Episode Transcript
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(00:12):
Good Morning Friday. On the MorningShowman Press, It's got it is May
the twelfth, Saw eighty nine one. I will sing of the Lord's great
love forever with my mouth. Iwill make your faithfulness known through all generations.
Someone thirty two nine. Sing tohim, Sing praise to him,
(00:37):
Tell of all his wonderful acts.Someone thirty two, verse nine says,
may your priests be clothed with yourrighteousness. May your faithful people sing with
joy song one oh four thirty three. I will sing to the Lord all
my life. I will sing praiseto my God as long as I live.
(01:02):
Isaiah forty two ten. Sing tothe Lord a new song his praise.
From the ends of the earth,you who go down to the sea
and all that is in it,you islands, all of you who live
in them. I could go onand on. Paul and Silas singing in
jail. We were made to praise, to sing unto him. Ten minutes
(01:29):
after the hour, Let's do thisFriday Always fun on the Morning Show with
Preston Scott. Look minutes after thehour. It is good to be with
(01:57):
you. I'm Preston. That's Grant'sMorning Show with Preston Scot that would be
me Show forty nine, twenty eightDay eight forty two of America held hostage.
It is May the twelfth inside theAmerican Patriots Almanac. In nineteen sixty
two, on this date, WestPoint Military Academy awarded General Douglas MacArthur the
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Thair Award, given each year toa citizen whose service to the nation has
exemplified west Point's motto, Duty HonorCountry. The following comes from a speech
MacArthur delivered to the academy core ofcadets in acceptance of the ward. MacArthur
said, duty, Honor Country.Those three hallowed words reverently dictate what you
(02:46):
ought to be, what you canbe, what you will be. They're
your rallying points to build courage whencourage seems to fail, to regain faith
when there seems to be little cause, faith to create hope when hope becomes
forlorn. The unbelievers will say,these are but words, But these are
(03:08):
some of the things they do.They build your basic character. They mold
you for your future roles as thecustodians of the nation's defense. They make
you strong enough to know when youare weak, and brave enough to face
yourself when you are afraid. Theyteach you to be proud and unbending in
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honest failure, but humble and gentlein success. Not to substitute words for
action. Not to seek the pathof comfort, but to face the stress
and spur of difficulty and challenge.To learn to stand up in the storm,
but to have compassion on those whofall. To master yourself before you
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seek to master others. To havea heart that is clean, a goal
that is hi. To learn tolaugh, yet never forget, how to
weep, to teep, to reachinto the future, yet never neglect the
past. To be serious, yetnever take yourself too seriously, to be
modest, so that you will rememberthe simplicity of true greatness, the open
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mind of true wisdom, the meeknessof true strength. Well that out ad
for Friday's edition of The Morning Showwith Preston Scott. I mean, I
could stop right there and like theaged Winston Churchill speech where he gets up
and says a commencement, never giveup. That's all he said, Never
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give up sick. That's so funny, and it's like immortal because it's remembered.
Seriously, We're going to talk abouta of stuff here today, but
there might not be anything better thanthose words. And now, of course
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here we go. I'll go aheadand ruin it all. How many of
today's recruits would listen to that?Heed that everybody that heard that speech in
nineteen sixty two was on the edgeof their seat, and they took every
word to heart. Seventeen eighty,Patriot General Benjamin Lincoln surrenders Charleston, South
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Carolina, more than five thousand troopsto the British General Sir Henry Clinton.
Eighteen sixty four. Some of thebloodiest fighting in the Civil War rages at
the Battle of Spotsylvania Courthouse in Virginia. Nineteen forty three. World War Two
Access troops in North Africa surrender afteradvances by the Allied, Thank you very
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much. In nineteen forty nine,Soviet Union ends its blockade of West Berlin,
which the United States in Britain hadovercome with the Berlin Airlie. So
there you go this state in historytoday. On the program, of course,
it's Friday. That means the finalhour. We have a lot of
fun in the final half hour,a lot of interesting stories. There will
tell some encouraging stories in our goodnews segment. We've got headlines from the
(06:14):
Babbylon b. We proceed all ofthat first half hour. In the third
hour with your calls. During what'sthe Beef? Next hour, Tiger Joyce
from the American tort Reform Foundation willjoin us. Did Florida make any headway?
What's left to be done? Andwe'll tell you about an art club
you might want your kids to avoid? All right, no time to ease
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into excuse me today's program, there'sjust too much. So although I will
break it up a little bit.We got to animal stories next hour,
and of course the third hour isan hour unto itself, but then that's
always the case anyway, Good morning, Welcome to the Morning Show. Since
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two thousand, social securities buying powerhas dropped nearly forty percent, meaning even
with the cost of living increases fivepoint nine percent in twenty twenty two eight
point seven percent in twenty twenty three, those are the largest boosts since the
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nineteen eighties. The cost of food, medicine, transportation, gas, heating,
oil, housing, etc. Haveraised prices so far it can't even
keep up. Now for some ofyou listening, you're like, well,
tell me about it. Preston.I live that every single day. Aggregate
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goods services the typical retiree buys haveincreased one hundred and forty one percent since
January two thousand. In February ofthis year, social Security checks have increased
seventy eight percent. Why am Ibringing this up? Let me tell you
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why. Because you likely will notbe able to live off of Social Security
alone if you are approaching retirement ageand younger, and I strongly suggest that
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you have a plan. If youare listening to me right now, and
you are, if you happen tobe in your twenties and working at all,
sweet lord, after you pay yourtithes, pay yourself first, put
some money into savings, develop aroth ira or some kind of plan,
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Meet with a financial planner, meetwith an advisor, and put a plan
together and start saving I myself.I look at the landscape of things,
and I'm at retirement age. Now. I'm not going anywhere, sorry,
grand But the fact of the matteris I couldn't retire, couldn't do it.
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I would right now if I hadto, I would say I will
be working until now. Some ofthat's choice, because I find that people
that quit work not all, thereare some that are able to enjoy their
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retirement and stay active and busy.I just see a lot of people retire
and become miserable and just sit.Maybe that's part of why I love my
yard, for example, because there'salways something to do in my yard.
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It keeps me very active. It'swhy I love golf, because it's a
game that I remember my dad tellingme, you can play this game all
your life. I started playing whenI was five. I'm sixty two.
I'm not quite as good as Iwas in my late teens early twenties,
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but I'm getting back. But it'sa game I can play and enjoy.
But when you look at these numbers, when it comes to Social Security again,
I think you should be pestoring Congressand you're elected officials to end it,
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make it optional if someone wants tosave I mean, look, here's
the reality. I always thought growingup that the money taken out of my
paychecks and out of everybody's paychecks wasset in an account with their name and
social Security number on it, right, and that it's accumulating a little bit
of interest, and that's the moneyyou get back what you've contributed plus interest
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back when you retire, whatever youput in, you're getting back. That's
not the case. Everything that's takenout of your paycheck right now is paying
for the checks that are going out. Your money's gone. It's a Ponzi
scheme. And so I just believeit should be optional that you should have
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all of your check if you wantit. But that's a debate for another
day. Time for news, andthis is the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Well, with all the attention thatit has been receiving, because even
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Democrats are worried. This is thisis a fatal this is a kill pill
for Democrats in the next set ofelections. Good morning, Welcome to the
Morning Show with Preston Scott. BecauseBiden has totally mismanaged the border, let
me put some context to it.The last year Trump was in office,
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fiscal twenty twenty six hundred and fortysix thousand border encounters with the illegals that
ultimately came into the country until theycould get an immigration hearing. That's still
a lot. In twenty twenty onetwo million, twenty twenty two, two
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point eight million. This year,we are on track for over three million
in three years. If things gothe way that Biden wants them. Eight
million a year is what we couldbe looking at. As you know,
Title forty two expired at midnight,and that was the means by which we
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allegedly were sending people out. ButFlorida's Attorney General, Ashley Moody, filed
a lawsuit and sued the federal government, and federal Judge Kent Weatherll blocked the
Biden administration from releasing migrants without courtdates. Now that doesn't necessarily mean a
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lot, but to put this insome context, the rule that Biden had
put into place requires illegal aliens tofirst seek asylum in another country that they
travel through and be denied before theyseek asylum in the United States. According
to Alejandro may Orchis, Homeland SecuritySecretary, if individuals do not access their
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lawful pathways, the pathways that wehave made available to them, they will
face a rebuttable presumption, but apresumption of ineligibility. So all that has
to happen is for the country thatthey're traveling through to say no, okay,
move on. It was meaningless.So the policy that Biden had in
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place along with these new rules saysmigrants can be allowed into the country on
parole. Now, we think parolein the criminal justice sense, it's a
little different here. A process likeparole is reserved for urgent humanitarian reasons or
significant public benefit if Customs and BorderProtection faces overcrowding. The memo calls for
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the practice of parole with conditions,as migrants are required to make an appointment
with Immigration and Customs enforcement or requesta notice to appear by mail. Under
parole release, migrants are rapidly releasedinto the country. They do not get
an alien registration number and do notreceive a court date. And oh,
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by the way, how many ofthem do you think have an address?
The use of parole is being authorizedif a capacity goes above one hundred and
twenty five percent, if agents apprehendseven thousand a day over seventy two hours,
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if an average time and custody goesabove sixty hours. Agents have been
encountering ten thousand migrants a day sinceMonday, and that number is expected to
go up. This has been adisaster, But the judge has said in
his ruling, the court has notrouble concluding that Florida has a substantial likelihood
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of success on the merits because thechallenge policy appears to be materially indistinguishable from
the parole plus ATD policy vacated inFlorida, both in its purpose reducing overcrowding
at the border patrol facilities and mannerof operation releasing aliens into the country without
first issuing a challenge a charging document, placing them in immigration proceedings, and
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simply directing the aliens to report toICE within a specified period for further processing.
Bottom line is this, we stillare being invaded at the southern border
even with this court victory, andit is an epic disaster because of one
party and one person. It's theMorning Show with Preston Scotts on News Radio
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one hundred point seven FLA. We'llspend back to that story next hour.
It's just one of many things.But a judge has stepped in and again
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the probability of success is there.That's what the judge is finding with Ashley
Moody's lawsuit against Biden and the policy. So thank you Ashley Moody. It's
good to have an active attorney generalthat's looking out for us. She's done
a good job. I can't saymuch for her willingness to come on the
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show. It's a typical happy tocome on when they're running for office,
not so interested once they win.But that's we'll forgive her for that.
Have you noticed Riley Gaines's new strategy. First of all, round of applause,
Miss Riley Gaines. Now we areefforting to get her on the air.
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I thought we were close, andsuddenly it just kind of has gone
silent. And I would imagine becauseshe's doing so many national interviews, even
though, as I learned yesterday,we have quite a following in Wisconsin and
Michigan. It turns out. I'llshare that email perhaps later today or next
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week. But I understand you haveonly so many hours. You're getting death
threats whatever, I get it.But she is challenging professional athletes that are
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women to say something, and she'scalling them out. The first on her
list are the Williams sisters, Serenaand Venus. Now Riley gives them an
out, saying, you know,I get it. A year ago,
they've got endorsement deals. They didn'twant to be caught up in all the
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publicity. But now we're now inan issue where this is becoming prevalent.
And she also knows this that.In twenty thirteen, Serena Williams said on
David Letterman Show, quoting men area lot faster, they serve harder,
they hit harder. It's a completelydifferent game. If I were to play
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Andy Murray, I would lose sixlove six love in five to six minutes,
maybe ten minutes. Thank you foran honest appraisal. And so Riley
Gaines, who, by the way, is an All American swimmer from the
University of Kentucky who lost to amale swimmer, lost the title to a
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male swimmer, Leah Dude Thomas.She has been going all over the country.
She's had her life threatened, shehas been physically assaulted for challenging men
pretending to be women. And I'vegot to remember and remind myself, I'm
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not going to fall into the trapif I can avoid it, of saying
trans women. Now, these aremen pretending to be women. And she's
been fighting this fight almost herself,even though the overwhelming majority of this country
agrees with her. And that's what'sa little annoying to me. This would
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end tomorrow if everybody, if everybodycompeting, all of the girls, all
of the women competing. When aman enters don't compete, it would end
the next day. That's the responseto this. Honestly, I don't want
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the government involved. But if that'swhere we are, that's where we are.
But it wouldn't come to that ifyou just did the right thing and
just said no, we're not competing. Some places have done that, but
not enough. But the silence ofwomen athletes is unbelievable, and so Riley
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Gaines is taking them one at atime calling them out. Good for her,
keep it up. Support the effort. Folks. Talk if you're if
you're on a if your daughter's playingsports. Talk with all the parents.
You all know each other, you'reall besties. Because you're footing a huge
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bill to get them to compete insports. Do something about this. It's
on you, and if you don't, shame on you. It's The Morning
Show with Preston Scott. Yeah,by the way, on the Riley Games
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tennis thing with Serena and Venus Williams. I would go so far as to
say that a good high schoo coolplayer, an elite high school player,
and an average men's college player wouldbe the women on the pre Usta Tour.
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I just as Serena said, wouldn'tbe close if you matched one of
the top men against her, arguablythe greatest female tennis player ever, and
she is. She was sorry,but she's honest when she said, yeah,
I wouldn't stand a chance. It'sa totally different game. That's the
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whole point I've been trying to make. And that's why these narcissists who cannot
handle being average or below average againstmen compete against women. It's shameful.
It started with Renee Richards. Hewent through the whole surgery thing and played
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professional tennis as a woman. DoctorRenee Richards, it's a joke. Never
achieved a lot of great success,which tells you about his tennis game.
Anyway. From the Daily Signal,Tyler O'Neill Southern Poverty Law Center, what
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do we know about them? Theycall every good group a hate group.
Yeah, everyone is a all right, neo nazi domestic terrorists group. They
might they just categorize everyone that way. Yeah. If you if you oppose
the transgender movement and oh my gosh, transphobe, homophobe, xenophobe, whatever
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the fobe is, you are,you are one of them. If you
oppose the teaching of certain curriculums inschool. If you believe in God,
I mean you name it, you'reyou are a hate monger. But let's
you remember back in twenty nineteen,former employee came forward in the wake of
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racial discrimination sexual harassment scandal that ledthe SPLC to fire its co founder.
Its president resigned, but a formeremployee, Bob Moser, confessed that the
hate accusations quote are a highly profitablescam, meant to exaggerate hate and built
donors. Here's what's significant. Whyis it in the news because it lost
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a case, not entirely, butit lost something it had never lost before.
Usually when a group files a lawsuitagainst the Southern Poverty Law Center,
the judge usually dismisses defamation, sayingthat the defamed hate groups fail to meet
the actual malice standard. Well ina story that's getting virtually no coverage except
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for groups like The Daily Signal,which is from the Heritage Foundation, March
thirty, First District Judge Keith Watkinsdenied a motion to dismiss a claim of
defamation from the Dustin Inman Society andits founder Da King. It's a pro
immigration enforcement group that the SPLC brandsis anti immigrant hate group. There it
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is hate group, hate group.You're a hate group. You're a hate
group. In his opinion, Hisruling allows the case to move into the
discovery phase of litigation, where nowthe SPLC has to provide documents. It's
never been required to do that before. This is huge. It's the first
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time an accuser has gotten past thehurdle of dismissal. This is a big
deal. That's why I wanted totalk about it, so I wanted to
make sure it was on your radar. We come back. Tiger Joyce joins
us. He is with the AmericanTort Reform Foundation. How did Florida's legislative
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session do on the topic of tortreform? Talk about it next. Good
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morning, Welcome to the second hourof the Morning Show with Breast Sin Scott.
I happened to be breasting. Thatis Grant Allen running the show.
It is program number four thousand,nine hundred and twenty eight, but who's
counting. It's Friday, May thetwelfth. Great to be with you this
morning. As always, we appreciateyou sharing your time, whether it is
(28:11):
on terrestrial radio or on iHeartRadio.And yes, we know there are a
couple times a year that the signalsa little wonky, we get bled on
by some others. We get it. It'll be all right, hang in
there, and if it's really bad, just remember the iHeartRadio app. You
can stream it crystal clear though delayed, and by delayed meaning by you know,
(28:36):
maybe twenty thirty seconds something like that. Just go to WFLA FM one
hundred point seven w FLA on iHeartRadio, or just look up WFLA Panama City
and you can stream us that wayand you never have to worry about that
signal issue when things are a littleweird. All right. We are joined
by Tiger Joyce. He is presidentof the ATRF, otherwise known as American
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Tort Reform Foundation. Tiger, goodmorning, how are you. I'm great,
Preston, good morning. Thanks forhaving me on today. It's my
pleasure. For those who might notfully understand or grasp what tort is,
describe it. Is it an acronym? What does tort mean? Well,
tort law is basically an aspect ofour overall civil justice system, one of
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the for those who are lawyers.It's usually a first semester law school class.
It just is that area of thelaw that involves let's just say,
involuntary exchanges. It might be somethingas simple as an auto accident or somebody
falling in a store. It's justoftentimes considered matters of just sort of personal
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injury. The sort of contrast wouldbe from a legal standpoint with contract law,
which is essentially the broader law ofentering into agreements with people. These
are sort of kind of think ofthem as involuntary encounters. Everybody from everybody
from the Florida Chamber of Commerce torank and file business owners, to insurance
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companies to even govern around as Santasand his predecessors have always referred to Florida
as a judicial hellhole. Explain whythat was. Well, first off,
thank you, that's the that's adesignation that my organization, that our foundation
that affiliated with our overall Torform Association, the American Tort Reform Association, we've
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given, regrettably given Florida all theseyears, and it has to do with
where we believe in looking at theway the civil justice system, tort cases
and any number of aspects of civillitigation, we believe simply we're profoundly out
of balance. Uh and that theinterests of all parties were not represented,
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the system was skewed way too farin the direction of those bringing lawsuits.
And we we issue a report everyyear. We put it out in the
end of in early December, andrather than just stating opinions, which we
do and our perspective, we highlightany number of areas of the law.
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And it's not just the courts.In the case of Florida, we've highlighted
activity by attorneys general. But Ithink that in recent times, what we've
been happy to report is that therehave been significant improvements in Florida. And
(31:47):
maybe that's what I think you wantto want to talk about, But it
is a report that we put outand I think in twenty eighteen we listed
the state of Florida as the absoluteworst jurisy fiction in the country for civil
litigation, and it only improved slightlyto number two in twenty nineteen. So
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but there have been changes which we'rehappy, which we're happy about, Tiger.
I want to get to those changesin the next segment. But before
we go to break, is ittoo simplistic to say that the real impediment
over all these years to significant changehas been a couple of brutal realities.
Number one, the success of thelobbying that goes on and the fact that
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so many lawmakers are in fact lawyerslawmakers in Florida. It's a part time
gig and so they're not full timelawmakers, which is good. But is
the fact that we have so manylawyers? Has that been an impediment?
Well, I think that I don'tthink that has to be an impediment.
I don't know that necessarily paused inFlorida. Okay. The fact is,
(32:52):
though, that the personal injury lawyerswho who benefit the most from the what
we think are the excesses in thisU. And I can say that because
you know, we've seen plenty ofanalyzes of the impact of the excesses and
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uh, it costs thousands of jobs. It perfectly harmed the economy of the
state. Uh. And it's justit's it's not just limited to you know,
those people who are involved in individualcases. Tigers stand by Tagger Joyce
with US American tort Reform Foundation.We'll talk about the good news we've referenced
(33:34):
next on the Morning Show with PrestonScott. Welcome to the Morning Show with
Preston Scott. I'm talking about tortreform, and joining me is the president
of American Tort Reform Foundation, TaggerJoyce. All right, so Florida is
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finding its way out of there,the judicial jail that it's put itself in.
Tell me what happened in this legislativesession. That's good news. Well,
I'm happy to do at Preston,But I think even before that,
we have to give Governor to Santiscredit because the important appointments he made to
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the State Supreme Court, as ourreport has highlighted, has significantly improved bringing
on justices who we believe have simplybeen been in effect referees as opposed to
those seeking issuing opinions, which skewedthe system. But just this past legislative
session, you've had really significant legislation, most prominently hp A thirty seven.
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Again all credit to Governor to Santis, but also to Speaker Paul Renner,
Senate President Kathleen Pasadomo, several keylegislators Tommy Gregory, Tom probres Y,
e Seador Travis Houston and Huston,and really outstanding legislation. To see.
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Part of it is what we callthe transparency and damages aspect of this the
section that deals with what is theactual cost of compensating people for the medical
care that they properly should be compensatedfor when they're injured. Florida had been
(35:28):
very much an outlier and addressing thisbecause recognizing that most people have the opportunity
to have their medical medical costs dealtwith through private health insurance. There are
obviously exceptions complicated area, but thebottom line is when you artificially inflate the
(35:49):
cost of treating the costs of treatingpeople for their medical care. This is
not about their pain and suffering orany kind of what's called punitive damages,
but dealing with that will really helpsignificantly. The Also, the legislature has
dealt with with the advertising that youoften see about pharmaceutical products, and we've
(36:13):
seen examples. The FDA is highlightedexamples where people stop taking their medication because
they get scared by these these advertisements, and the advertisements are a key part
of what we call the mass tortsmachine where you get these mega lawsuits involving
sometimes thousands of people. And thedownside that, as the FDA is highlighted,
(36:40):
is people's often get scared and theystopped taking their medications. And you
know, I went to law school. I didn't go to medical school.
People should listen to what their doctorstell them, not what's the advertisement tells
them. So these are really important. We've highlighted governor to scientists, the
legislative leaders as true leaders on thisissue. And we've deemed Florida now a
(37:07):
point of white. So it's gonefrom being among the worst now to a
national leader on legal reform, whichis just kudos to the governor and to
the leadership and the legislature for theseoutstanding reforms. A lot of things I'm
sure we can talk about, butwe are out of time today. Tiger,
thanks so much of the time.I appreciate it. Thank you so
(37:29):
much. All right, Tiger Joycewith US American Reform Foundation, he's the
president. I maintain insurance companies haveto quit settling on claims that are frivolous.
Get it to court, pay theprice, get a few rulings,
win a few put a few peltson the wall, and maybe they won't
(37:52):
try so many frivolous lawsuits as well. Maybe there's provisions in some of the
stuff. We'll talk more about iton Monday with Sale News Show of the
James Madison Institute. Who is ourlegislative expert. It's sixteen minutes after the
hour in the Morning Show with PrestonScott. Twenty one after the hour of
(38:24):
the Morning Show with Breston Scott.Wants to be Friday in about forty minutes
or so. You can you canget in line if you like, in
about a half hour. We'll tellyou when to call in. People are
calling though, Boy oh boy,well the morning Yeah, speaking of getting
(38:50):
in contact and hearing from got anote here from Kurt listen to your show
every morning here in the Upper Peninsulaand northern Wisconsin. Boy, you how
about that? A yooper? Yeah, that's what they're called, people that
live up in the Upper Peninsula ofMichigan. It's like this whole culture being
(39:10):
a yooper, an upper yoper.Come on now, really yeah, okay,
all right? I certainly know theyenjoy their pop up there. You
gotta have a soda pop, don'tyou know? Drive a truck from Crivits,
Wisconsin to Hotan or Houghton, Hancock, Michigan. Every day? How
(39:31):
about that? You actually have quitea few followers up here. I thought
you would like to hear that.God bless you and your crew. Keep
bringing us the truth. Kurt.Wow, very cool. A little shout
out there, come on now landa goshen. We're hearing from people all
over the fruited plane, not tobe confused with a fruity plane, but
(39:54):
that's a story for another day.U. We've mentioned earlier in the program,
the perverts that are obsessed with sexualizingchildren. They're evil, they just
(40:20):
and I know we're supposed to loveour enemies, and we do. I'm
working on it, but no,I twisted. I admit it's a problem
for me. We love them toomuch to see them to not tell them
(40:40):
the truth because they're sick and twistedand they should be thrown in jail.
This is what's happening on campuses nowColorado, Colorado. And again this stuff
takes root. But just because it'sColorado, a pretty blue state, not
(41:05):
pretty, I mean it's a prettynever mind. Just know that there are
teachers, instructors in your state,in your county that are willing and are
doing things like this. It's everywhere. They are using art club, not
(41:27):
class. See art class is acurriculum, it is a course. With
a teacher. Art club only needsa sponsor, and that person doesn't have
to have any acumen or skill whatsoever. They're just sponsoring the club. And
(41:50):
in this case this particular art club, group of sixth graders in the art
club were exposed literally to material thatwas actually a gender and sexuality awareness club.
(42:13):
They brought in an outside presenter andthis person used flags to describe umbrella
terms. Told the students they weretransgender if they were not fully comfortable with
their biological sex. Presenter told studentsthey could describe themselves as queer if they
had not yet figured out their sexuality. She talked to them about polyamory,
(42:40):
told them that these new labels thatthey had just adopted made them more likely
to commit suicide, and talk tothem extensively about suicide. The presenter also
discussed puberty blockers, cross sex hormones, warning those in attendants that their parents
may not save people to turn togo as they struggle with certain identities.
(43:06):
The speaker runs an organization. Thisis the outside speaker brought in called Skittles
What for Kids five to eleven todiscuss gender and sexuality five The art teacher,
the art class sponsor the art clubsponsor pulled aside one student and said,
(43:30):
you don't have to tell your parents. You know. Representing families that
are bringing a case against the schooldemanding accountability and transparency is former Florida Attorney
General Pambondi, So she's on thecase. The takeaway from this and this
(43:53):
is so just this sucks. Youcannot trust the school system, no public
or private. You must be engagedin everything going on in your child's life.
Bible says raise them in the waythat they should go, not the
(44:13):
way they think, not the waythey want, the way they should.
You have every right to be intheir business, not just your kids,
your classroom. It's The Morning Showwith Preston Scott. Hashtag disastering. That's
(44:52):
what we've got on the southern border. And I wonder we have alleged put
twenty four thousand border agents on theborder or ready to serve at the southern
border. Are we now really thinat the north? Can we be exploited
(45:15):
to the north? Probably? Imean that is how the nine to eleven
terrorists got in. They came throughthe northern border like Vermont somewhere right.
I want to say that's how theygot into the country was from the north.
But I could be mistaken, butI feel like I heard that somewhere.
(45:37):
I thought they were here legally,I don't know, because they were
taking flight training and simulators and allthat stuff. Maybe. So that said,
Remember now, this is Joe Biden. At the time he was vice
president. The policy of Obama wasa single front military, meaning the days
(46:00):
of modern warfare would require us tobe be agile and mobile, and that
we were not going to be preparedto fight two wars at once. To
devastatingly bad idea. May Orcas says, the border is not open wt H.
(46:25):
Question mark exclamation point, question markexcellent. What is he talking about?
Listen to this quote talk about gaslightingman. The border is not open
starting tonight. People who arrive atthe border without using a lawful pathway will
be presumed in eligible for asylum whatever. But the statement that I dog eared
(46:50):
in this report, we expected tosee large numbers of encounters initially. We
are already seeing high numbers of encountersin certain sectors. This place is an
incredible strain on our personnel, ourfacilities, in our communities with whom we
partner closely. We prepared for thismoment for almost two years, and our
plan will deliver results. It willtake time for those results to be fully
(47:13):
realized. It is essential that weall take this into account. What is
he talking about. He's talking aboutthe strain on our communities. Where has
(47:35):
he been for the last two years. The strain on the Texas communities is
overwhelming, but it has spread intoevery state in this country with deadly consequences.
That is a literal statement. Ithink the handling of our southern border
(48:02):
is a criminal matter, meaning Ibelieve Joe Biden, Alejandro Mayorcis, others
in leadership should be brought up oncriminal charges aiding and embedding an enemy,
treason to talk about sedition. Goodgrief? All right, We're gonna talk
(48:24):
about something else. Will we comeback? It's The Morning Show with Preston
Scott. A needed distraction, diversion, something else to talk about here for
(48:45):
a few minutes. Joining me onthe program. Michelle Dean, executive director,
Pope's Museum Preservation. Michelle, goodmorning, How are you? Good
morning? My pleasure? First,Pope's Museum Preservation. Huh, tell me
about it. While we are justacross the Florida border and in Caro.
(49:05):
It turned out to be the oldestart museum in the country done by a
woman. Amazing place where I waslistening earlier to you as opposed to other
places. Laura, who passed awayin nineteen fifty three, uses her art
for good, for honorable. Sheshowcased the value of the military, literally
(49:29):
has exhibits all over the property sayingthank you to the veterans. Also has
showcase the value of women and menworking together for solidarity and the value of
the family. It's a really amazingplace. The Laura you are talking about
is Laura Pope Forrester, and themuseum honors her. Tell us just a
(49:49):
little bit about her. She livedhere in eighteen ninety four to nineteen fifty
three and during a time when womendidn't have the right to vote. A
lot of people don't realize that eventhough the Constitution was ratified, Georgia didnimend
it until nineteen seventy and she literallyshowcased women all over the property and created
(50:14):
statues from concrete and sands just thecreek at the creek just up the road.
So she was a self taught,unknown artist who single handedly created one
of the strongest tourist attractions in Georgiain the nineteen twenties and thirties and forties.
You have an event going on tomorrowand it's very important. Tell us
(50:35):
first of all the purpose of theevent. There is a hundred but wide
World War Two memorial right accessible bythe street, and it honors men,
women, Donald Eisenhower, Pearl Harbor, d Day, etc. Unfortunately,
I mean Laura created it in theforties and fifties. Unfortunately, there are
(51:00):
huge trees that are literally busting upthis hundred foot wall and we need to
save the wall. Pressing in atime period when national monuments are being destroyed
intentionally, we want to intentionally preservethis monument. And we're doing a concert
to raise funds to preserve this nationalmonument. What time and where's it going
(51:24):
to be. It's going to beat Pope's Museum, which is one nine
two Pope Store Road just north ofU k Ross. Certainly your listeners can
look up Pope's Museum. They're justfind it. And the band is Big
Poppa and the Shuffle Brothers. Yeah, awesome, awesome band based out of
(51:46):
Tallahassee. Seeing them all the time. They're a great group of guys and
they're coming up here. We gotfood trucks, we got Hawaiian ice.
We're gonna have a fantastic time,and we love to have We've got businesses
from all over that have donated prizesfor the raffle, and all the money
is going to preserve this national monument. Yeah. I was going to say
(52:09):
you can get tickets on e ventbright or at the door. I think
it's probably easier at this point forfolks to just come on up and children
six and under are free, butthe proceeds going to the cause. So
do you have a restoration plan forthis? We do. We actually submitted
it to the Georgia Trust for HistoricPreservation. We do. The first step
(52:32):
is so we've got an endorsements andactually the museum is endorsed by the United
States National Park Service, so thisis no small, no small thing.
We do have a plan, andthe first step is to get these huge
trees. Eddie's Tree Service is ourtree company, and they've already got a
plan to take the trees out andthen we're going to restore the fence that
(52:55):
is the foundation of the historic wall. Nice. I appreciate you making time
forrest Michelle, and again it's tomorrow. What time does all the fun start?
Six o'clock sixty nine? Very familyfriendly, sweet, I appreciate it.
Let us know how it goes wellto thanks Preston, have a great
afternoon. Thank you, Michelle Deanewith us. And again that is Pope's
(53:17):
Museum Aclockney, Georgia. But really, Caro and good Cause. I mean,
if you know the background of LauraPope Forrester, Wow, I mean
her contributions in preserving what many ofus think is so important to preserve.
(53:38):
That's what makes this project worth sometime here on the program. And so
for any of you in the region, look, come on, it's Saturday,
it's it's may. Go on outthere and bring a little extra money.
I'm sure they would love to havean extra few bucks beyond even the
ticket admission to the event and makea donation to the cause. Make a
(54:01):
difference. That's kind of what we'reall about here, the Mad Radio Network,
the Make a Difference Radio Network.Come back, get you ready for
What's to Be Friday? On theMorning Show with Preston Scott. Two fifty
(54:32):
two minutes after the hour start,What's to Be Friday comes up next,
a new drug resistant ring worm ison the loose. Ladies and gentlemen,
you can just you can give ita collective Oh gross, I'm just saying
(54:54):
it's the CDC says it. Itmust be true. Here's the thing,
it's very possible. In fact,I'd say it's it's likely. Now.
This stuff is highly contagious, andthe problem is because so many people are
(55:15):
so doggone over medicated and have takenso many antibiotics for nothing. This particular
ring worm allegedly is resistant to treatments. Lovely, that's just terrific. Anyway,
CDC said they found two patients inNew York City who did not improve
(55:40):
with treatments, twenty eight year oldwoman and a forty seven year old woman.
Now here's what's interesting about this.They're just releasing the news now,
and these two patients go back totwenty twenty one and twenty twenty two.
(56:01):
But let's go back to the biggerproblem. Do you believe the CDC about
much of anything anymore? Right?Right? I? I mean you could,
you could, really, the babbylonbee would have a field day coming
up with infections of different kinds.A new drug resistant form of lice is
(56:27):
now covering the heads of children allover the country. Did you ever ever
a classmate deal with lice? No? Fortunately, I never had anyone in
class ever have that. Oh man, yeah, that was that. That
was always something that happens. Itwasn't what was the the fix? Didn't
you have to like put something onyour head? Like was it? Yeah?
(56:49):
Yeah? Why do I want tothink mayonnaise? Was it mayonnaise on
the head or was it wasn't it? Like, I don't know about anything
like that, but but I knowthat there's I thought they were medicated gampoos
and things like that that you thoughtthere was a type of remedy like that,
like if you get sprayed by askunk, you soak in tomato juice,
right, maybe like that. Ialways heard that was a thing.
(57:10):
Well, but that's because you spendtime on a farm. I did,
so for some reason, I havein my mind tomato juice. And maybe
you're just craving a PLT buddy.I'm just let's just cut to the chase
here, and then there's this.You're ready. The Biden administration is now
coming after dishwashers. We're gonna behanging clothes on the line. By the
(57:35):
time this is over. Biden Departmentof Energy announced new efficiency standards to limit
water usage and energy consumption for newdishwashers. If implemented, the new rules
would require the dishwashers cut water andpower usage by thirty four and twenty seven
percent, respectively. That's according toBloomberg. Can we just pause for just
one second before I get to What'sto be Friday? This is actually kind
(57:59):
of a primer of the pump.So your dishwashers cutting the use of water
that would buy necessity suggest that yourdishwasher will not wash dishes as efficiently.
Right, So what does that do? That returns you back to the sink
(58:22):
and running your hot water and runningeven more water. The stupidity of this
is overwhelming, but I digress.It's What's to be Friday? Next?
Eight five zero two zero five WFLAcall. Now lives are open eight five
zero two zero five WFLA. Heythere, Hi, there, ho there.
(59:04):
Welcome to the third hour of theMorning Show with Preston Scott. And
it's Friday, and that means it'stime for our exclusive presentation of you What's
to be Friday? Your chance tocomplain about whatever your little heart desires.
If it matters to you, itmatters to us, even if we have
to pretend Grant Allen has taking yourcalls. The lines are busy right now.
(59:28):
So as we focus through or sorry, as we go through the phone
calls, pay close attention. Focusin, and as you hear us wrapping
up a call, call in eightfive zero two zero five to WFLA.
We're on a delay, especially longdelay on iHeartRadio. But you are welcome
(59:49):
to call in as well and participate. Just no profanity and don't make it
personal. Let's go to the phoneline. Standing by is Michael. Good
morning, Michael, what's the beef? Good morning, Preston. Well,
first of all, before my bees, I just want to say I date
all the moms out there that areworking hard, especially those that have the
S chromosome and also those that forsome medical reason where they don't have children.
(01:00:15):
But we still call the moms andthat still have the chromosome. There
you go, there you go.We have to differentiate these days, now,
don't we. Yeah, we do. But my my bees is with
I had radio. What we do. Yeah, for some of us,
we be the only way we canbe listening to the VFLA is true.
I had radio and it's an amazingtoo because some of us who don't have
(01:00:39):
the chance of seven. So forme, it's like, um, once
we listen to your program, usuallyyou have look out at most of the
time, but from after your showand you have the attack a cows in
Lemberg and Sean Hondy and most ofthe ads, probably one third of them.
(01:00:59):
I usually podcast as about murder andcrime. You know, it's like
and it's like they're glorifying the killersor the murders, and I know that
you have that prope and that wetry and let limit those kind of things,
and it's like it's like, Okay, you are saying one thing and
they I also saying and another thing. So it's like it's very frustrating,
(01:01:19):
you know. I understand. Thegood news though, is if you're looking
for content, there is a bunchof it out there. And if you
send me an email and you tellme what kind of content you're looking for,
I can make some recommendations. Thething is, I always put for
the WUFLA, so I'm always listeningto the FULA. So the thing is
(01:01:40):
that the ads that come in whenthey are going for a break. I
usually like those kind of things.I know what you're saying. Okay,
Well, if you feel free toemail me if I can help you with
some other content. So if weever let you down on w FLA,
you can find some other things tolisten to. Okay, thank you,
Hey, thank you. I alwaysappreciate it hearing from you. Michael.
(01:02:01):
Let's go to George. Hello,George, what's the beef? Oh,
my beef, My beef, Prestonis the You're laughing already, you haven't
even said a word, and you'realready feeling better. Hey, it's it's
Uncle Preston's therapy brother at work.It's it's the watching the woke and the
(01:02:24):
CNN and different social media telling menthat they can celebrate Mother's Day as a
mother, um, as a asa transgender, or whatever acronym they want
to be, that they're entitled tocelebrate Mother's Day as a mother if they
want to. And and it gotme thinking, you you put a hundred
(01:02:47):
women and ten men on a desertedisland. In a hundred years, you'll
have a community of men, women, boys and girls. Now, now
go put a hundred trans women inten in on the dessert at Island.
In one hundred years, you'll you'llfind a skeletons of one hundred and ten
men. Follow me for more settledscience. Thank you, George. I
(01:03:13):
appreciate your calling in. Remember Iam your uncle. Ten minutes past the
hour, Regina, you are next, then John, what about you?
Eight five zero two zero five WFLA. We have one line openly. You
may call and grab it now.It can be yours. It's your shot.
(01:03:37):
What's to be? Friday, Maytwelfth, Show forty nine, twenty
eight of the Morning Show with PrestonScott. Grant is standing by the official
call Sieve of the Morning Show,ready to take your calls as we continue
listening to your complaints here in theMorning Show with Preston Scott. It's the
(01:04:00):
Morning Show with Preston Scott. Hey, we're just here to help. Our
goal is to be a listening ear. Every now and then, old Uncle
Press will dispense a little wisdom,but generally we're just here to listen because
sometimes you just need a set ofears. Just think you've got thousands of
(01:04:20):
them, thousands and thousands of setsof ears listening, commiserating, living vicariously
through your beefs. That's why it'simportant you not only have a better weekend
yourself, but you help others,because inevitably you make somebody else nod their
(01:04:41):
head in agreement, going yeap thatspeak that Sister Virginia, thanks for calling
into What's to be Friday? What'syour beef? My beefs with the CDC.
I'm a retired school nurse. Atone time you could google my name
and it would come up headlights queen. I just want you to tell him,
(01:05:03):
whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa. Yougotta give me a little more than
that. You could google your nameand come up with what headlights queen?
How did you earn that? Moniker? We were doing very aggressive headlights treatment
in our schools in Gulf County,Okay, and a lot of education on
(01:05:26):
it and everything, so somehow myname got connected to headlights. But I
just wanted you to tell you onething Grant nailed it. Mayonnaise is a
treatment. Come on, really,no, it is. You had to
put a whole lot of mayonnaise andcover that head for a long time and
smother them and it still didn't needto do nitpick in the next day.
But it is a treatment. Andwhen the CDC, why is my head
(01:05:50):
itching as you're talking about this?Everybody? My head's just yeah, every
but it gets the head edges whenyou talk about it. But um,
when the cd say C comes outand says there's resistant headlights, they they've
always been resistant. They get atreatment, right grid or Nicks, and
(01:06:12):
they they consume it so long thatthen they get resistant to it. That
tough. Yeah, So when theCDC makes a declaration, you know,
it's just a bunch of baloney.Well, we've certainly learned that in recent
years now, haven't we. Yeah, And uh, you know, being
a healthcare provider in public health,it is so disheartening to feel like you
(01:06:33):
can't trust the CDC. Yeah,I can only imagine. Regina, Thanks
so much. And do you havenightmares about the things you've seen, the
headlights that you've encountered that have justbeen unbearable. Yeah, And nowadays I'm
gardening and RESI chickens and tests.Thanks much. I appreciate the folk call.
(01:07:00):
Let's go to John. Hi,John, what's the beef? Me?
Good morning pressing? Uh, Mybeef is with people who get questioned
about the two thousand and twenty election, and don't respond with will when will
Biden and Harris and Clinton concede thetwo thousand and sixteen elections? How about
that? Uh, I don't haveany well, but they that they're legitimately
(01:07:27):
you know, aggrieved that that's thatwas really stolen. That's why. Okay,
well, I'm not a I don'tI don't have a proof I could
take in the court. But there'senough red flags that win up that I
could smell a load of male bovine'sequal matter from a mile off. And
Uh, when you only have lessthan one percent of mail in ballots rejected
(01:07:51):
on signatures, when normally in anormal election you'd have three percent, when
you have all up more being usedthis time, No, and that's there's
just too many anomalies. Uh,with the deals. No, I can't
say it was stolen, But Idon't believe Biden got a eighty one million
(01:08:11):
votes. If he did, itwas because some of the same votes were
counted multiple times. Now that's mypersonal opinion, which I highly respect.
Of course you do, John,And that's a perfect way to segue one
more caller in the segment, Rayyou're up, what's the beef? Hey,
good morning. So lately my Twitterfeed, I've been seeing supposedly conservative
people are moderate people saying, look, I believe in gun rights, but
(01:08:36):
but we've just got to draw theline somewhere and stop these assault rifles and
military grade hardware. I'm willing togive up this right. And I'm sure
it's it's it's a it's just aliberal faking it. But I want to
just point out anywhere there's a liberalidea once you go down that slippery slope
(01:08:59):
gamere and and what you know tenyears ago we just want equal rights for
gay marriage. What do we havenow? Drag Dragon Queen story hour,
you know, Black Lives matter.We're aggrieved because now what is it like?
Non prosecution and and and abolish thepolice. Immigration, it's a humanitarian
(01:09:19):
thing and now it's just a nightmareat the border. Let you start down
that slippery slope, you never regainyour footing. Spit to your conservative guns.
Thank you, Ray, Well,said my brother Roger Letty John,
You're up. What about you?We'll try to fit in four or five
calls in our final segment of audiotherapy, known as What's to Be Friday on
(01:09:44):
the Morning Show with Preston Scott onemore time through phone lines are full.
(01:10:08):
You can take a shot, butit's what's to be Friday. Final segment
of phone calls at eight five zerotwo zero five to WFLA Roger, good
morning, Welcome morning, Preston.What's to be top of my head?
Well, my fees is the topof my head? About blue off when
I heard about Biden going to givemedicaid to all these illegals, however many
(01:10:30):
millions of them there are. Whenmy wife and I can't even get assistance.
I retired back in November. I'msixty three years old. I have
to work forty to fifty hours amonth just to pay for my medical I
make too much to get assistance,and I don't make enough. I can't
afford the regular in church. Notonly that I'm raising my grandson. You
(01:10:53):
think I can get any help forhim? No, because why I make
too much money. But I'm lucky. I've got everything paid for now,
Lila. People probably in my position, but I've got a word just to
pay out of pocket my money justto pay for medical and they're going to
(01:11:13):
give them all that? Are youkidding me? I've lost now. I
can't visit my top of my head, Blue Office. I'm angry over that.
Well, I hope you at leastfeel better knowing that as you're talking,
there are a lot of people,first being educated, don't understand the
depth of this problem. Two thatthere are others nodding their head in agreement.
(01:11:39):
So you're helping other people by justgetting it set and getting it off
your chest a little bit. Roger, thanks very much for calling in,
and yeah, added to the listof things to talk about with your congressional
representatives from the state of Florida orGeorgia or wherever you're calling from. Letty,
thanks for calling in. What's tobe my beast is the speaker at
(01:12:04):
the United States Military Academy for graduation, which it's the Army UM. When
they let women into the academies,I felt like they were making a mistake
(01:12:24):
then, and that was many yearsago, and so to me it has
proved that it is. This yearthey're gonna have Um, the resident in
the second seat of the White Houseas their speaker, and I know she'll
do nothing but laugh and wave herhands around them. And how funny it
(01:12:47):
is these men are going into umbattle who eventually probably um to save hers
the United States and she doesn't evenI don't think she even really likes living
here. Thank you, Lettie.I appreciate the phone call. I think
there's a lot of agreement in whatyou just said as well. Jay,
(01:13:08):
thanks for calling in. What's thebeef? Hey? Love you guys.
Thank you? All right? Well, I was gonna say, Man's uh.
Well, first of all, Man, I feel Roger's situation, but
that's one yep o. My secondis all the all of the advertising on
(01:13:30):
your station about Chicago coming to theTuck on October sixth? Well, are
you advertising sobe early? You're onlygonna have about twelve fourteen hundred people show
up. Hey, hey, hey, come on now, First of all,
we don't have a say over howearly someone advertises. That's up to
them. You know, those marketingprices must be crazy. And speaking of
(01:14:00):
Tuck Tuck, that's my little anyway. Um the Navy commercials where they're
saying that you can be trans orwhatever in the Navy, I mean,
the Navy already gets about enough repWhen we had new guys show up to
my ship, we would all actlike violent homosexual rapists. And that was
(01:14:30):
just like our hazing for the newguys that came on the boat. We
meet one guy cry he was hidingunderneath an air duck. That just made
it worse swarm, and then wewere told to stop. All right,
man, I think you've said anew a new a standard for the program.
Appreciate you calling and j hope youfeel better. Final callers Stephen,
(01:14:53):
I, Stephen, good morning,Preston. I love this show. Thank
you. I've got the one beefin the Florida's segment. I m fifth
generation Florida. I love the song, but when you come up with these
wacky stories and call it Florida Man, I wouldn't like to remind a lot
(01:15:13):
of people about half the people livein Florida. Do these stupid things or
from somewhere else. That's my beef, sir, Thank you very much.
Appreciate the clarification. Florida Man justcalled in clarifying that at least half of
the Florida Man stories are from peoplethat are transplanted. Now, you could
(01:15:38):
argue that Florida has some hypnotic spellon people, not all, but some
that just cause them to do irrationalthings. It's the heat makes us crazy
and the humidity. You're just losingit over here. Could be I don't
know. You know, it'd beinteresting. Do Florida Man stories go up
(01:16:00):
from May to October if we havea dry spell during the winter months.
I'm just wondering if it's the heatand the humidity that causes Florida Man to
create more incidents. We'll have totrack that. Come back with the final
half hour, including good news,a dad joke, some headlines from the
(01:16:21):
Bee, and more. Next onThe Morning Show with Preston Scott. The
Morning Show with Preston Scott. Unbelievablesix straight years? My Green Bay Packers
(01:16:59):
are open the season on the road. That's wrong. But you've got a
Thanksgiving game this year? That's wrong. Oh, come on, you gotta
admit no, because we're gonna beat Detroit. Yeah, I know,
but Packers Lions on Thanksgiving Day?What you don't? Oh my gosh,
(01:17:28):
I would take six straight years,at least six. So what that's like
twenty seventeen? Six straight years onthe road to start your season. In
fact, we played two straight onthe road to start our season. That's
(01:17:48):
just wrong. I'm surprised they didthe two in a row. That's weird.
That's just wrong. But you gotyou got a brand new quarterback and
you're gonna make him start on theroad. I'm fine, that's fine.
Fine, these are supposed to behappier segments. It stakes, though,
(01:18:10):
that's not cool. If it wereyour team six straight years on the road,
sure, yeah, that'd be annoying. But again, you get that,
when's the last time in Packers played. At least it's gonna be on
national television. Yeah, that's true. But I suspect that YouTube TV will
be The Sunday ticket has moved toYouTube thankfully, I saw that no more
(01:18:33):
having to get Direct TV and thesatellite dish to get it. I may
be I may be a buyer ofthat because well, because I don't know
that Green Bay is gonna get alot of national games this year. They
might. I personally think that they'regonna be a lot better than people think
they will because I think Jordan Loveis the real deal. I just do.
(01:18:53):
I think he's gonna have a verynice season. That said, Monday
Night Football will open with the JetsAaron Rodgers against the Buffalo Bills on nine
to eleven. It's a fascinating game. I mean, goodness, gracious they're
gonna be playing at MetLife Stadium.That's gonna be epic. Yeah, it's
(01:19:13):
gonna be a big deal. Alsobecause you know you got Josh Allen,
right and uh and a rog Andthen the first ever Black Friday game will
feature the Jets against the Dolphins.They're playing a game on Black Friday,
which means what they're going against collegefootball? Yeah, because they play like
the Egg Bowl Old Miss Mississippi State. They play a bunch of games on
(01:19:36):
Friday. Yeah, they play.Yeah. Yeah, it's weird, it
is, And I get the impressionthe NFL is starting to say whatever to
college football. Yeah. Probably.Um, you've also got the Giants and
the Eagles on Christmas Day, asyou mentioned, the Packers and the Lions
on Thanksgiving, and then on NewYear's Eve, you've got a game the
(01:20:00):
Chiefs and the Bengals. So whenare they doing the college football Playoff?
I'm just saying, is that aSaturday New Year's Eve because they usually do
New Year's Eve for the college footballPlayoff? No, that's a Sunday.
The thirty first is a Sunday,So that means the college football Playoff will
(01:20:21):
likely be Saturday night on the thirtiethunless I don't know, none of the
rules matter anymore. Apparently it wouldseem forty minutes after the hour. Comeback
with some good news here on theMorning Show with Preston's Guy, The Morning
Show with Preston Scott by News Radioone hundred point seven WFLA, in our
(01:20:49):
good news segment of the program.An international study of people on five countinance
has found that humans help each otherwith small things about every two minutes,
(01:21:10):
and more often submit to the callsfor help versus rejecting them. Kindness,
generosity, These are things that firstthey make you feel better. You know,
(01:21:32):
you feel better when you are helpfulto people. You ever been a
situation where you just went out ofyour way to be helpful and you just
felt good about doing that initially andthen it backfired. I did it right,
tried to help someone recently, andthe new story bust. I know,
(01:21:55):
I tried to do it a sourpatch. What happened? Oh,
I was assisting someone, or attemptingto assist someone who seemingly was you know,
stuck in the neighborhood road battery dead, and I was like, you
know, going on a jog andtried to help, and you know,
I can go get some jumper cablesand I'll be right back. But they
(01:22:18):
weren't receptive to it. They're probablydoing a drug deal. Smelled like weed
as soon as I stepped any closeto the car, which made the whole
interaction make much more sense because itdidn't make sense. There you go.
So that's what I get. Yeah, but it's so so we we negate
that story, downer Dave because theperson wasn't truly in need. Of course,
(01:22:44):
now they could have used a littleJesus, that's right. But this,
this is interesting to me because itis something that is inherent in people.
For example, they even surveyed andstudy people that are not modern society
(01:23:12):
cultures. But that even taking intoaccount cultural differences that even in these distant
tribes and cultures, the idea ofbeing helpful to others is something that permeates
all cultures. Okay, I gottastop my I gotta put tape on my
(01:23:36):
mouth because there was this, therewas a smart comment coming out there,
and I just I needed to bitemy tongue. You remember, you don't
even read my blog. My socialmedia coordinator doesn't even read my blog.
I put a blog up about aguy who most lawns and does lawn care
(01:23:58):
for people all the time for nothingthem. Now you can say, well,
he's getting paid by putting content onYouTube, and he readily admits,
yeah, I make money from this. It's got a ton of followers.
But the fact of the matter is, wouldn't that make sense that you're doing
good for people for no charge andthat you get blessed on the back end?
(01:24:19):
Right? And you know what ifwe had a bunch of people creating
content based on helping other people,and they were compensated by just creating content
that people watched, and those peoplegot inspired in some way, shape or
formed to make a difference in otherpeople's lives. And I guess that's why
(01:24:41):
I'm bringing up the story. Thisjust reminds you sees opportunities to make a
difference. Teach your kids to makea difference, and watch what happens.
You'll be better, they'll be better. The people you're helping are blessed by
it, and everybody's just kinder.And that's good news. Notwithstanding Dave Downer
(01:25:06):
over there here in the Morning Showwith prest Sky Monday, I'm sure there'll
be plenty of immigration fallout to talkabout what's going on in the southern border.
(01:25:29):
We'll also have sald news O towrap up the legislative session for US
and we go to monthly meetings untilwe get to the next legislative session.
But that'll be Monday. On theprogram, Time for a dad joke,
arm you for the weekend share tochurch kids, get in the car.
What did the molecule say to thesuspicious molecule? I don't know. I've
(01:25:58):
got my eye on you. Jeez, should have seen that coming. Classic.
Well, I think we basically toldthe joke last week. You know,
Adams or liars, they make upeverything we have. We've got We've
(01:26:23):
got some headlines from the Babbylon beyour trusted source for satire. One year
old condemned for appearing in blackface afterchocolate cake incident. Coronation dates haster as
King Charles accidentally freezes London with hiddennice powers and flees to the mountains with
(01:26:45):
late night shows off air, Liberalsforced to start paying for actual therapy.
CNN fires Don Lemon again. Justto be sure, Biden reassures America is
that someone in his administration is probablydoing something about the borders. May Orcas
(01:27:05):
heads to porter to fire starter pistolwhen titled forty two expires and go youth.
Pastor delivers powerful message on Joseph andhis many colored bus and drip.
(01:27:27):
I resonate with that one. Inlatest gaff, Biden signs an actual guy
named Bill breaking George Santos arrested fivehundred thirty four members of Congress still at
large border wall covered with bud lightsigns to deter migrants. Feinstein says a
(01:27:51):
recent Jedi attempt on her life hasleft her scarred and deformed. CNN hosts
sus Trump for assaulted defamation after townhall and Twitter new female CEO expands tweet
limit to one million characters. Headlinesfrom the Battle of Beak your trusted source.
(01:28:15):
First satire brought to you by BaroneltHeating and Air. It's the Morning
Show one on WFLA. Just goback to the podcast. Check out the
show. You'll hear everything that wetalked about. But I'll go ahead and
sum it all up. The Southernborder is a disaster. We've brought the
(01:28:39):
military down there. We have twentyfour thousand border agents standing by. May
Orcas actually said we expected this andit places an incredible strain on our personnel,
facilities, and communities. Where haveyou been, Alejandro, Where have
(01:29:06):
you been? Brother? The lasttwo years have been just a choke.
I tell you now. This isbecoming right behind the economy, one of
the top two or three issues thatwill resonate in the next set of elections.
(01:29:27):
Colorado moms suing a school using PamBandi as her attorney that recruited sixth
graders for a secret after school genderand sexuality club masquerading. Isn't that interesting?
They have to hide as an artclub. They can't come out?
What what? What's the problem?Dishwashers are now under attack by Joe Biden.
Have a great weekend. We'll beback Monday morning.