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October 21, 2025 157 mins
  •  What's It Gonna Be? Food Stamps Or Healthcare 
  • Using The Poor
  • I Don't Care What You're Complaining About
  • The Stupidest Thing I've Read Today:
    Karrine Jean Pierre Is Still Lying About Joe Biden
  • Blaming Homeschooling For Mimi's Death
  • Los Fidel, Mimi's Law & Charlie Kirk
  • Joan Coe Joins The Show
  • New Haven NAACP Hates Halloween..... and nooses.
  • What is Rozan Going To Wear?
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:23):
Hey, yeo, they think should calm down.

Speaker 2 (00:26):
The show is about to style Reese.

Speaker 3 (00:28):
On the radio.

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

Speaker 4 (00:31):
Turn it up aund that could dream come true?

Speaker 5 (00:34):
Plan on your bread.

Speaker 3 (00:36):
This is also this game up.

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.

Speaker 2 (00:45):
Right now on w t I S News Talk ten
eighty Oh write it out?

Speaker 6 (00:59):
M hm.

Speaker 2 (01:02):
How am we doing this Tuesday? It's the afternoon, second
half of the evening. You know what time it is.
Let's get it going Atriesa on the radio on WTIC
News Talk ten to eighty. How that again? Anyway, whatever, No, biggie,
We've got a lot of stuff to get into today.

(01:25):
I want to first start off by saying, what do
you do when your source is flawed? Information is key,
It is a commodity and important one. But what happens
when your source is flawed? We'll talk about that in
a little bit, because there there's a duality sometimes and

(01:53):
when you have to deal with that duality, you got
to deal with it full force, like right at it.
You gotta stare it right in the face and deal
with it. So I'll be doing that today with a
breaking story as it associates with Try This On for Size,
Los Fidel, Mimi's Law, and Charlie Kirk. They are all intertwined.

(02:19):
We'll get into that later on in the program. Also,
we have a guest today. I confirmed that none other
than Joan Coe is going to join the program today,
a feisty octagenarian Joan co is going to join the program.

(02:39):
We'll talk to her about how she stood up for
alviras I ie the story that we were covering here
immediately after it was released by Project Veritas about the
passing of Alvira's daughter, a young lady who took her
own life in New Jersey as she was attending college.
In Alvira's story and how she was trying to get

(03:02):
or has been working to get the word out there
about her daughter, about how her daughter and her family
was affected by transgenderism, about coaching and grooming that took
place in their daughter's life and people have ignored it
in mainstream media and alvirah trying to get the word
out to talk to people about that to be called

(03:23):
a bigot by elected officials. So we'll talk to Joan
Coe and what she did at the Simsbury Board of
selectmen a couple of days ago, and how she was
silent and her free speech was put in jeopardy. We'll
talk about that today and we'll have her here to
talk about that as well. Stupidest thing I read today

(03:46):
is about the book tour Gone Straight to Hell. We'll
get to that, and I'm sure we'll have some Hollywood news.
Oh in the New Haven NAACP will be introduced by
yours truly or introduced to yours truly reachs on the radio.
I don't think we've met New Haven n Double ACP,

(04:09):
but we'll get to know each other today during the show.
Apparently you're going after Halloween, which is weird, weird, just
weird considering it's New Haven. I didn't hear any stories
about the NAACP and New Haven talking about the crime.

(04:30):
But apparently Halloween is something we get a press release
on a lengthy let me grab it here. Is it lengthy?

Speaker 7 (04:37):
It's relatively lengthy there.

Speaker 2 (04:39):
It is pretty lengthy about Halloween decorations. I find that odd,
but anyway, we'll get to it. That's what we do.
I understand also understand that they also put out a
press release about illegal immigration and double ACP, so we'll
talk about all that and more a little more with
Tucker Sauls today your headlines as well. Let's get to

(05:05):
the opening, Monolock Real Simply, I have one question to
Connecticut Democrats because of two stories I saw this morning,
and I've got to say to them, Connecticut Democrats, Rosa
de Laura, who else? Jim Hines, who else? Chris Murphy,

(05:32):
Dick Blumenthal, Ned Lamont, You've got a choice. I'm trying
to figure out which is it going to be? What
are you going to choose? And I thought there was
only one way to find out. We want to call
this game show. Who's gonna starve? Or Who's going to

(05:56):
get health care? Will the Democrats choose to open up
the government so that Connecticut recipients of the SNAP program,
three hundred and sixty thousand of them, get their food assistance?

(06:20):
Or on November first, will they not be able to
feed their children because the Democrats want to get healthcare
for all. I'm just trying to figure it out.

Speaker 7 (06:38):
Which will it be?

Speaker 2 (06:40):
If you ask me, Democrats, I think I really do
think considering the No King's rally on Saturday, I think
deep down that you are going to choose healthcare over
the hungry mouths of babes in the state of Connecticut.

(07:02):
I think, though that's just my point of view. I
think that you are going to make those poor people starve.
Healthcare is the most important thing in the world, and
the healthcare of illegals is even more important to you.

Speaker 8 (07:16):
Isn't it.

Speaker 2 (07:17):
Isn't it because the only way people will get their
snap benefits. If it doesn't come out in the pockets
of Connecticut's coffers, You're gonna have to open the government
in order to do it again. But if you open
up the government, the rabble rousers on the left will
lose their minds because you caved and didn't get health

(07:41):
care for all. So people are gonna have to decide
I can get a band Aid or a Hostess Twinkie
one or the other.

Speaker 7 (07:49):
It's just gotta be one of the other.

Speaker 2 (07:50):
I don't know what are we talking about here. These
are two stories same day. One headline from the Connecticut
Insider Connecticut Dems not backing down amid shutdown quote. People
are going to get killed if we pass that budget.

(08:13):
That's a quote from Chris Murphy. People are going to
get killed if we pass that cr we have.

Speaker 7 (08:23):
Got to get that healthcare.

Speaker 2 (08:25):
If we don't get that healthcare, fifty thousand people are
going to die. That's what Bernie Sanders said on The
Daily Show. Yeah, fifty thousand people are going to die.
But there were three hundred and sixty thousand people in
the state of Connecticut who will not get their food
stamps headline Hartford current three hundred and sixty thousand Connecticut

(08:49):
residents get food stamps.

Speaker 7 (08:51):
Why the government shutdown could take that away? So what's it.

Speaker 4 (08:57):
Gonna be, boy, little bit of meat loaf there, what's
it gonna be?

Speaker 2 (09:08):
Because I mean, at the end of the day, I
don't think Connecticut residents are going to blame Republicans in
the all blue state of Connecticut.

Speaker 7 (09:18):
I don't think.

Speaker 9 (09:19):
So.

Speaker 7 (09:21):
Everybody knows.

Speaker 2 (09:22):
They all know, even the drive by media watchers, the
drive by news watchers know that it's Democrats who won't
sign on to the clean Sea are I'm sorry, the
public relations games you're not winning.

Speaker 7 (09:38):
It's literally split down the middle.

Speaker 2 (09:42):
And with everything that's going on, especially with the people
who are concerned about getting their food stamps, trust me
when I tell you it's everywhere. People who are concerned
about getting their food stamps. Some of them are blaming Trump,
but Trump is just gonna throw that right back at you.
And he's got better messaging than you do. Hey, all

(10:03):
they have to do is sign that clean cr Those
checks are coming immediately. We'll get them there yesterday. Or
or I can move some money around and I could
do for you what I did for the for the
military there and make sure you guys get your benefits.

(10:25):
You know, but we're gonna want something in return.

Speaker 6 (10:29):
You know.

Speaker 2 (10:30):
I can move some money around, and you know, how
about this, I'll go one step further. Let's move some
money around, make sure you get your benefits, and then
I ask you to watch the Democrats closely as they
go to court to stop us from funding SNAP, and

(10:53):
then you can ask whose fault is it. Then we
can say, hey, did Chris Murphy try to say that
it was illegal for us to move some money around
so that poor people can get their SNAP benefits?

Speaker 8 (11:11):
Hey?

Speaker 2 (11:12):
Was that Jim Heims saying that it was probably illegal
like he did when they were talking about on CBS
that we were going to move some money around so
the military would get paid. Jim Heims, you know you
said it. We all heard you. We all heard you.
Who were they going to blame?

Speaker 9 (11:31):
Then?

Speaker 2 (11:33):
But I'll go one step further. Let's see. Was it
just today we heard a story about how the Democrats
cannot and will not sign on to the clean cr

(11:59):
because they would be facing a political guillotine if they do.

Speaker 3 (12:06):
That?

Speaker 2 (12:07):
Was that you guys? Are you sure that it wasn't
you guys? That the American people have to suffer because
you want one point five trillion dollars to be added
on to a whole bunch of crazy boondoggles across the globe.

(12:30):
You want to fund transgender mosquitoes and Timbuktu, whatever it
is that you guys are spending that money on. Do
you really really think that the American people who just
want their Snap programs? And oh, by the way, did
you hear what the average Snap program is? Did you
hear what the average is in Connecticut? The amount of money?
Hold on, let me let me get that quote for

(12:51):
you real quick, because it's it's actually I thought it
was astonishing. Damn.

Speaker 7 (12:56):
They are really really disrespecting to people in Connecticut.

Speaker 2 (13:00):
And the reason why I say this, listen closely because
I'm gonna throw the contrast at you. This is what
the headline, but this one one of the quotes say
in the Hartford Current article, the food shutdown would have
an impact on grocery stores that could lose an estimated
five to ten percent of their business. As nearly ten

(13:21):
percent of all state residents currently receive food stamps. Benefits
vary based on the size of a family, but the
average monthly benefit per person is about one hundred and
ninety three dollars, or around fifty dollars a week. Contrast
that Mayor Elker, Contrast that Mayor Arounin contrast that Rosa Deloro,

(13:53):
Jim Hines and all of you screaming and hollering about
how we need to make sure we protect the illegals
in here. How much money did they get on their EBTs,
how much money did they receive, how much money was
doled out to them. You're holding out on an average
of one hundred and ninety three dollars and this appears

(14:16):
to be a quagmuier for you folks. Again, two conflicting articles.
What do we do? What do we save? Who do
we help? Now? I know that the average citizen in
Connecticut isn't paying any mind to that. The politically active

(14:38):
are going to be the politically active. They're gonna call
their congressmen or congresswoman and they're gonna scream in their
holler and they're gonna say what they do. But the
most vulnerable, what do they do? Who's working for them?
What I think is gonna happen is this, And it's
real simple because I know every one of these folks.
They are cookie cutter as they get. These guys are

(14:59):
made in a f especially if they're Democrats. They will
use the poor. Oh, they will use them. That's what
they're worth. It's not about pawns. It's about the usefulness
of poverty to blame the other folks. Look at these

(15:23):
poor people. We're trying to help them, but you won't
let us. Over and over again, they'll repeat that while
those folks continue to starve. I see them all hooking
up with Connecticut Food Share, saying that we're gonna need
two hundred thousand dollars to feed all of these folks, or.

Speaker 7 (15:47):
They can just open up the government.

Speaker 2 (15:52):
But they would rather agree but grab all of these
other tricks to make themselves appear. See, we care not
gonna leave you out high and dry. We'll make sure
that you get something. But can I tell you what
the really ugly part of all of this is? And

(16:12):
I bring it up every time, it's the really really
ugly root of all of this. Connecticut, with all of
its wealth, one of the richest states in the Union,
still has three hundred and sixty thousand people dependent on

(16:35):
government instead of dependent on themselves, with that number growing
over and over and over again in a predominantly blue state.
The poorest amongst them, the poorest amongst them who definitely

(16:55):
vote for them when they do.

Speaker 7 (16:59):
Manage to be the most dependent.

Speaker 2 (17:05):
It's going to be hilarious to watch Senator Chris Murphy
or Senator Dick Blumenthal to say to the all blue
residents of Connecticut that is the Republican's fault while they
sit with no power. What it'll be even laughable are
the people who will chucklehead and go yep, it's them Republicans,

(17:30):
like a bunch of mind numb robots. I think that's
going to change, but we'll see who will win, who
will lose, who will starve. I don't know, but I
don't think this lasts very long. I hate the fact

(17:51):
that it had to be run down to food stamps,
But I think it's getting there. Other programs will follow,
and I'm trying to figure out who they really think
of the cruel ones here.

Speaker 7 (18:07):
I want every poor person to.

Speaker 2 (18:09):
Recognize something, real, real simple. It was bad enough that
we tried to warn you earlier in the year that
they were choosing illegals over you, that they were fighting
for illegals over you.

Speaker 7 (18:25):
Let me ask the black community a simple question.

Speaker 2 (18:28):
Has Rosa de Laura ever fought for your family member
or your family member's child when they were arrested for
drug charges or any other misdemeanor or crimes when they
got put away. Was anybody concerned about your school age
children the way that Rosa Delora was concerned about illegals

(18:51):
who were at the optimal car wash at New Haven's
school age children? Do you ever hear anybody screaming and
hollering about police officers taking your family away? No, but
Rosa Delora is writing letters to Ice while you're fighting
and struggling these people who have no right to be here.

(19:13):
Elected members of Congress who don't even get their vote
allegedly are fighting really really hard for them, putting all
their sweat equity into them while you are concerned about
whether or not you'll get one hundred and ninety three
dollars on November first. Something to think about and we'll

(19:35):
let you. We'll be back. More news, more views than
you can shake a stick at. It's recent the radio
on WTIC News Talk ten eighty. You know one of
the things that I've never I've never understood. Maybe somebody
can explain it to me. You know a lot of
people use this term, and you could use it in

(19:56):
almost anything. You know, if this was fifty years ago,
you wouldn't have been allowed to do such and such,
And I hear that a lot. You know, this is
back in the day. You know, the thing that you
celebrate now you wouldn't be able to do back then.
And I'm trying to under I'm trying to understand it

(20:17):
because it's flawed into very obvious ways. It's flawed and
it makes no sense. The dumbest argument ever won. There's
a degree of clairvoyance there. But what's worse than that

(20:38):
is that it would also take time travel. And why
is it relevant what used to be fifty years ago?
I was not born in nineteen thirty five. I don't
have the luxury or the I don't know the unfortunate
unfortunate of living in that time whenever this perceived action

(21:02):
would have taken place on me. So it plays no role,
Like I need to looked at those things in context
to say if this were then, you wouldn't be able
to Well, those days are over. And if you think
that that is a justification for today, you're mistaken. Times change.

(21:24):
And to give you an example of this, and I'm
gonna talk about this with the NAACP thing in New Haven.
No kid today is thinking about what took place in
nineteen twenty five or eighteen twenty five. Now, how do

(21:45):
I know this? Has anybody ever seen the videos of
these kids, like in Times Square or any other place
across the country, when they're asking high school students or
college students basic stuff like when this war was, who
is the war of eighteen twelve against? Who fought in
the Civil War? What country is Hawaii? And have you

(22:08):
ever seen these How many of you have cringed watching
that going What makes you think that any of these
children or people today look at the world from the perspective.

Speaker 7 (22:21):
That most of these people do.

Speaker 2 (22:22):
They don't, they don't, They have absolutely no attachment to it,
but people keep trying to suggest that because they do,
and even they don't, you don't.

Speaker 7 (22:33):
Have any attachment to it. What I'm trying to say.

Speaker 2 (22:39):
Here is it's it's dumb, it's silly, and it's also
childish to always go back to what it would have
been like if that matters, not.

Speaker 7 (22:55):
Today is what counts.

Speaker 2 (22:57):
What can happen today, the possibility of today, and even
then we don't know.

Speaker 7 (23:01):
That's what this world is all about.

Speaker 2 (23:04):
And if anyone is that clairvoyant, just if you are seriously,
stop wasting my time about what would have happened in
the nineteen fifties. If you are that good and you
are that clairvoyant, I need Powerball and Mega Million's numbers
stat get on it. Other than that, I mean, unless,

(23:25):
I mean seriously, I wouldn't trust you with telling me
your birth date and getting it right or what time
of day you were born. I couldn't trust you with that.
So please stop trying to tell us what would have
been if this had happened. Nobody knows. It's a dumb hypothetical,
so just stay away from it. Stay away from it.

(23:48):
If you're trying to prove your point, prove your point
with the Simsbury Board of Selectman speech that she gave
and how it ended up going off the rails, and
ever one's talking about it in Connecticut, so we'll deal
with that as well. In the opening monologue, I was
talking about this problem between Democrats and their constituents, especially

(24:12):
here in Connecticut, and the breakdown is is this is
how they laid it out. They said. On one side's Democrats,
including Senator Chris Murphy, Richard Blumenthal, Representatives Rosa de Laurel,
Johanna Hayes, Jim Hines, and John Larsen, and Joe Courtney
forgot about him, are unified and blocking the budget without
concessions to re reverse earlier cuts, such as failure to

(24:36):
extend the Affordable Care Act subsidies new restrictions on Medicaid eligibility.
They argue the Republican plan would throw millions of health
coverage off of health coverage nationwide, Senator Murphy bluntly stating
that people are going to get killed if we pass
that budget, and they say on the other side, the

(24:58):
shutdowns ripple effects are Connecticut's most vulnerable the hardest through
a potential cutoff of snap food stamps, benefits, which support
about three hundred and sixty thousand residents. That's nearly ten
percent of the state's population, including over a third in
Hartford alone and significant shares in cities like Bridgeport and

(25:21):
New Haven. If the shutdown persists, federal funds for November's benefits,
averaging about a dollar one hundred and ninety three per
person monthly, won't replenish EBT cards starting on November first,
leaving families without grocery aid and grocers with broader economic fallout.
So I'm again I don't understand why they won't just

(25:47):
give in and have that other debate later. Because let's
think about this. The midterms are coming up in a year.
Just over it, and if the Republicans screw up the
ACA or health care for all, I mean, if they

(26:10):
end up on the wrong side of that debate. Politically,
it is something that Democrats can run on and they
have an entire year to do it. But other people
don't have to suffer. Nobody has to suffer, especially the

(26:30):
people who are dependent on government. Someone was talking about this. Gosh,
I wish I could remember who it was. It'll come
to me and I'll even find the audio to support.
It was saying that one of the things that the
Democrats love is that they have poor people right in

(26:56):
the palm of their hands by having them live live
in poverty and crime. And one of the arguments that
has been made about Donald Trump going into places like Memphis,
going into Portland, going into la going into Chicago, He's

(27:18):
already gone into DC. What they are fearful of is
if Donald Trump goes into those towns and he cleans
them up and it's safe for kids to be outside
in the inner city and what are considered Democrat strongholds.

Speaker 7 (27:33):
And they look at the contrast of bullets flying Saint Louis.

Speaker 2 (27:39):
Just the other day, young man named Dewan doing his homework.
Oh sorry, he's playing video games, just after he'd done
his homework. His mother told them he could go play
video games after he'd done his homework. He's sitting in
his home. Dewan is shot by a stray bullet in
Saint Louis. Now, imagine you are a young inner city kid.
Doesn't matter. Your race, an inner city kid, black, white, Hispanic,

(28:01):
Asian doesn't matter. And the Democrats have been telling you
over and over again. Crime is down, Crime is down,
and then Donald Trump comes in and says, crime isn't down.

Speaker 7 (28:13):
It's a cesspool, it's dangerous. People can't go outside.

Speaker 2 (28:15):
The kids are forced to sleep on the floor, They've
got to do their homework in the bathtub, hoping that
they don't get shot by a straight bullet. And then
Donald Trump comes in and he cleans the whole place up.
People are out in restaurants, Folks feel safe, kids are
out playing. And then everybody goes, wait a minute, you
mean to tell me that it could always it could
have been fixed all of this time, and the people
I've been voting for did nothing. And then this guy,

(28:37):
the Orange man bad comes in and cleans it up.
Then there'd be no excuse because those same people would say,
wait a minute, man, you told me that you could
fix this. And this guy comes in, he isn't even
a year and it's over. I've dealt with this for years.
I've lost two, three, four kids to the streets. This
guy comes in in a year and he cleans all

(28:59):
of this us up. Oh man, I'm done with you people.
And that's what they're afraid of. And that's something I've
been saying for a hell of a lot of time,
funding programs of hundreds of millions of dollars going into
some cities, crime prevention, gang prevention, all of that good stuff.

(29:25):
Everybody lining in their pockets. Gang activity grows, and no
one asked the question, Wait a minute, mate, we give
you three million dollars just to curb gun violence in
your community, and more people die. Yeah, we're gonna need
more money. You had three million dollars. We thought that
was going to be a good investment. We're gonna need five.

(29:46):
Can we can we get five? I promise you we
will work this time around, And they never do. The
objective is to keep the money flowing. It's not about
solving the problem. It never has been. And that's according
to this guy, and I tend to agree that's the
reason why they're fearful if.

Speaker 7 (30:07):
Donald Trump solves it against the wishes of the people.

Speaker 2 (30:11):
Who need Those poor people need those folks who are
living in violence. They need them to continue to live
that way so they can constantly go to them every
two years or every four years and say I'll help
leave it to me. I've got your back. And if

(30:31):
Donald Trump walks in there with those folks believing he's racist,
he's a bigot. He hates them and never care a
damn thing about them and goes in and makes their
lives safer. Talk about a wake up. Wait a minute,
I thought you said the orange guy hates me. They
came in here and he cleaned up the hood. Oh

(30:52):
wait a minute. I've been like too. That's all I
care about. So I don't know. Like I said, it's
gonna be a decision. What's it gonna be, folks, what's
gonna be Democrats, food stamps are healthcare? I think we
know the answer. We'll take a break. We've got headlines

(31:17):
coming up, and we've got weather in traffic as well.
When we return, it's res on the radio on WT
I see News Talk tennady, It's race on the radio
on News w T. I see I see.

Speaker 6 (31:29):
You know.

Speaker 2 (31:29):
I saw something that actually blew my mind. Do you
know that now State Senator Julie Kushner is ensnared in
this wishing death on the President of the United States,
along with uh doctor anwar Like the list of people

(31:52):
keeps growing. And I got a text message today which
I thought was funny because I don't maybe you didn't
hear me when I said it before. What was that. Yeah,
here it is. It says, I hope you're listening to
the news on your station. The man who was sentenced
to twenty one months but was pardoned by Trump has

(32:13):
now been arrested on Monday for applotting to publicly applotting
to kill Kim Jeffries. And what am I supposed to
say about that? Do you want? Do you want a
response for me? Do you want?

Speaker 7 (32:30):
Do you want my outrage?

Speaker 2 (32:32):
No? Maybe you missed the program yesterday, so what? But
I don't care. You can't get you. You can't get
a response from me, and I don't think that anybody
should response. E respond Ever, again, he got caught, he
got arrested. He'll do his time, but don't ask me

(32:54):
for any quotes. Connecticut Democrats stood by, stand by and why,
and I'm sure they'll stand by Julie Kushner. Don't ask
us for anything. Don't take it. We don't care. We've
got no words for any of this. We asked, we

(33:15):
were kind. I said this to you over and over
again yesterday's show. Condemn it, that's all.

Speaker 7 (33:24):
Just condemn it.

Speaker 2 (33:25):
It takes nothing to say, hey, man, I apologize. Hey,
you know what in the heat of the moment. I
thought it was funny. It apparently isn't take the l
I'm an elected official.

Speaker 7 (33:39):
I clearly run a.

Speaker 2 (33:40):
District that may have Trump supporters there and this may
have been offensive to them, And as that person who
represents those individuals, I should show some consideration for those
people and say not was in poor taste.

Speaker 7 (33:55):
Right, Just do that.

Speaker 2 (33:56):
No one's asking him to be sent to prison. No
one's asked him well.

Speaker 7 (34:00):
I know some people out there have been saying he
should lose his license.

Speaker 2 (34:03):
That may be a bridge too far, but I think
we should give the guy some grace. But all he
has to do is apologize. It's not like he actually
plotted against the president. But if people think that this
is a joke and they can't show any degree of
humility by just saying, yeah, you know what, this has

(34:25):
been getting a little out of hand. As a leader,
I should do better. My biggest problem is that the
rhetoric has gotten too bad or too high and too hot.
Let me lead by example. Instead, you guys said, nah,
we're good. Don't call me, And I mean that from

(34:45):
a bottom of my heart. Don't call me. I will
not be responding to the what about ism. I don't care,
and I truly don't. Don't ask me to, and I
stand on that. I stand firmly on that people have
an opportunity to do the right thing. And even Oakley

(35:06):
Doakley had the decency to say, yeah, you know what
that was? That probably wasn't wise. I'm sure he didn't
really mean it, but you know what, he should apologize
and that's it. Just apologize and we move on. Nope,
you doubled down. Cool, we're done. So what you should
be doing? And I think this is important? This is important,

(35:26):
this is important. You want a response for me? You first,
you want a response for me? How about calling Senator
an wak How about calling Senator Kirshner?

Speaker 7 (35:39):
How about calling them up and demanding their apologize and then.

Speaker 2 (35:43):
Get back at me. Hey man, we got them to apologize.
Will you condemn this? Absolutely? But you first, again, I
wouldn't ask you say it every day, would not ask
you to do something I wouldn't do myself. So instead
of saying that I condone the behavior of this individual

(36:06):
as it pertains to Hakim Jeffries, I say nothing, which
again is exactly what Kirshner and Anwar could have done.
In all of this, they could have protested, no kings.
They could have said democracy is you know, is at risk,
but beyond the paylists to wish death on a guy

(36:27):
and they know it. And Connecticut Democrats said, it's a joke.
It's a joke. What do you bent out of shape?
Republicans creating more partisanship than ever on it and then
having the audacity to you people to come over here
and say, Reese, do you hear about what this soul?

(36:50):
Did you hear about the school teacher who is at
the protest mocking the shooting death of Charlie Kirk, who
has now lost her job? I didn't are you posting
about that? In fact, you didn't text me about that either. Yeah, Reese,
did you see this? How awful of this woman she
teaches children? Not a word from you? Phuh So I

(37:14):
spent on the problem. I don't know what Democrats are
looking for. What is that? But if they're looking for
Republicans to give in to their hostage taking, they should think.
I don't know what that was. Okay, I fault, Sorry.

Speaker 7 (37:26):
That's okay, all right, Dave. Dave was ready to go.
He's like, get off the air.

Speaker 2 (37:33):
I think it's die for us to go anyway. Good
cue Dave. So that's my point. I'm not nope you first.
So until you start filling up my text messages with hey,
I condemn anybody who wished the death on Charlie Kirk
or wish the death on the president of the United States,
You'll get nothing from me. So please don't bore me
or bug me. Now, let's get to the newsroom with

(37:53):
Dave Meger and for John Silva, it's Reese on.

Speaker 1 (37:55):
The radio making sense of the news. Yeah, even when
it makes no sense at all at all. Now until
a w T I see news talked to eighty.

Speaker 2 (38:05):
All right, let's get to something Hella. It looks like
two of the eight people who were detained by ICE
agents at the Dixwell Avenue car wash location the Optimal
car Wash, have now been released. New Haven's congress congresswoman

(38:27):
has sent a letter to ICE demanding answers as to
why agents acted with such force. As I was saying earlier,
that letter was by Rosa de laure who was asking them,
you know, what was the big deal? Why why did
they have to come in there and scare all those folks,
which I thought was rather interesting that she wrote a
letter to Ice about people being separated from their children

(38:50):
when I've never seen a congress person ever say that
about regular old Americans being dragged away from their school
age children. It just didn't make any sense. Also in
New Haven, they've joined a third lawsuit against the Trump
administration on Monday, challenging new federal policy that withhold security

(39:11):
dollars from cities serving undocumented immigrants or operating equity programs.
The city is joining eight municipalities, including Chicago, Boston, New
York City, Baltimore, Denver, Minneapolis, St. Paul, and Minnesota's Ramsit County.
The City of Chicago at al Christy nomes filed in

(39:33):
the U. S. District Court for the Northern District of
Illinois Eastern Division. The cities and counties are collectively disputing
the legality of a new set of terms and conditions
that the Trump administration is placed on Department of Homeland
Security grants. The terms of the grant broadly prohibit city
from operating a diversity, equity and inclusion oriented program and

(39:54):
from in and from including undocumented immigrants on city services.
This is something that people fail to recognize. So if
you are a local government who is actively stopping ice
from engaging getting people off the street who don't belong

(40:14):
in that city. And then you want a Department of
Homeland Security funds when you are not contributing to Homeland Security.

Speaker 7 (40:26):
Like, I don't get it.

Speaker 2 (40:27):
I don't expect the lawsuit to go really far, and
I think it's just to plug up the works, if
you will, against the Trump administration. But I'm just looking
at this, you know, from my law and order degree
twelve years at that university. I'm just staying from that point, like,
why would you expect funding from the Department of Homeland Security?

(40:48):
Why would you believe that you deserve a grant when
you are thwarting the efforts of the Department of Homeland Security,
Which seems odd to me. But there we are also
the White House. You may have heard this rumor, but
the White House is actually struck back against some fake
news reporting from TMZ.

Speaker 7 (41:09):
Of all places that have alleged that.

Speaker 2 (41:11):
President Donald Trump is seriously considering commuting the prison sentence
of rap mogul Sean p D. D. Cooms, according to
TMZ on October twentieth, they said a high ranking White
House official claimed that Trump was facilitating and could sign
a commuting order sorry for combs fifty month sentence as

(41:35):
early as this week, but the White House rejected the
claims outright. TMZ reported according to a source, the President.

Speaker 7 (41:42):
Is facilitating on a commutation but anyway.

Speaker 2 (41:46):
White House spokesman said that TMZ story is entirely false
and accused the outlet of circumventing standard procedures in reporting,
so that may definitely not happen.

Speaker 7 (41:58):
It would be I'm telling you that, I don't.

Speaker 2 (42:00):
Even know what the Left would do if that would
actually take place. Let's go to the stupidest thing I
read today. Yes, you do.

Speaker 10 (42:14):
Activity could very well be the stupidest person on the
face of the earth.

Speaker 2 (42:22):
Corn Jean Pierre, You should not be surprised. This has
got to be the stupidest book tour I've ever seen
in my entire life. After everything that we endured four
years of Joe Biden cognitive decline and I'm not even
adding the original Sin Book by Jake Tapper and Alex

(42:44):
Bernstein holds no weight in the discussion of whether or
not Joe Biden was in cognitive decline, and any evidence
that would be presented by the book independent by Karin
John Pierre is to be dismissed, but I can't still
can't believe that she's out there peddling this. Here's two

(43:05):
examples from two different shows where she is repeating the
same nonsense as if she is on a script and
can't seem to get out of it.

Speaker 11 (43:15):
People said, why didn members of his inner circles speak
up about what many believe was the apparent decline of
Joe Biden? You said, you're a member of the inner
circle and you never saw the decline. And after that
I wrote, how do you even write Korean that you
were on the plane with him going to the debate
and you didn't see anything.

Speaker 2 (43:33):
Now, there's one thing to recognize when it comes to
Karine Jean Pierre is that she takes this very seriously,
this question so.

Speaker 12 (43:42):
Really I take I want everybody to know that I
take this question incredibly seriously.

Speaker 8 (43:48):
I do.

Speaker 2 (43:49):
It seemed like a dramatically different person, and at eighty
one years old, that's not entirely unexpected. You can imagine
why people got so worried. So a couple of things.

Speaker 12 (44:00):
I got to see Joe Biden almost every day, and
this is a question that I take very seriously, and
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (44:10):
What that's supposed to mean that she keeps taking it seriously,
like I'm not sure what that's like. So okay, you
take it seriously, So do we we take it seriously
that the president of the United States was incapacitated. What
are you not getting?

Speaker 7 (44:25):
She went on.

Speaker 12 (44:26):
I never, no one has ever said he has an age.
No one ever said it. We've always said, we're not
going to say, oh, he didn't age. He aged, and
he pokes fun at it. We always owned up and
with age comes what happens when you get older. I never,
no one has ever said he has an age. No
one ever said that. He would make jokes about it.
He would acknowledge it, and he would say, yes, I know.

(44:48):
I don't speak this as as well as I used to.
I don't walk as well as I used to. No
one is saying that he didn't age. I'm talking about
was he did he have the question that I was
getting the mental acuity?

Speaker 8 (45:00):
Was he able to govern?

Speaker 12 (45:02):
And the man that I saw nearly every day was something.

Speaker 2 (45:05):
You see The one Loan Clapper in the back clearly
the first person to buy the book, that Loan Clapper.

Speaker 12 (45:17):
The one who was engaging, understood policy, and was always
putting the American people first.

Speaker 7 (45:24):
Yes, he was always putting the American people first. Of
course he was.

Speaker 2 (45:29):
What a great individual he was. Like, I guess whatever
we saw we didn't see because Karin John Pierre was
right there. But she said something far worse.

Speaker 7 (45:39):
But she said far worse.

Speaker 2 (45:40):
And this is interesting. Her book is called Independent and
she's saying that we need an independent party. I think
Karin John Pierre has gone way left because, like I
told you, folks yesterday, I went to the No King's
rally and Karin Jean Pierre when she spoke to these outlets,

(46:02):
Boy did she sound like some of those folks there
were socialists.

Speaker 12 (46:06):
Listen closely, we should not what we're seeing and what
I hear from people not just me.

Speaker 8 (46:11):
They feel as if the.

Speaker 12 (46:13):
Democratic Party is acting as it is normal times and
they are relinquishing their power.

Speaker 2 (46:19):
Will you create a new party? Isout You're well, I.

Speaker 12 (46:21):
Actually talk about this in the book and it's very nuanced.
I'm very much aligned with the values of the Democratic Party.

Speaker 2 (46:27):
So what a socialist and I understand.

Speaker 12 (46:29):
What it means to have a third party system and
how that can I talk about the history of third party.

Speaker 2 (46:34):
Candidates and they usually fail presidential.

Speaker 12 (46:37):
What I am saying is, I want to start a conversation,
and I feel like I am now a private citizen
and I have the ability to do that, and if
I could be from the outside pushing and saying, hey,
this two party system isn't working. There are millions of people,
not just me, millions of people who are part of
the Demo Independent Party who feel like they're not seen,

(46:57):
and younger people are becoming independence.

Speaker 2 (47:01):
Yeah. I don't think she knows what she's talking about
at all, But the Independent Party already exists, and independent
candidates already joined campaigns, they already start campaigns, they do
join presidential races, Bobby Kennedy, anybody. So I don't know
what Curin John Pierre is talking about. But did we ever?

(47:27):
Did we ever? But I really do believe that this
book tour is going to get worse and worse. I
think it's gonna take away I mean, thank goodness, Well
maybe not. It might be worse than Kamala Harris's book
tour because both of those things.

Speaker 7 (47:42):
Are train wrecks.

Speaker 2 (47:45):
I mean, they kind of represent the status quo and
it's sad that both of them are women of color
who are dragging the Democrat Party down with their books
to the point where they're showing up at events. Said,
people are shouting them down. People are, you know, curling

(48:06):
their eyes like what what is going on? It's actually
kind of sad. Frankie baby, what's going on? Sir?

Speaker 6 (48:14):
Well, to answer your question, I'll take the.

Speaker 2 (48:17):
You'll take what I'll take. You'll take the twinkie over
the healthcare, I don't think, not at all, sir.

Speaker 6 (48:29):
There's no way the sun pastoral number first, they're not them.

Speaker 2 (48:35):
Yeah, yeah, Well, the wik thing is kind of already
been handled because first Connecticut, well, Connecticut said that they
were gonna take they were gonna take care of it,
but then literally simultaneously, the Trump administration moved money around
to make sure that each state was funded, so they're
gonna get paid back whatever a Connecticut paid.

Speaker 7 (48:54):
But to write about the about the SNAP program, I.

Speaker 2 (48:57):
Don't think that you can't have both of those things happened.
The week situation and then the food stamp situation, because
the most vulnerable people, whether or not they vote or not,
it the optics look bad.

Speaker 7 (49:11):
And that's where I think that you're right.

Speaker 2 (49:13):
I mean it's a matter of what have we got
like a week left, just a little more.

Speaker 6 (49:17):
Than a week just morning, I think Saturdays, I don't.
There are two other things that I want to talk about.
One I know is you don't have to call my house.
We're getting killed. It's cap op taking. It's the biggest
Monday loss for twelve years.

Speaker 2 (49:33):
What wait, hold on, Frank, Frank, Frank, hold on because
for some reason you're breaking up. And I heard you
say part of it, but I want to make sure
I got it right, because if I can't hear and
I know they can't say it one more time.

Speaker 6 (49:43):
Today is having the biggest sell off for twelve years,
five dollars. It happens it cap So that means it's
a great opportitude, and so they should be mine still.
And the last thing I got this copy of this
last night. If you think the calm and I'm gonna

(50:03):
talk there is Nobody's daughter. And I was reading a
little bit this morning.

Speaker 2 (50:08):
Are you talking about the Are you talking about the
Virginia Guthrie book?

Speaker 13 (50:12):
Right?

Speaker 7 (50:14):
Yeah, Well, you.

Speaker 2 (50:14):
Know what, I know something about that book, and you
know what, I'm just gonna have to find I'm just
gonna have to play the audio. There's an interesting part
about that book that that people are kind of ignoring,
and I'm gonna get into that because I've been avoiding
playing it because people get mad at me. Whenever you
talk about this and they think that you're you know,
they immediately say, oh, you're trying to cover I'm like,
I have no interest in covering up for anyone. I
just want to get what the what the facts are.

(50:36):
And this guy did the reporting, not me. I'm just
doing what I do. But thank you, Frank. For some reason,
you're breaking up a lot, man, but thank you. Will
we come back the next half hour blaming homeschooling for
Mimi's death.

Speaker 7 (50:52):
That has got to be addressed.

Speaker 5 (50:55):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (50:55):
And it ties into this story with Los Fidel and
Charlie Kirk and just how much this has gone off
the rails in a week and it's a little bit
more than a week now, but it is. Jeff's gone
off the rails, and the Connecticut Sentinel did some reporting,

(51:15):
some very extensive reporting, and it's incredible. I've gone through it.
As you know, Lost Videl was on the show because
he had some inside information that was coming from family
members that he provided for us, and sure enough everything
he provided ended up in every bit of a reporting
from WTNH, the WFSB and everywhere else. But Los Fidel's

(51:38):
gotta let's just say, he's drawn the ire of some
fobes behind this Mimi's Law deal and that's got to
be addressed, So stand by for that. Also, Joan Coe
is going to join the program to talk about Elvira
said and the Simsbury Board of Selectors and that town

(52:00):
hall or that you know, city meeting or whatever it was,
and how that thing went off the rails. We'll talk
to her about all of that and as it attains
to tuck her Sauls and all of that as well.
The NAACP. That's an important thing to remember, the NAACP
of New Haven going after Halloween decorations, and it's not

(52:21):
just any Halloween decorations. It is Halloween decorations that have
been lauded and celebrated in Hamden. So we want to
talk about that. That's exactly where it was. If you
haven't heard the story, look it up. It's there. It's
been some minor reporting about it, but the NAACP released
a statement about it. I was going to call them

(52:43):
and get it on. But you know how these get
them on. You know how reluctant they are to come
on this program. So that won't happen. But we'll talk
about it nonetheless. Plus your phone calls at eight six
zero five two two WTI C eight six zero five
two two nine to eight, four to two. Also will
read some of the stuff in the chat room by

(53:04):
those who are opening about some of the subject matter
that's going on today. Somebody Jesse writes in the chat room,
by the way, what are the Kushner comments?

Speaker 7 (53:15):
So ms Kushner or Senator Kushner, what she did?

Speaker 2 (53:20):
It wasn't her comments is that she took a photograph
of individuals at the.

Speaker 7 (53:26):
No King's parade locally in the state.

Speaker 2 (53:29):
And in the photograph, one of the women pictured that
she intentionally took a picture of is holding a sign
that says eighty six forty seven. That is not a
mystery what it means. Everyone knows what it means. And
this again aligns itself with what Connecticut democrats have said,
and other Democrats have said that James Comy didn't mean

(53:52):
anything by it. You know, eighty six means get rid
of but not not in the waited Republicans are trying
to suggest it. You know, Plicans are pouncing on the
term eighty six thinking that it means so instead of.

Speaker 7 (54:04):
Just condemning it, now people are doubling down.

Speaker 2 (54:08):
And as a state senator posting that picture as did
doctor Anwar, Senator Anwar, it goes to exactly where Democrats
are in this debate, and that is, as long as
it's a joke in their view, the rest of us

(54:28):
can stop clutching our pearls. And this is how they joke.
This is how Democrats have fun. This is what they
chuckle about. Is about the death and the demise of

(54:50):
the President of the United States that they lost to
to a group of people, working class folks, African American
and Latinos who rejected them. And how they respond to
that is instead of getting serious and getting down to
the business of governing government, shut down anyone and actually

(55:14):
winning those folks back by actually proving that their ideas,
although they lost on them last.

Speaker 7 (55:20):
Time, they've thought about it.

Speaker 2 (55:24):
They've redirected who they are, moved some stuff around, maybe
some furniture, thought about working on the optics, maybe messaging
a little bit to those people that they lost men
in particular, some of the white folks that they also
ignored or maligned for the good what fourteen years and

(55:48):
said to them, here is what our plans are for
twenty twenty six are hell twenty twenty eight. They could
have done any of that. Instead they double down on cholesterol.
Do your job in eighty six forty seven. None of

(56:10):
the things that I just mentioned are important enough to
them to what they what they stand behind, what they
double down on them.

Speaker 7 (56:18):
If you really look.

Speaker 2 (56:19):
At it, they're doubling down on there's no violence in
those inner cities. Violence is down. Men can play in
women's sports. I don't see what the problem is. I
think we should leave it to municipalities to make a
decision on their own. I don't have an opinion. These

(56:42):
are the things that they double down on. It's just
a joke to talk about the death of the president.
Don't you get it? What are you not savvy enough
to understand a joke joking about death? People do it
all the time. And the worst part of it is

(57:04):
is that guys like Chris Murphy, who I know I'm
picking on in this regard, but remember what he said
immediately after days. In fact, he said that this White
House is going to use the death of Charlie Kirk
to squash dissent and free speech. And if we're to
understand what he means by that is joking about one's

(57:29):
murder or joking about one's death. That's what Donald Trump
is trying to put a stop to to kor He's
trying to He's trying to enforce de korro from elected
officials to behave like their constituents might be on the
other side of the aisle. When Chris Murphy is saying, Nope,

(57:52):
not us, as our Connecticut Democrats, God bless him. That's
the line in the sand for them. You're not going
to go after our joke. So double down, folks. We
hear you loud and clear. We'll take a break. We'll
be back. More news, more views, and weather and traffic
coming up soon. It's reach on the radios. Hey, did

(58:12):
you hear it's our birthday? One hundred years? Did you
happen to get us a present? Working on it? I'm
almost there, I'm your president. It's Resona Radio on WTI
see News Talk ten eighty. So it was last week.
I believe I get this link on well, at least

(58:33):
it just shows up on my feed, because I had
been covering the story of Mabe Torres, the young woman
that we've all come to know after her untimely death
by her parents, well you know, her mother, and her
mother's boyfriend and her aunt. We've learned so many details
about this death, this killing, this absolute injustice for this

(58:58):
twelve year old girl. And I get this thing on
my Facebook feed for this guy, and I notice he's
covering the story, and he's got these very elaborate stories
about things that are going on behind the scenes. So
I see that. I reach out to him, send him
a message online, and he gets back to me, and
I asked him immediately, Hey, can you come on real quick.

(59:21):
I need to talk to you about some of these
things that you're posting about, apparently coming from family members.
And I had corroborated a lot of it beforehand, but
I made it very clear, Look, these are speculative at best,
but I want to talk about some of those things
that he was learning or he was being told by
family members of Mimi or Carla, her mother, or the aunt,

(59:44):
or anyone else for that matter. And sure enough, the
stuff that the information he was gathering. In fact, we
didn't even post this, but someone at the police department
had leaked a portion of the notes that the detective
gathered at the New Britain Police Department about Mimi's death that,

(01:00:10):
according to the report, came from the aunt or the mother.

Speaker 7 (01:00:13):
We couldn't substantiate who it.

Speaker 2 (01:00:15):
Was, but in the report, and I have it here,
I am absolute proof of it, with a timestamp and everything.
That said. Two details that turned out to be factual,
and that was why I knew I could trust the soreds.
And it was that Mimi was tied with twist ties

(01:00:35):
with goodness, what are else darting ties called zip tize?

Speaker 5 (01:00:43):
Thank you?

Speaker 2 (01:00:44):
Why was the word escaping me? Zip ties? And that
she was made to sleep on wiwie pads that you
normally put down for the dog, And that there was
a photograph of it that we hed on to it
because we got it over the weekend. I sent it
over to Mark and West Hartford asked him to see

(01:01:06):
if he get authenticated, talk to a couple of people
that he knows, you know, he's the man with the plan.
But we said let's hold off, let's not post this yet.
Let's make sure that we know this before we post them.
We have to be responsible. Well, it didn't take twenty
four hours. The story was out by Sunday without us
even posting it. It was there, sure enough, those details

(01:01:26):
and the detective who communicated all of it corroborated, so
it's valid. So in continuing to talk to Los Fidel,
we found out that he wanted to get Mimi's law established,
and the details at that time were for me.

Speaker 7 (01:01:46):
Were very vague.

Speaker 2 (01:01:46):
I don't know what it's abo, how it's supposed to
protect them, but I was protecting.

Speaker 7 (01:01:50):
Other children like Mimi.

Speaker 2 (01:01:52):
But I didn't read any of the details, so it
wasn't forwarded to me, and from what Los Fidel it
made I guess available to me was that it hadn't
been well thought out yet ful. Sure enough, now we know,
and the story is now suggesting that there need to
be more guidelines on homeschooling as a result. Though now

(01:02:18):
again I'm going to start this by saying, I don't
think that Los Fidel is savvy enough to have thought
this out. I think he saw a need for something
and in a very half assed way, thought that the

(01:02:38):
homeschooling issue, which was what was already being painted as
a narrative he glombed onto.

Speaker 7 (01:02:44):
But I can't be certain.

Speaker 2 (01:02:45):
I'm just saying, because this wasn't thought out of, that's
the theme that's in the news. Media attached Mimi's law
to it. And when I heard this thing about Mimi's law,
and I heard about how people were associating it with
homeschooling because the mother had removed the child from the
school saying that she would homeschool them. For anybody to

(01:03:06):
suggest that that now puts homeschooling under the microscope, it
would be like putting a microscope on the bank because
bank robbers targeted it for targeted for money. It makes
no sense. Homeschooling was used as a rouge. That's it.

(01:03:29):
DCF is the problem here. That's it.

Speaker 7 (01:03:35):
DCF is the problem here.

Speaker 2 (01:03:38):
If DCF wasn't involved, and the school was the only
place that was involved, if the mother was on the
up and up, and she had been a standout parent
from beginning to end, and then out of nowhere, inexplicably
a twelve year old girl ends up mountainnourished and dead,

(01:04:00):
then you can.

Speaker 7 (01:04:00):
Blame anything you want to.

Speaker 2 (01:04:01):
You can speculate all over the place, but we know
where the ball was dropped, and this despicable display by
a lot of people who know better. I get the agenda,
I get the problem. I know deep down that the

(01:04:24):
school system has lost a lot of credibility, not just
in the state of Connecticut but all over the country,
that no one can trust the Board of Ed Educators,
the Teachers' union right now, everything about them is mud.
And parents can't take it anymore, and they're taking the

(01:04:48):
kids' education into their own hands because the school system
is failing them. And every year, no matter how much
money they throw at it, it gets worse, it gets worse,
it never gets better. And it's not.

Speaker 7 (01:05:02):
Even the parents who have kids who really want to learn.

Speaker 2 (01:05:04):
It's the fact that these parents have kids who want
to learn who can't because the attention goes to kids
who do not learn or have a hard time learning,
and their kids get left by the wayside. So instead
of complaining about it, instead of protesting, walking back and
forth in front of the school demanding more, they took
the bull by the horns and they self educated. They

(01:05:27):
said that said, baby, we're going home, Mommy and daddy
are going to teach you. And it won't be under
that funny business that's going on in the libraries either.
And what did the teachers union and the education system
do overall? They panicked, Holy crap, people are leaving us.

(01:05:51):
Holy crap, we've been found out due to the COVID virus.
What we're teaching our kids? Parents said, hell, no, we
won't go oh and then a story like this comes
on and then the mint start a rubbin. Yes, home
schooling will blame them. Think about that, folks, think about

(01:06:19):
the argument against homeschooling. In the two most recent cases,
one was a child who was never homeschooled, taken out
of school and died a month later. Yeah, out of
school in August, dead by September. No homeschooling, ever, replied.

(01:06:46):
The other case a thirty two year old male who
had to set fire to his home to be rescued.
And you, yahoos, went to homeschooling. That was your direction
in all of that. That where's the first place that
you went. And you didn't think any of us would notice?

(01:07:06):
Did you think that wish none of us would say
likes peculiar?

Speaker 7 (01:07:12):
You thought we'd go along and get along.

Speaker 2 (01:07:14):
Listen, let me say this to all the women out
there and all the parents out there who are homeschooling,
because I'm saying women, because mothers primarily do this. I
told you before, and if you missed it, then I'll
say it again. We got your back. Take it from
a high school dropout who always hated school, always, who

(01:07:37):
is an entire career. From the time I went to
school to the tenth grade, I had two conservative teachers,
just two.

Speaker 7 (01:07:49):
In the third grade.

Speaker 2 (01:07:51):
In my last year of high school, he was the
man who taught me literally literally taught me to think critically.
Those are the only people or I ever experienced. But
now you've got to take education into your own hands.
They're failing your kids, and we got your back here.

(01:08:12):
We've got your back here. As much as they try
to spin this in this direction where it's if your
homeschool your kids, we need to go through all of
these hopes.

Speaker 7 (01:08:25):
It's very easy for you to just take your kids
out of school. We've got to find a way to
stop that. Then we got to see if we can
control the curriculum. Then we got to see if we
can control the parents.

Speaker 14 (01:08:34):
Because if we don't have the kids, we've got nothing.

Speaker 2 (01:08:41):
You don't deserve anything. You had the kids for a
long time and you squandered it. Are kids that the
last than anything in the world. You have not earned
your right to educate American children anymore. And now that
there's an option, people are taking it. Now there's competition.

(01:09:05):
Deal take the l.

Speaker 5 (01:09:11):
Now.

Speaker 2 (01:09:11):
As far as the lost Fidel's situation is, Fidel's got
a past. Fidel's got a checker past. And maybe, and
I won't speak for him, maybe he thought he was
doing something good. Maybe he was. Maybe he was under

(01:09:34):
the impression that this would be an opportunity for him
to redeem himself. It could have been.

Speaker 7 (01:09:43):
Until he posted what he posted about Charlie.

Speaker 2 (01:09:45):
Kirk And I'm a man of my word and I
have integrity, and I'm sorry, buddy, that's unforgivable. In my book,
as I stated about Julie Kushner and doctor Saud and war,
you cannot mock the death of a man. You cannot

(01:10:07):
mock anybody's murder and telling people to f off for
calling them a B word in the process, while people
are mourning the unnecessary murder of a man, and you
mock that and belittle it and disrespect it. We can't
do that here. So I can't support you. I can't

(01:10:32):
and you're gonna have to find a way to redeem yourself.
So contact the folks over the Connecticut Sentinel, apologize, find
a way to redeem yourself. You can. I'm not gonna
sit here and judge you, but I'll definitely tell you
that Charlie Kirk thing that I saw in the Connecticut
Sentinel that won't fly here. You want to do something

(01:10:56):
good for Mimi, you can start there. Okay, That's all
I'll say in the matter. When we come back, we'll
get to a couple of your phone calls. We'll talk
about some other stuff as well. And no, don't forget.

Speaker 7 (01:11:09):
We got Joan Cole.

Speaker 2 (01:11:11):
She's joining the show to talk about Simsbury and what
happened to her there. So stand by, more news, more
views than you can shake a stick at. It's Reese
on the radio. It's on the radio. I see. Let
me get a real quick call, in real quick.

Speaker 7 (01:11:26):
Joe, two days in a row. What's going on with you?

Speaker 5 (01:11:31):
I'm looking forward to the Joon Coke call. That's a
ton twisterr jone Cone call. Yeah, Yeah, she's a lot
of fun. I saw her this summer. Last time I
saw her. I see her pretty regularly. She was driving
around town in her convertible.

Speaker 7 (01:11:46):
Old God bless her.

Speaker 5 (01:11:49):
People will enjoy her, and I'm very glad that she's
been fighting the good fight, not just just against politicians
in general that are not doing the right things, regardless
of party in this town. So I want to give
her some applause in advance. But I wanted to mention
something about homeschooling. So this is an example. I was

(01:12:13):
not able because I was away. Last I heard. I
think you were going to have someone from the CIAC
to talk about the windsor thing. So in the state
of Connecticut, you want to talk about. Something that I
think is pretty disgusting is that you're a parent and
you have a child who is extremely athletic, yet the

(01:12:34):
school that you're in is garbage or they're teaching all
kinds of stuff you don't want them to know. So
you make the decision as a parent that I'm going
to homeschool my child. And let's say that your child
not only is athletic, but is highly highly intelligent. Under
the CIAC rules in the state of Connecticut, your child

(01:12:56):
is not allowed to play sports for the local high
school in the town that you pay taxes in. I
find that absolutely disgusting. I could see if they wanted
to make sure that the child was academically qualified, but
they are basically trying to make sure that kids who
are athletic do not have an opportunity to play high

(01:13:18):
school sports in the state of Connecticut.

Speaker 7 (01:13:20):
So you mean that, Okay?

Speaker 2 (01:13:21):
So essage, So let's say I live in I live
in I don't know. I live in Bristol, Farmington, Okay, Farmington?
All right, So I live in Farmington, but I want
my kid to play athletics in another town or in
my own town, in your own town.

Speaker 5 (01:13:36):
Holy moly, Armington High School is a CIAC member school, Okay,
and you are your homeschool child cannot play. So let
me give people an example of where this has come in.
I'm going to give a name that I'm sure most
people will know exactly who they are. Tim Tebow.

Speaker 2 (01:13:54):
Oh wow. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:13:55):
Tebo in the state of Florida was outstanding high school
football player Heisman Trophy winner. Yep, he was homeschooled m hm,
and he was allowed to play football for his local
high school. But the state of Connecticut, in their communist ways,
if we can't control the child. The child is not

(01:14:16):
going to achieve what they might be capable of achieving.
That's incredibly I wanted to bring that up because you
were talking homeschool.

Speaker 2 (01:14:21):
Well you know what, you know, listen, we you know
we the executive director was on the show. We did
have him on. You may I think according to you,
I think you must have missed it. But I've got
his personal number. I'd love to talk to him about that,
because if that's something that they can address, they should.

Speaker 7 (01:14:37):
But that's a good point. Tim Tebow's hit.

Speaker 2 (01:14:40):
Not only was he homeschooled, he was homeschooled in like
the Philippines in many cases because they have a mission
out there. So I know he was in. I mean,
this guy's a world traveler, homeschooled. Uh, And I love
Timbo Tim Tebow, we have the same birthday. I'm a
big fan of Tibo, big fan of his. But yeah, wow,

(01:15:00):
now I need to ask about that failure.

Speaker 5 (01:15:03):
You know, I would not I understand if they were
to have a rule where it said they've got to
academically pass a certain test. I totally agree with that.
But in the case of someone who would pass that
test just because and let's say that the parents decided
that their child was being bullied. Yeah, and that was

(01:15:25):
the reason. And now their child is a tennis player
or a baseball player or whatever. Yeah, he played for the
local high school. That you're paying property taxes for criminal
to me.

Speaker 2 (01:15:36):
Yeah, I couldn't agree more. You know what, I'm going
to reach out to him today. That's such a good point.
They shouldn't allow that anywhere, because if they do it
in other places, they should do it here. Thank you, Joe,
I appreciate that.

Speaker 5 (01:15:46):
Thank you.

Speaker 7 (01:15:46):
You got it all right.

Speaker 2 (01:15:47):
Let's get out first, checerd weather in traffic and if
I checked, I think Scott Holman's got weather today.

Speaker 7 (01:15:52):
And Mark Christopher he's in the BPS traffic center.

Speaker 1 (01:15:54):
Hey, Mark is on the radio. Brind don't say we
didn't more than you on Newstalk tenad w T I see,
I see.

Speaker 2 (01:16:15):
And today's winner of a dozen vegels a month for
six months, courtesy between Rounds the Bagel Bakery and Sandwich
Cafe in South Windsor, Vernon and Manchester goes to Diane
s in Windsor. And if you would like an opportunity
to win, you gotta go to Rese on the radio
dot com. That's our E E S E on the
radio dot com. Enter as many times as you like.

(01:16:37):
We will send you an email telling you exactly what
to look for. You've gotta be certain that you're looking
where It explains it in the in the email where
to look. Make sure you look out for it. Don't
delete it thinking that it's spam. It'll probably be in
your spam folder when you get the alert after it's entered.
I've already I think like three people so far have

(01:16:58):
contacted me about not receiving an email. We're working on
trying to help those folks out, but you gotta be
very you know, cautious about exactly. You know, sometimes people
have a filter on there or feature on their emails
and get rid of spam like every so often. So
if you're if you have something like that, be mindful

(01:17:20):
that it's probably gonna end up in your spam folder.
When we come back, we're gonna speak to jo and
Co of SIMS Barry. We'll talk to her about what
took place at the Board of Selectmen, uh and break
that down for you from her mouth, and you know what,
I'll explain why Joan Co and Wendy from Newtown. Why

(01:17:43):
I'm featuring average folks in the neighborhood who become a
part of these news stories when we return. So stand
by for that. Because what we're trying to do here,
at least on RESU on a radio, is something I
think has never been done before in a less say
positive way. We'll talk about that. Let's get another check

(01:18:05):
of weather and traffic. We've got Scott Holman with weather
and Mark Christbury's in the Bats driving Center.

Speaker 7 (01:18:09):
Hey Mark, all right, thank you very much.

Speaker 15 (01:18:11):
Well, if you're heading on the eastbound side of eighty four,
you've got an accident in Farming ten eighty four east
between thirty seven and exit thirty nine, so you're gonna
see some delays there. Back to thirty seven behind that
Finneman Road stayed to the right, left lane blocked after
that slow traffic again as you move forty six is
in an avenue into the tunnel west pnin eighty four is
tied up approaching the both you bridge out to forty

(01:18:32):
four prospect doquit south Man ninety one delays in winter
thirty seven down to thirty six again, thirty three down
to thirty two am be more slow traffic twenty three
down to twenty two in the Route nine interchange north
of ninety one is losing some speed up by twenty
one and cromwell after that. A good ride into Hartford
to ninety one, thirty four looking good east of the
river to Eastbounds Okay, Glastonbury into Marlborough nine northbound slowing

(01:18:53):
Harvard Park to the Aragondy Bridge, eighty four westbound Waterbury
slows twenty five a up to the mixed Master southbound
on the Parkway. Looks for slow traffic down as you
move down from exit fifty down into the West Rock Tunnel.
Traffick and weather together on the eighth WTIC News Talk
ten eighty WTC right.

Speaker 16 (01:19:12):
This afternoon, abundoned sunshine, a nice day, high sixty seven,
lots of clouds, couple of showers tonight and then occasional
rain and drizzle later on, low fifty three, breezy Tomorrow,
a shower early on, then a mixture of clouds and
sunshine in the afternoon, high sixty four, clear tomorrow night
low forty four, then breezy, cool on Thursday.

Speaker 2 (01:19:33):
With some sun in a high fifty nine.

Speaker 16 (01:19:36):
Right now at sixty two o Marlborough, sixty seven in
Berlin and sixty eight in Hartford. This is Media Religions.
Scott Holman in the WTIC Weather Center.

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Speaker 2 (01:21:52):
Slash like it's race on the radio on news, change
to ten eighty ut. I see, I see, all right,
we're back. We're going to join what will be joined
by Joan Coe in a second. Because of yesterday's story.
We talked about a young man who is very active
in the community of Simsbury, and that is Tucker Sall's

(01:22:19):
and I got this breakdown Simsbury Democratic Town Committee. I
want to read this to you before we get to Joan.
On the line, he writes, why I love Simsbury. I
have lived in Tariffville since I was six years old.
I currently live in the duplex that my grandmother bought
as a young man and where my father grew up.
I went to Tarofville Elementary, Henry James Middle School and

(01:22:41):
Simsbury High School. When I left home for college and
subsequently traveled for work for the National Guard, I realized
just how special Simsbury is. This town is a community
that produces excellent Simsbury provides the safety, security, resources and
education necessary to allow people to thrive and achieve greatness.

(01:23:03):
It is no wonder that this is considered such a
desirable place to live, and it is equally unsurprising that
our population continues to grow. I sometimes struggle to articulate
what specifically makes Simsbury so great. It is our gorgeous farmland,
our thriving downtown, our schools are historic buildings. What I

(01:23:24):
have come to understand is that there is no one
aspect of Simsbury that defines it.

Speaker 7 (01:23:29):
What makes us special is that no.

Speaker 2 (01:23:32):
Matter what you want to do or who you want
to be, Simsbury has something or someone to help you succeed.
Tucker wrote, so imagine being called a bigot as you
are trying to talk about the suicide of your daughter

(01:23:56):
to a crowd, when the mother who's doing so is
very reclusive and very private, but wanted to speak up
for a child.

Speaker 7 (01:24:05):
Nobody had the nerve.

Speaker 2 (01:24:08):
Or the audacity to be compassionate to her, and this
young man called her a bigot for speaking up about
her daughter, something that she had skinned the game for.
But one person who did speak up for her, Elvira said,
is our guest, Joan Coe, who's on the line now, Hello, ma'am,

(01:24:29):
how are you?

Speaker 3 (01:24:31):
I am fine, thank you, and I appreciate what you're
doing because Simsbury needs to be told. Simsbury's wonderful place.
I've lived here for sixty years and my four children
grew up here.

Speaker 21 (01:24:43):
But somebody has to be able to speak their.

Speaker 3 (01:24:47):
Minds and observe what is going on and.

Speaker 21 (01:24:51):
Give their point of view. This is what I've been
doing for years. I look and see what's going on.

Speaker 3 (01:24:57):
I do my homework, I check and there are areas
of the government that is not serving the people, or
do they can't to serve the people. We have a
first electman, Wendy Us which I can't pronounce, believes in censorship.

Speaker 21 (01:25:14):
She believes she's a control stree.

Speaker 3 (01:25:16):
She gets unhinged and she can't speak et temporareously. She
has to have everything under control, including her stop watch,
which she spends more time looking at than anything else.

Speaker 2 (01:25:29):
Do you, Joan, I'm sorry to cut you off, because
I know you're prepared for this, but you know that
was one of your that was your contention in all
of this, was that she could not, especially if you're
listening to the person giving the speech, as Alvira was doing,
and if you've seen any of the any of the

(01:25:50):
speeches or at least the commentary that she's given on
this subject, knowing that what she's talking about, she's continuously
grieving about her daughter's dead a year. What she's experiencing
is an honest breakdown and pain of a mother's anguish.
And as you just described, it's like while she spoke,

(01:26:11):
more people were concerned about the time consumption than it
was about what she had to say.

Speaker 7 (01:26:15):
And that's where you took issue.

Speaker 21 (01:26:19):
Well, Lyra is a grieving mother.

Speaker 3 (01:26:22):
Her child committed suicide, and that was a horrible situation.
She had the ability to caring to share her grief.

Speaker 21 (01:26:36):
With the community, as if to say, I didn't.

Speaker 3 (01:26:40):
Get any help, my child didn't get any help. The
community has failed me, failed my daughter. Tell all of
us because it should not have happened. And she wants
to give people who have trans children or any other
person who have child with suicide to tell them that

(01:27:04):
we have to get more people involved. We have to
get some people who will at least help these people.
And you need help, you need people to go to,
you need support services.

Speaker 21 (01:27:23):
There should have been a whole.

Speaker 3 (01:27:24):
Bunch of people services professionals.

Speaker 21 (01:27:28):
Helping this woman.

Speaker 3 (01:27:29):
So we didn't get.

Speaker 21 (01:27:30):
To this end.

Speaker 3 (01:27:31):
This was a dead end, but nothing was done.

Speaker 2 (01:27:38):
No, I was just gonna say that A good point
about what you're making here and why are Red Tucker comments.
Why that's important is when this woman, who again an
immigrant to this country, has a daughter who is again
struggling with her own identity, has a pastor or reverend

(01:28:00):
whatever he was called, dcf on her, and she is
in essence left stranded. No one comes to her aid.
The only time anyone even recognizes what she's gone through
is after her daughter is long gone dead. It took
Project Ferratas out of state to bring local attention to it,

(01:28:20):
and even then no one came to her aid. No
one even thought to grieve with her or to either
show her some compassion. So when she comes out and
she decides to do the brave thing of bringing attention
to trans kids that are clearly in Simsbury suicidal ideation
that obviously is permeating within our young people. She brings
that to attention and again she gets shunned, which doesn't

(01:28:44):
make any sense.

Speaker 3 (01:28:46):
Well, you're absolutely right, and the problem is you have
to reach out to these people, and maybe people in
the community will try to reach out and try to
discuss it. Seem parents will, children who are trends or
have any other issues are afraid to talk out because

(01:29:07):
they're afraid to be stigmatized. They are not the ways
that are stigmatized. It's see, it's the whole system that's stigmatized.
They have built the system has failed, and what we
have to do is build a system that will help
these people, that will help everybody so other people don't

(01:29:28):
go and have end up with a child that has
they decide to commit suicide as.

Speaker 21 (01:29:34):
The only outlet that this person can do.

Speaker 3 (01:29:38):
Because that is a sad commentary on our community and
the people who are here.

Speaker 2 (01:29:44):
Yeah, that's because that's that's the that's the part that
really bothered me about Tucker Sauls in this regard. It's like, look,
even if you disagreed with Alvira's point of view, one,
she's someone who's experienced that. She's obviously bitter. Why wouldn't
she be. She feels as though that community killed her daughter, whether.

Speaker 7 (01:30:06):
Or not she's righteous in thinking so she does.

Speaker 2 (01:30:09):
If anybody had lost a child, whatever, you at least
give them a degree of grace as to who they
think is responsible for the death of their child. You
kind of give some latitude to that individual. Not that
they're right or they're wrong, but you give some latitude.
The one thing you don't do is strike out on
them while they're grieving and they come out there and
they're in a very vulnerable place. And to a person

(01:30:30):
who is in essence saying in his own bio he's
a sensitive, caring and loving individual, showed none of it there.
But I want to Joan, if I can focus on
you for a little bit. From what I gather, you
have been active in your community for quite some time.
Give me a little bit of background on you. I
understand that you used to be a select person as

(01:30:52):
well as do I have that right or wrong?

Speaker 6 (01:30:55):
No, I.

Speaker 21 (01:30:57):
As a school teacher.

Speaker 7 (01:30:59):
Oh you're a school teach? Is that it really not?

Speaker 21 (01:31:03):
In this community?

Speaker 3 (01:31:04):
I was in New York City at the time I
was and then I had my children that I just
was teaching tennis, teaching platform Tennis Wow to the community,
and I also did substitute teaching in the community okay,
and in raising my children.

Speaker 21 (01:31:23):
I was also.

Speaker 3 (01:31:25):
As a assistant coach for my son's acker team. I
participated in this as a tennis teacher and somebody who
has the ability to teach other people.

Speaker 21 (01:31:41):
I decided to go.

Speaker 3 (01:31:43):
To favor and get a uh, get the children who
were disabled a gaze of a program that they could
participate in. I taught to these children.

Speaker 21 (01:31:57):
How to play tennis because I felt that every should
be inclusive and this is what we need in our community.
We need people to be exclusive.

Speaker 3 (01:32:06):
Not to shove them away. The attack dog for Wendy
because he feels that she is having all of this
bad press and she won't get re elected, and he
is going to an extreme in order to attack everybody
in order to bring some light on Wendy, and it's

(01:32:28):
not working. Wendy's probably not going to get re elected
and because of her inability to perform her duties in
an appropriate manner. And when you're head of the Democratic Party,
you have to go and attack anybody who is not

(01:32:49):
going to give good reports on your candidate, and that's
what this is all about.

Speaker 2 (01:32:57):
Well, Joan, I think that listen, everything you had got
the attention of everyone. Uh, you are clearly I can
understand now with your background why you were so darn
active today. You understand the idea of slowing down is
not an option.

Speaker 7 (01:33:13):
So I love every bit of that, the fact that
you are. You know, you're so active.

Speaker 2 (01:33:17):
Joe and Simsbury called a little while ago and said
that he saw you not not too long ago driving
in your convertible, just to show how active and just
how energetic you are. We love you. Everybody who sent
me text messages and emails celebrates you, your existence.

Speaker 7 (01:33:33):
And fact they told me that as well.

Speaker 2 (01:33:38):
They all celebrate you, They all love you. They couldn't
wait to get you here on the program. I'm glad
you're here and we'll be talking, okay.

Speaker 3 (01:33:46):
I thank you very much, and I hope we made
it and like public, well, don't worry something of this
horrible situation created.

Speaker 2 (01:33:56):
I'm telling you, Joan, not only we're gonna get together,
but you're going to teach me how to play pickleball,
because my wife's been dying to get wealthy.

Speaker 7 (01:34:05):
Thank you, Joan, my pleasure, have a good one.

Speaker 2 (01:34:08):
Okay, you got it, Joan co everybody and I got Look,
I'm giving her ound of applause. I want to be
that active in eighty eight. She's a fantastic woman. I
didn't even meet her, but everyone can't stop talking about her,
can't stop raving about her. And she's an unsung hero

(01:34:34):
in the sense of everybody knowing about her. I know
the people who do, but I wanted to make sure
that she got her props. I was saying before the break,
before we brought Joan on, that I wanted to make
this sort of a proclamation, if you will on the show,
you guys are the story, whether you believe it or not.

(01:34:56):
And someone asked me. I think it was Mattio who
asked me, if I ever got syndicated, would I ever
leave and go to some big city. And I said
this before and I'll say it again. I'll never leave
Connecticut once I get there. Literally, wild horses couldn't drag
me away. I'm apprehensive is all get out starting my
life there, but it's where my career began and I

(01:35:18):
really wanted to be there. But if there's anything that
I recognized about this show thus far in the three
years that I have been here, is that as much
as it it is my show to host, you guys
are the story. So people like Joan, people like Wendy
who have been on this program just average everyday people

(01:35:42):
who have come on this show and been a guest
on this show to talk about the problems and talking
about the issues going on with their elected officials. I
can have those folks on all day, every day. But
the most important part of all of this is you.
So it's not about making you a celebrity or making
you a household name. It's letting you know that you

(01:36:03):
have a platform, and if it's important enough for this show,
it's important enough for everybody else to know. So you, guys,
I appreciate. I get stories all the time. I get
a lot of people running for office who contact me
all the time. But you guys, you're the life's blood
of what we do here on recent Radio on WTIIC,

(01:36:27):
so that I'll always be appreciative of.

Speaker 7 (01:36:29):
And I owe it to you that you are not ignored.

Speaker 2 (01:36:35):
Sometimes this thing or this medium can almost feel like
it's really really far away. This show is about you
because as much as I can talk about the stuff
that's happening on the national stage. What does it matter
if somebody's not bringing attention to the stuff that makes
your life either difficult or easy. So that's what we're

(01:36:58):
trying to do. That's what Joan being here is about,
Wendy's being here about Mark and West Hartford, Simsbury, Joe.
You ever notice why you give everybody nicknames because it's
bigger than me, It's bigger than a lot of us.
We all play a role. So I just wanted to
get that out there, and I want to thank Joan again.

(01:37:18):
I want to thank you guys for making that happen.
Mark c Robert also got in touch with me so
I can get Joan on the program. You guys, good stuff,
good work, and I appreciate you. And we'll get to
the bottom of this, and we'll get these folks to
recognize you. Whether they like it or not, whether they

(01:37:38):
like it or not, they have to understand that they
work for you. Let's get another check out. Whether in traffic,
Mark Christopher, he's in the BPS traffic center, Hey.

Speaker 1 (01:37:48):
Market, stay locked in race on the radio is on
w T I see news.

Speaker 2 (01:37:56):
And again we want to thank Joan Cole for being
a part of the program. Don't forget. You can always
go to Resuner radio dot com. That's our E E
S E on the radio dot com. You could go
there and check out everything from the show. You can
even watch live during the show two to six. You
can actually view the show. You see my beautiful voice

(01:38:17):
on the air as we do the program. And uh,
there's also video content. So usually when you hear audio
on the show, there's a video to a company that
So if you ever want to watch the show, you're
sitting there at your desk and your boss is really
all not you know, not all that on your back
about watching you know, a radio show at your cubicle.
You can do that by going to resunradio dot com. Also,

(01:38:38):
we've got substack. Every week a new article comes out
on Sunday. You can get that article if you just subscribe,
it goes directly to your email. Or you can just
go to Resuner Radio every Sunday morning at roughly about
seven to eight o'clock in the morning. I try to
get it out exactly at seven. I don't think I've
got I've only done I've only lost one time. I

(01:39:00):
missed that seven o'clock deadline, but I usually try to
get it there. This week's article is Chris what's his name?
About Chris Murphy and his dwindling poll numbers, but yet
is astonishing astonishing revenue intake as well as television and
magazine appearances. We talk about that a little bit. And this,

(01:39:21):
by the way, for some odd reason, I posted on
X too. If you want to follow the show on X,
which I have to say, can I I'm gonna take
a second and say this. I never really posted on
X because I never really knew how to use that
social media, and I have to say thank you so
much for people who have been responding there. So I

(01:39:47):
post the article at the substacks. But then I posted
it on X because apparently there's an article feature. Well,
this Chris Murphy article talk about going like taking off.
That article has had over fifteen hundred views. Now all right, really,
so I appreciate you checking it out. Makes me feel good.

Speaker 7 (01:40:09):
I'm gonna keep writing. You want it, you'll get it.

Speaker 2 (01:40:12):
Let's get another check of whether in traffick talk about
getting it. Let's get on the roads with Mark Christophers
in the PPS Traffic Center. How were doing.

Speaker 5 (01:40:18):
Not this up.

Speaker 1 (01:40:19):
The NAACP calls him, WHOA, I don't think I'm it's
race on the radio.

Speaker 2 (01:40:26):
Let's just say some people.

Speaker 1 (01:40:28):
Are not fans a news talk ten eighty WTI.

Speaker 2 (01:40:31):
SI and keeping with that tradition, it's time to talk
about the NAACP. So on the sixteenth of October, the
NAACP of Greater New Haven wrote this letter for immediate
release press release, so to speak, offensive and harmful Halloween
display on Whitney Avenue in Hamden, Connecticut. The Greater new

(01:40:56):
Haven branch of the NAACP received numerous call and messages
from concerned residents regarding an offensive Halloween display in front
of a home on Whitney Avenue in Hampden. The display
features multiple nooses hanging in from the front lawn, accompanied
by corpses and yeah corpses suspended from them. We want

(01:41:20):
to be unequivocal. This display is deeply offensive, racially insensitive,
harmful to our community, and extremely triggering. The image of
a noose carries a horrific and painful legacy in this country.
It is tied directly to the lynching of black men, women,

(01:41:40):
and children. Such displays are not simply Halloween decorations. They
are symbols of racial terror that evoke centuries of violence
and oppression.

Speaker 7 (01:41:53):
It is a reminder of a deep, dark, painful, and
ugly past.

Speaker 2 (01:41:58):
While we understand the importance some free expression, freedom of
expression does not absolve individuals of responsibility for the harm
and pain their actions cause. The display on Whitney Avenue
has caused real pain, fear, and outrage amongst community members.
Racism and racial trauma harm not only Black people, but

(01:42:23):
the moral and social fabric of our entire community. So what,
I don't care that the NAACP is offended. They can't
say anything about images. They can't keep the noises up them.

(01:42:47):
You heard me, keep the nooses up. Did you display
them to scare black people in the community. No, it's
a huge sign in the front that says asylum for
the criminally insane. Unless now that's associated with black folks,
I doubt it. If you capitulate, I got nothing for you,

(01:43:11):
But I wouldn't. As long as we know that imagery
means nothing right, intent means nothing. I think that everybody
should just be allowed. Look, the imagery is the imagery.
It's a Halloween decoration, that's all it's supposed to be

(01:43:32):
an insane asylum, that's all. It's supposed to scare kiddies
when they go there. This is a celebrated place, a
celebrated home where kids have gone and people have been
pardoned au pun dying to go for Halloween so they
can have fun with the kiddies, maybe get some candy,
go through a haunted house, boo spooky. And somebody is

(01:43:57):
injecting race into it now, suggesting that it's their intention
to make it racial. It isn't. This is being put upon.
But remember we're not supposed to be curl pearl clutching.
Remember we're not supposed to clutch our pearls. Right, we

(01:44:17):
can't take a joke. Don't give me this nonsense about
it's insensitive. It evokes What are we supposed to think?
What are we supposed to think that because it invokes
something racial in you, that it's supposed to be for
the rest of us. You didn't seem to care when
we said stop wishing to death on our president. We

(01:44:38):
should accept it as a joke. I'm telling you, all
bets are off, folks, All bets are off. I wish
to live by the standards that you said, and remember
I went there. I was at your rally. You are
morally sound. We heathens, all of us. You're the ones

(01:44:59):
that say that we a have to do it here.
You are the ones who set the goalpost and we
have to follow around while you move it. Well, if
we have got to follow your template, that's what we're
going to do. Keep the nooses up.

Speaker 7 (01:45:14):
It's just halloween.

Speaker 2 (01:45:18):
Black people weren't the only people who were hung. Pirates
were hung all the time throughout throughout the world.

Speaker 7 (01:45:27):
They're used everywhere throughout history. Why does this.

Speaker 2 (01:45:33):
One group of people get the carve out noosing for
just them? Why not? Whatever happened to equal opportunities? Hah,
everybody took a part? Oh I being insensitive? Well I'm
just joking. Can't you take a joke? Can it be funny?

(01:45:54):
Can I be ha ha?

Speaker 7 (01:45:57):
Y'all y'are what happened? Why does it?

Speaker 2 (01:46:01):
Why is it more important for you to get what
you want? Why do you get to tell these folks
hear how they can display their Halloween decoration? How what's
wrong with their expression? Where was the NAACP when it
came to people expressing themselves in the library.

Speaker 7 (01:46:26):
With drag Queen Story Hour.

Speaker 2 (01:46:30):
When people said they didn't want that because they thought
that was triggering to their children, that they shouldn't see
a grown man with half of his breasts out. Where
was the NAACP on that one. I didn't hear anything.
I didn't hear a word.

Speaker 7 (01:46:47):
What the NAACP finds important is laughable.

Speaker 2 (01:46:50):
Case in point, same day, October sixteenth, NAACP of Greater
New Haven, the Greater New Haven NAACP joins the local
and national outcry against federal immigration raids that sow fear
and distrust in our communities. These operations not only violate

(01:47:13):
civil rights, but also tear apart families and undermine public safety.
Earlier this week, ICE agents conducted a raid at the
Optimo car wash in Hamden, detaining eight individuals. The action
caused chaos in the neighborhood, left children uncertain if their
loved ones would return home, and spread fear throughout the

(01:47:34):
immigrant and.

Speaker 14 (01:47:35):
Black communities alike. The black community was affected by ICE.

Speaker 7 (01:47:48):
Who who in the world.

Speaker 2 (01:47:53):
In the black community was going ICE is in the neighborhood?
I better get in the house A who was thinking that?
We call on local, state, and federal leaders to demand
accountability and transparency for mice, in sure due process for
all those detained, and strengthen protections such as Connecticut's Trust

(01:48:16):
Act to prevent further collaboration with federal immigration enforcement. Here's
the NAACP telling people to resist the federal government. The
Greater New Haven NAACP stands in unwavering solidarity with the
people of Hampden and the communities across our state. We

(01:48:38):
will not be silenced or intimidated. Oh well, neither should
the Halloween display. They should not be silenced or intimidated either.
Since we're going there, perhaps you not infringe on their

(01:48:59):
freedom of express should their first Amendment? Right? I think
the kitties would like the noose. I think the kitties
would like to be scared by the spookiness of it all.
And I bet you not one kid who walks through
there will be thinking about slavery when they do. Not one,

(01:49:21):
They'll be thinking about whether or not the house has
the big snickers or the bite size. That's what I believe.

Speaker 13 (01:49:28):
That's just me.

Speaker 8 (01:49:29):
That's just me.

Speaker 2 (01:49:32):
By the way, you better have the big ones there.
You better have the big ones. Their kids will they
will annihilate you if they trick or treat there, and
you've got the bite size. I know, I know, I
understand it's cost effective, but I'm not again, I don't care.
I don't care. Remember, I'm done with the sensitive stuff,
aren't you. They told us we're being too sensitive cholesterol?

Speaker 7 (01:49:56):
Do your job?

Speaker 2 (01:49:57):
Eighty six forty seven News is what's the difference? What's
the difference? We were told that in no way, doctor
Anwar intended to wish death on the president of the
United States. Well good, We'd like to follow that same
template over there and in Hampden.

Speaker 7 (01:50:20):
They did not intend to suggest anything about slavery.

Speaker 2 (01:50:24):
They were just trying to have a little Halloween foot
That's just me. Let's go to Jill and Willington. Hello, Jill,
how are you?

Speaker 5 (01:50:33):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (01:50:33):
Is that Jim? I'm sorry, Jim. What's going on? Jim?

Speaker 22 (01:50:36):
It could be Jill.

Speaker 23 (01:50:37):
You never know.

Speaker 7 (01:50:38):
I doubt it.

Speaker 2 (01:50:39):
What's up, buddy?

Speaker 22 (01:50:40):
You shouldn't assume man. Let's you know, I'll tell you
all this craziness with uh illegal immigration. I you know,
I haven't heard one Democratic politician, not one when they
get on the air, especially Chris Murphy, when they get
on the air and start talking about how Trump is
there or Trump is that now one of them had

(01:51:01):
said that they disagree with Trump and we want to
change the law and we need to do it through
the legislation in Congress. Right nobody, nobody wants to recognize
the fact that it's a law everybody's breaking. And oh,
by the way, here's the solution. Here's how we can.

Speaker 7 (01:51:18):
Fix it, exactly exactly.

Speaker 22 (01:51:21):
You know, And I'll tell you there's there's play away.
You can straightened this situation. I would take it ten
or fifteen years, but you could certainly straighten it all
out very easy. Wouldn't be difficult, difficult at all?

Speaker 2 (01:51:33):
How about it? How about WAYMNU? How about one step further, Jim,
how about drafting legislation at least to present to the
American people that says, you know what, here's our plan
to keep the league, the the the illegals in the
country here, and then proposing that.

Speaker 22 (01:51:51):
And then and then it gets piled up to a
team I've been mentioning on his show off and on
what democrat out there has the political spine stand up
and do that? Which one has to find to do that?
And then say I don't agree that what's going on
in the street. I'm not gonna I'm not gonna call
for the for the verbiage that says we should assassinate

(01:52:13):
Trump because he's uh, he's associated quote unquote the Hitler.
Where are they?

Speaker 2 (01:52:20):
Yeah, that's interesting where they are.

Speaker 22 (01:52:21):
And then the last thing I'll say is this, Chris
Murphy strikes again. You've heard me say it many times.

Speaker 13 (01:52:27):
On your show.

Speaker 22 (01:52:28):
He's a third third rate politician in a party that
will let him.

Speaker 2 (01:52:33):
Oh, they'll let him, listen to me, They'll let him
coast forever forever. They will let him be an MSNBC star.
They will let him coast for the rest of his career.
Thank you.

Speaker 22 (01:52:45):
I don't even think I don't even think you realize.
He's not the only one, but he's the one.

Speaker 7 (01:52:51):
He's there today. He's he's the soup desure right now.

Speaker 2 (01:52:54):
That's all he is. There'll be somebody else in due course,
thank you, sir. Part Someone is sending me this story
and I want to make sure that I address it
before we go to break, and then we'll take some
phone calls in the next hour. So stand by if
you want to, if you want to be on. There
is a a I guess a digital creator on Facebook.

(01:53:17):
His name is Jason Hayes and he's got quite the following.
Some five thousand folks are following him, and I was
looking at the picture that he has on his profile.
The interesting thing is that people are really taking notice
of this post that he did with the word maga
with the red, white and blue swastika that's supposed to
represent the g or in between the word maga is

(01:53:41):
a big giant sort of American flag like swastika in there,
and in it he writes the Confederacy defeated in eighteen
sixty five, Nazism defeated in nineteen forty five, Magaism defeat
in progress. But people are saying that he didn't. I'm not.
It was not in any way and he's a first selectman,

(01:54:01):
not in any way supposed to be antisemitic. Is just
me pointing out maga in mega this. But here's the
interesting part. His profile picture shows him cheek the cheek
with Jennifer Hudson, the singer, movie star and from American
idol fing. But Jason, let me help you with something.

(01:54:24):
If you know your history, the person that your cheek
to cheek with in your profile picture Jennifer Hudson. Why
don't you give her a call and ask her where
her family lived rent free for six months after her
family members were brutally murdered in Chicago. Why don't you

(01:54:46):
ask her that? Because when I saw that, I didn't
see anyone notice that. I saw the picture, and I'm like,
who's that black woman? Is he married to a black woman?

Speaker 9 (01:54:53):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (01:54:54):
That's interesting. Let me see who the picture is.

Speaker 7 (01:54:55):
And that's all I went.

Speaker 2 (01:54:56):
Wait a minute's Jennifer Hudson. I recognize that face anywhere.
And while he's sitting up here calling Maga folks and
Donald Trump hitler, Well, he has a picture of a
woman who stayed in Donald Trump's Trump International Hotels rent

(01:55:17):
free for six months after the senseless murder of her
family members. Donald Trump provided that first person to come
to her aid. No Diddy, no jay Z, no blackest fear,
nobody Donald Trump did. I would just take that picture down,

(01:55:43):
spare yourself the embarrassment because you had to have known that, right,
You had to know, because all I needed to do
was see the picture, and I knew right off the back.
But then again, you know, I've got quite the recall.
I've often been praised for that. I just have this memory.
Oh it's weird, but it's interesting that you didn't know

(01:56:04):
that that you would be boasting.

Speaker 7 (01:56:06):
Look, I know what's celebrity.

Speaker 2 (01:56:10):
It just happens to be that that celebrity got the
help of the very Nazi that you were trying to
ridicule and malat kind of interesting. Get it together, folks,
get it together. You look silly out here, You look silly.

(01:56:30):
Let's help the roads, they'll look silly.

Speaker 7 (01:56:32):
Let's get to mark Christopher in a BPS traffic center.

Speaker 2 (01:56:34):
I know some traffic out there marking the hour that
bags out.

Speaker 1 (01:56:37):
Punch Punch. It's Reese on the radio on WTIC News
Talk ten eighty.

Speaker 2 (01:56:43):
And of course I failed to get Hollywood News today.
I didn't even bother. Someone's supposed to be giving me
a call and a little bit about about oh goodness, Simsbury.
So I'm waiting for that call that should show up
really really soon. But I want to talk about something
that I've created if I could for a minute. And

(01:57:06):
I've talked about this a little bit with Matty O,
and I've talked about with my wife, and it came
sort of as a joke. So ellis the boy, we
call him. So the Boy says one day, and he's
very clever and funny. I guess we were having a
discussion and I have these sort of things, these sayings

(01:57:29):
that I have, and he called them racisms and he
just said it, you know, out of nowhere. He was
just like, you know, He's like, oh, it's like so
it's like a racism and I went, that's funny. So
then he kept using the term racist. Whenever I would
say something somewhat controversial, he started calling me a racist.
So yesterday we were talking with with Simsbury Joe about

(01:57:53):
using GROC. So I actually tried this and it worked.
I asked Groc to come up with a definition for
resist and it did. Pronunciation. It says now a person
who taught race intelligantly without any emotional and.

Speaker 7 (01:58:08):
Atology about the about.

Speaker 2 (01:58:18):
Racism. And I was like, oh you serious, They can
actually do that, and it did, so I'm thinking about
getting it on a shirt. It's actually pretty cool.

Speaker 7 (01:58:28):
It made it up itself, uh.

Speaker 2 (01:58:30):
And it it used racisms in order to do it.

Speaker 7 (01:58:35):
I thought it was clever.

Speaker 2 (01:58:36):
I was like, damn, that's actually pretty smart anyway, So
I'll share it one day let's get to WATHER traffic
mark Christopher's in the BPS traffic Center.

Speaker 1 (01:58:44):
Anymok, it's race on the radio on Newstalk ten A,
w T I see, I see.

Speaker 2 (01:58:49):
So I just got a message from somebody who was
calling in Josiah out of Simsbury. Josiah, I got your number,
thank you, and I had to hide it. I don't
want anybody to see it in and you get all
these other crazy crank calls, not that my audience would
do that. I just don't want anybody to have access
to it. So I hit it in the screen. But
I do have it. I'm gonna be giving you a
call later on about it. So a quiet investigation that

(01:59:11):
I'm doing for those of you who remember me, who
have been here since I started at WTIC in my
filling days, I have always talked about Connecticut opening up
these pot stores, these cannabis brick and mortars in the state.

Speaker 7 (01:59:33):
And I am quietly doing this investigation.

Speaker 2 (01:59:37):
Because we were told in every article from the Hartford Current,
the Connecticut Mirror to the New Haven Register, all of them,
that the most important thing about all of this was
that they were trying to sort of let's just say
they were doing restorative justice.

Speaker 7 (01:59:57):
They were going to.

Speaker 2 (01:59:59):
Go right after the African American community and make sure
that they had a hand in the cannabis business first
and foremost before anyone else. Well, I did some background
on this about two months ago, and I've waited to
bring this story up, and Josiah is in this space,

(02:00:20):
and when I tell you what I found out, God,
it is a story that will embarrass the hell out
of the people Nedlamont two, every person who streamed and
hollered about why the African American community was finally going
to make up for They were finally going to make
up for all of the damage that was done in

(02:00:40):
the war on drugs in the black community. Don't take
my word for it. Go look it up. How many
African American cannabis stores have been opened since twenty twenty.
Go find out the numbers. When I saw the numbers,
I was like, what, yeah, yeah, no effort, none, none,

(02:01:03):
out of all of them, no effort. The numbers are astonishing.
So I want to talk to Josiah about that. It's
a quiet little investigation that I'm doing, but I'm really
going to get to the root of it when I
get there, So stand by for that. Let me get
to the phones. Let's go to Rich and windsor Locks.

Speaker 24 (02:01:21):
Hello, Rich, Hey, are you doing.

Speaker 2 (02:01:24):
I'm pretty good?

Speaker 25 (02:01:25):
So what's up?

Speaker 9 (02:01:26):
Hey?

Speaker 24 (02:01:27):
I just wanted to say, yeah, I can't believe that
Simsbury is not inclusive. I can't believe that they claim
that they are. And you know, they they've got all
these you know, their parks, et cetera. Their programs are
all inclusive. And then here's somebody, like you said, you

(02:01:48):
know earlier, pour in their heart out or you know,
their child suicide. I mean, don't they know it's we're
community to be trying to help each other, not shut
somebody down. Oh gotta worry about how much time?

Speaker 7 (02:02:05):
Yeah, exactly, I mean how much?

Speaker 5 (02:02:07):
You know.

Speaker 2 (02:02:08):
It's scary part about this with this thing, what Elvira
is right, it has all of the hallmarks of what
liberalism has told us for five years now, is that
if we do not affirm these children, they will take
their own life. This woman tried to do that, and

(02:02:31):
she only got more depressed and took her own life.
And in knowing that, knowing that she is a member
of this community, and like I said, she ticks off
all the boxes. If you ask these folks, she's an
immigrant woman with a transgender child. She might as well
be Charlie's theron for that matter, and they treated her

(02:02:53):
like dirt and called her a bigot for it.

Speaker 24 (02:02:57):
Yeah that's you know, we pay their salaries.

Speaker 5 (02:03:02):
These folks.

Speaker 24 (02:03:02):
They want to be in power, but when it comes
to responsibility they abdicate. Oh oh no, I can't do that.

Speaker 5 (02:03:11):
That's work.

Speaker 7 (02:03:13):
Yeah, they should be ashamed of themselves.

Speaker 2 (02:03:15):
And look, I'm glad that Simsbury has stepped up, and
there's so many people in the community who have stepped up.
They've They've been reaching out to me all day and yesterday,
and I'm telling you the response is overwhelming. I really
do believe that this show has more reason than I know,
and it kind of makes me nervous. I'm like, well,
a lot of people listen to the show, so I
really appreciate that we.

Speaker 5 (02:03:38):
Vote.

Speaker 7 (02:03:39):
That's right, Thank you, sir, much appreciate it.

Speaker 2 (02:03:41):
You you got it.

Speaker 7 (02:03:42):
Let's go to Tom and Thomason.

Speaker 15 (02:03:44):
Hello, sir, Hey, I say now loudly and proudly that.

Speaker 13 (02:03:50):
I am definitely a recis.

Speaker 2 (02:03:55):
Well, yeah, we're trying to get we're trying to get it,
like Actually we're trying to get the phrase cool. So
we'll get it done.

Speaker 26 (02:04:02):
There you go, I'll buy a T shirt.

Speaker 13 (02:04:07):
I want to make a comment on that latest video
that that Project guy made.

Speaker 2 (02:04:14):
What is this about? Do you talk about James O'Keeffe
and the and the Native American ng O thing?

Speaker 13 (02:04:23):
Oh my goodness, scam, Oh my god.

Speaker 2 (02:04:28):
Yeah. By the way, Tom, before you go on, let
me just tell everybody. Get let's direct everybody to the
right place. So if you've got YouTube, go to YouTube
and look up James O'Keefe and the investigation he released
yesterday at about one o'clock, and what he broke down
was that there is this organization called AFI. If I'm correct, Tom,
is that the name of My wife watched it. So

(02:04:49):
the organization is called AFI, and they work as the
liaison with the government to get small NGOs or SBA
small business loan the small business these loans or these
grants to do particular work in and around their communities.
And if you're Native American or black or minority, you

(02:05:12):
get those bids first. In fact, there are no bid contracts,
but this AFI organization is the go between. They're the liaison,
so they get the or they get the government to
give them the billions of dollars. And here's what they
do that makes this stuff so crazy, folks. So the
AFI organization takes over sixty percent of the money, They

(02:05:35):
give the balance of that to the actual organization that's
trying to get the money, and then they make that
organization do about eighty percent of the work while this
AFI just collects all the money. So in essence, it's
sort of like a finder's fee. That's okay, And Roseanne, oh,
go go, go to the microphone. So you can thin
because Roseanne watched this the first part of it yesterday

(02:05:58):
and I told her to do I want her to
do research on it so we could get to after Wednesday. Guy.

Speaker 8 (02:06:02):
Yeah, I think the one key part that's really essential.
It's two parts.

Speaker 9 (02:06:07):
One is that the bidding organization is required to give
fifty one percent ownership to this.

Speaker 7 (02:06:17):
I think it's a pi api okay, I.

Speaker 8 (02:06:19):
Think so, I can't remember.

Speaker 9 (02:06:20):
Anyway, they're forced to give up fifty one percent ownership.
They collect about thirty five percent of the overall earnings.
The main industry, the main company h the ones pretending
to be Native American, keeps sixty five percent of it there.
And then here's where it gets even crazier, is that

(02:06:41):
the owner of the of the organization. Because once you've
reached a certain dollar value in earnings, you are no
longer eligible eligible under the SBA. So what he does
is he just starts a new business so you can
then get it again.

Speaker 8 (02:06:59):
Yeah.

Speaker 13 (02:07:00):
That's what drove me nuts was when I heard that
once you've hit this four hundred million, he just starts
a no name of a company.

Speaker 8 (02:07:09):
Yeah.

Speaker 13 (02:07:09):
And the Native Americans, who are supposed to be the
stewards of all the land, they're in on a scam
because they just use their name to make it a
minority owned company.

Speaker 9 (02:07:21):
So they're sort of in on this scam, but they're
not really getting anything out of it.

Speaker 2 (02:07:25):
Right, They're doing most of the work and only getting
a portion of the Only.

Speaker 9 (02:07:28):
Are they getting most of the they're doing most of
the work, but they are only it's only their name
being used. They're getting no other benefits.

Speaker 2 (02:07:37):
Wow.

Speaker 8 (02:07:37):
So where this company maybe getting.

Speaker 9 (02:07:39):
A you know, thirty five million dollar grant or a
thirty five million dollar contract from the federal government.

Speaker 8 (02:07:45):
Sixty five percent of that goes to these three white people.
The remainder.

Speaker 9 (02:07:51):
The thirty five percent is given to the organization that's
actually doing the work allegedly. Right, they have to sell
fifty one percent of that alleged business.

Speaker 2 (02:08:01):
Wow.

Speaker 9 (02:08:02):
And then if the contracting work is done by the
Native people, they get paid an hourly rate. So they're
not even getting paid. They're not so they're in on
it is a little like it's a quasi fact because
they're doing the work, but they're not reaping any benefit
from it.

Speaker 2 (02:08:21):
Right, go ahead, what were you.

Speaker 13 (02:08:23):
Saying to I think in the number two part, I
think it will they get so the the Native Americans
do own fifty one percent.

Speaker 9 (02:08:33):
No, No, the three owners of the company. It's two
white men and a white woman. They're using the name
as an umbrella corporation, the Native organization, the Native they're
not even involved.

Speaker 8 (02:08:48):
All they did was short take our use our name.

Speaker 2 (02:08:52):
Oh, but it's.

Speaker 13 (02:08:55):
A it's a corporation, so that they do. Now when
the books have been at the end of the year,
there might not be any profit. Right, they are legally
entitled to fifty one percent of any profit the.

Speaker 8 (02:09:09):
Entity itself, but not the Native.

Speaker 13 (02:09:12):
They are the Native American tribe. I ever heard of
them they're.

Speaker 8 (02:09:17):
Getting it's not a real nation. That's why it's not
a real nation.

Speaker 2 (02:09:22):
It isn't a real nation.

Speaker 9 (02:09:26):
Yeah, no, kidding, that's that's what I'm saying. This doesn't
This isn't an actual Native nation. This is like a
small corporation that's using the name of it's something like
Sweet River something.

Speaker 2 (02:09:39):
Let me ask you this because if you watched it.
I haven't had a chance to see it yet, but
I saw like the first half hour of it. If
I'm getting this right, is it because they claim that
they're Native American and that nobody looks like nobody second
guesses it. They just go, oh, just a Native American company.

Speaker 9 (02:09:54):
So so when it comes to do government contract bits, right,
excuse me, having lived in.

Speaker 8 (02:09:59):
The Great Area working, you know, knowing people are.

Speaker 9 (02:10:03):
Contractors and as such, you have to bid for everything
with the government and the person who I mean you
remember the whole NASA move.

Speaker 8 (02:10:11):
So you bid for that. The guy with the best.

Speaker 9 (02:10:13):
Bid, which includes you know, all the contingencies and benefits,
that's the guy that wins. Now, if you claim to
be Native American, that is like the peak, pinnacle, tippy
top of people who are it's the Native Americans are.

Speaker 8 (02:10:28):
The most.

Speaker 9 (02:10:31):
Underrepresented in this country. It's not Black folks. It's Native Americans.
They are the poorest. They live in the largest rates
of poverty. It's not black folks. So when they are
given an opportunity to start a business or bid for
a government contract, the government is saying.

Speaker 8 (02:10:48):
Holy crap, it's we've found when it's a unicorn, give.

Speaker 2 (02:10:51):
It to him. Okay.

Speaker 7 (02:10:52):
So that's in essence they're using that because the government were.

Speaker 2 (02:10:55):
More than like.

Speaker 9 (02:10:58):
So the organization went to this native organization. It's not
it's not a nation, it's not a reservation.

Speaker 8 (02:11:04):
It is just an entity.

Speaker 9 (02:11:06):
Think like she Indian Affairs Bureau, or like, you know
my native nation. You saw the little building they have
in an sees Chaves here in San Antonio. It's not
the actual nation. It's a small entity that some of
those people belong to this nation. These three folks came
over and said, hey, we want to use your entity

(02:11:27):
in your name, and they were like, all right, sure,
go ahead.

Speaker 8 (02:11:31):
So the fifty one percent owners are not Native American.

Speaker 9 (02:11:34):
The fifty one percent owners who reaped the fifty one
percent ownership of whatever company bids the contract are these
three white folks, Okay.

Speaker 13 (02:11:42):
Tom, respectfully, or then I think you're wrong. The Native
Americans have to have majority ownership. They have to be
to fifty one in order to qualify as a minority
right to.

Speaker 2 (02:11:59):
Get to know. Yeah, no, no, I think that's what.

Speaker 7 (02:12:01):
Yeah, I think you're I think you're in agreement there, Tom.

Speaker 2 (02:12:03):
What she's saying is is that the organization that is
calling itself Native American is technically just only.

Speaker 7 (02:12:10):
It's in name only, so to speak. So that's that's
that's the fifty one percent.

Speaker 2 (02:12:15):
You're right, as is she in the sense of it's
not a real like, they're not really Native, They're just
an organization who calls themselves Native.

Speaker 7 (02:12:22):
That's the fifty one percent that you guys are sort
of at odds with.

Speaker 2 (02:12:26):
So yeah, according to this, it appears to be. But
I'm waiting for the episode that comes out tomorrow so
we can sort of get the wrap up because apparently
James o'keeth is going to confront all of the people
with the videos that he's so far recorded.

Speaker 26 (02:12:43):
Yeah, he confronted the one woman that got all from
He takes his wig and she's like no, no, no, no, no.

Speaker 9 (02:12:53):
Videos, turn that off, turn that off, I don't want
to be on camera, and then apparently everything that she
said to Undercover the day before was allegedly or her opinion.

Speaker 2 (02:13:05):
Yeah, thank you, Tom, I appreciate you.

Speaker 5 (02:13:07):
Man.

Speaker 2 (02:13:08):
Thanks Roseanne, I appreciate you got it. Yeah, I think
you turned off like four different people because of dis conversation.
There's like four people on older Like, I ain't waiting
on the line. You can call back now. I promise
I'll get to your calls. That was just a really
explosive story. But like I said, if you want to

(02:13:29):
James O'Keefe on YouTube, you can watch it there. And again,
you got to see the uh what do you call it?
The disguise that he puts on. You're gonna be asking yourself,
how in the hell did they not know he was
wearing a wig? It is the most ridiculous thing I've
ever seen in my entire life. Anyway, we'll get to

(02:13:50):
what did I forget? I know there was somebody that
I forgot to get into today. I did that? Did that?

Speaker 6 (02:13:56):
Did that?

Speaker 2 (02:13:56):
I don't know.

Speaker 7 (02:13:57):
Anyway, we'll find out.

Speaker 2 (02:13:58):
Let's get to another check of weather in traffic, Mark
Christopher is in the BPS.

Speaker 7 (02:14:02):
Travick sent again your home.

Speaker 2 (02:14:03):
Hey, mark the Odyssey app.

Speaker 1 (02:14:04):
Let's you jump back to the moments you missed from
WTISE News Talk tennady. Download the free Odyssey app. Search
WTISE News Talk ten eighty and tap earlier today to
get started.

Speaker 2 (02:14:16):
That's right. Make sure you go to WTIC dot com
download the Odyssey app so that you never missed an
opening monologue by Rees on the radio. Because the show
starts at two o'clock and I know a lot of
you miss it. You can always do that. Plus, you
know the best part about it is that you guys
love going back to go check it out because I
know I've seen it. I've seen it, I've seen you

(02:14:36):
go back and listen to it, and we appreciate it.
Make sure you do that or go to resellerradio dot com.
Don't forget to go to resellerradio dot com for this
show and a lot more so you can find out
a whole bunch of stuff a lot of people. Now
all I had to do was mention pickleball, and now
people are sending me invites to go play pickleball.

Speaker 7 (02:14:55):
I will play with every one of you. I promise.

Speaker 2 (02:14:58):
I need to get out there and start playing pickleball.
My wife is getting one nurse. Every time we go
into like a Dick's Sporting Goods and she sees a
pickleball racket, we should get some. It was like, not now,
not now, Wait till we get the Connecticut, We'll pick
up one. She's already screaming at me. She wants to
get them cheaked, she wants to try everything. She's so

(02:15:19):
excited to be up there. Can I tell you a
little secret. I'll tell you a little secret, she says.
I hope no one thinks I'm throwing her under the
bus this, But I just thought I thought it was sweet.
Roseanne when we got together, was in I mean absolutely reclusive.

(02:15:41):
She was a recluse. She stayed around her own family,
her own friends really didn't get she didn't have a
lot of people around her. I actually got her sort
of to be more outgoing and God bless her. I
remember we would go to meetings and she didn't know
anybody there, and I would literally walk her over to
a group of women who's.

Speaker 7 (02:16:02):
Like, Hi, this is my wife Roseanne.

Speaker 2 (02:16:04):
Talk to her and she would be so embarrassed. But
I would almost feel like the parent trying to introduce
her to like the new kids. Hi, this is my
wife Roseanne. Be her friend. So she said to me
the other day, when I think it was maybe last week,
She goes, do you think that I'll have friends in Connecticut?

Speaker 3 (02:16:26):
Like?

Speaker 2 (02:16:26):
Sweet, they're gonna love you. They already do. You're gonna
have plenty of friends. Are you kidding me? They could
be vying all day to.

Speaker 7 (02:16:33):
Come and hang out with you. They already enjoy you.

Speaker 2 (02:16:37):
They can't wait to meet you in pala around with you.
You're gonna make plenty of friends. And I really am
enthusiastic about her making some friends so that I could
get a break.

Speaker 5 (02:16:47):
And I'm kidding.

Speaker 2 (02:16:49):
She hears that I'm gonna be so much trouble. I
don't mean that at all. I don't need that. But
she's really really excited to get to get out there.
And her big thing now is like she wants to
go shopping for winter clothes. That's a big deal, a
really really big deal. So if you have some ideas,

(02:17:12):
ladies of a certain age or where she should shop,
that would be a great place for her to get
some nice winter clothes. You know, hit me up, let
me know.

Speaker 7 (02:17:25):
She is dying to find out. She's like, where did
a lady shop in Connecticut.

Speaker 2 (02:17:29):
I'm like, I don't know. How would I know? By
the way you must avoid? What are the places where
you don't want to shop?

Speaker 5 (02:17:37):
Is it?

Speaker 2 (02:17:37):
Was it Forever twenty one? And what's the other one?
What's the name of that other place, the one for
older women? I can't name it. I don't know why.
Let's get another check of weather. In traffic, Mark Christopher
is in a BPS traffic said, do you know the
name of that clothing place that the older women shop?

Speaker 7 (02:17:57):
I hate saying it, but do you know that Marca?
It's it's something.

Speaker 2 (02:18:02):
Yeah, mine too. It's not Forever twenty one because I
almost feel like that's just regular. There's another one that's
sort of like, I want to say chic or something.
Somebody's gonna know what it is. John Beckman says Amazon
is the easiest and the fastest. I guess it would
be there's some lady's clothes. There's another one that she likes.
It's called a white House black market. Yeah, that's a

(02:18:25):
place that she really is one.

Speaker 15 (02:18:27):
I think there's one in Somerset Square in Glastonbury.

Speaker 2 (02:18:29):
I think it's really there.

Speaker 7 (02:18:31):
Yeah, that place is nice, but it's expensive.

Speaker 2 (02:18:36):
Oh my goodness. Even the clearance is expensive. I look
at the clearance, Islan, I'm like, I'm not paying for that.

Speaker 7 (02:18:41):
That's a seven hundred dollars jacket.

Speaker 2 (02:18:43):
Is it Talbots? No, Talbot's is one two. That's what
I believe. It's for older women. I just can't think
of what the other name was. I gotta think. I
gotta look at a all right, thank you man.

Speaker 6 (02:18:55):
I don't know.

Speaker 15 (02:18:55):
I don't do a lot of clothes shopping myself. So
there you go, we in the same shirts and a
fair of uh jeans? Two exactly?

Speaker 2 (02:19:08):
What's up? Everybody?

Speaker 5 (02:19:09):
You know who it is?

Speaker 2 (02:19:11):
You know it's on the radio, Frederick Douglas of the
twenty first century. It's w t i C News Talk.
All right, we're almost out of here, and we'll take
some last but not least phone calls before we get
out of here.

Speaker 7 (02:19:26):
So of course all you have to do is.

Speaker 2 (02:19:27):
Mention clothing, Roseanne, and everybody has chimed in.

Speaker 7 (02:19:32):
I couldn't remember the clothing store you're looking because.

Speaker 2 (02:19:35):
You were in the back of the house.

Speaker 8 (02:19:36):
She goes, She goes. Anybody who's seen this as forty nos.

Speaker 2 (02:19:40):
Slow down, slow down, you got to go through all
of these. I want to go through the list of
what people have been saying in the chat room, because
I couldn't find out which one it was. They were all.
Now everybody's chiming in, even the guys are chiming in.
So Doug is saying that ellll Bean on Route ten
in Southington. He's saying, that's a place where you should go.

Speaker 9 (02:20:03):
That's like camping outdoor stuff outside.

Speaker 2 (02:20:06):
I don't know. Okay. Mattio says, just don't go to
five and below or five below and Taylor. You don't
like that place either, Okay, okay, okay, perhaps find a Burlington.
Beckman says, you are on a word time out the

(02:20:30):
outlets in Clinton and Westbrook. You don't mind an outlet.
You like an outlet store, even though I think for men,
outlet stores are like the stuff they won't sell at
the regular stores. Yes, yes, exactly. Carmela said, are you
thinking about Chico's or Coldwater Creek? Now, I know you
don't like Chicos Coldwater Creek.

Speaker 8 (02:20:50):
That's not a no, that no, that's like an ll
Bean and Taylor sort of mix.

Speaker 2 (02:20:56):
Okay, So she says that's for mature women.

Speaker 8 (02:20:59):
I'm not I'm not there yet, Okay, So.

Speaker 2 (02:21:02):
When you hit about fifty or something, okay, without the hatred, Okay,
do you don't have to look at me that way? Okay.
I'm just I'm saying when you're fifty, not that you
would be fifty. How do you feel about llban?

Speaker 5 (02:21:16):
Are you?

Speaker 2 (02:21:17):
Are you okay with lban?

Speaker 9 (02:21:18):
Mean for like a jacket or okay, like gloves or something,
boots okay? And Talbot's is definitely you know right, I
used to work in the Talbot's Okay, like many many,
like twenty five years ago.

Speaker 2 (02:21:31):
What is wrong with the stores that I don't understand
because I'll tell you the thing that I hate is
that there are no stores for men of a certain
age like either a no.

Speaker 8 (02:21:41):
My whole, my REPORTWAK Brooks Brothers.

Speaker 6 (02:21:44):
No.

Speaker 7 (02:21:44):
First of all, if that's a suit and you know
with you know.

Speaker 8 (02:21:47):
Buffet, isn't there a store the Jimmy Buffett?

Speaker 2 (02:21:50):
First of all, I'm never for wearing those things. Are
just saying, but men of a certain age, the only
thing we have, honestly, it's not Brooks Brothers. First of all,
that's for fans, your stuff or we're going to be
on a boat. You can wear that stuff. But I
think for men of a certain age, the only store
we have if I'm and I just had it at
the tip of my tongue, Oh please.

Speaker 8 (02:22:10):
Tell me they have one of those spots, you know,
with like the Steve Harvey type suits things.

Speaker 2 (02:22:15):
You know, I will never wear those things.

Speaker 9 (02:22:17):
So that's kind of how I feel about, you know,
some of these places. The stuff, it's it has to
suit your personality. If you were not a Hawaiian shirt, yeah,
like bright pink with war Bahama.

Speaker 8 (02:22:30):
That's the one.

Speaker 7 (02:22:30):
I'm trying to think.

Speaker 9 (02:22:32):
That's not that's that will never be you never, Like
if you ever get sick and it up in a hospital,
I will.

Speaker 8 (02:22:38):
I will just to torment you. Dress you in Tommy Bahamas,
you know.

Speaker 7 (02:22:42):
Do you know It's like there are some like sneaker company.

Speaker 2 (02:22:45):
I don't want to I don't want to offend anybody,
but there are some sneaker companies that are made for
men of a certain age.

Speaker 8 (02:22:50):
Yeah, they got like a soul like that thick.

Speaker 2 (02:22:54):
I won't until that's necessary. Maybe when I'm sixties hot,
sixty holler at me. I will probably throw on those.

Speaker 8 (02:23:00):
If I have my way, you will work out and
you will never get there. What else do we?

Speaker 2 (02:23:03):
Okay? But no, there are a lot of people who
are just opening about some of the places to go.

Speaker 8 (02:23:08):
I Jessica's used to be my favorite, but now they
make clothes for little girls.

Speaker 2 (02:23:12):
Yeah. Ello Bean has sweaters and fleeces that are super warm.
I kind of like that.

Speaker 9 (02:23:18):
Yeah, so I'm a I'm a like you know, there's
like function and form and they're not often together.

Speaker 8 (02:23:25):
And I'm more of a fashion Yeah, so I will.
I will freeze if I look cute.

Speaker 7 (02:23:31):
Where's their store? I mean, I don't know where guys
go to shop.

Speaker 2 (02:23:34):
I know that I don't.

Speaker 8 (02:23:37):
You order T shirts online? I buy eu jeens and
I bring them home.

Speaker 2 (02:23:41):
But the only thing, and you're right, I'll order t shirts.
Maybe we'll go to what's the T shirt place that
I love? Grunt style. I'll buy grunt style t shirts
and I'll go to get Levi's. That's about it.

Speaker 8 (02:23:53):
You don't get any of those. I buy them and
you gripe about it, and then you put them on
and you are quiet.

Speaker 2 (02:23:59):
A slip hats I love, Yeah, I love hat. Lids
is my favorite place to go. I love lid.

Speaker 8 (02:24:04):
They could just make you know, pants and shirts and
shoes and socks and underwear. You would never leave lids.

Speaker 2 (02:24:14):
They are.

Speaker 7 (02:24:16):
I don't know they that's all it is. I'm just simple.

Speaker 2 (02:24:19):
I can't. I don't think that there are stores that
are designed for men of a certain age. So that's
why I don't.

Speaker 8 (02:24:26):
You're just entirely too stubborn. I just don't know if
you're stubborn.

Speaker 2 (02:24:35):
Somebody said Coals is Okay, I don't have anything against them.
They were all.

Speaker 9 (02:24:40):
Rights is like Sears, And yeah, it's like Sears, like
their younger sister, like the just graduated high school, not
quite like peaked.

Speaker 8 (02:24:52):
In high school. Like that's Coals. Okay, Yeah, there's nothing
wrong with it. Honestly, I don't want.

Speaker 2 (02:24:58):
To, but you want to go to you like you like, uh,
what do you call it? Privately owned? Privately owned boutiques.

Speaker 8 (02:25:05):
I really do prefer boutiques.

Speaker 2 (02:25:07):
Yeah. And so there's a lot of places in Manchester
that just have the strip that's just old, very old
town Manchester. It's some of our favorite places that we
go look exactly like it perfect, very Victorian and old style.
They've still got the you know, the like you know,
what do you call it?

Speaker 7 (02:25:26):
Like the old clock at the you know whatever it's called.

Speaker 2 (02:25:33):
Words are hard today anyway, all right, I just wanted
to find out exactly what the name of the place
is that you would not go.

Speaker 7 (02:25:40):
Do you have a sweet and a toe? Do have
a suit and a tie?

Speaker 2 (02:25:44):
Yes? I do have a suit in the tie.

Speaker 8 (02:25:46):
I have one that he wore the day we got married.

Speaker 9 (02:25:49):
Yes, Listen, if I had it my way, you would
you would definitely have like your work like, this is
what you were to work and you're not at work
clothes like I would totally have you dressing different.

Speaker 22 (02:25:59):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (02:26:00):
When you grow on, you always look fancy, and me,
I just look like you.

Speaker 8 (02:26:02):
She looks fancy. I just I look like I care
about myself.

Speaker 2 (02:26:07):
And I look like your chauffeur or the bouncer.

Speaker 8 (02:26:09):
It looks like my body. Yeah, do it look like
it looks like the guy that I hand. My bags
are here, Take these to the car.

Speaker 2 (02:26:15):
Let me get these calls out of the way. I
love you, I love you too, all right, he'd go here.
Brad's in the car.

Speaker 7 (02:26:21):
Hello, Brad, Hey, hey ree.

Speaker 3 (02:26:24):
Yeah.

Speaker 27 (02:26:24):
I think I didn't hear the name, but maybe limited
is one that I don't know if she likes to
shop there or not. But that's one I thought maybe
is for older women.

Speaker 2 (02:26:36):
The limited.

Speaker 9 (02:26:37):
What do you think of that place that's more of
like a like a business, like you go there to buy,
like a woman will go there to buy her clothes
for work, like really her office.

Speaker 7 (02:26:45):
Oh yeah, okay, I don't know anything about that, Brad. Okay,
thank you, Brad.

Speaker 2 (02:26:48):
I appreciate you, sir. And yes and me for guys.

Speaker 27 (02:26:53):
Back in the nineties, I used to shop in a
lace called Jean's Wet. I don't know if they're still around.

Speaker 9 (02:26:58):
I don't know if they are, but I'm familiar with
that about structure, does anybody remember structure?

Speaker 2 (02:27:03):
I remember all of those. Yeah, I remember all of those.
But I'm too old for that place. That's like me,
like me wearing something from each and m.

Speaker 8 (02:27:11):
Well now it's expressmen.

Speaker 2 (02:27:12):
Oh that's just awful. Oh my god.

Speaker 7 (02:27:15):
The express men should be like Swahili for effeminate male.

Speaker 2 (02:27:19):
That's what That's what I believe it is. Thank you, Brad.
I appreciate you.

Speaker 1 (02:27:26):
Man.

Speaker 7 (02:27:27):
Let's go to Robin Simsbury.

Speaker 23 (02:27:29):
Hello, sir, hey.

Speaker 21 (02:27:31):
Buddy, long time, Hey are e.

Speaker 24 (02:27:32):
I is a good great shop to grab.

Speaker 2 (02:27:37):
Now that's the if I'm correct, that's that's the camping place.
But they've got great footwear.

Speaker 8 (02:27:43):
They have a lot of really great stir.

Speaker 5 (02:27:45):
Yeah, they got a lot of good active where and Rob, Rob.

Speaker 2 (02:27:49):
Let me ask you a crazy question. Are you under
fifty or above fifty? Under fifty? Okay, let me ask
you this. Are cargo pants still cool?

Speaker 8 (02:28:00):
They're not? No, And if you say yes, Rob, I'm
coming for you next.

Speaker 21 (02:28:05):
I love you.

Speaker 13 (02:28:07):
It is turning to be hunting season right now in Connecticut.

Speaker 2 (02:28:10):
I love cargo pants.

Speaker 9 (02:28:13):
Of hunting is going to the pantry to get his
nuts or the fridge to find his grapes.

Speaker 2 (02:28:18):
That I love cargo pants. They're always cool. They always
look great. I look fantastic in cargo pants.

Speaker 22 (02:28:26):
No, you don't get thee hunting pans.

Speaker 7 (02:28:30):
There you go some hunting pants. Well you can't see
what color waves?

Speaker 21 (02:28:35):
Orange?

Speaker 2 (02:28:37):
Okay maybe not rough?

Speaker 8 (02:28:40):
Well not where that gets you some waiters while we're
at it, thank you?

Speaker 2 (02:28:45):
Oh goodness questions. You're not helping me right here? Oh
orbis Wow. I think I've been in that place once
and it scared me because there's a Yeah, it's not
like when I walked in there, I looked at it,
just like what am I even doing in here? It's
really like.

Speaker 24 (02:29:04):
You definitely covered the cargo pants.

Speaker 7 (02:29:06):
Yeah, definitely absolutely.

Speaker 2 (02:29:07):
My wife will let me go in there anymore orvis.
Thank you, buddy, I.

Speaker 8 (02:29:13):
Appreciate you could do even sure.

Speaker 2 (02:29:17):
Oh I never even heard of that.

Speaker 9 (02:29:19):
Least have one in Quantico. It's a or in Potomac Mills.
It's a military law enforcement gear. So everything's like related.

Speaker 2 (02:29:27):
Well, you know they've got cargo pants.

Speaker 9 (02:29:29):
They do, but they're not like cargo pants. They're like
I'm not looking for like the puffy cargo pants.

Speaker 8 (02:29:35):
You're very sexy.

Speaker 7 (02:29:37):
Bob's and Walcot. Hello sir, Hey, how's it going pretty good?

Speaker 2 (02:29:42):
Thank you?

Speaker 23 (02:29:45):
I just wanted to chime in on this.

Speaker 13 (02:29:48):
Thing with no cargo pants.

Speaker 23 (02:29:50):
I think they're definitely they're dead.

Speaker 8 (02:29:55):
You know, it's over fifty year under. How old are you?
Over fifty year under?

Speaker 7 (02:30:00):
Over fifty one?

Speaker 13 (02:30:01):
Okay, people like stuff everything into the cargo.

Speaker 26 (02:30:07):
They're walking around with a cargo boxes folding out all
over the place.

Speaker 13 (02:30:14):
They're cool.

Speaker 23 (02:30:15):
And as far as shoes, goal, I was told because
I was getting older, my ex wife was telling me
I should started getting new balance and I'm like no,
I see only old.

Speaker 2 (02:30:26):
People wearing New Balance. They're actually they're cool now they're.

Speaker 23 (02:30:29):
Cool for they're not. No, they're not, they're not. I
went to Sketchers were Sketchers. And also there's this shoe
line called Hike Footwear that I buy because I'm a
minimalist and it's like walking around barefoot.

Speaker 13 (02:30:51):
And they are so comfortable you.

Speaker 23 (02:30:53):
Can feel every pebble on.

Speaker 13 (02:30:56):
The road as you're walking.

Speaker 2 (02:30:58):
Wow. Okay, I mean, like, I'm just really grounds you
the footwear. No, just gonna say the footwear thing is
just just different guys. You saying the gens go ahead,
True Classic okay.

Speaker 23 (02:31:13):
One, and you buy it based on the measurements.

Speaker 5 (02:31:16):
Of your body.

Speaker 2 (02:31:17):
You don't buy it, okay?

Speaker 3 (02:31:19):
And those are.

Speaker 13 (02:31:21):
Those are the genes that fit perfectly for me.

Speaker 23 (02:31:24):
I mean, I'm I'm not the most attractive, sexiest guy
in the world. I did it, but you know the
genes really damn good.

Speaker 8 (02:31:32):
All right, Well Classic, I'm on it.

Speaker 2 (02:31:34):
Well you've already well True Classic is a great coming.
Those are ones who have the funny T shirt commercials
that you like, I'll show it to you.

Speaker 7 (02:31:41):
It's really real.

Speaker 2 (02:31:42):
Yeah, they're really really good. Thank you, Bob. I appreciate you, man, Okay, right,
And and last but not least, let's go to Stevie
v and Waterbury. How are we doing, sir?

Speaker 26 (02:31:52):
I'm doing good.

Speaker 13 (02:31:53):
How you guys are doing?

Speaker 2 (02:31:54):
Look good?

Speaker 6 (02:31:56):
Good?

Speaker 13 (02:31:56):
Hey, listen, check out West Harford.

Speaker 26 (02:31:58):
They got a lot of nice bot tea out there.

Speaker 2 (02:32:00):
Yes, that's wait out a doubt that. And I was
gonna say that it's it's even fancier than than the
one in Manchester. But I like the Manchester Place because
actually used to go there a lot. But it's it's
really it is with the West, the West Hartford, uh,
location of that.

Speaker 9 (02:32:17):
To put your pinky up when you say fancy rather
than fancy, just say nicer.

Speaker 7 (02:32:25):
It's nice, it's nice, it's noise.

Speaker 24 (02:32:28):
Can I make a quick political comment, real quick?

Speaker 21 (02:32:31):
Okay?

Speaker 13 (02:32:32):
For all those people.

Speaker 26 (02:32:33):
Want to the King's day, A lot of them probably
also said never Trump, Look where that got him.

Speaker 2 (02:32:40):
Yeah, good point. It's a really really good point. Thank you,
boss man. I will talk to you soon. You got it.
So what do you think, Roseanne? We got a couple
of days we'll be on the road.

Speaker 8 (02:32:50):
It's excited. I am really excited.

Speaker 9 (02:32:53):
So I'm calking the toilet in your bathroom, cleaning the floors,
about to close out that bathroom. Got a few more
rooms to clean up and closed down. We've got our trailer.
We're almost completely packed. I'm like, I'm so excited to
just get on the road. Plus we get to drive
through northern Virginia, spend the night, see a couple of
friends before we head up.

Speaker 8 (02:33:11):
And yeah, I'm ready for a new start. I'm so excited.

Speaker 9 (02:33:14):
And yes with you, yesterday you were sad that we
were leaving. I'm no, I'm gonna miss my house. I'm
gonna miss waking up and you know, the smell of
coffee that you, you know, made for me. I'm gonna
miss walking out into the garage and at four o'clock
in the morning, you know, stifling heat. There's just little

(02:33:35):
things I'm gonna miss about, you know, like this is
my first house I've ever owned.

Speaker 2 (02:33:39):
Yeah, it's gonna be a new beginning. It's gonna be it's.

Speaker 8 (02:33:42):
Gonna be more houses.

Speaker 2 (02:33:46):
Yeah, it will be all right.

Speaker 7 (02:33:47):
Guys, just a couple of days away and Rowland's favorite day.

Speaker 2 (02:33:51):
Help day is tomorrow. As I always say, radio is free.
So we thank you for paying attention. Remember to keep
JC in your hearts and in your mind. Shot Patrick,
we love you and we miss you. Remember the panic
is not planning. It's so plan your work and work.
You're playing me. I'm reasing the radio. She is Roseanne
on the radio. Say it bye, Roseanne.

Speaker 8 (02:34:06):
Good by, Rosanne.

Speaker 2 (02:34:09):
Mark Christopher's getting your home. Have a good night and
a pleasant tomorrow. Good recent, Roseanne, have a great night.

Speaker 15 (02:34:15):
If you're heading into Hartpard right now, you're on the
soth down side of my ninety one.

Speaker 2 (02:34:18):
Look for delays.

Speaker 15 (02:34:19):
Al right down again, twenty seven to twenty eight, a
little slow again.

Speaker 2 (02:34:24):
You guys, enjoy your evening.

Speaker 5 (02:34:25):
Thank you.

Speaker 7 (02:34:28):
Bok the bridge.

Speaker 25 (02:34:29):
It's raining out here right now, so six, Oh my god,
it's fifty fifty. Oh, get ready for it, y'all. Come
into the snow and cold.

Speaker 2 (02:34:40):
If you're she's gonna be wearing for sweater, hey, layers.

Speaker 25 (02:34:45):
Layers make a difference because that wind cut through your clothes.
Oh so you already know the west Rock and all right,
roll Magnan.

Speaker 2 (02:34:55):
Hump day forty three in west Haven.

Speaker 7 (02:34:59):
All right, everybody, thank you so much. I appreciate you.

Speaker 2 (02:35:02):
Thank you. Michael A. Sketchers are the best shoes. Now
very comfortable. Beckman says, under armour, we swear by those.
We swear by those. Mattio says, why don't you just
ask Roland where to go? I'm pretty sure he's more
stylish than anyone else on staff. He's a big T
shirt guy.

Speaker 5 (02:35:22):
He is.

Speaker 2 (02:35:23):
Beckman says, isn't there a decent sorry, it's just lost it.
Isn't there a decent men's clothing shop called seven eleven?

Speaker 8 (02:35:32):
Remember that gas station that we saw and you were
like over star Barns for me, and I was.

Speaker 2 (02:35:38):
Like, my god, I almost bought those jeans. No, there
was like I just wanted to try them on. I
wanted to try them on, gass them. Listen to me,
gas station jeans.

Speaker 8 (02:35:54):
Sticks.

Speaker 7 (02:35:54):
They were selling jeans in the grocery whatever, gas station.
It doesn't matter what have you ever said in your life.
I bought these jeans from a gas dan.

Speaker 8 (02:36:04):
Ever, because I don't wear gas station clothes.

Speaker 2 (02:36:06):
Can you imagine that, Hey, where'd you get those jeans?
It's a gas station.

Speaker 8 (02:36:10):
I'm at a BUCkies now, although BUCkies does not sell jeans, I.

Speaker 2 (02:36:14):
Would I would say, oh, I bought these in a
gas station in Tuscaloosa. I'm going back.

Speaker 7 (02:36:23):
That would be great.

Speaker 8 (02:36:24):
That would be grounds for divorce.

Speaker 2 (02:36:25):
I just want you to know, really, really, grounds are
divorce for sneakers? No, you said blue jeans, I mean
for blue jeans. I'm sorry.

Speaker 8 (02:36:35):
Yeah, I have to set a standard here, Beck.

Speaker 9 (02:36:40):
When you cannot see me in a leisure suit again,
i'd like to see you and see your sucker.

Speaker 2 (02:36:46):
Oh well, that you would like. I know you would
love to see me in.

Speaker 8 (02:36:49):
That, actually, Lenen, I would think it looks so beautiful.

Speaker 2 (02:36:51):
And I've done that before. Not for me, well I
was ten. But anyway, long time.

Speaker 7 (02:37:01):
I love you guys. We see a manyata. Almost there,
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