Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:23):
Hey, yo, they they should 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. Lound
does like a dream come true.
Speaker 2 (00:35):
Your Due to the nature of this program, discretion does
not exist.
Speaker 1 (00:42):
It's race on the radio right now on w T
I see News Talk ten eighty.
Speaker 3 (00:57):
How waiting all your fun day?
Speaker 4 (00:59):
Do I.
Speaker 3 (01:04):
Oh man, believe it or not. There's other news going on,
but it's a happy day. You can't deny it.
Speaker 5 (01:14):
You gotta gotta give the man credit because he deserves it.
I taken no crab from any of you folks out there.
Speaker 3 (01:29):
You know who you are.
Speaker 5 (01:31):
Just enjoy with the rest of us. I said it
last week. I'm gonna say it again today. Please just
celebrate with us.
Speaker 3 (01:41):
There's nothing to be mad about.
Speaker 5 (01:44):
We should be overwhelmed with joy and jubilation. Hostages are returned,
families reunited, people are home. We still got to recover
those who have died. But it is a big day.
(02:06):
It's all anyone can talk about. And I love the
fact that it has been relatively quiet. You got a
couple of people here and there and everywhere can't even
sit still without making themselves this story. You know, the
usual ones, mister Murphy, mister Himes, the usual folks. But
(02:28):
that's not important, it is it. I don't want to
focus on them today. I want to focus on some
news we're gonna get into that. We're not gonna do
the whole show about the hostages being freed and about
the peace deal, which.
Speaker 3 (02:41):
Of course is important. Let's do it.
Speaker 5 (02:43):
Let's not let's give it what it's due. But I do,
I do kind of have to. I have to do
this opening monologue because it's necessary and it's sort of
in two parts. The first part is maybe Trump was
(03:09):
right about everything, and maybe he is. It's a question
worth asking. A lot of people.
Speaker 3 (03:15):
Say no, no reason he's not.
Speaker 5 (03:18):
Okay, we'll put that to the test today. The second
part of our opening monologue is political will versus political
won'te And let me begin, because this opening monologue is long,
(03:38):
and I've got to get to it.
Speaker 3 (03:39):
If I'm going.
Speaker 5 (03:40):
To get to every facet of it.
Speaker 3 (03:43):
It comes with forty two points.
Speaker 5 (03:49):
I don't have a lot of time, so bear with me,
indulge me if you will. In twenty twenty, Donald Trump
said that COVID nineteen originated from the Wuhan lab leak,
the media acclaimed. CNN, New York Times, Washington Posts, MSNBC
(04:13):
labeled it as debunked conspiracy theory and and a xenophobic smear,
with experts like doctor Faucci and the World Health Organization
dismissing it. CNN's Jeffrey Tuben mocked it on air The truth.
US intelligence assessed the lab leak was plausible and or likely.
(04:39):
The FBI deemed it the most probable origin. No natural
zoonotic evidence was ever found. Trump said the Hunter Biden
laptop was laptop was real and contained evidence of foreign deals. CNN, MSNBC,
and PR in a Washington Post called it Russian disinformation.
(05:00):
All noted fifty one intelligence officials wrote a letter claimed
that it was a Russian plant. Social media suppressed the
New York Post story. The truth was according to The
New York Times the Washington Post, they authenticated the emails
in the Hunter Biden laptop.
Speaker 3 (05:20):
And eight million dollars in Chinese money.
Speaker 5 (05:24):
The FBI had the laptop since twenty nineteen and confirmed
it was authentic. CNN's Jake Tapper admitted in twenty twenty
three Trump was right and Biden was wrong. The Obama
administration was accused by Trump for spying on his campaign. CNN, MSNBC,
New York Times, Washington Post called it a baseless.
Speaker 3 (05:44):
Lie, and McCarthyism. Fact checkers rated it false.
Speaker 5 (05:51):
In the twenty nineteen IG report, They confirmed that Feiser
warrants on Carter Page, a Trump advisor relied on flawed
Steele Dalsier, Attorney General bar at the time, said spying
did occur, and a new Nez memo detailed the improper surveillance.
Donald Trump told us that schools should be opened during
the COVID during the COVID nineteen pandemic because it was safe.
(06:16):
CNN and MSNBC and The New York Times portrayed it
as reckless endangerment. Biden and Democrats opposed it, citing science
coverage tied to.
Speaker 3 (06:27):
Trump's normalcy denial.
Speaker 5 (06:31):
CDC revealed in twenty twenty one that it showed minimal
transmission in schools. The New York Times op ed in
twenty twenty admitted that Trump was right and Democrats were wrong,
noting remote learnings devastated far more low income kids than
any others. Donald Trump said that China was exploiting US
(06:52):
trade in the economy CNN, Washington Post, and experts, including
Joe Biden in twenty nineteen dismissed it as protectionist.
Speaker 3 (07:01):
Fear magging, fear mongering.
Speaker 5 (07:03):
New York Times called the tariff economic malpractice. Well, US
trade reports revealed and confirmed three hundred billion plus an
annual ip theft phase one deal force concessions. Biden continued
the tariffs, admitting China's threat and therefore admitting Trump was right,
(07:27):
US energy independent was weakened Russia and Iran.
Speaker 3 (07:32):
Trump said, all right, oh that is my apologies, my
apologies for that.
Speaker 5 (07:43):
US energy independence would weaken Russia and Iran, Trump claimed.
MSNBC in the New York Times mocked it as climate denial.
Experts predicted shortages, not dominance. The truth was US became
the net exporter. In twenty nineteen, prices fell to forty
dollars a barrel, bankrupting Iran's proxies. Biden's policies reversed the gains,
(08:06):
and spikes went up to one hundred bucks a barrel.
It had ended up funding Russia's Ukraine War. Iran's nuclear
deal was a bad agreement, Trump said, CNN, the Washington Posts,
and Obama officials decried it as reckless.
Speaker 3 (08:25):
Experts warned of war risk.
Speaker 5 (08:29):
The truth IAEA confirmed Iran violated limits of the Post
Deal and Trumps sanctions and maximum pressure left Iran broke
Biden's revival, tanked and failed. Amid Iran's advances, they ended
up becoming closer to a nuclear weapon. NATO allies were
(08:51):
free loading on US defense spending. MSNBC and a BBC
called it bullying allies. Experts said that it was impossible
to get our European NATO allies to put more money
into the till.
Speaker 3 (09:08):
After Trump threatened them.
Speaker 5 (09:11):
Spending rows to one hundred and thirty billion twenty three
of thirty two allies hit two percent by twenty twenty four.
Speaker 3 (09:20):
Allies admitted that.
Speaker 5 (09:21):
The resources always existed, seriously asking I'm sorry.
Speaker 3 (09:28):
I don't even know what that is. That is my fault.
I got it, that's my fault. I gotta fix that.
What else am I on? I'm sorry? Oh h. The
Abraham Accords you might remember these.
Speaker 5 (09:45):
The Washington Post and CNN dismissed it as smoking mirrors.
Experts even said it was impossible to achieve. Of course,
we know. In twenty twenty, the accords normalized tides with
the United Arab Emirate, Bahrain and others. It was the
first in twenty six years. Even Biden hailed it as
(10:05):
a breakthrough. The prolonged Iraq and Afghanistan wars were mistakes,
Trump claimed, media dismissed it.
Speaker 3 (10:16):
The New York Times backed the wars.
Speaker 5 (10:18):
Trump's twenty nineteen pull out threats called an abandonment. But
after eight trillion dollars of loss and after nine hundred
thousand deaths, Biden ended up withdrawing in twenty twenty one,
didn't he and he echoed Trump's critique while he was
trying to get those troops out Venezuelan migrants included gang
(10:40):
members and criminals. CNN and MSNBC called it racist fear mongering.
They even fact checked his claims as being false. We
all know how that turned out. The border crisis was
worsened without strict enforcement donald.
Speaker 3 (10:59):
Trump told us.
Speaker 5 (11:01):
CNN, MSNBC in a Washington Post labeled that as racist,
fear mongering and exaggerated. Biden allies denied a crisis existed
pre twenty twenty one.
Speaker 3 (11:13):
You know, I don't need to tell you the rest.
Trump was right.
Speaker 5 (11:18):
Inflation would spike under Biden's spending policies. MSNBC and The
Washington Post dismissed this as partisan nonsense. Even economists like
Paul Krugman said inflation fears were hysterical. The truth was
inflation ended up hitting nine point one in twenty twenty two,
the highest in forty years, proving Trump to be right again.
(11:43):
Ukraine aid would fuel corruption and would be wasted, Trump
told US, CNN and The New York Times framed it
as extortion for political gain. Fact checks called the corruption
concerns a pretext.
Speaker 3 (11:58):
It turns out.
Speaker 5 (11:59):
In twenty twenty five Zelenski interview, he said half at
the three hundred and fifty billion dollars in aid was
unaccounted for. Reports confirmed widespread graft, with billions of dollars
diverted who the World Health Organization was biased towards China.
Speaker 3 (12:20):
That's what Trump claimed.
Speaker 5 (12:22):
The BBC and CNN ridiculed it as conspiracy mongering. The WHO,
defended itself as neutral in fact checks called the claims baseless,
but investigations confirmed that WHGO delayed pandemic declaration echoed CCP
on origins despite evidence US pulled funding, citing the bias.
(12:46):
The Paris climate accord was unfair to the US economy,
The NPR Washington Post. They called that climate denial experts
and withdrawal isolated US without economic harm.
Speaker 3 (13:01):
The truth was.
Speaker 5 (13:03):
US emissions fell fourteen percent post withdrawal via market forces.
China emissions rose thirty percent despite pledges violating uneven burdens.
US Postal Service subsidized Amazon deliveries. Trump claimed and accused
(13:24):
Amazon of using the United States Postal Service as the
delivery boy, causing tremendous loss to taxpayers.
Speaker 3 (13:31):
The New York Times dismissed it his baseless grudge.
Speaker 5 (13:36):
They said it was all against Bezos, and the United
States Postal Service denied any losses, but according to a
twenty twenty United States Postal Service report, one point five
billion dollars in annual losses on Amazon packages China manipulating
its currency, Donald Trump told US. Washington Post called that
(13:59):
economic mcmolpractice turned out to be true. European NATO allies
weren't pulling their weight. The BBC and CNN called it bullying.
Spending rows to four hundred billion. That was beyond the
three hundred billion before sending Javelin missiles to Ukraine would
(14:22):
deter Russian aggression. The Washington Post and CNN called it
escalatory and risky, contrasting with Obama's non lethal aid. Experts
warned the provoking putin the missiles proved to be crucial
in twenty twenty two's Ukraine War, destroying a thousand Russian tanks.
Biden officials credited Trump's move as pivotal. The Iran nuclear
(14:46):
deal enabled Tehran's aggression without real restraints. New York Times
in the CNN decried it as reckless warmongering. Obama officials
claimed it verifiably worked, but the iea AA confirmed Iran
breached limits post deal and got sixty percent enrichment by
(15:07):
twenty twenty one. Trump's sanctions crippled Iran's economy, delaying the program.
Crushing ISIS required aggressive military action, not to enlist them up.
Diplomacy and pr to Washington Post called it hasty, created vacuums.
Obama era experts said that there were years needed, but
(15:32):
the truth was the caliphate fell by March of twenty
nineteen and just eighteen months, one hundred thousand fighters killed,
and UN reports credited Trump's de escalation. Space force was
essential for US supremacy in orbit. Anybody remember how that
guy laughed at CNN mocked it his sci fi fantasy
(15:56):
and wasteful Democrats And wasteful Democrats called it redundant. In
twenty twenty five, de Pentagon reports confirmed adversaries anti satellite tests.
Space Force now leads two hundred plus satellites vital for
GPS warfare, hydrochloroquin MSNBC and The New York Times brandedness
(16:17):
is dangerous quackery, turns out Henry Ford study showed it
twenty to thirty percent mortality reduction in early use. The
WHO later approved trials. Mail in voting expansion would enable
widespread fraud. CNN political fact checks called it baseless, fear
(16:40):
mongering and voter suppression. Twenty twenty audits in Georgia Pennsylvania
found one thousand illegal ballots.
Speaker 3 (16:48):
In twenty twenty four, Heritage.
Speaker 5 (16:50):
Database logs fifteen hundred proven fraud cases tied to mail
in ballots. The opioid cross crisis required a declaring of
a national emergency. The USA downplayed it as overhyped, and
then deaths hit one hundred and ten thousand dollars a year.
(17:14):
Maduro's Venezuela regime was on the brink of collapse. The
Washington Post called it fantasy turned the twenty twenty four elections.
It sparked mass process protests, US sanctions, FROE seven billion
dollars in assets, leading to Maduro's twenty twenty five fight
amid unrest, and now he's on the run and there's
(17:35):
a bounty on his head. North Korea talks could pause
missile tests without full denuclearization.
Speaker 3 (17:43):
New York Times ridiculed as summit theater. But what happened
no missile tests After the meeting.
Speaker 5 (17:54):
General Motors and other firms were offshoring jobs and needed
taris to bring them back.
Speaker 3 (17:59):
CNN called it a job killing folly.
Speaker 5 (18:02):
Economist forecast a recession, and then GM announced twenty seven
hundred jobs return post Travis of post tariffs manufacturing at
in five hundred thousand jobs in twenty seventeen to twenty nineteen.
I can go on, I'm only up to thirty four.
(18:26):
We're gonna have to consider exactly what people are telling
you and you're repeating, and what the facts are when
we come back. Political will versus political won't. You don't
want to miss this because I've got a question to
people who are complaining about what Donald Trump promised and
what he didn't deliver on. When we returned, It's Resa
(18:48):
the radio on WTIC News Talk Tenney.
Speaker 1 (18:50):
Fan of WTIC, then do us a favor, download the
free Honesty app and favorite WTIC.
Speaker 3 (18:58):
So I just got great news from an email.
Speaker 5 (19:02):
We are confirmed Robert cool Bell of Cool in a
Gang will be on the program next week Wednesday, on
the twenty second and four five.
Speaker 3 (19:12):
Can't wait to tell.
Speaker 5 (19:13):
Mark Christopher in a BPS traffic center about that. I
know youbody psyched for that, So he'll be our guest
on Wednesday. I'm actually very excited to talk to him
about the band.
Speaker 3 (19:22):
They'll be touring.
Speaker 5 (19:22):
I think they're gonna be Atlantic City sometime that week.
Speaker 3 (19:26):
So if you are interested where you can find it.
Speaker 5 (19:29):
Let me get to this thing real quick, because I
have so much other news to get into today and
it's Monday and it's.
Speaker 3 (19:36):
Chock full of news.
Speaker 5 (19:37):
I've got to talk about this young lady in New
Britain who was found dead in a I guess some
cooler or something, some container in the back of an
abandoned apartment. That has been a subject people have been
talking about online. I want to get to that as well,
(19:57):
so stay tuned for that. Mimi as is her name,
that's her nickname, Mimi. We'll talk about that a little bit,
political will versus political won't.
Speaker 3 (20:06):
I want to get into that as well. But somebody
in the.
Speaker 5 (20:08):
Chat room wrote something interesting. Black unemployment is twice that
of whites. Black women are losing jobs at record rates.
This guy, Donald Trump, asked blacks, what do they have
to lose?
Speaker 3 (20:21):
Answer their jobs?
Speaker 5 (20:24):
And I ask this question because I'm again a black man,
Not that that matters.
Speaker 3 (20:30):
I'm just a black man.
Speaker 5 (20:33):
But I'm reasing the radio, and I ask the simple question,
can they not get new jobs? Every time I ever
lost the job, I found a new one.
Speaker 3 (20:49):
Is there something I'm missing.
Speaker 5 (20:52):
That has always been a fabric of my life, in
everybody else's life for generations. You lose a job, you
find a new one.
Speaker 3 (21:04):
That's it.
Speaker 5 (21:06):
There ain't no time to complain about who's losing jobs,
who's not losing jobs?
Speaker 3 (21:13):
I got a family to feed.
Speaker 5 (21:16):
Why would I even I wouldn't you think I would
stop and go, well, why you only firing the black folks?
Speaker 3 (21:23):
No, I wouldn't even stand around.
Speaker 5 (21:26):
The last time I was ever fired, I got fired
from a Nissan dealership. I'll never forget it. I didn't
look stand around looking at the guys just like but
why me No. I went out to find a new
job and had one in a day. Paid more too.
It's a little bit of a commute, but it paid more.
Speaker 3 (21:43):
Didn't care. You move on a job.
Speaker 5 (21:51):
And of course the response to that is, why aren't
whites losing their jobs at the same rate. I don't
know and don't care.
Speaker 3 (22:04):
Don't care.
Speaker 5 (22:05):
My objective is to get a job, not to check
the stats. Your babies ain't gonna live off stats. Political
will versus political won't. Charlemagne said this on his radio show.
I thought it was interesting, not that he's ever consistent,
(22:26):
he's always back and forth, but this comment was relevant.
Speaker 6 (22:29):
Donald Trump shows me what's politically possible. Trump shows me
what presidents can do if they want to do it.
Donald Trump shows me what can be said if you
are willing to say it. It's not about what can't
be done, it's about who has the political will to
do it. I don't want to hear peep from Democrats
about nothing until they get the balls to say what
was really on their mind. In regards to this country,
in this world. Trump doesn't care if it sounds ridiculous.
(22:51):
Trump doesn't care if it make sense. It's no political
correctness whatsoever. As I've been saying for years, the language
of politics is dead in Donald, try.
Speaker 3 (23:01):
Political will versus political won't.
Speaker 5 (23:05):
And you have to ask yourself what kind of politician
your guy.
Speaker 3 (23:10):
Is or gap?
Speaker 5 (23:12):
And what is the one complaint most people have had
about politics, and that is making promises they cannot keep. Now,
I heard all of these people saying, I thought he
was going to solve what was it, Ukraine and Russia
on day one. Okay he didn't. He was going to
(23:33):
lower prices on day one, Okay he didn't. He said
he was going to lower gas prices on day one.
He said he was going to lower the price of
eggs on day one. He said he was going to
stop the war in Gaza on day one. But my
question to you is are any of those promises kept?
Speaker 3 (23:58):
Many of them have been.
Speaker 5 (24:01):
He's continuing to negotiate between Russia and Ukraine, continuing even
putting sanctions, but he hasn't stopped trying to do what
he's planning on doing.
Speaker 3 (24:10):
In fact, you see.
Speaker 5 (24:11):
It every day because he's asked about it every day,
and it's brought up every day. But I never see
this kind of I don't know, like resistance to the
man that I see with other politicians, even some of
your favorites. I don't hear anybody screaming and hollering about
promises that were not kept. When it comes to other presidents,
(24:33):
other presidents, let's start with a few, if I may,
I remember a president saying that there was going to
be a middle class tax cut.
Speaker 3 (24:44):
There was going to be a tax cut.
Speaker 5 (24:45):
For middle income families, but instead that president raised taxes
as part of a nineteen ninety three budget to reduce
the deficits, leading to criticism that he abandoned.
Speaker 3 (24:56):
His core economic pledge. That's Bill Clinton a full repeal
on bans on gays in the military. What ended up happening,
He had to reduce it to donass don't tell.
Speaker 5 (25:12):
How about protecting Haitian refugees and their asylum rights. He
criticized Herbert Walker Bush's policies and promised he would get
Haitian's asylum.
Speaker 3 (25:23):
He did not.
Speaker 5 (25:26):
How about advancing abortion rights, Clinton committed to codifying Roe v.
Wade and easing restrictions, but did not do it. He
didn't even prioritize it, despite having Democrat majorities allowing new
limits on federal funding and procedures to pass. They didn't
(25:51):
get done. Even though he had majorities, didn't even address it.
Let's go to the chosen one closed guantanamobey that was
a campaign promise, didn't happen. How about no new taxes
on people earning under two hundred and fifty thousand dollars?
That didn't happen either, to end, don't ask, don't tell.
Speaker 3 (26:16):
What happened?
Speaker 5 (26:18):
Comprehensive immigration reform with citizen path. He vowed for a
bill for the Dreamers and undocumented workers, but he owned
it up. He only ended up passing what do you
call it, a executive order? That's it. Bipartisan working groups.
I remember this. I remember this, the bipartisan working group
(26:42):
where he would bring in Republicans and Democrats to pass legislation.
Speaker 3 (26:47):
They said.
Speaker 5 (26:48):
He promised institutionalized a Congressional consultation on wars open law writing,
but pursued actions in Libya on a unilateral basis, and
of course did the Affordable Care Act in a back
room deal with just Democrats on Christmas Eve, I'm not
(27:09):
making an argument about politicians and whether or not they
fail at their campaign promises.
Speaker 3 (27:18):
I'm talking about whether.
Speaker 5 (27:19):
Or not they actively work on them or just ignored
them overall, and you never hear from them again.
Speaker 3 (27:26):
And that was the case in many, many presidencies. Many.
Speaker 5 (27:33):
You can call a lot of things a lie. You
can call a lot of things.
Speaker 3 (27:39):
I don't know. I don't even want to say a lie.
You can say a lot of things.
Speaker 5 (27:43):
Didn't happen, But is there an active working group to
get the legislation or the particular policy done. Make that
argument if you try make the argument Donald Trump is
doing everything or at least trying to do everything that
he promised on. And what did you guys end up
(28:05):
on the Epstein files. That's what you ended up on,
Not a policy that enriches your life, not tax policy,
not nothing. I don't hear anybody screaming and hollering about
the stuff that matters. That's the only thing I'm trying
to bring. I'm trying to understand political will or political won't.
(28:27):
Most people talk a good game about what they want
to do in order to get elected, but they never
do the thing that they got elected for. And President
Trump has a proven track record of actual effort to
do the things he said he's going to do, actual efforts,
and you see it every day and nobody can argue it.
You can try to, but there is no argument there.
(28:49):
If you can name one, please let me know. Numbers eight, six, zero,
five to two two WT I C tell me something
Donald Trump said he was going to do that. There
has not been any effort to attack, any effort to
attempt to get done. Just tell me which one it is.
I haven't seen it. I haven't seen it, so you
(29:13):
know that's how that goes. What do I have another
minute and a half. Let me finish up this list
of more Trump telling the truth and the and the
media lying Biden's border policies would create humanitarian and security crises.
NPR called it xenophobic exaggeration. Biden administration denied surge economic data.
Speaker 3 (29:41):
From the.
Speaker 5 (29:44):
UH What labor statistics? Remember that the economic data from
labor statistics? They said, Donald Trump called them fake and manipulated.
Under the Democrats, Trump accused BLS jobs reports of inflation,
especially pre twenty twenty election. Fact Checkers labeled it as
a conspiracy theory. Economists defended the accuracy, and in a
(30:08):
twenty twenty five GAO audit found that BLS revisions understated
Biden's era losses up to one million jobs Trump's era
claims in twenty twenty they were all phantom jobs. Ivermectin
has untapped potential for COVID Despite early ridicule, The late
(30:30):
night shows at MSNBC called it a horse de warmer.
Speaker 3 (30:34):
Do we need to go there again?
Speaker 5 (30:36):
China's tariffs would force fairer trade without hurting US customers.
New York Times claimed, Americans put it an eighty billion
dollar bill. Twenty twenty four studies showed that China absorbed
seventy five percent of the cost.
Speaker 3 (30:51):
The Steele dossier. He was right.
Speaker 5 (30:55):
No new wars started under his watch. He was right,
despite Washington Post calling it an unlucky streak, vaccine development
warp speed, even though it's even though it's caused some problems. Nonetheless,
I just keep asking the question, what does all this
(31:15):
stuff mean? If all of these things it turned out
to be true? When he was called a liar, what
does it mean? And the people who kept calling the
liar were the same old suspects over and over again.
But yet Donald Trump is the liar. We'll take a break,
(31:36):
We'll come back. More news, more views at Teresa on
the Radio. What presidents can do if they want to
do it. Donald Trump shows me what can be said
if you are willing to say it. It's not about
what can't be done, it's about who has the political
will to do it.
Speaker 6 (31:48):
I don't want to hear peep from Democrats about nothing
until they get the balls to say what's really on
their mind in regards to this country, in this world.
Trump doesn't camp. It sounds ridiculous. Trump doesn't camp. It
make sense. It's no political who correctness whatsoever? Have I've
been saying for years the language of politics is dead
and Donald Trump killed it.
Speaker 5 (32:07):
He did probably because he had no fear in telling
people what they needed to hear, and he challenged the
establishment and that was the biggest problem. And I saw
these people any day and every day. I gotta tell ya, ya,
I watched these people over and over again tell me
(32:29):
what was and what isn't presidential? And then when you
challenge them on it, they had nothing to say. No Reverer,
It's like, Donald Trump isn't presidential, And I'm like, like, really,
what's what do you call presidential? Like, what's this defined
presidential thing you're talking about? And what they really are
(32:55):
admitting is is that he doesn't sound like a politician.
He doesn't sound which, by the way, is nothing more
than any excuse, that's all it is. It's an excuse.
It's an excuse to claim Donald Trump is an outlier.
Speaker 3 (33:11):
He's not like all of the rest of them.
Speaker 5 (33:13):
And what he's supposed to do is be polished, you know,
he's supposed to be squeaky clean. He's supposed to point
his fingers or use his fist with his.
Speaker 3 (33:22):
Thumb up when he speaks. We're god, I got dot done,
I blushed and that done. He doesn't speak politician. He
just talks like he talks.
Speaker 5 (33:33):
He's not phony, which in essence, that's what people are
kind of trying to say, they really really want somebody.
Speaker 3 (33:38):
He's just phony, that's all. And looking to be honest
with you, I'm okay with that.
Speaker 5 (33:45):
If you want your politicians to be phony, if you
want them to look like you know, I don't know
who ned Lamont, if you want them to behave.
Speaker 3 (33:53):
Like that, like, if that's what a politician looks like to.
Speaker 5 (33:56):
You, sure, if that's what you vote for. I mean,
I'm i gotta be honest with you, even I'm a
little tired of that. I can't understand why you aren't.
I would I would avoid anybody who. Now, look at
here's a perfect example. What's his name, John Edwards. I
(34:19):
wasn't even from North Carolina. John Edwards.
Speaker 3 (34:22):
Do you remember him?
Speaker 5 (34:23):
You can't tell me that John Edwards doesn't look like
like the right kind of politician. Everything about him was perfect.
The hair swooped over, the eyes, perfect, spoke well, magnanimous,
great smile, and of course.
Speaker 3 (34:45):
Behind the scenes, eh.
Speaker 5 (34:48):
He's boinking the videographer, having a secret love child, hiding
in bathrooms when the National Inquirer catches him doing it,
running from the press, y secretly having an affair with
his videographer while his wife is dying of cancer. That's
(35:09):
what you guys want as a politician. That's you know,
that's Hollywood. That's Hollywood for you. You like that the
guy like Donald Trump comes around and he starts smacking
around your favorite puppet, and you get mad, your entire
you know, the way of life is completely overturned. Somebody
(35:30):
comes in and just kicks it all over and you
get outraged, and the worst part is is that it's
not even original thought.
Speaker 3 (35:37):
That's the scary part.
Speaker 5 (35:38):
Everything you guys dole out is nothing original about it.
You're just as cookie cutter as the people you support.
You follow the mantra of the day, you repeat the
talking points of today. You can't think for yourselves. You
just know that you're supposed to repeat the same old nonsense.
And then when you're pushed back on you seem to
like lose control. You start pulling out your hair because
(36:01):
somebody will wreck your orthodoxy while the rest of us
are literally kicking over the apple cart that you drove
in on.
Speaker 3 (36:07):
I love it, that's all I mean. It's just that's
the way that it is now, and the beauty of
it is.
Speaker 5 (36:19):
At the end of the day, what's happening right now,
if you really look at it, what's your party doing.
You're running around trying to find authenticity. That's what all
of the all of the strategists and all that of utuff.
They're running around doing think tanks to find authenticity. How
(36:40):
bizarre is that it's completely ridiculous finding authenticity within your ranks,
completely defeating what authenticity is, not even understanding it.
Speaker 3 (36:56):
You know, good luck to you.
Speaker 5 (36:58):
I love watching it. It's fun. It is fun. I
love to watch you scramble because while you're screaming and
hollering that we're wrong, deep behind the scenes you're trying
to copy us. That's the funny part.
Speaker 3 (37:16):
Secretly, that's what you're doing, so all that nonsense gets ignored. Anyway,
it's fun.
Speaker 5 (37:22):
Anyway, when we come back the ugly truth about the
death of Mimi Torres and why no one wants to
touch this story. I'll read the statement today. You don't
want to miss it. But let's get to the wt
i C newsroom of John Silver. It's recent the radio
on WTIC News Talk TENNEDI. He's on the radio making
sense of the news. Yeah, even when it makes no
(37:43):
sense at all at all. Now until w t I
see News Talk TENADI, you probably heard at the top
of the hour, John Silver talking about the death of
twelve year old Mimi Torres and uh the investigation into
her murder.
Speaker 3 (37:59):
I mean, I think there's any other way that you
can describe this. And it is a sad state of
affairs as it relates to this twelve year old girl, and.
Speaker 5 (38:14):
As I'm looking at this story, which it was talked
about all weekend. There were demands for public officials, of
course Aaron Stewart to speak up, to say something, and
everyone has been reticent.
Speaker 3 (38:26):
Everyone's been cautious about what.
Speaker 5 (38:29):
To say and when to say it, what should be done,
how they should address it.
Speaker 3 (38:38):
And I'll get into that in a minute.
Speaker 5 (38:45):
I have my own apprehensions here, but it's not for
the reasons you think I'm going to say what I
need to say.
Speaker 3 (38:52):
But we have to talk about what's at hand here.
We now know that this.
Speaker 5 (38:57):
Twelve year old was missing since a fall of twenty
twenty four, and no one, No one found it out,
No persons were involved, DCF wasn't involved, nobody was involved
at all this. The body was moved, according to reports
(39:23):
early reports, the body was moved to several locations. It
was dumped, The child was abused, starved, all of it.
What can you possibly take away from this story other
than it was a tragedy. Then it is a tragedy.
(39:48):
It's far worse than that. It is negligence on a
lot of people's parts. And I have to admit, sorry
to say this, this is becoming commonplace in Connecticut.
Speaker 3 (40:06):
I want to read this statement why I'm saying what
I'm saying.
Speaker 5 (40:10):
This came from Rachel Zanouski, communications director for the City
of New Britain.
Speaker 3 (40:16):
Here's what she writes.
Speaker 5 (40:19):
Delicate investigations of this nature often take twists and turns,
which is why it is so important that we do
not say anything until we have all the facts that
have been corroborated by all law enforcement agencies actively working
on a case like this. I don't know if anybody
(40:41):
can read into that, but because it is my business,
I know exactly.
Speaker 3 (40:44):
What it means.
Speaker 5 (40:47):
It means, please do not judge the people who may
be responsible because they are minorities and they are of
the Hispanic or Latino community.
Speaker 3 (40:59):
That's it, that's all. This is delicate? Mean what delicate investigation?
Speaker 5 (41:06):
A twelve year old was found behind an abandoned home
dismember delicate.
Speaker 3 (41:16):
If this had been any other circumstances where, let's.
Speaker 5 (41:19):
Just say, any other normal human being, let's say an
adult female, had been found would have been deemed to
everybody to be told hold on, take a beat, slow down.
Speaker 3 (41:34):
This is delicate, No, not at all.
Speaker 5 (41:38):
But again, the most vulnerable person you could think of,
twelve year old female child telling everybody else this is delicate.
Speaker 3 (41:50):
Let's take a beat, what what this means.
Speaker 5 (41:58):
And when you say something that, you give away the store.
You give away the whole store.
Speaker 3 (42:03):
When you say it.
Speaker 7 (42:06):
Is that.
Speaker 5 (42:06):
Don't make this about race. Nobody's doing that. Don't make
this about that community. Nobody's doing that. You're trying to
prevent anyone from saying that, because deep down you know.
Speaker 3 (42:21):
That the reason why this was ignored is for two reasons.
It is two reasons.
Speaker 5 (42:27):
It's because one, we have a protected class in Connecticut.
You know we do, and we have absolutely no real
interest in the severity of the of the state of
children in Connecticut.
Speaker 3 (42:42):
They just don't.
Speaker 5 (42:44):
I'm sorry, folks, they just don't. This is an outrageous
story that involves a mother that did this to her
own child. This is the biological mother who did this
to a twelve of your old girl. All that is
telling everybody to be delicate?
Speaker 3 (43:05):
Are you kidding me? What normal person wouldn't be outraged?
What normal person?
Speaker 5 (43:09):
Anybody here, if you've ever raised a kid, has a
niece who was that age at any point in life,
who wouldn't be naturally outraged or be concerned?
Speaker 3 (43:20):
You tell everybody.
Speaker 5 (43:23):
Under normal circumstances, this would be like ring every alarm possible.
Under any of the circumstances, this would be a five
alarm fire. We have people talking about politics in more
severe ways than this girl's death. Do you understand that
(43:44):
this is an actual human being who was murdered, a
child that was murdered.
Speaker 3 (43:53):
You have other people.
Speaker 5 (43:53):
Talking about stuff, I mean, absolute fabrications.
Speaker 3 (43:57):
Talking about a doctor, our democracy and etiquette.
Speaker 5 (44:02):
This is the death of a human child, and everybody's
hold off, take a beat. Don't anybody get ahead of
their skis. Let's get all of the information. Okay, Now
we know that the mother is responsible. Yes, Now we
know that the child has been dead since last fall.
(44:23):
Now we know that the mother and other members I
believe the boyfriend and an aunt were just moving the
child in and around Connecticut.
Speaker 3 (44:33):
Okay, can we not be so delicate?
Speaker 8 (44:36):
Now?
Speaker 5 (44:36):
Can we now ask for the individuals responsible to be
put in jail and, if we're lucky, get them executed.
Speaker 9 (44:45):
Huh?
Speaker 3 (44:46):
Or is that too much? We were delicate? We were delicate.
Speaker 5 (44:52):
We had to wait nine days in some cases to
get in to get a response from some individuals.
Speaker 3 (44:58):
Even the mayor of the town.
Speaker 5 (45:03):
How long is everybody going to have to wait before
we actually start taking some action. The interesting part about
the DCF thing here, The interesting part about it was
would it involve the woman in water barrier? How did
Governor Lamont respond? How did they respond? We've got to
(45:23):
look at homeschooling. We have to find a way to
incorporate homeschooling with the overall education of Connecticut. We can't
have them often the weeds raising their children quietly by themselves.
We're yet today Lamont, according to the reports, at least
out of NBC Connecticut, this twelve year old girl was
(45:45):
being home school I say, with quotations, where's now screaming
and hollering about homeschooling?
Speaker 3 (45:55):
Huh nothing? Governor has it come out? Lamont nothing? Blumenthal nothing,
Him's nothing. Where are they?
Speaker 5 (46:05):
We literally have to scream and the halloween get these
pepids like pulling teeth with these people?
Speaker 10 (46:10):
Why?
Speaker 3 (46:10):
Because they don't want to focus any attention. They're concerned.
Speaker 5 (46:13):
And that's what the delicate part about this is is
that this is a protected class of people that no
one is too scrutinize, and if people show outrage to them,
it is like giving permission to be upset at a
Hispanic mother who killed her child, and they can't have that.
(46:38):
They've got to protect the agenda before they protect the children.
Their safety be damned. They don't care. They don't care.
It's that simple, And I'm sorry Hispanic's out there. You're
gonna have to come to a really, really quick understanding
of what's going on in and around the country.
Speaker 2 (47:01):
You are useless.
Speaker 3 (47:02):
You are here to be used.
Speaker 5 (47:05):
Do you understand that outside of you being used, you
are useless to these people. You're a prop you're a pawn.
You were used against their political enemies. You are used
to make a point. But if you die, if you starve,
if you get kicked out of your home, if you
(47:26):
are homeless, you are of no use to them unless
they can use you. Everybody should beat up in arms.
They should have to do nothing with her ethnicity. This
should be a kid has died the same way that
it should have been dealt with When that young black
girl hung herself because she was being bullied and nobody
(47:48):
paid any attention to it, didn't care because DCF had
to be protected. That kid was just a pawn, just
a necessary evil in the grand scheme of things. Little
baby fell out the window with an alleged crackhead father
still sitting in the house. According to reports, nothing was done.
(48:11):
DCF absolutely dropped the ball, but nope, they had to
be protected. It's always the same case, over and over again.
And the only victims here, The only victims here are
the children. And everybody is claiming that they care the
most about that they're supposed to be protected, and over
and over again, more and more of them seem to
fall by the wayside. They just die and get abused
(48:33):
and are just thrown away while everybody pats each other
on the back and says, no, we're doing a good job,
We're doing.
Speaker 3 (48:40):
Okay, you don't care. They've never cared.
Speaker 5 (48:48):
The children are useful for one thing, to indoctrinate them
and for some odd weird reasons, sexualize them with these
awful books that they're putting in classrooms.
Speaker 3 (48:58):
I don't think I've ever seen this kind of abuse
in the world.
Speaker 5 (49:01):
I don't ever think I've seen this actual concerted effort
by politicians, radical fundamentalists, think tanks, political groups. I don't
think I've ever seen this kind of onslaught of just
destroying the lives of people that they use, and it's
(49:26):
just any given day they just shift their political weight
to every little group that they can marginalize when it's
convenient to them. I'll read it again, delicate investigations of
this nature. What is delicate about this? What's the delicate part?
(49:47):
The child has been dead since last fall?
Speaker 3 (49:53):
They said?
Speaker 5 (49:53):
The delicate and investigations of this nature often take twists
and turns, which is why it is so important that
we do not say anything until we have all the
facts that have been corroborated by law enforcement agencies actively
working on a case like this.
Speaker 3 (50:15):
Do we ever get this type of measured response.
Speaker 5 (50:21):
When the situation is racial in nature, when it is
the police involved in a shooting with an individual, is
there ever any care or pause or let's wait it
out until we get the facts?
Speaker 3 (50:35):
Where's all that?
Speaker 5 (50:38):
That's never the case, As I bring up all the
time Ned Lamont took the death of George Floyd to
admonish his own police department, who had nothing to do
with it, saying that we need police reforms because a
one officer in one death with one guy who lived
over fifteen hundred miles away. If I remember correctly, George
(51:04):
Floyd's never stepped foot in a nut mixed state, and
if he did, I'm pretty sure it was to rob somebody. Yeah,
that's right, I said that, plua right back at you.
But no, who did Governor Lamont blame cops who had
(51:24):
to like who actually had to reconsider who they are
and how they should behave Cops.
Speaker 3 (51:34):
They did even know.
Speaker 5 (51:35):
George Floyd, They didn't even know Derek Chauvin. Many of
them don't even live out West. They just don't imagine
waking up this one morning and just being completely blamed
for the behaviors of some other officer, saying that we
have to be held to an account in some way.
(51:55):
And then you hear these bozos sit around here and
tell me that this must be dealt in a delicate way.
Speaker 3 (52:00):
What just come out and say it.
Speaker 5 (52:08):
It's an Hispanic family, it's an Hispanic young lady, and
we don't want you folks jump into conclusion and we
think you're gonna be racist and bigoted, So we got
to put a stop to that. Please don't be racist
and bigoted. By the way, Rachel, putting a statement.
Speaker 3 (52:29):
Out like this is racist. It is bigoted because you're.
Speaker 5 (52:35):
Saying that the death of this child, who, again we're
talking about not like a kid who inadvertently went into
a refrigerator and locked themselves in and died. This is
a child who was dismembered and put inside of a
(52:56):
container and left behind and abandoned a That is not
something we treat dedicately, delicately. That is something we treat
with outrage. We need all to be outraged about something
like that. We have permission, folks, I give you all
permission to be outraged about this. I give you permission
(53:18):
to be outraged and screaming and hollering at those who
did nothing to protect this girl, and who are now
all of a sudden concerned about how we're supposed to
behave They seem to be more protective of nonsense than
they worry about this little girl. They seem to be
more concerned about the reputation of individuals and stopping people
(53:40):
from jumping to conclusions, then they seem to be concerned
about the death of a child. I argue, I give
you all permission to be outraged. You don't need them.
In fact, you don't even need my permission. If you
are outraged, you should be and you should ask public
officials to stand up and knock it off with the stupidity.
(54:03):
We're done with the political correctness. Someone is dead and
if they don't get on the ball, more will die.
Speaker 3 (54:13):
Because if you.
Speaker 5 (54:14):
Keep allowing them to do it, more and more people
will be neglect full of their children. You'll keep handling
them with kid gloves and they'll have a license to
abuse more kids. We'll take a break, we'll be back.
I'll take your phone calls if you want to opine
about this, and if you want to chime in on
the chat room, you can. It's eight tix zero five
(54:36):
two two WTIC eight six zero five two two ninety
four two.
Speaker 3 (54:39):
It's TRIESA on the radio on WTIC News Talk ten eighty.
Speaker 11 (54:41):
Jody Ambrosio giving a salute to the broadcaster at one hundred.
Speaker 3 (54:46):
Hey, we're back, Reesaw on the radio.
Speaker 5 (54:49):
I was discussing this ugly truth about the death of
Mimi torre As, a twelve year old girl who was
found last week.
Speaker 3 (54:59):
And again, I.
Speaker 5 (55:04):
And you know when you have or have had young children,
and me as recently as you know, being married to
Roseanne and the boy was just turning fourteen when we
got together. And I'm not gonna lie. The first year
he was in my life, I felt like I gained
(55:25):
a new son. And when you hear a story like this,
you immediately reflect on him yourself. It's like wow, It's
like wow, what the mother must be going through, because
you know what you would go through. And then you
find out that the mother has been arrested, and then
(55:48):
you get angry because you'd say to yourself, it's like
who does that?
Speaker 12 (55:53):
Like?
Speaker 13 (55:53):
Who does?
Speaker 3 (55:56):
And it's you can't no matter who you are.
Speaker 5 (55:59):
And again, I even say that to people who are
childless unless you're you know, that kind of childish lady
person who hates kids, you know from the womb.
Speaker 3 (56:12):
Those There are some people out there who just have
no use for children.
Speaker 5 (56:17):
And I get that, But if you can't find it
in your heart, if you saw a picture of this
girl Mimi, and just say to yourself, man, how could you?
Speaker 3 (56:32):
And then other people who will respond by saying it
happens every day.
Speaker 5 (56:38):
I hate to say it, but sometimes I just want
to think, shake some sense into them.
Speaker 3 (56:45):
I don't give a damn if it happens every day.
Speaker 5 (56:47):
I don't give a damn off it happens a million
times a day it cannot be normalized at all. So
I again all of you who have been responding to
it the way that you have, I know what you're outraged,
but that outrage it has to be put to good use,
especially to these people who I just watch a video
of Aaron Stewart being as the dcf knew anything about it.
Speaker 3 (57:11):
And she just looked confused.
Speaker 5 (57:14):
You gotta watch the video yourself, don't do you think
I'm being mean spirited here, but just looked around and
just went no. I mean, Aaron, I'm sorry. I have
never seen a person look more out of their depth
than that moment. The fact that you don't take the lead,
(57:36):
that you don't jump in front of that microphone and
ensure the people of that community that this cannot stand
and the fullest extent of the law must be put
on the people who are responsible. To just sit there
and just go no and then back away from the
microphone like a scared cub.
Speaker 3 (57:57):
Does not exude leadership. It just didn't.
Speaker 5 (58:01):
It's not that you're responsible, it's not even that you
have to be responsible, but you gotta take charge. That's
what you do when tragedy falls on your city. You
set people's minds at ease. You say something encouraging and
enlightened and united. You say something we are all affected
(58:26):
by what happened to me me. We all stand together
and condemn this happening to any of our children. And
if it should happen again, just like these parents, they
will be held to the fullest extent of the law.
We will make sure the book is thrown at them
if they are found responsible.
Speaker 3 (58:45):
Through a court and a jury of their peers. That's
what you do.
Speaker 5 (58:53):
And again, I'm not a politician, and I gave that
speech off the top of my head. That's called natural
born leadership. Now I'm not sitting up here trying to
tap my too my own horns, and I've gone it.
Speaker 3 (59:05):
I just know what to say.
Speaker 5 (59:10):
Let's go to the man who's been covering this story
since its inception, my man Mark and Wes Harford.
Speaker 3 (59:15):
What's going on, Surfer?
Speaker 7 (59:18):
Well, you know I already told you I went on
thirty thousand calls as a Hertford firefighter, and you never
get jaded when it comes to some disturbing death of
a human being, especially kids. So I wanted to go
out there and find out, you know, as much as
I could because there was silence. This happened. The report
(59:40):
came in Wednesday at one pm, and by Saturday morning,
I woke up, I said, you know what, I grabbed
a coffee and I drove over there and for a
while I was by myself in the morning. And I'll
tell you what, for those of you who've never immersed
yourself at a location where something bad.
Speaker 14 (59:56):
Has happened, just to know I was just feed away.
Speaker 7 (59:59):
From whatever storage container where Mimi was in. And then
within I spent, like I said, about four hours, and
then neighbors started coming out or walking to the bus stop,
and people were stopped starting to stop by, and I
had a chance to interview quite a few people. Now
here's the thing is this press conference. I learned nothing today.
(01:00:20):
You know why I knew everything they said today. On Saturday,
I was actually posting on x that something happened in Farmington,
and you know it was it was just odd to
see them say at the press conference that, you know, like,
you know, they don't want to compromise the investigations, but
they got to talk to the community and it's sensitive,
(01:00:43):
like they won't give the location in Farmington right and
this and that, you know, I talked to four neighbors
who live on the street to across from the abandoned
blighted buildings. They have yet to have been questioned by
police or FBI. I go, wait, it's saturday.
Speaker 9 (01:01:00):
Are you telling me?
Speaker 7 (01:01:01):
Is anybody in your building or mostly Twoman Tree families.
They all said, no, there was nobody there. It was
an empty street. It wasn't like there was you know,
it was being protect theater, there was a command post
there or anything. It was just I was literally, for
a while, the only one there.
Speaker 3 (01:01:21):
So hold on, we know. Wait, woman, don't don't want
you to.
Speaker 5 (01:01:24):
I don't want you to get on this because that's
what you I'm I'm taking in everything it is that
you're saying. We have a dead child, a twelve year old.
We don't know how long the child has been there.
We're now learning that the child has been there since
well exactly been dead since the fall of last year.
(01:01:44):
They're not certain what month, but they are certain it
was the fall of last year, which in essence could
be September or October.
Speaker 2 (01:01:50):
We do know that, and.
Speaker 5 (01:01:53):
We know that the body was behind this abandoned building,
this abandoned house, I should say, which is a corner
home if I'm correct, right on a corner.
Speaker 7 (01:02:02):
It's a couple of houses.
Speaker 3 (01:02:04):
It's in the middle of the block.
Speaker 13 (01:02:05):
There was a fire.
Speaker 15 (01:02:05):
I could tell there was a fire there at one point.
Speaker 7 (01:02:09):
Who was all boarded up, completely blighted, overgrown, And from
what I understand, it's been that way for quite.
Speaker 5 (01:02:15):
Some Yeah, somebody said it's been there for about two years.
I know someone said it was there for about two years. So,
and the neighbors in that area who lived there, you're
talking about the time you got there on Saturday. This
reported on Wednesday. Not one neighbor in the area has
been questioned about suspicious activity, noticing anybody going into the
area who may have been hangingh even though and that's
(01:02:38):
the other part is that they know that it is
a known squatter's location, and still no one has been there.
Speaker 7 (01:02:48):
You would think p D would would have been diligent
to question everybody at least on that street, at least
here in getting to Farmington. I'm trying to find the
location in Farmington, which you would think they'd want to go,
because now, how is the community like imagine you live
in Farmington or now are people just calling randomly, Hey, Hey,
(01:03:12):
where did they live?
Speaker 3 (01:03:13):
Yeah, and let's the community there, they don't know.
Speaker 9 (01:03:17):
So here's what I found out.
Speaker 5 (01:03:18):
Hold on before you, before you go on, Mark, hold on,
let me stop you for a second. And the reason
why in case you missed this with the important part
about what Mark's talking about in Farmington or where the
location was, because this bears investigation as well. That reason
being is that according to reports and what we've learned
so far is that the body was moved to a
Farmington location.
Speaker 3 (01:03:40):
But no one has seen to let anyone know where
that location was.
Speaker 5 (01:03:45):
And even if those individuals in that area had been
questioned if they had seen one anything suspicious, had noticed
the smell of a rotting body, anything of that nature.
Because again, to get a timeline of when the body
was moved and.
Speaker 7 (01:03:58):
Where, so real this is what I found out Saturday.
And I again with them being sketchy, is I heard
she was held captive and starved and chained and died
in Farmington. She wasn't brought there. I heard it happen
in Farmingtons.
Speaker 3 (01:04:18):
Okay, So that's what a depth place it did.
Speaker 7 (01:04:20):
It's like, why wouldn't you want to say, hey, have
anybody in the front. This is where they lived.
Speaker 14 (01:04:28):
Listen, I get it.
Speaker 13 (01:04:30):
Believe me.
Speaker 7 (01:04:31):
The one thing about firefighters and cops no is mitigation
is the only way mitigation works is to work on
it quickly, gather as much as you want. Of course,
you want to be respectful.
Speaker 14 (01:04:42):
This is horrific, but the thing is as uncomfortable.
Speaker 13 (01:04:46):
As it is.
Speaker 7 (01:04:47):
You have to ask like why wouldn't you want to
give the location in farming tin? Why when you ask
for you know, now you've got ring cameras and r
lows and everything. I just heard at the pressure they
weren't going to give the location because one of at
least the reporters ask some for the first time reason,
I can tell you, Stan have some pretty good questions day,
(01:05:09):
which is unusual.
Speaker 3 (01:05:11):
And they got no answer something and.
Speaker 7 (01:05:13):
They got no answers, but one of them was what
was the location? Well, at this time, it's too sensitive
and this and I'm there like, well wait a second,
you want the public health yet you're you're keeping the
public in the dark.
Speaker 5 (01:05:26):
Yeah, And again, well, I'm just saying that's an important
hold on. Do's an important part that you're making here
about saying that it's too sensitive. You've got to ask
the question, because that would have been my follow up.
It's like, women, what's sensitive in nature? Are you concerned
that somebody is going to contamidate the area like they
don't live there anymore? What what exactly is so sensitive
(01:05:48):
about this location?
Speaker 14 (01:05:50):
I don't get it.
Speaker 7 (01:05:52):
Just I mean, if you see things on a national scale,
when something bad happens, what do they do They try
to provide a mug shot or they showed you, they
show you footage of things they're trying to They're trying
to prompt you to you know, like, hey, you know
what that doesn't look familiar. But in this case, you
can't have it both ways. We want the community's involvement.
(01:06:14):
Please if you have any tips, but.
Speaker 3 (01:06:16):
We're not going to tell you what we know, yeah,
or where it even happens.
Speaker 13 (01:06:19):
But you can't tell him everything.
Speaker 14 (01:06:21):
I get some of it, believe me, I get that
part of it.
Speaker 7 (01:06:24):
But the one thing that was really disturbing at that
pressor obviously for those of you who want to go
see I suggest for anybody, and I'm not knocking the air.
And at this point, I'll tell you, for a while
I felt bad for it. But where was Johanna Hayes.
That's her district in New Britain. You know where was
my Senator Derek slap in West Hartford who West told you,
(01:06:46):
this guy is unbelievable.
Speaker 4 (01:06:47):
He dials it in.
Speaker 7 (01:06:48):
He has no opponent, He covers Farmington, and never mind
all the rest of them in New Britain, whether they
were representatives or whatever. She was all by herself there.
Speaker 3 (01:07:00):
I'm telling you, I know, Look, we all know the reason.
Speaker 6 (01:07:03):
We all know.
Speaker 5 (01:07:04):
The reason why is because that community in particular, be
it Hispanic, Latino, whatever they're being called this week, that
that is a sensitive area to bring attention to because
then and again in this statement that came from the
communications director of New Britain, delicate investigations of this nature,
there's nothing what do you mean, delegate investigations of a
(01:07:26):
murder that's never been dealt with delicately.
Speaker 3 (01:07:29):
A murder is a murder, and we go to I
mean literally.
Speaker 5 (01:07:32):
We go to the wall to find out what caused
this and who's responsible. No one's ever looking at this
in a delicate way. And the only reason why they're,
like I said, they're showing their hand. It's delicate because
one it involves the Hispanic community, and they don't want
anybody to scrutinize them or scrutinize the community, and out
of their own fears and their own sort of political correctness,
(01:07:53):
that's what they're trying to do here.
Speaker 3 (01:07:55):
But Mark, if you get any listener.
Speaker 15 (01:07:58):
Two quick things.
Speaker 7 (01:07:59):
Yeah, they want them down there. They want you should
have see for those of you go on march from
West Hartford. One gentleman in the car hanging out the
passenger side. They said, what if this was an affluent area,
frend it's rab and he even said it, they'd all.
Speaker 13 (01:08:14):
Be down here. But I want to leave you with this,
and this needs to be fished.
Speaker 7 (01:08:18):
And I'm going to call out just one lawmaker. You
know how they always they'll they'll present the law with
the person something might have been. I want to have
something called Mimi's laws. No more mandated report for mandated reporters.
There is no option to do DCF or Police Department
(01:08:38):
from now on, mandated reporters. Somebody needs to work on
it and make it a law. No more giving it
to DCF. That's because I'm telling you they got so
much blood on their hands. It's not even their bathed
every year.
Speaker 3 (01:08:53):
It's something new and every year. I got to tell you,
and why do they give them the option exactly?
Speaker 7 (01:09:00):
She'd be police only.
Speaker 3 (01:09:02):
Yeah, their track record is never good. Thank you, boss man.
I'll talk to you soon.
Speaker 5 (01:09:05):
All right, let's take a break. We'll be back more news,
more views. We'll take your phone calls as well when
we return. It's Recent radio on WTIC News Talk ten eighty.
Speaker 2 (01:09:12):
It's race on the radio on News WT I see,
I see.
Speaker 5 (01:09:17):
I got a couple of minutes before we get trafficing weather.
Let's go to Sarah in Berlin. Hello, Sarah, how are you?
Speaker 15 (01:09:24):
I'm okay?
Speaker 9 (01:09:24):
How are you?
Speaker 3 (01:09:25):
I'm fine? What's up?
Speaker 15 (01:09:27):
Was that a firefighter that was just on with you?
Speaker 3 (01:09:30):
Mark Walls from Mark of West Hartford.
Speaker 13 (01:09:33):
Yes, yeah, okay, So.
Speaker 15 (01:09:36):
I think that New Britain. I've been told not to
drive down North Street and North Street, New Britain intersects
with Clark and what's on the corner of North and
Clark Saint Anne's Church. That church was built by the
Italians a million years ago.
Speaker 3 (01:09:52):
Wow, and a lot of people.
Speaker 14 (01:09:53):
Have moved away from it.
Speaker 15 (01:09:54):
And I'd like to say one thing.
Speaker 3 (01:09:56):
The city of New.
Speaker 15 (01:09:57):
Britain doesn't want bad press because of the nameighborhoods, and
it's a good city, but there's a lot of problems, okay.
And where was father Israel Rivera, who is the pastor
of Saint Anne's and Saint Mary's on Main Street. And
Saint Mary's is a Spanish church. Where where are Where
is everybody?
Speaker 3 (01:10:17):
Where are they? It's such an important point to make.
Speaker 5 (01:10:20):
It's like these things used to bring out community, Sarah,
especially the death of a child. You know, I can
think of hundreds of children by name that would bring
everyone out, from Elizabeth Smart to a Don Potts to
Adam Walsh, every kid I could think of, really on
(01:10:42):
the top of my head, that communities across the country
would join together and be standing out there in solidarity
saying we'll never allow this to happen again. More and
more community based, you know, sort of response would be
the case. And the fact that this is not in
this sort of drugging their shoulders as to I don't know,
(01:11:03):
it seems weird to me that this young lady would
get that response.
Speaker 15 (01:11:09):
As soon as the announcement came out about a delicate situation,
I thought, well, I never heard of anything like that.
Speaker 5 (01:11:15):
Okay, so you would like me Sarah, when you're like,
whoever calls this a delicate situation.
Speaker 15 (01:11:22):
I have no idea where is DCF and where are
all your school systems.
Speaker 3 (01:11:28):
Exactly? And again, most people need to step up.
Speaker 5 (01:11:31):
And God only knows if someone would actually demand that
someone step up and say why was this girl missing
from every system you could think of, be it public education,
a homeschool, And if this child was truly being homeschool
in some way, there had to be some sort of
registration of her in that program.
Speaker 3 (01:11:53):
And no one seems to have anything.
Speaker 5 (01:11:55):
And everybody's being told to deal with this delicately while
they give no answers to any questions.
Speaker 3 (01:12:00):
It's it's astonishing, to tell you the truth. Absolutely, and it's.
Speaker 14 (01:12:04):
Just a sad day for New Britain. I feel sorry
for all of them.
Speaker 15 (01:12:07):
And the mayor wants to run for governors. She's done
a fine job in New Britain. I don't even live there,
but you know what, Uh, they need to they need
to find out what's what's going on in all these
communities and and people are afraid today. That's that's the
bottom line.
Speaker 3 (01:12:22):
That is fair, you know what?
Speaker 5 (01:12:24):
That is the running theme, Sarah, Thank you so much.
It's the fear part. Thank you so much, you too, Yeah,
the fear part.
Speaker 3 (01:12:32):
That's it.
Speaker 5 (01:12:32):
Everywhere you look, communities are afraid, in some cases, afraid
of their own shadow. Hey, let's get our first check
of weather in traffic, Mark Christopher when we return on
the next hour.
Speaker 3 (01:12:45):
I've got some good news for you. By the way,
when we were talking, Mark Christopher is in the BPS
traffic center.
Speaker 1 (01:12:50):
Hey, Mark is Reese on the radio. Brind don't say
we didn't mourn you on news Talk tenady w T
I see.
Speaker 5 (01:13:00):
We'll get to some more news and plenty of views
we've got. Uh, let me see Antifa. Everyone seems to
know they don't exist collectively, which is kind of weird.
Speaker 16 (01:13:13):
Uh.
Speaker 5 (01:13:13):
Also, we'll talk about this sub stack this week on
my web page. And also, uh, don Lemon doesn't know
that he's stupid.
Speaker 3 (01:13:23):
He doesn't.
Speaker 5 (01:13:23):
We'll give you an example of all of that, plusure
phone calls at eight to zero five two two w
T I see.
Speaker 3 (01:13:28):
Let's do the thing.
Speaker 5 (01:13:33):
Between bounds bounds. Today's winner of the dozen bagels a
month for six months goes to Christopher A.
Speaker 3 (01:13:45):
In New Britain.
Speaker 5 (01:13:46):
Ironically, uh, he will be receiving a dozen bagels a
month for six months courtesy of Between Rounds the Bagel
Bakery and Sandwich Cafe. If you would like to participate
in this contest, you just gotta go to Recenterradio dot com.
That's ore ee se on theradio dot com. Enter your name,
your telephone number, and of course your address and all
that good stuff and your data birth. Do not forget
(01:14:07):
your data birth. You must live in the state of Connecticut.
You cannot have won within the last six months. You
can apply as many times as you like. If you
know you'd like to, you know, secure your chances of winning.
Speaker 15 (01:14:20):
Just do that.
Speaker 5 (01:14:20):
We picked them randomly, and as soon as we get them,
we send you an email to let you know that
you won, and then at this time every weekday we
tell you who that winner is. Also, if you'd like
to help out the food Share program, go down to
Between Rounds and any one of its locations again in
South windsor Vernon or Manchester and pick up a beca
(01:14:42):
And that's a beca bagel. It's bacon, egg and cheese, Chipotle, mayo,
and avocado. Fifty cents of that purchase we'll go to
the Connecticut Food Share That's how you can help them,
not those silly little ideas like you know, license plates
where the money doesn't go to food chair racket anyway,
(01:15:03):
help out food share. I understand what the guy who
runs food shares is a jet fan. Yeah, Bud, you
need all the help you can get. I'm just trying
to help you, buddy, because you are suffering like I do.
If there's anybody hungry, it's you and I four a win.
Let's get another check of weather and traffic.
Speaker 4 (01:15:26):
Uh.
Speaker 5 (01:15:26):
And we've got who do we got in weather today?
I actually wrote it down. Scott Homan meteorologist has got
weather today? And Mark Christopher we have cooling a gang
on Wednesday. The twenty second O La La, Yeah, that
gonna come out. We're gonna talk about We're gonna talk
about every song except Celebrate because.
Speaker 3 (01:15:46):
Yeah, that's their worst song. That's their worst song.
Speaker 11 (01:15:48):
They're most probably the most popular song and as far
as hit music radio, but their.
Speaker 5 (01:15:54):
Worst is I will tell you this, you know it
drives me nuts. Is like I will go to a
wedding and I remember one year I went to a wedding.
A lot of weddings, and most of the weddings I
went to they chose a band instead of a DJ,
and they all played Celebrate to my I had to
leave the venue.
Speaker 2 (01:16:11):
Yeah, that song.
Speaker 11 (01:16:12):
I just did a wedding Saturday night. That song doesn't
get played unless it's requested, and sometimes they have to
come up twice.
Speaker 3 (01:16:18):
Really, I'm like, you know, it's another song. I can't stand.
This is gonna be bad because every band does it.
Cameo's word up.
Speaker 5 (01:16:29):
I can't stand came I know the man personally, and
I tell him all the time. Yes, I told him
to his face, I said, I can't stand that song.
Speaker 12 (01:16:41):
Man.
Speaker 5 (01:16:43):
Well, he said, he said, he goes. Everybody has their
own taste. He's very nice about it. I just I
told him it's not his fault. It's it's bands who
do word up at weddings.
Speaker 15 (01:16:52):
And maybe.
Speaker 5 (01:16:53):
Now this is a song, that's the track I grew
up to. This record. This is R and B radio
right here.
Speaker 3 (01:17:00):
Hey, how about this one? Oh, he can't go wrong
with this one either. She's strange.
Speaker 5 (01:17:07):
Yes, I'll give it to Larry Blackman. He was the
only person who did not know. He did not reject
rap in his songs. No, he practically rapped because a
lot of people in R. And B hated rap music,
but Larry Blackman embraced it.
Speaker 11 (01:17:23):
Right there.
Speaker 2 (01:17:23):
He is It's race on the radio on news to
ten Et.
Speaker 3 (01:17:27):
I see, I see Yeah.
Speaker 5 (01:17:29):
A couple of great comments that I'm getting so far,
Albert writes. In the recent radio chat room, he says
Connecticut does not want to bring too much publicity to
this matter about uh little Mimi Torres his death because
of all of the illegals here. We should notify Trump
and DHS of this horrific story. And again, I think
that's what I was suggesting, Albert, is the fact that
(01:17:51):
look that this is.
Speaker 3 (01:17:54):
Again this is.
Speaker 5 (01:17:55):
What's always believed about certain communities, that if you chastise
one as an individual for their wrongdoing, it's the impression
that everyone will be held accountable or everyone will be criticized.
That we aren't smart enough to just deal with it
in an isolated way. But because government has a tendency
(01:18:17):
to paint everybody with one broad brush that you can,
they think you can't, so they will see this as
an overall hispanic issue instead of this young girl's you know, mother,
an aunt and quite possibly her.
Speaker 3 (01:18:33):
Mother's boyfriend's responsible for this girl's death.
Speaker 5 (01:18:36):
That we can actually look at this in the way
that it should be that the death of this girl
is wrong. But of course again you get a statement
like this delicate investigation. Again, I don't understand what's so
delicate about it. Craig in the chaperal also says he says,
I'm not sure what statements people are looking for a
(01:18:57):
mayor Stewart to make. Wasn't jack Lyn Jeni identified, Yes,
you're right, but I want to say this to that comment,
and you're right, like, what could.
Speaker 3 (01:19:06):
She possibly say?
Speaker 5 (01:19:08):
Well, it's usually what any mayor or government officials should say.
It's usually blather, and it's usually you know, there's one template,
but it is something that should be said. So I
responded to him by saying something to the effect of
police are investigating how the girl's death went undetected and
expecting the full weight of the law to come down
(01:19:30):
on those responsible.
Speaker 4 (01:19:32):
You know.
Speaker 3 (01:19:32):
Again, isn't a platitude, yes, but it shows leadership.
Speaker 5 (01:19:36):
You are saying, yeah, I'm expecting the investigation go by,
have faith and confidence in the people and the investigators
in New Britain to get to the bottom of this.
Speaker 3 (01:19:45):
But to stand there and not know how to.
Speaker 5 (01:19:48):
Respond, you know, that people are expecting you again, it's
it's it's part of your job description as the mayor.
Speaker 3 (01:19:58):
Not did it happen under your watch?
Speaker 5 (01:20:00):
Not that it happened because you wouldn't you know, your
neglect or anything like that. It's not about that. It
is about responding when a tragedy falls.
Speaker 3 (01:20:09):
On your city.
Speaker 4 (01:20:12):
It just is.
Speaker 5 (01:20:12):
And I know a lot of people say it was like, well,
was she supposed I don't. It's not about what she
was supposed to do. It's what she's supposed to say.
It's expected of you. It's in the job description. Everybody
knows that. An extra comment to help boost it you. Oh,
thank you man, let me see it.
Speaker 3 (01:20:31):
I'm I'm with you.
Speaker 5 (01:20:32):
On the song Celebration, we had it on the do
not playlist at our wedding, Karen says, Karen, Karen, I
don't mean to put you through this, but if you
could just indulge me, can you please put in the
chat room if there were.
Speaker 3 (01:20:51):
Other songs on there, so that I can respond to them.
Speaker 5 (01:20:55):
I really want to know your taste of music, now
that I know that Celebration was on the do not playlist,
If there wasn't do not playlist.
Speaker 3 (01:21:01):
I'm on every song, every one of them.
Speaker 5 (01:21:04):
That's important to me because I'll tell you what it's
it's personal, but it would be effective to what I'm
trying to do.
Speaker 3 (01:21:12):
If you can listen those songs.
Speaker 5 (01:21:13):
I want to give them to my wife because she
does not understand what the words unsanctioned music means. She
has got the I'm sorry, I'm not gonna shouldn't say
it like that, I'm already messing up. She has a
particular taste in music and say that diplomatically, and I'm
(01:21:35):
not always a fan. Every time she sings the song,
she looks at me and she goes, you hate that song,
don't you.
Speaker 3 (01:21:43):
It's not about hate, reetarded, It isn't about hate.
Speaker 5 (01:21:47):
Just some songs that I just think are just bad,
just I don't think that they're really really good. Right
up there with Poke, which actually I played at the
last wedding, I DJ that was asked for the wedding
Apple and her husband asked for that song, the hokey Poke,
and made everybody in the wedding do it at the reception,
made everybody do it. What was I gonna get into today?
(01:22:11):
Oh yes, Antifa, Okay, stand by this doesn't make sense. So,
according to reports, Antifa does not exist, and I am
having a hard time understanding how. I am one hundred
(01:22:34):
percent positive that Antifa exists. I don't think that they
are the tooth Fairy. I don't think that they are
Santa Claus. I think that Antifa exists. But why do
I think Antifa exists because the media says that they
(01:22:55):
don't go Antifa. This is an entirely imaginary organization.
Speaker 2 (01:23:00):
Is not an Antifa like I don't even know what
Antifa is.
Speaker 3 (01:23:03):
Is no group.
Speaker 17 (01:23:04):
It's not even like for right groups like the Proud
Boys and oath Keepers. Compared to right wing extremists, Antifa
linked violence is rare and limited.
Speaker 3 (01:23:11):
It isn't an organization.
Speaker 2 (01:23:12):
It is a it is a in many ways mythology.
Speaker 18 (01:23:16):
It's not like the Proud Boys or the oath Keepers,
you know, sort of defined terrorist organizations with leadership that
let that you know, leads violence.
Speaker 3 (01:23:27):
It's not a highly organized movement.
Speaker 10 (01:23:28):
It's a moniker it's it's it's it's not a unified
group like the Proud Boys are.
Speaker 5 (01:23:34):
Things like Antifa are things that are thought up.
Speaker 3 (01:23:36):
It's all of this guys of going after Antifa, which
is nothing.
Speaker 2 (01:23:40):
There's no organization called Antifa. Nobody's a number of Antifa
because it doesn't exist. They are just claring into existence
something that doesn't exist. There is no Antifa organization.
Speaker 1 (01:23:53):
So uh, maybe that's good for social media, but it
really has is non.
Speaker 19 (01:23:59):
Existent exist on the Internet in chat rooms and in
four Chan and discord, in places like that where they
run discussion boards, trade tactics, documents, things like that, but
none of them are called Antifa.
Speaker 5 (01:24:15):
Now, when I heard all of that, that's super cut,
that there is no Antifa, I kept asking myself, how
do they all know that something doesn't exist?
Speaker 3 (01:24:28):
That seemed odd to me, like everyone seems to know.
Speaker 5 (01:24:33):
Like Donald Trump holds a round table with a bunch
of journalists who have experienced violence and other altercations with
a group known as Antifa, calls themselves Antifa, has flags
and have been seen carrying its handbook probably, and the
(01:24:54):
news media all gathers around and says that there is
no such thing collectively, and in fact they say it
with this this confidence. It doesn't exist. Antifa isn't a thing.
And in my head, I'm saying, we're going, how can
(01:25:17):
you all know that a thing doesn't exist. And with
I mean one of those people in that was Joy Behar,
and another person was Chuck Todd, and another person was
Representative Dan Goldman of New York.
Speaker 3 (01:25:41):
These people.
Speaker 5 (01:25:44):
Who probably have crossed paths in some sort of way,
seem to understand the existence or in their case, the
non existence of a group that we've all seen, that
we've all in some way of experienced in our lives.
(01:26:05):
And these people are telling us that they don't exist.
What's got me also thinking as to why would they
say Antifa doesn't exist.
Speaker 3 (01:26:19):
Let me explain why.
Speaker 5 (01:26:23):
You remember an opening monologue where it was Donald Trump
versus the news media. Whatever the story was, they claimed
it was untrue.
Speaker 3 (01:26:34):
Every major news.
Speaker 5 (01:26:36):
Network said that they this didn't exist. That's not true.
Wu hang lab not true? You know, will hang lab
leak not true? Turns out to be true. Here's what
the problem is. It's real simple. Donald Trump has an
(01:26:56):
ability to make a threat a real threat. He has
an ability to get plenty of people to believe in
whatever he's talking about. And this is a concern on
the left. And what they say is and I looked
(01:27:19):
this up yesterday. In fact, it was it yesterday last
week someone said in the chat room that they were
concerned about Donald Trump's rhetoric, and they said, donald Trump
has the biggest voice box and the biggest bullied pulpit
of ever, and whatever he says people will respond to.
Speaker 3 (01:27:40):
I said, Okay, that's true. I looked it up.
Speaker 5 (01:27:43):
Donald Trump is just a little more influential than Jijing Ping,
but he's at the top of the tier. He's the
most influential politician ever ever.
Speaker 1 (01:27:54):
He just is.
Speaker 3 (01:27:56):
And I kept asking myself after I read that, that's
what the problem is.
Speaker 5 (01:28:04):
It's because people believe Donald Trump that people will actually
go above and beyond to counter him.
Speaker 3 (01:28:13):
His influence is problematic to them.
Speaker 5 (01:28:18):
They failed at influencing people the way that they're supposed
to it.
Speaker 3 (01:28:23):
They don't care that they've been debunked. They only care.
Speaker 5 (01:28:27):
About being in opposition, because who they care about is
the small few that's redundant, but the few who will
believe them and go out on their behalf and repeat
the same nonsense. They don't care about those people. They
don't care about being wrong every day. They don't care
(01:28:49):
about how wrong they are by everything that comes out
of their mouth. They don't care if it's provably false
the stuff that they repeat, but they will repeat it
anyway and move on and act like nothing ever happened.
And you can say, hey, remember that time when you
said blah blah blah blah. Yeah, but that's old. Why
are we going back there? Oh we were going to
relitigate that, But this one's true. And then that's the bunk.
(01:29:13):
And it's the same thing over and over again. It's
because they don't care about truth. Neither any of these people.
They don't care about truth. The only thing they have
is a job. Their job is to spread the agenda.
And Tifa is not real. Doesn't matter how many times
Andy No gets hit with the bikes with a bike chain,
(01:29:34):
They're not real. No matter how many independent reporters who
are female or punched in the face and show up
on Jesse Waters with a black eye.
Speaker 3 (01:29:42):
Antifa is not real. They were a figment of your imagination.
Speaker 8 (01:29:48):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (01:29:48):
I don't know anything about the handbook that Keith Ellison,
the Attorney General, was photographed holding in his hand, posting
on Twitter at the time calling the book the handbook
of Antifa, Donald Trump's biggest fear, now saying publicly, I
don't know what antifa is they're not real, even though
(01:30:12):
that we can prove that the guy is read the
Antifa handbook because he posted it on his own Twitter feed.
Speaker 3 (01:30:22):
So I, again and again, it's worse off.
Speaker 5 (01:30:25):
That the people who would normally scream right after these
folks the same bit, that they don't turn around and
look at their leaders and even tweet back at them
and say, hey, can you.
Speaker 3 (01:30:37):
Can you stop saying they're not real? We know that
they're real.
Speaker 5 (01:30:39):
Okay, you look silly. You're making the rest of us
look silly. I can't repeat that nonsense. Okay, I could
just delete that.
Speaker 3 (01:30:45):
Just don't do that. It's bad.
Speaker 5 (01:30:48):
But you know, then again, I can't expect these people
to have an ounce of integrity either. Also, I want
to give a shout out to ned Lamont if I
could Governor ned Lamont this today, Connecticut is home to
countless people with Italian roots, as well as indigenous people
(01:31:10):
who have called our state home for thousands of years,
communities whose culture, food, and traditions shape who we are
as a state today. We honor their stories, resilient and
lasting impact, to which I responded to the governor, Dude,
(01:31:31):
just say happy Columbus Day and move on Wu's damn.
Speaker 3 (01:31:35):
You're afraid of your own shadow. Just say happy Columbus Day.
Speaker 5 (01:31:42):
It's okay now, it doesn't mean you don't support Indigenous people.
Speaker 3 (01:31:47):
Just say Happy Columbus Day and move on. Cheese man.
Speaker 5 (01:31:54):
I told you these folks are scared to death scanning
their own shadow.
Speaker 3 (01:31:58):
Let's get another checker.
Speaker 5 (01:31:59):
Whether in t Scott Holmes got weather Mark Christopher he's
a the BPS driving center.
Speaker 2 (01:32:03):
Hey, but stay locked in.
Speaker 3 (01:32:06):
Race on the radio is on w T.
Speaker 1 (01:32:08):
I see.
Speaker 3 (01:32:12):
Joseph V. Joey V says, Hey, Reese.
Speaker 5 (01:32:14):
The real politician I want to hear from concerning Columbus
Day is Rosa Deloro.
Speaker 3 (01:32:19):
Couldn't agree with you more, couldn't agree with you more.
She should be saying.
Speaker 5 (01:32:26):
Something about Columbus Day. She probably won't. Again, these folks
are afraid of their own shadow.
Speaker 3 (01:32:31):
It's actually sad.
Speaker 5 (01:32:32):
Don't forget to go to rees on radio dot com, folks.
That's our E E S E on the radio dot com.
You can check out the new substack called not All
Illegals Are the Same. I was talking to you last
week about this tax lie that's being spread about illegals
and what they contribute to taxes and you know again,
(01:32:57):
it was just as simple. As I kept listening to
the story, I'm going two things cannot be true. You
can't take in ten million people over the last four
years and then suggest that all of them are contributing
hundreds of millions of dollars to the federal tax. When
they were on the dole, when they got here, be
(01:33:17):
at hotels, medicaid, everything, the money they received on the
EBT cards, plus the cash, plus having their rent paid
for them. How could any of those folks be contributing
to the tax burden. And it's just not true. So
if you go to rease on a radio dot com,
that's our ee s E on the radio dot com,
(01:33:38):
scroll down to the substack so you can subscribe and
you can read my latest substack, which again is titled
not All Illegals Are the Same. It will give you
an itemized breakdown to the lie, especially the one that
I love the most, rental tax.
Speaker 3 (01:33:55):
If any of you out there rent, I know a
lot of you own.
Speaker 5 (01:33:57):
Your own home, but if you actually have rented, ask yourself,
when did you ever pay eighteen hundred dollars plus tax
on your rental? Never at all? But yet for some
odd reason they're including that in the tally. They're saying
that illegals are paying rental tax, and it's it's such
(01:34:20):
a brilliant slide of hand. They're saying that by paying
your eighteen hundred dollars a month in rent because of
the homeowner who pays a property tax, that the renter,
the illegal, is contributing to that. That's what they're suggesting.
It's it's the craziest slide of hand ever. It's absolutely incredible.
(01:34:42):
And where they get those numbers from, I don't even understand.
So and the truth is, and I guess the way
to break it down, and I'm hoping that you'll read
the article. The breakdown is is what they're saying is
that there are people who have been in the country. Clearly,
illegals have been here for a long time. Some people
have been here ten, fifteen, twenty years. And you'll notice
that when you have this conversation with folks, they'll say,
you know what about the people who've been here for
(01:35:03):
fifteen twenty years. We're not really arguing about those folks,
but if they are committing crimes, they gotta go. But
we're talking about the people who were let in within
the last four or five years. Those folks they can't
be allowed to stay.
Speaker 3 (01:35:18):
They just can't. Sorry, just can't.
Speaker 5 (01:35:22):
We'll talk about it some more when we return. Don
Lemon doesn't know he's dumb, folks, he does it. We'll
break that down as well. Mark Christopher, he's in a
BPS traffic center.
Speaker 2 (01:35:33):
Hey Mark, the NAACP calls him.
Speaker 3 (01:35:37):
WHOA.
Speaker 2 (01:35:38):
I don't think I'm allowed to read this.
Speaker 1 (01:35:40):
It's rece on the radio. Let's just say some people
are not fans a news Talk ten eighty WTI series.
Speaker 3 (01:35:48):
And they never will be.
Speaker 5 (01:35:49):
I want to just give another round of applause. I'm
wearing I got freedom t shirt today for the twenty
hostages that were freed in Israel today. We don't want
to not recognize them as everyone else is talking about them.
I just want to make sure that I showed some
solidarity with those families in Israel. They got their loved
(01:36:10):
ones back. From those of you who know that there
are plenty who were lost. They'll be getting their their
loved ones and they remained soon enough, and we hope
that there's at least some closure there to some degree
as the peace talks are going on. I'll read Maddio's
comment in the second let me get to the phones
that we'll get to.
Speaker 3 (01:36:31):
Don Lemon. Let's go to Fritz the Cat. What's going
on my man?
Speaker 4 (01:36:35):
Hey, Teresa has been a while, haven't seen it since August.
Speaker 15 (01:36:38):
I know.
Speaker 14 (01:36:41):
You have heard of what do you call it?
Speaker 8 (01:36:45):
Where the media keeps telling the same line over and
over and over like reflection.
Speaker 14 (01:36:49):
Yeah, so, Mike, you know, I'm going back to what
you're talking about when they say that Tifa doesn't exist.
Speaker 3 (01:36:54):
Yeah.
Speaker 13 (01:36:55):
Do you think that they're.
Speaker 14 (01:36:56):
Drilling that into people's heads so that way someday they
could say Antifa was never January sixth, They don't exist.
Speaker 3 (01:37:02):
Yes, And again that's what the talking point is.
Speaker 5 (01:37:07):
They do know they have some influence with members of
the left, and to drive that talking point as some
sort of wedge issue between folks that when we talk
about Anti four, anyone talks about NTFO, you have these
sort of screaming factions.
Speaker 3 (01:37:24):
Go, but they don't exist. It's not a real thing.
Speaker 5 (01:37:27):
And of course Anti forgets to operate, you know, it's
sort of secretly. But that's not even the worst part.
I will tell you this, no matter to the left
or anybody else, for that matter if they exist. I
do have confirmation that Cash Patel and Pam Bondy are
going after certain individuals as a report that I'll be
(01:37:48):
talking about tomorrow who are funding these organizations, and of course.
Speaker 3 (01:37:54):
You won't be surprised who they are.
Speaker 5 (01:37:55):
Let's just say Kim from northern Connecticut will be calling tomorrow.
Speaker 3 (01:38:00):
That just all I need to say.
Speaker 5 (01:38:02):
You're I know, I'm listen. I got two weeks, I
promise you. I can't wait until I get there. I'm
so excited. It's just two weeks and I don't even
mind the drive. I'm getting closer and closer to it,
and I'm getting more and more excited and at the
same time apprehensive because you know, it's gonna be living
(01:38:22):
like I'm gonna be living there again twenty years and
it's gonna be it's gonna be hell of a different,
uh sort of atmosphere for me. I've gotten used to
where I live now. Now I get to get used
to Connecticut again.
Speaker 9 (01:38:34):
If you're coming in two weeks, I think you're still
gonna see.
Speaker 3 (01:38:37):
Oh, I can't wait. I can't I can't wait. And
that's that's the thing I'm looking for, is to drive
with the.
Speaker 5 (01:38:44):
Window down and to feel that cool breeze and hear
the leaves rustling in the background. It's I'm sorry, folks.
There's nothing else like it in the world. In New England,
there's nothing else like it. Thank you, buddy, I appreciate you.
Let's go to a my good friend, Frank by Zion.
What's up, buddy.
Speaker 4 (01:39:02):
Well, I hope I was happy to have everything worked
out in the Middle East. Yes, as long as I ran,
as long as Iran has that ragime around, and this
generation people over there have been, you know, growing up
hating Israelis and Jews. I think this will last as
long as Trump is in power, and as once as
soon as he leaves, they'll be right back to where
(01:39:23):
they were again.
Speaker 3 (01:39:24):
I hate Okay, no, no, no, And that's listen.
Speaker 5 (01:39:26):
That is a fair argument to make because you don't,
you know, you don't get another guy like Donald Trump,
and if he's gone, you sort of wonder if you
know that, you know, if the cats away, if the
mice will play right. It's like nobody has that kind
of gravitas that Donald Trump has, so they can abuse
(01:39:47):
it because Donald Trump isn't there to hold them to account.
And you always wonder if the next, you know, sort
of form of leadership in the United States is going
to hold them to that deal. But if I had
to ask you a question, Frank, if let's say, let's
go on a deep end here, who would you choose
to hold the Trump mantle at least for the next
(01:40:12):
four years beyond the three? Who would that guy be
that has something that sort of has that same gravitas
that Trump has.
Speaker 3 (01:40:19):
Who would it be?
Speaker 4 (01:40:21):
I just don't know. I know one thing that's not
a Democrat?
Speaker 5 (01:40:26):
Okay, how about how about this one, Frank, I'll give
you a listen, let me give you, let me give
you some let me give you some choices. Let's say
jd Vance, Marco Rubio and to just just spitballing as
a third Tulsi Gabbert.
Speaker 4 (01:40:43):
Well, it's not going to be jd Vance. That guy
worries me because you know, he doesn't understand that what
who our biggest I'm in the China? Okay, you know,
because he came out and said that Chinese people are peasants.
That's one of the most ridiculous things I've heard in
my lifeline. These are belly intelligent people.
Speaker 5 (01:41:00):
It's not that they aren't intelligent, but a large swath.
I mean the population overall is a peasant culture. I
mean that's the reason why they're underheeled. It's not a
very wealthy country. And you know, it's a very isolated
few that live like sort of with modern technology, if
you will.
Speaker 7 (01:41:19):
Right.
Speaker 4 (01:41:20):
But the government, the government is out to destroyers one
of them. Gold went up another one hundred plus dollars
to One of the reasons why gold is going up
is in the last fifteen years, China is dumping our
treasure reason buying gold. They're out to destroy. See. They
know if they get damage to the US dollar, which
is yeah they damage.
Speaker 3 (01:41:39):
Yeah, no, trust me, I know that that that's that
that's their plan.
Speaker 5 (01:41:42):
They wish to make the currency, get the currency or
the global currency out of America's hands.
Speaker 7 (01:41:49):
Uh.
Speaker 5 (01:41:49):
And I don't I don't even know what they're going
to create that would actually change. I know it's not
going to be the end.
Speaker 4 (01:41:55):
They saw what Joe Biden did with Russia with the sanctions.
They closed Russia's three hundred billion dollars of you know, assets,
so what they they had them over I think it
was one point one trillion dollars of our treasuries. Once
they saw that, they said, the hell with that. We
got to start dumping these treasuries because what happens is
they deal with us, so they dump the treasures and
they have goal set to them. Well, once you have
(01:42:16):
possession of gold, like I do, I think you know,
the possession is nineteen nine percent of the law. Who's
gonna take it from you?
Speaker 3 (01:42:24):
So again, so again, you've got You've got nobody.
Speaker 5 (01:42:27):
You think after Trump has gone in three years, you
think calamity back in the Middle East? You don't think
anybody What if I hold on, I'll go one step
further before I go to another call. What if it
proves positive that everyone's flourishing, gaza is repaired, that you know,
everybody's living in some not opulence, but at least there's
you know, there's real productivity in those regions, you know,
(01:42:49):
between trade and all lot of this stuff. You think
they go back to war.
Speaker 4 (01:42:53):
Well, Reece, here's my question to you. For four thousand years,
they've had that opportunity. I mean, these are the only
group of people I know in the history of the
world that don't want to seem to benet themselves. I
told you, if I was a Muslim and every day
read the Koran. When the Prime Minister says to me, Frank,
your family's been living in the gaza, you know for
the last centuries. You're poor, You've got nothing. I'm going
(01:43:16):
to offer your prosperity. I'm gonna sign right away. But
see that's me though.
Speaker 3 (01:43:21):
Yeah, I know, I do believe you're one hundred percent right.
Speaker 5 (01:43:24):
But remember one of the things that they sell to
a lot of the poor Palestinian people is that they're
poor because Jews are wealthy. So if the component of
that adjuta, right, a component of that adversarial nature is
about poverty or or an opportunity to flourish, if that's
(01:43:44):
a part of it, then you just cater to that
and maybe you'll.
Speaker 3 (01:43:48):
Get a change, aro ount. That's just my opinion. That's
all I'm thinking.
Speaker 4 (01:43:52):
Now. For hundreds and hundreds of years, and you'll walk
across with view and they got beautiful homes, they're drive
the nice cars, they got nice clothes to read.
Speaker 3 (01:44:00):
Well, yeah, but you know what, people, you know what
human nature is? Human nature. That's all I'm saying.
Speaker 5 (01:44:05):
Thank you, Frank, Let me get to one, Let me
get to one more over here, Dave is in Branford.
Speaker 8 (01:44:08):
Hello, sir, are you happy Columbus Day? Thank you, Happy
Columbus Day. I do want to observe. We have a
thirty two inch bronze statue of Columbus that about the
time they took the statue out of the park in Worcester.
Speaker 4 (01:44:24):
Square and New Haven.
Speaker 8 (01:44:25):
We brought it out of the backyard. Mostly keep it
in the front yard, though I'm always afraid it'll be stolen.
And I started thinking about if you wanted to get
a card, a greetings card, yes, there's no Columbus reading
cards for that holiday. And if you wanted an image
or a likeness at a garden center.
Speaker 13 (01:44:43):
I mean you can get Mother Mary for Christmas.
Speaker 8 (01:44:46):
You can get any number of Snowman and Chris and
the Santa Claus, the.
Speaker 13 (01:44:51):
Grinch from fourth of July. You can get Uncle Sam.
Speaker 8 (01:44:55):
Just try to find a statue of Columbus.
Speaker 13 (01:44:58):
Anywhere you know, made out of They don't exist.
Speaker 8 (01:45:01):
It's about as easy to get as the image and
likeness of Mohammed.
Speaker 13 (01:45:05):
You can't find it at all.
Speaker 5 (01:45:06):
Well wait, now, do you think do you think that
with the proclamation or the executive order by President Trump
that that'll change next year or within the next year.
Speaker 8 (01:45:14):
No, no, I don't because the popular media there's a conspiracy.
I've listened to NPR this morning. I think they had
some guy whose last name was I think it was
called Noise Cat or something. He is talking about coyote,
you know, it's like a spooky kind of of a
meme that's part of Indian lore from up in Canada.
(01:45:35):
And the local news is talking about the pizza trail
in Connecticut and Hispanic you know, Hispanic months in our
neck of the woods, you know, and nothing about Columbus.
Speaker 13 (01:45:47):
It's awful.
Speaker 8 (01:45:47):
And one last thing on Antifa, I think it was
about twenty eighteen when they were having Occupy Wall Street.
Speaker 3 (01:45:54):
Yeah, well, what, no, occupy Wall Street? It's twenty eleven.
Speaker 14 (01:45:59):
Was it that far?
Speaker 4 (01:46:00):
That far back?
Speaker 8 (01:46:00):
Ben Shapiro had come to town and they had the
usual black face covering thugs that were following him around
on the green and the front cover picture.
Speaker 13 (01:46:11):
I wish I had saved.
Speaker 8 (01:46:12):
It was a woman with the face mask with her
leg extended kicking Ben Shapiro in the butt, and you
could look if you look closely in the picture there
was somebody holding a Russian flag with the Hammer and Sickle.
Speaker 3 (01:46:23):
That's right right behind the lead group.
Speaker 8 (01:46:26):
Those were clearly Antifa people. Yep, you know, taking over
the socialist downtown New Haven stuff.
Speaker 13 (01:46:32):
They are alive and well, they exist. I've seen them myself.
Speaker 5 (01:46:36):
I couldn't believe that. Actually people twisted their mouth to
say that they were a myth. Thank you, boss. I
appreciate you, thank you, you got it. Ralphinson, South Carolina, Hellosa.
Speaker 20 (01:46:45):
Good afternoon. Couple things. It's the uh people were going
after Murphy's phone. He would have a totally different attitude.
And I like, uh, and this is what bilers me
and if both say, it goes to both sides. Rees, Okay,
they're nothing, but you know, and they're nothing as fire
(01:47:07):
as I'm concerned. Republicans are a lot better, but they're not.
These are the lowest life forums on the planet.
Speaker 7 (01:47:12):
They really are.
Speaker 20 (01:47:13):
You're politicians, And let me ask you a question. What
does NAZI stand for?
Speaker 16 (01:47:17):
Rees?
Speaker 8 (01:47:18):
Uh?
Speaker 3 (01:47:18):
The National Socialist Party.
Speaker 20 (01:47:22):
There you go, and these are the socialists calling the
Republicans socialists.
Speaker 5 (01:47:30):
Yeah, that's an interesting background to that too. But but
I get I get your point. I look, I I
totally get your point, and I appreciate it. Let me
get to this Don Lemon thing, Ralph, I appreciate your
bosson man. Let me let me play this this this
bit real quick speaking of the whole uh super cut
(01:47:50):
of Antifa doesn't exist. I want to get this out
real quick before we get into Hollywood news.
Speaker 3 (01:47:57):
And I got two movies I need to talk about.
Speaker 5 (01:48:00):
So Don Lemon, who's worked in CNN for a lot
of his career, is very famous and notorious as being
the newsman, and people have mocked him online. And now
that he has a show that's online on YouTube, he's
(01:48:20):
out doing man on the Street interviews, actually dealing with
the public, communicating with folks, a job that he had
or a thing that he had never done during his
career because he had always been inside of the offices
of CNN, around his elites and people who agree with
him in his own little bubble.
Speaker 3 (01:48:39):
Well, as you know, he's been doing these men on
the streets and this happened, folks. This is real. This
is not made up.
Speaker 10 (01:48:47):
Okay, crossing the border illegally is not a crime.
Speaker 3 (01:48:49):
No, it's not a criminal act. It's a misdemeanor.
Speaker 20 (01:48:51):
So why are they being sent back and saying that
they're breaking the law.
Speaker 2 (01:48:54):
That's the point.
Speaker 12 (01:48:56):
Okay, as somebody that we don't know what they're breaking
the law because they won't tell this no due process,
where's the evidence?
Speaker 3 (01:49:01):
That's the whole point.
Speaker 12 (01:49:02):
And if they are breaking the law, most people will say, okay,
then they need to go if they're criminals. But if
they're not, why are they being rounded up and sent out?
Especially when he promised to deport the criminals and now
he's not doing that. I don't think we're So it's
not a criminal act. No, if you get charged with
a misdemeanor, that's not a criminal.
Speaker 15 (01:49:25):
If it's not a criminal act.
Speaker 12 (01:49:27):
Because we have different levels of crime, everything is not
the same, you know, we have we have different levels
of I shouldn't say crime, but it's not. It's not
you're not it's not a crime. You're not breaking the law.
I mean you are breaking the law, but it's not
a criminal act.
Speaker 3 (01:49:42):
No, you're not breaking the law. That's not a criminal.
Speaker 9 (01:49:50):
Well no, if you're.
Speaker 12 (01:49:51):
Speeding is a misdemeanor, right, So okay, if you want to,
if you want to qualify, that'll do his semantics. But
what I'm saying, but what I'm trying to tell you
is everything is not the same. It's all not one thing.
Speaker 16 (01:50:03):
What is.
Speaker 1 (01:50:05):
It the law that what is it a law?
Speaker 20 (01:50:07):
To come over?
Speaker 4 (01:50:08):
Law?
Speaker 12 (01:50:09):
Is there a law?
Speaker 4 (01:50:11):
There are?
Speaker 3 (01:50:11):
There are rules that are processes that you should follow. Yeah,
so you're breaking rules.
Speaker 12 (01:50:15):
You're breaking the rules, but you're not necessarily breaking a law.
Speaker 3 (01:50:17):
Soa rules, then you get some of the consequences, but
the consequences.
Speaker 12 (01:50:22):
Should not look no one is saying no one should
start of the consequences. You guys are getting things mixed up.
Speaker 5 (01:50:30):
I'm sorry, folks, he really does not know that he
is dumb. He's not ignorant, he he just he does
not He is too stupid.
Speaker 3 (01:50:42):
To know that he is dumb. That's all it is.
This guy has had a career on CNN somewhat twenty years.
I think some twenty years. He has no idea how stupid.
He is not a clue none, And he is there arguing,
(01:51:04):
knowing damn well.
Speaker 6 (01:51:07):
That he is.
Speaker 3 (01:51:08):
I mean, he's literally talking himself into a circle.
Speaker 5 (01:51:13):
Saying that a misdemeanor is not a crime, it's breaking
the rules, and breaking the rules is not breaking the
law because rules are not laws. Are their punishment for
breaking the rules. Yes, So that would be breaking the law. No,
it's not, and then says that they are confused. This
(01:51:33):
guy is a respected member. He is a respected member
of the news media. And again, not one person checked him,
not even the people who agree with him and know
that man, not one person said, hey, listen, yes, your
slip is showing, you know, pull up your pants.
Speaker 3 (01:51:53):
You look silly, rich, says Negro. Nonsense. Indeed, my friend,
let's get another check of weather and traffic. Oh, I'm
so sorry for this. The truth, Scott Holman. He's got
weather Mark, Christopher's and the BPS traffic center.
Speaker 1 (01:52:09):
Hey man, it's rece on the radio on newst I see,
I see.
Speaker 3 (01:52:16):
So I went to the movies this weekend and I
went to go see two films.
Speaker 5 (01:52:20):
Friday night, I went to go see Soul on Fire, which, again,
like I said, was absolutely boring, but there were I mean,
it was interesting enough to sit through the entire film.
Speaker 3 (01:52:30):
I wouldn't have panned it.
Speaker 5 (01:52:31):
It just it had some really really ridiculous plot lines
and it seemed all over the place.
Speaker 3 (01:52:37):
But it was an overall watchable movie.
Speaker 5 (01:52:41):
But I will say this, and I said this before
that one of the reasons why I went to go
see the film Soul on Fire was because.
Speaker 3 (01:52:48):
Two of the lines in the film was.
Speaker 5 (01:52:52):
If you can make the most of the life, the
life that you have, and not pay attention to the
life you think you should have had you figured it out,
And I thought that was a great line. But the
second line in the film didn't happen until I watched
the film, and that one was the best line of
the movie. And it again, like I said, I love
(01:53:14):
movie lines, and that's the reason why I go is
because you kind of learned something, You sort of figure
out your own situation based upon some scripted line in
the film. And this was the line that got me,
and it said that it was talking about the young
man John O'Leary who's the subject of the movie. His
father says to him that you're running away from a life,
(01:53:38):
or running away from a past that stopped chasing you.
Speaker 3 (01:53:42):
And I thought that was wow, that was such blown away.
Speaker 5 (01:53:45):
And I told my wife when I got home about
that line, and she even she got the chills.
Speaker 3 (01:53:51):
About it because it was again.
Speaker 5 (01:53:52):
It sort of talks about the film and the people
that were in his life and he had done something
that he had regretted as it relates to.
Speaker 3 (01:54:03):
One of the men who stood by him and not visiting.
Speaker 5 (01:54:06):
Him before he died, which you have to watch the
film in order to get it. But I want to
talk about Roofman before I get to the phones. So
Rufman is a story about this criminal and his name
is Jeffrey Manchester. And this guy was an absolute horrible thief.
I say that because this guy robbed a lot of places,
(01:54:31):
and he robbed McDonald's. He was an employee at McDonald's.
I'm reading some of his background, which I made sure
I did not read until after I watched the movie,
because then I could, you know, I didn't want to
go in there with the actual story and then come
out and say, oh, you guys didn't cover that. I
just wanted to watch the movie without that bias and then,
you know, sort of realize what they left out after
(01:54:52):
the fact, and then I could be honest about what
I saw.
Speaker 3 (01:54:54):
One. I love this movie Channing Tatum. What's her name? Gosh,
why am I forget her name? It's in here?
Speaker 5 (01:55:05):
Uh and now I've forgotten her name. Anyway, they were
absolutely fantastic in the movie. And the story is about
this guy who robbed all of these McDonald's, and then
at one point he goes to prison after he's busted,
and he escapes and he ends up living at a
(01:55:27):
Toys r Us for a little while, but then he
escapes the Toys r Us when things get hairy and
he ends up at a neighborhood circuit City, which doesn't
appear in the movie. That's where he spent most of
his time. But in a movie they have him spending
all the time in a Toys r Us. It was
really a circuit city where he was staying, and he
stays in the circuit city ironically when all hell breaks loose.
(01:55:50):
The reason why they figured out he was the person
hiding inside the circuit City of the stairwell is that
they found one of his fingerprints.
Speaker 3 (01:55:56):
He's on the lamb, they can't find him.
Speaker 5 (01:55:58):
They find one of his fingerprints, ironically on a DVD
of Leonardo DiCaprio's Catch Me if you can.
Speaker 3 (01:56:06):
There are no coincidences. I don't care anybody, there just
are none. But this movie is so good.
Speaker 5 (01:56:14):
Why it is not because you root for the bad guy,
because Jeffrey Manchester is a bad guy.
Speaker 3 (01:56:21):
He is, but he was brilliant in this sense.
Speaker 5 (01:56:27):
What made this guy so popular, and the reason why
they did this movie about him was because he was
a criminal with a conscience for some odd reason. And
every person he robbed, especially the McDonald's, he was always
considerate and kind to the people he was robbing. Like
the story was really like about the forty five McDonald's
(01:56:48):
that he's robbed. He would come in to the McDonald's
and get the early morning staff to go into the freezer.
Speaker 3 (01:56:57):
And there was one particular case with one of the.
Speaker 5 (01:56:58):
Guys he puts into the doesn't have a coat, and
Jeffrey Manchester gives the guy his own coat. See, everyone
who said anything about this guy always said nice things
about him. He was always nice, he was always cordial,
he was always kind and considerate. That's what everybody said
about this guy. So he seems like a hapless knucklehead,
(01:57:21):
which he appears to be, but Channing Tatum plays him well,
remarkably well. I kind of This is one the only
movie I can honestly say that I saw where I
actually didn't see the actor and I could actually immerse
myself in the storyline.
Speaker 3 (01:57:36):
And it was good.
Speaker 5 (01:57:38):
It was really really good from beginning to end. You
might want to wait to go see it when it
comes out on streaming. If you don't want to go
to the movies. I know a lot of you guys
don't go to the movies anymore. I don't want to
tell you go to the theaters to go watch it.
I would suggest go see it on a Sunday at
a matinee. It's relatively cheaper.
Speaker 8 (01:57:57):
You know.
Speaker 5 (01:57:57):
I hate to put it that way, but I think
you should watch this film because it is entertaining from
beginning to end. I really really love this movie, and
I think it's worth watching. Sold on Fire not so much.
It's an inspirational story, but not Eah, It's kind of weak.
Speaker 3 (01:58:12):
It fell flat. So I just wanted to say that
Joe's in New Hampshire. What's going on Wall Street?
Speaker 9 (01:58:18):
I I have a couple of timents Hillary Clinton. She's
starting to say a few nice things. You know why
the investigations call me. Everything's going to lead to her eventually,
and she doesn't want to have to face justice. You know,
Trump might just let her go. You think that explains
her kind words.
Speaker 5 (01:58:39):
Let's say, do you think do you think that it's
reached that tipping point where everyone who they think Trump
is going to go after. They're gonna go after.
Speaker 9 (01:58:57):
I think it's going to you know, the evidence will
lead them, you know, to be somebody ratting out somebody
else to save themselves. And how far up it goes,
it could go as ha as Barack Obama. Really and
I'm not saying maybe he is at the top of
this whole thing. Whether it gets that far, I'm not sure.
Speaker 5 (01:59:14):
Yeah, I don't know if it goes that far either,
But you know what, I would still bring him into
a grand jury.
Speaker 3 (01:59:19):
Let me play Lindsey Graham for you.
Speaker 16 (01:59:21):
He was on.
Speaker 3 (01:59:24):
Meet the Press with Kristen Welker. Here's what he said.
Speaker 18 (01:59:26):
Hold on, do you think that cross is a line
between the Justice Department being independent from the executive branch.
Speaker 21 (01:59:34):
I think our Justice Department, in the hands of Biden
cross to every line there is to cross. I think
within three days of announcing he was going to run
for president in twenty twenty four, he did.
Speaker 2 (01:59:45):
That in twenty twenty What about Trump?
Speaker 3 (01:59:47):
What about.
Speaker 9 (01:59:50):
Now?
Speaker 21 (01:59:50):
I think the grand jury's going to take care of this.
But you didn't care any about this. You didn't care
that Latissa James made up charges that no one's ever
faced alone and everything.
Speaker 2 (02:00:02):
He had Nanny.
Speaker 21 (02:00:05):
Biden regretted that they didn't do it for the election.
Jack Smith surveiled my phone records and eight other senators.
Jack Smith introduced his brief against Trump October the twenty fourth,
before the twenty twenty four election, violating every protocol just
to politicize the election.
Speaker 3 (02:00:25):
The next line, Joe is the best line of them all.
Speaker 5 (02:00:29):
And I cannot believe I'm agreeing with Lindsey Grahamnesty in
this line.
Speaker 21 (02:00:35):
So this may bother you that people are being held
a animal, It doesn't bother me one damn bit.
Speaker 3 (02:00:41):
I agree with them. It doesn't bother me one bit.
Speaker 4 (02:00:45):
Well.
Speaker 9 (02:00:45):
I love the back in the twenty sixteen campaign early
on when Donald Trump gave out Lindsay Graham's cell phone
number and Lindsey Graham took his cell phone and threw
it against the wall and broke it like Hillary Clinton
broke herself.
Speaker 3 (02:01:00):
Yeah, he made a whole video out of bashing the vone.
Speaker 9 (02:01:03):
Yeah, it was beautiful. Hey, another thing I wanted to
say about that poor twelve year old girl, You know
you've brought attention to Yeah, there is no doubt whatsoever
that this laid back, hands off has to do with
the illegal aliens in Connecticut, because if you were to
go after this in a normal way, there'd be so
many people that would need to be deported.
Speaker 3 (02:01:23):
That's exactly that's exactly right.
Speaker 5 (02:01:26):
They're keeping again, not bringing any attention to this is
because they're assuming that it's going to bring lighte to
illegals in the city, in New Britain or Connecticut overall,
that that kind of heinous crime is going to bring
the unwanted.
Speaker 3 (02:01:40):
Attention to the immigrant community. That's what they're worried about.
Speaker 9 (02:01:44):
And I'm going to say right now, for the past
three four elections, Republicans would come a lot even though
so many people moved out of a state like me
that don't vote, you know, for Republican or independence anymore.
That's a big gap now. But the Democrats would get
a lot less votes if the illegals were all going
because they vote with their driver's licenses. And and when
(02:02:07):
you go back to that twenty twenty election, you know,
as time drags on, more and more obvious that Biden
did not get eighty one million votes. Hell no, and
the mail in ballots, and it's going to come out
that this was a plan with the help of communist
China with the virus being let out. They knew they
(02:02:28):
let the virus out, they'd be you know, Panama and
millions of people died because of this. I mean, this
is how evil it is and people should be busting.
Speaker 5 (02:02:36):
Yeah, you know what, doctor, But Joe, it ain't over listening,
it ain't over yet. I know people want expedients when
it comes to that stuff, but I tell everybody, look,
we're just look, we're not even in the first year yet,
we got plenty.
Speaker 9 (02:02:48):
Of time to go. Well, the plan was Communist China
hated Trump. He was holding them to account, you know,
with the tariff you know, back then and all the accountability.
So they wanted Trump out. So let the virus out.
And you know, the Democrats this was all a collusion thing.
It might go back to call me and the CIA.
I mean, this is big stuff. But the Chinese let
(02:03:11):
the virus out. The Democrats new, Okay, the virus comes out,
people are dying all over the place. You're gonna close
everything down and we're gonna have to use mail in ballots.
And there were extra millions of mail in ballots that
were released to the pat.
Speaker 5 (02:03:25):
I'm not gonna say let me stop you, Joe, I
cannot say I do believe this. I don't think that
one thing led to the other, like in other words,
that was sort of like the plandemic, which a lot
of people have referred to. What I do believe is
is the old rama manual adage. You know, never let
a crisis go to waste. That's what I believe that,
as far as the election was concerned, was taking advantage
(02:03:48):
of that in order to ensure that one Donald Trump
was held accountable in two to ensure that Joe Biden won.
Speaker 13 (02:03:55):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (02:03:55):
Rees, I really respect you.
Speaker 9 (02:03:56):
You do your homework, and I agree with you on
a lot of stuff. But I really think on this
one point there was more collusion in advance then you're
willing to.
Speaker 3 (02:04:06):
Hey, I've been known to be proven. I've been known
to be proven wrong seldomly. But you know, well, no,
thank you exactly. And like I said, I'm one last thing.
Can I get this in real quick?
Speaker 9 (02:04:24):
October thirty First, the auction in Rhode Island.
Speaker 3 (02:04:27):
The conjuring Hall. God here, goodbye, Joe, no more. Bob
is in Walcott.
Speaker 14 (02:04:33):
Hello Bob, Hey, I was just going back to, uh
you talking about like wonderful quotes from movies. Yes, have
you ever seen the movie Falling Down?
Speaker 4 (02:04:46):
Uh?
Speaker 5 (02:04:46):
That is the Michael Douglas film where he's a defense
contractor of some sort and he gets fired.
Speaker 3 (02:04:53):
Yeah, what do you what's the line.
Speaker 14 (02:04:58):
When he goes into a when he goes into a
fast food restaurant, Yes, orders lunch and he opens up
the he opens up the sandwich and he goes back
up to the counter.
Speaker 13 (02:05:11):
He says, you.
Speaker 14 (02:05:13):
See that picture up there of this sandwich, and then
he holds up this swashed piece of mess. Is what's
wrong with this picture?
Speaker 3 (02:05:25):
That's actually it's still you know what.
Speaker 5 (02:05:28):
It's crazy as it is, It's still one of my
biggest complaints that I go to a fast food restaurant.
It's still it bothers me every time that I can't
get the thing that's in the picture, trus me nuts.
Speaker 14 (02:05:40):
It's my mind too that that movie was like both
tragic and funny at the same time.
Speaker 4 (02:05:46):
It was.
Speaker 3 (02:05:47):
But let me ask you something about that, philm because
it appears you like it.
Speaker 5 (02:05:51):
Would you call that movie an anti hero movie with
because I almost feel like a lot of the from
the beginning to the end, almost to the end of
the climactic ending of that film, I'm rooting for Michael
Douglas because he's been shafted.
Speaker 3 (02:06:10):
All of his life and he's finally reacting to it.
And then it gets to the end.
Speaker 5 (02:06:13):
And at that point you kind of you can no
longer root for him, right, It's it's over at that
point because all he wants to do is just to
get home and everyone is rejecting him in his life,
and you kind of feel for him the whole movie.
Speaker 3 (02:06:27):
And then at the end you can't help but kind
of despise the guy.
Speaker 14 (02:06:32):
Well, no, I didn't despise him at the end. I
still fell back for.
Speaker 3 (02:06:35):
Him, did you.
Speaker 5 (02:06:36):
I mean kidnapping the kid will always be the one
that just like, ah, that was not good, that he's
just not good.
Speaker 14 (02:06:43):
But his heart was always in the right place.
Speaker 3 (02:06:46):
Yeah, I think that.
Speaker 5 (02:06:47):
You look, that movie is about being fed up and
doing things the right way and having the rug pulled
from under you over and over and over again. And
the guy who was you would normally can it in
mild mannered who had had enough, and that was what
that movie was about.
Speaker 3 (02:07:04):
I think it really expressed what a lot of people
are going through today.
Speaker 14 (02:07:08):
Well, I think that's where everybody should be going when
they get to that point, but not to get to
the point of getting Yeah, not the point of that
the end.
Speaker 13 (02:07:18):
Of that movie.
Speaker 3 (02:07:19):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (02:07:20):
My favorite part of that is watching the transportation transformation
of Michael Douglas's character in the in the what do
you call it? In the traffic jam, because that's where
it happens. That's when the snaps you can't.
Speaker 14 (02:07:32):
Park, I'm abandoning it, walked away.
Speaker 3 (02:07:38):
Thank you, Bob. I appreciate his briefcase, y briefcase, that's
the best.
Speaker 1 (02:07:48):
The app lets you jump back to the moments you
missed from w t I See News Talk tennady. Download
the free Odyssey app. Search w t I see News
Talk tennady and tap earlier today to get started.
Speaker 7 (02:08:00):
I feel.
Speaker 3 (02:08:05):
That's right. It's time for What happened was.
Speaker 5 (02:08:09):
On WTIC News Talk ten to eighty, brought to you
by the Odissey app. If you'd like to what I'm
gonna do is of course, you can go download the
Odyssey app. You can go to Recentradio dot com. You
can go to WTIC dot com to check out the
opening monologue, which was I guess Trump was right about everything,
but it is a forty two point reference to all
(02:08:32):
the things that Trump said the media said was untrue
or were lies and turned out to be true. There
are forty two of them and they come from the
first administration.
Speaker 3 (02:08:42):
And this one. Now, someone said, hey, can you post this?
I will.
Speaker 5 (02:08:47):
I will make sure it is posted today. If it's
not on my Facebook page, well, it'll be on my
Facebook page. It'll definitely be on my X page. And
I will see if I can get it on the website.
Because I have this, I just printed it out and
I have the whole list of those things, so you
will be able to read it later on today. So
if you want to check out at the beginning of
the show, if you want to hear these yourself, you
(02:09:08):
just gotta download the Odyssey app and go back and
check it out as well. When we come back, I'm
going to see if there are any other phone calls.
We'll welcome you to the week. Two things I want
to play useful idiots, explained Maria Carino Machado. This is
the woman who did win the Nobel Peace Prize. What
(02:09:30):
she said to Maria Bartouromo about Donald Trump and that
Peace Prize, And I want to play this other piece,
a black woman explains what many in the state of
Connecticut have been complaining about, and that is the housing crisis.
Speaker 3 (02:09:47):
When you hear this woman.
Speaker 5 (02:09:48):
Explain it, you will not believe in like no one's
ever mentioned it, even myself. And when she said it,
I went, yeah, that's a really good point. So I'll
play that for you. On the other side of the
break on tomorrow's program, I'm going to their two stories
(02:10:09):
that the Connecticut Sentinel has that I want to get
to the bottom of.
Speaker 3 (02:10:15):
And these stories are really really.
Speaker 5 (02:10:20):
Incredible, to say the least, but I'll just save them
for tomorrow. Also, the New York Times accidentally made the
case against Letitia James in their own reporting, and what
we found out in the grand jury testimony will blow
(02:10:45):
your mind because Leticia James, I'll put it this way,
if she's not found guilty of mortgage fraud, I'll tell
you I'm I'm I may lose it because according to
the grand jury, you'll never guess who's sunk her and
it ain't the president, it isn't even Latitia James. It's
(02:11:08):
her own tenant. It's her own tenant. We'll get that
breakdown tomorrow, So stand by for that. Oh and Obamacare.
Everybody's talking about the government shutdown. I'm gonna give you
a breakdown of Obamacare that you need to know, and
I think you're gonna love that. Let's get another check
(02:11:29):
of whether in traffic, Mark Christopher, he's in a BPS
traffic center, and I believe that it's a little windy
out there.
Speaker 3 (02:11:35):
Mark, is it?
Speaker 4 (02:11:35):
What's up?
Speaker 3 (02:11:36):
Everybody? You know who it is?
Speaker 2 (02:11:37):
Who is you know?
Speaker 5 (02:11:39):
It's we sung the radio Frederick Douglas of the twenty
first century.
Speaker 3 (02:11:43):
It's w t i C News Talk ten eighty.
Speaker 5 (02:11:47):
All right, folks, it is almost a wrap for us
to get up out of here. If you want to
opine on the show, you can always do that. And
just calling aights X zero five two two WT, I
see it's X zero five to.
Speaker 3 (02:11:57):
Two two nine to eight four two.
Speaker 5 (02:12:01):
Ned asked, so if you need a passport to visit
another country, and why don't you need one to come
into the United States. I couldn't agree, born Ned. That's
a great point. That's a great point. Mattio had a
question that was in the chat room. Let me see
if I can address this because I may have missed it,
he says, he says Reese, Do you think you can
(02:12:23):
answer something honestly for me? Just pretend for a minute
that you were born outside of the country and you
still had your keen mind. What would your argument be
for the other side of the coin? Just just a
thought experiment. So I am I saying to the other side,
(02:12:45):
I'm assuming for liberals what Maybe I'm not understanding what
the question is.
Speaker 3 (02:12:50):
I'm gonna have to call him and ask him what
he means. But I don't think I would.
Speaker 5 (02:12:56):
If I had my mind, I would come and I
came to the United States, it would probably be for
the reasons that I already believe in the United States
as this country for which it stands like. I don't
think that I would be coming to the United States
with a leftist ideology hell bent on destroying it.
Speaker 3 (02:13:15):
If that makes sense, That's just where I would be tomorrow.
Speaker 5 (02:13:20):
Also on the show, I have this list to consider,
John Adams, Woodrow, Wilson, Franklin, Delano, Roosevelt, and Richard Nixon.
What do they all have in common? Again, John Adams, Woodrow, Wilson, Franklin, Delano, Roosevelt,
and Richard Nixon. What do all of them have in common?
(02:13:44):
Two Democrats, one Federalist, and one Republican. What do they
all have in common. We'll talk about that tomorrow, but
let me play this. Maria Karna Machado, she was asked
by but Toromo about the Nobel Peace Prize and Donald
Trump not getting it.
Speaker 3 (02:14:04):
Here's what she had to say.
Speaker 5 (02:14:05):
Now, you know, she sent out an ex post supporting
Donald Trump, saying that you know, he deserved that.
Speaker 3 (02:14:11):
She takes the honor.
Speaker 5 (02:14:16):
I forget how she phrased it, but in essence, she
dedicated it to him and the Venezuelan people.
Speaker 3 (02:14:20):
Here's what she said in her first interview.
Speaker 10 (02:14:22):
They decided to dedicate it to President Trump because he
deserves it, because not only has he been involved in
only a few months in solving eight wars, but his
actions have been decisive to have Venezuela now at the
thirst hold of freedom after twenty six years of tyranny
(02:14:44):
that had destroyed the lives of millions of Venezuela, to
stabilized region and undermine the institutions in the United States.
Because having Venezuela as a safe heaven of the enemies
of the United States, and you see in our territory
and our resources hurt the American people and American institutions
(02:15:06):
is certainly a threat to the national security of the
United States and the security of the hemisphere. The President
Trump has been very clear courageous in terms of dismantling
this criminal structure, and on behalf of the Venezuelan people.
I reaffirmed our gratitude and our commitment to this cost
(02:15:28):
for the whole America.
Speaker 2 (02:15:29):
So I insist he deserves it.
Speaker 5 (02:15:32):
So that's what she had to say, and people, of
course avoided it like the plague. But you know, she's
a gracious woman, and I'm actually kind of happy that
she said something about it. At least she came out
and did something more than an ex post. Now, you
guys have probably heard Governor Lamont talk a lot about
(02:15:53):
affordability as of late, but one of the things that
many in Connecticut talk about is housing and the lack
thereof Josh Elliott, candidate for governor trying to unseat Governor Lamont,
constantly talks about how there isn't enough housing in the state.
Speaker 3 (02:16:19):
And I listened to this black woman out of Chicago,
and she completely blew.
Speaker 5 (02:16:24):
My mind because I didn't even know how I did
not make the connection, nor did did anyone else for
that matter.
Speaker 17 (02:16:33):
So I will tell you right now, I'm a person
that lives on the South side of Chicago and the
migrants that have come in. At one point, they were
coming in and we were feeling very sorry for them
because they came in at a time where the weather
was cold. So we're like, we're seeing all these people
in tents and all this and that. But then we
find out they're not getting fifteen thousand dollars in food
(02:16:54):
stamps five thousand dollars in cash. I work for a
company which I will not say that they're able to
to come in and they're able to get internet and
Wi Fi and all it is free because guess what,
the government are paying their rent for two years. Why
is the government paying people that came from another country
rent for two years.
Speaker 5 (02:17:14):
That's a fair question. Why are they doing it? But
then she made the connection that all of us should
have made. Remember, what are they telling us we don't
have enough housing?
Speaker 17 (02:17:26):
Can we explain that because it's a housing crisis right now,
we're multiple homeless.
Speaker 5 (02:17:32):
People on the streets right now.
Speaker 17 (02:17:34):
That if we I can follow and show you homeless
people that's been living on the streets. So what makes
the migrants better from coming to another country that they get.
Speaker 5 (02:17:41):
All of this?
Speaker 3 (02:17:43):
Yeah? I mean, how do you not ask? I mean
it sounds like a housing crisis of our own doing,
is it not? How's it not?
Speaker 5 (02:17:54):
If those folks weren't here, would we have a housing problem.
I don't see how we would. I don't I don't
see how we would. I thought this audio was interesting too.
Remember when I played Chris Murphy on the Daily Show
with John Stewart talking about how we can't expect people
(02:18:21):
to make sacrifices if we're not willing to make sacrifices ourselves,
he said, And he also said that we needed not
tens of thousands, but hundreds of thousands of people in
the street, like on the eighteenth of this month for
the No King's rally.
Speaker 3 (02:18:42):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (02:18:44):
Well, if you're wondering why all of it is, I
think this gentleman explains it. Well, it's talking to a
couple of college students about useful idiots.
Speaker 16 (02:18:53):
Going back to your point about leftist violence. So you
have to understand this is not something new. This is
not something that's randomly happening. That happened in China that
happened in Vietnam, it happened in Cuba, which I'm Cuban.
So every single time the leftists take over, what do
they want revolution to? What break down the status quo?
Speaker 3 (02:19:10):
How do they do that? Not through peace?
Speaker 16 (02:19:12):
They do it through revolution Jacovara, Fidel Castro, Pole Pot,
Maose Doong stall in.
Speaker 3 (02:19:18):
Every single time, That's how they do it. And you
know who they use, all of you.
Speaker 16 (02:19:22):
They use the university students, they use leftists, the authoritarians,
a strong men.
Speaker 3 (02:19:27):
Convince the leftists to fight for them.
Speaker 7 (02:19:28):
You need them to be out on the streets, not
with hundreds, not with thousands or tens of thousands of people,
but with hundreds of thousands of people.
Speaker 16 (02:19:34):
That happened in Iran where the Iotola took over, happened
in Cuba with Castro. They get the leftists to disrupt
and cause destability and destabilization. Once they take power, they
get rid of all of the leftists to help them
get empowered. Maose Dong created the Red Guard. When he
got empowered, he said, all universities canceled.
Speaker 3 (02:19:52):
I want you to get my book.
Speaker 2 (02:19:54):
It's called a Little Red Book.
Speaker 16 (02:19:55):
Put it in your pocket and go around and if
any teacher has spoken out against me. I want get
to tell the communist commissar, we're going to arrest them
and kill them.
Speaker 2 (02:20:03):
They did that.
Speaker 16 (02:20:04):
The army didn't step in. They allowed the protesters and
the revolutionaries to do what they want. You know what
mal did after he got power, He said I don't
need any more destabilization. He sent them out into the
field to work, and nine million of them died.
Speaker 2 (02:20:18):
That's what he's done. The Shaw did it the same
thing to the leftists.
Speaker 16 (02:20:20):
The leftists are always we call them the useful idiots,
not all of them, but the ones who are revolutionary.
Speaker 3 (02:20:25):
They are used to destabilize.
Speaker 16 (02:20:26):
They go after the young people in universities every single time,
hundreds and hundreds of years.
Speaker 3 (02:20:32):
This is the same thing happening over again. This is
not new.
Speaker 5 (02:20:34):
What your experience is not new. It's just new to you.
It's new to our age. I thought that was a
really really useful piece of info, and more young kids
need to hear it. And they're all eager to be
a part of that pray. They all want to be
(02:20:56):
seen as somebody who's making a change, and their friends tell.
Speaker 3 (02:21:01):
Him, come on, come on out of here, we're changing things,
join our rally. They all do.
Speaker 5 (02:21:11):
It's real easy, especially when it's applied to revolution.
Speaker 3 (02:21:16):
It's a real, real good buzzword with the kids. They're
excited about that fighting the oligarchy. We get to fight
against oligarchy. What what's that mean? Exactly? It means the
rich folks, it means it means the rich fight against
the rich. I hate the rich. Why do you hate
the rich? Because I'm poor? It's usually the reason. It's
(02:21:39):
real simple. It's not really it's not well thought out,
but you know, it's easy. It's a it's an easy lore.
Speaker 5 (02:21:49):
I had to talk to the kid this the past
weekend talking about how much he hates money, Like it's like,
that's the thing I'll never understand at these kids, the
ones who hate money?
Speaker 8 (02:22:05):
What is that?
Speaker 5 (02:22:06):
And I tried to get to the bottom of it, like,
what do you mean you hate money? And he said,
because I think people want it so much?
Speaker 3 (02:22:15):
Yeah, what do they want it for?
Speaker 5 (02:22:20):
And he has this belief that wanting money means that
you only want it for bad things. And what does
he say, or bad things? The want itself, wanting a car,
wanting a home, that those things in and of itself
are selfish. It's funny because I gotta deal with the
(02:22:41):
kid every day doing what giving his money away?
Speaker 3 (02:22:45):
Oh you know what, let me ask Roland. Your kid
is roughly about the same age as the boy. How
would you deal with this?
Speaker 5 (02:22:53):
And I'm gonna say this because again, I kind of
feel like you're a traditional black dad and I'm so
but I just do. I just do, And I think
I'm a little more mainstream. I don't have any I
don't have any of the stereotypes. But I want to
give you a scenario.
Speaker 3 (02:23:08):
With your daughter. Now, imagine you provide a credit card
for your daughter.
Speaker 5 (02:23:15):
She already she already has one, Okay, fine, and you're
none is let's just say limited on the credit card.
If she abuses it, you don't really like punish her
by taking it away. You say things like, hey, I'm
gonna need you to be a little more responsible. But
then you find out having a conversation with your daughter
that she's paying for other kids' meals because she feels
(02:23:36):
She expresses to you that having it and knowing that
others don't, she should share the wealth because she is
so fortunate.
Speaker 3 (02:23:47):
How would you deal with that?
Speaker 22 (02:23:49):
It depends on the kids that she Obviously, if his
kids that's less fortunate that she's taken care of, were
gonna have to have a talk and make a budget.
Speaker 3 (02:23:59):
For that real, So you would encourage it with a limit.
Speaker 22 (02:24:03):
With a limit exactly, Okay, not just because technically we're
giving her that money, right, so you got to put.
Speaker 2 (02:24:10):
That on a budget.
Speaker 3 (02:24:12):
Okay, So you wouldn't discourage it.
Speaker 22 (02:24:14):
No, because I was actually one of those kids that
didn't have, grew up and didn't have and somebody one
of my closest friends always used to look out for me.
So eh, so I would I wouldn't discourage that because
I was able to survive off off of that for
for during my high school years till I got a job.
Speaker 5 (02:24:34):
Okay, all right, maybe I'm just cheap then, Oh no, no, listen,
I needed you to describe that to me.
Speaker 3 (02:24:43):
I needed you to explain that to me because I'm
looking at it. I'm looking at it from this thing
that just goes Look, man.
Speaker 5 (02:24:48):
I don't I almost feel like it discourages kids for
doing for themselves because somebody's footing the bill for them.
Speaker 3 (02:24:54):
That's the way I'm looking at it. But I feel like,
you know, now you explain it.
Speaker 5 (02:24:58):
I'm just going, Okay, fine, I guess I can understand
that is a degree of that that I would I
would want that compassion from the boy.
Speaker 3 (02:25:06):
But there's another part of it that I'm not. I
don't know.
Speaker 22 (02:25:09):
I just will never say she don't care about money though. Yeah,
that be the furthest thing from her, because she's always
trying to make.
Speaker 2 (02:25:17):
An extra book.
Speaker 3 (02:25:18):
Yeah, I mean, but I can I clean you? Can
I clean your car up, clean your car off for
some money? Can I sweep the floor?
Speaker 5 (02:25:25):
So she's very industrious in that sense, right, looking for
ways to make money. Okay, because I'm again I'm looking
at that in a way.
Speaker 3 (02:25:32):
I had this talk with him.
Speaker 5 (02:25:33):
I drove him to go get ice cream, and he
was saying to me that, you know, he sees his
friends and some of them do not have the advantages
that he has. And when he says the advantages, I
look at it in the abstract. This is the most
abstract thing that the boy has, if you really think
about it. He has four active parents. He's got friends
who don't have fathers in the homes. He has two
(02:25:56):
you know what I mean, Like, he's got two dads
and two mobs, both you know, the stepdad and step mom.
Speaker 3 (02:26:02):
But in essence, he's got a wealth of people who
take care of him.
Speaker 5 (02:26:06):
Yeah, and you know, so to cater to his needs
as a child, and he sees these kids without and
he is just overwhelmed with wanting to help them, And
in my head, I just go.
Speaker 3 (02:26:17):
You can't do that for everybody.
Speaker 22 (02:26:19):
Yeah, not for everybody. You gotta take like you just me,
have like one or two close friends that you buy
lunch for every now and then, now and again.
Speaker 3 (02:26:26):
Yeah, I mean I get you.
Speaker 22 (02:26:27):
You're dropping five dollars every now and again.
Speaker 5 (02:26:32):
Yeah, maybe I'm looking at it different. Anyway, Time for
us to get up out of here. Welcome to your week, folks.
We got a week full of programming. As I always say,
radio is free, so we thank you for paying attention.
Remember to keep JC in your hearts and in your mind.
Shown Patrick, we love yet me, miss you. Remember that
panic is not planning, So plan your work and work
you're planning me. I'm racing on the radio. You have
a good night, pleasant tomorrow. Mark Christopher's getting your home
(02:26:53):
in the weather in the BPS traffic center.
Speaker 3 (02:26:55):
Good night sah Hey, good night Rees.
Speaker 11 (02:26:57):
If you're heading into harpard right now to night. He
went stopped to look for some slow have a thirty
three down to thirty two a m de southing one afternoon.
Speaker 22 (02:27:03):
All right, good sir, All right, yeah, I got a
queue up this because John Is he left for the
whole five o'clock, so I've been queuing his uh pre records. Yeah,
let me get it, let me get it ready, all.
Speaker 3 (02:27:19):
Right, choo everybody, always a pleasure.
Speaker 5 (02:27:21):
Thank you so much for participating, Jeffrey, illegals are sucking
up the housing, and they're sucking up our water. They
call it global warming. I don't think so. Couldn't be
more right, jeff You guys have a wonderful night. I
will see you Manyana. Welcome to the week. Be good
to each other now