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October 14, 2025 • 65 mins
Voorhees will make ya TRUMP TRUMP!
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Scott.

Speaker 2 (00:01):
I think I've got enough stories here. We're the only
tie that binds all of them is the President of
the United States. When that happens, we put those stories
together in something we call a Trump date. Thank you

(00:28):
very much the Pointer sisters for always hanging out here
in the studio to provide us one of the various
music beds for our Trump date. That would be Anita
and June Harpo. Well, I don't remember the names of
all the Pointer sisters, Lucy Chapman, good morning.

Speaker 3 (00:49):
Well, good morning.

Speaker 2 (00:51):
Can you name the Pointer sisters? I want to say June, June, Yes, Pinky, Yeah, No,
those are fingers Pointer is one of them. Those are
the fingersisters Pointers. One of the Pointer sisters. You got June, Anita, uh, Alec, Daniel.

(01:17):
Oh those are Baldwin brothers. Anyway, here's something that the
President of the United States is doing today that, according
to some is the most infuriating thing he's ever done.
That is a very large pile. That is a Mount
McKinley of accusations.

Speaker 3 (01:35):
What do you how do they even narrow it?

Speaker 1 (01:37):
What would you.

Speaker 2 (01:37):
Think, Lucy if I said, not what he's going to
do today, but just everything he's done. What do you
think that his detractors would say, is the worst thing
that President Trump has ever done? I had there is
an answer to this question up until today.

Speaker 3 (01:53):
Oh boy, the worst things.

Speaker 2 (01:57):
The worst thing that those that can't stay to the
president stand him. Yeah, I think you're on the same
path I am. My answer is exist. He had the
nerve to exist. And I love all these people that say,
you know, if only he hadn't been elected, or if

(02:18):
he would be removed from office somehow. You know, there's
a majority of people, a majority of people in this
country who voted for him. You know, you can't remove
all of them from life, right, Oh, as much as
you might fantasize. Which brings us to Charlie Kirk. Today
is the National Day of Remembrance for Charlie Cook Kirk.

(02:41):
Pardon me, I should point out real quick here at
the start of the program, I am on all the medicines.
I sometimes I just lose my patience and my wife
is saying, no, don't you can't take that with that?
What are you doing? Did you already take one of those?

(03:02):
I'm just I've taken all the medicines. Don't worry. I
cleared it with OURFK Junior. He said, you're taking all
the medicines. I said, I am. He said, are any
of them tiling all? I said no, just to set
a medaphine. He's like, that's the same thing. I'm like, well,
I can't sometimes I can't understand what you're saying. So

(03:22):
I've taken all the medicines today. So when I repeatedly
make mistakes on the air, I'm blaming all the medicines.
But I feel better. We'll see how long that holds.

Speaker 3 (03:38):
That's all that matters.

Speaker 2 (03:39):
Also, I think that there are spiders all over me.
My skin's on fire. It's fine. I'm sure it'll be fine.
M Take two. Today, President Trump institutes the National Day
of Remembrance for Charlie Kirk. They're going to do this

(04:00):
by posthumously awarding him the nation's highest civilian honor today
today in his memory with I'm sure his widow, Erica
Kirk will be there. He'll receive the Presidential Medal of
Freedom today, and in so doing, they've instituted today the

(04:21):
National Day of Remembrance. The significance of today is this
would have been Charlie Kirk's thirty second birthday, today is
Charlie Kirk's birthday. So it's not like they just picked
an arbitrary date and said, yeah, this the day we

(04:43):
remember Charlie Kirk. And you know, just because it's on
the calendar, and it's not something I don't even think
this is anything that ever ends up on your Google
calendar or anything like that. In purple on the top
of the like, oh it's dewale, I don't know what
that is, not a car, So it's not something like that.
It's just one of those things up there with National

(05:03):
Pancake Day and National put more Skeletons in your yard
coming out of the ground Day, which apparently Omaha celebrates
every single day. There is a more skeletons popping out
of ground in Omaha these days than in a Michael
Jackson thriller video. So it's just it's one of those days.

(05:27):
But obviously for supporters of the Turning Point movement, for
fans of Charlie Kirk, for conservatives everywhere, this will be
something that will give them an excuse, I think, every
day not to remember Charlie Kirk on the day he died,
though there will be those remembrances. They'll pop up in

(05:47):
the news. It's been one year ago, and certainly for
the Kirk family, Erica Kirk, when you lose a loved
one like that, anniversaries are really hard. This is the
first Halloween I'm taking the kids trick or treating without
Charlie Kirk. This is the first Thanksgiving with us. This
is the first Christmas with our anniversary, his birthday, the

(06:12):
day he died, And it's brutal after you lose a
loved one. So rather than do that national Day of
Remembrance on the day he died, they decided to do
it today on what would have been his thirty second birthday.
This is the anniversary of Charlie Kirk's birth. But that's

(06:36):
not what has got those with Trump derangement syndrome all
mad today. They think he's done this on purpose, And
you know what, I will give them this credit. Maybe
he has. Maybe it was decided, you know, we're going
to do a day of remembrance, We're going to honor him.

(06:56):
When should we do it, Well, maybe the day he
started turning point USA. Do we do it on the
day he died, his birthday? Do we just do it
on a random like the second Tuesday in October, you
know whatever. Nope, they decided to do it today. And
people say he's doing this because Democrats still brand. Charlie

(07:22):
Kirk is absolutely bigoted to his core, and his supporters
are worse. The timing of today's remembrance is a little interesting.
It's not just Charlie Kirk's birthday today. Today is also
the anniversary of the birth of George Floyd. This would

(07:45):
have been George Floyd's birthday, older than Charlie Kirk. I
think he was born seventy something. But is that right?
Was he that old? I don't know. I have to
go back and look, but yeah, this is also Floyd's birthday.
Now people are like President Trump is doing this on purpose.

(08:07):
He's trying to overshadow George Floyd in his significance rather
than go down a side street on that conversational point.
No one, to my knowledge, and I apologize if I
missed something, because I will give you this. What happened
to George Floyd did stir up in people, especially those

(08:32):
who either this happened to them or their parents or grandparents,
or this in their family. Certainly, this country has not
had the best track record either institutionally or in many instances,
too many instances individually, when it comes to how black
people have been treated in this country, and it's raw

(08:53):
enough in our nation's history that there are still several
people alive who can tell you those stories. Regardless of
what happened on that street and how George Floyd died,
that's not going to make any difference to someone who says, yeah,
that brought up this memory of what happened to me,
or what happened to my dad, or why my brother's

(09:15):
in jail, you know, and what they feel to be
either inhumane or unfair or racist or whatever. So the
actual significance of that moment and what state George Floyd
was in and how he may have died or whatever,
that's really immaterial, which I admit as a chicken Shinola

(09:36):
way of kind of getting out of having that conversation
because it has stirred up in so many people a
painful history of this nation. But I don't think anyone
ever made today, on George Floyd's birthday, a national day

(09:58):
of remembrance and honor of George Floyd. So it's not
like Trump. It's I mean, it'd be something to say, oh,
here's a day on the calendar that has been this day,
and now someone else comes along to change it just
because they don't like the subject of that day. Why
when has that ever happened? Yesterday? As a matter of fact, Yes,

(10:22):
what was yesterday? Well it was either Columbus Day, don't
say his name, or it was Indigenous People's Day. So yes,
that happens. There's a day in the calendar. Can we
get rid of it? I don't know if we can

(10:44):
get rid of it, but we can put another day
right there next to it, and then most people rather
than like when I was a kid in school, we
would learn about Christopher Columbus, and I'll give him the
same credit I gave George Floyd, I think it's fair
to do the same. Whatever you might think historically about

(11:08):
Christopher Columbus and whatever sources you got this information. The
spirit of looking out at a vast ocean and having
no idea where it goes. I mean they thought like,
you're gonna be eaten by sea monsters, You're gonna fall
off the edge of the flat earth. Several NBA players

(11:28):
apparently still feel that way. Also, birds are fake, and
there are Jewish space lasers I don't know. There's all
kinds of crazy stuff out there. Lucy Chapman is chomping
at the bit to be a part of all these conversations,
but right now she's too busy telling someone in the
newsroom about how the moon landing was doctored. So we'll
go back to Lucy and all this in a moment.

(11:50):
But to look out at that vast ocean and say, well,
we build a boat, we don't know what's out there,
we don't know what we're gonna when we get there.
Let's go anyway, that's the kind of adventurous spirit that
should be celebrated, even more so because it worked. So

(12:18):
it's not like, oh, that's the day we founded this country.
There were already people on this country. Yes, But you
know when they when they have an anniversary of this
is the day we founded this BUCkies gas station. But
there was already something there. Yeah, and then we bought
it and we transformed it into a BUCkies and so

(12:41):
that was the first day of this BUCkies. Well, you
got to give credit to the Sinclair station. It's not
Bucky's Day, it's Sinclair Day. We're not taking anything away
from Sinclair. But today is the first day that we
founded the thing, and we had a guy George Bucky,

(13:02):
who is like looked out at west Omahon said I
don't know what's out there, but I'm gonna go see.
And he started this gas station. After buying another gas station.
He hired some of the people who used to work here.
Some of them tried to kill him. He killed them
right back. It was a tough time. Did I mention,

(13:25):
I'm on all the medication anyway, Columbus Day is not
like Columbus didn't say, all right, hey, who's with me?
We're gonna get on a boat because there's a lot
of Indians out there and we want to go kill them.
Who's with me? And all these Europeans were like, they're
not white, are they? Ah, not really good enough for me,

(13:50):
let's go. But some people just couldn't have it, couldn't
have Columbus Day, so we got to have Indigenous People's Day. Meanwhile,
Italian Americans are like, hey and unquote, but you know,
the news yesterday was showing you here's what this group

(14:12):
of people are doing for Indigenous People's Day. Here's what
that group of people are doing for Indigenous People's Day.
Oh are you going on to the reservations to help
people with abuse and addiction. No, we're just gonna come
out here on this college campus and dance around for
a little bit. Okay, hey, you know your day. Do
what you gotta do. So I don't think anyone instituted

(14:37):
today as George Floyd Remembrance Day. And to be honest
with you, which I will usually do, I don't think
anyone knew today was George Floyd's birthday until they learned.
Until someone I don't know how who even knew this
or thought to look it up? Who would think this way?

(15:00):
But as soon as they said, yeah, Trump's going to
do a posthumous Medal of Freedom award and declare a
day as National Charlie Kirk Day, like Charlie Kirk Remembrance Day.
When are they going to do it on his birthday?
When's that October fourteenth? That's George Floyd's birthday? Who would
know that? So someone? All it took was one person

(15:23):
on ex Twitter to say Trump is covering up George
Floyd's birthday and making it Charlie Kirk's birthday. Just another
whitewashing of history. These people are so racist. I'm sure,
someone got to President Trump and said, hey, just letting

(15:44):
you know, there's a group of people online not real happy.
They think that you're doing this on purpose because it's
George Floy's birthday. And I imagine that conversation went something
like this, really great, even better, let's do it. So yeah,
I think there's probably a little bit of a twisting

(16:05):
of you know, hey, mister president, there are people upset
by something. You do it great, Let's do more of it,
Let's do all of it, and then we'll just do
it again tomorrow, which makes some people really really mad
that now the person they've described as Hitler for all
these years has just brought about peace for Israel, and

(16:27):
the people have been yelling free Palestine also now have
to begrudgingly give credit to the man who's brought some
peace to Palestine and ended the so called genocide and
all the rest of it. So did anyone actually give
did any Democrats actually give President Trump credit? We'll address
that next.

Speaker 1 (16:46):
Scott Bodies News Radio eleven ten kfab.

Speaker 2 (16:50):
Darren points out the Fingersisters also happens to be the
name of a gentleman's club in Lincoln. Thank you, Darren,
and thank you for listening to that show a couple
of weeks still on the Vintage Warheats podcast link on
the Scott Varheats page at kfab dot com. And even
though I titled that podcast, I think I titled it

(17:10):
like forty five minutes on strip Clubs. You can say
that's so classless. You can say that. I can show
you how many downloads that that podcast got, and you
have no one to blame but you for that one.
A lot of people have listened to that. I don't
know if they listened to the entire thing, but I

(17:31):
hope you. I hope they did, because that was the
most fun I've had on the radio in a while.
All Right, we are in the midst of a Trump
date My trump My trump My trump My, trump My,
trump My, trump My, trump My trump My lovely little
Trump check it out yesterday. The twenty living hostages who

(17:54):
spent the last couple of years in captivity with a
terrorist organization known as Hamas, spent their first night in
freedom surrounded by loved ones. Of course, the media was like, hey,
can we talk to you like, you know, I don't
know if you know this. I've been held in captivity.
The last two years. I just want some fresh air
and maybe you know, a little babaganoosh something to eat.

(18:18):
That'd be great. I want to spend some time with
my loved ones. If you could get that camera out
of my face, that would be great. Some of them
just said what do you want to do, and they said,
I'm looking forward to seeing the night sky and stars tonight.
I hope it was a clear night. Interesting that they
noted that in the past week, as it appeared that

(18:39):
the Hamas would have to release them, they all got
great food and medicine in the past week from their captors. Why.
They didn't want them to look so frail and sickly
when they released them, so they deprived them of food
and medicine for I don't know about one hundred and

(19:00):
four weeks, and then in that last week they're like, oh, hey,
you want some chicken. This ought to help say sorry
a boy that no hard feelings. They finally got a
chance to be with their families yesterday. Even Trump's critics

(19:20):
are finding it hard to ignore that he's been able
to achieve this, however tenuous, and I think that some
of the people who can't stand President Trump. If you
hear any Democrats saying, oh, yeah, Trump, he did this.
He deserves all the credit for this. He brought Middle East,
he said, he got this done. The more they say that,

(19:42):
the more they're setting him up to fall, Because I'll
remind you, it is the Middle East, and they do
fight a lot over there. Generation, generationally, they fight a
lot over there, Over the centuries, they fight a lot
over there. I don't think this piece of paper or
whatever it is is going to stop all of that.

(20:03):
You know, habits. I'd like to stop popping my knuckles,
but I can't. Now that I've said it out loud,
this finger really needs to be popped. Sorry, that's a
habit since I was a kid. Yeah, habits, they fight
a lot over there. I popped my knuckles once in
a while, not as much as I used to. So

(20:25):
is anyone actually giving the president credit? Chuck Schumer released
a statement, Today is a wonderful day. Finally, finally, finally,
the last living hostages brutally held by Hamas or home
an immense and overwhelming sigh of relief. Did we thank
the president?

Speaker 3 (20:43):
No? Did he say brutally brutally Hamas?

Speaker 2 (20:47):
Yeah, brutally held by Hamas yes. President Clinton issued a statement,
Let's see the horrors of the October seventh, twenty twenty
three attack on Israel, the conflict they reignited. It resulted
in an unbearable human and lost and hard to watch,
nearly impossible to rationalize. Did we thank President Trump? No.

(21:08):
Vice President Kamala Harris she said that she appreciated quote
the President unquote for helping secure the deal that led
to the release of the hostages. Didn't something didn't identify
Trump by name. President Biden, though, commended Trump by it
name and his team the Trump administration for helping secure

(21:29):
the ceasefire and hostage deal. So President Biden ends up
being the bigger man. None of the rest of them
have actually named Trump on this one, but I guarantee
you when the first shot is fired in violation of
the ceasefire, they'll name Trump a lot. Oh. I thought

(21:51):
the Trump peace deal was hold. I thought, this is
the greatest peace deal you ever seen. Cutter is back
channeling now the US Venezuela talks. This is the nation
where Israel blew up hamas real good in one of
Cutter's cities there just last month. And I said, as

(22:13):
President Trump is like, Hey, I'm gonna tell Israel not
to do that. Hey stop that. Cutter meanwhile, probably was like, hey,
thanks for getting Hamas out of our town here. We
don't want them here. Yeah, you bet, But now we've
got to act like, hey, you can't do that. Yep. Absolutely,
What do you need to keep quiet about all this?
And play ball Cutter is now being celebrated by President

(22:37):
Trump and they're playing a vital role in what's going
on with Venezuela. Venezuela was in the news this week
because they gave the opposition to the leader of Venezuela
the Nobel Peace Prize and then she did something infuriating.
Our Trump date continues after a Fox News update. Next

(22:58):
Scott Voriez, Are we still in the midst of a
Trump date?

Speaker 4 (23:06):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (23:07):
I think a Trump song means that here we go
Trump Trump Trump Trump to Trump Trump Trump. Oh, we're
doing a live karaoke version of a Trump date here,

(23:27):
all right. Uh. When we have a lot of different
stories and the only thing that ties them together is
the President of the United States, we put them together
and something we call a Trump date. We are in
the midst of it here. Let's see what have we
covered thus far in our Trump date. People are mad
at President Trump because they say that he is obscuring
the significance of today George Floyd's birthday by making today

(23:52):
Charlie Kirk Remembrance Day. A couple of things, no one
knew today was George Floyd's birthday until President Trump declared
today Charlie Kirk Remembrance Day. Well, well Trump knew. He
only did that because he wanted to obscure George Floyd's birthday.
It's also Charlie Kirk's birthday, which just goes to show

(24:15):
you Charlie Kirk just shot out of the womb racist,
didn't he? How dare he be born on George Floyd's birthday?
Years before anyone would know the significance of either one
of those people. So anyway, that's what people say. I
and I conceded that I'm sure someone told President Trump,
are you sure you want to make Charlie Kirk Remembrance

(24:38):
Day on George Floyd's birthday? Some people are upset? Are
they did? I upset? Some people? Today must be a
day that ends in Why can we make the entire
week Charlie Kirk Remembrance Day? Well, one day, like, all right,
that's fine. So that's happening this afternoon. As President Trump

(24:58):
is awarding Charlie Kirk posthumously the Presidential Medal of Freedom,
there are Democrats. The only one of significance who, begrudgingly,
I'm sure, mentioned the name Trump in celebrating the accomplishments
of this Middle East ceasefire was President Biden. Schumer didn't,
Clinton didn't. Hillary, She didn't. Bill Clinton issued a statement

(25:23):
but didn't mention Trump. Vice President Harris thanked the president.
I wonder who she thinks that is? Oh, she has mirrors,
she knows. Do you think she walks around her house
looking at herself, going, I should be the president of
the United States right now?

Speaker 3 (25:40):
I would.

Speaker 2 (25:41):
I should be the decider. I should be the president. Meanwhile,
what am I doing today? I'm going to go talk
to some girl scouts who sold the most cookies? This is?

Speaker 4 (25:52):
Well?

Speaker 2 (25:52):
How much am I getting paid for it? Oh? A
bazillion dollars? All right, I guess I'll I guess I'll
go do that. And then we get to as a
byproduct of the Middle East situation, remember when Israel blew
up hamas real good in cutter last month, and I said,

(26:14):
Cutter knew it was happening, but they had to come
out and go, hey, you can't do that. Israel knew
that it would be okay if they did it, and
they did it. Cutter was really happy to get Hamas
blown up real good and out of their nation. And
President Trump had to come out there and be like, hey,
I'm gonna tell Israel they can't do that. Hey, Cutter,
sorry about that. Let's have a closer agreement. Maybe you

(26:36):
can help with a few things here in the Middle
East and perhaps back channel some negotiations with Venezuela, which
got interesting this week when the Nobel Peace Prize was
awarded to Maria Karna Machado. It's always fun watching white
guys on TV who speak super white. Nobel Peace Prize

(27:01):
today was awarded to Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Carina today,
and so that's always fun. Well, Venezuela has taken note
that they awarded the Nobel Peace Prize to this person
who has the nerve to speak out against the leader
of Venezuela, the brutal dictator Nicholas Maduro. So what has

(27:26):
Venezuela done. Well, they can't go after her. They don't
know where she is. She's been in hiding for the
last year. She's in a spider hole somewhere, which makes
me wonder if Venezuela is the one that said, yeah,
give her the Nobel Peace Prize. In fact, we'll deliver it. Yeah.

(27:47):
Where do we send this prize? There's cash attached to it.
Where do we bring this again? I'm not falling for that.
So Maduro labeled Machado a quote dimmonic witch unquote fu
not not a good witch. You know, he probably just

(28:07):
saw wicked. You got the good witch, you got the
bad witch, you got the wicked witch, you got the
demonic witch. So not just any witch. She's a demonic witch,
which is such a coincidence. I just went to Mangleson's
and bought that costume for Halloween, well kind of. I
went with the sexy demonic witch costume.

Speaker 3 (28:30):
Did it come with a little dog.

Speaker 2 (28:32):
And your little Well, now it comes with your little dog,
my little dog. Yeah, Well the witch doesn't have her
own dog. She wants your little dog, right, Yeah, no,
I have to go find one. I'm gonna go. I'm
gonna go out and Halloween as a sexy demonic witch
and find Candy and your little dog too. It'll be fun.

Speaker 4 (28:53):
I want to go to that party. Population me, okay,
I don't want to go to that and your dog.
So Maduro calls her a demonic witch, and then he's like,
how can we get back? How can we let the
world know? They can't just give a Nobel Peace Prize
as someone who doesn't like me.

Speaker 2 (29:14):
So what did he do? I'm not making this part up.
I didn't make the last part up either. It's gonna
be awesome costume. I'll put it on Instagram. I don't
have Instagram. No, he closed because you know, the Nobel
Peace Prize comes from a group of people in Norway.
He closed the Norwegian embassy in Venezuela. He shut it down.

(29:38):
No sorry, sorry, sorry sorry, I got that screwed up
other way around. Wait stop that, back it up, reverse
it there's your eight sorry seventies movie reference for this
segment of the radio program Losing Wait, back it up,
reverse it. Better off dead Charlie and the Chocolate Factory
Willy Wonka. So no Venezuela shut down the Venezuelan Embassy

(30:02):
in Norway. That's that's what they did.

Speaker 3 (30:04):
I'm still shocked on that. I'm still trying to get
past that.

Speaker 2 (30:08):
I know why they haven't. Okay, Right, So you've escaped
the hideous dictatorship of Venezuela and you've made it to Norway,
a free land with nice people. But you're longing for
home and you're like, how am I going to get
home to the brutal dictatorship of Venezuela. Oh, thank goodness,

(30:32):
here's the embassy. I wonder if any, first of all,
are how many Venezuelans are in Norway? Raise your hand seven?
You're right? Seven? Nailed it? Do they just drive by
the embassy and just give it the finger every day?
They don't want to go home. If they wanted to
be home, they'd be home. They're in Norway. I don'm

(30:54):
not sure how much they want to be in Norway,
but it's better in Venezuela. So Venezuela's like, we're gonna
shut down our mbassy there. Norway was like, oh no, no, don't.
They're like, wait, where is it.

Speaker 1 (31:08):
Us?

Speaker 2 (31:08):
Right? Shut down our embassy in Norway. Venezuela has an
embassy in Norway. You know why, right? Because that means
that you can give someone a cushy job as the
Venezuelan ambassador in Norway, and you can pay someone a
ridiculous amount of money to just hang out in Norway

(31:29):
and be Venezuelan.

Speaker 3 (31:31):
Or not even go there. Just pay them.

Speaker 2 (31:34):
It could be that they're not even there.

Speaker 3 (31:36):
Yeah, it sounds like there might be corruption in government.

Speaker 2 (31:42):
Wait what, Yeah, we're gonna show you for shutting down
our embassy there.

Speaker 3 (31:48):
Oh no family guy.

Speaker 2 (31:52):
Yes, yeah you got that one. Dang. Meanwhile, you heard
what Machado said after I mean through like a series
of carrier pigeons and andah and Morse code. No, Machado
is the woman, not a type of coffee.

Speaker 3 (32:09):
This is the one that's a Monado.

Speaker 2 (32:10):
Yeah, this is the person who got the Nobel Peace Prize.
Did you hear what she had the nerve to do
after she won? Give it back, not really ask for
the money, which I'm sure she's gonna get the money.

Speaker 3 (32:23):
Can I take that in cash?

Speaker 2 (32:24):
She dedicated her award to somebody, oh you know who
she dedicated it to. She through a series of smoke signals,
carrier pigeons and Morse code. So it was not to
give away your location. And if she wanted to do
that smoke signals is probably not the right move. But
she dedicated through a burner phone her award to President

(32:48):
Donald J. Trump for his decisive support of our cause
in Venezuela and for everything he's done in the Middle
East and other parts of the world. So they're all
mad Trump supporters and President himself all Maddie didn't get
the Nobel Peace Prize, saying, oh, it's about politics, so

(33:08):
they give it to this woman. First thing she says
is thanks. I'd like to dedicate this award to Donald Trump.
Thank you for your attention to this matter. And the
Nobel Priest Prize people were like, wow, I didn't see
that coming.

Speaker 3 (33:24):
You think they'd be smarter than that.

Speaker 2 (33:25):
We're still in a government shutdown and that will close
our Trump date for this hour.

Speaker 1 (33:30):
Next Scott Boyes News Radio eleven kfab.

Speaker 2 (33:37):
Yeah, and the guy who wins the Nobel Prize for science.
I dedicate this award to RFK Junior. Doctor RFK Junior,
he's not a doctor.

Speaker 1 (33:45):
Ah.

Speaker 2 (33:46):
Well, last part of our Trump date here in this hour,
Speaker Mike Johnson says this government shutdown might be the
longest in history. The last one that was long was
in Trump's first term ended after thirty five and the
speaker thanked President Trump for ensuring that the military gets
paid this week because the Democrats were saying Republicans want

(34:08):
to stop the military from getting paid, President Trump said,
pay the military. They're like, can he do it? I
don't know, we're gonna do it. Meanwhile, airports are now
standing up to the president administration by not playing the
Christi Nome Homeland Security blame Democrats for the shutdown video
and airports that'll show him. Meanwhile, Christy nom is like,

(34:30):
it's fine. The media has already played this over and
over and over again. Mission accomplished. And that is our
Trump date Trump the Sandlmayer Maker Trump for Yeah, that's
our Trump date. Here on news Radio eleven ten kfabef
State auditor Mike Foley AXELF Nebraska State auditor, former lieutenant governor,

(34:56):
former state auditor. He's he's been. You know when when
Mike Foley comes into your office, you don't want it.
Mike Foley has these piercing eyes that stare deep within
your soul. And that's how he's such an effective state auditor.
He doesn't need you to give him the paperwork and

(35:18):
show him what you did wrong. He just needs to
stare into your soul and he extracts that information. It's
very effective. When it's happening to you, it's horrifying. I
like Mike, but talking to him in person scary because
I'm like, he knows. He just he looks at me

(35:38):
and he knows. Oh, there's a great movie. I think
it's called Frailty, Uh, Bill packs Willis, Bill Paxton and
Matthew McConaughey. Where you know, if they even if they
brush up against you and just touch you, they can
stare into your soul and find your deepest, darkest secret.

Speaker 3 (36:00):
That's what happens when I brush up against Vince Vaughn.

Speaker 2 (36:04):
What exactly happens.

Speaker 3 (36:05):
Yeah, it's amazing.

Speaker 2 (36:07):
Yeah, I think that's not what the movie's about. Anyway.
Mike Foley has now turned his attention on Karen's.

Speaker 3 (36:17):
Any Karen in particular, All.

Speaker 2 (36:19):
Well, yeah, okay, Karen named James Karen James. I should
probably specify that in this instance, the karens is I
don't think it's probably even pronounced that way. Karen. It's
a large ethnic group out of Southeast Asia, Burma, so Burmese,

(36:44):
Me and mar refugees that have been coming to Nebraska
for several decades now are helped by this non profit
organization called the Karen Society of Nebraska. It's a real
group and they get real money and because some of
that money is through grants, including some funding considerable funding

(37:09):
through among other organizations, the Nebraska Department of Homeland, not Homeland,
Nebraska Health and Human Services Department. That's the one. That's
why State Auditor Mike Axelf fully decided to look and
see what was going on with the finances because there
were a few things that raised some red flags.

Speaker 3 (37:29):
So he was looking into an NGO.

Speaker 2 (37:33):
I don't know that they're technically an NNGO. I don't
know if that's a specific designation. It's a nonprofit organization
that does get some funding through the government. Operating as
a non government organization might be a distinction without a difference.
So we'll just say sure it is okay. But this

(37:54):
group say that their mission is to help your refugees
and immigrants from Burma build and sustain a high quality
of life and achieve self sufficiency in the state of Nebraska.
A high quality of life compared to what the high
cost of living yeah, compared to what someone else in

(38:16):
Omaha is enjoying, or compared to what you had when
you fled Burma. A high quality of life, that's I
guess the eye of the beholder.

Speaker 3 (38:27):
Wouldn't it be great if we had an organization that
helped Americans achieve a high quality quality of life?

Speaker 2 (38:34):
It's called capitalism. Well, yeah, yeah, take advantage of it.
It's great. So tell me what jumps out as a
red flag to you? If you're the state auditor and
you're like, all right, let's see what's going on here
with this group. They get a lot of money. How's
it going. They've been operating for fifteen years. They have
offices in Omaha, Lincoln, and in Madison, Nebraska. Madison, I

(38:57):
presume Madison County up around Norfolk. Familiar with the town
of Madison.

Speaker 3 (39:01):
Oh, do we have that many Burma immigrants? Burmese immigrants?

Speaker 2 (39:06):
We have that many Burmese pythons?

Speaker 3 (39:09):
Did I say it wrong? Would they be Burmese?

Speaker 2 (39:11):
Yeah? I think so.

Speaker 3 (39:13):
I'm not trying to be disrespectful. I truly don't know.

Speaker 2 (39:16):
Uh, well, your ignorance is disrespectful. Yes. Madison is a
town just south of Norfolk in Madison County anyway. Now, yes,
we have a lot of refugees from all over and
I guess I don't know how many specifically from Burma.
But here's what state auditor Mike Foley says he found

(39:37):
as there is. Now these are the allegations from the
state auditor. He now turns them over to law enforcement
and says, now you take it. Here's some of the
red flags he found. Employees designated as independent contractors. Now,
when you have an organization and you've got an independent contractor,

(39:59):
that's usually some one not essential to the day to
day function of the job. Someone we need to do
a particular role from time to time, but not like
a full time employee. Because we have a full time employee,
then we gotta pay benefits, we gotta pay taxes, we
get all this stuff. So you know, it's fine people
do employee independent contractors. But among those included as an
independent contractor with the Society is the executive director of

(40:23):
the society. Mike Foley says, it seems odd that the
executive director has a specific employment designation that would mean
that his role is non essential.

Speaker 3 (40:37):
Wait, does he get paid as a regular employee and
he's a contractor. Yes, so he's double dipping essentially.

Speaker 2 (40:45):
No, he's employed as an independent contractor. So when the
society pays him, he's paid as an independent contractor, which
I think would mean that his taxes would not come out.
He would have to pay quarterly taxes. And we'll see
if that's going on. Let's continue to dig here and

(41:05):
see if you notice a trend. The executive director also
does have another job, and there are several hours. He
found several hundred hours where this particular executive director for
this organization was getting paid by another employer while also
billing the nonprofit Karen Society of Nebraska for those hours.

(41:28):
That is double dipping. He lives in a house that's
also the office for the organization. The house is in
his name. The organization is paying the mortgage perk. Maybe
you know what else, ten thousand dollars paid to this

(41:52):
person one hundred thousand dollars for real estate loan payments.
The state auditor said, I'd like to see some of
these records. They said nothing, no nonprofit tax returns to
show for the last couple of years. Thousands of dollars
in fund transfers through an app with ties to China,

(42:15):
and then little things like someone paid to translate from
English for again, these are the refugees from Burma. Here
in Nebraska, there was a apparently a how to, like
a training I don't know. It was a pamphlet or
a seminar or something, and they paid good money to

(42:37):
translate it from English. The name of the instructional material
is quote, how to prepare for a hurricane or tropical
storm unquote here here in Nebraska. And we do get
some hurricanes wins, yes, but not really the same thing.

(43:01):
Mike Foley State Auditor says. Particularly troublesome was the continual
uncooperativeness of the societies aforementioned executive director, who declined to
explain why the audits team routine requests for documents and
accounting records went largely unanswered.

Speaker 3 (43:22):
I'd be mad too, don't audit me. I got this
under control.

Speaker 2 (43:26):
Yeah, it's there's a big staff. Yeah. How how dare you?
How's everything going in there?

Speaker 3 (43:35):
Great health?

Speaker 2 (43:38):
Can we come in take a look? Not necessary? Now, Look,
I don't know this director. I'm not seeing anything that
pops up? Is you know? I'd love to be able
to say. And his name is I'm gonna leave his name.
His first name is James. You're like James, it doesn't
sound like a Burmese refugee. Well, his last name I

(43:59):
can't renounce. So take that for what you want. So
they got a large staff over there. But I haven't
seen anything from this guy like having ties to this
group or that group, or being particularly political and taking
funds and saying, let's go out and get this person elected.
I'm not seeing any of that. It just kinda it's

(44:21):
either look, it's either a simple mistake, Oh, this file. Sorry,
is this what you were looking for? Sorry, well, I
don't do keyboards very well. I didn't know what you wanted.
So it's a simple mistake. Or it's wanton disregard for

(44:45):
what goes on in this country. Probably in this country
a little bit long to say, I don't know laws,
and it's not how we do things in Burma. I
don't know, so, or it's uh, it's fraud or fraud
of taxpayer money, and it's and that would either be

(45:05):
through negligence or on purpose. That's what Mike Foley is
now handing over to law enforcement so they can take
a look. I'm Scott Voorhees. There's Lucy Chapman. Am I
the only person in town who gets really upset about
these street racers in town? Not just because of the

(45:26):
danger of driving around them, but it's just a really
annoying noise all night. I hear it in northwest Almohallas. Yeah,
I hear it all you night.

Speaker 3 (45:42):
You should move.

Speaker 2 (45:45):
Well. Lucy and I live nearby each other. She's in
she's in room one oh two and I'm down the hall,
so we live in a compound. Really nice. Leader kool
Aid's delicious. So no, I think I'm just a little

(46:06):
bit closer to Fort Street, and then I suppose you are.
That seems to be where I hear them running up
and down out by Lake Flanagan all night. They're they're racing,
and even in the instances where they're not completely racing,
you get the loud just going down the street and

(46:30):
it's it's super annoying. I'm I don't like it.

Speaker 3 (46:34):
Well, if you seem to be able to find them
pretty easily, yeah, how come law enforcement isn't finding them.

Speaker 2 (46:41):
They are finding them as much as they can, but
you only have so many officers on patrol, and you
have to catch them in the act. And so what
happens is me and a bunch of other old ladies
call up the police all night and go they're very noisy.
Where are they out there? Did you see them? I

(47:02):
heard them and they sounded like they were going ninety
four miles per hour. Wow. Yeah, I got a highly
calibrated ear. But it's not just the danger of weaving
in and out of traffic and you get one trailing
another and they're like we you know, whether they're on
motorcycles or souped up little cars or whatever, and then

(47:23):
running up and down the street and the noise and
all of it. I fear that it's heading in this
direction because there's more and more people who are congregating
in business, parking lots, park parking lots, and you just
kind of wonder where all this is going. We'll look
no further than Boston. Did you hear what happened in

(47:43):
Boston the other night? I mentioned this last week after
it happened, but now we're getting more details on it.
According to the Boston Police Department, it was over one
hundred people involved in what they referred to as a
street takeover, where they decided the street racer. People just
decided we're closing down the street. Do you have a

(48:06):
permit for that? Absolutely not. We just decided to close
down the street. Cars are racing up and down the street.
It's like American graffiti and except it's like in a
like downtown Boston. And then there are people doing like
donuts in the intersection. Crowds are hanging out, people are drinking,
and it's just kind of this impromptu party, which I

(48:31):
admit doesn't sound terrible, but you can't do that here.
So when Boston police responded to let these guys know, hey,
I'm not sure if you're aware of this, but you
can't do that here, that's when the riot started. Police
officers were attacked, they were met with violence. A police

(48:51):
cruiser was set on fire. Did you even hear about this?
This happened about just not quite a week and a
half ago.

Speaker 3 (49:00):
I saw some tweets about street takeovers, but no, not
about this this specific.

Speaker 2 (49:05):
Scific one in Boston. A police cruiser was destroyed by flames,
and Boston didn't really say anything about it, because well,
it's just poor in a blue city such as Boston
to stand up and say, hey, take it easy on
the cops. It's not a real popular opinion in a

(49:27):
city like Boston, so but cops are talking about it
and they're saying, look the heck is this What kind
of support are we getting? What are we going to do?
Because it's going to happen again and again and again.
There were over like one hundred people out there and
they all just started like shooting off fireworks and throwing
stuff at cops. So I'm worried as I see gatherings

(49:57):
of people here in Omaha that they look at what
happened and in Boston and say, hey, that sounds like fun.
As we have a more anarchist sentiment taking hold in
some of these groups, I don't want this to happen
to omahas police Department or Douglas County sheriffs that are
sometimes in some of these outside of the city limits

(50:19):
areas around town who are trying to curtail some of
the street racing. And I hate it even more because
when like Sheriff Hansen, for example, says, all right, when
we catch you in excessive street racing, we're going to
impound your car on your phone, and people are like,
you can't do that, all right? So what do you
want to have happened.

Speaker 3 (50:38):
Well, that's the thing, there's no consequence. They might get arrested, right,
but there's no actual consequence.

Speaker 2 (50:44):
Yeah, what exactly do you want to have happened? You
got someone out there endangering everyone's lives. We've had people
killed because of street racers in this community or the
people who have killed themselves. I get to the point
where I come in here in the morning and I
see a story about like a motorcyclist was and I
have to think, was this someone driving safely or was

(51:05):
this someone with a death wish who got his wish?

Speaker 3 (51:10):
You can't there's nothing that you really can do except
get make sure you're following local judges and federal judges
and watching their records and vote them out that are
soft on crime. That's the first step.

Speaker 2 (51:26):
Yes.

Speaker 3 (51:27):
The second step is you've got to get somebody into
the DMV who's running that department that puts some absolute
lays down the law, strict guidelines on. Everybody needs to
be tested a driving test, not just written. Everybody needs
to demonstrate they know how to operate a vehicle, because

(51:49):
every day we know I mean just to get your license.

Speaker 2 (51:53):
Yes, well, I think they do. No, they don't.

Speaker 3 (51:57):
I don't think so. I don't think so.

Speaker 2 (51:59):
Oh, I don't.

Speaker 3 (52:00):
There are a lot of there's tons of stories out
there about DMVs, not ours in particular, but DMV's granting
driver's licenses all the time without any driving.

Speaker 2 (52:13):
Test, with a driving test portion of it.

Speaker 3 (52:15):
I don't think it's happening here. Maybe it is, Maybe
it is not.

Speaker 2 (52:18):
I would certainly hope not. When I talk about the
sentiment of the cops try and do something to protect
themselves and others and other people say you can't do that.
Let me tell you about what's going on here in Chicago.
That's coming up after a Fox News update.

Speaker 1 (52:33):
Next Scott Voices News Radio eleven ten kfaby.

Speaker 2 (52:38):
Sorry, we got to mix in some Chapel Roan on
this program. I guess to get the kids involved. Chapel Roon.
She's the one who dances at the Pink Pony Club.
She gotta keep on dancing at the Pink Pony Club.
Chapel Roon, Chapel Rone. Yeah, I thought Chapel Roon was
a country band. Turns out it's a girl who sings

(53:00):
about dancing at a strip club and just recently denounced
Ice Ice Q by Steve and La Ice, no Immigration,
Customs Enforcement, real daring. A young pop star with liberal
leanings came out and said something bad about ICE. So

(53:20):
here's the latest on ICE. That's Lucy Chapman. By the way,
I'm Scott Vorhees. This is News Radio eleven ten kfab
Pink Pony Club is actually a super fun and catchy song.
If you're like, what about the subject matter, I don't
take it up with Reba McIntyre. You ever listen to Fancy?
You ever listen to those words? You know what that
song's about? Right? I do? So, mom horn out her daughter.

Speaker 3 (53:44):
I believe you listen to that song a thousand times
growing up and you did not know that until about
a year ago.

Speaker 2 (53:51):
That's probably about right. But again, but great song. Subject
material there is is iffy. But the ICE detention center,
the processing center in Chicago area, as you know, this
is the subject of riots, protest, violence against law enforcement.

(54:16):
Federal law enforcement who work for ICE just because they
have the audacity to exist and they're carrying out federal law.
Not here in Chicago, you can't. So this past weekend,
another eighteen people arrested as there were fights in this community,
protest fights, vandalism, trying to break in the facility to

(54:42):
do what exactly. So, because this is going on in Chicago,
and because the Chicago cops had told members of the
media that they were told not to go help Ice
officials when they're under attack at this processing center, that's
when President Trump said, we're sending in the National Guard.

(55:04):
And then of course that everyone's like, you can't send
in the National Guard against citizens to help. We're sending
in federal law enforcement types to assist federal law enforcement
from being under attack from these dangerous protesters. We can't
do that. Watch us. Well. One of the other things

(55:24):
they did there to protect the law enforcement within the
boundaries of this facility, they put up a fence. They
put extended fencing around the processing center to protect the
people who work there. A federal judge just ordered them
to take down the fence. Now, when I said a

(55:46):
moment ago, little things like the street racing in Omaha
and big groups of people gathering and like taking it
to the next levels they did in Boston, like it's
not enough to just go racing up and down the street,
and part of the thrill is like we don't think
there are any cops around, let's race, which is super
dangerous and dumb. But that escalates into yeah, we don't

(56:09):
care if the cops show up or not, as what
happened in Boston the other night, where the cops showed
up and then these guys started fighting the cops. A
police cruiser was set on fire. So when we let
little things become big things and we don't protect law enforcement,
what are we even doing. These guys are under attack.

(56:33):
They put up a fence to protect these workers. A
federal judge said, you can't do that. If these people
want to exercise their First Amendment rights to kill you,
we need to let them. That's what he's saying. Or
she and the Democrats in Illinois completely celebrated. They went out,

(56:55):
here's the speaker of the Illinois House saying, mister Trump,
tear down on this fence. They think that this is great.
They're jeopardizing the safety and lives of people who work
for immigration and customs enforcement. This was where we are

(57:17):
just a few weeks after the killing of Charlie Kirk,
and people were celebrating that because hey, you know, do
one more Nazi down right, and that woul all these
teachers on social media said one Nazi down, and I said,
they think it's perfectly okay to celebrating a man's death
because they think that they're doing the work where they're

(57:39):
trying to kill Hitler, like they go back in time
and kill Hitler. Well, here are all the Hitler's, you know,
the Hitler that just stood up for Israel for all
these years and just provided some level of peace for Israel,
you know, like Hitler would do. They think it's perfectly
okay to threaten and worse against Hitler and all of
his gestapa. So they're out there taking shots at Ice.

(58:06):
A fence was put up to protect them. A judge says,
take that fence down. Under what authority can a judge
tell someone to take a fence down on their property?

Speaker 3 (58:16):
Well, that takes me back to you've got to pay
attention to what judges are doing in your area and
then vote accordingly.

Speaker 2 (58:24):
The judge, by the way, says, well, you illegally blocked
a public road and impeded emergency access. Emergency access isn't going.
That's according to some of the Cook County Sheriff's Office people.
As far as the public road, no one seems to
care when the protesters are out there blocking it, which
they have been doing. Now, speaking of people actively taking

(58:47):
shots at ice, we're learning a bit more about the
twenty nine year old gunman who opened fire on the
Dallas immigration facility last month. Here's what the parents are saying.
They said, our son was completely normal until he went
to Washington State. You're like, oh, yeah, what, too much coffee,

(59:09):
not enough sunlight? What happened? Well, what they said was
what they think was because he's not been diagnosed with
or treated for any mental or physical disorders, and they
think that he went up to Washington State where he
lived for about five years, and he was living within
close proximity of uh. Where is it a one of

(59:39):
the sites for the Manhattan Project. I was today years
old when I realized the Manhattan Project was in places
other than around Manhattan. I don't even think that that
has anything to do with the title. Now that I
think about it, I'll have to watch war games again.
I learned everything I had to know about all this

(01:00:00):
from wargames.

Speaker 3 (01:00:00):
It explains a lot.

Speaker 2 (01:00:01):
Yeah, So one of the sites for the Manhattan Project
to develop atomic bombs was in the county where he
worked in Washington State. So the family said, we're convinced
our son was exposed to radiation from a nearby facility
and was suffering from radiation sickness.

Speaker 3 (01:00:20):
No, I think he was just exposed to some of
the professors. In order for that to.

Speaker 2 (01:00:25):
Stick, I don't know that he was in school there.

Speaker 3 (01:00:28):
Oh, I thought he was in school there.

Speaker 2 (01:00:29):
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (01:00:30):
But but in order that for that to stick, they
would have to prove that other people had had changed
their personalities. There's a lot of talk about personalities just
changing right now. That is just and it explains a lot.
I mean, how do we go so far to lack

(01:00:50):
of any kind of civility.

Speaker 2 (01:00:53):
I have an answer for you on this kid. Okay,
is this what the family says. Now, let's take a
look at this family for a second. This family not
exactly a harmonious family life. They would call the police
on the one morning mom called the police on this
kid's sister when she slept in rather than go to school,

(01:01:16):
and then moved out of the house for weeks as
a teenager, and then at one point spray painted a
curse word on the driveway of the family's home. That's sister.
There was a brother. Mom called the police on him
when he failed to show up at a meeting with
an army recruiter. When she said, you're going in the army,

(01:01:38):
He's like, I don't want to. He didn't show up
for the meeting. They called the cops. So mom and
dad are interesting to say the least. I don't know.
But let's also look at how they treated this guy.
This is the twenty nine year old who showed back
up after five years in Washington State, where they said

(01:02:00):
think he was exposed to radiation, and then they let
him wear gloves all the time because he felt like
it would be bad for him to touch plastic.

Speaker 3 (01:02:12):
I'm not sure radiation would cause that.

Speaker 2 (01:02:14):
Oh, did I fail to mention what he did while
he was in Washington State?

Speaker 3 (01:02:19):
You did fail.

Speaker 2 (01:02:20):
He was working at a marijuana dispensary and processing center.
Now that and who knows how who knows how much
of what he partook of while working up there. So
he comes home, he decides he can't touch plastic. He's
wearing gloves all the time. The parents let him do

(01:02:42):
two things, then stay in his room day and night
playing video games. Having logged thousands and thousands of hours
on first person shooter games and that's just on one
game distribution streaming platform. And they let him get a gun,
not a plastic one.

Speaker 3 (01:03:01):
Well, no, he couldn't use it.

Speaker 2 (01:03:02):
Then, Yeah, so this guy comes home, he's his personality
is completely changed. He's withdrawn, he has no friends, he's
plewing nothing but playing first person shooter games. He thinks
that plastic is the devil, and they're like, well, let's
get him a gun and let him do this. And
then they had the audacity to act surprised when he

(01:03:24):
did something like get up on the sea of the
roof of a nearby building and start taking shots at
who he thought were ICE officers, writing anti Ice on
a bullet and leaving handwritten notes saying he wanted to
ambush and kill ICE agents. He killed two detainees and

(01:03:44):
wounded another before he took his own life September twenty fourth,
in Dallas. The family's like, well, he was completely normal,
and then, yeah, he changed quite a bit, but that's okay.
We let him just play video games and get a gun.
Common thread in a lot of these shootings it's the gun. Yes,

(01:04:05):
I'll admit that there is a gun as a common
thread in these shootings, but also all of that and
either not treating mental issues or treating them with the
wrong substances, and being withdrawn and living in your own

(01:04:30):
virtual world. That's a horrible cocktail. That's worth than worse
than tailanol for a baby at birth. I don't know.
I'm not a doctor, I'm not even RFK Junior. But
the State of New York has issued a driver's license
for someone who entered America illegally and was released by

(01:04:52):
according to Department Homeland Security released by the Biden administration,
into this country, he was given a commercials driver's life
in the state of New York. He was just stopped
by Oklahoma Highway patrol the other day and they say,
can we see your license? And they looked at the
name on the license. Here's the name written on the

(01:05:12):
license by some DMV in New York. His name is
no name given and mole name no name given. What
and mole his last name is on mole get a dog.
His first name no name given. Just in case, Just

(01:05:36):
in case you're wandering, who the good guys and the
bad guys are.

Speaker 1 (01:05:41):
Scott Boys Mornings nine to eleven on News Radio eleven
ten KFAB
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Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

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