Ep. 5167: The Slow Drip of the Truth Finally Revealed - podcast episode cover

Ep. 5167: The Slow Drip of the Truth Finally Revealed

May 28, 20242 hr 32 min
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This is the full episode of The Morning Show with Preston Scott for Tues. May 28, 2024. 

Our guest today includes Howard Eisenman in the segment Money Talk. 

Follow the show on Twitter @TMSPrestonScott.

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

Listen live to Preston from 6 – 9 a.m. ET and 5 – 8 a.m. CT!
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Transcript

Yeah, that'll work. Hello friends, Hope you enjoyed. Hope many of you enjoyed your long weekend and remembered to thank the men and women who, over the years have died to provide a weekend where we can grill some food and enjoy time with family and friends, or just enjoy time. Welcome to Tuesday on the Morning Show with Preston Scott. He is Grant Allan, I am Preston and it is Show fifty one sixty seven May twenty eight. Can

you believe it? When this week? Before this week is officially over, we will enter the month of June, which means we are halfway through the year. When the month of June ends halfway through. Put it's up with that. Oh my? Anyway, Good morning friends, Hope you had a terrific weekend. Had some serious rainfall over the week over the overnight. Mind gosh, didn't see that coming. Of course I was asleep, so I wouldn't have. Never mind. Our verse today Romans twelve fifteen, Rejoice with

those who rejoice, weep with those who weep. We look at a verse like that, and I think we goh, okay, and we don't really give it much thought. Let's take those words and let's distill them into a concept, a principle, an idea of Christian living. Rejoice with those who rejoice, weep with those who weep? Well, how does one rejoice when others are rejoicing? How does one weep when when another person is weeping?

Investment investing in other people's lives the principle of our faith. Well, one of the principles of our faith is that we are invested in the lives of others. We are increasingly a culture that is living inside of moats and castles, and I get it. That's my tendency. My tendency is to want to a hand full of friends, family, That's it. And so our

church family is a place where we try to extend our reach. And I would say I am not as successful as I might ought to be, because you cannot rejoice with those who are rejoicing and weep with those who are weeping unless you are in their life. Now, there are certainly people in our life that that applies to, no doubt, But broadly I would simply ask, are you invested in other people's lives to where you can rejoice when they rejoice? And weep? When they weep. Sometimes you don't need a word,

you just need to be there. Ten minutes, eleven minutes now past the hour. Big weekend for FSU athletics. We'll talk a little bit more about baseball later. But the golf team men's golf made it to team play. They're the final eight in the NCAA National Championships. When I fell asleep last night, Luke Clanton was a shot back, maybe two shots back from I think it was a shot back from the lead in the individual and man team playing well, so they were going to be maybe the fourth or the

fifth seed. I don't know where they ended up before team play begins, which I think is today or tomorrow. I think it's today. So congratulations to Trey Jones FSU men's golf team. Let's see here May the twenty eighth, one day after boy check out my commentary. When it pops up, you'll hear it oftentimes right before the start of the show. You'll hear it

about twelve thirty or so every day Eastern time. I don't know if it's scheduled eleven thirty Central, But did you see some of the comments by the squad about Memorial Day among them. I've come up with the title for ilhan Omar our Congressional ji Hoti. She's out there saying, you know, we are heroic men and women. We honor them, and they deserve better than they deserve all that they have earned. They deserve health care and mental health

care and job opportunities. Blah blah blah blah blah. It's like, uh, you do you not know what Memorial Days about the answer is, of course no, because all the people that you're posting about that we are thanking and for their services and that they deserve this, that and the other, they're dead. You imbecile. That's Veterans Day now. If you want to say, we honor those who have given their last full measure of devotion d D D D and on the subject of veterans, blah blah blah blah blah.

Okay, that's fine. Pivot, there's that works. But oh, anyway, let's see the twenty eighth, nineteen thirty seven, FDR pressed a button in Washington, d C. Signaling that the new Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco was officially open to vehicular traffic. Nineteen thirty seven, Golden Gate Bridge was the longest suspension bridge in the world until the opening of the Verrizanto

Narrows Bridge in New York City in nineteen sixty four. Who Oh, by the way man who played a role in that bridge being built was none other than James Braddock, the Cinderella Man, the boxer who took the heavyweight title from Max Bear, whose son was Jethrow. In Beverly Hillbillies True Story seventeen fifty four, Virginia Militia under Lieutenant Colonel George Washington defeat French troops near Uniontown, Pennsylvania, in the opening skirmish of the French and Indian War nineteen oh

two. The Virginian owned by Owen Wister, regarded as the first Western is published nineteen twenty nine. On With the Show, the first movie with color and sound, debuts in New York. And if I'm not mistaken, the theme song is the theme song to Warner Brothers. Dun du Du, dun du du, This is it? The heigh device and oh what heights? Well? On with the Show? This is it? And I think that's the theme song from this movie. I could be wrong, but I know

that's the name of the song. That's the theme from the Warner Brothers cartoons

On with the Show. Nineteen fifty seven, National League approves the move of the Brooklyn Dodgers and the New York Giants to Los Angeles and San Francisco, And in nineteen eighty four, Ronald Reagan leads a funeral at Arlington National Cemetery for unknown servicemen killed in Vietnam. The remains were later identified as those of Air Force Lieutenant Michael J. Blassi, and then moved to Saint Louis, which is I'm sure the family was very grateful to have their young man,

their sons remains identified. Seventeen minutes after the hour, come back like you very much. Yeah, we got a little bit of that. Twenty two, almost twenty three passed the hour. I had my procedure done on Friday. I will not go into the gory details. I'll simply tell you that it's done. Procedure didn't last all that long. Been a little uncomfortable, a little a little uncomfortable, but overall I'm all right, and uh,

my doctor's awesome. I had never met this gentleman until we had the consultation. Doctor BRIANO. Allen and and adontist haven't had to see an end adonist in in a minute, as the kids like to say. And yeah, it was a procedure. I didn't even He said, I think you need to do this procedure. Over this procedure. I said, what, I'm sorry, what I didn't I didn't catch that. What was that an apicoectomy?

And so I'll just leave it there. And if you are are puzzled, you certainly may look that up. But I'm still feeling the effects a little swelling. Haven't shaved since Friday, so I'm getting just a little little yeah. And so uh, it's it's it's it's tender right there. And and so if I shaved everywhere but there, it would I look like I'd lost my brain. So I'm just like sorry, honey, because my wife hates it when I don't shave, hates it. She said, you you

you look like a vagabond. I mean you you just do you? You don't you don't grow whiskers. Well, she said, it's all white and you look terrible like geez. Okay, all right, I admit I I I've never I don't know. Maybe I can grow a beard now because I'm not feeling the bald spots I used to have. So maybe now in my sixties, I finally, you know, reached full puberty. I was going to say, you made it through puberty finally, Yeah, could could have

happened. Uh anyway, Yeah, So I mean, I I admit that, you know, with my my eyebrows kind of white and my hair getting there. You know, my hair does have some gray in it. It's it's kind of gray and there's maybe a speckle or two of of of dark brown nestled in there. So it's salt and pepper, but it's a lot of salt, not a ton of pepper. I kind of look like that old golden retriever, you know that the face turns white, and it's like,

my face just disappears. I feel like people want to come ask you for a story something like that, yeah or or yeah or ten bucks, and they think you can take a ban of a tail from years gone by, something like that. It's just it's I know that that my beard likely is mostly white. I can sort of tell that already. And so we laughed over the weekend about the prospect of a mustache and a goatee. She's just not She's not having any of that, And I can't say that I

would either. I itchy and I'm already itchy. And it's just as someone with a beard. Yeah, you get through the itch phase, yeah, and then you're good, yeah, whatever, But you're then straining food through your mustache. And only if you're particularly wild with your eating. Hey, you can, you can, you can make it work. I don't know. There's a reason why they call mustache's cookie dusters. It's all I'm gonna tell you. Elvis Presley's Bible went out for sale over the weekend at cruise

GWS Auctions had nothing to do. Here's an interesting development. You remember the Graceland. There was a lawsuit filed trying to claim Graceland because Elvis's daughter did not pay back a loan allegedly allegedly she allegedly used Graceland to secure three point eight million dollar loan. And it's like, no one can prove the loan ever existed. And this company was sketchy to begin with. Well, the judge said, yeah, we're not We're not going to let that happen just

yet. There needs to be some more evidence of that. Well, they've dropped their claim that company which tells you did they just like gather together and go, let's go for it. Let's take a shot. Maybe the granddaughter won't show up because she's the sole heir. Now, Lisa Marie Presley's daughter is the she's an actress. She's the sole heir of all things Elvis. Anyway, a Bible that was on his nightstand when he died went up for

auction. Among other things, it's embossed with his name and highlighted verses, including from the Book of Job. If I have made gold my hope, or have said to the fine gold, thou art my confidence. If I rejoice because my wealth was great, and because mine hand has gotten much. If I beheld the sun when it shined, or the moon walking in rightness, and it's like the dude was a reader and highlighter of scripture. And apparently he read the Bible before and after every show. And now obviously he

was a troubled guy. He had a lot of things but that he was dealing with. But he would pray to calm nerves before and after shows, especially before auction. Included his army uniforms, sunglasses, assigned chair, just an actual folding chair that he sat in when stationed in Germany, and he signed the chair for a family who hosted him. And so yeah, so I don't have the prices yet, so if you see the price is send him my way. But Cruz GWS Auctions selling Elvis s Kier twenty nine Pass

Preston Scott Good on News Radio one point sevenuf LA Tuesday m Day. It is Manly minute and money talk in the third hour. Manly minute coming up next hour. A lot of pretty intense standalones today on the show we'll have for you so you will definitely be better informed when this show is over than you are at this moment, no doubt about that. Thanks so much for

joining us. Big story in the press Box Stories brought to you by Grove of Creative Marketing and digital Expertise. Because I was late in the last segment, I'll only give you the overview and we'll dig a little deeper later. Whistleblower has leaked an internal memo from Pfizer dated January eighth, twenty twenty one. Now the story comes from Conservative Globe. Have you ever wondered why you've not heard anybody from Pfeiser suffering from vaccine injury? The memo tells us Pfiser

employees did not get the vaccine everybody else got. They got a different one. They got a separate vaccine, quoting separate and distinct from those committed by Pfizer to governments around the world. The thought is that it was some were placebos, but the others likely did not have the spike pro teams and so forth. Does that change your view of things just a little bit? And also inside the memo, Pfizer insisted on their employees getting the shot at their

research facilities, not at health clinics or pharmacies. Well, that would make sense. They got a different shot. NC DOUBLEA and Power five schools are agreeing to pay players. They're going to pay student athletes, you can call them athletes students. The Power five Congress conferences along with the NC DOUBLEA they

will pay. The NCAA will pay more than two point seven billion in damages over the next ten years to past and current athletes, according to sources, and that parties have agreed to a revenue sharing plan to allow each school to share up to roughly twenty million dollars a year to its athletes. Good luck with that. Good luck, Let me know how that works out. Target sales are down eight percent. Target stock sorry fell eight percent last week after

the quarterly results, showing a decline for the fourth straight quarter. And as Target is pulling back on Pride month gear, Walmart is going all in, just saying just let you know what's going on. Forty minutes after the hour here on the Morning Show with Preston Scott, The Morning Show with Preston Scott, forty two passed, had someone at church walk up and hand me a a mail earth that they got this gentleman pays attention to all of the fringe

political candidates out there, just pays attention. He said, I found this interesting. Constitution Party nominates Randall Terry for president. Randall Terry is has been, always has been a very vociferous anti abortionist. I credit him. What I thought through is does this do any good? He can't win and he knows that, and I've long I don't know if the right word is chided. Some maybe have perceived it that way, and perhaps at time it has

been that way people that can't win running for office. On one hand, see I'm conflicted. On one hand, I I credit anybody who gives it a go because it is not for the faint of heart. Running for office is just man, it's it's warfare without the guns. It's just brutal. You've got mean, rotten people like illiberals out there that that just are They attack personally and they're just they're just awful people. And they they distort,

they lie, they don't they don't want to talk about issues. But then you look at a guy like Randall Terry and he said, look, this there's one issue, it's abortion. I want to make it the number one issue in the upcoming election. Well that's not going to happen. I wish it would, because I feel as though life is the is the building block. Where you are on the moral issue of life is kind of telling on

the rest. But the fact is that the economy and the border are the two biggest issues this country is thinking about right now, and so on one hand, I have high regard for the effort. On the other hand, there's a part of me that's like, well, this doesn't this doesn't really help Republicans A whole lot Republicans aren't even helping themselves because they're not they're not owning the issue. They're they're backpedaling, and they're trying to find this nebulous

middle ground on the issue. And you know, Terry's running ads, and he's going to run ads showing aborted babies and these ads unless and he'll probably get turned down and he'll probably have to file a lawsuit to get them married. They're gonna air in at least twenty states because on twenty states, he's gonna be on the ballot at least twenty states, So it's gonna be,

it's gonna be, it's gonna be in those states. At least. He thinks that because they're on the ballot in twenty states, they can run the ads in all fifty. I don't know one way or the other about that stuff. But do you run to make a point not to win? Does it Is it effective strategy to bleed off even a handful of votes from well from Trump, because he is capable of doing that, and we saw in

many states that's all it takes. You factor in bleeding off a handful of votes, whether it's Randall, Terry RFK Junior cheating, these margins become very very thin. And so I question the wisdom if you stay in the race to the end. If you want to try to impact the campaign, Okay, I applaud your efforts, but this is where practicality has to step in anyway, That's just my take on it. We come back something from Jeff Childers to share. It's the Morning Show with President Scott. It's taking a

remarkable amount of concentration to not run my tongue over my stitches. That's just anyway. They'll dissolve over time. Some already have. But I digress. Oh I, oh, thank you very much. Got a note here from Jeff Childers in his COVID and Coffee Daily memo. Now, Jeff's an attorney in Gainesville who developed quite a following during COVID, and his newsletter is called Coffee in COVID, But he focuses on other things now because he's developed the

following. So he's just using his platform to just offer his thoughts on different things. And I did not know this. This is a story that I had not picked up on in the two dozen sites that I routinely go to, and no one had forwarded it to me, which was interesting. What's

going on in Ohio? And it's a story from the UK Guardian of all places, Governor Mike DeWine, who is an interesting character and we'll leave it there, has called a special legislative session and it pits him against the Secretary of State Frank Lrose. DeWine and l Rose sounds like anyway. The special session is to begin today in Columbus. Why because, according to the Secretary of State, Joe Biden will not be on the ballot in November in Ohio

because he's going to miss the statutory August seventh filing deadline. Because the Democrats chose to hold their convention two weeks later, he won't be the nominee. If he is the nominee, he won't be the guy. So Dwine is calling for a change in the law. Now Childers is making this point. First of all, could you imagine any Democrat governor doing the same for Trump

calling lawmakers back together. Keep in mind Dwine is a Republican allegedly according to him, not having Biden on the ballot, let me read what he had to say. Ohio is running out of time to get Joe Biden, sitting President of the United States, on the ballot. This fall fell in to do so is simply not acceptable. This is ridiculous. This is an absurd situation. But now the plot thickens. Nothing says the Republican Party like snatching

defeat from the clutches of victory. Like you's just it gets better, just hold on, hold on, buck eye boy. Republicans hold a veto proof super majority in the House and the Senate. So Senate Republicans have advanced, if you will, an offer to Democrats, and they have offered a few things that Democrats hate that would tighten up the election process dramatically in return for allowing Biden to be on the ballot. Democrats said, no, we're not

doing that. Senate said, okay, let us know if you change your mine. Anyway. This has so many layers of intrigue. First of all, there's Mike Dwine being in Mike Dwine. There's there's there's the Secretary of State holding to he said, look, I get it, but I'm duty bound to uphold the law. That's the way you go. Sorry. And then you got the Republicans in the House in the Senate going, oh,

really, five minutes past the hour. It is Tuesday, May twenty eighth, The Morning show Press, it's got corner friends, this was this was interesting to chew on over the weekend. Artificial intelligence, I think will prove to be like the Internet, filled with evil and filled with good evil because it's in the hands of man and we are a sinful lot. And I'll

get to in fact, some of that just a few minutes. But this study from Stanford University finds astonishing differences between the male and the female brain. The key points in the study. Researchers found no overlap between male and female rejected the idea of something called continuum. Male pattern brain connectivity predicted male cognitive function, but not female cognitive function. Female pattern brain connectivity predicted female cognitive

function, but not male cognitive function. Now, your first thought in mind when I read when I read that was uh, yeah, is there anything surprising coming now? I'm not going to pretend to fully be able to explain, because I have not fully understood the complexities of this study. Investigators found consistently that women are more likely than men to experience anxiety and depression. Conversely, men are more likely than women to have autism, add and schizophrenia.

Questions being asked, are these differences social constructs just a result of the way society functions? For men and women, or might these in fact be more connected to the real neural differences between men and women, I e. How God created us. And they show the different cohorts and the different studies and the different brain scans, and they show all of these different things. But

I got to get to where my brain took me. Obviously, there has been some call it a misogynist view of men versus women, that women are inferior, that their brains aren't capable. And clearly, I mean I would say that that's objectively false. They're different. Men and women are merely different and are constructed that way. And this is what's interesting. You know how we talk to at least to me. Okay, you now we talk about the fact that you can get all the surgeries you want and it's not going

to change the DNA. A guy will always be a guy, and a gal will always be a goal. It's just reality. The gene pool will not change because of superficial surgeries, no matter how in depth those surgeries might be, or body altering those surgeries might be. The skeletal structure and the d is that of a male and that of a female. Now consider this and ask this question is this why so many transgenders end up committing suicide?

Because of what we're touching on here. No matter what someone may think or try to do, men and women cognitively neurally in their brain are different, and no surgery can change that. They're just and so, if you will, a male pretending to be a female is no matter what changes are made around them environmentally surgically in their brain that cannot be touched. They are wired to be a male and there are defined, well defined and now established cognitive

neurological differences in the wiring that even goes beyond DNA. Could that explain the torture of being trapped in the wrong body? The Morning Show with Preston Scott on News Radio one hundred point seven WUFLA. And when I mean trapped, I'm not talking about it from the transgender's view. I'm talking about it from the opposite perspective. They're going through all these surgeries, all of these actions to pretend to be to present themselves as a woman, but they're not and

nothing's going to change it. That's what this study stood out to me. It wasn't that, oh, wow, men and women are different. Huh? Really it's the level of difference going to a part that cannot be changed. You can't surgically change it, can't do anything about it, just like you can't change the DNA, you can't change the wiring of the brain. How God made someone to be male and female anyway, I just found that interesting. Yeah, I think it does make sense of a lot of things,

and including even down to like the male side. Right, So the study said males were much more likely to have autism, which even men, males that aren't diagnosed officially as autistic still have that kind of one of the features of autism from when I'm aware, it's like a real fixation on like particular things. That's like sessions, that's like a that's like males having hobbies, you know, like golf, you know, you know, working on cars, mechanics, you know, like those kinds of things. It totally

makes sense. That's how male brains are, that's how female brains are. Totally makes sense. I just think it's a It's another interesting point to make if you're ever having the discussion with somebody on the subject, and it explains why we see that that there are studies that are showing the suicides of trans youth and adults has nothing to do with acceptance in that I mean, they've never been more accepted. It has to do with this being held hostage.

Their brain is the opposite of how they're presenting, and they keep presenting themselves. I would I would submit that the pressure in the trans community to stay the course is greater than any other force that's being exerted on them. Anyway, back to AI for just second, I've never heard of Wiley. Have you ever heard of Wiley Coyote? Nope, science publisher two hundred and seventeen years one of the leading science paper publishers in the world, if not the

never knew about it. It has reportedly peer reviewed more than eleven thousand papers that were determined to be fake without ever noticing a posed From Joe Nova Joanne Nova, it's not a scam, it's an industry. Who knew academic journals were a thirty billion dollar industry. In her post, she said professional cheating services are employing AI to craft seemingly original academic papers, and all they're doing is shuffling words around. In other words, they are plagiarizing, among other

things. But the bottom line is they're not going through any actual peer review. AI is just going through this stuff and rendering them ah legit, ergo peer reviewed. You remember how we talked about peer reviewed during COVID. What are you talking about? Like when Fauci suddenly changed decades of positioning on masks two weeks after saying masks, we don't need masks. We're not those people,

We're not crazy. What are you nuts? You paranoid? Two weeks later you need to mask up. There were no papers, there was no peer reviewed. In fact, the publisher Wiley has confessed that fraudulent activities have rendered nineteen of its journals so compromised they're shutting them down. Nineteen. In December twenty twenty three, Nature posted more than ten thousand papers were retracted in twenty twenty three Nature. By the way, what does Nature cover global climate

change? I'm just pointing out, if you pay attention, common sense wins. Our intuitive nature created by God, our discernment given to us by the Holy Spirit, trumps this stuff almost every time. The truth is slowly coming out, even if it's being dragged out. All right, I take no joy in sharing this, No really, zero, none, none, none. I need to make sure I say that up front, because I know that a lot of you are tattoo wearers. I I I get just I'm

placing my fingers a half inch apart. I get that much of the tattoo thing for guys who have been in military service together and they kind of get something that is like a bond of their work together and they're serving together. And I guess I mean, I'm like, take a picture, you know. I mean that's just me. I've just I've never understood, I've never embraced. I don't get it. With all due respect to any of you that are my age or older, I think I think tattoos on old people's

skin look just nasty. And so just anyway, this is this is This is a study from researchers in Sweden lynd University, and they have found a potential link between tattoos and a cancer of the lymphatic system known as lymphoma. Having a tattoo, a singular tattoo, could just it's like, you know, could increase your risk of developing this very rare type of cancer by twenty one percent. Now, before you say, okay, they studied twenty people,

fifty people, one hundred people. No, they studied eleven thousand out of that group, twenty nine hundred. They study eleven nine hundred and five Out of that group, twenty nine hundred and thirty eight people between the ages of twenty and sixty had lymphoma. Now, the results, obviously, according to the lead researcher, need to be verified, investigated further. There's more

research going on. It's just it's an early indicatory. They took into account smoking age and they found that the risk of developing lymphoma was twenty one percent higher among those who were tattooed. The size of the tattoo did not matter. Having a full body tattoo did not increase the risk any more than a

smaller tattoo. They broke down the type of cancers. General symptoms heavy drenching, night sweats, which can also happen during the day, high temperatures that come and go without any obvious cause, unexplained weight loss, tiredness, itching of the skin that doesn't go away. Some people had swollen lymph nodes that may ache or feel painful soon after drinking alcohol. They're not sure why,

but this is what the initial researcher, doctor the Crystal Nielsen. One can only speculate that a tattoo, regardless of size, triggers a low grade inflammation in the body, which in turn can trigger cancer. The picture is thus more complex than we initially thought. We already know that when the tattoo ink is injected into the skin, the body interprets the ink as something foreign that

shouldn't be there. The immune system is activated, a large part of the ink is transported away from the skin, so the lymph nodes is where it is deposited. Now that starts to crystallize the situation and make it make a little more sense. First of all, as we've talked about with doctor Heart's over the years, and to a certain extent with Doctor Camps, inflammation's a

massive problem in the body. But when you start to take stuff that isn't supposed to be in your body and it runs into the lymph system and it can't be processed properly, and then it does who knows what, just saying so, I guess this is my way of giving those of you who don't have tattoos reason to not get one, and and young people just don't. That's just my advice, though, But that's just me being an old dad.

All right, twenty eight minutes Grandpa too. After the hour, It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott on News Radio one hundred point seven double UFLA or on NewsRadio double UFLA Panama City dot Com. Yeah, heehaw here we go. H thirty six pass Big Stories in the press Box, brought to you by Grove of Creative Marketing and digital expertise. Tomorrow, trying to get

somebody on the program from Heritage Foundation to talk about the FED. But I'm going to talk about the FED regardless and the idea of shutting it down. We broached the story yesterday Thomas Massey proposing I think he's represented from Kentucky proposing. Is it Kentucky or Tennessee. I want to say Kentucky, Kentucky. Yeah, proposing shutting down the FED. Just close it, giving it one year to close down operations and we'll talk more about that. Target Target stock

prices have fallen eight percent. Retailer posted quarterly results that showed sales declining in the fourth straight quarter. I mean you throw out literally Satan merch, don't be surprised. Well, you combine that with you know, not only whether it's beals a bob or beals a bowl, not only you know that kind of nonsense, which they pulled back quite a bit. There's some stories not putting any of it up, and that's good. But you know, ask

bud Light. Yeah, these lessons are tough and sometimes you just like people don't come back. It's a real thing, you especially now, because if you if you just you find another way, You just find another source for whatever it is you're looking for, and then the the new path has been made and you find, oh that that path works just as well, and I don't have to worry about that. But you factor in the mistake that

Target made pushing this LGBTQ crap down everyone's throat with inflation. Where a store like Target, which is a higher end version of Walmart, right, not as big in terms of the types of stuff it carries. You know, you don't have an automotive department really to speak of in Target. Yeah you can get a little bit of car wash stuff, but that's about it. You know, they don't have the lawn and garden in most Targets. So but you get my point. It's not quite Walmart. But now Walmart is

doing the same thing. Walmart's targeting the LGBTQ crowd saying come shop at Walmart, and I just they're not going to come to Walmart like you. They hate Sam Walton. Yeah, but even if they do, that's fine. You don't need to cater to anybody. Sell stuff. Whoever wants to buy can buy. But to promote and cater to that, it's just business suicide. But because of the arrangement with our I guess current economic structure, and

you've got Walmart target you know, publics. You know you have select stores, right if you're an in person shopper, you may be limited in your options, and you've like, well, crap, like it's the closest store for twenty miles. It's all I got. Yeah, yeah, I get it, Absolutely get it. NCAA and Power five conferences agreeing to pay players apparently all sports twenty mili a year to all schools to distribute. Can't wait to see how that goes down. I've told you it's gonna happen. The

no revenue sports are gonna say, where's ours? Well, you don't produce any revenue. We have to we have to pay for your program to exist. I just anyway. And then the biggest of the big stories, and internal email from a whistleblower shows that Pfizer employees got a separate COVID vaccine. It was not the one that everybody else got. Well, dootal Lee, do do do do do? It's The Morning Show with Preston Scott forty two

passed the hour story from Conservative Globe. But it's the story of a whistleblower that leaked an internal email dated January eighth, twenty twenty one. Let's put some context on that. That's right as the vaccines were being rolled out, that's before Biden was sworn in as the installed resident of the United States.

And inside the email it it points out that they got a separate vaccine if they were a Pfiser employee, and in fact they were asked to please get the shot at a Pfiser facility, not at a health clinic, not as at a pharmacy. Why well, because it's different, and they detailed that. They didn't detail how it was different, what made it different, just

that it was different. Now, if you piece together that little revelation with the fact that we have not seen stories of Pfiser employees coming down with all the different blood clots, the myocarditis, and the other conditions that are associated with the shot. It makes sense, by the way the article points back if you think back in twenty twenty one, Albert Borla, the CEO of Pfiser, was invited to Israel to meet government officials, except that no one

could go in or out of Israel unless they had proof of vaccine. He admitted he hadn't been vaccinated, So the guy behind getting every government in the world to take the shot hadn't gotten it. Isn't that interesting. That's just fascinating to me. I guess he didn't even trust the shot that was being given to Pfiser employees. But anyway, I move on. US Fleet Forces Commander Darryl Caudle said that at Navy bases alone, there are attempted infiltrations two

to three times a week. More than one hundred attempts have been made by Chinese nationals in the last year, perpetrators claiming to be tourists making a mistake and where they were going, telling Fox News, this thing of our military base is getting penetrated by foreign nationals happening more and more. It's Russian, Chinese, comes from all these different nations. Inside the story is our people that have been convicted of spying for China going to prison, others facing charges.

But here's where it gets just ridiculous is if you look at the chart, eight thousand percent increase in Chinese nationals crossing the southern border in the last three years since Joe Tay took over. Now again, Joe Biden is allowing Chinese nationals to enter the southern border. They know it's happening, the government knows it's happening, the military knows it's happening, and yet we're doing nothing

to stop it. Is this the payoff? Remember the contention is Joe Biden is beholden to j the president of China because they paid the Biden family and they know they did, and they have the goods and Joe has to cooperate. So we're allowing spies into the country and they know they're here. I wrote down in the rundown. Might this be a reason to finally say no to Joe and the Democrats? Does that get it done? I don't know. Forty six minutes after the hour of The Morning Show with Preston Scott Manly,

Minette coming up. Preston Scott sixty of the time. It works every time on news radio one hundred point seven double UFLA alright, fifty one minutes passed the hour and manly Minutte just moments away. Congratulations. Link Jarrett was a two time national Coach of the Year at Notre Dame. You ought to

be the national coach of the year again. The program. Look, there's no other way to put it. The program was heading the wrong direction and he got handed the program and promptly did the best he could with band aids, and FSU missed the postseason in his first year as head coach for the first time in forty three years. I think it is, but look what happened in the year subsequent. They are a top eight national seed, which means if FSU wins the regional this weekend, it will host the Super Regional

the following weekend, which means they can punch their ticket to Omaha. Unbelievably, in Linked Jarrett's second year without leaving Dick Houser Stadium, where they are really good. Large part that's because of you fans, But they will host Alabama, UCF and Stetson. They'll play Stetson first on Friday at noon. You can hear the game right here. That's a good that's a that's a tough one. Yeah, that of you take all those four teams, those

are those are good programs, Yes, they are. I would I would personally think that Alabama's maybe closer to the three or four seed. Stetson might be closer to the two or three. But it is what it is. You gotta win, you gotta beat them. And and here's what's interesting for you. They are paired with the Oklahoma Regional, where one Oral Roberts University

is part of. So you're telling me there's a chance that if my alma mater makes it out of the Norman Regional and Florida State wins their regional. F s U Oh are you? Whoa you talk about conflicted? Because I know you're a big FSU baseball fan, but that's your alma mater. I do love I love FSU baseball, no doubt, But in this moment, I would be rocking the Blue and gold. I'm sure you would be. I'm sure you would be. That'd be nuts. Yeah. The Oklahoma Regional,

the Sooners Duke Yeah, oh are you and Yukon. That's another heck of a regional. Yeah, I wouldn't mind seeing o ru come But at the same time, I really kind of want to see Duke come here, given how that last game went. Yeah, in the championship game. But that actually leads us to These are the skills, virtues, tips, things to pass on to your son to make sure that he is in fact a man. In the spirit of teach your son how to score a baseball game.

I've talked about this once before. Take him to a game. It doesn't matter what game. A game. First, you're teaching him the finer parts of baseball, which takes its time, It breathes, it exhales. Baseball is a game that is to enjoyed over a conversation and a frosty malt and perhaps some cracker jackson a hot dog. But scoring a baseball game, you get the baseball card. You mark down your lineups, you put down the batting order. Pitch your number one, catch your number two, first

base, number three, and so forth. Your positions. K is a strikeout, BB is a base on balls, a walk one. B is a single too, B is a double. I mean, there's the game is captured. On one card and then it's a momento for the rest of their life of that time they scored their first baseball game with dad, mom, brother, uncle, good friend who knows the game. And if you're not sure how to teach him, go online. They are tutorials everywhere and

it really is a fun way to enjoy the game. Well, the last time he came up, he had a three to one pitch to right field. I mean, come on, that's awesome. And there you go, my friends, in the spirit of FSU Baseball, and you can go to Dick Houser Stadium this week, catch a game and score it. What a memento the College Baseball Playoffs first baseball card right there. Back with our three of the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Imagine that you own a piece of

property adjacent to a national park. It's yours, You own it. You have it fenced, you have it locked, you have your private property secured. But you decide, because you have a spring fed pond that's really good size, You've got all kinds of great gardens, wild animals that like to frequent your land, that every single day of the week, you're gonna unlock your gates. And allow the public to come in and enjoy your land,

except on Sunday. On Sunday, you're going to honor God's Day, or that's the day that you decided you want you want to just kind of have your sabbath on Sunday. And so you don't unlock that gate. It's your land. Sure, it's adjacent to a National park, but it is your land. You're not encroaching on the national park. And then all of a sudden, the National Park Service says, excuse me, why is your gate locked? Well, it's it's my land. In fact, I don't have

to open it at all. I do, and I welcome visitors to enjoy what we've been blessed with in our family six days a week, all year long, just not on Sunday. That's all good. Oh no, no, no, no, it's not good. In fact, you're ordered to open up your land on Sunday. As you think about the un believable, I mean, that couldn't possibly happen, except that's exactly what has happened in

Ocean Grove, New Jersey. Ocean Grove has kept a mile long strip of the Jersey Shore beach closed until noon on just noon on Sundays since eighteen sixty nine. It is privately owned by the Ocean Grove Camp Meeting Association, a religious group. They own it, it's their land. But in New Jersey, the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection is ordered the beach be open. It doesn't matter what you think, it doesn't matter that it's privately owned.

And their appeal they would threatened with fines of twenty five thousand dollars per day if they didn't comply. The Commissioner, Sean Letourette has denied the request to stay or halt the order, so they're having to appeal. But in the meantime they have to open up. But just just think about this for a second, privately owned land. There's beaches to the to the north and to the south, beaches all over the place. This is their beach and they

have to open it or else. Mmmm mmmmm. Preston Scott on News Radio one hundred point seven Double UFLA earlier this morning, I mentioned that today's show featured just coined a term silo stories. They just stand on their own. They're just like that one. Wow. Now we previewed this, we told

you this was coming. We covered the story of Ocean Grove, New Jersey, back last year and what they were in the midst of fighting, but still in and of itself, that's one of those silo stories that just just stands there in the middle of the field and it draws your attention to it, and it's just WHOA, that's that's incredible, And it would be very easy to just say, well, there you go, that's New Jersey, right, that's Jersey. Except that's that's something that's growing in our country.

The government telling you where, when, how you're going to live. Came across a piece by Michael Snyder. He's an author written a lot of books about eschatology and times that kind of thing. He's got a book out called Chaos right Now. It's a pretty controversial book, and he's Headline America in

twenty twenty four. Fast food is a luxury, eleven million children live in poverty and a thousands of stores are closing, and inside of it, he hits on those those are kind of bullet points to the really wealthy people. The cost of things going up doesn't impact them. But that is that echelon of people that things like this just don't impact the rest of us. It absolutely does. He breaks down you know, the McDonald's, the subway,

the prices of things Chipotle. A burrito that was six point fifty and seven twenty nineteen is now ten seventy. I mean, if you do the math, that is a massive jump in price. Lending Tree did a survey discovered

that eighty percent of all Americans believe fast food is a luxury item. Now eighty percent, I mean candidly, that's where people that kind of struggled would go to have a meal with the family, right because they could go out and have a dinner cooked for them by somebody else, and a family of four could eat for twenty bucks and that was a night out. Today, forty percent of the entire country is considered to be either living in poverty or

among the ranks of the working poor. Forty two million Americans are on food stamps, and you've got people that are facing loss of jobs because stores can't can't stay open. Inflation destroys everything in its wake. Businesses are stuck with the cost of wages going up and all of the associated costs from that. Then the cost of their downline expenses going up, and so you reach a point where whatever your niche is in business is tested. Is it something that

people need or is it something that people want? You know, I was talking to my end a Donnis briefly and I just last week, and I said, you are in a recession proof industry. Good for you. He charted his path, he shared with me kind of how he got to doing what he's doing, and he had a very interesting comment. He said, I was a pharmacist first, he said, but I realized I was giving people medications to cover the problem. Being an end adonist allows me to treat

the cause of a problem and help people actually feel better. It's like that's noble. But again, think about it, and that's just one industry. There are other industries that are recession proof. You need that service or that good or whatever it might be. But there's a whole bunch out there that that make their living off of people having a little bit of discretionary income.

Their margins are based on people being able to buy their stuff in the numbers needed to employ this number of people and to create this amount of profit to keep the business going. All of that's going away under this economy. And again, a silo story, a story that stands all on its own and points us factually to conclusions that should impact your voting in local, state,

national elections. Just just is we're right now in a Plato factory, and we're the Plato, and we are having incredible pressures exerted on us, and we're either going to come out in the shape that they want us to or we're not, and so we have to blow it up. We have to we have to push back on this and get a different mindset in government so

that we can just live our lives without being ruined by elected officials. Come back and talk about an original twenty three past those my age, give or take, that were fans of basketball in the UH late sixties, early seventies and beyond. A little sad yesterday fast finding out that legend Bill Walton passed away at the age of seventy one. Battled cancer for quite a while. You never would have known it listening to him broadcast in the last year.

Just wasn't his style. I can't say I was a huge fan of his broadcasting style, but I was a huge fan of Bill Walton because he loved the game of basketball and to me played it at a mensa level. He was again. To me, he was the best center I ever saw play. And that includes wil Chamberlain, who I did see play, and Abdul Jabbar and David Robinson and Moses Malone and other bigs and Kashaquille O'Neill. Walton, to me was the best of all of them because he could run the

floor, He rebounded like a beast. He was relentless, he could shoot, and boy could he pass. He was just before injuries got the better of him. He won titles as a pro. He was the MVP of the league the year that Portland Trailblazers won the NBA title. He later won another one with the Boston Celtics coming off the bench. I think he was the sixth Man of the of the Year in the NBA. He was a three time National Player of the Year, three times playing for John Wooden.

But I wrote down some numbers here. Nineteen seventy two National Championship Game beat Florida State. It's the only time Florida State was in the National title game. Beat Florida State eighty one seventy six. Walton had twenty four points and twenty rebounds. Not a bad night. One year later, National Title game against Memphis, where they won. Walton scored forty four points on twenty one

of twenty two shooting You're thinking a bunch of dunks. Huh oh no, no, no, no, no. Bill Walton was banging jumpers off the backboard. He was just phenomenal. I watched that game. I remember that game. It's still the single most impressive per performance in a championship of any kind I've ever witnessed. Forty four points, thirteen rebounds, seven blocks, and the man played with a relentless energy. It was just fun to watch.

I encourage you to watch highlights of Bill Walton play basketball if you've if you've never seen him and you love the game, because the highlights are all over everywhere. I mean, you can find him on YouTube like crazy, and you can find that Memphis game twenty one of twenty two. He was just He was an original, great basketball player, loved the game, seemingly just a gentle giant, a little different, love the Grateful Dead, obsessed

over that band, but an absolute legend in the game. Passing too young at the age of seventy one, but died surrounded by his family. His son was a very good NBA player and was a coach for a little while Luke Walton. But anyway, yeah, Bill Walton missed all right, twenty seven past the hour, come back with the big Stories in the press Box. It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott little money talk in just a few moments. But first, the Big Stories in the press Box brought to you

by Grove Creative Marketing and digital Expertise. Tuesday on the Morning Show, Pfizer internal email shows employees received a separate COVID shot. Here's what's significant. Whistleblower leaked an internal email dated January eighth, twenty twenty one. Now, first, remember what Peiser was saying, we need seventy five years to turn over documents. Can I tell you how long it takes to turnover documents? Let me demonstrate. Hold on, I'm going to demonstrate. Here. I have

a file folder and it has various things inside of it. Here it's a notebook, one of those three ring you know notebooks, that's probably an inch and a half thick. And here's how long it takes to disclose documents. That's how long that's it? Do you hear that? That's how long it takes to hand over documents. That's it, just like that Pfizer wanted seventy

five years. This whistleblower handing over documents said that inside the document, it says that Pfiser employees would be getting a separate vaccine, that the vaccine doses to be used for this program are separate and distinct from those committed by Pfizer to governments around the world and will not impact national supply to national governments in any way. So the idea they were planting is, don't worry the poor

nations of the world. All the nations they're getting their supply. But what people weren't noticing is that inside this email it says distinctly different whistleblowers surmises that they were placebos and that perhaps the vaccine was missing the infamous spike protein. Also in the email, they didn't want employees to be vaccinated at health clinics, doctors' offices, pharmacies. They wanted the shots administered at Pfizer's research facilities.

How about that. I don't think we can state the importance of this story. I told you the truth was gonna come out. My god, you look at Watergate. They couldn't keep a story straight and keep a secret for just a couple of months. It's coming out. The truth is coming out, and it's going to be a crime, a massive crime. NCA Power five schools agreed to a deal that will pay pay athletes at schools. Individual schools will have twenty million dollars a year to pay athletes. They will

have to divvy that up. It's the aftermath of a two point seven billion dollars settlement that will be paid over ten years to pass in current athletes and Target sales are dropping. They are not going full bore into the Pride thing this year, not as as they have in years past. But walmart is lessons come hard. They just come hard, all right? Come back? Money Talk with Hard Eisman. Next, It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott

Money Talk, which is now with investment advisor Howard Eisman. Securities and advisory services offered through NBC Securities Inc. Member FINRA and SIPC. NBC Securities Inc. Is a wholly owned subsidiary of RBC Bank Usa. The opinions expressed are not those of NBC Securities Inc. Or iHeartMedia. Remember on appropriate matters, seek professional tax and or legal advice, and always remember if I chime in,

just seek professional help. Do you y them money? Howard, last hour we talked about in fact, this hour we talked about the cost of things, and one of the things we did not cover is how childcare costs are just exploding. Yeah, they really have pressed in the average annual cost of childcare or a household with two children this past year actually exceeded the average annual mortgage payment in forty five of our states, and exceeded the average annual

cost of rent in all fifty states. And so it's very, very expensive. And the most expensive place for childcare happened to be in the states of Hawaii, Oregon, Vermont, and New York. But I think it's a big issue all over. Absolutely it is. I'm curious. I would imagine that in your years of you know, following what the markets are doing, there are always oddities that that happened. I mean, even in good financial

times, there are things that are just weird and unusual. But the performance as of mid May of three of the five best performing stocks was curious to me. Yeah, if you look at the best performing stocks in the standard Forest five hundred as of literally just about a week or so ago. The defensive sectors are actually doing very well this year after dramatically underperforming the prior year

due to the spike higher inflation and interest rates. When you went, let me ask, when you say defensive sector, we're not talking about like national defense, You're talking about something else. Yeah, really, exactly, great point, Preston. It's the utilities deemed to be the most defensive stock portion of the index. You know, where you turn the light switch on and

off and ah, we've got power. Wonderful, And I think part of it is there's an anticipation that for the next five or ten years or more, there's going to be a huge demand for electric power just to keep up with the command centers that are being help that I ginormous, a lot of the large high tech companies, So we're talking artificial intelligence and electric vehicles. It's going to cause a big demand. And the folks who are already lining

up with the utility companies to make sure they don't get left out. You say AI, artificial intelligence, and then I think about the amount of information that's available to us now, more than any time in human history, and yet a lot of people don't fully know what their options are when it comes to their money. Well, that's true, and you know, obviously there's

an awful lot of options. And I would suggest for folks who maybe have benefited tremendously from this run up that we've seen in the market really since the fall of nineteen twenty twenty two and last fall as well, you're now getting paid a reasonable amount of interest income on your savings. So depositors which in many many places are actually earning under still under one tenth of one percent a

year, which is effectively zero right in their checking accounts. Well, a study showed that forty two percent of Americans don't know that money market funds or certificates of deposits are available, and today they're paying in the five percent range. And it's crazy, We've got so much information at our disposal. But do you think that's because people kind of have a turtle approach to this. They just pull their head in and hope it goes away or gets better.

Well, they pay their bills out of their checking account, and so in many cases, you know, the same bank or credit union they use may or may not be encouraging them to move part of that into the higher yielding savings vehicles. But sure seems like a good idea to may good stuff. Howard is always thanks for the time, Yes, sir, I have a great week. Press all righty, Howard Eisman with us this morning Money Talk on The Morning Show with Preston Scott. Remember now it's Tuesday. We'll get

thrown off by that. It's gonna happen to me. I know it, I know it. I'm already kind of just I guess we would call him a serial Guinness World Record breaker, right, David Rush, He's got another one. This guy keeps popping up. He's got another one. He now has one hundred and seventy one concurrently held Guinness World Record titles that he either

holds or co holds. He previously broke the record for the most table tennis balls bounced and caught in shaving cream foam on the head in thirty seconds. It's a team title and he's broken it multiple times, but he took on the individual version. Now you can rightly say you're kidding me. Right, dude puts shaving cream on his head. He has to bounce a table tennis ball off of a wall and then catch him on his head. He caught fourteen balls and I don't know if that's in thirty seconds or sixty, but

he holds the record now with Californian Ronald Sarcian. So he now has one hundred and seventy one records that he holds right now, and he's going for one and eighty one. I still does somebody does do people out there start picking off record? I mentioned this that a jerk could really be a jerk and just find one or two records and just keep picking off one or two. Like he gets to one hundred and seventy nine and then someone brings two

or three records and he's down to one seventy seven. Yeah, then he gets to one eighty and someone goes, oh nope, and he's down one seventy five. Troll. I'm just wondering is it gonna happen? I don't know, but you could. At this point, we're all we're invested, we're in we're in it to find you know what. I had to try to get him on the show. That'd be fun ott to see if he's got a YouTube channel, he's got a he's a he's a thing out there.

So make sure there's an email or a DM somewhere that can be sent. Yeah, you know how good I am at that. I'm good at tracking people down normal ways. But dms brought to you by Barno Heating and Air. It's the Morning Show one on WFLA that said, I will try. We started with Romans twelve, verse fifteen. That's where we began the program. The big stories in the press box today, Pfizer internal email shows employees received a separate COVID vaccine distinct and different from the one that the rest

of you got from Pfizer. Really, or as ace Ventura would sayly, NCAA Power five conferences agree to a deal that will let schools pay players twenty million dollars a year will be set aside per ghoul. Wow. It's just wow. I don't know how you're gonna do it, How you're gonna divvy up that money. NCAA is effectively saying, uncle, they're tapping out. They're gonna pay two point seven billion over the next ten years to settle a few lawsuits. Uh, fast food's a luxury now? Is that where we

are in America? That's what one writer says. Ocean Grove, New Jersey, privately owned beach ordered to open on Sunday mornings. Doesn't matter what you've done for one undred and fifty five years, doesn't matter that it's privately owned the state of New Jersey. Thus, saith and wait to go. FSU Baseball top eight seed. Back with you tomorrow. I have an awesome day.

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