Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:23):
Hey, yeah, they think she should calm down.
Speaker 2 (00:26):
The show is about to style Reese on the radio.
Turn it up, Turn it up low, low, turn.
Speaker 3 (00:32):
It up loud like a dream come true.
Speaker 4 (00:35):
Your Due to the nature of this program, discretion does
not exist. It's Race on the radio right now.
Speaker 1 (00:46):
On w t I SEE News Talk ten eighties.
Speaker 2 (00:56):
As Roland likes to say, baby his hand, I am
fired up and ready to go. Time about you. You
know what time it is. It's Reeess on the radio
on wt i C News Talk ten to eighty. I
(01:17):
got a fire in my belly that you wouldn't believe.
I gotta tell you, man. You know, sometimes, you know,
people just make me mad. I gotta sometimes I have
to just scream and curse people out. Sometimes you ever
get that way where it gets to a point where
you just have to tell somebody to what for? You
(01:39):
gotta curse them out. You just gotta say, don't don't
ever get beside yourself with me. And a lot of
people do a lot of people do got this animus
just creeping through their blood veins, and they've got to
say stuff. And sometimes you just gotta get them in check,
you know. And it's these idolaters that always see things
(02:04):
through certain lenses. You gotta check them sometimes I have.
Speaker 5 (02:07):
To do that.
Speaker 2 (02:08):
I'm a friendly guy and that sometimes I gotta tell you, folks,
sometimes being the nice guy causes people to say.
Speaker 6 (02:15):
The wrong things.
Speaker 2 (02:17):
You know, they think, they get a little comfortable, and
they get a little you know, they do a little
slippy stuff with the tongue they've been starting speaking. Wow crazy,
And sometimes you gotta get him in checks like him.
My man, don't ever don't don't don't do that. Don't
ever do that. I will hurt your feelings. So just
(02:40):
gotta be careful. And I could start wars. I could.
I know how, I know how to start wars, but
I'm not gonna do that. I'm gonna go I'm a
good guy. I'm a good guy now. I'm a good
guy now. But I'm telling you what I'm I like
warring factions. I love it when guys are going after
(03:04):
each other. Sometimes I don't want them to do the
whole chit chat thing. Stop talking. Swing. I need somebody
to swing. One of you get into a fisticuffs right now.
I want to see bloody noses, bloody lips. I want
to see scrapping. Let's go. All that greasy talk is
meaningless to me. I'm a guys, guy and folks, and
(03:26):
I'm telling you it's the primitive nature in me. It's
just primitive. I said the other day Chris Murphy, I
want to get under that man's skin in a minute
that he sees me. I don't want him shaking my hand.
I don't want to come and say to me, hey,
you the reisk guy. No, I want him swinging. That's
the primitive nature of me. If I think of you
(03:49):
as some sort of worm or piece of crap, I
want to let know that when you see me, there
is no talking. That's the way I feel about you.
And I don't have any reason have any beef with
this guy. I don't.
Speaker 6 (04:04):
But he's a worm.
Speaker 2 (04:06):
He just is sometimes and people will understand this. Sometimes
you just gotta you gotta do it for general principles.
But that's what I'm saying. It's not that I would ever.
I've got nothing against Chris Murphy other than the fact
that I think he is a lying worm. But I
(04:28):
got bigger problems than that. Forget about him. We'll get
to his nonsense later. I gotta talk to my own
party as it seems. Again, I don't know who you are.
I don't know what cut of cloth you come from,
(04:48):
but something is wrong with you. And I'm talking to
Republicans up here, and guess what This is what I
want you to understand. So I don't have to name
any names. If it don't apply, let it fly. But
if it sounds like you, I'm talking to you, that
goes to the radio host, the TV host, the bloggers,
(05:10):
the podcasters, and the whole Like if you're calling yourself
a Republican in the state of Connecticut and you can't
hold the line and you have sitting up here crying
and whining about Democrats and about the news media about
how they depict you. Yes, I'm talking to you. And
if you take it personally, see me, come after me.
(05:33):
I've got no problems with that. I don't sell wolf tickets.
I tell the truth as it is, and you guys
know what I'm talking about. I don't spend a lot
of time listening to other people's radio shows and other
people's networks. I don't. I have no interest in it.
People always tell me, you say, did you hear such
(05:54):
and much? Say such and such are this such and such,
and I go no, I have no interest in what
they say. Why not so much that they influence me
is that I don't want them angering me. I don't
want them upsetting me because I've got my own set
of rules and regulations.
Speaker 6 (06:10):
When it comes to being a conservative, you.
Speaker 2 (06:12):
Don't want to know what rule number one is. Be conservative.
That's it. Be conservative. If you're wishy washy about being
a conservative, you're not a conservative.
Speaker 6 (06:23):
And just say that. By the way, if I hear.
Speaker 2 (06:28):
Another bozo use the word big tent when it comes
to conservatism, please stop using it. Stop it. You either
are a conservative or you're not. If you are upset
at the term rhino, it's probably because you are one.
(06:50):
You shouldn't be upset to that word at all. If
words affect you, you're a wuss. If someone's saying that
you are this and that and you feel as though
you have to defend yourself or your feelings are being hurt,
work on it. Call your sponsor, call your therapist. But
(07:10):
keep it out of a public view. No one wants
to hear you whine. By the way, this idea of
far right, someone stop using it until they have a
definition for it. Am I far right? Am I far
right because I'm a meat eating conservative, no abortion, pro
(07:37):
life black man who believes in the Constitution? Am I
far right? What do you mean when you say far right?
If you don't have a definition, stop using it and
(07:57):
let me explain something to everybody in the Republican Party.
If you are concerned about what the news media says
about you, you don't have a message. If you are
concerned about what voters are going to ask you, stop
knocking on doors. If you don't have an answer to
(08:20):
are you a Trump guy? What are you knocking on
doors for? If you're complaining about people when you're knocking
on the door saying how do you feel about Trump?
And you're upset that people are gonna ask? What do
we do to answer that question?
Speaker 5 (08:35):
Ma'am?
Speaker 2 (08:35):
No offense, But what does Trump have to do with
why I'm knocking on your door. I'm here to talk
to you about property taxes. The property taxes in this
state have nothing to do with Trump. They have to
do with your elected leaders here in this state. I'm
not exactly sure about your question. What's the Trump question about?
I'd be happy to address it, but I'd like to
understand how that's gonna get your property taxes down. You're
(08:57):
not to do that. Hi, I'm so and so, I'm
running for such and such office. I'd like to talk
to you about property taxes. I'd like to talk to
about sales taxes. I'd like to talk to you about
taxes overall in the state. I understand that my opponent
wants to raise your taxes incrementally two to three percent
every four years.
Speaker 6 (09:17):
I'm here to stop that.
Speaker 2 (09:21):
If the person in turns the rest says yeah, but
what do you think about Trump? I'm not exactly sure
why you're asking about Trump.
Speaker 6 (09:27):
This is about your taxes.
Speaker 2 (09:28):
Is Trump more important than lowering your taxes? Ma'am? Is
Trump more important than lowering your property taxes?
Speaker 7 (09:35):
Sir?
Speaker 2 (09:35):
I'm not exactly sure.
Speaker 6 (09:36):
Why you're asking that question.
Speaker 2 (09:38):
I'm here running for you, is your rep so that
I can fight against people taking money from your pocket
to pay for things that you don't want. Still trying
to understand the Trump thing. And by the way, if
you're a Republican and you're complaining about Trump that Trump
is doing things that hurt your chances, let me work
(10:01):
on this for a little bit for you. I'm gonna
help you with something. I'm gonna tell you a little story,
really really important story. There's a reason why people never
ask me about Trump and always ask me about me
when people meet me. No one ever asked me about Trump.
(10:25):
They asked me, how did you become a conservative? How
did you get on radio? Tell me more about your
life as a child. You come from New York. You
want to know why, because Trump is an afterthought. If
you're running for public office and people are more concerned
about Trump than they are about you, you don't exist,
(10:49):
You don't matter. You've made no end roads as a politician.
Is anybody running for office? Your name is not bigger
than the story. You need to become the story. Are
you running for public office? If people if a Democrat
is going door to door, knocking on people's front door,
(11:10):
and the person comes in and says, what do you
think of Chuck Schumer? Ma'am, I'm actually trying to save
democracy here. I'm not exactly sure about what Chuck Schumer
thinks about him. I'm the candidate here, not Chuck Schumer.
Chuck Schumer represents New York. I represent Bristol, and I'm
(11:30):
hearing these excuses from these people, and I'm listening to that.
I'm not going are these people that danse that this
is what they're complaining about, that they really do believe
that when people are knocking on the door to ask
for their vote, that they're concerned about what's going on
in Washington and Donald Trump, that their water bill, their
(11:52):
electric bill, Hi, I mean any bill for that matter,
that the first thing that comes in your mind when
you were talking to them about issues that matter to them.
You're telling me that the most important thing they're concerned
about is Donald Trump and his tweet. I think you're
(12:12):
fooling all of us. I think you're lazy. I think
you're lazy, and I think you're inept. I don't think
that your name is worth bubkiss. I think your name
is mud. And I think you're finding excuses for losing.
(12:34):
You're not out there on the street. You're not out
there pounding the pavement, getting in the faces of not
just other public officials, but in the news media. You're
not getting out there holding a press conference or even
going down to the newsroom and saying I want my
equal time. You're not making these people notice you. They
(12:55):
write a quick blurb about you and then you're done. Hey,
look we wade it in the paper and you move on.
You don't have what it takes. You are a career
running mate or a career candidate. Most of you guys
are just running so you can get your press, so
(13:19):
you can get some form of notoriety. John so and
so last year ran for office blah blah blah blah
blah blah blah, and now you're some political commentator on
some ridiculous weekend show. You guys are running for fame.
(13:42):
You're so afraid of your own shadow and so afraid
of the state that you do not know how to
make headway. And now you're getting to the point where
you're trying to make other people reason with the idea
that the only way you're ever going to get elected
is if you get wishy washy and side with the
(14:04):
Democrat Party. You're trying to get everyone to sign on
or swallow the idea that they have to capitulate in
order to make it. We're never gonna get elected unless
we moderate and sound more like them. That's losing, that's
(14:29):
not winning. That's what we call someone who doesn't have
enough of the gonads to go out there and make
a case. They'll do anything to get elected. They'll kiss
anyone's feet. They are not there for the people. They
(14:50):
are not there to represent them and their ideals at all.
They are there trying to get in so they can
fit in. I think a lot of you have gone soft.
I think you lost so much. You're all a bunch
of Mitt Romney's. But like I said, if it don't apply,
(15:14):
let it fly. But if you think I'm talking about you,
that's because I am.
Speaker 6 (15:22):
I don't know what. You're scared of yourselves or everything.
Speaker 2 (15:31):
You don't have to turn turn on your back so
that Democrats can rub your belly just so you could
be liked. Let me give you a few examples. You
should pay attention to this guy from ras Musclin ras Musclin.
Speaker 6 (15:48):
His name is Mark Mitchell.
Speaker 2 (15:52):
This is an important thing you're running away from Donald Trump.
Speaker 8 (15:56):
Why they just want America fixed and they don't care
how it's done. And so I think there's this aspect
of Trump support that really gets overlooked, which has been
like young angry online men that have been the butt
of American society. And these people are not reading William F.
Buckley they want a strong man, they want things fix
and unfortunately they've been around for ten years they haven't
(16:18):
really seen a lot of stuff get fixed. And now
all of a sudden, it's like, well, Trump came in,
he was wrecking the government. Everybody loved it, and then
that stopped. And what happened, well, probably the uniparty killed Doge.
Donald Trump was getting a sixty percent approval rating of
under forty voters. That's just like insane, that's did.
Speaker 9 (16:37):
You know that?
Speaker 6 (16:39):
Did you know that?
Speaker 2 (16:42):
Do you want to know where the sixty percent of
under forty voters are now? Because you guys were running
against Doge? Here's where they are now?
Speaker 8 (16:56):
Literally not so And now where is it? It's thirty
five percent? And who are those people like?
Speaker 10 (17:00):
Now?
Speaker 2 (17:01):
They like, Mom, Donnie, you're running your people into the
arms of a communist because you keep battling Trump, who's
doing all the legwork that you're afraid to do.
Speaker 1 (17:19):
Fan of w t i C, then do us a favor.
Download the Free Honesty app and f.
Speaker 7 (17:24):
W T i C.
Speaker 2 (17:26):
I gotta tell you, you know, I think about this all
the time, and I've learned this and I may have
to admit it. I may have learned this through sobriety.
Aside from the saying if nothing changes, nothing changes. You
(17:50):
just got to ask yourself at what point is enough.
It's not so much about hitting rock bottom you've got
You got to ask yourself, at any anything in life,
when is enough enough? And some people it ain't there yet,
it's not enough yet, and they're okay. And I know
(18:14):
what it's about, because there's a lot of projection in
this town, telling everyone what the other person's motives are,
never ever divulging their own.
Speaker 6 (18:30):
Now I know this.
Speaker 2 (18:33):
Because I've been in these places before, and I'm just
as guilty of it, and I'm honest enough to admit
it that if there was something I could get out
of it, I was there for it. How can I
help this promote me? How can I get this to
(18:55):
get my name out of that? The fame was just so,
it was just one of those things. It was like, oh,
they know my name, this is fantastic, and so obsessed
with that realizing I had no mission statement other than
my own notoriety. But then when I realized that it
(19:18):
isn't about me, never has been, never will be other
than this show. This is the only thing that is mine,
And to be quite honest with you, that's barely mine.
I mean it's owned by WTIC. I get that. But
what I do here, what comes out of my mouth,
is my own thoughts. No one's lining my pockets, and
(19:41):
when I mean lining them, no one is giving me
money for these ideas. I've said this before and I'll
say it again. I'm a part of no club. I
don't want to be pigeonholed or attached to it, tethered
to anybody. I've got a job to do. I'm a conservative.
(20:05):
I want my ideas to spread across the fruited plane.
I want a better life, not just for myself and
my family, but for you too. And I believe that
my ideas have weight and take up space. Why did
I use that phrase? They matter? That's what I think
of my views. They matter, They have weight and take
(20:29):
up space. So as much as I may be riling
people up or getting people upset, people might be getting
in their feelings or feeling a little hurt or damaged
or bruised by these facts.
Speaker 7 (20:48):
So what.
Speaker 2 (20:51):
You're in the world of public service, and if you
are not serving your public, that's job one. You're not
serving your public. If you're doing this for fame, notoriety,
or for your next gig, then you're not doing job one.
(21:15):
And I told you guys again, this radio gig used
to be that thing where I was coming in for
the notoriety. But you know what, I started looking at
it differently. When you got people talking, you got people
doing things. You have people moving and shaking based upon
the things. You realize you are a public servant.
Speaker 7 (21:33):
I am.
Speaker 2 (21:34):
Thank god, I get paid for it, just like every
other public servant servant in politics does. But what I'm
doing here in talk radio is a public service, is
to hash out those ideas, find rational solutions to them,
talk with you and see how we can come to solutions.
(21:55):
I've been trying to do that since I got here.
That has been my mission statement, not about me, about you,
about the state of Connecticut. I'm the biggest cheerleader for
this state. With the exception of a few out there.
I ain't even from here, and I talk about this
state like it's my second home. I fight for it
(22:17):
like it's my home because it matters to me. I
told you before, I grew up envying this place because
I couldn't get here. I look at all the wealthy
people with all the nice cars going to my home
in Connecticut. Wow, what's up there?
Speaker 9 (22:36):
Oh?
Speaker 6 (22:36):
I was stay in Greenwich Worth over by the water.
Speaker 2 (22:41):
I didn't see those people as Papa's I saw those
people as people I wanted to be like. Then I
got to see it firsthand, and I went, God, I
really do love this. I'm a fan of this place.
And other people are here to complain. I'm not not
that I mind that they do. But I listened to
(23:05):
people and again, like I said, I listened to other
radio stations today, again something I rarely do, and I
spent more time listening to the audience than I did
the host of those shows. And you know what the
audience was saying. They were saying the same thing that
I'm saying.
Speaker 6 (23:18):
I'm sick and tired of you people capitulating.
Speaker 2 (23:21):
I'm sick and tired of people you lying down with
them and then calling it, you know, compromising. They're sick
and tidy hearing the compromise only going one way. Never
once is there a Republican victory where the Democrats have
been made to say, well, we and all that the
(23:41):
Republicans had us over a barrel on this one. We
had to we have to see some ground. They made
some very very good points, and it was fiscally irresponsible. No,
it's always well. If you're gonna get anything done, you've
gotta you gotta give a little, get a little. Why
is this you split always ninety ten eighty twenty seventy
(24:03):
thirty in their favor? Why because you don't have any weight,
Because you don't think you have any real weight. I'm
here to tell you that's not true. That's not true.
You're fighting in the wrong backyard. You're fighting in your
own now you need to fight in theirs. Everything can
(24:31):
be changed, but you have to be willing to change it.
WI lingya to change it. You can't make these excuses
about what the media is going to say or what
other people are going to say. If they control the message,
you have none. If you understand that, let me give
(24:54):
you a little bit of press one oh one. If
you're dealing with a reporter who sounds like a Democrat,
stop the interview and ask him, I'm sorry, are you
here to represent the Democrats during this interview or are
you interviewing me? Because if you'd like, I'd rather you
just bring a democrat into this interview and he and
(25:15):
I or she and I can hash this out. I
don't want to debate a Democrat in this interview. I
want to be interviewed in an unbiased way, objective journalism.
But if you're here to make talking points for Democrats,
this isn't an interview. And stop the interview. Don't beg
(25:37):
for their ink as soon as you're hear them talk. Well,
some Democrats would say. I don't give a damn what
some Democrats will say. Are you here to represent the Democrats?
I didn't know I was here for to be in
a debate. You want to talk to me about what
my plans are? Do you want to have a debate
with me? Because let me know what district are you representing?
(25:57):
Their journalists, maybe we should get a moderator here and
put them on their toes. It's one thing to accept
the fact that the news media has left this. It's
another to accept them to throw at you the opposition's
talking point during an interview where you're trying to get
(26:19):
your message out, and then the entire article comes about
comes out and it's about dismissing your talking points. Is
that an interview?
Speaker 4 (26:28):
No?
Speaker 6 (26:29):
And Why are you allowing it? Why because you have to? No,
you don't.
Speaker 2 (26:32):
Who told you that? What rule book was that?
Speaker 11 (26:35):
In?
Speaker 2 (26:37):
What rule book said that? If the leftist journalist wants
to completely dominate your message, you let them just so you.
Speaker 6 (26:44):
Can get the ink we're Afterwards, you show it around
to your friends and go I think it was a
pretty fair interview. That was some mother parcel.
Speaker 2 (26:56):
If you're not controlling the message, you have none. It's
that simple. You have got to become more unorthodox, because,
to be honest with you, there is an orthodoxy here.
(27:17):
There is a way of doing business that has been
the same.
Speaker 6 (27:20):
What have the results been?
Speaker 2 (27:22):
Lost after loss after loss, and everybody's sitting around going
what do we do?
Speaker 6 (27:26):
What do we do? What do we do?
Speaker 2 (27:28):
How about not the same? If you're asking yourself, how
are you going to do that? You know how to
reach me. If I have to be an advisor, I will.
(27:48):
If you have to listen to the show to get advice, fine,
listen to the show. Democrats are not going to be
able to combat what we're talking about here. The only
thing they can do is scream and holler, and they.
Speaker 6 (28:02):
Yelled Donald Trump all day, Donald.
Speaker 2 (28:03):
Trump, Marga Donald Trump MAGA. They have no opposition to
real ideas, so we can talk right in front of them.
They don't know how to combat ideas. Let me give
you a hint as to why they have none. They
(28:28):
cannot win in the debate of ideas. It's that simple.
Speaker 6 (28:36):
We'll be back Reese on the radio.
Speaker 2 (28:38):
It's Reese on the radio. News. I see all right
coming up in the next hour. We've got plenty of
news and plenty of views. We've got headlines. Stupidest thing
I read today, of course, has my favorite person, Chris
Murphy involved. In fact, there are two great stories that
are related to Chris Murphy. And I want to thank
the Democrats because it has been months, I mean a
(29:01):
lot of months.
Speaker 6 (29:02):
And Epstein's back.
Speaker 2 (29:04):
Hey, Jeffrey Epstein is back in the news. Epstein's back,
and it's better than ever Christmas this year. Epstein's back.
I can't wait to talk about that. And of course
we'll take your calls at eight and zero five two
two WT. I see eights and zero five to two two,
(29:26):
nine to eight, four to two. We've got between rounds
that winners coming up. And I have some very very
interesting news. I'm not just gonna go after the Republicans today.
I think we're gonna have to go after the civil
rights ers today as well. A story that we covered
a couple of months ago, even went down to the
courthouse to cover the case.
Speaker 6 (29:50):
Has had a resolution. It has been resolved.
Speaker 2 (29:54):
A case that we covered right here on this program
that involves the Department of Correction and the death of
an inmate. Remember that, well, we've got some details on
that that. There has been absolutely no coverage of Everyone
seemed to be covering the court case when we went
down there, and then the story disappeared, even though the
(30:18):
judge is handed down a ruling. You'll remember that case.
It's the case of j.
Speaker 6 (30:24):
Allen Jones. We'll talk about that as well. Did you
even know that?
Speaker 2 (30:28):
Did anybody even know that that case had been resolved
by the judge, that they had judged handed down a ruling. Yeah,
I didn't know either. I had to go back through
my files and say, hey, do we have any unresolved issues.
Speaker 6 (30:42):
From recent radio to recover? Because we don't like.
Speaker 2 (30:44):
To leave anything hanging. We don't like to leave anything
because we don't want to do whatever happened to on
this program. We want to get to the end of it,
and it turns out there's an end to this story,
and it is quite baffling. And the crazy part is
is that no one, even the Civil RIGHTSS have made
(31:07):
any hay about it. You will not believe what I
learned today from one of my sources on the video,
So stand stick around for that. That one's gonna be
my numbing. I mean I couldn't stop thinking about it today.
Mind numbing as well. Also, what we're working on, if
(31:32):
not this week, I'm gonna try for Friday, so you
guys have to be here for that. I am trying
to get the podcaster on this program. Who's the podcaster,
you say, Let me give you a little background. Mimi Torres.
(31:55):
You know the story we have still covering and everybody's
now releasing them police videos of Yeah, Mimi Torres's mom
was supposed to do a podcast from a woman in
her neighborhood. I believe it was the upstairs neighbor. Well,
we have that podcaster's contact information and we're working on
(32:16):
getting an interview with that individual. I'm trying to get
it scheduled as early as Friday. I'll be working on
that today to get that done, so stand by for that.
I'll get you some details on and hopefully I'll have
an answer for you by tomorrow and see if we
can get that interview on Friday as well. So yeah,
(32:38):
we got plenty of stuff to get into today. Also,
this ridiculous poll that came out, let me read it.
It is about apparently, according to this poll by you gov,
ninety percent of Connecticut voters believe that ned lamont Is
(33:00):
is dragging his feet on affordable housing in the state.
But something doesn't jive with that. The polling data is
really suspect. And it was a headline on a couple
of news sites and I'm going look and again, this
is not to defend Oakley docally, is just to tell
(33:21):
the truth. I don't like bad journalism and this journ
this story is not a story. There's a reason why
there is no affordable housing in the state of Connecticut
or why it's such a problem. And I'll be honest
with you, I think it has everything to do with
focus on focusing on particular towns and regions that ned
(33:44):
lamont and others are not giving up on. And I mean, yeah,
they refuse to give up on although they should.
Speaker 6 (33:51):
So we'll talk about that.
Speaker 2 (33:52):
Plus, they need to do some apartment renewals and improvements
in and around Hartford, because I've driven through the city
of Hartford and I've seen some of these hollowed out
homes that people could be housed in, and no one's
doing anything about them. Whether there's slum lords or whoever
(34:15):
owns them, nobody's doing anything about them. If they want
to spend some money, if they really want affordable housing,
there are ways to do it. But they're ignoring the
places where there are homes that can be improved, or
if that's the case, just condemned the ones that should
be condemned. So we'll talk about that article as well.
Plus we've got headlines coming up, and this has got
(34:37):
to be one of the wildest headlines.
Speaker 6 (34:40):
I've done on this show.
Speaker 2 (34:42):
Some of these stories are almost insane to believe, but
they're going to be really, really good. I think that's it, right,
What else, That's all we got to set up for
the whole show. Oh, and of course your phone calls
and eights zero five two two WT I see this
eights and zero five two two nine eight for two
and uh oh, Clinton's how did I forget them. I
(35:05):
got Clinton news because I mentioned that yesterday. Yeah, we
got some Clinton news as well, the Clinton Foundation.
Speaker 6 (35:11):
Darn it, how do I forget that? Anyway, it happens.
Speaker 2 (35:14):
John Silver has got your news. He's in the WTIC newsroom.
Speaker 6 (35:18):
Will be back.
Speaker 2 (35:18):
Go nowhere. Make sure you give us a call at
eight six zero five to two to two WTIC.
Speaker 6 (35:23):
I'm Recenter Radio. This is News Talk ten ady WTIC.
Speaker 1 (35:26):
Breeze on the radio, making sense of the news. Yeah,
even when it makes no sense at all. All now
on WTIC News Talk ten eighty.
Speaker 2 (35:36):
Yeah, let's get too headlines. The Department of Homeland Security
announced that on November fourth, in Los Angeles, California, ice
officers arrested Victoria Sorisn, an illegal alien from Moldova wanted
(35:57):
in her home country, for murder committed with premeditation and
exceptional cruelty. In September of twenty thirteen, Sorceren and an
accomplished were convicted of intentional murder and she was sentenced
to seventeen years in prison. Sorcerin and her accomplice tortured
(36:18):
their victim in an apartment in Maldova. They beat the
victim with a stitch with a stick. Sorry, an electoral
electoral cable? Just say an electric cord, an electrical cable,
before throwing the victim out of a ninth floor window.
Representative John Larsen could not be reached for comment. Sorry.
(36:40):
In an attempt to evade a seventeen year sentence, Sorcerin
fled to the United States under the first Trump administration.
ICE then arrested her on January. In January of twenty twenty.
Following her arrest, Socerin engaged in a very in various
legal tactics to avoid removal, including following multiple appeals with
(37:02):
the Board of Immigration, and she appealed them seeking asylum.
In twenty twenty two, Soccerin was released back into the
country under the Biden administration.
Speaker 6 (37:14):
She has now been, of course, caught again.
Speaker 2 (37:18):
A man is facing charges for allegedly admitting to deputies
that he fatally shot two people inside a New Mexico
home after receiving an encrypted message in a cockroach that
he needed to kill authorities say. Alexis Hernandez Is twenty
five years old, was arrested in charge with two open
(37:38):
counts of murder in connection with Friday's incident inside a
Southwest Albuquerque home. According to the Baronello County Sheriff's Office,
Hernandez was booked into the Metropolitan Detention Center on Saturday morning,
and it's not immediately clear if he.
Speaker 6 (37:55):
Has retained a lawyer.
Speaker 2 (37:56):
Authorities have not identified the men who were killed in
incident or the two young children who were found inside
the house at the time.
Speaker 6 (38:04):
According to the arrest.
Speaker 2 (38:06):
Warrant filed with the Burranello County Metropolitan Court, deputies responded
to reports of gunfire in the Southwest Alberquerze, Albuquerque home
before ten thirty pm. When deputies arrived, they were met
at the front door by Hernandez, who had a firearm
in his waistband and the Marine Corps saber on his hip.
(38:29):
The arrest warrant said that Hernandez, who was immediately detained,
told detectives that he was a marine and he had
to do what he had to do. Once inside the house,
the warrant, state's deputy found one deceased mail with possible
gunshot wounds and the other in front of the house,
and the second male sorry had stab wounds. The warrant
states that Hernandez also alleged that a friend had placed
(38:51):
cameras and lights inside the home, and Hernandez told deputies
that he was allegedly hearing creepy voices coming from the
ve that he was getting signs that he had to
end the property owner before he ended him. Hernandez later
alleged that he told deputies he had also been receiving
encrypted messages in a cockroach that he needed to kill. Yeah,
(39:17):
that's what he said.
Speaker 6 (39:19):
Wealthy sniper tourists.
Speaker 2 (39:23):
This is a story you've probably seen in the movies,
or you probably thought might be real, but you don't
know where it is. Well, according to an investigative reporter,
this may very well be real. Wealthy sniper tourists allegedly
paid ninety thousand dollars to shoot people during what's called
a human safari trip in Sarajevo in the nineteen nineties,
(39:47):
with an extra fee to kill children, according to wild
claims being pro by Italian prosecutors.
Speaker 6 (39:54):
The investigation was sparked.
Speaker 2 (39:55):
After an Italian writer alleged that he had uncovered evidence
by wealthy gun in enthusiast dubbed sniper tourists, they would
pay Bosnian Serb forces for the chance to gun down
residents at random during a four year siege of the city.
According to the Guardian, more than ten thousand were killed
in Sarajevo by snipers and shelling between nineteen ninety two
(40:17):
and nineteen ninety six.
Speaker 6 (40:18):
During the Balkan.
Speaker 2 (40:19):
Wars, there were Germans, French and English people from all
western countries who paid large sums of money to be
taken there to shoot civilians. According to the investigative reporter,
there were no political or religious motivations. They were rich
people who went there for fun and personal satisfaction. According
to his notes, we're talking about people who love guns
(40:42):
and who perhaps go on shooting ranges in the safari
of Africa. And now for the stupidest thing, as if
those weren't enough that I read today, yes you do.
Speaker 1 (41:02):
It should very well be the stupidest person.
Speaker 12 (41:05):
On the face of the earth.
Speaker 2 (41:09):
Now you may know that the government shut down is
in the midst of wrapping up. Well, of course, only
if Democrats decide that they want to sign on after
the bill is sent from the Senate and goes down
to Congress, that may very well happen.
Speaker 6 (41:25):
Who knows. We're still waiting to see what takes place.
Speaker 2 (41:30):
But Democrats have gotten so desperate that they've decided they
want to ouse Chuck Schumer. And ouse Chuck Schumer, they
may well do. It may not happen until twenty twenty seven,
but it looks quite likely that the old guard is out.
Nancy Pelosi has already called it quits. Chuck Schumer may
be following suit. But what ro Kana and other Democrats
(41:56):
are suggesting could be far worse for Democrats. Ro Conna
is suggesting, perhaps we can get the Chrises to fill
that gap that Schumer may leave behind.
Speaker 6 (42:08):
Who are the Chrises.
Speaker 2 (42:10):
Well, it's either Chris van Holland of Maryland or our
very own Christoph Murphy. Oh baby, Chris Murphy, Senate Minority Leader.
It could happen. It could happen.
Speaker 6 (42:32):
A lot of people are suggesting it.
Speaker 2 (42:33):
They're saying that he's a fighter, he travels around the country,
he's energetic, and he's boring is all get out. He's
perfect for the job for Democrats. I think that he's
got to show it. I mean, they could pick Jasmine Crockett,
but you know, I don't think that she's got a
shot in hell anyway. But Chris Murphy, imagine it. Chris
(42:53):
Murphy finally getting a real job where he's gonna have
to rap his troops. I think it's quite possible we'll
see him on television every day. And Connecticut, you'd be
so proud, wouldn't you. Wouldn't you be so proud? I
can't wait. Let's go to the phone. Shun's in Meridan.
How are you sean?
Speaker 5 (43:15):
Great? Oh?
Speaker 9 (43:15):
Well, yeah good, But I was listening to your entire monologue. Yeah,
and I gotta honestly say, I couldn't have said it
better than myself.
Speaker 5 (43:26):
Thank you.
Speaker 2 (43:26):
I appreciate that.
Speaker 9 (43:28):
Because it was And I've been in Connecticut for forty
years and I'm a Republican. I'm a conservative. I don't
apologize for it. I get in a lot of trouble
because I don't apologize for it. I've lost jobs because
I don't apologize for it. Because I wouldn't play games
with the state of Connecticut and put kids where they
(43:48):
said that they should go.
Speaker 5 (43:50):
I didn't do that. I got written up, I.
Speaker 9 (43:51):
Got suspended, all the other stuff. But one of the
things that I love about your show, and.
Speaker 5 (44:01):
I'm not a big you know, fluffy up and I
like you.
Speaker 9 (44:06):
Buddy's okay, you're no nonsense and and the BS stops
at the door and have to.
Speaker 5 (44:16):
And well know, for a lot of.
Speaker 9 (44:18):
People in Connecticut it doesn't.
Speaker 2 (44:20):
Yeah, I know.
Speaker 9 (44:22):
And that's that's why when you when you said what
you said, I'm like, oh man, oh, I'm like lapping.
Speaker 5 (44:29):
There's nobody here to hear me.
Speaker 9 (44:30):
But but but but it was phenomenal in that if
you're people of principle, in which your principles are non negotiable,
then you can stand Democratic, Republican or independent, and you
can have the conversations that you need to have to
pull everything forward for everybody. But when you get to
(44:52):
capitulate because you owe somebody or they owe you or whatever,
then you're like you are that like little we that's right,
Like you're you're tumbleweed.
Speaker 5 (45:03):
Whatever the wind blows.
Speaker 9 (45:05):
That you got to go with it because if push
comes to show they got something.
Speaker 2 (45:09):
They'll throw you under the bus for yeah, exactly.
Speaker 9 (45:12):
And and I thought that was really really phenomenal. But
the other and the other thing, two more things I
want to quickly mention, and then I just want to
hear other people. It's amazing to me for the Democratic
Party that you can start the problem of Obamacare here a. Yeah,
(45:32):
you did it all by yourself. No Republicans at all anything.
Speaker 5 (45:37):
Keep your doctor? What out I couldn't keep my doctor.
And then you know it's coming. Yeah, because who set
it up?
Speaker 7 (45:45):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (45:45):
No, no, it gets you know, you're right. It's like
it's a unique craft that you can set the whole
thing up. Vote for it with no bipartisanship to mention,
cram it down our throats, tell us we have to
pass it before we find out what's in it, and
then when it fails, be able to jiu jitsu pretzel
(46:07):
twist away into blaming the Republicans for its failure and
say it then it's our fan.
Speaker 9 (46:15):
You know, it's not gonna have enough money to go forward,
and it needs to be revitalized. And so now you
want to give it all back, and you want to
add people to it, and then you want when you
and when you add people to it, it's gonna cost
more money, of which it doesn't work in the first place.
Speaker 6 (46:32):
Exactly. It's insane.
Speaker 2 (46:34):
What was the last thing you want to get to
so I can get to get to somebody else?
Speaker 9 (46:36):
Go ahead, the Chris Murphy thing. Yeah, I hope he
gets to be leadership because then people can see.
Speaker 5 (46:47):
What a more on here is.
Speaker 2 (46:49):
You're one hundred again. No, see this is this is
like the Mamdani thing. It's like people are just like
Chris Murphy could be the Senate Minority leader, and it's
like that could be fantastic.
Speaker 6 (46:59):
I'm going yes, it would.
Speaker 2 (47:02):
Because then he would be on TV every day and
anything that failed would fall right in his lap. That's
why I think he won't.
Speaker 5 (47:09):
Take Something I want to comment on is Mndabie.
Speaker 9 (47:12):
I remember him to get into office. He said I
will take the fight to President Trump. I will stand
against President Trump.
Speaker 5 (47:19):
And now he's in office.
Speaker 13 (47:21):
Oh, by the way, we can't afford what you're gonna do.
Speaker 5 (47:23):
Hey, President Trump, I heard you.
Speaker 6 (47:26):
I heard I heard you.
Speaker 2 (47:27):
I heard he wants to talk to Trump. Now, yeah,
thank you man, you got it. Let's go to Ralphie.
Speaker 5 (47:34):
Boy.
Speaker 6 (47:34):
What's going on?
Speaker 13 (47:35):
Good afternoon, Reese. I want to discuss that you can
and got a couple of minutes.
Speaker 2 (47:40):
Affordability, sure, I mean, but it seems to be what
everyone else is talking about, but never mentioning what I mean,
how to make things affordable?
Speaker 13 (47:49):
How about how about some common sense?
Speaker 14 (47:51):
Uh?
Speaker 13 (47:52):
I redid my mortgage about five years ago, I got
a fifteen year mortgage at two percent. Okay, all right, now,
why not go back to that and say, just run
numbers a fifteen year mortgage at two and a half percent,
a twenty year mortgage at three percent, a twenty five
(48:13):
year mortgage at three and a half percent, and a
thirty year mortgage at four percent. And what has to
happen also is people have to stop with these three
thousand square foot houses and go back to the fifteen hundred,
eighteen hundred square foot homes that they can afford.
Speaker 2 (48:33):
That's you know what. That is a good point because
I am in a fourteen hundred square foot home and
it's just my wife and I and I gotta be honest, Ralph,
it's too much for us. We say it all the time.
We have three bedrooms in that place.
Speaker 5 (48:49):
Yeah.
Speaker 13 (48:49):
But another thing too, that people have to take into
account when you're getting a mortgage, Chris, and I'm sure
you're aware of that. You've got your property taxes, you've
got your home own owners insurance, and that could add
another one thousand dollars a month. Sure could margats payment,
Sure could. That's all gonna be factored in, So if
(49:10):
American people go back to doing that fifteen hundred and
eighteen hundred square foot home, even if you've got a
couple of kids, so you got two thousand square feet
with three bedrooms, you're not going to have a huge mortgage.
And if they make the rates as I you know,
I thought, was it sounds reasonable anyway that you know
(49:31):
what you can afford.
Speaker 5 (49:32):
For what length.
Speaker 2 (49:33):
Well, we also need real estate agents who work like
who work like like like our car.
Speaker 6 (49:39):
Dealers used to do.
Speaker 2 (49:39):
I'll never forget when I bought my twenty thirteen Nissan,
I wanted to get the twenty eighteen Maxima and the
guy said, nah, no, no, no, this one's gonna be
in your in your price range.
Speaker 6 (49:50):
I'm not gonna lie it was.
Speaker 2 (49:51):
It was smarter for me to get the Ultima, but
I wanted the Maxima, but he was like, no, no,
this one's probably gonna be wiser for you. And it was.
Speaker 6 (49:59):
I had a car payment of three hundred and two
dollars a month.
Speaker 2 (50:02):
It was perfect. It was perfect. And I think the
home owners should have a real estate agent that isn't
trying to get them into the best bang for the
real estates.
Speaker 13 (50:12):
Buck right, But the average person that they get any
kind of a brain and Murphy supporters don't. I'm sorry,
they just don't that that's a fact. And as you
know what your monthly payment's got to be what you
can afford when you add in your mortgage, your insurance, yep,
and your taxes. You know what that bottom line is.
(50:34):
You know what you can afford to pay. Yes, and
that's what you pay.
Speaker 6 (50:39):
Exactly, thank you.
Speaker 2 (50:40):
Ralph Donald says, rees, I'm for revamping the ACA. It's
proven to be if it's proven to be better than
what we have, well, actually, that's see. This is the
dumb argument that a lot of people get into with
the Affordable Care Act. It it's funny that America always
(51:01):
seems to be identified after the government program.
Speaker 5 (51:04):
Right.
Speaker 2 (51:04):
We always look at the world like, you know, it's like,
we can't get rital social security it wasn't always here.
We can't get rid of unemployment, it wasn't always here.
People get so comfortable with it, they treat it like
it's always been a part of the fabric of who
we are. Social programs were not the fabric of who
we are. They became the fabric of who we are.
(51:27):
People have survived without them. The Affordable Care Act must go.
There should never have been a government takeover the health
insurance industry. So for someone who doesn't understand this, which
is clear that Donald does not, let me help him. Okay,
you are not arguing for health care. Stop using that phrase.
(51:53):
Healthcare is not what Bernie Sanders is talking about. It
wasn't what Barack Obama was talking about. It isn't what
democrats are talking about. Let me give you an example.
You're walking down the street and you trip and you
hit your head on the pavement. A witness sees you
(52:15):
bleeding out on the floor on the ground. They call
nine to one one, the police, fire and EMT show up.
They pick you up, and they put you in the
ambulance and they take you to the hospital. On the
ride there, the EMT is taking your vitals. They're probably
(52:36):
asking you questions if you're conscious, are you taking any medication,
are you epileptic? Anything along those lines. But they are
caring for you. These things are health care. See how
that works. Say how it works. You get to the hospital,
you are rushed into the emergency room if necessary, or
(52:59):
in tree. A person will ask you, are you dizzy?
Are you nauseous. How many fingers do I have?
Speaker 5 (53:07):
Up?
Speaker 6 (53:07):
What year is it? Who's the president of the United States?
Speaker 5 (53:11):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (53:11):
That looks bad, Okay, stitch him up. These things are
called health care. Now, if someone gets to the hospital
with you, someone will immediately say, hey, let.
Speaker 6 (53:25):
Me take you into him.
Speaker 2 (53:26):
He is conscious, he's doing okay, let me take you
to the room.
Speaker 7 (53:30):
Now.
Speaker 2 (53:30):
Afterwards, they will give you some paperwork for the hospital.
Speaker 6 (53:33):
Right, Hey, fill this out.
Speaker 2 (53:35):
We need to know his name, bay blah blah blah blah,
bah blah blah blah. Does he have insurance? No, No,
he doesn't have insurance. Okay, no problem. Just fill out
all of this information with your address, and then you
get a bill. At no time were you denied healthcare?
(53:58):
Were you know? What you're arguing is called health insurance. Now,
does every human being deserve healthcare?
Speaker 9 (54:15):
Yes?
Speaker 2 (54:15):
Queen yes, which begs the question, does every American get healthcare?
Speaker 15 (54:26):
Yes?
Speaker 2 (54:27):
Queen, yes, health insurance you pay for. You already have
the God given right to healthcare.
Speaker 6 (54:44):
You are not.
Speaker 2 (54:44):
Refused by doctor. The EMT doesn't roll upon your worm. Sir, sir,
I see that you're falling down.
Speaker 6 (54:52):
Who's your insurer?
Speaker 2 (54:54):
I can't put you in the bus until I find
out who you're insurance. Oh wow, that's a horrible gash.
I should put a bandage on it. But who is
your insurance to pay for this bandage? No? I can't.
I can't put the bandage on if you don't you
don't tell me who your insurance is.
Speaker 6 (55:11):
Get the point.
Speaker 2 (55:12):
Sorry, I had to explain it like you were a
five year old, but unfortunately some of you act like
you are. We'll take a break, we'll come back. It's
Recenter Radio on wt I see news stock ten eighty.
Speaker 1 (55:21):
Hey, whoa, whoa, whoa? Hold up one hundred candles on
the cake? Who do you think is lighting this?
Speaker 2 (55:29):
Hey? We are back at Trecenter Radio, news stock ten
eighty wt I see. It's weird that you guys call
in during the commercial breaking. You know that the break
is long and so like you can't stay. So I'm
hoping that people get used to the clock when they
do call in. Speaking of calling in, What's up?
Speaker 6 (55:45):
Frankie Bais on What's Up?
Speaker 2 (55:47):
Buddy?
Speaker 7 (55:48):
Well, last night we were talking about next Novembers election
in Connecticut for governor.
Speaker 2 (55:53):
Yeah it's over, you think so, buddy?
Speaker 7 (55:57):
Everybody I talked to, except you love the idea what
our governor did, stepping up to the plate, taking the
seventy two million dollars out of the Rady daphone and
giving it to you know, the children the Saber mail doing.
I can't find one other person. Now, these are all
poor people, you know, They're not you.
Speaker 6 (56:15):
Mean, people who are not going to vote.
Speaker 7 (56:18):
Right, No, they're gonna They're going to vote the.
Speaker 2 (56:20):
Rank Frank, Frank, Listen, there's one thing that people have
they failed to ever acknowledge because it's supposed to be like,
you know, an unwritten rule to say the obvious. Okay,
the poor in the state of Connecticut don't vote. If
they did, they would vote against half the things that
(56:42):
are being done to them without their consent. But they
don't even know what's happening. They don't if they're on EBT.
I'll put it this way, if they're on EBT, I
can guarantee you at best twelve percent of them vote. So, oh,
I know so because they already think that the system
(57:03):
is it is marginalized against the or marked against them.
They don't believe that this system is there for them.
They believe. Look, some people have to be on food
stamps for whatever reason. It subsidizes their income, you know,
gives them a little extra money so they can buy
some extra food because their regular job doesn't make enough.
They're working at Wendy's, they're working in the service industry,
(57:24):
so they don't make enough money. But the bottom line
is that those individuals are few and far between who
actually go out and vote. And when they do, here's
the most important part. When they do, they go out
for the major elections, the ones that are ticky taffy
that are in and around the state. They don't bother
to show up because they don't have the time they
(57:44):
got to be at their jobs.
Speaker 7 (57:46):
You might be right, but if we're going to have
a rainy day fund, what better thing to see. You
know how sensitive I am when it comes to food.
Speaker 2 (57:53):
You know, no, but your deal is look, look, look,
here's the deal I look when I look at the
people who were saying that what Lamont did for them
is good, are the same people who believe that politics
or politicians are installed to give them something. Instead of
(58:17):
looking the other way around. The politician, no matter what
where you are, your station in life, the politician is
there to do your bidding. But if you are poor
in this country and the hell if you are poor
in this state, you believe that the government is supposed
to do things for you, provide for you. Ask any
one of those people you want to do you want
(58:38):
to try an experiment, Try this on precise Ask them this, frank,
do you believe that government governor Lamont is supposed to
take care of you or do your bidding? And see
what the answer is. I put them any amount of money.
Eight out of ten. Hell, I'll go nine out of ten.
We'll tell you he's supposed to do for me, in
(59:00):
other words, give or provide for me. I put him
out of money. They'll do it for any politician.
Speaker 7 (59:05):
I was surprised he did it, though, because a lot
of governors did not.
Speaker 2 (59:10):
He needed it for political reasons, without a doubt. And Lamont. Look,
a lot of people have been pooh pooing the idea
that Lamont's got a fifty eight or fifty five percent
approval rating in a foreign government governor of a blue state.
That's not far fetched. That's an easy that's an easy get.
I mean, that's you know, throwing rocks in a bucket.
(59:30):
But he's concerned that there are some people who are
going to primary him, which is why he took this
new position on the affordable housing thing, the one he vetoed,
the reason why he immediately jumped on board. Here's a
guy who was just complaining a couple of months ago
that he's not I mean, he's not liberal enough and
(59:51):
that he is.
Speaker 6 (59:52):
Considered uh you know, was it conservative light.
Speaker 2 (59:56):
So he is trying to in a reasonable way to
capitulate to his far left of sort of adversaries.
Speaker 7 (01:00:04):
That is his biggest problem to the primary. But if he
gets the nomination, he's not going to lose the Republican
that's put that way. I don't see that happened. That's
his biggest problem to primary. But if it wins the primary,
he's going one.
Speaker 2 (01:00:15):
Hundred and seventy four thousand votes separated him in Stefanowski
last year, last time. You don't think that's you think
that's insurmountable.
Speaker 7 (01:00:24):
I don't know, Resa, everybody I talked to in the
status at Denver.
Speaker 6 (01:00:27):
I don't think that's insurmountable.
Speaker 2 (01:00:28):
And like I said, if anybody is going to run,
look nothing against Aaron Stewart, she's gonna have to convince
me otherwise, I don't think she's the person Fazzio might be.
He might be, but he's gonna have to try some
other tactics. Stop waiting for don't forget about social media
and Connecticut. That's not working. He has got to make
a bombastic campaign and make sure that everybody in this
news media is covering him every day and covering him
(01:00:50):
in a meaningful way. He's got to be out there
campaigning every day.
Speaker 7 (01:00:54):
When they vote today that the government's going to involve it,
and then on January thirtieth, if they don't come up
with agreement at the ACA, it's gonna they're gonna shut
it down again.
Speaker 6 (01:01:04):
No, no, no, no, trust me.
Speaker 2 (01:01:05):
This it's getting passed by Mike Johnson's already said he's name,
he's got no kids.
Speaker 7 (01:01:09):
I'm talking about today. But then January thirty, if they
have a January thirty, if tyk A shut it down again.
Speaker 6 (01:01:15):
They could but everything.
Speaker 2 (01:01:16):
But no, it doesn't matter because the bill that they're
signing today or the bill that they're going to sign
it funds all of those things until next year. So
it's no, it's not going to affect anything. So so
even if January comes around, it'll be a meaningless fight.
Speaker 7 (01:01:32):
Yeah, I just don't like the idea. I remember the
battle days in Sicily. There wasn't a lot of food
in the house as a kid. Then I don't like
I don't like that. If you could, if you could,
if you could afford, if you could fund Social Security,
then fud food stamps. That's also only nine billion dollars
a month. That's not a lot of money with a
subject with a subc with a seven trillion dollar budget.
Speaker 2 (01:01:52):
This is why you got so much hate mail the
last time you mentioned God bless Yeah, I hear you, buddy,
you got it. Let's go to Teresa and Hartford.
Speaker 6 (01:02:05):
Hello, Teresa, Hey, Rees, how are you.
Speaker 2 (01:02:08):
I'm great, I'm great.
Speaker 16 (01:02:10):
I'm sorry about the phone.
Speaker 2 (01:02:11):
Stop apologizing. It happens.
Speaker 6 (01:02:14):
It's no big deal.
Speaker 16 (01:02:15):
What do you got Listen, I actually have something that
I want to say in uh. I wanted to say
to you was for a long time. I grew up
in a in a Republican household. My dad and he
never talked politics. I'd say, Dad, who you vote for?
Speaker 7 (01:02:33):
None of your business.
Speaker 13 (01:02:36):
But that's how it used to be when I was
a kid.
Speaker 16 (01:02:38):
You didn't have to worry about someone coming and trashing
your yard or stealing your signs. You just voted for
who you voted for.
Speaker 13 (01:02:44):
And that was it.
Speaker 16 (01:02:46):
And anyway all that to say, you know, then I
got older and my dad was a big rush limbough person,
and I never listened to him. And my dad used
to say to me when when Obama went was running
for office, and uh my, I had to say, my
(01:03:09):
old pastor, uh said when I said to her, you
excited because my old pastor was black and she was
a woman, And I said, are you are you so
excited like I feel like there's going to be a change.
And she looked at me and said, oh, yeah, there's
going to be a change.
Speaker 12 (01:03:25):
All right.
Speaker 16 (01:03:26):
And it wasn't It wasn't a positive and I didn't
I didn't understand it. I was like in my early thirties,
still didn't really you know, think too much about politics, right,
but some when things did start to change, my dad
was complaining about Obama and I used to say, Dad,
(01:03:46):
you got to be careful, like people can hear you, like.
Speaker 2 (01:03:51):
I was seriously I was, I'm sorry, I'm only laughing.
I'm only laughing is because I totally understand where you're
coming from when I in two thousand and eight, when
I was talking about Obama in certain places, I would
get people who would be like, don't say that. I
can't say it loud. Yeah.
Speaker 17 (01:04:10):
Yeah.
Speaker 16 (01:04:11):
So fast forward to now, my dad has passed away,
and I, you know, it hurts me that I didn't.
I didn't the end, he knew like I. He knew
that I was a Republican, and.
Speaker 7 (01:04:28):
I knew he was a Christian.
Speaker 16 (01:04:29):
So it made both of us happy. But I have
to say that he was right, and shame on me
for trying to say to him, don't say that you were.
Speaker 2 (01:04:41):
Caught up in the moment. No, no, no.
Speaker 16 (01:04:44):
I can tell you that I know people now that
we sit around in circles and talk and we're like
we whisper, and I think we're crazy to whisper. We're
allowing this to happen. It's our own fault.
Speaker 2 (01:04:57):
Can I tell you something. I got to tell you this.
This is this when you talk about this. In my head,
I'm saying to myself, I remember a movie called Brighton
Beach Memoirs, and okay.
Speaker 6 (01:05:08):
So have you never seen it? Okay, so.
Speaker 2 (01:05:13):
I think his name is Silverman, who's in the movie
he's the main character, and it's a Neil Simon play
of course in the film, and he talks to the camera.
But I always equate what you're talking about to this.
One thing he says in the Brighton Beach Memoirs is
that his mother, when talking about someone who has cancer,
she would go, you know, missus DeMarco, she's got cancer,
(01:05:36):
and they would whisper it no matter what, because they
weren't allowed to say it out loud. But what you're
talking about is the same thing, because if you whisper it,
you don't want anybody to get it. But you're saying
it's like we always had to whisper our views was
because it wasn't allowed in polite society.
Speaker 6 (01:05:51):
You weren't allowed to say the honest thing.
Speaker 2 (01:05:54):
Because what you're talking about in two thousand and eight
was something that was paved by Bill Clinton when he
started talking openly about political correctness, and that was just
nothing more than a form of censorship. It means that
the thing can never be talked about unless it be
true and people be convinced of it.
Speaker 6 (01:06:14):
So we were allowed to be told lies.
Speaker 16 (01:06:17):
Correct But I'm saying that that's now I'm recognizing that
that everybody's like, are they come? And I've been guilty
of it myself, and it's wrong. And if we want
to see changed in this state, in this town, in
this country, we had to stop being so afraid to
(01:06:39):
speak the truth.
Speaker 2 (01:06:40):
That's it.
Speaker 16 (01:06:41):
And and you know what, and people will never be
able to get on board unless we're willing to have
that conversation. We can talk to each other all day long.
We already we already believe it. It's the people that
that don't. And it's just like, you know, I have
to equate it with being a Christian. Like I can
(01:07:04):
go around all day and tell everybody how I'm a
Christian and Christian, But when I stand before that judgment,
fee you.
Speaker 6 (01:07:13):
Gonna there may be that question?
Speaker 2 (01:07:15):
Is like you know, there may be that question in
your life afterwards, was like who did you who did
you pray for? Who did you pray with? And who
did you pray to? So I mean, I I look
at all of that and I just said, look, it's
it's it's all of our jobs to make sure that
we as honest as we possibly can, not that we
need to go in every street corner and not that
we need to go in everyone's home. But we cannot
(01:07:36):
force ourselves to be shut down and quiet just because
we're concerned about other people's feelings.
Speaker 6 (01:07:41):
While we negate our own.
Speaker 2 (01:07:44):
If these are the things that we believe, we have
to be able to stand on them firm.
Speaker 6 (01:07:48):
I shouldn't be in hiding.
Speaker 16 (01:07:50):
Absolutely, absolutely, And you know what the scripture says. If
you know, if we're a shamed of Jesus before the
Father in heaven, he's going to be ashamed of us. Indeed, Jane,
if we're a shamed of what we stand for there
(01:08:11):
and to tell people like you know, I get that
you know you feel this way but that way. But
can I just share this with you in loving kindness,
not in yelling and screaming.
Speaker 2 (01:08:22):
Yes. Absolutely. Unfortunately I got to take a hard break
here because I've got my last break coming up for
the hour.
Speaker 6 (01:08:28):
But Teresa, thank you so much. I'll give you a
hollow real soon.
Speaker 2 (01:08:30):
Okay, Okay, thank you, You're welcome. All right, stand by,
more news, more views. We'll get to the last of
your phone calls on this on the screen in a minute.
It's recent on the radio on wt I see News
Talk ten eighty. It's w t I see, I see
Donald Trump knew about the girls. We'll talk about that,
(01:08:53):
but I'm pretty sure a lot of you have some
questions or some statements about the new emails that came out.
Donald Trump knew about the girls. Roland and I were
talking about that in the background. I'm going to tell
you what my what I considered that equivalent to in
a second. But let's get to the phones. What's going on,
Mike oh Man?
Speaker 13 (01:09:14):
So, uh, did you see any of the interview with
Trump that Laura Ingram had last night?
Speaker 14 (01:09:21):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (01:09:21):
No, I won't know why I missed it, but I'm
sure it was about are you talking about the H
one B visa.
Speaker 13 (01:09:28):
Thing, Buddie. This part of the Republican Party is so
clueless and tone death think to the point they deserve
to lose Okaya as president. Look Laura Ingram in the
eye and say, we don't have the talent that's needed,
so we have to bring in these people when we
(01:09:50):
all know that the people who are coming on H
one B visas are doing jobs that Americans not only
can do, but created the entire industry.
Speaker 5 (01:10:00):
Correct.
Speaker 2 (01:10:02):
I don't even know what that was about, in the
way that he rolled his eyes when he did it,
he said, we don't have the people. There was such
a special interest sort of tone that he had about that.
That kind of annoyed me. I get the fact that,
you know, a lot of people in Magar are upset
about it because it doesn't and even Matt Watson, and
(01:10:24):
I love Matt Walsh, who's just like, look, it's jobs
for Americans.
Speaker 6 (01:10:28):
This is not one of those things where.
Speaker 2 (01:10:29):
You get to sort of waiver on you know, jobs
for Americans. These jobs.
Speaker 6 (01:10:35):
You know, he made that comment about making missiles.
Speaker 2 (01:10:38):
I'm like, with all due respect, I don't think I
want that that job going to Farnest, thank you.
Speaker 5 (01:10:43):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:10:46):
Is a scam, right, right, of course, it's it's nothing
more than a scheme to get other family members in
the country, exactly.
Speaker 13 (01:10:55):
That's it. They get hired into a place and then
they assume leadership role and they replace everybody with.
Speaker 2 (01:11:01):
Indians exactly what like, And we're talking about them bringing
in like third cousins.
Speaker 6 (01:11:05):
It's not even immediate family.
Speaker 13 (01:11:07):
And we don't even know if these people are qualified.
They could just be doing as a scam to get
them in the country, exactly. And migration may bring their
grandmas and uncles and stuff. It's a scam. We don't
need a billion Indians coming here. It's not to our benefit.
And for that you ever, do you ever wonder how
the Patel family has dominated all the mostels.
Speaker 2 (01:11:29):
It's so wild that kidding.
Speaker 6 (01:11:31):
Listen to me.
Speaker 2 (01:11:32):
When I own my U hauled dealership in San Antonio,
across the street from me was one of those those
quick little quickie hotels, you know, whatever it is like,
but there was a whole sleu of them. So all
of a sudden, I get, you know, guys show up,
and the Indian guys, and they wanted to rent some trucks,
and they rented them every week.
Speaker 6 (01:11:49):
They were like one of my like avid customers show
up all the time.
Speaker 2 (01:11:52):
I'll never forget when the first time I come in,
he goes, he goes, what's your name? Is that something? Patel?
And fine? I give him a truck. He keeps it
for a week. He goes, my O's gonna come down here.
He's gonna runt some trucks. He shows up, his name Patel.
What does he do?
Speaker 6 (01:12:05):
He owns the hotel down the block from his brother.
I'm like, holy.
Speaker 2 (01:12:08):
Crap, it's everywhere everywhere I look it's Patel's owning hotels.
Speaker 13 (01:12:13):
And when the story comes up, you know, the the
brain dead, right, say, oh look at those people pull
themselves up from their bootstraps.
Speaker 14 (01:12:21):
No, these people.
Speaker 13 (01:12:22):
Are milking the system every step of the way on
that they get special deals for the government to buy motel.
Speaker 2 (01:12:29):
It is so true. And again this is up and
it's funny because I never thought that I would say this.
It is one of the things as a government program
we just can't get off of. Thank you, Mike, I
gotta get to the get to weather in traffic man,
thank you. Let's get to Mark Christopher. I know he's
there now, he's in the BPS traffic center. How are
you doing, sir?
Speaker 1 (01:13:03):
It's Reese on the radio. Brind don't say we didn't
do more than you on news Talk tennady w T
I see, I see, I see hey.
Speaker 2 (01:13:15):
Now we're back and uh yeah, let's do the thing.
Where's my winner? Ah various Timothy h Congratulations. He lives
in Rocky Hill. He is the recipient of the dozen
(01:13:36):
bagels a month for six months courtesy in between rounds.
The Bagel Bakery and Sandwich Cafe, located in South Windsor, Vernon,
and Manchester. While we're getting closer and closer to December,
we still haven't heard any word about where we're going
to do the remote, but hopefully I'll reach out to
some folks and see what we can find out. Hopefully
that's coming up soon before we do the big holiday store,
(01:13:58):
which is happening. It sucks that you're not going to
be out there with me, Roland. I would really want
to hang out with you there, but you're going to
be here. Well that's going on, right. Somebody got to work, man,
What is that supposed to be. I'll be working. I'll
be that work.
Speaker 5 (01:14:14):
I'll do it.
Speaker 2 (01:14:14):
Not then when we come back with of course, talk
about the the Epstein Files, which everyone is talking about. Also, well,
before we get to the afterte the thing, I've got
breaking news on the Jay Allen Jones story. And the
only reason why he's breaking news is because no one's
breaking that news, and it is wild that no one is.
(01:14:34):
And it involves a death that took place at a
correctional facility and there was a court case to have
the video released and we have some news about that,
and of course one of the sources on this story
just filled me in earlier today about what is on
that video, how long it is, uh, and what some
(01:14:56):
of the details are.
Speaker 6 (01:14:56):
So I'll share that with you now.
Speaker 2 (01:14:58):
And I've been trying to get into touch with mister
Betts of the Hartford the NAACP who was at the
courthouse with me, and he keeps telling me I'm gonna
I'm gonna call you back, man, I'm gonna call you back.
He hasn't called me back yet. So I'm about to
send him a text during a break and say perhaps
he should be listening and maybe he should get on
(01:15:19):
the phone and have a conversation with me, because he
didn't seem to be aware about the details of this
case that I have. Okay, and that's weird, but we'll
get to the bottom of that, all right. So stand
by more news and more jews breaking all the all
the news right here on RecA in the radio. All right,
(01:15:40):
let's get another check of whether in traffic he is
in the studio getting it done. He's back. But it
was weird Mark Christopher and the BPS Driving Center having
you on the phone. What was that, like, I know
you've done it before, yeah right, Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:15:54):
Comcast had an issue out in Farmington, so our connection.
Speaker 2 (01:15:59):
Do you know what it was called what they called
the what they called something or something the upgrade that
that would so if there's no service, apparently it's an upgrade. Exactly.
Language is so key, exactly, I.
Speaker 6 (01:16:19):
See, I see, Sorry about that.
Speaker 2 (01:16:23):
Okay, we've got that. And you guys might remember this
story because it was brought to my attention and we
had on devon ward and we went down to the
courthouse to go find out the details of it. For
those of you who do not remember, let me refresh
(01:16:46):
your memory. And this is the case of j Allen Jones,
who was at the Garner Correctional Institute and died in
twenty eighteen, and the details of his death remained murky.
(01:17:07):
Many people couldn't seem to figure out what happened, who
was responsible, if there would be any accountability. What we
did know at the time was that the coroner said
that it was homicide, was how Jay Allen died, Yet
(01:17:27):
no one was charged with murder. People just went on
with their lives and the family got no closure. But
one of the most important things that they needed was
a video of the events that led to Jay Allen's death.
(01:17:48):
The Department of Corrections refused, and William Tong played a
huge role in keeping that video from ever seeing the
light of So they had a hearing with Superior Court
Judge Claudia Bao, and I only pronounced that that way
(01:18:11):
because I'm assuming it's pronounced like Scott Bayo looks like
the same thing. Judge Claudia Bao has decided that the
Department of Corrections did not have sufficient proof that there
would be safety concerns if the video were to be released,
(01:18:33):
which was the pretty much the conditions of its non
release by the Department of Corrections, and that's what they
stated that if they released the video, there were safety
concerns about the correctional facility, that if they watched the video,
people would know certain things about the room that Jay
(01:18:53):
Allen was in and that would cause security concerns.
Speaker 6 (01:18:59):
Everybody knew that that was bogus. Everybody knew that was untrue.
Speaker 2 (01:19:04):
They knew what was in the video was going to
harm the credibility of the Department of Corrections and what
they would reveal would quite possibly enrage the people of Hartford.
The civil rights ers, if you will, would see that
(01:19:24):
video and oh yeah, they would turn it into a
George Floyd event. So I thought it was interesting that
there had been no details about it. And when I
didn't see any news reports about it, I thought that
was weird. Like where all the news reports about this,
that was a big case. Everybody was covering Jay Allen's case.
(01:19:48):
As it pertains to release in this video what happened?
The judge had to have rendered a decision by now.
Sure enough.
Speaker 18 (01:19:57):
She did.
Speaker 2 (01:20:00):
She did that a month ago, four weeks ago. But
there's been no release of a videotape. Doesn't that seem odd?
The judge orders you are compelled to release the videotape.
The Apartment of Corrections has not released it. Why I
called around? I called around and I found out that
(01:20:23):
the Department of Corrections is one editing the tape and
two will not release it until after Thanksgiving. Strategic. Probably
they're probably constructing a narrative, getting all their ducks in
(01:20:45):
a row when the video comes out in the event
that there's some outrage, how they're going to respond.
Speaker 6 (01:20:53):
Why they're editing the video.
Speaker 2 (01:20:54):
I have no clue. They're probably gonna edit it to
block out windows or block out door number or.
Speaker 5 (01:21:00):
Things like that.
Speaker 2 (01:21:01):
Maybe certain individuals' faces will be blurred out. But they've
got to go through all of that to make sure
that the actions that are seen in the video protect
certain things and or individuals. Fine, okay, I don't have
a problem with it. Do whatever you gotta do, Just
release the video. You gotta go through all that.
Speaker 12 (01:21:18):
Fine.
Speaker 2 (01:21:18):
If you've got a guy who used to work at
Blockbuster Videos, got little editing, you know, experience. You know,
you got some schmo who works at a technical college
who's got to do the editing piece by piece by
piece because he's using you know what's that dub that
that Apple software. I don't even know what it's called.
But anyway, doesn't matter. They're going to release it on Thanksgiving.
Speaker 6 (01:21:42):
But you know what I find odd? You know what,
I'm literally finding odd?
Speaker 2 (01:21:48):
Where are the civil rightsers? The civil rightss are nowhere?
There's no demand for the video. Now, it's been a month.
I called the NAACP of Hartford and I said, hey,
what gives it's been a month. What's up with the video?
(01:22:11):
Oh uh what video? Jay Allen Jones, you were at
the courthouse.
Speaker 5 (01:22:21):
Oh oh oh.
Speaker 6 (01:22:23):
Yeah, yeah, Yo, let me get back to you. My
phone hasn't wrung. I've heard nothing.
Speaker 2 (01:22:33):
What happened Black Lives Matter eight sixty? You've been quiet,
you haven't even been in the news for a while,
and we all know you guys love the cameras. Nothing,
no press releases. I looked the judge made the decision
to release the video. It hasn't been out in four weeks,
(01:22:55):
and you guys haven't had a protest or anything.
Speaker 6 (01:22:57):
Where's a march?
Speaker 2 (01:23:00):
Or is it too cold? Is it too blustery outside
for you to guys to get out there on and
walk the streets, pound the pavement huh?
Speaker 6 (01:23:11):
Or is this no longer lucrative for fundraising? What's the deal?
Speaker 2 (01:23:16):
Is researn a radio the guy who's gonna have to
hold the mantle for the civil rights ers of Connecticut?
Am I gonna have to be the person who's going
to force the Department of Corrections to release the video
or to actually get anyone other than the civil rights
organizations outraged about What I have now learned is the
(01:23:39):
murder of Jay Allen Jones. According to my source who's
watched the video in its entirety, says that they indeed
killed the man. You don't know about that, but I do,
and not what I say My source is credible. My
(01:24:00):
source couldn't be more credible. When I say my source
is unflappable, my source is unflappable.
Speaker 6 (01:24:08):
They watched the entire video and I got that in
a phone call.
Speaker 2 (01:24:12):
That video shows his murder, and you guys aren't outraged
about it. This is easy pickens for you. Like when
I watch a video, I go, yeah, black lives man
is gonna have a field day with that one. I
don't know how the CoP's gonna get away with that one.
(01:24:34):
This one's a slam dunk tomahawk.
Speaker 11 (01:24:39):
In the net.
Speaker 2 (01:24:41):
Nothing. I wonder why. I wonder why you were all there.
Speaker 6 (01:24:50):
I was there, we saw you.
Speaker 2 (01:24:52):
You were in the news. Here's a picture of it
right here. All those folks, I'm not seeing or hearing anything.
No public media, no social media outcries, know nothing. Four
weeks ago, Judge says, released a video. You guys should
be salivating for this. They killed the black man. Nothing,
(01:25:12):
what happened?
Speaker 6 (01:25:16):
Nothing?
Speaker 2 (01:25:19):
You know why? I know why. But that's okay. Folks.
Stand by After Thanksgiving, we're gonna get to the bottom
of this. I want everybody to enjoy their holiday. When
a video comes out, then we'll discuss We'll see whether
(01:25:39):
or not the Civil RIGHTSS will come out and droves,
or whether or not it'll be too cold outside for
them to rally. Maybe they'll hold an indoor thing in
some warm location. Maybe they'll have hot cocoa marshmallows. Maybe
you have a sit in and a pow wow. Come
on and have some peaceful Kumbaya protest. It's kind of embarrassing. Goodness, gracious,
(01:26:08):
I can't believe I have to do this on my own.
Speaker 6 (01:26:10):
Now, what's up, Rudy? How are you doing today?
Speaker 5 (01:26:13):
Sir? All right? I called in for another reasons, but
let me fire off four rounds to dispute some statements
that were said, Mike, great call. Trump looked like a
fool because Microsoft laid off two thousand American engineers. I
do remember that six thousand visas and the point it's
(01:26:34):
non disputable. Second, we know that Trump knew about Epstein
because he kicked him out of mar Lago for sexual
harassing the sixteen year old employee. That's a lie, Frank.
We fund Social Security through payroll taxes, not the government.
They need to pay us back the money they stole.
Got that right, Reese, There is no eight to sixty BLM.
(01:26:58):
They're not an organized legal entity in the military state Connecticut.
They are.
Speaker 2 (01:27:04):
I never stopped them way, but that never stopped them
from rallying before.
Speaker 5 (01:27:08):
No, it's grifters living off the national brand. Here's the
reason why I called I hate well, you you know
that America, like sixty percent of the country is a
literate They read at the sixth grade reading level. I
hate people saying I'm religious, which I am. I'm not.
(01:27:29):
I'm I'm a Biblical Christian. Religious means that you belong
to a religion as doctrines and ritual you know, Catholics, Lutherans, Presbyterians,
whatever I read the Bible. Bible to me is basic
instructions before leaving Earth. I'm sure you've heard that.
Speaker 2 (01:27:48):
Yeah, of course, you know.
Speaker 5 (01:27:51):
I took on red stock, reapstock, whatever, because you know,
it says in Genesis that God created us in a
version of him and man and woman, and we're not
supposed to change that because we're his vision. And that's
one of the reasons I pick on him. It's not
my job to judge him. He will go before God.
Hopefully he will see the light and go before God.
(01:28:15):
Is what he was intended to be you're a nice guy.
Speaker 12 (01:28:20):
I hate to do this because you're such a nice guy.
Speaker 5 (01:28:24):
You said the other day. You go home and it's
like a lightning rod hit you. Whatever I call, but
I got so irked. Linda made a good call, and
I really wish that people would live more by within
the Bible.
Speaker 2 (01:28:39):
You mean Theresa, No Linda.
Speaker 5 (01:28:41):
I think it was Lina who was talking about her
father was a conservative, So I mean, you're a nice guy.
I don't mean to do this. It's probably going to
backfire with callers, but it's clear and one Timothy chapter two,
I think it's verse eleven or twelve. Women are not
(01:29:01):
supposed to be teaching men on God.
Speaker 2 (01:29:07):
Did you get the impression she was teaching me about
the Bible?
Speaker 13 (01:29:11):
No?
Speaker 5 (01:29:11):
Oh, okay, she went women shouldn't be pastors and she
went to a church and had a woman.
Speaker 17 (01:29:17):
Oh what was that go to do with me?
Speaker 5 (01:29:20):
That has nothing to do with my fear is.
Speaker 2 (01:29:24):
Oh oh no, no, no, no, no, no, no, don't
get me wrong. Listen, if you got the impression before
Rudy that like when you come in and you like,
you spark something about the tattoos or whatever the case is, no.
Speaker 8 (01:29:33):
No, no.
Speaker 2 (01:29:34):
I never like I always say when I go home,
yes no, no no because Roseanne No. I went home
and I mentioned I ha.
Speaker 11 (01:29:47):
No.
Speaker 2 (01:29:47):
In my head, I was saying to myself, it's like
Rudy when I said I hate you, I mean that
tongue in cheek. It was like you had you and
Mike does it too. You and white Mike have this
ability to come in and light that sort of you know,
throw that lightning wrong into the mix. Don't get me wrong,
I love it. Are you kid me? This is this
is the kind of radio I started being wrong.
Speaker 5 (01:30:07):
I've been taught a lot of things by women, and
some of them I can't say over the radio, But
I mean, I've had more female bosses. No, I've had
more female bosses than not. And when I when I
was in healthcare, I learned a lot from I mean,
to this day, I'm fighting with the Veterans Administration to
switch my doctor to a female nurse practitioner because they're
(01:30:31):
better care providers and they have more knowledge. A lot
of people say they usually were floor nurses for twenty
years in specialties and they're not like writing you prescriptions.
So I'm not saying women can't teach men anything. But
if if you're Christian and you believe in the Bible.
Speaker 2 (01:30:47):
They should not be you're saying that they should not
be women.
Speaker 5 (01:30:50):
Of the women that are running these churches. You've got
a bishop of the Lutheran Church in New York City
who's announced less a butch haircut out there, and that's
not that goes against everything you read in the Bible.
So if you live by the Bible, believe in the Bible,
believe in God, you can't accept that. So no, I
(01:31:11):
mean even in Connecticut, you got those I.
Speaker 2 (01:31:15):
Know, don't get by the way, don't No, no, we
can't talk about that because that's that's a secret undercover investigation.
Speaker 5 (01:31:21):
Hey yeah, real, last thing, the n double CPA won't
take a call from me. Do you know why why
you married a white woman, white man go to help
represent the poor black indigen It.
Speaker 2 (01:31:40):
Looks like it looks like I have to represent them
now because Jay Allen Jones has got apparently no representation
from them.
Speaker 5 (01:31:47):
Sixty is purely she's.
Speaker 9 (01:31:50):
Like his Spanish.
Speaker 6 (01:31:51):
I know, yes, yes, she is Hispanic.
Speaker 16 (01:31:53):
I know.
Speaker 2 (01:31:53):
We can't even get black folks to run the Black
Lives Matter.
Speaker 5 (01:31:57):
White Lives Matter eight, We come on Joe from.
Speaker 2 (01:32:04):
Thank You Boss, Big ut BPS the BPS traffic Center
with Mark Christopher.
Speaker 1 (01:32:09):
Hey Mark, the NAACP calls him, WHOA, I don't.
Speaker 2 (01:32:14):
Think I'm a want to read this.
Speaker 1 (01:32:16):
It's Reese on the radio. Let's just say some people
are not fans news talk to Nady w T I see.
Speaker 2 (01:32:24):
Imagine Roland was found to have sending found that he
was sending emails to Janine and the emails read that
he knew that I was passing gas in the studio.
(01:32:50):
What would that mean about Roland? What would that mean
about you? Roland? What would that say about you?
Speaker 12 (01:32:57):
Guy?
Speaker 2 (01:32:57):
I'm a snitch, But it wouldn't mean that you were
a culprit, right, It wouldn't mean that you were then
responsible for me passing gas Like Roland new Ree was
passing gas in the studio and you not know, you
knowing and emailing Jeanine about it. Someone would then try
(01:33:18):
to make you like an accomplice to my passing gas.
Speaker 5 (01:33:23):
In the studio.
Speaker 2 (01:33:24):
You kept my meaning yeah or a whistle blower?
Speaker 7 (01:33:26):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (01:33:26):
Or a whistle blow Well, you're technically not a whistleblower
because you're having private.
Speaker 6 (01:33:30):
Emails with Janine saying.
Speaker 2 (01:33:32):
Yeah, he's passing gas in there all the time. But
it wouldn't make you an accomplish. They would just say
that you knew that I was passing. I'm the culprit.
Everybody else was gonna use the studio walks in, they
smell my, oh differous self in the room. Right, everybody
be like, who's doing that? Roland didn't tell anybody. He
just sent it in an email to Janine said, you
(01:33:54):
knowess he's passing gas in the every day. That would
be the case, right, But no one would hold you
responsible for that, would they.
Speaker 5 (01:34:01):
Right.
Speaker 2 (01:34:02):
They wouldn't say in some way you held my hand
while I was passing gas in here, or you were
you were in there actually egging me on, Hey, you're
gonna pass gas in that room again? No, no one
would ever do it. Ah, you secretly saying I need
to buy air freshmen or something for you. No, I'm
saying this because you hear this ridiculous story about Jeffrey Epstein.
(01:34:26):
Okay with Trump? With Trump? Okay Trump knew and again
no details. The line just says Trump knew about the girls,
and I'm like new and you even when I said
it to you, What do you hear when you hear
that line, Yeah, what did he know? What are you
talking about? He knew what about the girls? That's an
incomplete sentence where I come from, right Like, that doesn't
(01:34:50):
give me anything he knew about the girls. Or we
do assume what he knew about the girls because it
gives us interpret We get to make an interpretation of
what that was in our own minds. This thing we
weren't be able to in the news says we have
not been able to confirm that the emails are authentic,
but we're gonna report that Donald Trump knew about the girls,
(01:35:11):
which means that the only thing he could have known
about the girls was that they were being trafficked or
they would be in abused. And because he knew it,
what even if that is the case, that means what
he knew about the girls because every other issue that
I've received on this, every piece of information I've received
on this, what he knew about the girls was was
(01:35:33):
that Glaine and Jeffrey Epstein were trying to recruit girls
at Mara al Lago. So Donald Trump knowing about the
girls could be he knew that Jeffrey Epstein and Glaine
Maxwell were recruiting girls and mar al Ago. That's what
he could have meant. Isn't it allowed? If we can
make the interpretation, if we can make the leap that
(01:35:54):
he knew that the girls were being abused by Jeffrey Epstein.
Why can't we because again it's an incomplete sentence. Can't
we say he knew that the girls were being poached
as employees at Marlago? Can't we make that leap? He
knew about the girls doing what he knew about the
girls stealing from the bar, he knew about the girls.
Speaker 6 (01:36:18):
Drinking after hours?
Speaker 14 (01:36:20):
What did he know?
Speaker 2 (01:36:22):
No one seems to say anything, and everybody's giving me
the wink wink nod not you know what it means?
You know what it means? And I keep asking, No,
I don't because I'm not a psychic. I don't know
what it means. I know what the sentence says, and
I can read. Unlike what Rudy said, I've got above
(01:36:44):
a high school reading level. It says Trump knew about
the girls. And if it was so true, here's the
part that makes me absolutely like bonkers. It shows you
how shady democrats are on this whole deal. They released
emails that were already out in the public, and the
(01:37:08):
emails that were already out in the public had the
individual named in the emails, which is missus Guthrie, there
for everyone to see. But when the Democrats released it,
they redacted the name, so that again by using that
line knew about the girls and a redacted name, you
(01:37:31):
wouldn't make the association of the two separate emails, one
with the individual and one without saying that, oh, we
don't know if that's the Guthrie woman. Well just look
over here, stupid. That's where it is, same email, same information,
same release. It's nothing new. But the objective was to
(01:37:52):
muddy the waters. That's how dirty deeds are done. They're
also done dirt cheap.
Speaker 7 (01:38:00):
Just so you know.
Speaker 2 (01:38:03):
Anyway, let's go to the false eight and zero five
T two W T I C. Jim's in Willington.
Speaker 5 (01:38:08):
Hello Jim.
Speaker 7 (01:38:10):
Yeah, okay, so.
Speaker 19 (01:38:11):
Did Bill Gates and who knows how many other people?
Yeah about knowing the girls? And here's the deal. Uh,
when did Trump dispatch Epstein?
Speaker 13 (01:38:20):
Was that in the nineties?
Speaker 5 (01:38:21):
Yes it was?
Speaker 19 (01:38:22):
Remember, yes it was Okay, I believe that Alan was
Uh was Epstein's lawyer and Dertruish is on record saying
that Trump didn't know anything.
Speaker 2 (01:38:31):
So is Virginia gut Thrie.
Speaker 19 (01:38:33):
Yes, well, I wasn't gonna mention her because he's looking
for a sweetheart deal. But but at the end, at
the end of all of it, you're right, it's just
another it's another scratch across the tuckboard, right to try
to get to try to get something gone when it
comes comes.
Speaker 2 (01:38:47):
And of course everyone followed suit knowing damn well, it's
like the fact that that line is in there. Donald
Trump knew about the girls, which then says to the
listener or the reader, make up your own mind about
what he knew.
Speaker 11 (01:39:02):
You know nothing new.
Speaker 19 (01:39:04):
Listen. You know I had another topic. I completely forgot
about it when I heard It's ok. When I heard
the I thinkured Elvis Preschel, you know girls, girls, girls.
Speaker 18 (01:39:13):
Okay, well, you know Alvis do the girls too, you know.
At the end, at the end of all of it,
Bill Clinton, how many times was he on the flight
logs for flights to uh concerning.
Speaker 2 (01:39:24):
Listen, You've got to have quite an intimate relationship with
a guy when he has a painted portrait of you,
the former president in a blue dress with heels on.
Speaker 19 (01:39:36):
So let me ask you, did Trump know about the painting?
Speaker 2 (01:39:39):
Exactly? Yeah, wouldn't go on, go on all damn, that's right.
He's been. That's right. He said that Trump has been
to his house. Did Trump know about the painting? That's
such a great question.
Speaker 19 (01:39:51):
Yeah, there you go, tru. Did Trump know about the painting?
Did Trump know about our buddy Prince Edward no longer
Prince Edward?
Speaker 2 (01:39:58):
Oh you no, who knows? Yeah, you're one right about that.
That's a great point. Thank you, boss, I appreciate you.
Magic man is on the line. How are you, sir?
Speaker 12 (01:40:10):
Hey Reeves, how are you about it?
Speaker 2 (01:40:12):
I'm okay.
Speaker 12 (01:40:14):
I called in to talk about that poor young man
that was murdered in prison. But then I heard that
idiot got on line saying he lived the scriptures. Well
guess what, I lived the scriptures and I've cured my
crippled it.
Speaker 2 (01:40:34):
Well, Ray, hold on before you go down that road,
because hold on, wait, wait, it's gonna go because it's
gonna go along. It's gonna go along.
Speaker 5 (01:40:41):
This guy is judging women.
Speaker 12 (01:40:44):
Yes, scripture is that keep your women silent in the church,
for they are to be I know all the scriptures.
Speaker 5 (01:40:52):
I got the Bible.
Speaker 15 (01:40:53):
Memorized, keep your women silent in the church, for it
uh is abomination for them to speak. They ought to
remain obedient as saith the law. But you have to
remove the scripture that says that we are now able
(01:41:15):
to worship under grace.
Speaker 12 (01:41:18):
Instead of the writings of the law. Now they have
to remove that scripture all together. I kind of phrased
that a little differently, but we understand the scripture if.
Speaker 5 (01:41:32):
You actually read it.
Speaker 12 (01:41:34):
You have to remove that scripture in order to say
women can't teach because Paul was teaching women not to
have sex with their husbands.
Speaker 5 (01:41:44):
Paul was all kinds of mess, and this is Paul.
Speaker 2 (01:41:49):
I don't want to look. I knew that. I knew
that him bringing it up ray was going to bring
up a mess, and I knew it. But I only have.
Speaker 6 (01:41:56):
Limited time, and I knew that that discussion was going
to go elsewhere.
Speaker 2 (01:41:59):
But I love you. I promise you. I will give
you a hollow suit. I promise. I promise. Let me
get to Fulton real quick before we end up taking
a break. What's going on, guy, what's.
Speaker 13 (01:42:08):
Up, buddy?
Speaker 20 (01:42:09):
I want to get on this religious conversation. Oh goodness,
gracious tren Miller, like he was a woman now he's
a man's okay, I'm just wondering about that.
Speaker 2 (01:42:17):
I don't think according to Rudy he would be okay.
I think he was gonna he was about to get
into that.
Speaker 13 (01:42:25):
Yes, I know one more thing.
Speaker 20 (01:42:27):
The doc is the same as the freaking DC. All
these entities are horrible, and they're covering everything up and
they're not releasing anything and nothing surprising. And I'd like
the Harvard six or if Harford NACP not not upset,
what are they gonna put out a thing about how
racist Thanksgiving is?
Speaker 2 (01:42:45):
That'll be if they seem to you know what, if
they pay more attention to that than this Jay Allen
Jones story.
Speaker 6 (01:42:52):
You're one hundred per right, I've got to rake them
over to colts.
Speaker 13 (01:42:54):
Is the fa story that happened in New Haven?
Speaker 7 (01:42:56):
Right?
Speaker 20 (01:42:56):
So that's yeah, the fifteen year old gets killed by
the thirty year old at school. Yeah it was thirty
and got a gun at eleven, and they cover the
next town over the na A C you down there
covers the next town overs. Halloween is played.
Speaker 6 (01:43:11):
Yeah, man, that it still bugs me.
Speaker 2 (01:43:14):
It bugs me out that these folks, you know that,
it's almost like they're putting these feelers out and saying,
which thing can we get traction on the important issue
or some stupid Halloween decoration.
Speaker 6 (01:43:26):
It's ridiculous. Hey, do me a favor.
Speaker 2 (01:43:28):
Send me a text, by the way, text me the
the podcast number, because I know it's sitting in my
back and I don't have it on me. Send me
a text to that podcast number so I can. Yeah,
I can take care of that today. Okay.
Speaker 20 (01:43:40):
Oh yeah, yeah, and I forgot you threw me off.
I don't even know what's tell you, but all right, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:43:45):
Okay, I appreciate Thank you, man, I appreciate you.
Speaker 9 (01:43:49):
You got it.
Speaker 2 (01:43:51):
Friends in Middletown, how we doing?
Speaker 9 (01:43:52):
Sorry? Hey?
Speaker 12 (01:43:53):
Good?
Speaker 5 (01:43:54):
So? Uh.
Speaker 14 (01:43:55):
I know that you're a conspiracy theorist like the m
r n A. I'm just curious if I might violate
your hippa.
Speaker 5 (01:44:02):
Here.
Speaker 14 (01:44:03):
Do you do flu shots?
Speaker 11 (01:44:04):
No?
Speaker 5 (01:44:05):
Never have?
Speaker 14 (01:44:06):
You don't okay, never have?
Speaker 5 (01:44:08):
Yeah?
Speaker 14 (01:44:08):
I didn't think so because I just heard someone this
morning who has put a big disc on the mRNA
say about you know, he's going to get his flu shots,
and the flu shot that's cumulatus, like after you get
the mRNA if it doesn't mess you up, if you
get a bunch of blue shots, it can like you know,
accumulate and take you down. The other thing I'm calling
(01:44:31):
to not talk about Ben proto the idea he would
not he filtrate your enemy as opposed to meeting someone
head on. The Green Party has never been anything in Connecticut.
Some guy named clicks Orton got two percent of the
vote when he ran against Jody Rail with governor back
in six But so the local Green Party guy, he's
(01:44:52):
kind of out of it now. But he used to
tell me that like twenty five years ago, they would
meet on Main Street and then they would have big
meetings in Hartford, and he said he swore there were
people there who were just like it wasn't they They
would argue about details, they would waste all the time
at every meeting, Just so many ways to take a
thing down. Yeah, from the inside, Yeah, I don't.
Speaker 2 (01:45:15):
I think the politics of Connecticut is so isolated from
how politics are done in the real world, primarily because
and I think the problem is, and you tell me
if I'm right or wrong here, I think and it's
the first thing I noticed when I got here.
Speaker 6 (01:45:31):
Everyone knows everyone, and that creates.
Speaker 2 (01:45:34):
A bubble, probably right, you know what I mean? Yeah,
And I think that that's what it is, is that
when you operate in a bubble, you don't operate outside
of it. So new ideas are almost a non starter
because this is the way in which you have to
work it.
Speaker 6 (01:45:54):
You have to color within the lines.
Speaker 2 (01:45:57):
So and you know, and you know, it's so crazy
because when I got I've talked to a couple of
people in the news.
Speaker 6 (01:46:01):
I'll say his name, Morgan Cunningham.
Speaker 2 (01:46:03):
One of the first things he said to me when
I first got here was he goes, I love what
you're doing it and for him, it's sort of like
coloring outside the lines, he says, because the only way
people are going to know us is if we're out
on the street, pounding the pavement. And that's always been
my mission, says the moment that I knew I was
coming here and I was like, I am not going
to be this wallflower who comes in every day and
(01:46:23):
talks about the news that it's delivered to me.
Speaker 6 (01:46:25):
I need to be out in the street.
Speaker 2 (01:46:27):
And that's the same thing that's got to happen at
the Republican Party. Here, it's not about winning hearts and minds,
it's actually making names for themselves.
Speaker 14 (01:46:35):
And it's just not your job to straighten out the
Connecticut Republican Party real quick. One more detail on that,
No less than the great Amy Board and who you
gotta love. She's done some really good you know, child
advocacy and medical freedom stuff. Yeah, just a minute ago,
she was kind of jumping off and down for the Republicans.
You know, we got to raise money, we got to
raise money. And then she like snapped out of it
(01:46:59):
and said, what the hell am I doing? You know
what I mean, this is just I fu Yeah, I
do not try to save this thing, you know, good
money after bad and closing with Jesse, Kelly says that
to release quote the Epstein files would be about five
tractor trailers full of paper. You know, that's the Epstein files.
It's from all these court cases. Everything generates like reams
(01:47:22):
of paperwork.
Speaker 2 (01:47:23):
You know, I keep wondering, but here's the question. I
always ask about that, and this is always going to
be the you know, at the end all of be all.
It's like the people who are in pursuit of the
truth about the Epstein Files. What is the truth you're seeking?
And that's always because I always want to know people's motive.
This is one of the cases where it isn't even
(01:47:43):
about the thing it's supposed to be about. It's about
something far more nefarious, and in my view, it's about
embarrassment than it is about justice.
Speaker 6 (01:47:53):
That's the part that sucks.
Speaker 20 (01:47:55):
Oh yeah, yeah, they don't care.
Speaker 14 (01:47:57):
They don't care, And the Epstein Files are bigger than
Republican and Democrat.
Speaker 2 (01:48:01):
Indeed, you're right about that, Thank you, boss man. As always,
you got it. Let's take a break. We got more
traffic and weather coming up. I've got some Hollywood news.
I noticed something interesting, and I think it explains why
the movie's kind of gone downhill.
Speaker 1 (01:48:21):
The hour the bags up, Punch Punch. It's Reese on
the radio on wt I see News Talk ten eighty.
Speaker 21 (01:48:29):
Hey, it's Hollywood News with your correspondent Race on the radio.
All the glance and all the glema. It's Hollywood News.
Speaker 2 (01:48:51):
So I was looking this up because yesterday was it?
This morning?
Speaker 5 (01:48:55):
I think it was.
Speaker 2 (01:48:56):
I saw the new trailer for Toy Store five, and
I was thinking about that because just a little while ago,
they just released the trailer for the new Mario film, Like,
I think it's Mario Kart, What's what's what's the Mario movie?
Rolling that?
Speaker 5 (01:49:12):
You know this?
Speaker 2 (01:49:12):
Because I know you wouldn't see it this super Mario
Super Mario. Yeah yeah yeah so se yeah yeah see,
so I knew it was right in this wheelhouse. I
don't care about all that stuff. So I'm looking this
stuff up, and I'm saying to myself, you know, I
feel like animated films are a big draw for Hollywood
(01:49:35):
now because people aren't going to see regular films. So
I asked the question to Grock, who made who made
more money in the last twenty years from two thousand
and four to twenty twenty four as a genre animated
films versus action films. So these include the action films
(01:49:58):
include things like you know, the Avengers stuff, you know,
the comic book stuff, and the animated stuff like Toy
Story and all that other stuff. So I'm looking it up.
Roseanna's making a whole bunch of noise in the here.
So I'm looking up the numbers, and this is interesting.
So if you had to guess, Roling, who do you
think made more money in twenty years, action films or
(01:50:22):
animated film animated. You know, it's interesting. I didn't think
this to be true, but it turns out that it's
a tie. Oh wow. But here's the weird part in
the year. The only reason why I'm saying it's a
tie is because of this. It takes twice as many
action films in order to make the same amount of
(01:50:42):
money as the animated films in the.
Speaker 6 (01:50:46):
Same amount of time. Absolutely true.
Speaker 2 (01:50:49):
It turns out that in the same twenty five so
I mean twenty years, twenty five animated films made close
to if not oh no, sorry, hey made half. Yeah,
I'm sorry, I'm saying this wrong. Twenty five films in animated.
Animated films made just as much movie as the money
as the same amount of action films. But in twenty
(01:51:11):
five in twenty years, I should say action films have
been produced more times.
Speaker 3 (01:51:19):
Yeah, goss, I'm failing described No, it's a bunch of movies.
Is like, if you've got one hundred and fifty action movies,
it only took fifty fifty seventy five seventy five animated
movies exactly make up the same amount of money.
Speaker 2 (01:51:31):
Exactly the case and in this case, in twenty years,
action films fifty animated films twenty five. There you go?
Is that wild? That means animated is winning exactly?
Speaker 6 (01:51:42):
Let's get another checker, whether traffic with.
Speaker 2 (01:51:45):
Mark Krismer and the BPS Draveic Center Anymark.
Speaker 1 (01:51:47):
It's race on the radio on news top ten et
I see.
Speaker 2 (01:51:52):
I cannot believe how horrible I butchered that Hollywood News.
What only thing I was trying to say was was
that in twenty years, if they do fifty action films,
they do twice the amount of money that animated films do,
and animated films they only had twenty five versus fifty
(01:52:14):
in the same amount of time. And so if you
only did twenty five action films and did twenty five
animated films, they would make the same amount of money,
when action films only making a considerable I mean a
small smidge and amount. More So, I thought it was
interesting that in the twenty years there were more action
films and it were animated films, but they still make
(01:52:35):
much more. But that's probably because kids love going to them,
and Roland as well as the kids. Roland and the
kids love going to see these animated films. Do you
know there used to be a time Roland when adults
would not go see animated films on their own. I'm
sure you brought the kids so that you know, you
have the cloak of you know, being a parent. Well,
(01:52:57):
i'll go by myself. Often.
Speaker 6 (01:53:01):
What animated film that you go see by yourself?
Speaker 4 (01:53:05):
Uh?
Speaker 2 (01:53:05):
Let's see.
Speaker 3 (01:53:06):
I saw well Sonic is actually is that that not
a children's Yeah, it's a children's fan but it's not animated.
Speaker 2 (01:53:14):
It's a it's part live action, yes, live actions with animations.
Speaker 3 (01:53:19):
Like Actually, I saw both Sonic one and two by myself,
just the ones that I knew my daughter didn't really
want to see, Not a Sonic How to Train the Dragon?
Speaker 2 (01:53:30):
I want to see those couple of Your.
Speaker 6 (01:53:32):
Daughter wasn't interested in How to Drink, how to Train
your Dragon?
Speaker 3 (01:53:34):
She like the first one, and then after that she
didn't want to see anymore. So, Uh, I went to
see him by myself.
Speaker 6 (01:53:40):
You went to go see is that the live action one?
Speaker 11 (01:53:42):
Just?
Speaker 3 (01:53:43):
Yeah, the live action one just came out, but before that,
the cartoons or the cartoons.
Speaker 2 (01:53:47):
I saw them by myself.
Speaker 3 (01:53:49):
Goodness, gracious, I don't know, man, whatever, Yeah, what's uh
if I if I'm interested in it, I don't need
anyone to go with me.
Speaker 6 (01:53:57):
You can just stand there as a grown man in
the crowd watching the movie.
Speaker 3 (01:54:00):
You know what that's It's not like it is filled
with one hundred million kids in there. There's a lot
of adults in there.
Speaker 2 (01:54:08):
That's right. I've heard there's a lot of comic book
kind of geek geek geek guys will go in there
and watch. I'm not going in there juggling kids around,
and yeah.
Speaker 7 (01:54:16):
I hear that.
Speaker 2 (01:54:17):
That's crazy. I don't just say.
Speaker 6 (01:54:20):
Good dad, enjoy freedoms. Thank you for your note.
Speaker 2 (01:54:23):
I'm actually going to talk about this subject now with
the affordable housing. You may have just heard about the
special session at the top of the hour. So according
to this you gov poll, it says that ninety percent
of voters across parties, ages, and incomes and regions said
(01:54:46):
that Lamont isn't doing enough to tackle the crisis that
requires one hundred and twenty thousand to three hundred and
eighty thousand new units statewide. Only twelve percent approved of
their own municipality's efforts on affordability. But what they don't
tell you about the survey is that they only surveyed
(01:55:08):
eight hundred Connecticut voters and they're calling that ninety percent
of Connecticut voters. It is such a ridiculous thing. So
what is this new incentive or this new special session
about Towns can now voluntarily join programs for transit oriented
development or downtown revitalization to unlock state funds while non
(01:55:33):
participants lose. What does this They lose? What they lose? Okay,
they lose lawsuit protections for blocking affordable projects in a
softer approach praised by some town officials as collaborative but
criticized by advocates as carrots without enforcement, potentially letting resistant
(01:55:55):
municipalities opt out indefinitely. Now the problem is, of course,
as we all know, is that regardless of this stupid
UGOV thing, no one wants affordable housing in their community.
No one does. No one does. That's just not how
communities have worked. It's never worked that way. We moved
(01:56:16):
someplace to get away from the riffraff. Sorry, don't like
me calling them riffraff. Don't be riffraff.
Speaker 6 (01:56:23):
That's all you can improve.
Speaker 2 (01:56:25):
You don't need. By the way, riffraff isn't a distinction
you are forced into you know, I remember the story
my wife told me not too long ago. We were
just bonding driving in the car, and my wife says,
I just chose to be better than I'm Mexican, and
everybody in my family was doing what Mexicans are required
(01:56:47):
to do. And I said, no, I am not going
to be Mexican in the sense of being truly Mexican.
I just decided, no, that's just the case. You don't
have to be bobbed down by your social economic status
because other people want to be If you want to
(01:57:09):
be better, you have to act better. Sometimes you just
have to act better at being better than most people.
I've never had a situation where somebody thought of me.
Speaker 6 (01:57:24):
As a high school dropout.
Speaker 2 (01:57:26):
Never when people find out, they go, really go, yes,
So you don't have to be a bum. You don't
even not act like a bum. You can have the
finest taste in everything. Know that does not mean Aliza
and Hennessy. No, no, no, no, no, those are not
the finer things, just so you know. Okay, but you
can have a taste for the finer things, Okay, you can.
(01:57:49):
You don't have to be riff raff. You could be
anything that you want. Now that being said, nobody who
lives in a small town with small town values, with
boutiques restaurants. You know the warm and fuzzy feeling you
get every weekend when you walk down and you go
and get a cup of coffee maybe a cinnamon raisin
(01:58:12):
bagel down in West Hartford, and you look around and say, wow,
it looks so clean, it's so pretty, so nice and quiet.
Speaker 6 (01:58:22):
Everybody knows each other.
Speaker 2 (01:58:23):
Hey, neighbor, hi, neighbor.
Speaker 6 (01:58:27):
To have that turned into some cesspool.
Speaker 2 (01:58:30):
Of what people call affordable housing, let's tell the truth
about what they want. Folks. It isn't about giving those
people an opportunity to live your life. No, no, no,
no no. This is an opportunity for them to destroy
your way of life because people hate your way of life.
(01:58:52):
Have you ever heard think about it? Think hard. When
have you heard anyone celebrating your small town values? When
have you ever heard any of these folks sitting up
there telling you you know what I like about that town?
Small town values. Everyone knows each other. All the kids
(01:59:14):
play together, they go to school together. They have homecoming
dances and a parade with a float celebrating their neighborhood pride.
When have you heard these people celebrate them? Know what
you hear is look at them, look at them in
their privilege. Look at them thinking they're better than everybody else.
Look at them their basketball team is the best. Look
(01:59:37):
at the captain of the football team. All smug. I
just want to wipe got smug look of honest breaks,
they hate it. Do you think they want to bring
low income housing because they wish to improve on that model?
Hell no, they're coming there to stomp on it. They're
coming there. They're coming there to urinate on it because
(01:59:57):
you don't deserve it. You got it from ill gotten gains.
You got away from the riff raft, and now because
you've become successful, you deserve to have the riff raft
come back to your neighborhood to remind you what you
ran away from. And then they'll run you out of
(02:00:19):
that town too, And then you'll come into another town.
It'll be someplace in the mountains where you can ski
and drink cider twenty four hours a day, and then
they'll say, ah, you know what, we need to bring
affordable housing into your neighborhood again.
Speaker 6 (02:00:34):
That's what they're gonna do.
Speaker 2 (02:00:36):
None of these people are doing it because they care
about you or care about the people they wish do
just they can build it anywhere. They can build this
affordable housing anywhere. I mean, look at the city of Hartford.
Look at the slums that are around there and the
dilapidated housing and apartments. Tear them down. You can build
(02:01:00):
the building a high rise anywhere around there. You can
expand on it lickety split. But they're not interested. Why
why are they interested in your town? What are they
going to They're gonna increase traffic? What are you gonna
bring another bus line? What else are they gonna do?
What are they going to improve? How are they going
(02:01:22):
to improve on your life? Because again, it must be reciprocal,
That's all I'm saying. Shouldn't it be reciprocal? Shouldn't you
be able to know right off the bat when you ask, Okay, fine,
let's build affordable housing foot these folks. What am I
getting out of it?
Speaker 5 (02:01:39):
Well?
Speaker 2 (02:01:39):
Culture, you'll get culture. I'm sorry say again, I didn't
quite hear that because this one you said culture. Yes, culture,
everyone needs a little bit of that. Yeah, that's why
I came here this cultures.
Speaker 8 (02:02:00):
I'm with you.
Speaker 2 (02:02:01):
Know, everybody wears a little you know, bubble goose vest.
All the girls wear ugs. We go to the restaurant
down the block. We pick up a hot bagel and
some tea. We drive through the neighborhood, we go to
the local church. Maybe we'll go to some local theater.
You know, honey, what's playing at the local theater? Jesus
(02:02:25):
Christ Superstar the musical? Who's in it? Billy from around
the corner can't wait to see it. We've got enough
culture in our town. Yesterday someone put on a local
production of Spam a loot. We've got all the culture
we need. Culture.
Speaker 6 (02:02:49):
All of this stuff is laughable. I can't stop laughing
at it. I can't.
Speaker 2 (02:02:55):
I don't even know to understand why we're doing it.
Sometimes you just gotta say close for business. I don't
know why, but I'm just thinking that that's I like
that close for business. Phil, What say you?
Speaker 5 (02:03:09):
How are you not too bad? Sure?
Speaker 10 (02:03:12):
Hey, I've got an idea going with your last little
semi rant. I understand there's a recently cleared woodlot in Greenwich. Hmmm,
that probably could use a high rise in the Lamont neighborhood.
Speaker 2 (02:03:27):
Beautiful ha ha wouldn't listen to me, What person with
low income who needs low income housing would frown at
the idea of living in Greenwich?
Speaker 10 (02:03:42):
I mean the beautiful people, man.
Speaker 2 (02:03:45):
Exactly, listen to me. I would love to live in
Greenwich and I make a reasonable income, but I can't.
But you know what, but if there's some people out
there who will never get the chance to live there,
why not make that opportunity happen right now, Darien as well? Exactly?
Maybe if those people listen, if the low income housing
(02:04:07):
folks get an opportunity to live in Greenwich, maybe through osmosis,
those people would say, you know what, maybe I want
to get an education and learn to be a captain
of industry like the great folks right here.
Speaker 10 (02:04:19):
What'll be the capital of the football team with a
smug look?
Speaker 2 (02:04:24):
That works as well, I think the great culture. What
a culture shock it would be if, for once the
culture that was changing was not of the affordable housing
folks into the people already there. The people already there
were influencing the new folks.
Speaker 5 (02:04:41):
That's a beautiful thing.
Speaker 2 (02:04:42):
It would be. Thank you, Phil, you got it, buddy.
I'm just saying, I'm just saying this is up by
the way, this stuff brought to you by common sense
cost you nothing. Seriously, you know, and you know, and
it has no return policy. You can use it whenever.
(02:05:05):
It sits right in your pocket. Oh Man, Will says,
you are one hundred percent Correctories Connecticut is a political bubble. Yeah,
I couldn't agree more. Let me read, excuse me, let
me see. John Becker says, my god, there is no
(02:05:25):
such land in this country. You are correct.
Speaker 6 (02:05:28):
They could build it anywhere.
Speaker 2 (02:05:30):
And Carmela says, Lamont has all the space now that
he has cleared out all of those trees. Koreans, well, hey, Tarapee,
I haven't seen you in a while, He says. They
will get them voters out in the suburbs, and as
a bonus, they can have the towns that have decent
tax pace to pay for services that the city can
(02:05:51):
no longer afford. I'm just saying, there's a bunch of
opportunities here. There are a bunch of opportunities here. No, no, no,
we'll see, we'll see. Stand by, We're gonna get some
more news, some more views, and we've got weather in
traffic coming up right now with Mark Christopher. He's in
a BPS traffic Center.
Speaker 5 (02:06:10):
Hey Mark.
Speaker 1 (02:06:11):
The Odyssey app lets you jump back to the moments
you missed from WTI SEE News Talk Tennady. Download the
free Odyssey app. Search WTI see News Talk Tennady and
tap earlier today to get started.
Speaker 2 (02:06:24):
Anyway, And what had happened was today I opened up
the program talking about how Republicans are seeing themselves in
the state and I believe overall, and one of the
scary things about that is the fact that these Republicans,
whoever they are, I guess old Republicans, do not know how.
Speaker 5 (02:06:45):
To deal with.
Speaker 2 (02:06:47):
Do not know how to deal with the narrative that's
out there. They're very much afraid of being able to
communicate with their audience. They keep complaining about you know,
they're going to be compared to Trump. I was like, so,
if you're compared to Trump, or you're asked about Trump,
you should have an answer for that. If you know
it's coming, you should know what the answer. And you
(02:07:09):
see so many of them seem to be flat footed,
and I don't understand it. But go to the Odyssey
app and you can listen to the broadcast anytime you want,
so you can get the opening monologue of um Me
a City. It's at two o'clock, but you can watch
it or listen to it anytime you want by downloading
the Odyssey app. I love my wife. She forgets where
(02:07:31):
she is. Sometimes she's sitting in here and her phone
is going off while aw on the air. I wanted
to play this because, you know, this is what I
always find interesting. This is how Connecticut politicians who are
running for office, they think that the American people respond
to buzzwords. And every time I hear that, you know,
(02:07:53):
it's like the electorate wants this in The electorate wants
you to talk like that, and they want you to
say this, and they want you to say that. And
every time I hear it, I think of this scene
from Family Guy when Lois was running for office and
Brian gives her a cool tip during a debate and
during a press conference when people are asking questions, what are.
Speaker 6 (02:08:16):
Your plans for cleaning up our environment?
Speaker 20 (02:08:18):
Nine eleven?
Speaker 2 (02:08:19):
What about our traffic problem? Nine eleven? That's just that's
just who they are. You just say the buzzword and
they think that people are going to respond. You know,
(02:08:39):
what's your views of the economy? I'm not like Trump?
What are you gonna do in a lower taxes. Well,
you know, I'm not like Trump. That's what they do.
But I played this earlier and I want people to
listen to this. You do not know your constituents. And
Mark Mitchell of Rasmussen does. He talks to them all
(02:09:00):
the time, and he does the polling data to prove it.
He's really really good at his job.
Speaker 8 (02:09:04):
Conservatism has basically become the luxury value set that DC
Republicans love to convince themselves will win hearts and minds.
Finally this time, and everybody knows, after we see zero
action out of the Republican Party that it's basically just
a grift job, just a donor harvesting operation.
Speaker 2 (02:09:20):
Basically, well, what are the youth wan?
Speaker 8 (02:09:23):
What happens is when Trump wins an election, he convinces
a higher proportion of the under forty votes to turn
it out for him than we've ever seen before.
Speaker 6 (02:09:31):
All the Republicans say, oh, look at us, we're so great.
Speaker 2 (02:09:33):
We just you know, we've won the youth vote because.
Speaker 11 (02:09:35):
Republicans are great.
Speaker 6 (02:09:36):
It's like, no, these people are.
Speaker 2 (02:09:37):
Not conservative and they hate you.
Speaker 8 (02:09:39):
They only voted for Trump to give him a chance
of fixing America.
Speaker 7 (02:09:42):
You're screwing it up.
Speaker 2 (02:09:43):
That's right. Let's got another check our weather in traffic.
Speaker 6 (02:09:46):
Mark Christophers in the VPS driving Center.
Speaker 2 (02:09:48):
What's up, everybody? You know who it is?
Speaker 1 (02:09:50):
Who is you know who it's.
Speaker 2 (02:09:52):
We's on the radio, Frederick Douglas of the twenty first century.
Speaker 1 (02:09:56):
It's WTIC News Talk ten eighty.
Speaker 2 (02:10:00):
By the way, I've got to say something. There is
something weird that's going on rolling because I was filling in.
I was filling in all the way out in Buffalo
yesterday yesterday, and they were playing bumper music. So I
don't know what this station or company wine thing is
about bumper music, but they were using them up in Buffalo.
(02:10:23):
I need to investigate that, get to the bottom of
it because I missed my bumper music. It's a good,
big part of the show, used to get us hyped,
used to make the show so much better, and a
lot of fun doing that. Anyway, I don't know. We're
figuring it out. What's going on?
Speaker 13 (02:10:40):
Mark?
Speaker 11 (02:10:41):
Hey, I still want to talk about Republicans and affordable housing.
Speaker 5 (02:10:45):
But this is more.
Speaker 11 (02:10:47):
This is is more. In fact, you know what? No
real quick go on? Mark from North Harbor and on Twitter,
I just reposted something about Constitution Plaza and Hartford. Okay,
you know there's tens of thousands of empty buildings there,
indetail office buildings, infrastructures there, transportation, school, hospitals, it's all there.
(02:11:08):
But listen, I never thought so. Soon after they found
Mimi Garcia's body, I had talked about something that I've
been talking about for years, how DCF is not in
concert with local police departments or state police when when
that's warranted from the start to the end of an
(02:11:29):
investigation of abuse and the colect So today.
Speaker 2 (02:11:34):
We're gonna put work off.
Speaker 6 (02:11:35):
Hold on for a second. The lend best Off thing
I forgot.
Speaker 2 (02:11:39):
I realized. I just realized you were actually going to
bring that up. We're going to start the show with
that tomorrow.
Speaker 11 (02:11:46):
Tomorrow.
Speaker 6 (02:11:46):
Yeah, I want to talk about it tomorrow.
Speaker 2 (02:11:48):
A great detail because you were one hundred percent right,
because you had been talking about it for the longest
and this is the thing about Mimi's law that you
were pointing out, and lend Bestof did a special about it.
You can probably catch it again later on tonight, probably
at the six o'clock news where he did that.
Speaker 6 (02:12:08):
Who's he talking to the Farmington chief.
Speaker 11 (02:12:11):
Right to and unintentionally. I couldn't ask for a better partner,
Yeah than the Farmington police chief. His name is Paul
Manton Mellonson. But what he said, and let's just I
guess we'll say we're teasing it for tomorrow.
Speaker 6 (02:12:27):
Yeah, that's right.
Speaker 11 (02:12:28):
Let's say the quote he gave unless you want.
Speaker 5 (02:12:31):
Me to read the quote.
Speaker 2 (02:12:31):
Read the quote.
Speaker 5 (02:12:32):
I believe.
Speaker 11 (02:12:33):
So this is leading up to what I've always said.
These police, So how Len presented it was they had
no information the one and only time they went up
to the condo, Mimi was dead and she was in
the basement of the condo and Farmington police show up
for a noise complaint. On their screen, they've got everything
from DMV to criminal cases. The one thing they didn't
(02:12:55):
have with DC Episthothy.
Speaker 2 (02:12:56):
That's exactly right, Len.
Speaker 11 (02:12:58):
Best off question is Chief Paul Milanson on it. And
this is the quote. It's really almost unbelievable. We work
well together when DCF understands that there was a crime involved, Okay,
but until that point they've determined that there was a
(02:13:19):
crime or a suspected crime, really there's not any collaboration.
So that sometimes becomes an issue. So my question is
and tomorrow, I guess I want you to delve into it.
I'm going to be calling up. Believe me, I got
a lot of family do or cops what qualifications? Does
(02:13:39):
we have a police department? They are trained, their qualifications,
they have certifications to investigate crimes. They're waiting for DCF
to determine if there's a crime. Isn't that right there alone?
Tell everybody. I hope Senator Harding, who said he was
going to assist me in this, I hope he's listening.
But we're our local police departments are waiting for DCF.
Speaker 2 (02:14:04):
That But I think, hold on, there is something. There's
there's something to that Mark. That's why I want to
wait till tomorrow. What you just what you just brought up,
And I want everybody to pay attention to what he
just said. So he says the police department is waiting
on DCF in order for the police department to know
that there is an incident that they should be investigating.
In essence, they show up at a home where there's
(02:14:25):
a noise complaint, and in essence, DCF is sort of
giving the police department to lead on whether or not
there is well, the information that I have that relates
to DCF answers your question, because what you just asked
is the lynch pin as to why Mimi wasn't on
their docket while they wasn't on the radar of the
police department. That's why I said, I want to wait
(02:14:47):
until tomorrow.
Speaker 11 (02:14:48):
So yeah, let's wait till tomorrow. But this, this will
tie in for tomorrow. And this was another validation. So
those of you who've been paying attention a lot, Teresa
is showing I hope you do. You remember the teacher
that we inappropriately touching kids in West harper.
Speaker 2 (02:15:02):
Right rested four times out at school.
Speaker 11 (02:15:05):
So the mother, knowing my crusade now to get DCF
and police together, she calls me and tells me, and
this is unbelievable. DCF had determined her allegations of the
teacher inappropriately touching her kids was unsubstantiated, unfounded. They were
ready to close the case. Thank god, one DCF worker
(02:15:27):
found a peace information he was uncomfortable with, thought it
was basically a crime, gave it to West Harford police,
and police started a warrant for his arrest that very day.
Speaker 2 (02:15:39):
And it's interesting because and that also no, no, no,
what you're talking about, and that's the thing. What you're
talking about is exactly to disconnect with DCF when it
comes to the police. That's why I said I want
to wait until tomorrow because both of those cases, if
you notice the similarity there is is that DCF is
not making it a criminal issue, is not making a
police issue. Well, the person who I had a private
(02:16:01):
phone call with, who knows the people who are in
charge and knows the names and where the bodies are buried,
explain to me why that is. And it's really really
bad it.
Speaker 11 (02:16:11):
Change doesn't come about from this incident alone. It should
have been changed years ago, maybe decades ago. If this
doesn't change it, then shame on every politician that knows
about this.
Speaker 2 (02:16:24):
And they're going to bring up money, Well, there's gonna
have to be. There's going to have to be as
I like to call it, regime change at DCF. But
I'll explain that tomorrow. I'll and when I call you
later on, I'm gonna when I'm on my way to
my meeting, I'm going to give you a call. I'll
tell you all about it.
Speaker 12 (02:16:39):
Okay, rip Raff, I.
Speaker 11 (02:16:40):
Looked it up isn't in the Bible, so feel free to.
Speaker 2 (02:16:44):
All right, goodbye, Mike is in Hartford. How are we doing, sir?
Speaker 17 (02:16:51):
You there?
Speaker 7 (02:16:51):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (02:16:52):
Yeah, what's up, buddy?
Speaker 17 (02:16:54):
One word could describe all the problems we have with
our state government.
Speaker 6 (02:16:59):
But oh, state government, state government.
Speaker 17 (02:17:02):
Lack of Yeah, state government, lack of oversight. If you're
a manager, say for DCF, yeah, and you get on
get on one of your subordinates.
Speaker 5 (02:17:11):
I've seen it, uh in person.
Speaker 17 (02:17:15):
The manager gets reported then gets a thirty day unpaid furlough.
Speaker 5 (02:17:20):
Damn.
Speaker 17 (02:17:21):
They don't back up their managers. They don't. They don't,
they don't, they don't.
Speaker 5 (02:17:27):
Did you look into that the.
Speaker 17 (02:17:30):
Subject I talked to you about yesterday about the abuses
by the state police.
Speaker 2 (02:17:36):
Yes, I actually have that story, and I'm getting some
background on it with with a couple of police officers
who are helping me with some details.
Speaker 17 (02:17:44):
Did it Is it as bad as it sounds?
Speaker 6 (02:17:47):
Or I won't know. I won't know until on Well
it might not be until Monday.
Speaker 17 (02:17:52):
That's another thing. It's almost like not just the safe
but you get into the department and you get trained.
Rains me a movie training day with Denzel Washington.
Speaker 5 (02:18:04):
Yeah, this is the way we do it.
Speaker 17 (02:18:06):
And that's it.
Speaker 2 (02:18:08):
Yeah, that's why. It's what I said, It's what I
said earlier about the bubble. It is what I said
about the bubble. You know, it's the reason why so
many people this is interesting thing. The reason why so
many people in the local news media make a big
deal when Chris Murphy's on the national stage or Bob
Larson is on MSNBC. Like when these guys in here
(02:18:31):
get in the national stage is because they understand that
they operate inside the bubble. But if they break through
on a national platform, everybody celebrates it like they're all
in on it. And it's again, it's a bubble mentality,
and you're run one hundred percent right. When you're in
that bubble, you kind of get away with.
Speaker 7 (02:18:46):
All hell, all these extorcencies of state charges.
Speaker 17 (02:18:50):
I mean, you look at everybody out there. They got
to have a license to practice to do their living.
Now they don't care how they spend our money. They
don't care. But you know, even if that means we
fund cop sleeping her post sterly to go home and
they still get paid.
Speaker 11 (02:19:09):
Yeah, a lot of stuff, these guys are getting paid
for sitting at.
Speaker 2 (02:19:13):
Home there's a lot of stuff that's got to be addressed. Man,
we got to go in piece by piece though. Thank you, Mike,
I appreciate you, sir.
Speaker 7 (02:19:19):
You got it. Oh, this is.
Speaker 2 (02:19:23):
What's today? Wednesday? Yeah, Wednesday.
Speaker 6 (02:19:26):
Wow, mhm, this week is going by slow.
Speaker 2 (02:19:29):
It must have been that holiday yesterday because no, that no,
the ridiculousness of having to do the show on holiday
where there was really like no one like here, like
it was dead. It felt like a weekend show. So
it's like it's it's a it's a ridiculous thing to
(02:19:54):
do when it's a holiday and no one is actually around. No,
it's just in the middle of the week. Yes, exactly,
a federal holiday in the middle of the week Monday
would have made sense.
Speaker 6 (02:20:05):
By the way, can I tell you something, Roland, this
is this is the.
Speaker 2 (02:20:08):
Funniest thing anyone's ever done to me. This was absolutely
the funniest thing. So I come into the office. I'm
always here three hours before the show. I get in,
I still do my prep work, and I'm walking through
the house. I'm grabbing, you know, through the house, walking
this is this is the office because this is my
(02:20:28):
house now. So I'm walking through the office I'm printing
up my paperwork and stuff for the show. And yeah,
I usually do my hellos uncle, see Stephanie if Steve's around,
and go say hey hello to him. I'm always very
you know, sales department. Love going by to see them.
And I go by Janine's office and before I get
to the office, Janeine can see me, see me straight
(02:20:48):
straight away, and she points at me. She goes, yee,
I need to see you come here real quick. And
immediately think, oh crap, I'm being called at the principal's office.
She goes, exactly the person I want to see, said
walk in and with a stern look on her face,
she says to me, you don't work on Thanksgiving? And
I went what.
Speaker 6 (02:21:10):
She goes, yeah, you're not working on Thanksgiving. Thanksgiving is
a federal holiday.
Speaker 2 (02:21:14):
You're not working.
Speaker 6 (02:21:15):
And I went, I have to be told that I'm not.
Speaker 2 (02:21:18):
Working on Facegiving because they know you work. Your animal.
Speaker 17 (02:21:25):
I never have her.
Speaker 6 (02:21:26):
I'm like, I looked at her. I said, I have
to be told to take a day off. She goes, yes,
you do. You have to be told that you have
a day off.
Speaker 2 (02:21:33):
I was like, I've never had any employer to tell me,
thank thank goodness, because that means I get the day off. No,
that was the other thing she told me. She says,
she goes, no, we're not going to do a show
that day. Roland will not be in, so you're off.
And I'm like, she goes, We're just gonna do a
best of day And I'm going, all right, yep, matter
of fact, I'm gonna make sure to do that this week,
(02:21:55):
this week before I go. Just so I know, just
so I know, we all said. I look, I'm not
that bad. I would have worked on Christmas though, I
would have What's crazy? What are you talking about? Christmas
happens in the morning.
Speaker 6 (02:22:12):
If the morning is when you wake up in the morning,
you open up your gifts. The rest of the day,
what do you do kill and relax?
Speaker 2 (02:22:18):
There's games on, there's family around, there's great food, great fun.
What are you talking about.
Speaker 3 (02:22:25):
I'll just you know what, this is what I'll do.
I'll bring all of that into the studio. You're out
your mind, That's what I'll do. You'll be here by yourself.
This whole place is going to be dark. There's absolutely
no one's gonna be in this building.
Speaker 2 (02:22:41):
I don't get it.
Speaker 6 (02:22:41):
I totally.
Speaker 2 (02:22:42):
I have not understand that this vacation thing in the
days off stuff does make sense to me. I don't
get it. If you're up and awake, you should be working.
That's just the way it is, just unless, of course,
you know, you know, you're my wife who she's giving
me the dirtiest look I've ever seen.
Speaker 6 (02:23:01):
What are we doing on Christmas?
Speaker 2 (02:23:03):
Do you have plans for Christmas? She said, I'm going
to buy her a robe? A ah, I bought her
one last year. I brought her black robe. She loved it.
She did, she did love it. I tried to hide
it from her, but she found Yeah, good luck with that.
Speaker 6 (02:23:20):
Yeah, I can't hide anything you got.
Speaker 2 (02:23:22):
You gotta gotta you gotta get you. That's such a
good point. Yeah, you gotta be able to hide gifts.
I can't. Here's why, And this is true. She complained
to me one day. She goes, you never buy me
flowers anymore. I said, why would I bother you flowers?
You're always with me, Like, I can't surprise you with flowers.
You're right next to me. Yeah, I have to order
(02:23:44):
them or I've got to gold like. And that's the
worst part, because she's on the bank account every day,
counting every penny like a miser. This woman, so I
can't show literally, she goes, this six dollars and thirty
six cents you bought it, you spent at the gas station.
Speaker 5 (02:23:58):
What was that for?
Speaker 2 (02:24:00):
Gum like?
Speaker 6 (02:24:04):
She goes, Okay, I'm just I'm just asking.
Speaker 2 (02:24:06):
I'm just asking. Wowser's said, yeah, man, She goes, so
I couldn't order anything if I wanted to, and she
set it up this way. I'm gonna tell you how
bad it is when I had my own separate bank account.
She goes, just get rid of it and you'll just
have one account. But I said, how am I supposed
to surprise you at anything? Surprises are overrated? She said,
So I couldn't surprise her. If I tried, she'd know
(02:24:29):
I was buying her a gift.
Speaker 5 (02:24:30):
No matter what.
Speaker 2 (02:24:30):
And she got you do yeah, no kidding, I know
I fell for it. 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, showing Patrick
we love you. Let me miss you. Remember that panic
is not planning, So plan your work and work you're
planning me. I'm reselling radio. You have a good night,
pleasant tomorrow. We'll see you here next time. Mark Christopher's
getting your home. He's in a BPS traffic center.
Speaker 5 (02:24:52):
Good night, sir.
Speaker 2 (02:24:53):
You don't You're a mess. Verry Grace have a great night.