And thereof seven minutes past the hour Monday Morning Show with Preston's Gay. Good morning on Preston. He's grant great to be with you, friends, friends, ruminators, countrymen. Thank you so much for sharing your time with us. We always start with some scripture. Let's put some context to the week. Yesterday was Palm Sunday. It's a day that remembers Jesus's entry into Jerusalem. A lot of the Bibles will write as a sort of a caption, but not a caption in terms of a photo, but it's sort of like
a heading for this section of the story. Triumphant entry, triumphal entry. It was a surreal scene. It was one of expectations because his entry into Jerusalem was thought to be bringing in the person that Jews at the time thought was going to be the guy who would banish Rome from the land of Israel. They wanted a ruling king like old Testament days. Jesus came for a very different purpose and a very different kingdom, and within one week everything changed.
Within days, everything changed. Our verse today comes from one John one through nine, or sorry, first John one to nine. It says, if we confess our sins, He's faithful in just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness. This week is about remembering with laser focus the whole point of Easter, who celebrated his birth around Christmas time, the Advent, the coming and all of it pointed to this one week and
what Jesus would do for all of mankind forever. Ten minutes after the hour, it's the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Preston Scott, do you understand the words that are coming out of my mouth? On news Radio one hundred point seven DOUFLA, What a different show today. Jay Sherlot will join us from Orphan Shade. Jay and his wife stays here in town for a meet and greet. Just a thank you to those of you that have accepted the
invitation. We'll talk more about that later on. We won't give the specifics. It is a by invitation only, so if you've got an invitation to this, we're looking forward to seeing you. But we'll talk a little bit about Orphan Shade and the work that's going on. We'll also talk next hour, Bill Shack with Inclusion Cafe. Don't let the name fool you. He'll explain we've got doctor Joe joining us as well. But our trip through this
date and history begins March twenty fifth, sixteen thirty four. About two hundred English settlers climbed off of two ships. There were small ships named the Ark and the Dove, anchored in the Potomac River, rode ashore to a slice of land they named Saint Clement's Island, erected across and held a Thanksgiving service. It was the beginning of a colony in Maryland. A good day for fighting religious freedom. Four Religious freedom. Maryland was founded by Cecilius Calvert,
also own is Lord Baltimore. Did you know that that's how we got Baltimore. Look at you. Received a charter from England's King Charles for some twelve million acres at the northern end of Chesapeake Bay. Calvert and was a Roman Catholic at the time. Boy, I'd love just to have someone to sign off. Here you go, here's your twelve million acres. I'll tell me about that. This was at a time when Catholics were persecuted in England.
He founded his colony to be a haven where Catholics could worship freely. He named it Maryland. In honor, he said of Queen Henrietta, Maria, King Charles's wife. Although Catholics quietly understood the land to be named in honor of Mary, the mother of Jesus, a little Calvert boy, wouldn't the activist go nuts if they knew that that the state of Maryland was actually named in honor of Jesus's mind, there'd be we need to rename it. I'm
surprised they haven't figured out El Salvador the Savior. I mean, I mean the Angels Los Angeles Counting. Calvert wanted Maryland to be a place where both Catholics and Protestants could worship freely, partly because he knew he would need Protestants help to settle the colony. Sixteen forty nine, the Colony Assembly passed a Toleration Act guaranteeing that no Christian in Maryland would be in any ways troubled, molested, or discountenanced for or in respect of his quest or her quest of
religion, nor in the free exercise thereof. Such toleration led Puritans and Quakers to flee to Maryland from Virginia, where they were persecuted by Anglicans. Tell me about it Maryland. Maryland became renowned for its religious liberties. Wow, by modern standards, those liberties were restrictive. They applied only to Christians. There were times in the colony's history when Catholics and Protestants fought each other and
people were indeed persecuted for their religion. Nonetheless, Maryland's Toleration Act was a historic step toward and for freedom. Laid down a principle now central to our way of life. Sort of. That was in sixteen thirty four eighteen sixty five, Roberty Lee orders his last attack of the Civil War against Fort Stedman near Petersburg, Virginia. Nineteen eleven of fire kills one hundred and forty six garment workers in the Triangle Shirt waist Company. It's a factory in New York
City, leading to public calls for safety reforms. And in nineteen sixty five, civil rights activists led by doctor Martin Luther King and their historic march from Selma to Montgomery at the steps of the state capitol. There you have it, sixteen minutes after the hour, Come back continue here in the Morning Show with Preston Scott twenty two past the hour. A lot of basketball Over the weekend, NCAA men and women played. FSU's women got bounced in the first
round. It was a yeah, it was just it was kind of predictable to me. Florida State just has some real talented players, but the women's game is just different. It just is, and they don't really have the depth they need upfront to to compete for titles. But still congratulations on making the tournament. Nice season. It's going to be interesting to see what happens.
Caitlin Clark has changed the women's game. She would be smart to stay one more year and do what no one will ever be able to do again. But the w NBA is calling. I agree with Jason Whitlock who said they ought to just go ahead and let the team that wants to draft her drafter and let her play one more year. They did something similar, I believe for Larry Bird. Bird's rights were drafted, but he stayed another year by Boston and so Boston had a chance to sign him like right after the
college season the next year, and I believe did. It's something like that anyway. The television ratings, the the viewing when IOWA plays is just out off the charts and it's driving a handful of libs nuts and Whitlock believes that they stacked the deck against Iowa to knock him out of the tournament. We'll
see baseball over the weekend. FSU went to Clemson undefeated. Clemson ranked three or four in the nation FSU depending on what poll you're looking at, anywhere from seven or eight to twelve, but unbeaten, the only unbeaten team in the country. But not no more. They got swept the first game, they got beat the final two games. It was. It was a mass of choke job by the bullpen. I think link Jarrett really rude his decision on Game two Saturday, they had an eight to one lead in the ninth
inning and lost nine to eight. He went to a freshman reliever, and I get it. You're trying to get them innings in safe situations. And then they're ahead eleven to two yesterday and coughed it up. So I suspect it's going to be a learning experience. I'm not worried about it. This is a much better baseball team than the one that was on the field a year ago. They'll learn they can smack the ball around. I'll tell you that, but they're pitching got exposed a little bit on the back end.
Too many walks, too many free passes. There's some talented pitchers, though the team's going to be good. What I want to poke at is, you know, I've long been critical of the sports Athletic Department, the sports information department, sorry at FSU. I have observed over the years a transition and just backwards. And it continued over the weekend. In the write up for the doubleheader where they got swept, they don't talk about what happened.
They don't write anything about what happened. They talk about a great pitching, a performance by Jamie Arnold, the sophomore was incredible. But they just that's I mean, it's incredible. And there's a pattern here, and the pattern is when FSU has a bad day, they don't write about it. They don't tell you, and that's bad. That's you get quotes from the coach, you find out, you know, the thoughts of the coach and to whatever extending he wants to expose the players to it, they talk about it.
I went to the site because I wanted to hear what link Jared had to say. I wanted to hear his thoughts, but this is now a pattern developed and it's unprofessional. Well, who are you. I've been around sports information and on the college level since I was fifteen years old, working for my dad. I have dealt with college and university sports information departments since nineteen seventy five. I know something about this, and it's disappointing because it's
supposed to have changed, it was supposed to get better. And it's just sad because I think boosters, I think fans, they deserve not just the the plaudits, and they deserve the stories when things struggle a little bit, It's okay, they're college kids. It's fine, it's not the end of the world. But don't cover it up and hide. And that's what they do. They don't write anything when their teams perform poorly, They just they skim right over it. They don't give you any information. And it's sad,
it's disappointing, and most importantly, it's unprofessional. Twenty eight minutes after the hour, here in the Morning Show, The Morning Show with Preston Scott. Okay, it's Monday on the program, March twenty fifth, final week of the month of March. And then unbelievably we move into the second quarter of the year. AH welcome friends to the radio program known as The Morning Show with Preston Scott. He's Grant Allen. I'm Preston. Big Stories brought
to you by Restore Carpet Care and Tile. Now everybody in the world of mainstream media is focused on Trump and his deadline to produce his bond of four hundred and fifty four million or whatever that number is. It's obscene. It's a violation of the Eighth Amendment. It is why it hasn't been immediately stayed on the appellate level and even the United States Supreme Court. I have no idea. I have no idea. We'll get to that. That is not
going to be among the big stories though. It just isn't. Well, that's what's going on. Kamala Harris was in town over the weekend, not here, but in Florida to provide training and technical assistance to individuals responsible for implementing laws designed to keep guns out of the hands of people who post a threat to themselves or others. She came in town to tout the Biden administration's new massive red flag operation, the National Extreme Risk Protection Order Resource Center.
She went to Parkland Stone Douglas High School calling on states to pass red flag lies. Look, we have laws that give guidance on who should and should not have a gun. All we have to do is is adhere to them. I'm just calling your tention into this because this is going to come face to face with your right to have a firearm. I guarantee it. Somebody overhears you saying, you know, people breaking into a home ought to be you know, if they if they break into my home, I'll you know,
you're going to be targeted because you're a threat to harm others. Congress passed it's going to the President to sign, if he hasn't signed it already. The one point two trillion dollar spending bill. Here is the vote on the Republican side. More voted against it than voted for it, but enough voted for it. All Democrats voted for it, well, not all, one eighty five to twenty two, so it passed easily passed the Senate seventy
four to twenty four. So Republicans defected there as well. There's an effort going on right now to spin it as look what we got now whatever parcels of scraps from the dinner table the Republicans got is nothing compared to the feast that the Democrats got. And then there's this the irs not the irs, good grief. The FDA settles a case involving ivermectum and agrees to remove the
posts on its sites telling you to stop taking it for COVID. This is a huge development in a settlement on a case that was heading to trial. The FDA did not want this case going to trial because if you go to trial, you have disclosure, you have discovery, you have to turn over evidence. Personally, I would not have settled, but I'm not the one suing the FDA. The FDA has twenty one days to remove pages that slam ivermectin, especially as it's related to its use with and against COVID. There's
more, but that'll do for now. Forty one minutes, now past the hour, a little late. It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Just a little power add on here. Ivermectin could be one of of a list of tools to help fight cancer. Researchers have I have determined that different from a lot of conventional cancer therapies, ivermectin kills cancer cells by enhancing the immune
system. Boy, wouldn't that have been nice for some COVID patients out there to have their immune system helped by something, because that is one of the ways that it worked in COVID. But I've got a like a twelve page story here on ivermectin and some test cases and some researchers that are looking at ivermectin and it's amazing properties. Keep in mind, this is a drug that is very low cost, like unbelievably cheap, inexpensive, is a Nobel Prize
winning drug. One of the few in the last sixty years, maybe one one or two drugs have won a Nobel Prize for medicine. This is one of them. It's incredible, and they're just beginning to tap the quote off label uses for it. And it was found to be effective with COVID early
on, like hydroxychloroquin. My guess is this is something you ought to know if you are a cancer patient, because my hunch is most American doctors have been scared so silly by the FDA as it relates to ivermectin that anything that says ivermectin as a story, as a report, as a as something in a trade journal. Whatever they're they're they're looking right past it. So this is this is a remarkable story. It's an epic times it is a premium report, but it is out there. I'll try to get into it a
little bit deeper later on in the program. I think we've all seen stories enough to cause incredible concern. It's one of the top two issues in the presidential campaign, the southern border, illegal immigration, distinguishing legal immigration from illegal
immigration. The Dems, illiberals, leftists conflate the two. I want you to listen to this comment by Massachusetts Democrat Governor Mara Healey now to frame this twenty six year old Haitian national entered the country illegally, arrested this month after he allegedly assaulted and raped a disabled team at a Rockland, Massachusetts migrant shelter. He didn't just come into the US on his own accord. This is
one of the guys flown into the country by the Biden administration. Remember we told you up to three hundred thousand have been brought in from other countries. And initially the governor said that the actions of this man were horrible and her thoughts when hearts went out to the victim and then it changed. She was asked by Boston twenty five about what happened again just a couple of days ago. We have security and systems in place, we have a vetting, We
have vetting in place. It is unfortunate that you know, from time to time things will happen. Excuse me, this girl was assaulted and raped, and it's you know, things will happen. Wasn't it il aan Omar that talked about nine to eleven and said, you know, some people did some things, some things. This is how the liberals respond to all of this
cold indifference. Forty seven minutes after the Hourum Preston Scott on news radio one hundred point SEVENUSLA get back to the border for just second here, senior leader of MS thirteen is among those that have been apprehended at the border. The guy was it was apprehended at the California Mexican border earlier this month. Taken into custody March seventh, sadly being transferred to New York. He'll appear before a federal judge in the coming days. Listed among the FBI's most wanted fugitives.
Imagine who we haven't caught. Oh my goodness. We'll talk with Hejesus Rodriguez of the Border Patrol, retired agent later on this week. What's your take on this whole Trump New York thing. I have nothing to say. I have no nuanced take. It's all background noise. I didn't even know the status of where it is right now. He has to come up with today today's deadline, a four hundred and sixty four million dollar bond required by that heinous, evil judge. Keep in mind, no jury. They wouldn't
let this get in front of a jury. This was a judge. I'm not sure that Trump requested a trial by a judge versus a jury. I don't know if that's not an option. I don't know that part of it. But you've got businessmen out there saying, first of all, you can't do this. Let me give you an equivalent of what happened. You're going to the bank. You're getting a alone just because what do you have in the assets? Well, I got a car. What's it worth? About
fifteen thousand dollars? That's you're estimating about fifteen it's actually thirteen to five, you're estimating fifteen on the car. How much equity got in your house about seventy thousand, Okay, and really you don't necessarily know, but your equity in your house because the market changes, is actually a little bit lower than that. You get the loan for twenty thousand dollars, thirty thousand dollars, and you pay it back. You're done right. No, No, you
see in New York because they hate Trump, that's a crime. His financial disclosures were fraudulent. For he created value that wasn't there. Well, the lending institutions had no problem with the value that was given to the collateral that was offered up for these loans. These loans were all paid back, no fines for late payments, nothing, Everyone was satisfied. Not one part of this has come from a victim. Why there are no victims. I need
you to understand the importance of this. What's happening to Trump? No victims, no crime, no debts unpaid, and yet they're trying to bankrupt him, They're trying to ruin him. They're trying to take everything he owns inside the state. This is the crime, and it can happen to you. Well, I got stood up. Welcome to the second hour of the Morning Show with Thrust and Scott. Everybody that's Grant Allen over there at Studio one A. I'm here at Studio one B. Do to Joe Camps after the
big stories in the press box at the bottom of the hour. But we're trying to get somebody else on. Bill Shack, I supposed to join us, hasn't. Let me just take a few minutes to share what the press release says about this. The Inclusion Cafe is teaming up with the Salvation Army
to launch the Inclusion Cafe Training Academy. Now, the idea behind this is to provide restaurant skills to people inside the Tallahassee community that have intellectual disabilities, different kinds of challenges, and the point is to foster a little bit of independence being able to create some jobs. And it's a fourteen week program that will offer weekly sessions. It's a specialized curriculum and so the program kind of
began a couple of weeks ago in terms of applicants. And so if you know of anybody that falls into the category of having what is described in the press releases intellectual disabilities, interested in training that is tailored to the capabilities the needs of the participant. This is opening a door to perhaps a career in restaurants, in the restaurant industry, perhaps hospitality. You can get information and
apply at inclusioncafe dot net. One word inclusion cafe dot net. You know, I had expressed my concerns that the word inclusion was going to open the door to a lot of different things because of the way that that word has been hijacked by the LGBTQ movement. That's not what this is about. This
is about a different kind of inclusion. And so there you go. We've done our due diligence and we'll move on onto some other things here this morning along the same line in terms of local front got a note here from Moms for Liberty. Lessons are learned slow. Now, this is a pretty important day for Leon County schools because this is where you can set your schedule for
tomorrow and plan on going to the school board meeting. Leon County is not really going to follow the advisement of the State of Florida as it relates to the LGBTQ guide that they're preparing for public schools because it brings quote other staff members into the decision making process and points to a transidentified child's right to privacy. Parents, you need to know what the policy says, and we're going
to go over that next. We'll probably touch on it again tomorrow, but it's really important for parents to attend the meeting tomorrow night and protect your children. And we'll get to that here in a second. Ten minutes after the hour, it is The Morning Show with Preston Scott, The Morning Show with Preston Scott. All right, let me let me kind of gather my thoughts here. We were just kind of scrambled. This is the proposed policy language.
District procedures must require parent signed, parent or guardian permission forms for field trips that include, at a minimum, the following nature the field trip, day and times of the field trip, specific location, type of establishment to be visited, mode of transportation, method of student supervision provided such as anticipated number of chaperones, and whether room assignments for overnight lodging are not separated by biological sex at birth. Doe left this open to districts, but it is
absurd that districts are going to leave this open ended. Parents should not wait for permission slips to know how overnight roommates will be assigned. Is it going to differ school by school, trip by trip? Who's going to make the decision? The question that needs to be asked, will overnight room assignments be based on biological sex or on so called gender identity? Yes? Or no?
It's not complicated, that's the question. Florida's made a lot of progress on this front, but Florida's DOE did not hammer this down as it should have. They did not nail it down. And so I am strongly suggesting that you get to a school board meeting tomorrow and ask one question, and ask it just matter of factly, no tone or tenor take my tone and tenor out of it. Will Leon County schools be assigning overnight rooms and roommate
assignments based on biological sex or alleged gender identity so called gender identity? Yes or no? It's just that simple. It's not complicated. There is no way. And I have you know what, It just occurred to me. I have an even touched on the story yet of the transgendered kid who murdered a little girl and then videotape the body and put it on Instagram or one of these social media platforms and he's admitted it. Yep, I did it
talk about mental illness. I'm sorry. A young person that is struggling with their gender identity. Most of the time they grow out of it, but in the midst of it, they need mental health help. They need counseling that affirms their biological gender. Allowing a child to go on a trip that is a boy and tend to be a girl and room with girls is criminal to me. It's wrong, and parents, I'm warning you now protect your kids. Will overnight room assignments be based on biological sex or on so called
gender identity? Yes or no? Please? Thank you? Sixteen minutes after the hour. A related story next twenty one minutes after the hour, It's Morning Show with Preston Scott. It was mentioned last week during What's the Beef. It was a story last week, but it connects directly to what we just talked about with Leon County Schools Planet Fitness. They've lost four hundred million dollars minimum of valuation because of what happened. What happened should be a surprise
to nobody. We talked about it constantly when Planet Fitness several years ago went all in with wokeness. Planet Fitness. I'm going to I'm going to read from Chief Corporate Affairs Officer McCall goslin as the home of the judgment free zone, Planet Fitness is committed to creating an inclusive environment. Our gender identity non discrimination policy states that members and guests may use the gym facilities that best align
with their sincere self reported gender identity. The member who posted on social media violated our mobile device policy that prohibits taking photos of individuals in the locker room, which resulted in their membership being terminated. That person is Patricia Silva. She watched a biological male inside the women's locker room shaving himself. In that locker room was a twelve year old biological girl as well. She recorded it
and posted it as evidence. There are men inside of women's locker rooms and it is not just fine. It is accepted policy and practice at Planet at what is it Planet Planet Fitness. And what's interesting is most of us would take the no judgment zone as it relates to working out, Like if I went in there and worked out, I'm not gonna thrill anybody with my sets of weight. I wouldn't thrill anybody with the overall physique of my conditioning.
But the fact of the matter is that's what we're talking about, that there's gonna be people of all different kinds that are in there trying to make themselves healthier, in better shape. And that's what we think of when we think of a no judgment zone. It's more like, come on, let me help you out. I remember when I was working out at a local gym.
Here you encouraged people that in there trying and you knew they're they're having a tough time, they're just starting out, or they're really really out of shape, I'll put it that way, and so you encourage people like that. I received encouragement, come on, man, one more, one more press, one more lift, one more squat, one more whatever. That's that's awesome, and that's the the great part of being part of a gym
is those types of encouragements. But locker rooms, no no, no, no no, no, no no no. And so what's interesting about this story is that this post has generated what everyone should have known years ago when we talked about it. This was gonna this this type of thing happens routinely. It's just in certain areas people are shamed into not reporting it. Friends, let me tell you something. Gym's right now are a lot like fast food. There's plenty to choose from, plenty, and personally, I don't
think most have a policy like this. There's some ask about it, but just remember there are always options in the marketplace. Unfortunately, Planet Fitness has branded themselves as being the cheapest option, and they are and they are, but at what cost? Yeah? Right, I mean what's the cost? It says ten dollars, but your soul is on the line, and I mean, really, what's the cost? Your wife, your daughter's working out a Planet Fitness. They go in the locker room and a dude's in there.
He's already mentally unstable because he's pretending to be a woman. What if he snaps and all of a sudden decides to be a man again at that moment when your daughter's in the locker room, what's the cost of that membership? Then? Look, Planet Fitness has to do what it does, but the fact of the matter is it's losing value in the marketplace. Go woke, Well, you know the rest twenty seven minutes after the hour, come back with the Big Stories in the press Box on the Morning Show with Preston
Scott. It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Thirty five minutes after the hour of the Morning Show, Big Stories in the press Box, brought to you by Restore Carpent Karen Tyle. The FDA is settled in a lawsuit involving ivermectin. Doctors get a big win forcing the FDA to remove statements about ivermectin. It's a great agreed to remove social media posts and web pages that urged
people to stop taking ivermectin to treat COVID nineteen. It's a settlement dated March twenty first, the FDA has already removed the page that said should I take ivermectin to prevent or treat COVID nineteen question mark No, They've got another page to remove. Settlement was announced filed with the Federal Court in Southern Texas. This goes back to the FDA lying about COVID, the CDC lying about COVID, and in turn they had to lie about ivermectin, hydroxychloroquin and other potential
treatment that did in fact work. They worked in countries around the world to treat COVID. You can't prevent COVID because it's a corona virus and as such, there is no shot to inoculate and to prevent anyone from getting it. And that's what we've seen over and over and it's really pathetic that the FDA did all that it did and now, quietly, trust me, this isn't
being reported, it's not being pushed out. The FDA is wrong. So why now suddenly are they having to say nothing about using ivermectin Because it's being shown to work. It's been shown to work for four years. And if I sound a little angry, it's because I am. It's because I got ridiculed, I got threatened, I got all kinds of pushback when I was the one that had the science on my side. I was the one sharing the FDA documents that changed the goalposts, that changed the definition of vaccine and
explained why they did what they did. And I'm going to remind you, had they said that ivermectin could be used to treat, that hydroxychloroquine could be used to treat, they would not have been allowed to approve the vaccines. The shots the jabs under the emergency use authorization, and I'll remind you they still have never used the one shot that was quote approved. They're still using, they were still administrating administering the shot that was under the experimental label A
name. Why because it protects them from lawsuits. I'm I'm just this sounds like I'm spiking the football a little bit, and I am. I heard from so many doctors that were threatened. Their jobs were threatened if they didn't get the shot, their jobs were threatened if they if they help patients with alternative forms of treatment. I feel so glad for them. They've been vindicated.
It's so rare that you're able to like truly follow a story from the onset of COVID, you know, like through this end, and it's been chronicled for four years now. Like it's it's so clear that all of the concerns from four years ago, and it's like, no, I'm not sure you're being quite honest with me. I don't think you're telling the truth.
Here and now here we are four years later, totally feeling vindicated, and some amazing, unbelievable medical professionals have to live under the cloud of uncertainty because of all of this, and it's so unfair to them. It is so unfair. So now the FDA agrees to remove Why did they settle? I can answer the question because had they gone to court, they would have had
to disclose everything. Forty minutes after the hour, one of the big stories in the press box The Morning Show with Preston Scott on news Radio one hundred point seven WFLA. Let's have some healthy expectations learning us doctor Joe camp Solli, My friend, good morning. How are you today, Preston. I'm doing good, my friend, I'm doing good. How about you? Well? I listened to your blast segment and uh, you sound a bit animated, so that yeah, I mean want to get away you go, so
yeah, it's a way, go ahead. I wanted to. Uh. I've been interested in T cell immino therapy for for many years. Yeah. One of the reasons is my son in law up at UH in Pennsylvania does T cell research and uh, you know, the T cells or the natural
cells in our body that attacks all sorts of pathogens. But in this particular study, they use genetically engineered T cells and basically infuse these cells into the body and patients that had glio blackstonea Now glil blackstone is a brain tumor, probably one of the worst diagnosis one could ever get because there's really no effective
treatment other than surgery at this time. But certainly there were patients that were infused with the genetically engineered T cells and they had initially a great response. Now these tumors shrunk by over sixty percent. However, relapsed in two patients, and one of the patients has still been intermission. And so we're starting to see some clinical applications to this T cell modification to be used in the
treatment of very aggressive cancers. And you know, one of the things I've talked about for many years now is one of the issues we have with treating cancer patients is that the toxicity to the body. It such that it basically causes where maybe shrink the tumors, but certainly affects the blood cells and other things that can lead to infections and ultimately demise. But certainly I think that
T cell is going to be where the new information lies. I think it's going to be a type of infusion iminotherapy that's going to rev up the immune system to fight cancer. And I do hope and do believe one day that certainly this is going to happen. Now, the reason I talked about this this morning is that glioblastona's basically are very very aggressive, awful tumors, very
very difficult to treat. So I was glad to see that there was over a fifty percent reduction in these tumors and patients that were infuse with car T cells. So we'll be standing by and keep looking at this, but I have tremendous hope. The fact that these tumors were able to shrink by sixty percent is somewhere in couraging to me, and I stand by to see what
happens to this type of therapy in the future. Well, you know, doctor Camps, we came across this story and talked about it a couple of weeks ago in our good News segment on a Friday, and talked about the incredible advancements that are being made and the study that was published that you're referencing
in the New England Journal of Medicine. But here's what's also interesting that that therapy won a Nobel Prize for medicine, and ironically there's another story out and I don't know if you've seen it yet, And just to kind of show how the merging of technologies shows up in the most incredible places. Ivermectin now is being used to help fight cancer because it enhances the immune response and actually enables the chemotherapy and radiation theray to be even more effective. And so absolutely
it's incredible the advancements that are coming. It's unbelievable. And I look by and certainly activating our own immune systems to fight cancer like it does everything else that we encounter in our lives, I think is going to be the big breakthrough. And again, my son in law studies as Cartel. He's a researcher up in Pennsylvania, and so I can't wait to tell him about this
because certainly when you do bench work sometimes it takes years and years. But certainly to see anything effect leo blastona is really promising to me, and I'm really excited to see what happens in the future. Absolutely, Doctor Camps, thanks for the time today. All right, preston you take care, thank you, sir. Doctor Joe Camps with us this morning as we have healthy
expectations for everybody here on the morning Show with Rustin Scott. It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott on News Radio one hundred point seven double UFLA or on NewsRadio double UFLA, panamacity dot com. You know, we did have some other big stories of the press spots. Congress passing another one point two trillion dollars spending bill to avert a partial shutdown, folks, as much as it would disrupt lives, ask anybody who works for the federal government. It is
duplicatus. There is so much redundancy inside the federal government, waste, absolute waste. And guess what. We have plenty of jobs in the country, but it's compounded the problem with the job market by minimum wage loss. It's just it's a disaster what government has created. Conservatives are up in arms. I don't know what Mike Johnson was thinking. I had such high hopes for
him. Obviously, the realities of governing as the Speaker of the House change things dramatically when you're sitting in that seat and you're behind those particular closed doors. But it is to me unconscionable the amount of debt we're handing down to our children, grandchildren and great grandchildren. It is just immoral. And I still believe that the messaging that works is the messaging that ought to be done, which is just comparing how the government spends versus how you and I do
and how you and not because Democrats Republicans. That all goes away when it's money, when you can't pay your bills, Democrat republic It doesn't matter. Now the activists that are out there, it doesn't matter which side of the out the activists that are out there, none of that registers in their world.
Where it registers, and where good messaging could win the day is simply by pointing out how Congress just takes money from you and me, and how when you and I don't have enough money to pay whatever bills we might have, we have to figure it out. We don't just get more money. The banks just don't lend us more. The credit cards just don't extend more credit. There's a limit. There's a limit. I'm sorry you're in does
not create enough room for us to extend more credit to you. And that's what the federal government should have been told in two thousand and four, two thousand and five, two thousand and six, Sorry, no more, figure it out. Here you go. This is what you get. Figure it out. Another big story in the press box, the Biden administration coming after guns. They're using what is now called a massive red flag operation. It's
the National Extreme Risk Protection Order Resource Center. Man, can we name things or what it is all about? Finding ways to impede your right to possess a firearm, and they'll do the red flag thing. So, for example, if you just if you just were to say in the wrong crowd that if somebody enters your home without your permission, breaks into your home, you will use a firearm in your possession to defend yourself, for your family,
your children, the wrong person. Here's that you're going to be a threat to other people. And with ATF they take guns first, ask questions later. We've seen the stories, We've heard them time and again from Lee Williams, the gun writer. And that's the way it works. Hey, just
an fyi. If you're traveling on April eighth, which is in a couple of weeks, that total solar eclipse it's going to streak across the country diagonally from south to northeast, is going to be disruptive of air travel in different ways and means, So just keep that in mind. It's a span of time. It's going to move quickly. It's a thing. Millions and millions of people are traveling to the path of this all over the country to be
able to witness it. It's going to run about an hour Eastern time, an hour and ten minutes from about two thirty to three forty Eastern time on on April eighth. So just if you're plotting travel for business or pleasure, just keep that in mind to avoid being disrupted. All right, Our three is next. Hey, welcome to the third hour. It is Monday, March twenty fifth. Here our morning show. It's it's still really weird that we are about to polish off the first quarter of the year. I'm not
going to say it's old age. The time moves faster, just feels that way, and so we welcome you to the third hour of the radio program. Time moving fast here on Monday. It is show fifty one, twenty two of the radio program. That's Grant Allen running the show. I am Preston Scott and joining us in studio. It's really good to have in studio Jay Shirlow and Jay and his wife Stays here co founders of an organization that many of you are familiar with called Orphan Shade. We introduced you to Orphan
Shade a couple years ago and Jay, welcome into the studios. How are you good, sir? I'm great and glad to be here. Yeah, you are. You're just a couple months short of heading back to Malawi. That's right, we are headed back in early May. Excuse me for a seven week tour. Seven weeks, all right, We're going to get to that. For those that may not have heard the introduction back a couple of years ago and the many repetitions of it in the time subsequent, explain what
Orphan Shade is and how it came about. Sure I can. I can do that by telling you a story of one of our girls we have. We have a young girl, she's seven years old. Her her name was uh I lost it. It's Ruth and Ruth. Her parents both passed away due to HIV and she was left without a guardian and fended for herself in survival mode in a small village where we serve and Ruth would do things like
sleep in a goat pen at night. She would forage for food, beg for food as a seven year old child at at significant risk to abuse, trafficking, all kinds of bad things, and we were introduced to Ruth. She was invited to join us. We had an empty bed, so we brought her in and she is now part of a foster family that we support.
It's important for people to understand they hear orphan shade, and I think the immediate default that we all have, and I know I certainly did when I first heard about what you and Stacey and pastor component we put together from my wife Cynthia and disclosures. Cynthia and Jay were friends back in college. I think of a traditional orphanage that is not what you do. Correct.
We are technically legally within the country. We're a foster home, but we have a home with two volunteer parents that volunteer to raise these children to eighteen, and our home is supported and looked after by the local church in the village. That's tough for some people to get their mind around. Wait, I thought you were talking about Malawi. Yes, and that's where Prince Compono comes in. That's right, So he works together with us very closely.
We rely on him significantly. He will point the direction where he has a mature church with a mature pastor. They've been around for more than ten years, and we will meet with these folks and we will assess their ability to really help us take care of a family. And in this first case with Ruth, that church has gained a new ministry and that's our home with our foster family. We're going to talk about those homes because there's more than one,
there's more than two. In fact, we're going to talk a little bit about home number three, which many of you played a role in, and just kind of get a broad overview of how this all works. The website is real simple, Orphanshade dot com. You can go there and learn more about this and who knows, you might be tugged on to participate. That's between you and God on whether you want to do that. Ten minutes after the hour, Jay Shirlow the Orphan Shade my guest here in the Morning
Show with Preston Scott. It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Jay Shurlow with me of Orphan Shade and Jay, let's go to home one and how are these places selected? We are directed to these villages based on our partner you mentioned, Prince Kempomo. He directs us to a village that both has need from an orphan standpoint and where they have a mature church. He's been planning churches how long now for about eighteen years. Wow, I love it.
The Johnny apple Seed of Malawi with churches. There's over one hundred and fifty of them. I don't know the exact number, and I don't think he knows the exact number, but it is an abundance of small and medium sized church plants in local villages. Tell us about Home one. Home One we built in twenty twenty one, opened it at the end of twenty twenty one. It was our first shot at it. We had no idea what we're doing. Every day was a new day, just a need and a
desire to meet it. Yes, yeah, So we built a home with the help of a very cordial and helpful builder, and we went through the process of identifying children. Uh, it was all girls, and we identified a set of parents from another village church and so they became the parents. We had lots of problems and both from the village standpoint and from the extended family of the girls, they were the least helpful uh in our experience. So that was very eye opening for us. But the church opened their arms.
They provided food that their method of tithing as farmers is providing food, and a lot of that food went to the to the home to feed the children. And uh, the family became the men ministry or one of the ministries of the local church, which which was our intention. Uh, and we wanted to be local in the child's own village. So it was successful in terms of our vision. Uh, it was. It was rough because we were learning, learning new things every day and it's an ongoing home.
Number one continues to this day. Yes it does. What did you learn that you brought into home too? We learned about trauma. These are children who have experienced the death of both of their of their parents. They have they've faced this term food insecurity is a nice way of saying people in this country don't know food insecurity, correct. So these are these are children who could go days without eating and their their method for finding food was begging in
most cases. So there was a big adjustment for them in this home and they struggled with feeling that this was their home. They in terms of food, they would steal food from themselves because they didn't trust that they were going to be fed the next day. Correct. So it just there's an expectation that this would go away. And so that was about a six to nine month process for them to start adjusting to a family that will be continuous.
The distance between Home one and Home two, these villages give us a little proximity about fifty kilometers say thirty eight miles ish, so not close and completely different village, different culture. That home is interesting right next to where the local pastor lives, so he is very involved in the day to day activities of the family. And that that church is thriving. That church is planted. Since we landed there, they have planted two churches on their own in
the area. Yes, based on people who have come, who came to our grand opening, and people were being saved, people were being healed, and churches were formed. We've got more to come. We're going to give you an update on Home three, which many of you supported the building of and are going to support the the month to month expenses of. We'll get that report next. Jay Sherlow of Orphaned Shade is my guest. Sixteen past the hour, I told him ahead of time it's gonna fly. He knew
that because we've had him on the show before. Jay Sherlow of Orphan Shade. So we now get to home number three, which is the one that some of our listeners and some folks that listeners told about Orphan Shade have partnered with with us. Home number three tell us the status the house is ninety five percent complete. They just painted the outside and the floors inside last week.
We will be moving beds we have. They have fabricated steel beds monk beds for the girls as well as for the parents, and those will be moved in, I believe next week. So we're we're getting very close to being ready. I think when when we talk about building homes, I think it would be useful to share here's what's normally in these villages, what is
in these villages, and what is being built. A typical home in a tribal village would look like a homemade brick, one two room schoolhouse looking structure with a thatched roof, designed to last about maybe one season season and a half. Okay. These areas get significant rainfall during the rainy season and often get wiped away by flooding. So it's normal for them to rebuild on a regular basis because these are handmade bricks correct as opposed to what's being built at
the Orphan Shade homes correct or our home. I refer to it as a tank. It has based based on input from our builder. We have a foundation that is two meters deep, so a little over six foot deep, with lots of rebar and large abundance of concrete, so it's immovable. And what we're protecting from is weather, so it's not just rain, it's flooding. And so this house is about twelve hundred square feet, three bedrooms. One of the bedrooms is very large to accommodate eight girls, and there's a
small kitchen, small living area, and there's a porch. No electricity, no plumbing. That's just not available in these villages, but it is. It is a home that will last decades. What are the other advantages that these girls have, because you mentioned that you choose girls in large part because they are the most likely to be victimized when they're orphaned. And so these girls, though have have what going for them being part of Orphan Shade.
Good question. They are going to get education, that that extends beyond with the government would supply, which is the government provides public education to children up through the end of what we would call middle school. High school would be something that would be only really sharp students would be Algebra four and that would
be boarding school and that's private only. That's correct. Okay. They are going to get food on a regular basis, so it's important that it's three meals a day at the same time, repeat, repeat, repeat, and snacks. So these these are girls who are not skinny anymore and malnourished. They they get healthcare that they would not get at all in their village. So we have relationships with local clinics that we can take the girls to to
get care. But most of all, they're introduced to the gospel. They have parents who love them like their own, so they are actually part of a living, breathing family and that care for them and love them in an environment where that has never happened to them in the past. Home number three paid for, the support is covered. What needs exist? Now where are you going forward? Our next objective is house number four and are we're going
to build that this summer. We've we've been successful at raising funds for that, and some of your listeners have provided funds for really oh yeah, we're really thankful for your listeners who have given small amounts large amounts. Recall, theres about one hundred and fifty donors total who gave towards that home and it raised. They raised over forty thousand dollars. That's amazing, which I was gobsmacked. So all of you who did gave you are a tremendous blessing to
us and to these children. So Home three folks taking care of We're now on to Home four. And yes there will be a five and a six and a seven and an eight. God willing and if God Terry's learn more support the work Orphanshade dot com, Orphanshade dot com and to those of you that are svp'd, we look forward to seeing you tonight. Jay, Thank you, Thank you, Jay Sherlow, Orphan Shade, orphan Shade dot com. Preston Scott sixty of the time, it works every time on news radio
one point seven double UFLA. All right, it's thirty six past the hour, final half hour. Chick fil A in the news again. We'll get to that in just a few minutes. Now, seriously, how many times can we get Chick fil A in a broadcast in like a two week window? It's insane. I blew your mind with the the what was it? The little blue menu? Is that? What that was? Little blue menu? The one at the College Park Carlark, Maryland restaurant. Yeah, they're
making pizzas at the Chick fil A in College Park, Maryland. Pizzas, Chick fil A pizzas. Hey, I'm open to it. Look, I've never met a pizza. Just take a look at me. I've never met a pizza I didn't like anyway. Big stories in the press box brought to you by a restore carpet, cair and Tyle be paying attention. I promise I will bet the farm that Lee Williams will be writing something about the National Extreme Risk Protection Order Resource Center. If ever there was an acronym that absolutely
fits a Biden administration idea, it's this one. IRPO io Io's that's what they're calling it. I didn't make it up. It's IRPO. I'm not kidding. It is the IRPO Resource Center. As you know, what my sister used to say when she she would not be feeling well I'm gonna irp right right, that's what I think of a child who's gotten up set tummy
exactly. Yeah, is that ever? Like, could there be a better for what they're They're going to try to hinder your ability to have a firearm, and they're gonna use this red flag thing that Look, there are laws in the books right now that deal with people that are crazy that shouldn't have a firearm. We got them. All we gotta do is follow them, and we're fine. But what this is gonna do is it's going to open the door for if somebody hears you say that you believe in the castle doctrine,
let's say you're going to be a threat to others. Yeah, it's so important to almost use I hate them. We've gotten to this point, but almost like coded language, like you like someone who understands you knows what you're talking about, but a lot of people don't know what you're talking about. And so that's kind of in the like you can't just say things like anymore, Like you can't say things, yeah, I mean you can otherwise if you do, I mean, all eyes are on you. Yeah,
the eye of Souren has directed its gaze your direction. Who would have thought when George Orwell wrote that stuff, right, Souren is lord of the rings. I'm just talking about by brother, Yeah, nineteen eighty four. I mean, who would have thought FDA settling the ivor mechtin case I went off on that last hour, I spiked the football. The FDA has settled a case and they no longer will say on their website, social media, on anywhere that ivermectin cannot be used to treat COVID. Now, isn't that an
interesting development? Why would they settle that? Folks? I keep begging, you don't always follow the ball, because that's the look over here, look over here, look over here, while something else is back here. They settled this case because they would have had to go to court, and they would have had discovery, and they would have had disclosures, and they would have had to take questioning and cross examination. The FDA wants no part of that. And so, all of a sudden, ivermectin is not the ugly
redheaded stepchild of the family of treating COVID. All of a sudden, it's now okay, well, you know if it works on whatever, and so this is going to have a ripple effect, but it's going to take forever to get through the medical community because ivermectin had been turned into persona non grata in the drug field. Preston Scott on News Radio one hundred point SEVENBUFLA, all right, you judge the importance of this Chick fil A announcement like anything
else. Grant and I can turn this into a half hour of the show. Chick fil A announced that it will be shifting from anti biotic free chicken quoting to maintain supply of the high quality chicken you expect from us. Chick fil A will shift from no antibiotics ever to no antibiotics important to human medicine starting in the spring of twenty twenty four. Now, before anybody rolls them under the bus, just hold on, now, why are they in this
spot? Probably because, like what quarter of chicken plants have mysteriously blown up for no reason in the last four three four years exactly the same fate. I don't know the exact amount, but it's a lot. We've talked about the suspicious blowing up fires, closures of chicken farms across the country that's been going on for the last two to three years right, boy, what happened two to three years before? Oh yeah, now yeah, now you're reaching
Preston a big guy. Anyway, this is this is where I get it. Chick fil A is saying. Look, they're saying without saying, we can't find enough chicken, and so we're gonna have to We're gonna have to
accept some things here moving forward. Now, if I'm Chick fil A and i may own the cattle on a thousand hills, but I'm close, I'm creating my own chicken farm and I'm doing it regionally, or I'm part better yet, think of the pr win if you partner with those family run farms that we've been talking about that are getting run out of business one hundred percent
of the big conglomerates on undred percent. Imagine if Chick fil A partners with them, helps them with the fertilizer issues so that the rest of their farmlands can grow, they have their chicken produce, or maybe they just specializing chicken. Whatever you're dealing with the Bill Gates thing going on where Gates is buying
up all the farmland and is forbidding cattle farming on those lands. Imagine the possibilities if some of the higher end and by higher end, fast food industry leaders start partnering with these smaller farms that are being shoved out of business for cattle, local fir chicken, local chicken produce grown not in this kind of inhumane, gross conditions factory farm style, Like, we have local growers,
and here's the list. Here are the farmers that we support. Here are the family farms, and you can go visit them, like you can see who they are. These are people in your community. Yep, you trust the poultry that's being grown in the area. Yeah, that's that's a total just people would flock. I no pun intended. Nice. I use this as just another example of this is government's fault that we're at a place like this where Chick fil A is having to say what they're saying. So I'm
not mad at them, I'm not. I get it. I get the landscape they're having to operate in, and so Chick fil A just youbu whatever. But I think for the rest of us, we need to just step back a little bit and just take a look at cause and effect. Look at what all the regulations, look all of the expansion of government intrusion into lives, into businesses, into the small farms of America. Look where it leads. It eventually leads to this type of scenario existing. Have you priced
a Hamburger lately? Have you priced Hamburger, steak or anything at the store. Just consider this and its impact on your pocketbook as you vote in elections this year, small and large, near and far. Forty six minutes after the hour, come back with a megamiss tomorrow on the program We're We're gonna take you inside the House Oversight Committee that was handling the open hearing involving Hunter Biden, Joe Biden, James Biden, the Biden Boys. You know what
they had to do a podcast, Biden Time. It'll have stories of intrigue, corruption and ice cream chocolate chocolate chip. Yeah, I mean corn Pop. Oh my gosh, would that be amazing? Special guest corn pop, special guest appearances from corn Pop terrific. I'd listen. Someone not to just do that Biden Time. You're welcome whoever picks that up and runs with it. All right, we did not have a Mega million winner. We did not have a winner, So the next drawing is tomorrow night. I'm not
encouraging you to play. It's a news story. If you spend, if you are, if your budget is so tight that you that you can't spend a couple bucks on a lottery ticket, you shouldn't be playing the lottery. Use that for your bills and your bread and all that I've told you.
I'm I just think it's it's a fascinating phenomenon how this has worked. And I'm you can't convince me that there's not an occasion that those balls just happen to pull up a winner in California, because it sure happens a lot But then again, Californians have reason to play the lottery because that might be the only way they can afford their one bedroom apartment. Same thing with New Yorkers. Friday's winning numbers were three, eight, thirty one, thirty five,
forty four. The megaball was sixteen. The prize hold on Kids Tomorrow Night is estimated at one point one billion dollars. No thank you, No nope, nope, nope, nope. Now just that's says that's too much, that's too too much money. All right, tomorrow we will talk about the House Oversight Committee. Will take you inside the meeting with some sound that you
will find fascinating. Manly minute, money, talk and more, brought to you by Barno Heating and Air. It's the Morning Show one on WFLA look back at the radio program in one hundred and eighty seconds or Wes Big Stories in the press box today. Ivermectin big win, a huge l on the ledger for the FDA. The FDA can no longer say that ivermectin cannot work against COVID. They're not allowed to do it. They've agreed to that. Again. Why did the FDA settle this case because they were wrong and they
knew it. I'm just I'm going to keep spiking that football over and over and over. Speaking of ivermectin new development. It may be a powerful drug for fighting cancer as opposed to the way a lot of conventional cancer therapies work. Ivermectin kills cancer cells by enhancing immune response, and it actually helps enhance the work of radiation and chemotherapy. It's a thing just saying Republicans are upset
because the Biden administration is trying to again infringe on Second Amendment rights. They're working at it. They passed to one point two trillion dollar funding bill. What's the old joke about billions? You know, before you know it, we'll be talking about real money. We're not talking about real money anymore. It's all gone. All right, Tomorrow we'll do it all over again. Folks, have an awesome day.