Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Use Radio seven ten dot com The Uncle Henry Show
weekday afternoons from five till seven.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
One of the first things we tell our players is
keep in touch with their families. And when our freshmen
first arrived, we asked them to write a postcard home
right then. You know, we keep them pretty busy, but
they always have time to pick up the phone and call,
and it's really important to keep in touch. Have you
(00:32):
called your mama today? I sure wish I could call mine.
Speaker 3 (00:36):
Greens out in.
Speaker 4 (00:37):
Texall wonderful town, wonderful peoples to go, things to see.
My love is small, that's my wonderful times and churches,
(00:59):
entertain laces to shop.
Speaker 5 (01:03):
My heart's in morebel that's my wonderful time.
Speaker 4 (01:09):
Mobile the center of transportation, business and industries at the place.
Speaker 5 (01:15):
Mobile's got the Junior.
Speaker 4 (01:17):
Missal Operation Home of Party Crying.
Speaker 5 (01:21):
Senior Home Game. Mobile is great to live in and
work in.
Speaker 4 (01:25):
Good Climate's ideal for progress.
Speaker 6 (01:28):
You see. My love is mobil.
Speaker 5 (01:33):
That's my wonder fault, it says The Uncle Henry's Show
(02:11):
here on Dues Radio seven ted wnt M. Thank you
very much for listening to the Uncle Hendar Show. I
appreciate it very very much. Now we can talk about
whatever you want to talk about as we're here together,
me and you trying to figure out what's going on
(02:32):
in the world around us. Telephone number to reach the
show two five one four seventy nine two seven two three.
That's two five one four seven nine two seven two three.
Email address Uncle Henry at iHeartMedia dot com. That's Uncle
Henry at iHeartMedia dot com. Now I've got a caller waiting. Caller,
(02:53):
hang on just a second. Does want to mention, Yes,
it is. We're heading into the Mother's Day weekend. I
don't wait until the last minute. You're getting you're getting
close to the last minute. You're getting close to the
last minute. Don't wait until the last minute. If your
mama is still on the planet, make sure that you
acknowledge her on Mother's Day. I saw a list of
(03:16):
what not to get mother's in case you don't know
what not to get them. The number one thing you
should never buy your mama for Mother's Day, according to
a survey I saw. Number one thing to never get
your mama is any kind of weight loss product. No,
not even if she wants it. Do not get her
a weight loss product. Number two on the list would
(03:39):
be any kind of cleaning supplies. No, no cleaning supplies.
Also on the list of things not to get your
mom or unsolicited self help books. No matter, no matter
how much you think your mama needs a self help book,
(04:00):
don't get a one. All right, just a phone call,
maybe some flowers. Just remember your mama for Mother's Day.
Two five, one, four, seven, nine two three the telephone number.
We got so many things talking about, so many things,
so many different issues to get the in and out of.
But I do have a living caller on the phone.
I want to go to Hello caller.
Speaker 3 (04:22):
Good evening, Okay, Henry.
Speaker 5 (04:23):
Cliff Cliff, you are live on the radio.
Speaker 3 (04:27):
Okay, Henry, you have got to hell given your beautiful
mother and your father one of the greatest gifts that
you can help give them. I didn't know you did
any coal mining of gold mining. I didn't know if
you fished or not, but you have managed to land yourself.
Speaker 6 (04:55):
A beautiful lady.
Speaker 5 (05:00):
Congratulations sir, Hey Cliff, thank you very much. You are
speaking the truth yet and I want to thank your
family for helping us out with our our matrimony. You
and your family made it very very special. For us.
So it will never forget your family for what you
(05:21):
did for us.
Speaker 7 (05:23):
Uncle Andrew, I can walk, but I'm overwhelmed for not
even being there to be a part of something like that.
You have been speaking the truth and you showed me
something about you. I don't care what anybody call you,
(05:43):
your color blind, your man of God. Only a man
of God.
Speaker 3 (05:48):
Could be color blind and believe in the truth of God.
For what you allowed us to do. So we want
to thank you and continue to tell you as I
tell you every day, to be blessed. But I think
you're gonna be all right now. You's well.
Speaker 5 (06:04):
Cliff, thank you very very much, very kind words, and
I appreciate that. And and listeners, Cliff his his wife
involved in the marriage with me and my wife, helping
us out with some uh uh some stuff with our
ceremony and uh, just just something I'll never forget. It
(06:25):
was a wonderful, wonderful thing. And uh and as far
as the other stuff, we're all trying, most of us
are trying to be men of God right, uh, sometimes
falling short, but always trying. So thank Cliff, thank you,
and again we'll never forget your family. Uh. Connecting with
(06:45):
mine for that very happy occasion two five, one four
seven nine two three the telephone number on the On
Glenn show. As far as doing something for my parents,
when I was growing up, what I was always told
old the very the very least that was expected was
(07:05):
to graduate from high school and stay out of jail
and get a job. That's as long as that did
those things, then it would be just fun. If you
just graduate from high school, stay out of jail, and
get a job. That's all that was expected of me. Now,
in your fam maybe you the listener, maybe maybe you
(07:27):
were you were expected to go to college and become
a doctor or a professor or something like that. Whatever
it was. In our family, we just wanted the basics.
We wanted some law abiding, tax paying drone type of
member of society. And I believe I've become that. I've
become very good as a drone, earning cash for the
government's taxes and staying out of jail not try not
(07:50):
to cost the taxpayer that much. And it's interesting how
in modern times, unfortunately a lot of families just can't
meet that basic baseline, right. I mean, you hope your
kid can do those things, uh, at least be able
to read and stay out of jail and get a job.
(08:15):
And unfortunately, we see a lot of a lot of
family struggling with that, if families even exist in some places.
So UH have been blessed, been blessed to be able
to control myself enough to stay out of jail and
stay employed. All right, Uh, coming up more phone calls.
I've received some messages on a variety of topics. Living
(08:39):
callers are always welcome on the program. I've already got
one person waiting two five one three the telephone number
to reach the Uncle Henry Show back after the break
with more Uncle Henry Show. Heading into the Mother's Day
Weekend Uncle Henry Show. News Radio seven to ten WNTM.
(09:21):
It's five twenty news headlines coming up in ten minutes
from Fox ten and Fox Radio National News. Telephone number
here two five one four seven nine two seven two three.
That's two five one four seven nine two seventy two three.
I've got wonderful messages from listeners to get to. Although
(09:44):
I say wonderful, I'm not sure because I have not
previewed them. But I do have a living caller. Let
me go to the caller. Hello, caller, why Hello, Hey, Hey,
what is your good news? Sir?
Speaker 7 (10:04):
Who's going to be open on Sunday?
Speaker 5 (10:07):
The zoo is going to be open on Sunday.
Speaker 8 (10:10):
Yeah, we can go filcino at your mother.
Speaker 5 (10:12):
Oh stop it. You know it's Mother's Day weekend. You know,
I can't even get through the first half hour of
the show. You know, the the attacks on my family
have amped up to where now I cannot get through
the first half hour of the show. And I've come
to I've realized what this is all about. I thought
it was people just disrespecting my mother and disrespect of
my family, disrespect of my new wife. Now I realized
(10:36):
this is all This has been an increase in the
prank cause it's all tied to my hospital time last July.
Last July, I was in the hospital with the with
the heart issue, and I believe, I really do believe
that this is an attempt to kill me on the air.
I do. I believe that it is, and I'm gonna
(10:58):
get in touch. I'm Conde attacting a lawyer. I don't
know if I can do, if I need to make
civil lawsuits or if there could be criminal charges for
attempted murder. Yes, attempted murder when somebody calls in and
attacks my mother or my beautiful new wife. It is
(11:20):
my opinion that it is attempted murder upon me because
they're trying to set off a heart attack, and they
are doing it because they want to hear it live
on the air, because it would excite their pervert, degenerate
mind that reprobates. A reprobate mind is what they are.
They want to be excited by hearing me fall and all.
They want to go look at the Facebook video to
(11:42):
see me fall out. That's what it's all about. But
I want you to know I went to the pharmacy today.
I got my U I got my blood pressure medicine,
I got the plavix and all that kind of stuff.
I'm ready for you. I'm ready for you. Two five
point one four seven nine two two three. The telephone
number here on the Unclaimer show. Hello caller, Hello caller.
(12:13):
All right, that's it. I'm going to voicemails. I'm going
to voicemails at this point.
Speaker 8 (12:17):
Now.
Speaker 5 (12:18):
If there's a reasonable human being that wants to call
in live. I'm always open to a reasonable human being
that might want to call the program that has an
actual opinion or something they've observed. Maybe they've observed something
interesting involving I don't know, snakes or raccoons in their neighborhood,
whatever it is, or something political. There's a lot of
stuff that's been going on lately on the national scene.
(12:40):
You could certainly call in with the observations on that,
but I'm walking away from the phones right now. Let
me go to a voicemail message. We have somebody here
that calls himself the Alabama bush Hog. Yes, the Alabama
bush Hog.
Speaker 9 (13:00):
Well, Henry, this is the Alabama Bushall. You can find
me there under that name on Rumble. I just had
to call you to tell you that I've been a
long time fan and this is my first time calling.
Speaker 6 (13:15):
Okay, so you do a wonderful sub Thank you.
Speaker 9 (13:19):
You've got so much talent it makes me jealous.
Speaker 5 (13:22):
I appreciate that. Thank you.
Speaker 9 (13:23):
I gotta tell you something. I just want to talk
about the immigration problem. Did you see in Newark in
New Jersey today that two or three congressmen and the
mayor of Newark an enter to an ice the tension compound,
and well they arrested the mayor. Yes, the mayor of
New New Jersey.
Speaker 5 (13:43):
Yes, you know, yes, you the listener. Uh, you've heard
the story. You've seen the story congressman and a mayor
breaking into an ice facility.
Speaker 9 (13:54):
You show your tale in a certain way, I guess,
and you know trying to grant stand. Well, you had
to face the consequences. Uncle here that what I don't
understand is that they have let tee all these people
come into our country. Some say ten some say twenty million, right,
(14:15):
and they're taking a strain on everything, social services, housing, healthcare. Now,
lord that they got to go. Now. The Trumpet administrations
even tell them, we'll give you a free airplane, chacker
and a thousand dollars to go home. Then you got
(14:37):
a chance to come back later the right way. Let
me tell you something. I wouldn't want to be in
any foreign country knowing that I wasn't welcome. I had
to look over on so it all the time. You know,
I just wouldn't feel right about it. Now that's just me.
I don't know why they're still hanging around or some kind.
Speaker 6 (14:59):
Of various purposes, I believe maybe.
Speaker 9 (15:04):
Anyway, I just wanted to share that with you on
this rainy Friday. That's killing my old bones off Fridays
and everything till you growing old. Ain't precisis no cert
no serve, and one one thing before I'll let you go,
Uncle Henry. Yes, that fellow JD is trying to kill you. Well,
(15:30):
somebody needs to do a cavity search on him and
find his head. You have a good day.
Speaker 6 (15:37):
Uncle Henry.
Speaker 9 (15:39):
L D j V l D whatever his name is.
He ain't right all right?
Speaker 5 (15:45):
In Alabama, bush Hall, Thank you very much, Alabama bush
Hog Gift and the immigration you are talking about the
immigration thing. Yeah, I'm still trying to understand why what
the Democrat There's a lot of issues they could pick.
I wonder why that one where you would have congress
(16:07):
people and a mayor of a town going into an
ice facility with that mayor getting arrested. What's I just
it just doesn't seem like a winning issue for them.
And at some point would love to have anybody from
the Democrat party sitting down in front of a camera
(16:27):
and just explain why it was a good idea, What
was the point, what was the positive point for the
country to have ten to twenty million, anywhere between twen
to twenty million come in within a matter of four
years was what was that? Could you be honest about it?
Could you tell us what the point of it was?
(16:50):
Tell us how things will be better from that? And
I don't, of course, not going to hold my breath
waiting for the explot nation, but it would be nice,
nice if somebody could sit down and explain that most
Americans love the immigration story, the story of the immigrant
(17:11):
who comes to our country legally, works hard, and achieves
the American dream. Most Americans love that story. Reagan loved
that whole idea. The problem is when it's ten million
at a time, or fifteen million at a time, or
(17:32):
twenty million at a time, too much of a good
thing is bad. That's why you don't eat an entire
bag of Dorito's unless you're a slab uncle. Henry Show
(18:15):
News Radio seven to ten WNTM. It is five thirty five.
You can hear me weekdays, Monday through Friday from ten
to two on ninety five k s J laying Today's
Hottest Country. Be listening Monday. I was told that I'm
going to have some kind of announcement. It's some type
(18:36):
of concert announcement or something. I don't They don't always
tell me because they're afraid I'll let it slip early.
So I'm not exactly sure what I am announcing, but
I'll have some type of announcement Monday for some type
of concert of some kind that is Monday or ninety
five KSJ along with all the great country music. Two
(18:59):
five one nine three. The telephone number that's two fine
one four seven seven two three. Email address Uncle Henry
at iHeartMedia dot Com. Hellop calling.
Speaker 8 (19:10):
Hello Henry, Yes, sir, Hey Jesus, Dwayne, Hey Dwayne. First off,
congratulations on your new marriage.
Speaker 5 (19:19):
Thank you.
Speaker 8 (19:21):
I just wanted to say my thoughts and prayers go
out to the families affected by that terrible wreck up
in Tomasfield.
Speaker 5 (19:30):
Oh yeah, that was awful.
Speaker 8 (19:32):
I drove up on that coming from the other direction
while that car there was one cop there. He had
just got there, and I think that that has ruined
my week. But you know, Donald Trump has passed an
executive order now that you have to be able to
(19:53):
speak English to operate a commercial vehicle. Right the driver
of that truck on spoke Russian. He was from Ukraine
and was in the United States on a work visa.
So you know that that was a good thing. I
think him passing that executive order, but it just happened
(20:13):
a little too late, you know.
Speaker 5 (20:15):
Yeah, And I'm with you on that.
Speaker 10 (20:17):
Uh.
Speaker 5 (20:18):
I don't personally, I could care less if somebody can
speak English or not. But if you're going to do
something that involves the public like that, that that has
that potential for danger, you need to be able to
communicate with us.
Speaker 8 (20:32):
Well exactly. You need to be able to read road signs,
you know. Yeah, Trump Truck's used right lane, you know,
just simple little road signs. They can't even understand them. Yeah,
And I and I'm like you. I feel like anybody
has a right to work, but I feel like if
you're going to operate and it involves public safety, you
(20:54):
need to be able to understand and written communications and
verbal communication of course.
Speaker 5 (21:01):
Absolutely.
Speaker 8 (21:04):
Yeah. Well that's about all I had to say, Uncle Henry,
and you have a last weekend, and I hope your
mother has a very happy Mother's Day.
Speaker 5 (21:13):
Well, thank you, sir. I'm going to stay out of
jail between now and then, so I think she will.
So thank you very very much for your phone call
and your good wishes, and I wish you a great
weekend as well. Now, I had another call on that's
on the same topic, the topic of that terrible accident.
I believe RT calling in about it.
Speaker 6 (21:36):
Hey, good afternoon, Uncle Henry. This is RT. I have
a question for you and any listeners, and I just
wondering how many strong, able bodied Ukrainian men do we
have here in the United States hiding now while we're
(21:59):
spending billions of dollars to fight that war for them?
This guy in Thomasville that killed our citizens should be
in a foxhole in eastern Europe shooting Russians. Why is
(22:19):
he here? And how many other strong able body Ukrainian
men do we have over here in the United States
and probably lots of them in Canada and Europe hiding
out from that war. I agree with the President, we
(22:44):
need to cut them off. If they don't get a
piece Dell, we just need to cut them off and
let them have it. If they're not willing to fight
for themselves, then they don't deserve our help and our
tax dollars, that's for sure. But this hiding now, apparently
pretending to be a truck driver killing our citizens, all
(23:08):
precious of football coach, our precious mother of beautiful young children,
Those people should not be over here hiding. Now, this
is worse than draft dodgers going to Vietnam war running
(23:28):
to Canada. I mean, they're supposed to be defending their
own country and if they're not willing to do that,
then I don't know. We need some answers. How many
Ukrainian men are hiding out here in the United States
and pretending to be a truck driver? Thank you, have
(23:54):
a good day, roll.
Speaker 5 (23:55):
T Thank you very much our tie for your voicemail.
That would be a stat that I think a lot
of us would be interested in. Is is We've heard
stories about how they're they're drafting people and forcing a
lot of Ukrainian men to get into the military, whether
(24:17):
they want to defend their country or not. They're grabbing
them off the streets in some cases and force them
into the military, many of them. There have been reports
that many many Ukrainians have left because they didn't want
to fight. So how many that's a good question. How
many are here I don't know. I don't know the
stab and how many are here, and how many are
all over Europe waiting for the conflict to end so
(24:41):
they can go back there if they ever want to.
Go back there if you hear would you ever want
to go back there? Rtie, Thanks for that phone call
two five one four seven nine two seven two three
the telephone nuber that's two five to one four seven
nine two seventy two three. Email address Uncle Henry at
iHeartMedia dot com. Want a completely different topic than the
(25:03):
that horrible wreck in Ukrainians. In our country, we have
the snake trapper.
Speaker 11 (25:09):
Hey over, Henry, snake trapper. Hey man, you know why
I was for these terrors from day one, Uncle Henry.
Speaker 5 (25:16):
A tariff call.
Speaker 11 (25:17):
Wasn't for the fact that I you know, I knew
it was gonna feel a little pain out of it,
Uncle Henry, But it's something that needed to be done.
Trade needs to be fair.
Speaker 6 (25:29):
For this country.
Speaker 9 (25:31):
Other countries need to quit taking advantage of it.
Speaker 11 (25:34):
And man, I'm telling you, Uncle Henry, it is really working.
Speaker 12 (25:38):
And I'll give you proof.
Speaker 6 (25:41):
That the tariffs are working, okay.
Speaker 11 (25:44):
And my reason is you look at what's going on now.
Even the Pope has made in America.
Speaker 6 (25:51):
Now, I just.
Speaker 10 (25:54):
Had to put that out there.
Speaker 9 (25:55):
Brother.
Speaker 12 (25:56):
You have a good day, my friends.
Speaker 5 (25:58):
Stake trapper, thank you very much, Thank you very much
for your phone call. Still learning about the new Pope.
And I saw I think I saw an interview with
his brother, the Pope's brother in Illinois, who seems to
be an ordinary human being, very not popelink. Really it's interesting,
(26:24):
uh dynamic there with him and his brother Steak trapfor
Thank you for the voicemail voicemail number two five one
two one six, nineteen seventy six. That's two five one
two one six, nineteen seventy six to leave a message
for the uncle Henry's show. And let's see, I've got
uh real quick, one more message before I go to
(26:46):
break by somebody who calls him still self. Storm and Norman, Hey.
Speaker 13 (26:56):
Hey, Storm and Norman, just wondering how your cabbage and
connect a sausage and all that other conglomeration with that
missus Henry fixed for you on sinko Domao. I bet that,
I bet that toy your guts up. I know it
(27:21):
would have mine.
Speaker 6 (27:22):
Who have a good one, buddy, All.
Speaker 5 (27:26):
Right, Storm and Norman, thank you for I'm the concoction
cooked up by my wife that included connecta sausage, cabbage, potatoes,
onions bowled up in chicken broth. It did not do
anything bad to my gastro intestinal system. I ate it
two nights in a row.
Speaker 1 (27:49):
iHeartRadio app now number one for podcasting. This is use
Radio seven tennt and iHeartRadio.
Speaker 5 (27:56):
Station Uncle Henry Show News Radio seven ten WNTM. We
(28:25):
have news headlines coming up in ten minutes and then
additional Uncle Henry Show for you on this Randy Friday
and Mobile Alabama. Telephone number here is two five one
four seven nine two seven two three. That's two five
one four seven nine two seventy two three. Email address
(28:47):
Uncle Henry at iHeartMedia dot com. Let me go to,
Let me go to a message from a reputable human being.
Speaker 12 (28:57):
Hey, Pat Nelly, I hope you're having a great afternoon,
and I haven't been able to call you and congratulate
you on your marriage.
Speaker 9 (29:09):
So congratulations, Thank you.
Speaker 12 (29:11):
Hey listen, I tried to call a couple of times
because something you said triggered me. I don't know if
I'm not operating the phone system correctly or dialing the
correct number. But anyways, that guy that Tim Walls ran
for Vice President Tamala.
Speaker 5 (29:33):
Yeah, the weird guy, what is the unusual man has a.
Speaker 12 (29:36):
Daughter that's some kind of influencer, right, and when you
were talking about men are becoming more manly.
Speaker 5 (29:44):
Right, Well, I mentioned that there's the people are going
in opposite directions. And this has been happening I don't
know ten fifteen years or longer, but you've noticed the
rise of MMA and all this these that culture, gym culture. Uh,
there's some some people that are becoming more and more manly,
(30:06):
and then there's the opposite people getting all snowflaky. There's
there's just two different directions people are heading in.
Speaker 12 (30:12):
She was talking about running running is racist.
Speaker 5 (30:21):
So Tim Walls's daughter is claiming that the act of running,
like running for health, is racist.
Speaker 12 (30:31):
Because minorities can't run.
Speaker 8 (30:35):
What.
Speaker 9 (30:36):
I can't figure that out?
Speaker 12 (30:37):
And she said, you know who told me that information,
Tim Wallas. Well, I'm not surprised they are about some coots.
We sure dodged a bullet when Trump was elected.
Speaker 5 (30:50):
I believe, and I'm sorry to interrupt you again, Patnelly,
but I believe I've in my lifetime I've seen people
of every ethnicity running, sometimes for exercise, sometimes competitively, and
doing quite good at it.
Speaker 12 (31:04):
Another thing, they're saying that protein is racist. How is
protein racist? I can't understand that?
Speaker 8 (31:12):
Is it?
Speaker 12 (31:13):
Because minorities can't afford me, or because white people can
afford it protein in a bottle.
Speaker 9 (31:22):
They're just so confused anyway, I.
Speaker 5 (31:29):
Would say, And look, I have not heard the I
have not heard the argument about the racism of protein.
Does that mean carbs are it's okay to eat carbs?
The carbs love everybody. The carbs do not discriminate, and
they make all of us fat slobs. Is that I
(31:49):
don't know what to say about this. But if you're
sitting around wondering if anything inanimate, if you're sitting around
wondering if an inanimate object is racist, you've got way
too much time on your hands. You've got it too
easy in life. If you're sitting around thinking, you know what,
(32:09):
you know what all this protein's racist that you have
instantly told me you've got you've got it too easy.
Speaker 12 (32:18):
Congratulations on your marriage. I can vouch that your wife
is normal sized as well as your mom. You have
a great evening and roll tide.
Speaker 5 (32:29):
Bro tied ro Pat and Ellie. Thank you very much
for the phone call. Now you've got me curious. I
guess this weekend I want to go find where somebody
is claiming that protein is somehow racist? Are we? Are
we ever going to reach the peak with all this
kind of stuff? I wonder if if running can be
(32:52):
racist and protein can be racist, could we pick something
really basic and claim that it's racist. Could you pick
a direction? Could this? Could the actual direction of south
be racist? North? East, west they're fine? But south? Could south?
(33:13):
Could a direction be racist? I don't know. I don't know.
Maybe I just gave somebody an idea for a term
paper out there so they can make a lot of
money proving that the direction southern is somehow racist.
Speaker 6 (33:26):
Right.
Speaker 5 (33:26):
Anyway, just about out of time for this segment of
the program. If you would like to listen to previous episodes,
you can find them on the iHeartRadio app. iHeartRadio app
having a lot of fun of fun with it these
days because it's new design. You can use it to
listen to the radio. You can pick a zip code,
(33:47):
enter it into the iHeart Radio app, and then scan
the radio dial in that zip code. So that might
be your old hometown where you lived, or maybe you've
heard about what was going up and going on in Newark,
New Jersey today where the mayor there got arrested busting
into an ice facility. You can just enter in Newark,
New Jersey and listen to their radio. Go up down
(34:08):
the dial and see if anybody's talking about it. That
is a feature on the iHeartRadio app, and you can
set a preset in the app for this show and
this station more Uncle Henry Show after the break. That
(34:43):
says the Uncle Henry Show here on News Radio seventy
ten WNTM. Thank you for listening to the Uncle Henri Show.
In this half hour of show, I'm gonna get to
some news items and some voice smels from listeners. Let's
start with a news item. Now, libraries have been in
(35:07):
the news over the past several months, maybe even longer
than that, because here in the state of Alabama, people
have been fighting over whether or not filth should be
in the children's section of the library, if your child
should be able to look at naked people or read
about nakedness and all that kind of stuff. A lot
of people say that the little children need to be
(35:29):
exposed to blank uality. Other people want to protect the
innocence of the little children from the filth. So there's
all kind of arguing about this. A lot of this
is happening in Fair Hope, Alabama, the alleged paradise on
the Eastern Shore. Well, yesterday, the Alabama Public Library Service
came up with a new way to judge books to
(35:52):
determine whether or not they should be allowed in the
children's section of the library. So I've got this report.
This is from WSFA TV that is a stepsister station
to Fox ten. Let's listen together to what they report
about the Alabama Public Library Service, and they're trying to
figure out if books are nasty and filthy or not.
Speaker 14 (36:16):
Board members today approved a new policy they hope will
put it into years of controversy. During that time, some
conservative groups have claimed that library booksmen to educate children
about sexuality should not be in the children's section. WSFA
twelve news reporter Mone Stevens has tonight's update.
Speaker 15 (36:36):
If they see it talks about masturbation, it is on
this list as sexually explicit the Alabama.
Speaker 5 (36:43):
Public By the way, I apologize for those words being
put on this show. I apologize for this. It's part
of the news story.
Speaker 11 (36:50):
Now.
Speaker 5 (36:51):
In a perfect world, of course, there would be those
words would not be said publicly in a perfect world,
But unfortunately, on the this is one of the rare
instances where those words get leaked out onto the program,
and if it has scandalized you, I apologize.
Speaker 15 (37:07):
Public Library Services Board is creating an official definition of
sexually explicit material to serve as a guide for libraries
in all sixty seven counties determining which books should be
removed from their children's sections. Any content, written, visual, or
audio that depicts or describes sexual acts, nudity, or related
content will now be considered sexually explicit.
Speaker 5 (37:30):
APOLS chairman, Now, is this rocket science you really do?
Is this hard to grasp? What is filthy? And what
is and filthy?
Speaker 8 (37:42):
Get?
Speaker 5 (37:43):
I guess nowadays when you can find failth all over
television in almost every show, maybe people are confused. I
don't know.
Speaker 15 (37:50):
Sherman John Wall says he hopes the move will ease
tensions that have been building on the topic for years.
Speaker 5 (37:56):
The book should be judged by the clear requires found
in the ALISO changes.
Speaker 15 (38:02):
However, some patrons and librarians are not convinced that the
definition fully protects their rights.
Speaker 1 (38:08):
That includes LGBTQ, that includes people of color, sexual assault survivors,
and those facing poverty and abuse.
Speaker 15 (38:16):
Most of the thirty three people who address the Library
Board at thursday's meetings, said public libraries should be governed
by the standards of the communities they represent. What is
a mirror book to one person maybe someone else's window
books and young people deserve to see themselves reflected in
the books they read and in their libraries. Please listen.
Speaker 5 (38:35):
And it is really somethinghow that if you are somebody
that enjoys filth in our society. Of course it's everywhere.
You can find it just about everywhere. But you should
feel reassured if you're a filth lover, because there are
people that are just they are really fired up. One
to protect the ability for filth to be spread to
every age group the librarians.
Speaker 4 (38:57):
Please let us do our jobs.
Speaker 5 (38:58):
You are diminishing our work, undermining our purpose.
Speaker 15 (39:01):
But others say kids sometimes run through children's libraries without
parental supervision. It should not have access to books that
their parents might find objectional. That the problem is we
all have different values.
Speaker 5 (39:13):
Yeah.
Speaker 15 (39:14):
The chairman also mentioned tonight that the Fairhoe Public Library,
which recently had its state funding pauls, will get that
funding restored if it removes questionable books from the children's
section based on a new addendum to their policy.
Speaker 5 (39:26):
Mark all right, all right, Well, the library, so the
Public Library Service came up with this new definition, and
they think that this will maybe calm people down. I
don't think so. I think people This seems to me
people enjoy fighting over this for whatever reason. And there's
(39:46):
always people advocating first as much access to filthy stuff
as is possible. I make the very easy prediction that
there will be continued fighting over this, continued wrangling over this,
and maybe some libraries will find a way to just
do without that funding so that they can distribute as
(40:07):
much filth as they see fit. All Right, we'll all
find out together. Right now, let me get to some
voicemail from listeners. I got to, by the way, the
voicemail number two five one two one six, nineteen seventy six,
that's two five one two one six, nineteen seventy six,
to leave a message for the Uncle Henry Show and
the listeners of the Uncle Henry Show. Now, yesterday I
(40:31):
had a story in this half hour of the program.
I found a weird news story out of the country
of Turkey. And in the country, Uh, there was a
small town in the country of Turkey where the police
there decided to burn some marijuana they had confiscated. I
think they had twenty tons twenty tons of it, and
(40:55):
they put it in the town square, set it on fire,
and then it made people in the town. It made
people in the town sick for like five days. People
were hiding in the house because they were Some people
were hallucinating because of the stuff they were accidentally breathing in.
It was a big mistake. It was a big mistake,
burning twenty tons of marijuana right in the center of
(41:17):
a small town in Turkey. Now a listener heard that
story and wanted to make this remark.
Speaker 10 (41:25):
Hendry, just heard your story about the flaming bags of
cannabis in Lice, Turkey. Yes, and it gave me an
awesome idea. What we need to do is round up
all the marrabant wana we can.
Speaker 5 (41:41):
By the way, that was a rooster in the background.
Hats I'm not wearing a hat right now, but hats
off to you with your chickens.
Speaker 10 (41:48):
Trabant Wana we can illegal or otherwise, you know, maybe
like buy out all the crap in California and Colorado
and bag it up. We take it over to Ukraine
and we send we let the Ukrainians launch flaming bags
of cannabis over the lines into the Russian lines, and
(42:11):
we get the Russians, the Chinese, the Koreans, whoever's helping
them out, you know, because it's not just Russians anymore, right,
But uh, when they're all high and uh happy feeling,
you know, the Ukrainians can go in there and master them.
Speaker 9 (42:24):
Uh sounds good to me, makes good common sense.
Speaker 10 (42:27):
And uh maybe we get some folks over here in
the US drive out and uh it's sober for a change,
you know, become productive citizens. And uh anyway, have a good.
Speaker 5 (42:38):
Damn Henry thinking, now that's good out of the box thinking,
I like your idea of setting the cannabis on fire
and then dropping it behind Russian enemy lines. That that's
it's sure. Again my hand would be off to you again,
first time for the for the rooster, and the second
time for the outstanding idea. Thank you for that. Voicemail
(43:02):
number two five one two one six, nineteen seventy six.
Here on the Uncle Henry Show, I've got to take
a break for traffic, weather and words from our sponsors.
I'll be back after the break. Let's go ahead and
take the break here on the Uncle Henry Show. This
(43:30):
says the Uncle Henry Show here on news Radio seventy
ten WNTM news headlines coming up in ten minutes. That's
some more voicemail. I want to get into voicemail number
two five one two one six, nineteen seventy six. That's
two five one two one six, nineteen seventy six. Now,
(43:54):
earlier this week, Buford, longtime caller, Buford took his He
went with his daughter on a field trip to mobile
government plaza for a city council meeting, and the children
were exposed to all the political hot air from all
the bloviating politicians down there. Now. Beauford then called in
and left a message about the mayor's race. He's told
(44:16):
us previously he is pro spiro, so just to let
you know his standpoint on all of this. Here is
a Buford message after he went to government plaza.
Speaker 16 (44:29):
An this here's Henry was a government plaza the other
day and I was talking to someone who was in
the know. They're not they're not a department head or
politico or anything like that, but enter they are a
high level city worker. And here's the current plan, Henry,
(44:55):
of how this election for mayoral race might go if
Connie Hudson becomes the mayor, then uh, she is then
gonna buy Geena Gregory to run for her kind of
commission seat.
Speaker 9 (45:11):
All right, Henry, let me tell you this.
Speaker 16 (45:19):
If any one of them says they have the support
of city and county workers, uh, that's gonna be well.
I don't want to say a lie, Henry. The city
workers are scared to death they'll have to work for
(45:41):
Connie Hudson.
Speaker 6 (45:42):
Why they do not want to work for Connie Hudson.
Speaker 9 (45:46):
Why she comes across as mean?
Speaker 5 (45:49):
Right now, I'm pausing here, uh, just to say I've
not heard this before. You're the first one bringing all
of this to me, that that I'm that I've heard
that accusation. By the way. Uh, and I'm going to
unpause the message just to say, but before I do,
just to say, if you're a if you're a big
Connie Hudson fan, feel free to leave me some pro
(46:12):
Connie messages at two five one two one six, nineteen
seventy six. That's two five one two one six, nineteen
seventy six. Uh, because uh, Buford is pro spiro and
I want anybody to feel comfortable to call in about
their preferred candidate. I would enjoy getting some Jermaine Burrell voicemail.
Well I say that I don't. I don't really know
(46:33):
if I will or not, but uh Jermaine Burrell messages
or some uh Batiste messages or Paul Prime messages, whoever
you want to support. I would just enjoy your voicemails
because it would give me a new perspective. And also
the more you leave voicemails, the less talking I have
(46:54):
to do. Yes, indeed, yes, I am not paid by
the word. I'm not paid by the word. So if
you wanted to fill if you wanted to fill my
show up with your your your your comments about any
candidates you like. Would love to hear from you. Two
five one two, nineteen seventy six. All right, Beauford is
claiming he's making the claim that there are some city
(47:20):
workers afraid to work under Mayor Hudson. So let's get
back to the voicemail.
Speaker 12 (47:28):
They do not want to.
Speaker 6 (47:30):
Work for Connie Hudson.
Speaker 16 (47:31):
She comes across as mean, and they will probably be
a massive talent fleean if she becomes mayor, and Henry
the county workers scared of death. Jeanie Gregory might take
(47:52):
that county commission.
Speaker 5 (47:53):
See my why no, why now? Why are they Why
are they scared of that? Beauford. I'm going to more
information on this. Why are they scared of that? You know,
Gina Gregory's been down there for a long long time.
I don't know that I've ever heard anything. I don't
think I've ever heard anything negative about Gena Gregory.
Speaker 16 (48:13):
That's interesting because you see, the county workers are gonna
support Connie Hudson for mayor to get rid of her,
and uh, the four city workers they're screwed he no
matter what happened. But uh, anyway, Henry, I ain't.
Speaker 5 (48:29):
Saying nothing, oh really, just.
Speaker 16 (48:30):
Telling you what I heard while I was wondering through
the halls of city government.
Speaker 5 (48:35):
You have a good day, all right, Well, BEEFTT, I
thank you for telling me this. A person tells you
described the person as a not a department head, but
somebody that you consider high ranking city worker told you
this right now. Beefferd did call back with a quick
follow up, and this.
Speaker 9 (48:55):
Is different, Henry.
Speaker 16 (48:56):
And I'm sure people are figuring that I was talking
to a man city employee, some good old boy type.
But no, Henry, I was talking to a lady worker.
Speaker 5 (49:10):
Henry.
Speaker 16 (49:11):
Has been my experience that most professional ladies absolutely hate
working for other ladies. I don't know, Henry.
Speaker 6 (49:22):
It might be something.
Speaker 16 (49:23):
Where they all, you know, they can't be friends with
each other.
Speaker 6 (49:27):
So I don't know, Henry.
Speaker 16 (49:28):
But but no, Henry, this was a professional lady city
worker that was absolutely worried Connie Husson.
Speaker 6 (49:39):
To be married.
Speaker 16 (49:40):
It does not want to work for and I do
believe she said, will.
Speaker 6 (49:45):
Not work for her.
Speaker 16 (49:47):
So anyway, Henry, just tidbit.
Speaker 12 (49:54):
You have a good day.
Speaker 5 (49:55):
Thank you for the tidbit, and you the listener if
you have a different tidbit. Two five one two one
six nineteen seventy six is the number out of time.
Thank you for listening, as they say in Sirland, have
a good one, as they say in Theodore, take it
evesey all right later