One final stretch. Welcome friends Thursday on the Morning Show with Preston Scott May thirtieth and Show fifty one sixty nine on Preston. He's Grant and it's great to be with you. Boy. Yeah, we've got we've got some things to talk about today, lots of stories, not as many guests as we had planned. Doctor ed Moore not feeling well, and so keep doctor Moore in your prayers if you are of the praying sort. But he reached out yesterday said I'm going to call in, and then he reached out just shortly
thereafter he said, Nah, I'm not I'm just not there. And so we have plenty to fill with because the the new cycle just does what it does, and it is pushing out like a Plato factory, story after story after story, and one notable one which we'll get to at the bottom of the hour, but we always begin with scripture Luke nineteen. It talks about an encounter Jesus has with a guy named Zichias. Check this out verse one. He entered Jericho and was passing through and behold there was a man named
z Achias. He was a chief tax collector and was rich and he was seeking to see who Jesus was, but on account of the crowd, he could not because he was small in stature. So he ran ahead and climbed into a sycamore tree to see him, for he was about to pass that way. And when Jesus came to the place, he looked up and said to him Zechias, Well, first of all, could you imagine Jesus just looks up and calls you by your name, and you'd not met him before.
Such was the lot of Zichias at that moment. Zakia is hurry and come down, for I must stay at your house today. So he hurried and came down and received him joyfully. Now we'll pause in the story and move ahead to verse nine, where it says and Jesus said to him, today, salvation has come to this house, since he is also a son of Abraham, for the son of Man came to seek and to save the lost. There's so much to that story, but I think what stands out
to me is the effort that Zakias went to to see Jesus. Zachias was not well liked. He was a tax collector. I mean he he he was the chief tax collector and yet Jesus knew him by name. So let me just posit the thought that first, God knows each of you by name. He knows the good and the bad. He knows when we confess our sins before God. When we say I really messed up here, God, I'm sorry. God's not up there going Wait, you did what you're kidding
me? God knows. The point of confession is to make sure that we know. The point of saying to God, I messed up, I'm sorry is to make sure we know. Because God knows, Jesus knew who Zachius was, and he was touched by the fact that Zachias was not going to allow anything, including his size, stop him from seeing the Son of God. And so I guess I would pose the question, do you allow anything to stop you from seeing Jesus? And I would say, in response to
whatever that is, climb that tree. Ten minutes after the hour, It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott. 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. He's on end of the Morning here, still scruffy I'm hoping I'm gonna get to shave by the by Sunday is mostly gone. Still a little too tender for those of you that have what are you talking about it?
I had some moral surgery last Friday. But being the gamer that I am, I came in all week long just saying, yeah, gum surgery, come on, no problem. It really wasn't surgery for the gum. They just had to go through the gum to get to the tooth and so yeah, but no, just just one of those things. And so I have. This is the longest I've gone without shaving, like my whole face. Okay, I got some of the neck stuff off. I got some of the neck fur off because I always think that's kind of gross. I'm
not a neck beard guy. I don't think it's attractive on any guy. Yeah, neck beards are kind of the they're not in and they've never really been in. It's like the dudes that have really hairy backs and their hair comes out of their their shirt, their crew neck shirts. That's just and if that's you, hey, you know that's you. You're you know you style you the way you style you. But I've always just been like, no, that's just not something I enjoy for me. But at any rate,
yeah, I haven't shaved in a minute. And and so, you know, it was so funny. Cynthia, my sweet wife, she said when I was talking about how she reacts to me having, you know, stubble, and it's now the stubble's now getting almost a little softer, almost almost, but I can see where that might you know, burn a little bit. But she said, you made me sound mean. I said, well, vagabond, what's the difference between a vagabond and a homeless person?
You think I look homeless? She was very concerned. I says, you, there's not a mean boat in your body. Anybody knows you knows, and anybody that listens to this show knows how I feel about my wife. And so there's no there's no doubting that she just thinks I look like somebody who is destitute and and without any sense of social grace when I'm when I'm not shaving, because that's just you know, I look rough, and I I probably do. I don't know. I'm I'm kind of past all that
kind of thing. I'm I'm vain about one thing. I'm grateful I have hair. I am a little vain about not about my hair, because I'm not like some style horse when it comes to my hair. I'm just grateful that I have hair because I defeated the mother of all gene pools on that one. Just thank you, God, thank you, thank you, thank
you. What's the old? Uh? I don't know if it's a wives tale or whatever they say, but your hair genetics is akin to your mother's father, at least for men like I don't know if that has any for my brothers. Yeah, I suppose you know that. Just yeah, so I get it, you know. I don't know if that real or not.
I know that I did get more of mom's gene pool because of my height, my eye color, my coordination, and so far my medical history so far, and certainly my follicle history has been greatly impacted by my mom's side. Important things. Yeah, So anyway, May thirty What do we got here? Fifteen thirty nine. Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto lands in Florida. Welcome, sir. Have you been to Disney stop at the uh Little Cabana there on the beach and you can get reduced passes to Disney. Wonder
if they had one of those then. Eighteen oh six in Kentucky, Andrew Jackson kills lawyer Charles Dickinson in a duel for allegedly insulting Jackson's wife. Oh my gosh, kids, why sir, you have besmirched my beloved, my dear. I shall meet you on the on the on the hill tomorrow. Bring your a pistol. Eighteen sixty eight. Memorial Day widely observed for the first time eighteen ninety six New York City. The first recorded car accident occurs
when a motor wagon collides with a bike. Nineteen eleven. Ray har Run wins the first Indianapolis five hundred. Bet you didn't know that. I thought it was aj Foyd nineteen twenty two. Lincoln Memorial dedicated in Washington in nineteen fifty eight. Unidentified soldiers killed in World War two in the Korean War are buried at Arlington National Cemetery in the two in the Unknown seventeen passed the hour? All right? Have you ever heard of picasso? Uh? Now?
Pig pig cosso The website pig casso as in c A S s O after pig p I g E pig pig kasso is a literal pig that paints and m h. It was. It was a viral thing that has remained. And I'll give you an example here. I'm trying to get it to convert to you. You can buy the art online and it's not cheap. There's an elephant that does this too. It paints, it grabs the brush. Picasso has the brush in his in his mouth and he just if you go to the website, you'll see he just goes nuts painting and then you know
he does exhibitions, tours the whole nine yards. Well, the lead research assistant of the Morning Show sent to me the two year old pint sized Picasso Lorent Schwartz from Bavaria. According to and this mom actually sounds grounded. She noticed her son's artistic bent when they were on vacation in Italy in September of twenty three. She said, there was a painting room in the hotel and we couldn't get him out of it. So just before Christmas we set up
a studio for him and he was in it all the time. And he does this abstract art. It's the only way you can describe it. And she put a page up on Instagram of her son's work and almost immediately had thirty thousand followers. She said, I thought I'd set up a channel because the paintings looked so nice. Then she decided to put some paintings up for sale on a website, Rent's Art l a u r e nts dot art, and it has been snapped up. His work. This two year old's
paintings have been snapped up from art lovers from the UK. The Bahamas, a gallery in New York, has contacted them, according to The Times in London, to display his artwork to a full display like in the gallery. He has sold one piece for seven thousand dollars. Here's what's interesting. Obviously, Mom's handling all this, and what they're doing is they're putting the proceeds in a bank account until he turns eighteen, just locking the money away for
when he's older. She said, it's totally up to him when and what he paints. Sometimes he doesn't feel like painting and doesn't set foot in the studio three or four weeks at a time, but then suddenly it grabs him and he says, mama painting. And so they've got pictures of this little guy's paint work, and I mean it's kind of crazy cool. You know. I'm not a huge abstract art guy because I think some of it looks kind of dark. But this kid's stuff has a little something to it,
and he's too. I can't say it beats Picasso. There's just something about an ant or the elephant, and I can't remember the elephant's name that does this stuff. But anyway, we'll be back with the the singular Big Story in the press Box next on the Morning Show with Preston Scott. But the Morning Show Preston Scott, Big Story in the press Box brought to you by GOB the creative marketing and digital expertise. You heard right, story singular.
I'm gonna read the headline from town Hall yesterday, Matt Vespa the tip sheet, brace yourselves for a Trump conviction because the judge just tilted the scales. I heard little things popping up yesterday. Shortly after we finished the show. The judge gave the jury instructions. He wouldn't print them out. He said they could ask questions. Friends. He didn't just put his thumb on the scale, he sat on it. I believe that when this is all said,
and done. This judge will face disbarment, removal from the bench. Yes, even in New York. He told the jury, if you paid attention to the national news. Let me reiterate, He told the jury, this is from John Roberts, who was sitting in the courtroom, who reports for Fox. They did not need unanimity to convict Four could agree on one crime, four on a different crime, four on another. He said he
would treat four, four and four as a unanimous verdict. So if it if there's twelve in the jury, two thirds could say to any of these charges, nah, Now they didn't meet any burden of proof. Wouldn't matter if four people find on three separate crimes. He's doing the math for them. Yeah, that's unanimous. That's not even legal in Zimbabwe. That is
not a legal court proceeding anywhere. According to a pretty wide swath of legal observers on this, his standards for conviction are abnormal and jurors don't even have to agree what crime was committed or even determine what crime was committed. Here's why there was no crime committed. Unbelievably, the judge allows Stormy Daniels to
come in there and describe whether Trump used a condom or not. But he wouldn't allow Bradley Smith, the former chairman of the Federal Election Commission, to come in and testify that what Trump did was not in any way, shape or form a campaign violation. He's an expert witness. One of the charges alleges he committed campaign fraud. A former chairman of the Federal Election Commission, was prevented from testifying by this judge, but he allowed Stormy Daniels to testify
that Trump wore a condom. This is as unbelievable as it gets, and I'm scratching the surface. I'm gonna unpack it this morning in the big story segments and we're gonna take calls in the third hour. Preston Scott Beyond on News Radio one point seven WUSLA. I really think that context is very important. And again we're scratching the surface of the irregularities. You got the judge who is a Democrat donor, a donor to Joe Biden, and guys left
the Biden administration to assist the prosecution here. They literally took a job working ad hoc for Alvin Bragg, the New York City District attorney to prosecute Trump on behalf of Biden, to make sure it's done right. I think the guy was a third highest ranking attorney in the Department of Justice and he left the job to take this to help with the prosecution. Sure he did. You've got a serial, habitual, convicted perjurer and liar, Michael Cohen as
the star witness. You've got a porn star porn actress that signed a non disclosure agree which in fact has been I mean NDAs have been legal and accepted as legally binding for decades. Two people with a motive and a vendetta. But you don't allow the chairman of the federal election commission a former chairman to testify as an expert witness. And oh, by the way, the judge's daughter is an activist for the Democrat Party. And none of that matters.
That's why the headline brace your cells for a Trump conviction. The game plan has always been find a way to convict him of something, to get him beaten in November, and then the oh, our bad will come later, the exoneration will come later. The idea that somehow there's no way people will
elect a convicted Trump. They're betting on that, and then when when the judge is determined to have been corrupt and wrong and his directions and instructions illegal, if at at at the worst and at the best just wrong, it'll be too late. That's what they're that's what they're banking on. We'll talk more about that in the third hour. I'm gonna take calls with the proviso. I've got a lot more. I've got some sound for you to listen to. We'll share some of that, more points to bring out, but
will open up the phone lines if you want to weigh in. I'm not it's not like a phone segment per se, but it's a if you want to weigh in, fine, If not, just sit back and maybe grab a pen and and paper and make some notes. That's what's coming up in
the third hour of the program. Steve Stewart comes up next hour. We've got some fyis and and and kind of a John Morgan I wouldn't say sighting, but a hearing A A we've heard from John can't wait to share the morning show with Preston Scott on News Radio one hundred point seven w f L A. A right, A few fyis, I don't know. If I don't know if the numbers are accurate. Next month, we'll talk to Hey
Zeus Rodriguez, former US Border Patrol agent. But but apparently, because there's a thirty to thirty five percent reduction in border patrol agents, they're leaving. They're just like, peace out. You won't let us do our job. We're tired of endangering our lives, getting crapped on, ignored, and handcuffed. We can't do our job. So apparently we're losing. We're losing agents
and border patrol officers. Anyway, Apparently a group of illegals called uh called for rides from lyft because they got tired of waiting for the Border patrol to come pick them up. They called hoopers and lifts. Hey man, can you give me all right? Uh? Where are you sir? Well, I don't exactly know. I just subsort that just makes me laugh. We shouldn't be laughing about an invasion, but but it's it. That's funny. That's funny they're calling. They're calling ride sharing services to get to get a
lift after breaking into the country Maryland. Please don't square this statement. Do you know what Larry Hogan is? Uh? Seen the governor. He was the former governor of Maryland. He's a rhino to the core. He's the worst kind of rhino, he really is. He's a Republican Senate candidate for the US Senate released an ad in the Senate. Republicans can't count on my vote, But then again, neither can Democrats. Dude, why are you running as a Republican if I were? And look, I'm not talking about
this from the standpoint of you gotta vote monolith with your party. That's not really what I'm talking about. If you look at all of who Larry Hogan is and his term as governor when he was governor, and I should say, his time as governor, and you look at what he stands for, which isn't much, why would the Republicans allow him to run as a Republican? Dude, run as an independent. I'm just saying, please, oh God, don't vote this guy in. He probably reflects Maryland a GOP voters,
though I don't see. I don't know. Maryland doesn't really strike me as like, you know, a bastion of any conservative ideas. I get it, but still, no, no, no, no, no, no, we don't need another Mitch McConnell. And then John Morgan is out there. He's not going to put any money behind Amendment three. But I just got to thinking he's apparently kind of joked about in made statements to the media about you know, if I was governor, I would be paroling all
of the people that are doing time for possession of marijuana. And he might not be wrong about that. We have some people serving hard time for stuff they shouldn't be serving hard time for. We do, Okay, that is a fact. We've got people serving life sentences that never harmed a person. And I'm not talking about drug dealers. I'm talking about literally people who didn't harm anybody and they're doing life terms. And I think we need to visit
stuff like that. But I want you to think about this. Okay, he's a personal injury attorney. What's going to happen if we fully legalize weed. Set aside the fact that it is a gateway drug. Set that aside. Here's what's going to happen. You can have more injuries, you had more car wrecks. What does John Morgan do? John Morgan is buttering his
bread. When this is all said and done, this is all about In my opinion, this is all about John Morgan, an admitted pot spokner who spends half his time in Hawaii. Now, this is about John Morgan looking out for the personal injury business that he has helped shape. This is my body. In the words of the Immortal Batman. On television, we haven't a moment to lose. It's time for the second hour of the Morning Show with Preston Scott Thursday. That means that's how we roll around here. Steve
Stewart joins me from Talas Reports, the website Talasreports dot com. Hello, my friend, how are you. Good morning prising good. Leon County Schools finds it self in a bit of a predicament post storm. Huh yeah. So you know one of our tiles reports. One of the things that we do, I think we do better than anybody, is we cover these local government meetings. We watch. If we don't cover them live, we watch the videos and we get some of the stuff looks really boring, but we
we find stuff that you should really know about. Right. So I was actually responsible for watching the school board meeting. It was only about an hour and a half, but and you know, I think I told you last couple of weeks ago, I went down to a blueprint meeting at City Hall, and you know, covering the meetings live, even watching them live, you get this context of what's going on with the board and the interactions. It is really it's invaluable. But back to the school board, a three
to two vote on on an issue which we'll talk about. But the one thing I wanted to bring to everyone's attention that I think is under the radar. We're going to do some more digging into. Is this damage to god Be High School by the recent weather events. And I understand that. Look, you know, you say, well bad weather, tornadoes come, yeah, and the flooding. Actually, and so we're starting to hear some rumblings that there's some things that God Be that we're going on that could have been
foreseen. Well, let's set the stage here for a second. Godby has been damaged severely by by flooding. Yes, it appears that way. There was a it is not a lot of not a lot of information. As I said, we watched the meeting. There was an item that was just you know, approved five zero. Not a lot of discussion to hire a vendor and pay them one point seven million dollars to repair God be and if you read the contract, it clearly says that listen, this isn't going to
do the job. We're going to need more money. Uh, this doesn't address all the damage. So then you start thinking, what are we talking about here? No mention of insurance. So we've heard some stuff behind the scenes about the AstroTurf field that was put there. Not a lot of thought into what would happen if if it you know, if it did rain a lot, because you know that's an impervious surface and or not as is not as uh, do not accept rainfall as much as just natural ground. There
will be more runoff. So you start looking around and why is God being got all this damage? Anyway, a story worth following because you know, another thing that we don't hear a lot about, although we do hear some complaining about charter schools and we hear complaining about people leaving the school system. We're going to have some financial issues with the school board and financing things.
And this is why Alva Smith brought up, Look, we've got schools that are sixty to seventy percent capacity, and we got we got to look at starting to maybe close some these schools for operational efficiency. Now, if you start, if you go upstream and look at some of the bigger school districts in Florida, Deval, Miami Dade, even Hillsboro, which is Tampa.
Politico just did a story about the number of schools that are being closed in those areas, and so that you know that flows down, We're going to have some of the same issues here because our lack of growth in population and students, and not only that, the demographic changes of where people are choosing to live. Yeah, they're shifting, they're migrating elsewhere in the region.
So even if you have you know, if we haven't zero growth in students in the last ten years, but you've got people moving around in the county, then you've got schools that are open at sixty seventy percent capacity. So anyway, the financial side of this, I think we need to pay attention to. The other issue that which was the three to two vote is obviously there's been a lot of state policies trying to address education, and it's interesting
to see the discussion between Alvi Smith and Lorie Cox. Actually Alvi Smith is the one that brought this issue up is state law is basically you've got to get parental permission for kids to sit in on special events and things that curriculum events that are staged are planned by the school that may be something that parents don't want their kids to go to. Now, this is on the one side, this is in response to what we've seen happening over the last ten
years and what happens as a pendulum moves back and forth. They're wanting parents to basically get a permission slip for almost everything. That's the argument by the state, we want to make sure parents are involved. Well, there's a couple of people on the school board that are arguing that, look, this is just this is going to hamstrung principles and teachers who want to educate kids
in different issues. And so the language that was put forth by the state and said listen, this is the language you need to follow was basically amended by a couple of board members because they wanted to sort of they wanted to move a different direction. The board members. It would be I would say Roseanne Wood, although she didn't admit it, she's the one that fought for the language. Alvi Smith said, look, I get the sentiment here.
But we are again going against state in the State DOE, and it's going to cause a problem, a little bit of a debate about it, but it passed three too. This is one of the issues that will have to be brought up to DOE if it's concerned Rose enne Wood, doctor Nichols, and then so those three and then Cox and Alvis Smith were in the minority. Okay, all right, we're gonna pick up there ten past the hour. You want to know what's really going on, because, as he pointed
out, you won't find it elsewhere. You just go to tell astkrreports dot com. This is the Morning Show with Preston Scott Meck with Steve Stewart, Executive editor, tele As your Reports. Subscribe, get the paper for yourself, just like I do. Now I'm a paying customer. I support the work. Tellaskireports dot com is the website. Yes, it's very important too. Hey, look, two copies a month. We're trying. Hey, our goal is to get to a weekly newspaper. Come on, we got
some support. But before the elections August twentieth, we're gonna have what another six publications. You're gonna find information there. Both sides. Look, we're gonna identify the top issues in these in these local races, and look you can see where they votes. You know, I've got my opinions that I might actually publish, but you're going to see it. You'll publish them as opinions. Opinions, yes, but you'll see. Look when I say someone
is noteworthy, yeah, it has some question about LA enforcement. How do they vote, what did they do? And so so what we want to talk about now is the local PBA Big Ben chapter of the the Police Benevolent Association. They come out with their endorsements. And this brought back memories from the forty five times I ran for office and I would sit in these interviews. So I talk what I talk of, I have experience, and I've gone into these you know, we my first and actually was endorsed at one
point by the PBA. You want these endorsements because it gives some air of credibility. However, and this is the article that we'll have up is you've got to look at the actual wordings and how these endorsements take place, right, because these are unions, uh, and for whatever reason they decided to you know, just like the firefighters they've decided get involved with politics, and
then they sort of whine when things go there don't go their way. I don't understand why they want to endorse, but law enforcement, public safety, it's number one priority for local government. All you got to do is what's the old saying, Look at someone's budget and they'll tell you your priorities. Look at the City Commission's budget for the general fund, the property taxes that
we pay from Bannman Road all the way to the south side. It's law enforcement, and so it is a pretty important part of what they do. And obviously law enforcement has been I would again say under attack from a national perspective here. There's a number of commissioners have tried to pull that national perspective here locally and they've trashed the law enforcement. So the PBA has an act that they have not only concern about some officials, they've got what I would
say is the votes, the public comments to go with their endorsements. So they've interviewed people on the City commission side. First of all, the six endorsements we're going to talk about, five of them are incumbas, so they've only endorsed one challenger. The theory on that is, Look, if you're in a cumbent and you're generally supportive of law enforcement, you know, you don't go around saying officers are planning evidence, and you don't appoint defund the
police to people to you don't call them cop killers exactly. You're gonna get their indoor killer cops. You're gonna get their endorsement because you're in power and you generally support what they do. So on the city commissions side, Curtis Richardson falls under that. Rubrick. He's been in office for you know, different offices for twenty years, has been supportive of law enforcement, came out and supported hiring more officers last year. Yeah, he gets it right.
Now you're gonna have to you know, they did vote for a tax increase, so you're gonna have to decide is that tax increase Trump his support for law enforcement. He's running against dot Man Johnson, who is I argue really Hamstrunger campaign when on the first day said that she was going to be the third vote with Jack and Jeremy right, So that was sort of an easy
endorsement for the PBA. Now that the other race is Commission Jack Porter and wire's the incumbent, who is the incumbent is being challenged by Rudy Ferguson. They're gonna they're gonna support Rudy Ferguson, and it's not you know, look, this is something that really a third creator could have figured out. I mean, commission reporter would not support hiring more police officers, would not come out publicly. She's appointed police abolitionists, self proclaimed not my opinion, we
want to defund the police, to the citizen review boards. She has basically been a big critic of Police Chief Reveel and so they have that is the one incumbent that they decided to go against, and they're gonna endorse Rudy Ferguson. We'll have detail on the law enforcement in the votes, but that was
one that they highlighted. The other two Brian Welch, who's been they argue supportive, Carolyn Cummings on the county side, and then you've got Corey Simon, a Republican in the Senate, and Alison Tant a Democrat in the House. Now, one thing I think is noteworthy is these endorse It's cut across partisan divide and also you know, the racial divide. They are endorsing Republicans, Democrats, African Americans, whites, so it's interesting to see that more
with Steve Stewart. Next in the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Back with Steve Stewart, Executive editor, Tell asked you reports good news locally. We talked a little bit about the airport off and on over time and it's doing well. Yeah, the economy we've we've talked about some of these local numbers,
but the executive director are the are the I guess yeah. The director of the Amazon Fulfillment Fulfillment Center spoken NEIBA, the Network of Entrepreneurs and Business Advocates on Tuesday, talked about the number of jobs over fifteen hundred jobs, seventeen dollars an hour lead. I guess one of the top locations for people taking advantage of the education benefit that's there. It's a great obviously a very
good thing for the community. Also, Dan Foss Turbercore, which has been in h is in the Innovation Park, is a national company, actually a Canadian company. Create basically build high end efficiency efficient air conditioners and use technology to try to make that more efficient. They're expanding. These are high end jobs. Ninety thousand foot expansion again next to the mag lab, and so you start to see this is manufacturing. This is where you really want to
This is where you really want to have job growth. So you start to see these things around the community where the economy is growing and a job addresses so many problems. Preston you don't have to deal about with poverty and affordable housing and stuff like that. So you want jobs, you don't want government to be the solution or that exactly a name. That's my opinion, and
so it's good to see this. One of the downsides and we talked about this a little bit last week, and we keep seeing evidence of this is that the progressive element here in the community who is just trying so hard to label business as corrupt. Well, that's that's an old it is, but it's it's probably new here because we've been able to sort of have this wall around us from the national perspective of progressive. But we've got national progressives here.
They're traveling to these conferences, they're going to Atlanta for training from progressives who promote to fund the police and who are against Amazon. I mean, look, commission reporter voted against the Amazon project. And then after it was built and hired, fourteen hundred people said you would vote against it again. Okay, that I mean that is that is the kind of mentality we have.
We're starting to see the impact of this on the business community in terms of their willingness to step up and talk about and challenge things in terms of what they would like to see. And well, the chamber, the Greater Chele ask you chamber needs to step up and represent them and not be worried
about government. Yeah. But the problem is is so when you have these aggressive we're talking about a progressive element, you know, three commissioners with some political infrastructure, three meaning David o at the County, Jack Porter, and Jeremy Mattlow and then they and the thing is is they show up to these
meetings with their they're sort of like I said, their political infrastructure. They they tape these meetings, they take picture of people that speak, and then they who knows what they do with some of the stuff posted on social media. Businesses do not want to be involved with that. Businesses, you know, if they want to argue on an issue because they believe that this is
best for the economy or you know, for job growth. Now they have to go in and say, why is that person taking the picture of me? Why are they filming me? And you know this is coming from group who just accused a police officer of planning evidence falsely, and so they're like,
I don't want to be involved with this. So President, this is a and I just sort of noticed this the last couple of weeks, but this is I think a dangerous president that's being set set And again I think the chamber who for the last couple of years Commission Mattlow is just you know, if you're a developer, you corrupt, all right, And they start using that corrupt word. Reese Goat is corrupt. You know, the chief revel is corrupt. And this causes people not to want to speak out.
I had someone call me and who was concerned about this and said, you know, we need a group. We need to get a group of people that go to the city commission or the county commission and speak on issues that are important to the community. I said, good luck. And so this is an issue, but you can't seed that ground, you can't give in
to it. I totally agree with you on that. And you know what I heard when I brought up a concern and a number of months ago behind the scenes, and listen, you know, you can't let somebody get up and say that, you know, the law enforcement is full of killer cops and just and you know, and again the court, well you know that's so the point is I'm sending up the canary and you know, and the
mind here. This is an issue. And if you just look at the social media post by David O'Keeffe yesterday, were they out of a local business because a businesses actually do on a sales call they or he, I mean he outed the business. He out of the business and actually printed the business's name because they sent a letter to someone and thendian headacres inquiring about Hey,
look, you know I'm a realtor. I get them all the time, gud investors who might be able to help you out if you're in a situation. This guy put this on social media. And this guy meaning David nil keith, an elected official, implying that this guy was doing something wrong. I'm telling you we need to wake up to this because it is slowly seeping into this community and it's not good. No, it's not at all. And oh, by the way to Commissioner O'Keefe, and you're sick of fans
who are listening. Most of us living in any neighborhood in town get those letters all the time you want to sell, hey, if you need to sell, I mean we get them all the time and routine, right, and so it's an example of what's happening in the business community, and it's going to have it's going to have a negative effect. Well, I guess
my thank you as always, You're welcome, Preston. My message would be to Sue Dick in the Greater Tallassie Chamber of Commerce, stand up to this, back with more of the Morning Show, The Morning Show, Preston Scott thirty six past the hour, halfway through the Thursday edition of the program. Already Big Stories in the pass press Box brought to you by Create Grow with creative marketing and digital expertise. Sorry getting ahead of here. This is the
headline from town Hall brace Yourselves for a Trump Conviction. What I wanted to share is Guy Benson with town Hall went on Fox yesterday morning after the judge gave the ridiculous instructions to the jury, and those instructions said that it will only take four jurors to convict Trump. It doesn't need to be unanimous. That four can think he's guilty of this charge, four others can think he's guilty of that charge, four others can think he's guilty of that charge,
and together that that would make it unanimous. According to the judge, it's absurd to me. It's judicial misconduct. But Guy Benson went on Fox and Dana Perino and Bill Hemmer and had this to say, and the other thing that I worry about Dana frankly, and we'll see what the jury decides. And I'm pulling for an acquittal or at least a hung jury, because I think this trial based on these facts is an absolute joke. Or you had the previous DA in Manhattan look at this and decide no charges. You had
the DOJ look at these exact same facts, no charges. The FEC, which governs this realm, didn't even find Donald Trump over this. But you have Alvin Bragg deciding, oh, let's try to put him in prison for more than one hundred years based on this legal bank shot that no one has ever even tried before. I think that is sort of an astonishing thing. And you're talking about the norms that we have enjoyed for a long time in
this country and this creeping sense of things coming unglued. There is a very real possibility data that let's say this New York jury decides to they're confused, but the prostitution says, look look at this blizzard of icky stuff. Let's convict him of something, and they go along with it. Then this moves on to appeal. So you've got the term convicted felon slapped onto Donald Trump's forehead for the next several months leading into an election. Then let's say Trump
for that reason narrowly loses the election. I'm not saying that's what's going to happen. I'm just saying, in a very plausible hypothetical situation, then that conviction gets overturned. As many of the legal eagles say that, it would be as a slam dunk on appeal because of the buffet of appealable items here after the election. Think about what that would do to the American people. Tens of millions of people who would look at the fact pattern and say this
was completely politicized. They got a temporary verdict for the purpose of winning an election, and then it got wiped out after the election. That would be I think another major nail in the coffin of many people's perception of general fairness and equality under the law in our system. I put it this way in a commentary I did this morning around the Corner. This becomes a demolition derby, and I have no idea what's left standing. I personally am of the
conviction that if the Obiden faction wins the next election, we're done. It's prepare for every man and family for him or itself. We can't sustain four more years with what has had happened in the last three and a half. We can't. It's not we will collapse. It's not sustainable. Just isn't not being a harbinger of doom. I'm just saying we got one shot to reel this in, and they're doing everything possible to make sure that can't happen.
Forty minutes past the hour, we'll talk about this more next hour in the Morning Show with Preston Scott. The Morning Show with Preston Scott on US Radio one hundred point seven Double UFLA or on newsradiou WFLA Panama City dot Com. I don't know if you picked up on what Guy Benson said. No other entity that had the same opportunity to file charges press charges, looked at the facts of this case and saw a case. No one, not even
the Federal Election Commission, they saw no violation of any kind. Anyway. We hear often about court cases not being settled in the court of public opinion. We actually have an example of one that not only was settled in the court of public opinion, but where all of the videotape that was out there that people took of the event ended up causing the case to be judicated in the public completely. And that's the case of Scottis Scheffler. I heard a
lot of people say, which was refreshing. Scotti Scheffler's character, who he is and has been his entire life, weighs so heavily in his favor. Simply put people just that that were commentators that that know Scotty said, it is not plausible that Scotty's being dishonest about this. It just isn't. That is not who he is, it's not in his it's not in his wheelhouse. And so Scheffler and his attorneys said, no, we're not going to
to settle. We're going to fight each and every charge because he's not guilty of these crimes. He certainly was not guilty of any mystery or any any felony. And all the police officer forgot to turn on his camera. The one who did that approached him, took up for the cop, but also revealed that Scheffler's story was very accurate, that Scheffler's fears were very real. I didn't know this guy was a cop. He had no badge, he didn't identify himself as police. He came running at my vehicle. He hit
me. After I rolled down my window, he hit me, and then the video revealed the guy ran thirty yards. Scheffler drove ten Scheffler drove to the gate, waited, rolled down his window, and then was basically assaulted. Ah, but his camera wasn't on. You know, I stick up
for law enforcement, but I stick up for truth over everything else. This is a case where the video finally painted a picture that the District Attorney's office in Louisville said, mister Scheffler's statement of a misunderstanding, a big misunderstanding, is corroborated by the evidence. His actions did not satisfy the elements of any criminal offense, of any criminal offense, not lesser charges nothing because that video
showed that cop did not get dragged by Scotty Scheffler. So whatever injuries he had, he got because he tripped and fell being a jerk. So we have a video udication in essence and public opinion and the character of the accused, and the DA finally just looked at it all and said, yeah, we got nothing. And I hope that police officer has some time to think about things now. Scottie Scheffler certainly isn't piling on. That's not his that's
not his way, but grateful that that's in the rearview mirror. We're gonna come back talk a little bit about the FED and get you ready for a roadie. And this is the Morning Show with Preston Scott. We're set up next hour. Before we begin the segment here, we're gonna talk about this Trump case. I've got a list of things irregularities to go through, some more sound. Andy McCarthy, former federal prosecutor, has weighed in on this, but I want to hear from you. What if Trump is convicted?
Your thoughts, what do you think is going to happen. What if he's acquitted or there's a hung jury, what do you think happens? So, but I want to make sure you understand the next half hour. I don't if you want to call in and join the program, I'd love to hear from you, but it's not a typical call in segment where I'm kind of just sort of relying on you and your thoughts to carry the half hour. I have lots of things to share, and you may decide I'd rather hear
that, and that's fine, because that's what we do. We want to give information. And I don't think a lot of people really understand how bad this trial was was it was a joke, it was a circus, it was pretend it was not real. But it has very real consequences. So that's coming up next hour, and if you want to weigh in on it, you certainly are welcome to do that. I'll give you the number in a second. Here. Federal Reserve Bank President in Minneapolis, Neil Kashkari.
We've talked about him before. He said that the Central Bank should wait a lot longer to show data, to look at data showing that inflation is trending down before they make any decision to lower and in fact, he said I wouldn't rule out raising rates further. Here's what that means. Inflation's not getting better. And we've said at the beginning of the year that we expected the FED to try to reduce rates, because that's what they said they were going
to do to try to aid Biden. But they can't because no matter what Biden says, no matter how many people try to talk down on you and tell you how stupid you are, the economy's great, So you paid two hundred dollars for four bags of groceries. Whatever, the economy's great, get over yourself. The fact is it's not. And the actions by the Fed right now are such that they can't maintain any level of credibility. While there are things floating around to just do away with the Fed, they can't do
it. They can't lower interest rates, and in fact, they may raise them. Road trip idea now again, starting next week, we'll try to We'll try to stick regionally Florida, Georgia, Alabama, maybe South Carolina. But this, my friends, is this is in my heart. I've never seen it all the years I lived in Arizona. I have never been to meteor crater. Let me put it this way. If you're gonna go, see the Grand Canyon just south and to the east, to the east of
Flagstaff, Winslow, Arizona is the media crater. Are you standing on a corner in Winslow, Arizona? That I could continue the lyrics, but I'll not h It is an epic site. To be on the rim of that meteor crater and to see what happened when a meteor hit the Earth. It's nuts and it's worth seeing. There's a there's a there's a visitors center. It's incredible, so check it out. It's got a website and everything. All right, your calls are welcome. Eight five zero two zero five w
FLA. The lines are now officially open. If you want to talk about the what ifs, what if Trump's convicted, what if he's acquitted? Your thoughts next? Eight five zero two zero five w fl A. Well, it's the third hour morning show with us. That Scott a little friend. It's good to be with you. I prest Andy's Grand It's made thirty one more day of the month. And then we turn the page to the sixth month of the year. Wow, Yeah, show fifty one sixty nine and
if you'd like to talk to me and give your thoughts. The headline in town Hall puts it this way, brace yourselves for a Trump conviction, adding because the judge just tilted the scales. It's a twelve person jury, and the judge unbelievably told the jury they do not need unanimity to convict. Four could agree on one crime, four on a different one, and the other four on another crime, and he would consider that unanimous. It makes sense
why they would say, can we have those instructions again? He would not put them in writing. He said they could ask questions. So it would seem that if there's there's so much ambiguity here, so is Judge Merchant, who, by the way, is a Biden donor, who oh, by the way, did not allow testimony expert testimony to be offered on behalf of
the defense. So in essence, what he's saying is, okay, if these jurors one through four think he's guilty of this crime, Jurors five, six, seven, eight think he's guilty of the second crime, and jurors nine through twelve I think the third that's a unanimous jury when that would not be unanimous in any court ever, and they can't even identify what the crime
is. Judge said, that's not really a problem. So my question that we're taking calls on if you want to comment if not, I have more than enough information here to share how the judge not only put his thumb on the scale of justice but sat on it. I think he's conducted judicial I think I think he's guilty of judicial misconduct. But the question that I'm asking you is your thoughts on what happens next if he's convicted. If Trump is
convicted, what happens next if he's acquitted or there's a hung jury. You that none of the charges that he's facing, the Department of Justice wasn't willing to charge him, he wasn't found to be worthy of finding by the Federal Election Commission, but by god, New York City's going to charge him. John, thanks for calling in. Hey, good morning pressing. Thank you for having it. Regardless of a conviction, I think Trump will win,
but the Democrats, the leftists win either way. And here's why. Even if he's found guilty and he wins the next election. And I think and hope he will. Now that's opened the door for the next quote felon like a Andrew gillim or someone like that, that they can run and then you can't cross them off the list because well, being a convicted fella's no problem for you to be president. Which is I get it. It's not in the constitution that it's not a not a disqualifier, but typically it has you
know, something like that would prohibit somebody from running. But the mask is that they don't care what anybody thinks. Look, they got away with stealing the last election. Do you think they care if you see that they're corrupt now, they absolutely don't care. They're off the chain. It does not matter. They're going to do whatever they want to do until there's somebody who calls the ball and says no, somebody's going to jail for this corrupt activity.
Until that happens, it's not going to change. And they don't. None of them care what me or you or anybody else thinking. Think John Anthony, you're next. There's a thought that he could be acquitted. There's another thought that now he could be convicted. This has been a set up
from the get go. The Democrats are banking on muddying Trump enough where he doesn't get enough votes to win, or it's close enough where they can cheat again, and then when it's finally adjudicated in court, they think that it will take too long for all of this to be undone, and that by then it'll be too late. Anthony's next, what about you? If not,
I again, I've got sound from Andy McCarthy, Guy Benson. I have a list of things that happened in the trial that Yeah, ten minutes after the hour, Welcome to the Morning Show with Preston Scott Well passed. Anthony, Thanks for calling in, as always welcome. What are your thoughts? I think that the left wants a couple of things happen. They want them to be convicted, and they want someone on the right to do something
outrageous. They want they want the judge or the prosecutor or someone like that to get attacked, hurt, maybe even killed so they can go, oh, look look at what we have. This is what this is what you want? You want this kind of person, these kind of people in power. I think we it's she's going to get convicted. I'm pretty sure it'll
happen. I think what they need to do is get the Supreme Court and needs to go, Okay, you know what, We're going to expedite this because there's an election in the in the mix and they need to rule on it and and find all the uh the lacking that this that this case has due to the judge and the prosecutor and throw it out. Thank you, Anthony, appreciate the call is always be safe out there. You It's interesting.
I don't know the exact process, but if this goes, for example, to New York Appellate Court, which would be my guess, can they stonewallet do they have to expedite it? And then it would go to federal court perhaps on review. Maybe I don't know. It's not a federal court that this is taking place in it's city, So I don't know. I don't know what the process for appeal looks like. I know that it's a matter of time because so egregious are the judges' actions. I listed this in
the first hour of the program. But what I want to do instead of going back through that, listen to what former federal prosecutor Annie McCarthy had to say yesterday. Again, this was Dana Perino and Bill Hemmer, I would say, we just heard from Jonathan Turley. I think this is anything button standard. It's the antithesis of standard, the idea that they do not have to agree on what the other crime is. You know, we spent six
weeks wondering what is the other crime? And at the end the thud we all get hit with is you know there's three or four of them, and you know you could pick one or the other and they don't have to agree on it. And yeah, let me jump in. Carrier Bond says, here are the three choices. May consider violations of FIKA, which is the Federal Election Campaign Act established in nineteen seventy one, which regulates the raising and
spending of money in US federal elections. Two falsification by the business records or three violation of tax laws. Andy yep. So the violation of tax laws is interesting. Bill the prosecutor summed up on this last night. I've always thought this was hard for them in terms of intent to defraud, which is supposed to be part of the crime, because the way they structured the payment
to come and he laid out one hundred and thirty thousand for Stormy. They doubled it, and the reason for doing that was the anticipation that he would have to pay taxes. So the way that they structured it it was so that more taxes could get paid, not less, so there was no fraud
on the state. What the prosecutors argue is that because they consider that to have been reimbursement, which is a non taxable event as long as it's a no interest loan, rather than they made it appear to be ongoing legal fees
in twenty seventeen, which is a taxable event. What they told the jury is that even if there were even if no one lost any money, even if the state wasn't deprived of a dime, it's still a tax problem because they generated stuff that looked like taxable income records when in fact it wasn't taxable. It's a kind of a head spinning argument, and there's no harm out of it. So there you go. There's just a little bit. We're going to come back with more here in the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
If Trump gets convicted, what happens, If Trump is acquitted? What happens. Jerry enters Day two of deliberation in an hour and eight minutes and Ray is called into the program wants to weigh into morning. Good morning, Preston. I think this, this whole thing has just been an attempt to com with salacious details, uh, you know, the company of Stormy Daniels, the company of the grossness of the Next Inquirer, and the and the vileness
of Cohen. I think if they if they actually get a conviction, they're all going to be kind of shaking their head, calling, oh my good, it actually worked out, you know, in high fiving behind the scenes. But I don't think they set out to get a convention. I think it was just to disrupt his campaign and to just make him look like more of a scumbag by exposing some of these details. Now, I think also that behind the scenes they've really made a tactical error because it's actually invigorated his
base and other people are saying, wow, this is actually wrong. And I mean, look at what just happened in the Bronx where twenty five thousand people showed up to support the man. All right, great, thank you, appreciate you calling in as always, great Price listed on Twitter just how bad this trial was. Rro's funded DA elevated a misdemeanor to a felony,
despite lowering sixty percent of all felonies for actual crimes in his jurisdiction. The lead prosecutor resigned his position as the third highest ranking member of the Biden DOJ to join the team going after Trump. What does that tell you? The judge donated to Joe Biden has a daughter who's raised millions for Democrats off the
Trump prosecutions. The other lead prosecutor donated to Joe Biden. The lead witness that the whole case relies on is a convicted perjurer serial liar who admitted during the trial to stealing money from the Trump organization. The judge put a gag order on Donald Trump for pointing out the political conflicts of interest of the people prosecuting him. The quote crime relies on the idea that Trump paid off Stormy Daniels to conceal another crime, which which is not mentioned in the indictment.
The judge barred Trump's defense from explaining to the jury that no campaign finance violation occurred, but allowed prosecutors to assert as fact in their closing that there was and oh, by the way, barred a former chairman of the Federal Elections commission from testifying on behalf of the defense that what Trump did was not a
federal election crime. The judge said, you can't have that. The judge cleared out the courtroom when Michael Cohen's former attorney was exonerating Trump, but allowed the prosecution to bring in Stormy Daniels to talk about whether Trump had used a condom or not. The judge barred the former FEC commissioner that was testifying. As I mentioned, Trump did nothing wrong, but is allowing the jury to not have to reach a unanimous verdict on the underlying unnamed crime Trump committed,
what crime? We don't know? Price rights and closing what did I miss? This is an absolute travesty. And when we come back, we're going to talk about the big story through the lens of the question I've asked, what if? What if? We'll take our shot at answering the what if he's convicted, what if he's acquitted or there's a hung jury. We'll take our shot at it. Next twenty six minutes past the hour, still to come, a you don't say kind of story. And this is the Preston
Scott shift. Thirty five past the hour, of big stories of the press box brought to you by grove of creative marketing and digital expertise. And so the question is what happens if I want to point out something that Judge Merchant told the jury It is not my responsibility to judge the evidence here, it is yours. But what evidence? He totally and completely determined what they were
allowed to consider and hear. It's as if we only allowed half of a given set of evidences, evidentiary items to be entered that showed guilt, and we did not allow, for example, just take any other case. We didn't allow the alibi that the person was in another country and the evidence that was presented is really really flimsy. But we didn't allow evidence that would completely
remove somebody from consideration of being guilty of the crime. They weren't there, they couldn't have physically done it. We have evidence, we have hotels, we have videotape of them walking in and out of their room in Aruba or whatever. We didn't allow that evidence. So it's your job, he says, to weigh the evidence, not mine. Yeah, but you allowed the evidence or disallowed it. So what happens if Trump is convicted what happens,
I personally think immediately there is unrest in this country. I don't think it'll take long. We'll find out about the appellate process and people will start weighing in on time frames, etc. And then you really start going down the trail of this is a political hit job, the fact that that's what this is, because it is is going to really be illuminated if there's a conviction,
because suddenly everyone will be talking about it. Everyone. And once that happens, this enters a whole new world because up until now this has just been noise. Uh yeah, another Trump trial, whatever. And honestly, these trials merge with the whole Russia collusion thing. Whatever. Noise noise, noise, noise, noise, noise, Wait what he was found guilty of? What? Oh? And then it's gonna be the debate over the trial.
I don't think it will take much to nudge some people into this is not this is This is unsettling for the nation, and that's when you're going to really see attention. And what I will be curious to see is where does the line get drawn? Because I think a lot of minorities are citing with Trump. Here a lot, and I don't think the left is prepared for where that line is drawn. If he's acquitted, they can't they can't fileow those charges again. Now, remember these charges were not filed by the
Feds. They don't they didn't think there was a case, and so this is strictly a local case. Do they go after them again, Probably not, because at that point it is definitely too late for them. So this is going to be the story I predict tomorrow. I think they're going to find a verdict today, or to acquittal, or something is going to happen today. I don't see them dragging that. I don't see them going past today. I'm actually a little surprised they've gone past yesterday forty minutes past the
hour. Way do you hear what's next? The Morning Show at Preston Scott on News Radio one hundred point seven, double UFLA. This is one of those stories that for many of us, we would look at this story and you go, really, you don't say, huh, feigning shock. There's a study that was published last month and the International euro Canal Ginacology Journal, I could say that in Brazil, and it was a study of biological women
who wanted to play for the other team. And so these were these were trans men taking testosterone as young as eighteen, average age of twenty eight, and unbelievably, they were suffering menopausal symptoms in their twenties. Really, you don't say biological women suffering menopausal symptoms. Huh, Well who saw that coming? So all the uh, all the hormones they were taking accelerated there. Uh, what normally is an event that occurs in women, not in their
twenties. It accelerated it to the twenties. No, I mean maybe sort of. Here are the symptoms, incontinence, sexual dysfunction. Of course, I don't know how you even identify that you're you're a woman identifying as a man. How would you identify sexual function? Even bedwetting, we're among the symptoms found in women in their twenties who tried to medically transition with cross sex hormones. Ninety four percent of trans identifying women experienced some type of pelvic floor
dysfunction. Again, these are women, biological women who are pretending to be men. Eighty seven percent experienced urinator's symptoms. The aforementioned bedwetting and continence, frequent bathroom visits. Women taking to stosterone three times more likely to suffer from urinary incontinence seventy four percent of bowel issues constipation or the opposite couldn't hold it in, messing their breeches, flatulence and the like. I just and of
course I'm oozing with sarcasm as I say, really, no way. And we did a story early this week about the wiring of the brain and how no matter what drugs surgeries you have, men and women's brains work differently, and unless you figured out how to have a brain transplant, you're stuck. So if you tried to convince yourself that and I want you to get this dynamic tension in your head here, if you're trying to convince yourself that you're
the opposite of the biological gender you were born to be. No matter what you do physically to alter yourself, your brain is still that of your biological wiring. And so your brain is screaming let me out, meaning let me be the woman or the male I was meant to be. And so that's where the conflict is, and that's likely why the suicide rate is what it is. Brain can't accept it. But here's another shocking study showing that it just you just are what you are. Go figure Trump on his way to
court. The entourage, UH is heading there. It's just I hope we're just talking about an acquittal or a hung jury or something. And then I hope at some point we're talking about Judge Merchant going to jail. But anyway, Uh, Tomorrow on the program, we'll have What's to be Friday, take your calls. We'll have the best and worst good news to be and uh and more. But but first, William fannin Hazzard, Kentucky. He's from Hazzard, Kentucky. I just I just kind of imagine Wisha marry she
Shazzard. Anyway, he visited the Kentucky Lottery headquarters with his wife Frida, collect a fifty thousand dollars lottery prize from the May thirteenth powerball drawing. He bought his ticket from Zip Zone in Hazzard. He said he bought his weekly powerball tickets from another store for twenty five years, but he had to make a stop at zip Zone and decided I'm gonna buy a ticket and there you
go fifty grand. What makes it interesting is that the win came three months after his daughter Starla, won one hundred and fifty thousand dollars and some change in the Merry Money Merry Money Bonus Jackpot instant play game, which is an online game in Kentucky. You know, this just buttresses my idea that if you're a lottery player, go to some little outlying town somewhere, just some little village somewhere with a population of fifteen and buy a ticket there. Because
a lot of winners, not in California come from these little towns. It's crazy. So I'm just I'm done. I'm not saying. I'm just saying. Brought to you by Barono Heating and Air. It's the Morning Show one on WFLA Morning Show one to eighty. Look back at the radio program in one hundred and eighty seconds or last Luke nineteen. The story of Jesus and Zechias was our focus today. If I do say so, it was a very meaningful devotion. When you start the show, big story today, the
judge sitting on the scales of justice. He didn't put a thumb on him. He sat on him, and he sat on one side, and we detailed the ways that the judge impacted this this trial and so brace yourselves, town Hall reporting, brace yourselves for a Trump conviction. They're just saying, while we all hope for an acquittal, I think most of us do. I think even some of you with Democrats are like, you don't. You don't want to believe our country's gone there and you're hoping for an acquittal.
This thing was stacked against Trump before he ever set room in the set foot in the courtroom, warning about interest rates that they might in fact be going up. This from the head of the Minneapolis Federal Reserve Bank. Charges against Scottie Scheffler dropped in part because it was adjudicated by social media by video, and Scottie Scheffler's character is a person John Morgan endorsing recreational weed. Could it be because he's a personal injury attorney and this is good for the cause.
I'm just asking when it's all said and does he's just gonna continue laughing his way to the bank. And we talked about a two year old pint sized picasso as well covered a lot of ground today. Tomorrow. I can't wait. We're gonna do it all over again. Ruminators, thanks as always, have yourselves an awesome day. Try to make a difference somewhere Thanks for listening.