because there's a global agenda if we succeed taking back

(51:00):
our country, there's an agenda that goes it's been working
for years to try and you know, raise its head.

Speaker 7 (51:08):
Oh, I think I think that we are.

Speaker 6 (51:10):
I think, to be honest with you, sal what is
trying to be done today? Now that the the powers
that be are in the hands of the opposition to
this idea? I believe that it doesn't quell their attempts.
I only think it emboldens them. I think because they
know that they thought they had it, like they were

(51:30):
coasting for a long time, and now that there has
been an opposition to that, which is now either the
MAGA movement or can the New Conservatism, that now they
are emboldened to do far more and far more and
far greater. Which is why we can sit up here
and I tell people all the time, we got to
stop sitting around thinking that there was a victory one

(51:51):
and we could relax. The war has just begun. And
I mean that figuratively and ideologically.

Speaker 17 (51:58):
Absolutely, We're always the same.

Speaker 7 (51:59):
For always a pleasure to Sally. Do you love you man?

Speaker 6 (52:04):
Yeah, it's just it's it's just the truth. And again
I'm going to get to this point, uh when we
get back on the when when we get back to
regular airwaves, because I want everybody to be able to
hear this. And I'm checking right now. We're at the
bottom of the eighth inning. It is Boston Red Sox
three to Orioles two. Uh, and we'll be back there soon.
I'm hoping that before we get to the four o'clock

(52:24):
so I'm sparing. I'm saving all of this good stuff
that I have. What we do, Let's get to Mark
and West Hartford before we go to a break.

Speaker 7 (52:31):
How are we doing, boss?

Speaker 20 (52:33):
Hey, I'm doing good. Before we get to the s
r OS, I gotta ask you, what was the media
out that you utilized to grab the chaan bite from
Mayor Runin pollam who's saying he liked to Uh?

Speaker 7 (52:45):
I know, I w I do it all the time.

Speaker 6 (52:47):
W w FSB carried his words live and after and
they went that was live online. So I'm on my
Facebook page and I'll get a w FSB alert when
something's going on, and it said WFSB was live, and
I saw, you know, Mayor Runin, and I didn't couldn't tell.

Speaker 7 (53:05):
What it was he was talking about.

Speaker 6 (53:06):
Then I saw the chiron about the Connecticut Sun, so
I just looked at it.

Speaker 7 (53:10):
So listening to.

Speaker 20 (53:11):
Their newsroom, what I want everybody to remember is while
he's proposing this, and you know, a whole bunch of
stupid liberal Democrats are probably like, yeah, they should stay
in Hartford. We are on the hook for that dunkin
Donut Park. Two decades we lose since and Listen, we
have record attendants in that league. Hartford leads in attendance

(53:33):
year after years since it opened, and they still lose
between three and four million a year, and they're going
to continue to lose between three to four million a
year with it being the highest attendance in that league.
So I want everybody listen. I told you about the
OTV they built this guy, and nobody questions. That's why
I'm asking. I'm gonna call FSB, who gonna say, you guys,

(53:55):
don't bring up the stuff they've done already. They're renovating
the Civic Center. That's gonna be a bust.

Speaker 6 (54:01):
I will tell you that way, waiting hold on the
Civic Center isn't twenty years old.

Speaker 7 (54:06):
What do you mean they're renovating it.

Speaker 20 (54:08):
Oh no, No, the Excel Center, the Excel Center, Oh yeah, yeah,
people people. So they're putting these bunker instead of skyboxes
where you're way up high, they're gonna have like these
little like I don't know what they're calling bunker suites
down below. Listen, nobody's going to go there unless you
get a big ax. In only a few a year,

(54:29):
that place is gonna be empty. But what I'm saying
is how can they not question him on duncan don'ut
park because you know what failure saying he wants us
to be on the hook for a basketball because okay,
not the reason for that.

Speaker 6 (54:43):
And again this is not making an excuse for them.
Remember what everybody is on board with, and I think
I can speak for everybody here. The objective is is
that they need to give a mayor room in a
platform because everybody wants them to stay. They want they
definitely want Hartford to not lose another major.

Speaker 7 (55:01):
That's the agenda. They're not going to talk about that
other stuff when they need to keep the Connecticut Son
in heart.

Speaker 20 (55:07):
So we don't bring up the money.

Speaker 6 (55:09):
We can't. You can't, but Mark, you know that they can't.
You listen, listen, they can't because it is a one page.
That's the objective is because look, it doesn't hurt, it doesn't.
It doesn't help w FSB to challenge him on all
that other stuff. Win Again, the one thing, the one

(55:29):
you know, train of thought as it were, is to
keep the Connecticut Son. So everybody's on board. Now I'm
not saying that's a good things. I'm not saying that's
a good thing, but that you got to understand, you know,
pick your poison at that point.

Speaker 20 (55:41):
But do you see what they're doing with this mayor
have you ever seen anybody question him yet?

Speaker 2 (55:47):
That was my whole point.

Speaker 20 (55:49):
On question, and I'm gone, I'm sick of it.

Speaker 7 (55:55):
You are you listen? You and I look at you
and I are on the same page.

Speaker 20 (56:00):
That's why do my opening monologue real quick about the SROs.
I got a message. You know, they're not going to
get back to me, but I figured, what a great
what a great time. You know, I reach out to
Murphy's office. They never get back to you, but I'm there, Like,
what's his position today? As they've increased police presence in
Connecticut schools. I'm doing that with my own Board of

(56:23):
ED member LaToya Fernandez. Fernandez here in West Harford. She
single handedly got rid of SROs in San Jose. Oh yeah,
that's all these Democrats who wants SROs out, like talk
about not getting sound bites. Where is the media to go,
like talk to the Dems now in Connecticut.

Speaker 7 (56:40):
I don't get it again. I do great story, I
don't get it now.

Speaker 6 (56:45):
The fact that you know it's so it's so crazy
that We have been talking about police officers at schools
all this time before a tragedy takes place, and then
the tragedy takes place. And by the way, they pretty
much told all of us the gold pound sand on
the subject.

Speaker 7 (57:05):
They all told us that.

Speaker 20 (57:07):
Where's Bob Doff, where's Martin Looney? Let's get some sound
bites from them. But can I just leave you with
I hope I have enough time. I want to tell
you how dangerous and I think you need to have
James talk about Hartford. It's the capital city, right they
got rid of their SROs. I believe it was nine
years ago. Luke Brown and spearheaded the project. And let
me tell you, it wasn't Luke brownan by himself. It

(57:29):
was others. And they a lot of blood on their
hands because let me tell you, three years ago there
was a thirteen year old that brought Fenton all that
he found in his apartment. I okay, the kid died,
two other kids got sick. This kid died the one thing,
and I'm taking credit for this. There's not a lot
of times well I'll do that, and it's not my ego,
but I made such a big deal that they didn't

(57:49):
have NARKIN in the schools in Hartford. Now I have
them in West Hardford years before Hartford just enacted it.
It took them only months because I made such a
big deal. I said, there was no ar can to
give the kid. Guess who carries narkn SROs. If there
was a police officer that they didn't kick out nine
years ago, Luke Brownan and the other leaders in Hartford,

(58:10):
that kid.

Speaker 7 (58:10):
Might be alive exactly, We'll never know.

Speaker 20 (58:13):
He had to wait. And how I know that because
my firefighter buddies had to go, you know, homlong retired.
I talked to them. That disturbed them. They had to
show up. They couldn't save them.

Speaker 7 (58:22):
Yeah, you know.

Speaker 6 (58:23):
The interesting thing is is like what why is what's
the whole SRO nonsense going on with these libs and
the thing that they and it's the unholy alliance to
these civil rights organizations that say that the police presence
there is some sort of affront to black kids in
the school. And again, the fact that anybody would echo

(58:44):
that sentiment shows exactly how out of touch they are.
Those police officers are part of the community and they
should be embraced as such.

Speaker 20 (58:52):
Did you see what I posted yesterday. People, please go
on Mark from West Harford yesterday just to show you.
Chris Murphy and others will always tell it's the optics
of the cops, right, kind of telling kids look bad.
There's one hundred and twenty school they call them safety officers.
Go on my page and look at what they look like.
They got badges on their shirts, they wear tool belts

(59:14):
with flashlights, radio strapped over their shoulder. They look like cops.
You can't The only him missing is a gun. Yeah,
I wish they had it. It gets What if a
shooter goes in there? What are they gonna do? Throw
a radio at him? Anyway, Thanks for letting me.

Speaker 6 (59:30):
Have you got it, buss Man, I appreciate you. Yeah again,
I saw that picture too. I'm sorry. Maybe their uniforms
look like cops, Mark, but those guys didn't look like
cops at all. Those guys look like rent a cops.
They look like, you know, observe and report, which is
technically what they're there to do. Uh, Bob in the

(59:54):
chat room, is that Friday?

Speaker 21 (59:57):
Uh?

Speaker 7 (59:57):
No, no, Friday after next?

Speaker 22 (59:59):
Yeah?

Speaker 7 (59:59):
Yeah, yeah, but cops?

Speaker 22 (01:00:03):
What was it?

Speaker 6 (01:00:03):
Okay? Sorry, Bob, Bob broke he says, the agenda has
been bringing the truth to America Americans. I don't know
if some are in opposition to a truthful narrative because
it diminishes their ability to claim moral high ground an
American superiority. We are a great country, but our history
is our history. Our strength should enable us to tell

(01:00:24):
the truth about our weaknesses and strengths. Who wants to
go back to a less transparent society? If I'm hearing
you correctly, Bob, that's exactly what we're talking about, is
that we want to be a less a more transparent
society where we actually tell the American people what's going

(01:00:47):
on inside the government that serves us. I don't know
what that's about. You know, It's like you have to
you have to have a constituents that trusts you with
what's going on. In the next half hour, I'm going
to go into the headlines, which I didn't go into yesterday.

(01:01:09):
I've got the stupidest thing that I've read today that
I know a lot of people have heard about, but
I got to get this out of the way.

Speaker 7 (01:01:14):
Now I'm sitting with it.

Speaker 6 (01:01:17):
If you don't know who the two shooters were by name,
and usually I don't, but today I have to because
I need to give a comparison that's very important to
this subject. And I'm looking now at the Red Sox game,
and we have got the top of the ninth, we

(01:01:39):
have three outs. Looks like that just happens, so we're
about to go to the bottom of the ninth. It
looks like the game is almost over, so we could
very well be back on regular air in a couple
of minutes, So stand by with that. So I want
you to take into consideration a couple of names. The
two names are Audrey Hale and Robert Westman. Audrey Hale

(01:02:05):
is the shooter at the Coventry School in twenty twenty three,
and Robert Westman is the shooter from yesterday. Now, I
did a comprehensive search, a breakdown, if you will, of
the similarities between both shooters.

Speaker 7 (01:02:27):
Why is this important? Both shooters.

Speaker 6 (01:02:33):
Consider themselves transgender, they have changed their names, and they
both shut up Catholic and or Christian institutions that they've attended.
The interesting scope here to have is that one shooter

(01:03:00):
was born a girl still remains a girl. But I'm
using it just for context reasons. Was born a girl
and the other was born a boy. Both identify as transgender,
and again both shot up a Christian or Catholic institution
they attended, and they are under the same zeitgeist of transgenderism.

(01:03:29):
And what I'm about to read in a little bit
are the similarities written in their manifestos.

Speaker 7 (01:03:37):
These two individuals, from what we know, have never communicated
with one another.

Speaker 6 (01:03:45):
They have only seen probably the same talking points of
their communities, and they both set out to kill children.
When I tell you that the list is considerable, I
am looking at one, two, three, four, five, six, seven

(01:04:15):
things that compare the two seven, and I have that
list here. What is really interesting is that every one
of these things break down to liberal ideology that we

(01:04:38):
have seen in the public. Going back to Big Sal's
point about ginning up one of these guys to come
out and commit an act like this. It's a very
very interesting study. But we'll get to them in a
little bit. The game should be over shortly, so stand by.
We just got two strikes on the first. By the

(01:05:00):
time we come back from the break, we should be
into this. So stand by. We got bottom of the
hour news with Dave Meger right here on WTIC News
Talk ten eighty. All right, it looks like we're back,
all right, no commercial, that's fine. Reesunner Radio right here
live on WTIC News Talk ten eighty. Congratulations to the
Red Sox again winners over five hundred. Damn you Yankees.

(01:05:23):
All right, let's just get into it. Let's get into
some news real quick, and then we'll get into some
other stuff, all right. Also in the headlines, looks like
Democrat Julian Jillian Sorry gil Crest of West Hartford formerly
launched the campaign for Connecticut's first district that was on Tuesday,

(01:05:45):
joining a field of Democratic candidates who are looking to
unseat fourteen term incumbent John Larson. Gil Crest was forty
three years old who unseated the incumbent member of her
party in twenty eighteen. She's joined the Connecticut General when
she joined the Connecticut Assembly, has expected to announce our
candidacy for US House seat for weeks and several others.
This lets you know that the old guard the new

(01:06:08):
guard's gunning for. And we got Luke bronan former Hartford
mayor who's in the mix. And now we have Gilchrest
who's now trying to unseat Larsen so we'll see how
that turns out. It should be an interesting race, oh
folks versus the young folks. Also in the news during
a marathon three hour cabinet meeting. Many of you watched it,

(01:06:33):
but you probably didn't watch all of it. The media
managed to ignore one little breaking news story item from
the president.

Speaker 7 (01:06:43):
It was some information that he received from Tulci Gabbard.

Speaker 6 (01:06:48):
And if you have listened to Rees on radio long enough,
you probably knew that I was on this story way
before it was mentioned by Tulci Gabbert, and that had
to do with the twenty twenty election.

Speaker 23 (01:07:06):
You've also found many bags of information I think they
call them burned bags are supposed to be burned, and
they didn't get burned, having to do with how corrupt
the twenty twenty election was, and when will that all
come out?

Speaker 7 (01:07:21):
Mister President.

Speaker 18 (01:07:22):
I would be the first to brief you once we
have that information collected. But you're right, we are finding
documents literally tucked away in the back of safes and
random offices, in these bags and in other areas, which
again speaks to the intent of those who are trying
to hide the truth from the American people and trying

(01:07:42):
to cover up the politicization that was led by people
like John Brennan and James Clapper and others that have
caused really immeasurable harm to the American people and to
our country.

Speaker 6 (01:07:55):
Yeah, so look out for those in the coming week
acting them to be incredibly explosive. Now for our stupidest
thing I read today, Yes, you do.

Speaker 1 (01:08:13):
You could very well be the stupidest person on the
face of.

Speaker 6 (01:08:17):
The earth, by far, the most beautiful first lady since
Jackie Oh. Some people have even some problems, saying that
folks at Vanity Fair are threatening to walk out of
their jobs if they dare put.

Speaker 7 (01:08:34):
Malania Trump on the cover.

Speaker 6 (01:08:38):
One person says that I will walk out the mother
bleeping door, and half my staff will follow.

Speaker 7 (01:08:45):
Me, according to one editor who said it to The
New York Post.

Speaker 6 (01:08:49):
Another editor double down, telling the Post, we are not
going to normalize this despot and his wife. We're not
going to do it. We're going to stand for what's right.
But not everybody at Vanity Fair is buying the threats.
They're saying that it's nothing more than performative, said, it's
all talk.

Speaker 7 (01:09:08):
One employee said.

Speaker 6 (01:09:11):
If they put her on the cover, people will protest
and gripe about it, but I don't see anyone quitting
such a prestigious job over that. The reason why I
say it's the stupidest thing I read today. Nobody cares
if Milania is on the cover of Vanity Fair. No
one even reads print magazines anymore. Like people get them

(01:09:32):
and they sit on their coffee table. And if they
do sit on somebody's coffee table, that individual is in
their seventies at best. Nothing against my seventy year old ladies.

Speaker 7 (01:09:42):
I love you, you know I do.

Speaker 6 (01:09:44):
But that stuff you put out there, it's kind of
like table decoration, isn't it. Now? Do people still do that?

Speaker 7 (01:09:50):
When I got my apartment.

Speaker 6 (01:09:52):
When I got my apartment in the Bronx, it was
one of my first apartments, I put magazines out on
the coffee table because it look.

Speaker 1 (01:10:00):
Like a.

Speaker 6 (01:10:02):
It looked like a doctor's office. I just put the
I was like, I don't even know why I put
him there. I thought that was what you was supposed
to do. I learned that from my grandmother. I also
watched all my children a lot too in my adulthood.
I don't want to say any names, but a certain
news guy likes The Young and Restless. I'm not going
to say any names he's but he's been watching it

(01:10:26):
for years. I was actually shocked. I was like, hey,
why do you got this stuff on? He was like,
I've been watching that for over thirty years. I'm like
that Young and Restless. It's like, yeah, I don't want
to out of I thought it was cool. I was like, okay,
just start watching when you're sixteen.

Speaker 7 (01:10:40):
You don't give up. Some people's got things, They got
things that they like, they just do. Let me go
to Mattio and Tom real quick. Let's go to Mattio first.
How are you, sir?

Speaker 6 (01:10:52):
I love you. I'm pretty good.

Speaker 7 (01:10:54):
What's up, sir?

Speaker 22 (01:10:56):
I'm sorry, mister Hopkins. He caught me off because, yeah,
it was blank.

Speaker 10 (01:11:02):
For a while.

Speaker 6 (01:11:03):
What do you got?

Speaker 21 (01:11:06):
So?

Speaker 22 (01:11:07):
Yeah, I wish he took more after he got on
regularly because he's way more interesting than me. But I
was just calling to say I don't normally call about
school shootings, but the one thing I would say is,
like the other guy was saying, with the red flag laws, yes,
I think those are a good idea, but I think

(01:11:29):
there has to be a difference in the hippo laws
on top of the red flag laws. Because the way
the hippo laws are are designed, if say there was
an underage person that went to a psychologist or a
psychiatrist and the parents to worry about him, they can't

(01:11:51):
really say anything. But if you add those two together
you might have an actual deterrent to these type of thing.

Speaker 7 (01:11:59):
Well, I would say, I look at it in this way.

Speaker 6 (01:12:03):
So we have a parent in this case who in
twenty nineteen changed their son's name from Robert to Robin.
This was probably a mother who is just like a
lot of these Hollywood mother types who now treat their
children like an airmaze bag when they find out that.

Speaker 7 (01:12:23):
Their kids are transgender.

Speaker 6 (01:12:24):
I've got the transgender child, and you know, again, change
their name because they couldn't do it on their own.
She is trying to give that child gender affirming care
by getting their name changed. And with all of that
thought that that was it, that there was nothing else
that they needed to do in order to assure their

(01:12:46):
child was living a productive life, they did nothing else.

Speaker 22 (01:12:51):
That's kind of my point is the psychiatrist might have
known or seen other warning signs, but they cannot say
anything because.

Speaker 17 (01:13:00):
Of the hippologue.

Speaker 7 (01:13:01):
Right, very true.

Speaker 22 (01:13:02):
You add that to the red flag laws, then you
might have an actual first first warning sign.

Speaker 6 (01:13:14):
Okay, I get your point. Yeah, you're right, you could.
It's quite possible. I have, Like I said, in this case,
I'll look at it this way. Can I play this
audio for you these let's contrast the two last presidents,
Joseph Varbiden Donald J.

Speaker 7 (01:13:26):
Trump.

Speaker 24 (01:13:27):
The idea that an eight year old child or a
ten year old child decides, you know, I decided I
want to be transgender. That's what I think i'd like
to be. They make my life a lot easier. There
is no reason to suggest that there should be any
right denied your daughter or daughters, whichever of one or two.

Speaker 23 (01:13:47):
Reminalizing sex changes on children and forever ending the lie
that any child is trapped in the wrong body.

Speaker 25 (01:13:55):
This is a big lie.

Speaker 2 (01:14:01):
No message to.

Speaker 23 (01:14:03):
Every child in America is that you are perfect, exactly
the way God made you.

Speaker 6 (01:14:10):
Now, I don't know what could be more affirming than
what Donald Trump said right there, is that you are
perfect the way that God made you.

Speaker 7 (01:14:18):
What an affirming comment to make to your child.

Speaker 22 (01:14:25):
And again, I'm not going to argue that fact, right,
I'm just I'm just saying that there are other warning
signs other than that that might that might bring light
to someone that could be dangerous if the hippolaws were different.
So sometimes it might just be a transgender Sometimes it

(01:14:49):
might be something deeper.

Speaker 6 (01:14:50):
And yeah, you know, so you're not going to be
able to look Matt, Matt, You're not going to be
able to not gonna be able to farm. Like, we're
not gonna be able to find them all, you know
what I mean, We're not gonna be able to Some
of them are gonna be okay and others are not
gonna be so okay. But what I believe is is
that if it if it's true that it's turning out

(01:15:12):
that these folks are becoming more and more violent because
they feel either oppressed or put upon, then what we
need to do is we need to protect the soft
target that they seem to be going after. But I'm
gonna get into that in a second. Thank you, boss man.
I always appreciate you. Let me read you to comparisons,

(01:15:35):
and again, as I said, this is a case where
we have to go after who.

Speaker 7 (01:15:41):
They are going after. Don't understand that, Yeah, that was
coming in real hot too. But oh was it okay?
I'm sorry about that. I knew it was. I was
trying to turn it down. Thank you.

Speaker 6 (01:15:53):
Let me Let me go through the similarities between the
two individuals, and this is Audrey Hale and Rob Wesmen
hatred towards Christianity and religious institutions. Both shooters express disdain
for Christianity, targeting Christian schools and institution. Audrey Hale Covenant

(01:16:15):
School as a symbol of conservative Christian values. Westman Annunciation
Catholic school with anti religious phrases and the desecration of
Christian imagery. Resentment towards society and the world and life.
Both harbored broad, nihilistic, antagonistic views towards society and existence.

(01:16:37):
Audrey Hale feeling at war with society and America for
ignoring her. Westmen hatred for life and the corrupting world,
leading to desire for destruction. Racial and ethnic resentment. Elements
of racial hatred appear in both through manifested differences. Differently,

(01:16:59):
hal resentment towards white privilege and her own white race,
Westman's racism against racial minorities, including anti semitism and white
supremacy ideologies hatred towards politicians. Both included disdain for political figures.
Hale said their hatred for s headed politicians in America.

(01:17:23):
Westman specifically calls to kill the president of the United States,
the current one and broader political resentment targeting children and innocence.
Both focused harming children as symbols of vulnerability or privilege.
Hale called privileged white children at private schools. Westman fantasized
about slaughtering powerless children, and innocence with ironic phrases like

(01:17:49):
for the Children.

Speaker 7 (01:17:50):
Self hatred and personal struggles.

Speaker 6 (01:17:53):
Both lists include self loathing tied to mental health and
identity issues. Hale's hatred for her female elgender and her
body plus autism OCD, westman self hatred, despair, and references
to depression and autism. Influence on broader societal and ideological frustrations.

(01:18:16):
Both drew from feelings of isolations, obsessions with violence, and
notoriety with references to other societal groups.

Speaker 7 (01:18:25):
Hale black culture.

Speaker 6 (01:18:27):
Hale thought that she was ignored by black culture even
though she cared so much about them.

Speaker 7 (01:18:33):
Westman had historical hatreds for Jews.

Speaker 6 (01:18:39):
And anti Semitism, considered homosexual as the f word or
referred to them as such. Those are all the similarities,
but it goes deeper. We'll talk about those in a second.
So stand by, more news, more views that you can
take a stick at. I'll play some audio sound bites
you need to hear when we return. Go No, it's

(01:19:00):
res on the radio on WTIC newstock Tannad.

Speaker 4 (01:19:03):
It's Reese on the radio on newst I see.

Speaker 6 (01:19:08):
Yeah, we're back. We've got more news and more views.
We've got Hollywood news coming up. We've got APOC American
Israel Public Affairs Committee. We've got to talk about that
a little bit as well. Standby for that. And between rounds,
we got the winner. Between rounds, the dozen bagels a month,

(01:19:29):
we're talking about this shooting in Minneapolis. And this was
Andrew McCabe on CNN talking about the shooting yesterday.

Speaker 11 (01:19:42):
This one is really remarkable to me in that respect.
I was looking at you know, we don't I haven't
seen the manifesto as I can say whether there are
specific references to the twenty twenty three Covenant School shooter
in Nashville, But if you look at that, that's its
situation and this one, there are remarkable similar So both
are in their twenties. Both targeted religious schools that they

(01:20:04):
formerly attended. Both brought three weapons to the crime. Both
purchased those weapons legally. Both drove to the attack site
and left a vehicle there. Both posted manifestos in which
they raged and expressed grievance towards numerous ethnic groups and religions.

(01:20:24):
You know, a real broad stroke of kind of anger.

Speaker 7 (01:20:28):
There, y you heard it. They have this broad sense
of anger.

Speaker 6 (01:20:35):
But I've looked at all of the things, their comprehensive
list on the things that they hated, and it is
a textbook breakdown of liberal ideologies, all of them. Let's
look at them separately. Forget about the comparisons between the two.
Let's break them down. A comprehensive list of Robert Westman's

(01:20:59):
hate life, world and society. Who are the people who
are always down on the way the life is, the
world is and society.

Speaker 7 (01:21:09):
That's not a conservative idea.

Speaker 6 (01:21:12):
When conservatives are complaining about stuff, it's liberalism. They're not
complaining about life. They know life is hard, they know
that society can be tough. They understand that people don't
agree with them. These things don't affect conservatives. It's not
a conservative value by any stretch of the imaginations.

Speaker 7 (01:21:31):
And do we complain, Hell, yeah we do, but it's
just about people like you.

Speaker 6 (01:21:39):
But we don't have a societal like when we talk
about societal problems, we talk about like the destruction of
societal norms like going to church, family, getting up early,
going to school, Christianity, and religious institutions that don't sound
like us. Who's got the biggest problem with religious institutions?

(01:22:03):
Liberals because they hate the patriarchy. They believe it's too demanding,
it's too structured, too stringent. And the fact that the folks,
both of these folks are transgender. No one's ever talked
about the far left transgender group in this country.

Speaker 7 (01:22:24):
No one's ever done that. We go on Jews and israel.

Speaker 6 (01:22:30):
College campuses, anyone, but I digress racial minorities, white supremacy,
Donald Trump and politicians, children and the innocent. Who's got
the biggest I mean real like anti child rhetoric going on?

(01:22:56):
Who considers a baby of fetus? Come on, seriously, self
hatred and personal despair. Who's more prone to that historical hatreds?
Let's run through a few Westman praised Adolf Hitler who's

(01:23:23):
running around saying Hitler was right? Who's doing that the
college campuses? I'm seeing that all over the place. It's everywhere.
Let's get our first check of weather in traffic. Was
it Thursday? Bob Larsen is not in today? We've got
Scott Homan in today for Bob Larsen and Mark Christophers

(01:23:47):
always is in the BPS traffic center.

Speaker 2 (01:23:48):
Hey, Mark, is Reese on the radio?

Speaker 4 (01:23:51):
Brind Dan say we didn't mourn you on News Talk
ten eighty WT.

Speaker 2 (01:23:57):
I see see we.

Speaker 7 (01:23:59):
Already got a minute.

Speaker 6 (01:24:04):
Between bounds bounds and congratulations to Tom h in Vernon.
He is today's winner of the Between Rounds dozen bagels
a month for six months, courtesy Between Rounds the Bagel
Bakery and Sandwich Cafe, located in South Windsor, Vernon and Manchester.

(01:24:25):
If you'd like a chance to win, you gotta go
to Reese on the radio dot com. That's our E
E S E at s. Please our E E S
E on the radio dot com. In order to enter
fill out the form. You must live in the state
of Connecticut, and you cannot have won within the last
six months from today when we come back, I've got
plenty of audio sound bites that we need to get into,

(01:24:46):
plus your phone calls and folks, for those people out
there who talk of a lot of smack about our
Senate and Congress, these hearings and stuff that goes down
on the floor with people yelling at at each other
saying it's so divisive. It's just so divisive. I want
you to go on X right now and go to

(01:25:07):
the Blaze and look at the massive fight that broke
out in the Mexican Senate where these two men. I'm
looking at it now, but I love fights. So these
two men are on there and they are swinging on
each other. We're talking like a massive people are throwing blows,
grabbing each other by the jackets. Hey maker swings. It's great,

(01:25:32):
it's real, you know, you know, Lincoln Douglas. They are
on the floor singing on each other in Mexico. I
hear it's about the cartels, but I don't know anything
about that.

Speaker 4 (01:25:44):
It's Reese on the radio on newst I see.

Speaker 6 (01:25:49):
I've got a lot of stuff to get into today,
and let me just get into it, and I promise
I'll get to the phones soon enough. I want to
bring this out here because once you hear this stuff,
you'll start to recognize why I said, when talking to
Sally d earlier, that we have a news media that
is working as the political apparatus for the Democrat Party

(01:26:13):
or for liberalism overall. And nothing could shed more light
on that than what I saw yesterday, and many of
you saw it as well. I want to go through
a couple of them, a couple of things. We know
that the shooter was on YouTube expressing their hatred for

(01:26:36):
Christianity and for Catholics and these Christian or Catholic children.

Speaker 7 (01:26:45):
He exposed it.

Speaker 6 (01:26:46):
But there were so many efforts by the news media,
CNN in particular, to make this about other things, or
to act like we didn't see with our own eyes
what we saw. Here's John Miller. Now remember John Miller
working at CNN is like their chief investigative reporter. This
guy worked in policing. You started as a news reporter,

(01:27:12):
worked in policing, worked for the Bush administration. This guy's
supposed to understand anti terrorism, policing, criminality.

Speaker 7 (01:27:19):
All that stuff.

Speaker 6 (01:27:19):
So he is as a journalist, is the inside track,
like this is the guy who knows it all.

Speaker 26 (01:27:25):
Going through the writings, particularly going through the videos as
he the shooter, laid out his weapons and held up
each individual parts. What you saw there was a pervasive
message of hate, hate against Blacks, hate against Jews, hate
against God, and the target, of course being a Catholic church.

Speaker 7 (01:27:47):
But this all sounds like tenants of a liberal That
all sounds like motive.

Speaker 26 (01:27:53):
But there's also a degree of posturing there about what
we're going to investigate it. As they're investigating it in
support of the Minneapolis police for a homicide case.

Speaker 2 (01:28:05):
The offender is dead.

Speaker 26 (01:28:07):
It is doubtful that anyone other than the offender, unless
we learn something very new in the next couple of days,
is going to be charged. I almost find the conclusion
that it's a hate crime against Catholics premature.

Speaker 6 (01:28:22):
This is the chief intelligence guy on CNN, and you
might remember Jonathan Miller. The last time CNN had to
cover a shooting, it was in New York where we
found out who the shooter was before the news ever
mentioned it. Jonathan Miller, again, chief intelligence correspondent for CNN,

(01:28:44):
said this.

Speaker 22 (01:28:46):
They do not know who he is.

Speaker 2 (01:28:49):
They know he is a male, possibly white.

Speaker 6 (01:28:57):
If you thought that was bad, let's check out Evan
per He is their justice reporter. He obviously shows no
justice towards the truth because as long as he's been
in a business, he doesn't understand how semi automatic weapons work.

Speaker 13 (01:29:14):
It seemed like a rifle, he said, a semi automatic rifle.

Speaker 7 (01:29:18):
And it went on for several minutes.

Speaker 21 (01:29:20):
Right, And that's not uncommon as well. These things can
shoot dozens of bullets, you know, in just one trigger pull, right,
And so.

Speaker 7 (01:29:29):
What happens.

Speaker 6 (01:29:31):
Dozens of bullets in just one trigger pull semi automatic weapons.
What I also found a little scary was Chief Brian O'Hara. Again,
we live in the Internet age, we live in the
social media age. Hell, we live in the information age,

(01:29:53):
and everybody is getting the information.

Speaker 7 (01:29:55):
In real time. We don't have to wait on the
news media anymore.

Speaker 6 (01:30:00):
The fact that this guy would be several hours in
and be on the news and say this blows my mind.

Speaker 27 (01:30:04):
But what do we know about this online presence and
the YouTube videos?

Speaker 2 (01:30:09):
Do they provide anything that could lead to a motive.

Speaker 6 (01:30:13):
So here's the reporter saying, the YouTube videos, which we
have confirmed, is the shooters. It's not made up?

Speaker 7 (01:30:21):
Is the shooters?

Speaker 6 (01:30:22):
Have we come to a motive?

Speaker 28 (01:30:26):
Yes, And obviously that's something that we want to be
able to provide for our community and the public in
general as fast as possible. There's still hundreds of pages
that have been retrieved with these search warrants that the
FBI is going through with us and helping us to
try and determine a specific motive, but from everything.

Speaker 6 (01:30:46):
A specific motive. Let's go to Amy Klobuchar.

Speaker 4 (01:30:52):
He was an all.

Speaker 19 (01:30:52):
Purpose hater, by the way, hated groups left right, you
name it.

Speaker 21 (01:30:57):
There's no way to pin an ideology on this.

Speaker 6 (01:30:59):
I defend equality, Kill Donald Trump. This guy was an
all purpose hater. He didn't help hate the LGBTQ community.
The people again, this is all an effort to misdirect
because they know it's one of theirs. As I like
to say, Hey, this one of yours, Yes, it's one

(01:31:22):
of yours. What I also find interesting, and this is
the part that made me mad. You heard me yell
about the mayor of Minneapolis, Jacob Fray. Aaron Burnett on
CNN was trying to get him on the air so
he could explain. You know, what were you saying when
you were talking about don't direct this towards the trans community.

(01:31:46):
Here's what Frey said to Aaron Burnett, this is being.

Speaker 13 (01:31:50):
Seized in all corners, as you can imagine, in all
sorts of ways.

Speaker 17 (01:31:53):
And you know that mare.

Speaker 13 (01:31:54):
And perhaps that's why when you spoke about this so
profoundly and powerfully as you are even here now. But
when you spoke about this today publicly, you voice concern
for the transgender community, for the community overall.

Speaker 27 (01:32:08):
And obviously you chose to.

Speaker 13 (01:32:10):
Do that in that moment because you thought it was important,
and I wanted to give you a chance to say why,
to say why you felt.

Speaker 27 (01:32:15):
It was important to do that in that moment.

Speaker 15 (01:32:23):
Obviously I've heard about the rhetoric and the narrative that
is being pushed out.

Speaker 2 (01:32:27):
But here's the thing.

Speaker 15 (01:32:28):
Anybody that is going to use this as an opportunity
to villainize our trans community or any community, has lost
touch with a common humanity. We got to be operating
not out of hate for any group, but out of
a love for our children. That's where the focus needs

(01:32:49):
to be right now. A love for our kids. Seeing
these kids not just as somebody else's kids. This horrific
thing happened, but what if it was our own? How
would we feel then? So look, we need to be
standing up for every community out there, a Catholic community too, by.

Speaker 7 (01:33:06):
The way, I mean, where the hell was all of
this when other instances.

Speaker 6 (01:33:15):
That were major news story where we had compassion for
people who had nothing to do with it. Right, a
transgender person writes a manifesto about the hatred they have
for other groups who have marginalized him as a representative
of those groups, and the mayor sits up here and

(01:33:36):
talks about how we can't demonize the transgender community. We
need to stand with them too. Was that always the case?
I look this up, I wrote this down. Did the
news media make it a point to separate people who
showed up at the twenty twenty one stop the Steel
rally from the rioters at the Capitol on January sixth?

(01:33:57):
I'll say it again for the lefties out there. Did
the news media make it a point to separate the
people who showed up to the twenty twenty one Stop
to Steal rally from the.

Speaker 7 (01:34:15):
Rioters at the Capitol on January sixth? This was the answer.

Speaker 6 (01:34:24):
No, the news media did not consistently make a point
to separate the people who attended to stop to Steal
rally from the rioters who breached the Capitol on January sixth,
twenty twenty one. Coverage varied significantly by outlet, reflecting partisan divides.
Left leaning media often portrayed the rally and riot as

(01:34:45):
interconnected parts of a Trump incided mob action, with little
emphasis on the distinguishing peaceful attendees from the violent actors.

Speaker 7 (01:34:56):
Right leaning media, however.

Speaker 6 (01:34:58):
Frequently drew a clear line, emphasizing that true Trump supporters
were peaceful and suggesting the violent stem from a small
fringe or even infiltrators like Antifa, which.

Speaker 7 (01:35:11):
We know to be true.

Speaker 6 (01:35:14):
So now people are asking us for some odd reason
because the person is trans, don't connect them all.

Speaker 7 (01:35:24):
Pluah, forget you.

Speaker 6 (01:35:30):
You gave the marching orders, We're gonna follow them. Sorry,
you should have thought of that in the beginning. It's
too late now. And now that we have two transhooters
who we can clearly distinguishably, say, have the seven seven

(01:35:51):
consistent views.

Speaker 7 (01:35:55):
In comparison, Yeah, I'm gonna go there.

Speaker 6 (01:36:01):
I think it's only right. You guys gotta be kidding
me talking about how you don't no, don't, don't don't
confuse the two.

Speaker 7 (01:36:15):
And Mayor Jacob Fray, let's go one step further.

Speaker 2 (01:36:17):
These were Minneapolis families.

Speaker 7 (01:36:19):
These were American families, and.

Speaker 15 (01:36:22):
The amount of pain that they are suffering right now
is extraordinary. Don't just say this is about thoughts and
prayers right now, these kids were literally praying. It was
the first week of school, they were in a church.
These are kids that shouldn't be learning with their friends.

Speaker 6 (01:36:43):
Yeah, we all know that. The reason why we're giving
thoughts in prayers is that even after they were murdered
by some really, really bad piece of garbage that you invented,
we thought that we should give thoughts in prayers to
those who have dealt with unspeakable.

Speaker 7 (01:37:01):
Thought of loss.

Speaker 6 (01:37:03):
And we thought that showing our prayers in solidarity with
that Catholic and Christian community was a good thing.

Speaker 7 (01:37:10):
Now, allow me to do something you can't believe.

Speaker 6 (01:37:14):
I'm going to allow some grace to the governor of Minnesota,
former vice presidential candidate Tim Walls, who ignored the sentiment
of Mayor Frey.

Speaker 29 (01:37:28):
So I asked the rest of folks around the country
who are watching, keep us in your thoughts and prayers,
but also keep us in the thoughts for action, keep
us in the ideas that we can work together and.

Speaker 7 (01:37:39):
It's on these days like this, I think, and I
hope we can hold on to it. We are unified
as a community. Everybody across the country today.

Speaker 29 (01:37:48):
Is part of the Annunciation Parish and they're with those families.

Speaker 6 (01:37:54):
And I applaud Tim Walls for saying that by ignoring
all that nonsense. I just couldn't believe that he said it.

Speaker 25 (01:38:03):
But you know, there it is.

Speaker 6 (01:38:05):
I want to say this. I'm gonna play this piece
real quick before we go to break, and then we'll
get to the phone calls on the other side. So please,
everybody who's there standby, be patient. I appreciate you. This
is Temecula County in California. This is a school board meeting.

(01:38:27):
The man who is speaking is a father of daughters.
And the reason why he's speaking is because of this document.
Let me see if I can find it here and
put it up on the screen, because I will read
it to you.

Speaker 2 (01:38:40):
Is it this one?

Speaker 6 (01:38:42):
Let me get the picture there it is. Here's the
picture of it. I'll read it to you. Let me
get it in front of me, because for some reason
it's behind me. I thought that i'd got there where
it was.

Speaker 22 (01:38:55):
Here it is.

Speaker 6 (01:38:56):
This is called a mental Health Accommodation Request. Again, this
is Temecula County, California's Mental Health Accommodation Request form.

Speaker 4 (01:39:12):
What is this form for?

Speaker 7 (01:39:15):
This is a form for girls.

Speaker 6 (01:39:19):
In Temecula County schools to fill out if they have
a problem with being in the bathroom or locker room
with a transgender male.

Speaker 30 (01:39:34):
Good evening Board. My name is Manuk Grigorian. I'm a
father of four beautiful daughters. I'm also the co founder,
one of the co founders of lev Ar Kids Alone,
who is in collaboration with many other organizations, over one
million followers in total, and I'm here speaking in behalf
of all of them. When you first opened this topic,

(01:39:58):
the key word that you you said was if a
girl does not want to change with the in front
of the opposite sex. You yourself admitted that trans girls
were the opposite sex like they're a boy.

Speaker 31 (01:40:15):
You didn't say it like that, but saying the opposite
sex of a girl to me is a boy. Okay,
So this is this is not what we as parents
want to see. I don't want my child, who's a
daughter that has to sign a paper to be opt

(01:40:35):
out from her space.

Speaker 6 (01:40:38):
This is not it's not okay that the girl has
to sign a mental health request because she will not
accept a biological boy as a girl.

Speaker 7 (01:40:51):
She is the person with the mental health excuse.

Speaker 6 (01:40:56):
But now I gotta go to the dirty place and folks,
this is exactly how disgusting and despicable these individuals can be.

Speaker 7 (01:41:08):
Do I have this piece here?

Speaker 6 (01:41:09):
And do I not have?

Speaker 22 (01:41:10):
Yeah?

Speaker 6 (01:41:10):
I don't have it up here, So I'm going to
read them to you, So bear with me. These I
downloaded earlier on Reddit. There were people online talking about
the shooting. Let me read to you what they wrote.
Take the fight to their kids so they can feel
what it's like to be attacked for your identity. Elect

(01:41:33):
the fascist. Your kids are legitimate targets. Republicans are enemies
of humanity, and thinning the.

Speaker 7 (01:41:40):
Herd is our duty. More dead Christians laugh out loud.

Speaker 19 (01:41:48):
To me.

Speaker 6 (01:41:49):
It seems like if you elect a bad guy that's
cruel to people and weaponize his cruelest and horrific behavior
against our neighbors, some of those horrible things will happen.
We'll read more when we return. Let's get to weather
in traffic, Scott Holman's Got Weather and Mark Christopher's at
a BPS traffic center.

Speaker 2 (01:42:09):
Hey Martin, stay race on the radio is on wt
I see news.

Speaker 6 (01:42:17):
Say by guys, your phone calls coming up. We've got
weather in traffic in a second, so stand by for that.
Read something in the chat room. I've never understood why
people keep repeating this.

Speaker 10 (01:42:28):
It is.

Speaker 7 (01:42:30):
Okay, it is not silly, it's not even misguided. It's dumb.
And the people who express it should be embarrassed when
they do.

Speaker 6 (01:42:45):
Let me read it, and the blame game finger pointing
continues from both sides. Meanwhile, this country continues to be
divided even more.

Speaker 7 (01:42:57):
Who is destroying this country?

Speaker 6 (01:43:00):
Now for the reality check to the obvious infant who
wrote it. And this is the part that makes me mad,
because it's disingenuous to suggest that there is some utopia
somewhere outside of a Harry Potter book or some never

(01:43:21):
never land wherever you may, I don't know. Knock yourself
in the head and dream about. Every place on the
planet has a division. No one gets along anywhere. Political
divisions existed since the dawn of time. Hell, even canaan

(01:43:45):
Abel fought to the death.

Speaker 7 (01:43:51):
Not everyone agrees.

Speaker 6 (01:43:56):
We can't do you understand what type of world it
would be if all of us just agree on everything.
And by the way, just so we understand who gets
to decide on the thing that we all agree upon,
who's that omnipotent one. We all have the free will
to believe what we believe. Finger pointing will happen. The

(01:44:19):
blame game will persist. But here's the thing you might
want to recognize.

Speaker 7 (01:44:23):
Next time around.

Speaker 6 (01:44:25):
Somebody might be to blame and you should consider that
what you're avoiding is accountability. That's why you're screaming about
blaming because you think the word blame is a pejorative.

Speaker 22 (01:44:40):
It is not.

Speaker 6 (01:44:41):
If your kid breaks a lamp, he's the one to blame,
isn't he, Especially if he's responsible, it doesn't get to
be the lamp's fault because of his position. See how
that works?

Speaker 7 (01:44:58):
So please stop. You're a grown man, an older person.

Speaker 6 (01:45:03):
You're older than me.

Speaker 7 (01:45:05):
Can you act like one and grow up the blame game?
Who's that silly?

Speaker 6 (01:45:13):
Someone must be blamed because there's blame to go around,
And if you don't think there is, ask the school
system in and around Connecticut today that finally realized perhaps
we should have some.

Speaker 7 (01:45:24):
Cops around.

Speaker 6 (01:45:27):
So they don't get blamed for leaving those kids vulnerable.

Speaker 7 (01:45:34):
We'll be back.

Speaker 6 (01:45:35):
Scott Holman has weather Mark Christopher's at a BPS Traffick Center.

Speaker 2 (01:45:38):
How are you doing, buddy, The NAACP calls him.

Speaker 4 (01:45:41):
WHOA, I don't think it's Reese on the radio. Let's
just say some people are not fans a news talk
ten eighty WT.

Speaker 6 (01:45:51):
I see, don't you dare Fred Negro nonsense is coming,
So I know you're waiting for that, so stand by. Yeah,
it's a ridiculous idea. I hear this stuff all the time,
talking about on our own. Well, after all of their stuffisions,
that's how you make a more perfect union. There are

(01:46:12):
some people who believe that their ideas are their ideas,
and there are other people who believe that their ideas
are their ideas. And they get together and some people
get upset, other people deal with it, or other people
say no, we don't.

Speaker 7 (01:46:25):
Want to live that way. That's how democracies work.

Speaker 6 (01:46:29):
I thought, even though we were republic but I thought
that's how democracies were.

Speaker 7 (01:46:33):
Let's go to Sean and Meriden. Hello, sir, Hey, great.

Speaker 12 (01:46:38):
Great show so far I've heard.

Speaker 32 (01:46:40):
But one of the things I think that, well, I
don't think people have missed it, and actually you've nailed
it several times. It really comes down to for me,
let me speak for myself. I haven't held decisions, okay,
because things you're either going to promote unity and work together.
And unity doesn't mean you have to agree on everything,

(01:47:02):
which means for the common good, you just have a
discussion and when when you're right, you're right, and when
you're wrong, you're wrong, you own it and you move on.
But for the left, I mean for the last four years,
and actually as an as a black man, it really
pissed me off because this a lot of this crap
we started under Obama, okay, and and his division and

(01:47:25):
everything by race and everything by color. Like the police
officer out of Boston who he immediately because it was
a friend of his, said it was because his friend
was black, is why he got stopped.

Speaker 12 (01:47:35):
It was because he been drunk.

Speaker 6 (01:47:37):
No, he wasn't drunk, and he wasn't drunk. He was
being a jerk. Henry Lewis Gates or Skip Gates as
he's referred. Okay, he told the guy to go how
do I put it? He told he told the cop
to go have sex with his mother.

Speaker 32 (01:47:53):
Well, yeah, that that will get you in trouble with that.

Speaker 6 (01:47:55):
Yeah, no, And what was it?

Speaker 7 (01:47:58):
What did the police and what was the police officers crime?

Speaker 6 (01:48:02):
As it were? He asked the guy to prove that
the home had belonged to him because a neighbor contacted
the police because they saw a man climbing through the
window because Skip Gates lost his key. That's all.

Speaker 32 (01:48:18):
But and it's it's really it really gets to be
very very simple, and the facts are the facts are
the facts, yep. Okay, And anyone who's going to justify
this shooting or any other one when when the hate
has been promoted, okay, And Kamala did a good job
pushing it SODA's Walls, which which I'm so glad you

(01:48:40):
played something very positive by him, because it's the first
thing I've heard positive regarding the United States of America
from him, which is amazing.

Speaker 6 (01:48:48):
Which is why I thought I thought it appropriate to
show him grace when I heard him say that, like
other people, other people were making note of it, that
was saying sort of the contradiction between the two, would
Tim Walls look as screwy as that guy may be,
and as much as we could be criticized in this moment,
it should have been exactly what Tim Walls had done,

(01:49:09):
and that was he said, he didn't say anything. He
talks about the president at nauseum in a disparaging way.
But when he said the President called him, he put
politics aside and and Mayor Frey couldn't do.

Speaker 33 (01:49:22):
It, and that and that is the key.

Speaker 32 (01:49:27):
See that that's I would imagine that's how he started
in politics.

Speaker 12 (01:49:31):
And that innocent moment that.

Speaker 32 (01:49:32):
You that we heard, and then he got okay, if
you're on outside, here's how you gonna.

Speaker 7 (01:49:37):
Be right exactly.

Speaker 32 (01:49:39):
And so so you know, Alma and heart and the
other day and under Jensaki who said we don't want
your prayers and all this other stuff to the people,
Oh prayers don't count for not so basically I'm like, really.

Speaker 6 (01:49:53):
Who is she? But you know what, this is the
other thing I don't understand. Jensaki says, we don't want
your prayers?

Speaker 7 (01:49:59):
Who are we?

Speaker 6 (01:50:00):
What are you talking about? That's not your community? And
then no one, you're not speaking for anyone? What the
hell is we?

Speaker 10 (01:50:06):
You know?

Speaker 6 (01:50:07):
So it's just high Thank you, Shawn, I appreciate you. Sorry,
Let's go to Tom and Thomas fin Thanks for all
than Tom. What's up?

Speaker 17 (01:50:13):
Hey, I'm excellent.

Speaker 2 (01:50:15):
Thanks.

Speaker 12 (01:50:16):
Hey, you are so right disingenuous. That's what at any
time a lefty wacko ax out the left is so disingenuous,
it just it drags me none. But uh uh And
I was all in with Danny d until he said.

Speaker 32 (01:50:31):
Uh the government started line disease.

Speaker 12 (01:50:34):
I lost him right hand.

Speaker 6 (01:50:35):
Listen, Hey he was.

Speaker 7 (01:50:40):
He made it clear that he was going off the
reservation with it.

Speaker 6 (01:50:43):
He made it clear he.

Speaker 12 (01:50:45):
Went off, Hey, I could solve this school shooting problem today.
President Trump gets out of the airwavest tonight at nine
o'clock and said, my Trump, my Trump Care policy has
brought in so much money. I was gonna get everyone
a Trump stimulus tariff check. But instead of doing that,

(01:51:10):
I'm gonna take all that money and start a a force,
a federal force that protects every school in this country.
Whoa You could hire all ex military that got training
in the combat arm given jobs when they when they
ended there, when they end their involvement in the military,

(01:51:33):
and you can make the schools safe like they should be.

Speaker 6 (01:51:37):
You know what, Now, it would kind of go and
and go against what Donald Trump has done to defederalize
public education.

Speaker 7 (01:51:47):
But I understand what you're saying.

Speaker 6 (01:51:49):
There is a caveat to that because they again, those
schools will still get federal funding. If you were to
have a carve out that would go federal funding to
each state on education, and then you'd have a car
valve to the security of said education, you know, establishment
for every campus. Yeah.

Speaker 12 (01:52:08):
Absolutely, that's even better reached because if they did it
federally when Trumpet out of office, that that agency would
just bloat like every other agency exactly. Yeah, carve all
all that money he was gonna get for a stimulus
check one thousand dollars. I mean, yeah, it would be nice,
but it would be better staff for tech.

Speaker 6 (01:52:29):
I would take. I would take all of the money
that I was saving, Like you know, Doge is stilling
in the works, cutting all of that bloat that's in
the board of Education that goes to any and anything
and everything administratively. Remember we're talking about money that goes
to a federal federalized board of education. Take the money
that you're saving by de federalizing that and have a

(01:52:49):
car value that goes directly to security to all of
the schools across the nation.

Speaker 12 (01:52:54):
Hey, we take those four or five CDC blowhards that
just quit. Take that much.

Speaker 6 (01:53:00):
He gave it.

Speaker 12 (01:53:01):
And here's the reason, here's the reason why why were
there only twenty five children killed at Sandy Hook and
not thirty or forty.

Speaker 7 (01:53:10):
Or fifty Because the police arrived exactly.

Speaker 12 (01:53:14):
A man with a gun showed up and that hutred
powered shot himself.

Speaker 7 (01:53:20):
That's right.

Speaker 6 (01:53:20):
It's funny. I said it every time. Is that if
we know and that's the thing. We can't detect who
the maniac is going to be, but we know who
the target is.

Speaker 7 (01:53:30):
We're not in the dark here. We're not in the dark.

Speaker 6 (01:53:32):
Yeah, you know, it's one thing to be completely in
the dark, and we're going we don't know where the
targets are going to be.

Speaker 7 (01:53:39):
We know who the target is, so let's protect that.

Speaker 12 (01:53:44):
It's such it's such an easy fix. I don't understand it.

Speaker 6 (01:53:48):
Yeah, agreed, Thank you, boss, I appreciate you. Let's go
to Tim and Hampton.

Speaker 25 (01:53:52):
What's going on, sir, My good afternoon. You know a
couple of points and stuff.

Speaker 10 (01:53:59):
I think.

Speaker 25 (01:54:01):
Transshooter was a copycat essentially, he is. All the reports
say that he was obsessed with mass shootings, as many
of them are all that stuff as most of them,
you know, all that sort a star. But I like
the what I'm calling now the lazy media saying that this,
this latest shooter had a manifesto. It's like manifesto most

(01:54:26):
people like I barely know what that is. So a
guy scribbles some stuff down on a spiral, puts a
few things on the internet, you know, tries to get himself,
you know, noticed by putting you know, his guns and
everything on there, you know, essentially begging for attention and everything.
But it's not, you know, some sort of you know,

(01:54:50):
manifesto from the progressive, you know, or left or liberals.

Speaker 6 (01:54:54):
I think that, because of our changing media, a manifesto
be loosely defined. I agree with you in the sense
of it wasn't in it. It wasn't like the unibomber
who writes, you know, why he's doing all exactly, you know,
And like I was saying, in the traditional sense, it yes,
fair enough, but another but I want to ask you this,

(01:55:16):
and I'll let you come up with your other point.
I want to ask you this. This this apathy that
this shooter. Westman wrote about African Americans and praising Dylan Ruth.

Speaker 7 (01:55:27):
Let me ask you this. I'm gonna set it up
for you.

Speaker 6 (01:55:29):
I'm leading the witness, so I'm gonna emphasize that first,
that I am leading the witness. People said that that
was associative with his anti black stands.

Speaker 7 (01:55:40):
I would suggest that.

Speaker 6 (01:55:42):
The reason why he was celebrating Dylan Ruth was because
Dylan Ruth killed African Americans inside the church. And this
shooter Westman has an apathy towards Catholicism.

Speaker 7 (01:55:57):
Would you make that same assessment?

Speaker 12 (01:55:59):
Oh, could be.

Speaker 25 (01:56:00):
I mean, essentially, you've got, you know, somebody shooting people
in a barrel. They have no where right right the door,
and he comes in on that stuff. There are a
lot of people that have, you know, tremendous patrons you know,
for the church and everything, uh, all across the board
that a lot of people have left the church, but
liberals in particular, you said, liberals don't like you know,

(01:56:23):
it depends on what kind of church.

Speaker 7 (01:56:25):
They don't like Catholicism.

Speaker 6 (01:56:27):
They don't like Catholicism because of its paternalistic.

Speaker 7 (01:56:32):
Attributes for lack of a better term, they don't like that.

Speaker 6 (01:56:35):
They don't like that, it's it's sort of judgmental you know,
it says that you have to hear the certain guidelines
and a dogma, and they find that offensive and they
use other like the you know, the pre sexualization of
children as as sort of like the backdrop of why
they should not be listened to, or Catholicism, or even
the Crusades before they had the scandal in Boston and

(01:56:56):
in New England, you know, it used to be the
Crusades which was the the contributing factor to why we
shouldn't listen to Catholicism.

Speaker 25 (01:57:04):
Well, I mean, you know, even the current you know Pope,
which a lot of people just well we like the
current Pope and all that stuff. I mean, he's you know,
pulled back on a lot of the kind of things
that you know, quote liberals would would care for and everything.

Speaker 32 (01:57:20):
Yeah.

Speaker 25 (01:57:20):
Absolutely, But I think people are you know, uh, they're
trying to mix you know, mix up somebody who hates everything, essentially,
try to.

Speaker 6 (01:57:28):
You know, but did he really but no, No, you're
right that this Westman did hate everybody, But let's talk
about the everybody he hated.

Speaker 7 (01:57:39):
He did not hate transgenders, did he.

Speaker 6 (01:57:43):
No, So he didn't hate, he didn't hate.

Speaker 7 (01:57:45):
He did he didn't he didn't hate transgender He didn't.

Speaker 25 (01:57:48):
He didn't see he didn't see transgender people as affecting.

Speaker 6 (01:57:53):
Him or so the word everybody, So the word everybody
is now null and void. And that's and I'll go
I'll go back to your earlier point about the manifesto,
right because you said manifesto we can't use if it
doesn't meet the criteria.

Speaker 7 (01:58:06):
Well, guess what. He didn't hate everybody, so it no
longer meets the criteria.

Speaker 25 (01:58:11):
He didn't hate, hated the wide wine.

Speaker 6 (01:58:14):
Spectrum of he did, and every one of them, and
every one of them were things that liberals hate.

Speaker 19 (01:58:20):
Yes, well, I don't know.

Speaker 25 (01:58:22):
Did he hate the Muslims? Did he hate this?

Speaker 17 (01:58:25):
Actually?

Speaker 6 (01:58:25):
Yes, yes, Oh I.

Speaker 25 (01:58:27):
Hadn't seen I hadn't seen that. But we have to
be very careful, you know. Again with all of the
things going on. Uh, you know why we can't go
back to Ronald Riggan's idea that we don't need assault
weapons anymore. There's a meme going around with all the places.

Speaker 6 (01:58:45):
Tim, I got to cut you off in this sense, okay,
at the risk of offending you, because I know how
sensitive you are on this Okay, if I if I
stab you with the spoon, does it become an assault spoon?
The gun? Listen, listen, hold on.

Speaker 7 (01:59:01):
The gun doesn't make ice cream, sir.

Speaker 6 (01:59:04):
The gun does what the gun does. The the term
assault rifle or assault weapon is redundant. It doesn't do
other things. A gun shoots, It doesn't make ice cream.
It doesn't change your oil. It's a gun.

Speaker 7 (01:59:19):
Why use a salt wipe? Why why using gold? Assault weapon?

Speaker 25 (01:59:23):
Who's fire these things? It's not the same thing.

Speaker 6 (01:59:26):
No, no, sir, yes it is.

Speaker 7 (01:59:28):
It is the same thing.

Speaker 6 (01:59:30):
When you can spray some there's no spray. An assault
weapon does not spray.

Speaker 25 (01:59:38):
Reason as fast as you can pull the trigger.

Speaker 6 (01:59:42):
Did you did you miss the did you miss the
shooting of Amadyallo? So hold on, people, did you No? No,
don't change the subject. I'm asking you. Do you remember
the shooting of Amadalla?

Speaker 22 (01:59:54):
What about it?

Speaker 7 (01:59:55):
Do you know how many guns were fired? I mean,
how many bullets were fired?

Speaker 1 (01:59:59):
Uh?

Speaker 6 (02:00:01):
Something very good?

Speaker 7 (02:00:02):
It was in the fifties.

Speaker 6 (02:00:03):
Right, one officer, one officer fired thirty one rounds.

Speaker 7 (02:00:08):
Did you know that?

Speaker 4 (02:00:09):
Right?

Speaker 6 (02:00:10):
Hold on? Out of fifty one officers fired thirty one
rounds in a matter of seconds in a with a
pistol with a gun. Okay, how did he pull we
how did he pull it off? He had to fire
the weapon thirty one times with his gun. He did
it in a matter of seconds. So again, same thing
with a day are fifteen yes, to do the same thing.

(02:00:31):
But I gotta go. But I appreciate the the back
and forth. It was a great conversation and you were
you were splendid. Let's get another checond Weather's traffic and
we'll get back by Hollywood News. When we returned, Mark Christopher,
he's in a BPS traffic center. Hey, but that was civil.
Holy smoke. Was that great?

Speaker 34 (02:00:49):
Right?

Speaker 7 (02:00:50):
That actually came up pretty well. I don't know how
I do it sometimes.

Speaker 6 (02:00:53):
Yeah, I was like I was waiting for something to
blow up and it didn't.

Speaker 7 (02:00:57):
I'm a I'm a brilliant course. You certainly are.

Speaker 2 (02:01:01):
Certainly are the hour the bags out, punch punch.

Speaker 4 (02:01:06):
It's Reese on the radio on wti C News Talk
ten eighty.

Speaker 6 (02:01:10):
Yeah, it's Hollywood News.

Speaker 5 (02:01:17):
When you're correspondents on the radio, Oh the glens, Oh
the glamour.

Speaker 6 (02:01:26):
Of Hollywood News right here on w TIC You have
to say it like that in order to make it,
you know, to just go along with the music. Yes,
Hollywood News Today. On November one, nineteen eighty five was
the release of a small, low budget film that would
end up living in the infamy now.

Speaker 7 (02:01:48):
Of course, as Hollywood would do, there was a remake
to it.

Speaker 6 (02:01:52):
Back in November of nineteen eighty five was a little
B film called The Toxic Avenger. Remember it. I didn't
see it.

Speaker 7 (02:02:01):
I would have never seen it.

Speaker 6 (02:02:03):
In fact, when I did see it, I saw it
by accident, and I hated every bit of it. But
the thing that I can tell you about that movie
was that it was groundbreaking in the sense of it
became a cult classic, and groundbreaking because it had gone
off the beaten path of what Hollywood movies did. There
was a B movie and some of the great B
movies of yesteryear ended up. You know, it turned out

(02:02:23):
to be actually a pretty good success. You know, Donna
the Dead, things like that. Uh, what was the other movie?
The not Army of Darkness?

Speaker 7 (02:02:31):
What was the other one? I'm thinking of?

Speaker 6 (02:02:32):
Evil Dead? Evil Dead became a cult classic, and of
course here we are we Toxic Avenger.

Speaker 11 (02:02:38):
Now.

Speaker 6 (02:02:38):
I looked at some of the actors in this film,
Andrea Miranda Michael Cohen or Mitchell Cohen and Jennifer Baptiste. No,
nobody knows who these people are. And the remake, this
is the crazy one. The remake has big names in
it like Peter dinkliche yeah, Elijah Wood and Kevin Bacon

(02:03:00):
finally showing the movie some love.

Speaker 7 (02:03:02):
These guys would have never been in the movie forty years.

Speaker 6 (02:03:05):
Ago, but they're starring in it now, which always kind
of ticks me off that people would find it important
now to get into those films. Let's get another check
of whether or in Traffic with our good friend Mark
Chris was in a BPS Traffic set.

Speaker 7 (02:03:17):
I know you remember the Toxic Avenger. Can you tell
me Dinklish was in that movie?

Speaker 10 (02:03:21):
No?

Speaker 6 (02:03:22):
No, Peter Dinklish is in the forty year old remake
that's coming out soon. He is actually going to be
playing the too two wearing, mock wielding chemically altered title
vigilante and he's going up against Kevin Bake, Bacon and
Elijah Wood, who were playing the villains in the new
film Toxic Avenger the Rebab. Right there you go, Peter

(02:03:44):
tackling a guy who's like a Shakespearean actor. Game of Thrones. Yeah,
come on, Game of Throat. He's a thou Art guy
and now he's doing toxic Avenger.

Speaker 2 (02:03:55):
Holds still, this is only gonna hurdle little. It's Reese
on the radio.

Speaker 6 (02:04:01):
On w T.

Speaker 7 (02:04:03):
I see, I gotta do it, you know, because it's time.

Speaker 6 (02:04:12):
Negro nonsense nonsense.

Speaker 7 (02:04:18):
How dare you?

Speaker 6 (02:04:27):
Yes?

Speaker 7 (02:04:27):
How dare I?

Speaker 6 (02:04:28):
It's time for Negro nonsense righting her own reason the radio.
This gentleman on your screen, and you may not be
even Sam if you're listening on the Radio's a guy
by the name of Jonathan Conyers. Jonathan Hunters writes an
article for the website publication called The Grioh, and he
is featured in two.

Speaker 7 (02:04:46):
Days Negro Nonsense.

Speaker 6 (02:04:48):
Why, you might ask, well, because he wrote the most
ridiculous article I've ever heard or read in my entire life.
It should have been the stupidest thing I read today,
But it appropriate is being nominated for Negro non since
this Thursday.

Speaker 7 (02:05:06):
The headline.

Speaker 6 (02:05:07):
The real hoax was never Esse Smollette, it was the
Chicago police.

Speaker 7 (02:05:13):
He writes.

Speaker 6 (02:05:16):
I grew up knowing the difference between a mistake and
a pattern. A mistake is a bad night. A pattern
is a system.

Speaker 7 (02:05:23):
Netflix.

Speaker 6 (02:05:24):
The truth about Jesse Smollette makes you think the story
is about him. Whether he lied, stayed a hot, staged
a hoax, or played the media, that's the bait. Jonathan Wright,
The real shock isn't Jusse. The real shock is the
Chicago Police Department, a force with hundreds of misconduct complaints,

(02:05:46):
a history of covering up brutality, and a knack for
turning black victims into villains.

Speaker 7 (02:05:53):
Forget debating whether Jusse is believable, he says, forget about it.

Speaker 6 (02:05:59):
It's the subject of the damn documentary, he says, forget
about that debate. The debate should be about how anyone
can trust the people deciding his fate. Let's be clear,
the officers tied to Smolett's case had five hundred and
sixty three complaints on their records, not five, not fifty

(02:06:23):
five hundred and sixty three. If a surgeon had had
five malpractice suits, you wouldn't let him touch a scalpel.
If a teacher had dozens of abuse complaints, they'd be
banned from the classroom.

Speaker 7 (02:06:38):
But not for five hundred failed students.

Speaker 6 (02:06:40):
No, no, no, You keep them teaching, and you tenure
them Jonathan, I'm sure you would. That's why he said,
That's why he was very very clever and what he
said here. Yeah, but again he suggests that we should
be looking at this documentary in Jesse Smolett's case as
if it's not about Jesse small led and the lie

(02:07:01):
and the money that he cost the city of Chicago,
it's about the police turning him into a villain when
he was a victim. We know he was not a victim, unless,
of course, a victim of his own making when he
desired to hire two Africans to do a white racist job.
I mean, come on, if we're gonna outsource anything, it

(02:07:23):
shouldn't be racism. And by the way, you couldn't hire
a bunch of white guys to do this, I mean
in this case, I mean, was it one of those
things where Jesse Smolette was so enamored by the idea
of DEI that he couldn't hire actual white people to
play white people. So even then he had to blacken

(02:07:46):
it up because that what he had to do. Did
he have to go hmm, Normally I would hire a
white guy for this position, but you know, there's so
many black actors out there who don't get an opportunity.

Speaker 7 (02:08:00):
Let me hire these two Nigerian brothers. Keep it in
the family. So Jonathan Conyer's boy, this is sad, But
there you go, Negro nonsense.

Speaker 6 (02:08:12):
I would get it too. The Al Sharpton doing a
DEI march today, but no one cared, like no one cared.
And he did a DEI march at Wall Street, which
didn't seem to make sense. He said he compared it
to the march on Washington. He couldn't get the Washington.
Oh that's why I know why he didn't go to Washington.

(02:08:35):
It's too clean. And you know what it is true,
Donald Trump is down there cleaning up criminals. So why
would Al Sharpton be there.

Speaker 7 (02:08:44):
But I digress.

Speaker 6 (02:08:45):
Let's get back to the phones. Eighteen zero five two
two w T I see, let's go to Fulton. What's up, buddy?

Speaker 17 (02:08:51):
What's up?

Speaker 20 (02:08:51):
Buddy?

Speaker 34 (02:08:52):
Five fifty complaints? I mean, how many of those were founded?
That's an outrageous number for I don't know Waterbury. I
don't even think we had that in my whole time.
I was there for the whole department, But I guess
there was guys.

Speaker 6 (02:09:04):
They got the five Yeah, apparently to talk about.

Speaker 34 (02:09:08):
Have you ever heard that the Dissyan.

Speaker 6 (02:09:11):
The Dizzeyan.

Speaker 7 (02:09:15):
No, that doesn't sound familiar.

Speaker 4 (02:09:17):
What is that?

Speaker 34 (02:09:18):
Okay, so it's a transcult.

Speaker 7 (02:09:21):
Oh forgive me sorry, let me cut you off. Fulton, Fulton.

Speaker 6 (02:09:25):
I am aware of them because Simsbury Joe referenced them
about the about the state trooper who was killed. I
believe in New Hampshire the person who killed them was
a member of that group, That's correct.

Speaker 34 (02:09:38):
It So I'm wondering if it's like the connection to
these guys, there's too many similarities, Like everything is so similar,
Like they don't live near each other, all those murders
from the diss around the country, they're not, but they're
all affiliated together and they're all pushing their own.

Speaker 20 (02:09:52):
A gender right.

Speaker 6 (02:09:53):
Yeah, there may need to be a deep dive into
that sort of interweb connection between like because they all
communicate via social media, be it the dark web?

Speaker 34 (02:10:04):
Yeah, I don't know, Like where do you come up
with the same ideas, Like there's no way the local
medias all say the same thing unless somebody's getting in
that strip of say like when they played that on TV,
and it's like every media is saying the same thing.

Speaker 6 (02:10:19):
Well, that was the reason why I played Andrew McCabe,
because as much of a piece of scum we think
he is, he did put on his FBI thinking cap
when he said what he said on CNN, let me
play it for you, because I thought that was you
know again, Andrew McCabe is a cop, so you know,
when you see certain patterns, you can't avoid it.

Speaker 7 (02:10:39):
Here's what he said.

Speaker 11 (02:10:39):
This one is really remarkable to me in that respect.
I was looking at you know, we don't. I haven't
seen the manifesto as I can say whether there are
specific references to the twenty twenty three Covenant School shooter
in Nashville, But if you look at that, that's the
situation and this one there are remarkable similarities.

Speaker 7 (02:10:57):
So both are in their twenties, both.

Speaker 11 (02:10:59):
Targeted religious schools that they formerly attended.

Speaker 7 (02:11:02):
So McCabe McCabe is operating like a profiler in the FBI.

Speaker 6 (02:11:06):
And when he says that they are extraordinary similarities, that's
I immediately had to look that up, and sure enough
there were.

Speaker 34 (02:11:14):
I said that, I said it from the beginning, and
I said the second thing not for nothing. Like Christine yesterday,
she first starts with the violence thing. She's like, oh,
why did you relate to the violence. You don't know
what it's about. And then at the end she calls
for violent.

Speaker 6 (02:11:29):
She goes, oh, you're talking about yes talking about you're
talking about Courtney yesterday.

Speaker 34 (02:11:36):
Right the phone call yesterday, She's like, we don't have
the Kate violence. Why does everybody saying that. By the
end of the phone call, I'm talking about two centutes later,
you said, so you're calling for violence. She said, yeah,
that's how you get things.

Speaker 6 (02:11:45):
Son, you go.

Speaker 34 (02:11:47):
I said one more thing, Jim Wall during the Vice
president the Vice president of debate, doesn't he say something
like he's friends with school shooter?

Speaker 6 (02:11:56):
He was, Look, I know my wife brought that up before.
He was as nervous as all get out. He had
never been on a stage like that before. And then
the debate he said, I'm friends with school shooters. Ah,
it was the ugliest thing I ever heard in my
entire life.

Speaker 7 (02:12:15):
He knows that's coming back to bite him every day
right now.

Speaker 34 (02:12:18):
And the last shooting was the guy from his office.

Speaker 6 (02:12:21):
That first thing I said yesterday, that was the first
thing I said yesterday, was that you know here we
are back on Tim Tim Walls's doorstep. Another mass shooting
or another you know, politically motivated shooting.

Speaker 34 (02:12:35):
No police like, we don't want the police. We don't
want We don't want our kids to die. We don't
want tops in the school.

Speaker 17 (02:12:42):
What are the answers?

Speaker 34 (02:12:42):
Nobody has answers, but take more guns?

Speaker 6 (02:12:45):
Hey, Connecticut had the answer today, because what did they do?
In response? They went to the soft target?

Speaker 7 (02:12:51):
Yep. Cop showed up.

Speaker 6 (02:12:53):
Yep.

Speaker 7 (02:12:53):
Thank you, boss. I appreciate you.

Speaker 34 (02:12:55):
Everybody.

Speaker 10 (02:12:55):
You got it.

Speaker 7 (02:12:56):
Let's go to David Litchfield. How are you doing, sir?

Speaker 32 (02:13:00):
Hello?

Speaker 19 (02:13:00):
Recent?

Speaker 33 (02:13:01):
Yeah, as far as first of all, far as what
Tim said. Oh, he can fire him as fast as
he can pull the trigger. That's the mark of a
good quality gun. For your people out there.

Speaker 17 (02:13:11):
Who are not you know, familiar with this.

Speaker 19 (02:13:13):
Jerry Mitchllick, I believe his name is still m I
ce l u k H Jerry.

Speaker 33 (02:13:18):
I saw advertisements in magazines. Jerry Mitchllick fires twelve shots
of a six shot Smith and Weston in three point
ninety eight seconds.

Speaker 22 (02:13:25):
I said, how can that be?

Speaker 6 (02:13:26):
He can't?

Speaker 17 (02:13:26):
He can fire it that quickly, uses a speedloader.

Speaker 19 (02:13:29):
He fires a revolver so fast they sound like machine
guns right.

Speaker 17 (02:13:32):
Another one you want to watch is Bob.

Speaker 33 (02:13:35):
London m U N D E N.

Speaker 19 (02:13:36):
He has a single action six gun, which means you.

Speaker 17 (02:13:38):
Have to cock it before you fire it.

Speaker 19 (02:13:39):
This production of the old and so those are made for.

Speaker 7 (02:13:44):
Does he do the dave? Does he do the old?

Speaker 6 (02:13:46):
Sorry to cut you off, but does he do the
old like from the Westerns where he pulls back the
hammer with.

Speaker 17 (02:13:51):
The with the other hands, Yeah, he does.

Speaker 23 (02:13:54):
Yees.

Speaker 19 (02:13:55):
He cocks, he draws the gun. Bob London cocks it, fires,
it cocks it fires, it hits it acro hits the
target acule and reholters it in two one hundreds of
a second.

Speaker 17 (02:14:03):
Wow, he fires the gun.

Speaker 33 (02:14:05):
He fires the gun so fast. He's dead now, Bob,
but when he in his hey day, when he's alive.
He fired the gun so fast that when if you
play it in regular speed it sounds like one shot,
it's actually two.

Speaker 6 (02:14:17):
Wow.

Speaker 33 (02:14:18):
And as far as that goes, it's been illegal to
have machine guns the average citizens since September of eighty six.
New machine guns. You can buy used ones, but you
have to get a federal firearms license. They cost like
twenty five thousand.

Speaker 19 (02:14:29):
Dollars a piece.

Speaker 33 (02:14:30):
As far as that goes, though, you can make these
fake clocks you probably I think you talked about them.

Speaker 10 (02:14:35):
You can get these.

Speaker 19 (02:14:35):
Auto seers, yeah, and you convert into full auto.

Speaker 33 (02:14:39):
People say, well, ban the blocks and then ban the
files to instruct you how to do that. Well, you
know what, you and I could get arrested tonight based
on some crime committed and not a pure Illinois Somebody
could have stolen our idea in the dark web. They'll
pass it along on the dark web how to make
these fake clocks. They'll make the fake clocks, they'll get
the auto seers, and the boarders will be you know,
you can't shut everything down. You'll get him in here,
just like the drugs are continue to come in and

(02:15:00):
to spray people with automatic gunfire, true automatic from a block,
which is totally illegal, and well like sixty five percent
of the time in the state of Connecticut, they plead
bargain the firearms violations away.

Speaker 6 (02:15:11):
That is enough, you know, And I mentioned that yesterday, Dave.
That's one of the problems that I have here in Connecticut.

Speaker 20 (02:15:17):
Is right.

Speaker 6 (02:15:17):
Look, the true gun reform isn't just in the pro
the prohibition of them. If somebody does have a gun
illegally because we know that how many of them are
getting them and those who are using them in the
various ways, in harmful ways are people who have them illegally.
But we've got to stop plead dealing these people who
get those guns. And I'm sorry even if you have to.

(02:15:40):
And I know this is this thing where people don't
seem to understand, but then again I think they do.
They know that the people who are using them are
gang members who are in the black community or in
the Latino community. And this sort of like of twisting
themselves in the pretzel by prosecuting them but in a
lenient way because they don't want to seem oppressive to
this group is not helping a soul. It is costing

(02:16:03):
the life of millions of people across the country. And
they've got to stand by and say, look, if you're
caught with an illegal gun, and I again forget about
the harshness. If we're serious about gun control, and that
what it is, it is entailing gun control, the punishments
have to fit these crimes as well. We've got to say,

(02:16:23):
if you're caught with a gun and you're not supposed
to have one, we've got to give you ten to
fifteen years mandatory.

Speaker 7 (02:16:28):
No arguments.

Speaker 19 (02:16:30):
Oh yeah, absolutely absolutely. You know another thing too is
my parents were educatords. My father was a math teacher
and it became a school psychologist later on. They're both
deceased now, but I can remember it like, starting in
the late seventies, up until about the mid eighties, the
teen suicide rate skyrocketed in this country. Im they made
this study in health class. The gym teacher also had

(02:16:52):
to teach health in my high school. Well, but watching
a teen suicide rate and what was the reaction was
like a collective yawn from society. I mean, anytime there's little,
any little labor dispute in France, they're all out there,
all socials out there marching the streets. All parents should
be out there marching in the streets. Here our kids
are committing suicide. But it's like people believe in this

(02:17:14):
country you can buy your way into happiest or you
can government can. Then the socialists think you can regulate
your way more government interference.

Speaker 17 (02:17:20):
It's gonna work.

Speaker 19 (02:17:21):
No, we need a sense of community and we don't.

Speaker 22 (02:17:23):
We don't have that.

Speaker 17 (02:17:24):
It's yeah, you know, lwlans is becoming an epidemic.

Speaker 6 (02:17:27):
Isn't that crazy? In the say and to quote something
it's a little controversial, you know.

Speaker 10 (02:17:32):
Uh.

Speaker 6 (02:17:32):
Ted Kaczinski said that that was gonna be the the
new information society was going to sort of direct us
away from one another and less less humanity and less community.
Thank you, Dave. I appreciate you, buddy. You know he
talks about that teen suicide thing. Is anybody here remember
Molly Ringwald and I think Rob Lowe we're in an
after school special about homicide. I'm almost certain it was

(02:17:55):
Motley ring Wall. That could be wrong.

Speaker 7 (02:17:57):
I'm gonna look it up. Now, let's get another checker.

Speaker 6 (02:17:59):
Whether in traffic Scott Omen is in for Bob Larson
and we got Mark Christopher's in the BPS Traffic Center.
Do you remember any of those after school specials?

Speaker 34 (02:18:06):
Mark?

Speaker 1 (02:18:08):
They're vague, right, yeah?

Speaker 25 (02:18:09):
Not really?

Speaker 6 (02:18:10):
Now an eighty I remember, I remember conjunction, junction, what's
your function?

Speaker 7 (02:18:15):
But not what you were just talking about.

Speaker 4 (02:18:19):
App let's you jump back to the moments you missed
from w t i S News Talk Tennady. Download the
free Odyssey app search w t i C News Talk
Tennady and tap earlier today to get started.

Speaker 2 (02:18:34):
What had happened.

Speaker 7 (02:18:37):
That's when you Carmela.

Speaker 6 (02:18:40):
Is what happened was.

Speaker 7 (02:18:45):
What right here on wt i.

Speaker 6 (02:18:49):
C News Talk ten eighty rees on the radio. What
happened was we talked about the comparisons between the two shooters.
Took a lot of phone calls on that subject matter.
Also at the beginning of the show, we talked about
the curious case of Kevin Rossero Moreno and why no
one seems to be talking about him, even in light
of the Newington seven who were arrested last Saturday at

(02:19:12):
a car wash, which, by the way, if you didn't
hear this, let me be the first to tell you.

Speaker 7 (02:19:20):
Officers were not wearing masks in Newington.

Speaker 6 (02:19:26):
There were like one or two, but I've seen the photos.
People in the community took photos of the arrests, and
Ice was not out there with masks.

Speaker 7 (02:19:36):
There was no masked marauders out there.

Speaker 6 (02:19:41):
And I was also talking about Mayor Arnin, as you
heard at the top of the our news or bottom
of the hour news, about his press conference outside of
the People's Bank Arena, pledging, you know, whatever he can
to keep the Connecticut Sun in Connecticut and to play
in the Hartford, and I was, of course, in fact
that he was telling Connecticut citizens to contact the WNBA

(02:20:04):
who have changed their telephone number for some reason to
an AI phone, and I guess the WNBA doesn't want
to be reached, and he found some sort of issue
with that, And I was saying, that's odd, because we
hear in Connecticut find that same problem when it comes
to him and other elected officials who don't seem to
want to answer any questions who in some cases, and

(02:20:26):
I'm on good authority to say that people like Governor
Lamont do not want certain press credentials given out to
some people in the media. I don't want to say
any names Fox sixty one, I don't want to say
who they might be WTNH, even though from what I understand,

(02:20:51):
there are some people at WTNH who go to Christmas
parties with the guy but doesn't want to send out
press release and won't take questions. Oddly enough, one day
I'm gonna be able to tell you the dirt on
that story. But give us some time.

Speaker 7 (02:21:04):
I promise I'll get to you. I don't want to
disparage anybody here.

Speaker 6 (02:21:08):
Let's get another check of whether in traffic we got
Scott Homan, who's filling him for Bob Larson, who is our.

Speaker 7 (02:21:13):
New meteorologist by the way. And we got Mark Christopher's
in the VPS traffic center.

Speaker 6 (02:21:18):
Hey Mark, what's up?

Speaker 7 (02:21:19):
Everybody?

Speaker 6 (02:21:20):
You know who it is?

Speaker 30 (02:21:20):
Who is you know?

Speaker 6 (02:21:22):
It's on the radio, Frederick Douglas of the twenty first century.

Speaker 2 (02:21:27):
It's w t i C News Talk eight.

Speaker 7 (02:21:30):
All right, we're back.

Speaker 6 (02:21:31):
We're almost out of here again. Congratulations to the Red
Sox for of course winning even though preempting my show
to the online realm.

Speaker 7 (02:21:39):
We'll be back here tomorrow and do it all over again.

Speaker 6 (02:21:41):
I've still got plenty of news and plenty of views
I haven't gotten into yet. Let me just give you
a preview of that as well. Before we get out
of here. I'm going to read, by the way, the
second part of that trans reddit. I've got to talk
about what David Hoggs said about Hai Keen Jeffries and
team's reluctance to support.

Speaker 7 (02:22:04):
What's his face zorn Mumdani. I don't know, I don't know,
I have no idea. Well, I drew a blank on him.
I've got some great audio on that will play that
as well. Tomorrow.

Speaker 6 (02:22:16):
Also, there's another story that I want to get into,
and that's the Mike spercottish thing I keep saying I'm
going to talk about, which is really a despicable piece
of audio which shows exactly the road that the left wants,
our people, our children especially. So I'm gonna play that.
I have to play this now because this was breaking news.

(02:22:37):
I want to thank Kevin b for sending it to me.
This just happened about a little more than half an
hour ago on the well a little more than that now,
it's probably an hour ago on Will Caine's show on
Fox on the Fox News Channel. He was talking to
Maryland Governor Westmore. I also understand some other explosive details

(02:23:00):
in that interview where he exposes Wesmore Governor Wesmore for
lying about receiving the Bronze Star. We'll get into that
as it pertains, But this was interesting with all the
people in these cities that have crazy violence in the
Baltimore being way up there. There has been this refusal

(02:23:21):
of federal help by the Trump administration. But Will Caine
got wes Moore after. Of course, Mario Bowser, the VC mayor,
has now changed Turtuo.

Speaker 7 (02:23:33):
Listen to this exchange, Governor.

Speaker 27 (02:23:36):
I appreciate the investment, but it would just seem to
me if despite that investment, Baltimore still ranks third in
the nation in violent crime rate per capita in the nation,
that you would welcome in the President of the United
States help if crime in Maryland. And as to the
point of partisan politics, it's simply the truth. The truth
isn't partisan, and the truth is most of the major
cities in the United States are run by Democrat governors,
and they're also the highest rate crime cities in the country.

(02:23:59):
I'm unlimited, and I want to give you a chance
to addy.

Speaker 35 (02:24:01):
I would absolutely federal support.

Speaker 27 (02:24:04):
Apparently there we go. You would welcome to federal support.
That's wonderful to hear.

Speaker 32 (02:24:09):
I would absolutely welcome federal support.

Speaker 10 (02:24:11):
Hear that.

Speaker 35 (02:24:11):
But I also know what federal support is going to
be necessary and required.

Speaker 7 (02:24:15):
It's the reason that I've.

Speaker 35 (02:24:16):
Said we would love to have additional support for license
plate readers, things that we know can actually stop crimes
as they are happening, and making sure that people are
brought to justice, and not having thirty million dollars cut from.

Speaker 7 (02:24:27):
Public safety budgeting.

Speaker 35 (02:24:29):
That that is coming from the federal government that I
would love to be able to make sure that the
federal government can do things like ban ghost guns and
making sure we're eliminating these extended clips for blocks, which
are essentially are turning blocks into automatic weapons. I would
love to make sure we're investing in local law enforcement
because we are.

Speaker 7 (02:24:46):
By the way, for those of you who don't know,
investing means government spending, There's no such thing. I love
the word investing like there's a return.

Speaker 6 (02:24:57):
Stop using that word, you guys sound silly when you
do we need to invest in education, you mean just spend,
Just say spend.

Speaker 7 (02:25:05):
I would love it if my wife would.

Speaker 6 (02:25:07):
Say, I'd like to invest in a Louis Vauton bag
at four thousand dollars. What return am I gonna get
from it? My happiness, dear, That's what she says. By
the way, every time, what do I get for that purse?
Mean being happy? Oh?

Speaker 7 (02:25:23):
By the way, that is only for a limited time.
It is always just for a limited time.

Speaker 6 (02:25:27):
So there you have it. Wes Moore conceding he would
accept federal health He needs it.

Speaker 7 (02:25:35):
He needs it.

Speaker 6 (02:25:36):
They're losing on this. They've been losing on this for
a while, and it's about time these guys recognize it.

Speaker 7 (02:25:43):
It's just about time the violence in.

Speaker 6 (02:25:47):
Those cities they're only affecting, they're only going to create
more black Republicans. And even if they don't become Republicans,
they damn su're not gonna vote for Libs.

Speaker 7 (02:25:55):
They're just not.

Speaker 6 (02:25:56):
They're gonna vote for their safety and in their you know,
in for their own interest. That's all I'm saying. All right,
let me get up out of here, and before I do,
let's go to our.

Speaker 7 (02:26:06):
Good friend white By calling in from Florida.

Speaker 6 (02:26:08):
What's up, sir?

Speaker 10 (02:26:10):
Did I just hear that moron Wes Moore say that
these extended clips for gloss turns.

Speaker 20 (02:26:17):
Them into machine guns?

Speaker 2 (02:26:19):
Yes?

Speaker 7 (02:26:19):
He did?

Speaker 10 (02:26:20):
Did he just say that? No, you freakin' milk said,
looking idiots, What happens is these people have illegal switches
that replace the backplate on the slide and turn glocks
into fully automatic.

Speaker 6 (02:26:35):
They don't under why why is that guy.

Speaker 10 (02:26:38):
That's massively illegal?

Speaker 4 (02:26:39):
Right?

Speaker 6 (02:26:40):
Why is it? Why is it? I want to play
this for you too. I don't know if you heard
this earlier. This was Evan Perez right at CNN. This
is him talking about the gun that was used in,
of course, the Minnesota shooting.

Speaker 7 (02:26:52):
Listen to what he says here.

Speaker 13 (02:26:53):
It seemed like a rifle, he said, a semi automatic rifle.

Speaker 9 (02:26:58):
And it went on for several minutes, right, And that's
an uncommon as well.

Speaker 21 (02:27:02):
These things can shoot dozens of bullets, you know, in
just one trigger pull, right, and.

Speaker 7 (02:27:08):
So again, it's not that hard to figure out. I
know it frustrates you.

Speaker 20 (02:27:16):
It's just a rifle.

Speaker 10 (02:27:18):
These people have elevated this simple rifle to weapon of
mass destruction. It's a dinky little round. You can't even
hunt deer with it in most places. It's not powerful enough.
It's just a rifle. If I had stood outside, it's hypothetical.
If ill outside that building with nobody stopping me, and
I had a three fifty seven magnum revolver, I killed

(02:27:41):
twelve people before anybody gets to me. It's not about
the firearms, about the fact that nobody stopped this person,
and we could stop a lot of this if we
returned to the old DSM certifications for mental illness. Nobody
who's a transgender or a homosexual should be allowed to
buy a firearm, because, according to psychiatry, they're mentally ill.

Speaker 6 (02:28:03):
Now, Now you know what's funny because I talked to
a clinical psychiatrist who said that to me in a
sort of whispering tone. We're like, we were private having dinner,
and she said it to me in this whispering tone
because she was concerned that others might hear it. Like,
is it true that people in the psychiatric world are
afraid to say the truth out loud? Yes, dude.

Speaker 10 (02:28:26):
It's the same reason that we dropped the standard for
mental retardation from eighty five to seventy five in the seventies.
Do you know why we dropped it? Because the average
IQ of an African American is eighty five in this country,
That's why. And you couldn't have a standard that said
that most black people are mentally retarded, so they dropped
it in seventy five. Now it was eighty five until

(02:28:48):
the seventies.

Speaker 6 (02:28:49):
Now, it's funny you say that. I was just telling
my wife about this story. Do you remember the Denny's
not Denny's, I apologize the Wendy's shooting in where there
were two burglars who robbed a Wendy's and they killed
the employee's execution style.

Speaker 7 (02:29:06):
In the nineties. That ring a bell at all. Ye okay,
this was the story where the two men in New York.

Speaker 6 (02:29:13):
Governor Pataki was the governor of New York at the time,
and insisted.

Speaker 7 (02:29:17):
On the death penalty for all of these people.

Speaker 6 (02:29:19):
This story was so huge back in the day's folks,
and some of you may remember it that Dave Thomas
came to Queen's and held a press conference to support
the families of the victims, right the people who had died.
That's how big this story was. And they wanted the
death penalty for both individuals. One got them, but one
of them, they said, was mentally incapable of being tried

(02:29:43):
as a fully functioning adult. And the big debate was
whether or not he could be put to death because
he would be considered mentally retarded. But it was for
the exact same standard you said, because and again, and
this person willingly did the deed that he did. This
guy didn't, you know, there's that George and Lenny sort

(02:30:05):
of you know, as we you know, sort of consider
people of mental retardation.

Speaker 7 (02:30:09):
But this guy was a fully functioning young man who
knows what he did.

Speaker 6 (02:30:13):
But they used the thinnest of reasoning to keep him
from facing the death penalty.

Speaker 10 (02:30:20):
And the way I figured, if they're actually retarded, they
won't know what's going on. Anyway, I can tell them
it's a carnival ride.

Speaker 6 (02:30:26):
Let him ride the way exactly.

Speaker 7 (02:30:28):
It's exactly right.

Speaker 6 (02:30:29):
And this it wasn't like this kid didn't know not
what he was doing, but he was also well aware
of the consequences of the death penalty.

Speaker 10 (02:30:38):
And real quick, how come all these these shooters who
go on these rampages seem to have enough money to
buy a whole bunch of stuff.

Speaker 7 (02:30:46):
There's a lot of money here.

Speaker 10 (02:30:48):
A lot of money is minimum five hundred. That shotgun
he had is five hundred. The handgun's probably five. He
had several hundred dollars worth of magazines for everything, plus
body armor, plus all kinds of AMMO. And he was
a gig worker who's paying rent in his apartment. Unless
he had a credit card, he loaded up. I don't

(02:31:09):
see how he got like three grand worth of stuff.

Speaker 6 (02:31:12):
Yeah, it's yeah, it's we're gonna that's probably one of
the most well, it's got to be one of the
considerable questions in all of it. And we should find
out exactly how he paid for it. They said he
purchased the gun legally, so I'm assuming it was with
his own funds, and it may very well been a
credit card.

Speaker 10 (02:31:26):
And and if if we had the old standards that
said these people were mentally ill, he wouldn't have been
allowed to buy.

Speaker 20 (02:31:32):
It in the first place.

Speaker 7 (02:31:33):
That's exactly right.

Speaker 6 (02:31:33):
That's why I said a red flag lawn should have
played a role.

Speaker 10 (02:31:36):
Some store owner should have said no. But then he'd
get sued for discrimination because he won't sell to a transformer.

Speaker 17 (02:31:42):
They're screwed.

Speaker 6 (02:31:43):
Thank you man.

Speaker 7 (02:31:44):
All right, I want to I want to address this
in the thing.

Speaker 6 (02:31:46):
First of all, Donald, you're screaming into the chat room
that what he said was racist.

Speaker 7 (02:31:53):
Did you check out this the data, because we know
it to be true.

Speaker 6 (02:31:57):
It's actually one of a conversation that we've had plenty of.

Speaker 7 (02:32:00):
Times on the air.

Speaker 6 (02:32:02):
Do you remember when they changed the term monkey pos
just recently? Why did the CDC change the term monkey pox?
Why did they change it? It's always been the monkey pox,
But why did they change it? Because they the CDC,
not US. They associated the term monkey with African Americans

(02:32:24):
and they didn't want people making fun of African Americans
who were stricken with monkey pocks, and people use it
in a derogatory way, so we know it's a fact.
And you may not know this because then again, you
didn't do the research. The only thing you researched was
your outrage was that they changed the standards. And I

(02:32:44):
know this beca some good friends with a clinical psychiatrist
who has forty years in the business and a woman's
Puerto Rican. Okay, just so you understand, just because you
hear something you don't like and you're outraged about it,
do the research and then get back to me, and
then are screaming about how it's racist.

Speaker 7 (02:33:01):
But when you go read it, which by the way,
we know you didn't do. You never bother to do.

Speaker 6 (02:33:06):
Most of you people who are screaming racism never do
the homework that I do for you. Technically I should
get your grades, but I do the homework for you,
if I may say so myself. I get legions of
phone calls and text messages right here on this show
that say I'm grateful at how well researched you are,

(02:33:26):
because that's my job. But you didn't research a thing,
did you. All you can find yourself is outraged and ashamed.
I don't have to worry about your outrage or your
shame because I'm telling the truth. I don't give a
damn about your optics. Those are for fools. So if
you don't like the fact, talk to the people who

(02:33:49):
actually change the standard.

Speaker 20 (02:33:52):
That's all.

Speaker 6 (02:33:53):
Go be outraged where it counts, No, sir. What you're
finding me to be hopeless of is to bowing to
your rhetoric. This is what you don't understand. I will
not kneel. You can forget about it. You call me
hopeless because you mean I'm hopeless to your whim, I

(02:34:17):
am res on radio, just gonna be resun radio, and
I'm not gonna be offended by everything that I hear.
It is like, well, that sounds richeous, too bad, Grow up,
be an adult. Seriously, call a cop. That's what I

(02:34:37):
said to my wife the other day. Call a cop.

Speaker 7 (02:34:42):
It's so mean.

Speaker 10 (02:34:43):
I know.

Speaker 6 (02:34:45):
All right, tomorrow, don't forget. We got more news, more views,
if any details about this story go on. But as
far as I'm concerned.

Speaker 7 (02:34:51):
I've moved on.

Speaker 2 (02:34:53):
News.

Speaker 6 (02:34:54):
What do we have?

Speaker 7 (02:34:54):
What's breaking news?

Speaker 3 (02:34:57):
I heard?

Speaker 6 (02:34:58):
Yeah, you know every Dallas always sends everybody over there.
If they don't send them the what do you call
it to the uh, the Raiders?

Speaker 7 (02:35:06):
So what do they have some type of the owners
have some type of No.

Speaker 6 (02:35:10):
I mean, who was the last guy who who left Washington?
I mean, I'm sorry left Dallas to go to the Packers.
There's always somebody who is up there. Michael Parsons wasn't
gonna be happy at Dallas anyway. That team's not gonna
win for another ten years.

Speaker 7 (02:35:24):
Yeah, well they they messed up on that one. I
will listen.

Speaker 6 (02:35:28):
I'll tell you what they need to do. They need
to finally, finally like take take a uh let's say,
take some testosterone shots and fire Dak Prescott.

Speaker 7 (02:35:41):
Prescott he's whack. He's way good at FIRS the first
three years, but then after that.

Speaker 6 (02:35:47):
Is he is one hundred percent whack.

Speaker 25 (02:35:50):
You know what.

Speaker 6 (02:35:51):
He's so whack. He makes Tony Romo look good. And
I used to call him. I used to call him Tony.
Oh no, Romo.

Speaker 7 (02:35:57):
Why did I call him?

Speaker 6 (02:35:58):
Because every time you got the ball, I go, oh no,
because there's going to be something wrong.

Speaker 7 (02:36:04):
He's d I call a wack press guy. Get rid
of that guy.

Speaker 6 (02:36:08):
It's over right now, I'd rather I mean no, if
I'm I'm a Jet fan, that Dallas.

Speaker 7 (02:36:14):
Cowboys are so horrible, I can't bring myself to root
for I can't.

Speaker 6 (02:36:19):
I can't.

Speaker 7 (02:36:19):
They're gonna be good this year.

Speaker 4 (02:36:21):
Man.

Speaker 7 (02:36:22):
I'm sorry, no offense, but is there a repeat on?
I just sounds like it sounds like I heard that before.

Speaker 6 (02:36:28):
I don't know where time to get about it here?
As I always say, radio was free. So we thank
you for paying attention. Remember to keep JC in your
hearts and then your mind. Show Patrick, we love you,
have me, miss you. Remember that petic is not planning,
so planning your work and work you're playing me. I'm
reaching the radio. You have a good night, pleasant tomorrow.
Scott Homan filling in for Bob Larsen and Mark Christopher.
He's in the BPS driving center. Good night, sah, Hey,

(02:36:50):
you have a great night. Recent If you're heading into
Hartpard South, then went delays by thirty.

Speaker 7 (02:36:54):
Three, Oh racer, I gotta go out. And if you're
heading down into Meridith.

Speaker 4 (02:37:00):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (02:37:02):
You get that packing on hire a moving company. I
don't trust those guys.

Speaker 4 (02:37:10):
I know.

Speaker 7 (02:37:11):
I'll say it to you every time on the right show.
No have a good have a good weekend. Catch you
on Tuesday.

Speaker 6 (02:37:17):
That's right.

Speaker 7 (02:37:20):
Yeah, I'm out tomorrow, Yes sir, Yes, sir. He's Hardford, Quiet, Middletown,
West four and.

Speaker 6 (02:37:32):
Again, where are you all right?

Speaker 7 (02:37:36):
We'll go south Found on the park one. All right, folks, Thank.

Speaker 6 (02:37:41):
You're ay, thank you, Michael A, thank you, Laurie. It's
always been a pleasure. Donald. No offense, But dude, I'm sorry.
It's you know, this is just one of those things
that you know, you're so hooked on the black thing. Dude,
you're just so hooked on it. You don't even see me.

(02:38:02):
You don't, you really don't see me. You just see
my color, which is the most disrespectful thing in it all.
Like you don't even understand that I take offense to
the fact that you only see me as a black man.

Speaker 7 (02:38:15):
And I try to explain this to everybody. Dude, I'm
a man.

Speaker 6 (02:38:21):
I'm not a spotted owl, right, I'm not a derivative
of I'm a man.

Speaker 7 (02:38:28):
I'm a fifty six year old man. I'm no different
than anyone.

Speaker 6 (02:38:34):
I'm as accomplished as anyone. I could do anything I
want to if I put my mind to it. But
I'm a man, not a black man, not a person
of African American descent. I'm none of those things. I'm
a man. I'm a grown ass man. And if you
want to live your life being a derivative of or
a subspecies, whatever the f that is, you go on

(02:38:57):
and do that. But please don't come up in me
with all that. I'm so offended and ashamed, ashamed. I
don't need Do you really think that I give a
good damn about what you are ashamed of when it
comes to me, I'm not.

Speaker 7 (02:39:10):
Here representing you.

Speaker 6 (02:39:11):
I'm not your kid. I don't have your last name.
You didn't bear me. That's your problem. You think that
because I'm black, you think I have some sort of
allegiance to you. I've got none, no offense. But black
people have never done a thing for me, my friends,
my family. They have busted their asked for me and

(02:39:33):
the people who matter. I will always give a damn
about whether or not I shame them. But you, you're
just some random negro. You don't really think you hold
any weight here, do you. I respect you as a man,
and I respect your patronage to this show, but don't
you ever think that your shame carries weight. If it

(02:39:54):
really did, you just leave instead of sticking around to
be abus, because that's technically what I'm doing. Every day
I say something you don't like, you're just being abused,
and perhaps you like that. Maybe that's your fetish. Maybe
you're just like an abused girlfriend in some way, and

(02:40:14):
if that's your thing, dude, that's your kink. Have at it.
But with all due respect, when you have a kink,
just enjoy it. Please stop telling the dominatrix how hard
they should bite you. You understand.

Speaker 7 (02:40:30):
It works. Let's understand what our relationship is.

Speaker 6 (02:40:35):
I do my thing.

Speaker 7 (02:40:36):
You listen, but your shame keep it in your pants.

Speaker 6 (02:40:42):
We don't care over here, y'all, have a good night,
stay good to each other

Speaker 30 (02:41:00):
S.
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