Hey, good morning friends, Welcome to Wednesday. You're on the Morning Show with Preston Scott On Preston, He's great Allen and it is April the seventeenth show of fifty one thirty nine. My o, mind, what times we live in? What is it? The website not to be proclaims what a time to be alive? Let's let's begin with a verse of Scripture one Corinthians one eighteen. For the word of the Cross is folly to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved, it is the power of
God. I want to take a take a moment with this one. The word of the cross is what is the word of the cross? There are a lot of ways you could extrapolate some kind of meaning out of that portion of Scripture. The word of the Cross, as I would explain, this is the work of the Cross. In the case of Jesus. It applies to no other person in history, which makes sense because no other person in
history has had the power to divide time. The life of Christ was so significant and impactful that it marked the division that we now referred to as BC and AD. And it goes on to say that the word the work of the Cross. And here's I think an important way to understand to those who are perishing. We're not talking about the temporal death that comes to us all. Everybody's going to face it until that last generation that sees Christ's return,
that could come at any time. Jesus said that he didn't even know when it was going to happen. But the perishing being referred to here are those who have ignored, rejected, scoffed at, laughed at, mocked the word of the Cross. The reason for their perishing is that they ignored it. And it goes on to say, but to us who are being saved, which explains what the word of the Cross is all about. The word of
the Cross now transitions to an instrument of salvation. When you understand the totality of what Christ did, you understand that it is that that point and the work of the Cross, and after that Jesus did that enables us to have the option of receiving that lifeline and being saved. And it is the power of God. It's a powerful little verse, like all of scripture, just
packed with depth and meaning. So that's how we start the day. One Corinthians one eighteen Good morning, busy day, Charlie Strickland in the third hour, Lots to talk about with Charlie. Who've got Florida Man, Florida Man Factor fiction. We're gonna take you inside the United States Supreme Court arguments that took place yesterday relative to January sixth. Stick around seriously, get some toast, maybe mix up a little oatmeals and eggs, and settle in for a
while. And if you can't stay for the whole show, circle back on the podcast later. It's The Morning Show with Preston Scott. The Morning Show with Preston Scott on News Radio one hundred point seven Double UFLA or on NEWSRADIOBFLA Panama City dot Com Deep Dive inside American Patriots Almanac. On April seventeenth, nineteen forty two, the aircraft carrier USS Hornet steamed west across the Pacific, several hundred miles from Japan. Lashed to its deck were sixteen B twenty five
bombers planes never before launched from an aircraft carrier on a combat mission. Their target Tokyo. In the four months after Pearl Harbor, Japan's forces had surged across the Pacific the Japanese were confident their nation was safe from attack. Lieutenant Colonel James H. Jimmy Doolittle and seventy nine other airmen were determined to prove them wrong with a surprise air attack from the sea. They knew they would not have enough fuel to return to the Hornet, so they planned to land
in China. After dropping their bombs. Early on April eighteenth, a Japanese patrol boat spotted the task force. Doolittle realized he much must launch earlier than he planned. His airmen had spent months training but had never taken off at sea. In the midst of a howling storm, Doolittle got his plane off the pitching deck and into the air, with the other B twenty five's following. The bombers headed towards Japan, just twenty feet above the waves to avoid
detection. The attack was a complete surprise. Many Japanese waved as the bombers flew overhead, not dreaming they could be Allied aircraft. The raiders quickly dropped their bombs on Tokyo and other targets and sped away. Doolittle and his crews continued towards China, where they crash landed or parachuted from their planes as they ran out of fuel. One bomber landed in Russia. Most of the men eventually made at home with the help of Chinese who hid them from the Japanese.
The Japanese did capture several airmen, executing three, starving one to death. The audacious raid did little physical damage, but it stunned the Japanese. News of Jimmy Doolittle's thirty seconds over Tokyo electrified Americans and helped turn the tide of the war in the Pacific. I didn't know that we had we lost men to execution. Wow, that was on this date in nineteen forty two. Changed those numbers around a little bit. Fourteen ninety two, Christopher Columbus
signs of contract with Spain giving him a commission. We'll pay you a commission of five percent now to seek a western route to the Indies. Fifteen twenty four, Italian navigator Giovanni di Verrazano, exploring for France, becomes the first European douce sale into New York Harbor. Hence the name of the bridge Hullo
that's named after him, The horizontal bridge. How about that how about that eighteen sixty That's the thing I love about these little stupid segments we do is because it now I understand why certain cities are named the way they're named. I understand why there certain bridges are named the way they're named. It's just
interesting. Virginia seceeds from the Union in eighteen sixty one. Nineteen sixty one, some twelve hundred American back Cuban exiles launched the Bay of Pigs Invasion, failed effort to overthrow Fidel Castro. And then in nineteen seventy, Apollo thirteen astronauts returned safely to Earth four days after an on board explosion on their crippled spacecraft. Oh yeah, I've got some memorabilia from Apollo thirteen, from the
actual spaceship, the actual command module. It's pretty cool, as well as a signed photo by Gene Krantz autographed our successful failure is something like that written on board with a picture of Jim Level. I just want I want to try and get Jim Level's signature on it. Anyway, sixteen minutes after the hour, come back with sort of the unofficial beginning of the show. I say the word castaway or Castaways, and most of you probably think Tom Hanks,
well said, that was my first reaction. Some of you not just think of Tom Hanks, you think of the SS Mino and Gilligan's Island. Now, do you ever watch one episode of the old Gilligan's Island show? Yeah, I've seen it. Now, I'm not a ton I've seen more like Mash and Andy Griffith right than I saw of Gilligan's Island. And I don't know why that is, but yeah, I've seen more episodes of those shows. Yeah, Gilligan's Island predated all of those others. Yeah, quite
by quite a bit. I mean they would do some specials which are just like naked stop. Oh really. They had like uh yeah, like almost reunion type shows, many movies in the in the like huh you know, the the the cast Jim Backus, for example, who played thirst and Haw the Third He was the voice of Mister Magoo, which is just a classic cartoon. There are so many flaws in the entire idea of Gilligan's Island. You know, a three hour cruise. How did they have all that gear
with them? I mean, Ginger had sequence dresses to last years on this deserted island for a three hour cruise the professor. I mean, the Howls had all kinds of things, but we'll set all that aside. It was a fun little show and some crazy little scenarios that would unfold. I enjoyed watching Gilligan's Island. I thought it was funny in a silly kind of slapstick
way. But then you got to the movie Castaway. Though there were individual moments that were kind of sort of funny, that was not a funny movie. That was an incredible movie. To me. I thought it was really good. But then I tend to think Tom Hanks is an exceptional actor, and I just have to suspend some of his political leanings. I just have to put those to the side because I just really enjoy him as an actor.
I always have. I don't know why. So when I saw this story from the lead research assistant, I don't know if the lead research assistant of the Morning show realized that I know him, and he's going to definitely jump on this because the first word in the headline is Castaways. He's going to gravitate to it. And so it is that four quote experienced mariners, which I kind of chuckle at because they were on a twenty foot skiff with an out motor and they're in the Pacific Ocean with that bad boy, and
they ended up not coming back. And it was several days later that friends, family members notified authorities that they were missing, and so the search began. The search grid was pretty impressive, seventy eight thousand square nautical miles. That's big. That's a lot of ocean. And so they were rescued. How do you think they were found? How did they get the attention of planes flying overhead? They used palm fronds to spell out help on a massive
beach. Wow. And when you look at the picture of how they did it and how they how large they made it. Wow. Yeah. I mean they built a makeshift shed and protected themselves the best they could from the elements. I don't know what they drank. I don't know what they had
on board. We'll hopefully get some details, but a rescue package was basically dropped until a ship could be sent to get them, and radio was sent and dropped to them by parachute by one of those Hercules planes that I think we probably referred to them as hurricane hunters, and so these four guys are in good health, and there you go. Actually it was a P eight, a Navy P eight aircraft that dropped the gear. It was US Coast
Guard that found him and a little remote island stranded in the Pacific. Closest US area was Hawaii. So there you go. Always be prepared. That's all I can tell you. Be prepared, boy scout motto. And this is the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Big Stories in the press Box this morning brought to you by Grove, a creative marketing and digital expertise. Our condolences to the family and close friends of former Florida US Senator and Governor Bob
Graham, who died yesterday at the age of eighty seven. Born in Coral Gables, went to the University of Florida Harvard grad served three terms in the Governor's mansion from nineteen seventy nine to nineteen eighty seven, three terms. His family actually created the town of Miami Lakes in nineteen sixty crazy but again, our condolences to the family of Bob Graham. He was a guest on this program. It's been a number of years since I had Senator Graham, Governor
senator, you know, take your pick what title. I don't know which title he preferred, but a moderate. I think that he would probably be pretty disgusted at where this party has tracked in the last decade. At the very least, he's kind of like one of those old school Florida guys like Steve Spurrier, you know, like born and kind of that old South Florida, those old school families, you know, those pioneer families, and you know, he was a gentleman, just deep deep ties in kind of the
old Florida. Yeah, the old state as it was before you know, mass modernization and you know, beach resorts. It was just a different time. And so it's at least at the very least, always very sad when another member of kind of that older generation of like our grandparents and great grandparents and you know, just in the old guard of the Democrat Party as it used to be. Yeah, without the extremism and the fringe politics and anyway.
But again that, of course, I think Mark's a big story, as does this want to take you inside Supreme Court listening to arguments made yesterday by US Solicitor General Elizabeth Preleagor in Fisher versus the United States. They're challenging the charges that the Department of Defense has brought using the Sarbanes Oxley Act, which had nothing to do with anything that went on January sixth, and so she's presenting and Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsich has some questions, if I might
so, what does that mean for the breadth of this statue? Would a sit in that disrupts a trial or access to a federal courthouse qualify? Would a heckler in today's audience qualify? Or at the State of the Union address, would pulling a fire alarm before a vote qualify? For twenty years in
federal prison. There are multiple elements of the statute that I think might not be satisfied by those hypotheticals, and it relates to the point I was going to make to the Chief Justice about the breadth of this statute, the kind of built in limitations or the things that I think would potentially suggest that many of those things wouldn't be something the government could charge or prove as fifteen twelve C. Two beyond a reasonable doubt. Would include the fact that the Actus
raise does require obstruction, which we understand to be a meaningful interference. So that means that if you have some minor disruption or delay, or some minimal outbursts, I don't think it falls within the beginning to require the court to reconvene after the proceeding has been brought back into line, or the pulling of the fire alarm the vote has to be rescheduled, or the protest outside of
a courthouse makes it inaccessible for a period of time. Are those all federal felonies subject to twenty years in prison, So with some of them it would be necessary to show nexus. So with respect to the protest house, yes, they were figuring that. Yeah, they were trying to stop the proceeding. Yes, And then we'd also have to be able to prove that they acted corruptly. And this sets a stringent men's raya. It's not even just the mere intent to obstruct. We have to show that also, but we
have to show that they had corrupt intent in acting in that way. We went around that tree yesterday. I know I heard the argument yesterday, but I guess what I would say is that to the extent that your hypotheticals are pressing on the idea of a peaceful protest, even one that's quite disruptive. It's not clear to me that the government would be able to show that each of these monsters had disrupted protests that actually obstructs and impedes and an official proceeding
for an indefinite period would not be covered, not necessarily. We would just have to have the evidence of intent. And that's a home They intend to do it all right, Okay, they intended to do it all right. More Next on The Morning Show with Preston Scott, Welcome to the Morning Show,
within Scott. As was pointed out in a column on Red State, theoretically, left wing protesters who block roads and prevent official proceedings, in this case, court proceedings from occurring, could be charged under the same statute as the January sixth protesters. According to the government, though it's different because they somehow didn't know they weren't allowed to obstruct an official proceeding. How does that
make any sense as is written? How is a mema who took selfies in the rotunda on January sixth, having walked through an already opened door, somehow more aware of what they are doing than a left wing protester who planned to do what they did. It doesn't make sense, and it's obvious the government simply doesn't care that it's applying the law in such a biased fashion. So
Justice Gorsich brings up sit ins at the trial. At a trial, Kavanaugh protests pulling a fire alarm, Representative Bowman, Heckler's in a crowd, Palestinians, Palestinian sympathizers, and mostly peaceful protests BLM. The write ups all indicate that the originalist justices are doubting the government's case, and they are doubting that the government has any legal standing to apply Sarbaines Oxley, which was about destroying documents and Enron to this case. Another big story in the press box.
House of Representatives on Tuesday formally delivered articles of impeachment against Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorchis to the Senate. Don't know that anything. It's probably going to die
there because the Senate's controlled by Democrats. But as this problem grows in its scope, illustrated by just a moment from now, this will prove more and more difficult for the Democrats because what it will then look like that can really affect down ballot voting is that the Democrats in mass are going to defend Joe Biden's open border and invasion of this country, illustrated by this story from The Daily Signal, an advocy advocacy group based in northeastern Mexico, that Lobby's US
lawmakers has distributed and posted flyers encouraging illegal immigrants to vote for President Joe Biden. The Oversight Project says, quoting translated from Spanish, reminder to vote for President Biden when you are in the United States. We need another four years of his term to stay open. Is there any one of you now doubting why Democrats are allowing this? They are hemorrhaging registered Democrats, not just in Florida, across the country. I have chronicled for you for years the walk
Away campaign and how it is the tip of the iceberg. People are fleeing and they have to replace them, and they will do so illegally if needed, happily without any because here's why they believe that it's morally right, that it's just the right thing to do. And so what if. Remember Jonathan
Gruber and Obamacare. I wish we could be transparent, but I'd rather have this bill than not Democrats paraphrasing, wish we could be legal, but we'd rather have Joe Biden continue this ridiculousness, or whoever's pulling Joe's strings to continue being able to do that. We'd rather have Democrats in power illegally than not legally. Okay, So because we know we're right, and we know we're
better, we know we're more enlightened, that's what matters most. So if if there needs to be an invasion of the southern border and we need to have some illegal voters, so be it. That's how they think. Don't doubt me. Forty seven minutes past the hour, and this is the Preston Scott Show. A few FSU related stories here. Spring Football Showcase is coming up on Saturday, and I'll be anxious to hear the response the crowd has to the condition of the stadium. My understanding is, and and they could
be I could be wrong on this. My understanding is it will not be completed by the start of the new season, that there will be diminished seating availability this coming season. I don't know. My understanding is they can't possibly get it all done because they've pulled a chunk at the stadium out and it's part of a renovation that they're doing. There would be many that would say
that it was not necessary. There would be many that would say it was necessary, that the bleacher style seating is too narrow and they needed to space things out a little bit. I don't know. That's not my wheelhouse. FSU Baseball Top five now they have made the steady march and I think they're getting better. I think that, you know, and a lot of people forget that they really should have won the Clemson Series on the road. They had, if I'm not mistaken, all three games and gave it up at
the end in the bullpen. This is a good baseball team. Link Jared has pulled together in a very short period of time. He's turned over nearly the entire roster, and so that's good news. I thought it was pretty cool. I thought I recognized her, Angel Gray doing some ESPN women's college basketball tournament. She's an FSU guard. She played for Sue Semro, and
she does a very good job. I was really impressed and proud of I like to think I'm a pretty good critic of broadcasting sports in particular, and I was just it was I saw her and I was like, I know that name. I think that that girl played guard for Sue, and sure enough, that's her. We will talk women's basketball by the end of the week because a lot's being made of the pay disparity between WNBA rookies and NBA rookies, and w NBA players and NBA players, and I want to talk
about that, But I also want to give a little love. Got this note. I know you're an avid supporter of all things FSU wanted wanted to bring something to your attention. For the second straight year, FSU's women water polo team has won the Southeast Division Regional Championship, beating the University of Florida in overtime. This past Sunday, the Collegiate Water Polo Association will be holding
the National Championships at Texas A and M and early May. Once again, the Lady Knowles will be representing FSU as a proud father of one of the players. I hope you can find time to give a shout out to the whole team for a job well done and cheer them on as they compete at the Nationals. They're not done yet, so fear the water polo spear and that is from Jeremy Johnson. Jeremy, shout out to your daughter and credit because I've never played water polo, but I've been in a pool and let
me tell you something. Treading water for the amount of time that they're treading water and swimming and doing what they do, that is no sport for sissies. Water polo and oh, by the way, is brutal. It is a very physical sport. So congratulations women's water poloers. Go get them in the nationals. And I hope we can talk to a coach or a player in the future. Five minutes after Second Island, good morning, kids, ruminators, friends, ladies and gentlemen. Wherever you are however you are listening,
thank you. It is the Morning Show with Trustin Scott. And yes, this time of year, broadcast radio signals can get a little flaky. We are aware. We are at full power. It is an atmospheric thing called ducting we have zero control over. So always consider switching over to the iHeartRadio app. And let me quickly add some have said, well, where's
I'm not getting local news. I'm getting news from another part of the state of Florida or another location that's all based on whether you're using data or Wi Fi. Usually your data signal from a cell tower will be localized. Oftentimes your Wi Fi signal will come from somewhere else. It'll be originating from say Orlando or wherever, and you'll get because that's where it's geographically located, the
hub. That's where you could potentially be getting on your iHeartRadio app, so you can you can just switch and experiment and see which is going to deliver what you're looking for the best. But no matter what, you can listen to the show live by streaming ninety six three FM Panama City or one two point five FM Panama City Beach, or you look for WFLA FM in Tallahassee one hundred point seven or WFLA Panama City. Just look for those on the
iHeartRadio app to listen live. The podcast, of course, will be UH will drop a little bit later after the end of the show. It was a number of years ago we talked about it on this program, the number of female teachers targeting male students and engaging in intimacy. I've got one story, two deliveries of it. Please found forty five year old woman and again bad reporting allegedly admitting to no She's admitted to engaging in intimacy with a seventeen
year old student. Police show up. They get a report of a suspicious car at the back of a road three am. Officers approach the car. The teenager jumps into the driver's seat and tries to drive off. It's not his car, the forty five year old substitute teacher, it's her husband's car. Yes, she's married and has three children. He crashes, the car takes off. He's eventually found on search wearing boxer's T shirt and socks. She's facing twenty years. She certainly has lost her job, and in one
report, that's where the story ends. Here's what's fascinating. When this report was released and written, there was other information available. The other information is that the husband works for the Department of Defense. He's a Harvard grad with seemingly a spotless record. Doug Ward spent nearly two decades at Strategic Command, headquartered in Omaha. Began his career as deputy Branch chief in two thousand and
five, promoted to deputy director of the Commander's Action Group in February. High profile military guy and the nature of their relationship whatever. I mean, it's not Jermaine. It's interesting that the Fox story doesn't say anything about it, but it's everywhere else. But there's a bigger story here. It is a much bigger story than this lady doing what she did with that student. And
that's the story I want to get to next. Ten minutes after the hour, it is The Morning Show with Preston Scott, The Morning Show with Preston Scott on News Radio one hundred point seven WFLA. Why is it? And I asked this exact same question years ago, why is it that female teachers praying on students is treated totally differently than male teachers praying on female or male students. I'm not remotely suggesting that guys should be treated with a softer touch.
I'm pointing out that we have some really strange predispositions in our legal system. In drug cases, minorities get treated more harshly than whites Caucasians for the exact same set of charges, similar backgrounds. They just are. In divorce proceedings, historically, men get shafted on custody and settlement terms. Traditionally there
are always exceptions, but traditionally there's a predisposition towards women. Now maybe that's dying away because so many more women are now working and engaging in professional cons I just believe no fault divorce is a mistake when fault can be determined. That said, when it comes to this violation of a teacher student relationship, it is interesting. I was just listening to Chris Hansen talk about this. He's the guy. We've had Chris on the show to Catch a Predator.
He's got a new show take Down where they engage in stings with local law enforcement across the country. Oh yeah, finishing move. Yeah. I was thinking more of a wrestling move with that show. Wow. Yeah, yeah, from the top deck. Wow. And you should see the faces of the guys that come in in their face with cameras and Chris Hansen. They're expecting to see little Joey or little Missy or whatever. He pointed out. Men tend to be looking for anonymity, tend to be Women don't want that.
Women want intimacy. They want to know the person they want to have. They build a relationship with that person and they think it's a safer type of engagement. But there's always an element of power and control, and with female teachers it's the teacher student power and control relationship. Now, this woman's life has ended over this in terms of as she knew it, Her marriage is likely over her kids. I mean, how do you how do you deal with that? Your mom engaging in that? How do you do that?
But I just want to point out that this predation is growing and it's come back, and women are being treated differently than men. Still, is it forgivable? Absolutely, Unlike predators of children, which I do not believe can be rehabbed. These situations, if they're one offs, they're just dreadfully bad mistakes and the prices is severe, and I think people can walk from
that and find their way to a better life. I'm just pointing out the inconsistencies in our court system and importantly in our media and social conversations about this. Sixteen minutes after the hour, Be Vigilant Parents, Charlie. I'll join us next hour, Charlie, Charlie stricklying Talent training group. Chalie, it's about it. Listening on his way in right now. How you doing that, Charlie. Yeah, We're going to talk about some media matters, important
stuff, personal defense. Third hour twice a month. Why because it's dangerous out there, friends, And we will be talking over lots of different scenarios this morning on the program. Do you ever find yourself in a situation and you wish you'd had just had the right thing to say, and you didn't quite have it at the moment. It always comes to me in the shower right about it day later. Yeah, I there were on a run or driving in the car, some meditative moment, Yeah, some moment alone where
I'm like, God, got it. I could have dropped that one in won. And I'm always conflicted because there's absolutely a part of us that enjoys the zinger back, but I'm not always certain how christ like that is. It depends on what the zinger is the context, for sure. And I absolutely believe because Jesus had some zingers, he had some zingers. I believe
a properly worded zinger can be highly appropriate and useful given the situation. Take, for example, this young man, eleven year old Arizona Diamondbacks baseball fan. He is geared up, he's got he's got his his stuff, and he is absolutely ready. He's got the glove, he's got the cap, he's wearing the shirt he's had a baseball game. Come on, right, it's it's it's magic. If you're a baseball fan sitting in a major league baseball park, well, any baseball park watching a game is just it's just
awesome. It's a it's just you. You almost feel like you you just got that little bit of that dip in the magic waters that that James Earl Jones talks about as Terrence Man in the movie Field of Dreams. Oh, they'll come, ray, people will come. They'll feel like they've dipped themselves in magic waters. I mean. And so one point in the game, guy had to go to the bathroom, maybe go get something in the concession stand. He's eleven, so you know, he goes up to the whatever,
and he's coming back. He's attempting to get back to his seat, and then the tape rolls because an eighty year old woman ain't letting him do it. See his seat, like her seat is in a front row, and so she's got her foot up on the cement barrier right in front of their seats. So you know what I'm talking to. Where you're in a section and there's cement in front of you not other seats. So this woman's got her leg up and he's just looking at her like hello. She doesn't
move her leg. She blocks him from going by. Now what would you and I do? We would put our leg down because our leg is in the way. But what does she do? Know? This crusty, old, mean person not only blocks but says step over me. Barks it out. He does. He steps over her, but she got mad and kicked him. This wasn't grandma. This was just some old, entitled senior, crusty woman with an attitude. She kicked him. It's on tape. What I mean, She's an old woman. She didn't like bruise him or anything.
But it's like, really, now people are all paying attention. He says, I'm eleven years old, you're eighty. Get a life. Good for you. He walks by, Get a life that's a good one. By now she's likely been outed. Oh and I hope that there were some individuals that came to the rousing defense of this young fella based on even though the clip died out pretty quickly, it sounded as though he got applause. Good. What I want to know is are the d backs going to not
allow her to sit in the stadium again. That kind of boorish behavior. First, that's just rude. Secondly, legally, technically that was battery. It was she touched him, but what a what a mean spirited And I guess here's my takeaway and all of this. First of all, well done, kid, Well done. You go ahead and love baseball and don't let those types of people get you down. But this is a memo to all advancing in age people out there. And I know that there are a lot
of you listening. If you're that grouchy, stay home, And I get it. You could just be having one of those months, one of those years, one of those decades. At your age, you should know you don't need to be around people that much. So if you can't be decent and kind, I would be like, it's like when I see kids on a golf course. I love it because it's another generation learning to play the game. I love it. Some people are just wigged out by it.
I love it. If you can't love and embrace an eleven year old going to a baseball game, stay home, Preston Scott, do or do not? There is no try On news Radio one hundred point SEVENBUFLA noting the passing of former US Senator and Governor Bob Graham, who died last night at the age of eighty seven, surrounded by his family. Our thoughts and prayers are
with the Graham family and closest friends. Governor Graham. Senator Graham was kind enough to be on the program several times in the early years of the show. We lost touch over the years, but again our condolences with the family. Big Stories in the press Box brought to you by Grove Creative marketing and digital expertise. How is it possible that the US Senate could not take up and held a trial an impeachment trial of Alejandro mayorcis well, I suppose,
because if you hold him responsible, don't you have to impeach Biden? He's following Biden's orders. It barely passed the House. The vote was two fourteen to two thirteen. Impeachment articles for high crimes and misdemeanors. First article of impeachment deals with a will full and systemic refusal to comply with the law. The second addresses the breach of public trust for his actions creating and failing to handle the border crisis. For the last three plus years. It took years
before he would say the word crisis. Now, all of a sudden, everybody in the in the on the left side of the l is declaring a crisis. We've been telling you about it since Biden took office. Also another big story, Neil Gorsicch points out to the Solicitor General representing the Department of
Justice, Elizabeth Prelger. Justice Neil Gorsich asks if the statute that they're using to charge January sixth, defending including former President Trump, which is punishable with a twenty year sentence, does that apply to, say, the US congressman who pulled the fire alarm? Does it apply to Heckler's in a crowd like pro Palestinian protesters? Does it apply to the mostly peaceful protests of BLM, I would add Clantifa? Does it apply to the sitians at trial when the
Kavanaugh protests were going on? Gorse, it's just calmly eviscerated the argument by the federal government. So we'll see. Most observers think that this could be a pretty monumental switch in what's going on with January sixth. Does it cause people to be released? We'll find out we come back the extent of artificial intelligence. It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott Personal Defense. Next hour, Charlie Strickland of the Talent Training Group co host Talent Outdoors will join us.
We've got a Florida Man Factor fiction edition coming up. I read three headlines, you pick which is the real headline. We also happen to have a Florida Man Story. I love it when it works out that way, when we can segue from a real Florida Man story to Florida Man Factor fiction where we challenge your discernment skill set. Years ago, and I'm talking fifteen years ago, a friend who is was a pilot for UPS. He flew those large cargo ships all over the world world. He just looked at me over
lunch. He said, it's a matter of time. I said, what's that? He said, they're working to replace us. I said, what do you mean, replace you? Autonomous planes. If they can figure it out, they're going to do it. Do you realize how disastrous that would be? But now listen to this. This comes from my Flying magazine. Air Force secretary plans to get in cockpit of self flying fighter jet During a Senate hearing last Tuesday, Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall told US lawmakers he's going
to get into a cockpit of an artificial intelligence controlled fighter jet. The flights intended to allow him to observe the technology underlying the Air Force's future fleet of collaborative combat aircraft, which will pair crude jets with fleets of tiny autonomous drones. A second pilot will join the Air Force Secretary, but neither will actually fly the aircraft, a modified F sixteen, except in the case of an emergency. They get into the cost and why they're looking at this type of
technology. Kendall said, we have a cost problem with the aircraft that we're buying now. Our fighters are very expensive. The F thirty five and the F fifteen ex cost about one hundred million each. Next Generation Air Dominance MNGAD will cost over three hundred million and will be bought in small numbers. What could possibly go wrong? Now, just for a second, I think through
because they couldn't really demonstrate it when they made the movie Terminator. They didn't quite have the full technology that they had available when they did Terminator two. The Terminator two shows a scene where autonomous robotic AI controlled crafts kind of hovercrafts, think of a real high end osprey were being dispatched and sent to areas of rebellion and just killing everything in sight. The machines became quote self aware.
Now before anything like that happens, I just want to remind you that a group of community college students successfully hacked into a US military drone. It was a controlled experiment. They claimed they could do it, The Pentagon said they couldn't. So the Pentagon took the challenge, brought a drone down to Texas, and with parts obtained at a radio shack for about eleven hundred bucks
at the time, they successfully hacked into a drone and controlled it. I'm just asking what happens when our own stuff gets hacked into and turned and used against us. Forty six minutes after the hour, if you read something insane, I probably did it. Everybody just sing along. I'm fout of mood. The box is go ahead and google my name. Now that he's known me to the sins, I have committed and we all feel man. We have somebody whatever to man, and it's time for Florida man ever to man.
These UH stories are now being sent in by listeners of the program. As the feature has caught on. Joseph Tressault thirty two shares a flat with his roommate Elvis Singleton's sixty two. Interesting. Usually you're generationally a little closer to your roommate. Saint Petersburg, Florida. Now, last year, young miss Tresselt was busted for walloping Singleton. According to the arrest report, Tressolt said Singleton's quote coughing noise caused him to punch the victim in the face.
Prosecutors subsequently declined to pursue the battery case, so it was dropped. It made me, you know, immediately I stopped there and think, did the prosecutors hear mister Singleton's cough and decide, yeah, that's annoying, and we'd hit him in the face too, I don't know. So we now fast forward to just a week or so ago. While preparing a pizza, Tresselt told cops that Singleton quote started making sounds like coughing in a way that was
to irritate him. He also reported hearing voices telling him how to make the pizza. So I'm guessing that mister Singleton was annoying with his cough again a little pattern here, and then maybe advising him on how to make better make a pizza. So Upset trestled through a piece of dough on the floor and then threw it again, striking the victim on the head while he was seated at the dining room table with his back. So it was a cowardice throwing
a pizza to the back of the head, and so he was. He's admitted to tossing the pizza dough because Singleton was quote making coughing sounds that he did not like. So he's been arrested, booked in the county jail eleven and fifty dollars bond, charged with criminal mischief for allegedly breaking a piece of furniture and has been ordered no contact with his roommate and cannot return to the apartment. Ladies and gentlemen, that that is how things happen here in Florida.
Part of me feels as though that mister Treusseled needs to be joined by Elvis Singleton in this episode of Florida Man. But we'll just leave it with the perpetrator of the hospital trip, or rather he did not need hospitalization, but throwing depending on the pizza dough. I mean that could be all right. Time for Florida man Factor fiction three headlines. Headline one Florida man breaks
into home, blames orse. Headline two, Florida man poors bleach on neighbors lawn after her dog urinates in his headline three, Florida man caught stealing beer says he was just exchanging for hold ones. I'm gonna go with number two and you're right. Whoo. Florida man pours bleach on neighbor's yard after dog urinates on his yard. What a perfect lead in to our number three personal
defense. Charlie Strickland will join us from the Talent Training Group. Next to the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Let's do this show five thousand and thirty nine of the Morning Show with Preston Scott. That's Grant Allen. I'm Preston. Good to be with you, Ruminators. Wherever however you are listening to us, We thank you very much. And again a reminder, this time of year, the radio broadcast signal can get squirrely because of an atmospheric condition
that we have no control over. No, it's not the federal government. It's something called ducting, and it just happens seasonally. It's based on the sun and things that we have no idea why they happen, but they just do every I think once or twice a year this time of year for certain and so there will be changes sometimes in the signal quality. Though we are
broadcasting at full strength on all of our stations. What you need to know is that you have the iHeartRadio app and you can always just stream the show live there. And now we are joined by our personal Defense segment. Charlie Strickland, co founder, co host of Talent Outdoors, co founder of the Talent Training Group. Hello, my friend, how are you. I'm fine. I listen on thatheart on the way in this morning, I or making fun of my name and all. I have to listen on our heart because
of the duct thing phenomenon. It causes my radio to quack up, so I have to, you know, listen through the app. Glad you're on top of this StuffYeah. Yeah. See, granted I didn't come up with that in the shower or in a meditative state. That was just right off the top of my head. Yeah, you're much quicker than I am. That's what all right, so well, good morning. I ran across a scenario, ran it across you yesterday, and I think it will take and
I think it merits taking a little time. You've had scenarios in your law enforcement career where you're knocking on doors at various times of the day and night. We've seen stories play out nationally where the endings aren't so good from time to time. How would you advise somebody that comes to a training class on how to deal with somebody breaking in your front door in the middle of the
night. Well, you know, as Florida castle doctrine, and this is the same in Georgia and Alabama. If someone is forcibly and unlawfully entering your home, they're coming in your house without permission. They're you know, they have no lawful right to be there. That is, basically, it gives you the right to use deadly force to defend yourself, your family, your
home. That is castle doctrine. If they are forcibly and unlawfully entering your residence, dwelling, or occupied conveyance, then you can use deadly force to protect yourself. You don't have to look look for their intent. They don't have to express a violent intent. There's a presumption of violand intent on their part because they broke in your door, because they well, if they entered
your door, they entered your dwelling. They don't have to break it in, they just have to come in. So if you wake up the middle night somebody's standing over you in the bedroom, there's a presumption they have violent
intent. As long as you know, we recommend that you identify the target, that you make sure it's not your adult child that came home to visit and wanted to surprise you or something, and you need target identification is a big deal, which is why you know we carry flashlights, have flashlights, you know, have control of the lights. All that's important. That said, that doesn't apply if it's law enforcement in the performance of their lawful duties.
And so, well, somebody's trying to kick your door in, you can shoot them through the door, but you can't shoot them through the door if they're law enforcement and they've announced that they're law enforcement. That gets to the issue, and that is announcement knowing their law enforcement and a lot of things that are different in every single situation, Okay, and it's different in different states because some states still allow no knock warrants. Florida does not allow
no knock warrants at the application process. If there is there are exigent circumstances to where someone's life is in danger, then yes they can do that, but they have to justify it on the scene and based on circumstances and again, and that's really a high standard. Sure it's life or death. So it I hear some music playing, So we're coming up on the breaks. What happens when this guy's hosted his own show for a while. Now he
goes, we'll be right back. Well, I don't. I don't want to get halfway through a sentence, and so stay tuned and we'll pick right up there when we get back. Yeah, Because what I want to do as well is I don't want to just offer advice to those of you listening, because some of it's just like common sense, like don't do stupid things that put you on the radar of law enforcement. But at the same time, I also want to talk to law enforcement. I want to I want
to put some things out there for you guys to think about. You, you men and women that are serving these warrants. Ten minutes after the hour. It's the Morning Show back with Charlie Strickland of the Talent Training group Personal Defense. We're talking about what happens when law enforcements, whether it's local or state or federal, knocks on your door in the middle of the night and then proceeds to enter your home. You were talking knock and no knock warrants.
Yes, so some states still a lot of states still allow no knock warrants. You know, they apply for the warrant, they apply for a no knock and then the judge signs off and says, yes, you can go in without announcing. Based on these circumstances in Florida, unless I recall incorrectly, and it's been quite a few years since I've applied for a search warrant that we don't do no knock warrants here now, So law enforcement is
required to knock on the door and announce. Now, then you get in some federal things, but state law enforcement, local law enforcement is for sure.
Now, how long they knock, how loud they knock, how long they wait for a response before they breach and make entry, you know, and if they are compromised, sometimes they'll go ahead and go in and knocking, Shriff's officearch want, share, police officer search want, and then somebody's shaking the curtains and if they feel out, you're in danger and you know, we're compromised, breach, breach, breach, they go in the door, and it is a dynamic situation. But that it depends on the type
of warrant that Now. I was in financial crimes, and we knocked until they came to the door. We didn't breach the door unless nobody was home
and we've been knocking on the door for thirty minutes. Well, let me ask you this, Charlie, in your experience and the experiences of those that you are friends with, that you're colleagues with, that you know is a is the serving of a warrant going to be handled and prepared for differently based on what you predict or feel like you know about the person being served. Absolutely, it is okay. So I worked in violent crimes, financial crimes,
We did paper crimes. We did real crime, you know bad you know, like violent criss And I was a swat team leader and we went we have operational plans. Search warrants have operational plans. We do an in depth dive a deep dive from our intel section and obtain all of the criminal history, all of the information we talked to the case detectives. All of that stuff goes in through preparing the operational plan. You're doing drive buys to
the house. You're getting photographs, you're pulling public records. You're doing all of this stuff to make sure one that you go to the right house, and still mistakes are made. You're making sure that do they have children, what time did the children go to school? What do all these things go in and preparing a search warrant properly for law enforcement. But still, I mean, can we can we throw in a flash bang? Can we not? Depending on how big a deal. If it's not a big deal,
you're gonna knock on the door. We have to have a uniform presence at the door. There has to be a uniformed officer at the door so that they can see that it's law enforcement. But when it's all boiled down, you have to make a determination that the subject of that warrant and anybody who else may be in the home is either likely to be dangerous or not likely. They might absolutely need to be arrested and have their day in court,
but deemed dangerous or not? Is that a fundamental bottom line determination? Yes, absolutely, is what are the realistic chances? What do we believe? What do we reasonably believe that this person would do if confronted? Have they have they been to court recently for violent you know, they had injunctions applied against them, The nature of the crime, the things that they may have
said on social media, all these things matter. All of this stuff goes in and it's probably way more robust now than it was ten years ago when I was still do it. When you say more robust the intelligence gathering processes, they're probably using things now to get more information now than we are available,
not necessarily the threshold MySpace era. I mean now they've got all kinds of stuff I mean that you can get and there are whole sections that are only their job, and they're really good at what they do is to just gather this information, you know, and make sure that law enforcement has to write information ultimately, though you still may not. You may be laying in
bed and you don't hear them knock, you don't hear them announced. Now most warrants are served, you know, not at two three o'clock in the morning. They're more like right before you wake up. That's typically the targeted time is just when you're really, really in that deep sleep before you wake
up. That's when if you're dangerous otherwise. You know a lot of these cases you see around that are nationally know them are they probably should have just caught them walking to the car in the morning right or at work, because there aren't any do overs if it goes wrong. No, no, you can't take for anybody involved. You can't take that back. And I do
want to talk about the conflict between castle doctrine and search warrants. We're going to do that next, as well as get into a couple of other things related. It's Personal Defense on the Morning Show with Preston Scotland and we are back set up very differently. Yeah, Charlie Shirkley with me from the Talent Training Grip and personal Defense. We're talking about what to do, what you should do, what you need to think about and you wanted to keep talking
about this scenario. There is in fact some conflict across the country between castle doctrine, which is pretty much the law of the land. You can protect your home with someone's breaking in your home, all right, you presume there's violent intent. Law enforcement, on the other hand, has the right to breach the door and come in under certain circumstances with probable calls and a search warrant signed by a judge. And in here locally, they're required to knock
and announce and announce their intentions. And that's pretty much the way it is, unless there's extra circumstances, even around the country. So now you have a situation where if I wake up in the middle of the night and I don't hear who this, if I don't hear law you know, and the thing is is law enforcement they're knocking on the door. Well, how long do they knock and how loud do they announce? I've seen it done in a couple of different ways, so you know, we have to knock and
announcement. I've seen some search weren't served where it wasn't necessarily that loud or it didn't go on for that long. And there are some guidelines that they need to follow, and I do. But in a thirty something year career, I've seen it done a couple of different ways, and now all of a sudden, the person doesn't here, all right, So now you have a legal defense for the homeowner. I didn't hear or see that they were law enforcement. And you know a lot of times they're not wearing they're not
wearing polyester uniforms. They're wearing whatever they end that wearing. It's just tighted to cool. And then so the homeowner gets in a situation where they were legally lawfully defending their home. They had no knowledge that this was law enforcement, no reasona believe it was law enforcement. Law enforcement, on the other hand, had a valid warrant, knocked and announced, it's on camera. Whatever they go in, they waited a reasonable period of time. They go
in and somebody starts shooting at them, and they shoot back. So now you have an untenable situation where neither one of them is going to be criminally charged because both of them were in the right. The problem being that in that situation, because of your training and any number of other things tactically that come into play, like equipment and so forth, the homeowner is going to
be the one that ends up dead. Well in law enforcement is there are a lot of law enforcement officers every year that are injured, particularly in swat situations. That are serving warrants, it happens. It happens absolutely all the gear in the world. I mean, I run a team. I don't want to put my guys to a door where the person's armed and it's potentially
violent. There's no reason to be in a hurry. And I've always differed with some of my partners in law enforcement is that I don't think flushing a little bit of weed is all that important. I mean, if I can't, if you haven't been able to make the case before you go in the house, if you don't have enough to arrest that person, enough evidence to prosecute the case before you go in the house, you really need to think
rethink your case. I'm not saying you shouldn't go there to collect evidence, because you should, but you know there's there's ways to handle that stuff. I mean, if your whole case hinges on the evidence that you're going to find in the house, we'll catch them while they're not in the house, and then the house is empty and then go serve the warrant on the house, which you can do. They don't have to be in it. Sure, So I mean, you know, there there's When I was younger,
you know, I was part of the swat tea. I was part of the tool the sledge hammer, that was the swat team, that is that tactical unit. I have that train I still do that training. I mean, I'm all for it. I think there's a huge role in an absolute necessity for us to have in a community. However, not every nail needs a sledgehammer. Sometimes it takes a smaller you know, you just have to
use the proportionately to scale. What would you say, because there's the other side that we've talked about off air, and that is the person that is the subject of an investigation, and whether they think they're should be arrested or charged is irrelevant. They're in that area of gray where they're doing things on the edge. They should know. People know when they're doing something wrong. You know, you listen. You know, I I speak my mind very
openly. You know, we have we have FFLs, we have businesses, we have I've been in law enforcement. I know what the laws are. You know, I constantly am reevaluating my situation to make sure that I'm not doing anything wrong. But you know what, sometimes the government can be you know, they want to make an example and sometimes I actually think about the fact that what if they wanted to make an example of us one day and they wanted to hinge on some little minor thing that we didn't think was of
any real consequence. You know, what would I do? You know? And what I'll tell law enforcement is sometimes knocking on the door and saying, hey man, we want to talk is a better way to take someone into custody than it is to show up at four o'clock in the morning. Sometimes you got to go at four or five six o'clock in the morning, and sometimes you got to knock real loud, and sometimes you got to kick in a door. And sometimes you're gonna have to get in a fight to deal
with some people. But not everybody is that person, you know, and it's hard to but there's a lot of people that make those decisions. It takes a strong boss to tell your team, no, we're not going to do it that way. Sure, I used to hate it when they told us that. When we come back, I'm going to bring up a story set of stories from Australia and see what we can learn. Personal defense of Charlie Strickland of the Talent Training Group. Next in the morning, show a
couple more segments. We'll get to a couple of emails that we've received in your questions, but first I promised a couple stories. One very notable story at a mall in Sydney stabbing that left seven people dead at a shopping mall. Guy just went nuts, just went on a rampage and it was near Sydney before an armed police officer ended it. Just a few weeks later at a church in Sydney, another stabbing of the priest. Worshipers of the church
service were attacked as well, again knife wielding. We could talk all day about how Australia's made this possible by not allowing its citizens to be armed. Instead, I'd like to ask you to revisit something we've talked about off and on over the years, because we are seeing more incidents of stabbings. How does one best defend oneself when someone's with it has a knife, Run right distance, run so they can't shoot. They can't stab you from thirty yards
away. They can stab you. They have to be up close and personal. Okay, So somebody's coming at So first off, if you can get away, get away, because that'll now if you can't outrun them, all right, and that's very likely a possibility, he says, staring straight at me. Well, I'm just saying I don't run that fast either, but you haven't seen me scared native exactly right. Even if you're just running the cover, you need to go. But not everybody can, all right,
So get away if you can. But there again, you've got children, you've got you know, grandchildren, any number of situations, so you can't run. So pick up a chair or something, a table, something that you can put between you and them to keep them in arm's length, you know, so that they're swinging their arm, and they're gonna do a lot less damage if you've got something that's blocking between you and them. Jump over a counter, you know, and if you're in a mall or something,
jump over the counter, get on the other side of the counter. They're gonna look for easy targets typically unless they're targeting you specifically, you know, throw stuff in front of them. Gets something to put between you and them. There are two victims I want to I want to address quickly here. The ones that we're talking about now that are not armed, and those that
are armed. Are the protocols any different for someone that's carrying a firearm in terms of how to best address the situation, which you mean somebody's trying to stab me in I got a gun. Well, I mean there's well it's an easy answer, yeah, I know, but but I'm gonna translate that to then what do you do to repair at the range in that situation because as you said, this is almost this is always going to be a close quarters attack, right, and they're not always going to announce that they're going
to do it. A person with a knife can do a lot of damage in a hurry. Yes, and we have you know, law enforcement usually twenty one foot rule, you know, whatever where you know for you to and that's from a duty holster, where someone who has a knife can charge you from twenty one feet away and put that knife in you before you can draw and fire, assuming that that when you fire, they're going to stop, and that's not always the case. So someone with a knife is very
dangerous. So if someone has a knife and they're threatening you, and if your gun's not out pointing at them, and you're back, not backing away and putting something between the two of you, go around the table, something that they would have to clear a hurdle or get around to You need distance, cover, barricade something to you know, you don't have to necessarily have to draw and shoot them, but you need to be putting something, a
car, something between you and them in order to keep them from being able to get to you. And if they come at they're threatening you with the knife, a reasonable person will believe that that person's trying to harm you with that knife. Deadly force is authorized, but you're the once got to live with it, so you know, how fast do you want to use it? When we come back, I want to just follow up on that,
and then we got two questions via email. More with Charlie Strickland. Next the Morning Show at Preston, scott On News Radio one hundred point seven w FLA forty one minutes after the our final segment. Here Charlie Strickland again. Talentrange dot com great place to go to get your training and to practice skills
that could save your life. Obviously, Charlie, this goes back to fundamental number one, which you, JD and I have discussed at nauseum, and that is situational awareness, being aware of the people that are around you. Just seeing what might be in their hand, what they're reaching for. If someone were to go to the range and want to better prepare for this type of scenario, we're talking about, what's the best way to do it well? In knife defense, some do you go back to your drawing from the
holster, whatever concealment and method you use. Just going out and putting on an outside of wasteband holster and drawing from that is useless unless you're carrying an outside of wasteband holster. It amazes me how many people buy guns walk out the door with a gun, no holster, no magazine, nothing. They just take the gun and go, I'm reckon, I'm gonna figure it out later on. Well, the perfect place is right there, So you can
purchase something from us hopefully, or wherever you buy your guns at. But you really should go ahead and outfit that thing with some at least in some way fashion as you can go train with it. So drawing from concealment. If you're a lady and you carry a purse, you want to draw from that purse. If you're a guide, you know, carrying appendix, or if you're a woman carrying appendix, or you for some reason, select to go with an ankle holster for some odd reason. You know that's never a
good place to carry your first gun. But you know, second gun maybe pocket holster whatever. You want to work from that, and you want to work, and we do a comply, distract react drill. You know, uh, something we put on you too many years ago, and we still to comply. Someone's trying to do something to you. Comply, act like you're not a threat, distract them, point the other way, get them
to the officer. Officer he's got, you know, a knife, he's got a gun, and to get them to look somewhere else, step off line so that you're not where they last saw you when they look away, and then draw your pistol and engage. When I say engage, I mean pull the trigger. And you know a drill like that, or at least standing in front of a target, going from the hole, getting to the
concealed pistol, presenting the firearm and engaging. Maybe even not when the sites are all the way up on target, but once you point towards the target, make sure your support side of hand is out of the way, because if you had to lift your shirt or hold a purse or a bag or something you want to you'll maintain control of that. And a lot of times
this is going to be one handed shooting. But you want to be able to hit the target from three to five seven feet away, you know, and you can do that without actually aiming most of the time, because it's like pointing your finger at somebody. If you and to practice this, basically, make your weapon safe and sit in your car in the driveway when the neighbors aren't watching, or in your car port where nobody can see you,
or in your living room or at the range or whatever. And stand in your living room, make your weapon safe, take all the amo out of it, work to slide, make sure it's safe, and then look at something across the room or ten five feet away, something close. Just look at it, close your eyes, point your gun at it. Open your eyes and see if the pistols actually pointed at that item, would it hit
that based on your alignment, and then work on that skill set. They just a little learning point shoot to some degree, but your body's pretty good at aligning things. You can close your eyes, point your finger at something, open your eyes, and it's pointed at that thing. Because your brain knows where your body is a relationship to other things. Same thing with a pistol. That's why you want a pistol that you are very in tune with,
that you've shot enough to where you know which way it's pointing. Because under a critical incident stress and that's when split seconds matter. You know, drawing and pointing and pulling the trigger that first round or two is the most important thing in the world. At that point in time. You've elected to send something down range to stop someone, it needs to go where it belongs. And in a close quarter fight, side alignment, stance, grip,
all those things, breath control, none of that matters. It is getting the weapon pointed in the right direction and pulling the trigger. You have two choices. You neither stick around for a very brief final segment to answer the email questions, or you dictate an answer and I send them by an email. I got nowhere to go, Okay, I was just oh, hey, I gotta go to work, said, he might get mad. It may be late. I'm always late, so they'd be surprised I'm actually there
today. Bonus Content with Charlie Strickland is next here a morning show with Preston Scott back one more segment with Charlie Strickland of the Talent Training Group. We're going to get to your questions. And first Patrick wrote in and asked about a specific Florida statue seventy nine dot three three Field of Regulation of Firearms and Ammunition. Does it invalidate a given counties requirement that all firearms sales on property
accessible to the public require an NICs background check. Yeah. Seven ninety thirty three actually preempts all local ordinances related to the field of firearms, and by that it says it invalidates all local ordinates is related to anything to do with firearms. Now, there may be some exceptions in there as it relates to commerce. Sometimes the state will leave a little bit open for you know,
being able to determine where FFLs are and FFL related activity. But on its face, just a quick read of the first part of that chapter, it invalidates Leand County's local But it won't be the first time that Tallahasse or Leond County had a law that's still on the books, like discharging a fireman in the city limits, even though that's perfectly legal by state law. And you can't enforce that. It's still sometimes they carry those things on the ranks,
So I mean that's not an enforced ordinance anyway. Second question came from Roger who asked, does federal law enforcement have to comply with state law or could federal law enforcement still authorize a no knock warrant in Florida? Okay, So the way it works is you have local law enforcement who will assist federal agencies serving federal warrants, and you have of federal agencies that will assist local agency serving local warrants, well Florida warrants. In Florida, the government, the
federal government can't exempt the local agency from the knock no knock requirement. The state, the county agency, or the city agency helping the government the federal government exercise a federal warrant. A federal warrant can still be authorized as no knock and would allow them to have a no knock warrant. So if atf or DEA or one of the FBI showed up and they said, we have a warrant, it's no knock. You know, we need you all to help us, local could still go there and be the first ones in the
door based on the facts of a federal warrant. You know, it's then you get into agency policies and rules and liability concerns and all that. But yeah, technically sure, I would ask you what's coming up this weekend on Talent Outdoors, but I know better than to do that because you won't know until you start talking. I don't know. We're going to try to get a good friend of virus in on the show and talking about gathering and survival.
Hoping to have a guest Billy Bailey on the show is gonna not this week, It'll be to next week. Thanks. Gonna be a good, good move for us. We're picking up some more subject matter expertise. Thanks for coming in. Yeah, thank you. Charlie Stricklin of the Talent Training Group. Brought to you by Barono Heating and Air. It's the Morning Show one on WFLA look back on the radio program in one hundred and eighty seconds or less. We started with First Corinthians one eighteen. There you go.
That's your devotional kickstarter for the for the day. Big Stories in the press Box Today brought to you by Grove creat Marketing and digital expertise. Our sympathies to the family of former US Senator former Florida Governor Bob Graham. Governor Graham spending two years in office as governor three terms. I think it was as
a US senator passed away last night at the age of eighty seven. We shared some of the oral arguments and a little bit of the pushback by Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsich related to charges that about three hundred and thirty defendants, including Donald J. Trump, are facing relative to January sixth, it would appear that Justice Gorsicic and most of the justices are not buying the argument. I would only ask why has it taken this long to get this issue before
the United States Supreme Court. Illegals are being instructed to vote for Joe Biden. Actual brochures are being handed out quoting reminder to vote for Joe Biden when you are in the United States. We need another four years of his term to stay open. These are being distributed and it settles any debate over the ulterior motive of Democrats and this sitting resident in allowing illegals to come into the country and invade our nation. Air Force Secretary plans to get in the cockpit
of a self flying fighter jet. Not sure that's a good idea, and the MAJORCIS impeachment is now in the hands of the Senate, where it will likely die a quick death there. Tomorrow, Steve Stewart and Scott Beacon scheduled to join US