Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Back.
Speaker 2 (00:00):
So glad you're here today. There's so many reasons to
be happy today, especially happy if you're a Republican. So
in the Big Three, President Biden has crawled out of
a hole he was hiding in in Delaware after four
awful years in office to reinsert himself into the national spotlight.
Speaker 3 (00:23):
Social Security is more than the government program. It's a
sacred promise.
Speaker 4 (00:28):
We made.
Speaker 3 (00:28):
As a sacred promise, seventy three million Americans received Social Security.
Speaker 2 (00:35):
Yeah, he's still doing that whispering, shouting thing, but that
doesn't matter. That doesn't matter. It's the fact that he
showed his face again. This is exactly what the Republicans needed,
a reminder of how bad the last four years were.
Because Donald Trump's approval ratings starting to dip a little bit,
and this will be a reminder. Oh yeah, by the way,
(00:56):
he lied about Social Security. Social Security is not going
to be cut. That promise has been made over and
over and over again. The Democrats want you to believe
that it's being cut. What they're doing is cutting the
Social Security Office and all the fat and the fraud.
Expect charges to be coming, by the way, and the
(01:17):
retrial of movie Mogul Harvey Weinstein starts in Manhattan. He
has made the obscene claim that one or at least
his lawyers have that one of the actresses that is
accusing him that they claim it was consensual sex.
Speaker 5 (01:36):
This was not consensual. This was sexual assault with force.
Speaker 2 (01:42):
Jerry's selection continues today, and Donald Trump apparently was dead
serious when he said he wants to send violent American
born criminals to a prison in l Salvador. That's what
he said during an interview with Fox News.
Speaker 6 (01:56):
I call him homegrown criminals grew up and something went
wrong and they hit people over the head with a
baseball bat. We have and push people into subways just
before the train gets there, like you see happening. Sometimes
we are looking into it and we want to do it.
Speaker 2 (02:15):
And the world lost the game show legend. He was great,
so many game shows that he did, including Tic Tac
Dough Wink. Martindale, the name that became synonymous with game
show host, has died at the age of ninety one.
But now I want to talk about Letitia James. And
I'm just as happy about this story as I am
(02:39):
for President Biden inserting himself back into the spotlight. Because
Letitia James has been accused of real estate fraud. Accused,
I shouldn't even say accused. She's probably going to be charged.
It's been referred to the Justice Department. And what's amazing
(03:02):
is that our own words are coming back to bite her.
First of all, the case she brought against Donald Trump
should never have been brought. It was a ridiculous case,
and I'm sure it's going to be thrown out in appeal.
I've been waiting for the appellate ruling because they went
after her lawyers in the Attorney General's office. The judges
(03:24):
went after them and said, wait a second, let me
get this straight. A case like this has never been
brought before. He paid back the entire loan. Remember he
was accused of overevaluating a property to get a loan.
This kind of case has never been brought before. There
were no victims, it didn't harm the public, and he
(03:44):
repaid the entire loan on time with interest. So why
are we even talking about this case. They even talked
about censuring the lawyers for bringing the case in the
first place. But now we've been waiting months. This is
before the election that they heard this case, and it's
been months waiting for this decision, and now we have
(04:08):
this referral, this referral of charges by the Federal Housing
Finance Agency Director William Pulty sent a missive to Attorney
General Pam Bondi and Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche alleging
that James had falsified records to get home loans for
(04:29):
a property in Virginia that she claimed was her principal residence.
This was back in twenty twenty three, so she if
this is true, she just did this. She knew that
she did it, and she still went forward with the
case against Donald Trump that occurred in late twenty twenty three.
(04:53):
How stupid do you have to be? So this was
just weeks before she began the civil fraud trial against
the Trump Organization for over inflating the values of many
of its properties, and that ended up in a four
hundred and fifty four million dollar judgment because it was
(05:13):
held in New York. Even though the case was ridiculous,
it was held in New York. But she'll remember what
she said over and over again, and these words are
I hope she eats these words. It's going to come
back to haunt her.
Speaker 7 (05:26):
It's important that attorney's general representing our respective.
Speaker 5 (05:31):
States stand up and enforce the rule of law.
Speaker 2 (05:37):
Well, not if you're falsifying business records, you shouldn't.
Speaker 5 (05:41):
The President of these United States is.
Speaker 2 (05:44):
Not above the law, and the Attorney General of New
York is not above the law.
Speaker 8 (05:51):
No matter how rich, powerful, or politically connected you are,
everyone must play by the same rules.
Speaker 2 (05:59):
Or if you're a Attorney General of New York, you
should be playing by the exact same rules. Remember the
part that's so insidious about this, the part that makes
your blood boil, is that she didn't She had to
search for a case because she promised she was going
to get Donald Trump on the campaign trail. Remember that.
(06:20):
Remember that she proudly said at parties and in speeches
that she was going to get Donald Trump.
Speaker 9 (06:29):
Please sue him for us.
Speaker 7 (06:30):
We're definite assume we're going to be a real paining.
Speaker 2 (06:34):
That was somebody saying to her, please sue him, and
she promised that she would. So she had to find
the case. She had the person she was going to accuse,
But she had to find a case. That's not the
way the law is supposed to work. It's not the
(06:54):
way the law is supposed to work. That's not how
you're supposed to campaign. You don't campaign saying this guy
you don't like politically, I'm gonna bring him down. I'm
gonna sue him. I'm gonna make up something and I'm
gonna sue him, which is exactly what she did. She
made up something. Who cared if he overvaluated his properties,
(07:15):
which he didn't, But if he did, so what he
was able to get loans and he paid it back.
There were no victims with all the interest, but this
case against her. It wasn't just the one house in Virginia.
In February of two thousand and one, James also purchased
(07:36):
a five family house in Brooklyn, but consistent this is
according to this is, according to the referral, consistently misrepresented
the same property as only having four units in both
building permanent applications and numerous mortgage documents and applications. So
(07:58):
twice she lied on official papers, on legal papers to
buy properties that she wouldn't have already been able to afford.
Here's Jonathan Turley.
Speaker 10 (08:14):
Well, obviously, the irony is perfectly crushing. This is a
person who prosecuted Trump for everything short of ripping a
label off a mattress. And among the charges that were
brought in New York in not just the civil but
the criminal case, was making false or misleading statements to
financial institutions.
Speaker 2 (08:36):
Yeah, the irony is absolutely thick. But in this case,
this isn't a made up case. This is real. These
allegations are based on actually falsifying records.
Speaker 10 (08:50):
If we apply to Leticia James standard that she created,
there'd be little question here. This seems pretty straightforward. What
do they What the administration is saying is this was
not her principal residence. In fact, as a New York
elected official, she had to say that her principal residence
(09:11):
was in New York. This was an out of state residence.
Speaker 2 (09:14):
Now expect her to claim that these are false charges.
Expect her to claim this is just the Trump administration
coming after me. But the proof is going to be
in the pudding. We have to wait to see when
these charges are filed, and believe me, charges are coming,
and then the trial of Letitia James, unless she pleads
(09:35):
guilty and resigns. Wouldn't that be a wonderful day. Here's
an interesting question for you. Maybe you know the answer.
What the heck are oyster girls? And why have they
become a New York party essential. We'll talk about it next,
and you want to add to the conversation, just leave
us a talk back talk about Letitia James. If you want,
(09:56):
go to seven to ten WLR and the iHeartRadio app
and click the microphone and when you're there, put seven
to ten WOOR on your presets. Hey, welcome back to you.
Have you ever heard of oyster girls?
Speaker 5 (10:08):
No, but I love oysters.
Speaker 2 (10:10):
Well, I don't know if you'd love the servers here.
I know that men in New York apparently love these
servers apparently, and this is according to the New York
Post Oyster girls. I'm sorry, I can't take that call
right now. Oyster girls became a New York City party essential,
with top events eagerly shelling out for sexy service.
Speaker 5 (10:35):
So we're saying this is like the new shot girl.
Speaker 2 (10:38):
Yes, but they're oysters.
Speaker 8 (10:39):
Right because the girls used to, you know, beautiful women
would walk around with the shots, you know, at a party.
Speaker 5 (10:45):
Yeah, bottle service or bottle service.
Speaker 2 (10:48):
Yeah, but these are oysters.
Speaker 5 (10:49):
I know.
Speaker 8 (10:50):
But we got an oyster and which she's not an
alcoholics so no, yeah, but whatever that's calories reason right.
Speaker 2 (10:59):
Well, put the two and two together. You have a
very most of them. A lot of them are models.
Speaker 5 (11:04):
They're gorgeous.
Speaker 2 (11:06):
They are they are gorgeous, and they walk around with
a tray of oysters to give to you. Now, you
don't have to be freud to figure out what's going
on here. It's a fantasy. It increases a fantasy, and
it really I consider it a fantasy. But these are
very rich men.
Speaker 8 (11:28):
Okay, I'm against the oyster girl there to take advantage
of these young women.
Speaker 5 (11:36):
I don't like it.
Speaker 2 (11:38):
Well, they're getting paid extremely I was going to say,
but the tips are pretty good. The tips are great.
Speaker 4 (11:44):
Yeah, pep.
Speaker 11 (11:45):
All they're doing is handing you an oyster and making
a lot of money, Like sign me is fantasy.
Speaker 2 (11:51):
And anything that happens after that is their choice.
Speaker 5 (11:55):
Oh wait a minute, I didn't know that was Is
that part of no?
Speaker 2 (11:59):
No, no, no, no? Oh okay, wired that's not required.
I'm just saying, did I miss? Nothing is forced upon them? Okay,
that's what I'm saying, So that what they're doing is fine, ye,
except that I would believe that most feminists would be
against this, wouldn't.
Speaker 5 (12:16):
They making a ton of money for handing someone an oyster.
Speaker 2 (12:19):
No, okay, all right, you.
Speaker 5 (12:22):
Got two women right here with thumbs up on the oyster.
Speaker 2 (12:25):
Girls.
Speaker 11 (12:27):
Go ahead, ladies, you can pass out your oysters and
make more money than I do.
Speaker 5 (12:31):
Thank you. It's great, Absolutely, God bless.
Speaker 2 (12:36):
And what they are doing is flaunting themselves and their
bodies and handing out and that's okay. I just wanted
to make sure, Hey, that's fine with you.
Speaker 5 (12:45):
And I actually am fine with that.
Speaker 8 (12:47):
I absolutely And if some man wants to throw his
money away, go for it.
Speaker 5 (12:53):
Love it.
Speaker 2 (12:55):
Reef go Meyer is the mastermind behind this operation that
you women are fine with. I find it personally offensive.
Speaker 5 (13:05):
Good for you.
Speaker 8 (13:05):
You should say that in public, Larry, Yeah, I just did.
Speaker 5 (13:09):
I know. I'm glad you did.
Speaker 2 (13:10):
I just did. I cannot believe that women are being
used in this way, but that's fine, that's fine. You
have your positions. I have my position.
Speaker 5 (13:19):
Women have been used in this way for a lot
of money for it.
Speaker 2 (13:24):
I thought times have changed. But if money is worth it,
then that's fine.
Speaker 5 (13:29):
Worth what you're handing someone an oyster.
Speaker 8 (13:31):
Yeah, you're it's the man who's obviously making more of this.
She's handing out an oyster. Okay, Yeah, No, Crash just
said something about plans. They're not shucking clams.
Speaker 2 (13:43):
No, please, I can't say that. No, but you did anyway.
So I'm glad. I'm glad we know where we all
stand on all this because this has become a really
hot and the and the women, by the way, say,
it's the easiest job in the world.
Speaker 8 (14:00):
There's nothing illegal about it. And if they want to,
you know, if you wonder what, walk.
Speaker 5 (14:06):
Around hand out oysters and make a ton of oysters.
Speaker 2 (14:10):
Okay, and where are you going with that? Anywhere?
Speaker 12 (14:12):
No, that's it.
Speaker 5 (14:13):
They're handing out oysters. That's it.
Speaker 2 (14:16):
That's fine.
Speaker 8 (14:16):
I didn't read anything more into the story than that,
Larry just saying, yeah, I didn't look at it at
anything else. It's a new party attraction.
Speaker 2 (14:26):
Yeah, And all of us would encourage our daughters to
do this.
Speaker 8 (14:30):
If my daughter wanted to do it, I would, you know, say,
just be safe, you gotta be smart.
Speaker 5 (14:35):
Okay, all right, and can you help pay the mortgage?
Speaker 2 (14:41):
Well, hold on now.
Speaker 5 (14:42):
Now you're going to pay yourself phone bill.
Speaker 2 (14:44):
Now you may have just convinced me.
Speaker 11 (14:46):
I was like, are you going to take over your
car because they make more than all of us combined.
You have to understand for a short amount of time
in their life and a very easy skill set.
Speaker 2 (14:56):
Yep, I'm sold. If we turn around then, yes, exactly,
I'm all on a thousand percent.
Speaker 8 (15:03):
Would you would you have a problem if there was
a bachelorette party and your son was hired to do
the same thing, you would?
Speaker 2 (15:13):
Yeah? I would, all right, I would. I would have
a big problem with that because we've paid a fortune
for his education and that's what he ended up doing.
Speaker 5 (15:22):
This as a side house dab market's hard.
Speaker 2 (15:25):
Yeah, hopefully he did well enough that he wouldn't need
that as a side hustle. Uh. Anyway, Now let's get
the news with Jacqueline Carl at nine to thirty Jacqueline.
Speaker 5 (15:34):
Good Morning.
Speaker 11 (15:34):
Hong Kong's postal service will stop sending some mail to
the US beginning April twenty seventh. The Hong Kong Post
said the move is in response to US tariffs on China,
which it described as bullying. And there are new rules
that go into effect today that crack down on unreadable
license plates.
Speaker 12 (15:54):
In New York City, vehicle owners now faced fifty dollars
fines for license plates that are obstructed even when parking
and standing. Fines can be issued for plates with dirt, rust,
plastic or glass covers if they're deemed not readable by
the human eye or cameras. This is an effort by
the city to crack down on folks using ghost plates
to avoid tolls and evade automated camera enforcement of traffic laws.
(16:16):
I'm scappringle wr.
Speaker 11 (16:17):
News, So I'm gonna tell you a story, but I
want you to think about this question. What is your
smartphone battery life panic threshold? According to The New York
Post a survey conducted by Talker Research, thirty eight percent
is America's panic percentage when it comes to battery life.
They surveyed two thousand Americans pinpointed precisely what level of
(16:39):
remaining phone battery people reach before they start to worry
or seek out a way to get charged. Gen Z's
threshold for worries starts building it just forty four percent
of battery life. Millennials get a little nervous around forty three.
Gen Xers allow themselves a little more leeway they go.
Speaker 5 (16:55):
To thirty eight.
Speaker 11 (16:56):
Boomers are the most relaxed generation when it comes to
the phone batter waiting until about thirty four percent on
average to start looking for an outlet. Who gets panicked
at your phone and needing like a battery charge?
Speaker 5 (17:10):
Like what, what? Where does it have to be for
you dead?
Speaker 4 (17:14):
How?
Speaker 5 (17:14):
Really?
Speaker 2 (17:15):
Yes? I do? I forget all the time to charge it.
I forgot right now. I should be charging it right now.
Speaker 8 (17:20):
And it's funny that you said that, because my phone
is usually always charged, and last night my connection must
not have worked. So I woke up at forty five
percent and right now I'm at thirty and I know,
and I get a little lower, that battery turns red,
you know, And that's when I'm.
Speaker 5 (17:36):
Like, really yeah, I'm like, oh gosh, I gotta find it.
That's a charge. I'm at eighty. Once it hits eighty,
I have to find a plug. Oh wow, wow, I
got I gotta work on that, Jacqueline, I certain, this
is so much. I have to work on bigger fish
to ride.
Speaker 11 (17:52):
But let's head over to Wall Street at the opening bell,
shall we like? For instance, this, the Dow open down
one hundred and eighty four points, S ANDP opened down
sixty points, and the Nasdaq opened down three hundred and
thirty seven points.
Speaker 2 (18:08):
Thank you very much, jack Mancarl who was talking about
AI just a little while ago, and now a CEO's
bold new hiring policy prioritizes AI over humans. Yeah, it started.
Teams must prove why AI can't meet their needs before
requesting more resources. Is this the future of the workplace?
(18:32):
We're gonna ask career advice expert Greg g and Grande
next welcome back. Look, there's great trepidation even fear of
introducing AI into the workplace, but this next story goes
beyond the pale. A Shopify CEO wants new hires to
prove they can do the job better than AI. So
(18:57):
what would the next step be? Replace them if they
can't do the job with AI. I don't even know
where that is going. But Greg g and Grande may
he's the career advice expert. You can check him out
on go to Greg dot com and he's with us
every week with his expertise. So so, Greg, explain this
story to me. How do you feel about it?
Speaker 1 (19:20):
Well, I don't want to scare anyone, but the future
is now and if you don't jump on this, then
you're going to get left behind. What the CEO said was.
It wasn't asking new hires to prove they can do
the job better than AI. It was saying to current managers,
(19:43):
before you ask for resources or to hire new people,
or to even backfill people who you know somebody leads,
you have to prove to me that AI can't do
that job before we have resources. And you know it's shopify.
(20:03):
So he's made big headlines, but this is actually going
on across corporate America already, just not making headlines.
Speaker 2 (20:11):
Oh well, that's good. I had the story wrong, and
I'm actually glad I did because that makes a little
bit more sense. But do we know how many jobs
have been replaced by AI so far?
Speaker 1 (20:25):
We don't know that yet because I think it's still
too too soon. But this year I can tell you
just from my network and a lot of the companies
that I know, as they are planning for their next
fiscal year, whether it's the calendar year of twenty twenty
six or if it's some point this year, all budgeting
(20:48):
for most corporations is going to include how do we
dramatically increase productivity cut costs by implementing AI, which will
re result in some jobs being eliminated and other jobs
is being augmented by the different tools and technology. You know.
(21:08):
The World Economic Forum estimates that half of the workforce
is going to need to be completely reskilled within the
next five years because of AI, and more than half
of students who are entering college now will likely be
in jobs at some point in their career that don't
currently exist because of AI. So the time, it doesn't
(21:33):
matter where you are in your career, if you're just
entering or if you're middle of senior management, now is
the time to make sure that you are fully fluent
in how to use the tools. It doesn't mean you
need to be a coder or an engineer, just like
you don't need to be that to use the internet.
Think of it that way.
Speaker 2 (21:52):
Yeah, everything has changed because of AI. But we were
sold a bill of goods because when they were first
talking about AI, they kept saying, Oh, no, no, it's
not can replace anybody. It's a tool. You're gonna be
able to use this in your job. You're gonna be
able to do your job better. But it sounds like
the replacements of jobs has already started.
Speaker 1 (22:11):
It has, but it will be both. There will be
some jobs that will that will become extinct because of
what AI can do, but faster and better, just more efficiently.
And there's virtually no job that isn't going to be
impacted in some way, maybe not you know, make it defunct,
(22:34):
but will completely change how one does that job. So
it's going to be both. There will be some jobs,
particularly obviously in manufacturing, a little less so in the
service sector, but anything having to do with research and
writing and content creation, data analytics, and even coding, those
(22:57):
jobs are going to change dramatically and are going to
go away.
Speaker 2 (23:01):
Are we at a point now where companies have complete
trust in AI?
Speaker 1 (23:08):
No? No, There is a lot that most people still
don't know about AI security, AI privacy, how these language
models learn, and what they do with the information. So
there's a whole kind of workstream and committees and legislation
(23:32):
about how do we ensure that AI is a force
for good and doesn't compromise personal security confidential information.
Speaker 2 (23:44):
It is interesting that schools have changed on AI too.
It used to be and I have kids that are
both college age and high school agent. It's happening in both.
It used to be you can't use AI, don't use
AI for your paper if I catch you checking, and
there's programs to check if somebody used AI. You're gonna
get an f That has now changed that you can
(24:08):
use AI, but you have to you have to give
a reference that you did, and you have to talk
about where you used AI in your paper. I think
that's not only a huge change, but from what you're saying,
it's good that kids are learning how to use it
like that.
Speaker 1 (24:25):
Absolutely, it is fundamentally changing education. And it was folly
to think that students wouldn't be using AI in the
same way to think that they wouldn't be using the internet.
You have to think about it as just a tool.
Of course, it could be used for cheating, but so
could the Internet. Cheating has been going on since the
(24:47):
beginning of time. The tools and technology have just gotten better.
But incorporating AI as an incredibly powerful innovative tool to
enhance an augment learning is what the future of education
is all about.
Speaker 2 (25:07):
And to augment the workplace. So you're saying we should
we shouldn't be scared of AI.
Speaker 1 (25:14):
No, And if you are and you avoid it, you
are going to make yourself more vulnerable in.
Speaker 4 (25:19):
Your job and your career. So you don't want to
sound old. You don't want to say in my day
right and talk about the Internet as like the greatest invention.
You want to sound current and it doesn't take a
lot to be current on AI. Like I said, you
don't have to be an engineer. You just have to
know what the tools are and how to.
Speaker 1 (25:39):
Use them and be an advocate for it, and that'll
make you sound and be more current in the workplace.
Speaker 2 (25:47):
Greg g and Grande Career advice expert. Check them out
at go to Greg dot com. Thanks Greg, thank you.
When we come back, we'll have a recap of today's
show and my final thoughts. Democrats have decided to rally
around Kilmar Albrago Garcia, the MS thirteen member who has
been deported to an L. Salvador prison. They're making him
(26:09):
a cause to lab everybody in the country knows his name.
They want him back in the country. Maryland Senator Chris
van Hollen is even traveling to L. Salvador to try
and negotiate his release. He had good luck with that.
It is amazing that the Democrats are rallying around an
(26:30):
MS thirteen member after leaving the border wide open for
four years, allowing three million into the country, including gang members, criminals,
and terrorists. Do you know when Garcia entered the country
under Barack Obama? If Obama was in office, he would
(26:52):
have deported him already. At one point they called him
the deporter in chief. Do you remember he said three
million illegals back to where they came from, and Democrats
were fine with it. Then now they have a problem
because it's Trump. But that's not the biggest hypocrisy. They
(27:15):
call this Maryland the illegal a loving father and husband
to try to gain your sympathy. Yet they were silent
when Rachel Marin, a loving Maryland mother of five, was
raped and murdered by an illegal immigrant in twenty twenty three.
(27:36):
They continued to be silent at President Trump's Joint Session
of Congress when Rachel's mother, Patricia was acknowledged by the
President as she stood there and Republicans clapped and Democrats
sat on their hands. That Boys and Girls is called
(27:57):
the biggest hypocrisy. It's also called disgusting. Coming up next,
Mark Simone welcomes Fox News contributor Joe Kanca and New
York Post journalist Miranda Devine. That's a great show. Plus
listen for the keyword after the ten am news, then
head to seven ten WR dot com for your chance
(28:19):
at one thousand dollars. Now a recap of today's show.
New York City council Member Vicki Palladino can't understand the
Democrats pushback on ice being allowed in Rikers Island.
Speaker 9 (28:33):
This is all about actually breaking the sanctuary city policy
by deep porting and getting rid of the dangerous and
the most bile of our criminals, and yet they don't want.
Speaker 1 (28:47):
To do that.
Speaker 9 (28:48):
Wrap your head around it, everybody.
Speaker 2 (28:51):
Democrats will be Democrats. Leader in vaccine research at the
Mayo Clinic, doctor Gregory Poland explains why an increase in
autism rates has a positive side.
Speaker 13 (29:03):
Let me first shock you by saying this is very
good news. And the reason that I say that is
this reflects a dramatically increased awareness of the disease, screening
and diagnosis of the disease, and the fact that the
diagnosis keeps expanding in criteria.
Speaker 2 (29:25):
Authors of the new book Real Life, Real Family, A
Guide to Raising Empowered Children, Gia Casey and Power one
five's dj NV spoke about what people and especially children
need most.
Speaker 7 (29:40):
You give that child attention if you actively listen you're
actually interested, You ask questions, you lean in verbal cues,
nonverbal cues. You bring things up later on, you ask
more questions. They come alive. You see a person's spirit
change when they feel paid attention to That resonates to
(30:02):
them as love.
Speaker 2 (30:04):
We found out today what the formula is for a
perfect day, but there is one issue with it. This
is for people that don't have a job.
Speaker 5 (30:13):
I know that less than six hours of work.
Speaker 2 (30:16):
I would love to do two hours a day. There's
no way I can fit in two hours to day
of exercise.
Speaker 8 (30:22):
I think, well, if you look at this formula, you
have to be working a part time job at or.
Speaker 2 (30:28):
Or you have to work for the government.
Speaker 5 (30:29):
Just that's great.
Speaker 2 (30:34):
We've also been talking about how the Trump administration will
be going after New York Attorney General Letitia James for
alleged mortgage fraud. They're going to file charges and you
went to talk back to let us know how you feel.
Speaker 14 (30:49):
You know, Allowryet. It's a beautiful things that James is
getting busted. She deserves it. She's a rat and we
all know what she is. But unfortunately, I don't think
she's going to get the punishment she would get if
she was a conservative. But that's okay. People are gonna
see and remember this is your Democrat party. If they're
(31:11):
accusing you of doing it, they're already doing it or
they did it already.
Speaker 1 (31:17):
Hey Larry, what's this a James? So?
Speaker 13 (31:20):
Do you think that she and Fannie Willis can share
the same prison cell in some federal prison facilities somewhere?
Speaker 1 (31:30):
Looks that way.
Speaker 2 (31:32):
That's a great image. Oh, I hope that happens. Wouldn't
that be wonderful if that happened. Oh, what they'd talk about.
Don't forget to check out our podcast and catch up
on things you missed during this morning. Listen on demand.
Just go to seven to ten wora dot com. You
click the podcast tab. It is that easy. So coming
up tomorrow and Minty in the Morning, our favorite Democrat,
(31:55):
Laura Currn, WLR Street Reporter Natalie and Migliori with her
Beat on the Street, n Y You Langone, bioethicist doctor
Arthur Kaplan. Oh, and ticket to see The Doobie Brothers.
The Doobie Brothers with Michael McDonald. I'm gonna call in.
(32:15):
I'm still gonna go.
Speaker 5 (32:16):
I keep telling you that.
Speaker 2 (32:17):
I'm gonna pretend I'm somebody else. You have to buy
your ticket at eight night, Sorry at A twenty five.
You have a wonderful day today. As always, we appreciate
you being here. I hope to talk to you again tomorrow. Now,
let's get the news at ten o'clock.
Speaker 10 (32:33):
Chaffin co founder of chaff and Lhana injury lawyers.
Speaker 2 (32:37):
We're dedicated to fighting for what you're entitled to.