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November 7, 2025 65 mins
AKA, "Learning to Fly."  AKA AKA, "The Transgender Panda Show."
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Great song started out down a dirty road the opening
lyrics to this one, and that's kind of how we
got here this government shutdown, and now the impacts at airports, specifically,
let's see here New York, Los Angeles, Atlanta, Chicago, those
are the biggest ones, but they're among the forty hubs

(00:22):
seeing flight cuts today as the government shutdown hits the
thirty eighth day. Let's not men's swords here and good morning.
By the way, I'm Scott Vorhees. Lucy Chapman is here,
and this is news Radio eleven ten kfab so great
to have you with us. Why are their reductions and flights,

(00:47):
squeezing of number of flights, squeezing of reduction in staffing.
Why is this happening here on the thirty eighth day
of the government shutdown, Because this is exactly what they
want to have happened. All of these thieves, criminals, ne'er
do wells, gutter snipes, and deplorables. Where's my thesaurus? All

(01:11):
of them, the Republicans, Democrats, they saw this coming headlong,
and here we are. They could all do something about it.
As President Trump said, the Republicans in power can change
the rules Oh, my gosh, the nuclear option. We can

(01:33):
change the rules for five minutes and then you wouldn't
need to have the filibuster proof majority, which is absolute. Horsepucky,
pardon my language, but horsepucky. You know how this works. Right,
We're gonna have a vote to end the government, and
then someone says, wait a second, I've got something to say,
and then they hold up the vote by talking. That's

(01:56):
called a filibuster. Oh has someone been there at the
United State Senate talking for thirty eight straight days? No,
there's one guy kind of talked through the night and
that was it. They were not They're still getting paid.
Members of Congress, still getting paid. Put these guys to work.
Make someone filibuster. I want someone out there talking for

(02:18):
thirty eight days? Why not?

Speaker 2 (02:23):
So?

Speaker 1 (02:24):
Because we don't want that to happen, and it's not happening.
The Republicans won't change the rules for five minutes to say,
all right, we're going to a straight majority vote. Anything
we want to get done, we're going to a straight
majority vote. All those in favor Republicans' majority say, I
Democrats probably aren't even doing anything because these Democrats days,

(02:46):
my goodness, we're not getting our way, let's shut down
the government. It's the same thing that happened in Texas
earlier this year. Do we forget about that? Texas said, hey,
we got a majority here in Texas of Republicans. None
of us can to power in a military coup. We
were all elected by the people of this state, and
here's what we're going to do with this power. And

(03:07):
the Democrats said, oh, no, you don't, and they left.
They fled to Chicago so that the Republicans wouldn't have
a majority or a quorum to be able to pass anything.
Did they stand and fight, did they debate their points. No,
these cowards left, which is in violation of the law.

(03:29):
Those are the Democrats in Texas, the Democrats in Washington,
d c. They've just shut the government down. We're not
getting what we want. They they don't need to leave.
They just allowed the government to shut down, and they
won't have a vote to open it back up. The

(03:50):
Republicans can say, all right, we're done dealing with them.
We're going to for five minutes, vote to end the
filibuster proof majority vote to get things done. We're going
to go to a straight majority rules. We're going to
vote to open up the government, which will then provide
snap benefits so that people who are hungry, who need

(04:15):
food can get these benefits they need. How, I don't
know what percentage of them truly need it, how many
are gaming the system? I don't know. Let's just feed
the people who need fed, and then we can go
back to work on doing the things the government's supposed
to do, like try and determine who's taking advantage of

(04:36):
the system. Meanwhile, I want to point this out tomorrow night.
They're doing a food drive this weekend in the let's
see here, Benson District, all the way up and down
Maple and the Benson area and even here into Dundee.

(04:56):
There's a food drive tomorrow. And though I'm sure if
you stop by any of these places today they'll take it.
You can drop off a can, lift up. A neighbor says,
join your favorite local bars for a weekend of good tunes,
good vibes and giving back donations. Stay right here in Omaha,
with the rest going to Food Bank for the Heartland.

(05:17):
So the bar crawl for a Cause is at Jerry's
sixty third in Military Benson Broke Down Palace, a little
outside the Benson area, but eighty eighth and Maple. Really
cool spot there near ninetieth and Maple. And then here
in Dundee the Cork and Bottle, the vaunted Cork and
Bottle fiftieth in Underwood. Say hi to Tom Becko when

(05:39):
you're he's probably there. So Jerry's Broke Down Palace, Cork
and Bottle, food drive, drop off a can, lift up
a neighbor. There's drink specials for donors. Jerry's at sixty
third Military is doing a free UV bomb or a penny.
Well if you donate five items. I don't know what
a UV bomb is and loose See I'm not looking

(06:00):
at you because I figure you know, but I'm opening
up the possible.

Speaker 3 (06:05):
If you've got some, I break them out.

Speaker 1 (06:07):
Lucy's usually faced down. Hey, what is this drink? Broke
Down Palace Drink specials for all food donors says see
bar for details. Say hi to our friend Tissan, she's
probably working. And then at the Cork and Bottle Free Cafe,
Bobby shot with the donation of five items. I don't

(06:27):
know what that. I don't know Bobby is. Yeah, I
didn't say Bobby, Bobby a free cafe. Bobby shot.

Speaker 3 (06:35):
Oh sounds like a hot coffee.

Speaker 1 (06:37):
Yeah, I don't know. When I go to the cork
and bottle, I have a fine little glass of wine
or something fancy. I uh, it's the bar crawl for
a cause. And it's tomorrow and Sunday. I don't know
why it's not tonight and tomorrow. But that's that's what
this says, nourish thy neighbor. So the people who need

(07:00):
the benefits can get them via what they'd come to
expect from snap EBT, food stamps, call it what you will.
That all got cut off despite what a judge said yesterday.
And these are places across the country, like the city
of Omaha, like these particular bars, who are trying to
step up and do something. The Republicans could refuel those coffers,

(07:25):
and we could get these air traffic controllers TSA agents,
We could get them paid. We can get them to
where they're working and not missing paychecks. You know, when
you're working probably two shifts because someone else called in,
either because they're legitimately sick or illegitimately calling in sick.

(07:46):
You don't have a lot of time to go out
there and say, yeah, I need someone to give me
a low or hopefully zero interest percent loan so that
I can pay the rent, mortgage, the electric bill. You know,
the kids need food for school. I mean, we got
to do all this stuff. I don't have paychecks coming in,

(08:08):
and I don't know when we're gonna have paychecks coming in.
It's got to be infuriating for these people because not
only are the good ones showing up to work, putting
in the hours in the effort, but then they're dealing
with not knowing when the government's not going to be
shut down anymore, when the Republicans might grow a pair

(08:31):
and vote to just do up majority vote, let's end
the shutdown, that we can change the rules back and
go with sixty votes and let's do the business of
the people. They don't know when the Republicans are going
to grow a pair, when the Democrats are gonna come
out from underneath Mom Donnie's suicide vest. I don't they
just like I don't know when I'm the government's not
gonna be shut down. I don't know what I'm gonna

(08:51):
get these paychecks. And I go to the airport, especially
started today with a ten percent reduction in flights, and
this I'm sorry. Today starts the start of a four
percent reduction in flights. If this goes on till Tuesday,
a six percent reduction in flights by Thursday, eight percent,

(09:15):
and one week today will be up to a ten
percent reduction in flights. As we said yesterday, ten percent
reduction of flights. Most of these flights are already over sold.
They're begging people to take advantage of offers to get
on a later flight, or I don't know, just decide
you're not going to fly anywhere and stay home. And hey,
if anyone wants to check even so much as a

(09:37):
small purse or something at gate check, we don't have
room on this flight. If anyone wants to sit on laps,
we're willing to do that. Who wants to sit up
here with the pilots? We don't have room? Who wants
to hang onto the wing of the plane. So these
flights are already overbooked. People are already coming on an
overbooked flight which may be now canceled, trying to get

(09:59):
on another over booked flight. Good luck with that. And
who are they yelling at. They're yelling at the TSA agents,
The air traffic controllers are trying to figure out. Wait
a second, I got this sheet today that said, here
all the flights coming out, which ones are not? Well,
we don't think this delta flight's flying. Okay, we'll cross
that out. Wait no, sorry, so sorry, that one is flying,
and you're like, wait, I don't know. And then people

(10:21):
are yelling at them. Pilots are saying, hey, can we
take off? There's no one on the runway in front
of us. Can we go? Hold on, I'm trying to
figure out whether you're an actual flight, and everyone's yelling
at them, and these guys aren't getting paid, and it's
all because the Republicans got no nerds and the Democrats
won't even bother to show up and argue their point.
God bless Somemeric, Good morning, Lucy.

Speaker 3 (10:45):
It sounds to me like you're putting this the whole blame,
all of the blames squarely on the Republicans.

Speaker 1 (10:51):
No, I'm putting it on all of them. The Republicans
are just in a position where they and they alone
can end it without the other party the Democrats can't.
That mean the Democrats, I suppose they'd have to just
decide to vote with the Republicans. They'd have to capitulate.

(11:12):
The Republicans wouldn't have to capitulate. They can just continue
doing Republican stuff and just vote straight majority rule. Government's
not shut down anymore, and then we can go about. However,
they usually get in there and screw us.

Speaker 3 (11:26):
But you've got some Republicans quote unquote that are not
voting Republicans.

Speaker 1 (11:31):
No, if they were to have a vote today to
say we're trying to do what the president wants and
go to straight majority vote, there will be enough Republicans
who don't do that.

Speaker 3 (11:43):
So, really, who you're putting the blame on is what
four or five Republicans.

Speaker 1 (11:47):
As I said at the start of this rant, where
I only just took a breath, I'm blaming all of them. Right. Well,
at what point do the American people look at all
this and say, can we just get together, scrap everything
and just start from scratch.

Speaker 2 (12:04):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (12:04):
I think a lot of people have been thinking that
for years.

Speaker 1 (12:06):
Yeah, I think the American people are looking at this
going is this really the style of government that really
meets our needs? Let's just start from scratch and then
and then it will all come to blows When half
the American people say all right, but we're putting Trump
in charge, and the other half going, uh, we're putting
Zoron Mom Donnie in charge, and then we can tear

(12:28):
each other apart in a whole new way. But these
the Democrats really not a factor right now. These cowards,
they won't show up and fight for what they believe in.
Where are the moderate Democrats? Nancy Pelosi announced yesterday she's
not going to serve anymore, which is fine, she's a

(12:48):
billion years old. But there are a lot of Nancy
Pelosi types out there. One that named It's not as
big is Jared Golden. This is a moderate Democrat out
of Maine. He says, you got, They are all nuts.
I don't want to run anymore. Where do moderate Democrats go?
If they even exist anymore? Is there a moderate Democrat? Mammy?

(13:10):
Is there?

Speaker 3 (13:11):
Can I independence words?

Speaker 1 (13:13):
Is there? They're an independence Missouri? Is there such thing
as a Democrat who doesn't hate to their very core
Donald Trump and all of his mega supporters. Because if
that's you, you're not a moderate Democrat. You're just a Democrat.
And then you have to decide are you a democrat
Democrat or a socialist Democrat, which might be depending on
the state and city distinction without a difference. All right, Sorry,

(13:37):
Like I just said, I just only just took a breath.
I gotta take a couple of breaths here, Scott voice
in the Zunker's custom was inbox Scott at kfab dot
com Andrew Emails says the shutdown is all Senator Chuck
Schumer's fault. He's being pushed by the far left. In
New York. Alexandria Okazio Dez is looking at running against him.

(14:02):
As soon as the Democrats realize Schumer's hill is not
worth fighting over, they will pass the bill. Could be
the Democrat from Washington, Primila Jiopaul yesterday said that she
basically said everything other than Chuck Schumer should resign from

(14:27):
the United States Senate. She's definitely a squad member that
some of the cabal of younger femaler Democrats in the
House of Representatives. It's aoc Promila Giopaul, ilhan Omar, Jasmin Crockett.
You know the fun ones whose soundbites we like to
play on the air and listen to Marjorie Taylor Green

(14:51):
and Nancy Mason. Some of these Republicans fight with him.
You know, they're they're entertaining, and they don't like Chuck
Schumer anymore than Andrew does. But I think they also
they like power and they like the influence, and they
like that every time they open a newspaper. Of course,
these younger people don't know what a newspaper is, but
every time they turn on MSNBC or open up their

(15:14):
favorite news website, it shows, Hey, the American people believe
Republicans and Donald Trump are to blame for this shutdown.
And the Democrats are like, all right, we've shut the
government down for thirty eight days. We had what a
great night on election day where Democrats won in Democrats
states and districts in Democratic areas during it off your election.

(15:36):
I'm not sure how that's a mandate for anything, but
that's how they see it. And they look at the
polls and they say, the American people blame Republicans for everything,
and they're like, hey, let's just keep this mother shut down.
Why not? We seem to get more power every time

(15:56):
we shut them down. Shut them, just keep it shut
down forever. Now, many of us who aren't flying or
on snap, or have family or friends who aren't getting
paychecks endlessly furloughed by all of this, We're like, why
not just keep that government shut down? And I'm not
necessarily arguing with you. Sorry, I sounded like Katherine hepburn

(16:20):
on that I not necessarily argue. I don't know what
that was, but not necessarily arguing with you. But obviously
there are more people that live in this great nation
than just you, So we can't have the government shut down.
Not to say that it's everything's just hunky dory. When

(16:41):
they're back in session, the Republicans are going to apparently
vote today. The Senate Majority Leader John Dune is prepping
a new vote to reopen the government today. Let's see here.
The latest offer of the Democrats swaps these shopgap funding
bill rejected in multiple votes, for a longer funding patch

(17:05):
that would extend into January and full year funding for
veterans programs and food assistants. This is something that Democrats
have voted on several times in the past, depending on
who was president and which way the political wins were blowing.
But they're not going to vote for it. But they

(17:25):
still feel like, hey, we're trying. We're having these votes
and the Democrats are voting no, They're voting to keep
the government shut down. Meanwhile, President Trump is like, Republicans
need to change this to a straight majority vote. And
I'm saying, just change it for five minutes, open the government,
and then go back to the sixty vote super majority

(17:47):
to pass anything. Trump's like, forget that these Democrats would
do it to us. He's right, just go straight majority vote,
and he says, and then let's have the greatest three
years that America has ever. Trump's just going to be
like just barraging them with truth socials posts like hey,
and I want this, and let's unveil this deal, and

(18:10):
let's blow up this vote, and let's give people reduced
prices for popular obesity treatments or as Trump called them yesterday,
fat drugs. Trump's like, let's just go, let's just do
Here's how it works. You guys, change the rules. I'll
tell you what to do, and then you do it,
and America will love it. That's his timeline. And there

(18:34):
are certainly some people like, yeah, let's give it a shot.
I don't know how many of the people who say
that didn't vote for him. What did he do yesterday?
Did he gain any kind of curry, any kind of
favor with his detractors yesterday by trying to lower prices

(18:54):
for popular treatments health treatments. We'll see what he did
and maybe look why he did it after a Fox
News update.

Speaker 4 (19:02):
Next Scott Voice News Radio eleven ten kfab.

Speaker 1 (19:07):
We've talked about this subject time or two. I don't know.
I'm not going to pretend that I'm a doctor. I
would only say when it comes to obesity, I'm trending,
but I'm not there yet. In fact, I think I
lost like five pounds here recently. Stress and you don't

(19:29):
see anyone marketing that right. Are you slightly overweight? Have
you tried stressing yourself out? Here's how it works. You
get yourself in way over your head on multiple fronts
related to family, work and finances, and then you lie
awake at night thinking about it. When you eat, it's
usually after skipping two or three meals, and then you

(19:50):
just gorge yourself and end up in the bathroom for
hours and hours on end. It's called stress, and it
can be effective and losing weight a relatively short amount
of time. Stress available wherever you work or live. Hi,
I'm Scott Vorhees for stress.

Speaker 3 (20:13):
That is an endorsement. I probably would turn down.

Speaker 1 (20:18):
I'm not you're in it though, Oh yeah, no, I
wouldn't say I'm endorsing it. But it's clear I'm a customer. Scott.
How is it that you stay so thin and your
hair went gray at the age of twenty? Well, I'll
tell you what I got turned onto at a very
young age. Stress. Really, how does it work? Well, let

(20:39):
me tell you day by day how my how my
life was at that time.

Speaker 3 (20:43):
Wait, if that were true, I would be a little
tiny waif skinny bones.

Speaker 1 (20:49):
You are, okay, So I don't I don't know about obesity,
and I don't know nothing about not being you know,
about being a doctor. So I'll tell you what I do. See.
I see people who used to be of a certain

(21:10):
girth and now they are half the man they used
to be or woman. And like everyone knows, like, oh,
you're taking whether it's this GLP one or that one.
They all have brand names and so forth, like we
all know you're on the this thing or that thing,

(21:31):
but no one ever says that, right, it's not polite
to go, oh, clearly you're on this. Where do you
do your injection? You know, you don't say that. Instead,
we all say things like did you change your hair?
You know? Or something? You know. You don't want to
just go up to someone and go, hey, I haven't
seen you in a few months. You used to be

(21:53):
really fat and now you're not. You're like what I thought,
I looked pretty good. No, I no, I didn't change anything.
I got a new shirt. Maybe that's probably the new shirt.
You know, we're not supposed to in polite company. You
can't go to someone and go what did you do

(22:14):
to drop so much weight so quickly? Like we all know,
and I don't care. I hope that no matter what
it is that your life is like and whether it's
someone would have an issue with saying that you could
probably stand to lose a few pounds. That's a medical diagnosis.
There are some people from a societal standpoint that think

(22:36):
certain things. If you're too fat or too skinny or whatever.
I don't care. I don't. If you're happy, have at it,
listen to your doctor, but you know, have at it.
But there are a lot of people who dropped a
lot of weight really quick, and the only thing I
know about it is for them, it seems to be
effective for weight loss. I don't know how it works

(22:59):
for long term effects. I don't know that anyone really
knows that at this point. I hope it's all right,
and I know that it's expensive. So the President yesterday
was standing out there with RK. Junior and doctor Oz
and said, we struck a deal with drug makers Eli,
Lilly and Novo Nordisk to expand coverage and reduce prices

(23:24):
for popular treatments known and from a marketing standpoint, is
like zep bound and Wigovy, popular obesity treatments.

Speaker 3 (23:33):
So they have been spending time talking to pharmaceutical companies
and working a deal. And I'm sure this took more
than a couple of hours, just based on a drug
to make people lose weight, when there are so many
other things out there that that you're not able to
get because you can't afford Some people can't afford some

(23:56):
of the life saving drugs for themselves.

Speaker 1 (24:00):
I don't know. I don't know, no I do. I
don't know if you heard me say this, but I'm
not a doctor. But so many of the things you're
talking about, like how come they don't do this for
drugs that would impact things like cancer or congestive heart failure,
or diabetes. The weight loss can assist with not needing

(24:23):
the drugs because you're not going to run obesity headlong
into some of these health problems that go with that
kind of weight that you're carrying around that lead to
other health issues. So if you lose weight, are you
generally healthier? Yes? We all know those people who are

(24:46):
at a healthy weight and they have all kinds of
health problems. And we know those people who are bigger
and they're fine. So you know, asterisk on everything I'm
saying here. But the idea here is that if you
lose the weight and you're no longer OBEs, especially morbidly OBEs,
then perhaps we can stave off some of these health

(25:07):
problems that would have you going to the hospital, the
doctor and needing all the rest of the drugs that
you're talking about. What I'm wondering here is, okay, so
how do we get to this point? Because I don't
I hope that we're not talking about taxpayers subsidizing this.
Some of the costs of these things have been like
five hundred dollars a month or more.

Speaker 3 (25:29):
Well, where do you think money comes from?

Speaker 1 (25:31):
Insurance coverage has been spotty at best for some of this.
So let's see here. Some of these drug makers, this
is Pfeizer and Astrazenica recently agreed to lower the cost
of prescription drugs for Medicaid after an executive order by
President Trump this past May that set a deadline for

(25:51):
drug makers to electively lower prices or face new limits
on what the government will pay in reimbursing them. So
Trump is he's been negotiating in true Trump fashion, and
in true Trump fashion, he started talking about this yesterday
in discussing someone who's allegedly a friend of his. Let's

(26:14):
let's listen to how this went when President Trump started
talking about some of these fat drugs.

Speaker 2 (26:20):
I mean, I'll tell you a story. Friend of mine
who's a business man, very very very fat, top guy.
Most of you would have heard of him, highly neurotic,
brilliant businessman, seriously overweight.

Speaker 3 (26:34):
He's talking about himself.

Speaker 1 (26:35):
He he's a good friend of mine. I have this friend.
He's great. Most people would say he's probably like the
greatest person ever been. Great friend. I'll tell you wh
wouldn't say that. Nancy Pelosi wouldn't say that, but everyone
else would say that. All right, So this is a
good friend of mine. He's neurotic and he's fat, but
he's got a bunch of money.

Speaker 2 (26:56):
This guy takes the fat shut drug and he called it.

Speaker 1 (27:03):
He takes the fat the fat shot drug unquote. This
guy's doing great, takes the fat fat shot drug. Back
it up three seconds. I want to hear that. You
would have heard of him.

Speaker 2 (27:16):
Highly neurotic, brilliant businessman, seriously overweight, and he takes the
fat the fat shot drug.

Speaker 1 (27:30):
If someone like Wigovy doesn't immediately put in their advertisements content,
go to wigovy dot com so you can take the
fat shot drug today now at a reduced rate, cheaper
than ever before. It's the fat shot drug online at
the fat shot drug dot gov. Not an actual website,

(27:55):
I don't think.

Speaker 2 (27:56):
And he called me up and he said, uh, President,
he used to call me Donald. Now he calls me president.
So that's nice respect. But it's a rough guy, smart guy,
very successful, very rich. I wouldn't even know how we
would know this, but because he's got comments the president.
Could I ask you a question. What I'm in London

(28:17):
and I just paid for this damn fat drug I take.

Speaker 1 (28:20):
I said, it's not working.

Speaker 2 (28:22):
He said, he said, I just paid eighty eight dollars,
and in New York I paid thirteen hundred dollars.

Speaker 1 (28:31):
What the hell is going on?

Speaker 2 (28:34):
He said? So I checked, and it's the same box,
made in the same plant, by the same company. It's
the identical pill that I buy in New York. And
here I'm paying eighty eight dollars in London. In New York,
I'm paying thirteen hundred dollars. Now, this is a great businessman,
but he's not familiar with this crazy situation that we have.

Speaker 1 (28:57):
Well, he feil merry enough that he's paying for it.
The President goes on to say that, all right, I'll
see what I can do about it. Is this how
government gets done of Apparently Trumps buddies call them up
and go, what the heck? President, I'm paying eighty eight
dollars for the fat shot drug in London. It's the
same thing that cost me thirteen hundred dollars in New York.

(29:20):
Then stay in London, Yeah, stay in London. You can
eat it, not fat eat that food, which you're not
going to want to eat a whole lot of it.
The food's better in New York. Any hot dog cart,
any hot dog cart in New York is better than
your finest dishes you're going to get in London. Any
any Friday deli sandwich at any delicatessen in New York

(29:42):
City is better than any of the finest restaurants in London.

Speaker 3 (29:46):
Ah huh, I.

Speaker 1 (29:47):
Bet I bet you.

Speaker 3 (29:48):
I would, and I would put money on this. If
you were able to look at the ingredients of food
bought in America and food bought in Europe. It's they're
catching up, but the ingredients are better there.

Speaker 1 (30:00):
I'm glad that you redirected me. I could have absolutely
gone down a weird path here.

Speaker 3 (30:05):
That far happens.

Speaker 1 (30:06):
No, but I'm not going to. Instead, I want to
come back to what you just said, because there was
something else that the President and Secretary Kennedy and the
others were saying about this yesterday that upset people more
than Trump referring to these GLP ones as fat shot drugs.
And this is something that also has to do with
the government shutdown and some of these benefits and so forth.

(30:29):
And we'll get to it next.

Speaker 4 (30:30):
Scott Bhees, News Radio eleven ten kfab.

Speaker 1 (30:34):
President Trump yesterday is like I was talking to this
friend of mine, rich guy, neurotic fat very fat. I'm like,
take the food out of your mouth before you talk
to me. I'm the president of the United States. Many
people like me, and he said the fat drug shots
are too expensive. There was something else that was said
yesterday during that from President Trump, and that was how

(30:56):
this is going to help with poverty in this country,
and how it's going to impact the health of people
in poverty in this country. It's always been treated too
many times like a joke, and that is that there
are a number of people in this country on food stamps, EBT,
whatever and snap and they're overweight. The stats do bear

(31:18):
it out. Obesity prevalence among those living below the federal
poverty line is approximately forty six percent. Now, those above
the poverty line aren't doing a whole lot better. We're
at thirty six percent if you're above the poverty line.
But people who are poor, almost half of them are obese.

(31:40):
Now people are like, well, stop eating if you don't
have any food stime. It's as Lucy was saying, there's
the quality of what you're eating, and there's a lot
of other factors as well. But what the President his
cabinet was saying yesterday was if we can get you
a better rate on these shots to lose the weight.
This can also help you'd be more productive and you

(32:02):
feel healthier. You feel better, you're working, you're doing better,
you're not having all the other health problems. They're honestly
trying to save America on a lot of different fronts.
I don't know that they'll get the credit for it,
but that's what they were doing yesterday. Was talking a
moment ago about the announcement yesterday by President Trump. This

(32:25):
is the one we were waiting on in this hour
of the program. I didn't know what he was going
to do. And then after eleven o'clock he's like, let
me tell you about a friend of mine. He's very fat.

Speaker 2 (32:33):
I'll tell you a story. Friend of mine who's a
business man, very very very fat, top guy. Most of
you would have heard of him. A highly neurotic, brilliant businessman, overweight.
I've never seen his shoes, and he takes the fat,
the fat shot drugs.

Speaker 1 (32:56):
I can't get enough of that SoundBite. That's too good.
This guy. Let me tell you about this guy when
he sits around the house. He sits around the house,
got his own zip code. This guy, Let me tell
you about this guy, you'd know him, you'd see him.
You see him from space. This guy is.

Speaker 2 (33:18):
There.

Speaker 1 (33:18):
His blood type is gravy. He so he says, I
take the fat fat shot drug and I pay less
for it in London, and I do in New York.
What the hell is going on here? So I said,
all right, we're going to see what we can do
here as your president, working on your behalf. And we
were talking about some of that in the last hour,
and then I said, this also has to do with
so much of what RFK Junior has been working on

(33:41):
as Secretary of Health and the MAHA movement, the Make
America Healthy Again movement, not the annual music festival here
in Omaha. But he's obviously been trying to deal with
the ingredients sourcing in the foods and chemicals and all
the rest of this stuff. I don't know any of this.

(34:02):
All I've said is, yes, he's probably right. But if
I occasionally want to eat an entire bucket of cheese puffs,
don't take that right away from me. As an American.
It's up to me to have the responsibility not to
eat a bucket of cheese puffs for four or five meals.
A day, or to speak in the parlance of today's teenagers,

(34:24):
for six seven meals a day. But if I want
to have a whole bunch of cheese puffs cheesypoofs, then
I want to have some cheesy. Don't completely take them away.
But their ingredients are terrible. I know. That's why I
don't eat them all the time. Every once in a while,
I'm like, huh, cheese puffs. Next thing you know, I'm

(34:47):
licking the bottom of the bucket.

Speaker 3 (34:50):
You're just eating air. Put a little cheese on it.
This is air.

Speaker 1 (34:53):
Oh man, cheesy air. I'd be walking around like pac Man,
a pretty good impersonation of pac Man.

Speaker 3 (35:03):
I almost thought it was them.

Speaker 1 (35:04):
Yeah, I put a bow in my hair and be
misspacked man, be trans pac Man trans trans them packed,
pack them packed, they them, Yeah, thank you. I was
picturing packed they them at a No King's rally and

(35:25):
kind of wondering where I was gonna go with that.
How long was I out? So rfk JR. Rfk JR
is like, we need to eat healthier, we need to
get rid of some of this stuff. I'm like, yeah,
you're probably right, but don't take all of it away
from us. Give us some rights as American to occasionally
eat just hot garbage. And I said, because he's been

(35:46):
doing that. And when you look at everything we're talking
about here, whether it's the GLP one drugs, the AKA,
the fat shot drugs as Trump said, and trying to
lower costs and more people can take them. RFK Junior
wants people to be healthy. We have so many people
right now are like, how am I going to eat?
The government shut down has affected my snap benefits. You've

(36:08):
got forty six percent of America's federal poverty line and
below individuals could I said that more awkwardly? You have
forty six percent of people who are poor according to
the federal numbers. They're below the federal poverty line, and
they're obese. And people always say, like, how in the

(36:30):
world can you be fat? I thought you were on
food stamps. How do you even have money? Well, because
you're they're probably eating stuff that's not very good for them,
and that whole thing compounds itself when when you're putting
on too much weight, you don't feel good about yourself,

(36:51):
you don't want to go out. This is not for
every single person, but for a lot of people. The
for a lot of people, people who are obese, they
don't feel good about themselves. They never thought that they'd
be tipping the scales at four hundred pounds or whatever
they're at, and it didn't happen overnight, and that here

(37:14):
they are. And once they started hitting you, like rounding
the corner on two twenty five, they're like whatever, and
it just it fed upon itself. More than that, itself
is feeding itself, and it leads to more weight gain,
more depression, more health problems, and all of this takes
away from not only quality of life but also quality

(37:35):
of production. You're not going to be able to go
out and work. So Trump is like, well, we're gonna
give you a great rate on these fat shot drugs
and you can drop the weight and then that cycle.
And we've seen it happen, haven't we With people we
know who have taken some of these drugs that they
they shed the weight, They feel better about themselves, they

(37:57):
love the fact that they're blowing large amounts of their
budget on new clothes. They have a certain glow and
shine to them that I don't think is related to
these drugs we know very little about. I just mean
that they feel better about themselves, and you see them
getting more involved. They're hanging out with friends and family. Again,
some are getting promotions or getting jobs and they can

(38:18):
be more productive. And one hand can shake the other
here when it comes to health, getting people off of
being dependent on government for snap benefits and also some
of these healthcare costs that were drowning in as a nation.
And I was trying to say some of that a
moment ago, and I got this emailer saying, I don't

(38:40):
see how the government forcing these private businesses to get
people access to these drugs where they might lose weight
is going to make them healthier or have them work more.
So I'm getting a little pushback here. Well, hopefully everything
I just said reinforces the point that I was attempting

(39:00):
to make a moment ago. But ultimately, if you fall
into this category where you've wanted to take these drugs,
you didn't think that you would weigh this much. You
would like to weigh less. Sure, you put on a
brave face, but when you look in the mirror, you
don't feel good about yourself, and you see some of

(39:23):
your friends spending hundreds, if not over one thousand dollars
a month on these drugs. You can't afford it, and
you wonder what would happen. What would my life be
like if I were to be able to look in
the mirror and see half of what I'm looking at
right now. And what is that future? I can't imagine.

(39:47):
It's I'm going to sit around and watch TV more.
I'm going to disconnect from family and friends more. You're
probably thinking about these things you want to do, and
hopefully that's a better future. And the President said, all right,
been holding you back the money. We're reducing the cost
of these things. How many more Americans can picture that future,

(40:08):
they can see past the image in the mirror that
they don't like and see into a future that is
now more financially accessible. How many people are going to
take advantage of it. The president and then the government
can't go door to door and go hey, we know
you're in there and you're fat. Take this. You know,
we're not doing that. As much as people think that

(40:29):
Trump is the Gestapo, He's not going door to door
to do that. I mean unless he has ice do it.
Because when I read the news, apparently that's what the
President has ice doing. They're just going from door to business,
to daycare and just grabbing people a look somewhat hispanic
and sending them to El Salvador. So he could also say, hey,
and by the way, you look a little fat, here's

(40:50):
some cost effective drugs. They can't force you to do this.
But what happens when you look at a a you
look at where you are now and where you want
to be, and in between those two points you see
obstacle after obstacle, some legitimate finances, some are just things

(41:13):
that you put up there. Well, it's hard, how do
I how? And you immediately start thinking like, well, here's
where I am, there's where i'd love to be, and
it seems like a long ways away, and how am
I going to get from here to there? Overnight? Well
it doesn't work overnight. You try and take positive steps,
knowing you're going to take some backward steps here and there.
But after a couple of weeks you look at where

(41:36):
you were versus where you are and you realize, hey,
I'm that much closer to my goal. Let's keep going,
And suddenly the obstacles fall down. You realize some of
them are excuses that you put up that you turned
into a brick wall. That you were ramming against. Those
things start to fall away, you start to move in
that right direction. This what the President did yesterday. As

(42:00):
much as I'm laughing about how he said it and
what RFK Junior, doctor Oz and the rest of the
Trump administration is doing, this could lead to life transformations
for people who are currently succumbing to health problems led
that obesity leads to and a better, more productive society

(42:24):
who feels better about themselves. I don't know that I'm
gonna go out right now and buy a bunch of
stock and yoga pants makers, but I don't know. Maybe
more people will, maybe people take advantage of this, But
ultimately it's going to be up.

Speaker 3 (42:41):
To you, you know, Scott that had not you, Lucy Chapman, Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Well,
I mean in a sense that the whole rainbow and
roses scenario that you paint is probably true for maybe
one or two or three percent of people. But when
you look at all of the jobs that are open

(43:01):
right now, the unemployment is I don't know what the
latest numbers are, but I know that so many places
need help. People will apply for jobs, they make the
appointments to get to come in for the interview and
they don't show up, or they take the job and
then they work a day and they don't show up. You,
I know, have heard that from some of your friends,

(43:23):
business owners or managers, and that happens all the time.
So what you're suggesting is that the reason we aren't
working is because we're too fat. And I know, of
course i'm simplifying, but being unwilling to work. Yes, it
makes it harder if you're heavy, but it is not

(43:46):
that's not the driving force. That is a mentality. That
is the way that you were influenced from a young
person until today. If you were influenced to hey, things
are going to be taken care of for you whatever,
you just kick back and relax, then then that's the
mentality you're going to have. You certainly see that in very,

(44:06):
very wealthy kids. Those kids aren't doing any more work
than a lot of other people. But if you are
raised in a family or a community that says work
is important, then that's the mentality you're going to have,
whether you're heavy or you're thin, and that's the mentality
you're going to keep going with. Now, if you get fat,
with that mentality, you're still going to try to do something.

(44:29):
You're going to try to work from home, you're going
to try to do something to help other people, whatever.
It is a complete mentality, and a weight change is
not going to change much of that in the overall public.

Speaker 1 (44:44):
I hope that no one's taken away from my comments
that I've been saying that, hey, if you're if you're
a little bit tubby, you are a fat, lazy bumb
not not capable of working even if you wanted to,
and you don't know. I hope no one misunderstands what
I'm saying. You started throwing numbers out there. The unemployment

(45:04):
rates very very low. It's only like four point three percent.
That's very very low.

Speaker 3 (45:08):
Are all these businesses, But.

Speaker 1 (45:10):
Let me talk about a big butt what the workforce
participation rate. The unemployment rate only impacts those who are
looking for work and for whatever reason, unable to find it.
The workforce participation rate is what we always need to
look at. And right now we've got about thirty eight

(45:31):
percent of Americans, just over thirty seven percent of Americans
who are not engaged in the workforce. Now, these are
able otherwise able, bodied of age Americans. We're not talking
about kids. We're not talking about the elderly. We're talking
about people who really could work in some capacity in
whatever reason, don't and they've stopped looking. So that thirty

(45:53):
seven to four percent now we're looking at thirty three
percent of people aren't even looking for work. How many
of them are obese. How many of them could possibly
turn their fortunes in their futures around by shedding the weight.
And it's not just about the weight, It's about the
feeling good. I'm achieving a goal. Whether you're achieving that

(46:16):
by eating better and exercising and getting up and hitting
the gym and doing a couple miles on the bike
before the sun comes up, or I still eat nothing
but cheeseballs and I take a shot or a pill
or the fat shot drug or whatever the Trump called it,
and I'm losing the weight. Whatever. If you're feeling good
about where you're going, you stand a better chance of

(46:39):
being actively engaged, of working, of doing a good job
of respecting yourself. Because there are too many people, whether
they're obese or they otherwise look like they're at a
healthy weight. I think what we're both talking about are
different tenets of depression. People not feeling like they're worthy,

(47:00):
and therefore they don't exercise that worth for themselves or society.
And wait, is a big part of it. When I
say forty five point eight percent of those living below
the federal poverty line are obese. I think it's a
much bigger number than the one two three percent that

(47:24):
you thought could be better, could have a better life,
could be more self sufficient. If we start eliminating some
of the excuses, and a big one is financial Trump's like,
all right, it doesn't cost as much now, and then
you have to look and go or what's my next excuse?
And that's when you realize, oh, I'm just making excuses.

(47:45):
Give it a shot. Hey, let's let's try. What we've
been doing has got us here? Where are we here?
We're at too many people not working, too many people
are below the federal poverty line and above the obesity line.
The government shut down and the Dodgers won the World Series.
I don't know that anyone looks at where we are

(48:05):
right now and says this is the best things I've ever.

Speaker 3 (48:07):
Been spoiler thanks for that. I haven't watched the games yet.

Speaker 1 (48:14):
World Series and the days ago. I'm busy, all right, yeah,
I know, Lucy was, and that's my fault. Lucy told
me before the show, like, don't mention the World series.
I'm gonna finally binge watch it this weekend, and then
I blew it.

Speaker 3 (48:30):
Thanks friend, all right, Yeah.

Speaker 1 (48:32):
See, I told you life is awful and getting worse.
That's what I was saying. So but let's try a
different course and maybe it could get better. Scott conversation
got a little obese there in the last segment. I
love talking about real world stuff that neither of us

(48:52):
knows anything about. There's nothing I love more.

Speaker 3 (48:56):
Oh, come on, you know what it feels like to
be a rich kid and suddenly I have your endowment
taken away.

Speaker 1 (49:04):
I've been trying to hand out my endowment. No takers money.
Oh let me tell you about a dream I had
last night, and all the radios go off. I walk
up this morning and I thought, I've got to tell
this dream on the radio in your hand. No, no, no,

(49:26):
I'll just say this. I'm not my wife. My retelling
of a dream is not going to take five hours
in length. My wife listening? All right. I went to
and it started with my wife was talking with our daughter.
This is real life.

Speaker 3 (49:44):
Wow, this is a dream so that it's almost putting
me asleep.

Speaker 1 (49:47):
I got to get into it. So my wife told
me last night that I was talking to our daughter.
She's away at college, and she says college is going great,
but she's she was feeling like she hasn't She said
something like, I haven't met my my best friends yet,
Like you go to college and you suddenly are just
a wash and not only friends but best friends. And
she's involved in a lot of different stuff and she's

(50:10):
doing great, and my wife's listening. It's got a text. Sorry, honey,
she knows it's true, but that was kind of washing
around in my brain when I went to sleep. That's
this is where it came from. Okay, so I this
is the dream. Visit my daughter at college. I'm dad,
but I'm also like young dad. I feel like I'm

(50:32):
only in my twenties, so I'm kind of I'm not
like old guy hanging out. And she takes me to
a group of people that she's trying to make her friends.
And these are college age girls all hanging around in
a circle, sharing and they're talking about all this LGBTQ stuff,
and one girl starts to speak her truth. Another girl says,

(50:56):
excuse me, your microaggression are triggering me, and the other
person says, I am sorry, let me check my privilege
before I share my truth with you. It's okay, And
so there it's that kind of conversation. Another girl and
I swear, this is the dream I had is telling
the entire group that she has a transgender panda that

(51:21):
she has befriended, and other people in the group can
talk to if they're nervous about talking with a transgender person,
what it might be like. Sometimes it's scary to just
go talk to a transgender person. But the transgender panda
and this is a stuffed animal that she has with her.
You can talk to the transgender panda, and you can

(51:42):
feel better about talking with your transgender fellow students. And
I'm looking around the room and it's all just girls
in there. It's all girl and then me and I
told my daughter, like, I gotta get out of here,
and so I went. And there were a bunch of
guys playing basketball and making fun of each other and
cut each other down and call each other names. I'm like, oh,

(52:03):
life hasn't gone crazy, completely crazy. And I shot some
hoops with these dudes. Then I woke up in a
great mood. That was my dream last night.

Speaker 3 (52:13):
This is easy. Yeah, your dream was about the ability
that you might have had in your twenties to speak
more about what you believed in and didn't and then
you decided that you were just gonna go and do
your own thing.

Speaker 1 (52:29):
M No, I had. I started this radio experiment on
a talk radio two hour daily talk show in college,
and I talked about everything just like I am now. Amazingly,
I haven't gotten any better.

Speaker 3 (52:43):
But okay, it was just about eating poops.

Speaker 1 (52:47):
I started thinking about I need to go visit my
daughter at college, because I haven't gone down there like
I said I would. Because when she went down there
in Manhattan, Kansas, I said, there's a great golf course.
I'm gonna go play there. I'm gonna go play golf.
They might take you out to eat, and I haven't
done it yet. I've been too busy.

Speaker 3 (53:03):
Well, many years of your dream is about you thinking
that you can go down there and help her acclimate
and make some friends by being cool young dad. And
then you get down there and you realize she's good
and you go play.

Speaker 2 (53:16):
No.

Speaker 1 (53:17):
I just was thinking about like, well, if I go
down there and talk to her. I've been down there,
but not just me we went down I've been down
there twice with my wife, one time my wife and son.
And so it's not like I'm like, hey, a fun
of college. We'll see a Christmas. But I was thinking, life,
I go down there, how's that gonna go. I'm gonna
be sitting there in some sort of circle with a
bunch of girls sharing their truth, and I'd have to

(53:40):
talk to the transgender Panda.

Speaker 4 (53:42):
Scott Bodies News Radio eleven ten k FAD.

Speaker 1 (53:48):
And with her hair blowing in the breeze. That is
Lucy Chapman. You got the heat on over there in
the Total Traffic Center or is it just you Hr?

Speaker 3 (53:58):
It's just me.

Speaker 4 (54:00):
Hot hot.

Speaker 3 (54:02):
I mean I'm just hot.

Speaker 1 (54:04):
Thank you for that SoundBite. Don't and that one keep
it going. In fact, you just take hope. I hear
that too much, right, I don't hear that enough. I
got emails about my dream a moment ago where I
said that I went to visit my daughter at college

(54:25):
and the dream I had and I was forced to
go to some group of girls college age girls these
days who are all hanging out sharing their truths and
talking about microaggressions and checking their privilege. And one girl said,
I think it's very helpful when you're meeting a trans
person to know how to deal with them. That's why

(54:47):
I have the transgender panda. There's a transgender stuffed animal
panda who you could talk to and therefore feel better
when then talking to a transgender person, you talk to
the transgender panda. That was a dream I had last night. Right,
Because other guys they dream about going to a college
and being surrounded by college girls, can they? And they?

(55:10):
But then they have a very different dream. Oh no,
I never have those dreams. Too much reality, am I? Right?
Guy home on High five? Hi? No one? Okay, yeah,
I never have those dreams. The closest I ever have
to having dirty dreams, wicked dreams is and I had

(55:35):
this one a few years ago. It still sticks out
in my mind. I opened the door and a friend
of mine was engaged in activity with another with a
girl who I knew, and I said I'm sorry, and
then I closed the door, embarrassed at walking in on him.

(55:57):
Those are the dreams I have. I have the dreams,
no wonder I don't sleep.

Speaker 3 (56:03):
It's a dream. You could have done whatever you wanted.

Speaker 1 (56:05):
I know you would think, but I never have those dreams.
I never do. I never have. So let's see here
a guy emailed and said that wasn't a dream, that
was a nightmare. And another guy says transgender panda would
be a great band name. All right, thank you for
the Zonker's custom woods inbox messages. There. Let's see. On

(56:30):
that same front, the Trump administration scored a what's described
here as a major, if perhaps temporary win at the
Supreme Court level. The Supreme Court didn't decide anything. They
just didn't decide to hear the chorus, which kind of
remanded it back. And they had to do with whether

(56:50):
or not President Trump could force people when they get
their passport to mark one of two boxes M or F. Sorry,
Samuel L. Jackson, that's not what we're talking about. Male

(57:11):
or female. Well, I thought you could mark X. Yeah.
Let's see. Was it the Biden administration that said we're
going to give you the option when you go get
a passport to choose a male female or if you
don't have any gender, just mark X, you know, because science. Look,

(57:39):
I want to say a couple of different things here.
Part one is, as I always say, John Lennon said,
whatever gets you through the night, I always tag on there,
whatever gets you through the night. Just try not to
get any on me. If you're living a life and
this is the life you're living and you're not hurting anybody,

(58:03):
have at it. I honestly don't care. I get a
chance to talk with people of all kinds. I mean
every single demographic you could think of. There are some
people that check one or eighteen different boxes there, and
I enjoy if they're good people with fantastic stories. I
love talking to them, and we get right into it too.

(58:27):
I have zero filter. And if people are willing to say,
oh okay, let's have let's get into let's have a conversation,
I love it. I love that. What I'm trying to
say is, if you're living your life is transgender this
or that, and you're not a minor child, I hope
that you're having a wonderful day and a great weekend ahead.

(58:51):
Here's the other thing I'd say, is it too much
to ask to just look at the boxes on there
say male or female, and just check the one that
corresponds with your gender, not the not the life that
you lead, the name you prefer to be called, the
stereotypical clothes that usually go male or female, not just

(59:13):
your gender.

Speaker 3 (59:16):
Well, you could go the other way if you were
born a man but are dressing like a woman today
or you feel like you are a woman.

Speaker 1 (59:26):
I guess you're still a guy.

Speaker 3 (59:28):
You could still but you could, you could still mark
the f Why does there have to be a third choice?

Speaker 1 (59:36):
No, no, the third choice is gone now it's birth
gender has to be marked and your passport. Yeah, and
that's that's it. Okay, so move on. So yeah, so
let's say that you were born male, but now you
were not born free. So now you're living your best

(59:58):
life and you've got a new new identity and a
new wardrobe, and you got a couple of these, and
you took that thing and you had someone put it
in a jark just a case you might want it
later for something. And that's you. That's great. I mean,
I it's not exactly what I would look at and go,

(01:00:19):
yeah that I could see myself doing it. But like
I said, you're living your life. You're not hurting anyone
have about it. Honestly, what do I care? But now
someone's putting in an official document in front of you,
and a passport is an official government document, and they
say you have to mark that which corresponds with your

(01:00:40):
birth gender. Now why, hell, I don't know. Because you're
on a plane, the plane blows up, they gotta find
your remains, and they're like, but this has XX chromosomes,
but this person marked the X y. How are we
supposed to know? I don't know what, But I can

(01:01:01):
tell you this, how many different things that you go
through every day where suddenly you come up against something
and you look at it and go I could make
a big deal over this, whether it's a work thing
or you go into a store or restaurant and like,
I'll give you a perfect example. This is going to

(01:01:22):
blow your mind. But I went to a golf course
the other day. I know, try and contain. You're like, wait,
wait what. So I went to a golf course the
other day and I was about to go and play golf,
and I wanted a beverage because I knew that this
particular golf course didn't have water to drink on the course.
You had to buy something ahead of time. So I'm like,

(01:01:43):
all right, fine, I'll get a Gatorade and then they
say we have power aid why. I like, that's fine,
that's fine, and she said I's fine. It's you can
grab whatever one you want from the cooler right behind you.
And then I paid for it for her, and I
was given the option of leaving a tip, and I

(01:02:03):
looked at it and I felt like saying, why in
the world would I give you a tip. I'm the
one doing it. I'm the one. I gotta go all
the way over to this cooler. I got to pick
the power right I want and walk out of here
with it. You're not doing anything, so standing there barely
looking up for your phone. Why in the world would
I tip you? Why are there have even the option
on here for me to tip you? You're not doing
anything now. I could have done that, but instead I

(01:02:26):
thought the hell and I put down ten or fifteen
percent or whatever, and I moved on with my life.
Sometimes at work, it's hey, you gotta do this I got.
I got a text from my boss yesterday demanding information
that I emailed to him when he asked for it
a week ago. And rather than say yeah, as I

(01:02:50):
already told you last week and when you asked me
this email for this information. I could have done that.
I could have been snotty and snarky. Did I do that?

Speaker 3 (01:02:58):
No?

Speaker 1 (01:02:59):
I looked at the text and I just replied with
the information that was being sought. No, no, no, I'm trying. No,
I'm trying.

Speaker 3 (01:03:09):
Okay, you can try all you want.

Speaker 1 (01:03:11):
That know, how did these stupid little things I'm talking
about relate to someone's truth? Only that Sometimes you're faced
with something, you're like, do I have to make a
big deal about this or not? Someone says it's your
passport mark, your birth gender. You know you have a
birth gender because you call yourself transgender. So you were

(01:03:32):
born this and now you decided you're that. Now, on
that front, I'll fully believe that someone can change their gender.
When you allow me to change my race, all right,
identify as a black woman, and you're like, whoa, whoa,
you can't do that. Oh wait, change my gender but
not my race. Have fun with that one, all these

(01:03:54):
liberal heads exploding over there. Yes, you can change your gender,
Well I want to change my race. Oh, you can't
do that. It's totally different. How how it's not. But
I don't usually make a big deal about that kind
of thing, because, like I said the first part, I
don't care. So someone's putting someone in front of you
on your passport, you know, marked male or female based

(01:04:15):
on your birth gender. No one's saying take off the
wig and the fake bubicles and you go out there
and dress like a man. Dude. No one's saying that
he still do whatever you want. But they're just putting
you down like you got to write you got to
mark down your gender. Why. I don't know. Now you
can make a big deal about it and take it

(01:04:35):
all the way to the Supreme Court, or you can
just mark the box and move on with your life.
By the way, that's how they promote some of that surgery.
Just mark the box and move on with your life.

Speaker 3 (01:04:53):
You mean they don't do anything.

Speaker 1 (01:04:54):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (01:04:55):
Scott Voice News Radio eleven ten.

Speaker 1 (01:05:00):
We blew up another Caribbean narco terrorist. It turns out
there were thousands of them on a Royal Caribbean cruise ship.
I just seen. If you're paying attention now, this one
killed three people on some little boat. Who do they
keep sending out from Venezuela. All right, I think you're

(01:05:21):
gonna be fine, but they're blowing up that's sixty nine
people dead in seventeen strikes against narco terrorists, and the
weekend is just beginning.
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