Morning Friends.
Welcome to Thursday on the Morning Show with Thrusten Scott today. Can you see over there? I'm I'm left speechless when he looks normal. Normal is abnormal for him. It's over there cracking up doing a little miniature, little little mini dab. Yeah, it's it's so weird to see his face and his head because usually he's walking in looking like a terrorist. But anyway, we welcome you to the Thursday edition. It's September twelfth. More on that date in a moment show
fifty two thirty three, paying attention. The SpaceX crew is as we speak, getting ready to perform a historic spacewalk, an EVA an extra curricular sorry, extra vehicular activity, and it's never happened in private space exploration. And what makes this unusual is that there will be four people simultaneously exposed to the vacuum of space. They've got two that
are going out, Jared Isaacman and Sarah Gillis. Will will leave the depressurized crew drag in spacecraft, and they have about an hour and fifty minutes of oxygen to use.
They're not doing any kind of maintenance.
This is strictly a testing of the SpaceX suits and how they are able to function. Keep in mind these suits, the helmets which have HUDs, have to be one hundred percent sealed.
Any leak.
Could be cataclysmic any so they've been going through the checks of the suits and so it could happen anytime. So it'd be interesting, and I wish them well and pray safety over all four of them. Let's start with scripture. We've been going through Romans five, verse one. Therefore we have been justified by our faith. We have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ on Tuesday, verse two. Through him, we've also obtained access by faith into this grace in which we stand, and we rejoice in the
hope of the glory of God. Yesterday, we got to verse three, where it says not only that, but we rejoice in our sufferings, knowing that our suffering produces endurance. And today we pick up from there where it says in verse four and endurance produces character, and character produces hope. Let's think about that training, if you will, suffering produces endurance, endurance produces character.
Boy does it? Ever?
That's the forging of life's fire. Right You just and if you know anything about like gold smelting and forging in general. You know that you have to get impurities out of the way. What's interesting about gold is that when you put gold into fire, the impurities bubble to the top. You scrape it, and then you have a more refined gold.
Rings.
For example, fourteen carret gold is the softest gold you can go with for a ring, because if you get above that, it's soft and it breaks. The more refining gold goes through, the more valuable it becomes. In the process that God's talking about here in Romans five, that in durance produces character, produces value, if you will, and that character produces hope because you've you've come through the other side.
Oh good stuff.
Really is hope. You have a blessed day today. Stick around with us. I think we'll contribute to that in different ways. Busy Show will tee it up next here on The.
Morning Show with Preston Scott, The Morning Show with Preston Scott on News Radio one hundred point seven.
Doubled UFLA. Okay, this is gonna be this is gonna be an interesting segment here because we obviously we do our deep dive into history and sometimes it's not so deep. We just for example, seventeen eighty two, September twelfth, Betty's ain runs for more gunpowder during the siege at forty Henry. Pretty big story surrounding that. Eighteen fifty seven, the SS Central America sinks in a hurricane off Cape Hatteras, North Carolina. Four hundred lives lost a fortune in gold from California lost.
Nineteen eighteen, in France, US forces launched their first major offensive of the Great War is what it was called, World War One. And in nineteen fifty four, on this date, Lassie premiered on television. That dog was so cool and all the different iterations. But there's now history being made right now live.
On the show. Let's listen in see what we can pick up news. Our EVA has begun SpaceX. They're opening the hatch, so.
You're you're going to hear referred to as primary and secondary O two. Primary is going to be that primary flow of auction to pressurize. Secondary is largely putting oxygen into their suits to help with cooling. But secondary is the first one we turn on, and so our two flow timer has started. The eva's start at three twelve a m. Pacific. I'll do the math on UTC in a little bit. So this first, this first operation, or this first step in the operation is a suit purge.
So inside their suit, obviously when the visor is still open, it's still a nitrox environment. It's the same as the cabin. And since they're going to be at a lower pressure than what you can basically live at with oxygen levels, they're going to be on pure O two. They're going to be a one hundred percent oxygen environment. And I mean, you guys were kind of in the same thing, and it's it's because like your suit can't be can't move a suit around at fourteen point seven PSI?
Can you?
Maybe you can?
No, that would be pretty that'd be pretty tough to do.
And as we had talked about earlier, that's why that mobility is so important, because when that suit is pressurized like that, it can be challenging to move around.
Absolutely. So here on your screen we can see the Polaristan crew now with their visors down. The EVA has begun. We are beginning to flow that two through.
Now.
We will of course bring these views to you as we have them, but due to ground station coverage, they do come in and out here and there, but every moment that we can, we will certainly be sharing this with you. I also wanted to point out quickly that the window near Kid's feet was so much brighter than it was just even five minutes ago.
We're going to be seeing.
That in start contrast as soon as.
We get the EA, just to kind of reset what we're listening to. This is courtesy of SpaceX interest and of the four astronauts, two of them will be leaving the space craft, but all four are exposed to the vacuum of space. So all four have to have their space suits that are specially designed by SpaceX, taking into account all of the years of development through NASA. But they're totally different, and it appears as though they will
be tethered to their air. They will not have any kind of oxygen packs on them, it appears to me. But Jared Isaacman and Sarah Gillis will leave the spacecraft. Jared right now has his hand on the hatch that they will eventually open up here any time and begin.
We'll need to adjust a box threshold low following Primary two flow initiation.
GiB one copies copies, so we'll.
Just keep an eye on this as we go throughout the the first hour of the program, and you know, if there's something we can gyp and bring you, we will do that.
Sixteen minutes past the hour.
History being made here today on the Morning show.
One minutes past the hour, and it's crazy.
They are pressurizing their suits now and then they are they're basically purging all the nitrogen from inside their suits, and then they do a pressurization check, and so the astronauts have to hold very very still to make sure that there are no leaks because any movement inside the suit creates an imbalance in the pressures, and they have to make sure they're not leaking any of the pressurized
oh two that's inside. But just for some context, they're moving at twenty six thousand miles per hour, sorry, twenty six thousand, seven and thirty nine kilometers per hour at an altitude of three hundred and ninety eight kilometers. So they're out there, and we'll be again keeping an eye on what's going on. If something significant happens, we'll let you know. But it's happening as we are doing the
radio program today. Of course, we've got Steve Stewart joining us doctor David Hart's road trip idea in the third hour, it's so interesting, Doctor David Hart sends me and sends me a note yesterday saying, Hey, we're going to tackle this topic. I was like, cool, ironic, because that's the same general topic, only a little bit of a different
slant with our with our guests. In the third hour, doctor Marty McCarey, A lot of you know the name because a lot of you remember me talking about how remarkable it was he's he kept his job at Johns Hopkins University working with the hospital at some point, I guess because he was very outspoken about don't you dare give vaccines to children?
Now I don't. I don't expect that.
In the ten minutes that we have him for we're going to talk much about that. He's really advocating getting cell phones out of schools, banning the use of cell phones in schools, and so we will we will.
Talk about that.
But you know, when I started in radio, well in because I actually started when I was a senior in high school. I worked I've told the story. I've worked at CAZZP FM doing news and that was that's a great gig for a high school kid, let me tell you. And it was sort of an oxymoron because it was FM music. I mean, it was a top forty radio station,
and FM news was an oxymoron. And the guy who did the news director for the station, who did news in the morning, Morning Drive, was a guy named Paul Talbot. And Paul was like this surfer dude, that's kind of how he did. The news man worked with crazy Dave Auto. Hey what's up, Dave. Let's talk about what's in the news today, all right? And so I'm just sort of this counterbalance to him because I'm, you know, I have a little bit more of a typical delivery than Paul would.
I personally would would have loved to have done it the way Paul did it and had fun with it, created an alter ego and hey, dudes, come on, let's get together and let's bust out out some headlines.
What do you say?
Okay, we're not we're not like hanging ten at the waves, but you know, we can make some waves of our own, right.
But anyway.
I used to do Years later, I did a show for a contemporary Christian music station, Afternoon Drive, playing contemporary Christian music, and I did a feature called you know, Howard go Smell. It's kind of instead of Howard Cosell, Howard go Smell speaking of sports, and it wasn't speaking of sports, it was speaking of sorts. And I would just kind of mock and mimic. And here we are speaking of ESPN's admitting that it's using AI to write
sports stories. They're using AI to and and they're they're look, I credit them for owning it. They're not hiding it, and so I'm good with that. At least tell us. Their reasoning is it allows them to cover underserved sports Premiere Lacrosse League and National Women's Soccer League. Those stories will be written by AI, but each AI generated recap will be reviewed by a human editor to ensure equality
and accuracy. Now, a lot of sports writers are out there saying, well, why not just have that person write the sports story?
Then if you've got to have a human.
Determine its accuracy, the only way a human can determine the accuracy is knowing the event, reading the stat line, you know, having some overview of what happened. Otherwise it's the blind leading the blind, isn't it. So it'll be interesting to see if this continues. But ESPN's pressing into the AI thing, and again is as many who have departed, ESPN will tell you the evil mother ship. And so
we'll see where this leads. But I credit them for at least admitting they're using it, because a lot of places have just been hiding it.
There's more.
We'll get to another story tomorrow about Tom Brady being in the booth. He did not do well in his opening weekend, and I certainly have some thoughts on that, given my background and that of my father's.
So we'll talk a little bit about that. That's good.
Friday Fair twenty seven, almost twenty eight minutes after the hour, back with the big stories on the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
A bike with one of those bells and a radio just like the seventies. Yeah, I traveled with a radio taped to my bike. This is the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
All right, a lot of things going on today and we're going to do our best to jug at all right now, the SpaceX mission Hilarios Dawn continues with the depressure is pressurization of the cabin. The suits are holding pressure, so they're getting ready to open the hatch, but really much much closer to home. In much of our listening area, you've got weather that may or may not break into our programming. There is a tornado warning right now in
the Appalachicola East Point region up to Kreoles. It's off the coast there and covering Saint George Island. So we are in a tornado warning until roughly another forty minutes.
So be advised.
There is the possibility of hail that's coming with this weather system. These are all spinning up as a result of the hurricane that hit and went through yesterday and is still bringing weather with it, and so just be advised. We don't know when we're interrupted by the National Weather Service, so we're just gonna keep talking. And it may sound like, man, you guys are idiots. We don't know. It's an automatic system that imposes itself over top of us, and that's
the way it's supposed to work. I wish there was a way that we could get a little red light or something that tells us that an alert is happening, but we do not have that. That kind of system does not exist for us, and so just be advised. We're gonna be kind of bouncing back and forth, and the show will probably change as a result of it. To a certain extent is we're kind of paying attention to everything that's going on in space and here at home with the weather system.
Big stories in the press box this.
Morning on the Morning Show, you've got the Governor Mike DeWine of Ohio sending troopers in. He's of course a borderline rhino and doesn't want to say anything, you know, hurtful towards the Haitians. I don't have a problem with the temporary status, just stating that the federal government needs to be part of the solution. Good luck with that.
But the big question that I've been asked repeatedly, and the mainstream media of course made fun of Donald Trump, I wouldn't have gone where Trump did at the debate talking about dogs and cats and geese and ducks. I wouldn't have gone there. I would have talked about dead people. Now there's a commentary I've got related to that, but I would have pointed out that you know, there are there are people no longer here in America because of the influx of illegals that are coming into this country.
Unvetted.
Some of them are violent, dangerous people that are in this country illegally and now seemingly protected or unable to be deported. And it's unacceptable. It's just unacceptable. But the single biggest question now in the wake of the debate, there really aren't any They're not eating cats and dogs and they're not doing that. There are no verified reports, fair enough, or are there. I'm gonna let you decide. Come back and listen, quick check away, they're in traffic.
We'll deal with the issue of Haitians and dogs and cats and ducks and geese.
Oh mine.
No official reports, say the city, although there are police radio transmissions of people that are telling them that they witness sings things. At the City Commission meeting at the City of Springfield, this young man stepped up to the dais Anthony Harris.
All Right, I'm twenty eight years old and I'm a social media influencer and I just be on TikTok and stuff I do YouTube. I think it's like kind of odd that like a guy like me has to come out from going what I do on a daily basis to have fun because I see what's going on in these streets and I see you guys just sitting up there in them comfy chairs and suits and like, and I'm getting out here every day and I'm broadcasting this and you guys are just sitting up there and suits
something like. I really challenge you guys to get out here and do something. These Haitians are running into trash cans, they're running into buildings, they're running into they flipping cars in the middle of the street. That you got a bunch of people on a bus getting dropped off at a gas station to come down here. I know a single mom that FaceTime me tonight, FaceTime me this morning at the welfare office that really need like that really
needs something. And it's nothing but immigrants over there. And I don't even want to like seem like I'm coming down on the immigrants because it's the people that's bringing them down here, because wherever they're at, that's what they're used to. Bro They're in the park graving up ducks by their neck and cutting their head off and walking off with them and eating them.
Like yeah, decapitated ducks. Okay.
So we have someone on the record at the City Commission that says, as this is happening then, as we shared a couple of days ago, we have Springfield police and this body cam encounter. What did you do?
Why'd you kill the cat? Smile for me?
I like, did you eat that cat?
Did you eat it?
Now?
Why'd you kill it?
Did you?
Guys see all this? No, we brought up and she.
Was just lay near with you. She was, Yeah, you call your Maine society, see if they'll come pick those cat up.
It's deceased now.
I got an email from a listener who is son of a missionary, grew up in the mission field and lived in Haiti. He said, it's the culture. They eat cats. It's just that's part of what they do. I know for a fact that it is part of a voodoo ritual with any of these animals that they kill. Additionally, he said, look, I've eaten cat, I lived there. I've said it's not it's not abnormal at all. So let's connect this with what the young man that Anthony Harris said.
This is the lifestyle. They come here and they bring this stuff here. Because we don't assimilate people anymore. We don't require people to learn the language. But these people have been allowed to just come here and stay here. They arrive before June sixth. They are protected. They're not going back under this administration. This is about, And what the young man was talking about is the driving issue. They're nuts. A lot of these people have never driven
in their life, and they somehow have vehicles. They're killing people. I talked to him. I did a commentary. Nathan Clark is the father of an eleven year old boy, Aiden Clark, who was killed. He was riding a school bus when a Haitian recklessly drove into the bus and it killed his son. He's angry at people like me Donald Trump, JD. Van's Republicans for making it quote a political issue. He's angry,
he said, and I'm quoting here. I wish my son, Aiden Clark had been killed by a sixty year old white man, suggesting that this hate would never exist.
We'd leave the immigrants alone. Dude.
It's it's not a political issue. It's about your son. It's about other people in Springfield, Ohio that have been killed by reckless immigrant drivers in this country illegally. It's about the scores of people that have been murdered, women raped by illegals in this country. It's about people who are being harassed, threatened in stores, who have had their apartment buildings taken over by gangs. It's not political, brother, Get over yourself. I feel bad for you. My heart
breaks that you lost your son. But it has nothing to do with politics, brother, It has to do with lives lost lives.
Let me tell you something.
This is an intentional act by Democrats to win an election. Get that straight. That is a fact. And they don't care about the dead bodies. It is acceptable collateral damage to win an election.
It sickens me.
That's just one reason to flee the Democrat Party. Forty seven minutes after the hour, there's more.
This is the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Let's listen.
In SpaceX Live Polaris Down Mission, astronaut Jared Isaacman has emerged from the Dragon capsule.
Kitchen roller three two twitching single handed operations are fine static hand with dynamic des servants switching to left hand.
He's he's doing flexibility checks of the space suit while holding on to the outer part of the capsule, and they have a camera mounted where you can see it. He has cameras on his helmet as well, and he's cruising along at twenty five thousand kilometers per hour.
Pitches A four.
His suit is designed to insulate him when they go into the shadows behind the sun, the other side of the sun, into the shadows of the Earth, and to protect him when they're in full sun.
The suit can do both.
PID checks five point three psi, RH thirty three decimal mind Celsius.
SpaceX copies and testmate turks of one and the HUT readout.
He also has a.
Hud a heads up display inside his mask that's giving him the important information as it relates to the pressure of his suit, the oxygen levels, duration of time, and you know, temperatures.
And all these other things. And so it's literally history being made.
Private space operations now moving into territory only occupied by NASA, and of course perhaps the Russians and the Chinese, but of course America led the way in all of this.
Once they got.
Your Grigorian out of the way with the Ruskies, we then leap frogged over the Russians and the cosmonaut with what we were doing. So yeah, it's obviously the combination of this and the weather that's out there. We are in a tornado warning in part of our listening area, and as I mentioned earlier, we could be interrupted at any point of the show. The warning is at least until seven fifteen. Let me make a quick check and
see if they've extended that warning at all. Seven point fifteen flash flood warning for the region until eleven thirty. And it's pretty large region from Port Saint Joe to East Point up to Honeyville and Sumatra. So there are weather alerts from this storm system. Of course, I would hope I don't have to remind anybody get don't be out on the in the Gulf. There's a large storm that's still churning up things in the golf. It's called a hurricane even though it's ashore now and bringing with
it a lot of weather. And that's what we're experiencing. So we do have Steve Stewart coming up next. We are going to kind of adjust and juggle here the program, So stay with us. That's why you listen, right, what's happening? Good Morning Show with Preston Scott. All right, ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, males and females only, welcome ruminators to
the second hour. Second hour already, all right, we have weather going on around US Tornado watches almost entirely to the west of Tallahassee, the whole area from the Gulf Coast up into Alabama and Georgia at least for another few hours, Tornado warnings for a little while longer, which means there's active tornado activity in and around and Port Saint Joe, Appalachic Cola, and so forth. So just keeping you apprized of that and know that we could be
interrupted at any minute. It's time though, to visit with Steve Stewart. He is, of course, the executive editor of tallash Reports website tallashi reports dot com. Really cool development we'll talk about in a few moments with regard to access to tallasher Reports. But first, of course, doing what you do covering the city city budget, what do we know?
Yeah, a lot of budget stuff going on at the end of the year here the fiscal years thoughts Ober first, next week, the Leon County Commissioner will hold their budget hearing Tuesday. The school board too, I think, no comments, just passed a six hundred million dollar budget. People just aren't getting, you know, into the nuts and bolts of the city. A little more controversial because you have an election going on, and you've got the division on the
city commissioned. So if you remember last year, they had actually had a property tax increase which passed three to two. This year, no private tax increase, but they had a tax increase because the home values went up to the tune of this is the general fund, to the tune of about three point nine million dollars four million dollars. And so, you know, the issue here is it probably is not a stretch for even a moderately conservative person to say, look, city, you just had a property tax increase.
You've got four million dollars in extra money through increase in property values. Here, you could do a rollback rate, you know, and so show a little goodwill to the citizens, because on what one hundred and eighty million dollar budget, you can't cut three point nine million dollars. But as we've become a customed as conservatives.
They don't do stuff like that. Nope, they don't. They just it doesn't matter who's elected. They that's what they keep the money.
You know, the issue here is you've got progressives who won't control the city commission and they see an opportunity to say, hey, we'd like to cut three point nine million dollars and we.
Could do that, you know, and sounds great.
How Yeah, they don't tell you how, but they but I don't know that they need to because of the level of engagement. A lot of voters they just see that, hey, we voted against the property tax increase, and that's sort of where we are in sort of electoral politics.
So that's what happened.
Commission Mattlow made the big staged announcement that you know, he's not for the tax increase and that he can probably that we should probably cut three point nine million dollars, which I agree with everything there, yep. But where are we going to cut. It's going to be law enforcement, it's going to be parks, it's going to be animal services, it's going to be from the capitol budget.
You know, I would like to know those type.
Of executive staff that maybe we have a few too many assistant city managers.
Right, But there's no there's no there's no specific plan how to cut it. But like I said, it's an election year and I think he's calculated.
And when I say.
He he's got this pack where he's supporting dot M and Johnson against Curtis Richardson, and this is what they're going to ride with. They they're going to ride with the fact that they don't need to say specifics that all they got to say is they voted against the tax increase.
And you know it might work low and shallow information. Voters are not going to beyond that, sadly, right.
And so the thing that you have to deal with is that in the primary you had you had people that did not vote because it's a primary in local elections. So now what we'll have in November is you'll have very high turnout, But the question will be how much information will the voters be able to consume on the local side to understand what's in their best interest?
Do we have to qualify the words very high turnout because I mean compared to the primary, but overall what eighty thanks?
Oh yeah, I think it be eighty percent. I think that's what it was in the presidential election four years ago, Okay, And so what was it in the primary? Thirty percent?
Thirty one to thirty three percent.
So the issue on that is, obviously Republicans tend not to vote in the primary unlesser is a major election and that impacts the city as we've seen because if you go back and look at daily Dozer raise for mayor Dozer wanted, you know, got it, didn't get the majority because there's three and it's the beat daily in the primary, but then got beat in the November because there's more. It's a more conservative electorate, you know, in.
The general elect they come out and vote where they just kind of sit back and do nothing because they don't have candidates.
On the ballot. Hey they're not yet. We got more to talk about.
Steve Stewart with us Talahassee Reports dot Com. So you go subscribe, you'll get papers, actually an actual paper, you know, with real content and everything delivered to you a couple of times each month.
More on that next, I do what you're talking about. It's The Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Back with Steve Stewart and Tallahas Reports again Tallas Reports dot Com. Steve, we were just talking in the break how you know you you are focusing right now. You've got a front page story in the new paper about the crime numbers here and what's going on. And I think it's important to point out that, you know, we we constantly on the show talk about how the federal numbers, and it doesn't matter whether the crime numbers, whether there are job numbers, whether it's you know, something to do
with the economy. They should throw these numbers out and then months later they get revised and it's usually not good news for the public.
Not only that, if you look at the previous crime numbers, how we used to look at crime is that the numbers would go to FDL, they'd put them all together, they go to the FBI, and you would find crime numbers for, you know, something that happened in January, a year and a half later. So it's not really it's not really good.
It's not real time in any way, shape or form.
So with that in mind, what we started to do, and I think this is starting again a little self serving, it's starting to look like it's very valuable. We're trying to get data from the ground up so that you can do that with housing data because you got it with the property Praiser's office. This is we don't have to wait for the realtor association to take the data and manipulate it and do whatever they do with it. We can actually get the data right here, okay, And
we do that same thing with the crime numbers. Same thing with crimes. We started getting the crime incident numbers from the talentsan police department four or five years ago and putting them in a spreadsheet so that we could, you know, so we could develop reports. Last the headline in our latest newspaper is something that's not being reported is that violent crime incidents are down, and it's down by double digits. You're looking at from year to date
compared to twenty twenty three, they're downs down like thirteen percent. Okay, this year we are seeing staggering double digit numbers down for things like.
Robbery and assault.
Robbery over the last four weeks is down over forty percent compared to last year. So there's a trend that's heading down. Now, why isn't this being reported? Because it's so much easier to go out and get the press release on a shooting and an apartment complex and you know, plaster on a headline and it clicks. What they're not doing is analyzing what is really happening in the community and how it impacts everyone. These numbers and again we've got a front page report on this is showing a
decline and you say, well, wait, a minute. You know, crime is down nationally. It is, but if you look at the national numbers, they take all the cities and aggregate them. So you could have one city that's down fifty percent for cities that are up a little, you know, ten percent, and it's still down nationally. You've got to disaggregate the data because there are cities where crime is up. So you start looking at city tallhase.
Why is it down?
What we saw in the news last I guess was last month. The you know, TPD is starting to get more aggressive and pulling people over one day, one day, three hundred and seventy six stops, two hundred and seventy seven day one week.
That was one day. I went and checked that.
We got a little bit of a question on this on Thursday. It was a week of enforcing it. But the story that the release from TPD.
Was one day, wow, eleven arrests.
Was eleven arrest Okay, so that's they're getting more aggressive. The second thing is there's more officers on the street, okay, thirty eight officers since high since twenty twenty four. Now obviously you get some retirements. Third thing, ninety three public safety cameras around this community, which are being monitored in real time at the real time Crime Center. So to argue that there's obviously got to be some connection between law enforcement and what they've been doing over the last.
Year, active patrols, numbers of patrols, et cetera.
Now, so you look at these crime this is crime incidents. Now, we've got a story up now right now that shows that shootings are a seventeen month low. Fatal shootings. Let mean revise that fatal shootings because you see again every time there's a fatal shooting, you see this big headline we were at. We looked at a three month average over the last four years. Okay, in January it was the highest it's been in four years. It was three
point seven fatal shootings per month. Okay, we are down to one, an average of one fatal shooting per month over the last three months. Haven't been there in seventeen months. The problem with this current year and the numbers which are getting reported repeatedly. We had seven fatal shootings in January, which is an aberration, but it affects the year numbers unless you start looking at it and analyzing it. So fatal shootings are way down and that's something that's not getting.
Reported and because of that, there is only one source where you can find it reported and that's Tallassi Reports dot Com. More to come on that on the morning show. Pay attention to the weather friends. There is the remnants of Hurricane Francine I think it is, that is now spiraling up the central part of the country, but bringing with it some severe weather. We've got tornado watches. I
misspoke earlier. It's not entered into South Georgia yet, but it is in South Alabama and to our west, so a lot of the listening area is under a tornado watch for a little bit. Steve Stuart with me from Teleaster Reports and Steve, you know, you've got a new paper out and for the first time ever, these papers will be available at select locations in town.
Yeah.
So one of the things that you know, we've been doing Tallest supports for a number of years now, we're trying to expand our reach. We we are getting more social media contacts where people you know are We're raising our profile in a lot of different areas. But you know, one of the things is study after study says that more informed people are more engaged and are more likely to be engaged with what's going on. A lot of times people throw up their hands with the media. They
just don't know what to believe. And so from a national perspective, it's even you know, because you have so many different sources. But it's starting to happen locally, and so one of the things that we thought about was trying to how how to raise our profile, how to give people access to alternative media to where they can decide themselves. You know, they can say, hey, look, you know Taalas reports that may not you know, that may say, you know, I'm not that familiar with So what we've
done is we're doing a little retro. We're going back. We have bought some newspaper boxes and refurbished them, which is.
Not a simple task. No.
If you notice, the newspaper boxes for the most part have been just pulled up, and so we did some research. You've got to get permits from the state on certain locations, you got to get permits from other local governmentities.
We filed with that.
We filed with the state and some other local governmentities to get permits downtown and we put our first three boxes out and I think there's a couple of things. First of all, it elevates our name. People are going to see and say, look, all Talas reports. They've got newspaper boxes. You can open the newspaper box and get the latest paper. It's free at this point. And the idea is that a lot of the issues now in media is that you have people that are disparaging other
media because they don't want them to read it. Okay, they call them names or they say that it's right wing. So what we want to do is lower the barrier as much as possible for people that may not be familiar with Talis Reports that will say, well, look I'm gonna try I'm gonna look at this paper and see is this correct, is it bias or is there information here I don't get anywhere else. And so that's what we're doing. And so we've purchased a number of these boxes.
We're refurbishing them. Now, this is not a simple process. These boxes are about you know, they're four hundred dollars each, basically four to five hundred dollars. So it's a it is a it's a committed endeavor. It's not something you just do on a wing. But We've looked at it, and we think this is one way, especially from a local perspective, to get people engaged with local media.
Well, it's interesting because I can't I can't tell you the last time I watched a local newscast on television. I don't look at the Tallassei Democrat website unless someone points me there for some reason, and usually they provide a link to the same stories somewhere else, So I
don't even bother because I don't find it trustworthy. And additionally, Steve, I find it interesting that as the local legacy print outlet is lose subscribers and is pulling up boxes and is no longer making their papers available and is seemingly doing less and less publications, you're adding.
Well, see, the thing is, and this is exactly what media outlets do, is they start to focus on their niche who are they going to cater to, and then they start writing the news that way, because so they've taken up the boxes and now they're basically a lot of these gnet papers are focused on who their subscribers are, which are more left Oh yeah they are, So they start writing news that way. We're putting our newspapers out there for Republicans, Democrats, Independence downtown to pull one up
and say, let me see what this looks like. Because the thing is is a lot of time you think about Talis reports, and early on we were a watchdog blog, but we've turned into a newspaper and now we've turned into a community newspaper. If you look at this newspaper, I challenge people to look at this newspaper. There are things that you would be shocked at what we cover. It's not just politics. It is you know, we've got business, We've got an opinion piece, we've got people on the.
Move, and oh, by the way, the opinion piece is are always on the opinion page and and noted as opinion.
Right. We've got state news in here.
We subscribe to the new Service of Florida, which covers state news, nuts and bolts of what's going on from the stale. This is a community newspaper. Now there are people that want to convince you that it's not for other reasons. And what this uh putting these boxes downtown is to open it up for everybody. And so the way I tell my critics that you know, argue about twas Forwartz says Hey, listen, critique it, you know, disagree,
but embrace it. Don't fear you know, don't fear independent alternative journalism.
Well, and if there's something factually wrong, you'd be sure to let me know. But that just doesn't happen very often. Hey, let me read it. Where is something that's biased? But you got to support local journalism.
And what we're hoping is people are going to see these boxes and say, well, you know, they're investing in these boxes to get this newspaper out.
Let me look at that. And that's how.
We're going to start to reel more people in to get them in formed. And again, if you disagree, that's fine, yep. But you're disagreeing with facts, well I know, but you can disagree no, but you can disagree with us, say in a position that we have that's an opinion.
But but you've got to.
Be engaged in. One of the first things that's it's really we start to see fading away is local journalism. We're gonna try to We're.
Gonna try to help promote that renaissance.
Yes, newspaper boxes, Oh boy, thank you sir, thank you.
Preston twenty seven past the hour, we will continue big stories in the press box and more next on the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
It's the Morning Show with President Scott.
Hi Big stories in the press box, of course, still paying attention to the weather out there. National Other Service is got a tornado watch until one o'clock this afternoon, so the weather's just ripe for it and it is out into the Gulf. It is the entire listening area to our west from Crawfordville and Marianna to Dothan to
Crestview to Pensacola. This includes Panama City. You are under a tornado watch for several hours here today and again reminding you that we could be interrupted at any moment. Big stories in the press box, reaction coming out to the debate, and I think this is worth listening to. CNN had a focus group and this was a little shocking when they put a mic in front of this young lady and asking her what she thought was.
Actually going to make our country better. And we're in an incredibly unique situation where we've had both of the candidates in office before and we've gotten to see what they do and when facts come to facts, my life was better when Trump was in office. The economy was higher, inflation was lower, things were better overall, and now with Kamala's administration, things haven't been so fantastic. And she's saying she can fix the problems that her administration has caused.
But I just don't know if I can afford to take that risk.
Whoops, didn't count on that one. That was And again that's just one person in a focus group. That's CNN threw together. In that same focus group, though they clearly liked Kamala's performance better. And I get it, and we'll talk more about that yesterday. Some interesting stuff coming out about Kamala. You know, a lot of us believe she was fed the questions well in advance. That's why her
insistence on doing ABC, NBC or CBS versus Fox. But despite all that, Trump actually gained with people in these focus groups on the issue of the economy. They also admitted post debate that Harris didn't answer questions. Trump is trusted far more on immigration. So it's kind of it's not panning out to be the big bump that the left Democrats hoped that Harris would get because it's mitigated by the fact that she's Kamala.
Another big story.
Governor of Ohio, Mike DeWine, who is kind of a rhino sending troopers to Springfield. Springfield's a train wreck. And last hour I had a bit of a monologue about Nathan Clark who lost his son Aiden because a Haitian crash his car. They don't know how to drive, and so the driving issue has been a huge thing. They're killing civilians, citizens, other people with cars because they don't
know how to drive. They're driving into buildings, they're driving into trash cans, they're driving all over They they don't know how to follow laws because they don't they don't know anything about driving. And Nathan Clark up said that quote Republicans Trump vance are making it a political issue, the death of his son, And he said, quoting, I wish my son had been killed by a sixty year old white man.
And I'm just I'm.
Pointing out how misguided that is. It's not a political issue, sir, it is it is an issue of lost lives, and people are dying unnecessarily because of the illegal immigration in this country. And the only conclusion you can come to is that Democrats have done the calculus and that it's okay it's okay. It's okay to do forty minutes past the hour. Doctor David Hart standing by in the Morning Show.
With Preston Scott on News Radio one hundred point seven WUSLA.
Forty one minutes after the hour. Time for a little optimum health, naturally. Doctor David Harts joins us.
Good morning, sir, Good morning, Preston.
Cell phones present a lot of challenges. Interesting that we've talked about it a little bit with Joe Camps. He brought it up. We've got a guest coming up talking about cell phones from a very different perspective. I'm curious what landed this on your radar.
Well, this is so much research coming out, Preston on what this thing we do with screens with children are doing to our children. And you know, it's quite amazing. Children are a challenge, you know, especially to take care of them, and especially when you have a busy life and you have to work and you're you want you want time with your spouse when you're out to dinner
and so forth like that. But what we're doing is we're placing our children in front of these screens because it's so easy to do, and sometimes we just have to. But what's happening is that it's really affecting their brains. And what I'm seeing medically is that the brain itself is constantly building neural connections and poming less useful ones away. Much of what happens when we look at screens is it provides an impoverished kind of stimulation to the development
of the brain compared to reality. And children need a diverse menu of different types of stimula into their brain. And when you don't have the diverse, you know, stimulus of reality, it causes effect upon the brain that actually affects development of the brain. And so when we start children, especially very young, with this type of stimulation, we affect
really the outcome of how their brain is developing. And that's We're just really really serious, and I think we're seeing this and the development that children later on with some of the problems that we're seeing being developed. You know, the researcher made this statement, It just jumped out at me. He said, boredom is the space in which creativity and imagination happens, and we don't have much boredom anymore. We want to fill most reality with children with with some
type of stimulations. Many times from screens. So you know, the old idea years and years ago, we have a box, you know, and you put the kid in the box. They play in the box Christmas rather than playing in you know, on a screen. They had to imagine, they had to create. And the difference between now is that we don't do that any longer. We have things that are constantly creating all kinds of stimulus. So what's happening and is causing problems? It's causing Uh, there's all kinds
of resource that talks about ADHD. We're talking about obesity, a regular sleep with children, behavioral problems because of this violence. You know, it seems to be increasing exposure, seems to increase violence in these kids, and it's it's causing all kinds of problems in our society, I think eventually. So you know, I think the challenge to parents nowadays is to go ahead and just start to try to be more creative for your kids. Watch this stuff with them,
you know, do things that are interactive. If you're doing things that are educational, that's fine, but we need to decrease just using them as babysitters. It's just it's causing tremendous amounts of problems in our kids. And you know, I mean, you know, whatever happened to you know, hide and seek? You know, as a as a grandfather and a father, my kids have grown up, and I tell you what, I sometimes wish that I would spend more time when they're around than I did because I was
so busy. And I think if they had a lot more screens I would even use them myself back then, because it's just so easy to do.
Yeah, they become a source of addiction as well. And we've all watched it happen. When a parent takes it away, kids frequently have just absolute meltdowns, which speaks to the addictive nature of this stuff.
Yeah, it's absolutely addictive. And they've proven that through studies that it produces a addictive behavior neurologically. And so we're addicting our kids the things that really aren't really good for them.
So our message today, ladies and gentlemen is go find a cardboard.
Box, right, maybe do I to seek or do something when you interact, that's how kids really really learned, is interacted with reality and with people and with emotion and with you know, just talking.
Absolutely, doctor Hurts, thanks.
Very much, all right, have a great day press Thank you.
Sir, Doctor David. Hearts with US forty six past the hour. The show has been altered by the weather, the interruptions. SpaceX Mission Polaris Dawn. They have completed successfully their EVA. They're back in the capsule capsules being pressurized. Pretty remarkable. First private spacewalk, commercial private spacewalk in history, and so congratulates everybody involved in that and more to come.
Right.
So I am ditching a couple of things, including the road trip, because I've just got to get stuff out to you.
This was the debate.
This was a very poignant set of comments made by Kamala Harris that I want to take a minute and talk about.
I was at the Capitol on January sixth. I was the vice president elect. I was also an acting senator. I was there, and on that day, the President of the United States incited a violent mob to attack our nation's capital, to desecrate our nation's capital. On that day, one hundred and forty law enforcement officers were injured and some died. And understand the former president has been indicted and impeached for exactly that reason. But this is not
an isolated situation. Let's remember Charlottesville, where there was a mob of people carrying tiki torches spewing anti Semitic hate, and what did the president then at the time say, there were fine people on each side. Let's remember that. When it came to the Proud Boys, a militia, the president said, the former president said stand back and stand by. So, for everyone watching who remembers what January sixth was, I say, we don't have to go back.
At no point did the ABC fact checkers sound courtesy of ABC Presidential Debate. Did they interrupt her. She was not at the Capitol on January sixth, She was not at the protest, she was at the on January sixth. She was never and has never mentioned her proximity to the DNC where the pipe bombs allegedly were placed by somebody that now we see video interacting with Capitol police.
We still don't know who that is. Isn't that isn't that amazing?
The pipe bombs at the DNC, the RNC and we know nothing all this time later.
Mmm mm hmm.
There is zero evidence supporting one hundred and forty officers being injured. I would I would add that, and looking at hours of the video of what happened outside. Certainly there was unruly behavior and behavior worthy of arrest and punishment by some. But I've told you, I believe tear gash was tactically fired by Capitol Police or by FBI or buy fill in the blank into their own people to fall back, to allow the crowd to have more
ability to gain entrance to the Capitol. There's no doubt in my mind that the FBI instigated, was involved, planted in, and and it was behind the entire insurrection, if you want to call it that. But any honest person listening to Trump's comments.
Knows he incited nothing. He said just the opposite.
And then Kamala had the temerity on the eve of the nine to eleven attacks to say this, Donald.
Trump left us the worst attack on our democracy since the Civil War.
She's a flaming idiot since the Civil War? What not Pearl Harbor, not nine to eleven? That where Oh, by the way, a Capitol Police officer a murdered a former Air Force member of the United States Air Force and was promoted for it, violating all rules of engagement. Was not defending himself from great threat of bodily harm or imminent death. There's more to be said about this, but we'll get to our number three and our special guests. Hi,
good morning, ruminators. Welcome to the third hour of show five thousand, two hundred and thirty three. Now, but who's counting? That's Hose. I'm Preston. It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Great to be with you this morning, and as always, thank you for sharing time with us. Keep in mind, we've got a lot of weather watches, tornado warnings in the region. We've got tornado watches to our west all throughout the listening area, and so just keep listening to
the radio. It'll interrupt us if need be, with very significant weather updates as needs.
But I'm really pleased to have with us. I've been a longtime admirer.
Especially through COVID, because he was one of the few rational voices speaking. Doctor Marty McCarey is a Johns Hopkins Professor, New York Times bestselling author. He's got a new book. We'll maybe touch on that in a few minutes as well. Visiting professored over twenty five medical schools and has published over two hundred and fifty scientific, peer reviewed articles. And he's our guest this morning, and that's going right on top of the bio, isn't it. Doctor mcarey, how are you, sir?
Great to be with you, presson, thanks for having me.
You have panned a recent op ed in the New York Post, and it's so ironic because it's been a topic on the show of late, the importance of trying to get cell phones out of public schools and out of kids' hands as much as possible. What is your kind of motivation for pushing this so hard?
Well, the average teenager gets two hundred and seven three text messages or notifications in a day, and when they're in the classroom, they are saying in these studies that have just come out that they're being distracted by their phones and their notifications. And remember, these big tech companies have made these apps and phones by design to be addictive, to grab the atension of a kid and hold on to it as long as possible when the kid is
supposed to be learning. So we've done tremendous damage to children during COVID prolonged school closures, all those COVID restrictions that resulted in massive learning loss Brown University study just came out. It found that on average, IQ has gone down twelve points. We're doing a tremendous disservice to children with these traconian policies, and so one thing we can do, it's not a sober bullet, but one thing we can do is to get rid of these distractions during class.
One of the things that's interesting is there are a couple of districts inside the state of Florida, doctor McCarry, that have gone this route. They have banned them and not just banned them in class time. They can't take them out in between classes, they can't take them out in the lunch room. And the reports are overwhelmingly positive.
Re engagement of the students in just talking to each other and better behavior and less bullying because they're not setting kids up to get videotape of a fight and posting it online.
Well, that's right. We're seeing the human connection restored in school districts that are banning cell phones. We're seeing kids now grow up with less impulsive behavior. You know, there is a group of parents out there, and God bless them, they are doing the right thing and they are saying, I don't have to give my kid a phone when they turn ten. I don't have to give my kid a smartphone. I don't have to give my kid an account on Instagram or snapchats. And these parents are doing
a great service to the future. My sister is one of them. She's got her two young teenagers raised beautifully, no cell phones, no added sugar, at least in the first four or six years of life, in the formative years when their gut is developing. And these kids can shake your hand and look at you and talk to you, and so I think kids are hungry for a human connection.
Doctor Marty McCarey with me for another segment. It's just about ten minutes past the hour. We'll give you a quick check of whether in traffic. Doctor McCarey stand by when we come back. I want to expand this just a little bit further. I also want to just get a little insight on his new book, Blind Spots again high regard. Doctor Marty McCarey with me here on the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
He's busy, but he's fit us in.
Doctor Marty McCarey with us Johns Hopkins University's professor there and a highly respected man in the profession, doctor McCarey. I'm just curious, is there any level of consensus when this kind of technology ought to be in the hands of kids. I know it might be there is no one size fits all, its maturity levels and those kinds of things.
But from a scientific.
Perspective, is there a spot where you kind of feel like it's safer for young people to have this stuff?
I don't think we have good evidence or data on that particular question. Parents ask it all the time. Sure, I tend to think once a kid has a real enjoyment of hobbies and other activities, you want the kid to be addicted to something good, right. You want him to be addicted to sports and family time and healthy foods and spending time with others and community service. So everyone has their thing that gives them a dopamine rush.
Everyone essentially has an addiction, but you want it to be the good things, to exercise, to positive things.
You know.
The other thing about banning cell phones in school, which has been positive, is it's addressing this mental health crisis. One study found at two thirds of kids in America today report being addicted to their phones during class and forty four percent said that their phones make them anxious. We've got the most medicated population in the history of the world. We've got epidemic levels of anxiety and depression.
So why are we giving them actively giving them the cocaine for their addiction and ignoring the fact that this is something that we can control when they're in a public school on task payer dollars with the purpose of paying attention to a teacher.
Yeah, I hate saying this stuff as the old guy, But how do we do it?
Right?
I mean, how did we manage to not talk to mom or dad fifteen times a day, or get text messages or phone calls or look at stuff?
How do we manage.
Well? Yeah, I mean people are saying, well, they might need their cell phone for safety. Well, I don't know of any example where a cell phone in the classroom has saved the kid's life. Maybe it's possible, but what's killing kids is the mental health epidemic. We've got escalating rates of suicide, depression, anxiety, and so we can't ignore that fact. If you look at the data, it's pretty compelling.
Kids are basically crying out for help. They've had terrible learning loss, not really as much in Florida because they didn't fall for the prolonged school closure gimmick. But nationwide, this is something we're starting to see states do in school districts implement and it's working. The results have been very positive.
We got a couple of minutes left, and I would be remiss if I didn't tee up and ask you about the book Blind Spots. Doctor McCarey. You came on my radar during COVID. I believe COVID really damaged the credibility of the medical profession and I don't know if it can be repaired without an admission by the medical profession that it was wrong and how it conducted most everything and advised during that period.
But what was your purpose in writing the book and what's it about?
Well, first of all, I agree with you. We have not seen any humility from our medical establishment nationally, and I can tell you it as a doctor, humility is the most important thing in being a doctor. But COVID was a snapshot. It was actually a peek into how a broader, arrogant medical community functions. You saw the same risk and arrogance that resulted in them getting the low fat diet and food pyramid wrong for sixty years.
They ignited the opioid epidemic with the dogma that opioids were not addictive. They ignited the modern day peanut allergy epidemic with the dogma they should avoid peanut butter for young infants. They have created some of our modern day health crises. And right now we're dealing.
With a chronic disease epidemic. Half of our nation's children are abese or overweight, a quarter have diabetes or pre diabetes, and autism goes out fourteen percent a year every year. I mean, who is stopping to say, what's going on? What are the root causes. We've poisoned our food, supply engineered highly addictive food ingredients. We liberally dole out mental health diagnoses. We've got the most over medicated population in
the history of the world. We're converting America's children into a generation of patients, and then we blame them sometimes for being sick. We have got to get rid of this hammer lock that pharma and big food and big agg have on health. We've done a terrible thing to doctors in this country. We've told them diagnose in Medicaid diagnose and medicaid, and we're going to give you a coding book and we're going to ask you to write notes, and you need to be busy billing and coding. And
we're going to measure you as doctors by your throughput. Well, guess what, a third of them are burned out. We have the highest suicide rate of any profession. People hate this system. Patients hate it, doctors hated. We have the most over medicated population in the world and the thickest population in the world. What are we doing. We have got to take a step back and ask the big questions,
talk about the root causes. Maybe the NIH needs to study food is medicine instead of back coronaviruses in Wuhan, China. Maybe we need to talk about school lunch programs instead of just putting every young kid on ozepic when they're overweight. Maybe we need to talk about treating diabetes with cooking classes. So we have a movement now in medicine to talk about the underlying gut health and environmental exposures and the role of pesticides and healthy foods and avoiding seed oil.
All of these new areas of scientific research around health not thickness, but around being healthy that people need to hear about. They have been in the blind spots of modern medicine and that's why I wrote this book, Blind Spots. I want people to know the truth about health and when medicine gets it wrong.
Can't wait to see your Christmas card list. Doctor McCarry, thank you for the time. You are welcome back anytime you Let Brendan know that and I'm going to do the same. But thank you so much.
Great to be with you.
Thanks Presty, Doctor Martin McCarey with us this morning on the Morning Show with Preston Scott. All right, let's get right to this to fit it all in CNN before the debate and Aaron Burnett talking about Kamala and it's a K file investigation. Check out this exchange. It's remarkable what is said in this interaction between Aaron Burnette and one reporter with CNN.
I'm on her campaign website. A K file investigation has uncovered meantime a twenty nineteen quest Jennaire and in this questionnaire Harris laid out some much more liberal stances among them on immigration. So in twenty nineteen and what K file found she said she would cut funding two ICE, writing quote, our immigrant attention system is out of control, and I believe we must end the unfair incarceration of
thousands of individuals, families, and children. I was one of the first Senators after President Trump was elected to advocate for a decrease in funding to ICE. Well, now, of course she's touting the Biden administration's executive order to crack down on the border. K File's Andrew Kaczinski joins me. Now, Andrew, that's pretty incredible on its own, when you're talking about what you found here on ICE, what else did you find?
Yeah, and this was a questionnaire that she filled out for the ACLU, And this questionnaire is really an interesting snapshot in time of that twenty nineteen Democratic primary. Kamala Harris was trying to get to the left of Bernie Sanders. She was trying to get to the left of Elizabeth Warren. And you really see that in a lot of these answers. And I want to walk our viewers through a little bit of what she said. Let's just take immigration and
look at what she said here. She said on immigration, she made this open ended pledge to end immigrant attention. She said she supported taxpayer funded gender transition surgeries for detained migrants.
She also said she's.
Tax pair funded gender transition surgeries for detainment Chaine. She actually said she supported.
She wrote both wrote and answered in the affirmative when she was asked this, and she said she also supported it for federal prisoners. Now, she also pledged to slash immigration detention by fifty percent, close all family and private facilities, and decrease funding for ICE and then the end and ice detainers with local law enforcement.
I mean, these are these are things that you know, it would be hard to think that you would come up with taxpayer funding gender transitions for uh, for detained migrants. And yet this, as you say, written and verbally, uh, you know what else you know did you find?
Well, let's also let's take a look at her answer here on drugs. She got asked about. You know, this is the question from the ACLU was, since drug use is better addressed as a public health issue through treatment and other programming, will you support the decriminalization at the federal level of all drug possession for personal use? And Harris answers, yes, Now what would that mean? Will it
mean the federal all all drug possession. That's not just marijuana, which she she alluded to her answer to this question, but it also mean level cocaine, things like that.
Yeah, have they responded to you on her changes on these issues?
So we did put this question to the Harris campaign about the entire uh ACLU questionnaire, and the Harris campaign didn't answer any questions from CNN. Instead, they just provided a statement from an unnamed Harris campaign advisor that just said the Vice president's positions have been shaped by three years of effective government governance as part of the Biden Harris administration. Now, they declined to CNN to elaborate on
what those positions were. And then they also provided this statement which they attributed to a spokesperson saying as president, she will take that same pragmatic approach, focusing on common sense solutions for the sake of progress. So where does she stand on this all all this question or today? We don't know and they won't say.
Aaron Burnett sitting there stunned. She's looking at this guy like.
You are me.
See that self editing I just did there just saved you the trouble, save those he the beat button. Just it's incredible you people cannot possibly support that because you don't like Donald Again, if you do, you deserve what comes. You're just gonna bring all of us along with you. Twenty seven twenty eight past the hour, Circle back to the Big Stories. Next Big Stories in the.
Press Box, Boning. I'm Preston Jose.
It's Thursday, always a busy day here on the program. Ohio's Governor Mike DeWine is sending in troopers because Springfield just it's exploding. You bring fifteen twenty thousand people that don't speak the language, that don't understand America, that have no interest in assimilating, and you shove them into a town like this, What do you think is going to happen? Roughly a third of the population is now Haitian and
you can't deport them because they're under protected status. What Dwaine doesn't get it, but at least he's trying to help. But he said the Feds have to step up. Well, they're the ones that created the problem. I pointed out, how you know, Donald Trump made several mistakes, he didn't seize opportunities in the debate the other night. It is what it is, the illegal immigration problem in this country. Is a national security issue. It is a local security issue.
It is not a political issue. Taking issue with a grieving father. Nathan Clark lost his son Aiden when a Haitian immigrant driving illegally illegally in this country, ran into a school bus and his son was killed on that bus. Others in Springfield have died because of illegal Haitian immigrants driving recklessly. They clearly don't have a driver's license. You can't get one, you're not a citizen, but they're driving anyway. Mister Clark says that Republicans, Trump, Vance etc. Are making
this a political issue. Well, no, your son's death, along with the deaths of hundreds of others across the country, rapes, stabbings, shootings, gang related crime, establishment of gangs, taking over apartment complex, says parts of cities.
That's not a political issue.
For God's sake, that is a human lost lives, lost standard of living issue.
It's not political.
God, bless you. Your heart is grieving so much, you've lost your mind and I don't mean to sound indelicate, but lashing out because you're irrationally thinking through your grieving and it is irrational. When we get back, I'm going to retee Kamala Harris's comment at the debate, where she went on a one minute rant and I want to really take some time, just just a few minutes, and I'm gonna pick it apart as we go. That's next on the Morning Ship. All right, let's listen to this
once again. ABC presidential debate sound courtesy of.
Kamala said this, Donald Trump left us the worst attack on our democracy since the Civil War?
Our democracy, right, the no, since the Civil War? What level of ignorance are you in on the eve of the worst terrorist attack perhaps ever nine to eleven.
To just skip that.
You forgot Pearl Harbor and you forgot nine to eleven. But let's go a little bit deeper here. Let's let's go to this monologue.
I was at the Capitol on January sixth.
No, she wasn't. That is a lie. Just know she wasn't. She was. In fact, she should have been stopped and fact checked right there.
I was the vice president elect. I was also an acting senator.
I was there. No, you weren't.
And on that day, the President of the United States insided a violent mob.
Let's let's just remember what he said. We're gonna peacefully go down, and we're gonna encourage our brave men and women in the US Senate and Congress.
The House to do the right thing.
No words of incitement were spoken, not even remotely hinted at.
To attack our nation's capital.
Nope.
Once again, all throughout the rally were embedded FBI agents, undercover operatives, and who knows who else. John Brennan picked out and assigned to just kind of nudge and goose along the events that happened. Were there some criminal acts that took place, Yes, there were, among them the shooting of Ashley Babbitt by Capitol police officer, violating every rule of engagement.
But I digress to desecrate our nation's capital. On that day, one hundred and forty law enforcement officers were injured.
That's a lie. There is no evidence. One hundred and four the officers were injured, and of many, first of all, well, let me let her letter.
And some died.
No.
No, In fact, Brian sick Nick died one day later from natural causes, according to the doctors. That's what his report says. He suffered two struggles. Well it was it was because of that, Maybe it was because he knew something I'm just saying, maybe it was the stress of knowing. Maybe it was because he got tear gas by his own people. Unbelievably, they fired tear gas into their into into the police. These are trained law enforcement professionals. It
just adds evidence. I've watched the tapes continue.
And understand the former president has been indicted and impeached for exactly that reason.
By who, Thank you very much.
But this is not an isolated situation. Let's remember Charlottesville.
Oh okay, let's talk about Charlottesville, where.
There was a mob of people carrying tiki torches spewing anti Semitic hate. And what did the president then at the time say, there were fine people on each side.
All right, I've hit it, all right, Not seriously, I'm just having fun here with that.
Kamala is lying again.
Even the left wing, illiberal fact checker Snopes says this whole line is false and a lie. The good people on both sides was referencing the argument over whether civil war monuments should be torn down. Trump was talking about there are good people on both sides of this argument. He condemned the white supremacists that were at Charlottesville. He condemned them. He made it clear in his speech. Read
the transcript of the speech. But Kamala is doing what Joe has done, and every fact checker out there is saying the same thing.
This is a lie.
She lied over and over in one minute of actual audio. She lied about five or six times in one minute. Tomorrow on the show, I'm gonna point out twenty five specific lies. This is what the left has to do. They cannot rely on the truth, so they have to lie. And then you add to it the fact that Kamala is just downright dumb. And you've got a real winning hand, now, don't you. Forty seven minutes after the hour we come back, We're gonna end with a say it ain't so. I
just like to let that play for a minute. I feel like, hey, we made it another three hours, can you believe it? And some of you have been listening the whole time and look at you, grounding points, maybe a happy meal someday, just saying, wouldn't it be fun if I could award you, like something really cool for listening.
All three hours?
How about my eternal thanks? Thank you, thank you very much, because I know some of you saddle up six oh five devote. You're there through the whole program. You're having coffee, will tea, some breakfast, kick back, do a few chores around the house. Maybe got your your phones walking in into the office, got your your buds in looking around.
No one knows you're listening, but I know and we know.
Yeah Tomorrow on the program, a lot of conversations have stopped because of COVID and the political climate. You'd think COVID would bring people together, it didn't. And the political climate it's breaking families apart. How along with the stuff that breaks families apart. In gentlemen, we're gonna teach you tomorrow how to re engage. I'm gonna do that for you. Research is the lead research assystem of the program. Uncovered an article that teaches how to re engage. We're going
to do that also tomorrow. Best and Worst, good News, got a great good news story, headlines from the Bee, and of course what's the Bee Friday. That's all tomorrow on the program, The Say it Ain't So Campbell's Soup is dropping its name. It will now be called the Campbell's Company Soup. I guess it's no longer Campbell's. It's the Campbell's Company. Apparently their portfolio is so large with
all of the snacks and sauces and its acquisition. Its spent over two billion dollars to buy out another I think it's called Sovos Brands, which makes REOs.
Sauces.
They got prey Goo, they got Goldfish, Hanovers, Snyder's Pretzels of Hanover.
They bought that too.
So yeah, Campbell's Soup is going to be going away, allegedly replaced by the Campbell's Company.
Brought to you by Barno Heating and Air. It's the Morning Show one on WFLA. Today.
In the radio program, we started with Romans five. We went through verses one, two, and three, and added verse four. Today tomorrow we'll go through verse five. That was our little devotional reading today. Great visit with doctor Martin McCarey. He was fired Doctor David Harts, ironically independent of each other, touched on the same subject. What is that saying to you?
Neither knew what the other was talking about. Steve Stewart joined us.
We jypped live, which is Joined in progress radio term JIP and television SpaceX, making history the first private commercial space walk ever.
It happened crazy and it was successful. They did it tomorrow. I cannot wait.
Things I didn't get to today because of the programming and the weather and all that. Stay safe, everybody, stay dry. I'll do it again tomorrow, just twenty one hours away, and I cannot wait.
Have an awesome day.