Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Scott VORDIEZ, If this is the first time that you've
ever listened to this radio program, oh boy, everyone is
so excited for you. They are all thinking right now. Well,
I remember the first time I listened to Scott's show,
and I was held hostage at gunpoint and forced to
and you know here, it's been all these years later,
and I can't even remember what it was like to
(00:21):
have that innocence before I listened to this program. But
if this is the first time you've spent any time
with me here on this radio program, great to have you.
If you're wondering, can Scott find anything to complain about
after last night's football game? Of course I can, and
I will in a moment, But I want to start
(00:45):
with the thing that I'm excited about. We won a
close game, a game that we could have in previous
years found a way to have not won. But last
night we won. And I admit I wasn't filled with
a tremendous amount of confidence last night, but I was.
(01:09):
I was filled with more confidence going down in the
last few minutes of that game last night than I
have been in previous years. There's just there's something about
this team you're gonna hear from one of those players
in a moment who I absolutely just really really really like.
(01:31):
I liked the fourth and two play at the goal line,
rather than kick a field goal, go up six, Like,
let's put ourselves two scores ahead. Let's put ourselves in
position to win this game. If we don't make it,
we're still pinning them way down here on the goal line.
(01:52):
It's a good bet. And what a great play call.
I like our offensive coordinator. This is a guy who
was brought in last year to kind of assist things.
Everyone knew that Dana Holgerson would be named the offensive coordinator,
and for most of the game last night, he called
(02:12):
plays in a way that was different than some of
his younger counterparts who do the offensive coordinator thing. He
didn't feel the need to try and be fancy. He
didn't feel the need. He obviously didn't feel the need
to say, let's show everyone in college football how smart
I am. Look how creative I am. Run it off
(02:35):
the right tackle, run it up the middle, run it
off the right tackle, run it up the middle, screen
pass slant pattern. These are basic plays that were gouging
the Bearcat defense, and they were working, and it wasn't flashy,
and it wasn't impressive. There were a lot of probably
twenty something thirty something offensive coordinators looking at that going
(02:56):
this is the most boring play calling I've ever seen. Yes,
it was. I loved it. For some reason, we got
away from it at the end of that game. I
don't know about that jet sweep or going back on
that pass that not a lot of good things could
have happened there. But you know what, when you have
faith in your players, and the players have faith in
(03:17):
the coaches, and everyone just sitting there with a whole
bunch of faith in each other, and the fans are like,
let's go, let's come on, let's do this. Why not
you maybe maybe try a few things. And it didn't
always work out. Not every play is gonna work out
all the time. But I mentioned to Gary and Jim
a little bit ago. I got a snarky email, which
(03:40):
I appreciated from an Iowa State fan. He says, he,
I just turned on the TV. This was sometime in
the fourth quarter. Just turn on the TV. What do
you know they're showing reruns on TV tonight, Go Cyclones. Yeah,
he thought a lot of people probably thought, this is
Nebraska going to find a way to lose again. But
(04:02):
there was a plot twist. They brought it. I don't
know if it was New Writers or AI or they
or what, but there was a plot twist. We didn't lose,
which means we either tied or we won. And last
night we decided, we decided we could win a game
(04:23):
like that, and I was so excited I stayed up
an extra two minutes before going right to bed, which
Number one complain, it's really really difficult as we're trying
to get this next generation of Husker fans, and this
(04:43):
is this whole not even this whole segment's going to
be about football. So calm down. If you're like, is
he gonna talk about the calm down, It's okay, use
your words. It's really difficult if we're trying to get
this next generation, this legion of Husker fans excited about
this team, and two players in particular have been going
(05:06):
out there and trying to get these this next generation
of potential Husker fans excited about this team. Dylan Royola
and EMMITTT. Johnson have been going to prep football and
basketball games and community events around this state for the
past year, and they're they're out there fist bumping, high
(05:26):
five and selfion with the middle school and high school students,
little kids that are at the game, going that's Dylan Royola,
that's Emma Josin. And they run up there and get
their picture taking and get an autographed and these guys
are like, hey, guys, hey make sure you watch the
Huskers this year, and all like this new generation of
little kids are all excited, like, hey, you know I
(05:48):
met him, I know him. We got a picture taken together,
and that gets them excited about Husker football. So what
do we do on the first game? We have a
kickoff at eight pm? Eight, not even seven eight. That
game didn't get over till eleven thirty last night. The
(06:09):
little kids aren't supposed to be up that late. I'm
not usually up that late, which brings me to complain
number two. It's not just about the kids. You got
an entire huskernation. Hey, let's face it, we're old. I
don't like to stay up late anymore. I don't like
(06:31):
to stay up late. I like to get a good
night's sleep. And all right, so let's be honest. Do
any of us get a good night's sleep anymore. That's weird,
isn't it. Man, I'm so tired. I'm so tired. I'm
going to bed. And you go to bed and you
lie there for two hours looking at the clock, going
if I fall asleep right now, I can still get
(06:55):
six and a half hours of sleep. If I fall
asleep right now, I can still get six hours thirteen
minutes of sleep until my alarm goes on. And then
you do that all night, you fit filly, sleep here
and there, get up, use the bathroom, try and go
back to sleep. You're by ready to fall asleep, and
then suddenly your brain is like, hey, did we ever
(07:17):
take care of that thing back in twenty fourteen? That
was really beyond our control anyway? Did that ever get resolved?
Now your brain's got to wake up and think about
that which you had with There's nothing you can do
about it in the middle of the afternoon. Less you
can do about it at two forty five am. But
your brain's still got to think about that for a while.
(07:38):
And then finally, gratefully you fall into this really good
deep ram sleep where you're dreaming about the band ram
And that's five minutes before your alarm clock goes off
and you're like, I'm up, time to make the donuts.
And then you get after it and you do it
(07:59):
all again. But you know, we say that we need
a good night's sleep. I don't know that any of
us get a real I don't get a good night's sleep,
not all the time. Sometimes I do. I did once
this year. It was great good night's sleep. But still
(08:20):
it's harder to try and get a few fitful hours
of sleep when the game doesn't get over till eleven thirty.
Who decided that game had to start at eight eight?
Our kids can't watch, our parents can't watch. They probably
stayed up better than we did last night. I don't know.
(08:47):
I'm pausing for a second. Do I hear? Oh? I
think someone's just got a vacuum going or something. I
thought the alarmed. I thought the assirens are going off outside.
I heard that. I don't think they are. I don't
think there's an air raid coming, said the reassuring voice
on the AM radio. Sorry, did I mention I didn't
(09:09):
get a lot of sleep last night. I was watching
the Huskers go big Red, all right, gripes about the performance.
I don't know why we have to make every single
quarterback we play starting quarterback mobile quarterback backup quarterback who
came in because we injured the starter and this guy
hasn't played in three years. We have to make every
(09:32):
single quarterback look like Tony freaking door set. These guys
quarterbacks can run all over our defense. We have no
pass rush we put. We're not making a quarterback run
unless he wants to, or if he's suckering us in
(09:52):
so we can dart through a hole and go get
thirty yards. I just think our defensive scheme against these
quarterbacks needs some something. We gotta and I believe we
can do something because one of my defensive gripes going
into this game was the play of the dbs or
(10:12):
the scheme regarding the dbs. Last year, it seemed like
the dB defensive backs. I was one, and now I
still am one. I was a defensive back, now I'm
a d bag dB. So I looked at these guys
and it looked like last year they were out of position.
A lot of times guys were wide open. These guys
had their head turned the wrong way. It didn't look
(10:33):
like anyone knew what they were doing. There was so
much better play last night by the defensive backfield. But
we still have no pass rush, and we make these
quarterbacks look like i'man green. They run all over us.
So hopefully that can get schemed to a better position.
(10:59):
As as far as as I said, I liked the
play calling, like to see a little shoring up of
the defensive line, but we didn't just continuously shoot ourselves
in the foot last night. I saw that jumping off
sides on the false start on the one foot line
on our goal line on their goal line, I should
(11:21):
say first and goal from the like the two foot
line field goal because we jumped off sides, come on.
But that was balanced out by that fourth and two
goal line play where we scored a touchdown. So I
generally was very very happy last night because we won.
(11:42):
And then I went to bed, not to sleep. I
went to bed. I missed this after the game. This
was as I mentioned, there are two players been going
out to prep games across the state eight and high
fiving and selfie and fist bumping with all these these kids.
(12:04):
And one of them is our quarterback, Dylan Ryola. The
other one is this running back with a huge heart
and a ton of talent. I really really like Emmitt Johnson,
more so by the way he ended his news conference
with the media after the game last night. Here's emmittt
(12:25):
Here's Emmett.
Speaker 2 (12:27):
Can I say one more thing before we leave, just
you guys, pray for you know, some families back home
in Minneapolis, Minnesota. They currently had a school shooting, and
you know it was right by my high school back home.
So I just wanted you guys to pray for them.
And I had it written on my wrist during the game.
So please pray for Minneapolis. Have you guys got some time?
I appreciate you guys.
Speaker 1 (12:46):
That's that's how it's done. Why couldn't Why couldn't someone
else say that yesterday? Not a football player. I'll tell
you what I really miss yesterday afternoon's news conference from Minneapolis.
Next Scott Bodies News Radio eleven kfab Lucy Chapman. With
(13:10):
a few days off, she'll be back with us on Tuesday.
Glenn Beck will be on during this time or The
Glenn Beck Show will be on during this time on Monday.
I hope you're able to have a good labor day
weekend as well, with as little labor as possible possible.
Unless you're in labor and you're induced, in which case
I hope you have just the right amount of labor.
(13:34):
I don't know what I'm talking about either, don't bother
to ask me. So we just heard from running back
Emmitt Johnson, who after the game last night asked people,
can you guys pray for some families back home? He's
a Minneapolis guy, he went to school near Annunciation Church School,
had pray for MPLS Minneapolis etched into the tape on
(13:57):
his wrist, and he had those kids in that situation
heavy on his heart during last night's game, and he
just said, hey, can you guys pray for those families
if you have time? Just a real, honest, heartfelt plea.
That is not what we heard from the mayor of
(14:18):
Minneapolis at any point since this happened a few days ago. Yesterday,
there was a news conference where you had law enforcement
out there answering reporters questions and getting emotional talking about
how even though even if you're cop, think about being
a cop in Minneapolis for a moment, these guys aren't
(14:39):
exactly paraded through the streets as heroes, you know, in
that community. So you're a law enforcement officer in and
around Minneapolis. Again, someone calls nine to one one. It's
a horrible situation. People are running from it. These guys
run into it, and they find these horrors in a
(15:00):
atrocities ninety to one one. Operators hear it, law enforcement
sees at first responders deal with it from a medical standpoint,
And even though some of these guys been doing it
for years, you never get desensitized to a scene like this,
and you could see it on their faces. It was
it was really emotional. This cop, this chief in Minneapolis
(15:24):
got emotional talking about it yesterday. You know who wasn't
there during this news conference yesterday to thank law enforcement,
to thank first responders, to ask the community to just
say a prayer for these kids. Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frye,
(15:45):
I have covered during my fledgling time as a radio professional,
still fledgling, I've covered so many of these news conferences
in the wake of shooting. And what usually happens is
you get an official that comes up there and says,
(16:06):
we got some details here we wanted to pass along
to you guys, But first we have some people that
want to speak, and then you've got six or seven
elected officials who all go up there and say three
minutes of essentially the same thing. Hey, we want to
we appreciate the community rallying around this situation. Law enforcement's
doing a great job. How about these first responders, And
(16:29):
we just want to make sure everyone knows that this
is a safe community. And do we hate it when
things like this happening. It's one after the other goes
up and says about the same thing, and you always
hear from the mayor. The mayor whether their heart is
in the right place, and they say, look, I was
elected to represent this community and the people deserve to
(16:53):
hear from me. I want to say something. I don't
want to take up a lot of time, but I
want to be there to thank lawn enforcement, to ask
people to pray for these kids, to see how we
can move forward. I want to be there. I want
to be a part of it. Or maybe they're just
grand standing fools that say, hey, a lot of people
be watching this, and I'm bucking to be governor or
(17:15):
a congressman. Someday I better get up there and say
a few things. You know, the mayor is always there.
That mayor came out day one in the wake of
the shooting mocked people for offering thoughts and prayers, mocked them,
So don't tell me thoughts and prayers. These kids were
literally praying. Yeah. I don't know where he got his
(17:39):
Bible or what variation he looked at it online. My
understanding of how faith works is when you're praying to
God for whatever, it does not absolve you from anything
horrible that might happen in this life, carried out by
evil people. It has to do with your soul, it
has to do with what happens after that, and it's
(18:05):
also there to help the people who are left behind
dealing and picking up the pieces from a horrible tragedy
like this. Prayer might not help some people. They're not
at that point in their lives. They might see it
as something to mock rather than something to do. But
what these people don't understand is that prayer does help
(18:27):
so many people of faith. There might be some people
who weren't really all that practicing who have enveloped themselves
in prayer and faith in the last few days in
that community and elsewhere, who have really found some level
of peace and comfort even in the wake of tragedy.
It's hard to explain to people who aren't a part
(18:48):
of it. But to mock it like this mayor did
was hideous, ugly and uncalled for. Of course he righted
guns and bad mouthed guns. There're too many guns and
all that, all right, think about all your family, your friends,
your co workers, your neighbors. Have a block party this
(19:10):
weekend between the rain drops. Have a block party and
they're on the spread, between the potato salad and the
hot dogs. Just put a whole bunch of guns, loaded guns,
safety off clips in whatever, a variety of guns, small guns,
big guns, military style assault rifles. Hell, put a bazooka
(19:33):
out there with instructions on how to use it. How
many people are gonna say, what a tremendous opportunity. I
was just thinking about killing all of you. Do you
already know who that person is on your block? Then
what are we doing about it? Waiting for the person
to do something horrible and then waiting for the media
(19:56):
to show up and you say, well, yeah, he was
a quiet neighbor. We always kind of thought that maybe
he might do something, or are we trying to do
something anything? In any instance? I know with my I
have good neighbors I don't think all of them love me.
I don't think any of them would take a loaded
gun there on the table next to the baked beans
(20:16):
and start shooting me or anybody, because the gun doesn't
sit up there and do it itself. The people do.
If you're surrounding yourself with a bunch of people who
would take that gun and just start doing horrible things,
including the innocent kids, how is that the gun's fault.
(20:37):
This guy blamed the guns. He mocked prayer. He didn't
even show up to that news conference. The mayor of Minneapolis,
Jacob Fry, didn't even show up to that news conference
yesterday in his community. Was he busy? You have something
else going on? Hey, labor day weekends coming up. Might
(20:58):
as well take a five day weekend like our sales department.
What was he doing? I gotta get my football picks
in kickoff tonight? What was he doing? What was more
important than being there to thank law enforcement and first responders?
(21:21):
And don't tell me, Oh, he didn't want to insert
himself in the situation. Oh, yes he did, so why
wasn't he there? Well, let's take him at his own
words from the previous day. I'll tell you what those were.
After a Fox News update next Scott Voice, the mayor
of Minneapolis, Jacob Frye, had this to say about the situation.
Speaker 3 (21:41):
I have heard about a whole lot of hate that's
being directed at our trans community. Anybody who was using
this as a using this as an opportunity to villainize
our trans community or any other community out there, has
lost their sense of common humanity.
Speaker 1 (22:03):
What it meant wait or any other community out there,
What other community out there would one look at and go, hey,
this is a tremendous opportunity for me to mock the
Inuit people. Are there a lot of people who are like, oh, hey,
are we just pushing hate? I'll tell you who I
hate redheads. So he's decided to stand up here for
(22:30):
the trans community, which is laudable to a point. We'll
hear the rest of his thoughts here.
Speaker 3 (22:36):
We should not be operating out of a place of
hate for anyone. We should be operating from a place
of love for our kids. Kids died today. This needs
to be about them. This needs to be wrapping our
arms around these families with every bit of love that
(22:57):
we can possibly show.
Speaker 1 (22:58):
The aimen to that that's what he said on the
day of yesterday, is law enforcement we're giving some more
details about the murderer who was trans. The mayor, Jacob
Fry wasn't there, and I have to wonder was he
not there because he didn't want to be surrounded by
(23:19):
law enforcement. In fact, at that little impromptu news conference
on the day of the shooting, he wasn't there with
a lot of police officers. Being around cops is not
a real popular thing in Minneapolis, so he wasn't there
(23:42):
really around law enforcement at that point. There's another thing
that I think that there are certainly some activists, individuals
and groups that don't want to hear They don't want
to hear anything bad said about the shooter because the
shooter was trans. There are some activists out there who
feel like the shooter is the real victim here, and
(24:05):
they can envision a scenario, however real it might be
on some level, and I don't know, but they've already
decided that this guy was picked on until he was
wanted to be who he really was. And there were people,
maybe his father, because it was his mom who signed
(24:25):
that documentation allowing him for the identity change, So maybe
his father, maybe religious people, maybe the kids at school,
maybe everyone was denying him the right to be who
he wants to be. And he sees these evil maga Republicans,
led by their hitler like leader Donald Trump, out there
trying to stamp out trans people, even though the Democratic
(24:48):
Party in this country has continuously had open borders letting
into the country an Islamic fundamentalist mindset that would have
every single gay or transgend in this country boiled in oil,
and not in a fun way. Democratic Party wants to
have Islamic fundamentalists just unchecked running rampant in this country.
(25:13):
Some of them are elected members of Congress and they're
up there demonizing the Jews and standing up for Islamic
fundamentalists who would rather have all these gay people and
transgender people killed. But somehow it's been Trump and the
rest of these guys that have the nerve to say,
maybe a thirteen year old should be allowed to go
through adolescence before making a big decision like gender reassignment surgery. Well,
(25:36):
that's of course the most hateful thing. Ever, how are
people like this murderer in Minneapolis supposed to deal with
that much hate and not take it out on the
real perpetrators, innocent defenseless children in a church. People said, well,
of course this guy had guns, he had no criminal record.
(25:59):
Of course he didn't have a criminal record. This guy
was a coward. This guy had some of the most
deranged and hateful thoughts. Did he ever go tell anyone
about it? I don't know. I bet he never walked
into a bar, or into a campus environment, or hung
out with a bunch of people he didn't know, you know,
sitting there at the old Country Buffet and said, you
(26:20):
know what, I'll tell you I don't like and then
just started laying out a laundry list of all these
religious or political people he didn't like. He never would
have done that because someone might have said, hey, mister,
I don't know if I like the cut of your jib,
what's in your craw punk? I don't think you should
be saying that stuff here. You're upsetting my wife. Oh yeah,
(26:41):
what are you gonna do about it? And then that
guy gets punched right in his stupid face. He didn't
want to get punched in his stupid face. I bet
in his whole life he never got punched in the face.
I bet in his whole life he never stood up
for himself. He never debated anyone. He never a spouse
to believe that he felt might upset other people because
(27:04):
he didn't want to be even so much as called
out for it. This guy was a coward. I bet
this guy saw other people getting picked on and marginalized
and walk the other direction. This guy didn't have a
criminal record because not once did he ever say hey,
I got a horrible idea, maybe we should do this,
and then actually have the guts to do it even
(27:24):
if it was the wrong thing to do. Until he
saw his opportunity to go out there and shoot one
hundred and seventy rounds against a church full of innocent,
defenseless kids. They weren't going to shoot back, they weren't
going to do anything. This guy is the biggest coward
that this country has seen since the last round of cowards.
(27:46):
This guy will go down in history not as someone
who should be supported, but someone who should be called
out for the coward they are. And why didn't the
mayor of Minneapolis, Jacob be a part of that news
conference when they were talking about this murderer. Because they're
(28:06):
activists that say, hey, don't say anything bad about this guy.
He's the victim all these religious Republican trump zelots. You know,
they're stoking hate in people who are otherwise really sweet people. Look,
I got news for you. There are a lot of
(28:27):
trans people in this country. There are a lot of
trans people in the Omaha area community. How many of
them would go and do something like this, thankfully thus
far zero percent. How many of them in the wake
of all this thought, hey, this is a great idea,
never thought of that, Maybe I should do that. I
(28:50):
believe that number to be zero percent. I certainly have
my thoughts on people who make that decision to be
a different gender. When it comes to young people, Jim
Rose has pointed out here on news radio eleven ten
KFAB he's called it a social contagion. I don't know
(29:10):
necessarily about that specific designation, but there's something to the
fact that fifteen years ago there was almost no one
who outwardly did this, and now it's a large number
of students now. I said this on the radio the
other day. Back when we were in school, we might
decide to go to school dressed in a certain way,
(29:32):
or change our hair, maybe go by a nickname. The
idea behind it is not new the rules of what
you can do and how you'll be seen if you
do it. They've certainly changed. That's not all bad. I
don't care if some kid or some adult decides to
be transgender. I really don't. When I talk to someone
who's transgender, I just see, Oh, here's a new line
(29:54):
of a way to talk to this person who clearly
has an interesting story. Let's find out If the person
is a fun, positive person who is great to talk to.
I love talking to that person. If that person's crazy,
I don't want to deal with it other than let's
see how this could amuse me for the next few minutes. Really,
(30:16):
that's what you people are just pawns for my enjoyment.
Either I'm gonna talk to you, we're gonna have a
good time, we'll be friends and we'll have a laugh together.
Or you're crazy. I'm gonna see if I can be
entertained by your level of crazy for a few minutes
until I decide to move on to somebody else. Either way,
you are only there for my enjoyment, and I presume
(30:39):
you feel that same way about other people. But you're
too polite and decent to actually say something like that
out loud. This is not to say I don't enjoy people.
I generally enjoy getting to know people if they're good
positive people. Do I know good positive people who transgender?
I do have. I met some transgender people who are
knucking futs. I have. And this guy up a manyplis
(31:01):
was if I'm the gun seller up there, and that
maniac walks through the door with the big mac eyeballs
and that crazy stupid look in his face, someone who
you're looking at, going you got to be kidding me,
and says I want to buy three guns. I've never
bought a gun before. I want three of them. Give
(31:22):
me that one, give me that one, and give me
one of those. You know what I know, constitutional rights
and all that. You know what I do is if
I'm that gun seller, I say, you know what I'd
love to my computer's down. Hey, you know how that is.
Let's let's take a look here. First of all, you've
falsified a document by putting your your gender on here
(31:46):
is female. That's a falsified document for a gun permit.
That's strike number one. But let's not get into that
here today. I've just decided I don't like your I
don't like how you look, and that's a horrible thing
for anyone to do. I would be the first person
if you walked in there wearing a Trump hat and
some gun seller said, oh no, you're gonna storm the capitol.
(32:08):
I know about you people, you know, and said I
decided not to sell this guy a Gun'd the horrible.
But you know what, if you're that person and you
get a bad feeling about the person in there buying
a gun and you're looking at this person, you'd do it.
You'd be like, I'd love to. I wish I could
(32:28):
tell you. I'd give you all these guns if I
could in my computers down. You know what, Try coming
back on Wednesday. Come back on Wednesday. I got a
computer tech coming out on Tuesday. Can't get anyone before
the Labor Day holiday, you know how it is. It's tough.
So we'll see you next week. Please please get out
of my store. You do it. I'd do it. I
(32:51):
know you're not supposed to, and all the rest of it.
And nor would I say that I would deny someone
who is transgender the right to buy a gun. Of course,
there's that piggy thing about the gun permit and what
you put down its gender. You know what science. I
think that this mayor didn't want to be a part
(33:12):
of that news conference because they are activists out there
that said, don't you dare say anything about this shooter.
He's the victim because to say, hey, this guy was horrible.
Now people are gonna think that every single transgender person's
a murderer. Who would think, Look, not every transgender person
is crazy murderer. Not every transgender person is not crazy murderer.
(33:37):
Let's get back to judging people for the individuals they are, good, bad,
or a holes. I think that's really the message we
need to have before this Labor Day weekend. Right. This
is a little bit of the new song by Neil Young.
(34:02):
What okay Neil Young is? It's called big Crime. He
says there's big crime in d C at the White House.
Speaker 2 (34:16):
Oh.
Speaker 1 (34:16):
I thought maybe he was supporting what the president was
doing to clean up crime in Washington, d C. But
Neil Young has decided that there's big crime in d
C at the White House is what he's singing there.
He doesn't name President Trump, but the lyrics there are
and I'll interpret. He says, don't need no fascist rules,
(34:41):
don't want no fascist schools. Don't want soldiers walking on
the streets. Got to get the fascists out, Gotta get
the gotta clean the White House out. No more money
to the fascists, the billionaire fascists. Someone a new word.
Let's see if it applies here. Let's talk about fascism
(35:06):
for a moment. Neil. If you're listening, good morning. I
think that Keep on Rocking in the Free World's a
great song. And I loved it every time President Trump
played it at one of his rallies, didn't you any who.
Fascism is an authoritarian regime emanating from a centralized government
(35:29):
telling the people here's what you can and can't do.
Some examples during COVID lockdowns. You can't go to work,
your kids can't go to school, you can't go to work,
you can't travel unless you get the experimental vaccine we're
telling you to get. And if we are going to
let you go out, you better have a mask on
until you sit down to eat, because COVID can't get
(35:52):
you if you sit down to eat, or if you're
eating some pretzels on an airplane, you're allowed to take
your mask off when you're eating pretzels. COVID can't get
you when you're eating pretzels. Make sure walk down the
aisle of the grocery store this way. COVID, we understand,
goes the other way. And if you walk, if everyone
(36:13):
walton walks down the aisle this way. Even if you
walked halfway down the aisle and thought, wait a second,
I just skipped the tortillas, and you start to walk back,
Oh no, no, no, no, come on, You're gonna kill everybody
if you do that. You gotta walk all the way
around the aisle, go down the other way where the
arrows are pointing that way, and then you come back around.
You can't just turn around. If you're going down a
(36:33):
one way street and downtown, like on Levenworth, you can't
just decide to turn around on that one way street
and go back. Everyone will die. It's the same thing
with COVID. COVID is coming at you like an oncoming car.
But if you keep going with the flow. We've decided
here in the grocery store aisles with your mask on,
COVID won't get you. So that would be an example
(36:56):
of an authoritarian regime. Leaders from the Democratic Party and
force some of the strictest pandemic related restrictions in the
country in cities like New York and Los Angeles, which
are exclusively run by authoritarian fascist Democrats. When public health
(37:17):
was cited as the rationale, the willingness to impose heavy
handed controls with little room for dissent would be a
fascist example. Fascism also might be using a pandemic to
change how we vote. Fascism might be, Oh, I see
(37:39):
that the Republicans here in Texas are doing some redistricting.
We don't like how they're tampering with our representative republics,
say the people who are in favor of ballot harvesting
and mail in ballots and installing Kamala Harris without a
single primary vote as the head of the Democratic ticket.
(38:01):
Here's another example, going to social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter,
and YouTube Instagram saying don't you dare give President Donald
Trump a platform to say anything? And in fact, if
there's anyone else's saying anything we don't like, we need
to either remove them from the platform or label what
(38:23):
they say is misinformation. Even crazy stuff like Hunter Biden's
laptop has some interesting things on it. Big tech suppress
that leading up to the twenty twenty election, which perhaps
changed the scope of a national election social media. If
(38:46):
you said that, well, they say that if you get
the COVID vaccine, you can't get COVID and give it
to other people. I don't think that's true. I got
the COVID vaccine. I still got COVID, which means like
still give it to other people. No, no, you've if
you get the vaccine, you've you can't get COVID and
you can't give it to other people. All right? Can
(39:07):
I choose not to get the vaccine so people who
want to get the vaccine can then not get it. No, No,
you don't understand how COVID works. COVID works out of spite.
If you decide to get the vaccine but someone around
you also doesn't get the vaccine, COVID can still get
you because COVID is very spiteful, and they they would
(39:31):
label that as misinformation on social media. At the behest
of government, that would be an example of fascism. Fascism
might be favoring green energy taxpayer dollars towards solar energy
or wind energy energy other than oil and gas and coal.
(39:55):
UH Authority authoritarianism. Fascism might also in pushing for government
run healthcare and trying to undermine someone else's not just
First Amendment rights we discussed, but Second Amendment rights as well.
See these would be examples of fascism. So when Neil
(40:17):
Young is hot, new song, big Crime says, and listen
to these lyrics. This is great. Like I said, someone
learned a new word. Don't need no fascist rules, don't
want no fascist schools, don't want soldiers walking on the streets.
Got big crime in the white House. There's big crime
in the White House. Gotta get the fascists out, Gotta
(40:40):
clean the White House out. No more money to the fascists,
the billionaire fascists.
Speaker 2 (40:47):
Scott Voyes, mornings nine to eleven, Our News Radio eleven
ten KFAB