Episode Transcript
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Eight minutes after the hour. It'sMonday, and like a old penny,
we just keep turning up. Howare you doing? I hope you had
a nice weekend. It's May twentysecond of the Morning Show with Preston Scott
Show number forty nine, thirty four, Day eight fifty two of a mericale
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hostage. That's Grant Allen. I'mPreston Hebrews thirteen fifteen through Jesus. Therefore,
let us continually offer to God asacrifice of praise, the fruit of
lips that openly profess his name.Do you want to be blessed, to
be a blessing, to be ablessing? You share your praise for the
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gift of God's grace, and youdo that with You do that on Sunday.
You do that on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday,
Saturday, and then again on Sundaywhen you head back to church to sing
together. You know, those versesare just one of countless reminders. And
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I think it's called a sacrifice ofpraise because we don't always feel like it.
And you know what I say topeople that kind of get sour patch
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like and little grumpy Jesus didn't feellike going to the cross. In fact,
he openly asked his father, Dad, is there another way? I
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mean, Jesus openly asked God,is there another way? If it be
your will, let this cup passfrom me? And then he got the
reply, not my will, yoursbe done. We are challenged, commanded
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to praise God, even if,even when it's called a sacrifice of praise.
Ten minutes after the hour, let'sget started with the American Patriots Almanac.
Next on the Morning Show with PrestonScott. Preston Scotts, They're gonna
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get I'm just knock. Who's that? On WFLA. This is a good
one now, May twenty second.After the Revolutionary War, some Americans doubted
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that the newly freed colonies could governthemselves. In May seventeen eighty two,
George Washington received a letter from oneof his officers, Colonel Lewis Nicola,
proposing that the general used the armyto make himself king of the United States.
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On May twenty second, Washington pennedthis response. And by the way,
this would be one of those notesthat if you had the resources to
get the original handwritten note by GeneralWashington. This would be, in my
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opinion, priceless as a historical artifact. With a mixture of great surprise and
astonishment, I have read with attentionthe sentiments you have submitted to my perusal.
Be assured, sir, no occurrencein the course of the war has
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given me more painful sensations than yourinformation of there being such ideas existing in
the army as you have expressed,which are big with the greatest mischiefs that
can befall my country. First ofall, let's just pause and marvel at
just the eloquence and the craftsmanship ofhis words. If I am not deceived
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in the knowledge of myself, youcould not have found a person to whom
your schemes are more disagreeable. Hegoes on to write, Let me conjure
you, then, if you haveany regard for your country, concern for
yourself or posterity, or respect forme, to banish these thoughts from your
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mind. It reminds me of oneof the great lines from the musical Hamilton,
when King George the Third is marvelingthat Washington set down the crown and
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would not remain the leader of theUnited States as president, and King George
says in his little song. Ididn't know that's something someone could do.
Just brilliant. There were some whostill wondered if Washington would give up his
power. He had the adoration ofthe people, command of the army.
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Washington erased any doubts in late seventeeneighty three when he appeared before Congress meeting
in Annapolis, Maryland, to surrenderinto their hands the trust committed to me
by resigning his commission. King Georgehad said, if Washington voluntarily gave up
power, then he truly would bethe greatest man on earth. Hello.
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Oliver Cromwell hadn't done it. Napoleonwould not do it, but Washington did.
He might have had a kingdom forthe asking. He wasn't interested.
He put his country first. Andthat's what I'm talking about. That's just
that is great stuff from the pagesof history. Ironically, on this date
in eighteen o two, Martha Washingtondied in Mount Vernon at age seventy.
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Eighteen forty three, wagon train ofthousands of pioneers bound for the Northwest leaves
Independence, Missouri on the Oregon Trail. Eighteen forty nine, Abraham Lincoln receives
a patent for an invention for buoyingvessels over shoals, you never put it
to use eighteen fifty six and asign of tensions between North and South Carolina,
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Congressman Preston Brooks beat Massachusetts Senator CharlesSumner with a cane in the Senate
Chamber. And in nineteen seventy two, Richard Nixon becomes the first president to
visit Russia. So there you go, seventeen minutes after the Hours morning show
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at Preston's Gutt third hour of theprogram. Jerome Hudson of bright bart dot
com. He's the entertainment editor,author of the fifty Things books, Fifty
Things they Don't want you to Know, Fifty Things they don't want you to
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Know about Trump, and a soonmaybe this year, perhaps early next,
a third fifty Things book. Ithink I've figured out what it's gonna be.
And again, he hasn't told meon air. You've heard me try
to get him to slip up andjust and the author of the newest book,
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fifty Things, he just laughed,he hasn't told me a word.
But I think I've figured it out. I think I know what you want
to say that out loud? Justyet I'm gonna have to go on the
record at some point, Okay,I think it's gonna be fifty things they
don't want you to know about eitherDemocrats or the Democrat Party. That's my
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guess. It fits. It justfits fifty things they don't want you to
know about the Democrat Party or that'swhere I'm leaning the party. But that's
that's that's my guess. But again, we'll talk to Jerome in the third
hour. Next hour, doctor JoeCamps joins us, what's the best hamburger
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You've ever had? Um? Hmm, I gotta think about that for a
second. Yeah, I don't know. I still have one answer, and
I've been chasing it ever since,and I've had places come close, and
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certainly some of it is probably lockedin my memory bank, and I'm probably
I'm probably thinking higher of it becauseit's so many years ago and it's nostalgic
to me. It lives on inmemory, Yes, and I would still
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I would still say it's the bestI've ever had, And it was.
It was the hamburger at Olympic HillsCountry Club in Eden Prairie, Minnesota.
It was an all men's golf club, no women period. That's it.
It did those places exist anymore?Very few. Uh. It's not an
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all men's place anymore, really,um, but it was. It was
exceptional. Now that's that's the golfcourse. I cost my dad a ridiculous
sum of money when I got offa plane flying up to see him for
a while in Minnesota in the summer. I was fifteen, got off the
plane, we went straight to thegolf course. He didn't think about it.
He didn't buy insurance, which issomething that you would do every golf
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season. You buy insurance for yourselfso that if you had a hole in
one, if you did what MichaelBlock did yesterday in the PGA, which
was incredible, and the fact thatit was him and his story, yes,
like, oh man, I'm sittingthere borderline tears, and it was
incredible watching the post game, youknow, his interview in the clubhouse and
by the way, shout out.I'm not a big fan of Brooks personally,
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but he's not losing sleepover that.But I sure think the world of
Brooks Kepka as a golfer and theFSU alum won his fifth major, big
time Brooks man, I mean,he plays in the money events. He
should have won the Masters arguably earlierthis year, and so he would be
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two for two. But that said, anyway, I had a hole in
one and cost my dad a lotof money because it was a Saturday afternoon
and everybody in the clubhouse gets adrink if you make a hole in one
unless you have the insurance, andthe insurance then pays for it. Dad
didn't think to buy insurance for mebecause I was just showing up. He
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didn't didn't even think about it.And I'd had one already a couple of
years earlier, and so it wasmy second one, and it was I
mean, you couldn't hide it.It was we were playing with another couple
of guys that are some you know, we're some pretty high rolling businessmen and
h and then it was a bunchof other people saw it happen as well.
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So no, yeah, so itcost him anyway. The burger,
the hamburger at at at Olympic Hillswas just legendary. I don't know how.
It clearly was a blend of beef. Maybe it was beef and brisket
and something else and um, maybeit was chopped sirloin along with brisket.
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Along with ground beeef. You haveto have a certain amount of fat for
a good burger because it's got tobe juicy. And and and I found
some hamburgers had tasted similar to meyears years later. But there's nothing like
this. And I don't know whatit tastes like. But if you want
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to go to Drury Beer Garden inPhilly and get a burger, the gold
Standard is the name of the burger, and it will set you back seven
hundred dollars. Yes, it iswag you meat, caviar, fresh black
truffle, lobster flambade with kannak,topped with aged Irish cheddar and drizzled with
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honey. Oh my gosh. Friesare included. Oh and a one ounce
pour of Louis the thirteenth Kgnac,which is five thousand dollars a bottle.
But you get a one ounce pooras part of the meal. Yeah,
yep, yep, yep, Sothere you go. I don't I don't
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know if it is the gold standard, but that is certainly if money was
no object. Would you even trya burger with caviar? No? No,
no, no, no no no. There are plenty of things that
I'm good having on a burger.Barbecue potato chips is one of them.
If you've never tried it, it'sincredible if you put the right barbecue potato
chip on it, but not fisheggs. Huh. I was a big
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fan of food ruckers back in theday when you could make up however you
want in the drizzled cheddar or in. I love caso. Caso on a
on a burger is just another level. And of course I'm big on the
barbecue with the onion rings and thebacon and I mean barbecue saucer. That's
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something spectacular. But anyway, twentyif I made you hungry, you ready
for lunch. Yet it's the MorningShow with Preston Scott Monday on the Morning
Show with MOI. It didn't soundergood on the air. It always sounds
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better to say with President Scott.So I'm Preston. That's granted. So
did you come up with it besthamburger man? I was racking my brain
trying to think of like homemade,made yourself, made by somebody in the
family or out dining out? Canyou narrow it down? So this I
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don't know if this was a productof the burger being so good, or
if the context that it was in, because the experience may inform this here.
I mean, well, a differentkind of seasoning. Not just that,
but I remember going camping when Iwas a kid one time, and
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you know, we brought food andafter just a day of being out fishing
and you know, foraging for wildberries and tiles. Basically I don't know
what. I don't know what itwas, but when whenever you're camping,
everything tastes better just because it feelslike you're really you know, like grilled
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on an open flame. Yes,And I don't know what it was,
but that was the like the mostsatisfying Okay, objectively speaking, I have
no idea if that was on parwith the best, but given the context
that was like the burgher, whereI was like, oh man, this
is amazing, okay, And soI think that may have to do with
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environment more than the actual ingredients.Atmosphere matters. Yeah, that's what I
mean. A different kind of seasoning, not so much with salt and pepper
or a seasoned salt, but theenvironment, yes, or the company that
you're keeping or yeah, I don'tknow if you saw the new Pole Harvard
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Caps Harris Pole. More than halfof Republicans would vote for Trump if the
election were held today, fifty eightpercent, putting him well ahead of Governor
Round de Santis, though he hasn'tdeclared, who has garnered sixteen percent of
likely voters. Some say that DeSantus is polling as well as he is
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without even declaring, is a signof good things. Four percent would pick
Nikki Haley separately. De Santis versusJoe Biden was basically a coin toss,
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but Trump is at this point intime would be favored to beat Biden.
What's interesting is is this pole manipulatedpolling is polling, But do not put
it past the main streamers and allof the outlets out there to poll in
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such a manner as to get usthinking one thing versus another. I'm just
saying, I don't know. Fifteenyear old girl and a woman allegedly raped
by an illegal immigrant from El Salvador. He's been arrested, grabbed, grabbed
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women on a hiking trail in Maryland, put a machete to one. She
ended up hospitalized after the beat downshe received after being raped. I'm just
saying, let's just say your familyyou're a husband, you're a boyfriend,
you're loved ones and you find outthat any illegal immigrant has done that.
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What are you thinking right about now? Is it any different than what you
should be thinking? Anyway? Welcometo the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
One other little titbit in the pressbox this morning. San Francisco office values
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retail office space values have dropped seventyfive percent. That is a devastating collapse.
Vacancy rate has jumped, it's growingby the month. Reports show a
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politically dysfunctional community as well as businessesand people consider the city economic area to
be dangerous and unworkable. That's kindof a bad, bad mix, don't
you think? Dysfunctional government, crime, homelessness, people throwing pooh on you.
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Yeah, that that'll that that'll tendto drive values down a little bit.
But here's the thing. All ofthose things are observable, predictable problems
that communities where the rest of uslive in the rest of America should be
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learning from. How is it thatvoters in any community across this country aren't
paying attention and making electoral choices accordingly? Is it because we're just stupid?
Is it because we're really, forthe most the most connected generation in history
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to information that we are just informationallyilliterate because we don't choose to really look
and grab hold of that information.Is it because we just think that,
well, this person will do itbetter, or is it became there's a
lack of electable alternatives that we putany faith in. I don't know.
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It could be a combination of allof those. I've got probably two or
three stories sitting in a in aclip inside my little portfolio here that have
the words written on the article learna lesson, and there are examples of
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what's happening in communities, and thereare lessons that can be learned. Give
you an example. Rachel Rawlins.She is US attorney for the District of
Massachusetts. She has resigned before theDepartment of Justice Inspector General and the Office
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of Special Council release a report.She didn't want to wait for the report,
so she's quit. In a letterto the President, Office Special Counsel
wrote that Rollins's violations of the HatchAct, which prohibit federal employees from engaging
in partisan political activity on government timeor with government resources, quote, are
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among the most egregious transgressions of theAct that the Office of Special Counsel has
ever investigated. The report of hermisfeasance, mouthfeasance, whatever you want to
call it, is one hundred andfifty five pages long. And she has
she's enriched herself, she's enriched specialfriends. And oh, by the way,
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she's a George Soros district attorney.She is the fifth rogue prosecutor backed
and elected with the help of GeorgeSoros and his pals. In the last
few months alone, Chess of bodinSan Francisco recalled, Marylyn Moseby lost her
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primary in Baltimore, Kim Gardner resignedin disgrace. In Saint Louis, Kim
Fox, the first that Soros funded, was in essence forced to announce she's
not running for reelection. Forty milliondollars spent by Soros and his buddies on
these elections, and this is anexample of people not learning quickly inclosing rollins.
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In Boston, she was proud ofher infamous list of fifteen crimes you
could commit in Boston. She madea list of crimes you can commit in
Boston that she wasn't going to prosecute, and she publicized it. This is
why you have to be paying attentionand talking to others who don't necessarily think
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like you. Seventeen sorry, fortyseven minutes after the hour, It's the
Morning Show with President Scott. Allright. Jerome Hudson third hour of the
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program from Breybart dot com. Formerlyan intern on this fine radio program many
many many years ago, and heovercame that and found himself successful. Anyway,
how about that. It's incredible.But we'll talk to Rome to Jerome
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in the third hour. Seventeen trilliondollars is the American household debt right now,
past surpass seventeen trillion. Total consumerdebt in the United States seventeen point
five in the first quarter of twentytwenty three, an increase one hundred and
forty eight billion. Why might thatbe because people are using their credit card
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to live month to month, andthat is a very bad sign. See,
this is the subtle problem with signaling. We're just going to pay people's
debts, like student loans. Forgiving student loans, because what you tell
people is you tell people that ifit gets bad enough, I'll worry about
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it, you'll pay it. Andso we have people now instead of holding
elected officials responsible for the finances andwhat's gone wrong our economy. And now
I will say, maybe that juryis not completely back yet, but I
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would say to you in response thatthe twenty twenty two mid terms was a
strong indicator that we don't have enoughpeople that have learned that lesson. I
would combine that with the fact thatwe didn't give them enough information i e.
Messaging a common refrain on the programto offer an alternative. Republicans are
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just brutally bad at communicating. They'rejust awful. We don't have enough Republicans
with any savvy Those that do winand win big convincingly. But you look
at this number right here and seethat debt is increasing even though the economy
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is a train wreck. It's becausepeople are having to use their credit card
to pay for their day to dayexpenses. And that's a problem. It's
a huge problem. And we haven'tdone a good enough job of communicating that
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there's a better way to govern,there's a better way to run an economy.
And so as long as we keeptelling people, yeah, don't worry
about it, go ahead to geta student loan, go to school for
a degree, that you don't haveany idea what you're gonna do with it,
But hey, it's a degree,right, and we're going to pay
your bill. Can you be surprisedthat we have a bunch of people out
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there spending irresponsibly on credit? Alittle report here May is National Stroke Awareness
Month. The American Stroke Association reportsmore strokes and adults under the age of
fifty. What's interesting study is theysay that it's continued to rise over the
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last thirty years. And that maybe, but I can sure tell you
this, the rise in the lasttwo years is pretty doggone explainable to me
in this story incident after incident ofyoung people getting strokes, And the question
I'm asking is are they asking thequestion? This report doesn't seem to ask
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the question did you get vaccinated?Isn't that an important question to ask?
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Hey, it's Monday. I'm wantto show with Preston Scott. I am
and that's Grant and God bless America. So loot, how are you everybody?
I hope you had a nice weekend. Man, I did a bunch
of workout in the yard, That'swhat I hear. Ah ha, last
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week you were what shoveling like twotons, two and a half tons,
two and a half tons, somegravel and now this, yep, yep,
just it's that time of year gettingit done. Man, Actually,
this is the worst time to workin the yard. Why, just because
it's so hot and brutal. Yes, you should just be maintaining. The
real work should be done in inthe winter. The problem is vines,
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Man, vines are just brutal.And I'm one of those conscientious neighbors that
I keep vines off of trees becauseif you don't, you will kill the
canopy. And that's I still can'tget my brain around why people in this
part of the world South Georgia,North Florida don't get that. That and
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by people, I'm not just talkingabout people like us. You know,
it's hard, it's hard to do. I'm talking about like the city county
people. Why are you people notdealing with this? Bring out the goats,
yeah, I mean the overgrowth isincredible. It's yeah. I think
we've a You see those old picturesof Tallahassee from like back in the day,
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and everything looks like clear cut.Right, we've so swung the opposite
direction that the overgrowth is now likewhen you drive down one of our canopy
roads in town during like a storm, all of a sudden, you're like
looking around like hope nothing falls becauseit's just so overgrown. Yeah, and
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we've just swung so far the oppositedirection. You know, a little bit
of maintenance would go a long way. You're gonna kill the canopy. That's
the bottom line is you're gonna killthe canopy by not dealing with these vines.
And it's incredible. And goats man, turn the goats loose. There
are goats that are that they havefor just this purpose. You turn them
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loose, and they will demolish acresand acres of this stuff, including poison
ivy. There's no problem with anyof it. That's amazing. They just
munch it all down. And it'shilarious to watch him do it too.
I mean, it's a spectators.They're funny creatures. Yes, they are
not funny. Panell County Sheriff MarkLamb. He was supposed to be speaking
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at a mother's against Drunk Driving eventthis summer. He's running for Senate.
He's running for the US Senate fromArizona. Gonna run against isn't it Kirsten
Cinema. Yes, and he hasbeen uninvited. It would seem because he's
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conservative, and he's unashamedly, unabashedlyconservative, good guy, smart guy.
But here's the irony of it all. He and his wife lost their twenty
two year old son, eleven monthold granddaughter and soon to be daughter in
law in a car accident where theywere killed by a drunk driver. And
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he's disinvited. Why because he speaksup against the woke identity politics of the
day, And sadly MAD has gonewoke, so his mother's against drunk driving.
The new mom's demand action. Here'sa statement released by MAD. MAD
said it supports fair and equitable safetyenforcement. MAD recognizes that we must do
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better to address inequities and traffic stops. They've got all the buzzwords. Yep,
they've got them all. And yeta MAD spokesperson said to Fox Quote,
We're focused on one goal, endingimpaired driving for good. No,
that's not true, because your statementssay the opposite. Your statements are all
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about woke ideology. Why else didyou disinvite a sheriff law enforcement, usually
a close buddy of MAD law enforcementofficers tend to like to enforce drunk driving
laws and make sure that doesn't happenkind of thing. And usually law enforcement
are your best buddies. And certainlya law enforcement sheriff running for the US
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Senate that, oh, by theway, lost a son, a future
daughter in law, and a granddaughterto a drunk driver. You don't want
to hear from him. And whywould that be? Oh yeah, he's
a republic bloicing conservative. Do whatyou want with that. If you support
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Mad, that's on you. Butthis is the kind of stuff that you've
got to draw a line in thesand, in my opinion, and say
no more. Your financial support dollarscan go to a lot of places.
Preston Scott's go Ahead, Make MyDay on news Radio one hundred point seven
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fla kind of the same subject hereindirectly, and it ties back to what
Grant and I were talking about lasthours somewhat daily signal four more companies go
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full bud light in their support fortransgenderism. And again, I don't tell
people what to do. I makemy decisions, you can make yours.
I'm just giving you information so thatyou can better make a choice. If
you want to. You know,this is the type of thing that in
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a lot of our industry you weretold to steer away from this stuff.
Just don't talk about it. Thankfully, I don't have that issue. It's
the issue that got Tucker Carlson pushedout of Fox. He wanted to talk
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about Fiser. The record speaks foritself about Fiser. Fiser spends a ton
of money advertising on radio, TV, billboards, magazines, online magazines,
digital, you name it. They'reeverywhere, canaps advisor whatever. They don't
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want to be talked about a negativelight. Stop doing dumb things. There
are four other companies here though,that they have. They have they have
just looking at the facts of whatthey're doing. Target number one, Levi
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Strauss number two, Starbucks number three, and of course Sports Illustrated now has
entered the list. Target we weretalking about it. Did we talk about
that on air or off fair?Off air? Targets? Target went woke
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before the word existed. Yeah,they had, they were, they were
doing this back in twenty twelve.Yeah, trans bathrooms has kind of been
it's it's targets tradition. They're they'reone of the first claimants to all this
well and what's crazy about the wholetrans bathroom thing. And then the train
gear. I mean, they sellthe gear that straps down women's breasts and
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hides tucks a young man's crotche crotcholl region. Yeah, I mean,
for a lack of a better whereyou're putting it. The mixed gender bathrooms,
mixed gender fitting rooms, entire linesof clothing that even if they don't
carry the line that's questionable, theycarry some of the line of manufacturers that
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are putting out vile stuff, Imean just vile. Yeah, and they
don't seem to care now. Andit's so funny because Target gets away with
it, and I'm not sure whythey get away with For example, We're
gonna offer fifteen dollars an hour toour workers, and then they quietly cut
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those same workers hours and reduce themto twenty nine hours or less, and
so they totally negated the impact ofthe of the rays that said. Target
just I mean, and it doesthis stuff in communities that I mean,
Target makes most of its money inconservative communities. That's because Target is an
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upscale Walmart. Better brands, betterquality, better selection of stuff, better
presentation. And it doesn't make sensebut it does. So there's just again
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you can decide for yourself on thesecompanies, and you can do the research
and find out daily signal. Partof the Heritage Foundation has all of it
out there and you can see ityourself. Another little piece of irony coming
up next, Michelle Obama's pleasy.Have you ever heard of pleasy? Oh?
This is good? This is good. And I'm not talking about the
drink that is Michelle Obama's. We'llget to that next. Just a little
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bit of in three two, justa little bit away from Joe Camp's about
twenty minutes from now, healthy expectations. Doctor Camp's will join us. We
will. We will also have JeromeHudson in the third hour. PGA yesterday.
If you did not, if youdid not watch it, if you're
(39:36):
not a golf fan, I getit. That's fine. Golf on TV,
I think is incredible. Golf inperson is better if you're playing,
obviously, But I'm not a fanof going to tournaments because you just don't
see much golf. You see aton of golf on TV, and the
PGA is different than any of theother quote majors now the USO, but
(40:00):
in the British Open. They're opentournaments. You can if you're a good
enough amateur player, you can qualify, and they have so many spots available
for amateurs to qualify in the BritishOpen and the US Open and even the
Masters. There are some amateur championsacross the country and around the world that
(40:20):
get in. But the PGA isdifferent because it allows twenty golf course professionals
PGA pros. They have to bea PGA golf Pro to qualify to play
in the tournament. They have twentyspots available, and often they don't make
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the cut. They have their twodays and realize just how much better the
guys on tour are. But notthis weekend. Tied for fifteenth, finishing
the tournament on a brutally tough golfcourse at one over, was a guy
named Michael Block out of California,and he actually could have done a little
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better. What a lot of peopledon't know is heading into the final round
he had the second most birdies ofany player in the tournament, who behind
only Justin Rose. Now, ofcourse that means he made more Bogei's right,
but I thought he had a chanceto get it under par on the
final round. He was two overon the fifteenth toll of part three.
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He's playing with Rory McElroy, whoate it all up. By the way,
Rory was just eating it up.He was loving being a part of
that pairing. You could tell.Well. He whispered something in Michael Block's
ear on the eighteenth toll to theeffect of this was bleeping awesome when he
(41:51):
hugged him, Yeah, smiling earto ear. Block hits a hole in
one, not a land role,role role, not a land bounce,
bounce in a slam, dunk inthe fly in the cup. Yeah,
(42:15):
didn't hit Grass, thought well,he damaged the edge of the cup.
He thought thought he was that McElroywas. He thought he hit it close.
He said, I couldn't see it. He said, I knew I
hit a good shot, and Iknew the second he hit it he hit
a good shot. And his commentwas I don't get a hug from Rory
McElroy for hitting it within ten feet. So I was wondering what was going
(42:36):
on, and mcory said it wentin. And he goes, oh,
come on, no, it didn't. And that's what he's and AND's and
he walks down the Ferrway, Nohe didn't. It didn't go in,
and it went in and mclory's laughingand just it was just it showed obviously
a great side of Rory mclory,just like it showed a great side of
(42:57):
Justin Rose the day before. UMand these guys appreciation of a guy who's
a club pro, who grinds itout. And he made the biggest paycheck
of his life because he can makemoney at these events. Yeah, he
tied for fifteenth, which means heplays the next year's PGA with no qualifier.
And by the way, his finalput was what sealed it. Ye.
(43:21):
Not only was the final put thequalifying put he needed to make that
in order to qualify next year,but it was also a fifty thousand dollars
put. It moved him. Itkept him at like two hundred and eighty
thousand dollars in terms of winnings.But if he had bogied it and missed
the putt, he would have gonedown to two thirty something like that.
So it was no small put.Yeah, I'm gonna watch that. I'm
(43:45):
gonna watch parts of that again onTV because he made a couple of pars
on the final two holes that werejust all world they were. It was
a five hundred and seventid yard parfour. Yeah, and he hits it
in this cabbage that's just as thickas your calf. And I mean incredible
(44:07):
stuff, just incredible stuff. Itwas great theater on television and his home
club where he's the head pro hada watch party in the clubhouse and they
went absolutely between the crowds in Rochester, New York that were just loving everything
(44:29):
he did. He was the thing, block block yes, all day long.
It was incredible, A true trulya man of the people, yes,
representing all of us that there ishope out there for all of us.
Yeah. It was good stuff.And I completely blew the Michelle Obama
story. I'll get to that ina minute. Don't worry about it.
Don't worry. Just stay with me. That was not as shameless tease to
(44:52):
drag you along. Just hang inthere. At Preston Show with Morning Scott
what thirty five minutes after the hour, The Morning Show with preston' skack in
the morning, I'm Preston. That'sGrant. Great to be with you.
Monday, May twenty second, DoctorJoe Camp's two minutes away show forty nine
(45:16):
thirty four of the morning show,at least the one's hosted by me.
I do not count the programs ifI'm not here, they don't count.
But it like a tree that fallsin the forest, it does make a
sound. So even though I'm nothere, it does. It does.
(45:37):
The show still reverberates. If Grantsitting in this chair and hosting there is
there is a radio program. It'sjust not It's not the ones that I
count because I'm not here anyway.Big story in the press box. New
polling shows Donald Trump is well aheadof announced contenders and unannounced contenders. New
(46:06):
Harvard Harris Poles shows Republicans supporting Trumpfifty eight to sixteen over Governor Round de
Santis four percent voting for Nicky Haley. Separately, the poll found that De
Santis and President Joe Biden were neckto neck in a tie when posters were
asked who they preferred in that hypotheticalmatchup. Trump. Trump is is dominating
(46:37):
as of right now. And Ithink that the indictment has done exactly what
a lot of people thought it would. The indictment has helped him, And
so there you go. Suspect inthe raping of a fifteen year old girl
and a woman on a Maryland hikingtrail in two separate incidents, has been
(46:58):
caught and arrested. Jose Roberto orNandez Espinal twenty. He approached an adult
victim and her friend on a trail, threatened them with a machete, and
(47:19):
took one of the women to asecluded part of the woods and brutally raped
her illegal immigrant How does how doeshow does Biden? How does Democrats get
away with this? And San Franciscooffice retail space values collapsing seventy five percent
(47:50):
based on the Democrats running of thecity of San Francisco. And again,
it's just it's just more and moreand more of the Saint. This is
a necessarily a big story in thepress box, but I'm going to throw
it out here because I didn't getto it in the last segment because I
got sort of caught off guard talkingabout the PGA golf tournaments for as long
as I did. Michelle Obama BloombergReport Twelve independent health professionals and organizations have
(48:19):
found that Michelle Obama's touted health drinkPleasy would not meet the requirements that she
put in place when she was thefirst lady and telling students in elementary school
what to eat and drink. Ohman, my generation remembers that distinctly.
In the school system. We knewimmediately when Michelle got her hands on our
(48:44):
school innches because they changed overnight andthey went in the dumpster. Kids would
sample it and throw it all awaythe breakfast. I watched it happen in
one school. It was incredible Titleone school free breakfasts, which I still
disagree with. I watched them throwthe food away. But how ironic that
(49:08):
Michelle Obama's own drink fails her ownhealth standards. The irony is palpable,
one person, one health expert said, to label pleasy and ultra processed food
is at best cynical, if notintellectually dishonest. They said, diet drinks
(49:36):
are healthier, as in diet cokesand so forth. They're healthier than some
of these things. Holy cal justyou can't make it up. Forty minutes
after the hour, doctor Joe Campsis on deck. Preston Scott, You're
mocking me, aren't you. Ohno, no, no, no,
no no no. I'm used Radioone hundred point seven FLA All right,
(50:06):
forty one minutes after the hour ofthe Morning Show with Prestin Scott, joined
by doctor Joe Kames. Good morning, sir. Oh yeah, we got
problems. We have a problem,uh Joe, I apologize, my friend,
Um, but we Yeah, theline went to garbage. We've been
(50:28):
having issues and our team has workedfeverishly, but let me let me just
see what happens here. I'm gonnatry picking it up myself, Joe.
Every time I bring it up,it's going bad, Joe, if you
can hear me, I apologize,but we're gonna have to do this,
uh next week. Um so yeah, you you heard what was happening there
(50:49):
is I potted it up? Yeah. Um so yeah, um we'll we'll
we'll get right on that and seewhat we can do to figure it out.
If you if you were not surewhat in the world was just happening
there, we got to hit bylightning last Wednesday. Uh, late in
the day, a lightning storm stormcame through the Capital City region and just
(51:13):
trashed our phone lines. And ourteam has worked tirelessly getting equipment in and
so forth, but we clearly stillhave some issues that we're gonna have to
resolve and so we apologize. UM, and that's going to present a problem
for us in the next hour ofthe show. So um, yeah,
(51:40):
we're gonna We're gonna be scrambling toto take care of the issues that we're
facing next hour because Jerome Hudson willnot be able to join us, and
that is a little problematic. Allright, we will, Um, we'll
just move on. UM. Iwant to go back to the big stories
(52:00):
in the press box. First ofall, the polling numbers. Do you
believe the polling is intentionally trying tomake Donald Trump the nominee? Yeah,
that's it's an interesting question because Imost certainly don't think polling is reliable in
any sense of the word. AndI think most Americans recognize that when they
(52:24):
see a polling set polling data,and I won't take that for what it's
worth. Like if anyone actually believesit, I don't know, because we
know that many polling institutions, notall, but some of the bigger ones
are easily left of center. Soit wouldn't shock me if are they trying
(52:50):
to make sure is the left themainstream media outlets, if they're all working
together. Are they trying to makesure Donald Trump is the nominee because he's
the seemingly the only one that,in the minds of some be the only
(53:13):
one that Biden can be because hethe unfavorables for Trump are legitimately there,
and most people are people that hatehim and their mind is made up no
matter what doesn't matter. Yeah,Now, I think he would swing a
discernible margin of voters by just beingnormal, Yeah, and not being polarizing
(53:40):
the way he is. I'm nottalking about polarizing on policy. I'm talking
about personal conduct. Sure, it'sall. I think that there is a
real nostalgia already for like a lotof people have, like twenty seventeen through
twenty nineteen, the pre COVID Trumpyears, and people really saw a palpable,
(54:01):
discernible change in policy and how itaffected their lives in a positive way,
and they're nostalgic for that. SoI think that that's a plus for
Trump. But yeah, I wouldn'tI would not be surprised one bit.
To come back to your original question, I wouldn't be shocked if the polling
(54:22):
institutions were that coordinated, you know, in their tactics forty six minutes after
the hour, come back talk somemore here on The Morning Show with Preston
Scott. Find more on his vlogwflafam dot com keyword Preston fifty one minutes
(54:51):
after the hour The Morning Show withPreston Scott. We're gonna sort out this
phone stuff because I can't take aguest if I don't have them. But
we'll we'll sort it out. Um, Like I said, a lot of
people working hard, but something youknow, that's the thing. You electrical
stuff, man, Man, youthrow forty billion vaults at something at one
(55:20):
time, and crazy things happened.Earlier in the show, we chronicled the
George Soros DA's. Five of them? Do we know how many have been
elected nationally? Oh gosh? Sinceum, when did he really start mobilizing
money towards these DA's What around theObama years? Twenty eight? Yes,
(55:42):
absolute Obama was open season. Yeah, So the last fifteen years he's been
quietly picking off state districts in areaswhere he had as a great chance of
success because he's look, you're notYou don't make the kind of money George
(56:06):
Soros is made by being dumb,right, and so even though it's kind
of a doctor evil kind of thingwhere even though he's evil, you step
back and say, but he's smart. Otherwise he wouldn't be making all this
money. You just wish he wason your side and not the enemy's side.
(56:27):
Yeah, to a certain extent,sure, although I wouldn't want anybody
with that kind of ethical no doubt, lapse on my side, no doubt.
I'm just saying, genius tactics strategyis. You know, it's a
formidable opponent. And I worry becausehis son is crazier than he is,
and I don't know if his son'ssmart. See that's a deadly combination there.
(56:52):
Stupid, yep, stupid in money. At least Dad earned it.
However he earned it. He earnedit. Did you see the rumors last
week that he died, But thenhe sent out a tweet that says basically
to the effect of, I amnot dead. Don't believe the rumors,
(57:14):
And it was just really funny.Probably started by his son anyway. Right,
But we talked about five das inkey areas that are out. Some
have resigned in disgrace, some havebeen removed from office, some have been
have not run for reelection. Toavoid the embarrassment, I would assume that
(57:38):
the one in Tampa, Andrew Warren, he isn't even on that list.
So that would be six if thegovernor prevails, which he will, because
as a state attorney, you mustenforce the laws. You can't pick and
choose. That's right. We're holdinghim an accountable to that, and he
doesn't like it. So he's,you know, got his thumb in his
(57:59):
mouth and he's whining about it.But the fact of the matter is there's
a connection to where I'm going.Alton Mills fifty four was commuted by then
President Barack Obama in twenty fifteen.He was serving a life sentence under the
(58:23):
three and out thing, he providedclemency for quote, non violent, low
level offenders arrested during the height ofthe War on drugs. He was arrested
in ninety three on federal drug charges. Felony conviction was his third strike,
resulting in a life sentence. He'dserved twenty two years. Was working as
(58:46):
a mechanic for the Chicago Transit Authority, but now has been charged with attempted
murder connection with a freeway shooting,so the clemency didn't work. Out all
that well for this guy. Now, I don't know that this is necessarily
(59:07):
a black mark on Barack Obama.If you look at it on paper,
this guy had not committed a violentcrime. He'd served twenty two years for
a federal drug charge. I'm ofthe opinion that a mandatory life sentence for
(59:29):
those types of crimes seems absurd.That's I just do Those types of punishments
for that type of crime just doesn'twork. And so I'm not going to
blame Obama for the fact that thisguy's now been charged with More than anything
else, I just feel sadness.This guy had a job, he had
(59:57):
I guess rehabilitated himself, but thenmaybe not so much. Come back with
the third hour of The Morning Showwith Preston Scott five minutes after the hour.
(01:00:22):
It is the third and final hourof Monday edition of The Morning Show
with Preston Scott. May twenty secondis the date show number forty nine thirty
four that is granted Alana over therein Studio one A. I am here
in Studio one B. I'm PrestonScott. Great to be with you.
Don't worry if you're trying to callin and we're not able to pick up
(01:00:44):
the phone lines. There's a verygood reason. We'll let you know when
you can start calling back in andchatting grant up. I can't do it
now. In fact, I can'ttake a guest right now. But that's
okay. We're never short of thingto talk about. We prepare for times
like these. I will remind you, however, after getting an email last
(01:01:06):
week from someone who a Yuper Uper, it is Yuper yep, not an
Upper, even though it's a Uper. Even though it is, I believe
it's Uper. Okay, After gettinga note telling me that we have a
great following in Wisconsin and Michigan inthe Uper area Upper Peninsula for those unaware,
(01:01:30):
I guess it reminded me I don'tdo it often enough. If you're
listening on iHeartRadio anywhere across the countryor around the world, send me a
note pressing at iHeartRadio dot com.I'd love to know where you're listening to
us from how you found it.That's always fascinating to me. Some people
(01:01:52):
just kind of are skipping around andthey just stumble on it and give it
a listen and go, whoa thisguy? So sure, but it's fun.
Whatever the reason might be, I'dlove to know that. And then
why you keep listening? How youfound us? And why? Sorry?
I said the same thing there,So where you're from, how you found
(01:02:14):
us? And why do you listen? Love to know that? Presson and
iHeartRadio dot Com. I saw thisstory and I don't read Reddit. Yeah,
me either. It's a cesspool ofwhat I mean, what's the reputation
if if you were to describe Redditto someone like me, I know of
(01:02:37):
it, right, but I don'tfrequent it ever. And I'm about to
talk about a Reddit story, soyou would take that for what it's worth.
But it's being reported in the news, so that's why it's on my
radar. What would you describe Redditas? It is a collection of communities,
so you can go like, let'ssay your big thing is your hamburgers,
(01:03:01):
there's probably a community on Reddit forlike find the best hamburger, or
more broadly foodie, you know typestuff you can find if you're into bicycling,
like you, these your individual communitiesunder the umbrella of Reddit. That's
right. Yeah, So everything fromlike let's say you're a bourbon drinker,
(01:03:21):
you can go to your bourbon subreddit. You can go to your bicycling subreddit,
you can go to your favorite sportsteams subreddit, and it's all just
like a consolidated community. But thedownside is Reddit has a stereotype of like
having the worst Internet takes in theworld. It's like, oh, that
(01:03:42):
was so reddit like, it's justso that's a thing saying it was so
Reddit. Yeah, like what areddit take, or some people describe,
for example, Canada and Justin Trudeauas like a Reddit nation that it's just
a bunch of like Reddit atheists thatyou know, post stuff, fun line
but just snowflakes with too much timeon their hands kind of. Yeah,
So you can't describe Justin Trudeau,you kind of get the gist for what
(01:04:06):
I mean. So if you everhear me the zoomer saying that's so reddit
like, it's just this like it'sthis cringe kind of segments. So Reddit's
not only a noun, it's anadjective. Correct, Okay, that's right,
all right, fair enough. Amom is reaching out to the parenting
community because she signed up for somethingcalled Gentle Parenting, and by signed up,
(01:04:30):
meaning she has decided that's what shewanted to do quoting. I was
not raised by gentle parents, andI knew I needed to do better for
my kids, so I really latchedonto the gentle parenting philosophy. She's known
on Reddit as Mama Earth Dumpling.That's very Reddit and it's a it's a
(01:04:56):
Subreddit post called gentle Parenting burnout.She continues, I'm now four years into
it, and I feel so burntout after four years of validating emotions and
being an emotional punching bag for mykid. She's burned out from coming up
with compromises, turning everything into afun game, in biting her tongue when
(01:05:19):
her young son gets hurt doing somethingI asked him not to do. Here's
what gentle parenting is, and thenwe'll come back and talk about it on
the other side. Four main elementsempathy, respect, understanding, and boundaries.
(01:05:41):
So let's talk about gentle parenting fora few minutes here. Next on
the Morning Show with Preston Scott,Uncle Preston has got his pencils sharpened.
Preston Scott one News Radio one hundredpoint seven WFLA. We're talking about parenting
(01:06:11):
here and a story that went reallybig on Reddit or mom can't take gentle
parenting anymore, said she came froma set of parents that were not gentle,
and so the question becomes, Okay, first, what about this idea
(01:06:34):
of gentle parenting? I would alsolike to know what does she mean by
she was raised in a not gentleDid she just mean that she was spanked
as a kid, or like,did she actually, you know, grow
up in a scenario where you know, there were you know, the parents
exercise too much authority and kind ofstepped over a bound. I'd be curious.
(01:06:56):
Yeah, and parenting is unhinged.I mean it really is. There's
there's terrible parents out there. There'ssome wonderful parents out there. Unfortunately,
the bad parents have no interest inlearning how to be better parents until there's
there's some form of a casualty,i e. The damage is being done.
You know, there's mentally and emotionallyabusive parents. I did a commentary
(01:07:19):
this morning about a husband and wife. Get your minder on this. They're
they're in Georgia. They've been arrestedand charged. Their ten year old was
found wandering the streets looking for thegrocery store. He weighed thirty seven pounds.
Ten year old ten lord have mercy. He had injuries, he had
(01:07:43):
dental injuries. Oh, the affidavitsaid that he was made to live in
his bedroom, no lights, notoilet paper, no human contact. And
there are four other siblings in thehome. Don't know the ages. They've
been taken by child protective services.My point in bringing this story up.
(01:08:08):
And we see these accounts, Wesee these accounts of parents that just kill
their children, torture their children,abuse their children. There are clearly people
that have no right to be aparent, They just don't. But this
is the larger issue here is here'sa mom who talks about being an emotional
(01:08:31):
punching bag, and you know what, the gentle parenting thing on the surface,
I don't have any real big issuewith it. Empathy. Yeah,
I think you need to have thatrespect. Well, what do you mean
by respect? Respect is something thatcan be taken to mean a lot of
(01:08:54):
things. They're your child, andyou raise your child and the way they
should go. It's not a debate. And I think sometimes we take this
word respect as if they have equalrights. No they don't. They have
human rights, but they are subordinateto a parent understanding absolutely, that's fair
(01:09:18):
boundaries. Look, gentle parenting saysboundaries, And this mom's out there admitting
everything's a compromise. Well, whywhy are you compromising? Everything has to
be turned into a game. No, it doesn't. The old because I
said so is just fine. Andhere's why. And this is what I
(01:09:44):
want to get across to parents outthere that are listening because I said so.
It's not a do as I say, not as I do type thing.
I mean, if you're sitting therebeing a drunk at home and you're
telling your kids don't drink, youlook like an idiot. I'm talking about.
You need to teach your son ordaughter that because you said you would
(01:10:05):
like them to clean up their room, they're expected to do it. You
don't need a reason. It's yourhome. You want the room cleaned.
That prepares them for the workplace,that prepares them for the boss that says
I need this report done by fiveokay. And this is why we have
zoomers that are right now considered theworst employees on the planet because they want
(01:10:30):
a reason. They want to debatewith you, they want to argue with
you. I would say this parentsher own worst enemy. That's what I
would say, seventeen minutes after theair come back. Animals Stories on Deck
on The Morning Show with Preston Scottin the wild or in our homes,
(01:10:51):
We love them Critters, large andsmall. Time for another edition of Animal
Stories on The Morning Show with PrestonScott. Gosh, I love this segment
just because I get to listen tothis music. This headline says it all.
(01:11:13):
Raccoon falls through classrooms ceiling as animalsoverrun Texas High School. McCallum High
School in Austin faced multiple incidents involvinginvasive raccoons trespassing on school property and inside
school buildings. They've been spotted wanderingthrough hallways and most recently, falling through
(01:11:41):
the ceiling during class. Journalism studentnoted that she and a classmate have reportedly
been reporting on the school's raccoon infestationfor the school newspaper, six catches and
releases, all in the span ofthree days. But get this. In
doing a little research, she foundout the school newspaper has been reporting on
(01:12:06):
invasive raccoons since the nineties. Ohmy gosh, every decade since has had
incidents of raccoons getting into the school. Now, what I found really funny
about this story is the school securityofficer said that they have apprehended what they
(01:12:30):
think has been the grown offspring ofa raccoon with a crippled paw who managed
to get inside the school during theCOVID nineteen pandemic. Mutated raccoon. Right,
So, how did I mean?Is it? Is it a genetic
trait? Yeah, that they're seeingthese raccoons with a gympie par so,
(01:12:54):
I don't know a little no,with a gympie leg right exactly. But
I'm just I'm thinking to myself,how hard can it be to keep raccoons
from getting in the building. Apparentlypretty challenging. So you've got to believe
they're trying to figure out where they'rethey're getting into the building, but they
(01:13:15):
haven't yet. And it's only beenwhat forty years thirty years at least.
Okay, And then there's this inPerry, Iowa. A rabbit their words,
not mine, terrorizing a neighborhood hasbeen caught. Apparently the rabbit has
(01:13:41):
bitten at least two people. Therabbit attacked one person, in fact,
trapping one in their car. Itcame around to her cars, wouldn't let
her out of the car, saidRoman Rustin police told the news station they
had previously received a report about athirteen year old bitten by the same rabbit.
(01:14:04):
Oh my gosh, I don't knowif they leave like bite marks that
are that you can determine are fromthat particular rabbit or not. Here's what
I can't get. They caught therabbit. They actually they actually caught the
rabbit, but they didn't test itfor rabies. They released it. They
(01:14:27):
caught and released it in an areafar away from the city or a little
this little community that doesn't add up. I don't have a punchline or anything,
but Perry, Iowa had a rabbitterrorizing their community. Those things can
be mean, now a rabbit,Oh yeah, those things can be just
(01:14:49):
downright mean to you. They lookso sweet, I know, I know.
How do you know my in lawsthey had rabbits for a long time,
owned them. Yeah, yeah,yeah, And sometimes they turned on
him. Rabbit stew sometimes happened occurredin the family after the rabbit turned on
him. I don't know if necessarilythe rabbit turned But all I know is
(01:15:13):
my wife has told me stories aboutshow I give be down right mean.
How about that? Well, Iwouldn't have thought that. All right,
twenty seven minutes after the hour,come back with the big stories in the
press box and the story of aRepublican lawmaker arrested. That's just one of
the best I've ever seen the morningshow at Preston Scott On News Radio one
(01:15:45):
hundred point seven u f L.A big stories in the press box and
(01:16:14):
and add on, do you rememberthe Trump Collusia collusion stuff and how Nancy
Pelosi had said that quote this weekwe saw cold hard evidence of the Trump
campaign, indeed the Trump family eagerlyintending to collude, possibly with Russia,
(01:16:41):
a hostile foreign power, to influenceAmerican elections. She said that this week
last twenty. Yeah, she's gotnothing to say. And here's the problem.
The media is not going to holdher accountable because they genuinely believe it.
(01:17:04):
Oh, I don't believe that atthis point. Well depends on the
level of staffer there. I justI don't. She's got nothing to say
in response to the Durham report thattook three years, nothing nothing, Adam
(01:17:29):
Schiff. Adam Schiff is still outthere saying, well, you know,
there's there's still information out there.No there's not You're a liar. They're
just liars. And that's why honestand truly, that's why outlets like ours
(01:17:51):
and why independent newspapers and media outletsare so dog one important. Do you
realize that without the information that weput in front of you and what you
do with it is up to youif you want to keep your head buried
(01:18:13):
in the sand. And we've gota handful of listeners that are like like
that, your rubes you you justconsistently ignore the obvious because it's inconvenient for
you. I could say specific thingsto discredit everything dealing with global warming.
(01:18:33):
I mean, there's only I don'tneed. I don't need a big list.
I've got it. Just a handful. That's all that's needed to discredit
everything. It's the same exact thingwith COVID. It's not a long list.
They change definitions, they cleared thepath, they they they said they
they claim something that cannot be done. It has never been done. Next,
(01:18:57):
It's that simple. And with allof this stuff they said they had
hard evidence, hard evidence, smokinggun, where is it you would think
with John Durham bearing down and thisentire saga being discredited by even foreign intelligence.
(01:19:20):
You would think the cold evidence wouldcome out then right, well then
here right, so deal with this, mister Durham. Ha. And here's
the difference with Hunter Biden, JoeBiden, his brother, his daughter.
(01:19:49):
There seems to be plenty of informationand evidence and they won't let it out.
But it's coming out. Apparently theFBI is relenting and some information is
going to Congress. This is goingto come out. I've told you it's
(01:20:10):
just a matter of politics. Whenit comes out, that's a new big
story in the press box. Forthe others. You can go to to
the podcast. A little bit lateron we come back. A Rhode Island
City councilman, a Republican arrested.This is the Morning Show with Preston Scott's
(01:20:41):
we let the chips fall where theymay. On the program, we upset
Republicans as well as Democrats. There'sjust not as much fodder that we can
use against the GOP. I'm remindedof I used to have. I've got
(01:21:02):
this massive window in front of mehere between our two studios, and there's
a frame around that thing, andI used to have Christmas cards ringing the
window and I'd stick them in theframe like a wreath all the way around
(01:21:23):
the window. I don't get anyChristmas cards anymore. And I don't think
it's because people are cheap. Wejust, you know, and I we
just talk about things as they are. And I've taken very strong positions against
(01:21:45):
some Republicans over the years and theydon't like me for it. And that's
okay, it's you know, Idon't take it personal. They do.
They take it personal. But whenyou're a political hypocrite, or when your
rhetoric doesn't match with your votes andyour policy decisions, you're gonna you should
expect to be held account And anyway, this is just breathtaking. Leaf.
(01:22:13):
This is funny. As tragic andsad as this is, this is funny.
Cranston, Rhode Island councilman Matthew Riley, a Republican. He was apparently,
(01:22:35):
according to someone that called police,having a medical episode in his car.
He was found passed out in thedriver's seat, and according to the
police officer running a body camera,he told Riley after kind of awakening him,
(01:23:02):
you have a crack pipe in yourhands. I think we found the
cause. Officers said you were literallychoking in your sleep. Somebody literally sprinted
and flagged me down because they thoughtyou were choking. He appeared disoriented,
(01:23:25):
but was polite cooperated with police.He initially denied having drugs, but later
admitted to buying one hundred dollars worthof crack cocaine the day before. They
did discover a white rock like substanceinside a container found inside his vehicle,
and it was a mix of cocaineand fentyl. Oh my gosh, guy's
(01:23:45):
lucky to be alive, no kidding. Search of the vehicle turned up additional
drug paraphernalia, scouring pad, anotherpipe, tools used to scrape the pipe.
I yes, he said it wasa relapse. I've been cleaned for
thirteen years. Just got back intothis charged with one count of possession Schedule
(01:24:11):
two. He was handcuffed, placedin the back of the car. The
photo of him from the body camera, Oh yeah, he looks just peachy.
It's got his aviator glasses on,head tilted back. I mean,
he's just he's out crack pipe pipe, I guess, and his car is
just a trash bin. So he'sresigned from the city council. And I
(01:24:42):
wonder if he got that crack pipefrom Biden remember that last year? Yes
I do. He's also resigned aschairman of the Cranston Republican Party. Oh
my gosh, buddy, I'm man, come on, come on, man,
just I got no words. Ijust I just these. You know,
(01:25:08):
people say to me, how doyou do it? How do you
prepare for a show? Are youkidding me? Comedy? I can't make
this stuff up. It's it's beautiful. Really, it's the babbylon Bee come
to life. It's a poetic blessis hard We come back? Jen Zers
are doing what? Yep? Ohyou have no idea? My friends.
(01:25:42):
Tomorrow the program, we'll have amanly minute. We've got a couple of
things scheduled, but that's coin tossright now. We'll just see if we
can continue to make progress on thephone lines. But in the meantime,
we will never have a shortage ofthings in the new used to talk about,
so we will. We will beprepared for it, no matter,
(01:26:04):
as we always are. I mentionedto you gen Z now they're a punching
bag for everybody right now, andI get it. So we're millennials,
and so will the generation after genZ be another punching bag. So,
but boy, oh boy, they'llbe tough to beat. Gen Zers are
(01:26:25):
lowering the bar. We are apretty talented bunch, aren't we. They're
lowering the bar and it won't takemuch to break it, but it will
take some effort to get below it. This is just the best I've seen
yet. Oh boy, gen zwhich And I'll be honest with you,
I don't know if the stereotypes thatapply to Generation fill in the blank apply
(01:26:51):
anywhere outside of this country. Forthe most part, true, I'm sure
they might in some areas. There'scertain things that see to be universal because
technology, well, access to phones, Yeah, and particularly in Western developed
countries, the social media world andall that. But then you could also
(01:27:11):
chalk it up as the commonalities ofsin not too you know. But I
know, as we push further awayfrom God, Zoomers in Zimbabwe would be
remarkably different, more than likely becauseof obvious factors. Yeah, absolutely,
gen Zers have increasingly slipped into usinga British accent. I can't wait to
(01:27:43):
hear why. Calbert Graham's Senior ResearchFellow Linguistics, University of Cambridge. There
are various reasons why people choose toadopt a new accent such as professional advancement,
cultural identity, improved communication, orsimply for enjoyment or create entertainment for
the research is necess sorry to understandthe reasons behind this current trend among gen
z. However, it should beemphasized that this phenomenon is not entirely new.
(01:28:08):
With the presence of social media platformslike tick talk, people can now
easily share their experiences and creations.Rather than writing about these experiences in the
diaries I would do in my day, they can create videos to share their
with their followers, thus amplifying thevisibility of accent, adapted adaptation, blah
(01:28:29):
blah blah. Now I get droppinga line from a show or whatever,
and some sitcoms that apparently are filledwith Brits or whatever. And I mean
back in the day, Monty Python, flying Circus, all of those guys.
Yeah we're Brits, right, that'ssaid. Dropping a line from a
(01:28:55):
famous show is one thing. Wanderingaround carrying the accent of another. It
would be like me going around today, aren't my friends? How are you?
Would you like ment to hold thedar? What a little help on
this shelf? Would that be goodto you? My sweet wife? How
(01:29:18):
are you, my DearS, youare looking lovely today? Peas yeah,
just yeah. Brought to you byBaronet Heating and Air. It's the Morning
Show one on WFLA Chock It Up. Chock It Up is another notch in
(01:29:45):
the belt for gen z ears.It's crazy, all right, look at
the show. In one hundred andeighty seconds or less, new pole shows
Trump dominating the political field. Lefthand right, we'll see Maryland teen rape
suspect is an illegal immigrant from ElSalvador. Thanks Joe, I'd be thinking
about Sue, and Joe. Justmake his life miserable. Sue him.
(01:30:10):
San Francisco office values have collapsed seventyfive percent. Chicago area man whose life
sentence was commuted by Obama charged withattempted murder. Michelle Obama's juice brand falls
beneath her own health standards. Howironic. She's the one that ruined cafeteria,
(01:30:30):
and that takes some work. Ruiningschool cafeteria. Cafeteria food is real
effort. Although I still remember somemeals growing up. Who who didn't love
the square cheese pizza, The squarecut cheese of cheese pizza. It was
brilliantly bad. Four companies going fullbud light mad, going woke mad,
(01:30:59):
going wok figure. All right,we'll do it again tomorrow. Thanks for
listening to give yourself an awesome day. Stay dry out there,