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January 14, 2026 • 47 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Last check Timesaber Traffic with Lucy Chapman.

Speaker 2 (00:03):
From the A one United Heating, Air and Electrical Timesaber
Traffic Center. That morning rush no quite underway, so you've
got some room to move on the Dodge Expressway. The
JFK's in good shape. You're still going to see all
that construction at seventy second in el slowing things down
that to look at your road some Lucy Chapman.

Speaker 1 (00:20):
Hey, Lucy, nothing's working in here. Can you stretch and
do another fifteen minutes on that traffic?

Speaker 2 (00:24):
Absolutely? I could do that for you.

Speaker 1 (00:26):
I'm kidding, all right, how are you feeling? Everyone is
worried about you?

Speaker 2 (00:31):
Well, believe it or not, I've a lot, a lot,
a lot better than I have been in the last
few days.

Speaker 1 (00:37):
It sounds smoky. We're gonna get We're gonna get emails.
Can Lucy's voice stay like that? I thought it was
the best it could be, and then it sounded like that.

Speaker 2 (00:46):
No, it's too hard to talk.

Speaker 1 (00:48):
Yeah like this. Okay, Well, we're no offense, but I'm
going to ignore you for most of the morning. Okay, deal,
We'll get time Saber traffic updates and very little else
from Lucy throughout the day here, don't don't do it. Don't.
If you said it hurts to talk, I don't want
to make you talk.

Speaker 2 (01:07):
It doesn't hurt to talk. It's just that I don't think.
And I've been telling Craig this and he's looking all
nervous in here.

Speaker 1 (01:14):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:14):
And I don't think I'm contagious.

Speaker 1 (01:18):
No, I look, we talked about this.

Speaker 2 (01:23):
Don't have your breath all.

Speaker 1 (01:24):
Yeah, we talked about this last week. I guess it
was because everyone has been sick over the last several weeks. Here, there,
and everywhere. Everyone is sick amazingly though, And let's focus
on the positives here. No COVID, No one has COVID.
No one shutting anything down. They're not suggesting we wear masks.

(01:44):
They're not suggesting six feet of separation. They're not saying, hey,
you're walking down the wrong way on this grocery aisle.
So we've we've beaten COVID, and I think that we've
kind of lost sight of that. No one's telling you
to go get vaccinated against COVID or stay home for
ten days if you got We beat COVID, and I
don't think that this is being trumpeted enough. So what

(02:09):
do we have. I don't know. We got Jim's coffin
in the background there, Lucy's all stuffed up over there.

Speaker 2 (02:15):
Well, it's interesting that you say that about none of
us have COVID, none of it, because I have thought
all of this weekend. I have thought. This feels like
the stuff I would get in my twenties. You know,
when I was younger, I would get this about maybe
once every other year or so. I'd get bronchitis.

Speaker 1 (02:34):
I got bronchidas, and I haven't had that.

Speaker 2 (02:36):
Gosh, I'm not going to age myself. We'll just say
a long time. Yeah, and it feels.

Speaker 1 (02:42):
Like it's been seventy three years and it feels a
lot like that. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (02:49):
So yeah, I mean there's stuff is still out there,
the same stuff that we've been dealing with for fifty
hundred years.

Speaker 1 (02:55):
I know, for fifty hundred years. We've been working together here.
I've been here for about nineteen and a half years,
and thankfully you've very rarely gotten sick, and we all
get sick once in a while. It happens. It's good.
Let the immune system go to work, like, Hey, that's
that's why we're here. Let's go, But I have not
heard you cough like you've been coughing this morning. You

(03:17):
sound like you've got the whoop. You got the whoop?

Speaker 2 (03:20):
I don't think so.

Speaker 1 (03:23):
You sound like they've got the whooping cough.

Speaker 2 (03:26):
Is it? Am I wrong? Is it true that if
you don't have a fever, you're not contagious or wait.

Speaker 1 (03:32):
Sure, yeah, let me check. I am not a doctor.
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (03:38):
Well, thanks for that laugh.

Speaker 1 (03:39):
I needed it, Lucy. I needed you back here, even
if you're somewhere hovering around thirty seven to forty two
percent wellness. So glad to have you back. Good to
be back because of your smile, because of your expertise
doing traffic, because it doesn't make a lot of sense
for the company to pay you to sit home, you know,

(04:01):
paid sick days. That's That's the stupidest thing I've ever heard.
So that's all good. There are a lot of things
I don't understand. I don't understand. We have so many
I told you we're gonna have emails coming this morning.
Everything from those who are impressed by your voice. Luke says,

(04:23):
dang girls, sounds so hot. Oh come on, that's from Luke.
If you want to go the other way. Ryan emails
and says, who's that new guy doing traffic? Come on, dude,
come on. Shannon wants you to sing Carpenter songs. I

(04:43):
don't know that you're in that lower Karen Carpenter register,
but if you want to sing rainy days and Wednesdays,
that would be fun.

Speaker 2 (04:51):
I'm gonna have go ahead and passed.

Speaker 1 (04:53):
On that anyway. And then we got.

Speaker 2 (04:59):
Between words don't belong.

Speaker 1 (05:01):
Yeah. Corley, who has been beside himself with grief the
last couple of days that you've not been here, just
emailed and said yay, Lucy is back on the radio.
And that's a follow up to his email yesterday that
was titled abandonment issues. Like I said, he was really
struggling without you being here.

Speaker 2 (05:21):
Well, let me just quote a famous line from a movie. Yes,
My Lives hurt real bad. Saw that mouth breathing when
you're all stuffed up.

Speaker 1 (05:32):
Lucy eat your ham same movie Napoleon Dynamite. All right,
thank you for coming in here. I'm sure you're not
going to get anyone.

Speaker 2 (05:42):
Stick and I'm disinfecting everything here.

Speaker 1 (05:45):
Lucy is the sole occupant of the Timesaver traffic Center.
She's not in the same studio with us, and the
next person coming in to use that workstation a microphone
is Lucy. So she has and quarantined and isolated. Don't worry.
If you're looking for safety and health, you're gonna find

(06:06):
it with your radio friends here on news Radio eleven
ten KFAB. After I said don't worry, I'm gonna ignore
Lucy most of the morning, and I talked to her
this entire segment and now news Radio eleven ten KFAB
Timesaver Traffic with Harvey Firesteam.

Speaker 2 (06:23):
Don't suite that. You can't do that. You can't do that.

Speaker 1 (06:29):
In the Sonker's Custom Woods Inbox, Scott atkfab dot com,
Will says, welcome back traffic Czar, Lucy, you are a warrior.

Speaker 2 (06:42):
All sweet, thank yous.

Speaker 1 (06:43):
She is playing hurt and Luke is back again. Uh
here in the inbox. This just to refresh your memory
from a moment ago. He was the one who emailed
and said, dang, Lucy sounds so hot. And then we
talked about whether or not Lucy was contagious, and Luke said,
I hope Lucy is contagious. I want what she has.

(07:05):
She can take my breath away. Luke my goodness, Yeah
it was. It's kind of funny at first. Now border
we're dipping the toe into the creepy waters here, and
trust me, I swim in at daily so I can
see it from here. We're gonna get into sports in

(07:25):
just a second. Their question has come up here from
a few in the inbox here recently, and this might
be the best time to address it. And the question
is directed at Jim Rose that says, all right, it's
from Rob. I have a question for Jim. Watching the
Nebraska Oregon basketball game right now, and I'm wondering my

(07:48):
eyes deceiving me. Or are the Nebraska men's basketball team
all wearing sports bras?

Speaker 3 (07:54):
Please explain they're not sportspras. That's upper body is support
for shoulders.

Speaker 1 (08:00):
Yeah, yeah, they're.

Speaker 3 (08:01):
Not sports bras. Or from the Seinfeld episode, they're not bros. Yeah,
they're not bras. They're bros.

Speaker 1 (08:08):
You want me to wear a bra? Yeah, bra, it's
b b as. More and more people are like, all right,
let's see what this Nebraska basketball thing is all about.
They're watching the game, especially when they got the whites
on or a part of me the cream on, as
they did at that home game last night. You can
definitely see the outline of what appears to be a
sports bra worn by what had been. It seems to

(08:30):
me just a few of the players, like Sam Hoiberg,
had it on, and now it looks like they're all
wearing it, and as as I understand it, to kind
of tack onto what Jim said, in practice, they wear
these these vests and it monitors vital signs that lets
them know about exertion, when you might need some more

(08:51):
hydration or whatever. And it's just kind of a sports
science monitoring system. And they're playing basketball and they're shooting
with it on in practice all the time. Well then
they get in the game and it's like, well I
don't have that thing on it. It feels weird. So a
lot of athletes are like, all right, I'm wearing the
bra in the game because this is how I practice.

(09:11):
I got to play like a practice. Hey, whatever it takes, man, Yeah,
you know what these guys can just they can wear
speedos and bras if they're going to play like this,
I don't care. All right, who doesn't want to see
buked in jail on a speedo in a bra? You
know how this works? In radio right, we sit here
and talk in the microphone, spill our guts, sun load art, brains,

(09:32):
hearts or whatever, and we just assume that you're paying
rapt attention, leaning forward in your chair, telling everyone around you, hey,
quiet down. They're talking on the am radio. I have
to hear this. That's how we think it works. I
don't like speaking in front of a live audience because
then we realize, oh, that they're not paying any attention

(09:53):
at all, especially talking to kids in a like a
high school setting. Forget it. I don't know how teachers
do it. By the way, good morning. I'm Scott Vorhees
here with Lucy Chapman. Craig Evans. Jim Rose is here
as well. This is News Radio eleven ten KFAB, Nebraska's
morning news. All right, Lucy, Lucy, yes, Lucy, all right.

(10:14):
It's mid fifties, it's in the segregated South, and a
young black woman has refused to give up her seat
on a bus. Name that person, well, that's Rosa Parks. No, oh,
stop quiet down there. See that guy's mad too, sorry,
Rosa Parks. No. Before that, I don't know. Yeah, a

(10:38):
lot of people kind of got the impression that there
was exactly one young black woman who was sitting there
on a bus and refused to give up her seat,
and we all kind of learned through history that was
and only was Rosa Parks. Nine months before that, there
was Clawette Colvin. And actually just after that, there was

(10:59):
another young woman named Mary Louise Smith, all black teenagers. Well,
Claudette Colvin who is kind of seen as the first
arrested for refusing to give up her seat on a bus,
this in Montgomery, Alabama, in nineteen fifty five. She's passed away.

(11:20):
She is eight. She was eighty six years old. And
I wonder if she lived her entire life being a
little bit bitter like, because everyone you ask people that question, like,
and here's your trivial pursuit question, who was the young
black woman and the segregated South who refused to give
up her seat in a bus? And everyone said Rosa Parks.
And I wonder if Claudette is like, oh, come on, please, God,

(11:44):
I did it first. Nine months before her.

Speaker 2 (11:46):
She you said she was a teenager, Yeah, and she
was arrested. Yes, I wonder if that is. I wonder
if that's one of the reasons why, because it wasn't
real highly poblicized at the time because she maybe was
under age and really couldn't really be arrested. I mean,
I don't know how the laws were then.

Speaker 1 (12:05):
Well I know how the laws were then. Uh, she
she got a ticket for it, and I don't know
that they you know, threw her in jail for a
week or anything. Rosa Parks was I don't remember. She
was a teenager, but she was pretty young. But the
situation being what it was, and it was you know,
how is this information going to get out? And who's

(12:27):
going to report it? And and the segregated you know,
south of Montgomery, Alabama, it's like, oh, there there are
some black people who have a problem with something. Oh well,
we'll just bury that and never report it, and no
one needs to know that, and we go on with
about our lives. Did he did he?

Speaker 4 (12:43):
You know?

Speaker 1 (12:43):
And that's how people didn't hear about it. But there's
another thing about Rosa Parks. She was already an activist
working with the NAACP. So when she got arrested, suddenly
there was a bit more movement behind it, and you
have to wonder, like, was she trying to get arrested?

(13:04):
Now you look at that versus the protest and today
where people are standing in front of ice vehicles or
parking their car theor whatever looking for trouble. And I'm
not saying Rosa Parks was. I think I think that
history bears out she was looking for trouble. She was

(13:24):
on the right side of history. And thank goodness that.
I think most people assume that we've moved past what happened.
They're not. In many of the lifetimes of our listeners
here are not me. Has happened several years before I
was born.

Speaker 2 (13:43):
But I do have some information for you, yes, please,
from our news department.

Speaker 1 (13:51):
Yes, Claudette is that Claudette Colvin?

Speaker 2 (13:55):
Apparently she was. The charges were dropped because she was
pregnant and they didn't want her to go through that.

Speaker 1 (14:03):
Oh this, Oh, Craig Craig Evans doesn't go there.

Speaker 2 (14:08):
I don't want to say that.

Speaker 1 (14:09):
No, wait, what did he say.

Speaker 2 (14:14):
He's gonna come here to tell you himself. Okay, he's
on his way here. He could just hang on one second.

Speaker 1 (14:19):
Anyone want to start this segment over? No play the
Bad Habit song by Ed Sheering again. Craig Evans K
Radio News Breaking News from nineteen fifty five, Montgomery, Alabama.

Speaker 3 (14:32):
According to what I've heard and read here in the
last couple of days, the Civil Rights Campaign did not
want her as the face of their campaign because she
was unmarried and pregnant at the time.

Speaker 1 (14:41):
Ah well, it was the fifties. That kind of thing was,
you know, not as commonplace or accepted or whatever. So yeah,
that's that's interesting. I did not know that. I in fact,
i'd never heard of this woman until this morning, when
I learned that she had passed away this week at

(15:02):
the age of eighty six. You kind of get some
impressions in your head, you know, growing up, and you
can get a little like here's a little someone's feeding
you a little spoonful of history, and you think, well,
that's how that was, like the Rosa Parks. That's why
I asked Lucy, who would have blown it all out
of the water. She would have said, oh, Claudette Covin,
like you know, so we kind of think that this

(15:22):
happened one time and someone said I'm not moving and
that was it. Claudette was fifteen and she was on
her way home from high school that day March second,
nineteen fifty five, when she boarded the bus and she
actually sat in the back of the bus where she
was because of the color of her skin supposed to.

(15:44):
And then the white section filled up and they said,
all right, you guys have to move, and she said,
I mean, she's sitting where she was supposed to. And
she decided, no, Now, I don't care how racist you are.
I don't care what era it is. What happened to
the idea of being a gentleman. You're telling me you're

(16:08):
gonna stand there and you're gonna look at a fifteen
year old black girl and say you get up, I
want to sit down on my way home. What I
mean it happened all the time. Oh, I you know,
I guess between I don't know the racism, the misogynistic activity,

(16:31):
that kind of thing, the whole thing. I just want
to go back and punch all those people, you know,
the bus driver, the white people like you get up,
let me sit down. I still if I'm sitting someplace
and there are no seats available and there's a woman
anywhere of any demographic standing, I give up my seat.
I thought that's how everyone well should have been raised.

(16:52):
People were, but radical feminism has kind of wiped that out.
It used to be that a guy would open the
door for a lady, a guy would give up a
seat for a lady. A guy would, you know, be
a little more courteous, So maybe walk on the other
side of her on the street so she doesn't get
splashed by water if somebody drives through a puddle. But
radical feminism has said guys, no, no, no, don't be doing that. Well,

(17:14):
we don't need any of that. Now we got Joe Rogan,
who some people credit with helping get Trump elected for
a second time. Trump went on there and did that
very popular podcast that Joe Rogan does host, and Kamala
Harris said, I'll do it, but only on the conditions
that you asked me these and only these questions, and

(17:36):
our campaign wants final editing rights before it goes out.
And they said that's not how any of this works,
and they said, well, then we're not going to do it.
Trump is like, whatever, I'll take as much time as
you want to ask me anything you want. And so
some people are like, Joe Rogan got Trump elected, which
caused some people to be down on Joe Rogan, which
means that anytime Rogan, who we have to remember who

(17:58):
we're talking about. Stand up comedian, hosted The Man Show
and Fear Factor.

Speaker 5 (18:04):
So his.

Speaker 1 (18:07):
Stairway to the fame he has now is girls on trampolines,
that's The Man Show and making people lick spiders Fear Factor,
and then he has a podcast. He's very funny. But
we're not talking about Walter Crokite here. So anytime Joe
Rogan says anything that might be even slightly detrimental to

(18:30):
Trump or his administration, suddenly the media says, Wow, this
just goes to show you that Trump support, that Trump
Wall is cracking. Now Joe Rogan is questioning whether we
have the Gestapo on the streets of America. He says,
you don't want militarized people in the streets just roaming
around snatching up people, many of which turn out to

(18:50):
be US citizens that just don't have their papers on them.
Are we really gonna be the Gestapo? Where's your papers?
As that's what we've come to. That's what Joe Rogan said,
and I quote on his podcast, The Rogan Experience, available
on iHeartRadio whatever you get your podcasts this week. So,
Jim Rose, do we have the Gestapo in the streets

(19:12):
of America because now they're in Lincoln. We have some
ice operations there well.

Speaker 3 (19:16):
And we've talked about this from time to time, and
I think we'll continue to Anybody who starts using Nazi
references is way out of bounds. I don't think they
understand who the Nazis were. I don't think they understand
what the Nazis did. I think it's easy to call
somebody a Nazi and not have any idea just how
derogatory that reference really is. The Nazi Party under Adolf

(19:41):
Hitler was the worst collection of human beings maybe in
the last two hundred and fifty years of civilization. What
they did to children, what they did to women, what
they did to Jews, what they did to dissidence. It
wasn't just lock them up, it was torture them, okay.
And so when you start talking about the Gestapo, which

(20:01):
was the secret police of Adolf Hitler's Nazi Party, they
had unlimited and unfettered authority to do whatever they wanted
to do. They could literally go into your house at
one o'clock in the morning. They could knock down the door,
drag you out, throw you in the back of the car,
and take you anywhere, and no one would ever hear
from you.

Speaker 1 (20:20):
Again, that's what people think that Ice is doing exactly,
and they're absolutely, one hundred percent totally wrong. And I
get really sick and tired of having people use Nazi references.
Now it got to be sort of avant garde during
the Seinfeld years when you had the soup Nazi. Okay,
this was the guy running the soup who had a
really unique personality and it was funny. Well they referred

(20:42):
to him as a soup Nazi. Okay, that's what started this.
And now suddenly everybody that you don't like or everybody
who's mean is a Nazi. So could we please maybe
dig deep into that small cavern of your brain when
you were in high school and you were taught Civics
or an American or European history, and remember what the

(21:02):
teacher told you about how really dreadful the Nazis were,
and stop referring to Americans as Nazis. Well, you don't
have to go back to Nazi Germany. You can go
back to today in Tehran and see what a real
like put you know, the boot on the neck regime
looks like. Look at what's going on in Iran.

Speaker 3 (21:21):
That is like Nazi Germany.

Speaker 1 (21:22):
Yeah, you've got the strict Islamic fundamentalist regime of Iran
killing people in the streets. Well, that's what Trump is doing.
Look at this woman in Minneapolis, all right, in one
woman who drove a vehicle at an armed ICE officer.
You've got thousands of people, potentially thousands of people in
Iran who have been murdered at the behest of their

(21:45):
government saying, Oh, these people out there in the streets
with the signs they don't like you, Well kill them.

Speaker 3 (21:51):
The mentally challenged people who are the ones that are
saying that, this is how you fix it. If you're
Jacob Fry, the extra jo ordinarily limited mayor of Minneapolis, Minnesota,
rather than buck Ice, rather than fight with the White House,
rather than get in the way, why don't you have
a meeting with the area ICE director and your police

(22:14):
chief and say, all right, how do we work together
to get the bad guys now? In the meantime, we
will absolutely support you ICE in all your efforts to
enforce ICE laws against criminal aliens. But can you give
me this. Let's not be going through meat packing plants.
Let's not be going through department stores. Let's not be

(22:36):
going through target stores looking for people who may be
here illegally. Let's get the bad guys first, get all
of them, because we know where they are, and you
know where they are, and my police department knows where
they are. Let's get them. Let's get them locked up
or get them shipped back to wherever, and then let's
come back and talk about a new proviso that provides

(22:56):
for folks who may have come here illegally, who are
labbed fighting citizens who are not even protesting, They're just
doing their daily job. And is there a classification for
them that we can have in place to keep them
from being yanked off the streets and sent home. So
if Jacob Fry and Tim Walls, who is just as
limited in his role as Jacob Fry is in his

(23:20):
governor Lapetamine would just would just stop fighting with Ice
and work cooperatively. I got ten dollars that says, I
will say, you know, some mayor you're on, We're gonna
do that. You're gonna make our lives easier. You're going
to cut down on any potential threat against our guys.
You're going to help us take care of these lunatics

(23:40):
who are out on the streets acting like a holes
and if you do that, we're gonna work with you.
And I promise you. Tom Holman, who's in charge of
all of this, and Christy Nome who's in charge of
all of this, are going to say I'm in, We're in.
If you work with us, we'll work with you instead
of acting likes and breaking the law, which is what

(24:03):
they're doing, and encouraging their citizens to break the law,
which is what's happening when you interfere with an ICE operation.

Speaker 1 (24:11):
To me, this solves the problem. Cooperate email here from
Mary in the Zonker's custom woods Inbox Scott at kfab
dot com. She's passing along one of the latest tweets
from the I don't know if you guys follow libs
of TikTok. This is a website that generally passes along

(24:32):
an astonishing amount of teachers who all seem to be
some variation of the same woman. And they're all on
there saying in.

Speaker 4 (24:42):
My classroom, we're gonna stand up for this, and I'm
gonna teach my students social justice and all that, and
so they they these people post on their social media
and then this site just forwards it along.

Speaker 1 (24:52):
Here's someone else educating your kids or whatever. So they
also posted one the other day that said, attention every
one in Omaha, Nebraska. This is the libs of TikTok
Twitter ex twitter Feed. Attention everyone in Omaha, Nebraska. The
Grove Juicery is selling a blank ice cold brew with

(25:16):
a share of the proceeds going to benefit legal fees
for illegals. If you support ice, they probably don't want
your business. Share this with everyone you know in the area.
And then there's a little picture of yeah, it looks
like at this particular Juice juicery two locations in Omaha,
they have a says it right there, blank ice only.

(25:41):
I didn't say fudge cold brew. And I'm saying this.
If you this is something that you're into and you
want to support, then apparently they're share of the proceeds
going to benefit legal fees for illegal immigrants. It's fine

(26:02):
if you're into that kind of thing. There it is
if you're like, you know, I think I'll go to
Smoothie King or someplace that doesn't post a politics on
the menu board, then you've got that option as well.
Just passing along that which is out there on social media.
This is something that's making the rounds on social media
as well. This is actually a couple of months old.

(26:22):
Maybe you've seen this, maybe you haven't. It's being passed
along as though it just happened in Minneapolis. It hasn't
to my knowledge, but it certainly could. This is in
the midst of a we don't like ICE protest. Here
is a white guy wearing an Indian headdress with face
paint on, and he's out there amongst the ICE protesters

(26:47):
calling out their cis americanness as a what he says,
Transindigenous person.

Speaker 6 (26:54):
Are you sis American? I'm trans Indigenous for ICE. We
love Ice, support them all. You're all trespassers on our layers.
Indigenous people are Indigenous people, and you're all trespassers on
our land, and we want both, you know, to deport
all of you guys.

Speaker 1 (27:15):
This is just a white guy doing these videos. Trans
Indigenous people are Indigenous people, and it's a white guy
masquerading as a Native American guy. And this has been
shared all over social media by a lot of different people,
including several Native American people. Think this is about the

(27:36):
funniest thing they've ever seen. So, of course his goal
is just his to trap liberals in their own argument.
You know, hey, you can't be an indigenous person because
you're not an indigenous person. Well, that's part of the
crux of the Supreme Court argument this week. Kathleen Hartnett

(27:57):
is the voice you're going to hear here. She is
the lawyer arguing at the United States Supreme Court on
behalf of a student in Idaho born Mail wants to
compete in girls sports. This is part of the Supreme
Court hearings yesterday on whether transgender athletes aka boys can
compete in girls' sports. Justice sam Alito just asked her,

(28:21):
can you define what gender is? Now? This has to
do the whole thing has to do with gender. Remember
one of these Supreme Court justices, Ketanji Brown Jackson, was
asking you define the difference between a man and a woman.
She says, I don't know. I'm not a biologist. So
Justice Alito asks Attorney Heartnet here, can you define gender?

Speaker 5 (28:42):
Sorry, I missunders to your question. I think that the
underlying enactment, whatever it was, the policy, the law, we'd
have to have an understanding of how the state or
the government was just understanding that term to figure out
whether or not someone was excluded. We do not have
a definition for the court, and we don't take issue
with the We're not disputing the definition here. What we're
saying is that the way it applies in practice is

(29:03):
to exclude birth sex males categorically from women's teams, and
that there's a subset of those birth sex males where
it doesn't make sense to do so according to the
state's own interest.

Speaker 7 (29:13):
Well, how can accord determine whether there's discrimination on the
basis of sex without knowing what sex means for equal
protection purposes?

Speaker 5 (29:25):
I think here we just know that we basically know
that the that they've identified, pursuing into their own statute, lindsay,
qualifies as a birth sex male.

Speaker 1 (29:34):
Yeah, there's a sub section of birth sex males who
are still males. There's nothing hateful about pointing out science
to the group that always says we believe in the science,
and then that applies to whether they say global warming,
man made climate change, whatever, they believe in the science

(29:55):
up to the point where we have gender, and then
they don't believe in the science. It's the fundamental question
of this entire issue. How can you how can you
legislate based on the based on sex without knowing what
it is, without being able to define what it is.
Title nine made it clear a woman has the right

(30:16):
to this because she's a person, not because she's a woman.
And up until now women were denied those opportunities. But
we can't even decide what's a woman now. I can,
but a very small sub sect of the activist class
can't decide what a woman is or what you think
you are, Trump's what you actually are. So this looks

(30:38):
like an eight to one vote to me. Uh, Katangi
Brown Jackson is going to say, well, you need to
provide for this, forget about women, forget about its impact
on actual women.

Speaker 3 (30:51):
You got to provide for this. Oh, it'll be three
that votes Kegan jacks There are questions yesterday were actually quiet.
I thought, spot on to the lawyer from the ACLU
who is defending this gal, this guy who thinks he's
a woman. But to me, it's time for this argument
to end. Scott, It's time for this argument. And no

(31:13):
one is denying a trans individual an opportunity. Nobody, not
one place, not West Virginia, not Nebraska, not Alaska, and
no place in this country is a trans youth denied
an opportunity to compete in athletics.

Speaker 1 (31:27):
No, nowhere. Just have to make the team on that
which corresponds with your gender, and therefore the equal protection
clause in the Constitution doesn't apply. It's like I'm being
denied the opportunity. No, no, you're not, you're not. Boys
long jump is right over here. You see the video
President Trump visiting that Ford plant in Michigan yesterday. Now,

(31:49):
he was there to talk about tariffs and policies are
gonna make cars cheaper and this would be better for businesses.
But everyone is talking about how the President is going
through the plant and it appears to show a heckler
on the factory floor. There's someone working at the plant
where the President's going through. There. Here's where we make

(32:10):
the trucks. Oh look, great trucks. I love these trucks.
And someone is heckling him, yelling at him, and the
President appears to say forget you, so to speak twice
and then raises his middle finger at the guy. The
person off camera can be heard shouting, and it sounds

(32:34):
like it was someone who was linking him to Epstein.
It sounded like the heckler was yelling, pedophile protector. You're
a pedophile protector. This is the president coming through your
place of business, and this guy's yelling at him that
he's protecting pedophiles. Even though the Trump's Justice Department has

(32:54):
released Epstein files by the hundreds and hundreds of pages,
where the Biden administration did not. The White House was
asked about the Trumps. The President's reaction like flipping a
guy the finger? Is it? So? Here's the White House
statement on that. Quote, a lunatic was wildly screaming expletives

(33:15):
in a complete fit of outrage, and the President gave
an appropriate and unambiguous response. Unquote. That's the statement from
the White House Communications Director Ford said, our core values,
you know, this is one of our events. Our values
are respect. We don't condone anyone saying anything appropriate inappropriate

(33:39):
like that within our facilities. The United Auto Workers labor
union said they suspended the worker in question. Have you
seen this video? Isn't it's flipping a guy the bird? Yeah,
he's losing it. Not the president, but that guy. And
I'm sure the Secret Service got super nervous for about
fifteen or twenty seconds they're going, oh, wait a minut

(34:00):
it is this guy like a human bomb?

Speaker 3 (34:03):
Is he? Is he?

Speaker 1 (34:04):
You know, a human.

Speaker 3 (34:05):
Improvised explosive device? And are we going to have an
issue here at the Ford Plan.

Speaker 1 (34:11):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (34:12):
It's it's kind of amazing when you think about just
how public this president really is.

Speaker 1 (34:17):
He gets out there.

Speaker 3 (34:19):
A lot, and for a president who clearly has ginned
up emotions on both sides of the spectrum, it's dangerous
to be Donald Trump.

Speaker 1 (34:31):
It really really is.

Speaker 3 (34:33):
And I don't know that he has the same paranoia
now that he had in his first term, where I'm
sure he was wondering, Okay, which of the deep staters
here wants to be the hero and take me out?
Which secret Service agent, which FBI guy? You know, which
CIA guy, which whoever guy. I don't know that he
has that fear anymore. But for him to be as
public as he is, he is extremely risky, and well,

(34:57):
I'm not sure I could do it. I'm not really
sure I'd be as out there as he is. You'd
never be elected. But the I could get elected.

Speaker 1 (35:05):
The guy at the Plan who got flipped out, flipped
off and cursed aft by the president, that was the
best day of his life. He'll be telling that story
with the big smileness face the rest of his days.
News Radio eleven ten kfab. I'm very very nervous, though, Jim.
We've got nine openings for head coaches in the National
Football League, and I just don't know which of these
teams is going to get Matt Ruhle from us. Are

(35:28):
you laughing at I think.

Speaker 3 (35:29):
Matt rule is not going anywhere for quite a while.

Speaker 1 (35:32):
You don't think the Steelers they're just like here, Matt,
here is a blank check. Fill it in and let
us know when you can start. You're not.

Speaker 3 (35:40):
He doesn't have that kind of equity. You know, once
you've blown it in the NFL, it's hard to get back.

Speaker 6 (35:46):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (35:47):
And not to say he blew it himself, but he
picked the wrong gig and he wasn't successful at Carolina.
The only way you can redeem and rehab your reputation
is to stay in the NFL. Go back to the
bottom of the food become a position coach, rise to
be coordinator. You get the great quarterback, you get the
great offense one year and then suddenly your name gets circulated.

(36:09):
But the NFL is about palocracy, and when I was
working in Kansas City. I was visiting with some of
the front office guys with the chiefs about that in
the NFL they rarely bring in somebody from the outside.
They just go around the league and find somebody else. Occasionally,
a really highly successful college coach can break in, but anymore,

(36:30):
they're paying so well as a college.

Speaker 1 (36:31):
Coach, there's no incentive to do it.

Speaker 3 (36:33):
And he has a seventy one million dollar buy out here,
and there ain't no NFL team going to pay seventy
one million dollars to then pay him another six or
seven million a year too.

Speaker 1 (36:42):
Talking about Mike Tomlin going into the broadcast booth, now
potentially the longtime Steelers coach might go into broadcasting, which
means you either add another chair on one of those
pre postgame shows or in a booth for a game,
or it means that some of the guys that I
grew up watching, or whether watching his broadcasters or watching

(37:02):
his athletes, turn broadcasters. At some point they got to
sit down with someone like and I'm not suggesting he
needs to go a Chris Collinsworth or a boomerasiasin to
pick on two Bengals and say, all right, you guys
are old news. Get out, We're bringing the new guy.
Oh what happens? I mean, every time like a Tom
Brady or someone goes in there, someone like Troy Aikman's

(37:23):
got to feel a little tighter in the sphincter, going, hey,
am I.

Speaker 3 (37:25):
On my way out? Am my old news? Now it's
a factor. They are very much in tune with the
eighteen to thirty four year old male. And you can
grow out of that. I mean, the John Maddens of
the world will never happen again where he stayed forever.
He was just delightfully funny and delightfully colorful. I'd be
very rare for that kind of of a broadcast personality

(37:47):
to endure as many years as he did. And if
you start looking at the guys like Tony Romo, Okay,
Tony Romo came in, well, his flame is about burned out. No,
he got some negative. He didn't work at it anymore.
Like he's just cheering in the booth. I like, I
like Romo and jim Nantz together. Just don't touch jim
Nantz or al Michaels or Chris Berman. Okay, as long as.

Speaker 1 (38:09):
I get still doing Yeah, he does the fastest three
minutes at halftime of the Monday night game. And that's
that's fine. I just need that sports free. Here's Jim Rose.

Speaker 3 (38:18):
At the NFL primetime when he was doing with Tom
Jackson Jackson.

Speaker 1 (38:23):
Oh man, he could go, oh, all right, go ahead,
or Jackson to say what's he gonna do?

Speaker 3 (38:28):
Chris could go all the way.

Speaker 1 (38:30):
I always like Jim Rose from Accrod. You know, Tom
Jackson always kne or someone went to college, all right.
Scott Adams passed away. He had announced in the past
year that he had prostate cancer and and he gave
some updates and said, yeah, I don't have real long
and as it turns out he didn't. He has died

(38:50):
yesterday the age of sixty eight. Scott Adams is the
creator of the comic strip Dilbert. That's the guy with
the boss with the pointy hair. Dilbert's tie is always
kind of sticking straight up, talking with his dog. Bert
kind of showing some of the lighter side of the
office and corporate life. And there are so many cubicles

(39:14):
and offices across the country for the last thirty years
that have a Dilbert comic strip cut out of the
paper and tacked on the wall. That's another thing that
goes away as people stop getting the actual hard copy
of the paper. Unless you print something out, like hey,
I like this edition of Hagar the Horrible. I'll print
it out and then tack it to the wall, it's

(39:34):
not the same thing.

Speaker 3 (39:35):
Do they have the comics online?

Speaker 1 (39:38):
I don't know. Probably I'll check.

Speaker 3 (39:39):
O Maha dot com and see if they have the
comics online. I know they obviously do it in the paper,
but I'll see if they have it online too, and
which case, yeah, you could do that. You know, things
are changing, and I don't know if they're changing for
the better, but they're changing. We can't stop it. The
newspaper is going away now. Its content isn't going away.
But the new paper that you hold in your hands, yeah,

(40:02):
you stick under your arm.

Speaker 1 (40:03):
Those days are over. They're fast coming to an end.
One more thing on Scott Adams. He said he was
never a Christian so to speak, but as you get
a diagnosis and you start evaluating things, he had said, quote,
I'm not a believer, but I have to admit the

(40:25):
risk reward calculation for doing so looks attractive. So here
I go the part about me being a believer should
be quickly resolved if I wake up in heaven. So
he's he's written a couple of philosophical novellas on the
subject of religion, God's Debris and the religion War, and

(40:47):
you know he's obviously we're all we're all on a
walk of faith. It is a walk, not a not
a destination, not a pinpoint. And that's where he was
at various points in his adult life. So, noting the past,
I've seen Scott Adams, the creator of the Gilbert cartoon,
dead at the age of sixty eight crosstate cancer. You

(41:08):
went on a pretty good rant earlier in today's program,
Jim Rose, where you got Joe Rogan and others saying,
do we really want the Gestapo in the streets of
America looking for people's papers? And you said, look, I'm tired.
You said, I'm sick and tired. I have people declaring
everything to be some form of Nazism, calling people Hitler

(41:28):
and Nazis and Gestapos and all that stuff. You got
a little feedback on.

Speaker 3 (41:32):
Yeah, you know, I got a nice email from somebody
who knows Rosie. Thank you. Unfortunately, my husband couldn't be
listening in this last half hour when you address the
left predominantly who referred to Trump or whatever may be
happening as Nazis, fascist, Gestapo, etc. My husband grew up
in Germany in the nineteen sixties when his father was
transferred there with John Deere. My husband studied German history

(41:56):
and World War Two to great lengths, and we've toured
concentration camps in our trips there.

Speaker 1 (42:02):
He is a master with his.

Speaker 3 (42:04):
Knowledge and will come almost unglued when he hears these
remarks about Nazis, fascists, and the Gestapo. Thank you very
much for your clear commentary. More people need to hear,
which said, more people need to understand what they're saying
is wrong. People who refer to either ICE agents, Rudy Giuliani,
George W. Bush, Donald Trump, or just pick your favorite

(42:26):
Republican as a Nazi, as a Hitler, as an SS agent,
don't know what they're talking about. They are under educated people.
You wouldn't refer to someone like that under any condition,
much less this fake suggestion that Donald Trump is orchestrating
some sort of jack booth thuggery against illegal aliens in

(42:49):
this country. That is not happening. And regardless of what
the left tells you, regardless of what you read on
the internet, regardless of what under capable people like Jacob
Fry or Tim Wall say in front of live microphones,
that's not happening.

Speaker 1 (43:06):
Now.

Speaker 3 (43:07):
Illegal aliens are being detained because they're here illegally, and
a whole bunch of people, about eighty million people voted
for Donald Trump for one pretty important reason, take the
illegal aliens out of this country by midnight tomorrow. And
he and his staff are doing that immigration and customs

(43:28):
enforcement by law passed by Congress and signed into law
by a president. This is their job. Their job is
to enforce immigration and customs issues. And regardless of what
we see on television by the view who are also
very very under capable people, or some of these other

(43:49):
folks that talk on the left, it doesn't change the facts.
And the facts are very stubborn here. These folks are
here illegally. And if these mayors and Governor Scott would
just cooperate with Ice and with Christine Oham from the
Department of Homeland Security and the White House, if they
would just cooperate with these people, then you could easily

(44:09):
take care of the business and not be doing what
they think that they're doing. And that starts with ensuring
that protesters and all Jacob Fry would have to say
is this. You are absolutely encouraged to protest, to peacefully
protest this on the sidewalks or within a safe distance

(44:30):
from the operation, but you are not allowed to impede.
And if you impede this investigation in any way, or
you throw something at an ICE officer, or you park
your car in the middle of the street of an
ICE operation, not only are they gonna arrest you, I'm
gonna help them. Okay, if he does that, we don't
have a problem. We have people that are peacefully protesting

(44:52):
that are getting on the news, which is that they want,
but we don't have violence. And we just had a
police officer in South Carolina attack this morning. This is
the kind of rhetoric that does just that because there
are people out there who are unhinged on both sides.

Speaker 1 (45:07):
Three things. Number one, go easy on the view WHOOPI Goldberg.
I like Jumping Jack Flash. That movie made me happy
and I was a kid. Two. The reason why Mayor
Fry continues to say, well, we don't want ice, you know,
detaining some guy just dropped his kid off at school
and is going to work, and he's been here for
a long time, and he happens to be here illegally.
He's been here longer than I have. Well, if that's
the case, he's had numerous opportunities at amnesty or to

(45:30):
get this paperwork right. But you know, most people are like, well,
I don't want that guy, you know, sent off to
Al Salvador either. There needs to be an opportunity to
take a look at the gang members versus the people
like that. The problem is people on the political left
think every illegal immigrant in the entire country is that guy,

(45:50):
and they're the ones being swept up here in Ice.
Most of the people you see out there protests, and
I'd say probably nearly all the people up there protesting,
Like this guy shoved into the street by an ICE guy.
He was almost hit by a bus. These are not
illegal immigrants. I'll address that specific instance and more on
that subject coming up at nine to oh five this morning.

(46:11):
I got another hour to go. Jim Rose got the
Rosie to GENOZI next, Lucy Chapman has one more time
Saber traffic update, and then please go back to the
sanitarium from whence you came after being I think it's
funny how and I probably shouldn't say this, but Lucy
was out quote unquote sick the last couple of days.
So she came in here with this total face.

Speaker 2 (46:31):
Has I heard you say stuff like that, total.

Speaker 1 (46:33):
Fake sick voice on the radio? Oh, I'm feeling well,
you've been out golf in the last couple of days.
It's been nice weather, temperatures in the fifties. Lucy been out,
total golf addict. And so then she comes in here like, oh,
oh feels so good. It's all bull but you know what,

(46:53):
that's fine?

Speaker 2 (46:54):
Really?

Speaker 1 (46:55):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (46:56):
Is that where you're gonna leave it at?

Speaker 1 (46:57):
Well, I don't get a chance to abuse you, as
you said, for the next hour, because.

Speaker 2 (47:01):
Got that right.

Speaker 1 (47:02):
You need to go lie down, You need to go
take the quills, take just do like I do when
I'm When I'm sick, I take all the medicine, all
of it and medicine. My wife said, what did you
take all of it? How much did you take? I
don't know, if I wasn't clear all of it. I
took all the medicine, took a bottle, I took all

(47:23):
of all of the medicine.

Speaker 2 (47:25):
That a bottle was a dose.

Speaker 1 (47:27):
Hey look at me.

Speaker 2 (47:28):
Never felt better, never felt nothing.

Speaker 1 (47:32):
Don't maybe do as I say, don't do as I do.
Just hopefully be entertained by what we talk about here
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