Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Scott Vorhees, Lucy Chapmans right there. I am Scott Vorhees.
We're on the the midwestern to western side of the
eleven ten a M radio band. Do you know where
the other one is? Lucy A News Talk eleven ten
(00:20):
w b T Charlotte. They get the eastern seaboard and
the the eastern portion of the Midwest before the mid East. Yeah,
the Ohio River Valley and Gaza. They get the mid East.
It's great radio station. By the way, Charlotte is a
(00:42):
beautiful city. Have you ever been there? No, you should,
You would like it. There's a lot to do in
that downtown. There's a lot to do in that downtown area.
You get off the plane there, and I'm sure that
this is better some parts of the year than others.
But just the smell of the peach blossoms and everything there,
(01:04):
it's a really great city. And that's why I think
a lot of people, whether they've been there or not,
have always thought about, Oh, Charlotte seems like a nice place.
I see nice pictures, or I've been there and had
a great time or whatever, and that's why it saddens
them that it's yet another American community that's fallen victim
(01:28):
to the most asinine policies that anyone could conceive of,
that you'd have someone and let's not act like there's
one guy and one guy alone and all of America
who has this kind of track record. In fact, there's
a terrible story out of New York today that we'll
get to in a moment. But the court and jail
(01:54):
records for this guy who's now charged with killing the
twenty three year old Ukraine refugee in Charlotte show that
he'd been arrested fourteen times. He was known by authorities
to have schizophrenia. His history includes convictions for a robbery
(02:14):
with a dangerous weapon, threats, felony, larceny. He was released
from prison in two thousand. Let's see he served. He
was put in prison for a six year prison sentence
in twenty fifteen for several incidents in twenty thirteen twenty fourteen.
He was released in twenty twenty. Within weeks of his release,
(02:37):
he was charged with assaulting his sister. His own mother
blamed the courts for allowing her son to be out
in public. She said, this is a dangerous individual and
he needs help. Away from a free Society diagnosed with
schizophrenia as a documented pattern of delusional behavior. This past January,
(03:02):
he was arrested after allegedly repeatedly calling nine to oneint
one to claim that something had been implanted in his
body and was dictating his ability to eat, walk and speak. Oh,
he's probably fine. And then for whatever reason, he saw
(03:27):
this girl sitting in front of him on the train
and thought, that's the end of this documented mental health issues.
Who is a danger and a criminal fourteen arrests, known
by authorities to be dangerous and delusional? Why was he out?
(03:52):
And then the audacity for the mayor of Charlotte, and
she's I'm sure she's a decent person. I don't even
think that she probably even knows that she said this.
It was just like, well, I gotta say something. I'm
gonna throw this word in there, because people throw this
word around a lot. She called the other day. She says, well,
(04:15):
we need to have a bipartisan approach to dealing with
crime issues such as this. That that word gets thrown
around a lot. The word is bipartisan. I was mocking
it yesterday when we were talking about this Congressman Thomas Massey,
(04:36):
who is a Republican, but he's taken up his entire
life's work now to just be anti Trump, anti Trump
and hang out with Democrats. So now when it's all
the Democrats and Thomas Massey that are pushing something the
media has licensed to say a bipartisan group of members
of Congress, it's not a bipartisan it's all the Democrats
(04:59):
and him. So people throw that around, they think it
sounds nice. This is what the people want. They want
to be bipartisan. I don't know any elected Republicans or
(05:19):
conservative voters who would look at a situation of someone
being arrested, even as we get to three, four and
five times, let alone eight, nine and ten times or twelve, thirteen,
fourteen times. I don't know any conservative people who would
(05:41):
look at this and go, here's someone who's dangerous, who's delusional,
who has a long criminal record, and his own mother
is saying, for the good of him and everyone else
in society, he needs to be put away someplace. I
don't know any conservative people who would say, a, well,
(06:01):
we're just we're just getting real close to a great
way of dealing with him and people in his unfortunate situation.
Society has failed him, and it's up to us to
bub b. I don't Conservatives don't talk like that, and
I don't like to frame things here, even on conservative
talk radio, as an US versus them situation. But where
(06:25):
are when she says we need a bipartisan approach first
of all, where are the Republicans who want anything other
than if someone is dangerous and dangerously crazy, this needs
to be dealt with. Where are the Republicans who are
not interested in that, who have not been interested in that,
who have decried the shutting down of institutions. Well, institutions
(06:49):
such a bad word. We don't want to lock someone up.
How can we do this? You know? And there are
Republicans who have said we shouldn't be doing this. I'm
sure that there are certain liberal people, left leaning people
who think it's mean to lock someone up. And they say, well,
look at one Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest, yet entertaining
(07:11):
movie not based in real life. Well, some of the
people in there are based in real life. And everyone
all the Democrats want to say that anyone who's ever
confined to an institution is Jack Nicholson. And yeah, all
the Republicans want to say anyone confined to an institution
is probably someone like this guy in Charlotte. The reality
(07:34):
is we need to look at all this in a
case by case basis. And when we have someone who
is clearly dangerously, criminally, violently delusional, what exactly do you
see the options as have them just walk around until
they fatally stab someone, or we put them in a
(07:58):
nice little facility with those nice young men and the
nice white coats and they can sit there and lick
doorknobs all day in color or what. I don't know.
I don't know. All I know is when I get
on a bus or a train or a situation like
(08:20):
I had right here in midtown Omaha yesterday, I don't
want to be made to feel like am I about
to be attacked. I was at a restaurant on Saddle Creek.
Woman comes in there. She had been seemingly living on
the streets. Because this is a bigger and bigger problem
(08:42):
on Saddle Creek. This is right around Dodge and Saddle Creek.
The number of people who there was one guy just
sprawled out at the burger king. It used to be
a burger king. They just shut that burger king down.
And this guy decided I'm just gonna just live right
next to the building. Another guy down here sitting on
a bucket. Someone else walking around. This lady's coming in
(09:05):
there carrying a bunch of bags and stuff like, oh
she'd been shopping. No, this is everything she has in
this world. She goes up to the counter of this
restaurant and is hoping to get a diet beverage. They said, okay,
that'll be three dollars and sixteen cents. She goes, oh, sorry,
and started walking out. And she's walking by me because
(09:27):
I'm sitting there eating and I looked at her and
I said, do you want something to eat? And she
just glared at me and cursed and walked out.
Speaker 2 (09:41):
Apparently I was I do that to you all the time.
Speaker 1 (09:44):
I know I was in the wrong. Well with you,
I'm like, Lucy, are you sure you should be eating that?
So no one blames you like that nice none of
my business. But no, I I took a chance at
this and just glared. This woman glared at me, and
(10:08):
I felt so awful because she's just going to go
out and live on the streets, probably commit a crime,
probably get picked up by cops, get shipped around here
and there, and they be right back on the streets
and the people who are trying to do something meaningful
for those who some of these people cannot help themselves,
(10:31):
whether it's a compulsion or mental illness. And the fact
is we've got more and more of them just living
on the streets, shuffling around or filling up our jails
after they've committed very serious crimes. And for this mayor
of Charlotte to come out and say we need a
bipartisan approach, it wasn't. First of all, I don't think Republicans.
(10:53):
I don't. I'd have to look, but I feel pretty
confident in saying that Republicans don't make up a lot
of the political elite in Charlotte, North Carolina. This is
a it's a blue city. So you've got a Democrat mayor.
I'm sure you've got a Democrat leaning majority city council.
(11:15):
The Mecklenburg County District Attorney seems to be left leaning, saying, well,
our community is focusing attention on public safety, but also
how mental health impacts public safety. We're at the beginning
of a conversation, not the end of one. What kind
of garbage is this We're at the beginning of a
(11:36):
beginning of the conversation. Should have been eight arrests ago
for this guy who is dangerous, delusional and violent and
a repeat offender. Well I don't Yeah, the whole conversation
about what do we do when we have someone who's
a public safety risk and also has mental illness that's
being untreated. That's a tough conversation when you're looking at
(11:59):
the map. But let's look at micro not micro the micro.
Let's look at the individual. Let's look at this person.
What are you talking about as it relates to this guy.
We're at the beginning of a conversation, not the end
of one. No, you're at the end of a conversation
with this guy who and it's these idiots down there
(12:20):
and Charlotte point out, well, he's now being held without bond.
Well you really got him this time. And the Feds
are like, we're going to charge him with a federal crime,
potentially a hate crime. We're going to make sure. Did
anyone think that they were going to slap him on
the wrist and say all right, this is your last chance,
stop stabbing and send him back out in the streets.
(12:43):
There are probably some probably some left leaning people that say, well,
you know, society continues to fail this poor man, why
shouldn't he mean to come out and make this these
just ridiculous, aggravating, frustrating conversation you'd be imagine being the
(13:04):
family of this young woman or her friends, co workers' neighbors,
the maagine being this girl's dad, and the district attorney
who has been there watching this guy get out, get out,
get out of this revolving door of injustice in Charlotte,
just get out until he was there able to stab
(13:25):
and kill his daughter. And then the district attorney says, well,
we're at the beginning of a conversation, not the end
of one. Yeah, we're at the end. I'm at the
end of conversations with my daughter. I'll never again be
able to talk to her. That's the end of that conversation.
Because you guys feel like all of this is a conversation,
(13:45):
and in the macro it is. But in the micro,
for this guy, there's no reason he should have been
out and to come out and say we need a
bipartisan approach. You don't want to listen to the Republicans anyway,
You're not electing you don't want to listen to them.
You think they're mean, and maybe some of them are.
Maybe some of them are the kind of people are like, Hey,
(14:07):
I don't know if just lock them all up doesn't
bother me. Well, that's not the right idea either. But
this is a terrible reaction. And like I said a
moment ago, let's not pretend that well, this was the
(14:29):
only guy in America who has this kind of situation
going on. It's sad what happened to this girl, but
at least we got that one guy. Let me tell
you what just happened in New York next.
Speaker 3 (14:40):
Scott Boys News Radio eleven kfab.
Speaker 1 (14:45):
Variety of emotions throughout this program. Sometimes we're happy, sometimes
are angry, and in cases like yesterday, sometimes I'm really
happy being angry. It's a variety of emotions here on
news radio eleven ten kfabing. We're so glad you're along
for this ride on Nebraska's news, weather and traffic station.
(15:06):
I'm Scott Vorhees. There is Lucy Chapman. As I mentioned
a moment ago, Sadly, this guy in Charlotte is not
the only one who should have been locked up and
not out there committing crimes. A New York couple in
their seventies were murdered this week. This happened two days
ago in what the police commissioner has described, and this
(15:32):
is in New York City, as a horrific double homicide, robbery,
and arson. I won't go into the details about what
happened to this couple. Seventy six year old man seventy
seven year old woman found dead middle of the afternoon
on Monday, about twenty minutes after surveillance video showed this suspect,
(15:56):
this guy walking around their home. I'm sorry. This was
in Queen some New York City area and Queens So
then they identified this guy and found him to be
someone who has committed a number of robberies. He has
(16:17):
a lengthy violent criminal history spawning several decades. He's currently
on parole after serving sixteen years in prison for a
conviction in a two thousand and six robbery. He's also
wanted by police though for two recent robberies. This past July,
he held up a video game store and then shortly
(16:41):
thereafter went into a cell phone store where he had
a fake gun and fought with one of the staff members.
At this Verizon store. He also failed last year to
register as a sex offender, which is a violation of
his parole. And this is someone who based on this
(17:03):
summer two robberies, including one with a fake but still
that's armed robbery, failing to register as a sex offender,
a violent and lengthy criminal history goes back several decades.
This is someone who should not have been out walking
around who. I don't know how he ended up keening
in on this couple's home, but he did and didn't
(17:28):
even care, walked right up to the front door. The
ring doorbell camera thing has a very clear picture of
here's the guy. And as of yesterday afternoon, I don't
know if there's been a change since then, but this
guy is still at large. He was seen on video
(17:49):
yesterday afternoon pawning some of the couple's belongings and they said, please,
this man should be considered armed and dangerous. Well, he'll
blend in because New York City and that whole area
is the same thing we're talking about. Basically, you've got
an entire justice system in some of these cities who
(18:14):
their idea of stopping crime is when they come in
contact with the criminal, they say, hey, stop that we
mean it, and then they don't. As it turns out,
they don't respond to that. So here's an Ukrainian refugee
(18:38):
completely unnecessarily murdered. Not that there's a necessary murdered designation
I can think of, certainly in this situation, but the
fact that this guy should never have been out walking around.
This guy in New York should never been out walking around.
And now the son who is a fire Department EMT,
(19:00):
he had to be among those who showed up at
the house because, like I said, also Arson in this one,
what this guy did to this older, defenseless couple is
just disgusting. Never should have been out walking around. And
(19:21):
so you got some of these city officials, yes they
happen to be Democrats, saying, well, we need to have
a bipartisan approach. Great, when are you going to convene
asking all of the tough on crime Republicans to come
in there and say, Now, as we've been saying, and
you haven't wanted to listen to this, but we're glad
(19:41):
that you've invited us into the room right now. As
we've been saying here, it's a pretty good deal we've
cooked up here. It's not crazy. We find someone who's
dangerous and violent and a repeat offender and delusional and
also probably hooked on the smack, and we don't let
them out in public. Now wait, we're writing this down.
(20:01):
You're saying, what now, we don't let them out a
bipartisan approach. When is this mayor of Charlotte who babbled
that problem the other day, When is she going to
invite tough on crime conservatives to be a part of
a conversation on maybe doing something more meaningful about crime
than what they've been doing, which is nothing. The latest
(20:24):
from Fox coming up in just a moment, Scott Voice
Scott atkfab dot com. John Emails says, Scott, this girl
was killed August twenty second there in Charlotte, and only
now the media is talking about it. How can this be?
It's my understanding that the surveillance video and images were
(20:47):
not released until just at the end of last week,
and once people saw that, it's well, I hope that
you have seen it. The images from that in the
video from it are something that you don't need to
(21:08):
download into your brain. But some people say this is
the only way that you'll pay attention, and I look,
I get that too, But our attention's being paid. And
as President Trump is talking about what we did in Washington,
d C. With a National Guard and trying to clean
(21:28):
up the crime there, and now looking at Chicago, the
emphasis has been on crime and not just you know,
people out there committing crime, but committing crimes over and
over and over and over and up to fourteen times
over again, like this guy in Charlotte, like this guy
who's on the loose in New York after murdering a
(21:49):
couple in their seventies, who've just been in and out
of the judicial system of bazillion times, and no one
seems to want to do anything about it other than
continue or come up with brand new thug coddling ideas,
no cash bail and not doing anything meaningful in terms
(22:11):
of sentencing for serious crimes. I mean, it's it's pretty bad.
So a lot of people have been asking the question,
how do we get to this point? Lucy Chapman ventured
in interesting ideas. We are talking off there a moment ago,
I said say that on the radio, Lucy, you got
a microphone in your face.
Speaker 2 (22:29):
Yeah, I do. It just doesn't always work. I think
sometimes it doesn't. First of all, can we agree on
just a couple of things before I present to you
my possible conspiracy theory That heroin has always been around,
Cocaine has always been around. Hard drugs have always been
around in this country since the birth of this country.
Speaker 1 (22:51):
I thought you mentioned beyond the world, right, I thought
you mention just around the radio station.
Speaker 2 (22:55):
Well, like, yeah, it's part of it, but it's part
of this country.
Speaker 1 (22:57):
Yeah, why do you think I work here?
Speaker 2 (22:59):
Okay? And and we've seen people, especially from the sixties
and the seventies, we've seen people heroin addicts kick that
habit and be able to function in life just fine
for decades.
Speaker 1 (23:17):
Yeah right, some people.
Speaker 2 (23:19):
Yeah, sure, I mean there are some that will never
be able to.
Speaker 1 (23:22):
I know, I don't know what the percentage ratio might be.
But what are you I'm not sure what are you
driving at traffic lady.
Speaker 2 (23:27):
If we can agree on those two things, then here's
where my conspiracy theory comes in. A lot of the
drugs being used today are fentanyl, and heroin is certainly
one of them. Weed is certainly one of the drugs
that are used commonly today. Where are those drugs coming from?
Speaker 1 (23:46):
Here we go, Well, we they're not coming from Venezuelan
shipping cargo.
Speaker 2 (23:53):
Boat anyway, well not the last two shipment.
Speaker 1 (23:55):
We blew that up. El Salvador just picked up like
tons of money in cocaine and all that too. So
it's nice to see these countries, but a lot of
it's coming across our southern border.
Speaker 2 (24:06):
Right, And the conspiracy theory or maybe it's a true
theory or true fact, I don't know, but a lot
of that is coming out of China. And if you
look at the information about China and some of the
products coming out of China, you would have to be
a bit of a conspiracy theorist to think about some
(24:27):
of this. But a lot of this stuff has been
proven true. I'm talking about conspiracy theories.
Speaker 3 (24:31):
So it's like Lucy has a conspiracy theory.
Speaker 2 (24:35):
What's in the drugs that are being sent here sold here,
coming from other countries? Whatever country? That is? What is
in the drugs that today wasn't in the drugs in
the seventies, in the eighties even and is heroin even
really talked about? I mean, aren't we aren't most of
(24:55):
the people the drug addicts here now using the fentanyl
and the what was the alligator or crocodile or something
like that drug something along those lines.
Speaker 1 (25:06):
I'm happy to say I don't know.
Speaker 2 (25:08):
But what's in those drugs that you are going to
It's not just drugs. It's not just to get you high.
It's to change your DNA, it's to change the way
your brain operates.
Speaker 1 (25:20):
It's to well, all drugs do that. Let me give
you a couple of examples that I think illustrate what
you're talking about. I was at a killer party as
a young person. It was great. This We were teenagers
and there was a girl whose parents went out of
town for like three days and so were trusting to
(25:41):
leave you alone, which was a terrible idea on their part,
because her house became a two and a half day party.
We just lived there for a couple It was fantastic.
And that's when people were ingesting things, drinking things, smoking things,
many instances. For the first time, a buddy of mine
(26:03):
got really drunk and high. And here's what he did
in that state. He passed out in the bathroom, wet himself.
And then later after we'd forgotten about him, like, he
came to and then started fighting his best friend, yelling
at him saying, you let me wet myself, like somehow
(26:28):
this was his fault. So it was incredibly entertaining. It
wasn't dangerous or violent, and no one got super psychotic.
It was just a stupid little tale from my youth.
A few years ago, some guy got all hooked on
I don't know if he was on the bath salts, fentanyl,
(26:48):
some combination of all this crazy stuff, and some guy
without any criminal record or mental illness or whatever, just
like found a homeless guy and started eating his face
out of nowhere. He's like that, I've never seen anything
that looks so good in my life and just started
eating a homeless guy's face.
Speaker 2 (27:09):
I recall that story.
Speaker 1 (27:10):
Yeah, there's something going on in the drugs or the
combination of drugs that's making people absolutely crazy. Now, so
I have a solution. What is it? Stop doing drugs.
(27:31):
Let me know if I can help with anything else.
Speaker 2 (27:33):
It's an excellent idea.
Speaker 1 (27:35):
I'm just saying here.
Speaker 2 (27:36):
That covers the psychotic behavior of some of the people
who are using drugs. What about the psychotic behavior of
people who have not ever used street drugs? Then you
have to say, well, street drugs.
Speaker 1 (27:54):
Look, there are some people who have taken pharmaceutical drugs
that have been prescribed to them and it has done
wonders for them, absolutely. And there are some people of
taking the exact same drugs, whether it's been prescribed or
they just thought, well, i'll take this, and it has
not been wonderful for them. And some people have tried
to buffer all of that with drugs and alcohol, and
(28:17):
you've got a cocktail of this. I've never heard anyone
start going down that road taking prescription drugs, drugs and alcohol,
or they were taking some drugs for a while and
now they're not taking those prescription drugs anymore, but they're
doing a lot of illegal drugs and alcohol. And the
end of that story has never been And wouldn't you
(28:37):
know it, they just were awarded the Nobel Prize for Science.
It's it always ends very very badly. Again, my solution here,
and this is also a great solution for when it
comes to border security. A lot of the whether it's
China or whatever, it's trying to bring illegal drugs in
through our southern border. The reason they're doing it is
(28:59):
because Americans just love lapping up all of our illegal drugs.
So if we stop doing that, they will stop bringing
it here. And someone came into the studio and said,
hey man, you want some of this weed, you know
or whatever. Nineteen eighty six back to School special guy
would come through here. Hey man, everyone's doing it. You
(29:20):
want some of this? I would say, no, man, drugs
are bad because I don't do that stuff, and I
and I would not be able to be convinced otherwise.
Some of the ugliness comes from people are at the
party like the one I mentioned, and they're like, hey,
drink this or take this, And you might think, all right,
(29:41):
there's probably something bad in there, but I didn't know
it's gonna be something that might kill me, like fentanyl.
I mean, you can't do that stuff anymore. There are
people who ended up ended up crazy or like their
brains permanently altered, or they die because of this stuff.
And so when and you're talking about like people used
(30:01):
to do this and this, and some people could even
kick the habit. They weren't putting synthetic garbage in there
that made it easier to produce, cheaper to produce, and
therefore more of a profit when they sell it to you.
There's crazy stuff out there, and I don't do any
of it, because from what I've noticed, we have yet
(30:25):
to run out of rum. When we run out of rum,
when we've completely exhausted the world's supply of rum, then
I'll look at another option. But right now, I just
like a little rum once in a while.
Speaker 2 (30:37):
My only point is, here we go with the conspiracy theory.
I think I don't think it was I think it's happening.
My only point is that the drugs that are being
used today, the drugs that you find on the street
and the drugs you find in your medicine cabinet, most
likely are not always what you think they are. They
have other chemicals, and I believe in some cases, especially
(30:59):
in large, large, large amounts of drugs that come into
the country, well you've got entire shiploads of drugs. Yes,
that is for the money for the short term, for
whoever's selling them. But the long term is it is America.
Because do you see this happening as much in other countries,
this particular violence, this random violence.
Speaker 1 (31:21):
Now because they have a half strike in your out
policy in a.
Speaker 2 (31:23):
Lot of these I think that is part of it, certainly,
But I believe that America has been a target for
a very long time, and people want to take over America.
This is not new, and I think that one of
the ways that you can do that is to infiltrate
from the inside. And if you kill off a quarter
or fifty percent of a population because of the drugs
(31:45):
that are being being just infused into this country, and
if the people the drugs themselves don't kill you, then
you're going to start seeing even more people killing each
other because of the psychoticness of it, the psychotic episodes
that the drugs cause. Then you're going to be able
(32:05):
to take over a country a whole lot easier because
it's going to have a whole lot less people.
Speaker 1 (32:09):
Yes, and here once again is my solution for that.
Stop doing drugs.
Speaker 2 (32:16):
What about the drugs that the doctors give little kids
because they seem to be just completely bouncing off the
walls and they've got ADHD and we need to treat that. Yep,
what's going on with those drugs?
Speaker 1 (32:28):
Got to stop doing that too.
Speaker 2 (32:29):
What's going on with with Kennedy talking about all the vaccines?
Who knows what he's talking about? I mean, who knows
how much of what he says is absolute, one hundred
percent sent true.
Speaker 1 (32:38):
Well, here's the thing. Here's the thing about RFK Junior
is doing and what his panel of skeptics is looking
at is they could come out with like one proof
and they could parade out the people saying, yeah, it
was me, I did it, and I would have got
away with it too if it weren't for you meddling kids.
And there would still be people who would be like,
(33:00):
I don't believe it because he's in the Trump administration
and they're all criminals and liars and liars and pedophiles
and all the rest of the stuff. They wouldn't believe it. So,
I mean, what you're talking about, maybe it's true, maybe
it's a conspiracy theory, but it all comes down to
what people are willing to believe or deny based on
(33:21):
the politics that they're feeling at the moment, which is
pretty either strong or anti Trump, depending on who you
talk to.
Speaker 2 (33:29):
You can be one party or the other and still
understand that there are issues within both parties that have
to should make you say, wait a minute, and you
just said something real quick, You just said something that
sparked an idea in my head or whatever. But you
said that we would have gotten away with it if
(33:49):
it weren't for those darn kids. And everybody knows that
the thing that happens next is that they pull the
mask off with all.
Speaker 1 (33:55):
The actually pull the mask off, then they admit to it.
Speaker 2 (33:57):
Yeah, that's true. But with all of the again conspiracy
theories talking about all of the different masks that people
are wearing and politicians are wearing, they're not they're real people,
and that person's actually dead. This is a stand in.
Believe what you want about that. I don't know, but Hollywood,
and I've said this before, Hollywood always tells us what
(34:18):
is going on and what's coming up. They always have.
Look at the movie conspiracy.
Speaker 1 (34:23):
Theory that was twenty years ago exactly.
Speaker 2 (34:26):
Scooby Doo was fifty years ago.
Speaker 1 (34:29):
All right, So now it's Scooby Doo and you know
who's selling all these drugs to kids, Tom Hanks, which
brings us back to twenty four hours ago, which we
don't need to revisit. Actually, I have an update on
the upstairs cabinet issue that we talked about yesterday. I'll
get to that at ten oh five.
Speaker 3 (34:46):
Scott Fores, This.
Speaker 1 (34:47):
Is News Radio eleven ten kfa B, Nebraska's news, weather
and traffic station, and twenty four hours ago. At that time,
we didn't do any of that. As I here with
Lucy Chapman decided to engage in some cathartic and completely
unnecessary conversation where it took me twenty minutes to say
(35:11):
this yesterday, I'll try and do it in twenty seconds.
I decided that everything that was out of control or
wrong in my life, things over which I had zero control,
I was putting all of that on a cabinet door
in the upstairs breakroom here at the radio station. And
(35:33):
every day I'd come in and that door would be open.
Because my co workers are trash pandas, and this is
why we can't have nice things. They think it's okay
just to leave that thing open and let anyone, you know, clients,
guests who come through here, We have some new employees
(35:53):
and they look and go, does that door not close?
Oh no, it closes very easily. You just slide it closed.
We didn't do that. No one does that except me.
And every day, not only would I come in there
and close that door, but at one point Lucy Chapman
left a note mocking me for closing the door, so
I called her out on it.
Speaker 2 (36:14):
Did I sign that? I did know it was for me.
I don't remember signing it. I frankly don't remember what
it said.
Speaker 1 (36:22):
It was from you, Okay. Then Lucy and I had
it out and she threw a bunch of googly eyes
at me. Some of them got stuck on the bottom
of my shoe, and I didn't know it for hours later,
I'm like, what is that like? There was an eyeball
on the bottom of my shoe. It got crazy yesterday
it got crazy. So a lot of people have been
(36:42):
emailing the day. First of all, based on our congenial
conversation at the first hour. They said, it's good to
hear that you and Lucy made up. Did we? Oh?
Speaker 2 (36:52):
No, I didn't think so.
Speaker 1 (36:55):
No, there's always got to be some element of tension.
Uh yeah, that's the fun part. But we weren't. We
weren't fighting like we were yesterday, but we had it out.
And so my test was, I don't necessarily need to win.
It's not a win. Like I said, I will keep
(37:17):
coming and even if it takes years, I will wait
you out and I will close that door every single
day because it's the only thing in my life. I
have any control over I can close that door. Some
of the other stresses and issues and so forth, I
don't have as much control over them as I would like,
but I can close that door. And I said I
will close that door for years to come. And when
(37:38):
I stopped closing that door, that's when you need to
worry about me. That's when I've given up. But I
was curious, after I threw a little fit about it yesterday,
when I came back to work this morning, I was curious,
would that door be closed? Here's the update. And I
(37:59):
have to ass Zoom whether or not you admit to
it that you did this, and you did this little
thing on purpose. The door was closed almost there was
about a half inch gap. They're like, all right, I'll
close this door, but not all the way, just enough,
(38:22):
just to aggravate Scott. And you know what, I left
it that way. That's compromise. That's all right, that's normal,
that's that's hilarious, And that's compromised that I today am
willing to live with.
Speaker 2 (38:36):
So let me get this straight. When you came in,
it was closed just a little less than an inch
all the way closed.
Speaker 1 (38:42):
Maybe three you No, I thought that was hilarious.
Speaker 2 (38:47):
Well, here's the thing that's interesting. I never go up there,
so I'm never the one leaving it open. Even though
you like to think I am. I never go up there.
Speaker 1 (38:55):
I don't believe you.
Speaker 2 (38:56):
On occasion, sometimes i'll make some toast. So I had
some good bread today, I'm gonna have to make a
piece of toast. So I did go up there. When
I got up there, that cabinet door was wide open,
and I shut it. But I thought I shut it
all the way. So you really have some issues.
Speaker 1 (39:18):
No, you can still see. Here's here's where the forks are,
here's where the plates are. The door is clearly open
a little bit, but just a little bit, not wide
open like before. And I figured that was done on purpose.
Whether or not it was, that's how I'm taking it.
And I thought that was the funniest thing.
Speaker 2 (39:35):
I mean, yes it was. I did that specifically for.
Speaker 1 (39:38):
That, and that started my day on the right note.
Speaker 2 (39:41):
Oh good.
Speaker 1 (39:44):
It's subject to change, but that's that's how that's where
we are today. That's where we are today. Let's see,
how do I how do I put this without condemning anyone? Well,
I want to condemn people. Oh boy, oh, do I
want to condemn people. I don't want to throw anyone
close to me under the bus. So let's just say
(40:05):
I was a friend of mine, all right, good friend
of mine, someone I've known for a long time, and
she is part of a nationwide group. And there are
people in this nationwide group. It's kind of a professional
(40:28):
society they have before meetings and especially during and now
since COVID, a lot of these meetings are all over
zoom or teams or whatever. And there was another one
last night and I couldn't help it over here that
(40:49):
they were still doing the same thing that they've been
doing before, and that is there's always a few people
that have to hijack the meeting, even though this isn't
the subject. They have to hijack the meeting to insert
their own very very left leaning political politics, which is fine.
I don't I certainly don't condemn them for having those thoughts.
Speaker 2 (41:07):
I try to do that all the time.
Speaker 1 (41:09):
Right, But when the subject is where should we have
our meeting for our annual conference, and you go off
in some tangent saying, well, it's not gonna be Florida
because our members won't be safe there.
Speaker 4 (41:26):
Because Florida's got Alligator Alcatraz and the governor down there
is working with the President of the United States, and
immigration and customs enforcement is on the loose down there,
and people don't feel safe and they feel like they
have to walk around with their papers all the time.
And they just went on and I'm listening to this
going come on, let me talk, put me on, and
(41:48):
the person was like nope, and was boxing me out,
like you know, please don't do we don't need to.
I'm like, I really, I'm gonna talk about it on
the radio tomorrow.
Speaker 1 (41:57):
And this is Yes, it's this one particular professional society,
but it's businesses, it's nonprofits, it's a lot of different
civic groups. It's people, it's family reunions. This is kind
of the way people are thinking about all this stuff anymore.
And a school district in Iowa just followed suit just yesterday.
(42:25):
There was a initially it was said to be immigration
and Customs enforcement. We're working in an area north of Ames, Iowa,
in the community of Belmond, Iowa, the thriving metropolis of Belmond, Iowa,
just north of Ames. And someone said ice is here,
(42:49):
and they're like vanilla, No t no cube, No immigration
customers enforcement is here. And so someone caught wa of
that and said, shut down the school. We're having a
shelter and place situation at our school where we lock
down the school. No one's allowed in or out. First
(43:16):
of all, Whereas what we've seen from ICE operations, they
have not just been I don't know that there's been
a situation where ICE has gone into a school, though
they said they would. They said, nothing's off limit. What
about school or church? Yeah, if we know there's a
dangerous person in there and we can go in there
and safely extract them, we will do so, no matter
(43:38):
what that building is. But we're not going to come
rampaging in guns blazing with kids in art class going
stop right there, Carlos Santana. You know we're not doing
any of that. But is there a situation where we
have to go in and do something and we find
it safe to do so? Yeah? Will we stop because
(43:58):
of what kind of building it is? No? And of
course people have lost their minds. ICE is going to
be going from classroom to classroom, fronting brown kids and
taking them to Uganda. That's what these people think in Belmont, Iowa.
So they shut down the school. They had a shelter
in place as though there was a school shooter. Now,
(44:21):
a couple things about that. First of all, ICE was
not doing an operation in the area. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement was not in the area of Belmonte, Iowa yesterday.
I wouldn't be surprised if they have to go in
there and poke around today, because if the school officials
are like, oh, ICE is here, most of our students
(44:42):
and faculty members are all illegal immigrants with criminal records,
let's shut down the school. I'm sure someone tipped off ICE.
I don't know if you saw the story. Apparently someone's
got something to hide. They might want to do some checks.
I don't know. But even when they do that, when
ICE shows up, it's targeted names on a list, not
(45:02):
people who look a certain way. That's what ICE has
been doing and that's what they should be doing. So
it wasn't ICE. It was Homeland Security personnel conducting welfare
checks on miners, specific names on a list who were
placed with sponsors years ago, and then we haven't heard
(45:27):
from them in a while. So this rose to the
level of Homeland Security, which suggests to me that we
have people who either were granted some temporary status or
asylum who went to this community, probably with kids that
they said as they came across our southern border, like,
(45:48):
this is my kid and this is a human trafficking
Either scare or we don't know the kids off the grid.
We got to go find these people and have a
talk with them. Where's that or where are those kids again?
Who has the problem with that besides the human trafficking criminals?
(46:10):
Or this is something where someone was granted the ability
to come and be a refugee in this country and
they had kids, and then someone's like, whatever happened to
those kids? I don't know, haven't seen them. It's been
wild been months. All right, let's go check it out.
And it's a homeland security situation because of the refugee status.
(46:33):
Either way, who from the school district is so nervous
and scared about any of this stuff? I just said
that they needed to not only decide we're locking down
the school, no one in or out. We're not going
to have ice come in here and start grabbing kids
and taking them to El Salvador, which they wouldn't do,
(46:56):
or who wanted to who was so political nervous and
anxious about this situation, like the people on that meeting
last night saying, well, we're not gonna have our national
conference in Florida. We'll all end up at alligator Alcatraz.
They're just the worst.
Speaker 4 (47:13):
Some of our members of this community are gay, and
as soon as they go to Florida, they're gonna be.
Speaker 1 (47:19):
Fed to alligators. That's what they think. And the school
officials in Belmont, Iowa apparently thought no, they thought nothing
of scaring those kids. Hey, we're locking down. These kids
in the schools had to go into lockdown mode. You
(47:42):
don't think that created a bit more anxiety for them
than if someone would have said homeland securities in the
area and they're doing welfare checks on miners who are
off the grid. Oh, I don't know what any of
that means. Can I go back to playing dodgeball and
gym class versus let's lock down the school. Everyone's got
(48:02):
a cower in a coat room or under their desk
or whatever. And these kids are sitting there wondering, am
I about to get shot? And then the word gets
out to their parents. Schools in lockdown is they're inactive shoot.
How do you, as a parent not immediately assume the
worst and so completely unnecessarily. The parents in that community
(48:26):
were horrified, thinking, what's going on in that school? Is
my kids safe? Why? Because some school official with the
Belmont Klem School District decided to do a political statement. Oh,
the Trump administrations in the area doing something. Our kids
(48:49):
must not be safe. You can't trust the Trump He's
probably going to come in It's probably Trump himself probably
going to come in there, grab those kids and take
them to Epstein's Island where we still know what he's
doing there. I saw the birthday card. What is the
matter with you people that this is the length you
(49:10):
would go to scaring children and their parents because politics.
These people should all be fired. There should be a
city count. There should be sorry, a school district school
board meeting tonight. The community should go in there and
demand that these people should all be fired and sent
to Uganda or Alligator Alcatraz or something. All right, Speaking
(49:35):
of that birthday card, As it turns out, when they
released that card, Trump was not the only person to
sign a or allegedly sign a page in that really
really dumb card we talked about yesterday. I'll tell you
who else's name is in their next.
Speaker 3 (49:51):
Scotties News Radio elevenfab.
Speaker 1 (49:55):
Lucy suddenly looks delighted and I can't imagine as anything.
I said, I'm just doing the intro to the I.
Speaker 2 (50:00):
Am because it's a really opposite of delighted.
Speaker 1 (50:03):
Yeah, two, you were smiling. Was it an evil smile?
Speaker 2 (50:09):
It's uh no, it was a cover smile, just to cover.
But since you brought up evil, yes, don't you think, yes,
that it's possible that demonic activity walks amongst us.
Speaker 1 (50:22):
Oh, I just saw Terry Lahy walk through the newsroom.
Is it? Is it Terry? We're talking about these demons.
Speaker 2 (50:31):
I mean, cameras do a lot, a lot of the
weird stuff. See look at this picture. It's it's a
shape shifter. It's demonic.
Speaker 1 (50:40):
What are you talking?
Speaker 2 (50:40):
I'm talking about people amongst us.
Speaker 1 (50:42):
We're on the air right now, this is going out.
Speaker 2 (50:45):
I'm telling you.
Speaker 1 (50:45):
Literally, singles and singles of people.
Speaker 2 (50:49):
I'm trying to make you understand. I don't think all
that nonsense about everybody, every cabinet meeting and everything as
a demon sitting in it because of some stupid shape
shift videos.
Speaker 4 (51:01):
I think.
Speaker 2 (51:03):
Of that. It's just the camera, the cameras are digital.
They're weird. But with so much evil going on, maybe
that's it. Demons walk amongst.
Speaker 1 (51:11):
This is what you know. That's that's on me. Yes,
it is. I thought at the end of that there
was going to be an amazing point. That's me. That's
my fault.
Speaker 2 (51:25):
I think it is an amazing point.
Speaker 1 (51:26):
You don't know that you made a point. Oh now
we're fighting again. The Epstein birthday book, I guess they
didn't just and I didn't go looking for the whole thing,
But I guess the Democrats on the I guess what
was it the House Overside Committee or something when they said,
here it is. Here's the Trump page, which Lucy and
(51:47):
I read yesterday on the air. We acted it out
just to recap. It's so stupid. It's supposed to be
a conversation between Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein that ends
with Trump. I'm saying, may every day be a wonderful secret, like, oh,
we know what he's talking about, the secrets of all
the horrible things they're doing, and the whole they look
(52:11):
at the page, look at that conversation, and ask yourself, honestly,
even if you can't stand Donald Trump, is this the
way Trump or anyone talks. Even Trump's biggest detractors would say, yeah,
this is stupid. I don't know who wrote this or
thought it was cute or funny or weird, but this
(52:33):
isn't Trump super dumb? Well, those who release that birthday book,
it appears they released the whole thing. There's a lot
of names in there. And now there's another guy. He's
the UK ambassador to the US who in the handwritten
note in the birthday book, this guy's name is Peter
(52:55):
Mandelsson and he says, yes, I know that. I call
Jeffrey Epstein my best pal. Another use of the term pale.
Isn't that what Trump? That's what I was going to say.
You know, a pal is a terrible thing to waste
or whatever? He said, that's the uh what was that?
The is that the United Negro College Fund?
Speaker 2 (53:17):
I believe that's right, brain right, a mind?
Speaker 1 (53:21):
Mind is a terrible thing to waste. The United Negro
College Fund? And right now I love saying that because
there's someone under the age of thirty five going. Is
he allowed to say that on the radio? Like, yeah,
it was it was the United Negro Stop saying that.
I think I don't know. I don't know. So a pal,
(53:44):
A pal is a beautiful thing? Was what Trump was?
Speaker 2 (53:47):
Maybe stands for something. Maybe it's not the word, Maybe
it's the letters.
Speaker 1 (53:51):
Well, I know a P would stand for in the
Epstein thing, pedophile and loser p a l Yeah, that's
what it is, pedophile and there thank you, Jim Carrey.
So this guy called Jeffrey Epstein, not just Powell, but
(54:14):
my best pal. You're my best Lucy. You've had friends
throughout your life, none here at the radio station, but
I imagine that when you leave here you have you
have friends. Have you ever called anyone your pal? No?
I've only been called Powell by one person, the great
(54:37):
Mike Murphy, Kansas City radio legend, who called everybody pal.
You know those guys that call everyone Hey, ay, Sport,
Hey Bud, Hey Pal, Hey pal? Yeah, that was Mike Murphy.
Speaker 2 (54:49):
You really have a mutual friend who says that has
called that? Used to call me pal once in a while.
Speaker 1 (54:55):
Is it Trump?
Speaker 3 (54:57):
Yes?
Speaker 1 (54:59):
Is it the UK ambassador to the US. No, who
calls us Powell? No?
Speaker 2 (55:04):
I don't. I have no idea. I haven't talked him
in twenty yeah years almost, But clearly clearly good. Your
friend Pat used to use the word pale once in
a while. I think, so, I could be wrong.
Speaker 1 (55:17):
I think so, oh that pass.
Speaker 2 (55:19):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (55:21):
Uh, he's not calling anyone much of anything anymore. He is.
He is off the sauce and uh, he's going to
bed early and not nearly as much fun as he
used to be. He's like, he's Lucy and I know
a guy. You ever see that friend's episode about fun Bobby?
(55:41):
And then they realized the only reason he's fun is
because he drinks all the time, And so they got
him off the sauce and suddenly he wasn't fun anymore. Oh,
that's that's him. I still love I love the guy, yea,
even though I told him one night as like, Pat,
if you keep saying that to my wife, I'm gonna
have to fight, all right, all right, sorry, Yeah that's him.
(56:05):
Where was I? Oh? Yeah, So this guy's name is
Peter so Epstein's my best pal, and so his name's
in the birthday book as well. And so now he's
not only coming out to say, look, my name's in
the book. I'm just letting you know my name's in
the book. I signed up my best pala that's right.
But I insist I've never witnessed any wrongdoing, and I've
(56:26):
never asked Epstein to introduce me to any women or
found myself on the receiving end of any of these things.
Because I'm also coming out as gay. I am a
gay gay man, and like this guy. Therefore, they got
one guy out of the closet because of the Epstein book.
He's like, I'm my best pal, But I didn't do
(56:49):
any of that stuff. Probably, he says, perhaps because I'm
a gay man. Yeah, perhaps, And Trump is like, let's
just backpocket that excuse in case things get bad for me.
I'm gay. No one's been more gay. I get along
very well with them.
Speaker 2 (57:07):
It's a big beautiful gay, big.
Speaker 1 (57:09):
Big beautiful gay. Love it. You love the dudes, all
about the dudes. JD. Come in here. I'll show him,
you know, I stop, he's just back pocketing it. Did
we go too far?
Speaker 2 (57:23):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (57:24):
Good? What did Sean Connery say every once in a
while woman needs to be cuffed or something like that,
not handcuffed, but just a little a little bit of
a backhand.
Speaker 2 (57:38):
I'm not sure what. Yeah, I mean, Sean Connery, we
know what he's been accused of doing didn't he beat
his wife?
Speaker 1 (57:47):
Here we go, didn't he beat his Here we go?
Yesterday Lucy had Tom Hanks throwing virgins into volcanoes.
Speaker 2 (57:55):
This is this was Yeah, everybody.
Speaker 1 (57:57):
I don't think Sean Connery was ever accused of beating
his Well, shouldn't we figure this out before we just
throw these allegations across the radio.
Speaker 2 (58:05):
Okay, it's just an a yeah, allegation.
Speaker 1 (58:08):
Well it's I don't even think there's an allegation. No,
Sean Connery. I think you're thinking of the same thing
I mentioned where he was doing an interview like with
Playboy magazine or something in the sixties or seventies, and
he's like, every once in a while, you got to
strike a woman to keep her in lie or something
like that was like and it was like nineteen sixty whatever,
(58:30):
and people are like, yeah, that sounds about right. What
are you gonna do? It's James Bond And so that
was a million years ago. Yesterday President Trump was No,
it wasn't yesterday. Two days ago. Two days ago, President
Trump was doing a speech and he was talking to
but this was during his conversation at the Museum of
(58:52):
the Bible I don't know how or why he thought.
Probably because he was President Trump and he was speaking
and there was a microphone people listening to him. So
rather than talk about Christian values and the Bible in
this great museum, let's get into all the violent crime
going on in America. Actually I could see Italian but anyway,
(59:14):
he said that, you know, DC had been the worst
most violent city in America before his intervention. The media
quickly pointed out, we don't think that's true. Side note,
the the number of cities saying crime is down and
all this stuff. Yeah, they stop counting certain things as crimes.
(59:39):
That's the truth about all this. Ask the people who
are either victims of crimes or don't go out like
they used to because they're afraid of being victims of crimes,
and they'll tell you whether or not the statistics are
up or down. It has to do with the people
in that community and what they feel safe doing, and
whether they're engaging more in their community or whether they're
(01:00:01):
moving from there. When a lot of these people are like, oh, yeah,
crime is not up. We just stopped committed. We stopped
calling some things crime. Like San Francisco, you wouldn't even
get arrested for shoplifting. There for a while, it's not
it's no longer a crime. I don't think that's a crime.
And you steal the car a shirt head, Yeah, I
(01:00:22):
don't even think that's a crime anymore. There's been a
lot of changes in the law. And there's your eighties
movie reference for this segment of the radio program.
Speaker 2 (01:00:31):
Plane Strains and Automobiles.
Speaker 1 (01:00:32):
There's Fred. Won't he be surprised? Now, that's fletch. So
Trump's talking about DC was the worst most violent city
in America before we intervene, and now there's no crime.
Some version of that exaggeration is is true on some level.
But then he said, because he was talking about what
(01:00:54):
I just said, he said the crime, like the robberies,
the assaults, the thefts and all this stuff. And then
he said, things that take place in the home they
call crime, like a little fight with the wife. You know,
suddenly you know crime or not crime, or so that's
what he said. He said, things that take place in
(01:01:15):
the home they call crime, a little fight with the wife.
And he was arguing that his rivals are artificially inflating
crime stats to undermine his efforts. So he goes into
d C. People stop getting murdered, and then they say, well,
someone called because of a domestic disturbance. There was an argument.
(01:01:41):
A wife said, I'm calling the cops on you have
had enough and get you in trouble. Whether or not
he was physically or even verbally threatening, she calls the cops.
It ends up going down as a domestic dispuse. And
then truth be told, that kind of thing happens once
in a while. You know what else happens once in
a while, domestic violence. And so what Trump said was
(01:02:05):
a little fight with the wife. And immediately here comes
the media saying, we're talking to this domestic violence counselor
about if you're a victim of a crime, just because
the President of the United States doesn't think it's any
big deal you there are resources available for all. Right.
So now we've got President Trump saying, ass, no big deal.
(01:02:29):
You gotta give a wife a little cuffing once in
a while. Hey, sometimes the meat loaf is cold and
you gotta tell her, you gotta you gotta throw her
down the stairs a little bit. You know what. Sometimes
I come home, I'm like, hey, where are my cufflinks?
(01:02:49):
I threw my wife right through the dry wall of
the living room, and I was like, oh, here are
my cuffling. Sorry about that, honey, But she knew, she knew,
that's no big deal. Well, domestic violence, it's fun for everybody.
That's that's what they have Trump saying, Yes today, here's
a strategist. Trump's casual dismissal of domestic violence as a crime.
(01:03:20):
So now we had the White House Press secretary yesterday
at a time when Israel decided we needed to go
kill some members of Hamas that were hanging out in
the capital of Cutter. So Caroline Levitt says, Trump wasn't
talking about crimes. But that's exactly the point he's making,
(01:03:41):
is that there would be an argument and someone calls
the cops, whether they should or shouldn't. It goes down
as in the report, and the people want to say, oh,
look at this, domestic crime is way up under Trump
or whatever. And he's saying, there's some things in a
ourn't crime. And then they say, you know, his first
wife alleged domestic violence and assault in the divorce filing,
(01:04:01):
before later saying that that didn't happen, So why would
Trump say this? Apparently still stung by that divorce from
thirty five ish years ago. I'm guessing that's where that
comment came from. His wife, Ivanka. No, his daughter's Ivanka.
His wife Ivanna. That's right, right, Ivanna Trump. Ivana Trump
(01:04:26):
had accused him of some sort of domestic assault in
the divorce filing and then later walked it back and
they took it out of there. Of course, the Trump
detractors are like, oh, he paid her off, like he
pays off everybody. I don't know, but I'm guessing that
either whether or not Trump thinks that every once in
(01:04:47):
a while, you've got to hit your husband over the
head with the toaster or not, I guess that people
who are either committing or victims of domestic violence don't
give a rip what President Trump said, nor do the
cop who would be called in. At no point can
you hit your head hit your husband over the head
(01:05:07):
with a rolling pin and he calls the cops, and
the cops are like, hey, we see the not in
your head, but we're not gonna do anything about it.
You see what I did there? Because the President of
the United States says that domestic violence isn't a crime,
So you guys just watch something on TV and don't
call us again. Speaking of Israel, President Trump publicly rebuked
(01:05:34):
Israel yesterday after they struck a building or a compound
in the capital of Cutter or Qatar. How are we
pronouncing the name of this country these days? It had
been Qatar, and then we were asked to say Cutter
And now I'm hearing people say something in the middle,
(01:05:54):
hoping that they sound like they know what they're talking about.
I'm gonna go with Qatar.
Speaker 2 (01:06:00):
That's the way I said. Okay, not that I say
it much, but yeah, Qatar.
Speaker 1 (01:06:07):
Israel said, we know that Hamas is in that building,
and so they struck it and blew it up real good.
Qatar said, we didn't know that Israel was going to
strike us. We've been friendly with the United States. Hey, us,
Rain and your boy. Israel's just blowing up everything around here,
and they feel very emboldened by it. So Trump comes
(01:06:29):
out and says, I talked to Israel, I said stop that,
and they said they're not probably not going to do
it again. And we talked to the leader of Qatar
and said, hey, sorry about that. We're not very happy
about that. Sorry about that. So that's what happened publicly,
Here's what I think happened behind the scenes. Israel knew
that Hamas was holed up in Qatar. Qatar is like,
(01:06:52):
we don't want Hamas here. But at the same time,
what is Hamas. Hamas is the ruling the democratically elected
quote unquote ruling party of what would be the Palestinian
area of Gaza. Some people say Hamas is a terrorist
organization like America, and certainly because they have every reason
(01:07:15):
to feel this way Israel, but there are a lot
of people in that region who think Hamas is just ducky,
whether it's the Palestinians, whether it's people in Yemen or Syria, whatever,
they think Hasbellah and Hamas and all these guys are
just good people. And so Qatar is like, well, we
don't want Hamas having a compound, especially in our capital city.
(01:07:38):
Israel says, we know they're there. Qatar is like, we
know they are too, but if we get them out
of there now we get in trouble with all the
you know, with Iran, Syria, Iran and Hamas are now
linked to Russia and China. We don't even know how
our country is pronounced. We don't need this smoke, Israel says,
(01:07:59):
tell you what, we'll take them out. You can act like, hey,
how dare you? America can say, yeah, how dare you?
We'll all be in on it. Hamas will be dead.
We'll rebuild this building what was there, Old Richmond gordonman
will rebuild it. We'll even put the little animals back
there in that play area. Would that be nice? Would
you like that? And then your old uncle Marcella will
(01:08:21):
get you a whole bedroom set. There's your nineties movie
reference for this segment of the radio program Pulp Fiction.
We're moving on, and that's I'm guessing exactly what happened.
And if Qatar at any point had complained to President
Trump and said, hey, Israel, let's say it is like
they say it is. We had no idea Israel was
(01:08:45):
doing this and they can't just fire missiles into our capital,
I'm guessing President Trump said, you know, maybe we should
make a bigger deal. The fact that Hamas felt very
comfortable having operations right there and your capital in your country,
should we pursue this, Should we have any more conversation
about this? Or are you ready to shut your mouth
(01:09:07):
about it? Thank you for your attention to this matter.
I don't know if you guys saw what we did
to Iran uh, but we got more of that where
that came from. So feel free to complain about it,
or you can behave and let us know again if
Hamas ever decides that they can seek refuge in your country.
(01:09:28):
Either way, I don't think Trump is all that disappointed
that Israel did this to Hamas, and I think Katari's
complaints is all for show. That's what I think, geopolitical
expert that I am.
Speaker 3 (01:09:45):
Scott Voyes Mornings nine to eleven, Our News Radio eleven
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