Ep. 5263: The real dangers of A.I. - podcast episode cover

Ep. 5263: The real dangers of A.I.

Oct 28, 20242 hr 31 min
--:--
--:--
Listen in podcast apps:

Episode description

This is the full episode of The Morning Show with Preston Scott for Monday, October 28th.

Our guests today include:
- Dr. Joe Camps
- Ira Schoffel
- Col. Gary Howze, FHP
 

Follow the show on Twitter @TMSPrestonScott. Check out Preston’s latest blog by going to wflafm.com/preston
  • Listen live to Preston from 6 – 9 a.m. ET and 5 – 8 a.m. CT!
  • WFLA Tallahassee Live stream: https://ihr.fm/3huZWYe
  • WFLA Panama City Live stream: https://ihr.fm/34oufeR Follow WFLA Tallahassee on Twitter @WFLAFM and WFLA Panama City @wflapanamacity and like us on Facebook at @wflafm and @WFLAPanamaCity.

Transcript

Speaker 1

Here get waiting, everybody, and welcome to the Morning Show with Christian Shuy. How you is People's people's doing?

Speaker 2

All right?

Speaker 1

Do you have a nice weekend? I hope you did. I hope you did. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I hope you did that.

Speaker 3

There's Jose Can you see in Studio one A, I'm here relegated to Studio one.

Speaker 1

B as in can you imagine if it was to be or not to be? That'd be a question? Sorry, welcome friends, It's it's great to be with you. It's Monday. We are we're almost a week away. Actually, our verse today really applies well. It's first Peter one versus twenty four and twenty five. For all flesh is like grass and all its glory, like the flower of grass. The grass withers, the flower falls, but the word of the Lord remains forever. And this word is the good news

that was preached to you. You know, we talk from time to time about how it's hard to find good news, and I suddenly find myself rebuking me because there's good news in God's word. That is good news. It is good news that God's word is unchanging. It might impact you a specific verse differently based on the seasoned stage of life you are in, but it never contradicts itself in doing so. God's word is God's word. It is there. You go rest in that, don't be anxious. Have more

to say about that later in the week. Got an interesting email that, yeah, we'll chat about later on in the week. Ten past the hour. Take a peek inside the American Patriots Almanac. Next here on The Morning Show with Preston Scott. It's The Morning Show with Preston Scott's is as as often as I might get an email that causes me to just shake my head. I get a hundred that are like thank you. Just read one

here from Richard. Richard, thank you. You just encouraged me in a major way because I had my brain attack this morning by an email that was so obscenely illogical trying to use scripture to justify stupid stupidity that I just it it angered me. It just it just it made me anger, angry, sorry, And I was reminded of the scripture in anger, do not sin. Anger's okay, you can be angry at stuff. It's kind of like the love of money. Money is not the root of all evil.

The love of money. Anger's not sin. Anger can cause one to sin. Does that make sense? It's okay to be angry at stuff. I was angry, pretty fired up, and again I'm going to share it a little later on the week. I'm not going to name the person who wrote it, because if I did, he'd be embarrassed, and he should be. He probably won't be, but that's all right. But anyway, I get notes from so many people that are so encouraging, and it's not like I need to have my ego stroked here. That's not what

I'm talking about. Most of you know that my ego is very secure in Christ. I'm very secure in that, and I'm very secure in how God made me and the rough edges that I have, constantly working to shave those down and smooth them out and be a better version of myself each and every day. But I do not apologize for having convictions on any issue.

Speaker 4

You know.

Speaker 1

This is a little a reset of something that I haven't talked about in a bit. Years ago, I got a note that said, you think you're always right, and I wrote back to the person I said, yeah, don't you No, I mean, and I mean, seriously, do you really walk around through life going you know, I really think I'm wrong about this? That makes you stupid? Now you can be you can be proven wrong. And here's the distinction, being willing and open to to be shown

that you're wrong. But do I think I'm right? You better believe I do, and I make no apology for it. I think through my positions, and my positions on a series of issues are anchored strictly in scriptural principles. God's word that impacts how I see things. It sometimes is not easy to articulate, it's certainly not easy to live, but it's simple and to be candid. That's kind of the lens through which I address the note that I got this morning. It set me off. But yeah, I

think I'm right, and so should you. If you don't think you're right, you haven't thought about it enough, you haven't prayed about it enough, you haven't taken enough information to form an opinion. You darn well ought to think you're right. Sorry. October twenty eighth, sixteen thirty six, Massachusetts General Court establishes Harvard Boy talk about it Regret, No just kidding eighteen eighty six Statue of Liberty dedicated in New York. Did you know the French people raised the

money to build that. It was designed as a gift from France to the United States, and the French people raised the money to have it built and shipped to the United States. What a reminder? Why did they do that? Yeah, let's go back to the founding of the nation? Please. Nineteen nineteen, Congress passes the Volstead Act, which enforces Prohibition. Nineteen forty two Alaska Highway connecting Alaska to the Lower

forty eight through Canada is completed. Thank you, Canada. And in nineteen sixty five, the Gateway Arch in Saint Louis, Missouri is completed. I've never been up inside of it. I never will go up inside that. I know people that do go up inside that, and it's incredible. It's an awesome view. But it sways ever so slightly. No no, no, no, no, no, no no no. That's where I get off. All right, seventeen past the hour, come back, and we're going to

address an apology that to me was not necessary. All right, let's recap a few things here. FSU soccer Friday Night, rebounding after two losses earlier in the year, back to back, very unusual on the road senior night. First chance. I've had to go to a soccer game this year. Love FSU women's soccer, but Thursday night games they don't mix very well with my world. And Sunday afternoons are tough because we've got church and family time and so yeah, so Friday night, so my oldest and I went out

there and watched packed, crowd packed. They were wringing the grassy knoll around the area around the soccer field. Hopefully we'll build some more stands we ought to, but it was delightful as Florida State beat North Carolina again. It was funny because a gentleman from New York who's a North Carolina fan. They I guess he lives near Chapel Hill, drove down eight and a half hour drive and a few family and of course that's what you do. Those

are your kids. But the guy from New York's just a big fan and he was He happened to be standing behind me in line before the gates opened up, and we struck up a very friendly conversation. I heard him saying, you know, last year.

Speaker 3

Oh it broke my heart, Florida State tying us with two seconds left in the game. Broke my heart and I just turned and said, didn't break mine.

Speaker 1

It just had a good laugh. It's always struck up a conversation. It was delightful. He was he was a fine gentleman. But he was like, you guys are on Nemesis. You've just been beating us like crazy lately. I was like, yeah, but then there's the first twenty years and because North Carolina is the standard in women's soccer is something like twenty two or twenty three national titles. I mean, dude's just crazy. But anyway, and sure enough FSU jumps out to a two to nothing lead and I'm like, oh boy,

that poor guy. And then they came back and tied it at two to two. I'm like, an, okay, here we go. And it was just a dominant second half performance. Well done to the seminal soccer team. They'll be they'll be poking at. North Carolina was ranked number four. We were ranked seventeen, maybe fighting our way back up. We were number one and two in the nation and lost two in a row and then got dropped to like twenty two. Like nuts, ACC's loaded, So a good win.

Fam you last night or Saturday Night hosted Southern previously unbeaten in the Swack Big Big Swack Conference matchup Southwestern Athletic Conference. FAM, it's the win, FAM, you gets the win. Go Rattlers. Nice win up there on the hill. They can just fix Brag. That stadium needs help. But I love being at Brag Memorial. And then FSU just yeah, we'll have a good conversation with Irish Chaffel in the third hour talk a little bit about that. Another loss.

It's the seventh No team has gone unbeaten and then started this poorly since maybe the nineteen forties or fifties, something like that. I think it was Maryland. And so this is uncharted territory in all of college football and the kind of notoriety you do not want this level of futility. Mike norvel I listened to the press conference after the game. He apologized for the outcome, and I

would never ever apologize for an outcome. I would be I would be choosing my words maybe a little bit differently. I think you apologize if you're not doing your job well, or if your coaches aren't or if the players are not performing to their capabilities. I don't have the answer to that, I just felt bad. I'm now to that place where I just feel very bad for coach Mike Norvel. He's trying. I can't say all the players are, because

I don't think they are. And I think a lot of you that have ever played sports know what I'm talking about. If you've played sports, you know effort when you see it, and you know effort when you don't. And I've played it, I've coached, and I know when there's effort and I know when there isn't. And I think they're lacking it in some some areas. I feel bad for so many of those kids that are trying.

Some of the coaches are pulling their hair out. Some I think are probably privately writing their resumes out because they're probably going to get let go anyway. We'll reset all that in a little bit twenty eight past little Late It's big stories in the press box. Next here in the Morning Show with Preston Scotting to.

Speaker 2

The Mad Radio Network. You are challenged to make a difference each and every day. Would you do that for us?

Speaker 5

Please?

Speaker 2

Please, just a little just try it to wid you. This is the Morning Show with Preston Scott Wednesday, I have pushed aside time and we're going to talk about voting.

Speaker 1

We're going to talk about amendments, We're going to talk about candidates, We're going to talk about philosophy and reasoning, and going to share an email maybe two. But I'm going to take time in Wednesday's show. I admit that I'm a little frustrated by what we've done with early voting and extending voting for so long. I'm just not

a fan of this. I'm a traditionalist. I probably could live with a week of early voting, but I just I don't like the mail in process unless you're overseas or you're documented to have been in the hospital and your homebound. But there have to be verifications. But there's too much. We're already seeing boxes of ballots left in backs of in the back of a car. That's that's that's a story that's out there, boxes of them unsecured.

It's just anyway, big stories in the press box this morning, just a little snapshot of some things US manufacturing contracting for the fourth consecutive month. It is the S and P Global Report, once again symptomatic of a struggling economy. If we are not manufacturing goods and served goods in particular. Obviously, where will they come from overseas? That is bad, And this leads me to something else we're going to do.

I'm going to try to find as many of the Kamala Harris ads that I'm forced to watch on television, and I'm going to play as many of them as possible and explain to you why they're either a wrong or b lying and deceptive. The guy who's out there wearing the baseball cap proud Republican, but I'm voting for Kamala Harris. I'm sorry. You're not a proud Republican. You're an idiot because all of the reasoning that you're giving in your ad is faulty. Well, no preston, everyone's toddled

to their pinion, but you're not entitled to facts. And what he's stating is just flatly wrong. Federal Judge example of what I was saying, Federal Judge Virginia stops Virginia from purging non citizens from the roles play and violated the ninety day quiet period preventing systematic changes before an election.

There's nothing systematic being changed. The change is that there are people that are admitting they're not legal residents of this country, that are registered to vote in Virginia, and oh, by the way, probably in every other state in this country. The systematic change is allowing them. And this was fascinating. Bill Gates is going to face trial in the Netherlands over COVID nineteen vaccine injuries. He is being held partially responsible.

Plaintiffs are alleging that Gates misled the public about the safety of the vaccines, and they're claiming that he knew the injections were not safe and effective. Dutch court has said, yeah, he is. He's part of the suit. He doesn't think he should be. The rich never think they should be. People like Bill Gates, never think the rules apply to them. Never.

Forty minutes past, now those your big stories. Go back and talk about the border here for just a second, dub Usla forty two minutes past, Kamala tim Democrats can't run from the border. They they can't run from the crisis they've created and allowed. They're trying to rewrite history the best they can. Some practical, pragmatic democrats that want to be reelected aren't. They're distancing themselves from all of

it the best they can. New reports come out from the House Judiciary Committee finding that the Biden Harris administration quietly granted amnesty to millions of illegals amnesty and their court cases are closed. Put some context into this. The report noted that since Biden and Harris took office, immigration court date backlog has increased four million new cases since the fiscal year twenty twenty one. Of those cases, for the fiscal year twenty twenty three, just fourteen percent of

illegal immigrants were granted amnesty. The rest were abandoned. Wait what abandoned? By creating this backlog of cases, In other words, by packing the court system with cases, they effectively allow these people to just go free. Homeland Security has failed to prosecute at least two hundred thousand cases and only eventually issued notices of a peer. So it's a game of yeah, we'll catch a few of them, we'll get a few of them into court, but most of them, oh, well,

we just didn't have time. You're here. It's a game. Got a very lengthy note over the weekend from a good friend, smart Guy, advocating that there needs to be a bipartisan approach to solving the immigrant and I wrote back. It was a very long note, and I wrote back, I said, this is a non starter for me. The idea was that, you know, a lot and Childs had had the gumption to do it right back in the day.

He challenged the federal authority. Yeah, well, lot and Childs, if he were alive today and took that approach would be kicked out of the Democrat Party. And anything that does not include mass deportations of those that have broken into this country as a non starter to me. To me, you can't keep a ship afloat by just bailing water. You have to stop the leak and then bail so you stop the illegal immigration into this country. Then you start purging the water people that broke in here illegally

and should not be here. And oh, by the way, another report here, one point six y two million out of the fourteen million illegally in this country are from China, Cuba, Nicaragua, and Russia. China the most noteworthy of the problematic nations that are in this in America. And oh, by the way, remember now we have Chinese incursions into our military bases.

The last report we saw was on average of two a week different military bases where Chinese nationals that are in this country illegally are attempting to gain an entry into our military bases. What is that? That's espionage And this is all happening again. It's acceptable collateral damage to Democrats, just like the deaths of Americans, because they want illegals voting.

They need the voting block because the Democrat Party is hemorrhaging members forty six, forty seven now passed the hour back with more here in the Morning Show with Preston Scott.

Speaker 2

It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott, and let's go back a few years.

Speaker 1

Barack Obama came into office and he wanted to fundamentally transform our country. He made a little difference. Obamacare was an egregious decision by the United States Supreme Court. John Roberts Wasey the deciding vote. He allowed Obamacare to exist even though it violated every law, every rule of judicial interpretation. John Roberts said, well, this is what they meant, and that when a judge says words to that effect, they

are an activist judge. Because a judge's responsibility is to interpret based on the language that was written and passed that law did not use the word tax in all the word tax didn't exist. But that's what Obamacare is. It's a tax, and so he inferred it. That was a mistake. Joe Biden really took the administration of Obamacare policies to a whole other level. Everything that Joe Biden has done is straight out of Obama, which is one of the reasons why I believe that Barack Obama has

been running this country. All of these terrible policies are from Barack Obama, because these are the policies that he stated he wanted. Kamala Harris is just an extension of that. She's a useful idiot to them. There are such things, there are such people. They're laughing at her behind closed doors. Trust me, they are. I've not met one person in a community full of Democrats that has said, oh, she's

a very bright, intelligent woman. Not one. She's a useful idiot, but she's she's continuing to carry the water of Baraco. She wants to quoting I do believe there should be some kind of reform to the court, meaning the Supreme Court. What are you talking about, No, seriously, what are you talking about? Well, They want to pack the court. They want to add justices. Now the justices don't agree with that, but that's what she wants to do. They want to

kill the filibuster. I don't care what side of the isle you're on. Republicans have argued for that at times. Democrats are demanding it. If she destroys and waters down the United States Supreme Court, we're done. We're close anyway, but we're done. This I thought was fascinating. The Washington Post is not making a presidential endorsement. Let's put some context to that. How big of a deal is that? The publisher, William Lewis CEO and opinion piece inside the newspaper.

We are returning to our roots of not endorsing presidential candidates. Oh really? The Washington Post did not offer endorsements for presidential candidates until nineteen seventy six. Since then, the paper has endorsed Democrats in every single election, with the exception of nineteen eighty eight, when it didn't endorse anybody. Why now, because they can't endorse Kamala Remember what I just said. You can't find anybody that thinks she's smart and capable.

The Washington Post conveniently uses this time and this election to say we're not endorsing, we're back to our roots, all right, when we come back parents, you might want to pay close attention to what's about to be talked about. If I passed the hour second hour of the Morning Show with Preston's Guy, Good morning, I'm Preston, He's Ose Show fifty two sixty three Doctor Joe campselor later on this hour, next hour, we will talk with Irischefell. Also,

Florida Highway Patrol Colonel Gary Howes will join us. Methinks he wants to talk about Amendment three because Florida Highway Patrol is usually the one dealing with fatalities on our roadways, and one out of four currently has marijuana involved. Can you imagine, now, seriously, can you imagine? Can you imagine if we approve this where you're going to begin smelling this stuff? No, no, this is and you're going to bankroll one company. You're gonna indemnify them. I'm not mistaken.

You can't sue them. Every state that's done this has regretted it, everyone, every one. And this is one of those genies once you let it out of the bottle, you're not putting back in. You're not going to get an amendment to cold get sixty percent to say no, we don't want it now. You're just not You got one shot at this, folks, too much, too much. I mentioned that this was a segment I wanted parents. I need you to really really listen here. Parenting has been

on the decline for a few decades. The advent of smartphones tablets has really allowed parenting to decline. There's a Florida mother that is suing an AI company, character dot ai because she is alleging that the company caused her son to kill himself. Found a lawsuit claiming the company created a product that caused her son to be addicted to the service, and the chat bot that it created, quoting character ai, targeted her son with anthropomorphic, hyper sexualized,

and frighteningly realistic experiences. The young teenager began having conversations with various chatbots on character Ai starting in April twenty twenty three. Conversations were often text based, romantic and sexual interactions. The mother, Megan Garcia, claims the loss in the lawsuit that the chat bot quote misrepresented itself as a real person, a licensed psychotherapist and an adult lover, ultimately resulting in Sewell's desire to no longer live out side of the

world created by the service. Young man was clearly addicted. The lawsuit said. He became noticeably withdrawn, spent more and more time alone in his bedroom, began suffering low self esteem, he became more and more attached to one particular bot called Denaris, based on a character in the Game of Thrones. When we come back, we're going to detail a little bit more of what this ended up becoming. The company has made decisions in the wake of this that could

be interpreted as an admission of culpability. We'll unpack all that. There's a warning here on the front end. Parents. This particular mother, in my opinion, didn't do a very good job parenting or child. It's your phone, it's your technology. It's your responsibility to parent raise a child in the way he or she should go, not the way they

want to. Ten past the Hour The Morning Show with Preston Scott talk a talking about a product called character dot AI, artificial intelligence and the death of a young man who killed himself. And that's a whole nother story, and we get to the parenting side of this as well. In the midst of this story, young man expressed thoughts of suicide, and the chat bot repeatedly brought it up.

He did end his life with a self inflicted gunshot wound back in February, after the company's chatbot allegedly repeatedly encouraged him to do so. Now here's where it gets interesting where it could be well, let me put it to you this way. I think that the mother's attorneys are going to allege that this is an admission of responsibility. Character AI has since added self harm resources to its platform, new safety measures for users under the age of eighteen.

They have placed warnings for lack of a better way of putting. New safety features include pop ups with disclaimers that AI is not a real person, directing users to the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline when suicidal ideations are brought up. I think that it would be reasonable for the attorney to suggest that these are admissions of responsibility, that they've added these guardrails in the wake of this suicide. Now, whether that holds water in court remains to be seen.

On their side, their head of Trust and Safety, Jerry Rorotti, said our investigation confirmed that in a number of instances, the user rewrote the responses of the character to make them explicit. In short, the most sexually graphic responses were not originated by the character, and we're instead written by the user. I'm not sure how a user rewrites that.

In other words, if you get I was on Amazon dot Com and I was going through the automated you know, queuing system on asking some questions about something I wouldn't I couldn't edit the responses of their AI system that's guiding me through the various sequences and things that I need to do to get an answer to my question. I can't. I can't rewrite that. So I'm not sure how valid that is. Here's the big, big picture takeaway. In the era of social media, we are the most

unsociable society in the history of man. We have young people that are weirded out by being looked at in the eye. They're intimidated by eye contact, they're intimidated by interpersonal interaction. They don't know how to interact with people because they have been poured into this mold that says this is your world, the online world. That's your world. And so moms and dads just first of all, know that these things exist, this type of AI technology. They're

creating these false worlds. There was a there was a movie made with Joaquin Phoenix where he fell in love with his AI partner. It was it was creepy, but it was a foreshadow of what we're seeing happen today. So, moms and dads, this is the this is it's the same basic tune, just a different chorus. This is your child. Raise them, Teach them to discern this kind of technology, I think is inherently dangerous. It can be helpful in

certain circumstances. Sure, like a lot of things. You know, there are a couple of bills out there that if you take them, they can help you. You take too many of them, they can kill you, right, I mean, this is no different. This is a technology that can be very useful and very dangerous. So we're the guardrails. You're the guardrails. Moms, dads, you are seventeen past the hour. Come back with a weather story that's a little interesting,

all right. I have documented for you how the National Weather Service and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has been pushing out storms being a category whatever, but the actual data does not match that inside their own documentation. I've shown it to you, I've told you about it, I've sent links to people. It's something that I just observed. Just things didn't add up. It's not to say that

there aren't storms. There have been. Absolutely there's damage. But when the National Weather Service continues to tell us that something's a category four when it wasn't even a category two, that's a problem. Now why are they doing that. They're doing that because it fits the narrative that they need to convince you of, and that is that global warming is real. But yet all of these stories they just don't point to that this was supposed to be a knockdown,

drag out season of hurricanes. We've had some storms. Anybody that's been in the wake of these things knows there's been damage, there's been rain, but we've not had the storm season that everyone said we were going to have. Now, don't roll your eyes at me, because I'm getting to the point. Headline from Fox Weather Hurricane season nearing extreme

levels even after sluggish summer. Hold on, here's the sub by just the number of named storms, the hurricane season is still lagging behind the bullish preseason forecasts admission, it's not exactly right. We were wrong. They were all wrong. But here's the rest of it. Using a formula known as ACE, this season could now be approaching extreme levels.

What the heck? First half of the sentence. Okay, the predictions were wrong, second half of the sentence, but we have a new way of measuring to show that we weren't wrong. And so when you look inside of this you see something called ACE.

Speaker 6

And even though the story shows that the number of storms is down below what the forecast was, but the Colorado State University meteorologists. Remember now one of the major hubs for these forecasts is Colorado State University.

Speaker 1

Go ahead, figure out why in the middle of America they're worrying about hurricanes. But that's whatever. Whatever floats your boat, right. They've created a formula accumulated cyclone energy, or ACE. See this is how they do it. Listen. It's a complex formula that takes into account each tropical cyclone's maximum sustained windspeed and duration. Let me help. You're not smart enough to understand that even though the storms haven't been as

bad they really are, they're worse. And so we've developed another way to help you out. Maximum sustained wind speed. Humhm, Really you mean that sustained wind speed that didn't break ninety that we were told was category four with Helene? You mean that one? Those are my numbers, that's their numbers. That's in their report, the post tropical cyclone report for tropical for Hurricane Heleen. I have it, I read it, I've shared it. This is the crap that we have

to filter through all the time. When things don't change, they move the goalposts. When things don't don't that was poorly phrased. When things don't add up the way they they want them to, they change the equation. They come up with a new formula. I'm merely pointing it out. It's up to you to do what you want with this information. I'm just telling you. You can either believe what they're telling you. You can believe your lying eyes. Right,

you see what you see. Storms happen. We're in a peninsula, we will have hurricanes. This just in But by god, they've been wrong a whole lot more than they've been right about anything. And it's all for one purpose, to manipulate your thinking, to control your actions, And it's just It angers me to no end that Fox is falling for it, but it speaks to what's happening at Fox News. Twenty eight past the hour, Big story in the press box coming up.

Speaker 2

The Morning Show with Preston Scott.

Speaker 1

That's a teaser. Not quite time for doctor Joe Camps thirty six minutes past the hour. It's the Morning Show. It's Monday on the program and the big stories in the press box. This is another indicator that we are in a very tenuous spot with our elections now Virginia, Virginia is stopping back up. The federal court at the behest of the Department of Justice has stopped the state of Virginia from purging non citizens from voter roles, calling

it a systematic change. How is that a systematic change when a non citizen is not supposed to be voting, How is it possible. It's not a systemic change to say that people that aren't eligible to vote are going to be removed from the voter roles. It's not a systemic change to say, you know what, we have a roster of people that are no longer living in the state that we're removing from the voter roles. It is not a systemic change to say people who have died

should not be on the voter rolls. And it is not a systemic change to say that people that are not citizens of this country should be removed. That's not a systemic change. That's fundamental. Second big story, Bill Gates will face trial in the Netherlands over COVID nineteen vaccines. This is a fascinating story. Dutch court has agreed that he needs to be in court. The claim is that he misled the public about the safety of the COVID

nineteen vaccines, that they were not safe and effective. And so Gates of course is say no, no, he should not be brought to court, but he's as of now going to be. And lastly, US manufacturing contracts for the fourth consecutive month, because after all, isn't that another sign of a booming economy. I mean, don't you have a great robust economy when the manufacturing sector of this country contracts four straight months? And I think if you backed up and looked at it even more broadly, I think

you would find that that's what's happened. In general. It's not just a four month trend. The regulatory environment created by the administration that's in charge is killing jobs. It's killing manufacturing. It's not look at the jobs. The jobs that have been brought back are jobs that were lost during COVID because of the economic policies of states and to a certain degree of the nation, Florida minimize that

damage by saying, no, we're going to stay open. We did it a little late, but we did it forty minutes past the hour. Doctor Joe next on the Morning Show with Preston Scott, The.

Speaker 2

Morning Show with Preston Scott on News Radio one hundred point seven WUFLA.

Speaker 1

There's that familiar lead in. Doctor Joe Camps joined us each and every Monday, most of the time with healthy expectations.

Speaker 7

Good morning, doctor Campson, Good morning Preston. You sent me an article and asked me to read it, and uh, it revolved around breast cancer, and so I read it. I read it again and I like it. Basically, this is a groundbreaking device that enables a more accurate breast cancer detection minus the discomfort of mammograms. And that's what

I want to emphasize. Yeah, because you know, as I've you know, listened over the years, apparently this can be excruciating pain, so it definitely is something that most women really don't want to do. So this new device is called the Coney kal and I g vera ver breast CT and basically what it does is it takes images of the breast tissue and it does it without compressing the breast. And what you're looking for is the density signals within the breast that can help one determine if

one needs to have a biopsy of the breast. Now, this is currently being utilized in several states including Arkansas, Alabama, Georgia, and Texas, and installations a plan for Florida, so it's not available yet in the state of Florida, but I thought it was a really interesting device. The detection rates are much greater even in tissue breast tissue density that's very difficult to image, and so this seems to be

something that we need to keep an eye on. That is going to be part of the armamentarian for detection of our early breast cancer. And I appreciated the article. It certainly enlighten a subject that for the last several years I've heard that was very, very uncomfortable for women. So I'm glad to see them advancing this technology and hopefully more women will participate in this as well, so that we can have adequate screenings for a devastating disease,

which is breast cancer. So thank you for the article. I'm always interested in new and exciting inventions that certainly increase our ability to detect cancers, particularly at an early stage. And when you can do it with high technology with less discomfort, that's a plus plus in my book.

Speaker 1

Boy, no kidding, and Joe, you know what stood out to me, and obviously I wanted to flag it and send it your way. What stood out to me was that they did something so simple, and they basically have women laying down on their stomach and they've created the machine in such a way so that the breast is encapsulated more comfortably as opposed to this typical mammogram procedure. And I thought, my gosh, how utterly simple but brilliant.

Speaker 7

That's absolutely brilliant. And you know, with this three D image in Preston, this is going to and it already has been a game changer, and so we continue to find ways to improve detection. And that's that's the game, and that's what it's all about. Preston, it's finding a way to make something more comfortable, cheaper with better detection.

I'm not sure about the cheaper yet, I haven't seen the part get there those, but hopefully it'll be in line with mimography and and we'll get the carriers and pairs to support this good stuff.

Speaker 1

As always, doctor Camps, thank you, sir.

Speaker 7

Hey Preston, thank you for the article. I'll talk to you later.

Speaker 1

All right, Doctor Joe Camp's with us here on the Morning Show with Preston Scott And yeah, ladies again, it's the Koenig c KO n I N G VERA v E R A breast CT Georgia based imaging technology company Coenig Health, and I mean it's it's remarkable and it's simplistic in how they made things more comfortable. And if you look up the technology you'll you'll understand what I mean.

It's just different and yet so simple. But as doctor Camps mentioned, it's coming to Florida when we when we learn where, we'll let you know because this is all about healthy expectations. Here on the Morning Show with Preston Scott. This is the Morning Show with Preston Scott.

Speaker 2

In an Amama.

Speaker 1

Morning friends, welcome Irish felle just a little bit talk a little FSU football. Colonel Gary Howes, FHP joins us at the bottom of the next hour. Talk a little bit about a three amendment three on your ballot. Hopefully you're not being silly and selfish and voting for that what you think you're getting, you're not. But time for our sons a thunder segment again. This is all about if you're going to say you're a Christian, act like it.

Something jumped out at me yesterday at church. Our pastor is teaching a series on First and Second Kings and going book by book, and we were in chapter twelve of Second Kings yesterday. Chapter eleven and then twelve and

twelve deals with the reign of Jehoish. And he said to the priest, all of the money of the holy things that is brought into the house of the Lord, the money for which each man is assessed, the money from the assessment of persons, and the money that a man's heart prompts him to bring to the house of the Lord. Let the priest take each from his donor, and let them repair the house wherever any need of

repairs is discovered. But then it said this in verse six, But by the twenty third year, the priest had made no repairs on the house twenty three years. So what does this have to do with you and me? First of all, it speaks to the principle of tithing, being obedient to that, not because you have to, but because you get to. Secondly, and maybe more importantly, although obedience is obedience, right, the delay, the putting off men and yes women. If you say you're going to do a thing,

do it. Honor your word. If you say to your kids, we're going to do this, do this thing. If you say I need you to take care of this by such and such a time, make sure it's taken care of by such and such a time. Now, granted, there are occasionally extenuating circumstances, but frequently not, And our kids then learn that your word is not so good that

you don't necessarily keep it. And when you have your expectations, they're not really expectations, because if they were and they didn't get met, you would have a consequence for that. You know, I'm not a big believer in allowance for kids, for example, for doing chores that they ought to do, for just being a part of the family, going over and above. Okay, that's allowance worthy, teaching them that if you do things over and above, you'll be rewarded. But

keeping a room clean. You shouldn't be paying allowance for things like that. That's like being thanked for not robbing a bank. I mean, I just don't think that's what you do. But I think this verse is. What this verse is really doing, is this verse is communicating to us the importance of doing what you commit to. And it's another way of saying, if you're going to claim to be a Christian, act like one, honoring your word to your kids, your wife, your coworkers, your employees, your employers,

represents your claim of being a Christian. You're an ambassador for Christ if you claim to be a Christian, and how you represent matters. All Right, We've got Iris Chaffelle standing by Little FSU football. Next on The Morning Show with Preston Scott. Monday Morning Show with Preston Scott. It's show fifty two sixty three, and that's Jose over there in Studio one A. I'm here in Studio one B, and all I could say is I'm grateful that I'm a fan of the Green Bay Packers, because at least

we're getting a few wins. Man, it's been tough. And we are joined by the managing editor of warhand dot Com, Irish Chaffell.

Speaker 5

Hello, Ira, Hey Preston, another week, another loss, But here we are. We're all in it together.

Speaker 1

That's exactly right.

Speaker 5

You know.

Speaker 1

I guess for some it wasn't as bad. That is, maybe he could have been expected. They certainly, you know, they they beat the spread. I don't know how Vegas does it. The spread was twenty one and they covered by a point. I don't get it how Vegas does it, but they did. What are your observations of the game big picture, Ira.

Speaker 5

You know, I thought, you know, I thought florest State had a good game plan defensively to try to give them a chance. You know, I think they you know, if you watch Miami play this season, they hit so many big plays. You know, whether that was you know, cam Ward just throwing the ball down the field, or whether it was you know, him scrambling and creating big plays. You know, think Florida State's defense did a good job of not letting him, you know, make big plays down

the field. And then I thought they contained him pretty well when he scrambled. For the most party, there's a two or three plays where he got out and they had plays, you know, to at least slow them down, so to where, you know, midway through the third quarters seventeen to seven game, you know, if you can get anything going offensively, you can get right back in it.

But they just never could get anything going offensively, and then the league just kind of crept away further and further way, so now it's twenty to seven, twenty three to seven, twenty six. You know, just they kind of just kind of pulled away slowly, so it didn't feel as embarrassing as it might have during the game. But then all of a sudden, you look up late in the fourth quarter and it's and it's thirty six to seven. So you know, it's the result that probably most people expected.

But you know, I think they gave themselves a chance. They just couldn't do anything on offense, you know, Ira.

Speaker 1

It's and I don't know if it's just kind of the law of diminished expectations. I just I watched the game maybe a little differently, and one of the things I noticed is I don't I don't necessarily think cam Ord played particularly well. He's not a particularly accurate thrower, that's to be sure. His mechanics are really sloppy. But I don't think there's a quarterback in the nation, and I mean this sincerely who could perform well behind the

offensive line that we have playing right now. Have that? Having that said, is there a consensus how this happened? I mean, you know, whether it's talking to people off the record or just your own observations and and pulling notes and thoughts with others, how did the offensive line get to where it is right now?

Speaker 5

I think it's a combination of a couple of things. I think one big thing is I think they the few guys that they had that played a lot last year, you know, you're you know, the guys that were turning starters, you know, I think they really were perceived to be better than they were based on having Jordan Travis. And you know, I think that Jordan Travis masked some of the problems they had on the offensive line last year, and then this year, I think they expected those guys

to play at a higher level than they have. And then the guys that they brought in the transfer that they brought in just were not what they thought they were going to be. They missed on those transfers. So now you're playing guys, you know, in that game on Saturday, they they played Jacob Rizzi at guard. That's the first time he's really played all years answer from Harvard. He was kind of the the third or fourth of those offensive line transfers, has not played at all yet, and

I actually thought he played pretty decently played. I think he played better than some of the guys that they've been playing, you know, but they've they've they've been playing younger guards to try to find something. And so you know, again for most of that game a guard, you Jacob Rasy and ca Andre Jones, two guys that haven't really played all seasons, so they're just throwing stuff against the wall.

And those are the guys that are new, you know, and and a lot of the guys that were returning just are not as good as I think that they thought they were.

Speaker 1

Irisha fell with us, managing editor at war chan dot com. More to come here on the Morning Show with Preston Scott, talk a little le f Su football with Irishafel, our friend from war chan dot com subscribe and you will be very happy, great content always. And I you know, I watched the postgame press conference. It might have been one of the shortest pressers I've ever seen, and it seems as though the media assembled collectively is almost in a state of despair, not even sure what to ask anymore.

It was an odd feeling presser.

Speaker 5

Uh yeah, yeah, And it also was a slightly different of our normal press corps. You know, a lot of the media have not been traveling to some of these road games because of you know, just the team's going so poorly and uh and so you know, it was kind of a different contingent of people. But yeah, I mean, I think from a big picture standpoint, it is tough to ask the same questions week after week after week. I mean it's you know, people will say, why didn't

you ask this? Well, we've asked it, We've asked it several times, and it's like, are we just gonna keep asking the same question week after week? So it's a weird place. It's a weird it's just a it's like, we have a press conference later today, you know, and some you know, look, I'll have I'll have friends that'll text me why don't you ask Mike Norvell, you know, if he's going to give back some of his salary this year. And I'm not asking that because I wouldn't

ask that to anybody who at any job. Hey, are you going to give back your money if you had a bad week at work? So are about two months at work? So anyway, it's a it's a weird time, and you know, fans are mad about some of the questions we're asking, But at the end of the day, you know, we've asked it all. It's we're two months into this and we just have to I think we have to ride out the next five or six weeks.

Speaker 1

Yeah, I'm laughing, because misery loves company. Iran. I remember back in the days of the USFL, I was the on the field guy for our broadcasts of the Arizona Wranglers when Mickey Andrews was the defensive coordinator for one season before he came to f SU to work for

coach Bowden. And I had to go into the locker room because we were the home broadcast and a Zona might have won one game all season, so I had to go in there and talk to Doug Shively every game and figure out how to ask him how he lost that one.

Speaker 5

Yeah, I did.

Speaker 1

It's it's a terrible I walked in there, like I just please, let me not go in there anymore. Let me let me take inspiration from your three two one column. Forget the questions so much as if you could ask one, two or three questions and get answers. What are the questions that you want the answers to from coach, even though you know you can't necessarily get those answers right now? What do you want to know?

Speaker 7

Uh?

Speaker 5

You know, my biggest thing is is if he if he realizes that he needs to make changes on his staff, because you know, everybody assumes there's going to be a lot of changes on the coaching staff. You know, this team has been poor. It has not meant any expectation. It's meant one of the worst teams in Florida state history. And and this, this swing from being undefeated to being one of the worst teams in school history is unprecedented.

And to me, I look at this staff, and I look around him and think he needs a lot of help. I think he needs better recruiters on his staff. I think he needs better you know, coaches on his staff. I think they need to do some things to just help Mike Orvell. To me out, you mentioned that press conference when he walked in. I mean, he looks terrible. I think this is taking a toll on him as it is it would on anybody, And I think he just needs better people around him. And I want to

know if he realizes that. Like I think, sometimes leaders internalize everything and put it on themselves and think about what they should be doing better. I hope. I wonder if he realizes he needs better people around him, and that's something we won't know until he makes changes or doesn't make changes.

Speaker 1

I'm of the opinion they need to have a quarterback play the entire game against Florida for a lot of reasons. But let the next three games tour at home. You got UNC at home, Notre Dame on the road in Charleston, Southern at home. If you were the head coach, how would you handle the quarterback situation?

Speaker 5

You know? Right now, I think I'm more. I think I'm more in a camp of I think Luke is the long term answer, so I think the more reps he gets, the better. But I also don't think you know, Brock is is appreciably worse or anything like that. It's not like I have any firm evidence to point to that. You know, Brock did lead the touchdown drive late in that game, and it made some nice places and he made some put nice plays later on as that Clemson

game went on. But I think Luke is the answer long term side would I'd ride more with him until you decide he's not the guy. But I think Mike Grove is probably gonna play both of them and uh, you know, continue this kind of giving each a few series, you know, until he figures out who it is.

Speaker 1

II ra chavelle with us. Another segment to go here on The Morning Show with Preston Scott twenty one minutes past the hour of the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Clearly, seasons not going as well as anyone would have wanted, except for Miami fans and Florida fans. They're real excited for how things have gone for Florida State. Ira. How important is it for for coaching orvel to find a way to win that game against Florida.

Speaker 5

Yeah, I mean I think that's obviously it wouldn't salvage the season, but at least it would, it would It would avoid like putting a big back exclamation point on you know, one of the worst seasons any fsuvans ever seen. And you know, I think, you know they're going to be Charleston Southern. I just still feel pretty confident about

that North Carolina this week will be a challenge. Now they've kind of figured some things out offensively, and Florida State's now favored, now an underdog at home and gets the North Carolina team that has not been good all year. But that Florida game, I know Florida has been playing better lately, but Florida over the next month has to play four really tough games in a row that there's a chance they'll go oh and four. It best maybe one and three during that stretch, and so florestat they

may get them when they've already been beaten down. So we'll see. I think the Knowles still have a good chance to win that game. But I know a lot of people are thinking Florida has turned things around it and will be tough to.

Speaker 1

Be three of the last four at home. But is dope Campbell. I mean, not just the diminished capacity, but with the way the season has gone is it a home field advantage?

Speaker 5

Ever, it'll be somewhat of a home field vtage. You know, a lot of people, especially the people who live in the area that have season tickets, are probably still going to go, especially because you can see some of these younger guys. I think you can talk yourself into going. Curious what the students do? You know, the game this Saturday, being a three thirty game, maybe you'll have a pretty

decent crowd. But yeah, it's not going to be what it was supposed to be because you know, in best case, Noar, you're looking at fifty plus thousand fans at this point. You know, I'd be surprised if it's much more than forty or forty five.

Speaker 1

Your recruiting coverage at Warchand is exceptional, second to none. Are your guys that are following that and that's their beat, that's what they do. Are they giving you any indication on what they're there? The recruits are being told now about coming to Florida State because clearly the sales pitch now is very, very, very different than the one that followed last season.

Speaker 5

Yeah, I think you know they're they're going back to kind of what you do when you're a bad football team, which is, hey, you can come help be the answer. You know, as they're talking to these recruits, it's not so much about you know, hey, join a program that's you know, just won the ACC or join a program that up all these numbers the last couple of years with Jordan Travis and Keon Coleman and Johnny Wilson. But the problem is they allured a lot of these kids

that had committed this summer based on that. You know, they saw what Keon and Johnny and Trey Benson those guys did, so they went out and they had three highly talented receivers. Three of the top receivers in the country were committed to Florida say this summer. Well, now they've all decommitted, including one this weekend, CJ. Wilie. So they've really lost all the guys that they won with that pitch. Now it's going to be going to other guys and saying, hey, listen, you can play early here.

You know there's going to be a chance. Look at all the freshmen we're playing this year. We know we have to turn this around. You guys can help us. So they've just had a pivot, which is what you know teams do in the situation.

Speaker 1

What is the consensus Irah on where you go in the portal? Do you go to guys that are at big programs and they're just not breaking through? Or do you go to guys that are proving themselves at mid majors and our football players they're not the two, they're not the four or five stars, they're the two three stars but can play ball.

Speaker 5

I mean, I think that that's where Florida State is probably going to go back to. That's where they had a lot of success. You know, you think back to you know, obviously Jared Verse when he was at All but he Braden Fist was a Western Michigan. Yeah, you know, you had some of those kinds of guys, but you also did have guys you know from from Jari and Jones and Fabian Lovet play at Mississippi State. You know,

obviously Jermaine Johnson played at Georgia was successful there. So you know, there's different ways to go about it, but I think they'll probably steer clear of what they went heavy on with this class, which was a lot of guys who were big name recrus coming into high school. Went to power programs didn't play much early and then Florida State brought them in. That was the case with all those Alabama guys mostly. That was the case with you know Jalen Brown at LSU and uh, you know

Marvin Jones Junior at Georgia. So now I think there's going to be you know, this is what we do. There's a pendulum, and I think they went that way and now it was not fruitful, so I think they'll go back to the other way going forward.

Speaker 1

AIRA is always thanks for the time. I appreciate it, my friend.

Speaker 5

Thanks questioning to care all right.

Speaker 1

Irisha fell with us from war chant dot com and covering FSU football this year is combat pay. You need combat pay to cover it. It's tough. It just is. And let me tell you something from first personal experience, asking questions of a coach like Mike Norvel when they're going through something like this is one of the most difficult assignments you can give any reporter anywhere. Anytime. You know, the fans that are saying you need to ask this, you can get back some of yourself. Oh stop it,

that's just silly. No media rep is going to ask a question like that because they'll never get asked for another question ever. Again. There's fair questions and there's unfair questions, and it's just tough right now because you're having asked the same questions because they're losing about every week. Feel bad for the team, I feel bad for the coaches, feel bad for everybody affiliated. Twenty seven past the Hour, back with more in the Morning Show.

Speaker 2

This is the Morning Show with Preston Scott.

Speaker 1

Thirty five past the Hour. It is good to be with you this morning, Monday, October twenty eighth. We're about to polish off the month of October and boldly move to election day. And there are a lot of things besides candidates on this ballot that will have remarkable impact on your life, and one of the most notably is Amendment three. Join me on the program is Colonel Gary Howse with Florida Highway. Colonel how in the world are you.

Speaker 4

Hey, Preston, good morning. I'm excited to talk to you. And by the way, thank you so much for infusing some positivity and common sense in the mornings. It's appreciated.

Speaker 1

We try, but I got to tell you now. You called in early and it's a little awkward for me to say to the kernel of FHP, tap the brakes, sir, tap the brakes slow.

Speaker 4

We're checking to see.

Speaker 1

In all seriousness, Amendment three. I have explained what I think are the fears of it. Give me the before. What you're dealing with now on the highways, when FHP responds to fatalities on the roads and so forth. What are the numbers involving marijuana in drivers.

Speaker 4

Well, let me tell you we you know, unfortunately, I have to report we kill about nine people a day on Florida roadways and a third of that is due to impair driving. What we're seeing through recent years is an increase, and we call poly impairments. I know you've talked about it on your show before where somebody will have, you know, multiple influencers in their system. And I'll tell you the thing about marijuana is it is a It's

a magnifier drug. The neurotoxins in marijuana will respond to other things in your system and really accelerate those impairments. And at the end of the day, marijuana it does

everything that we don't want to do driving it. It slows your reaction time, it reduces your hand eye coordination, your depth, perception, just your basic cognitive cognitive skills that you need to drive a vehicle safely is impacted by the use of marijuana a lot like alcohol, but again with marijuana, it's a magnifier of whatever else you could be using or just by itself. And you know, I know you've you've heard it talk. I heard it said before that you know, the marijuana of today is not

the same of the eighties and nineties and seventies. It's it's a lot more toxic, a lot more potent, a lot of higher THHC levels, a lot to talk about edibles. The edibles have very high THHC content. And it's just scary. What's on our what's what's on our roads? You know, I'll say for years people ask, you know, what's the harm of somebody smoking marijuana in the privacy, privacy of their own home, And you know, really there's there could be a lot of harm with it actually, and it's

because it's beyond that there. You know, there could be a lot more that's going on our roadways. And then that is in from other states. It's not an uneducated choice, right that that is in from the other states, and what they're seeing in states like Colorado, really there's like twenty something states now they have recreational use marijuana, and what they're seeing is higher emergency room visits due to impairments of marijuana. They're seeing fatality rates and crash rates accelerating,

getting getting much higher. They're seeing mergency roman visits in general, uh for overdoses related to marijuana. Again, could you have your poly impairments increasing? Your poison hotline calls are up on the on the flip side of that, outside of driving, even your property and your person's crimes are up in

those areas. And one thing that's different in Florida than a lot of those other states is their statutory You know, they went through their legislature and the people, the people's representatives voted where in Florida, you know, a constitutional amendment. This is going to be a constitutional right and law enforcement is not going to be able to respond and assist you like you're used to, like if somebody is

violent violating a law. You know, this will be someone's right if this passes, it's a right for someone to be smoking marijuana in public. And and I'll tell you not only dangers in our road aways. But the impacts of secondhand smoke on our kids, and and and being subject to the stench of you and your family trying to enjoy something in a public venue. You know, law enforcements is not going they've intervened because someone's smoking marijuana.

Speaker 1

Colonel stand by, stand by. We got to take a quick break here. We're going to come right back. Colonel Gary Howes with Florida Highway Patrol, My guest, we're continuing our discussion Amendment three. It is not nearly what you think it is. Even if you're in favor of legalized recreational smoking of wheed, it's not even remotely what you think it is.

Speaker 2

Forty passed the hour more to come. I do what you're talking about. It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Colonel Gary Howes with FHP.

Speaker 1

Colonel, I can't even imagine the nightmare that will be faced by troopers across the state dealing with this if it passes. Have have you even begun to consider what that looks like the enforcement of just something as simple as the driving that we're going to see increase where people are using it.

Speaker 4

Yes, we're you know, your your highway patrol is your very forward thinking and we do look down the road, but there's definitely some some impacts beyond just the immediate driving. But you know, as you said, just preparing for that. You know right now, Florida's DUY laws are very alcohol driven. You know, for the most part, you have your your point eight is your prima facia for someone being impaired

where their normal faculties are impaired while they're driving. Where with marijuana, those those standards are not set and and they're fairly controversial from state to state that has a recreational marijuana use, whether it be you know, three or

five nanagrams in your blood. But at any rate, and you know, Florida is a very alcohol B A C driven UH statute as far as d U I which was which is going to cause your law enforcement to very much have to depend on roadside sobriety exercises to establish a baseline from somebody in a short period of time and then and then judge that impairment and and and and are be able to articulate that it's going to be very difficult to a force right you know, right now, you know we have people out on the

roads they have marijuana, do the medical marijuana the people of medical marijuana cards, and and that's you know, we've we've navigated that pretty well. But if Amendment three passes, this is a whole different ballgame. It's going to accelerate, Uh, the the use is going to accelerate, the just the availability to just everyday folks, And it's going to be it's going to be a challenge for law enforcement statewide, uh to you know, to to be able to articulate

in a court of law someone's impairment. We have tools, you know, for us, you know, like I said, you know we have in car videos and you know, at the end of the day, you really have to establish and an impairment why someone's rumble faculties are impaired, which is kind of the foundation of all our dui laws. But it's not going to be because they go in and take a breathalyze or to us how traditionally it's done.

Speaker 1

Now well and not just you know, I mean, you're you're also going to be increasing the addiction. And I've talked at nauseum about it. It is a gateway drug. It will lead to more addiction. It's going to then impact our prison system. We talked to Correction Secretary Ricky Dixon last week about it, the consequences of the passage, and speak to this colonel if you can. There are some that say, well, legalizing it rids us of the

black market. Everything I've read in every other state says it enhances the black market.

Speaker 4

So you're a one hundred percent correct. That is a definitely a myth, or I like to I'll just call it a lie, but it's a myth. You know what happens is we're going to attack that first of all, and we're talking just a you know, a handful of megaweed companies that's controlling this amendment to get it on the ballot number one. So it's really a constitutionally UH sanctioned marijuana cartel in Florida is really what the amendments about.

And so when yeah, absolutely, when you know, when once when someone is driving and they have when they have marijuana in their system, Like I said before, it's a it is a just accepted fact. You're going to have cognitive skills delayed. You're going to be your hand eye coor nation is going to suffer. Your depth procession is going to suffer. It's not going to be a good scenario for you to be operating on the roads. And as as you're doing that. To your point, this is

a gateway drug. Every every piece of data that we see from across the country, especially these states that have gone this direction, down this roadway and regretted one hundred percent of them regret it. Every single one of them will tell you drug addiction on all types of drugs beyond merril juana has gone up as a result of the marijuana being available. Definitely a gateway drug.

Speaker 1

Colonel, my thanks to you and all the men and women serving our state. It's a dangerous job and I appreciate what you all do. Thank you so much, and we're here for you anytime.

Speaker 4

Presta, thank you for what you do. God bless you.

Speaker 1

Thank you, sir. Colonel Gary Howse, Florida Highway Patrol with me this morning and again, see here's what happens. Because this is a monopoly that's being established in the state constitution. The black market operators out there. You think you can grow at home, Oh no, no, no, no no, So the black market operators are going to grow their own weed. It will not be regulated in any way, shape or form, and they will then undercut the price that you're buying

at wherever the black market's going to thrive. Trust me. If you don't believe me, then believe what's happening in all the other states. Forty seven past the hour. Oh my goodness, tomorrow Jerome Hudson, my favorites the man, the myth. He's no legend. He's for you. He'll join us tomorrow. We'll have a manly minute. And I already have a prodigious stack of materials standing by some unbelievable sound for you to hear. That it's probably good for you to hear.

But the story I have here I wrote in the rundown. You don't say I could have written well, well, well, you remember when gorbel warming first got pushed out. I was on the air. I was telling you the settled science, what's not settled? Because as a point of definition, generally speaking, science isn't settled. You got gravity that's settled, got the first and second laws of thermodynamics. That's about it when

it comes to settled science. Another evidence to prove my point, and this is from a website that is so pro global warming. You should just be grateful that I go to sites like this and you don't have to. Here's the headline, climate models need an upgrade. Plants absorb thirty one percent more carbon than previously thought. I thought it was settled science. Now of course I'm being facetious. It's not settled. Here we are twenty plus years after the

great fraud began. I say began, was put on film, and none of the predictions of al Gorek have come true, none of them that's been documented, none of them. None of them. And now we've learned, Oh, those trees and plants, Yeah, they're pretty good at scrubbing the air, you know, pumping back oxygen, soaking up carbon that they need carbon dioxide, We need oxygen. It's an amazing thing God put together. Funny how that worked out. It's not settled. It's never

been settled, it never will be settled. And the facts support the climate just doing what the climate does. Good Morning Show one Bypassed brought to you by Bear No Heating and Air Conditioning, started the day with one Peter and then we did a Sons of Thunder segment where we got into seven Kings big stories. You can check those out on the podcast tomorrow, Joroam Hudson, many Minute, a lot of other stuff. We covered a lot of

ground today. Really good story from doctor Joe Camps, Women, new way of breast cancer detection, checking your breast without pain, and novel idea that would be right. Thanks for listening. I'll try to do better tomorrow. Have a great day.

Transcript source: Provided by creator in RSS feed: download file