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October 14, 2025 160 mins
  • What Of The World Stage Now? 
  • Why Is Obama Still Out There?
  • The Stupidest Thing I've Read Today:
    New York Times Proves The Case Against Leticia James 
  • R&B Singer DiAngelo Dead @ 51 
  • Wacky Whitey - ALEC BALDWIN needs new batteries
  • Hollywood News: Two Sequels & A Remake
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:23):
Hey, yo, they should calm down. The show is about
to style Reese on the radio.

Speaker 2 (00:28):
Turn it up, turning it up, turn.

Speaker 3 (00:32):
It up loud does like a dream come true on
your bread.

Speaker 2 (00:39):
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 2 (00:57):
How y'all feel out there? What's going on?

Speaker 4 (01:02):
Oh?

Speaker 5 (01:02):
You're scaley wags not beggars, conversational less ah hell and
the left?

Speaker 2 (01:10):
Hi y'all doing? You know what time it is?

Speaker 5 (01:14):
It's Reesa on the radio on wt I see News
Talk ten to eighty, one of my favorite rap groups.
I've always tempted to say it the way that they do.
They used to say, you know what time is it?
That's the far side out of the West Coast is
one of my favorite groups.

Speaker 2 (01:30):
Thank you, Wendy.

Speaker 5 (01:31):
I'm begrudgingly a Red Hot Chili Peppers fan because I
really really love anybody who can play the bass well,
and Flee plays it astonishingly well. Of course, the guys
who do the theme song to this very program, the Panics.

(01:53):
Their bass player, d Snake is one of my favs.
I love watching him live. I love the band.

Speaker 2 (01:58):
But I'm a.

Speaker 5 (01:59):
Bass guy, and d Snake of the Panics plays the
bass so well and is just something. He's effortless. That's
the one thing I love about a bass player.

Speaker 2 (02:10):
He's effortless.

Speaker 5 (02:12):
He doesn't even like rock out real hard, but the
bass is yes, ah just moves me. I can almost
feel the bass in any record flowing right through my heart.
It's an amazing feeling. So yeah, I totally get the
Red Hot Chili Peppers. They I got introduced to them
in the nineties with Fishbone. Of course Fish Who else

(02:36):
was I introduced to at that time?

Speaker 2 (02:38):
Jane's addiction was another band that I was into.

Speaker 5 (02:41):
Whoever was in Alallapalooza when it started was a band
I was listening to. Also, I have to give a
big shout out to a group I loved and I
will always love, even though it was a short lived
a group And that is why am I forgetting the name?
Now just came to my head. Oh my goodness, I

(03:04):
know why am I forgetting their name? I'll come to me.
Their lead singer passed away. I saw them in concert,
and for the love of goodness, I've forgotten their name
that fast.

Speaker 2 (03:14):
They were right there on the tip of my tongue. Rooster. Goodness, gracious,
why did I go blank? I better check my memory banks.
I gotta do better. Anyway, Enough of that.

Speaker 5 (03:30):
I've got so much stuff to get into today, Alison changed,
thank you, Wendy. Why did I forget their name? So
much stuff to get into today, And it's a lot
of local stuff, a lot of I would say, national stuff.
Nothing really international today. But what I knew was going

(03:56):
to happen is happening, and now it's out in the open.
I'll talk about that in the second part of the
opening monologue.

Speaker 2 (04:06):
Because I knew.

Speaker 5 (04:10):
There was a weird reason why this guy couldn't stay
out of the limelight, and it's because he feels threatened.
And I'm pretty sure you guys can figure out who
I'm talking about without even having to say his name,
and that is Barack who say Obama and Sonny host

(04:30):
in Houston, Houston of the View. She let the cat
out of the bag on that program I think it
was today, And I'll play that audio for you. And
I called it a long time ago. You don't believe me.
Go to my substack. Go to my substack at resenterradio
dot com. Link onto it and you can see the
article I wrote months ago about how it was always

(04:54):
about Obama. When it comes to Donald Trump, we'll get
into that, but I've got to ask the question for
those of you who have been saying it, thinking it
even confused. And I don't mean just folks on the left,
I mean people on the right as well. What say
you now about Donald Trump and the world stage, regardless

(05:21):
of the Gaza deal and the Israel.

Speaker 2 (05:24):
No, no, I'm not even counting that.

Speaker 5 (05:26):
I don't even want to count the recent victory of
that because that's not over yet. A lot of this stuff.
I always say, the perception is ninety percent truth. What
people see they perceive as fact.

Speaker 2 (05:42):
And we can take Donald Trump going to Israel.

Speaker 5 (05:47):
We can even go so far as Donald Trump going
to Egypt forty five minutes later, and with all of
those foreign dignitarians all flying out to Egypt to go
and be with him, to stand behind him as he
signed that peace accord. That should be enough to tell

(06:09):
everybody we were wrong, we were wrong. This guy is
not an embarrassment on the world stage today. If you
had to compare presidents, how well would Donald Trump stand up?

(06:32):
I'll go one step further. Let's consider the adversaries if
we have to count him, and then ask yourself if
these adversaries are important enough to measure the level of
embarrassment for Donald Trump on the world stage.

Speaker 2 (06:53):
Who would they be? The Mullahs in Iran?

Speaker 5 (06:58):
Vladimir Putin, who, by the way, recently said in a
press conference that Donald Trump deserved the Nobel Peace Prize.
But consider the fact he has been pretty strong armed
on not stopping the war with Ukraine, Vladimir Putin, that is,

(07:18):
how about Jijingping.

Speaker 2 (07:20):
We appear to be in another trade war with them.

Speaker 5 (07:23):
Donald Trump is suggested that we should put one hundred
percent tariffs on anything they ship to the United States.
That's a contentious relationship. So that's consider those three, the Ayatola,
Vladimir Putin, and Jijingping, and then everyone else. Would you

(07:44):
still call him an embarrassment, which is what all of
you said he was, what all of you said he
would be. Where are you now? I'm just asking the question,
why would those people, those folks fly all the way

(08:05):
out to Egypt to go meet with that president for
his limelight, to go there and praise him, shaking his hands.

Speaker 2 (08:16):
Can you help us with this. Can you talk to
us about that?

Speaker 5 (08:19):
Will you was I don't even know which which dignitaria was,
which world leader was? It was begging to meet with
Eric and Donald Trump while he was there. I just
saw it on ext the other a couple of hours ago.
Can you prease bringing your sons? Bring I mean, we
are very very serious. We need to speak to your
sons begging the President of the United States to assist

(08:42):
them and to help them. Pakistan, the folks that were
harboring the biggest terrorist ever, Osama bin Laden. This man
deserves the Nobel Peace Prize. They said, in the world's age,
What folks, what more do you want? Am I supposed

(09:05):
to believe you? Am I supposed to consider you? When
the actual world leaders are there? What was it more
than a dozen close to two dozen standing there behind him,
singing his praises. Am I supposed to believe you? You
make it very difficult too. You make it incredibly difficult too.

(09:32):
And you know who's also hurting it. I'll go one
step further. Your beloved media, your beloved media that you trust,
No not Fox News. You hate them. Everything they do.

Speaker 2 (09:47):
Is a lie.

Speaker 5 (09:48):
Remember, I want to go to the places you quote
all day every day. And by the way, I think
I have some beef with with Wall Street Joe today.

Speaker 2 (09:58):
I'll talk about that in a minute.

Speaker 6 (10:00):
But listen, If President Mom's going to write a whole
post about a peace deal, maybe he should acknowledge the
president that broke her in.

Speaker 2 (10:08):
If Daniel.

Speaker 5 (10:10):
Did Abby Phillips just call out President Barack Hussein Obama,
I said, if you're going to talk about it, sing
some praises on the man that we all hate, I
found that to be a little bit odd.

Speaker 6 (10:24):
No, Mom's going to write a whole post about a
peace deal, maybe he should acknowledge the president that broke
her in.

Speaker 7 (10:30):
If this ends, Donald Trump deserves credit regardless of anything
else you feel about Donald Trump.

Speaker 8 (10:35):
I really commend President Trump and his administration, as well
as Arab leaders in the region for making the commitment
to the twenty point Plan.

Speaker 5 (10:50):
What what is that? Is that crook Hillary Rodham Clinton
again back to you, folks, Should I believe you?

Speaker 2 (11:06):
Should?

Speaker 5 (11:06):
I believe you his biggest adversary in the last twenty years,
Hillary Rodham Clinton giving him praise I find out odd.

Speaker 8 (11:14):
And seeing a path forward for what's often called the
day after.

Speaker 2 (11:19):
I don't trust Donald Trump.

Speaker 5 (11:21):
There's no reason to trust Donald Trump, but I of
course work with any administration that wants to achieve those things.

Speaker 7 (11:27):
You may not trust Donald Trump, but what has been
achieved here so far is something that was not achieved
by President Biden. With the potential end of the war
and all the hostages being turned over with them.

Speaker 4 (11:41):
Should he be commended?

Speaker 9 (11:43):
I don't think that we should hold in credit where
it's due. I commend the people who have been a
part of this process. I commend the Qataris, the Egyptians,
and the President.

Speaker 2 (11:54):
Oh goodness, that must have been like pulling teeth for her.
I know you reckonize the voice that there's Kamala Harris.

Speaker 8 (12:03):
There any message you'd like to send to President Trump after.

Speaker 10 (12:06):
The release of these hostages today?

Speaker 1 (12:09):
Look, I'll thank.

Speaker 11 (12:11):
How much credit does President Trump deserved for this deal?

Speaker 12 (12:14):
I think he should get a lot of credit. I mean,
this was his deal. He worked this out. He sent
Steve Whitkoff and Jared Kushner, you know, over to negotiate this,
and it's so far has gone well.

Speaker 2 (12:28):
Senator Mark Kelly.

Speaker 12 (12:30):
Hopefully the hostages get released here might not be within
twenty four hours, but certainly I think by Monday, and
that's that's progress.

Speaker 13 (12:37):
It's a terrific day for the hostage families, It's a
terrific day for President Trump, for our national interests. You're right,
we don't know how the story ends, but stories are
made up of chapters.

Speaker 14 (12:50):
How can we all celebrate this thing? I mean, you've
had human beings held underground for over two years and
tortured and beaten and starved for us to dig their
own graves and things. Now they can finally come back home,
and now everyone, everyone should be celebrating these things.

Speaker 2 (13:09):
Do you give him credit for this?

Speaker 4 (13:13):
Certainly?

Speaker 15 (13:13):
I mean, this is an incredible accomplishment and an incredible moment.

Speaker 5 (13:17):
You have to look at the moment and say, just
ending the war.

Speaker 16 (13:21):
And getting the hostages home, it's an incredible accomplishment.

Speaker 2 (13:25):
It was a long time coming, to be sure. But
I don't even you know, I don't. I don't even
need that anymore. I really don't. We all know what
the deal is.

Speaker 5 (13:37):
But because I'm petty, just because I'm petty, and I
have absolutely no shame about it, I want to go back.
You may have heard in that montage super cut as
we like to call him here on the show that
people were giving credit to Jared Kushner and giving credit

(14:01):
to Steve Whitcough. I want to take you back to
Adams shifty shift when he was talking about Steve Whitcough
and his appointment as a negotiator by Donald Trump.

Speaker 2 (14:19):
Again, you guys echoed.

Speaker 17 (14:21):
This when he ran into Donald Trump in a deli
in New York and Trump was out of money and
he basically bummed a ham and cheese sandwich off of
Steve whitcoff with cuff bottom a ham and cheese sandwich. Well,
apparently that was a real bonding experience. So if you
want to get on the President's good side, buy a

(14:42):
ham and cheese sandwich. Anyway, after that, they started playing
golf together, and you might ask, what better qualification could
you have to be a envoy to the Middle East
and Russia than a ham and cheese sandwich, real estate
development and golf. But those are pretty solid criteria in
Trump world. So he has made envoy to the Middle

(15:07):
East and envoy to Russia. This is where he will
have and is having a seminal and destructive impact on
the foreign policy of the United States.

Speaker 1 (15:18):
What He's really.

Speaker 17 (15:19):
Done is carrying the most awful, false Kremlin talking points,
carry the dirtiest of water.

Speaker 4 (15:27):
For the Kremlin.

Speaker 5 (15:28):
Yeah, Adam shifty shift, that's what he said about Steve Whitcoff.

Speaker 2 (15:39):
How about Dana Bashi and John Keith?

Speaker 5 (15:41):
What did they have to say about Donald Trump back
in May, ladies and gentlemen when it came to peace
in the Middle East and brokering a ceasefire and an
end to the war between Israel and Gaza or Hamas
for that matter, what did they say? Remember, these folks

(16:02):
are the experts.

Speaker 11 (16:03):
The premise of this whole conversation was an expectation that
Donald Trump himself set in the campaign, which is, I'm
going to fix all of this, and a lot of
people believe that. It turns out, even the Hamas terrorists apparently,
who were holding hostages.

Speaker 12 (16:20):
They want to uh, who Terris, We're afraid of Trump.

Speaker 4 (16:24):
Yeah, they wanted Kamana to be chosen.

Speaker 16 (16:27):
You talked to politics with them, Yeah, yeah, yeah, they
wanted Kamana to be elected.

Speaker 11 (16:33):
The war is definitely not over, and not all hostages
are out.

Speaker 18 (16:37):
Not all hostages are out, and again another thing that
Donald Trump said would end.

Speaker 2 (16:40):
But the rest of the world.

Speaker 18 (16:41):
They're saying Donald Trump cannot be trusted on these issues.
Where America used to lead, there is American leadership. Here,
it's Tetana who do whatever you want. It's not how
do we end this? Where's an American president to try
to figure this out? Well, we just want Skaza empty.

Speaker 11 (16:56):
Well, I think it's the same idea of what we
were talking about with Ukraine is that he didn't understand
why it wasn't being done before he was there. Then
he got into office and realized, wow, this is really
really hard. And now he's turned his attention elsewhere.

Speaker 5 (17:10):
So so again I ask should I believe you? Should
I believe them? Who's trustworthy here? Again, we're talking months ago.
Donald Trump couldn't possibly get this done. He is a

(17:34):
joke on the world stage, they told us, and many
of you, you know who you are, You repeated it
like the parrots, not even an original thought.

Speaker 2 (17:47):
You've sent me every message. See what they're saying, See
what they said.

Speaker 5 (17:54):
As if that was evidence. A lot of us just
sat by. Many people got outraged, and you know who
you are. People got outrage. Do you hear what these
people are saying? I don't care what they're saying. What
they say has no weight, what they think has no weight,
especially when they're in the business of being the opposition party,

(18:18):
the opposition leaders, and.

Speaker 2 (18:21):
Just pretty much the opposition.

Speaker 5 (18:26):
How effective do you think Saturday's protest is going to be?

Speaker 2 (18:31):
How important?

Speaker 5 (18:32):
How relevant could it possibly be? When all of the
sting is out of the Middle East, all of the
sting is out of Donald Trump being an embarrassment on
the world stage, when Arab nations are behind the president
of these United States. They weren't even this united when

(18:55):
Barack Hossein Obama went across the was it was the
egyp he went to in Cairo and gave his apology
tour to the Muslim world.

Speaker 2 (19:07):
What did he get us? Nothing? And here's Donald Trump.
Like I said, I'm petty. I'm very petty.

Speaker 5 (19:21):
When we come back speaking of Barack Whusain Obama. Why
is he still out there? I'll explain when we return.
It's Resa on the radio on wt C newstoc T.

Speaker 1 (19:30):
Eighty fan of w t I S then do us
a favorite, download the free honesty and favorite wt I C.

Speaker 2 (19:38):
Yeah, Barack Hussein Obama.

Speaker 5 (19:41):
And it's a touchy subject for a lot of people
on the left, and if I could give you a
little bit of background here, you folks may not be
familiar with you know, I don't want to call it
my run ins with this administration, but my run ins
with supporters Barack Obama back in two thousand and seven,

(20:02):
two thousand and eighty and back then in the in
the past. People were one hundred percent bewildered by my
point of view. And it wasn't just the usual suspects.
It wasn't Black America. It was every America.

Speaker 2 (20:26):
And I get it.

Speaker 5 (20:29):
I understand that there was this this sense of hope
and renewal in his campaign. But I couldn't get there.
I just couldn't. I wasn't being again, and it wasn't
to be contrariant for the sake of I just couldn't
get there. And it was something about it that was

(20:49):
really It was angering me and it wasn't about him,
even though everyone wanted to make it. Like I remember
a girl I was dating much later on said to me,
while he was in office, you are jealous of him.
She said that to me, I mean, we're involved in
a relationship. She was white woman, of course, but she

(21:13):
said I know what your problem is, You're jealous of him?

Speaker 2 (21:17):
And I went.

Speaker 13 (21:20):
For what?

Speaker 5 (21:22):
And of course the obvious thing would be, He's the
president of the United States. How do you not how
could you not be? He is the leader of the
free world? And I went no, Like that wasn't even
a thought. I was really concerned with who he was,
what he believed, and how he viewed America. And every

(21:47):
time he opened his mouth it was just the wrong
point of view. It just defied logic. And I had
to push back on this guy every chance I got.
But people could not stop being mesmerized by him, and

(22:10):
they didn't even understand how racist it was. He speaks
so well, Yeah, he went to Harvard. Do you think
that they let old dirty bastard into Harvard? Is that
what you think comes out of a Harvard education?

Speaker 4 (22:31):
Like?

Speaker 2 (22:32):
Do you think that.

Speaker 5 (22:34):
Like what do you think comes out of a Harvard
educated African American?

Speaker 19 (22:39):
Right?

Speaker 1 (22:39):
Do you.

Speaker 2 (22:41):
Think you're gonna get a lot of Yo? My man,
it is what it.

Speaker 5 (22:45):
Is, Like, do you think that's what you're gonna get
out of it?

Speaker 4 (22:47):
So?

Speaker 2 (22:47):
What are you telling me? He speaks so well, And.

Speaker 5 (22:55):
The people who were saying it were of all stripes,
and I would look at them and go, do you
not hear yourself? And then they would justify it as saying, well,
you know what people think of us or of them
or what.

Speaker 3 (23:11):
So.

Speaker 2 (23:13):
This is not an excuse.

Speaker 5 (23:17):
And with all of that, here's the thing is I
always laughed about it.

Speaker 2 (23:23):
I always said that.

Speaker 5 (23:25):
You guys appear to be putting every angst ailment, anger,
whatever it is, you seem to be putting it on
his back, while Barack Obama never ever.

Speaker 2 (23:40):
Took up the mantle. Imagine this.

Speaker 5 (23:45):
Imagine a world telling you that you're a superhero and
you never using your powers, and then would ask why
don't you ever use your powers?

Speaker 2 (24:00):
You're a superhero.

Speaker 5 (24:02):
He responds by saying, why would I do that? I'm
just human, And then everyone somewhat miffed by it, and
his response to it is I never said I had superpowers.
But wait a minute, you kind of took everything that

(24:22):
we said in you campaigned with what we said about you.

Speaker 2 (24:26):
Well, yeah, I was trying to get elected. Let me
give you an example.

Speaker 5 (24:31):
Everybody used the mantra that Barack Obama was the first
black president and his election would create a post racial
United States, and he would make America livabol there would
be restorative justice in his election, that black people would

(24:53):
finally be redeemed, And then couldn't have been a couple
of weeks, maybe even a couple of months.

Speaker 2 (25:02):
He does an interview with Essence magazine.

Speaker 5 (25:05):
And people saying, well, you've been here for a little while.
I don't think that African Americans are really seeing anything
from your presidency. And then the guy turning around and saying,
while I'm not the president of Black America, I'm the
president of all America.

Speaker 2 (25:20):
And I heard that. It just went odd.

Speaker 5 (25:24):
Weren't you the guy who gave a speech in Philadelphia
about race.

Speaker 2 (25:32):
It was the infamous speech, Folks, go back and listen
to it.

Speaker 5 (25:35):
It was the infamous speech where he had to address
the words by Jeremiah Right, You know, the ones where
he said ged America about how nine to eleven were
our chickens coming home to roost.

Speaker 2 (25:52):
How Barack Obama had.

Speaker 5 (25:53):
To explain in the twenty years he had been in
service of that man Jeremiah Wright. Ever once heard one
of those sermons, You kidding me? The man who you
wrote in your own book, The Audacity of Hope, was
a father figure.

Speaker 2 (26:10):
The man who.

Speaker 5 (26:11):
Baptized your two daughters and officiated your wedding to Michelle.
You never heard him say any of those things in
the pews, and then got on stage in Philadelphia and
gave that famous speech and even oh my goodness, and
even threw your grandmother under the bus.

Speaker 2 (26:36):
And called her a bigot. Two. Yeah, go listen to
that speech. If you missed it, I did.

Speaker 3 (26:43):
Not.

Speaker 5 (26:45):
A lot of you folks who loved the legacy of
Barack Obama, forget all of those moments. He's also the
same guy who said that under the Affordable Care Act,
he wouldn't even give his grandmother a hit replacement because
she was too old to receive it. Death panel anyone.
I know everything about that man. The only thing I

(27:06):
don't know is the Social Security number. I know everything
back and forth, and I know the most important thing
to Barack Obama.

Speaker 2 (27:16):
It's what you.

Speaker 5 (27:18):
Say about him and then he echoes it. You call
him a genius, you call him an orator, you call
him a politician of the twenty of the twentieth In
the twenty first century, he's the most important political figure ever.
You all say it. You say everything about him is

(27:39):
absolutely monumental. There's a big giant rock that's being built
in Chicago that the community hates, that's supposed to be
his library. That's hundreds of millions of dollars over budget,
and not one of you will criticize it while the
taxpayers are made to pay for it. In Chico, Cago, Chicago,

(28:04):
this man has built temples to himself, has collected millions
of dollars, screamed and hollered climate change has come in
to kill us, and then builds a multimillion dollar home
or buys a multimillion dollar home of Martha's vineyard right
off the water where ironically chefs can't swim. I find

(28:30):
it incredible that you guys didn't see what I said
was happening.

Speaker 2 (28:35):
That Barack Obama is everywhere today.

Speaker 5 (28:38):
In fact, he's more I don't know, evident as part
of our everyday lives today than he ever was when
he was president. I mean, he's giving speeches everywhere. He's
talking about this administration, how desperate we are as a country.
No other president has been this vocal about the administration

(28:58):
that seated.

Speaker 2 (29:00):
Him, but this guy has.

Speaker 5 (29:03):
And I knew exactly why, and it's because of what
Sonny host in Houston.

Speaker 2 (29:09):
Houston said on the.

Speaker 20 (29:10):
View, everyone wants, you know, the subsidies to continue. They
want their Affordable Care Act to continue. And the reason
I think that Mike Johnson is not holding is not
holding session is because Donald Trump wants to screw up
Obama's legacy. This is all about Donald Trump being the

(29:32):
small petty man that he is and he doesn't want
Obama to have that legacy.

Speaker 2 (29:39):
Now, I'd like to ask one simple question.

Speaker 5 (29:46):
Barack Obama was president for eight years the Affordable Care Act,
which we're gonna get into in a little bit, if
that were to be a abolished, if it were to
no longer exist as a healthcare program for Americans, Sonny

(30:11):
host in Houston, Houston says, that would destroy Barack Obama's legacy.
It's all you need to know about the existence of one,
one piece of legislation.

Speaker 2 (30:29):
That's it.

Speaker 5 (30:32):
Barack Obama's legacy, eight years of it hinges on one program.

Speaker 2 (30:42):
I ask what legacy? What legacy?

Speaker 5 (30:49):
He doesn't have one? Barack Obama's legacy is a desire,
that's it. And they know that Donald Trump doesn't have
to do anything. Two things right now, one big beautiful
bill and peace in the Middle East. If he gets
both of those, Barack Obama's presidency is nothing more than

(31:12):
the black guy who got elected. And that hurts, that
really destroys. It makes everything come right around complete circle.
It will be Barack Obama's biggest achievement was his skin color.
If the affordable character is gone, that's it. Barack Obama
is nothing more than the black guy. And Sonny host

(31:37):
in Houston House had just said it there, your affordable
character is gone.

Speaker 2 (31:40):
Legacy over. I don't know what.

Speaker 5 (31:46):
To tell you, especially now that we know that. In
two thousand and nine, when he got the Nobel Peace
Prize and everybody's saying, wow, he got it in eight months,
it turns out it was just eleven days because the
Nobel Peace Price Commission that's picked the person who's going

(32:07):
to win is picked in January of that year, and
they did it on January thirtieth. Barack Obama went into
office on January twentieth. Yeah, Legacy donezo.

Speaker 2 (32:23):
That's what they're afraid of.

Speaker 5 (32:26):
And it exposes the Democrats for exactly who they are.

Speaker 2 (32:29):
Hollow, don't leave it to me. I'm just trying to
tell the truth.

Speaker 5 (32:39):
And if you want to counter that, you can eight
and zero five two two WTIC. If you can tell
me he's got legacy elsewhere, please, I'll be happy to
hear it.

Speaker 2 (32:47):
We'll be back. It sweetson the radio on WTIC News
Doc ten eighty.

Speaker 1 (32:51):
It's Reese on the radio on News to tenight WT.

Speaker 2 (32:54):
I see.

Speaker 5 (32:55):
I want to say that you folks in the chat room,
you're so damn cruel. Someone says, you know that Barack
Obama doesn't have a Social Security number.

Speaker 2 (33:06):
That's just gold, that's just messed up. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (33:12):
I didn't even understand that, Mattio. You know he's talking
about when Barack Obama was on Michelle Obama's podcast, he
said having a good gay having a gay man in
your life is really good. If you have a wife
and you want to send her out without actually going
out with.

Speaker 2 (33:29):
Well, that's horrible. He didn't say all that. I don't know.

Speaker 5 (33:33):
I don't even know what I again, I don't know
what that was about other than two.

Speaker 2 (33:41):
Yeah, I do.

Speaker 5 (33:42):
I'm not really keen on this emasculating of men in
a compassionate or using compassion to do so. And what
do I mean by that is by saying that in
order for you to be a man, you have to
do this that, and a third in Barack Obama's case,
is so like you need to have a good gay
man in your life.

Speaker 2 (34:01):
And I'm like, and for what reason is that?

Speaker 5 (34:08):
I mean, I just when I was growing up, I
thought that, you know that we were often told we
needed to find our feminine side or relate to our
feminine side, which I soundly rejected. I'm just like, what,
and what does that mean? It's like, well, we have
to learn to cry. We know how to cry. I

(34:31):
remember crying quite a bit when I was a kid.
I knew how to cry very well. I had emotions
that this it was just weird. I don't know, it's
it's just something again. I never got the Barack Obama thing, folks.

Speaker 2 (34:45):
I didn't.

Speaker 5 (34:46):
Maybe it's because I didn't really care about all the rest.

Speaker 2 (34:50):
Of that stuff.

Speaker 5 (34:52):
It's just that that really bothered me that when you've
forced people to explain the lure.

Speaker 2 (35:03):
Of him, it.

Speaker 5 (35:05):
Never got beyond the fact that he was black. I'll
tell you know what. Let me do this.

Speaker 2 (35:12):
What really angered me.

Speaker 5 (35:16):
About that whole Barack Obama's black and all that nonsense.

Speaker 2 (35:22):
What really angered me was it not.

Speaker 5 (35:28):
Only was its surface the hypocrites were coming out in droves,
and when they finally admitted they were hypocrites, then I
couldn't respect them. Let me give you an example. Anyone
remember Herman Kane. I know you all do, mister N
nine God follow this pizza. I loved Herman Kane. He

(35:53):
reminds me, or reminded me of my grandfather. Not the
way he spoke. My grandfather was very reserved. He a
very very low, deep voice. But they looked a lot
and their mannerisms were the same. But my grandfather was
very reserved augusta very dignified, scheduled to death because you

(36:13):
know whether or not he was gonna like just jump
on you.

Speaker 2 (36:16):
But he was very reserved.

Speaker 5 (36:18):
But I love Hermann Kane, and he for me. He
certified my conservatism as a black man. Listening to him
talking about his life, and it was when he told
this story about his father and his mother.

Speaker 2 (36:37):
And where he grew up. Herman Kane sat in the
back of a restaurant.

Speaker 5 (36:45):
In a colored only designated eating area. He grew up
that way. He was the guy who had what many
authentic blacks, the black experience. He had lived it firsthand
in the segregated Jim Crow South.

Speaker 2 (37:07):
Not Obama.

Speaker 5 (37:09):
But they questioned Herman Kane's authenticity right to my face,
right to my face. Why because Herman Kane's decisions in
life from those experiences made him a conservative. But Barack Obama,
who experienced none of it, was considered authentically black by

(37:30):
the gatekeepers of authentic blackness.

Speaker 2 (37:36):
And that was when I was absolutely extremely done.

Speaker 5 (37:40):
I've never held an ounce of respect for any of them.

Speaker 2 (37:46):
Once they start.

Speaker 5 (37:47):
When they showed their relations to Barack Obama and shunned
Herman Kane, I was finished, finished, and there's no going
back for me after that.

Speaker 2 (38:00):
None.

Speaker 5 (38:02):
I'm a single mother with five kids on welfare, food stamps,
having kid and turned out a conservative in a sea
of children who all went left, I went right. I
had the same food stamps that they did. I ate
the same grits and Colin Queens that they did. I

(38:22):
lived in the same community of Hollis Queens as they did,
but I had a choice, as did they. They chose left.
I chose right, living in the same house with the
same mother who loved voting for Joe Biden, and I
still ended up on the opposite side of it.

Speaker 2 (38:42):
But I did it because I knew had a choice.

Speaker 5 (38:44):
The rest of them, they did it for, I don't know,
to go along, to get along, to be part of
the crew, to not be shunned. I'll never ever respect
anybody who voted for him because he was black. Can't
do it when asked me, you didn't vote for Barack
Obama yet for the same reasons that you did because

(39:04):
he's black. Yes, let's get to the WTIC newsroom and
for John silver is Bob Brown.

Speaker 2 (39:12):
We'll be back at recent the radio on WTIC news
doock ten eighty Brie.

Speaker 1 (39:16):
On the radio making sense of the news. Yeah, even
when it makes no sense at all at all. Now
on wt I see news talk.

Speaker 5 (39:25):
I think it's appropriate to give a ride of applause
to our.

Speaker 2 (39:30):
Newsman, Bob Brown.

Speaker 5 (39:34):
I'm going to do something I normally wouldn't do. Okay,
I'm gonna get praise to a neighborhood that I normally
wouldn't because I would immediately say, ah, that's not New York,
that's Long Island. But he's right on the cusp. He's
right on the cusp. Give it up for Bob Brown.
New Hyde Park's very own. You might as well be
Queen's Bob, just tell everybody you're from Queens New Hyde Park.

Speaker 2 (39:58):
They won't know.

Speaker 5 (40:01):
I'll vouch for you. I spent a lot of time
in New Hyde Park. It is right near Elmont. That's
where my brother lives now in Elmont. He bought a
house out there, Bob, bro I love it when he's here.
Thanks Bob. Let's get to some headlines. Sad story coming
out of California. Former presidential candidate and Utah Senator Mitt

(40:25):
Romney's sister in law, Carrie Elizabeth Romney, was found dead
near a parking.

Speaker 2 (40:30):
Garage in Valencia, California.

Speaker 5 (40:32):
Authorities responded to a call on Friday night the reports
of a dead woman near a parking garage. The woman,
later identified as the former senator's sister in law, either
jumped or fell off a five story structure near Valencia
Town's Center Mall, and she was sixty four years old.
I haven't heard anything new yet, but I will check

(40:53):
on it on any other stories. This is another story
that will be a part of whack we'll get to that.
You may know that Alec Baldwin and his brother Stephen,
we crashed their suv into a tree in East Hampton
speaking of Long Island Bob on Monday.

Speaker 2 (41:09):
It's unclear of who was driving. We do know now
it was.

Speaker 5 (41:12):
Alec Baldwin who was crashing, who crashed the car, and
TMZ has obtained photos.

Speaker 2 (41:18):
Of the crash.

Speaker 5 (41:19):
We now have video of that which we will show.
In fact, I can show it in a minute. In fact,
let me see if I do have it. Here here
is Alec Baldwin talking about the crash and I guess
the events as it took place. It turns out that
Alec Baldwin is lying about the crash.

Speaker 4 (41:39):
Spent this morning.

Speaker 21 (41:39):
I was in this car accident. Guy cuting off a
truck in garbage truck. I mean a garbage truck the
size of a whale. I've never seen a garbage truck.
It must have been something commercial for like taking away
material from.

Speaker 4 (41:52):
Construction or something.

Speaker 21 (41:53):
It was the biggest garbage truck I've ever seen any Anyway,
I won't come into the details now one for you,
but to avoid hitting him, they hit a tree.

Speaker 4 (42:02):
They had a big fat tree and crushed my car.

Speaker 2 (42:05):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (42:06):
So I'll explain that in Wacky Whitey today, because it
isn't the Wacky Whitey story isn't about that.

Speaker 2 (42:12):
You're gonna have to pay very close attention to your
ears on this one. I'll explain it to you in
a little bit. Stand by for that.

Speaker 5 (42:19):
Also, Zorn Mamdani appears to be in a little bit
of trouble. His campaign quietly took nearly thirteen thousand dollars
in potentially illegal foreign donations, including one from his mother
in law in Dubai. The New York Post is learned
at least one hundred and seventy of the nearly fifty

(42:40):
four thousand contributions to the leading Democrat candidates campaign have
come from donors with addresses outside of the United States.
An examination of the New York City Campaign Finance Board
records found that only US citizens are supposed to and
permitted to legally or in legal residents are allowed to
contribute to political campaign and political action committees under federal, state,

(43:03):
and city law, and the candidates are expected to return
any illegal donations. Violators who knowingly accept foreign donations could
face hefty fines and imprisonment. So, yeah, it appears that
he may have done that, So he may have to
give the money up back. Why would I don't know,
I don't even understand why they would do that. Now

(43:25):
for the stupidest thing I read today, Yes.

Speaker 22 (43:33):
You do.

Speaker 1 (43:36):
This could very well be the stupidest person on the
face of.

Speaker 5 (43:39):
The earth, Laticia James, or better yet, the New York Times.
You might not know this, but The New York Times
is a leftist publication who often runs interference for Democrat
operatives no matter where they are, and of course if
they're in opposition of Donald Trump, they go double time.

(44:00):
In this case, they may have actually sealed.

Speaker 2 (44:04):
Her fate Letitia James.

Speaker 5 (44:05):
That is so according to a full investigation done by
The New York Times that had three writers on it.
One of the writers was Jonah Bromwich, Kate Kelly and
stefanos Chen. The three reporters all read the indictment and
all somehow in some case failed to mention in their

(44:26):
article paragraph nine in the indictment.

Speaker 2 (44:30):
What's in paragraph nine?

Speaker 5 (44:33):
Letitia James told the Universal Property Insurance the Norfolk property
was owner occupied for non seasonal use.

Speaker 2 (44:44):
But that's not the only infraction. There's much much more.

Speaker 5 (44:49):
She told OVM Financial, which is a bank, that it
was a second home, so she can get a three
percent interest instead of the three point eight point five.
She told the insurance company that it was owner occupied
so she can get lower premiums.

Speaker 2 (45:06):
And she told the irs that it was a rental.

Speaker 5 (45:10):
Property and had zero personal use days and as, and
she would never be there to claim the maximum tax deduction.
And she also told New York State it was an
investment property. Now, they all reported this or failed to
report this in the story, all of paragraph nine. But

(45:32):
here's what they did right, and here's where the problem is.
The New York Times says their key evidence, Remember they
omitted the earlier stuff, but anybody would have caught it.
The key evidence was Nakia Thompson that I believe is
a relative of Letitia James.

Speaker 2 (45:55):
She gave grand jury.

Speaker 5 (45:56):
Testimony that she lived in the home rent free and
did not pay rent.

Speaker 2 (46:03):
That's in the indictment.

Speaker 5 (46:06):
But in the indictment, in paragraph ten, it says that
Letitia James filed a Schedule E tax form reporting thousands
of dollars of rent received. Both cannot be true. Why
is this the perfect trap?

Speaker 2 (46:27):
It's simple.

Speaker 5 (46:29):
If Thomas paid no rent, James committed tax fraud. That
means he false rent received and deductions. James committed additional
tax fraud with zero personal day use while visiting regularly,
and James committed mortgage fraud because she controlled the occupancy
and violated the second home writer. Even if the Times

(46:51):
is wrong and Thompson did pay rent, that individual, who
by the way, is already a felon, has lied to
the grand jury.

Speaker 2 (47:02):
Yeah, it gets worse.

Speaker 5 (47:04):
The Times tried to frame it as a straightforward factual dispute,
needing more evidence.

Speaker 2 (47:10):
But this isn't a he said, she said.

Speaker 5 (47:15):
It's a document contradiction, and a grand jury sinks her.
The whole thing is done because again you're now going
to have to question, why did you tell the grand
jury Thompson that is that you were paying no rent?

Speaker 2 (47:30):
Why did you say that? And if you didn't.

Speaker 5 (47:33):
Pay any rent, why is Latitia James saying that she did?
And I would subpoena any records that say she did
receive any rent. She'd have to write because that would
have to be a part of her tax returns. She's
claiming that she she's claiming that she did receive rent
while the actual tenant said she paid none. So I

(47:57):
think this is going to be between the two of
them their.

Speaker 2 (47:59):
Own un doing. And I think they're just horrible liars.
But that's you know, that's just me. That's just me.
It's like zero five two two w T I C.
Let's go to the phones. Jim Is in Wellington, Hello.

Speaker 23 (48:11):
Sir, Yes, sir, you had mentioned previous to a couple
of your breaks about the legacy of Obama. Yeah, you
didn't believe he had a legacy.

Speaker 5 (48:22):
Uh, yeah, I don't believe if the if the legacy
was the Affordable Care Act, and.

Speaker 2 (48:30):
That could very well be overturned, much like Roe v.

Speaker 5 (48:33):
Wade, if we were to get another case in the
Supreme Court, and it would be over because John Roberts
in essence helped that thing get through by saying it
was a tax and the government had a right to tax.

Speaker 2 (48:43):
So if that's over, what else do you have?

Speaker 5 (48:45):
And everyone says that that is his signature legislation, and
I would quote Charles Kronheimer here and says that the
election of Donald Trump means that Obama's legacy was written.

Speaker 10 (48:56):
In sand Yeah.

Speaker 23 (48:57):
Well, Obama's legacy, in my in my I is the
destabilization of of uh of America because of his because
of his foreign policy concerned.

Speaker 3 (49:08):
In the Middle East.

Speaker 23 (49:09):
And you would mention a specifically specifically Iran, and the
fact that he, uh the president of the United States,
helped the fund terrorism that killed all kinds of people, exactly,
created all kinds of new terrorist organizations and then killed
more people.

Speaker 5 (49:26):
Yeah, paying them back for paying that was the interesting part.
Dropping off a palette of cash after all of the
wrongdoing of the mulas, after all of the wrongdoing of
of Mahmud Ahmedinajad, and then saying that and trying to
explain to the American people that this was money that
we unjustly seized and we were just paying it back, knowing

(49:47):
that they were going to use that money.

Speaker 23 (49:49):
And let and let me ask something else to that
one part. At one point Obama went across Europe and
Middle East, destabilizing the achievements of this country. That right,
the apology to it apologize. It's funny how he apologized for
numerous things about the sins of America, never once acted
what this country did to rebuild Europe and to protect

(50:13):
Europe and to protect Israel just a bunch of people.

Speaker 5 (50:16):
Do you remember his famous line, Jeff, I mean, Jim,
Do you remember his famous line? Oftentimes America has acted arrogant.

Speaker 24 (50:24):
Yeah, yeah, well you know what.

Speaker 23 (50:26):
That's all well and good. But here's here, here's where,
here's where I'm going. And this is the brilliance of
Donald Trump.

Speaker 16 (50:32):
Uh.

Speaker 23 (50:33):
Obama spoke to all those the same people, most of
the same people, but leaders from the same countries anyway, sure,
and said all those things. And Trump has done the
same exact thing with maybe new leaders, but the same
countries basically and completely turned around. Trump as he has
exposed the UN for what it is concerning Israel in
the Middle East, He's exposed to UN and the policies

(50:55):
of Obama concerning what they the money at the UN
spent for Hamas or amasis grabbed it. And somehow Trump
has been able to get both Arabs and Israel to agree,
to disagree, but to also come together for the better
good of the area and and the And the last

(51:18):
thing I'll say is the only thing Obama did for
the Middle East and for Europe or for the Middle
East specifically, would guarantee there be chaos and terrorism. And
Trump turned that thing on a dime.

Speaker 3 (51:30):
Yep.

Speaker 23 (51:31):
And you started your show and I'll land with this
and thanks for the time you started your show with
where does Trump stand in the pantheon of leaders? Sure
right now in my lifetime, the best president I've ever
I've ever.

Speaker 3 (51:44):
Looked at her or considered.

Speaker 23 (51:46):
And then the panteonic leaders, he's right up there.

Speaker 5 (51:49):
He's neck and neck, my friend, he's neck and neck
with some of the greats. I'm not gonna lie, and
I think I'll say this so much. It's not just
and it's interesting because we're talking about Barack Obama versus
a Donald Trump. And I will say this is that
Barack Obama as a legacy candidate in the sense of

(52:11):
he was transformative, but again for the most ridiculous of reasons,
his skin color. Donald Trump being what you know many
people will call the traditional white man. As being president,
he has been absolutely culture changing and transformative in foreign
policy and domestic policy.

Speaker 23 (52:30):
Well, well, let me let me let me close with this,
if you can give me another thirty second, let me
close with this. He took a Barack Obama, Doe Clinton, Biden,
and Trump and then and then wrote wrote down what
their major accomplishments were. I could say that, even though
I disagree, when there's the Clinton he left office the
country was in the black. He was forced to move

(52:52):
to the middle. We know what happened when he did
that was the contract of et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. Uh,
and then you've got.

Speaker 3 (52:58):
Swapping the other two.

Speaker 23 (53:00):
At the end of the day, Obama's got absolutely nothing
that he can hang his hat on.

Speaker 2 (53:05):
Nothing.

Speaker 23 (53:05):
Nothing, And we don't even have to talk about Joe Biden,
the president, the worst president in the history of my life.

Speaker 5 (53:14):
Yeah, I think in order to even be considered, you'd
at least have to be present, and now we know
he wasn't, So you know, it might have been better.

Speaker 22 (53:24):
He might have been better if he embraced the fact
I said on your show a long time ago when
he was hobbling around, maybe he should get himself one
of a campaign cane and he should put notches in
it or whatever to embrace, embrace and frailty.

Speaker 5 (53:37):
Yeah, yeah, exactly, because then he at least gets some sympathy.
Thank you, Jim, I appreciate you. America does have sins
that have not been acknowledged. I mean I can go
to plenty of countries that have sins that have never
been acknowledged. And let me address what Bob j just
said in the chat room and This is again, this

(54:00):
is exactly the type of nonsense that I'll put this
sort unserrious. People make this argument very unserious. It is
commonplace to put down America. It has been drilled into
the minds of leftists over and over again, and they

(54:25):
think it is something that they believe. They have been
told so many times the opinions that they have came naturally.

Speaker 2 (54:35):
They did not.

Speaker 5 (54:37):
They did not become They did not come naturally. They
are indoctrinated ideas.

Speaker 2 (54:42):
That's all.

Speaker 5 (54:43):
That's all it is to ignore travesties across the globe
and the atrocities that have happened across the globe. Compare
America to the Congo today, compare America to Nigeria. From
the perspective of Christians today, that mantra of America having

(55:13):
sins it must atone for is ignorant and it is
embedded in the minds of people who are easily influenced,
because I would simply say to anyone about the sins,
they be so atrocious.

Speaker 2 (55:33):
Name a place without sin.

Speaker 5 (55:34):
It's like what Jesus said, he let he without sin
cast the first stone. Would you say that Ukraine is
without sin? Would you say Russia how about China. Would
you say that Mausetong and the Color Revolution, would you
say that those folks are without sin? With the millions

(55:56):
who were killed millions, would you say Stalin was a
stellar human being?

Speaker 2 (56:03):
How about about Lenin?

Speaker 5 (56:06):
Will you say that the countries that they ruled over
that you know, they they have atoned for their sins.
I mean, if we were really to measure up and again,
I would always say I look at this in a
very very simple way, and it's easy.

Speaker 2 (56:22):
It's easy to discern with all of the countries.

Speaker 5 (56:29):
In the country, in the in the world, name the
one everyone's trying to get to. And in Bob Jay's view,
they're all trying to get to the place where sins
have never been accounted for. They all wish to come
to the place that is not atoned. Quite interesting, and

(56:55):
when asked why do they come here, it's for things
like opportunity, religious freedom, freedom of expression, things that no
one in anyone like Bob Jay, will never hold other
countries accountable for. I laugh as I watch black people

(57:16):
on white folks channels scream about the evil white man.

Speaker 2 (57:21):
And never get lynched. Think I want to say it again.

Speaker 5 (57:27):
I find it interesting that black folks on white people's
networks scream about the evil white man and his sins
and never leave the studio in cuffs and strung up
on a tree.

Speaker 2 (57:45):
This white, racist, oppressive country.

Speaker 5 (57:49):
How they scream and holler in the middle of the
street when they see a white person, call them white devils,
attack them because they didn't say hello, or because they
haven't argued with them, And never once has the Klan
rolled in burning crosses in front of their homes. How

(58:10):
they have this miraculous freedom to malign and excoriate the
opposite race without any accountability. This racist, bigoted country. Astonishing.
And yet I'm supposed to be told that it's much

(58:34):
tougher for black and brown people today than it ever
was during the Jim Crow South than it was in
the nineteen twenties. I'm sorry, but I'm not falling for that.
But again, like I said, these aren't original ideas, none
of them are. They didn't come to this on their own.

(58:58):
They couldn't because if they thought critically, they'd never believe
any of it. But they can't think critically. This is
what they have to stand on. This is what they
have to believe in, have to believe in, because if
they were to stray, Oh, the real lynching will begin
from the people they used to agree with. Don't ask me,

(59:26):
I wouldn't know. I just get it every day. I
know exactly what it's like to be theoretically lynched by
people who I refuse to agree with on a daily basis.
When you get around your posse and get around your crowd,
you were adored, you were patted on your button.

Speaker 2 (59:47):
Told good boy me.

Speaker 5 (59:49):
On the other hand, I I'm the sin that keeps
on giving. I'm the sellout. Uncle Tom. Please spare me.
At least I've decided that I'm going to think for myself.

Speaker 2 (01:00:08):
Have a good one. We'll see in a minute.

Speaker 5 (01:00:10):
More news, more views when we return, plus your phone
calls at Teresa Radio on wt I see News Talk
ten eighty. Oh man, I can't wait to get into
town to hang out with Steve.

Speaker 2 (01:00:19):
Reesa on the radio. We're back. Wacky Whitey coming up
very soon.

Speaker 5 (01:00:23):
The Alec Baldwin edition, as it sort of has to
do with the car crash. But it's something that you
are going to love, and it's an internet craze, a
social media craze that you are going to respond to
when you see it, so stand by for that. It
is hilarious and in some ways embarrassing. If I say

(01:00:44):
so myself, stand by for that. We've got a lot
of fun that we're gonna have with that as well.
I wanted to talk about this because as it relates
to the murder of Mimi Torres, the twelve year old
who is found in a container in a back of

(01:01:05):
an abandoned home in New Britain, there has been a
lot of criticism of Mayor Aaron Stewart and the reason
why people have been criticizing her is for having this
sort of deer in the headlights behavior at the press conference.

Speaker 2 (01:01:24):
Yesterday and seeming not to know how to react to
this situation. And I know.

Speaker 5 (01:01:34):
I can see it that she's responding to it poorly,
and I know it is out of frustration and she
wants another crack at it. This sounds crazy, It's like Greece.

Speaker 2 (01:01:49):
How do you know that?

Speaker 10 (01:01:50):
Trust me?

Speaker 2 (01:01:51):
I know, I know.

Speaker 5 (01:01:54):
When the criticism weighs heavy and you've done nothing wrong,
you weather that and at being ridiculous. I know what
I did was right. I handled it correctly. I can't
please everyone, and you stay focused. But that's not happening here.
That's not happening here. So I want to respond. I

(01:02:15):
want to show you what I mean by that. But
a tweet that she put out, an ex post that
you put out, responding to someone who had gone after
her about not questioning or at least saying that she
was having issues with DCF, or if she took issue
with them at all. She responded by saying, this, are

(01:02:37):
you kidding me? No question mark, are you kidding me?
This was not my place to give it an opinion
on the failures of DCF as a mayor, I don't
control them. If the press wants to ask me about
that separately or privately, then I can. Then I can,
and I'll give my opinion. Discussing a heavy and discussing

(01:03:00):
case about the abuse and neglect and ultimate murder of
a twelve year old girl is.

Speaker 2 (01:03:05):
Not the time to add my opinion. Get out of here, Okay.

Speaker 5 (01:03:13):
I am absolutely four reasonable frustration with critics.

Speaker 25 (01:03:20):
This is not how you do it. It isn't The DCF
question is a legitimate one, and.

Speaker 5 (01:03:31):
The opinion is not what anyone needs. It's not an
opinion about DCF, it's a response to questions about DCF.
Going above and beyond to state why you said nothing
about it almost gives leverage to the person questioning you.

Speaker 2 (01:03:56):
So I'm going to do the thing that I would
have done.

Speaker 5 (01:04:00):
Never had political office, public art, never did it just
a radio host. I gave some advice unsolicited yesterday.

Speaker 2 (01:04:10):
Let me do it again.

Speaker 5 (01:04:12):
This is how you respond to queries about DCF and
if they are indeed responsible.

Speaker 2 (01:04:18):
If you're going to respond to a post to an individual,
the two.

Speaker 5 (01:04:24):
Things you never ever start with or end with are
the words are you kidding me? Because therefore you're saying
any queries are unreasonable. They may be, but never let
that show you are responding to them because their questions
are legitimate, no matter how ridiculous they are. From the
ridiculous to the smart, all queries to you, the leader

(01:04:51):
are to be dealt with with respect, not dismissiveness. You
can't dismiss it. Even if you think that it is,
you can't dismiss it. And if you think this in
some way, you're sort of making you hard or edgy.
You know what, a type of person that pushes back.
This is not your enemy. This is someone asking you

(01:05:13):
a legitimate question about DCF. Do you think or were
there any failures with DCF. Do you think you should
have been harsh or on DCF. Here's how you respond
Without knowing all the facts which are coming. It is
difficult to say what responsibility DCF had. But if indeed

(01:05:37):
there were problems that DCF ignored, we must hold them
to account and get to the bottom of that and
find out where those mistakes were made. Folks, off the
top of my head, you tell me if that's a
legitimate response to a person.

Speaker 2 (01:05:58):
I don't have to say get out here. We are
turning over.

Speaker 5 (01:06:04):
In essence, I am saying to you, I'm outraged by
what happened to this twelve year old girl.

Speaker 2 (01:06:10):
It is evident that she didn't have.

Speaker 5 (01:06:11):
Her own parents, her own aunt, and her own mother's
boyfriend caring about this child's best interest. But if there
was anybody else who could have come forward, or anybody
else who knew about this girl missing from school, or
if there had been any reports about abuse at home
that DCUP was concerned about, and we're alerted to if
they drop the ball on this, they will be held

(01:06:33):
to account, but only after we get the evidence.

Speaker 2 (01:06:36):
That's what you're telling them.

Speaker 5 (01:06:37):
You are stern in getting the information and letting them
know I am on top of it, and when we
find out who's responsible, we are going to hold them accountable.
But going after the people asking questions who are concerned
as if this suggests they have no right to be
or they should get out of here for even suggesting
to you something.

Speaker 2 (01:06:59):
It's not the way to go at all. You've got
to be.

Speaker 5 (01:07:07):
You just have to be consistent with who you are
as far as your character is concerned, that you are
outraged by this and you.

Speaker 2 (01:07:15):
Want to get to the bottom of it.

Speaker 5 (01:07:17):
Having these cheesy little back and forth stupid rivalries or
you know, back and forth with some person you disagree
with or you think is sort of out of whack.

Speaker 2 (01:07:26):
No consummate professional, that's your job.

Speaker 5 (01:07:29):
You're running for governor. You're running for governor. Now, I'm
not saying that this is going to come back to Biter,
but the governor. I mean, if you really think about it,
Lamont has said nothing, and you think about that you
want to take his place. This is an opportunity. I mean,

(01:07:52):
if we're being real here, and I'll play makeshift campaign director, Okay,
I'll play bakeshift campaign director for Aaron Stewart. If I'm
your campaign director, this is what I would be telling you. Hey,
you know, La Mine hasn't said anything about Mimi's death,
hasn't said anything about her murder. I gotta be honest

(01:08:16):
with you. If I'm you and I'm running to take
his job, I've got to show the leadership that he lacks.

Speaker 2 (01:08:23):
Let's put out a statement about this.

Speaker 5 (01:08:27):
Unlet's ask that the governor brings some attention to this,
because again, him sitting in that office needs his attention
and his lack thereof. We got to put him on
the spot, and we've got to let everybody know in
Connecticut that the reason why you are better fit for
this job than he is. That's what I would say.

(01:08:48):
Now I'm saying that on the radio. You have no
idea what I would tell her in private.

Speaker 2 (01:08:53):
It would be.

Speaker 5 (01:08:54):
Much harsh, much more harsh. But I would be telling
her around the beak that this is the opportunity where
you show leadership when Lamot has not. A young girl
was starved, dragged, left in the back of an abandoned home.

(01:09:17):
She had gone missing since last Well, if they're right,
maybe it had been dead since last fall. This could
very well be a national story. You've got to get
in front of it, and a governor has not. So
forget about somebody asking you a question that you're not

(01:09:39):
comfortable with or that angers you.

Speaker 2 (01:09:43):
That's not leadership, that's emotion.

Speaker 5 (01:09:48):
Discussing a heavy and disgusting case about the abuse and
neglect and ultimate murder of a twelve year old job
the child is not the time to add my opinion.
Yes it is, Yes it is. Let me help you.
Here's an opinion that you can steal. It is in
my opinion that we haven't been doing enough to protect

(01:10:12):
at risk children.

Speaker 2 (01:10:16):
We have seen it countless times, with the suicide.

Speaker 5 (01:10:20):
Of an eleven year old girl, a young toddler falling
out of a building, abuses taking place inside of our
schools where young black girls were harassed by young white
students and spat on, and no one has stepped up
to protect those children. In my opinion, something must be done.

(01:10:45):
And as your governor, I will okay again if I
may off the top of the dome. As they say
in the hip hop world. Now, why is it so
easy for me? Why is it so easy for me

(01:11:07):
and not for many because they don't feel the way
that I do about this subject.

Speaker 2 (01:11:15):
I don't need to know, Mimi. I've raised kids.

Speaker 5 (01:11:21):
I don't need to be even related to that child
to know that the death of a twelve year old
left in that place, in that way, who clearly must
have been afraid, who must have been fearful every day
of her life, knowing that no one was going to
save her, and then to die in that fashion, emotions

(01:11:46):
should be bubbling up in you that you can respond
in a way that tells everybody, or at least to.

Speaker 2 (01:11:55):
Convey to everyone what you know everyone.

Speaker 5 (01:11:57):
Is feeling, if they're really thinking about the well being
of that twelve year old girl who died in such
a way that the people who were, in that sense
are supposed to just protect her, did not abused her,
did some of the most egregious things to her, never

(01:12:18):
even caring. I mean looking at the size of that child,
looking at her face, and you've all seen the picture,
knowing that somebody that the emotion that comes out of
that or in this case, a response should come naturally
if you have a heart, if you're a human being.
That's why it's not hard for me to come up
with something to say that shows and exudes leadership, especially

(01:12:43):
when you know the people who should be saying something
are saying nothing, and you you're trying to make a
name for yourself and you were running for the most
important office in the state.

Speaker 2 (01:12:57):
You have got to show leadership.

Speaker 5 (01:12:58):
Aaron Stewart and I am not back to anybody here,
but this unacceptable.

Speaker 26 (01:13:07):
Work on it.

Speaker 5 (01:13:10):
People are already saying that you're not ready for prime time.
This isn't helping you, and it is echoing true with
statements like this. You have an invitation to come on
the program if you'd like to respond to it, maybe
clean it up a little bit. But if I were you,

(01:13:32):
I do something. There's an opportunity here. You should take
full advantage of it. We'll come back more news, more views,
and a sad story about an R and B singer.
If you have heard, we're gonna pay him some respect
when we return. It's recent the radio on wt I
see News Talk ten eighty.

Speaker 1 (01:13:48):
It's race on the radio on News wt I see.

Speaker 5 (01:13:53):
Before we pay some homage, let me get to the
phone real quick. Chris is in Watertown. How are you, sir?

Speaker 15 (01:13:58):
Hey, good Reese. Thanks for take the call. You said
pretty much most of what I.

Speaker 27 (01:14:03):
Would have said, we all know DCF.

Speaker 15 (01:14:06):
Is a very big problem. And I guess I think
with her, with with this being in in her city now,
and she's the mayor of New Britain, that she should
feel rage. That's what she should feel about it. And
and so I think where we might disagree as slightly
as I think that this is what costs her any

(01:14:30):
traction and nomination to think in the Republican nominated this, Yes,
I do, because there's a lot of us out there
that have a lot.

Speaker 3 (01:14:37):
Of strong feelings about DCF.

Speaker 15 (01:14:40):
And and whether we're conservatives or whatever you want to label.

Speaker 5 (01:14:43):
Us, no, no, no, I'll put it to you this way, Chris,
if I may real, real quick, and I'll tell you
why I agree with you in a sense of like
no one ever knows what's that one thing that's the
issue that will tank a campaign. And in Connecticut I've
noticed this for the last three years now, that the

(01:15:05):
sort of protection of children has waned in ways I've
never seen in our society, and it is very, very
prominent in Connecticut in politics. It's like the only thing
they seem to be fighting for is getting these atrocious
books in school. But yet there's the ignoring of things
like education or the well being of children.

Speaker 2 (01:15:26):
That stuff is just ignored. It gets no traction, which
baffles me.

Speaker 27 (01:15:31):
The basic basic thing that.

Speaker 15 (01:15:34):
We should be doing as as as a state.

Speaker 27 (01:15:38):
Yeah, basic basic education and basic care.

Speaker 3 (01:15:42):
And protection of them as well.

Speaker 5 (01:15:44):
Yeah so yeah, maybe, I mean you could be right,
this could be that issue where you know, and again
I watched that press conference and you know, it's not
a one off. I'm looking at the press conference and
there's just no leadership where you can see the police
officers talking, we see other people talking like different uh
of people involved as far as law enforcement. And she's

(01:16:06):
there and she's got her hands folded and seems out
of place.

Speaker 2 (01:16:09):
It's if it's it's not natural, it's weird.

Speaker 27 (01:16:13):
She she has good script and she had and she
has good social media.

Speaker 15 (01:16:16):
But but my my concern is that when it comes
to making hard decision and having it and having to
do it, and I don't want to say in a
split second, but having to do it was.

Speaker 3 (01:16:26):
Very little, it was very little time to prepare.

Speaker 2 (01:16:28):
Yeah, she's not going to do it. It doesn't come
off natural. No, yeah, it.

Speaker 15 (01:16:33):
Comes it comes off as a politician, not as a person.
And that's why you can say.

Speaker 3 (01:16:37):
It's so much easier.

Speaker 2 (01:16:38):
Yeah, yeah, there you go. Good point. Thank you, Chris.
I appreciate your holding for me.

Speaker 3 (01:16:43):
You got you.

Speaker 5 (01:16:45):
I want to pay some respects to a person who
I can honestly admit I was jealous of, and I
think a lot.

Speaker 2 (01:16:53):
Of men were a little jealous of this guy.

Speaker 5 (01:16:58):
And then when I say they were a little jealous
of them, because I don't know a woman who dateon'
swoon over him and that music video How does It Feel?
R and B singer DiAngelo has passed away at the
age of fifty one.

Speaker 2 (01:17:17):
I guess he was struggling privately, very privately.

Speaker 5 (01:17:20):
I did not know he was suffering from pancreatic cancer.
And he passed away today at the age of fifty one.
But if you remember him, you remember every girl who
lost it behind that how does It Feel music video
where it's just you know, him topless with no shirt
on and it's a little below the waist and he's

(01:17:41):
just spinning around.

Speaker 2 (01:17:42):
It was the most.

Speaker 5 (01:17:43):
Simple, simple music video I've ever seen in my entire life,
but it was probably the most watched music video on
any video music channel known to man. DiAngelo gone at
fifty one Mark Christopher, he's gonna beat PS traffic, said,
I know you remember that.

Speaker 2 (01:18:02):
Man, there it is.

Speaker 26 (01:18:08):
Yeah, he was smooth man, Damn.

Speaker 2 (01:18:10):
He was smooth.

Speaker 5 (01:18:11):
It was the closest thing to Prince that we had,
like the second colage.

Speaker 2 (01:18:16):
Yeah, there you go.

Speaker 28 (01:18:20):
That's rolland song right there, great song, Roland, good choice.

Speaker 2 (01:18:24):
Oh yeah, yeah, rest in peace, d Angelo.

Speaker 28 (01:18:28):
Yeah that's pancreatic cancer. You don't want to get cancer,
but that's that's the one you don't want for sure, so.

Speaker 26 (01:18:35):
Said fifty one years old. Yeah, D'Angelo. Cool. Great R
and B singer Reese, thank you so much.

Speaker 1 (01:18:44):
It's on the radio. Don't say we didn't more than
you on News Talk ten eighty w T I see, I.

Speaker 5 (01:18:53):
See, I got I normally I know that we normally
do between rounds. I'm just gonna wait until the next
break because this was something that was hanging heavy on
my head roughly about ten o'clock.

Speaker 3 (01:19:08):
Last night.

Speaker 5 (01:19:10):
And I was going through this, and today I'm just
going through my phone during the break, just saying hey,
if there's any breaking news going out there, and last
night the first time I was ticked off, and I said,
you know what, maybe I'll say something about this tomorrow,
and then I said no, because then it would be
like piling on and I would be mean.

Speaker 2 (01:19:32):
Let me just tell you what happened last night.

Speaker 5 (01:19:33):
So last night, I'm reading the story about Mimi and
are passing, and then they finally found the boyfriend and
he was in custody and they were finally showing the
first pictures of him and all this stuff, and then
a report was going on was talking about the grandparents
and I think the grandfather who they had spoken to,
could only speak Spanish, and he was crying as he

(01:19:57):
was saying, my baby, you know, my granddaughter or whatever
the case was. Again, I was immediately just going, you
know what I was gonna say, A lot of you
are saying the same thing.

Speaker 2 (01:20:07):
I'm not gonna do that here.

Speaker 5 (01:20:10):
So then I go on my Facebook page just people
are making comments, so I'm just looking at them and
see if there's anything relevant.

Speaker 2 (01:20:17):
Maybe somebody's saying something.

Speaker 5 (01:20:19):
And I get to WFSB's page and they're showing the
mother Jacqueline as she enters the courtroom, and this is
the WFSB headline. Watch the unedited court video of three
people facing a judge for the first time. On the
case of the murdered twelve year old girl on WFSB.

(01:20:42):
But the top of that page it says this Jacquelines
the mother. Jacqueline's family packed the courtroom on Tuesday. I
don't know if this courtroom is big or it's small,
but the family packed the courtroom. I've got one question.

(01:21:05):
Did any of them know that Mimi was missing? How
many family members are we talking about?

Speaker 2 (01:21:14):
No one noticed.

Speaker 5 (01:21:17):
It's last fall, that's a year ago. Nobody noticed, That's
all I'm asking. It bears questions, nobody. I can't be
the only one who finds that weird. Apparently these people live.

Speaker 2 (01:21:40):
In the community, they know them, They knew of this girl.
They all sewed up.

Speaker 5 (01:21:46):
I don't know if it's there to support to her
or to admonish Jacqueline, but they're all there.

Speaker 2 (01:21:52):
Hello, media, what an opportunity. Huh. Let's get another check
of whether in traffic. Christopher's at the BPS Traffic Center.

Speaker 1 (01:22:01):
Hey, Mark, it's race on the radio on news ten
eight w T I see, I see.

Speaker 2 (01:22:07):
Yeah, we're back. Let's do the thing now.

Speaker 5 (01:22:19):
And congratulations goes to Noreen A of Broadbrook, Connecticut. She
is the recipient of Today's dozen bagels a month for
six months courtesy between Rounds the Bagel Bakery and Sandwich
Cafe located.

Speaker 2 (01:22:32):
In South Windsor, Vernon and Manchester.

Speaker 5 (01:22:36):
Don't forget you could also help out Connecticut Food Share
by purchasing a beca, which is a bacon, egg and
cheese for both a mayo and avocado sandwich on a bagel.
Fifty cents every one you buy the becka, that is
fifty cents will go to the Connecticut Food Share. So
when you go down there and go pick up a becka,

(01:22:56):
it's that time. And we'll get to the phone calls
in a second. So you we all know the story.
Alec Baldwin was driving in his wife's car. I think
it was a land Rover or a range Rover. I
can't tell which one is. The night's vehicle was driving
in the land Rover and they crashed into a tree,
and Alec Baldwin explains that the truck, the garbage truck,

(01:23:22):
ran him off the road. I guess what he didn't
know was that the the garbage truck actually had a
dash camp on the front of the truck and caught
the entire incident. And it appears that the garbage truck
made a legal right turn when he had the right

(01:23:43):
of way, was driving down the road and was going
it was a one lane road in a two lane highway,
and after making the right turn, the garbage truck was
doing what it normally does, going into the service lane
of the parking lane to pick up its first run
on the street of garbage cans, and it appears Alec

(01:24:04):
Baldwin may have been a little too close and tried
to go around the garbage truck but on the sidewalk side.
Here's how Alec Baldwin described the incident even while the
video was playing, showing that it was him in the row.

Speaker 21 (01:24:21):
Was but this morning I was in this car accident.
Guy cutting off of a truck. Big garbage truck. I
mean a garbage truck the size of a whale. I've
never seen a garbage truck. It must have been something
commercial for like taking away material from construction or something.
It was the biggest garbage truck I've ever seen any Anyway,
I won't go into the details now one for you,
but to avoid hitting him, I.

Speaker 4 (01:24:44):
Hit a tree. I had a big fat tree and
crushed my car, my wife's car. I crushed my wife's car.

Speaker 21 (01:24:50):
I feel that's all fine, and I'm fine, and my
brother's fine.

Speaker 2 (01:24:54):
Yeah, so he's fine. His brother's fine.

Speaker 5 (01:24:56):
But he says that the truck cut him off. But
that is not the reason why Alec Baldwin is making
it into today's version of wacky Whitey.

Speaker 10 (01:25:09):
Yeah you know what he is, wacky whitey, wacky whitey,
wackey whitey, wacky whitey.

Speaker 2 (01:25:14):
Yeah you know what he is, wacky whitey. You wacky whitey,
wacky white you, wacky whitey.

Speaker 12 (01:25:21):
No.

Speaker 5 (01:25:22):
The reason why Alec Baldwin gets the Wacky Whitey award
today is because, as he was going on to thank
the police officers who helped him after the argument or
after the the the accident, I should say, non argument,
something happens in the background in the video.

Speaker 2 (01:25:40):
Let's see if you catch it.

Speaker 21 (01:25:43):
Officer Gurkin is his name g E r K e
K A lovely guy. And there was another gentleman that
I didn't get his name, but Officer Gurkin from the
East Hampton Police Department, as nice as can be and
as presidents can be about the whole.

Speaker 2 (01:25:56):
Thing, and uh, did you catch it?

Speaker 3 (01:26:00):
Roland?

Speaker 2 (01:26:02):
He is fired.

Speaker 5 (01:26:04):
Smoke alarm is smoke arm, which has got to be
the most ghetto thing I've ever seen in my entire life.
But for those of you who don't know, there was
a theme, there was a theme online that shows that

(01:26:24):
they consider the most ghetto thing for you to do
is have a beeping smoke alarm in your or smoke
detector in your home. Alec Baldwin is not is not
someone that you would deem to be that ghetto. But
sure enough, while and again, my wife, who I played

(01:26:45):
that for earlier, just throws her head back and just goes, no,
he didn't.

Speaker 2 (01:26:50):
Oh yes he did.

Speaker 4 (01:26:51):
Sure e. R K a lovely guy.

Speaker 21 (01:26:57):
And there was another gentleman that I didn't get his name,
but officer came from the East Hampton Police as nice
as can be and as president is can be about
the whole thing, and uh.

Speaker 5 (01:27:15):
It's the I'm sorry, but oh I was doing it
just it came out of nowhere.

Speaker 2 (01:27:19):
I was just watching the video and it popped up
out of.

Speaker 5 (01:27:22):
Nowhere, and I went, oh, that's horrible, that's just horrible.
My wife is upset in the way that a wife
can be and would be upset. And that is the
first thing she said was why is it that people
do not understand how dangerous that is.

Speaker 2 (01:27:40):
I of course.

Speaker 5 (01:27:41):
Wanted nothing to do with that discussion. It was just
how do you live in a house? Alec Baldwin? And
this is the part that comes for me personally. Okay,
knowing Alec Baldwin. Folks, you all have sort of like
vicariously through the media, have had a run in with
Alec Baldwin. It's like you oh him right, Think about this, Okay,

(01:28:03):
think about this reasonably. Alec Baldwin appears to be angered
by the simplest slight.

Speaker 2 (01:28:14):
He seems to be constantly annoyed or aggravated. Are you
telling me.

Speaker 5 (01:28:20):
That that beeping sound going off at the same time,
over and over again has never ever irked him to
the point where he changed those batteries, that that it
was not an annoyance to him, that listening to that,
he didn't go like, I'm surprised in the video he
didn't look up and go change that damn battery.

Speaker 2 (01:28:44):
I just again, I'm completely flummixed by it.

Speaker 4 (01:28:48):
Officer G. E. R K a lovely guy.

Speaker 21 (01:28:53):
And there was another gentleman that I didn't get his name,
but officer from the East Empton Police department as nice
as can be, and his presidents can be about the whole.

Speaker 2 (01:29:01):
Thing, and he just acts like, wasn't there. It's the
funniest thing. Let's got to Sean and Meridan.

Speaker 26 (01:29:10):
Hello, sir, Hello, just real quick.

Speaker 19 (01:29:14):
You catch stuff that other people message hilarious, and it's
really it's really cool because I think when I'm being creative,
I'll be someplace and something will dawn on me and
I'll talk like like I had a conversation with someone
who's right next to me, like we've been talking about
it all the time, and so they're like, Okay, you're

(01:29:35):
elevator going to the top.

Speaker 26 (01:29:37):
But it's just hilarious.

Speaker 2 (01:29:39):
What do you got for me, Sean?

Speaker 19 (01:29:42):
This recent thing with the Middle East pres accord in
which Biden yes, and his his.

Speaker 5 (01:29:50):
UH Secretary of State Anthony Blinkett yes, credit for it. Yes,
it isn't worth I'll tell you this. I the reason
why I didn't go into it, because again, as petty
as I am, I didn't even want to go after them.
This is if there's anything that you can get from
what Joe Biden said and what Anthony Blincoln said is this.

(01:30:14):
And I would even go so far as to take
what Jake Sullivan said to form a National Security advisor
as complete opposition to Anthony Blinkin and Joe Biden. You
when you are coming in to step on the toes
of Donald Trump about this peace deal, it says only
one thing you need to realize, and that is how

(01:30:36):
significant it is. Because I would have just if it
was nothing. You just let Donald Trump pretend that it's
a glorious thing that he's trying to hang his head on.
Oh look at him, look at him in his small
little piece deal thinking he's done something. To have those
two bozos come out of the wing or you would
work and say, oh, it's really our deal shows you

(01:30:57):
exactly all you need to know about how significant, exactly
and petty they are, but just how significant it is
because they can't let him just have it.

Speaker 2 (01:31:07):
They need a piece of it themselves.

Speaker 19 (01:31:09):
And when I saw all those Jets and thirty five
leaders of thirty five nations, yeah, man coming together to
say some of what we're doing ain't working. Yeah it's phenomenal,
and it's not done. And he and Donald Trump knows that. Yeah,
they're like, well, what the other steps? How about you

(01:31:30):
take step one? Because if you don't take step one
and get it successful, then you don't have to worry
about the other nineteen.

Speaker 5 (01:31:36):
Yeah, exactly, good point. Thank you so much, Sehn, I
appreciate you. Wendy in the chat room said that Alec
Baldwin's wife is Latina. Sorry, Wendy, that is not true.
Hilaria is from Boston. Uh, and she is not Spanish
by or Latina by any stretch of the imagination.

Speaker 2 (01:31:57):
She is a fake accent, which.

Speaker 5 (01:32:00):
Actually she gets called on a lot because she keeps
switching in and out of it.

Speaker 26 (01:32:04):
Uh.

Speaker 5 (01:32:05):
She is a fae Tina. If anything, she's she's not.
She's not Latina at all. Sadly, my wife is in
the she's screaming about something. I think she's laughing at me.
I don't believe that even if they are. She's born
and raised in Boston. She's never had an accent.

Speaker 2 (01:32:23):
She was.

Speaker 5 (01:32:24):
She was absolutely busted for never having an accent, until,
of course, she started promoting a cookbook and then she
was exposed for being just you know, like average New Englander.

Speaker 2 (01:32:37):
Uh, she's been she's been faking that.

Speaker 3 (01:32:40):
Well.

Speaker 2 (01:32:41):
I don't know.

Speaker 5 (01:32:41):
I don't know about her parents being Latina. That I
may have to look into but I know that she
is like she has been pretending to be like a
you know, a first generation immigrant. However she is not. Sadly,
she's not. She's about as New England as a girl gets.
And her name is Hilario, which, by the way, from
what I understand, Somebody correct me if I'm wrong.

Speaker 2 (01:33:05):
Is she is she like? I'm almost certain her name
is Hillary.

Speaker 5 (01:33:15):
And she pronounces her name Hilaria, which I thought it
was a joke. Like in my head, I'm saying to myself,
that's gotta be irony, because when I hear her name,
I think hilarious, not Hilaria. Wendy says, I'm gonna go
google her parents. It's like Michael A says that she's

(01:33:39):
wished Tina, not Latina. She's wished Tina. That's just awful.
If I give you guys a chance, you will just
roast anybody, won't you.

Speaker 2 (01:33:51):
It's just roast anybody. It's the meanest people in the world,
all right.

Speaker 5 (01:33:56):
When we come back, we'll promote the website, the new substack.
Speaking of illegals, not all illegals are the same. We'll
talk about that as well. Excuse me, Hollywood, News. We've
got two sequels and a remake no one asked for.
When we return, we'll talk about that as well, plus

(01:34:18):
a whole bunch of other stuff. Oh, you gotta we
gotta promote Robert cool Bell of Cooling the Gang. It's
gonna be here next week on Wednesday, Friday. We've got
Larissa Why am I forgetting her name? Actress?

Speaker 2 (01:34:32):
What am I? Why am I forgetting her name? Now?
I feel awful that I forgot.

Speaker 5 (01:34:38):
Oh, Larissa Dolly from the movie Becky is going to
be on a program on Friday.

Speaker 2 (01:34:43):
We'll talk to her.

Speaker 5 (01:34:45):
I saw the movie yesterday, and I've got to talk
to her about it because it's got a couple of
it's got a couple of tropes in it. The movie
is about a black couple who have just moved into
a home and they have a rather attractive white neighbor
who I guess is sort of you know, got the

(01:35:06):
eyes for the husband and married husband in the film.
We'll talk about that, apparently to making a sequel to
the film, and we'll talk about that, of course during
the week. Oh, let me get to this real quick.
Yesterday I promoted this. I asked the question, what does
John Adams, Woodrow Wilson, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, FDR.

Speaker 2 (01:35:31):
And Richard Nixon have in common.

Speaker 5 (01:35:35):
And you know, John Adams was a Federalist, Woodrow Wilson
and Franklin Delano Roosevelt were Democrats, and of course Richard
Nixon a Republican.

Speaker 2 (01:35:42):
What do all of them have in common?

Speaker 5 (01:35:46):
Well, what they have in common is common with what
Donald Trump is being accused of. John Adams signed the
Alien and Sedition Acts, which made it legal to criticize
the government. He oversaw the prosecution of about twenty five people,
mostly newspaper editors and political opponents, who mocked him and

(01:36:06):
his administration in print. For example, Congressman Matthew Lyon was
jailed for calling Adams a repulsive pendant and criticizing his policies.

Speaker 2 (01:36:18):
These cases were later.

Speaker 5 (01:36:19):
Seen as a tax on free speech, and the laws
expired or repealed soon after Woodrow Wilson. During World War One,
Woodrow signed the Espionage Act and used it to prosecute
Eugene V. Debs, the Socialist Party presidential candidate, for his
vocal anti As a vocal anti war critic, Debs was

(01:36:40):
arrested after nineteen eighteen speech opposing the draft. Charged with
sedition and obstructing military recruiting, he was convicted and sentenced
to ten years, running his nineteen twenty campaign from jail.
His sentence was commuted in nineteen twenty one by the
next President, Franklin Delano.

Speaker 2 (01:37:02):
Roosevelt, a Democrat as well.

Speaker 5 (01:37:05):
FDR directed the IRS to audit and harass political opponents,
much like Barack Obama did during the nineteen thirties, including
Louisiana Senator Huey Long, a rival Democrat, and radio priest
father Charles Coughlin, who attacked the New Deal policies. The
IRS launched over fifty investigations into critics finances, often without

(01:37:27):
strong evidence, to silence or discredit them. This was part
of broader efforts to target enemies like business leaders and
conservative groups. This all sound familiar. This all sound familiar,
And let's not forget the Enemy's list of Richard Nixon.

(01:37:49):
Nixon created that Emeny's enemies list from about twenty prominent critics,
including journalists, politicians and senators like George McGovern and Hubert Humphries,
and celebrities. He ordered the IRS to audit them aggressively
and pressured the DOJ to investigate or prosecute leakers and
opponents tied to Watergate. For instance, his age tried to

(01:38:12):
block tax exempt status for.

Speaker 2 (01:38:15):
The groups like the NAACP.

Speaker 5 (01:38:17):
These abuses led to Nixon's resignition, resignation, sorry, and amid
impeachment threats. Now, all of that being considered, all of
that being considered, I want people to remember that Trump
has never used the phrase political enemies. But no one

(01:38:40):
ever mentions any of those four men. It's just figured,
let's get to weather in traffic. Mark Christopher's at the
BPS traffic center.

Speaker 2 (01:38:47):
Hey, Mark Race on the radio is on wt I see.

Speaker 5 (01:38:53):
All right, we are back, folks. Don't forget go to
Resellerradio dot com. It is all ways beneficial to go
to recent on the Radio dot com so you can
check out the substacks if you have not become a subscriber.
Now I know a lot of you have, and a
lot of people I've never seen the number of people
going up in like I have to show you exactly
what the graph looks like of all the people who

(01:39:14):
are actually checking out my stuff. And thank you so much.
I want to thank Simsbury, Joe and Greg Dylon. Of course,
author and basketball coach Greg Dillon for the kind words.

Speaker 2 (01:39:26):
Thank you, guys.

Speaker 5 (01:39:27):
They always leave a comment reading that Susan also tender
Laurie does. They leave such great comments about the articles.

Speaker 2 (01:39:35):
Thank you.

Speaker 5 (01:39:35):
You encourage me to continue writing. I'm so glad that
you guys like it. I work really hard on them.
On Saturday night, you know, when the wife is finally
done dragging me across God's Green Earth doing her thing.
That at night, roughly about nine ten o'clock, I sit
in my office where I've already had the idea, and

(01:39:56):
then I sort of put the whole thing together and
then you guys see it on Sunday.

Speaker 2 (01:40:00):
So I appreciate that.

Speaker 5 (01:40:02):
But if you would like to go to recent radio
dot com, go to the substacks and section and become
a subscriber to my substacs so you can read the article.
And I try to keep it the thing about. I
like to keep it pithy, somewhat fun humorous.

Speaker 2 (01:40:17):
When it's serious.

Speaker 5 (01:40:18):
It's serious, but I try to keep it at least entertaining.
So I love the fact that people are checking it out.
It means the world to me that you find it interesting.
You write so much great stuff about it. It is
really really sad. Wendy is in the chat room, and
I guess that she was familiar with Hilario Baldwin, Alec

(01:40:40):
Baldwin's wife, and thought that she was Latina. And I
remember the controversy because I don't really follow that kind
of gossipy stuff, especially with somebody who had a cookbook out.
I don't consider those people celebrities. I know that, you
know the Today Show does. That's just not what I
consider a celebrity. But I know she had a cookbook out,

(01:41:01):
and I remember the controversy about her pretending to be
Hispanic and having this really thick Spanish accent. Matt Mark
for West Hartford send me the audio of her not
remembering how.

Speaker 2 (01:41:15):
To say the word cucumber, which is.

Speaker 5 (01:41:18):
But Wendy just looked up her background and find out
not only was she born in Boston, neither of her
parents have any Hispanic roots at all. Her name is
not Hilario, it is as I said, Hillary, which again
in my head, you know what I thought of This
is what I thought of Wendy when she chose to

(01:41:41):
make her English word or English name or American name
into a Spanish one, saying Hilario.

Speaker 2 (01:41:50):
Choose that.

Speaker 5 (01:41:51):
To me, that's like when I jokingly my wife when
we get around her family and I tell them jokingly
that I know Spanish too, and I just say words
in English with the letter O at the end.

Speaker 2 (01:42:02):
Of it, and I just go, excuse me, oh do
u O nowhere L bathroom?

Speaker 5 (01:42:06):
Oh is a oh poor forro That's what I thought
when she came up with the name Hilario. Just I'm
just gonna take the name Hillary. I'm gonna put I
A at the end of it. It's the jeep is
the laziest way to choose the Spanish name.

Speaker 2 (01:42:28):
It's just awful. Let's get another check.

Speaker 5 (01:42:33):
Weather in traffic with Marco christophero in the BPS traffic
c Hey, Mark re resink you very much.

Speaker 1 (01:42:43):
The na A CP calls him whoa. I don't think
I'm it's recee on the radio. Let's just say some
people are not fans news talk tendy w T.

Speaker 5 (01:42:55):
I see, yeah, people still upset about that whole Barack
Obama thing.

Speaker 2 (01:42:59):
And you know it's funny.

Speaker 5 (01:43:02):
I'd find it interesting about the whole Barack Obama thing
is that people can they keep talking about just like yeah,
he was the first black president and he was re elected,
and I'm just like, that's it. Anything else, I'd like
to see anything else. I responded to one person by
saying he was black, what else? He was half white too,

(01:43:24):
so he couldn't even do that thing at on. I'm
just saying, even being black, he.

Speaker 2 (01:43:37):
Was half asked.

Speaker 5 (01:43:39):
I'm just saying, come on, maybe you just want me
to be mean, that's all you. Just stop looking yet
sometimes it's t ball out here. Just stop setting them up.
Just please, seriously knock it off. That's about all you got.
That's about all you got. Let's get to a I'm
you know what, I got a bone to pick with
Wall Street Joe Joe. Now to me, you said something

(01:44:02):
on yesterday's show, and I'm glad you called back, but
I've got a bone to pick with you.

Speaker 3 (01:44:07):
You conjury House. The Conjury House has been canceled.

Speaker 2 (01:44:10):
I don't care. Okay, you said something yesterday. That again.

Speaker 5 (01:44:14):
As soon as I got off the show, I'm going
through like as I usually dog over news if there's
anything that I missed, something that I might do on
the next day's show. And sure enough, I run by
an MSNBC piece and you'll never guess what the MSNBC
piece was on. It was related to what you said

(01:44:36):
yesterday on the show. Do you remember the question you asked?

Speaker 2 (01:44:40):
Do you did?

Speaker 5 (01:44:41):
You forget already let me tell you no, no, no,
I'm gonna refresh your memory. The question that you asked
was whether or not the peace deal would hold up
after Donald Trump left office, and I, yeah, I saw
that on MSNBC, and the first thing ran them mine
was I hope that Wall Street Joe didn't get that

(01:45:03):
question because it was being asked on MSNBC.

Speaker 2 (01:45:06):
You didn't.

Speaker 5 (01:45:06):
You didn't foresee that, right, You didn't see that before
you asked the question.

Speaker 3 (01:45:11):
I don't watch MSNB years ten years, looked.

Speaker 2 (01:45:16):
At it was first.

Speaker 5 (01:45:17):
I was so upset. I was just like, who the
hell I said? If Joe got that.

Speaker 2 (01:45:22):
From MSNBC, I would be so ticked off. But you
know what, I.

Speaker 3 (01:45:25):
Don't watch NBC, the MSNBC Financial that's a separate.

Speaker 2 (01:45:30):
Oh, the cn the CNBC, Yes, c NBC.

Speaker 5 (01:45:35):
Yes, c NBC is actually with the with the exception
of Andrew Ross Sorkin, I could do without him any
other day. But I like I like John Kiernan on
CNBC for obvious reasons. But but you would ask that
question yesterday about beyond Donald Trump, Uh, what could possibly
happen after the fact. I really do believe this, and

(01:45:58):
truth be told, it's got to be based upon the success.
And Donald Trump is looking at it this way. He
said it a little bit in his speech. You know what,
how could we possibly just continue war? As is that
be the status quo for the rest of the world.
No one is giving any sort of uh, giving any

(01:46:20):
space for someone to seek peace. It's all war or
nothing else. And the way he's looking at it is
is that why do we have to have so many
people die? Can't we have some people live and be
prosperous and live good lives? Like why can't that be
an option? And he's asking these folks, it's like, do
you always want to be living in turmoil where everybody

(01:46:40):
is at each other's throats? Why should we do that
when we can actually have some prosperity for not just
Jews and not even just for Saudi Arabia or Qatar.
Why can't that be for every Muslim nation so that
everybody can sort of use their you know, have their
best efforts use to live a prosper life. So that

(01:47:00):
we can take care of the people who matter to us.
Why not do that? And I think it's a fair
question to ask.

Speaker 29 (01:47:07):
Well, very late last night, I'm listening to Coast to
Coast like I most always do, and they had an
expert on what's going on with the Middle East in
this peace agreement. He said that the son of the
founder of Homage.

Speaker 3 (01:47:23):
He had a tape and he played it. There was
an interview with him, all I know a few years ago,
and they said, you can never make peace with Israel
long term. You can have a cease fire for ten
to fifteen years maximum, and you regroup and you attack
some more. Israel can never be recognized as a independent
country and all Jews must die. This is the son

(01:47:46):
of the founder of Amat.

Speaker 2 (01:47:47):
Yeah, I'm well, I'm well aware of him. I've seen him.

Speaker 5 (01:47:50):
I've got audio of him. He was on Doctor Phil
not too long ago. He is you know, this guy
has had a what do you call it? He has
got a bounty on his head that if he is
ever caught by Hamas, they will kill him. Even though
he is you know, he used to be one of
the UH I think it was second in command before
he decided to reject it.

Speaker 2 (01:48:10):
But I will tell you this, good.

Speaker 3 (01:48:12):
Good just considers what's going on now at temporary truth.
They're going to regroup and it's going to happen again.

Speaker 5 (01:48:20):
Okay, And I've let me just ask you this and
then I'll then then I'll respond. You think that there's
no likelihood that Arab countries or Arab nations will stop
funding them, and people like mak Moodjabbas are just pulling
the wool over Donald Trump's eyes and he's just gonna
play nice for a couple of years and then we'll

(01:48:41):
be back to the same old samo I.

Speaker 3 (01:48:44):
I generally feel that way. They gave him that plane
that was supposed to keep him on good standing with them,
for That'sqatar, that's.

Speaker 5 (01:48:51):
Not Hamas, that Makmoud Obas who was supposed to be
the Palestinian president, but he's really the AMAS president because
that is the political leadership of Gaza. But you don't
think that mak Mood Habbas is worth it we should
trust them at all?

Speaker 3 (01:49:07):
Well, No, they play both sides that section of the world.
They're into buying people up. They have all that oil
money and they just buy people off and buy their time.
It's like a seesaw.

Speaker 5 (01:49:19):
You do know, Okay, So Hamas and Hezbollah have no
real power. Everything that they get and they gain is
from I mean, they are proxies in the war pretty
much funded by Iran, right and some of Turkey.

Speaker 2 (01:49:34):
I might add. People don't mention that, but we know.

Speaker 5 (01:49:37):
But the bottom line is is that Hamas and Hezbelah
are an empty They're like the government, there were zero
some gain without those without those parenting company or those
parent factions. They have no money, they have no establishment,
they have no girth right right, But you know.

Speaker 3 (01:49:53):
Trump isn't gonna wait long for them to disarm and
surrender and go their separate ways. You're not gonna let
them just rea group. This is going to be all
played out within the next month or so. He's going
to give them a number of days to you know,
just go away, and they're not going to do that.

Speaker 5 (01:50:10):
Why did okay, hold on, Why why didn't Isis do?
Why didn't Isis stay?

Speaker 3 (01:50:16):
Isis he got rid of isis? You let the generals
do what they had to do, right.

Speaker 2 (01:50:20):
And you don't think that that's possible with Hamas?

Speaker 5 (01:50:22):
Like do you do you do you think Hamas and
hezbalah Or are far more deadly than what isis.

Speaker 3 (01:50:28):
Was well in that specific spot, yes.

Speaker 2 (01:50:33):
Just in that region, in that region, Yes.

Speaker 3 (01:50:36):
Yeah, they're already reneging on the dead bodies. They've only
returned four, maybe eight, and they say they can't get
the others, and that reneges on the whole deal. That's
going to turn into a big mess in the short run.
Watching the next week or so when no more than
eight bodies out of the twenty eight show up.

Speaker 5 (01:50:54):
I don't think that that okay. Well, I said this
about a week ago. In fact, it was last week
I said. I said that returning the dead bodies was
going to be arduous at best. Why because they're dead
bodies and they're probably scattered in plenty of places that
many people in Hamas, if they have been removed or
sort of been boxed out of certain areas, will not

(01:51:16):
even remember where those bodies are. So that's going to
be a much more difficult thing. You know, the people
who are alive, easy, got them all out. Dead bodies
are going to be something a little interesting as far
as that's going. I'm not going to call it out
by saying they gave back eight bodies, So now it
means they're not going to give up the rest.

Speaker 2 (01:51:33):
I think that's bogus.

Speaker 3 (01:51:35):
I do because no, I think they don't know, like
you said, where they are, or they already burned them
up into cinders.

Speaker 2 (01:51:42):
That's quite that right.

Speaker 5 (01:51:44):
I believe that there's a possibility that there is some
egg on some faces that say, how are we going
to break into people that we may have you know,
done something or desecrated. They're human, I mean their remains
in some way, and they're going to have to sort
of figure out how to maneuver that and distill, sort
of keep the.

Speaker 3 (01:52:02):
Piece hamas knew. Out of the twenty eight bodies, they
only have extra amount to give back. It might be eight,
it might be ten, but they know the difference is
never going to happen, and that's going to be a
big deal. Hey, reason I called.

Speaker 27 (01:52:15):
You for something far more important.

Speaker 3 (01:52:17):
That just broke than we're talking about.

Speaker 26 (01:52:19):
What's that?

Speaker 27 (01:52:21):
I came across the news and I told you this a.

Speaker 3 (01:52:24):
Couple of weeks ago, when they started blowing up those
Narcco ships leaving Venezuela. Well they blew up another one
earlier today leaving you know, Venezuela. Six people on board
were you know, killed with all the drugs. Mexico came
out with a statement on behalf of the cartel shortly
after that ship was blown up, and they gave a

(01:52:47):
list of bounties specifically to Chicago, but any city in
the United States, bounties ranging from two thousand dollars to
fifty thousand dollars at the top of the ice chain.
To come the end. They even have bounties around ten
thousand for the children of ice agents. Information stop seeing
the ice agents two thousand dollars per agent. Declared war

(01:53:10):
on ice and they've Warren Trump. They better back off
right now.

Speaker 2 (01:53:15):
Who's will you say? Mexico?

Speaker 5 (01:53:17):
Are we talking about Claudia Shinbaum? Are you talking about cartels?

Speaker 3 (01:53:22):
Well, if the cartels right out of Mexico, the message
came out of Mexico. They determined it came out of Mexico.
Shortly after that. I don't know about the sixth vote
they've blown up. Yes, but here's the thing. Mexico is
ruled by the cartels. Shine Blaum does what they say
or they'll execute her. And the war on I told

(01:53:42):
you the war on drugs is already spreading to all
our cities here in the United States, and it's going
to be a big mess here like there are in
Venezuela and Mexico. And Trump is not going to put
up with it. He's going to send in navy steel
type operations like Osama Bladen and there's going to be
execut sutents in Mexico.

Speaker 5 (01:54:02):
I don't think that's going to be the case. I
really really don't. And I know all about the bounties
coming in from the cartels.

Speaker 2 (01:54:12):
Let me just put it to you this way.

Speaker 5 (01:54:14):
There's a little bit of fugasey going on with the
cartels making public statements about putting bounties on ICE agents.

Speaker 2 (01:54:21):
But you know what, I'll talk.

Speaker 5 (01:54:22):
About that another time and I'll tell you why, because
I let me.

Speaker 2 (01:54:26):
Just put it to this way.

Speaker 5 (01:54:27):
I think there's a little bit of rub going on
with the cartels talking that talking.

Speaker 27 (01:54:32):
That about agent.

Speaker 3 (01:54:33):
Do you think an ICE agent or a family member
may be kidnapped in the near future?

Speaker 5 (01:54:38):
And I would put it to you this way, I don't,
you know, let me use it a phrase that the
kids use.

Speaker 2 (01:54:44):
Uh, the cartels don't want that smoke.

Speaker 5 (01:54:46):
And I think CNN and I have evidence, enough evidence
to support that there's no real threat coming out of Mexico.

Speaker 2 (01:54:53):
If someone actually puts a hit.

Speaker 5 (01:54:56):
Out on an ICE agent and someone actually act on it,
all hell will break loose. But it won't be in
the way that you think it will. It will definitely be.
It won't be shocking off, but it will definitely I
don't think that any of that holds any true weight.
But thank you, Joe, I appreciate you, big guy. Let's
take Max and Bristol real quick before we take a break.

(01:55:17):
How are you doing, sir, good?

Speaker 23 (01:55:19):
Good, my friend?

Speaker 3 (01:55:20):
Awesome. Hey so I only caught a piece of your
shirt today. Okay, but I'm a little disappointed in you,
my friend.

Speaker 20 (01:55:29):
Please, Yeah, you had a perfect lineup with the whole
Alec Baldwin.

Speaker 2 (01:55:36):
Saying I missed it? What did I miss?

Speaker 26 (01:55:41):
Her name is Hilaria?

Speaker 3 (01:55:43):
Yes? Right?

Speaker 15 (01:55:44):
Or claim you just should?

Speaker 24 (01:55:48):
You were laughing your butt off, it's hilarious.

Speaker 2 (01:55:51):
Well that's what I said. You missed that. I did
say it. I said that.

Speaker 5 (01:55:54):
I totally said that. I said immediately when I heard
she called herself Hilario. The only thing I thought of was,
how did this woman not know that it was like
like a syllable away from hilarious, Like I, how did
you miss that? It's such a horrible name to choose.
Now people in the chat room calling themselves wehn dia

(01:56:15):
And as I referred to Marco Christafaro INPs trappis, I
heard that part.

Speaker 27 (01:56:23):
Okay, I'm glad you did it.

Speaker 5 (01:56:26):
Oh yeah, there was no way I was gonna miss
that one. Yeah, yeah, thank you, thank you, Max.

Speaker 2 (01:56:33):
I appreciate that too. Yeah, it's so bad. It's just
so bad.

Speaker 5 (01:56:43):
By the way, check out the dash can video if
you haven't on Alec Baldwin explaining how he says that
the vehicle cut him off. Which is it? I mean,
it couldn't be further from the truth to say that
the truck cut him off off. The truck was traveling
for at least four seconds on the road and then

(01:57:06):
pulls in. As every if you own a home, if
you've ever been in a home, and the garbage man
comes by and they merge to the curb to grab
your you know, your trash cans. That's all that happened.
That's all that happened. And as he'd merged in a
one lane, we're not talking about a.

Speaker 2 (01:57:26):
Two lane road.

Speaker 5 (01:57:28):
If Alec Baldwin had to go around that vehicle, he
would have had to gone into oncoming traffic. He had
gone to the left, but instead he goes on to
the right and he crashes.

Speaker 2 (01:57:38):
That's exactly what happened. Roland.

Speaker 5 (01:57:40):
Did you want to say something? Oh no, No, that's
not Roland. That's okay. I know exactly what that is.

Speaker 2 (01:57:46):
That's what I figured. I was like, why is that?

Speaker 5 (01:57:48):
I'm hearing a microphone on in the background. That's probably
Bob Brown.

Speaker 2 (01:57:51):
Bob is that you? How are you? I'm good? We
never get to talk. So I'm gonna take this up
to I.

Speaker 17 (01:58:01):
Know people in Connecticut, well, they might be familiar with there.

Speaker 2 (01:58:03):
You're from Hollis Queens. I'm from Hollis Queens. I'm over
the border in New Hyde Park.

Speaker 10 (01:58:07):
I know.

Speaker 5 (01:58:07):
In the reason why I said that's what I said earlier,
I said New Hyde Park might as well be Queens
because I can still walk there.

Speaker 2 (01:58:13):
Yes, it's basically right on the border. Would you and
you were born and raised there in that area, though.

Speaker 5 (01:58:19):
I actually born in the Bronx first six months of
my life in the Bronx first six You do buy
my mask before we go to BPS. We're in the Bronx,
like exactly if you could, Like, we're near two train,
six trains.

Speaker 2 (01:58:29):
Probably not far from the zoo.

Speaker 5 (01:58:32):
Oh yeah, of course I know. Well absolutely, I used
to live in park Chester, d Yeah. Man, I'm a
Bronx Bronx kid too. But that's that's another story. All right,
Bob Brown is coming up with dues. Let's get into
the BPS driving center. Mark Christopher A. We just reminiscent
over here.

Speaker 1 (01:58:47):
Mark the hour. The bags are punch punch. It's Reese
on the radio on w T I see News Talk
ten eighty.

Speaker 2 (01:58:56):
That happened so darn fast.

Speaker 5 (01:58:58):
It's like I whether you were to expect that the
news comes so fast and all of a sudden, I'm
back on the air.

Speaker 2 (01:59:04):
Let's do the thing. It's Hollywood News.

Speaker 5 (01:59:15):
With your correspondents on the radio.

Speaker 2 (01:59:21):
All the glitz and all the glamor. It's Hollywood News.

Speaker 26 (01:59:27):
Now.

Speaker 2 (01:59:28):
I don't know about you, but you know, Roland doesn't care.

Speaker 5 (01:59:31):
And I only brought this up because he's not a
person who cares about this stuff. Roland, you don't care
how many sequels come out. If it's a movie you love,
you will go and see it.

Speaker 2 (01:59:40):
Is that true? No matter what.

Speaker 5 (01:59:42):
Yeah, see, he doesn't care. So these were probably movies
that he would go see. I don't know if you would,
but you may. But I've got two sequels and a
remake no one asked for. First up, another Jumanji is
being made. The two thousand and seventeen revamp of the
nineteen ninety five Robin Williams film is now on its

(02:00:04):
third installment. One of yours, Yes, sir, Yeah, definitely going
to go see him. Well, you'll have to wait until
December of twenty twenty six, so you got another year before.

Speaker 2 (02:00:14):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (02:00:15):
Now, I am not figuring out how these two got together.
Sigourney Weaver has just met with Disney executives.

Speaker 2 (02:00:24):
To do a sequel to another alien movie. Really, yeah,
that's what I said. I mean, when have these two
been the same.

Speaker 5 (02:00:33):
Yeah, So it turns out that, yeah, it's going to
be Sigourney Weaver working on another alien film. But apparently
it is executive produced or in some way related to
Disney Studios.

Speaker 2 (02:00:44):
I don't know, but apparently they're doing some of the production.

Speaker 5 (02:00:46):
It'll be probably one under one of their like subsidiary companies,
but Disney probably owned so many. But she just met
with them and apparently she just read the first fifty
pages of the new film. They haven't disclosed exactly what
her role is going to be, but it will be Ripley,
but they don't know exactly how much she will be
in the film, and maybe a guest appearance she might be,

(02:01:07):
you know, she won't be the lead though, but they
say that she is reading the script for a new
one and now for the film that no one asked for.
Are you a Sean Connery fan? I am, of course
so am.

Speaker 2 (02:01:20):
I I like Sean Connery.

Speaker 5 (02:01:22):
But one of the throwaway films he did, with the
exception of League of Extraordinary Generalman or whatever it's called,
he did a very cult film called.

Speaker 2 (02:01:34):
Highlander. You familiar? Oh yeah, yeah? There can only be one. Well,
apparently there is now two.

Speaker 5 (02:01:41):
Another Highlander film is being made, a remake Jeremy Irons.
Irons will take over Sean Connery's role, but the lead
actor will be.

Speaker 2 (02:01:51):
Man of Steel. It was a series. Man of Steel's
Henry Cavell will play the lead role.

Speaker 5 (02:01:57):
We've got Russell Crowe, Dave Bautista, the Karen Gillion.

Speaker 2 (02:02:01):
Of course of the Jumanchi fame.

Speaker 5 (02:02:04):
And him on Shung Zuo Young Zoo. You know, give
me the Blood Diamond. He's going to be in the
film as well. Let's get another check of the Whether
or traffic I think it is Bob Larson. I just
heard his say whether Mark Christopher's in a BPS traffic center.

Speaker 2 (02:02:18):
You had to have seen Highlander?

Speaker 26 (02:02:20):
Mark?

Speaker 3 (02:02:20):
Come on?

Speaker 28 (02:02:21):
No, no, no, no, no, no, sorry. I was doing
good with the John Candy movies.

Speaker 2 (02:02:27):
It's okay. I thought it was because it was in
the eighties. You might have.

Speaker 5 (02:02:30):
But then again, that's college years for you. So I
gotta go further back than that. I got to stay
in the seventies with you.

Speaker 26 (02:02:37):
I just I got I should Jaws, I start towering
in exactly? I got some of those movies.

Speaker 28 (02:02:42):
Yeah, did you I did see Mad Max in the eighties?

Speaker 26 (02:02:45):
You did?

Speaker 2 (02:02:46):
Really? Now you have to tell me.

Speaker 5 (02:02:48):
For a guy who doesn't go to the movies, why'd
you go see Mad Max?

Speaker 26 (02:02:52):
I think Mel Gibson was just yeah, he come back?

Speaker 4 (02:02:55):
He was?

Speaker 3 (02:02:55):
He was.

Speaker 2 (02:02:55):
Did you see me on Thunder?

Speaker 21 (02:02:57):
Though?

Speaker 26 (02:02:58):
Yes I did, as a matter of fact.

Speaker 3 (02:03:00):
How do you not? How do you not?

Speaker 2 (02:03:01):
I hated both of those films. I did they work?

Speaker 17 (02:03:05):
For?

Speaker 26 (02:03:06):
What else? Did they see the Ice a Purple Rain?

Speaker 2 (02:03:08):
Yeah, that's eighty two though, that's eighty four four. Oh,
that's right. The albums earlier, Yeah, you're right, eighty four. Yeah,
that's right.

Speaker 26 (02:03:16):
So I saw a couple of movies in the eighties.

Speaker 2 (02:03:18):
Yeah, yeah, very early, Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 1 (02:03:21):
It's race on the radio on news WT I see,
I see, all.

Speaker 2 (02:03:27):
Right, we're back. I'll get to the phone calls in
a second.

Speaker 5 (02:03:30):
Obamacare is going to be the conversation that many of
us have in the next week, and I think it
will dominate the headlines, primarily because it has been made
very evident that the Democrats are not going to get
back to the table until after the No Kings protests

(02:03:55):
two point zero. And there's been so much sort of
fervor taken out of this so far that many people
are already saying that, like they're already starting to sort
of key in, don't expect too much from this protest,
that it's lost a lot of its edge and a
lot of its teeth, And it's to be expected.

Speaker 2 (02:04:17):
It's always the case, because you should.

Speaker 5 (02:04:20):
Never plan stuff like this in advance, because you're giving
people an opportunity to counter it. And Donald Trump is
watching the left do what it does and then he
does something that completely like sabotages the whole thing.

Speaker 2 (02:04:35):
And that's what's happening.

Speaker 5 (02:04:37):
They know that they're polling numbers after the last no
Kings went nowhere.

Speaker 2 (02:04:43):
But if I might.

Speaker 5 (02:04:46):
Venture, I want to play this real quick, and it
was Mike Johnson talking about what the Democrats want forget
about Obamacare. That's a big deal as far as Obamacare
is concerned.

Speaker 2 (02:05:04):
And again, like I said, that debate's happening next.

Speaker 5 (02:05:06):
Week, you can damn well bet that is going to
be on the lips of every individual in the news media.
We have to hash it out. Obamacare is a bus
and it's about to go. It's about to be over.
Remember what Sonny host in Houston, Houston said.

Speaker 20 (02:05:21):
Everyone wants, you know, the subsidies to continue. They want
their Affordable Care Act to continue. And the reason I
think that Mike Johnson is not holding is not holding
session is because Donald Trump wants to screw up Obama's legacy.
This is all about Donald Trump being the small petty

(02:05:43):
man that he is and he doesn't want Obama to
have that legacy.

Speaker 2 (02:05:49):
Now now that they no longer have Roe V. Wade.
This is it now. Birthright citizenship is going to be
a big thing too. Can't wait for that.

Speaker 5 (02:05:58):
That's being heard by the Supreme Court in the coming months.

Speaker 2 (02:06:03):
And like I said, this, this is a big deal.

Speaker 5 (02:06:09):
But Mike Johnson did something today that I think is
quite crushing to Democrats. And it's not so much about
what he want, what they want for illegals, what they
want for others.

Speaker 2 (02:06:22):
Here's a list.

Speaker 30 (02:06:24):
It would also restore up to five billion dollars of
American taxpayer funds for wasteful spending for international projects. Here's
a couple of examples. This is in their legislation, their
counterproposal on the cr to keep the lights open.

Speaker 2 (02:06:38):
This is what they want to do.

Speaker 30 (02:06:39):
They want to spend twenty four point six million of
your hard earned dollars as a taxpayer for climate resilience
in Hunduras. They want to spend thirteen point four million
for civic engagement in Zimbabwe. They want to send three
point nine million for lgbtqiplus democracy grants and the Western Balkans.
They want to spend two point nine million of your

(02:07:01):
dollars for desert locust risk reduction in the Horn of
Africa and two million for quote organizing for Feminist Democratic
Principles in Africa.

Speaker 2 (02:07:14):
Now, how do you not.

Speaker 5 (02:07:17):
Listen to that and say, are these period people serious?

Speaker 3 (02:07:24):
Like?

Speaker 2 (02:07:25):
Is that what they are?

Speaker 5 (02:07:27):
And all I would ask is I would just ask
any one of them. And again, here's another great opportunity. WFSB,
here's another opportunity. WTNH, here's another opportunity. Fox sixty one,
here's another opportunity. You guys love to talk about it.
It was Ned Lamont who was on CNN today who said,
who said that Democrats need to hold the line with

(02:07:50):
this on it, with this stuff on it. Ned Lamont
today said Democrats need.

Speaker 2 (02:07:56):
To hold the line. Well, all of you.

Speaker 5 (02:07:58):
Journalists out there, you need to ask the question. This
is what they're holding the line for, Hu Chris Murphy,
this is what they need. This is what you're asking
folks to get out on the street on Saturday to
protest to make sure that they do that the Democrats
get all of this stuff.

Speaker 2 (02:08:19):
Let's do it again.

Speaker 30 (02:08:20):
It would also restore up to five billion dollars of
American taxpayer funds for wasteful spending for international projects. Here's
a couple of examples. This is in their legislation, their
Kuindter proposal on the see or to keep the lights open.
This is what they want to do.

Speaker 5 (02:08:36):
If anything, I would again, if I'm them, if I'm
a Democrat, I would do what comes natural.

Speaker 2 (02:08:41):
Lie.

Speaker 5 (02:08:44):
But to know that this stuff is in there, this
stuff is ridiculous. It is absolutely ridiculous that anybody put
this somewhere for people to read. But you notice that
no one in the mainstream media is asking about it,
because I would just simply say, hey, how can you
come on hawking. Jeffries was on a CNN the other day,
he was on MSNBC the day before that.

Speaker 2 (02:09:06):
No one has brought it up, and they all have
read it, they all.

Speaker 5 (02:09:09):
Know it's there, but you notice nobody brings it up
these ridiculous programs.

Speaker 2 (02:09:17):
And nobody asks.

Speaker 30 (02:09:18):
They want to spend twenty four point six million of
your hard earned dollars as a taxpayer for climate resilience
in Hunduras. They want to spend thirteen point four million
for civic engagement in Zimbabwe. They want to send three
point nine million for LGBTQI plus democracy grants and the
Western Balkans.

Speaker 5 (02:09:37):
You can't get a wit check. You may not be
getting your food stamps. You're worried about getting your social
security check?

Speaker 2 (02:09:48):
What is all that for climate change in Zimbabwe? Is
that really?

Speaker 3 (02:09:54):
What we're like?

Speaker 2 (02:09:55):
Really? Is that what No Kings is supposed to represent?
Who's going out there.

Speaker 5 (02:10:00):
I can't wait to see you get in front of
the cameras. I want to see you wave your no
fascism sign. I gotta see it.

Speaker 30 (02:10:08):
They want to spend two point nine million of your
dollars for desert locust risk reduction.

Speaker 2 (02:10:18):
Ned Lamont said, hold the line in the.

Speaker 30 (02:10:20):
Horn of Africa and two million for quote Organizing for
Feminist Democratic Principles in Africa.

Speaker 5 (02:10:31):
Feminist Democratic Principles in Africa.

Speaker 10 (02:10:37):
You can't get a wick check? Ah, how do you
not like?

Speaker 5 (02:10:48):
Seriously, you folks who are being asked to go out
there and protest on Saturday. The rest of us are
looking at you, those who listen to this program, and
I know a lot of you do. Just remember I
am sitting at home. I'm gonna be online and I'm
gonna watch every one of you, and I'm gonna watch
you and I'm gonna record you. And if you say

(02:11:09):
something to one of those reporters out there, and I
hope that.

Speaker 2 (02:11:12):
There's a reporter out there.

Speaker 5 (02:11:15):
It's unfortunate that I can't be there, But trust me,
if I was, I would go to every one of
you and I would ask you, do you mean to
tell me that some poor mother can't get a wig
check because we don't have feminism, no Horn of Africa
or some nonsense. Is that what you're out here making
sure that that woman can't feed her babies because you

(02:11:37):
want to spend millions of dollars for LGBTQ i A
in the Republic of Congo, whatever it was, I don't know.

Speaker 2 (02:11:44):
I can't stand it. That's all I want to do.

Speaker 5 (02:11:48):
I want you all to justify it. But like I
said earlier, none of these people have an original thought, none,
because if they did, they would know that this is ridiculous.
Every one of these ass by democrats is ridiculous. You
couldn't possibly be asking to do this to the American

(02:12:10):
people who you think are the most vulnerable for this
bull Come on, folks, just seriously, just shows its semblance
of serious and just be a serious person. They want

(02:12:32):
to support the gay gorillas in the Congo rainform, that's
a constituus. That's a constituency. Michael it's an untapped resource.

Speaker 3 (02:12:47):
It is.

Speaker 2 (02:12:48):
You don't know what you're talking about. Ship is in Coventry.
How are you, sir?

Speaker 3 (02:12:55):
Yeah?

Speaker 16 (02:12:56):
Are you joking about the gay gorillas?

Speaker 2 (02:12:58):
Why do you do how do you take anybody? Seriously?
How am I supposed to do that?

Speaker 16 (02:13:06):
You got me laughing, Professor Rees, all right, you know something.
I I think I have the solution for some of
the Democrats, like AOC, Kim, Jeffries and Chucky and we'll
throw We'll throw an al shaft him. I think this
is just my theory now, Reese. I think if they

(02:13:29):
decreased their level of thc intake, they might come back
to reality. I think I'm just I'm just saying.

Speaker 5 (02:13:39):
I think there's some legalization of weed that's really happening
inside the halls of Congress that I would love to see.

Speaker 16 (02:13:48):
I would love to see AOC and MTG in one
of those boxing matches or throwing Jazz and Crockett. I'll
take MTG anyway. Here's my question. Yes, my concern on
a serious note, with the release of most of the
houses excluding I guess twenty yeah, yeah, here's my concern.

(02:14:11):
You know we've already meaning I guess the United Nations
USA have been providing them with aid and food and
et cetera. My concern or my thought is this because
some odds that they don't care if they live or die. Okay,
they they released, thank God, the twenty living Israel's and

(02:14:36):
I think some Americans.

Speaker 3 (02:14:38):
Here's my thing.

Speaker 16 (02:14:39):
And I just thought about this the other night.

Speaker 3 (02:14:41):
I'll bet you and I hope.

Speaker 16 (02:14:43):
I'm wrong that in time that Amaz will rebuild, like
you know, they'll rebuild with Ireanne, They'll connect with and
they're gonna start this within years maybe less, and go
back to what they what do you think?

Speaker 5 (02:15:01):
You know a lot of people are concerned about that,
and you know what it is. I think people are
looking at this from w from this particular point of view.
You have a war that is waged for three thousand years,
and peace at this point seems impossible.

Speaker 2 (02:15:20):
You cannot trust it.

Speaker 5 (02:15:21):
No one spends three thousand years in a war and
then out of nowhere, abruptly it comes to an end
and everybody goes on their opposite sides and it's over.

Speaker 2 (02:15:31):
So I get it.

Speaker 5 (02:15:32):
It sort of like says, when will everyone finally like
when will they extinguish their bloodlust? If you will right
and cannot ever be achieved. Does it happen moderately or
can it? Because in this case it's hard to believe
that it can come to an abrupt stop. I agree
with you. I don't expect it to come to an abrupt,
abrupt start. However, I do think we need these next

(02:15:56):
three years that if these Arab countries do come to
the table, which, by the way, if I want to
say this real quick to you, and I got about
a minute and a half, I want you to consider
this in that question. One of the biggest problems I've
always had when people have asked me about this, was
what were the Arab country surrounding Israel and the Gaza
strip doing at the time when Gazins.

Speaker 2 (02:16:18):
Were always at war with Israelis.

Speaker 5 (02:16:20):
They allowed those people to live in poverty and to
live in what they call depression.

Speaker 2 (02:16:24):
They never ever made sure.

Speaker 5 (02:16:26):
That those people would only two point five million, some
of the richest Arab countries around never did a thing
to ensure their prosperity. They left them there to wallow
in misery and blame the Jews for it, when they
could have made their lives prosperous, could have gone in
there and given them education. Could have gone in there
and given them jobs and allowed them to flourish, but

(02:16:49):
they didn't.

Speaker 2 (02:16:49):
They kept them angry, which.

Speaker 5 (02:16:51):
I always equated to the black community here in the
United States and the Democrat Party. That was what they
were doing, keeping those people hostile. So now the Arab
countries have got Donald Trump. Donald Trump asked those Arab
countries to do the thing that I've been telling people
to do for the last thirty years, those Arab countries,
to make Gaza flourish, and to tell them that there

(02:17:12):
is no more war.

Speaker 2 (02:17:13):
It's over and if.

Speaker 5 (02:17:14):
There is going to be a war, that all of
that other nonsense ceases. They will never ever, I mean,
you just have to remove them. Egypt won't take them.
We know Jordan won't take him. And why because of
the same reasons that Israeli has been having the problems
with them, is because every time they come into those
countries they wreak havoc. Now, those Arab nations, if they're

(02:17:36):
footing the bill, they've got to tell them, you've got
to adhere, right, you can be prosperous.

Speaker 2 (02:17:42):
God.

Speaker 16 (02:17:43):
One last quick thing regarding Hamaz, a leopard never changes
as spots.

Speaker 5 (02:17:49):
I know and I look, listen, I am just as
I'm just as much of a skeptic as you are.
But I gotta be hopeful because I do believe that
this is a different avenue than has ever been taken before.

Speaker 2 (02:18:01):
But we'll see. Like I said, it's a it's a
it's a waiting game. At this point, let's.

Speaker 5 (02:18:05):
Get I gotta get to the BPS Traffic Center. Thanks, Chip,
We'll take your phone calls and we'll wrap this puppy
up in a short bit. Mark Christopher, He's in the
BPS Traffic.

Speaker 2 (02:18:14):
Center, him man, all right, thank you.

Speaker 1 (02:18:16):
The Odyssey app lets you jump back to the moments
you missed from wt 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 5 (02:18:27):
Ah, it's what had happened was brought to you by
the Odyssey App and of course reseller Radio dot com.
And then if you ever want to find out what
happened was, you gotta go to both both of those places.
Earlier in the show, we talked about Barack Obama's legacy.

(02:18:50):
Of course, we talked about what does Donald Trump, what's
Donald Trumps standing on the world stage today with so
many people who thought that he was a reckless individual.

Speaker 2 (02:19:00):
Where does he stand today? Was the question.

Speaker 5 (02:19:04):
We also talked about Obama's legacy where that is today
and is it pretty much paper thin at this point?

Speaker 2 (02:19:13):
And I think it's fair to say it was.

Speaker 5 (02:19:17):
And a lot of people can argue that, you know,
he was popular, that's great. I mean, if popularity is
the thing, hey, you go, boy, you know, knock it
out of the park. I think it's absolutely fantastic. But
I was bringing the point that Barack Obama is on
the world stage now, doing all of these interviews, He's
going on anybody's podcast that he could. He is in

(02:19:38):
the public eye, not because he wants to be president again,
is because he knows his legacy is at risk. And
there is a back and forth between he and Donald Trump.
If I can go so far as to say this,
and again, you can go to my sub stack and
look up the article I wrote about it. It was
always Trump versus Obama. It was, and it began with

(02:20:03):
the birth certificate. That was the starting point between the
both of them. And when Donald Trump said that he
had hoped Barack Obama would be a cheerleader for the country.
That rubbed Barack Obama the wrong way, But he failed
to realize that is what your job is as the

(02:20:25):
president of the United States, is that you were trying
to see what's best for the American people. They elected
you because you were there. They're putting themselves in your
hands as the president of the United States. Chris Rock
famously said, I see Barack Obama and Michelle Obama as.

Speaker 2 (02:20:39):
Mom and dad. You might remember that, and.

Speaker 5 (02:20:43):
That's what they are, that a mother and father of
the country. And that birth certificate thing really.

Speaker 2 (02:20:50):
Really bothered Barack Obama.

Speaker 5 (02:20:52):
That bothered him because everyone else who had tried to
get into Barack Obama's skin, everybody came to the defense
of They was really like they would jump out and
they would like, don't worry, Obama, I got this. So
if you criticized Barack Obama, everyone came to his aid.

Speaker 2 (02:21:13):
Don't worry. We got the small stuff. Barack.

Speaker 5 (02:21:16):
They protected him, they they isolated it, you know, kept
him protected in a bubble. But Donald Trump didn't care
no matter what they said about him. He kept coming
more and more to the point where Barack Obama was
forced to hold a press conference and to release his

(02:21:36):
long form pirth certificate.

Speaker 2 (02:21:40):
That made Obama mad.

Speaker 5 (02:21:44):
I'll tell you a little bit more about this because
you're a lot of people, a lot of you folks forgot.

Speaker 2 (02:21:48):
Will break that down. When we returned, bub Lar says,
God whether mar Christopher. He's in the BPS driving center.
Hey man, what's up? Everybody? You know who it is?

Speaker 5 (02:21:57):
You know it's on the radio, Frederick Douglass of the
twenty first century.

Speaker 1 (02:22:02):
It's w t i C News Talk ten eighty.

Speaker 5 (02:22:06):
Yeah, before I got cut off, Michael beat saying in
the chat room, Yeah, he definitely gets under his skin.
Yeah he does. Because you know, if you really think
about it. I always tell people go back and watch
that montage, or as we call it, a supercut here
at res on radio. Go watch the super cut of

(02:22:28):
all of the people who laughed at the possibility of
Donald Trump.

Speaker 2 (02:22:34):
Not only running but being a front runner.

Speaker 5 (02:22:40):
There's that famous video of a Culter on Real Time
with Bill Maher and Joy Reid was one of the panelists,
and Bill Maher asked and Culter who of the declared
Republicans will win the Republican nomination, and and Culter's says
of the declared Republicans Donald J. Trump, and the whole

(02:23:04):
audience laughs their head off, and look where we are now.
They thought it was a joke. Seth Myers famously said
at the White House Correspondence dinner, I think the joke
whins something like Donald Trump. I heard Donald Trump would
be running for president. I understood he would be running

(02:23:26):
as a Republican. I thought that he would be running
as a joke. Oh and the people laughed, ha ha
ha ha ha. And remember Barack Obama in mean tweets
on Jimmy Kimmel Live, famously reading a mean tweet by
Donald Trump that Barack Obama would go down as the
worst president in history, and Barack Obama having a drop

(02:23:50):
the Mike moment, said at least I'll go down as
a president in history, to which everybody rip roaringly laughed.
After the Access Hollywood tape, I think there were people
were saying that the possibility of Hillary Clinton becoming president
was ninety percent positive. It was a shoe in, and

(02:24:15):
for that woman to lose sent the entire world.

Speaker 2 (02:24:19):
I mean, it turned it upside down. I mean, there's
no other way to look at it.

Speaker 5 (02:24:24):
Everything that Barack Obama did, everything that Barack Obama was
protected from from the news media who had his back,
anyone who tried him. Donald Trump didn't care. He took
everybody who came his way. Every time they spoke up
about him, he said things you weren't supposed to say

(02:24:47):
in polite company.

Speaker 2 (02:24:49):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (02:24:49):
I think Barack Obama's a horrible president. I don't think
he accomplished anything. I think he's trash. And the people
just looked around, And I love the way they did it.
They all looked around.

Speaker 2 (02:24:59):
It was like, did he just say that?

Speaker 19 (02:25:03):
Did he?

Speaker 2 (02:25:04):
No, he did he You're gonna let him say that?

Speaker 5 (02:25:08):
And everyone rallied around Barack Obama and against Donald Trump,
and he just said.

Speaker 2 (02:25:15):
So what, which Again.

Speaker 5 (02:25:18):
This goes back to the charlemagnea God comment when he
said all that nonsense about people talking about what they
have the political will to do Donald Trump is proved
and all of it is dead because again, it is
about not caring. You have way too many people. I'm
still getting text messages from the same person who keeps
making it about caring about someone feeling slighted about someone

(02:25:46):
feeling is like, I'm offended. You can't say that. That's
not allowed. Who says and here's.

Speaker 2 (02:25:53):
The other thing. Just so you know, here's the other thing.

Speaker 5 (02:25:58):
The people who are saying that it isn't allowed think
that they are the arbiter of what is allowed. They've
anointed themselves. I was going back to Thomas Soul. They've
been anointed self anointed. I might add to say that
they get to deem what is acceptable.

Speaker 2 (02:26:17):
You can't say that.

Speaker 5 (02:26:20):
Transgender men are transgender women are men. You can't say that.
Yes I can, and I'll say it again. No, but
you can't say that or else or else. What what happens, Well,
then we'll get you fired. Come with it, Come with it.

(02:26:43):
It doesn't matter whether or not get fired. It doesn't matter. No,
I'm still going to say it. I'm going to say
it again and again and again. And why should you
be the person who gets to punish me? Why do
you get to be in charge? And why and why
is it acceptable for you to be in charge, for
you to be able to just exact any retribution against

(02:27:06):
me because.

Speaker 2 (02:27:06):
You don't like it? Why who made you?

Speaker 5 (02:27:12):
I mean, you guys get to be judge and jury
all the time.

Speaker 2 (02:27:16):
You just do.

Speaker 5 (02:27:17):
You get to tell everybody what they're allowed to say.
You get to tell everybody what they're allowed to think.
And if somebody turns around and looks at you and says, nope,
I don't care, so what And with confidence a lot
of people don't have enough confidence to do it. You
just have to look at these folks and just so no,
I'm not adhering to those rules. So that's the whole

(02:27:41):
thing deal with Barack Obama and Donald Trump. Donald Trump
didn't care. It's like, you're not gonna silence me.

Speaker 2 (02:27:46):
I'm Donald J. Trump. I built things. I'm a captain
of industry.

Speaker 5 (02:27:55):
I built myself from the millionaire club to the billionaire
club or whatever. I just start from the bottom or whatever.
But he made a name for himself. And I'm sorry, Look,
I'm gonna look at Donald Trump this way.

Speaker 2 (02:28:10):
Okay.

Speaker 5 (02:28:11):
He earned the right to say no, I'm not adhering.
He earned it. And here's what makes it better and leftist.
You need to understand it. You're never going to win
another real election until you do. Donald Trump did the
one thing that made it all possible. He didn't just

(02:28:31):
say I get to say this, he said you do too.
I'll give you you know what, I'll go one step further.
If you're willing to, because you won't. But you should
listen to at least three Donald Trump's speeches from any time.
You can go here in the twenty twenty four campaign,
you can go back to the twenty sixteen campaign.

Speaker 2 (02:28:52):
But go look at one of those Trump's speeches.

Speaker 5 (02:28:55):
And then do the same thing anyone of the stump
speeches by Baraco. And I want you to do a
word count on two words, just two. Do a word
count on who says out of the two men Barack
Obama versus Donald Trump on the words you and the

(02:29:17):
words and the word I. And tell me who says
what more spoiler alert, Donald Trump always says you, or
he says we.

Speaker 2 (02:29:34):
In a weird way.

Speaker 5 (02:29:35):
Donald Trump talks about things in a collective way. We
as Americans, us our That's the way he addresses it.

Speaker 2 (02:29:46):
Again.

Speaker 5 (02:29:47):
He gave everybody permission to say, no, I'm not gonna
do that anymore.

Speaker 2 (02:29:50):
We're not gonna take that nonsense anymore.

Speaker 5 (02:29:54):
We're the United States of America, and you are great people.
You folks out there do the hard work, you guys,
pulling your weight, doing the things that you're supposed to do,
trying to raise your family, trying to give them a
better life. We are building this country back up from
the doldrums of yesteryear. Barack Obama. I heard those speeches
because I listen to every one of them. I'd like,

(02:30:17):
I am, I'm going to I would like the only
time he ever said the word we, or at least
most of the time when he said we, he told
us that's.

Speaker 2 (02:30:29):
Not who we are. That's not who we are. He's
always chastising us.

Speaker 5 (02:30:36):
I love that comedian Jane Dave Smith who said that
every time you see Barack Obama at a stump speech
for some other candidate, he's always talking about how you're
a horrible person because you will not elect or support
the person that he's selecting.

Speaker 2 (02:30:51):
How horrible you are as an individual because you won't
it here.

Speaker 5 (02:30:56):
That's what now, the guys spent his entire career talking
about me, May and I. And then after he's gained
all of the wealth that a man can get, by
the way, Barack, how much is enough?

Speaker 2 (02:31:07):
Your word's not mine.

Speaker 5 (02:31:09):
After all of that, with all of the millions, with
all of the homes traveling all over the world with
Secret Service protection, America is still a horrible place. Huh,
even for you black guy with a funny name. Remember
those days. It's funny how Michelle Obama said, for the

(02:31:31):
first time of my adult life, I am proud of
my country. I wonder how she felt in twenty sixteen.
I guess it was the last time. I find it
odd that's going on, Fulton.

Speaker 2 (02:31:47):
How are you?

Speaker 23 (02:31:48):
What's up, buddy?

Speaker 24 (02:31:49):
I was wonder if we could dig down into the
real Britain thing a little bit with the girl.

Speaker 2 (02:31:53):
Yeah, what do you got?

Speaker 24 (02:31:54):
Did the murder actually happen in Farmington?

Speaker 2 (02:31:57):
Yes?

Speaker 5 (02:31:58):
And you know what someone did was in the chat room?
Who did say that that she died in Farmington? She
was found in New Britain at the abandoned home.

Speaker 24 (02:32:07):
I mean, everybody's on air. I mean, so that's like
saying a body style somewhere, and that's where the no, Like,
why is the mayor not said anything? Why does the
governor not said anything? I mean, I don't.

Speaker 5 (02:32:19):
Understand, Like, well, I would say no, I I totally
get what you're saying.

Speaker 2 (02:32:24):
But I will say this if I'm thinking about my.

Speaker 5 (02:32:28):
Community as a mayor of that community, Yes, the body
was left.

Speaker 2 (02:32:33):
In my town behind and I don't know if that's
been specified.

Speaker 5 (02:32:38):
If somebody does know in the chat room or anywhere else,
let me know. I don't know if it's been specified
how long the body was at that abandoned home. But
if I'm the mayor of New Britain and that's where
the investigation, Sorry.

Speaker 2 (02:32:53):
I didn't hear your question.

Speaker 24 (02:32:55):
I was gonna say so, So it's an abandoned like
burned out filming right like a chunk.

Speaker 5 (02:33:00):
It looked like a home, but it very well could
have been an apartment. But yes, it was burnt out,
but it was found in in New Britain. But my question,
my statement is as far as it goes to Aaron Stewart,
is is to say, Okay, this was found in my
town and this just lagged.

Speaker 2 (02:33:16):
There for whatever time it may have been.

Speaker 5 (02:33:19):
But if I'm going to be holding a press conference
because the body's found in my town, I know exactly
what I'm going to say. Because we don't know the
details of of of setting the you know, circumstanceship.

Speaker 24 (02:33:31):
I agree with that. I would have I would have said,
listen to the Britain police are only securing the scene
for Farmington, right, Farmington mayor or whatever, and that's what
no no hold.

Speaker 5 (02:33:41):
On There's there's something else Fulton that actually that runs
absolute counter to your point. Is that, you know, Mark
and West Hartford has been trying to find out where
in Farmington she may have died or she indeed was killed.

Speaker 2 (02:33:57):
The question is is.

Speaker 5 (02:33:58):
Nobody seems to know where that is, or least they're
not making that information public, because you're right, the Farmington
mayor should say something about it, should say something about
it if it happened in his town, But they're not
seeming to be.

Speaker 2 (02:34:10):
They're not disclosing where that was.

Speaker 24 (02:34:12):
Like no one's saying like where she was a registered student,
like she was in eighth grade, like teachers didn't miss
her cousin.

Speaker 2 (02:34:18):
You know, that's the again.

Speaker 5 (02:34:20):
Also what I said earlier, the thing that drove me
nuts was that today w FSB posts on their own
feed that the that the the courtroom was packed with
a Jacqueline's uh Josephine, I guess her name is, uh,
the mother with the mother's family inside the courtroom.

Speaker 24 (02:34:39):
They do to make everybody feel bad.

Speaker 5 (02:34:41):
But even that's the case, I'm just saying that if
you're the press and you're there and all of her
family members have shown up to this hearing right for
a mother charged with murder. If I'm exactly I'm going,
I'm every one of those people are gonna be questioned.
They come in, It's like, okay, are you a family
member this woman, this lady's been missing for a year.

Speaker 2 (02:35:02):
None of you folks.

Speaker 28 (02:35:03):
Notice daughter Christmas exactly exactly a birthday has passed.

Speaker 2 (02:35:10):
Nothing clearly like exactly no birthday, know nothing.

Speaker 5 (02:35:14):
None of you ever thought it suspicious when you saw
this family member exactly the school.

Speaker 24 (02:35:20):
And they were they were chained to like what there's
not a lot of the story coming out of it.

Speaker 5 (02:35:23):
But that's but see again, this is the laziness of
all of this. This is I'm going to take the
surface part of the story that a twelve year old
died and was found that a container, and then nobody's
gonna go beyond that. And when you look at it,
as any normal person goes, wait a minute, that's it.
That's all we're gonna get. No one's gonna go any
further into this, like what happened, how this this tragedy

(02:35:46):
actually was allowed to go in and none of the
family members are being held to some account to ask
where she was.

Speaker 23 (02:35:52):
For a year.

Speaker 2 (02:35:53):
Exactly, or they were acting normal exactly.

Speaker 26 (02:35:57):
That's arrangement right there, exactly.

Speaker 3 (02:35:59):
It.

Speaker 2 (02:36:00):
Yeah, it doesn't make any sense. Fulton, thank you buddy.
All right, you got again.

Speaker 5 (02:36:06):
Like I said, none of it makes sense, and somebody
should have just said, just one person.

Speaker 2 (02:36:11):
I know, it's gotten to the.

Speaker 5 (02:36:12):
Point where, you know, the news studios don't have reporters
as much as they used to, and they only send
cameras out and then they bring back the b roll
and then a reporter. But for the love of Pete Man,
something like this, not one person is a bit curious,
like an ounce of curiosity coming all of these people

(02:36:34):
coming out.

Speaker 2 (02:36:34):
It's just again, it boggles the mind. It just does.
I couldn't. I don't even know what to tell you.

Speaker 5 (02:36:41):
Anyway, all right, we gotta get up out of here,
and we got the rest of the week coming. I
cannot wait until I get on the road and get
to Connecticut.

Speaker 2 (02:36:50):
It's coming up really, really soon.

Speaker 5 (02:36:52):
So we'll give you updates on that and we'll tell
you when we're in town. We'll tell you where we're
gonna be and what we're gonna be doing. I don't
have any updates for tomorrow show. Uh, but as usual.
It'll be rip roaring as usual. Oh, I understand it.
There's a poll that says people aren't. Oh it's about
the Connecticut Sun. I can't remember what the headline is.

(02:37:12):
We'll get to it, all right. Uh let me say.
I know it's old and it's useless, but I've been
through my own birthday without even realizing it was my birthday.
I'm never gonna be that bad, never gonna be that bad.
As I always say, radio is free. So we thank
you for paying attention. Remember to keep JC in your
hearts and then your mind. Show Patrick love you have bevisu.

(02:37:33):
Remember that panic is not planning, So plan your work
and work.

Speaker 2 (02:37:36):
You're planning me. I'm reacing a radio.

Speaker 5 (02:37:37):
You have a good night. Pleasant tomorrow. Mark Christopher's getting
your home. He's in the BPS driving set of Good Night, Sir.

Speaker 28 (02:37:44):
Plan your work and work your playing UF. Only i'd
done that when I was twenty two. I'd probably be
a CEO of a company. But I didn't know you
back then.

Speaker 2 (02:37:53):
I would at least be a janitor at that company.

Speaker 28 (02:37:56):
There was a little bit of that going on rolling. Yeah,
there was some distractions along the way. Guys, have a
great night. If you're west Ben eighty four, you're tied
up approaching the bulk, the bridge into.

Speaker 31 (02:38:06):
The top, Sir Tomorrow's hump day.

Speaker 5 (02:38:17):
Yea quiet all right, everybody, Wendy, good night, Michael. I
thank you as always, thank you had a good time.
I will see you guys Manyana. Fred Ash asked, let
me read his comment real quick. He says, please ask
Robert Coole to reunite with his former lead singer James Taylor.

Speaker 2 (02:38:40):
It's time to mend fences and tour again with him.

Speaker 5 (02:38:43):
Also, ask him about his days performing at the Oakdale
in Connecticut if he can remember them. Yeah, you know,
j T. Let me tell you this, Fred, and I
will tell you this. Do you know my biggest problem
with Cooling the Gang is J J. T. Taylor error
because many people argue, and even Mark Christopher will attest

(02:39:06):
to this that that era they really went top forty
and they kind of really abandoned the funk, and a
lot of people had problems with that. You know, of course,
like Celebraed and you know, Ladies Night was still a
good record. Too Hot is another great record I remember
growing up to that. But yeah, you know what I
will ask him about James Taylor. I hope that's not
off limits. He may lose it on me if I ask,

(02:39:28):
but I'll bring it up.

Speaker 3 (02:39:29):
Thank you. Fred.

Speaker 5 (02:39:30):
All right, folks, time to get up bout it here.
Always check out the podcast. Go to resundradio dot com
and also subscribe to the substack so you can get
the article every week on Sunday. And uh yeah, yeah,
you're helping out res on the radio by actually downloading
the podcast, so if you listen to the show, if

(02:39:52):
you missed it, you could do it there.

Speaker 2 (02:39:54):
All of that just by listening is.

Speaker 5 (02:39:56):
Actually created, it's actually monitored, monetize just by listening to it.
And of course it's free to listen to it, so
make sure you check it out. All right, I will
see you guys. Manyana be good

Speaker 2 (02:40:07):
To each other.
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