Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Scott Vorgiz.
Speaker 2 (00:01):
Every single morning, I wake up there and uh, you know,
rub my eyes, take my phone off of, uh the charger.
And then when you take your phone off the charger,
the screen illuminates and it my phone just looks at
me mockingly and says one hundred percent charged. And I'm like,
(00:22):
I'm at about forty two percent. We were both, you know,
I plug my phone in, I go to bed. We
were both we both had enough the same amount of downtime.
But my phone's at one hundred percent. I'm at forty
two percent and dropping.
Speaker 3 (00:38):
You know how you fix that? Please Louise plugging your
phone in?
Speaker 2 (00:41):
Stop plugging my phone. Yeah, yeah, I was thinking, you're right, Lucy.
My perspective was all wrong. I was thinking, how can
I be closer to one hundred percent? But instead I
need to just drag everything else down to my level.
You are brilliant, Ike.
Speaker 3 (00:58):
Sometimes am can come up with some things once in
a while.
Speaker 2 (01:02):
That's Lucy Chapman. She's the best in the business. We
don't know what business.
Speaker 3 (01:07):
That's true.
Speaker 2 (01:08):
Yeah, A lot of questions here recently about you know,
the White House is going after the State of main
questions about various schools that have allowed this kind of thing,
and it all boils down to those who are born
one gender, usually male, and now identify as another gender,
(01:30):
usually female or something plural because it's twenty twenty five,
and then they decide to go compete on sports teams
and they're in fencing and swimming and hilariously, the pole vault.
But there's any number of things here that the White
(01:52):
House is like, look you, we can't start ignoring the
federal law about Title nine. Title nine says women have
their own sports, and then the other side says, but
these are women, and therein lies this battle. We talked
the other day about Bellevue Public Schools saying, look, whatever
(02:15):
gender you are, whatever gender you were born, that's the
bathroom you use, the locker room, the sports team, and
all the right. But at the same time, we don't
want anyone bullied, and there's gonna be no tolerance for harassment.
But just like we don't want something to happen against
(02:36):
someone here, we also don't want someone who uses the
wrong pronoun to be thrown out of school and potentially
jailed or sent to El Salvador. And of course the
question is, well, where are these students because you can
still dress as you want. And the idea is is, well,
if this person, if this guy dresses like a girl
and goes into the locker room after football practice, he's
(02:59):
going to be made fun of him beat up. Okay,
he's probably not on the football team. I mean, let's
just address some of these things. Is I don't Is
this happening a lot. Is there some some linebacker like
I like to go out and put the hurt on
quarterbacks and just absolutely fill that gap and destroy running
(03:23):
backs as they come through. But also afterwards, I like
to put on something frilly, have a little me time
in the locker room. Is this happening a lot? And
they're like, all right, so what about these students who
aren't on sports teams and they need to use the
restroom during the day. They could walk into the restroom
and get beat up. Hey, I don't know when the
(03:44):
last time you were in a middle school or high
school bathroom was anyone could walk into that bathroom and
get beat up. Oh hey, guys, sorry, I didn't mean
to come in here while you were vaping marijuana during
fourth period. I just wanted to use the restroom in
fourth grade right right, Oh, you're going to use the
restroom face down swirlies for everybody. I don't know if
(04:06):
they still just anyone could get beat up, you know. Yeah,
but what about this kid who dresses something then a
different gender? Well, they get the best deal of all
The schools are like, look, we understand this might be
a confusing time for everyone involved. Tell you what, you
need to use the restroom during the day, Why don't
(04:27):
you come into the office and use the private restroom
here in the office. How many of us in high school,
middle school would have been like, I'm feeling a little
trans about the time I might need to use the
restroom right after lunch. The private bathroom? How great would
that be? That'd be like Ferris Bueller Bold you just
(04:48):
walk through the principal's office with a newspaper tucked under
your arm. Hey you doing, mister Walters, and then just
walk in there and shut the door.
Speaker 3 (04:57):
So guys have a problem with not private bat.
Speaker 2 (05:00):
Brooms, No, we want private bathroom.
Speaker 3 (05:03):
I don't know I'm saying. So you have a problem
with rephrase, You have a problem with public bathrooms.
Speaker 2 (05:09):
Then, as someone who has spent my entire life going
in and out of men's public restrooms.
Speaker 3 (05:15):
Yes, it's because there's no couch.
Speaker 2 (05:19):
It's no, it's just it's you know, I didn't realize
how bad it was until I was out with my
young daughter and I couldn't send her into the bathroom
by herself. She was two or three, So like, all right, honey,
and I couldn't go into the women's room, but she
can come into the men's room. I'm like, all right,
come in here. And then I'm like, all right, we're
gonna not touch anything. Ever. So yeah, it's it's awful.
(05:44):
But let's talk here about the let's talk about the
sports teams. Let's talk about the issue of being transgender.
And again, I don't care what any adult does, how
they dress, what they want their name to be. Frankly,
I don't care. And I've always said this for those
who want to go like they were, they're at their
shopping at the department store and they need to run
(06:06):
in and use the bathroom. For the overwhelming majority of people,
when they go into a public restroom, they want to
get in and get out as quickly as possible, with
as little fuss as possible. It's that's how it is
for everybody, It doesn't matter what you identify as, and
all the rest this stuff. But there is this question
here about who's going to do what on a sports team. Okay.
(06:29):
On the issue of transgender first of all, there are
those who say a male can absolutely change his gender
and be female. These same people, I'll phrase it, I
said two questions with follow up questions to each on
(06:50):
the issue of transgenderism alone. Can a person change their
ethnicity how they identify. Can I, as a very pasty
white person, identify as black? All right, now that I've
made everyone uncomfortable, The answer has generally been, according to
(07:16):
society here lately, no, anytime a white girl it starts
saying no, I'm black or and then their society is like,
all right, you you seem to be a very very
white girl, and now you're masquerading as something other than that.
You can no longer be the chapter president of the NAACP,
(07:39):
but we will allow you to marry Alec Baldwin. So
society has had different thoughts on that. But so far
as society has basically said no, you cannot change your ethnicity,
why not. It's changing your ethnicity different than changing your gender.
So while you're stewing about that one. Let me lay
(08:00):
another one on you regarding these men playing on sports teams,
the biological males who identify as females, transgender females, however
you want to identify this. No, No, they're women. Okay?
For this situation. Can a man compete on a girls
(08:23):
athletic team? I don't mean someone like biological, this transgender that.
I'm talking about someone who is incredibly strapping, virile, full
of testosterone, someone who is born male and identifies as
alpha male. You know, someone like me or Rue Paul.
Can someone like that go and compete on the girls team?
(08:49):
Can some guy? And we're talking about this major Jocko
is the this is the quarterback of the football team.
He's the homecoming king. People. I mean, guys want to
be him. Girls want to be with him. And he says,
you know what, I need a winter sport. I'm gonna
(09:10):
go out here and I'm going to compete on the
girls volleyball team. Can open someone who is openly male
compete on these teams? Is the answer? No? Do you
see how hypocritical that is? Why not? Because he's a guy.
(09:30):
So look, we we've got a and Here's here's the
other thing. People don't want to ask these questions. Most
people are like, oh, I see that someone over here
is having a discussion about what constitutes gender anymore. I'm
(09:52):
going to Homer Simpson my way back into the hedges,
and I'm just going to back away from that. I'm
just asking questions. So next time someone says, like, well,
I think it's totally fine, Can a male compete on
a girls team?
Speaker 4 (10:08):
No?
Speaker 2 (10:08):
Why because he's a guy? Can a can a white
person or anyone? Can they change their ethnicity? Know why
they can change their gender? These, I think are the questions.
I think we know the answers, but I don't. But
I don't want anyone. I like what Bellevue did. We
talked about it the other day. Bellevue said, but we
don't want anyone to be harassed. We don't want anyone
(10:31):
to be threatened to beat up, bullying or anything like that. Great,
but there's got to be room for conversation and hopefully
a little bit of common sense as well. Now, Abrego
Garcia rounded up here when we rounded up a bunch
of gang members and we sent them down to this
(10:51):
prison in El Salvador, and then later, it was like, hey,
you didn't get kill mar did you. Well, he's he's
not a gang member. He uh, he shouldn't have been deported.
Since then, the Attorney General Pam Bondi in the Trump
administration said, this guy is not coming back to our country. Yesterday,
(11:12):
the spokesperson at the White House, Caroline Levitt, said, if
he ever ends up back in the United States, he
would immediately be deported again. He will never again live
in the United States of America. All right, Who is
this guy? Mister Abrego Garcia was granted temporary protected status
(11:32):
to remain in the United States in twenty and nineteen.
The Trump administration says he's a member of the MS
thirteen gang. His lawyer says, no, he's not. I don't
know who has what proof or what that looks like,
but it looks like based on what the administration says. Now,
(11:57):
we have details back in twenty nineteen during an arrest
that he is in this gang. Two years later, in
twenty twenty one, his wife, the one who is being
puppeted right now by bleeding heart liberals who care more
about this guy than Rachel Morin's family. Will get to
that in a second. They've got the wife out there saying, oh,
(12:20):
please bring my husband home and be there for my
kids and all this this guy all right, that's interesting
because a few years ago, in twenty twenty one, she
sought a temporary protective order against him. Now she's responding
to that, she tells CNN, after surviving domestic violence in
(12:43):
a previous relationship, I acted out of caution after a
disagreement with Kilmar by seeking a civil protective order in
case things escalated. Things didn't escalate, I decided not to
follow through with the civil court process. That's possible. It
(13:04):
seems a little knee jerk and potentially unlikely. After surviving
domestic violence in a previous relationship, I acted out of
caution after a disagreement with Kilmar. What does that look like?
Are you getting beat up by someone you finally, thankfully
leave that individual, get into a relationship with this guy.
(13:25):
This guy is like, who WHOA, WHOA? What are we doing?
This is not how we put things in the dishwasher.
The cups go over here, silverware goes in like this,
otherwise they won't get clean. And she's like, hang on
a second, and then she she's like, I see where
this is going goes to get a protection order against him.
(13:48):
And then we've got this senator who a Chris van Holland.
He cares so much about this family and Abrago Garcia
and so forth. This is interesting for a woman named
Patty Morin. Patty was welcome to the White House this week,
where she went into graphic detail to describe the twenty
(14:10):
twenty three rape and murder of her daughter, Rachel Morn,
thirty seven year old in Maryland who was killed by
a twenty four year old illegal immigrant from El Salvador
who was convicted earlier this week of the crime. The mom,
Patty Morin, expressed outrage that Senator Chris van Holland barely
acknowledged the death of her daughter, who is a mother
(14:33):
of five children. She says, I don't care about politics.
I just want to I just want to talk here
to speak about Rachel and the kind of criminals that
President Trump wants to remove from our country. These are
the kind of criminals we need to remove from our country. Now.
(14:55):
We don't have anything concrete as to this guy kill
mar Abravo Garcia is one who is a murderer. But
she says, after my daughter was murdered. She had a
quick face to face with Senator Van Holland she said
there was no remorse on his face at all. He
didn't seem like he cared about us. Meanwhile, he gets
in a plane to go to El Salvador to go
(15:19):
and see this guy who's in an L. Salvador prison.
And that got funny when the leader from L Salvador
said we're not going to let you see him. He's like, hey,
don't you know who I am. I'm a senator from Maryland.
They didn't seem to care, so they didn't let him
(15:40):
see him. He's like, let me talk to him on
the phone. Ah no, But if you need us to
help you load your stuff back onto the plane and
get the hell out of our country, that we would
help with that. And so he was sent back home.
He's like, I'm going to the US Embassy. Okay, it's
go down there and take a left see by Chris.
Turns out being a senator, a US senator from Maryland
(16:03):
carries very little weight in El Salvador or right now America.
But thanks a lot for stopping by, Chris. And he's
not the only one. Now. Corey Booker is like, I'm
gonna go down there. What are you gonna do? Filibuster
these all right? The guy's been talking for eighteen hours.
Let him spend five minutes with it. I can't take
(16:24):
this anymore. Got a couple of members of Congress said
they're gonna go down there. How about this, go talk
with the Trump administration. Go all right, before we go
down there and take up the cause of an MS
thirteen gang member, can you share with us what details
you have so we don't end up with egg on
(16:45):
our face because egg is expensive. Now we've got a
judge saying that President Trump could face contempt charges over
the deportation flights of individuals who either need to be
deported or there's some question as to whether they should
be deported or brought back. All this stuff, You've got
(17:06):
an American judge saying the President of the United States
could face contempt of court charges because he continues to
deport criminal illegal immigrants in America. You have an American
judge with American taxpayer dollars looking at the citizens of
(17:29):
America who have issues related to everything from education to healthcare,
to public safety to jobs threatened by criminal illegal immigrants
in our communities, and a judge who lives amongst these
people and is paid with their taxpayer dollars, saying that
(17:50):
the duly elected president of the United States, in following
American immigration law by deporting criminal illegal immigrants, could face
cont tempt of court charges for doing so. I don't
know that I can do this anymore. I don't know.
I feel like everyone else is speaking gibberish and I'm
(18:15):
over here trying to speak English and at lron different planets.
You know what, I think that you hear what I'm saying.
I think you comprehend what I'm saying on so many
of these things. I don't sit here and wave banners.
I don't lead rallies. We don't say like we're gonna
boycott this. We're not some one of these online mobs
(18:36):
coming after local businesses because we don't like your politics.
We're gonna shut you down, mean while the employees are like,
I've voted for Kamala. I don't know what, so I
don't do any of this. Here's what I do do. First,
I laugh at the phrase do doo. Secondly, there's a
(19:00):
logan that we kind of have here on the radio station.
It's behind the scenes. It's popped up on the air
a couple of times, but it's not anything that we
and I think it's maybe on our social media, but
the phrase is news radio eleven ten kfab is your trusted,
well informed friend with whom you laugh, cry and get
through the day together. That's what we're doing here. And
(19:25):
when we have a situation where the president could be
held in contempt of short contempt at court for following
the law on deportation, I think that this is just
a place where we convene and it seems like every
day it's like all right, now what and we just
talk about it. Sometimes we laugh at it, sometimes we
(19:48):
get emotional about it. That's what we do here. Now
let me tell you what I think is going to
happen next. I think that President Trump is going to
say because he obviously has a very very good relationship
with the leaders of L Salvador. You remember on this
big deportation flight where the judge is like, you can't
(20:11):
do that, and they said it's already gone. It's over
international waters, your jurisdiction has ended, and they're like, tell
El Salvador to turn that plane around. L Salvador is
posting on their social media going uh, too late, already here,
nothing you can do about it. Obviously, we've got we
got some trumpet people and power in El Salvador. I
(20:33):
don't know how it all works. I don't know how
long all this lasts. I don't get it. But let
me tell you what I think is going to happen. Next,
the judge is going to say, you're going to face,
mister President, You're gonna face contempt of court charge and
do what you can't jail the president of the United
States for following the law of the United States. But
(20:57):
let's say that it starts looking like that, because who knows.
I think President Trump comes out and says, all right,
I demand L Salvador return every single deported gang member, murderer, criminal,
illegal immigrant back to America so they can face a
(21:20):
fair hearing in American courts as if they were citizens
of this nation. I demand L Salvador put each of
them back on planes first class and fly them back
to America. And then Al Salvador says no, Well, now
Trump is off the hook in terms of this court thing,
(21:44):
because the judge can't do anything to the leader of
El Salvador and so I wonder if all of this
is getting is just getting us one step closer to
that point. Trump's like, oh, I told El Salvador to
send him back. They say, no, what do you want
me to do? It's getting more crazy by the moment.
(22:08):
And then we have these topics. We've got the Health
and Human Services Secretary RFK Jr. Saying all right, let's
tackle autism. Let's get rid of that. And we've got
a sign in downtown Omaha that says, these sinkhole Rats
are more loyal to us than Mayor Stothard. Lucy, you
(22:34):
didn't tell mehole the sinkhole Rats were coming to town.
Speaker 3 (22:38):
I did not know, but I thought that they were
going to be at an underground venue. Yeah, but we
don't know yet.
Speaker 2 (22:47):
Oh yeah, I know. Stir Cove has been making their
announcements about the the artists performing over there throughout the summer.
Saw Darius Rocker is coming back. I got to be
got to be at that one. Love me some d Rock.
But I didn't know the sink hole Rats were coming
to town. I love the sink hole Rats.
Speaker 3 (23:06):
Maybe that's where they'll be. Then are they on the schedule?
You don't know yet.
Speaker 2 (23:10):
Oh, I think right now they seem to be getting
into the mayor's political race in downtown Omaha. Okay, about
sixteenth and Farnham. Okay, it's where the Regis building, you
know what. The Regis Building is right there next to
the Kathy Lee building and then the what's her face
building took over for Kathy Lee? Do I actually like more?
And I can't remember her name? Ryan Seacrest, Yeah, her
(23:32):
name is Ryan Seacrest, Thank you?
Speaker 3 (23:34):
No he took us no, we all blond girl?
Speaker 2 (23:39):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (23:39):
Oh love her something.
Speaker 2 (23:42):
Yeah, it's a name similar to Kathy. I can't think
of her name anyway, I'll wait for Kelly. Kelly name Kelly.
Speaker 3 (23:54):
Kelly Rippa, Kelly Rippa and Ryan ze.
Speaker 2 (23:57):
Love Kelly Ripper. No, but she was on with Regis
for a little bit. So the Regius buildings down there
between Kathy Lee and.
Speaker 3 (24:03):
Kelly, and it's just where he wants to write.
Speaker 2 (24:06):
And you know what the Regius building's doing what I'm
going out of my mind? Basically, Dana Carvey's impersonation of
Regis filled In was just I'm going out of my mind.
The Regius building, they had a sinkhole pop open underneath
that building. This past January, mud water everywhere, and apparently
(24:31):
sink hole rats a special species, a subspecies of rat,
the sink hole rat, and the sink hole rats are
loyal to the residents of the Regius building who are
what still living there.
Speaker 3 (24:49):
Well, if it's in the front in the back, I'm
probably okay.
Speaker 2 (24:54):
Look, I'm gonna say, yeah, I'm gonna say two things
that are diametrically opposed to one another, yet I still
believe both things can be true. Number number one, the
engineers have looked at it and they said that that
building is structurally sound. Obviously there was an issue in
this particular part of the building that led to the
(25:15):
sinkhole opening up, and we have to examine what happened
there so that we can go about making the repair.
Speaker 3 (25:22):
Okay, well that's some of what the residents are saying.
Speaker 2 (25:27):
But as soon as these sinkhole rats are are marched
out of there and the sinkholes filled in, maybe we'll
get back to Kingfong. In the meantime, Panda House is
right down the street. I love that place. It's great.
So the one thing is, no, we feel the building
is structurally sound. So if you're a resident there, you're
(25:48):
up there on the fifth floor or whatever. The engineers
say it's fine. So and I believe that to be true.
These smart people, they're engineers. I'm a radio blowhard. But
I also know that there's something else that I think
could be completely true, and that's just human nature, and
that is Look, I want to trust you, but the
risk reward here is kind of tilted towards the risk
(26:13):
part of it. I'm gonna go find someplace else to
live right now, anywhere else to live right now. Anytime
I see a building go down like that, Oh my gosh,
that condo High Horizon, Florida a few years back, and
all the rest of this stuff, I'm like, yeah, I
don't need that in my life. I've got enough going
on before suddenly the floor comes out from under me.
(26:36):
So no, I believe you building structurally sound. Absolutely, You'll
forgive me if I pack up a bag full of
stuff and get the hell out of here. So anyway,
in the midst of all of this, we now have
a mayoral campaign. They said, well, we're not getting anywhere
(26:57):
with the city, so we put the sign up that
out of help, let's see sign. Let's see what sign
did I miss the first part of this. The sinkhole
rat sign. That's a sign.
Speaker 3 (27:10):
Oh, that's a sign they took.
Speaker 2 (27:11):
They took a big i don't know, like a big
bed sheet and spray painted on there. The sink whole
rats are more loyal to us than Mayor Stothard. Now
I'm on board, so let me let me figure this out.
Mayor Stothard is the mayor of Omaha and directs city departments.
(27:31):
You want the city departments to work with you to
find out what caused the sink hole and then repair
the sink hole. She's the mayor, and you're trying to
help the situation by saying you'd rather have sinkhole rats
down there helping you out than the mayor of Omaha.
Well that ought to help. I understand frustration. So they're
(27:54):
they're calling out the mayor. They've also called out their
city council representative, which in that part of the city
is Juanita Johnson. Janida Johnson didn't make it on to
the city general election here next month to retain her
seat in District too of the Omaha City Council. She
(28:15):
probably isn't going to do a whole heck a lot
about this. No one has seen or heard from her
in a while, So back to Mayor Stothard. Stothard says,
to say that we're not in contact with anybody is
another false statement. We are. The important thing is why
(28:37):
there's barricades there. You have to find out the cause
of why the sinkhole happened. Then you have to fix
the cause before you fix the alleyway, and that's what
we want to do first, and that's where we're trying
to do. It appears there's some structural issue with the building,
but we are working with the residents. We are working
on the sinkhole. And then she said, and now they've
(28:58):
filed a lawsuit against us, So there's really not a
whole lot we can say since we've got litigation against
the city. So here's what else they did. The story
here from KMTV three News Now says residents of the
building met with John Ewing to discuss their concerns. Now,
that's on one level fair. He is, after all, running
(29:20):
to be the next mayor of Omaha, and he could
be elected next month and then take office some time
down the line, and then sometime after that assemble a cabinet,
then look at the issues start from scratch and move forward.
I don't know how long between now and then should
Ewing be elected, that he would be able to have
(29:41):
a team in place to really look at this issue.
But I can tell you what he can do about
this issue right now. With all due respect to John Ewing,
you know what he can do about this issue right
now exactly jack? And I don't mean he could jacket
or mud jacker, and he is jacked. John Ewing lifts
a lot of weights. But right now, well, he can't
do anything. He can tell you he can help the
(30:03):
sinkhole rats get their license plates. If they need a
driver's license, he can help with that. He is the
Douglas County treasurer. If there's some money that needs to
be dispersed to the schools or whatever, John Ewing's your guy.
You know what, he can't do direct city departments to
(30:24):
fix a sinkhole. He's a Douglas County treasurer. He can't
do anything about this.
Speaker 3 (30:30):
I could. So what if he found something he could do?
Speaker 2 (30:33):
You know, well, like I said, he lifts a lot
of weights. He's a strong guy. He could go down
there and like, let me take care of this and
just like put his back into it and prop up
one side of the building. You know, I wouldn't put
it past him. But in terms of officially within the
city government and county government, he can do about as
much as me, which is talk about it, and the
(30:56):
sinkhole rats can do better than me talking about or
Johnny Wing doing anything. Now, if he gets elected, you
have a conversation with him. You want to be on
that day one punchboard about what he wants to do
as mayor of Omaha. But until then he can't do
anything about it.
Speaker 1 (31:15):
Scott Voice News Radio eleven to ten kfab.
Speaker 2 (31:20):
Perhaps we can have this conversation by stripping away the
partisan political filter that we run everything through and talking
about anything. These days, we do not want to have
any facts or opinions that might run against ours, and
so therefore we make enemies out of friends, We light
people up on social media, we cut off family members.
(31:41):
People have gotten divorces over all this political stuff and
Claion Bucker next thing. No, that'd be a terrible way
to end. No, I'm going to try and get us
back to a point here where maybe we don't do that,
and it's over the incredibly sphincter dightening conversation related to
(32:05):
first of all, Trump and RFK Junior. I can't I
can't strip away the political partisan politics. I hate those guys.
I hate him, I hate I know, I know people
feel that way. Let's let's try. Let's calm down a
little bit, and let's let's talk about this OURFK Junior says,
(32:27):
we're looking at autism all wrong, and we need to
examine this, and we need to ask a lot of questions,
and we need to get some very bright minded people
looking at this stuff. Now, you already have people in
this country like this guy is a whack job. A
couple of years ago, they loved him, then he got
(32:47):
in with Trump, and now they hate him. But they think, no,
this guy, he doesn't know what he's talking about. He's
a vaccine denier. He wants to do this, he wants
to do that. And I don't trust any of these guys.
That's fine. You don't have to trust these guys while
they're asking these questions. You're allowed to ask questions like
(33:08):
who made you the expert in all this? But it's interesting.
Let's first walk down to take a step down this road.
Towards RFK Junior's thoughts on autism by asking this question,
has everything been great up to this point, meaning have
autism rates gone down or have they gone up? Well,
(33:31):
that's because testing, and that's because we have a spectrum.
And now we got everything from this to this, which
is now okay. This is not to cause an argument.
This is just to have a conversation. But not only
Obviously have autism rates been higher than they were fifty
years ago. Fifty years ago, they just would have called
(33:51):
you a name and filtered you into a certain track
for your life. Now we have different ways of looking
at things, which is good, which is very good. But
here we are now as to identifying this and dealing
with it. Better resources available for those with autism, families,
(34:13):
especially with young people with autism, experiences for young people
with autism, opportunities for adults with autism. I mean tell
you there's this is gonna sound terrible. There's no better
time to have autism than right now in America in
twenty twenty five. Try to put a good spin on
all this, right, but that's true. Do you think that
(34:37):
what's happening now will autism rates go down? If we
don't do anything. If we don't look at anything, if
we all just say no bury heads and sand ignore that,
it'll be fine. Do you think autism rates go down
or they continue to go up? Because we also I
know that you can say, well, we look at autism differently,
(34:58):
we examine a different we're identifying it differently. Yes, but
that's been true for the last twenty years. I know
it changes from year to year, but basically it's been
true for the last twenty years, and rates continue to
go up. What RFK Junior is saying is it's we're
looking at genetics, and certainly there are going to be
(35:21):
those circumstances where genetics play a major part, and it
could be that genetics play a part interplay with other things.
And what are those other things? Well, he's talking about
he's talking about vaccines, he's talking about shot Actually, let's
if you stop yelling, let's hear what he is saying.
(35:43):
Our FFK Junior is talking about environmental toxins. He's commissioning
a series of studies on numerous toxins. He's talking about mold,
he's talking about pesticides, he's talking about chemicals in our food.
He's talking about some potential medicines as potential toxins contributing
(36:07):
to the spiking rates of autism. He also suggested ultrasound
scans could be a factor giving the timing of these
technological advances. And he said yesterday, quote, this is a
preventable disease. We know it's environmental exposure. It has to be.
(36:29):
Genes do not cause epidemics. It can provide a vulnerability,
but you need an environmental toxin. So he's going to
look at environmental toxins. All right. First of all, I
don't know that anyone who has a child with autism,
no matter how old that child is, would refer to
(36:50):
their condition, their unique condition, as a disease. I don't
think a lot of people appreciated that phrasing. Be that
as it may. He's talking about, let's take a look
at some of these things. Maybe we take a look.
Have we really done any major major studying examination of
(37:13):
this kind of thing. Not really, Let's do it. Let's
put the full forces of what we can do scientifically
and maybe with some federal funding, and let's really take
a look at this. Maybe it leads to a big
circle where we come back here and go, well, this
was our theory. It has been proven wrong. Sorry I
(37:34):
was wrong, and now I announced my resignation as Secretary
of Health and Human Services. I mean, anything could happen here.
But with that phrase anything can happen, we might be
able to find some links to what is causing more
and more rates of autism. On that front. When he's
(37:57):
talking about it's mold, pesticides, food chemicals, medicines, even ultrasounds.
Some of these things are now things that parents of kids,
especially mothers of kids with autism, are going to look
like going to look at all this and go is
he saying and is it potentially true that some of
(38:21):
the things that I was exposing myself and my unborn
child to contributed to this situation? This is going to
be very I mean, if indeed RFK Junior is like, oh, yeah,
we told you for years don't do this, and then
(38:43):
you did it, and then your kids got autism and
they I mean, that's going to be if it starts
leading down that path, that's going to be a really
tough path for a lot of people to go down.
Might prevent people in the future, but how many I
mean we're talking about moms, the moms blame themselves for
(39:05):
just about anything that goes on with their kids. I
mean that could be a rough one. What if it's
stuff like let's say it's pesticides or food chemicals or medicines.
These are all things that require some level of federal
approval FDA approve. Whatever what happens if people say, wait
(39:30):
a second, we were exposed to this, or I ate
a bunch of this, or I ingested that, or I
took this medicine, or I had this procedure. No one
told me that there was a risk of autism for
an unborn child and doing this. In fact, the federal
government approved it. Now, there are a lot of lawyers
(39:53):
sitting up in their chair right now, going, yes, they're.
Speaker 3 (39:58):
Looking conspiracy theorists.
Speaker 2 (40:00):
I was waiting. I hit my finger on the button.
Speaker 1 (40:05):
He has a conspiracy theory hold on.
Speaker 2 (40:11):
Lawyers will be coming out of the sprinklers to file
class action lawsuits against the federal government. RFK Junior knows this.
He's marching forward anyway. So there are people right now
saying this guy is crazy. He is to ride in
(40:32):
himself with people who are crazy. He works for a
president who is crazy.
Speaker 3 (40:37):
Wait, they're saying he's crazy because he wants to investigate
all different possibilities. That makes him crazy.
Speaker 2 (40:43):
No, they've got their fingers in their ears and they're
not listening to anything he's saying. They say he's crazy
because he's in the trumpet minute. I never have a
problem with people asking questions. You get so many questions,
even my son, Can I do this?
Speaker 3 (41:02):
No?
Speaker 2 (41:03):
Why? Well, because if this happens, that would be bad. Yeah,
but what if it didn't happen. All right, let's take
a look at that. If it didn't happen, then you
just do this, which is, you know, kind of good,
but it's not nearly as good as what would be
really bad if that happened. Yeah, but my friend gets
to do it. Well, I'm not your friend's father. Why
(41:25):
aren't you my friend's father? All right, that's the end
of the questions. We've reached the dead end of question.
Everyone gets so many questions. By the way, I am
his friend's father. He just doesn't know it yet. That's
why I don't want to answer that question. I mean,
he looks just like me. I was with his mother
so many times. I mean, it's the odds are in
my favor. But we're not, but we're not talking about that.
(41:47):
Everyone gets so many questions, but so many people get
so nervous when someone's just asking questions. Now, let me
tell you what RFK Junior isn't saying. He's not saying.
And until we have the answers of these questions, you
can't do this, and no one's allowed to do this,
(42:07):
and there's not gonna be any more of this shot
and no more vaccines for anybody, and everyone's gonna have
to eat nothing but wheat, germ bang next issue. He's
moving on with his life. He's not doing any of that,
and frankly, I'm happy about it. We talked about this
the other day that RFK Junior says, well, we've got
(42:28):
too much ultra processed food in this country. And that's true.
The store shelves are chocked full, the convenience stores are
bursting at the seams with ultra process food. But no
one should be eating nothing but ultra process food five
(42:49):
meals a day. I mean, you know you're not supposed
to be doing that, right, but some people do it.
Are we gonna take away their personal choice? More importantly,
for those of us who don't eat ultra processed foods
every single day. Are you gonna take away our personal
choice to maybe eat a little bit of that stuff
(43:10):
because so much of it is delicious. We want to
have a little bit once in a while, a couple
times a month. I want to have an ultra process
this or an ultra process that. And I can't have
it once in a while because there's some guy out
here that can't handle his pizza rolls. I mean, this
is like, hey, we got some people that drink alcohol
(43:33):
and they turn into absolute jerks. Therefore, no one's having alcohol.
Like great, none of us canna have a drink, you know,
because al over here can't handle his liquor. None of
us can have twinkies because al over it's always that guy,
because al over here can't handle his twinkies. Don't take
it all away because some people can't handle it. I
want ultra processed foods once in a while. But he's
(43:56):
not even saying any of that. He hasn't banned in anything.
He's just asking questions. And as far as those guys
who are saying, like, well, they put all this stuff
in the foods to make it more addictive, how can
we help but eat this stuff all the day you've
listened to yourselves. Listen to yourselves right now.
Speaker 3 (44:17):
You sound like Sheldon.
Speaker 2 (44:18):
You sound whinier than I am. They put stuff in
there to you know. You sound like Dad. Why do
you hate the Colonel.
Speaker 4 (44:28):
Because he puts an addictive chemical in his chicken that
makes us crave it? Fortnightly Smartest And there's your nineties
movie reference for this segment of the radio program, and
that is sun So, I married an axe murderer.
Speaker 2 (44:43):
Oh yeah, you were close though.
Speaker 1 (44:46):
Scott Boys Mornings nine to eleven on News Radio eleven
ten KFAB