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January 7, 2026 35 mins
I don't know if you ever feel alone when watching the news or checking social media, but -- as long as we have each other here on NewsRadio 1110 KFAB -- we are not alone!  And, if you can put up with my sermon about all of that, I spend some time later in this show talking about naked pictures on xTwitter.
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

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

Speaker 2 (00:01):
I didn't note the fifth anniversary of the January sixth
Capitol riot yesterday. And the reason why I didn't do
that is not because you're just carrying water for Trump,
you and all your treason as mega supporters. You put
a Trump cheerleading outfit on and you just give it
up for him every day. No, that's honestly not the reason.

(00:25):
The reason why I didn't note the anniversary yesterday is
because it didn't resonate to me that it was the
fifth anniversary of January sixth. I even looked at the
calendar as like, oh, it's January sixth, and you know
what I thought yesterday? I thought, I think today's the epiphany.
I was curious it was the fifth to sixth. I

(00:46):
think I think the sixth is the epiphany, but the
epiphany that several people had, and it was yesterday afternoon.
I said, all right, let's see what's going on on Facebook,
and against my better judge, and I went on there
and I saw several posts of people noting the anniversary
of the Capitol riot, saying that it was insurrection or treason,

(01:11):
and espousing several different views of the President of the
United States and his supporters, which is fine. God bless America.
I always say, I don't care for whom you vote,
I care how you treat people who vote differently than you.
There are too many people out there that feel like

(01:31):
I'm going to see a point in my life where
we all have the exact same thought and we're all
going to vote the exact same way. And that's everything
from some of the local offices that Jim Rose was
just talking about in his commentary up to the President
of the United States in America, will all walk around
in harmony? And what planet are you living on? No

(01:52):
point do I feel like anyone is going to see
the reality of a situation and change their mind. And
we see this put forth all the all the time,
all these guys that go out there and say, well here,
this was the campaign of twenty sixteen. I'll never forget

(02:13):
it where some Daily Wire reporters were talking to college
students and said, hey, what do you think of Bernie
Sanders tax plans? Let me read for you from Bernie
Sanders tax plans. And they were reading Donald Trump's tax
plans to college students and every single one of them
and professors too, were like, oh yeah, I think it's great.
I think, you know, go in there and shake things up.

(02:33):
I really think this is a really good plan. And
then they said, actually, this is not Bernie Sanders who
said that this is the tax plan of Donald Trump.
And immediately, and with seemingly no sense that what they
were doing was so incredibly hypocritical, they completely changed course

(02:55):
and were against everything that they just said they were
for because they weren't listening. They just heard Bernie Sanders
likes this, therefore I like it. Once they heard it
was Trump, the reaction was I can't like anything to
do with this, and that disdain has gone to an
all out hatred that is consuming some people. So when

(03:19):
I saw some of these posts on Facebook, I clicked
on one and said, all right, let's see what people
are saying. Is anyone daring to push back against this
very well known person here in Omaha who posted one
of these things. And one of the guys on there,

(03:39):
guy named Jim, said, let's hope Trump exits the Land
of the Living this year fingers crossed. And it's still
there and it's got nine likes, including by the guy
who posted it, very well known person in Omaha. I'm

(04:00):
not going there, what's the point? And it saddened me.
While I had a range of emotions. I was angry,
I was sad, I was disappointed. I felt like there's
some sort of righteous justice that needed to be made.
It out like I'd go on there and go, guys,

(04:20):
all right, so you don't like the president of the
United States, We can't be openly rooting for the president
to die, right because I know exactly how that would go,
because there are too many people out there who feel like,
not only can we do that, we should And people

(04:42):
were commenting on that one because I can clicked on
that view the replies. Did anyone say, hey, no, and
this comment should be removed from Facebook. This comment, by
the way, a lot of people would see as illegal.
It's not exactly a threat to the president. But no

(05:04):
one's doing that or their comments are just being deleted.
As people think it's great to root for the president
of the United States to die fingers crossed and people
are like, wouldn't that be a great way to start
the year. Hey, my birthday is coming up, maybe he
can get that done by my birthday. I feel really

(05:26):
sorry for these people. I feel sorry that they feel
like this is okay to do, and that they need
to be the ones to step out and do it.
That they want the commander in chief, the duly elected
president of the United States, to die, they don't have
to support him. They can do that American thing where
you just find someone to run against those ideals and

(05:50):
you prop up that person in their ideals and make
a counter argument, and you go out there and try
and get that person elected. That's the way it should
be done.

Speaker 1 (06:00):
Have at it. But no one's doing that.

Speaker 2 (06:04):
You ask people like, what do you think should be
done differently in this country, and it's all about like, well,
Trump shouldn't be there, he's illegal, he's a war criminal,
and all the rest of this stuff. It also saddens
me that there are some people so consumed with demonic
hatred of this president that they would root for him
to die and not realize that their friends, neighbors, those

(06:28):
in their social media sphere, co workers, people that they're
shopping at the grocery store with, or going to a
basketball game with, driving amongst in traffic. You know, half
those people vote differently than you, right, Half those people
would be shocked, angry, saddened, a range of emotions, to
know that you are just gleefully wishing with fingers crossed

(06:52):
that the president dies, and you realize that all the
people who are around you that feel this way, you
know that should you get your wish and the president
dies in office, then what do you think all the
people that voted for him, that maybe don't agree with

(07:13):
every single thing he says and does, but largely appreciated
an agenda that's cracking down on crime and fraud in
this country that has been going on too long, because
there are so many hard working Americans of various political
stripes who say, you know, I felt like I did
things the right way. I finished school, I showed up

(07:35):
to work, I put in an honest day's work, and
I not only feel like I'm not getting ahead, I
feel like other people are just fraudulently getting cutting to
the front of the line getting benefits because they've come
illegally into this country, or they've sought asylum and they're
waiting for their asylum hearing several years down the road,

(07:56):
and so they're putting them up in these luxury hotels
on the taxpayer dime, and their kids apparently have different
rules for what they're allowed to get away with in
education and in society, then say I and my family
have to deal with And I just feel like, not
only am I not getting ahead, I'm falling behind. And

(08:17):
who's out there fighting for me? Who's out there rooting
for me? There are a lot of people who feel
that way. The people who feel that way that cause
people like Donald J. Trump to be elected President of
the United States. They don't suddenly die. It's not like
a hive mind thing where if we kill that leader,

(08:38):
all the tentacles that spring forth from him all wither
and they all die. Boy, you guys tried that with
Charlie Kirk, didn't you. Boy, the number of people celebrating
his death, what happened? You got more and more people
who spent more time watching the videos, listening to what

(09:00):
he professed, or for the first time doing this stuff
and realizing, you know, he made a lot of sense.
And so you had a lot of people turned to
that side of the political spectrum and the faith that
he lived by. So I just think it's it's sad.
I'm done being angry about it. I'm very sad for

(09:24):
the people who feel the need to be so disgustingly
demonic in their hope that these people with whom they
disagree politically die, especially if they're murdered. So I unfriended
that guy. Woo wow, he's gonna feel that one No,

(09:48):
he won't know. I don't care. I find that very sad.
And once I got done getting all stomping and angry
about it yesterday, I was like, all right, how can
you positively channel your thoughts here? And that's when I
decided I can't wait to get back on the radio tomorrow.

(10:09):
I can't wait to hang out with my friends here
in the studio and who listen to the program. Because
I know that there are several of you who have
to email and tell me all the time disagree with me.

Speaker 1 (10:20):
That's great.

Speaker 2 (10:21):
I don't think that you're disagreeing with me and also
rooting for the death of people with whom you disagree politically.
Very few people in the history of my being on
this radio station have openly wished for my death or
butt kicking, probably more than I realize. But I don't
care for whom you vote. I care how you treat

(10:43):
people who vote differently than you. And when I look
at social media of all these people saying hideously evil
things and getting likes, and I look on there and go, oh,
these are people I know. Oh, I didn't realize they
felt that way. When I drive amongst people and I

(11:07):
see the careless way that people act out in public
with this multi ton vehicle they're driving that is putting
everyone else at risk because of the careless way they're
driving it, and think, oh, these people don't care if
I live or die. When I hear the profane way
people speak when they're out in public, who would never

(11:30):
have acted that way years ago, it makes me realize.
It makes me think sometimes like, wow, we're alone. I'm
maybe I'm alone. Maybe I'm the only one that says yea.
I think that that's out of bounce. I don't think
that's anything we should be doing, certainly celebrating, rooting for.

(11:55):
But I know that when I get here on this
radio station, there are a lot of you who feel
the same way. That's why we come together. I say
this from time to time. News Radio eleven ten KFAB
will be that trusted, well informed friend with whom you laugh,
cry and get through the day together. I can't deal

(12:17):
with all of that out there if I didn't have you,
and I hope that's why you come here too. We
are not alone, and that doesn't mean we all agree
and we all vote the same way. That's not what
it's about. I don't care for whom you vote. I
care how you treat people who vote differently than you. Now,

(12:38):
it'd be great if you voted the way I did.
That wouldn't that be fun? But it's not going to happen.
And I don't live in some sort of alternate reality
where I feel like everyone's got a field the exact
same way I do, or you should die. So I
didn't note the fifth anniversary yesterday of the Capitol Riot

(12:58):
because I didn't see January sixth in the calendar and
immediately think about that sad day in our nation's history,
and it was I'm one of those. And this is
where people are like, oh, how dare you? I don't
know that it rose to a you know, nine to

(13:19):
eleven or twelve seven. I don't think that it's a
September eleventh or Pearl Harbor dark day for our nation's history,
or the day President Kennedy was assassinated. There are a
lot of people who will tell you it was worse
than that, and you can feel that way if you want.

(13:39):
I don't do you want me to die? If not, great,
You're in the right place. Thanks for being with us
here on news radio eleven ten kfab sermon.

Speaker 1 (13:52):
Is over Scott Ford.

Speaker 2 (13:54):
Ron emails as Scott, you're not alone. About a year ago,
I unfriended anyone on Facebook book who wasn't family and
who I didn't actually see on at least an occasional basis.
But I kept you and Lucy as friends because you're
my family. That is a beautiful thing. So glad to
have you with us. Thank you, Ron. He then goes

(14:16):
on and says, but this year I decided to just
delete Facebook, so he not actively actively seen my stuff.

Speaker 3 (14:23):
I so, did he delete us family?

Speaker 2 (14:25):
Well, he deleted. Everyone's been deleted. He thanosed us. Okay, now,
I uh, I like so, Scott, if you hate Facebook
so much, I don't hate Facebook because it's it's comprised
of people who I either know or people who connect

(14:47):
with the radio station and the show, and.

Speaker 1 (14:50):
And that's great.

Speaker 2 (14:52):
Every once in a while I will unfriend somebody. Uh,
and it's not because we disagree politically. I have unfriended
people have said some really ugly things and who come
from the same political perspective as do I. But I
just I don't need that kind of negativity when I

(15:12):
look at my Facebook feed when I want to see
what my aunt and her dog are doing or whatever. Anymore, though,
I don't really see anything that anyone posts on Facebook.
It's just it's a bunch of ads and this day
in rock history music album charts, which I can't help

(15:33):
but click on it and go what was the number
one song in?

Speaker 3 (15:37):
Why you keep getting that?

Speaker 1 (15:38):
That's fine, that's fine.

Speaker 3 (15:39):
I keep xing out all of the ads.

Speaker 2 (15:42):
I've tried xing out from things I don't want to
see on Facebook, and Facebook's like, you.

Speaker 1 (15:46):
Mean you want more of this stuff?

Speaker 2 (15:48):
Are you sure? Facebook knows what I want and they
keep giving it to me. So here's the next sermon.
How you coming with that New Year's resolution? Lucy hates
it when I say this every year, so I've only
given myself a few moments to say it. This is
not going to be a long thing. You know, if

(16:11):
you want to do something to better your life, you
don't have to wait for any particular special date. The
changing from one year's calendar to a new calendar, a
brand new year. Yeah, that certainly can cause one to
reflect on the year that's gone by and think about

(16:33):
the year ahead, hopefully not wincing and pain and terror
when thinking about it. It causes people to reflect and
maybe say, yeah, you know what, maybe I could stand
to do this or less of that, or I want
to do more of this, I want to be more
like this in the year ahead. And then you try that,
and after a few days you get so frustrated and

(16:55):
angry by your own inadequacies and ability to stick with
your plan that you just give up, and that I'm
here to tell you stay in the game. This is
a very long game ahead. My apologies. If you're hearing
the heart monitor slowly go to just a long tone

(17:20):
next to you. For a lot of us, though, we
have no idea how long we have. But life is
a and should be viewed as a long game. You're
going to take steps forward, you're going to take steps backward.
That doesn't mean that every week that goes by you
look at where you were versus where you are and
go all right, well, I didn't move ahead every single day,

(17:41):
but I moved closer to where I want to be
and who I want to be this week than where
I was a week ago. Let's see if we can
move a little bit further in the week ahead, and
you're going to take some steps backward. You don't have
to wait till twenty twenty seven to start a new
you can start a new right now at nine twenty
eight am on January seventh. You're right and you yeah,

(18:05):
you know I is that what you want to do?

Speaker 1 (18:07):
Do you want to leave? If that's what you want to,
get serious, I will help you find a new job.

Speaker 2 (18:13):
Oh well, I'm just I'm trying to I'm trying to
infuse well leave, No, I certainly don't. I'm trying to
find some positivity here because I was so angry about
so much stuff yesterday that I ended up taking it
out on a pack of turkey.

Speaker 1 (18:30):
I hope.

Speaker 2 (18:31):
I made myself a sandwich, slapped turkey down of the
bread and I'm going to put a turkey sandwich, And
then I got to close up the turkey and I
was trying to close the It's really a Ziplock top
on these bags. I don't know what's happened to. It's
not Ziplock, they're a brand, but it's the type of

(18:51):
seal that they used to reclose packages. They're supposed to
be a real easy way to close it. Nine times
out of ten, it takes me long longer than it
should to find that right little groove. And then I
feel like I'm in it, and I slide my fingers
across and I mash it all together and go there.
And then it just looks at me and opens back

(19:11):
up with a look in its face like, Yeah, what
are you gonna do about it?

Speaker 1 (19:14):
Tough guy.

Speaker 2 (19:16):
I just about went out to the garage and took
a hammer and nails, and I was just gonna hammer
that thing and nail it shut and then throw it
back in the fridge and let my wife find it
later and go Ah, Scott's in a mood. So that's
kind of where I was yesterday. I'm trying to get
out of that place.

Speaker 3 (19:36):
Well, I hope it's helping. It is getting there.

Speaker 1 (19:39):
It is all right.

Speaker 2 (19:41):
I could be sucked back into that negativity vortex at
any moment, but usually what I am I try and
have fun with it. And the thought of nailing shut
a plastic pack of turkey actually did brighten up my day.
I'd like to see it, especially when my wife's like,
what are you doing? As I'm getting mad and cursing
at this turkey. And then later I texted her and said, hey, sorry,

(20:01):
I popped off, and she goes, that's okay, honey. That
package of turkey could could take out anybody or whatever
you phrase it. I gotta find it exact quote welding.

Speaker 3 (20:14):
It would have been interesting.

Speaker 2 (20:15):
She said, don't worry about that. The turkey packaging can
break anyone.

Speaker 1 (20:20):
Yep.

Speaker 2 (20:21):
Thanks, She's not wrong, thanks, honey, Holly says. Papillion mayor
David Black has announced he's not running for reelection after
seventeen years of service. He's the best mayor we've ever had.
That's from Holly in La Vista. Now I'm kidding. Holly's
in Papillion, said to Scott atkfab dot com. I thought

(20:41):
i'd better fact check that, just in case someone got
their wires crossed. And I went to Mayor David Black's
Facebook page and he says it's true. I am not
running for another term. As hashtag mayor, he hashtagged mayor
so we can see more poe about mayor. We also

(21:02):
have hashtag election and hashtag Papillion in here. Do people
still hashtags.

Speaker 4 (21:09):
Just thinking that exact same thing.

Speaker 2 (21:11):
Sometimes we hashtag iHeartRadio on our stuff whatever.

Speaker 1 (21:15):
H see.

Speaker 2 (21:16):
Mayor Black Papillion says, if I commit to something, I
am all in and do all I can to fulfill
that commitment. Thinking of another term as a five year commitment,
because he's got another year left and then the new term.
Thinking from a five year perspective, I was not able
to make that commitment to the end of twenty thirty,

(21:38):
so I'm just double checking.

Speaker 1 (21:40):
No.

Speaker 2 (21:41):
I thought maybe he was gonna step down and say,
please welcome the new Mayor of Papillion, Tim Walls. But no,
I also you, okay.

Speaker 3 (21:54):
Yeah, I'm sorry, that's right.

Speaker 2 (21:56):
Sometimes you got a headbutt the microphone.

Speaker 1 (22:02):
He says.

Speaker 2 (22:03):
If anyone asks if I know who will file to
run from mayor, I will not speculate on other people's intent.
By the way, watch Jean Stouther's house, see if she's
moving to Papillion. Hey, hey, Mayor Don Grocer. Ralston's like,

(22:26):
just put me in charge. I'll do it. Dave Ken
dig and La Vista's like, hey, you got to get
by me to get the Papillion there, buddy.

Speaker 3 (22:34):
Turf war didn't count. Some Bluffs just lose their mayor.

Speaker 2 (22:37):
Drive down eighty fourth Street. You got a turf war.
I'm Dave Kendig. I got everything here between eighty fourth
and Washington.

Speaker 1 (22:44):
Yeah, what's up.

Speaker 2 (22:45):
I don't know if those are the official boundaries, but yeah,
you could get Mayor Matt Walsh of Council Bluffs. He's
looking for a gig. The conglomerate of former mayors Stothard Black.
They'll probably have to elect someone else in Papillion named Black,

(23:08):
because you know, once you go black.

Speaker 1 (23:12):
All right?

Speaker 2 (23:14):
Oh, so I mentioned a moment ago that we were
talking about Facebook and all that ugliness you can see
on there. Well, another social media site is in the
news here. Apparently X is going triple X. What yeah?
X formerly Twitter? Don't dead name X.

Speaker 1 (23:37):
Twitter?

Speaker 2 (23:39):
The Grock that's the AI tool available on X. This
is apt Yeah, it's the Elon Musk AI tool grock.
G r Ok sounds like a caveman. I don't know
why you'd have this bastion of new technology with a

(23:59):
name that reminds me of a caveman from the Far
Side cartoons.

Speaker 3 (24:03):
Well, that's only if you pronounce it gro.

Speaker 2 (24:07):
I'm going groc. But apparently some people have been using
Groc and realized that you can take a picture of
somebody and upload it to Groc and say, hey, Groc,
take all of the clothes off of the person in
this picture. And Groc's like, right away, how's this. People
are like, oh, yeah, thanks Groc for making this fake

(24:30):
image of a naked person. And of course they've been
doing it too, celebrities, friends, co workers, classmates, people who
are underage, and it's just getting a little too wild
West out there for some people who are going, hey, Elon,
are you gonna rain this in or what? Like one

(24:53):
person who is someone who's in a custody battle with
Elon Musk over one of his children. Doesn't he have
a lot of children?

Speaker 1 (25:04):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (25:07):
Well, this person described as a conservative influencer, and I'm
not gonna give you your name because people are gonna
be like, I'm gonna go look for naked pictures of her.
They're fake pictures, but she said people are putting pictures
of her, including one of when she was fourteen years old,
and they're like, hey, Groc, this person's going after our

(25:29):
master Elon Musk. Remove her clothes and Groc's like, here,
it is and people are posting it and now x.
Twitter has removed some of the posts that she reported,
but others were. She was told, yeah, this picture does
not break our rules. I don't know what's out there.

(25:49):
I hesitate to even imagine, but Elon Musk as people
are posting pictures, says target have ranged from the aforementioned
Elon Musk former significant other to actress Millie Bobby Brown,
who is different from MILLI different from Bobby Brown. Millie

(26:15):
Bobby Brown is the actress from Stranger Things. She plays
l and she's no longer like a nine year old kid.
But people are posting apparently fake images of her. Sweden's
Deputy Prime Minister Ibash are these people that people want

(26:35):
to see without clothes on?

Speaker 3 (26:38):
People are so gross?

Speaker 1 (26:40):
I'll do it for you, guys. Calm down. I'm gonna
see what Iba Bush oh hi.

Speaker 2 (26:47):
But it's not her, the Deputy prime I'm not looking
at naked pictures, however, I just want to see what
she looks like. The Deputy Prime Minister of Sweden is
exactly what you'd think a Swedish woman looks like like
from veep statue. You ask and blonde people are I mean.

Speaker 1 (27:05):
It said. Uh.

Speaker 2 (27:06):
At one point last week, GROC was churning out roughly
one non consensual dirty image per minute. Well, it's hard
to get Deputy Prime Minister Bush's permission if you're gonna
ask GROC to So that's why I think it's it's

(27:27):
weird how this story. Uh from the BBC and the
Washington Post are also out with stories about how GROC
is taking picture taking clothes off of people's pictures. No,
it's not people are asking this AI tool to do it.
GROC has not taken upon itself. It's not like kids
are researching a homework assignment, like I got to write

(27:51):
a book report about uh Frederick Douglass. Hey, uh, hey, GROC,
help me write a book report. Get me some of
the facts about Frederick Douglas's life, and GROC is like, well,
the abolitionist who is responsible for helping free the slaves
and opening President Lincoln's eyes as to the injustices going

(28:13):
on in the Confederacy looked like this naked Is this
what you want? And you're like, no, put the suit
back on.

Speaker 1 (28:20):
What do we.

Speaker 2 (28:23):
GROC is not deciding for itself to make naked pictures
of people. People have to ask it to do that.

Speaker 4 (28:29):
So basically, what you're saying is that robotics and AI
is even taking over the pornography industry or will.

Speaker 2 (28:39):
I don't know whether we've reached the point where we
have a shortage of individuals who are willing to get
into that business. Willing is sometimes I think the wrong word.
But so they go to Elon and you're like, Elon,
what are you going to do about this? And of

(29:00):
course Elon Musk the other day decided to amplify that
which Groc is able to do by posting a fake picture.
I believe this is a fake picture produced by Groc
of a toaster in a bathing suit, saying Groc can

(29:20):
put a bikini on anything. All right, guys, I'll take
a look at this toaster and see if it's hot.
Oh hey, that is a hot toaster. Both slots are hot.
It's a toaster.

Speaker 1 (29:40):
Lucy. Have you ever lost your phone? I had to
deal with and now what do I do? Right?

Speaker 3 (29:45):
You mean today?

Speaker 1 (29:46):
Have you ever lost your phone?

Speaker 4 (29:48):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (29:48):
Really? Have have you? I never? Have you mean?

Speaker 3 (29:52):
Completely? Never recover it?

Speaker 1 (29:54):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (29:54):
Oh? No?

Speaker 1 (29:59):
Have you? Have you?

Speaker 2 (30:00):
Have you ever lost your phone? While being in charge
of the nuclear Regulation Authority of Japan.

Speaker 3 (30:06):
No I quit before that.

Speaker 1 (30:08):
Yeah, that's right, you did.

Speaker 2 (30:11):
It was not You thought that it was going to
be a real easy job, like Homer Simpson working at
a nuclear power plant. Turns out that no donuts employees,
There are no donuts, and you can't just drink duff
beer on the job. You actually have to do stuff
and no stuff. And she's like, I watched The Simpsons

(30:31):
and thought I knew how to run a nuclear power plant.
Smithers was nowhere to be found.

Speaker 1 (30:37):
So she quit.

Speaker 2 (30:39):
But then they put this guy in charge, and he
misplaced his government issued smartphone, which contains confidential contact information
for the Nuclear Security Division of Japan.

Speaker 4 (30:54):
I hardly think anybody could access it, and if they could,
then they wouldn't need his phone.

Speaker 2 (30:58):
To do Its word was one two three four five.
It's the same password an idiot would have on as luggage.
There's your eighties movie reference for this segment of the
radio program that is Vacation Spaceballs space I was looking
for Spaceballs. It's amazing how we have all this. The

(31:25):
technology has made it such that cyber thieves are able
to hack into all this stuff. I saw a story
yesterday that said that an extension in the browser Chrome
is potentially storing some of your sensitive passwords and information
and all the rest of this stuff. And you think,
how in the world am I supposed to beat back
all those who want to steal my identity or my

(31:46):
passwords or hack into my accounts and all the rest
of this stuff. Ultimately, why a lot of the stuff
ends up getting all jacked up is because some fool
misplaces his phone. Hey, has anyone seen a phone? And
next thing you know, bombs are going off around the
world because someone picked it up and said what does
this button do? And they went beat bob boot bang,

(32:07):
And the next thing you know, bombs are going off
because Japan can't secure it's nookes nukes because some guy
forgot his phone and the break room. The other reason
why all this problems happened with like hacking and and
and all that is because someone gets an email while
sitting there at work as the administrator of the cybersecurity

(32:30):
division of some company and it says, oh, no, can't
believe this you in video click link, Oh I didn't
realize Barbin accounting was illiterated, but I better click on
this and say, oh it was a it was a trap.

Speaker 1 (32:45):
And next thing you know, you've opened up your entire network.

Speaker 2 (32:48):
And actually it's not the security people. They're pretty savvy
about that. It's the people that they tell time and
time again. Now, hey, when you get a link, and
now I know that the link seems to be from
the CEO of the company. Remember she's not illiterate, so

(33:08):
if she sends you some illiterate nonsense, that's probably not her. Also,
if you look at the email address, it says, yeah,
this is totally fake at gmail dot com. It's not
from within the company. Don't click on these links. Sometimes
we have enough security in place that a window pops
up and says, you're about to click on a link.

(33:31):
You're trying to click on a link that is prohibited
by this company. Are you sure? And you're like, yeah,
I didn't get to be CFO this company by being
an idiot. And then this guy that you've told over
and over again like you gotta stop clicking on these links, like, okay,
I'll do better next time, clicks on another link, And
next thing you know, no one has health insurance. I

(33:55):
feel so awful for people in cybersecurity accept that they
will always have a job. There'll always be some moron
who can't control himself and is just clicking on links,
and then you got to have a meeting with the
guy like, look, you can't watch pornography.

Speaker 1 (34:21):
On the clock on.

Speaker 2 (34:22):
Your school issued computer. I was researching an assignment for
health class. Like you're a math teacher. Yeah, I was
watching one Go into two. That's you are really having

(34:43):
slept in week? Okay, alright, how long do I get
a chance to use that excuse here?

Speaker 1 (34:50):
With the new schedule?

Speaker 3 (34:51):
Ten days?

Speaker 1 (34:52):
Oh okay, next ten days are gonna be fun. Scott
Voice News Radio eleven ten Kfaby
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