Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Here the last couple hours it's five point two magnitude
in the San Diego area. So favorite place in the
world that I've ever been for the weather and just
the beach and all that stuff is San Diego. You
could talk to me out of living there if you
were going to tell me there were gonna be earthquakes. Yeah,
not that I was ever going to live there to
(00:20):
begin with. Maybe it's a good place to visit. I
don't know, how do you figure something like that out.
So that's going on. The Al Salvador president in the
White House with Donald Trump today, and of course many
people have created some opinions about L Salvador and when
it comes to the way that they are actively welcoming
(00:41):
it welcome something wrong word actively accepting American prisoners who
are migrants migrants prisoners.
Speaker 2 (00:51):
How do you say.
Speaker 1 (00:52):
That they are people who are being deported and just
are not being there are stick issues to send them
back to where their home countries are.
Speaker 2 (01:04):
But that's going on.
Speaker 1 (01:05):
It feels like El Salvador making some some good impressions
on Donald Trump, President of the United States, And we'll
have more on some of that meeting a little bit
later on. Also did you read this crazy story about
the guy who set the Pennsylvania governor's mansion on fire.
Speaker 2 (01:22):
I heard a headline. I read a headline. I heard it.
I heard a headline. How does that work? Well, I
just corrected myself. I read a headline. Memory that the
uh that that happened over the weekend.
Speaker 1 (01:33):
Now the guy has officially today come out and explained
why he did it. We didn't have a motive until
earlier today. So you know, you kind of is there
ever a good reason for anything like this? I mean no,
the answer is obviously no. But what do you what
are you attempting to achieve? Would be my big my
(01:53):
big thing, I don't know, like like you think something
is like like you do you somehow think this is
going to help you get to where you want to
go in this life. So Cody Balmer is his name.
He's retreating, receiving treatment at a hospital currently for a
medical event which is not connected apparently to his arrest
(02:16):
or the incident itself. Stop me if you heard this before.
But this is a guy who's in his late thirties
and he's got a military background, and I don't know,
it seems to be he seems to be a bit
cuckook for cocoa pus Can I say that on radio?
Speaker 2 (02:32):
Is that legal? I think that's allowed. You probably could
have gone with another serial analogy, but that one works. Yeah.
I think that's one of the best serial analogies. US
fruit loops. He goes fruit loops. Right, that's another good one.
Shredded wheat. I'm trying to think of.
Speaker 1 (02:47):
Something there nothing really there, oh, good, good, try though.
He's charged with domestic taranism, aggravated artists and aggravated assault,
criminal homicide and other counts, and uh, he just hates
Governor jos Shapiro. Apparently Donald Trump said today that there
was not he was.
Speaker 2 (03:05):
This guy.
Speaker 1 (03:07):
Was not a fan of Trump and a whack job.
I don't know if that's all true. Have you seen
a picture of Cody Balmer? No, I can google it
and you look. Look look up a picture of Cody
Balmber and tell me what you see.
Speaker 2 (03:17):
Now.
Speaker 1 (03:17):
I'm not trying to generalize here, but thirty eight year
old Cody Balmer, who had a military background again Army
reserves by the way, twenty four to twenty twelve, according
to an Army spokesperson, but had no deployments, but he
got up to the rank of sergeant before he was
before he got out Here we are thirteen years later
(03:38):
and he is. Apparently he walked an hour to the
governor's mansion with the intention of throwing his homemade Molotov
cocktails into the residence. He scaled a perimeter iron fence
that's seven feet tall, broke two windows with a hammer,
threw Molotov cocktails inside. Admitted it was aware that others
were at the home, and he knew it was a
(04:00):
possibility people could get injured by his actions. And he
allegedly said if he would have come face to face
with Josh Shapiro, Balmber would have taken his hammer and
beaten him with it. And that's what he said. Obviously
did not happen. And uh yeah, little little tiny sledgehammer.
This was overnight Saturday into Sunday, two am, as they
(04:22):
were finishing up celebrating the first night of Passover. Because
remember Josh Shapiro and his family are Jewish, so there's
all sorts of different angles, but we don't really know
anything other than the fact that he just dislikes him.
It's crazy, crazy. Did you find picture of Cody Balmer?
Speaker 2 (04:39):
Yeah? What is it is there? Is there more than
just the one? I'm almost looking for a couple of
different angles here, But which one are you saying? The
one where he's got the he's got the hood he's
you know, he's wearing a hooded sweatshirt and he's looking
and yeah, he's looking like he's had some better days. Yeah. Great.
Newsweek is literally not letting me exit their website. I'm
(05:00):
trapped here for the rest of my life. Wonderful. I
guess this is how they make sure that you are
the they are your source for news. They don't let
you leave the site. Yeah, well forget those guys. Yeah,
see you later, news Week. Let me see here. I
haven't seen another picture. It's just the one. Is that
the one that you've seen? Yeah, and he's smiling, but
(05:20):
that's not a happy smile. No, Is he smiling or
is he just kind of like the one I'm looking at?
And then there's another one that's kind of like of
his nose a little too close to the cam there, Cody,
not a great phone camera etiquette, is what I'm seeing.
Speaker 1 (05:33):
Did you see the other one where he's wearing the
goggles on the top of his head?
Speaker 2 (05:36):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (05:37):
Yeah, I mean, this is just this guy looks fairly disheveled.
I don't know what's going on with him. What has
to be broken in your brain to be like, you
know what I'm gonna do. I'm gonna set the Governor's
mansion on fire.
Speaker 2 (05:49):
Oh there's the goggles. Okay, yeah, that's a big pair
of goggles. What is he steampunk?
Speaker 1 (05:56):
I don't know, dude, I don't know even what those are.
Four Is that him taking a selfie before he throws
Molotov cocktails?
Speaker 2 (06:02):
Maybe it was before Comic Con.
Speaker 1 (06:04):
Either way, I think this guy needs to be put
away for a while and we need to do some examining.
And again, I don't want to make it sound like
this is like a military thing, because he did serve
in the Army reserves.
Speaker 2 (06:14):
For eight years.
Speaker 1 (06:15):
I don't want to make it sound like it's a
political thing, because we don't really know what. Like Trump said,
he's not a fan of Trump. We don't know that.
I don't have a lot of clues here in front
of me that anybody really has a real gathering of
anything other than the fact that this guy just hates
Josh Shapiro for some reason.
Speaker 2 (06:33):
But I don't know, you see pictures of the damage
he did too.
Speaker 1 (06:36):
I know that's the that's the governor's mansion, a historic site,
and there's some damage. There's some legitimate damage that was
done by this. And Shapiro and his family had to
evacuate obviously the house, just like you would your house
if part of it caught on fire. Yeah, hopefully in
the coming days we learn more about what the motive
was and just how messed up this guy might be.
(06:57):
But what do we what are we doing here right?
What is our society doing? Two sixteen, Yeah, if you
got some thoughts on this political violence? Never okay? Josh
Shapiro basically said as much. He had to answer questions
yesterday about this, and he basically said, we don't know
his motive. We didn't know his motive at the time.
Now we know the motives to be really just didn't
(07:17):
like jos Shapiro. I don't think that's good enough motive
for anything like this. But if you got some thoughts
on political violence and what we're doing wrong in this
society or maybe this is just a crazy guy. The
phone lines, as always are open at four h two, five, five,
eight eleven, ten, four h two five, five, eight, eleven
ten call us on news radio eleven ten Kfab and
Maurice Sunger. Just from what I have read and what
(07:39):
I've been told, the attacker basically wasn't a fan of
anybody's probably just a whack job, and certainly a thing
like that cannot be allowed to happen.
Speaker 2 (07:46):
End. Quote.
Speaker 1 (07:48):
Now do you know who reported? In the criminal complaint?
They say who reported? Who do you think reported Cody
Balmer or like identified him? I guess would be the
first correct way to explain this. Who do you think.
Speaker 2 (08:02):
The first person who smelled the smoke or saw the flames.
Speaker 1 (08:06):
But could give a name, like somebody who knows him?
Speaker 3 (08:09):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (08:09):
The thought, oh this might be him, and this is
what this? I know his name and I'll tell you
his name. Who do you think?
Speaker 2 (08:17):
Family member, an ex lover? Actually?
Speaker 1 (08:19):
Okay, he confessed to her and wanted her to call
police to turn him in, and he turned himself in
outside of the Pennsylvania State Police headquarters in Harrisburg. Can
we can we say with quite a bit of certainty
that this man is completely insane, maybe not clinically insane,
but we were talking off the air, maybe we think
(08:40):
that I think you and I are in agreement that
there might be some substance issues going on with a
man like this. And we also on this show talked
about the materials necessary to make a Molotov cocktail. It's
not that difficult, right, it actually is. Folks don't want
to give any any don't make them because it's illegal
to even.
Speaker 2 (09:00):
And that stuff. They it's really hard to get. You
gotta go to like Antarctica.
Speaker 1 (09:05):
Yeah, the things you need to make a fire thrower
thing is in the coldest place on earth, got it right? Okay, No,
but seriously, what are we talking about here? Terrible? It's
wrong with the people like this. Yeah, and there are
a couple of things. Could this be politically motivated? He
(09:27):
apparently just hates Like the only motive we know of
now is he hates Jos Shapiro. Seeing all the social
media hate going toward UH Governor cam Reynolds when she
announced she wasn't gonna run for re election, it's like,
you could do the best job in the world as governor,
and there are gonna be tenty plenty of people out
there that are gonna hate you. As far as I know,
in Iowa, nobody's gone to Governor Kem Reynolds house to
(09:48):
try to burn burn the mansion down. But alas uh,
it's crazy. But it's also the religious thing too, And
I had a couple of emails come in about that
Jos Shapiro and his family are Jewish. First day of
Passover was Saturday, feeling did you you know how Passover works?
It's kind of like Hanikah in the sense that it's
(10:08):
a multi day thing and it's really holistic, right, Like
it's a ceremony that is holistic in the way that
you are trying to you don't replicates, probably a bad term,
but you're kind of going through motions, or you're going
(10:29):
through steps or instructions or procedures or a process that
was pretty similar to what had occurred back in Exodus
would have been the time of Passover, and this is
the plagues. Remember learning about the plagues in ancient Egypt
and the pharaohs and the frogs and all that, and
(10:51):
then the Passover was the last one. Was well, you're
going to get your firstborn son because the pharaohs aren't
going to let the people go Passover. Put the red
over the door to signify that, hey, this house should
be passed Over because this is a Jewish place, right,
(11:12):
These are the Israelites. Do not take their firstborn son.
They're not the ones that are getting this punishment. You know,
I learned about the Passover by the way, about Passover
as a holiday. The Rugrats, Okay, did you watch those?
They had one on Honkah, they had one on Passover.
They had a bunch of different, like holiday specific ones,
but those two especially because I'm guessing one of the
creators was very Jewish, but they basically told the story
(11:35):
of Passover and Honkah in these specials in a way
that kids could understand. And it was I wouldn't call
The rug Rats like a educational TV show by any means.
Speaker 2 (11:47):
It was done. It's like it's any entertainment.
Speaker 4 (11:50):
You know.
Speaker 1 (11:50):
You watched it to laugh, and it was funny. But
in those two instances especially, and they had a Christmas
episode as well. But Tommy Pickles, who's the main character,
his mom's side is very Jewish and his grandpa basically
tells the story of Hanukkah and then tells the story
of Passover, and it actually, you know, makes some sense
for somebody like me who grew up in a Protestant
(12:12):
Methodist church, and you know, we talked about the Resurrection
in Easter.
Speaker 2 (12:17):
I did not actually see those from Rugrats, but I
learned about the passover from a similar source, a cartoon series.
It was Hannah Barbera's Stories from the Bible the Greatest
Adventure Stories from the Bible series. Watched some of those
two in church.
Speaker 1 (12:31):
Actually, yeah, yeah, kids react well to cartoons. I agree,
we need more cartoons in the world, says the cartoon lover.
Speaker 2 (12:42):
If you can teach me something and it's in cartoon form,
I'm down. Yeah, I'm lined in.
Speaker 1 (12:46):
I'm locked in loone, you know, like I want a
revolutionary war cartoon. I don't know how you do war
in a cartoon form, but.
Speaker 2 (12:53):
I feel like remember Looney Tunes when they used to
Have you ever seen those old cartoons that was like
kind of about World War two?
Speaker 1 (13:00):
Oh yeah, Actually, if I'm not mistaken, Daffy Duck debuted
in a World War two war bonds commercial. Yeah, essentially,
because those same animators were basically like, buy war bonds, We're.
Speaker 2 (13:10):
Gonna win the war victory.
Speaker 1 (13:13):
It was very like pro patriotic stuff. In the I
guess was like forty two forty three when you just
didn't know what was gonna happen.
Speaker 2 (13:21):
So when is Minecraft or Angry Birds gonna help explain
the Russia Ukraine conflict to the youngins, That's what I
would like to know. I don't think that's gonna happen today.
Speaker 1 (13:33):
We need yeah, we may need tensions to calm down
over there before the the apps get involved.
Speaker 2 (13:42):
Let's just say that.
Speaker 1 (13:43):
Okay, enough apps I think are involved anyway. All right,
So I appreciate your listening. It's Monday, it's two twenty seven.
Other things going on in the news where you're gonna
get to today. But one thing I definitely wanted to
make it an opinion about was there's one thing at
the Masters, which had an incredible finish yesterday, just an
(14:03):
unbelievable last round of the Masters. And there was one
thing that I noticed beyond the golf that I think
we need to apply to everyday life. And I will
tell you what that is coming up next on news
Radio eleven ten kfab Cash contest, A cash contest.
Speaker 2 (14:18):
It's back. Did you know that.
Speaker 1 (14:19):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (14:19):
I heard about it.
Speaker 1 (14:20):
Yeah, So uh, tell people how it works because we
want to get winners, not on just this station, but
our show specifically, because that's what we're here for.
Speaker 2 (14:29):
Well, you gotta log onto the internet yep, and then
you got to go to kfab dot com yep, not
dot biz or dot gov or dot edu.
Speaker 1 (14:39):
Is dot biz still a thing? Has anybody put their
business with a dot biz?
Speaker 2 (14:45):
The people who do regret it?
Speaker 1 (14:48):
I was gonna say, it just sounds like dot net too, right, like, well,
who does does anybody do the dot net? It's like
a thirty years old thing.
Speaker 2 (14:55):
Yeah, I don't know, I don't know. Was it Netscape,
dot net or something like that. Yeah? Yeah, what was
that about? Like was a network dot network or dot
com dot commercial commercial?
Speaker 1 (15:06):
And then we have dot gov which is still in
use it of dot org, which is for your nonprofit organization.
Your nonprofits exist there.
Speaker 2 (15:17):
Now people can just make it whatever they want dot
com No, but they can make it dot whatever they want. Basically,
I have seen some of that.
Speaker 1 (15:24):
You could do like dot all the countries have like appendages.
Did you know that, Like if you're in Australia you
have to dot au, dot com or something like that.
Speaker 2 (15:34):
Yeah, but probably it's not like that there. It's probably
just for us.
Speaker 1 (15:38):
Why don't we all just get like VPNs that nobody
has to worry about because you'll never know, like the
browser can't figure out where you are when you're using
a VPN.
Speaker 2 (15:44):
It seems like it could create more chaos. Is that anarchy?
Speaker 1 (15:48):
Because you see all these commercials for these VPNs that
are allegedly to protect your identity. I don't endorse any
of them. Maybe in my opinion, what change if I did?
But yeah, I don't know.
Speaker 2 (16:00):
I don't know anyways. Just go to kfab dot com.
Oh yeah, that's what we're talking about. The keyword will
pop right up there. You just go to the page.
Make sure you have your ad blocker pop up blockers
not on, because all they just pops right up for you.
It shows you a screen, It shows you a guy
who's who's holding up some money and has kind of
like a happy smile on his face.
Speaker 1 (16:19):
But you need to make sure our website is off
your pop up blocker. So if you have an ad
blocker or a pop up blocker, the way that this
operates and needs to like pop up a thing on
the interface to show you what you're telling them to
And if you're not seeing it's because you probably have
a pop up blocker. You need to disable that. You
need to disable that on that like on our page.
(16:41):
That's how you get to it. That sounds easy enough
because it is easy, right right, right, right right. I'm
trying to do the penguin from Batman. You know, oh,
oh yeah, what was his name? The guy's name which
the guy who played him or the character itself from
from from back in the day. You mean he's been played, well,
(17:02):
Danny DeVito played the penguin.
Speaker 2 (17:03):
Yeah, he did.
Speaker 1 (17:04):
I'm like, like, what was the guy from the sixties?
He was Mickey and he eventually was Mickey in the
Rocky series.
Speaker 2 (17:12):
Oh really, yeah, well he was.
Speaker 1 (17:14):
Mickey was the penguin in the sixties.
Speaker 2 (17:18):
Again, the Adam West Adam West, Yeah, no kidding? Yeah yeah?
How cool? Is that hilarious? Huh? The penguin eng when
And that'd been great if Rocky got real tired and
dehydrated one day and while Mickey was giving him a
pep talk, he just transformed into the penguin.
Speaker 1 (17:34):
Oh that probably what that probably would have been bad.
Speaker 2 (17:36):
Hey, Mickey, what's that? What happened to you? He looked
like the penguin from Batman. I think I'm tripping Burgess Meredith.
That's his name, Burgess Meredith. That's a yeah, that's that's
an actor from the sixties kind of name.
Speaker 1 (17:48):
Yeah, a guy who was born in like nineteen twenty, right, yeah,
Burgess Meredith. Yeah, and like what ten fifteen years later,
he's Mickey training Rocky in his heavyweight fight. Good for him,
he's got range. Yeah. Anyway, all right, So we were
talking about cartoons and stuff, and we were talking about
why kids respond to cartoons multiple times, so this was
(18:13):
you know, how people learn, how people gather information, whether
that's about you know, religious situations or beyond that. And
Bill says, how did most children hear their first classical music?
Think about that for a second, and the first time
that kids heard Mozart or van Go not vango? What
am I saying? Bach Bank goes a Painter, Beethoven? Like
(18:35):
when when was the first time you heard some of
that stuff, the Looney Tunes, you know, like like they
would they would like the music that would be over
the Looney Tunes would be like of classical music because
that stuff was made in the forties and fifties. They
weren't putting the popular stuff of the age in those cartoons.
Speaker 2 (18:51):
They might have tried to do that.
Speaker 1 (18:52):
Now, if you're watching, you know, like new age cartoons,
they're probably putting in some razmatazz like carb or Ice
Spice or who's the one that shakes your butt a
lot on the stage, probably put some of her in there.
Speaker 2 (19:07):
Shania Twain. Yeah, that's the one. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (19:10):
You just you don't hear a lot of popular stuff
in the classical stuff, you know. So I was got
some good violin and some good uh orchestra symphonic sounds
pretty good, pretty good. Brett said revolutionary war cartoon because
I said, hey, I'd love a revolutionary war cartoon. Well
apparently they did one, and this wasn't exactly what I
(19:32):
was talking about, but one called Liberty's Kids. And it's
like a it's like kind of it looks kind of
a cheap cartoon.
Speaker 2 (19:42):
Look this up.
Speaker 1 (19:43):
Tell me what you think, because this is the kind
of thing. It's called liberties Kids. Google that and not.
He's right. It looks like it's taking place in revolutionary times,
and I think it's probably a way to like teach
kids about the big things that happened in the United
States during colonial times. But I don't know, this seems
like something like one of those lame cartoons that somebody
(20:05):
would put together and show you when you're in your
social studies class when you're eleven.
Speaker 2 (20:10):
No, I remember this. I think they played them on PBS.
I remember these. Yeah, I got good, good, good thoughts
on them.
Speaker 1 (20:16):
Or you know, what I was thinking is more like, like,
why don't we just make like a legitimate cartoon and
we don't kid defy it, Like it's just like an
adults like doing adult things kind of thing.
Speaker 2 (20:27):
I think that, Well, I'll put it this way. If
I was sitting down to some Saturday morning cartoons and
it was this or Cowen, cow and Chicken or Batman
the animated series, you know where which way I'm leaning
Cowen Chicken of course, right. But now, if if the
substitute teacher popped this into the VCR, I'd be like, yeah, no,
for sure.
Speaker 1 (20:46):
I mean, based on the alternative in that situation. Sure,
but that's what I'm saying, right, But maybe I'm maybe
I'm asking for too much. I'm looking through the series, like, Okay,
so the first season I mean this is they do
these in chronological order. I mean they go in, they
start season one goes it starts with the Boston Tea Party.
(21:06):
It's weird how they kind of skip the Boston massacre, right.
Speaker 2 (21:10):
I guess they couldn't put that in a way to Yeah,
it might have been a tough one.
Speaker 1 (21:15):
Yeah, and that would have been how the Liberty's Kids
starts your first episode the Boston Massacre and you're our
parents walk into the room like, what are you watching?
Speaker 2 (21:25):
Mom? It's history?
Speaker 1 (21:28):
So they start with the Boston Tea Party and yeah,
they go through and they're like little twenty minute episodes
and there were forty of them. All right, you got
me not bad. Good job to Brett who sent that
in to alert me of that I might have to
do that. It looks like it's available on Prime. Should
(21:48):
we do like a Liberty's Kids marathon? Like pajama party?
Invite a bunch of people over you here in pajamas
watching Liberties Kids with a bunch of you know, forty
and fifty year olds.
Speaker 2 (22:01):
I'm worried about what could happen? What does that mean?
You'd try to make it fun, A drinking game would
break out, and then somebody would have to get their
stomach pumped because there's no way we're gonna have a
great time sitting around watching this for hours an hour,
no offense, but you know, oh, come on, give it
(22:25):
a try. You know, one of these characters probably has
like a weird thing they say, and then all of
a sudden it be like, all right, take a drink.
Speaker 1 (22:34):
Okay, you've proved your points. Well done, there, pal, that's
it's pretty good. You're right. I mean, if you get
a bunch of adults sitting watching cartoons, especially educational ones,
it a good good chance things aren't necessarily going to
end up the way that you'd planned it.
Speaker 2 (22:52):
By the way, this has got some really great voice acting.
Hoffman as Benedict Arnold.
Speaker 1 (22:56):
Whoopee Goldberg is Deborah Sampson, Walter Cronkite Arnold Schwarzenegger. Wow,
he's one of the Prussians. Walter Cronkite is Benjamin Franklin,
Liam Neeson is John Paul Jones. Okay, you know, I
don't know, maybe I could get back on board with this.
Speaker 2 (23:13):
Yeah, let's do it.
Speaker 1 (23:14):
Like Dustin Hoffman signs up. He's like, yeah, I'll help
you guys out. What role am I going to be?
I'll bring the kettle corn. And they're like, Dustin, it's
been Edict Arnold. He's like, oh, come on two forty eight,
Well be back, this is good stuff. Stick around News
Radio eleventon KFA.
Speaker 2 (23:30):
B Emery's songer.
Speaker 1 (23:31):
We were talking about cartoons. By the way, Oswald Chesterfield
cobble Pot. Brian wanted us to remember that the actual
name of the character. He wasn't just the penguin. His
name was Oswald Chesterfield cobble Pot, cobble Pot Batman. Anyway,
(23:54):
here you go four, two, five, five, eight eleventon. We're
talking about some of this stuff. Hey, Zoo's on phone line. Heyzus,
what you got for you?
Speaker 4 (24:01):
Hey, how are you doing today? Thanks for taking my call.
Speaker 2 (24:06):
Hey.
Speaker 4 (24:07):
There's a lot of different ones that I brought my
kids up on. There's one called Storytellers Adventures and are amazing,
Guitar Adventures and Odyssey. There was a gentleman I can't
remember the name, but, uh, you're talking about faith based ones.
Speaker 2 (24:25):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (24:26):
He left Disney and then he started doing all of
the Jesus ones and I think his last name is
rich you can look it up. But those ones were amazing.
But just like you said, but I was, I'm I'm
a like I was telling I'm an old comic book
geek and so I grew up with with Sunday Saturday
(24:48):
Morning cartoons like Space Ghosts and all of those that
were really good and the Old the Old the Old
series of those and the Humanoids and stuff. But like
if you go back to Adventures in Odyssey, they do
dramatization and they did amazing ones. The dramatizations on the
(25:12):
Lord of the Rings. They did the Lion, the Witch,
and the wardrobe. And if you get a chance to
go back, and you can, and it's.
Speaker 3 (25:21):
Very accurate when it comes to biblical and history. Like
you're talking about passover. The reason now we have passed
over for the Jewish people is when they were leaving
uh in order to have the that depth s parent
passed over them, Yeah, they had to have the blood
of the lamb on on their dorm door jam and
(25:46):
when you do it in there in that way, it
kind of represented the crme that turns over death. So
now we go back to the New Testament with Jesus.
We now have Jesus to was the perfect Lamb, which
we're going through Holy Week now, Yeah, Jesus, what a
perfect clam And because of the blood that was shed
on the cross you can now for free, will you
(26:08):
can be passed over from right? What didn't break?
Speaker 1 (26:13):
Yeah, and he's just some I'm running out of time, buddy,
but I appreciate it. This is really good stuff. Thanks
for calling in today. Yeah, I mean educational stuff for
the ghettos. So I mean, I love that. We'll talk
a little bit more about this, and you talk to
you about the thing that I discovered watching the Masters
this week, and then maybe we need to talk about
instituting with the rest of our lives, not just at
Augusta National. We'll do that and plenty more coming up
(26:33):
in the three o'clock hour on news radio eleven ten
KFAB