Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:13):
Good morning, everybody. Welcome toanother week on the Morning Show with Preston
Scott, Monday, May the eighth, Great to be with You, Show
number forty nine, twenty four.That's great, Allen running the show.
I'm here in my normal place inStudio one B and it's day eight thirty
eight of America of the hostage.We'll get to this date, if date
(00:36):
in history, in just a fewmoments, but first take a look at
a scripture first, Thessalonians five sixteenth eighteen. Rejoice always, pray without
ceasing, give thanks in all circumstances, for this is the will of God
in Christ Jesus for you. Here'sa checklist. Rejoice always. You know,
(01:00):
rejoice is based in the word joy, and I've pointed out oftentimes to
myself the difference between happiness and joy. Happiness is absolutely surface level, and
(01:23):
there's nothing wrong with being happy.Joy runs oh so much deeper. Joy
is rooted in a reliance and afaith and a trust in God. And
(01:45):
so when it says rejoice, alwaysremember that the word rejoice is connected at
the hip to the word joy,not happiness. We are challenged to in
all things to tie into the joyof the Lord, which then becomes a
(02:12):
strength second on the checklist, praywithout ceasing, Well, how do you
do that? You gotta work.I think that there's while there's certainly a
time to just kind of hunker downand pray, to take fifteen minutes,
(02:36):
thirty minutes, an hour longer,to just really exercise your spirit and pray.
I think what this is really tellingus is to be in a place
where you're praying throughout your day,that you're praying constantly, Praying without ceasing
(03:05):
means well, just because it's Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday,
Saturday, doesn't mean you can't pray. We've relegated our faith and our
Christian walk to Sundays at church.If that this is challenging us differently,
and give thanks in all circumstances.What a powerful scripture. Give thanks in
(03:34):
all circumstances. Again a reminder there'snothing that's going to happen in our life
that God's going to be surprised by. Sometimes he's shaking his head because it
didn't have to be that way.But we make choices and we have to
own them. But we have aGod who is good and faithful in his
(03:58):
love indoors forever, and his merciesare new every morning. His faithfulness is
great. Ten minutes after the hour, the American Patriots Almanac opens up next,
and we begin the Monday edition ofthe Morning Show with Preston Scott,
(04:20):
The Morning Show with Preston Scott onNews Radio one hundred point seven w FLA.
(04:47):
This state in history, this isa good one. This is interesting.
May eight credit for Mother's Day goesto a school teacher named Anna Jarvis.
Her campaign to organize a holiday beganhis way to honor the memory of
her own mom, Anna Maria ReevesJarvis. The elder Jarvis devoted bunch of
(05:11):
her life to the Andrews Methodist EpiscopalChurch in Grafton, West Virginia, and
in May nineteen oh eight, AnnaJarvis's urging, the church held a service
honoring moms. Anna Jarvis, wholived in Philadelphia, also convinced merchant John
Wannamaker. Oh, I wonder ifthere's any connection to the Wannamaker trophy that
(05:38):
goes to the PGA winner to joinher cause establishing in establishing a Mother's Day.
He held an afternoon service in hisstore. Within just a couple of
years, the custom had spread toother states. At first Mother's Day services,
Jarvis distributed white carnations, her mother'sfavorite flower. Many still follow the
(06:00):
tradition were incarnations on Mother's Day,white flowers in memory of deceased mothers,
brightly colored ones for living mothers.Jarvis and her supporters convinced ministers, politicians,
and businessmen to support the goal ofstarting a national observance, so on
May eighth, nineteen fourteen, Congresspassed a joint resolution designating the second Sunday
(06:24):
in May as Mother's Day. Nextday, President Woodrow Wilson issued the first
Mother's Day Presidential Proclamation, calling forquote a public expression of our love and
reverence for mothers of our country.I'm gonna just pause here for a second.
There are other things in history thathappen on this date, not the
(06:46):
least of which John asked. Pemberton, a pharmacist, sells the first Coca
Cola, Jacob's Pharmacy in Atlanta.That is, the by the way,
Coca Cola as we know it.But now listen to me, this holiday
(07:13):
honoring of mothers is not going tobe surrendered to the trans movement. We're
not going to allow that cannot allowthat to happen. That's a beachhead.
Mother's Day, Father's Day. They'renot sacred holidays. They are holidays that
(07:40):
honor moms and dads, men andwomen, not pretenders. There is there
is there, there is not.And you know, there's some genius to
what Kansas did in identifying the thesexual organs of a male or a female,
(08:09):
in determining male and female. There'snot a man that is capable of
giving birth to a child. Therejust isn't. There's some polling we'll share
later that's a little horrifying. Butthe fact of the matter is Mother's Day
(08:31):
is coming up. That's my bigreminder here, guys, you've got a
week to get this right. I'msensitive to those who I have always wanted
children and have not been able tohave children. I get that. Be
sensitive in those circumstances. Use wisdom, But man, remember moms, whether
(08:56):
it's your wife, your sister who'shad children and maybe she doesn't have a
husband to do something nice for her. Maybe you know mom, of course,
because none of us are here withouta mom, none of us,
none of us. So just keepthat in mind. Sixteen minutes after the
(09:16):
hour, come back with more herein the Morning Show twenty one minutes after
the hour The Morning Show at Preston, Scott Busy weekend. I don't know
(09:43):
how yours was, but mine wasa very busy weekend. Just a lot
of different things to do. Someof them were related to a baby shower
that my sweet wife was hosting.Some of them related to me going out
of playing golf. My son gothimself a truck and so we did a
(10:07):
little work on that yesterday. Thatwas fun. So it was just a
busy weekend. Nice weather, beautifulweather, getting warmer. It's going to
happen. It's fine. I've enjoyedthe humidity being a little suppressed. Though
as we are into May, I'mvery pleasantly surprised by that. But it's
going to get a little muggier overthe next few days. Also, of
(10:28):
course, we have, as Imentioned, Mother's Day coming up, but
the first Saturday of every month.It's been a thing in my family since
I was a child. My parents, and most notably my mom. Because
(10:48):
my dad was so frequently on theroad, we always watched the Triple Crown
races on television. We always watchedthe Kentucky Derby we always watched the Weakness
and we always watched the Belmont.And what we would do is we would
print out we would she would typeout a list of the names. Because
(11:11):
you didn't have a printer back then, you typed it out and she'd cut
up the names in little slips ofpaper. And however, many people were
there to watch. We drew,We took the field and divided by and
you drew names, and those wereyour horses, and you would have the
(11:33):
option of keeping your horse. Ifyour horse entered the Preakness, you could
just you could keep your horse orno, and everyone goes back in the
pot and you'd start all over again. And so we would always get our
horses, and I mean it wasfun. It wasn't ever based on handicapping
who the favorites were. Back inthose days. There would be articles written
(11:56):
and you might be thinking, well, maybe maybe I'll get this horse because
there the horses were favorites or not. But every now and then a long
shot would win and you'd have thatslip of paper or someone in the room
would It was a lot of fun. And so the Derby is something that
we we pay attention to even tothis day. It's just fun to watch
(12:18):
them. And I suppose it's funto people watch ridiculous hats. Oh yeah,
Oh my goodness, gracious, somepeople inappropriately dressed. But it is
a thing. I mean, ahundred and fifty seventy thousand people crammed into
(12:39):
this area. I don't count thatas something that I would be interested in
doing now because there's too many people. You don't you can't move, You
literally cannot move, And it doesn'tinterest me as much as I love the
ponies. But would you go ifyou got like prefretual seating, yes,
if like you had a connect absolutelylike you better believe it, a suite
(13:01):
or a box, yes, somethinglike that. Yes, but I would
get there before the crowd, andI would I would try to leave before
they left for obvious reasons is they'rea little liquored up. Javier Costellano,
a Hall of Fame jockey, gothis first Derby win. He was over
fifteen before finally getting the ride onMage Mage one at fifteen to one.
(13:24):
He wrote a nice race. Sadly, though, the entire spectacle of the
Derby was mired by the fact thatseven horses died at the at at Churchill
downs during the week of racing sevengood Gravy two. Earlier that day in
(13:46):
a previous race, some broken ankle, broke a joint in the leg and
had to be euthanized. It's just, oh my gosh, remember that trend
a few years ago at one trackin particular out in California and they all
(14:07):
just died in mass Ye what wasthat? Yeah? That's Did we ever
get a resolution on it? Idon't know that we ever did. But
but horse racing is now plagued byrumors of doping horses and you know,
finding things that and I just Idon't I get it. They're trying to
(14:28):
make money and they'll do it illegallyif they have to, But they don't
get it. You're supposed to bea lover of animals, and this stuff
eventually just kills an animal. Cheatinglike that, cheating hurts the animal.
And I'm a softie, I am. I love horses. I absolutely think
they're breathtakingly beautiful, amazing animals.But yeah, anyway, just when you
(14:58):
when you go back to what what'shappened in recent years, add this to
the I mean, this is theworst thing that could happen for horse racing.
Because you've got seven horses that diedin one week at one of the
iconic, if not the most iconicplace in all of horse racing around the
world. It is not going tohelp the sport. And honestly, I'm
(15:18):
okay with that. At this point. They gotta figure out what's going on.
Twenty seven minutes after the hour,come back with the big stories in
the press box, Preston Scotts.They're gonna get I'm just knock who's next
on WFLA thirty five, thirty sixminutes now past the hour, Good morning
(15:52):
Monday on the Morning Show with PrestonScott. Salderzo will not be with us
today. You got called into Jerryduty. So you will join us next
week and we will we'll have alittle bit more time to digest what happened
in the session anyway, some winners, some losers, things that we got
(16:15):
right, things we got kind ofright, things we didn't get right,
things that we need to do inupcoming sessions, and then in subsequent months
until the committee weeks begin in thefall, we're gonna have some deep dives.
We're gonna do some policy deep dives. And work over. We might
even open up some phone lines onspecific issues, like tackle this issue.
(16:38):
Open it up, get your thoughts, because he and I are going to
sit down and work on some policyproposals for members of the state legislature to
noodle over anyway, that's coming up. Joe Biden, with a straight face,
(17:04):
interacting with MSNBC anchor Stephanie Rule.Just listen to this. Why would
an eighty two year old Joe Bidenbe the right person for the most important
job in the world. Because I'veacquired a hell of a lot of wisdom.
I know more than the vast majorityof people. I'm more experiencing anybody's
(17:27):
ever run for the office, andI think I've proven myself to be honorable
as well as also effective. Iknow more than the vast majority of people.
I believe that. Do you really? Oh? Yeah, he knows
(17:48):
more. He knows more of howthe system works now whether or not he
is actually but that's not what hesaid. He said he knows more than
the vast majority of people. Healso thinks he's honorable. Yeah, that's
a joke. On the debt,he said, the debt is not a
(18:12):
debt. I accumulated Well, he'scorrect in that he didn't accumulate all of
the debt. What he left outis how much he's added to it,
how much he's made things worse.But all presidents from George W. Bush
forward owned the debt. Now,just get your mind around that. The
(18:38):
bulk of this debt, the overwhelmingmajority of this debt, belongs to George
W. Bush, Barack Obama,Donald Trump, and Joe Biden. That's
horrifying for presidents and a Congress unwillingto say no. On the border,
(19:11):
we're in a situation now where thosefifteen hundred troops put at the border,
they're not there to enforce the law. They're there to free up the border
agents that need to be on theborder. So Joe, why would they
be needed if we weren't being overrunat the border? See that's the point.
And where were these military guys twoyears ago when it exploded? Under
(19:36):
the first week of your presidency,he thinks, Kamala Harris has done a
great job. Kamala Harris is hisinsurance policy. Kamala Harris is there to
make sure Joe Biden didn't get knockedoff. Somebody doesn't cause him to slip
and fall. If you know whatI'm saying. Forty minutes after the hour,
(20:00):
it's The Morning Show with Preston Scott. Now, this little tidbit I
found interesting. This is an addendumtoo with the big story in the press
box. This was originally floated backin February by the Washington Post and if
(20:32):
you remember, I believe the mainstreammedia talking about this beginning to report about
this is a beginning of the endfor Joe. Apparently there is an effort
to put together a legal defense fundfor Hunter Biden's high priced attorneys. Not
(20:59):
only is he facing potential charges oftax fraud, gun violations, along with
all of the congressional probes that aregoing on, including wire fraud, he
is battling the mom of his child. He doesn't want to pay twenty thousand
(21:19):
dollars a month in child support.His attorneys, it's been added up,
are likely costing him one hundred thousanddollars a month. I mean, they've
got plenty of money. They've builta few nations for millions and millions.
(21:41):
Anyway, a legal defense fund,huh okay. By the way, I
saw a note that Chelsea Clinton isout tweeting that we need to catch up
all of the vaccination that kids aren'tgetting around the world and forced them to
(22:02):
get them even if they don't wantthem. Oh my gosh. Now,
in the story sent to me,the allegation was that she meant COVID as
well. I didn't see that inher comments. I didn't see that in
her tweets. I did see alist of litany of all kinds of other
vaccinations. Now, perhaps I missedit and she is. It wouldn't surprise
(22:30):
me, But in the interest offairness, I haven't seen that that's what
she means. That said, shetalked about disinformation being the cause of vaccine
hesitancy right now, and so Iwent ahead and tweet it out on the
official TMS Preston Scott twitter feed.In response, I replied to her tweet
(22:55):
suggesting that the disinformation, misinformation andhesitancy was caused by her side claiming that
the JAB was a vaccine that couldstop the spread of coronavirus and it obviously
it doesn't. But anyway, Ijust thought i'd throw that out there.
I don't wade into the waters ofour social media very often. It's a
(23:17):
wild wild West man. It is. It is and I am I am,
I'm from the seventeen hundreds compared tothe wild wild West. But at
any rate, this story as well, I thought was interesting because a black
(23:41):
homeless man has been charged with shootingtwo white strangers in the back of the
head. Walked into a library inTulsa, the Rudisill Library. Are you're
familiar with that, mister Tulsa,I'm not. No. Walked into the
library nine to forty in the morningon April eighteenth, and just put a
(24:03):
gun to the back of a guy'shead and shot him. Then just walked
out, went to a convenience storenearby, walked up to another white male
and put a gun to the backof his head and shot him, fired
shots at a security guarden another personoutside. Then police arrived and he said,
(24:23):
yeah, I just shot and killedtwo people. He claims. Allegedly
he said he shot him because hedoesn't like white people. Whatever. Here's
my point. Bad crap like thishappens all the time. But here's my
point. Blackmail, hate crime aswe define it these days, against two
(24:51):
white men, no confrontation, nothing, just shot up and killed just showed
up and killed him. Not onestory on I at least as of yesterday,
nothing on the Washington Post, nothingon CNN, nothing on New York
Times, nothing on USA Today.Nothing the main mediate media outlets will not
touch the story. Just pointing itout. It's all just pointing it out.
(25:15):
Forty six minutes after the hour,Welcome to the Morning Show with Preston
Scott. All right, switch onhere, because I'm gonna I'm gonna ask
you to weigh in on a questionhere in just a couple of minutes and
we'll set that up, all right, And you know what, just I
(25:41):
loathe doing what I've been doing becausemy paper clips are getting bigger and bigger,
full of stories. But there areso many interesting things that I think
are worth talking about. I filedone way that Grant sent me a week
or so ago on housing. Iwant to have that conversation. They are
(26:03):
just there are so many things thatI think, I just think are good
to talk about. And we're goingto do that in the next half hour.
If you want to call in talkabout it. If not, We've
got again, no shortage of stories, and I'll get to it in a
second. But before I do,the irs has spent ten million dollars on
(26:23):
guns, AMMO and military style equipmentsince twenty twenty two point three million on
duty AMMO. We had and wehad talked about this, and there was
a consensus that the government was buyingup AMMO when the AMMO shortage was in
place to keep us from buying AMMOand to push the price up. Yea.
(26:45):
So some of it went to theIRS. One point two million on
ballistic shields, another one point threeon various gear for criminal investigation agents.
Four hundred and seventy four thousand onSmith and Wesson rifles, you know,
the assault rifles. I'm sure,yeah. Four hundred and sixty seven thousand
on duty tactical lighting, four hundredand sixty three on Baretta thirteen oh one
(27:11):
tactical shotguns. Three hundred and fiftyfour thousand on tactical gear bags. What
do they have the logo on themand they give them out as gifts.
Yeah, some irs. Everybody thatthey audit, they give them a gift
bag. Two hundred and sixty seventhousand on ballistic helmets, two hundred and
forty two thousand on body armor.And this goes back to the question there
(27:36):
is no way on this side ofeternity that this agency should have any armed
personnel. That's just that's why youhave US marshals. That's why you have
local jurisdiction law enforcement sheriffs and soforth. I got a question. I
don't know if this has been ifthis is something that can be done.
When the IRS is buying up millionsand millions of round of Ammo order the
(28:02):
the Ammo manufacturing companies, do theyjust see like a purchase ticket from the
federal government and they don't know whoit's from, or you know, do
they do they have any kind ofthey know what the Department's getting at?
Yeah, do they have any discernmentto be able to know you can object
to this sort of thing, becauseI don't know. I like to think
(28:22):
that, you know, a lotof those companies would be kind of defenders
of the people and so yeah,but I don't I don't know that they
you have the legal right to notsell if you're you know, this is
not a custom mortar. They're justbuying up Ammo that's on the shelf that's
being manufactured, right, I mean, it's not it's not the masterpiece cake
(28:44):
shop. They're not asking them tomake a custom round at least to my
knowledge, now that they are,Yeah, they don't have to bid or
etc. But as I understood it, they were just placing orders and buying
AMMO. They were buying nine milland whatever else they need for their you
know, slugs for their shotguns.I don't know anyway. Yeah, so
that's that that should be in thecrosshairs. Oh no, did I say
(29:12):
that of of of the House,Because the House is in charge of the
purse strings, that should be inthe in the crosshairs. Uh No,
the IRS should not be funding anythinglike that. And with all due respect,
they just they do not need aan enforcement attachment detail that we have.
(29:33):
We have people that that do that. We don't need IRS people for
that. That's that's just that's realcreepy to me, always has been.
Um. All right, here's ourphone segment. I'm asking what if three
quarters of states in the United Statesdo not have enough teachers, there's a
(29:53):
teacher shortage. Florida is one ofthem. What if public schools collapse?
What if the public school system collapses? What would you do? Parents?
Eight five zero two zero five WFLAjust simple question. Good Morning, Second
(30:37):
hour of the Morning Show with Prustan'sgot great to be with you this morning
on Frushton. That is Grant Allenover there, and he's taking your calls.
I wanted to hear from you,especially you moms and dads that have
young ins in school. Maybe you'vegot maybe your grandparent and you've got you're
very actively involved in your grandchild's education. There is a very real possibility that
(31:07):
is looming here that I don't thinka lot of people want to talk about.
The Left has organized there the destructionof the school system. They have
they've overplayed their hand in my opinion. Keep in mind that the last four
(31:29):
decades five and maybe starting longer thanthat, it could be that you could
trace McCarthyism and the driving of thecommunist movement underground in America. And now
it's not so underground, but itgot underground. It moved into the Democrat
(31:53):
Party. It's slowly been pulling andtugging and steering the party further and further
and further. They're left, andthey've taken over the education system to the
extent, not entirely, but tothe extent that the system has been corrupted.
And I've said to you that evenwith the best of efforts by people
(32:15):
like Manny Diaz. I don't knowif public schools can be saved. They
might be irretrievably broken. That's notto say they're not outstanding teachers in the
school system. There are, Butin this case, the old adage that
it doesn't take much poison to ruina meal really really plays out here because
(32:37):
you've got such poison in in enoughareas in the teachers union, administrative wings,
boards of education, textbook writing.I mean right, it's it's kind
of don't know that we're going torecover this. So polling done is shown
(33:00):
and I came across this parental rightslack thereof not the kind we're talking about
in the news all the time nowthat parents want, hey, some saying
what's going on in their kids educationand in their private life. Schools bud
out. We're not talking about childabuse in the traditional sense of the word.
I would argue child abuses when youallow your child who's born male to
(33:22):
become a female anyway. Transgender policies, politicized school curriculums, and the number
one issue why teachers are leaving theclassroom is the lack of discipline in the
classroom. Teachers are being beat up, left hospitalized, shot by kids in
(33:46):
grade school. So add this up. Now you've got parents that are taking
their tax dollars in states that allowchoice, and they're moving them. They're
moving their kids out of public schools. You have public schools now that are
(34:07):
having to compete in the with theprivate sector for teachers, and those teachers
are going to those schools because they'resafer, they have control of their classroom.
There's oftentimes better curriculum, more traditionalcurriculum, more classic curriculum. And
so you have three quarters of thestates right now that have teacher shortages.
(34:30):
Couple that with the exodus of parents, and when their money goes, the
school districts are stuck. They don'thave that money. That kid's gone,
that money goes with them. SoI'm suggesting a what if scenario. What
if the public school system just collapses? What would your answer be for educating
(34:54):
your child? I did a commentarylast week and I offered that the one
room schoolhouses coming back, and thatthat one room is your your home,
to your house. But that's whatI think. What do you think is
the public school system irretrievably broken?To borrow my expression that I've used for
(35:14):
a few years now, can itbe saved? Eight five zero two zero
five w FLA. I'd love tohear from you, Preston Scott's go ahead,
make my day on news Radio onehundred point seven FLA. So when
(35:47):
you add it up and you lookat school boards that are they are intent
on ignoring parents, you have superintendentsof education that have their own agenda or
are ill equipped for the job athand. They're just they're just not equipped
(36:09):
to do it. They just theydon't they don't have the makeup, they're
not wired properly for the job.School districts have become incestuous, and so
if teachers are leaving in droves,that's the quote here from this story,
(36:30):
leaving in droves, you have ashortage to begin with, and now the
profession who's who wants who's training togo into the classroom? Where's the pipeline
it? I can tell you,as as as someone that's been more than
(36:53):
a casual observer to the issue ofeducation since you know, since I was
one of only two parents had askedabout curriculum in the Guidance Department of Leon
County Schools three decades ago. Twoparents in the entire district asked about this
curriculum that was questionable. I wasone of them. I was involved in
(37:16):
private education. My wife is anexpert in education in that she's got her
master's degree in it and has beena professional researcher and classroom instructor for going
on nearing two decades. I'm justcurious, do you think that this school
(37:42):
system can be saved? And ifnot, I mean, grant, what
do you see a parent doing ifthe public schools, I mean, it's
a fiscal issue as much as anything. If the money leaves and follows these
kids, you lose enough, you'restarting to combine class now because you don't
have enough teachers, right, andso you're it begins to self destruct even
(38:07):
more. Yeah. I see thehomeschool movement being the becoming much more mainstream
as it's already kind of gotten mainstream. Do you think more couples will go
to a single income Yeah. Yeah, in fact, that that's kind of
the plan that my wife and Ihave kind of taken the approach of we're
(38:30):
scaling things back over the last fewyears to try and you know, for
the future, to be able todo a homeschool model option, give us
that option, be prepared for thatif Christian School isn't on the table someday.
And even at Christian School, yougotta be careful. There are no
guarantees there. Well, I youknow, I had hoped that I would
(38:55):
hear from you on this. Iwas wrong. I thought that there would
be some interest in talking about thefuture of public schools. That's okay,
I've got other things that I'm goingto talk about next. But polling is
really pretty clear on this. Thisship's going the wrong way. And you
(39:15):
know, there's a certain inertia thateventually gets developed. And yeah, and
I'll take calls if you want tocall in now. I mean, I've
got one more segments set aside forthis if you want to. But eventually,
it's like that snowball. There's aninertia here that you just I don't
(39:36):
know that it can be stopped.I know, speaking for our local county
school board, I don't know thatthere's enough of them listening. I know
we have one or two that listen, I know one sometimes two, But
the rest and the superintendent they're justnot equipped for the job. They have
a personal agenda and they can't stepback enough to look at the fact that
(40:00):
that the building's on fire, andthey are the reason why. Anyway,
I see the school system is broken. What do you see? Eight five
zero two zero five WFLA. Yourcalls are next twenty one minutes after the
(40:24):
hour the Morning Show at Preston SkycodMorning, everybody. I happen to be
Preston and just a little conversation here. Teachers are sounding the alarm, growing
problems in schools and colleagues are leavingin droves. So what app what happens
if? What would you do ifthe school system collapses? Or what do
(40:47):
you think's going to happen? Andso we go to the phone lines.
Hi, built, Hey, howyou doing good? What do you think?
Well, I think it's been brokenfor a while and I think it
collapse. I live in Jefferson County, so it's been sailing over there for
quite a while. I've got adaughter and she's a junior to be a
(41:14):
senior next year. We're in aprivate Christian school. I'm paying for private
Christian school and I'm paying for publicschool. So I'll be glad when the
Governor's the new thing comes out wherethe money follows the child. Maybe I
don't have to pay twice, butI say, let it fail. The
(41:37):
founding fathers or self taught, homeschooled, or taught in a one room school
house, and I think by andlarge they were a lot smarter than we
are today. So you know,we don't need a big school system to
educate kids. Thank you very much, Bill, I appreciate you calling in.
Let's go to Jeffrey High. Jeffrey. Hey, good morning, quest
(42:00):
and I agree with your last callerto a large extent. I really don't
I really don't call them public schoolsanymore. I call them government schools,
and unfortunately arthritis is to set intothem. And you know, one thing
I've seen over time is that peoplewho have gone through the system themselves,
(42:21):
who are part of the education system, they don't have the answers anymore.
Because they've been through the system,they're involved in it, and it's hard
to get fresh thoughts as to howto one try to renew the system.
So consequently, there are all theadditional types of educating groups developing in the
(42:45):
country, and I think this isa healthy sign that again competition may be
the answer to resolving some of theproblems in regard to how we're going to
teach young people to be able tosuccess fully live in their future. Thank
you very much, Jeffrey Well said, let's go to Tara. Good morning,
(43:06):
Tara, Hey, good learning presson. What do you think about all
this? Well, it is quitedisturbing. It has been for quite some
time. Our daughter is only nineyears old, she's in third grade.
We have a long way to go. We did do some homeschooling during the
period of COVID to kind of seehow the schools was going to get back
(43:28):
to normal. There was certain policieswe were concerned and we didn't want them
to have overwhelming bearing on our child'sday to day life. So we did
that for a whole year, andof course it has its challenges, but
we looked at it as an investmentas education should be. Unfortunately, it
has become something very passive in ourculture, where we just send our kids
(43:49):
to school and not many questions areasked. So when you're discussing the collapse,
I'm kind of hesitant to think thata lot of parents are going to
be patriotic, so to speak,and really stand up and take take those
steps that make that sacrifice as Brantwas saying, you know, he's putting
some thought into it and making thoselifestyle changes, and I just don't see
(44:13):
the general public really stepping up tothat and doing that. Thanks, Jerry
Will said, good comments coming inhere. John, you're the last caller.
What do you think, Well,Preston, I wanted to bring something
up about alternative education sources here intown. Particularly, it's the Catholic High
School. Back in March. Friendssent there the bio Vita Curriculum Vita or
(44:42):
whatever you call it, the biographyof the new proposed Principle at JP two
High School, and it sounded gooduntil you got to the fourth paragraph where
she puts in there, I leadwith a commitment to support diversity, inclusion
and equity, as I believe everyindividual should have the same opportunity to succeed.
(45:08):
And so I wrote the bishop andsaid, you know, basically,
do you know what diversity, equityand inclusion stands for in today's world?
It is the agenda which is promotingthe pro homosexuality and the transgenderism and all
(45:29):
that garbage that's going on, andwhat you're seeing in most of the public
schools. And I said, thisis this is terrible. And the Bishop
of course wrote back with some bovineschatology, you know, and tried to
say that Jesus promoted diversity and inclusion. And of course while while he did,
(45:55):
while he did, he also saidsend no more. Ye. Yeah.
And so the interesting thing about whathappened after I confronted the bishop on
this, John, you got tenseconds. This person's bio was scrubbed.
(46:16):
Got it all right, sir,Thank you very much. His point is
one we've been making as well.Don't assume that a private school or a
private quote Christian school is doing thingsall that much differently. You gotta do
your due diligence wherever. Twenty sevenminutes after the hour, I promise you
this, that story is not goingaway anytime soon. Come back with the
(46:40):
big stories in the press box.Halfway through the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Preston Show with Morning Scott, whatcame across a video clip that was
(47:08):
interesting just in the break when werun the subject of education. Before I
get to the big story in thepress box, Grandpa shows up at a
school board meeting and he's talking abouthis son and taking a couple of his
(47:32):
boys to the movies, and oneboy wanted to see one movie, one
boy wanted to see another movie,and he just he observed that the movies
have ratings. And he said,now, it's interesting that there's not just
the movie ratings board, but thatthere's a board for video games, and
(47:59):
that that board looks at the materialand says that it's generally suitable for audiences
E for everyone. Right, wesee those ads on TV, don't we?
For video games? E for everyone? Some are E ten I think
is one designation suitable for most childrenten years of aging up. And then
(48:25):
there's ratings for thirteen and teenagers,and then above teenagers and so forth.
You get my point. We havewe've had a movie rating system, and
although the system has certainly changed overthe years, we still have guidance available
to parents. He didn't make thisspecific connection of the dots, but I
(48:47):
sure will consider the material that's inschools today, which some of the material
that's being taught pass a PG thirteenrating. Would it be rated R?
(49:12):
Would it be MC seventeen. Imean, I'm just I'm taking his comments
that I found very interesting. Maybecurriculum needs a rating. Maybe parents need
to know exactly what's in that curriculumwith a very easy to understand rating,
(49:37):
that there's material in here that mightnot be suitable for all audiences, right,
I mean, we have a ratingsystem for video games. People,
do you trust that more than youtrust Let's let me back up. You
(50:00):
have more knowledge of what's in amovie or a video game than you do
of what's inside your child's curriculum.Wouldn't be great if we had an independent
review board looking at all the curriculum. No, that's not appropriate. But
(50:21):
yet we are seeing and hearing storyafter story after story of people objecting to
the imagery and the teaching that areinside curriculum books that are in our school
systems. Unintentional detour this morning,sorry, forty minutes past the hour.
(50:50):
Joe Camp scheduled to join us.Maybe not next to the morning show.
Find more on his vlog WFLAFM dotcom. Keyword Preston. Let's do the
(51:15):
big story in the press box here. Something must have come up with Joe.
I think he got called into surgerylast week. Yeah, so if
that happens, it's one of theinherent risks of having someone who does do
surgery as a guy's kind of gotto do his job. He does have
to do that yet, all right, So Joe Biden, who oh,
(51:37):
by the way, I go backand forth regarding I feel sorry for him
sometimes and then you realize, now, he's just a power hungry man,
always has been. I'm most havedespicable feelings towards the family that keeps propping
(52:01):
him up when you know that he'sa grandfather, right, he's into what
do you mean by the family,The family is propping him up for power.
We're talking about the Obama's Jilly doctorJill Michelle Bruck. Yeah, I
mean she's she's apparently an iron maidenapparently, and I don't know. And
(52:23):
when there's he's clearly, you know, getting older in age, and I'm
like, let grandpa be grandpa kindof thing. But what a difference between
how I mean, Look, weall know Trump's weaknesses. I don't need
to spill those out again. We'llhave plenty of opportunities given to us by
(52:44):
Donald Trump over the next year anda half. But there's no comparison between
the vigor the mental sharpness of thetwo. Yeah, oh yeah, it's
not even close. And they're whatmaybe six years apart in age, something
like that. Trump's seventy six,Biden eighty two, something like that.
Well, Biden's Biden would be eightytwo when he I mean he's he he
(53:07):
would be eighty two if he ranagain, something like that. So he's
he's got him by a couple ofyears. Yeah, but oh my gosh,
you just look at him. He'smaus looping. Yeah. Sometimes older
people here and just kind of theirteeth that sound. I know you're annoying.
(53:35):
Hey, Jilly, Hi, Hithere, And you know what,
there's nothing wrong with growing old.Nothing I'm growing old, But that doesn't
mean you should be the commander inchief of the United States of America.
And listen to what he told StephanieRule on MSNBC. Why would an eighty
(53:58):
two year old Joe Biden be theright person for the most important job in
the world. Because I've required ahell of a lot of wisdom. I
know more than the vast majority ofpeople. I'm more experiencing anybody's ever run
for the office. And I thinkI've proven myself to be honorable as well
as also effective. Well, he'sbeen effective. He is using the regulatory
(54:22):
pen to ruin this country, andthat's something again. We have to do
something about that. The ability ofthe commander in chief to just write a
permission slip and allow this country tobe destroyed one edict at a time that
said, I know more than thevast majority of people, and I'm honorable.
(54:47):
Dude, Are you trying to channelGeorge Washington or something? I mean,
you were in the Senate, butI mean when he was there.
I just anyway, Joe, We'vegot some epic sound coming up next hour.
But when we come back, activistswant more. In California, we'll
(55:13):
explain. Preston Scott. You're mockingme, aren't you. Oh no,
no, no, no, no, no no. I'm used Radio one
hundred point seven FLA bad guy.We've gunned outside of them all and Texas
(55:44):
gotta be prepared. There are badpeople and they will always have access to
firearms always. This guy apparently hadsome mental issues. He might have connections
to a neo Nazi group. Um, his name wouldn't indicate that, you
would You would never think that,but it would it. That's one of
(56:05):
the original or um one of theone of the initial reports about his background.
He will remain nameless, as allshooters do and should on this program.
But anyway, California, we mentionedwhat was at one point two million
(56:27):
is what the panel was recommending somethinglike that. Okay, Yeah, the
state of California, despite being afree state when it was admitted into the
Union, is UH is seriously walkingdown the road of handing out checks to
to those who are black because ofthe amend's needed for slavery and subsequent descriminate
(57:00):
na That just paused for just asecond before we get to the specifics of
the story, and I just wantyou to consider that discrimination. So if
we determine society determines that you know, someone's been discriminated against individually or as
a group, we are now suggestingthat there is compensation. Now, we
(57:23):
have had a court system that hassuggested that certain levels of discrimination are certainly
entitled to considerations, whether it's accessto employment or whatever the case might be.
But obviously we know that there arelimits to that because, as is
noted in a blog that I publishedover the weekend, What's Happening to White
(57:45):
People? It's video by an Asianthat just simply it's gone viral. It's
huge blow up, and he's makingthe case that white people right now are
being attacked the same way that otherswere attacked, and that we're supposedly past
(58:09):
all this, but we're not,and this is what's happening. Anyway.
The case is made by somebody whohappens to not be white, and I
guess that's what lends it some gravitas. But you could make the argument that
every race, every ethnicity has beenenslaved at one time or another in the
(58:32):
course of history. Everybody's been enslaved. Literally, the word slave got its
roots from the Slavs. They werethe Slavic people at the time were slaves.
That's where the word comes from.European whites. Yeah, you know,
(58:54):
I guess we're supposed to sort throughthe blacks that sold blacks into slavery.
But we don't talk about that inthe in the history lesson, just
like we don't talk about black onblack crime. I guess there's that's just
that's that's taboo. You don't gothere. But we have a Reverend Tony
Pierce. You know that the numbersshould be equivocal to what an acre was.
(59:15):
Back then we were given forty okay, we were given forty acres.
You know what that number is,And you keep trying to talk about now,
yet you research back to slavery andyou say something about slavery. Nothing,
say nothing about slavery. Nothing.So the equivocal number from the eighteen
eighties is forty acres, which todayis two hundred million dollars. So the
(59:45):
Reverend Pierce is asking for two hundredmillion dollars for each and every African American.
Wait, two hundred million total foreach. There's no way that forty
acres is any tract of land offorty acres is two hundred million. California
(01:00:07):
maybe, maybe, but California.Talking about California. Now, the state
budget sits at three hundred billion dollarsfor California. Let's marvel at that.
And the preliminary estimate for the onepoint two is an eight hundred billion dollar
price tag. You can see wherethis is leading. But the demand now
(01:00:30):
is two hundred million. Now,I want to take you back too,
And sadly, we do not havethe ability that say Russia Limbaugh had with
his staff to pull They had recordingsall categorized by different tags that they would
give it and so he could pullup a sound bite. I made this
(01:00:52):
statement multiple times years ago. Itwill never ever be enough. And I
stand by that understanding that the overwhelmingmajority of blacks want no part of this,
(01:01:13):
But there are activists that are makingthese demands that get the lion's share
of the attention. And I willhumbly just simply say that people like me,
we got nothing to say about itbecause it's not going to be heard
because we're the white oppressors. Butfor those of you that happened to be
black listening to this program, thisone's on you. You gotta fight this
fight. Fifty six minutes after thehour, hour three next. Alrighty five
(01:01:49):
minutes after eight o'clock in the Easterntime zone, seven in the Central Hello,
everybody, good morning, and welcometo the Monday edition of The Morning
Show with Walk. That doesn't workvery well, though, so we call
it The Morning Show with Preston Scott. I'm Preston. That's Granted Grant Allen
(01:02:09):
over there, Studio one. Hey, I'm here in Studio one, B
Show forty nine, twenty four,and it is May the eighth. May
the eighth be with revenge for something. There isn't anything we've made up for
that. Yeah, we had twosolid days of fun little holidays, and
(01:02:30):
now it's back to nothing. Wedo have Mother's Day coming up, don't
forget about it, just saying Idon't care if your wife, if if
your mom says don't send me anything, you send something, do something,
do something, it matters. I'mgonna say, all right, before we
(01:02:52):
get to some amazing sound so muchso, I'm going to divide it in
half. I'm gonna share half ofit, then share the other half in
two separate segments inside a Senate subcommitteeor committee. I have to talk about
the pending fight between UFC fighter JakeShields and Mac Begs. Mac has answered
(01:03:22):
a call out. Now, Jakewas a UFC fighter. In fact,
Shields battled for the UFC Welterweight Championshipat UFC one twenty nine, lost to
George Saint Pierre Georges, Sorry Georgesand George's Saint Pierre's no, you know
(01:03:45):
he's he's good. It's a goodfighter, that said. Mister Shields has
said, yeah, any of youtrans men want to step in the ring
the octagon. Sorry, well,mac Begs called him out. Mac Mac
(01:04:05):
not only said yeah, I'll fightyou, Jacob said, look, I'll
take ten of you on ten onone. Mac would have none of that.
You're just gonna make this official callout. But Jake Shields, I
will take you up on your offer. This is on out kick. But
(01:04:28):
the offer isn't gonna be ten versesone ten trans men, you're gonna be
fighting for the rest of the night. You're gonna do a one on one
type match. You're gonna do itright. You're gonna you're gonna call yourself
a fighter and do bleeping right.So he's he she she's going to fight
him. Now. It should bepointed out that she also did not speak
(01:04:56):
like a lady. But she's not. She's a guy. I'm so confused,
she said, I'm specifically going tobleep you up, Jake Shields.
Now, what you need to knowabout this is Mac Beggs wrestled for the
girls high school wrestling team in Texasand won the one and ten pound championship.
(01:05:29):
But she was transitioning at the timeand taking testosterone and so forth,
and so she she won, butthen only went so far because the rest
of the girls wouldn't wrestle her becauseyou're you, you have juiced yourself.
She was basically a testosterone taking younglady who had herself boosted physically by taking
(01:05:56):
drugs. So opponent's forfeited matches becausethey didn't want any part of it.
Now, that's what we ought tobe doing to stop this nonsense. Just
don't compete. So here's what's set. We don't know where or when or
if anyone will leaven license this thing, because when it's all said and done,
you have a male UFC fighter thatis going to fight a woman pretending
(01:06:16):
to be a man that she's allegedlytransitioned and is now a dude. That's
still a kind of a disgrace forthat dude. Why would he do that
for like the act the mail Jakeshields, Why that's just disgraceful. Bro,
Like, come on, man,don't fight a girl. I think
(01:06:38):
he wants to make a point theother way, and I don't think I
don't think it helps him at all. I don't think so either. I
beating someone up to prove a pointdoesn't Like there should still be honor indignity
here, even if someone denigrates themselvesto taking testosterone, right, you still
don't. Yeah, she could neverwrestle in college against dudes, but that
(01:07:03):
was due to surgery. Don't knowwhat kind of surgery. I'm just saying
anyway, ten minutes after the hour, I just wanted you to know that
is actually on the radar now.Preston Scott one News Radio one hundred point
seven WFLA. All right, I'vebeen waiting all morning to share this.
(01:07:33):
I love soundbites. I love lettingyou listen to things and let you hear
people for themselves speak for themselves.And as much as Senator John Kennedy of
Louisiana can be infuriating, he alsois. It's just he's the perfect foil
(01:07:54):
for liberals because he can come offbeing just, you know, slow thinking
country boy. Right, buddy.He's sitting in this meeting. It is
the Senate Appropriation Subcommittee, so itwas a subcommittee and offering testimony taking questions
is Deputy Energy Secretary David Kirk.I'm gonna let you listen to the Q
(01:08:21):
and A back and forth in itsentirety, but in parts. Here's part
one. Adam, Chair, mistersecretary, thanks for being here. I
want to tap your expertise for amoment. Give me, give me your
best estimate, just an estimate Iknow of how soon you think the United
(01:08:43):
States of America will be carbon neutral? So I think according to the climate
scientists around the world, and certainlythe cutting edge scientists that we need to
rely on here in the US.By the way, what that means is
only people that subscribe to their theoryare allowed to weigh in on it.
Yeah, that sentence was all youneeded to know, right, And it's
just you have to listen to whatthey're saying. They're actually telling you everything.
(01:09:09):
We've got to get carbon neutral bytwenty fifty. And I'm very comfortable
with that target. And I thinkthat's the appropriate fifty which is only twenty
seven years. That is not along time away. And how much will
that cost? So the cost thatI focus first of all. So so
he's like a valley girl for God'ssake, So okay, So so it's
(01:09:30):
on even more is all the costsand all if we don't much cost to
get us carbon it's going to costtrillions of dollars and it'll cost tens of
trillions of dollars if we don't getour acts. How many trillions. I
don't have the estimate or the numbersin front of me. I've seen a
variety of different estimates, but it'sa large amount fundamentally transforming our energy economy.
The estimate, tell me the estimatesthat you've seen. I don't have
(01:09:51):
those numbers right on hand. Soyou're advocating that we become carbon neutral,
but you don't know how much it'sgoing to cost. So there's an awful
lot of estimates out there. Thingor you're the expert. I know,
I know how much is going tocost. I know with a certainty of
all the experts I've spoken about it'scheaper to get our act together than it
(01:10:13):
is to not get our act togetheron climate chase. Then tell me the
costs that if we don't do it. I think it's orders of magnitude different.
If you don't get back together,it's you don't You don't have a
cost. You want us to getthere, but you can't tell the American
taxpayer how much it's going to cost. Is that your testimony? It's gonna
save us money and there's a lotof jobs. Well, how do we
(01:10:35):
know? You don't know how muchit's going to cost. I'd be happy
to pull up the latest numbers thati've seen. How about fifty trillion dollars.
Is that right? It's gonna costtrillions of dollars, There's no doubt
about it. Okay, if wespend trillions of dollars and we achieve,
some of your colleagues est to makefifty treat and it disappoints me that you're
(01:10:58):
not willing to give the estimates.All right, we're gonna pause there.
Sat Senator Kennedy is about to hemhim in. But I want you to
notice his inability, his evasiveness onthe subject. He doesn't know. It's
his job to know. They don'tcare. See, that's the point.
(01:11:19):
First, The first point here thatyou take away is the illiberal left.
They don't care because it has nothingto do with money, It has nothing
to do with lifestyle, has nothingto do with anything other than controlling your
decisions while making it seem like you'remaking those decisions. US Senator John Kennedy
(01:11:51):
from Louisiana questioning Deputy Energy Secretary DavidKirk. He just pointed out to Kirk
that the experts he relies on andis so fervently pointed to and is earlier
(01:12:14):
testimony, have estimated the cost ofbecoming carbon neutral at fifty trillion dollars,
and that's your money, my money, and it doesn't count the damage it's
going to do to the economy.The Q and A continues, I don't
(01:12:36):
I hope you're not telling me youhave no idea how much it's going to
cost. That creates a whole newhost of problems. But if it costs
fifty trillion dollars or some of yourcolleagues have testified to become carbon neutral by
two thousand and fifty, listen,and I'm all for carbon neutrality. By
(01:12:57):
the way, how much is thatgoing to lower a world to eperatures or
how much is that going to reducethe increase in world temperatures? So every
country around the world needs to getits act together. Our emissions are about
thirteen percent of global EMA. Yeah, but if you could answer my question,
if we spend fifty thrillion dollars tobecome carbon neutral in the United States
of America by two thousand and fifty, you're the Deputy Secretary of Energy,
(01:13:20):
give me your estimate of how muchthat is going to reduce world temperatures.
So, first of all, it'sa net cost. It's what benefits we're
having from getting our act together,and reducing all of those climate benefits we're
seeing. Let me ask a game. Maybe I'm being right, maybe I'm
not being clear. If we spendfifty trellion dollars to become carbon neutral by
(01:13:41):
two thousand and fifty in the UnitedStates of America, how much is that
going to reduce world temperatures? Thisis a global problem. So we need
to reduce our emissions, and weneed to do everything we can. How
much if we do our part isit going to reduce? So we're thirteen
percent of global emis You don't know, do you? You don't know.
Do you You can do the mathwe need to. You don't know,
(01:14:02):
do you, mister secretary? Sowe're thirteen percent of If you know,
why won't you tell me if wewent to zero, that would be thirteen
percent. You don't know, doyou? You just want us to spend
fifty thillion dollars and you don't havethe slightest idea whether it's going to reduce
world temperatures. Now, I'm allfor a carbon neutrality, but you're the
Deputy Secretary of the Department of Energy, and you're advocating we spend trillions of
(01:14:27):
dollars to seek carbon neutrality, andyou can't. And this isn't your money
and my money, it's taxpayer money. And you can't tell me how much
it's going to lower world temperatures,or you won't tell me, you know,
but you won't. In my heartof hearts, there is no way
the world gets its act together andclimate change unless the US leads tell me
how much it's going. You can'ttell me either that or you won't.
(01:14:53):
And that's the fift the President UnitedStates needs. I've still got a few
seconds. I got twenty two seconds. I'm going to use them a different
way. He's changing his question andgoing after somebody else next for his twenty
two seconds. Now, I thinkit has comment on I'm all for carbon
(01:15:15):
neutrality is it doesn't trouble me onebit. The fact of the matter is
we should all want to not haveany pollution in the world. But there's
practical sides to all of this.And the fact of the matter is the
air is cleaner in America, inAmerica then it's ever been ever and it's
(01:15:35):
just fine. And carbon dioxide isnot a problem. Carbon monoxide is a
problem. Carbon dioxide is a requirementfor our planet to survive. But I
just want you to understand the lengthsthat these guys will go to not answer
a simple question. And I'm goingto tell you why they can't answer that
(01:15:58):
question. Because he's correct. We'reonly one piece of the puzzle. If
we don't, if we do,if we bankrupt our economy to do all
this, and China, India,Russia, it's not gonna make one bit
of difference. It's just not.But it's not a man made problem.
The climate changes, it does whatit does, and the reality is our
(01:16:27):
temperatures have actually gotten cooler. Thereality is that the way that they read
temperatures is faulty because they have thetemperature sensors in places that don't give accurate
temperatures. Let me put it toyou this way. The locations of most
of the sensors around the world arein locations that you might as well just
(01:16:50):
put it inside your oven and turnit on. How accurate of a reading
are you going to get to yourImagine your air conditioning running if the thermostat
that determines whether it kicks on wasinside your oven. That's where they put
these temperature sensors. They put themon top of buildings in downtown by asphalt
(01:17:13):
near air conditioning units that are runningand heated. Anyway, I'm not going
to go through this time and timeagain. But the fact of the matter
is he doesn't He's not going toanswer the question fifty trillion dollars. And
you know what's amazing. I don'tknow that this makes even the top fifteen
of things that Americans care about.But they're going to bankrupt our country,
(01:17:39):
ruin our economy, and control howyou live over it. You better start
caring. But for a whole differentset of reasons. The Morning Show at
Preston Scott On News Radio one hundredpoint seven, double ent LA. All
(01:18:03):
Right, we're in a bit ofa role here with John Kennedy, and
I just want you to listen tothis short exchange from last week send a
budget Committee. This time he's talkingto the president and CEO of the Solar
Energy Industries Association, Love Being Firm, Abigail Hopper and um and in this
(01:18:33):
testimony, he hass a very simplequestion and inside there is an answer that
says a lot more than I thinkshe intended. Just listen, um Um,
I can't see your name, Ican't see Hopper, the Hopper,
(01:18:56):
I love solar energy. I justwanted you to know that, and I
love electric cars, but I gotto ask you this question. I've been
waiting to ask this. H Ifelectric cars or so swell, how come
government has to pay people to drivethem? So? I think, Um,
it's like most most government policies,right, are are put in place
(01:19:19):
to incent certain behaviors, And sothat's part of the policy, is that
if we want more. But ifthey're so swell, why couldn't they just
in a confetitive market? People,why wouldn't they be choosing even electric cars
over internal combustion engine cars. Ithink that why do we have to pay
people to drive them? But Iwouldn't characterize as paying people to drive them,
(01:19:42):
but I would sure we are.We're giving a bigger the government having
a policy to incent more purchase ofelectric vehicles. Now, of course you
wouldn't characterize it that way. Butdid you catch it? Let's go back
to the very first time she triedanswering. So I think, um,
(01:20:09):
it's like most most government policies,right, are are put in place to
incent certain behaviors. That was it. Most government policies are in place to
incent people's behaviors. The entire greenenergy movement is about controlling your behavior,
(01:20:40):
mandating it. Oh, you canbuy anything you want as long as it's
electric. You remember when when everyonewas trying to get us to buy gas,
And I'm not talking about gas forour cars. I'm talking about gas
appliances, gas every because gas wasmore efficient. Now gas is taboo gas.
(01:21:11):
So what are we going to beasked now to replace our backyard weber
barbecues, the charcoal in the gasgrills with an electric grill. Hey,
if that's what you want to do, awesome, go find yourself one watch
they're gonna be coming because you won'tbe able to find charcoal gas grills.
(01:21:41):
Government's gonna regulate those out of existenceif they have their way. If you
don't stop this ridiculousness in twenty twentyfour, you give Joe Biden another four
years, for God's sake, it'sit's America is death death warrant right there.
(01:22:02):
But what they're they're going to moveyou too, And you watch,
the manufacturers are not stupid. They'regonna start moving to finding electric grills,
and then our options for fueling thatelectricity are going to be reduced, So
the price is going to go up, and it's all about controlling you.
(01:22:28):
All of this when we come back. Florida Man back in the news on
the Morning Show with Preston Scott.This is the Morning Show with Preston Scott's
forty one minutes after the hour,It is The Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Tomorrow Justin Askins manly minute, moneytalk and a huge mistake. I
(01:22:56):
wonder what that's about. I guessyou'll have to tune in to find out.
But it's been a while and soit's time making a return appearance to
the Morning Show with Preston Scott.If you read something insane, I probably
(01:23:19):
did it. I'm fond of photoblog. Is going in Google my name now
to read some into the sins Ihave committed. And we all feel better
when we have somebody to blame.Come on the man. If you put
(01:23:44):
a little break in your voice alittle, you sound even better. All
right, Let's talk about orgay APante Gonzalez forty one. This is Liberty
High School, Kiss Sime, Florida. Jorge's son was playing a game of
(01:24:06):
baseball. It would appear at thehigh school and apparently Horge's son allegedly has
a bit of a mouth, andthe umpire was not having any of it.
(01:24:28):
Kid was being disruptive. Umpire said, tone it down, maintaining control,
doing exactly what you're supposed to do. I went back and forth a
little bit. That's not what's supposedto happen. If there's back and forth
in a high school, a youngkids event, the kid sits down for
the rest of the day. Youjust you're done. You take a time
(01:24:51):
out for the rest of the day. Coach replaced number whatever. But Dad
was not having any of his sonbeing reprimanded. But the encounters over with
Dad's just in between it or theumpires in between and inks walking away,
(01:25:14):
you know, going to get adrink, water or whatever. Dad walks
up behind the umpire and sucker puncheshim and knocks him cold. There's video
of it drops him. The umpireis a sixty three year old disabled United
States veteran. Like a lot ofguys that referee umpire officiate, he loves
(01:25:44):
the game, loves kids, recognizesthat by doing this he gives kids an
opportunity to play sports and to learn. But not now. Florida Man was
there, and Florida Man sucker punchedthe guy. The sheriff, Marco Lopez
(01:26:12):
of Osceola County said, one ofthe players started to verbally argue with the
umpire, exchanging words. So theumpire is obviously going to maintain control of
the game because that's what they're thereto do to make sure kids learn all
about sportsmanlike conduct. Unfortunately, Dadwasn't going to have any of his little
boy being reprimanded. And you knowwhat this story is first Florida Man in
(01:26:38):
headlines, first line of the storyof Florida Man was arrested. But this
is exactly the type of parenting thatleads to what we're seeing in our society
today. You know what, ifDad had gone over to the dugout where
(01:27:02):
his son was said to the coach, I'd like a word with my son,
please, And if Dad had calledhis son to the side and privately
whispered into his ear, young man, you ever do that again and talk
disrespectfully to an adult, You andI are going to have a long chat
and it's not gonna end very wellfor you. That's what that parenting should
(01:27:25):
have looked like. Fifty one minutesafter the hours, so you watched the
(01:27:49):
coronation. I didn't what interested youabout that. I'm just the historic nature
of it. How it you know, been going on for a thousand years.
I mean, these people can tracetheir their roots all the way back
to thousand years plus some of thegreat kings of antiquity. You know,
(01:28:12):
it's crazy, it really is.It's cool. I'm glad that in like
the modern era, we think we'reso smart that some of us are.
Yeah, that the Brits have atleast held on too, you know,
They've like, no, we're notgetting rid of that, silly, We're
not the French. Well, Imean, think of the genealogy you found
(01:28:35):
on your own family. It's true, all right, Yeah, my family
were English. They were a partof that whole thing at one point.
But but these folks go back witha level of knowledge, specific written down
archival knowledge that no one has inthe world, right nobody. Yeah,
(01:28:57):
it is interesting. I can't saythat I watched it. I was busy
doing other things. That said,I thought this was a funny story.
Guy originally from Chicago lives in Miami, goes by the handle Tee Low with
a last name that's been withheld onvlogs. He vlogs. He loves Britain's
culture, whether everything so much henow identifies as a British Man. Well,
(01:29:19):
I guess he's the first person tolove British weather. Perhaps he enjoys
bad teeth too, I don't know, but he said he a door is
starting off his day with perfectly brewedKappa homemade chip Buddy, which is a
sandwich filled with thick cut deep friedpotatoes, while watching British teen sitcom The
(01:29:44):
in between Ers. Wow, he'sreally brit maxing. Huh, it would
seem. I mean, I've gotsome English tea down here, some caffeinated
English tea that you do I dodown here. Yeah, okay that I
drink from time to time here inthe studio. So anyway, yeah,
um, instead of a hot dogat the turn, oftentimes in England it's
a it's a sausage roll. Yeah, that's what they do, and it's
(01:30:09):
not a hot dog at all.It's something totally different. But um,
yeah, it's just interesting I thatthe now identifies as imagine where this is
going to take us in the nextfew years. Right, the cat has
been left out of the bag.Well, there will be, no doubt
some court cases that some people willpursue to make a point right, and
(01:30:32):
so we'll be I will be anxiouslywatching for all of them, because again
you'll if you go to my blogpage. I dropped a blog over the
weekend about what's happening to white peopleand it was done by two people that
are not white, and and onecommenting on it with prager you and the
(01:30:55):
other one who did the original blogthat's gone viral, just saying we're going
to be here to chronicle it allon the Morning Show brought to you by
Baronet Heating and Air. It's theMorning Show one on WFLA. Here we
go. Look back at the programand under an eighty seconds or less,
(01:31:15):
Joe Biden, he's made it clear. He's proven himself. He said that
he knows more than most people,that he's a man of honor and effectiveness.
Oh, he has been effective.I credit him with that. He
has done more to ruin this countryin two years and anybody in the history
of this nation. And that,my friends, is no small feat.
(01:31:43):
I've got a decide. Do Istart collecting babbles of people that are just
rotten and create some special plays guardedby my military guys over here create kind
of like an anti hero segment ofyour studio for like the negative bubble heads.
Yeah, there's a part of methat doesn't want to and a dime
on that kind of stuff though.Yeah, you also don't want to be
caught with the wrong character or figurefrom history because then people will start asking
(01:32:08):
questions. Yeah, but see imaginemy military guys over here with rifles in
hand guarding, you know, aimedat Joe. Just say it. Transgendered
MMA artist accepts a former UFC fighterschallenge to fight. Yeah, we'll see
(01:32:29):
about that. So this person,mac Beg Begs is an MMA fighter.
Yeah, we're right. Activists wanttwo hundred million per black resident in California
at one point two tomorrow. JustinHaskins of the Heartland Institute joints US