Ep. 5112: More COVID News Vindication - podcast episode cover

Ep. 5112: More COVID News Vindication

Mar 11, 20242 hr 31 min
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Episode description

This is the full episode of The Morning Show with Preston Scott for Mon. Mar. 11, 2024. 

Our guest today includes Sal Nuzzo from Consumers Defense.  

Follow the show on Twitter @TMSPrestonScott.

Check out Preston’s latest blog by going to wflafm.com/preston
Check out Grant Allen’s blog by going to wflafm.com/grantallen.

Listen live to Preston from 6 – 9 a.m. ET and 5 – 8 a.m. CT!
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Follow WFLA Tallahassee on Twitter @WFLAFM and WFLA Panama City @wflapanamacity and like us on Facebook at @wflafm and @WFLAPanamaCity.

Transcript

Welcome morning, friends, and welcome to the morning show with me. Pruston's got I'm Preston, He's Grant Allen. It's Monday, March eleventh, and I'm sorry. Time change happened on Sunday morning, yesterday morning, bright and early, real early, and it hurts. It just does. And this one is painful when we lose that hour. It's tough for the I didn't sleep well last night. I was just restless all night. It was Uh,

it'll change quickly for me. I can't speak for you, but anyway, if you're feeling the pain of losing that hour, I understand I'd be all in favor of just leaving it one way or the other. I don't care which, just leave it anyway. We welcome you to the broadcast with some scripture from Deuteronomy seven, verse nine. Know therefore that the Lord your God is God, the faithful God, who keeps covenant and steadfast love with

those who love him, and keep his commandments to a thousand generations. As I read that scripture, here's what comes to my mind, unchanging faithfulness. Unlike you and me, where our moods are often dependent on sort of the side of bed we get up on whether we're gonna, you know, have a good day or bad day. We kind of make that decision on our own. God is faithful through all generations, and that's why it's so important,

I think, to impart that into your children early and often. It will serve them all the days of their life, their children, their grandchildren, and thus your descendants going through the generations, one thousand generations. God has and his and will always be faithful. Ten minutes after the hour, it's Monday, look at the legislative session in total with Salnuzoh of Consumer's Defense.

Doctor Joe will not be with us today, so I will share some medical news that I think is important, big stories in the press box, and so much more stick around. It is the Morning Show with Preston Scott. This is the Morning Show with Dreston Scott. We've made Victor laugh all right. Twelve past Monday. Hope you had a nice weekend. Weird weather weekend, just a weird weather weekend, and we get that this time of year. It was nice to have the rain wash a little pollen down.

But anyway, March eleventh, huh. Inside the American Patriots Almanac eighteen eighty eight, one of the worst blizzards in US history hits the Northeast, killing some four hundred. Always remember this, cold kills more than heat by far. And so as you look at these events, and I mean, obviously you know eighteen eighty eight, we weren't dealing with well insulated homes. They

insulated the best they could. A lot of people used cob a mixture of sort of mud, clay, straw, sometimes horse hair, whatever they could find. Then they would dry, they'd put it in between the boards. Nineteen eighteen, the first US cases of the Spanish flu are reported, an epidemic that kills six hundred thousand Americans tens of millions worldwide. Nineteen forty one, President Roosevelt signs a lend lease bill provides war supplies to countries fighting the

Axis Powers. Nineteen forty one. See, we weren't in yet. It was it was December that Japan attacked Pearl Harbor. I don't were we at war with Germany yet when that happened. I mean, did Japan nudge US into the war against Germany? I don't know. I should know that. Nineteen sixty NASA launches Pioneer five, one of the first probes to explore the solar system, and on this date in two thousand and two. So we've got September eleventh, then October one month, November, December, January,

February, March. Six months later. Two columns of light beam skyward from ground zero in New York tribute to September eleventh, two thousand and one. I still love the fact that I think they call it World Trade Center one, that that was rebuilt, that the antenna at the top of it tops out at seventeen hundred and seventy six feet, giant bird at the bad guys, love it, love it, Love it all right. Over the weekend kind of a mixed bag. I think FSU baseball kept winning. I don't

think they've lost yet. Hm. Now the ACC's loaded this year, so and I mean, we're not playing the sisters of the poor. We're playing respectable baseball programs. There are a couple of you know, gimmes thrown in there, no doubt every team does that, but we're beating legitimate teams. So it'll be interesting once conference play gets going. Because the ACC stat this year women's basketball got boat raced by NC State. One thing's for certain when

they don't have everybody shooting, well, it's not a pretty sight. They just they don't have enough strength around the basket. They have to just they have to be able to make shots to stay in games. And against NC State, which they lost in overtime, they just got blown out. And then FSU men won the season finale at home against Miami. That feels so good for them to beat the Canes again. That just keeps happening. In Matthew Cleveland, bless your little heart. You went to a team that went

to the Final four last year. Thought you were going to be with a team that was going to be and yeah, they're they're worse than FSU. Whoops. All right, we'll come back with more here in the Morning Show. Research assistants of the Morning Show Why varied tastes in news stories? I rely on that. I don't tell anybody, hey, just look for this

specific story. Now. If I get somebody that says, hey, I heard X, Y and Z, I will then say, well find that, find a couple of accounts of that, and we'll have something to talk about. But generally speaking, I don't ask the research assistants. I don't even ask the supervisor or the lead research assistant. I don't ask either of them, just focus on specific things. No no, no, no, no no no. I want them to go where their heart and their interests

lead them. And so when when one of the research supervisors of the radio program actually sent me a story from the Metro in the UK, it just made me laugh because I thought to myself and then in fact did ask, what in the world are you doing on that site? I mean, what draws you there? This is the headline The foods that make you more or less attractive according to science. Now keep in mind this is written in the UK for readers in the UK, and it starts with this. If you're

a sucker for a full English then it's good news for you. The breakfast of Kings makes men more attractive to the opposite sex. That's funny. Sausage, bacon, toast, beans, eggs, hash browns, tomatoes, the full works. Yeah, the Brits throw beans on a lot of things, don't they, I guess, so beans and toast sounds wonderful in it. On the other hand, those who opt for the continental breakfast, the croissants, the waffles, pancakes, pastries, muffins, cereals are less attractive to

women less cultured. I guess what's so interesting though, is not just that the full English makes men more attractive, says the article, Guys who indulge in an afternoon snack like a bag of crisps otherwise known as chips, yeah, and sweet dairy products like yogurt it's may may appear more attractive as well. However, the bad news for women because eating these same snacks in the

afternoon makes them less attractive. Talk about a double standard. The study was conducted by a French team at the University of Montpellier and it consisted of one hundred and four French men and women, so it's not exactly exhaustive. But keep in mind, now, when the when the Brits say, for example, biscuits, they're talking cookies. Biscuits are cookies, they're they're the That

is pretty much it. But the idea here that eating a specific type of breakfast loaded in carbs, yeah, makes you appealing to the Now here's the question would that be true in America? Would would a woman over there looking at some guy woofing down eggs and bacon and sausage and hash browns man going with some baked goods on top of that some toast. Would that girl go oh yeah. I I have a hard time believing that any kind of scarfing down food adds to an attractive value at all, because like, no one

looks and be like like, oh gosh, what are you doing? Man? Like I'm civilized. Yeah, my mind immediately goes to a routine. It might have been a Saturday Night Live from back in the in the day. We're talking the late seventies, eighties, and and a guy named Marty Feldman, and Marty Feldman many of you know the name, and you haven't heard the name in forever. He was igor in Young Frankenstein, the bulgy eyed, little little actor, big old bulgy eyes. And he's at a

bar and he's stirring. He's got his swizzle stick and he's stirring a drink and he's making eyes at a lady next to him at the bar. And the lady is way out of his league, if you know what I'm saying.

I mean way, And he's got these bulgy little eyes and he's just ratty hair, and he's looking at her like, hey, how you doing, huh huh, And he takes the sip of his drink and turns to her, and unbeknownst to him, the swizzle stick was stuck in his nose and it was just like it just busted the whole scene and it was just a beautiful moment. She walks off, disgusted, and yeah, I don't know why, but when I think of these food encounters and that, it's

somehow I just don't think women like Grant. I don't think women. I didn't mean it like that. I like Grant. I agree with you, he says, I don't think that women are looking at guys going, oh yeah, look at the way he eats those eggs. Yeah, I don't think so and eggs. Oh, don't do that. Don't tease me. Are you going with bacon too? Yeah? No, I'm not buying that. Twenty seven minutes after the hour, But you can think it. You can think it, Fellas, go for it. Yes, the oscars happened

last night. It made a sound, but I'm not sure anybody heard it. Morning everybody, Welcome Morning Show with Preston Scott and Preston Big Stories in the press Box, brought to you by Restore Carpet Caarentyle. I don't care. Sorry, Look, I I enjoy an occasional movie, but I don't care. The second the Oscars decide to not be a NonStop bashing of conservative values and they have the vile, unfunny Jimmy Kimmel off of the rostrum, then maybe I'll pay attention, but nah, not worth it. Chris Hansen

was on this program. We had him. He's the longtime host of the program To Catch a Predator. He hosts Takedown. The show To Catch a Predator followed police sting operations targeting pedophiles. You might remember. His latest project led him to encounter migrants who were soliciting women and others who solicited themselves. Spoke with Fox News about it. He said, the idea of migrant crime

is not a hoax, contrary to what MSNBC is reporting. He said, on the human trafficking side, there were two hundred and twenty eight people arrested in a week. Ten percent were illegal immigrants. Two of the women after the arrest told investigators they had to earn three thousand dollars a week to pay the cartels who smuggled them into the country three thousand a week for how long

do you think that debt's ever paid. It's staggering that we have, for example, a federal judge dismissing a lawsuit filed by states against the Biden administration bringing in tens of thousands of illegal immigrants into the country from forced the countries. US District Judge Drew Tipton said that the plaintiffs have not proven that Texas has suffered an injury due to the program and lack of standing. In reaching this conclusion, the court does not address the lawfulness of the program. The

court may only reach that question after plaintiffs. Plaintiff has established that it has standing. Texas hasn't proved injury from illegal immigration. That is absurdity. Back in January, Biden announced allowing up to thirty thousand people from Cuba, Nicaragua, Haiti, and Venezuela to enter the United States each month, and they're giving them mass parole staffs, which is, according to Ken Paxton, the Attorney General of Texas, an abuse of power. However, I do have

good news. I'll get to that next forty minutes past the hour, just getting started here on the Morning Show with Preston Scott. All Right, we're gonna bring the good news on an uptick here for just a moment. You might remember New York Attorney General Letitia James. She's the one who's obsessed with Donald Trump. I think she's got a crush on him. I think she just wants to be in the same room with him. The only way she can do it to satisfy her desires is to see him in court as often

as possible. She sent a seasoned assist letter to NASA County, New York. You might remember an executive order by the county executive, Bruce Blakeman to protect women's sports. We talked about that story and Letitia James lost her brain. She just lost it, called it transphobic. Of course, name calling is what happens when the liberals don't have a point, they just resort to name calling. And so here's what's happened next. Some parents in Nassau County

and Blakeman are suing Letitia James. I love it. The executive order stops the bullying of women and girls by transgender males who have many outlets to compete without putting the safety and security of females in danger. In NASA, we will continue to fight for the female's right to safe secure, to be safe and secure and have a level playing field to compete. Thank you, thank you. But here's another win. You remember that golf tour that we told

you about, the nx XT Golf Tour for women. It's a it's a it's a low level women's professional tour and a guy named Haley Davidson winning tournaments and just blowing out the field. Well, the tour held a private poll of its members and then changed its its bylaws. You have to be a biologically born female to compete, and so Haley is out. Yay, They're kicking a guy out of a women's professional golf league. Hallelujah. It's progress. Granted, it's it's across the it's across the way. It's in the

I want to say the Australia, New Zealand part of the world. But it's a beginning. We just need this to happen and more and more. The Olympics are coming up this summer. How many guys are going to compete in women's categories and what will NBC do in its coverage of it. They're gonna only put the Megan Rapinos of the world out there? Are they gonna let Riley Gaines have a say. By the way, Alaska Air has another

problem. They the airlines that had the blown out door in flight. Thankfully, only a kid lost his his shirt and a bunch of people lost phones when the door plug got pulled out of the flight. Last week, a flight from Los Cabos, Mexico to Portland International plane arrived with the cargo door open and people had pets inside that cargo bay. So question number one, Boy, those pets got lucky. The weather must not have been bad enough, or not cold enough or something. I don't know, but this is

now. This is the second incident. Apparently the crew replaced a spring and I guess that was it. I don't know, is that the spring that keeps the door closed, and what happened to the procedures of taking off and making sure that the doors and cargo bays and everything's latched. I'm just saying that this is this is bad. More reasons why I'm driving whenever possible to

wherever I've got to go. Forty six minutes after the hour, come back with some consumer news needs to be on your radar here in the morning show. I'll be at a good weekend what'sn't necessarily the most productive weekend for me, but it sort of kind of was. I endure word, I endured some fun with Exfinity. I you know, for me, it's it. I don't have many choices. If I did, i'd be exercising those options. But had some real significant technical challenges, not from any kind of outage

or anything like that. I have very consistent service, very It's one of the things I like the most is the consistency that I have. I have service. One of the things that prevents us from looking to move to a parcel of land in an outlying area is internet service. That's just that's just too important to what I do professionally, what my wife does professionally, and so it's a thing. But man, I endured seven hours on phones with

customer service people. And the funny part of the whole story is the person who fixed it was in the billing department. The person who fixed the technical issue simply was determined to not let me have another bad experience with his company. He was an English speaking American based billing agent who literally went online and looked up forms and found the solution to a very weird problem. Tech support supervisors and tech support couldn't figure it out. This guy did saved the weekend.

Otherwise it would have been a really bummer bummer of a wasted weekend, but still couldn't get done what I'd hoped to get done outside in my yard. And so yeah, that's all right, that happens. We needed the rain. Consumer news here. If you are booking travel, we talked about flying and whether you know whether you fly or not whatever that's up. That's

up to you. But if you're making reservations hotels and the like, advice here is to be looking at what is called a facilitation fee that is now starting to incrementally pop up and grow if you're booking rooms through some of the sites. For example, the Expedia group now includes hotels dot Com, Verbo, Travelocity, hot Wire orbits eBookers, Cheap Tickets, car rentals dot Com,

Expedia, Cruises Trevago. Those are all under one company, Expedia, and the website says the company may also charge and retain separate service fees as additional compensation in servicing your booking, which may vary based on the amount and type of booking. Inside the terms of service, it says in the fine print, you acknowledge that our group of companies facilitate such bookings for a consideration

the facilitation fee. The room rate displayed through our service is a combination of the amount charged by the travel provider for their services for the rental of the room and the facilitation fee charged and retained by our group of companies. So here's the advice. The advice here is to think long and hard about using these services anymore and maybe reach out directly to hotels. That's all. That's just that's what I'm saying. Second consumer story here the median down payment for

a house broken down by US state. This is from an app called for and no Fornoi wornoi v roni, and it's defining single family home is no common walls, built on its own parcel of land, private entrance and exit, one set of utilities, single kitchen. The highest three states for down payment median price down payment, Florida is right there with Washington, d C. And Hawaii, with the average median down payment of ninety eight thousand dollars.

Now, the average down payment is seventeen percent in Florida, seventeen in Hawaii, twenty point one in Washington, D C. Twenty eight point six in Washington, Florida's two points above the national average and average down payment, but the median is ninety eight thousand, six hundred and seventy dollars. And then last consumer tidbit here, Target Circle three sixty is now going to try

to compete with Amazon Prime and Walmart Plus. So yeah, you get you get charged annually and uh it jumps to ninety nine dollars annually after the forty nine dollars first year charge for Target Circle cardholders. So there you go. You caught up on some consumer news. Five minutes into the second hour of The Morning Show with Rustin Scott Monday March eleventh, sal Newso next hour talking about the legislative session that was and some of the most important takeaways that will

impact you. Out of everything that happened, what I challenge sow, boil it down, distill it what impacts people the most. So we will go there next hour, but we begin with this. It is an epic time story by Joseph Hanneman. I'll be honest with you, I paid very little attention. Well, if you listen to the program regularly, you know I paid virtually no attention to the alleged bombs that were found in front of the

DNC headquarters on January sixth. You remember that story. Apparently there were pipe bombs found near a bench outside the Democrat National Committee headquarters during police response to on January sixth, twenty twenty one. Security video footage obtained by Epic Times from US Congressman Barry Loudermilk of Georgia shows camera eighty twenty one, which was recording the operations of a bomb robot, suddenly panned away from the scene.

So they've got robotics there dealing with these alleged pipe bombs, and the camera, which was controlled by Capitol police, is moved as they're going to as the robot is going to the pipe bomb. Why now, that in and of itself is not that big a deal. It's weird. But what's interesting is despite three years of a federal investigation and a five hundred thousand dollars reward,

you realized no arrests have been made on these pipe bombs. And did you know that two other cameras were moved as well, Camera thirty one seventy three, located directly across the street from where the pipe bomb was found at one five in the afternoon, turned away from the building at one twenty nine

before the bomb squad arrived. Why Camera eighty twenty, located on the Fairchild Building, was filming the assemblage of the bomb squad when it was directed away to focus on some distant railroad tracks and a highway overpass for two and a half hours. That switch happened just as the bomb robot showed up. The

security cameras were controlled and monitored from the Capitol Police command Center. An official familiar with the command operation said directing cameras away from a developing crime scene in such a matter quoting is very very odd. He said, you absolutely, or the source said, you absolutely would be having the camera operators training the cameras and scanning the sea if anything else was going down around DC, around

the Democrat National Committee. You're not seeing that. You're seeing what looks like a deliberate move of the cameras to not record anything associated with the pipe bombs. So what we have here now is a growing list of estans related to these pipe bombs. First, were they were they really? Was this a coordinated plot planted in front of the DNC? And apparently there might have been one in front of the Republican National Committee. I don't know, emphasis on

the word no, I don't know. But doesn't this seem odd that no arrests, know nothing with a half a million dollar reward? Or is this this which fits better, that this was a plot to perhaps blow up the DNC, Or was this perhaps a plot to make MAGA supporters look bad and they didn't want to show whatever happened with those pipe bombs eleven minutes past. Just step back and think about this in totality, FBI informants, FBI agents

undercover Capitol Police. They're planted in the crowd with Trump and Trump supporters. They're repeatedly recorded egging the crowd on past barricades when they've created a perimeter. Suddenly, without permission and following protocols, Capitol Police allegedly start firing tear gas, but instead of it being in the crowd, they inadvertently fire it into their own police force, who, oh, by the way, are not wearing masks, They're not breathing oxygen, They're overcome by the gas. Repeatedly,

Capitol police officers are saying we've been set up. That's recorded as well, but they have to fall back because the tear gas is on them. The crowd advances, being egged on by plants from the federal government, from the FBI, from the Capitol Police, and who knows who else. Now we've got these pipe bombs that may or may not, We don't know where they detonated or were they phony where the cameras moved so that they could just

laugh about pulling these bags up with the alleged pipe bombs. Then there's this. The January sixth Select Committee suppressed the testimony of former White House Deputy Chief of Staff Anthony Ornado. Barry Laudermilk released a transcribed interview. When interviewed by the Select Committee on January eighth, twenty twenty two, or Not always asked whether he recalled, quote, any discussion prior to January sixth about whether and

how many National Guard troops to deploy. On January sixth, he said he remembered a conversation between White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows and District of Columbia Mayor Muriel Bowser, quoting, I remember he had he was on the phone with her, and I had walked in for something and I was there. He was on the phone with her and wanted to make sure she had everything she needed because I think it was the concern of anti and pro groups clashing,

is what I recall. And not anywhere near the Capitol. This was just out in the mall area at the event, and wanted to know if she needed any more guardsmen. I remember the number ten thousand coming up. You know, the President wants to make sure that you have enough. You know, he's willing to ask for ten thousand, and I remember that that number now that you said it. Now that you said it, it reminded

me of it. That's and that she was all set. She had I think three hundred and fifty or so for inspection control, those types of things not in law enforcement capacity at the time. That's the only thing I can recall with that number, ten thousand National guardsmen. What's key here is the word order in the report. The Select Committee said some have suggested that President Trump gave order to have ten thousand troops ready for January sixth. The Select

Committee found no evidence of this. Well, it's because the Trump didn't order or NAO testified that Meadows was willing that Trump said he was willing to ask for ten thousand National guardsmen. According to Laudermilt, the J six Committee apparently withheld mister Ornado's critical witness testimony from the American people because it contradicted their predetermined

narrative. Where have we heard words like that before? Keep in mind, now Liz Cheney's out there always saying that, you know, we transcripts, documents, exhibits are meticulously sourced, eight hundred page final report, except that those are only the documents that they want to release, not the entirety of it all. And it goes back to the old saying, if you're only

sharing half the truth, you're not sharing and the truth at all. All right, this isn't to diminish the time that I'm gonna spend with sal Neuso next hour because it impacts all of you that live in the Sunshine State. But this is really important. This will be the next most important thing that I talk about today. And you could argue, well, why not just make it part of the Big Stories in the press box. It's a good

question. Consider this an early edition of the Big Stories. Lead research assistant of the program gets an email from Newsmax. Now listen, I need you to listen. To me. We've been extolling the virtues of Newsmax being the place that that now might be the go to for unbiased, well written news. Listen to what the note says, Urgent Friday deadline to stop woke funding. Dear friend, we have warned you the Florida State Senate has blocked an

anti blacklisting, anti censorship amendment. We are told some senators are telling callers it's in the bill. This is a lie. The Senate refused to include the anti woke, anti censorship amendment because a single senator, Senator Cory Simon of Waculla County, refuses to allow a full Senate vote. Simon is a pretend Conservative. And it goes on from there. Well, I did some digging. Number one, this email came out after sine die. Number two.

This email doesn't even contain a bill number. The only bill that has anything even remotely close to this is apparently nine thirty nine, and it says in the analysis it prohibits the executive branch, agencies and local government entities from contracting with companies for developing, providing, or using blacklists against news sources or public figures. So, first, Newsmax doesn't list the bill. Second, they're wrong. Third, they say Senator Corey Simon, who disclosure he's a

friend of mine, block this bill. No one has the authority to block a bill and keep it from coming to the floor for a vote. No senator has that power, No House rep has that power. It doesn't exist. So I wrote Newsmax. I made a media inquiry, and I said, do you mind explaining this? I want to give you ample opportunity to to just to to share what you're thinking here. First, I, unless I know something different, I don't think. I don't think Senator Simon is

from Wakulla County. Last I checked, he lives in Leon County and he represents a massive district that includes multiple counties. At at best, this is ill informed and stupid. At worst, it's slanderous libelss libelists. Rather not slanderous. It is libelous and and a lie. And folks, it pains me to say this. This is from Newsmax. And what this does for me is it causes me to question now what it's writing. This kind of

stuff is the kind of crap I expect from leftist organizations. Sadly, maybe even Fox from Time to time now right, So Newsmax owes an apology to Senator Corey Simon because if people rang his they put his phone number on here. Keep in mind, they don't list the bill. They got the con the actual wording wrong. What they accused the bill of having or or or

falling short, they're wrong. They accuse him of single handedly stalling this and not keeping it, not allowing it for floor vote when that's not possible. It can't be done. So I'm just letting you know I now will be questioning my use of Newsmax as a source for about anything until they correct this. We'll see if they have the courage to do it. Twenty seven minutes after the hour, Preston Scott, go ahead, make my day on news

Radio one hundred point seven WUFLA big stories in the press box. Press box as in Preston press, pr ees box, not press as in the traditional press, the press as in short for that's been my normal nickname that people have given me over the years. They just hey, Press, how you doing. It's just kind of the way it's always worked out. Okay,

let me all right, let me just reset here. We've got a federal judge dismissing a lawsuit against the Biden administration, and they're constant bringing in what was it, three hundred and twenty plus thousand flown into the United States illegally lawsuit charging the Biden administration with violating the law bringing tens of thousands from four

different countries Nicaragua, Haiti, Cuba, and Venezuela illegally. The president can only use this parole status that we hear about on a case by case basis. They're loading everyone up on a plane and flying them in twenty one States said you can't do that, file a lawsuit. Judge said, nope, sorry, you don't have legal standing. I can't answer the question because you

haven't proved that Texas has been harmed. OMG, what do you think should the parents of Lake and Riley show up with photos of their daughter who has been murdered by a veneze whalen here illegally to show harm, to show standing. I don't know. I just blows my mind. Women's Professional Golf Tour, the nx XT Golf Tour has now banned transgenders. It's a win. Granted it's not the Olympics. Yet it's not the NCAA. It's not any of the big pro leagues, but it's a win. It's a win.

You know what's interesting is the PGA has allowed women to on occasion compete on Akasare and Stam did it. I want to say Babe Diedrichson Zaharias did it. Most recently, Lexi Thompson did it. But I don't think we've ever seen it go the other way. But it's an inevitability if we don't nip this. At least one pro league has done it, and that's a step in the right direction. But I want to ask this question in the wake of what I just said regarding the news, regarding Newsmax, where do you

go as a source for national news that you can rely on. I've taken Newsmax off my list for now. We'll see, we'll see if they get back on it. Fox Case by Case, Breitbart, Love Breitbart. Hey, they're formatting. The format of their website is annoying. It just is. Go to Blaze or Daily Wire. Those would be my recommendations. Daily Wire, Daily Signal. Daily Signal goes deep on a handful of stories. They're not really breaking news kind of things. They do more analytical investigative pieces.

Daily Wire seems to be pretty good. What was the other one you mentioned, Blaze Blaze. My problem with the Blaze is is breadth. They go deep, they don't have a lot of stuff, and so I mean these are all places, you know, It's like I've said the Gateway Punnit is a place that I have to take with a grain of salt. There are a lot of stories that are really good. Zero Hedge is another good

place for certain types of stories. Citizen Free Press, I know, is kind of like an aggregator, kind of like the new Drudge if you will. Yeah, and I totally dismissed Drudge. He sees off the radar. So that's uh. I think if you're looking for a new Drudge, Citizen Free Press or zero Hedge can kind of serve that way. What about the Trump Junior site? What is it? M Times, m MX AM.

I'm not sure. I do know the Bongino Report. If you're a fan of Dan Bongino, he has an aggregated site that you can go to, so bonginoreport dot com. Yeah. The the Trump site is m x mnews dot com. It's an aggregator site. I've never heard of this. Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yep. It's m x mnews dot com. Correct and it's it's it's a nice layout, very easy to navigate. Town Hall is a good place for stories, but again it's not a lot, it's it's just a handful of stories. They go a little deeper interesting.

Red State might be a place to get some stuff I like the Federalist. Federalist is another source. I mean, we're giving you some places where we go. But at the same time, man, don't you just want a clean news site, just that's not left right or anything? Just news? Come on news Max. I gave you a bunch of love a couple of weeks ago, forty one minutes past the hour, Preston Scott, you're not at the time on news Radio one seven UFLA if you pay for it.

Epic Times is a great source. Wall Street Journal again, paywall coin toss. It's the Wall Street Journal. It's gonna, you know, have a financial slant to a lot of it. But they do have regular news there as well. All right, no Joe Camps today, doctor Joe. So I thought i'd throw in and I told you so. Now this story is is found at the gateway pundit. But it's not a gateway pundit story. They're just spiking the football with and I told you so. Remember when the

FDA pushed back against ivermectin. In fact, their social media campaign showed a picture of a vet hugging a horse and it said, you are not a horse, you are not a cow. Seriously, y'all stop it. In December twenty twenty one, the FDA warren Americans not to use ivermectin that is intended for animals to treat to prevent COVID. Now, that was an interesting statement, especially given the fact that the FDA had been pushing ivermectin in Africa

since twenty fifteen. It is a controversial statement because ivermectin won a Nobel Prize for medicine, something that a prescription drug hadn't done in oh, I don't know, three decades or something like that when it won it. As has been reported, there have been over one hundred and one scientific studies on ivermectin that confirmed the significant benefit of taking ivermectin to treat COVID in its early stages.

Now comes a study reported by Epic Times and zero Hedge. Two of the aforementioned media outlets that found that those who tested for COVID nineteen positively and took ivermectin as a treatment recovered faster than the comparison group. In fact, people who receive ivermectin were also less likely to be hospitalized or die, with one point six percent of ivermectin recipients being hospitalized or dying versus four percent of

the comparison group. Ivermectin worked. Ivermectin works. Hold that story though, Remember why the FDA would not allow it because it's off label use, right, That's not what ivermectin was developed for. And so they couldn't allow ivermectin to be used as a treatment because then they would not be allowed by law to approve an emergency use vaccine otherwise known as all of the stuff being pushed out by Johnson and Johnson, Pfizer, and so forth. If ivermectin or

hydroxychloroquin was allowed, they couldn't allow the JAB that's a law. So now what do we make of the fact that the FDA has approved a weight loss medication? Will govy for you s as heart disease prevention. It's off label, that's off label use. What that's not what it was for. It's meant for weight loss. The FDA played executioner for people across this country by preventing them from having access to ivermectin easily and hydroxychloroquin easily. But yet they

don't have any problem with off label use for other things. And oh, by the way, another study government says that fluoride does not protect teeth from cavities. Yeah. I couldn't just leave you there with that last one on fluoride. Recent published, very large quote government study shows that there is zero benefit to drinking fluoridated water as far as dental health is concerned. And this is from the UK. We we talk about a place that needs help.

Largest study of the effects of fluoridation on dental health on adults funded by the UK Department of Health intended to inform policymakers, and they found that fluoridated water does nothing to help people. Now, it does not address toothpaste, but fluoridation in the brain attracts aluminum, which is a problem with Alzheimer's. It affects the thyroid as well as other things. So yeah, there you go,

just saying. Now, this was sent by one of the research assistants, and and it's just kind of funny, especially now this time of year, do you get like really hammered with allergies. Not usually, but this year hit me harder than usual. It came out. I mean, it's it's been with us for since the last week of January. We started to get some dust. Yeah, some of you may notice my voice last week. Preston made mention of it. I made mention it. My throat was

just like absolutely on fire sandpaper. Sandpaper's brutal, and my voice was not working properly. I'm better now, but man, it really got me this year when it normally doesn't. I of my of my mother, my father, and my brother. I was always the one that had the least amount of allergy whatever, But I don't know, it hit me hard this year. Yeah, it's it's come now with a vengeance. It's it's it's a wave of pollen in the air, especially in this part of Florida. But

this note says Florida actually has twelve seasons. Winter full spring, yeah, second winter, yeah, spring of deception, third winter, pollening yep, actual spring, summer. Hell's front porch, which is like six months of

the year, false fall, second summer, actual fall. Yeah, I would say that, and we're in the pollening that false fall is kind of like in late mid to late September, and then you hit October and it's like, why are we back to ninety Yes, and then by Halloween we're like okay, all right, now we get a fall, yeah for thirty days. Yeah, and then you get a winter and then you get the full spring. Yeah. I just I think that I thought that was pretty

clever. So Florida has said that that would be that. That's one of those things that when you're talking to people that are visiting from out of state, and do you enjoy four seasons here this part of Florida, North Florida, No, we have twelve. Yeah, multiply it by three. Yeah. I'd say we're in the last stage of winter right now. It's like in the the it's like polyene and last age of winter because it was like in the forties this morning. But then it'll get back up, so it's

yes. I think you could argue that the order here is a little little bit off because we always have a cool crunch around Easter. Now Easter's coming early this year. It's the last week of March. I know I was surprised about that, but we normally have a little bit of a cool crunch. Because the Sunrise service is on Easter, which is usually an April thing, it can be kind of cool and chilly. So I'm just saying, bring a jacket for the morning and bring a T shirt for the afternoon.

I think we might have a little spring of deception around Easter time, more pollening, and then the actual spring that will last a week and then it'll be summer. Five minutes past the third hour, beginning here on the Morning Show with Thresdin' scot eight o'clock in the Eastern time, seven in the Central no matter where, no matter how, Thanks a lot for making time. We appreciate it. I'm personally enjoying this respite in the cooler weather for just

another day or two. Loved it yesterday, I'm gonna love it today. And we are joined here Grant Allen and I are joined by SALD News with Consumers Defense. Hello, good morning to you. Enjoy the weather. I love it, And in fact, I was thinking to myself, we had a very very mild winter, and so this like I was talking to somebody the other day, I was like, I thought we would get a couple more weeks of that, you know, thirties and week. Well, what

did punk Satani Phil say? He did not see a shadow this year, which means which means we're going to get an earlier spring, or which means that we have a greater than sixty percent chance of him being wrong, and we will in fact have longer cooler weather. It's all global warming, and I'm gonna changing just saying yeah, all right, we I challenged you. I tasked you with the with what impacts people the most, and we're going to get to that. But let's first kind of looking at the session.

It's now done. What did how did the governor do? I think the governor largely got everything he wanted, and in fact, when they were negotiating the budget before the conference committee, I believe the House had left off a couple of things in the tax package that he had wanted that didn't last very long. They put in some tax proposals that he had wanted, her tax

relief proposals. So with the exception of the amount of the budget, which I think we should get to and talk about, I think the governor landed really, really really well, well, is the sharpie read that he's going to be pulling out? The sharpie is going to be real red. The budget total was one hundred and seventeen zero point five billion dollars, which the week before, during the Conference Committee, it was only one hundred and fifteen

point eight So that's primarily a result of what's called the sprinkle list. The sprinkle list is the colloquial for the uh oh gosh. It's something the supplemental funding portion, and they just kind of add in this for this member, this, for this member of project here, a project there, kind of firms up the votes, and it's notorious for beefing up the budget amount, but I don't know that I've ever seen it this much. I mean, it was about a billion dollars, and so I would suggest, and I

think the Governor's office is kind of suggesting it's a bit of overkill. He was adamant. He wanted a final figure that somehow would allow him to state that they were cutting the size of government. That there's two ways to look at that. One is in the total amount we spent one hundred and eighteen last year or this year, we're going to spend one hundred and sixteen this year. That's one way to look at a cut. The other way to

look at a cut is in the per capita expenditures. Now, per capita, the state is incredibly lean, so I'm not sure how we get there on that. So I'm expecting. I think it could come in a billion or more in light on a vetos, but that's just me surmising at this point where we are right now. Highlights to me would include that we have reserves, that we are able to help state employees a little bit more,

and that we are paying off debt yep. So and to your points, we've got ten billion in reserves and the budget so and we had a huge reserve beforehand. A three percent pay raise for state employees. A couple of other notes on the education side, two hundred and forty dollars per student increase in what's called the FEFP, the Florida Education Financing Program. On top of

that, a two hundred million increase in money for increasing teacher pay. So there was some talk someone had filed a bill about wanting to get the starting salaries for teachers to sixty five thousand dollars. That's not going to happen. Worry at about forty five or something like that now, But I do believe they're moving in the direction where they want to be in the top quartile on

teacher pay. They need to be going in the direction of leaving starting pay where it is, but now creating funds to reward good teachers that have been in the system. And the two hundred million in teacher pay is not for starting salaries. It's for boosting and addressing what is called salary compression, which is exactly what you're pointing to, where the starting salaries butt up against what teachers who have been in the system for ten plus years are getting exactly and

that needs to be addressed. All right, more with sal Newso next, if you missed it, Salmuzzo now with Consumers Defense and the website is Consumers Defense dot com. Look at that. They went deep into the bucket of inspiration for that one. I wanted him to when they hired me on. I wanted to go def con because I just I loved the idea. Yeah, sure that got shot down. Oh well, hell well, we've talked about the legislative session from the perspective of the governor though he has now the

heavy lifting to do. He's got to sort through all the different bills. The budget, budget, first budget first. Yeah, they there had only been a handful of bills that were actually presented to him prior to the end of session. We had a total of three hundred and fifteen bills passed both chambers and go on. But I did some math. Over eighty percent of those bills were passed in the final week, So he's got a lot on his plate in the coming weeks. The legislature, How would we view the

session from the perspective of the House in the Senate? Amiable? They focused far more heavily this session on economic policies versus the social end of things, which I think the prior session had a much heavier focus on social issues. Probably the big deal that everyone is paying attention to is, you know, what are they doing on taxes. It's a two year tax package of about

one point five billion in tax cuts. Originally, and I had kind of mentioned this in the last segment, the original shift on the House in the Senate was they were going to more aggressively tackle the business rent tax. Yeah, they abandoned that. They went with the governor's proposal of continuing with sales

tax holidays. They did pair down a little bit of the timing on them, but he had also requested some insurance insurance premium tax breaks for homeowners and this last minute deal that he had proposed on it's about four hundred and fifty million dollars in a rebate program for drivers who pay more than thirty five toll transactions in a month. So the folks who are driving for a living that go you know, every day they're hitting the tolls. Orlando, Yeah,

you're going to have rebates coming in. I think it's twenty twenty five. I guess is when they'll kick in. You know. The plus side of pushing some of that stuff down the road is that they're cutting taxes by one point five what billion? Yep, they're able to say that again the next session they're cutting more tax you know what I mean. There's a there's a

there's a little gamesmanship there if they want. And in a state, and I speak to a lot of groups around the state, and I tell them, in a state growing by one thousand people a day, with the kind of diversity of the economy and the diversity of the individuals living in the state. We have a state with one hundred and seventeen for the time billion dollar budget New York State with two million, fewer people, fewer people, Their state budget is double what Florida's is, and I would argue we get far

more out of our state government than New York. I was just going to ask you, how many state legislatures do you expect this year are going to be talking about the one point five billion dollars in tax cuts. None, That's what I mean. I mean that's I don't think that Floridians appreciate the

anomaly that Florida is in the Union. Absolutely, and that's something that like from my days at JMI to even now in my new role, I highlight just about every time I speak to individuals or groups around the state or even the country. I sidetracked you a little bit. We wanted to talk about bills that impact people. We've got time for one before we take a quick

break. Okay, So looking at this bucket of what I call governance, I would suggest that probably HB one, P. Fifty one, related to the Florida retirement system is going to be the most impactful view for listeners in this area. Some positive employee positive changes to the DROP program as I was reading them, along with a mandatory cola for specific categories of employees on what

a crews in the retirement fund that's going to be a positive. You also have some stuff where they're trying to address affordable housing like eight twelve centibil eight twelve expedizing expediting residential building permits, trying to build on some of the efforts from last year. And then the other one that I'll highlight kind of at the end of this segment, House Built ten twenty one. It's called Condo

three point zero. More enforcement of the record keeping for condo boards, disclosure rules on conflicts for board members, think about vendors providing services to those condos, requirements for inspections, beefing up DBPR to help enforce. This is kind of in the aftermath of the condo collapse in Miami, they came back and really started to get it aggressive on these and they're continuing that and I think they'll can you on in future sessions more to come. We'll talk about the

parts of the legislative session that impact more of you than others. What impacts you the most here with sound News of Consumer's defense on the Morning Show with Preston Scott back talking about the legislative session that was they dropped the handkerchief on Friday and brought it to a merciful end. And so it's our recap and we're talking about the things that impact you impact the state in the most direct ways. And there's a lot that we have to weed through in all of

this. I say we because I just like to feel part of the team, though I did none of its President, you are part of the team. No, No, not on this one, pal, What else? So in the kind of bucket of entrepreneurialism, business, the conduct of business, you got a number of things. So HB forty nine, it was on life support last week. It is the bill that would alter the regulations for individuals sixteen and seventeen years old in the working place they could write more

hours. It made it through. It was paired with another preemption bill on like locals enacting some really crazy regulations on workplace conditions. What moves it from life support to suddenly getting passed. They amended it onto another bill that was moving or they amended another bill that was moving onto it so it happens every session. You know, the shells of kind of moving the chess pieces around. It happens every single session where things are moving, they're on a time

constraint. They're trying to move different things. One bill hasn't gotten through enough committees. They can take the language and amend it on because it's opening the same statutes and so on. So what this does is this allows more hours for sixteen and seventeen year olds to work. I believe it's thirty hours.

It goes up to thirty hours. Okay, You've also got Senate Bill two eighty, which is a big deal because after four years of really kind of a Yeoman's ephyrt, Senator Nick de Segli finally gets the regulatory system underway for short term rentals across the state. So this new system would largely preempt what the locals have been doing trying to regulate solely the airbnb so passing ordinances only on the short term rentals as opposed to passing those ordinances for all of the

properties in the jurisdiction. There's gonna be some reporting and some tax collection stuff that's regulated up to the state and the So is this good news for the people listening that have their homes listed on Airbnb and Verbo or whatever. It's good news for them. It is not so good news if you are one of the individuals who's lodging a ton of complaints because there's an Airbnb or a vrbo in your neighborhood and they might be, you know, behaving in ways

that you do not like as a homeowner. Okay, The interesting bill an account for kind of walking back some of the reforms that were done to the criminal justice system a few years back HB five forty nine retail theft, so kind of recognizing the changing landscape and what a lot of states are dealing with, namely blue states that choose not to prosecute retail theft in ways that Florida is just going to kind of plant a flag in and say, no,

you're not going to get away with that. Here are we changing the mounts required for it to be a felony. There's some change to the amounts, but it's more kind of also changing the degrees, so I think it bumps it up one degree kind of a second degree felony would be a first degree felony, and so on and so forth Okay. Senate Bill sixteen ninety eight it made it. This is the massive regulatory increase on the hemp industry.

It will restrict many of the I'm calling it fake weed products. It's derived from hemp, but then it's used in some products that are being sold in retail facilities and you do not need a medical marijuana license. Are another big bill, the vaping bill. It got changed to limit its scope to only single use mechanisms. So if you have a cartridge and you add products into it, no change at all for the single use items, the ones that you buy. It limits it to twenty three items approved by the FDA.

All of those are currently large tobacco company products. And then kind of in the healthcare space, the really big bill seventy sixteen seventy eighteen. It's a hugely impactful bill. Senate Presidents Live healthy reform on healthcare, beginning to address a lot of the provider shortages in the date. We are a gross state.

Two thirds of our population growth is over the age of sixty. The cohort that requires enough more healthcare, so seven hundred million dollar infusion and healthcare funding, increasing medical residency slots, loan forgiveness to get providers into hard to serve areas, reimbursement rate increases, and licensing reform kind of fast tracking approval to get providers from other states into Florida. So the bottom line is this

is going to help the burdensome process of trying to find healthcare. Absolutely, it should have a pronounced impact on wait times to get to a doctor and so forth. Effective win, I believe. July one, July one, all right, more with Sal Newso, next with Consumer's Defense here on the Morning Show with Preston Scott Preston Scott Use Radio one hundred point SEVENBUFLA back with

Salmuzo Consumer's Defense. But we're talking about the legislative session that was, and now we segue to what we were just talking about it education, yep. Education probably the most impactful issue in the community. Last year universal school Choice bill passed. With any piece of legislation like that that's kind of as transformational as HB one was from last year, Inevitably there's going to be glitches, things that they didn't anticipate the implementation of it. They're going to figure it

out. So the cleanup Bill, what they typically refer to as a glitch bill. Senate Bill seventy forty eight is one of them from Corey Seim and accomplished as a host of things, Merging the Hope Scholarship with the Florida Tax Credit Scholarship program. So that's going away, streamline, extending family Empowerment scholarships for the students with unique abilities, special needs kids. You've got an additional twenty one thousand kids there, taking the cap off of that with three to

five percent, with a kind of a growth factor in there. Expanding the allowable use of funds, which was an issue as the HB one kind of got rolled out. You had the left in the media. But I repeat myself trying to write narratives about parents purchasing certain things for their school kids.

And so they're streamlining and developing some kind of guardrails and kind of if you're gonna buy, for example, a large screen TV, you have to show in a form how you're going to use it for educational purposes to kind of give a sense of kind of accountability to it. Yeah, So, and there's going to be some other things that are going to come down the pike. I was talking with a few folks actually one of my old colleagues at JMI, and there may be a move ahead in the legislative session to come

to actually look at privatizing Florida Virtual School. And that's something that I think is a very intriguing thought because it would effectively open up some competition for how those materials are delivered and what parents can access and so forth. So the other thing in the educational front is the Gate program we talked about early on

in the session. The Chambers agreed to four million dollars plus an additional seven million in scholarships for this program, which would help get individuals without a high school diploma or a ged into career training programs. One of the elements of the reform that would kind of it's kind of attractive to me in terms of it would wave tuition and fees for those who have quit high school but who want to pursue vocational diplomas or workforce credentials in the state university system. So

kind of a hand up as opposed to a handout. They're going to have to go in and do the work on these things. But the individuals participating in the program, but when you look at you know who this can impact. This is exactly what I think good government should be about. Who will administer this, the community colleges, the vocational schools, the community colleges that have well, sorry, state colleges that have vocational schools. Where does this

start? I believe it's going to start with the Department of Education, through the border regions or Board of Governors shown my age there, and then they'll develop kind of the system along kind of what it looks like and how the money is dispersed in all of those things. As tech and innovation, the biggest story of twenty twenty four has to be the HB one and HB three roller coaster. It started out as an outright ban on social media for anyone

under the age of sixteen. It the final form of it after the governor vetoed it. It is now a ban still but with parental consent, so parents can somehow consent to have their fifteen and sixteen years or fourteen and fifteen year olds. However, the age verification method on this is gonna land this bill in court. There's already been some back and forth between the speaker and the group Net Choice, which represents all the big tech platforms and they're gonna

litigate this Arkansas bill, which was similar was already tossed. I don't know how this how this lands, but it's gonna continue on. And the bottom line is there are workarounds. Yeah, the virtual private network mechanism in Utah when they passed a similar bill, VP downloads went through the roofs. So it's you know, I applaud the Speaker for the intention and what he's trying to do with steering this conversation at where social media has gone. It's just

kind of an I don't know at this point. Morricel News. Oh, NeXT's weather, traffic and the big stories in the press box. The fastest three hours in media, and don't be surprised if you have a chuckle here and there. Just like that, It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Hey. You know we've been on the program talking about the dangers of TikTok and getting it off your kids' phones, and you know, my approach has always been parents be parents. We don't need the government being parents in this.

I agree with Speaker Renner on its dangers, as I do with everything, but it isn't quite the same as smoking, though it's impact could be Yeah, and I think at some point down the road there may be very

specific research out there that establishes causal relationships. I don't know that it's as reliable as some of the research that brought down the tobacco firms in the eighties and into the early nineties, but I think anecdotally it is abundantly clear that young people should have very minimal, if any exposure to social media, and it should be done in a setting like what the legislature passed last year, which was a social Media education bill, require the schools to provide a course,

could be a short course on what are the risks? What are the benefits? Like you know, LinkedIn versus TikTok? Do you know you're being manipulated? Do you know when you put a photo out on the internet it never goes away? Exactly those things? You know, Young people's brains are not formed and developed completely in the same way that they are at twenty five

or thirty. Although that's debatable, but that's where yeah, no kidding, but that's but that's where I feel like parents can't be let off the hook. It's your job to parent, it's not your phone's job to babysit your kid. And I can understand and appreciate both sides of this because I was a single dad for and have been. But I mean, my kids are older now, but when they were young, it was at times very easy to give them an iPad and say, hey, you know, occupy yourself.

Yeah, yep, And so I get the lure of it. So I I'm with you. I respect and admire the Speaker's intention. I you know, I would hate to see all of that effort and up being tossed by a court. But we'll have to see. So HB one got vetoed. HB one got vetoed. HB three was the vehicle that they used for the final bill, because the Senate took that language and merged it onto HB one, which then the Governor vetoed. So it gave the House that vehicle

that bill. HB three still to a mend, put the final language on that they agreed on with the Governor and move it in the very last days of session. What about Senate Bill six seventy six. Yeah, this was a preemption bill to ensure that local governments aren't creating regulations on food delivery platforms,

which some in South Florida were doing. They're trying to get there, you know, there get a little bit of revenue off of it, and that restaurants have to now actually agree to participate on those food delivery platforms. And the impetus for this is you get a lot of times where the food delivery platform, if it's a low quality or it takes a whole lot of time. You got a restaurant and now you get your food cold. The restaurant didn't know that a platform was delivering the food, and they get the

bad reputation or the bad review. And so it's got to be a they have to agree to this, and so I like the idea. There can you stay for overtime and in the final three minute segment go over the things that didn't make the cut? You got it all right, We're going to do an extra segment because we got a list here what didn't make it, what died, and so we're going to quickly go through that list. Next

one more segment with Sal Newsom. A bonus segment here with Sal. Bonus segment with Sal, and we're talking about bills that did not make the cut. Yeah, a number of things you had a County commissioned term limits that was bouncing back and forth between the House and the Senate, one chamber one at eight years, the other one at twelve. It just ended up dying. I think it may come back. The folks who sponsored it were they'll

be back in future terms. This one saddens me. My favorite bill of twenty twenty four did not make it the requirement for a supermajority to raise the millage rate. Sam Garrison, who is in line to be Speaker after Danny Perez, I think this is absolutely coming back. He's right on the money in terms of trying to get toward truth and taxation. The THHC caps ahead of the recreational marijuana amendment, those did not make it. So recreational marijuana

is going on the ballot. If they want to do anything to regulate the amount of marijuana that's in whatever, they will have to come well, what's going on the ballot if it passes. The State Supreme Court correct next biological sex on official state documents, so driver's licenses and certificates. That's a mistake, I do it's a mistake. I do believe it will also come back. The repeal of the eighteen to twenty one year old band on the purchase

of Long Night mistake. Yeah, and I think you're going to see the legislature kind of get a little bit more conservative on this matter as more folks from the House get into constitutional carry needs to come on. I saw another state past it recently, fantasy sports regulation. We talked about it a couple of times. The Senate passed a bill, the House just did not see it through. And sadly there will be no Italian American Pride license plate.

I am, I'm gonna go take prozac or something then sorry, Yeah, no Canoli's on your license plate. Brought to you by Baron No Heating and Air. It's the morning show on WFLA. There you go. Yeah, that's the last were no Canoli's on the license plate. Sorry about that. Thanks to Salnuzo with Consumers Defense, our guest and a little legislative wrap up

there. We go to now monthly meetings and talk about some of the deeper issues here with the legislature and some things that we want to get on the radar of lawmakers and their aids in advance of next year's a legislative session. We like to advance things. Today on the program, we started with Deuteronomy seven, verse nine. We talked about a federal judge dismissing a lawsuit against the Biden administration related to illegal immigration. The judge said that they didn't have

standing, they couldn't prove that Texas had suffered an injury. That is one of the most laughable statements from a federal judge in a very very long time. Chris Hansen, sounding the alarm on immigration and crime, said that yes, despite MSNBC's protestations, illegal immigrants are engaging in crime and a lot of it. Letitia James went after NASA County for protecting women's sports. NASA County, along with parents, have filed a suit against New York's Attorney General.

We started the program chronicling the foods guys that make you look sexy. Yeah, it's called a full English when it comes to breakfast. You can look that up. If you're traveling and you're booking a hotel by using those booking sites, pay attention to the fine print and find out what the facilitation fee is going to be. You're being worn third pipe bomb. The cameras that we're following these pipe bombs on January sixth that were allegedly placed at the d

and maybe one at the RNC. They were turned away from the scene. Now, why would that be while the investment investigation was going on? They turned the cameras Capital's Police was in charge of all of that. Why would they be not recording everything that was going on at the sight of those those bombs if they were in fact bombs. We've learned that Liz Cheney the January sixth Committee, they suppressed evidence. We learned that Newsmax was very inaccurate and

perhaps deceitful in an email it sent out. Sorry. We learned that Ivermectin has in fact helped people that were suffering with COVID in the early stages. We covered a lot of ground with Sal Newso and tomorrow we have scheduled Justin Haskins. We'll have a manly minute money talking more so, don't you dare miss it. In the meantime, have an awesome day, Thanks so much for listening.

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