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May 23, 2023 93 mins
This is the full episode of The Morning Show with Preston Scott for Tues. May 23, 2023.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:14):
Tuesday on the Morning Show with Preston'sGot Made twenty third show. Forty nine
thirty five, eight fifty three isthe number on the calendar. That's how
many days we have been held hostageby the resident of the United States being
installed in the Oval office. Man, we are paying a price. Sweet
Jesus, we are paying a price. But how do we end up where

(00:40):
we are? We look in themirror. That's how we ended up where
we are. We are who wevote into office? There you go.
Our verse today comes from Psalm onenineteen, verse nine. How can a
young person stay on the path ofpurity by living at court to your word?

(01:03):
How can I, not quite asyoung person, stay on the path
of purity by living according to yourword? How can a man kind of
older person stay on the path ofpurity by living according to your word?

(01:26):
How can an old person stay onthe path of purity by living according to
your word? Sorry for sounding likeJoe Biden, My apologies. You know,
purity is a lot more than thetemptation for sexual immorality. I think

(01:49):
when we hear a verse like that, they immediately our mind's default to that.
It's so much more than that.Let's think about the word purity.
How does anything become pure? Haveyou ever seen a life straw? Life

(02:14):
straws are amazing. If you're worriedabout Armageddon, the apocalypse, not being
able to find potable water, youneed to learn about a life straw because
a life straw takes about any sourceof water you can possibly stumble upon and

(02:38):
makes it drinkable as then you canliterally put the straw down in the source
and slurp it right on up.It filters everything. Purity is really about
the process of filtering. And soas you send the kids out the door

(03:04):
today, as you go out thedoor today, and as you think about
your whatever it is on your scheduletoday, consider the word filter. Filter
things constantly be filtering your thoughts,constantly, be filtering your actions, constantly

(03:40):
be filtering your words. If youfilter, and what's the filter we've talked
about that Jesus, Holy Spirit,God, Scripture, that's your filter for

(04:02):
everything. Everything runs through that.Think of a coffee filter. You drop
the grounds in that thing, runhot water through it. What comes out
the other side. You're a coffeethat you love. Get that filter in
place so that what comes out theother side is something that is enjoyable to

(04:25):
other people. Ten minutes after thehour, take a peek inside the American
Patriots Almanac. Next as we beginTuesday, right here on The Morning Show
with Preston, Scott Preston Show withMorning Scott. What heack? Good Morning

(04:55):
Morning Show. Greason's got how youdid still need a rooster? You know,
it's so funny. I was outin Gadsden County last week and I
heard a rooster and it made mesmile. He was just crowing up a

(05:17):
storm cock, a doodle doo.Man, it was awesome. All right,
Let's see here, this is deepdive time. This is a good
one. Thirty one year old HoratioNelson Jackson was visiting San Francisco's University Club
in nineteen o three when someone wageredfifty dollars that it would be impossible to

(05:39):
drive an automobile to New York inless than ninety days. Jackson immediately took
the bet. He did not ownan auto, and no one had ever
crossed the continent by car. Atthat time. The United States had only
one hundred and fifty miles of pavedroads, all of them in cities.

(06:00):
Highways roughen nothing more than two rutsleading toward the horizon. Jackson Persia's purchased
a used twenty horsepower car made byWinston or sorry Winton Motor Carriage Company of
Cleveland, christened it the Vermont afterhis home state hired a mechanic, Sewell

(06:24):
Crocker to accompany him. That wassmart. They loaded the Ottawa supplies,
and on May twenty third, nineteenoh three, the two men left San
Francisco on the first drive from seato sea in a horseless carriage. They
bounced along cliff side edges, splashedacross bridgeless streams, zigzagged over trackless planes,

(06:50):
tires blew out springs, broke bolts, sheared off parts, rattled to
pieces. Bad directions took them hundredsof miles out of way. They lost
count of how many times they hadto haul the Vermont out of mudholes,
but at every farm, village,and town, curious folks gave them a
hand. Blacksmiths helped them make repairs. In Idaho, they bought a bulldog

(07:15):
named Bud, fitted with driving cockles. It took him on for the rest
of the ride. On July twentysix, the mud covered Vermont rolled into
Manhattan. The journey had taken sixtythree days, though he never bothered to
collect his fifty dollars. Horatio NelsonJackson won his bet. The age of

(07:38):
the open road had dawned for theAmerican automobile. Now here's my question.
Do you think the guy who madethe bet read about the account and ever
gave thought to paying the bet?Maybe if they met up again, I'm
thinking, well, you can haveit. You could have to fifty bucks.

(08:00):
You just got to drive back andget it. Yeah, right,
How the heck did he cross theMississippi River or any among many other challenges
I'm thinking. I mean, Iguess the plan would have been to try
to find wagon trails, or maybesneak across a train track when a train

(08:22):
wasn't coming. I don't know isif it was wide enough. Yeah,
I don't know that that was possible. What a feat that? That's just
that's crazy stuff, all right.Seventeen eighty five, Benjamin Franklin writes in
a letter he had just invented bifocalglasses. I would imagine to someone that

(08:45):
needed them, that was quite adevelopment. WHOA if I looked my eyes,
my eyes looked down. I canI can read. If I my
eyes look up, I can Ican see distances that seventeen eighty eighth,
South Carolina becomes the eighth state toratify the Constitution. Nineteen eleven, New

(09:07):
York Public Libraries dedicated. And onthis date, in nineteen thirty four,
police killed bank robbers Bonnie Parker andClyde Barrow in Beanville Parish, Louisiana.
That was an ambush. They dieda very painful and ugly death they did,

(09:31):
Bonnie and Clyde. And there youhave it, this state in history.
Come back. Tell you what thirtyeight million dollars will get you at
auction. All right, we're gettingcloser on phones. We're not there yet,

(09:52):
so yeah, but we're getting closer. It'll all work it out,
work out eventually. You know,I haven't had a good biblical archaeological story
in a while, the closest onethat I've had lately, and because I'm

(10:16):
fascinated by that stuff, because allthat stuff does, all those types of
stories, it just proves what weknow by faith, and it builds your
faith admitted when you start to seearchaeological evidence that supports what the Bible said
happened. And you can begin tolook at at the Bible as not just

(10:37):
a book of faith, but abook of history. Man. That's a
that's a huge faith boost for somany of us. It just it builds
you up when you start to seethe accounts of the battles in scripture.
Wow, you mean kind of likethey wrote down there? Yeah? Crazy.

(11:03):
The last story I did is actuallythis story, only now it's the
conclusion of it. Do you rememberme talking about the Kodex Sassoon. It
was described as the earliest most completeHebrew Bible ever found. I was like,
what about a month ago we talkedabout it or something like that.

(11:24):
I feel like it was longer thanthat, but it could be. The
Kodex Sassoon is believed to have beenwritten about nine hundred by Jewish scholars living
in modern day Israel or Syria.The text vanished for centuries before re emerging
in nineteen twenty nine, when itwas acquired by a collector, David Solomon

(11:48):
Sassoon, who owned the world's largestprivate collection of Hebrew manuscripts. So whoever
had it knew who to go to. Sophemes Auction House describes the Codex Sassoon
as the earliest surviving example of asingle codex containing all the books of the

(12:09):
Hebrew Bible. Well, it wasauctioned and it has been purchased. The
seller Jackie Saffra, obtained the codexin nineteen eighty nine for three point one
nine million, which, if youadjusted for inflation, today's seven point seven

(12:31):
million. Well, the winning bidwas thirty eight million dollars. Former US
Ambassador to Romania, Alfred H.Moses won the auction on behalf of the
American Friends of a Nu. Thecodax will be given to the Anu Museum

(12:54):
of the Jewish People in Tel Avivand had been displayed there in March,
and it will be given to thatmuseum. That's a gift. You know
what. I wonder The story doesn'ttell me, but I wonder if a
group of people pulled their money withthe idea of giving it to this museum.

(13:20):
Let's make sure that we acquire thisand give it to the Museum of
the Jewish People, which would makesense. But thirty eight million dollars and
that's you know. See, thisis a perfect story for me because it's
the blending of biblical archaeology and auctionsand auctions make me happy. They're just

(13:46):
fun. By the way, speakingof biblical history, I am so sad
that initial reviews of the last IndianaJones movie are so bad. I didn't
even know if there was another movieout. It's coming out, Okay,
it's it's not out yet, butit has been screened and previewed. And

(14:09):
yeah, and I don't know.I know that the last one was terrible
or was it The Crystal Skull orsomething like that. I was awful.
It was awful. Movies one inthree are the best. Two is a
distant third, but one in threeare epic. The original Raiders of the

(14:33):
Lost Dark and the Last Crusade wasSean Connery right outstanding. And what was
the second one? Temple of Doom. That's right, Indiana Jones and the
Temple of Doom. You know,he had short round. He was funny.
You'll call him doctor Jones. Umand uh, no time for love.

(14:56):
It's just it's a great lags inthere. But that it's not it's
not as good. And and ifonly George Lucas, Steven Spielberg, and
Harrison Ford, if only they hadbeen listening to me, they would have
had a far, far, farmore satisfying storyline for the last installment because

(15:20):
it was. It's with the ideaof an older Indiana Jones, and it's
much more biblically centered. It wouldhave been Indiana Jones and the ashes of
the Last Red Heifer. It justworks. It's biblical history. It's a
fascinating story that viewed very few peopleknow, and it connects to the idea

(15:46):
that Israel may consider trying to rebuildthe temple on Temple Mount. It's just
it's it's it would have been perfect, and I could have been a contributor
to the Last Indiana Jones movie.But no, Preston Scott, you're mocking
me, aren't you. Oh no, no, no, no, no,

(16:07):
no no. I'm used Radio onehundred point seven FLA. It's Tuesday
on the morning show. We'll havea manly minute later on in the radio

(16:29):
program. Our scheduled guests have hadto take a rain check. Still got
some phone issues to iron out,so we'll do that. But between now
and then, still no shortage ofthings to talk about. Never will be
guests are nice, but not necessary. They do enhance our understanding of certain

(16:52):
issues, though, and so Iregret that we won't be doing that for
the next day or two. Butwhat do you make of this, this
whole NACP decision to attack Florida,And what's that all about. Let's take
this in some pieces here. Numberone, the language, what if an

(17:19):
organization we're to say so directly thatwe need to get rid of Barack Obama
once and for all? Would thatnot be considered and perhaps rightfully so,
by the mainstream media as a clarioncall for violence against the former president.

(17:48):
I'm asking because in so many ofthese stories you have to flip it around
and ask the what if? Well, what if the target of this was
a black lawmaker on the Democrats side? Anyway, that was the inflammatory language

(18:11):
used by NAACP president Derrick Johnson.Florida is openly hostile toward African Americans,
people of color, and the LGBTQplus community. Individuals. Before traveling to
Florida, please understand the state ofFlorida de values and marginalizes the contributions of

(18:32):
and the challenges faced by African Americansand other community communities of color. Is
there any merit to any of this, Well, of course not. In
fact, Florida is one of theleading states for the numbers of black owned
businesses, not just that. Thisreally is about the decision by the governor,

(19:00):
the legislature, and the Department ofEducation for the state of Florida to
not allow revisionist history to be taughtin public schools and public universities for that
matter. But what's also interesting inall of this is that the chairman of
the board for the NAACP lives inTampa, and so when that was pointed

(19:22):
out, he goes on MSNBC andcalls that BS. Well, no,
it's not BS. You live inTampa, So I guess you'll be moving.
The Republican Party of Florida offered tohelp. Chairman of the party offered
to help pay his moving expenses ifhe wanted to live up to the rhetoric

(19:44):
of the president of the NAACP.Florida, by the way, set a
record for the last quarter of themost visitors ever. I find that interesting.
Disney's cutting back, They're shutting downsome facilities, and yet visitation to

(20:11):
Florida. Is it that Florida's visitorsare diversifying their interests? See, I
would maintain if Disney move tomorrow,it wouldn't make a bit of difference.
It just wouldn't. It might fora little bit, but Florida is a
very diverse state with all kinds ofplaces to visit, all kinds of things
to do. But I'm just curiousabout the where's the racism really coming from?

(20:45):
We'll talk more about that next onThe Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Find more on his vlog WFLAFM dotcom. Keyword, Preston, remember what

(21:07):
Morgan Freeman famously said, it's nota racism problem, stop talking about it.
Where's the talk coming from? Well, that's because you white people just
wanted hidden. That's why you don'ttalk about it. No, I'm in

(21:32):
fact one of the very few outin the world that wants to talk about
it openly and honestly. Like blackon black crime in the cities, Who
wants to talk about that? Whowants to talk about the fatherless homes?
Who wants to talk about that?Who wants to talk about the law of
diminished expectations in HBCUs, Who wantsto talk about that? Just saying But

(22:00):
Goldberg comes out with the announcement ofTim Scott running for the United States Senate,
and again I loathe discussing anything thatanyone on the view says that said,
it's important to the broader discussion here, she said that Tim Scott had
the Clarence Thomas syndrome. What's that, Whoopee. One of the issues that

(22:22):
Tim Scott has is he seems tothink because I made it, everyone can
make it, ignoring again the factthat he's the exception and not the rule.
And until he's the rule that hecan stop talking about systemic racism that's
from Sunny Houston or hosting. Butin the comments made by Whoopee Goldberg,

(22:49):
she said that when Scott uses theword victimhood, it's a dog whistle.
As soon as you say that,like, you know what he's talking about.
I didn't like that. You know, listen, if he comes out
with something that makes sense, that'swhat will make him sparkle. Tell us
what you're going to do, justlisten to him will be sparkle. He's

(23:11):
a conservative. He sparkles all thetime. But then it gets she goes
here, you have to be herefor the entire nation, figure out what's
going to work for everybody see therethere And this is why I love what
I do, because I get toanalyze people's words like this, nothing but

(23:34):
God works for everybody. And eventhen, outcomes are determined by effort.
Outcomes are determined by discipline. Everybodyhas the opportunity that it's so funny how

(23:55):
the backstory to so many of thesesuccessful people is roughly the same, tough
childhood, not a lot of money, poverty, borderline poverty, and they
raise themselves up through hard work.They achieve. They just achieve. Now,

(24:18):
I maintain and have maintained first thatwe don't have a problem with racism
in America. It is a problemin that there are those black, white,
Asian Hispanic that are racists, butit's not pervasive, it's not widespread.
There are always going to be bigotsbecause bigots are matters of the heart.

(24:41):
Bigotry is a matter of the heart. But have you seen the donations
for Black Lives Matter down this year? Eighty eight percent. People are wising
up to the scam. All themoney that was being shall we say,
redirected to the friends and family ofthe leaders one Black Lives Matter group,

(25:11):
the Grassroots Group Survey is suing theleadership group because of misappropriation of funds.
We've routinely asked what are you doingwith all that money, Show me the
program, show me the change,Show me the change. And then we
have this little gem which we willget to this morning, leaked policy handbook

(25:37):
stuff from Fox News. And rememberwhen I mentioned the use of the pronouns
and the stories. Oh, that'sjust a tip of the iceberg. We'll
get to that this morning on theMorning show Preston Scott one News Radio one
hundred point seven double ula. Allone would need to to know how remarkably

(26:14):
detached from mainstream America, and bythat I mean probably in this particular example,
the issue of transgenderism three quarters toeighty percent of America, is to
listen to the questions and the allegedanswers being given by Miguel Cardonia, the

(26:37):
Secretary of Education for the United States. First of all, there's a department
that can go away tomorrow, cutit gone, see you. We don't
need it. We don't need it. We don't have any national schools,
we have state local schools, statelocal universities, colleges. We don't need

(27:00):
a US Department of Education. Bybut it is I think everyone should hear
his absurd responses two questions about shouldyoung girls, should female athletes be forced

(27:25):
to change clothes in front of abiological mail. You know what I didn't
say last You remember the story wetalked about last week with the sorority sisters
in Wyoming University of Wyoming. There'ssomething like that. I think it was
in Wyoming, and it was threegirls suing the sorority for allowing a mail

(27:47):
into the sorority. One of thecomments, and I will phrase this as
carefully as I can for you parentsto better describe. Talk about this issue
with your children. One of theirone of their points is the guy sits

(28:12):
in the large room, the kindof their their great room, if you
will, of the sorority house,almost always with a mass in a massive
state of arousal. Oh my gosh, he's supposed to be a woman,

(28:32):
right, so the argument's going tolikely be made, Well, he's he's
actually a lesbian, and so he'saroused by whom. You see where I'm
going with this. This is theinsanity of it. And here's what's amazing.

(28:56):
There are now fights breaking out socialmedia, etc. Between traditional lesbians
and this issue right here. Don'tbe no, we're women, that's the
that's what we are. We arewomen. Don't don't be pretending to be

(29:18):
something that you're not, and sothis splintering is just hilarious. The State
Department had a glitch in a programthat it was testing. It went live
before they thought, and so theglitch mis gendered employees with wrong pronouns.

(29:41):
It's a new it feature. Thefrom line of employees who did not manually
add them got pronouns added incorrectly.It's a program that's supposed to allow someone
in the State Department to add theirpersonal pronouns if they want, and apparently

(30:03):
it triggered a bunch of them.And so get this, Your tax dollars
are going to be used to offertherapy for any employees that were triggered by
an email that used the rock pronounts. Can't work. I can't work it.

(30:32):
I was I was a him,he him, and I'm not an
him. I'm gonnadate them. Oh, where's my? Where's my? I
need a counselor. I need acounselor. And your tax dollars are gonna
pay for this crap, this completenonsense. It's off the chain, off

(30:55):
the chain. I don't know ifit's ever gonna and I'm not gonna use
the words normal is what is thatanymore? Right? But I don't know
if this issue is going back into some form of control here. We're
gonna get to at some point todaywhere this needs to go once again as

(31:19):
it rears its ugly head all overthe country in all places. Back with
our two of the Morning Show withPreston's got five minutes after the hour.

(31:41):
It is a second hour Tuesday,May twenty third, on The Morning Show
with Preston Scott. That's Grant Allen. I'm Preston. It is Show forty
nine thirty five. Good to bewith you. The debt ceiling? Do
you care? I think deep downeverybody knows they should, but I'm pretty

(32:17):
sure most people just don't. Andwhen it's all said and done, we
all just kind of whatever. They'regonna do, what they're gonna do.
But what they're doing devastating your futureand your children's future, and your grandchildren's

(32:43):
future and their children's future. Andso this debt ceiling showdown, as it's
being described, it really matters,came across a fascinating piece written by Guy
Benson for town Hall the tip Sheet. In it, he writes, the

(33:08):
debt ceiling will be raised some formof very modest spending restraint will be imposed.
Washington will collectively head off toward thenext regularly scheduled fiscal cliff. We've
seen movies like this before, sothe outcome doesn't feel like a mystery,
but he writes Democrats. Democrats planhasn't worked thus far. Led by the

(33:35):
President, they've refused to negotiate formonths, assuming that the raucous House Republican
Conference wouldn't be able to coalesce behindany plan. The expectation was that Democrats
could point to GOP dysfunction while rampingup ramping up public pressure, aided by
the media, for a clean debtceiling hike. Now that's what Chuck Schumer

(34:00):
had been boldly telling everybody for monthsthat when we got to this point,
don't you worry, there was goingto be a clean debt ceiling hike.
And by that he means no negotiations, no spending cuts. Republicans are the

(34:20):
legislative arsonists and can't govern. Soit's the only responsible path, is the
assumption here, writes Benson. Butthen the Lower Chamber flipped the dynamic on
its head by passing a reasonable billto somewhat constrained federal spending while raising the
debt limit for approximately one year.Did you know that? Did you know

(34:44):
that the Republicans passed a bill thatputs some spending cuts in place, some
limits on future spending, and allowsthe debt to be expanded. Democrat as
haven't quite adjusted to that reality.Instead of accepting that, in the media

(35:05):
reporting that they've lied and the mediahas helped. After months of declining to
negotiate Benson rights, President Biden finallyrelented and agreed to talks, then left
the country. The discussions broke downin recent days, multiple issues being cited.
The two sides stuck get an impass. As discussions continue, Democrats endlessly

(35:30):
blame. That's what they do.Look, the people ask for a divided
government. The houses in the handsof Republicans. Democrats are controlling the Senate
and the White House. The problemis that the Republicans have passed a bill
that, according to polling, issupported by most of America. Inside the

(35:57):
bill are things that matter. Theguy who ran as a bipartisan dealmaker,
remember that fifty years of experience,he knows how to get things done.
Sixty five percent of the country supportsspending cuts, the Republicans passed the bill

(36:17):
to deliver them. Biden will getblamed for all of this, as will
Democrats. But there's more here.We're gonna get to that next here on
the Morning Show, The Truth,The Morning Show at Treston scott On News

(36:40):
Radio one hundred point seven WUFLA,talking about the debate on the debt ceiling.
They've got till next Thursday to havethis done midnight, I guess Wednesday
next week. We got just overa week to get this done. Biden's

(37:07):
out there saying, in essence,no one's gonna blame him. He keeps
trying to spin it. They keeptrying to lie. Things like the Republicans
want to cut veterans benefits. Noinside the bill are things that are pretty

(37:30):
popular with people. Seventy seven percentof Americans believe in reclaiming unspent COVID funds,
sixty two support enhanced welfare work requirements, fifty three percent support reducing discretionary
spending to pre pandemic levels. EvenPolitico is out there talking about the Democrats

(37:55):
being in disarray, quoting some Democratsbelieve that if Democrats had tried to hike
the debt limit before the House sweptinto the majority. Even Joe Mansion might
have gone along with it, butBiden's party never moved on the issue.
In six months later, Democrats arestuck doing exactly what they said they wouldn't
negotiating. Many progressives are at aloss over how the party ended up here,

(38:21):
having slowly reversed the stance that theywouldn't haggle with the GOP over the
debt limit after deciding not to evenattempt a party line debt hike last year.
Why didn't they Why didn't they justdo it? Good lord, They've
been doing everything else on their own, because they know even Democrats know.

(38:47):
Democrats no negotiations position on the debtceiling vanished this again, Politico replaced by
a potential deal that could slash atleast some federal spending against their their members
wishes. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumerthis week called the negotiations on the budget

(39:08):
and raising the debt ceiling separate butsimultaneous. If that isn't an expression of
political crap, I don't know whatis separate but simultaneous whatever we've even heard
you realize that they've actually kicked aroundthe idea of minting a trillion dollar coin.

(39:35):
Here's a coin it's worth Wait,hold on, I got some coins
here, two, three, I'vegot I've got about I've got five trillion
dollars right here. You just mintto coin and say it's worth a trillion

(39:57):
dollars. There. They've actually talkedabout this. Democrats have actually talked about
doing this. Biden rolling the fourteenthAmendment out totally unconstitutional, it has it
has no merit whatsoever. The taxcollections. We've talked about the record amounts

(40:22):
of money coming in. Nineteen pointsix percent of the GDP is taxes,
but we are spending twenty five pointone percent of the GDP. We have

(40:47):
record amounts of money coming in,and it's not enough. They're spending more
when record amounts of revenue coming income in. You know what most people
do. They pay down debt.That's what you and I do. Pay

(41:13):
down debt, Pay it down,pay it down, pay it down,
pay it down. Not the Feds, not Democrats. Democrats. Democrats are
allergic to fiscal restraint. Back withmore of the Morning Show, I change

(41:43):
it gears here for just a coupleof minutes. What's gonna happen to college
sports. We've heard that they're goingto be two super con princes, the
Big Ten, which would be whatthe Big thirty, the AFC and the

(42:10):
SEC. Yeah, so the ACC'sout there trying to figure out what to
do. What's interesting is that attheir annual meetings in the spring, the
relatively new Commissioner of the ACC,Jim Phillips, said that the athletic directors

(42:36):
for the league have told him we'reall in this together. But a subgroup
made up of Florida State, Clemson, North Carolina, Miami, Virginia,
Virginia Tech, and NC State allhad conversations together. The other schools were

(43:05):
not part of that, which leftthem a little hurt, I imagine.
So this is all about the rightsdeal that was signed out of desperation with
ESPN. ESPN got a sweetheart dealand the ACC desperate years ago for its

(43:30):
own network, to say, we'vegot a network too, just like the
SEC and the Big Ten. Eventhough the Big Ten network is not controlled
by ESPN, the SEC network is, they went ahead and agreed to a

(43:53):
deal that gave up rights to ESPNun till the twenty thirties. I mean,
it's just it's crazy and So thequestion becomes what happens moving forward,
because athletic directors at these schools thatwe just listed, you know, there's

(44:13):
seven schools there that they're not happy. All seven of those schools, with
the exception of Virginia and Virginia Tech, geographically would fit the footprint of the
SEC. North Carolina is on theborder. But the ACC brand for some

(44:37):
sports is better than the SEC brand, It's true, especially those kind of
Northeast lacrosse programs like Boston College,Syracuse lacrosse. The ACC conference is a
much more elite lacrosse conference for thatsport. Soccer yep, Basketball, yep.

(45:02):
The ACC has been just kind oflike not that they've always won the
national title, but they've had themarquee matchups, if you will, the
long standing duke with coach k andCarolina under Roy Williams prior to that Dean
Smith anyway, And of course infootball, you know, Clemson's been dominant

(45:22):
of late FSU prior to that.Miami, though not in so much dominance
since joining the ACC. Miami's dominancewas prior to that, prior to joining
the ACC. But that said,it's going to be interesting to see what

(45:43):
the future is what do you thinkit's going to look like? Do you
see two super conferences? Yeah?I do. It's I it really feels
it. Doesn't that delute the valueof your big tan the rivalries? Oh
yeah, you'll lose out on there'sa growing likely hood that you'll lose out
on those smaller rivalries. You knowhow you tune into like some random Saturday

(46:07):
in October and you're like, oh, this is the Battle for the jug
of Milk from with some like tworandom smaller schools whatever, but like for
them, Paul Bunyan's acts, Yeah, Paul Bunyan's acts. You know,
um, the the Illa Buck,you know, like it's it's just a

(46:28):
it's a statue. It's a statueof a turtle. And the thing about
it is every school has its OhioState versus Michigan rival Yeah there when it's
all of those other games that havebeen played for a long time that matter
more in the Big Ten and theSEC than the other conferences. That's right,
The oldest rivalries are in those two. So it's weird that these two

(46:52):
conferences are kind of leading the waywhen the member schools, the fan bases
of many of those members school leswould be losing their highly localized, highly
regional college football rivalries. But they'rethey you know, like Iowa will travel

(47:15):
to USC. That's that's like athat's like a big win for them to
be able to get to that Californiamarket. But yeah, they only want
to They only want the big guysthat eat beef. And yeah, yeah,
they're only gonna they're only gonna everrecruit corn fed guys from Iowa anyway.
So anyway, but yeah, Idon't know. I'm split on it.

(47:39):
I don't want to see the smallrivalries go, but I don't know.
The riding seems on the wall.And you talk about a convoluted mess
when it comes to bowl games andor playoffs, oh man, because you
can't put all the schools in twoconferences. It just you can't. You

(48:00):
can't fit them and make it work. It's not viable. It'll be interesting
to watch. Twenty minutes after thehour, come back with the news,
big stories in the press box,and more in the Morning Show with Preston
Scott. This is the Morning Showwith Preston Scott. Tuesday on the program

(48:22):
thirty six minutes after the hours,stupid criminals in just a little bit manly
minute third hour of the program,A little more behind the scenes on Tucker
Carlson's departure from his biographer. That'sinteresting. We'll hear some sound mentioned last

(48:47):
hour. One of the big storiesin the press box. And I don't
know what you do with this.The signs have all been there. You
and I have chronicled the decline ofFox News. Once the a list for

(49:08):
news reporting. The news dead smackdab in the middle. People would say,
Oh, it's just conservative news.No, it's just news now.
The hosts are conservative sort of,some more than others. But that's what
a host can be. They canbe one way or the other. And

(49:30):
I don't care, but news shouldalways be unbiased. Well but, and
I've heard this lazy argument made foryears. A person's personal biases always come
out and they're reporting, not ifthey're good. Sorry, if they do,
you're a bad reporter. You arenot good at your job if your

(49:55):
biases come out of your news stories. I know how to do news.
I've done news. I started doingnews when I was in high school because
I could pass journalism. As ahigh school student, I knew what it

(50:19):
meant to write news. Properly andstill know and I can spot bad news
writing in a minute. But we'vetalked about the fact that, for example,
Fox News incorrectly refers to a transgenderedwoman by the pronouns she, her,

(50:43):
etc. That's wrong. You don'tdo that. But there were signs
long before all this wokeness, butnow comes this. According to The Daily
Signal, which again the news outletfor Heritage Foundation, Fox News employees who

(51:05):
are allowed to use bathrooms that alignwith their gender identity rather than biological sex
permitted to dress in alignment with theirpreferred gender. They also must be addressed
by their preferred name and pronouns inthe Workplace company Handbook dated January twenty twenty
one. A copy was shared withthe Daily Signal. Fox offers to help

(51:30):
employees come up with quote a workplacetransition plan to ease their gender transition at
work. We have seen the pronounissue. We've seen terms like gender affirming
care inside Fox News stories, andwe've stepped backing on what what what is

(51:52):
this? The Daily Signal actually gotto talk to some Fox employees. We'll
share what they had to say nextright here in the Morning Show with Preston
Scott. It's the Morning Show withTrustin Scott's on News Radio one hundred point

(52:13):
seven u f LA. Again,I don't know what you do with this
information. For me, it justacts as and informing thought that when I

(52:47):
read a story from Fox News,I need to take into account that Fox
has gone woke. Not everybody there, I'm quite certain, but Fox has

(53:07):
fallen victim to its own I don'tknow. I don't even know how you
describe it. I mean, Iguess it starts with the Murdoch boys,
Lachlan in particular, because I thinkthe other Murdoch boy really doesn't have anything
to do with it. I thinkhe kind of disavowed himself from the whole

(53:30):
thing because he didn't like the directionit was going, I think, and
I guess Lachlan was pretty much leftin charge. Now. The employees,
current and former, spoke under thecondition of anonymity, quoting They want you
to think it's this place that supportstraditionally conservative values. This is a former

(53:53):
producer for Tucker Carlson day Tonight,but in reality they're pushing this nonsense behind
the scenes. A source who stillworks at Fox said that after Carlson's show,
was canceled in April. Quote theproducers for the new eight pm Fox

(54:14):
News program, we're told not tobash mulvaney, and that the directive came
from high executives. Now, letme stress in reporting, it wouldn't be
the reporter's job to bash mulveny.It's not. That's what a column is
for, that's what an op edis for. That's what a host can

(54:37):
do. A reporter does not havethat luxury. A host takes what a
reporter reports and then offers his orher view of it, his or her
analysis, his or her opinion ofit. But reporters shouldn't have to ever
be told, don't bash, don'tcheerly, don't do any report the facts

(55:00):
boom boom. For example, Dylanmulvaney is a guy who is a transgendered
woman, and when hired by budLight and made part of a campaign,
bud Light sales have declined since thattime. That's reporting. That's straight level
reporting. It doesn't take a proor a negative stance against it. That's

(55:21):
factual reporting. Referring to Dylan mulvaneyas her that's opinionated because factually he's a
guy. So if you want toavoid the him her pronoun thing. Just
avoid using pronouns, then use thereal names. Some more comments here.

(55:45):
The Fox Employee Handbook promises that thecompany is dedicated to expanding and strengthening efforts
to sustain a more inclusive work environment. That's from the handbook. Employees can
see company guidelines, policies, etc. Quoting from one policy, employees who

(56:07):
are transitioning their gender have the rightto be open about their transition if they
choose, if they so choose,and to work an environment free of harassment,
discrimination or retaliation, without fear ofconsequence or transphobia for living openly.
Fox News devotes hours of programming tooattacking woke companies, said one source.

(56:31):
But ironically foxes as woke as therest of them. Viewers would be astonished
to find out what the company islike, or maybe we wouldn't. Now
it's they. They can do whateverthey want. It's their company. I,

(56:52):
for one, continue to believe thatfor young people, gender confusion is
to be counseled and met with helpand wisdom. If as an adult someone

(57:15):
moves in that direction, I personallybelieve it's a sign of mental illness,
still deserving of treatment. Of fairness. But if I'm an employer, I
wouldn't be hiring that person because that'sa sign of hiring somebody who has a

(57:36):
mental illness in the workplace. Butthat's just me. It's The Morning Show
with Preston Scott. Oh, somebodymay not have heard that we view all
of you as essential workers. Rememberthat during COVID, I actually still have

(58:01):
somewhere here my essential worker badge.Oh wow, you were given one.
Yeah, that that I was toshow to law enforcement when I was coming
into work when everyone was supposed tobe locked down because I was considered an

(58:22):
essential worker. Your permission slip.Sweet Lord, that's surreal. It is
so because I happened to see avideo and it happened to be about these
YouTubers. They were traveling during COVIDand it was at the height of things
in twenty twenty, and my wifeand I were sitting there watching it and

(58:46):
I was like, Honey, Idon't know if I can take this because
it was just time traveling three yearsago, and I was like, I
can't relive this, this is thisis too much. Yeah, it's crazy
to think that that there were thingslike that. But I again remind you

(59:08):
that in our mind, all ofyou truck drivers were essential workers. I've
heard people describe twenty twenty as like, you know, the word apocalypse means
like like an awakening, you know, like it was a type of apocalypse
where eyes were just wide open,like what in the world is going on?

(59:30):
And so that's that's how I feel. And so when I said were
they some were, I mean somesome were well, but look at the
deception. Yeah, well some wereopened, and I would say, like
mine were even more wide awake towhat was really going on. But again,
just look at the people wearing masksto this day. People wearing masks

(59:53):
today are like those Japanese soldiers onthese remote islands who thought the war was
still going on and they're still fightingdefending their their hole. Yeah. I
feel like for the last thirty fiveyears, that's the equivalent coming out at
night looking foraging for food. Yeah. In nineteen seventy one, Yeah,
guys were found in jungles like inthe sixties and stuff. It was crazy.

(01:00:16):
Anyway, real quickly, here policeDepartment, Charles County, Maryland gets
a phone call. They're out patrolling. While they're patrolling, they see these
two cars, and they notice thatthey had been reported stolen. While that's

(01:00:36):
going on, they get a callinto nine one one that two cars matching
the description of those two cars justinvolved in going into a business and stealing
a bunch of merchandise, the typicalgrab and run thing that's going on across
the country. Right, So,long story short, they track them down

(01:01:00):
to get him. There's some juveniles, there's some young adults, and then
they're summer released on bond and soforth. So the car that picks him
up stolen. Someone comes to pickhim up in another stolen car. You

(01:01:22):
just you can't make it up.Stupid is a stupid does Mama Gump?
Was right time for a manly minute. Remember mail by birth, man by
choice. These are things to teachyour son. Now, this one's gonna
be controversial. Oh boy, yep, yep, I'm going I'm going where

(01:01:44):
some will say, how dare you, sir? No young boy should be
taught how to iron a shirt?And I say, bollocks, No,
you need to teach your son howto iron a shirt. Maybe on a
road trip somewhere. Shirts get wrinkledin the luggage. It's unavoidable. They

(01:02:07):
will get wrinkled unless you have ashirt that doesn't wrinkle, and those shirts
sometimes feel kind of funny, theyjust feel different. But anyway, teach
your son how to properly iron ashirt, making sure that they understand that
a shirt that's not been fully driedwill be easier to iron because of the
moisture in there. It acts aslike a little bit of a steam.

(01:02:28):
Or teach them how to use awater spritzer. I would use to sealed
water myself and add a little moistureto the area needing to be ironed.
That way, you can look atyour son and say, you can iron
a shirt, young man, andthat makes you a man. Besides,
more women don't know how to doit now than ever. Just saying just
saying, second hour, they wantto show with Preston's guy. Good morning.

(01:03:09):
That's Grant Allen over there, Studioone AM. Here is Studio one
B. And um, we're we'remaking progress on the phones. We're edging
closer, but we still have somethings to work out. So our team's

(01:03:29):
working hard, very hard, longhours and I'm sadly the bearer bad news.
Uh uh, so we're getting there. Um, do we know any

(01:03:50):
more about Tucker Carlson's adventure on Twitter. He hasn't announced anything yet, but
there was a little bit of newsthat developed in the last twenty four forty
eight hours about Tucker and why hemay or may not have I mean,
what short canned from. Did heget Did he get fired? My guess

(01:04:15):
is no, because that probably wouldhave triggered all kinds of things in his
contract. Did he quit? Maybethey might have pulled one of those provisions
inside the contract that says, well, you know, this says you have
to follow the editorial guidance of thecompany or something, you know what I

(01:04:40):
mean, something like that, Andhe said, well, under those circumstances,
then we can just leave and partways. It seems to me that
everybody's saying that he was pushed outthe door. Is that your personal opinion?
Yeah, it seems that way,especially after his tweet yesterday. Well,

(01:05:01):
let's give a listen to this fella, see what he has to say.
He'll introduce himself in the clip anyminute, now, right about now,
anytime, we'll reboot this here,let's let's try it again. Hey,

(01:05:28):
guys, Chubbick Moore Here, I'mthe author of a new biography about
Tucker Carlson titled Tucker. I havespent the last year researching and writing this
book, and during that time I'vegotten to know Tucker, his family,
his friends, and his staff verywell. In fact, I've gotten to
know Tucker the person, not thecaricature that his enemies try to portray.

(01:05:49):
I was working closely with Tucker whenhe was taken off the air by Fox,
and as some of you know,I was also a regular on his
show, and I happened to bea guest on the final episode of the
show, which was on April twentyfirst. I've also seen the monologue that
Tucker planned to deliver on Monday,April twenty fourth, before his show was

(01:06:09):
abruptly taken off the air. Thatmonologue dealt with, among other things,
investigations around January sixth, and particularlyRay Epps, the only person captured on
video inciting people to violence at theCapitol that day, and allegedly an FBI
informant who still has not been arrestedor charged. Ironically, a good part

(01:06:30):
of the monologue also dealt with thepeople and forces that are trying to silence
him, like AOC and others ingovernment. It has now been reported that
his firing was a condition demanded byDominion as part of the settlement with Fox.
Although Dominion has denied this, mysources have intimate knowledge of the situation,
and they have assured me even beforethis news leaked that that is in

(01:06:53):
fact the truth. If that istrue, it would mean that a small
group of people who have a controllinginterest in Dominion have managed to silence what
is arguably the most important and influentialconservative voice in the country, possibly until
after the next presidential election. KnowingTucker's I do, I'm confident that he

(01:07:14):
will not be silenced, as I'msure all of you are as well.
If you're interested in knowing more,if you want to know about who Tucker
is, about his history, hispassions, and what motivates him. Again,
the title of book is Tucker andit's available for pre order now at
Yeah you can order the book.And he talks a little bit about that,
but Wow, makes some interesting pointsthere, talk about the ramifications and

(01:07:40):
an idea that I have that mightbe the best fit for Tucker Carlson.
Next on The Morning Show with PrestonScott. This is the Morning Show with
Preston Scott, Tucker Carlson was letgo as part of the dominion. Now,

(01:08:11):
why what's where's the where's the intersection? Here? Help me out?
And I mean, and I'm askingthe two biggest stories that he was dealing
with, Fiser and January sixth.So the only potential intersection is January sixth,

(01:08:46):
because that then places a spotlight backon what did or did not go
wrong with voting systems operated by demand? Right, I'm just thinking out loud
here, as they say, justspitballing a little bit. Am I missing

(01:09:09):
something? So Tucker gets the bootbecause he wants to talk about on that
Monday show ray Epps. I don'tbelieve for one second Ray Epps was not,

(01:09:30):
if not directly employed by was infact funded by the FBI in some
former fashion. No chance, there'sno chance a guy with his recorded involvement
is not the first thrown in jailand thrown then into prison after some ridiculous

(01:09:55):
plea deal. There's just no chance. You have to understand guys like Tucker,
because of their independence, they getaccess to information from people inside of

(01:10:18):
places like the FBI and so forth. The same reason why someone likes Steve
Stewart at Tallas, who reports,gets information. People inside trust them with
the data, with the knowledge,with the specifics, with the papers,
with the details, that they willreport it, that they will perform due

(01:10:41):
diligence. Here's where you look forthis document, Here's where you look for
those details. Here's the dates forthose emails. This is what you need
to ask for, and then turnsthem loose because they trust them. Tucker
Carlson developed that the old look Fiser. There's no doubt in my mind that

(01:11:05):
Fiser played a role in this insome form or fashion, because they were
they were covering the story. JamesO'Keefe paid a price for Fiser, no
doubt about it. But the realthing for Tucker was January sixth, all

(01:11:27):
the videos January sixth, and thenthey stopped. And remember we theorized he
got he got put into a corner, don't show anymore, and he decided
that he was just going to startdigging in another angle. And that was
Ray Epps. Now, as muchas I think Twitter is, you know

(01:11:51):
whatever, if that's what you wantto do, go ahead. If you've
reached a deal with Elon Musk,he's gonna leave you alone. Fine,
You know what he really ought todo. He had to do his own
radio program from noon to three.He is the only person that I think

(01:12:17):
right now is positioned to potentially grabRussia's entire old audience. Think about it,
a different show, different component,not as much analyzing as reporting,

(01:12:45):
but think of Russia's reach and whatTucker Carlson could do with that. Sixteen
minutes after the hour in the MorningShow with Preston Scott, Okay, this

(01:13:24):
is just gross. I can't doanything about it, but I gotta talk
about this story. This guy namedCory Collins c a u r e.

(01:13:45):
Y. Sorry Rollins. Cory Rollins, twenty six years old. Last Wednesday,
driving along Grovetown, George, abouttwelve miles west of Augusta, spotted
a twelve year old boy outside shootingsome hoops, stopped his car, struck
up a conversation with the boy.Rollins then showed the boy a picture of

(01:14:11):
feet, which he had on acell phone just feat When Rollins asked the
boy whether his feet looked like thoseseen in the picture, the boy replied
no. Then Rollins asked the boyto show him his feet. The boy

(01:14:31):
refused and ran into his house totell his mom. Mom heard stories about
a local former teacher's aide who hadrecently been arrested for expressing interest in seeing
a boy's feet. She did alittle Internet search and came upon low and
Behold the name and picture of thisyoung man, mister Rollins. She showed

(01:14:57):
her son Rollins picture. The boysaid, Yep, that's the guy.
Mom called the police, rested Rollins, charged him with attempting to commit a
felony see At the time of theincident with the twelve year old, Rollins
was out on bond. Less thantwo weeks earlier, he had been released

(01:15:24):
from custody in nearby Richmond County,where he faces eight counts of child molestation
connection with two sets of allegations.The first related to a story that the
twelve year old mother had twelve yearold's mother had heard that Rollins had been
accused of inappropriately interacting with a youngboy's feet. In January, Rollins went

(01:15:45):
to Urban Air Adventure Park in Augusta, placed himself inside a fenced area designated
for children, began interacting with aseven year old boy, talking with him,
tickling his feet. He asked theboy to remove his socks and began
kissing and licking the boy's feet andsucking his toes right there in the park.

(01:16:10):
At the same time, he wasworking as a physical educational pair of
professional at Glen Hills Elementary School.After the allegation allegations of footlicking surfaced,
he was placed on administrative lead byRichmond County Schools. He resigned his position

(01:16:30):
a few weeks later while the schooland law enforcement of continued an investigation.
Other allegations came to light. He'sbeen accused of molesting four young girls whom
he met through his job at theschool. The mother of one of the
alleged victims claimed that Rollin's abuse nearlydrove her eleven year old daughter to suicide.

(01:16:56):
After a grand jury indicted him onthose molestation charges, prosecutors requested he
would he'd be denied bond, butJudge Amanda Heath denied the request set his
bond at thirty five thousand dollars,which means he can come up with thirty

(01:17:18):
five hundred and be out on thecondition that he adhered to a curfew,
avoid contact with any of the allegedvictims, avoid returning to the locations where
the molestations took place. Alleged thathe attended all subsequent court proceedings. He

(01:17:40):
was out on bond when he approachedthe twelve year old boy. He wasn't
a previous victim, but now he'sin custody. Couple things. Number one,
that's what happens with judges that don'tdo their job. This young man

(01:18:01):
is sick. First, Let's setaside the footlicking, toe kissing and toe
sucking. Right, yeah, Imean Grant just buried his head in his
hands. Let's set that aside.He is potentially a child molester. What

(01:18:33):
do you think is going to happento him when he gets to prison if
he goes there after a fair trial. This is just absurdity we are finding
ourselves with daily in the news,Back with more of the Morning Show covered

(01:19:02):
a lot of stories today on theprogram tomorrow. Inflation, intrastrates, and
delinquency. The first two are leadingup to the last. Lots and lots
of people are becoming delinquent on theirdebt. The signs are all there and

(01:19:25):
they're not Goodmorrow. We'll kick thataround a little bit, as well as
everything else going on in the news. Athena Ryan in CIF North Coast Section
Meet of Champions for the California HighSchool Athletic Association finished second place in the

(01:19:54):
varsity girls sixteen hundred meter run.Top two qualified for the state championships.
Oh dah, I forgot. Athenais a guy. I wasn't expecting that

(01:20:15):
I dropped like seventeen seconds on myseason's best in the past two weeks.
Really, how about that seventeen secondsboy competing for a birth in the state
championships. That'll motivate you, now, walt it. But just for a

(01:20:40):
second, let's think about Ellie Buckley. You see, because of a guy
competing and finishing just behind the firstplace runner, just saying just behind,
and amazingly just put in a kickat the end that bested their personal best

(01:21:01):
by seventeen seconds this season. Wow, what a coincidence. Other parents are
saying, boy, look at thatkick final hundred yards just blew everybody away.

(01:21:21):
So Athena gets to go to thestate championships where potentially there's college recruiters,
potential opportunities for who knows what rightin the future. And poor Ellie
finished third to a guy, andso she won't get to compete in the

(01:21:45):
girls championships, but he will.I know some of you are saying,
okay, Press, we get it, and to that I will reply,

(01:22:09):
no, you don't. Your peersthat have kids competing don't get it.
And I know that because it's nothappening yet. What's that don't compete?

(01:22:33):
If everybody competing had said no,we are not running against a boy,
if all of the swimmers had saidno, we are not swimming against him,

(01:22:59):
we would not be here. Butwhat's happening is it's getting worse and
worse and worse. It will eventuallystop, but not before the damage is
done to people like Ellie Buckley.Guess what, she doesn't get a do

(01:23:25):
over, she will not be inthe state championships competing. And oh,
by the way, however big thepodium was, whether it was for three
or four or five or six runners, someone was left off that podium because
a guy occupied that spot. Fortyminutes after the hour Morning Show with Preston

(01:23:48):
Scott, The Morning Show with PrestonScott quickly go through the other big stories
in the press box. Box Newshas gone woke. They have their own

(01:24:10):
diversity and inclusion standards inside Fox News. That's in a handbook that has made
its way to the public they're probablya little disappointed in that, the phony
ridiculousness, But it explains all ofthe things that we've highlighted, the bad
reporting on gender issues that's not basedon But see, this is how it

(01:24:38):
starts. When you give in,like on COVID vaccines, like on glbal
warming, when you give in onthese little areas that in the case of
COVID, you know, the changingof the definition of a vaccine whatever,
No, it matters when you startto say that this guy is a girl

(01:25:02):
and refer to him as her.You have people being injured damaged as a
result of it. Well, butwhat about them? What about them?
They're choosing their own delusion. They'rewelcome to it, but we don't have
to embrace it. I heard abouta lady that went to a school board

(01:25:24):
meeting and she demanded that they referredto her as her majesty. She was
trying to make a point. Youcan call yourself anything you want. I
can call myself the president of theUnited States. But see how that gets

(01:25:46):
me into the White House. It'snot gonna work. And if I stay
with that, you know what's gonnahappen to me. I'm gonna end up
in a mental hospital. Why becauseit can prove that I'm not. But
we don't want to go there,and it's to our own demise. NAACPS

(01:26:13):
decided to attack Florida. Good luckwith that. I had someone right in
on that one. I mentioned thatthe chairman of the board of directors is
a Florida resident and that the chairmanof the Republican Party offered to help him
move out of the state. Soonwrote in and said not to mention.

(01:26:35):
Therefore, HBCUs in Florida, multiplepro sports franchises that have made hundreds,
if not thousands, of black multimillionaires, as well as thousands of black
students of all types of scholarships atevery college and university in Florida. Members
of Congress, members of the StateHouse, the State Senate, whatever NAACP

(01:27:04):
wants to wants to go there,they're they're they're welcome to it. Meanwhile,
the lie that is black lives matterlie, because it's based on a
lie, and all lives matter.Eighty eight percent plunge in donations. It's

(01:27:27):
incredible. Here's my question, whoare the twelve percent? Who are those
that are giving the twelve percent thathave given nine point three million dollars in
the fiscal year ending June twenty second, compared to eighty million or so the
previous in twenty twenty. Who's giventhat? What is wrong with you?

(01:27:55):
My guess is their corporate shakedowns.That's my guess. Borrowing from the Al
Sharpton Jesse Jackson playbook. By theway, where's Jesse Whoopie Goldberg? You
know she's She gets out and offersthe same ridiculous, bigoted attacks on US

(01:28:21):
Senator Tim Scott that have been leveledagainst Clarence Thomas. So, I guess
if you are conservative, even thoughthe culture as a whole, Black cultural
standards are conservative by nature, ifnot by nurture, calling these people any

(01:28:43):
number of names is just fine andnot bigoted, A racist. I don't
get it, people, I donot get it. Powerline Blog points out
that scientific method works as follows.Number One, come up with a hypothesis.

(01:29:13):
You look for the implications of thehypothesis. What will be the case
if the hypothesis is true, willnot be the case if the hypothesis is
wrong. You carry out observations,run experiments, find out if the hypothesis
is supported by the facts or not. If you find that a fact is
implied by the hypothesis is indeed thecase, it provides support for the hypothesis.

(01:29:40):
If you find that the facts donot support it, then it's not
supported. In fact, it's noteven remotely conclusive. Back in two thousand,
guy named doctor David Weiiner predicted thatquoting, within a few years,
winter snowfall will become a very rareand exciting event. Children just aren't going

(01:30:06):
to know what snow is within afew years. How snowy was it this
past season? Would you be surprisedto know that there are still places right
now that are receiving snow in thecontinental United States? In fact, there's

(01:30:31):
a fresh three inches that have fallenon May twenty second, yesterday in Silverton
Mountain, Colorado, May twenty second, and I'm sure there'll be some more
snow. I seem to remember blizzardsand some pretty significant snow events. In

(01:30:59):
fact, I think actor Jeremy Renneralmost got killed in a snowplow accident,
Am I not? I think Igot that right. Yeah, Just so
you know, there has been nodecline in snowfall cover in the northern hemisphere
in the last fifty years. Justsaying so much for our children and grandchildren,

(01:31:26):
not ever ever seeing snow. Broughtto you by Baronet Heating and Air.
It's the Morning Show one on WFLAlook back at the radio program.
In one hundred and eighty seconds orlass than double ACP President says Democrats must
get rid of the Santis once andfor all. Whoo, if that language

(01:31:53):
had been used against Barack Obama,someone be arrested, someone would be get
talked to by the Secret Service.Don't doubt me on that assertion. That's
exactly what would happen. But nownow the NAACP can say racist, bigoted,

(01:32:17):
attacking violence in citing things all daylong. Can you imagine if Trump
had said something like that about Obama? Could you imagine if any white Republican
had said something like that about Obama? We gotta get rid of him once

(01:32:40):
and for all. They're calling foran assassination. See that's the difference.
That's the nonsense that conservatives have toput up with. The Only good news
is that donations to Black Lives Matterhave plunged eighty eight percent. That's very

(01:33:01):
good news. Leaked policy exposes FoxNews as woke box news, as an
entity as a business entity as Woketransgender California high school runners. Second place
finish pushed the girl out of herplace in the state championships. Reminder,

(01:33:25):
prove to me you care, Gettogether with parents and make sure that if
something like this ever happens to yourgirls program, none of you will compete.
It's got to stop, and that'sthe only way it's going to happen.
State Department offering your taxpayer funded freetherapy to personnel triggered by an unintentional
glitch pers little pronounce back with youtomorrow.
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