Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Scott vor.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
All. I want to.
Speaker 1 (00:06):
Just shake you Trump.
Speaker 3 (00:11):
Just shake it truck, Just shake it truck, Just shake
it Trump.
Speaker 1 (00:21):
Great to have you with us on this Trump Date
Monday morning. We could honestly do a Trump date every
single day, but we reserve them for when there's so
much fire hose of Trump news that none of it
really has anything to do with the other story, other
than it all circles around our President of the United States.
(00:44):
And I will say this about my little March Madness
spring vacation. I was down in the Ozarks. The Ozarks
are all in for Trump. It is amazing.
Speaker 2 (00:58):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (00:58):
There are Trump theme stores in the Ozarks. You go
in there and buy Trump gear and American flag hats
and all the rest of the stuff. Trump signs everywhere.
And in one occasion, I'm going to change a word
on this sign to witches rhymes with we got it?
Are we all clear? There is a guy who had
(01:20):
a house right across the street from a church in
the Ozarks. So you're driving north on one of these
Ozark roads.
Speaker 3 (01:27):
You'll have to be more specific.
Speaker 1 (01:29):
It's I no, no, and it It just shows you
what you're dealing with in the Ozarks and I'm fine
with it. I don't know about I wouldn't put this
sign in my yard with the language involved. But I'm
just telling you. You're driving north on this road and
to your right as a church, and to your left
is a guy's house with a big banner in front
of his house that says Trump and underneath it says
(01:53):
I'm back witches. That's the Ozarks right now. Part of
me didn't want to leave it was and I come
back here in the blue dots. I'm like, you know,
the election was last November, but I guess we have
election tomorrow. We'll talk more about that later in the program,
but this Trump date begins with an Omaha connection. Every year,
(02:15):
there's the White House Correspondence Dinner. This is something where
the media gets together. Generally, the President of the United
States is there and makes some self deprecating jokes, takes
makes some jokes about other people, make some jokes about
the journalist. There's a comedian that goes in there and
makes jokes about everybody. Oh shoot, who would oh. Jim
(02:39):
Gaffigan headlined the White House Correspondence Dinner last year, which
was really interesting because Jim Gaffigan, who if you're familiar
with him, hopefully you think he's a very funny comedian,
because he is a very funny comedian. He was just
in Omaha a few months ago with Jerry Seinfeld. Great Show.
Gaffigan's been a guest on this program a couple times
(02:59):
over the years, including one of my very favorite moments
when we had some breaking news about I don't remember what,
and it was at the same time that Gaffigan was
a guest in the program. So without any warning, I
welcomed him on, saying, all right, we have some breaking
news in New York. Let's go to kfab Junior Cup
reporter Jim Gaffigan on the scene in New York City. Jim,
(03:23):
what's the latest? And he there wasn't any huh what.
He just took the baton and ran with it like
the professional he is. I love Jim Gaffigan. But before
the twenty twenty election, Jim Gaffigan got on social media
and just let loose with profane, long winded rants against
(03:47):
Trump and his supporters, which isn't new. Most people in
Hollywood do stuff like that. I was disappointed to see
that coming from him, though I wasn't surprised These were
his political leanings. I was a little surprised at how
he was relating them. So a few years later, before
the twenty twenty four election, Jim Gaffigan is there for
(04:11):
Biden's last year at the White House correspondence dinner, and
I thought, all right, here we go, just anti Trump
anti Trump. There were certainly some jabs, but there were
also shots at the Biden administration and what was going
on with who was in charge of the White House
and all the rest of this stuff. And it was
(04:33):
it was good natured, funny shots at both sides, and
I was so happy to see that that's usually what
this event is. This year, the comedian who I don't
know who booked it win, but this had to have
been well before Trump was elected. The comedian is Amber Ruffin.
(04:56):
Was Amber Ruffin. Amber Ruffin is. She's a comic and
she's written for The Late Night Show with Seth Myers.
If you don't have any idea what I'm talking about,
then whatever. But she's been nominated for Emmy and Tony Awards.
And she was part of this revamped edition of I
(05:17):
Believe Some Like It Hot, which was at the Orphium
last week. I don't know if it's still playing this week,
check tick at Omaha dot com. But she's a very
accomplished comedian, comedy writer, and she's from Omaha Benson High School,
graduate nineteen ninety six. And she also said when someone
(05:40):
asked her, I believe she was on a podcast and
they said, oh, you're doing the White House Correspondence Dinner
with Trump. Are you going to do what everyone usually
does at this event and you know, have some jabs,
you know, playful jabs at both sides, And she said, oh, no,
(06:00):
absolutely not. She said, the Trump administration are a bunch
of murderers and to joke around with them where they're
laughing with you would make them feel like human beings,
which we can't do that because they're not. So the
Trump administration are murderers who aren't human beings and shouldn't
(06:24):
be made to feel that way. That was an easy
one for the White House. They said in a statement
from the White House Deputy Chief of Staff that Amber Ruffin,
Omaha's own was out. The White House Correspondence Association, I guess,
(06:45):
does all of this, and they decided to drop the
headliner the MC of the event. Omaha's Amber Ruffin quote,
we are no longer featuring a comedic performance this year,
according to the president of the organization over the weekend. Instead,
the event coming up in about a month's time will
(07:05):
focus on honoring the work of journalists rather than on
the politics of division. This isn't this isn't surprising. You
had someone saying that the Trump administration were a bunch
of murderers. Even if the White House Correspondence Association had
decided to continue with the event as is, Trump himself
(07:29):
wasn't going to be there. He didn't show up for
I don't think any of these dinners during his time
in office. Notably, he was there in two thousand and
I don't know, fourteen, maybe fourteen or fifteen. President Obama's
(07:50):
in office and he's up there doing his little routine
because they get a president's get a chance to fire
back at all the entertainers that evening, and it's kind
of like a good natured and Obama was always really
good at it. But he Obama that night took his
opportunities to take shot after shot at someone sitting in
the office, Donald Trump, and the President of the United
(08:13):
States saying, oh yeah, Donald thinks he can be president.
Donald thinks he can buy his way to the White House.
Donald thinks this. Donald thinks that just taking shot. And
President Trump sat there with his little, bemused smile on
his face, and I honestly think that was the moment
when he decided, all right, I'm done talking about this.
I'm doing it. I'm gonna run for president and I'm
(08:36):
going to win, and then I'm going to lose, and
then I'm going to win again, and then I'm going
to seek a third term. I think that was the
night when Trump laid all of his cards out there
and said, you know what, he thinks. He thinks he's
being funny. We'll watch hold my non beer, hold my heineken,
Trump doesn't drink, hold my heineken, and watch hold my
(08:57):
diet coke, and watch this. I on Leslie think that
was the night. And then he gets at office and
doesn't show up for the dinners, and he probably won't
show up this year, though the White House Past secretary
didn't rule it out, but h yeah. An Omaha native
had headlines over the weekend calling the Trump administration a
(09:20):
bunch of murderers who are not human beings and we
are just getting started with our Trump Date, let's discuss
the president's comments on about whether or not he could
seek a third term in office. We'll pick it up
there in our Trump Date next. Scott Voices News Radio
eleven to ten. Kfaby made some joke a moment ago
(09:43):
about the President deciding in about twenty fourteen or fifteen,
I'm going to run for president. I'm going to win,
then I'm going to lose, but then I'm gonna win again,
and then I'm going to seek a third term. This
is something that the President is talking about, and I
think I know why. But let's listen to what he
said about it.
Speaker 2 (10:01):
I want to talk about a fair term now, because
no matter how you look at it, you get a
long time to go. We have a long time, you know,
we have all those four years to go, and that's
a long cun But despite that, so many people are saying,
you've got to run again. They loved the job.
Speaker 1 (10:18):
Most importantly, they loved the job all right. So that's
he says, I'm not joking, but it's too early to
think about a third term or a third term, depending
on your thoughts about the president. He said, I'm not joking.
It's far too early to think about it. But then
he says, yeah, you know what, there are ways around
(10:41):
that pesky constitution. Immediately, all of those who can't stand
the president their heads exploded simultaneously. Maybe you heard the
you thought maybe it was the cracking of thunder over
the weekend when the president said that, it was just
heads of TDS sufferers floating all over the place. And
(11:02):
then you think, why would the president say that, Why
would he say, well, there are methods you could do it.
And then one of someone said, well, how could he
do it? Well, technically he wouldn't run for a third term.
But JD. Vance could run for his first term, be
(11:23):
elected president, and then turn the office over to Trump.
I don't know. I mean, unless obviously Trump was his
vice president, then that could happen. I don't know. There's
the wording about how someone could be president. Look, everyone's
starting to pass words and look at the twenty second
(11:44):
Amendment on the prohibition of being elected president more than twice.
But see that's the thing, Like he wouldn't be elected
this last time. They could make him Speaker of the House,
have JD. Vance run with Milania, and then they get
elected and they resigned and the Speaker of the House
becomes president. What do you know? It's Trump, the newly
(12:04):
elected congressman from Florida. I mean, there's any number of
ways we could do this. But and bear in mind
when I say this, I have been wrong about Trump's
presidential ambitions several times, including He's not going to run
for president. This is twenty fifteen, sixteen, He's not going
(12:25):
to run. Well, he's not gonna get the nomination, he's
not gonna win. So that was oz for three on
that run. But I feel confident going back to this
craps table again and saying, why would Trump say he's
thinking about a third term? He thinks it could happen
and maybe it should to cause liberal heads to explode.
(12:50):
I think one of his favorite things to do is
to get into the office and work and do the
work that he knew he was elected to do, and
secondary to that, slightly behind that sometimes right before that
is causing people who hate him to hate him even more.
(13:11):
Why would he say this just to tick you off
if you're one of those who is not a Trump supporter.
But we've got a city election in Omaha, the primary
election tomorrow. Let's hold off on the twenty twenty eight
presidential ambitions of everybody for at least another few weeks. Right,
(13:33):
We've got the general election, then the we got the
primary election, the general city election right after it here
in the weeks ahead, then we'll worry about twenty twenty eight.
We'll just skip the midterms and go right to twenty
twenty eight. So as far as that work goes. Elon
Musk also did something that caused people who hate him
(13:55):
and the president to get upset. He gave out two
one million dollar checks yesterday to two voters in Wisconsin.
You can't buy votes, all right, here's all the background
on this. There's a Supreme Court election in Wisconsin, and
the narrative here, whether it's true or not, I don't know.
(14:17):
But the narrative here is that if the Democrats get
that Supreme Court seat, then the Democrats will have the
power at the legislative and the judicial branches in the
state of Wisconsin to redraw the congressional districts. It's called gerrymandering.
Democrats do it, Republicans do it. This is how it works.
Sometimes they do it based on new population shifts and
(14:41):
in order to be more fair to the populations, they
redraw the congressional districts as they have allowance to do.
The other side will always call it gerrymandering, even if
it's not. I don't know what's going on in Wisconsin,
but the argument here is that if the Democrats win
the Supreme Court decision, then they'll jerrymander the districts and
(15:04):
two congressional races that tend to lean Republican will go away,
and Republicans will lose two seats in the House of
Representatives based on this vote tomorrow in Wisconsin. So with
that in mind, Trump and Elon Musk have been paying
a lot of attention to this. Elon said he would
(15:26):
pay a couple million dollars to people to get I
don't know. He was trying to get people to register
to vote and then vote. The gray area is he's
not paying people to vote. He's paying them on a
lottery choice of those who register to vote. The big
question on that is, how does Elon Musk know who
(15:47):
just registered to vote? I don't know. I'm sure there
are people that say, because he's doze and he's looking
at our social security information and he can check all
this stuff out, and he can probably manipulate who votes
for who. I don't know. I don't think that's the truth.
But so he gave out As there were courts trying
to figure out whether Elon Musk could do this, he
(16:09):
gave out these checks to two voters yesterday and he said,
I'm paying them because they're now they're working for me.
They are spokespersons for my political group. I'm not paying
them to vote. I have no control who they vote for.
It just happened to give out a couple of million
dollars checks to people who are here at this crowd
(16:32):
in Green Bay. And he was wearing a cheesehead green
Bay Packers hat, and he gave out these checks to
people and made them spokespersons for his political group. So
they work for him now, easiest job they'll ever have.
The media will say what do you think, and they'll say,
we think you should vote. They're Republican ku ching. It's weird,
(16:55):
but he spent more than twenty million dollars as well
as other political action groups that Elon has a hand.
They've spent more than twenty million dollars to help the
conservative win this race in Wisconsin. There's also a big
vote to fill the House seat of Mike Waltz, who
(17:17):
left to become the President's National Security advisor and start
inviting journalists into secret chat groups chat groups with intelligence
groups intelligence officials. So Waltz left Congress, became an essay,
got embroiled in the signal controversy. Now they've got to
fill his seat. And here's the funny way that the
(17:39):
media is talking about this race. It's a pretty heavily
Republican district, and the Republican is winning in the polls,
but not by much. They're like, well, I mean, he
should be winning in a landslide. This shouldn't even be close.
And maybe it is, and maybe it's not. Some of
(18:00):
the polls say he's only up by about four or
five points. Remember is the Des Moines Register poll that
said there's no way Trump's going to win in twenty
twenty four. There's no way he's going to win Iowa.
He won all this easily. Careful how much faith you
put in some of these political polls from these media outlets.
But the way that a lot of these media outlets
(18:22):
are reporting on this race. This website called punch Bowl News,
political website that looks at things like this, and they
said anything less than a twenty point victory for the
Republican in this special election for the House seat in Florida,
anything less than a twenty point victory should alarm Republicans.
(18:47):
So if you don't win by at least twenty points,
it's like a loss as far as I see it.
If you're the top seed in March Madness and you
win by twenty five points, you advanced to the next round.
If you're the top seed in March Madness and you
(19:07):
win in a last second buzzer beater heaved from three
quarters court that manages to bounce around the rim eighteen
times before it goes in what America? What a prayer?
You won by one point, you advance to the next round.
A win is a win is a win. And now
to say that, oh, if you win but it's not
a landslide whin, it's like a loss. Yeah. I think
(19:29):
that the extra or the continued Republican vote in the
House will not be seen as less than a vote
if it was only an eighteen point victory. But here's
where we are in this era of Trump. We are
in the midst of a Trump date. He's saying that
(19:50):
on Wednesday, it's going to be a liberation day when
it comes to his new tariffs taking effect. I'll tell
you again how the media is reporting this coming up
in just a moment, Fox News Update shortly, Lucy, are
you scowling at me? I look over and you're scowling
at me, aren't I? Usually you're on news right here.
You know the difference, kfab, You should be more surprised
(20:13):
when I'm smiling. Yeah, if I look over and you're
just sitting. And this was always something that bothered me
because apparently I have a pretty bad case of RBF.
Which will come up that's resting, which face that's not? Oh,
I get that'll come up here in about twenty five
minutes when I tell you what I learned on my
(20:35):
March Madness Spring vacation. But there would every once in
a while, and I don't know why I had to
react this way, stupid youth that has led into stupid adulthood.
But I'd be just hanging out there and maybe at
a party or you know, a gathering or something. I'd
just be kind of hanging out and some girl who
probably wanted to just strike up conversation that maybe would
(20:59):
lead somewhere. Really nice would come up to me and say, hey,
why don't you smile, And rather than just take it
as a nice like, hey, how's it going, I would
instead start arguing with this really nice girl that came up.
The pretty little girl comes up, Hey, why don't you smile?
You know, some sixth grade gathering or something like that,
(21:21):
And rather than smile and take it for the gesture
I'm sure she intended, now I start arguing, Actually, if
I was just standing here by myself smiling for no reason,
you should be worried. Now I look like a psycho,
but I maintain that I am right. Yeah, I don't know. Anyway,
(21:45):
We're in the midst of a Trump date here and
on Wednesday. Here's the timeline today is everyone is in
a cranky mood Monday, after listening to kfab's morning news,
all the emails, talkback messages and everything else that came
in to Gary and Jim and Lucy in the morning.
(22:07):
Though Lucy was never the ire of any of these.
Everyone was really cranky, you guys over kfab May May
May May. Everyone's super cranky. And then tomorrow is primary
election day in the city of Omaha. It also happens
to be April first. People have been emailing saying, are
you guys on your show going to tomorrow do something
(22:31):
like you've done in previous years on April First? And
the answer is, I'm not sure yet. We'll see, as
in previous years, that decision has been made moments before
the show starts, So we'll see. And then on Wednesday
(22:55):
we'll know who the top two vote getters are in
the city races. Everyone's very closely watching they may or race.
But Wednesday also is a different day. It's Liberation Day.
This is what President Trump has called Wednesday when his
new rounds of tariffs begin, and he says, basically, he's
(23:16):
like Oprah Winfrey, you get a tariff, and you get
a tariff, and you get a tariff, and people are like,
but these are our trade partners. Yes, And do you
know when the media talks about these, look for key
phrases that either are or aren't there in the reporting
(23:37):
of these tariffs. Here are the two things for which
to look. First, is the term reciprocal in the story.
I don't know what that means. All right, here's what
that means. Since World War Two, Lucy has been charging
(23:57):
me a fifteen percent tariff on certain imports into the
country of Lusitania. And so this has been going on since.
Isn't that a ship that went down? You bet it
was so proud of you the uh So, since World
War Two, I've been important. Let's say I make barley.
(24:21):
You know, I'm a barley farmer, and Lucy's like, I'll
take all the barley you got. There's a lot of
drinking going on in Lusitania, all right, So but we
also have some domestic barley, and I know you want
to do some business, but your barley's going to be
subject to a fifteen percent import. I'm like, okay, well
we're partners, and we also who might want to have
(24:43):
some of your rubber that you make in your country
over here in our country? Can we can? We're gonna
put a tiff on that. Oh my gosh, why would
you do that? Oh? Sorry, all right, We're not going
to do a terrif on you. So I've been paying
a fifth teen percent, basically having to charge everything along
my line fifty extra fifteen percent because you put a
(25:05):
tariff on me since World War two. Well, now over
here in Scotland, that's what my nation is called. Yeah,
there's a new sheriff in town. Sheriff's looking at the books.
Sheriff and his buddy Elon are looking at the books.
Go away. A second. Lusitania has been charging us a
fifteen percent tariff for seventy some years. What are we
(25:27):
charging nothing reciprocal tariff fifteen percent on her stuff? And
then Lucy's like, that's not fair. No, you're right, it
isn't fair because you've been getting this extra fifteen percent
for eighty years and we're just getting it starting Wednesday.
It's a reciprocal tariff. Now, no one in the media,
(25:50):
hardly anyone's referring to it as what it is, a
reciprocal tariff, because then they have to tell the people, Yeah,
we've actually been getting shafted on this train deal the
entire time. Here's another thing to look for when the
media starts coming out with stories, and you'll see a
lot of this in those media outlets who use the AP,
(26:11):
the Associated Press, the AP is now in love with
giving you stories on how things that you buy might
cost more, and they do put that phrase in there. Well,
you know, these these these tariffs, like presidents threatening twenty
five percent tariff on some foreign cars and car parts
(26:34):
that's going to take effect on Wednesday. The auto industry
is bracing, and what you buy for your next car
might be more money. If you have to get your
car repaired, it might cost more money. Now that's because
of a couple of things. Number one, do you buy
a foreign car that is exclusively made and parts exclusively
(26:57):
made in Mexico or Canada. There aren't a lot of
vehicles that would fall subject to that, So a lot
of people are like, but I drive this, all right,
that's that's not subject to it. But the media is
not going to tell you, you know, which is what? Like,
but this car is made up in Canada. Yes, and
it also has plants in America, and you can get
those cars and those parts here domestically. So yes, I
(27:21):
suppose if you're stupid about it, you're like, but I
need a new carburetor. Well, there's one available down the
street here in America, but I want to get it
from Canada. All right, it's going to cost fifteen to
twenty five percent more. That's not fair, You're an idiot.
Get the one here made in America. Well, I need
a particular carburetor for my foreign car and now it's
(27:44):
subject to twenty five percent. Well, there's an American made
equivalent that's made here in America and it costs about
the same, maybe a little bit less. I understand where
some people want to get stuff made overseas. There's a
lot of stuff made overseas that's a lot cheaper and
what's made in America because unions. But you're gonna have
to decide. But as far as as the tariff and
(28:06):
so forth, the media is like, well, you know, next
time you go get your car repaired, it might cost
more money. Yeah, it might. They could also say the
next time you go get a tuna sandwich, it might
cost more money. The next time you go get a haircut,
(28:26):
it might cost more. Basically, anything that might have a
negative impact on your life or pocketbook might be because
something Trump is doing. We don't know. We're just gonna
throw it out there and say, well, you know, if
if you do this and you buy that, it might
cost you more money. Now, the mite is because depending
(28:47):
on where you buy your stuff, and also depending on
how long these tariffs will last. What in all of
these tariff wars has been long lasting and a sticking tariff.
Trump is using this as an ago siating tactic. He
has his first term, he's doing it here just days
into a second term. It's a negotiation. What does he want?
(29:11):
He wants the other country like, well, we enjoyed a
zero percent tariff. Okay, well now it's twenty five percent.
Well then we're gonna make We're gonna do an extra
ten percent. Now you're paying thirty five percent. Okay, now
you're paying forty I can do this all day. What
does he want? He wants them both to be zero.
He is. He is fighting these countries until they blink,
(29:34):
and they will so he can make things cheaper for
you and also get what he wants in terms of
you got to pay this in NATO, you got to
pay that for this relief, or help out with this war,
or stop fentannel from coming into our country, or take
these political or take these illegal immigrants into your prisons.
(29:57):
He wants something. He doesn't want tariffs unless you're wanting
to fight that war, in which case apparently he's ready
to do it. But he's trying to get all this
stuff to zero. So yeah, it might cost more if
you end up buying a foreign car in the next
few weeks. If you wait, it might not cost it
(30:20):
might cost less. You know, there's something else the media
could say, Well, it seems like the president's negotiating tactic
is actually to bring down the cost of all these
things for people in Canada, Mexico and America. So it
might cost more if you buy a certain car in
the next few weeks, or if you wait, it might
cost a lot less. Media is not going to tell
you that last part because they hate Trump. So when
(30:43):
you're reading stories about this, see if they use the
term reciprocal tariffs, implying this is what we've been hit
with and now we're doing the same thing they're doing,
but we're the bad guys. And the phrase all this
might cost you more. It's amazing this same media saying
that now didn't say any of that, like, well, President
(31:04):
Biden's administration is doing this, this and this, and the
Congress just passed that and it might lead to record inflation.
You know, we didn't hear any of that everything you
buy might cost more money. That didn't have any of that,
But boy, we got that with this tariff battle. In
the meantime, maybe don't spend a lot of time looking
(31:25):
at the stock markets. They're disgusting. We'll wrap up our
Trump date next. Scott Vorhees News Radio eleven ten kfab
wrapping up a Trump date with the latest from Doge.
Doze has just sound emails out to about three hundred
(31:46):
government workers informing them that they no longer have a
job at the Tell me if you've ever heard of
this organization before, the US Institute of Peace. I think
I saw that on Testame Street. This is a real thing.
(32:08):
Oh yeah, Congress created it. When do we know when
no one knows from what? Don't even look it up.
It's no one has any idea just peace in our time.
Congress created it, and it's been a federally funded basically
a think tank. These guys, there's three hundred people that
(32:32):
work for the US Institute of Peace, and their job
is to come to work every day. They get a
clock in probably nine am, So good morning Bob, Good
morning Ted. And then they go sit in their cubicles
and they and sometimes they'll have meetings. They go all
to get together around a big conference table. All right,
(32:54):
I hope everyone had a good weekend. It's Monday morning,
and our job here at the US Institute of Peace,
just in case anyone forgot or is confused about the
mission is to come up with various ways that we
can have peace. Anyone have any ideas? Yeah, William, what
do you got?
Speaker 2 (33:12):
Well?
Speaker 1 (33:12):
I was thinking that maybe we just ask the people
in the Middle East to stop killing each other. William,
that's a great idea, and it's also been something we've
been talking about a long time here at the US
Institute of Peace. Recommendation here is that we send out
an email to all those people in the Middle East
(33:33):
who are killing each other, and we once again ask them.
Now we know that our previous efforts to ask them
to stop killing each other have not been We see
read once in a while on the email or the
message we send Jesus talking, but Jesus talking read read
(33:53):
letters on the emails never mind. Okay, r e A
d that they read our message, but they did not
reply to it. Sometimes they've replied with very rude language
or our favorite response is we would gladly stop killing
them once they stop killing us. So we've been trying,
we've been talking, We've been going basically round and round
(34:15):
and all this since we started, and we've determined that
peace is very difficult to achieve as long as the
people who are warring on this planet don't do what
we tell them to. I mean, how is that not
every single day at their jobs? How are we going
to get peace over here in Russia? We'll call the
(34:37):
US Institute of Peace. If they thank you for calling
the US Institute of Peace, please hold a lot of
due to especially high caller volume. You know, war breaks
out due to a specially high caller volume. Today this
group does nothing except suck taxpayer dollars. And and that
(35:00):
has just ended as the email went out saying you
all have to find another job. You don't have to
go home, but you can't stay here at the US
Institute of Peace. All the Trump administration doesn't like peace.
And that is our Trump date. Trump Trump. When we
have a lot of different stories and the only thing
(35:20):
that binds them is that they all have to do
with the President of the United States, we put them
together in something called a Trump Date. Scott Boyes Mornings
nine to eleven, Our News Radio eleven ten KFAB