Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Scott Vordiez.
Speaker 2 (00:01):
Yesterday on this program, we talked about a couple of
local businesses, eighty eight Tactical, which is an event center
that features a shooting range and a bar restaurant area,
and then Reps Sports Bar and Grill where we've hosted
our debate viewing parties on this radio station. Both of
them suddenly popped up in the news, with both of
(00:23):
their owners saying, look, we didn't know anything about this
guy coming in here. A couple of groups had reserved
some space. We didn't know much about it. Next thing
we hear there are people on social media trashing our
business and yelling at us, and so we just decided,
after talking with the event organizers, we weren't going to
(00:43):
do this. Well. The event organizers, Nebraska Freedom Coalition and
Beard Vet Coffee, have been trying to bring a speaker
into town for a select group of invited guests to
come here. Now, well, when I tell you who it
is and why he's famous, slash infamous or whatever, some
(01:08):
of you will say curious. I don't know how a
guy goes from relative obscurity to suddenly being portrayed by
John Krasinski on Saturday Night live in the snap of
a shutter frame. That's got to be a pretty interesting
life arc. And then seventy five days in jail, five
(01:31):
thousand dollars fine, and then pardoned by new President Donald Trump,
but then hours of being inaugurated. Yeah, we're talking about
one of the j sixers, the January sixth collection, who
went into the Capitol that day. This particular guy, wearing
a Trump hat but not a red one, and a
blue Trump stocking cap, was photographed carrying Nancy Pelosi's lectern, which,
(01:57):
as we mentioned yesterday, thought might be a good band name,
but I think more of it. It's an album title
for like a roots rock Americana band, Nancy Pelosi's lectern.
This guy was holding it, very proud of himself apparently
in the picture, and because he was so visible in
that the social media online mob found him, canceled him.
(02:20):
He got seventy five days in jail, has since been
pardoned by the president. These groups are going to bring
him in, and the social online mobs told these businesses,
you're not allowed to bring him in. Now. I might
not be interested in going to hear him speak. I
might not be interested in going to hear anyone speak
if I if I hear that someone's coming in for
(02:41):
a speech or a concert or an event, and I'm
not interested. You know what, I do anything else, I
find something else to do. I'm not gonna like, Well,
we got to shut this business down for having the
nerve to have this guy in here. Well this guy
is named Adam Johnson and he joins us now on
news radio eleven ten kfab Adam, thank you very much
(03:03):
for spending some time with us here this morning. What
do you think about all this controversy Because you're a
Florida guy, and I don't know if you've ever even
been to Omaha, but boy, you've been talked about a
lot here over the last couple of days. What do
you think about this controversy here in our town.
Speaker 3 (03:20):
Well, it's actually been to your state, Omaha, Lincoln quite
a bit. I got family out here. Oh good, was
on the way one of the stop by. It's a
great town, love the state, beautiful capital. The controversy I
think is I think they're blowing it out of a
portion if you actually look at what I did, what
I've been saying for the past almost five years now,
I've been very outspoken against the violence that happened that day.
(03:42):
I myself pled guilty to misdemeanor trespassing, which is a
nothing burger. People typically don't go to prison for this.
So I don't understand the controversy other than people who
just can't get over it. Now, if I were someone
who struck a cop, someone who actually broke down doors
or or destroyed property, I can understand like a modicum
of outrage. But I've served my time. It's been years now.
(04:06):
I spent two hundred hours of community service serving my
local leos, training them in jiu jitsu, and cooking them
food on the weekend. So this whole narrative that I'm
some awful, terrible person is I don't know. I find
it to be kind of gross.
Speaker 2 (04:23):
I can't imagine what it was like to be swept
up in the frenzy of that day. When you look
at that picture of you smiling and posing with the
former Speaker of the house's lecturn, do you remember what
you were feeling in that moment, and what do you
think when you look at that picture now, Adam.
Speaker 3 (04:44):
In the moments, you have to understand there were at
least one hundred thousand people there that day, and I
was one of about fifteen hundred people that walked inside.
When I did walk inside, the doors were open. This
is the first protest I've ever been to. Actually was
one of the first e lets since I ever voted
in and there that day. I've seen I've seen several
(05:05):
protests even in the recent years that have occurred in
that building. I didn't think much about it. I did
see some violence. I walked away from that because that's
not what I was there to do. That's not a protest.
So when I see people walking inside, I follow along
inside because I assume that's where the protest is going.
Looking at that picture now that the smile and wave,
you see the one that gave me some type of
(05:27):
measure of infamy, it's I saw some camera people. I
smiled and waved. It's a there's a lot of things
I was feeling that day.
Speaker 2 (05:35):
What do you think now when you see that picture.
Speaker 3 (05:39):
I think I've not been given an opportunity to do
anything else but lean into this. I was not prepared
to talk about these things and go on tours and
go on podcast That was not the option. I'm a
father of five, family man, and the stipulations that the
Plea deal gave me where I couldn't make money for
five years, the media that still follows me around today.
(06:02):
What other choice do I have. I'm kind of in
this box, and I think that it's necessary that I
do speak about this because government overreach affects both political
sides of the party.
Speaker 2 (06:12):
You're married, guy, right, Your wife's.
Speaker 3 (06:14):
A doctor, yep, fourteen years, five kids.
Speaker 2 (06:18):
So when I, you know, tell my wife like, oh, hey,
I'm going to be a little later tonight, We're hanging
out and we're going to get a few more drinks
or whatever. I'm going to go do a golf weekend.
I forgot to tell you about it. But I'm leaving
right now. See you. You know, she gets exasperated with me.
But what did your wife say about all of this?
Speaker 3 (06:38):
My wife was concerned about me showing up in the
first place, obviously for good reason. When I first talked
to her about the picture going viral, and it was
within within an hour, the I mean, the internet just
took it and ran with it. I didn't think it
was a big deal because I walked into a building,
I took a picture, and I left. But then when
we saw the news when they saw what they were
(06:58):
accusing me of. We knew it was going to be
an issue. My wife has been supportive through all of this.
My kids have been understanding through all of this, and
we at this point, we just realized that there is
a necessary component to me speaking and to me traveling.
Speaker 2 (07:12):
And doing these things. You yeah, go ahead.
Speaker 3 (07:17):
In the initial moments, it was, you know, obviously we
we talked about it, and you know, they were talking
about sending me to prison for twenty years for being
in a building and smiling. And you know, my wife
and I sat down and we said, you know, look,
I told her, I don't expected wait around for twenty years.
You know, while I'm in prison, our kids are going
to grow up, they're going to go to prom, they're
any licenses, and I won't be here for that. And
(07:39):
she told me she took an oath. We are married,
and we we're going to honor that.
Speaker 2 (07:44):
That's a very understanding woman. We're talking here with Adam Johnson,
lucky guy for being a part of that relationship here
on news on News Radio eleven ten KFAB. You had
your picture sketched by Jim carry John Krasinski portrayed you
on Saturday Night Live. They had a little fun with that.
(08:07):
And meanwhile, on the not very fun side of all
of this, you had people saying you're an insurrectionist, you
are a mega racist, you want to bring down the country.
You guys were going to go in there and kill
members of Congress. You should be guilty of treason. And
you went there that day with the express purpose of
(08:30):
going to that Capitol building and creating all this violence.
Why did you go there that day and did you
have any idea any of that was going to happen.
Speaker 3 (08:41):
I did not. There was no express plans to go
to the Capitol that day. It was on a whim.
I'd never been to a Trump rally in my life,
and I thought this was going to be the last one,
so I wanted to go to you a little bit
of history. I obviously have issues with what happened during COVID,
with what I have questions about the election, and I
was concerned for my country. Again, I have five sons,
(09:03):
and one of the reasons that I've voted for Trump
is because he is very anti war, and I don't
want to see my sons go to war. So that
was one of the biggest policies that he had that
maybe vote for him, and it's one of the biggest
reasons I showed up.
Speaker 2 (09:16):
President Trump has since pardoned you and so many others
involved with the unfortunate incidents of that day, however one
looks at them. I've talked with other people who were
at the Capitol that day, and they've really wrestled since
with their feelings of about the President. Some have gone
to court and said, look, he whipped us into a frenzy.
(09:40):
He told us to fight like hell and all the
rest of this stuff, and I blindly followed this. Man,
I don't support him anymore. What are your thoughts on
Donald Trump?
Speaker 3 (09:51):
I mean, I've been critical the past couple of months.
I'm not super enthusiastic about some of his choices for
staff and positions. But I'm also grown man. I take
responsibility phone actions. Whether someone tell us me to do
something or not is still ultimate my decision to do that,
So I don't blame Trump for sending me to the Capitol.
That's not what happened. He said we're gonna march peacefully
(10:12):
and patriotically down to the Capitol. So we took a
leisurely stroll down there. By time I got there, the
barricades had already been run over. I didn't know this
because I didn't see it happen. When I got there,
people were standing around, we were singing the national anthem,
and we started getting gassed. They started firing rebolts at us,
and we were just standing around. And that is on
(10:32):
video for anyone who wants to actually look into this,
there's a video of a Metro police officer saying it's
going to start gassing people, and he's being told, you
don't have the authorization to do that, that's not the
required force, and you don't have the authorization to do that,
but they did it anyway.
Speaker 2 (10:50):
I mean, you're there, Carrie. In Nancy Pelosi's lectern the
accusation is is that if if you guys is putting
the whole crowd together, if you guys had actually found
Nancy Pelosi, it might have been the end of her.
What do you think about that assertion?
Speaker 3 (11:08):
Look, I have no Illevill tortzure. You know, I'm a
pretty I'm actually a libertarian, a pretty centered guy. If
I had seen Nancy Pelosi, I probably have asked her
for a for a picture with her, you know, because
she's done a lot for her own party, and I
commend her for that. And there are people on the
rights in a lot for their party, and I commend
them for that. I owe her or I have no
(11:29):
ill torture whatsoever.
Speaker 2 (11:31):
Do you have a copy of the answer, I can't
speak for that. Sure, do you do you have something
that like a replica of Nancy Pelosi's lectern at your house?
Because now you guys, you guys are forever conjoined for history.
Speaker 3 (11:46):
I did build two replicas for some friends of mine.
Speaker 2 (11:50):
Did you really?
Speaker 3 (11:50):
And I actually build? Sorry?
Speaker 2 (11:52):
Did you really?
Speaker 3 (11:54):
I did. I'm a carpenter by trade. So what I've
done in the meantime is I actually build heiny replicas
and I hawked them all for charity. We've given one
hundred percent of all proceeds to families who have parents
who are in prison. So I mean, it's it's not
like I'm not here doing terrible things.
Speaker 2 (12:13):
I am so glad I asked that question. I did
not know that that is that's I think that's hilarious.
Now other people have certainly are not. And as I said,
if there are people who are not interested in hearing
your you speak, because apparently you're still coming to Omaha
even though this business and that business said they want
(12:34):
nothing to do with this controversy. These groups Nebraska Freedom
Coalition and beard Vet Coffee are still bringing you in
for an event. You want to tell everyone where that's
going to be.
Speaker 3 (12:46):
Well, the event's already open. We've already had it.
Speaker 2 (12:48):
Oh, you already had it.
Speaker 3 (12:50):
I've alread we already had it. We had two venues
that did accept us. And when we talk about okay,
I don't like shutting private businesses down. I didn't name
them personally online. I called both businesses masked to to
speak with them. I don't want to see their business
is ruined. Because they're private entities, they're allowed to choose
who comes and goes. That's completely fine with me. There
was the what was it the bakery and was at
(13:12):
Colorado that refused to bake a cake for a homosexual wedding.
It's a private business. They're allowed to reject people. That's
completely fine. My issue is the people that made all
this noise. They're not advocates for their businesses in the
first place. They were the ones calling, making complaints, leaving
false reviews, and they knelt to them, And if you
(13:33):
look online the response they've gotten to this, it's very
negative from the people on the right side of the fence.
You can't claim to be someone who is pro two
A pro one A and then reject someone coming in
who represents both of those things. I just, personally, I
think they chose the wrong side. The woman who started
all of this actually has a dui. She claims to
(13:55):
be an agent of Satan. So when I see all
of this, I'm like, Wow, these businesses literally knelt to
Satan by choosing the side.
Speaker 2 (14:04):
Yeah, I I mean I I look at the businesses involved.
I mean, I know some of these people, and it's
a it's a tough call. You're in business to make money,
and when it looks like you, your employees, that you
care about, the businesses that you built might be in
jeopardy because twenty people are gonna come here, the guys speak,
(14:26):
who's carrying around the former speaker's lectern? And you think,
is it all going to crumble away because of this moment.
That's a tough decision to make. Now, certainly there are
those who are happy they made the decision to part
company with the event. There are those who say, you
guys are a bunch of wosses. But I know I'll
let people make their own decisions on this. My only
(14:49):
thing is if you don't like the speaker, then then
don't go. So you you did the event, How did
it go? Any protests, any problems?
Speaker 1 (14:59):
No?
Speaker 3 (14:59):
We actually we had a great time. Everyone was happy
to come out and hang out. It was it wasn't
even a speaking event we were arranging. It was a
meet and greet. It was a private room that people
who were actually members of the facilitia set together. The RST,
the RSVP protocol was we were verifying IDs. We didn't
want to make this a big thing. We weren't asking
(15:20):
for special accommodation, special treatment. It was just a function
of Hey, I'm in town. If you want to say hi,
come say hi. And I have over one hundred thousand
followers on Twitter, I've been traveling for years. People always
come out and say hi to me because they want to.
And if you don't want to come out, you don't
have to. But these people who are shutting it down,
this isn't going to be the last time they do this,
(15:42):
and at some point they will have to take a
stand and say we can't keep kneeling.
Speaker 2 (15:47):
That's an interesting perspective, Adam. I really appreciate your time
with us here this morning. I mean, you've been through
something that only a select few in this country have
really had to deal with. I mean, you've almost lost everything.
You're trying to turn it into a positive and move forward,
and it's I can't even imagine what you've been through
(16:09):
these last few years. Adam. I appreciate the time here
this morning.
Speaker 3 (16:12):
Safe travels, Thank you, sir, thanks for having me on.
Speaker 2 (16:15):
That is Adam Johnson, the guy carrying around Nancy Pelosi's
lectern at the Capitol on January sixth, twenty twenty one.
And if you think, well, I can't believe that, Scott.
You had him on the radio and it sounded like
you didn't just you know, beat him up and so forth. Well,
Saturday Night Live lampooned the situation as well. So you
(16:39):
call Lauren Michaels and take it up with.
Speaker 1 (16:41):
Him, Scott, fores where you're going.
Speaker 2 (16:43):
The former president was speaking at an event aimed to
protect social security, because you know Donald Trump and Elon Musk,
they want to cut they want to take away your
social security, especially if you're three hundred years old or
have yet to be born. I'll explain those comments in
(17:06):
a moment. And the speech by the former president started
off just as awkwardly as you might imagine.
Speaker 4 (17:13):
Was the forty sixth president of the United States. So
please welcome the strongest defender of social security the American
people have ever had, President Joe Biden.
Speaker 2 (17:25):
All right, so here comes President Biden out on stage.
And we got to have some rock, you know, driving
music up there. Joe Biden's pointing to people, smiling, turning around.
They gave him the Beacon of Hope Award. He's posing
with that, getting this picture taken. Yeah, I don't know
(17:48):
what song this is. There we go, Okay, there we go.
He's talking right now. He's doing a speech. Does not
notice that.
Speaker 5 (18:02):
The deserve hell and pay for most of it?
Speaker 2 (18:07):
What? No has no idea? That music was blaring was
drowning him out, and he just thought, I'm just gonna start.
I'm powering through. I'm gonna speak softly here while we
have loud music blaring. He started a speech. No idea, no,
(18:32):
and and the people, I mean having some idea. What
it takes to run a microphone and sound for an event.
What you have here is it's a little it's a
little console, and you've got various knobs and sliders, which
(18:52):
maybe you're going to order for lunch today. It's your
favorite deli. So you got knobs and sliders there in
front of you. It's the sliders are faders if you will,
that you bring up or down to determine the volume
or whether or not anything is on. Usually for an
event like this, the console is not going to be
very big. We're talking. I mean, you can get this
(19:13):
done with a four track. Maybe it's eight, heck, maybe
it's fifty. There's really only two faders that are up
at this point, the microphone there at the lectern and
the volume of the music that you're playing. Since he
brought the music up, I presume his finger is already
(19:33):
on that fader, he could bring it back down. But
somehow the person running sound for this got confused by
having two faders up at the same time. So, hey,
that's you know, that's tough. I had to deal with
two things of the set.
Speaker 6 (19:50):
Now.
Speaker 2 (19:51):
Not to say the mistakes don't happen. We make our
fair share here on the radio station. Maybe you were
listening yesterday, when suddenly Rush Limbaugh jumped down onto the radio.
I noticed that there was an error in the commercial
log right before the one o'clock hour of the klan
(20:12):
Buck Show. And as I'm scrambling to get things in there,
which means I have to type in a number, I
forgot that on this keyboard in the studio. If I
touch the numbers on the top of the keyboard rather
than the numbers on the right side of it, if
I touch a number on the top of the keyboard,
I can fire various things on the air. And as
(20:35):
I recall, I think it's if I hit three, Rush
Limbaugh's voice appears. Let's try it.
Speaker 1 (20:41):
News radio eleven ten kfab omahas news, lweather, and traffic.
Speaker 2 (20:45):
See. I don't even know. I don't even even know
what all these they're called hot keys, I don't know
what they all do. One of them fires Rush Limbaugh's voice.
Let's try this one.
Speaker 1 (20:53):
News radio eleven ten kfab.
Speaker 2 (20:57):
This one. What the heck? This one fires ticket to
ride by the Beatles. I don't know what all these
I don't know what these buttons do. So you got
you got various saying this is this is fun. I
got several more to go, but one of them yesterday
(21:17):
put Rush Limbaugh back on the radio for a second.
This is Rush Limbaugh and you're listening to the superstation.
And I was like, uh oh, I'm sure that some
people are like, what year is it? What did what happened?
So sorry about that? Like I said, mistakes happen. For
(21:38):
the person running the controls, mistakes happen. But if you're
the speaker of the event, don't you hear the music blaring?
Don't you understand that this is not the time for
you to speak? Thank you, thank you. He's speaking right now,
(22:02):
he's doing the speech.
Speaker 5 (22:05):
You deserve help and paid for most of.
Speaker 2 (22:10):
It, and paid for most of it. And what someone
wrote the first line of that speech, going, son of
a I spent the opening line to a speech is
so important. I spent days working on this. And he
couldn't even stop talking long enough for the music to
go away. Lucy Chapmans off the phone and wants to
(22:31):
say something.
Speaker 6 (22:32):
Lucy, I don't want to say anything. I was just
going to ask where was his handler?
Speaker 2 (22:38):
I know, yeah, the uh, the president spoke last night
about social security. Now there are those who say, interesting
that we're defending social security since you said you said
before you got into office that you wanted to eliminate
waste and fraud to be able to protect social security.
(22:58):
Now that's interesting because Vlon muscot in there and found
hundreds of millions of dollars in wasteful social security spending
going to people who are aged one hundred and fifteen
and older. Now, since the oldest known living American is
one hundred and fourteen years old, there must be maybe
(23:19):
an underground camp of very very old people who don't
want to share their longevity secrets. So, I mean, it's amazing.
We would love to know who these people are. You
would think, well, I just followed where the check went
and see who cashed it. But apparently that's that's difficult
to determine. So there's millions and millions of dollars going
(23:41):
to people who are aged one hundred and fifteen and higher.
There are millions and millions of dollars in social Security
checks going to people who are between the ages of
one and five. Tikes are getting social Security And this
is the best part at all. They're I mean social
(24:02):
security people think like, I don't know if it's going
to be there for future generations. I don't know why
you'd say that, because social Security checks are already being
issued and cashed to people who, according to what's in
the system, haven't even been born yet. There's someone set
to be born in twenty thirty six who's already getting
(24:23):
thousands and dollars in Social Security. It's one hundred percent
true if you believe what Elon Musk says.
Speaker 6 (24:31):
You got to plan ahead. Those guys, I know, and
that's what they were doing.
Speaker 2 (24:35):
I think it's great. I think I mean, I was
concerned that perhaps Social Security wouldn't be there for me
when I got to retirement age. But this shows you're
in now. I'm there are already people much much younger
than me. They're not even born yet. Their father is
barely a glimmer in their father's eye, let alone the
(24:55):
kid get in the checks. So if it's already there
for them, it's got to be there for me.
Speaker 6 (24:59):
Well, before you indict this entire administration, I'm talking about
the previous one, Before you indict this entire administration, you've
got to define waste and fraud and fraud you got
to define what exactly that means. Who is it for
I mean, if you're talking about the waste and fraud
that they're going to that they did and are still
(25:21):
benefiting from from that entire administration, then it's not waste
and fraud. So you're looking at it completely wrong.
Speaker 2 (25:28):
Right, Well, one person's waist and fraud is another person's
tremendous opportunity exactly. Oh you're right. I hadn't considered that.
Thank you very much, Lucy. So this is what we
missed yesterday with you not being here. Never leave us.
Speaker 6 (25:42):
Again, Okay, I won't.
Speaker 2 (25:45):
So Joe Biden gave a speech last night, I guess,
ignoring the fact that he said he wanted to eliminate
alleged waste and fraud. Elon Musk found it and is
You would think that Joe Biden would do a speech
and say hey, thanks, thanks Pards, thanks for helping us
out on this one. Great work. We started this and
Elon Musk has finished. He didn't say any of that.
(26:08):
He started rambling about colored kids. Was at one point
in last night's speech, are you giving me a look?
Speaker 6 (26:14):
You don't believe me, I'm giving you a look.
Speaker 2 (26:16):
All right, let's go to the tape.
Speaker 5 (26:18):
Pulling in, pulling pulling into the parking lot. What and
I had never seen I'd never seen hardly any black
people Scranton at the time when I and I was
only going in fourth grade, and I remember seeing the
kids going by at the time, called colored kids on
a bus going by. They never turned right to go
to Claimant High School. I wondered why, asked my mom, why.
Speaker 2 (26:42):
Why the colored kids. Now this is someone said if
you ain't black, then if you don't vote for Joe Biden,
you ain't black. Among the racially interesting things that Joe
Biden has said in his career. So here he's talking
(27:05):
about well and at the time, I'm sure he did
hear that phrase to repeat it now is I mean,
I can understand it from the lens of how old
I am, especially since there's still an organization called the NAACP,
the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, which
(27:30):
is the only organization that still uses that phrase. But
see what we have here is a younger generation that
doesn't understand, appreciate, or want to appreciate context. And so
that clip goes around, Yeah, Joe Biden said that phrase
latter and they're like this kind of so I you
(27:51):
know whereas the speech writer for the opening line of
the event was upset that the speech that he or
she wrote for that was drowned out by the music.
I can't imagine anyone wrote that down for the former president.
And here you're going to talk about how you never
saw black people, apparently except for bus loads of as
(28:13):
he phrased it, colored kids. Can't imagine that was part
of the script. But his whole comment was supposed to
be about social security. This president jacked up the prices
of essential things that people in retirement need, while in
(28:34):
some years not providing a cost of living adjustment for
people on Social Security, putting people onto Social Security earlier
than they wanted to, by taking jobs away, by responses
to the pandemic, by shutting down this economy or at
least throwing into doubt whether or not would be back
(28:56):
up and running, which affected jobs and livelihoods. People had
to close their businesses, people lost their jobs, They had
to take Social Security much earlier than they wanted to.
All of this had an impact. So when we introduced
him as the president who was the greatest public servant
standing up for social security and history any cost of
(29:20):
living adjustments that were provided by the Biden administration were
eaten alive by the inflation that came up during his administration.
The cola didn't keep pace, not even close. So tell
me again. And as I said, as he said, we're
going to find waste and fraud in things like social
(29:43):
Security and medicare and medicare and then didn't do any
of that. Trump's in office for five minutes found it.
You would think he would say thank you and go
on your way. Either way, I don't give a damn
what you you think you're entitled to. Sorry, got into
the nineties movie reference that is a few good men. Sorry.
(30:07):
I just love that phrase. I would assume you would
say thank you and go on your way. But he
didn't do that. No, he had to order the code red.
He had to go in there and start attacking Elon
Musk and Donald Trump. Now, Lucy, when you started off
your comments said, before you start indicting the former administration,
(30:30):
I don't have to the American people did last November.
Speaker 1 (30:34):
Scott Boys News Radio eleven kab.
Speaker 2 (30:39):
Not a Biden's speech until he starts yelling.
Speaker 5 (30:44):
Simple dignity everyone, everyone that deserves to be treated with
dignitiestop yelling at me, regardless of their standard, regardless of
the economic sisery, regardless of who they are making sure
the more than sixty million Americans we're living with disabilities
are treating with dignity.
Speaker 2 (31:03):
Nah, Why are the people in that audience not treating
Americans with dignity? He's like he's chewing these people out.
Thank you so much for being with us here on
Nebraska's news weather and Traffic station, or as Joe Biden
would say, and hang you hone moment and being being here.
(31:30):
Lucy Chapman there, I'm Scott for He's.
Speaker 6 (31:33):
I'm not even I'm not even sure what to think
of this news right?
Speaker 2 (31:36):
He only lefn ten kfa b. Well that's how his
speech started. You're not sure what to think of what.
Speaker 6 (31:42):
Any of this day?
Speaker 2 (31:43):
The Shenanigans any all right, let's do it again. Thank you,
thank you, You're welcome. All right?
Speaker 3 (31:47):
Go so good to.
Speaker 2 (31:51):
Check his mouth is moving, he's doing the speech, doesn't
hear the music? Deserve help?
Speaker 6 (32:03):
I shouldn't.
Speaker 2 (32:04):
I wish that that was the I wish that that
was the punchline to a joke. And he's just looking
at the crowd waiting for him to react like, man,
we didn't get any any laughter at all with that line.
I can't believe it. I fire someone got fired. You
know you told me this was a funny opening line.
I delivered it nothing well, mister president. And we can
hear you.
Speaker 5 (32:24):
No, I can hear you.
Speaker 6 (32:29):
Now that I can hear in my head. I can
see that taking place one hundred percent.
Speaker 2 (32:33):
Yeah, you want to hear the part where we start
yelling again. Yeah, let's see. I think that's right here.
Let me cu that up. Dignity, dignity, simple, dignity everyone.
Speaker 5 (32:48):
Everyone deserves to be treated with dignity, regardless of the standing,
regardless of economic teachery, regardless of who they are.
Speaker 2 (32:57):
Making.
Speaker 5 (32:58):
Sure of the more than sixty million America we're living
with disabilities. Our treating with dignity is who we are
as Americans.
Speaker 2 (33:06):
Hey, uh, funny didn't he refer to Trump supporters as
garbage and domestic terriblelief?
Speaker 6 (33:15):
So yes, yes, but there are garbage, Swiss dignity.
Speaker 2 (33:21):
Trones, people vote from my opponent garbage. That's about dignity, simple.
Here's the other funny part about his speech last night.
Someone paid him. I am sure millions of dollars to
(33:44):
deliver a speech last night, which it was noted by
a few different media outlets. The speech was promoted to
people within the organization that it was going to be
an hour long speech. How long did he last? About
thirty minutes. Oh so I presume he's given back half
the money.
Speaker 6 (34:04):
Yes, I'm sure that's exactly what he's going to do.
Speaker 2 (34:09):
Yeah, someone's sitting there going, I wrote the check, and
this is money that could have been used for. Who
was the group that brought him in anyway, I don't know,
but someone, someone paid good money to bring him in
to talk about social security or whatever. I can't make
(34:30):
out the name of the the group there on the
wall behind him. But someone paid a whole bunch of
money to bring him in, and they're sitting there going,
we could have used that money for this, could have
hired fifty more people instead. I paid for this. Didn't
even hear the first eight minutes of it because the
(34:52):
music was drowning him out. Okay, I was out for
a walk the other night, Lucy by the way, good morning,
good morning. It's not for a walk the other night,
and I'm looking as I always do. I'm trying to
peer into other people's homes. Oh did they see you
and see what everyone's up to?
Speaker 5 (35:12):
Uh?
Speaker 2 (35:13):
Well, I mean if they had looked over me and
my face was pressed against their glass. So I'm I'm
looking people just I'm curious. I I don't know all
my neighbors, and I feel the best way to meet
them is they're they're having dinner and my face is
pressed up against the glass and they look over at me,
and I just go, what are you eating? You know,
(35:35):
it's it's started. It's a conversation starter. It is what
it is. And it occurred to me because I just
watched yet another movie. Now it was a TV series.
It was. I mentioned yesterday that my wife and I
got into the first season of Tom Clancy's Jack Ryan.
(35:58):
It's on one of the streaming services. Every time we
say let's watch another episode of that, we have to
remember which service it's on.
Speaker 6 (36:07):
Oh that's always fun. Yeah, you have to go through everyone.
Speaker 2 (36:10):
That, right. Yeah, I'm like, why do we spend money
on it? I think it is prime. I think it
is prime. And but we also have a problem because
my wife keeps calling it Reacher. You want to watch
Jack Reacher like it's not Jack Reacher. It's a different Jack.
So then I start saying, you want to watch Jack Klugman,
Captain Jack Sparrow, you want to watch that show? Should
(36:31):
we watch another episode of Jack the Ripper, Jack White,
I mean Captain Jack, I mean any any of these things.
I just you know, Jack and someone's name so Jack Spratt,
and she knows exactly what show I'm talking about, even
though she doesn't know what name it is. And then
it then I started calling it Jack Reacher. So I
(36:51):
don't know what we're watching. The one with John Krasinski
playing the analyst, you know, played by Baldwin or Harrison
Ford in the Tom Clancy movie. This is Jack Ryan.
Speaker 6 (37:04):
This isn't the movie with the guy that goes around.
Speaker 2 (37:07):
No, that's that's Jack Reacher, which is also a series,
which makes it even more confusing. Anyway, it was that
show where they had brought someone here to America and
they put them in witness protection. Okay, and how many
shows movies have you watched in your lifetime involving people
just living in a nice suburb in witness protection? Eighty
(37:33):
percent of everything you've ever consumed, it's probably had something
to do with someone being in witness protection, right, we
got to get him in witness protection.
Speaker 6 (37:43):
I don't know what you've been watching. I wouldn't put
it that high. Maybe twenty percent, Yeah.
Speaker 2 (37:48):
It's it's it's eighty so, I mean almost almost one
hundred and forty percent of that which we consume has
people in witness protection. Yet I've met most of my neighbors.
I I talk to these people, I don't get the
vibes that anyone's hiding from anybody, or they're not looking
(38:09):
over their shoulder, you know, when I ask them, like,
so what do you do? They don't suddenly like have
to look at the palm of their hand. I'm in marketing,
you know. It's they have to remember what their names are.
They're calling their kids different names, Sanjay, I mean, Frank,
(38:30):
you know they they You know. What I'm wondering is
having lived in a number of different homes neighborhoods in
my life, not a lot, but enough, and each of
these streets nice streets. I would refer to them as quiet,
(38:51):
unassuming streets. People are out mowing the lawn, kid and
his dad are out having a catch. There's someone driving
too fast down the street. One of the moms out
there goes slow down, you know, on normal street right
Omaha or Kansas City. Back to Omaha. The places I've lived,
(39:16):
surely there's someone who's lived near me who's been a
witness protection right. Have you ever checked that?
Speaker 6 (39:24):
I think you could safely say that, yeah, that's probably true.
Speaker 2 (39:28):
You ever check that sex offender registry to see who's
around you?
Speaker 6 (39:31):
I have, but I haven't for many years.
Speaker 2 (39:33):
I don't want to know because I would really hate
for it to be someone I know.
Speaker 6 (39:42):
Wow, I just wow. I've never heard anybody say that's
the reason they don't check.
Speaker 2 (39:48):
I would rather not know. I mean, like, sometimes there,
you know, there's there's a guy lives by himself. He
keeps to himself, and really your conversation is incredibly surface level,
and you just kind of wave, and he takes good
care of his yard and his animals aren't getting loose
running all over the neighborhood, A decent neighbor. I would
(40:12):
hate to know. It's like, oh, let me tell you
what he did thirteen years ago before he was it
was suggested to him that was the wrong thing for
him to do.
Speaker 6 (40:22):
In his life, So you would judge him on something
he did thirteen years ago.
Speaker 2 (40:27):
I would know my thought, but you don't want to know.
I don't want to know. My thought on all that
registry stuff is if we need to know where they
are because they're still dangerous on some level, I would
like to know where they are, Okay, in jail, they
should still with you, They should still be in jail.
If it's like, these people are really dangerous. Now we're
(40:48):
going to put him three houses down from you, but
we want you to know who they are.
Speaker 6 (40:53):
Like, I don't.
Speaker 2 (40:54):
I thought like, when you get out of jail, you've
paid your debt of your time, that you're released because
you're no longer a thread, you've learned the error of
your ways. Not hey, this guy, once upon time he
was and it could be any number of things, right,
everyone always assumes the worst, like, oh, he grabbed some
(41:18):
you know it. It's not always that. Not to say, oh,
some of it's fine. I'm not saying that. I'm like,
not all of it is just hey, hey kid, you
want some candy. Not all of it's that. But the
offender registry doesn't tell you what they did. You have
to assume the worst if you look at that stuff anyway,
(41:40):
if it's horrible stuff, keep him in jail. And I'll
say this as apparently I'm standing up for sex offenders
today on the radio, there's well, there's no registry for
people like you could you could eat a guy? Right,
you could.
Speaker 6 (42:00):
I'm going to wait for the rest of the question
before I answer you could.
Speaker 2 (42:03):
You could? You could be caught by police chewing on
a drifter and the drifters like, I'm fine with it.
They're like, no, that this isn't right. And and you
go to jail for some level of I don't know,
cannibalism or whatever, and uh so you serve your time,
and you know, he he goes to appeal and his
(42:25):
court appointed lawyer is like he was hungry, Like we
all get angry sometimes. All right, you're free to go.
And he goes out and he lives next door to you.
Is he on a registry? No, there's no registry for cannibals, murderers,
people will like to drive drunk and crash into people.
There's no registry for any of that stuff. But the
offender registry, well, we gotta gotta keep an eye on
(42:48):
these people. If they're dangerous, they should be in jail.
I don't care what they did. If they're out, I
wish them the best. If they're in, keep an eye
on them because apparently they're dangerous and shouldn't be around us.
Speaker 6 (43:04):
Well, I think that the sex registry is going to
be different from any other kind of registry.
Speaker 2 (43:12):
Because it's the sex offender registry. The sex registry is different.
Speaker 6 (43:17):
That's very different, all right, the sex offender because other
crimes are going to be very Please, friends, Sure, let's
just take murder. You know, there's a lot of people
that get out of jail after committing murder because it
was manslaughter or it was, oh, what's the.
Speaker 2 (43:38):
Woman's slaughter?
Speaker 6 (43:39):
That's it. But regardless, it's things that they didn't go
out there, weren't serial killers. They didn't go out and
stock some me. It wasn't first agree murdered. They were
out doing this. It was motor vehicle or whatever.
Speaker 2 (43:53):
It was, that thing that Lyle Bremser was charged with.
Lyle Le Bremser was charged with man woman in child slaughter.
Speaker 6 (44:02):
He put him in the aisle for it.
Speaker 1 (44:03):
He did.
Speaker 6 (44:06):
You wouldn't necessarily need to know who has that on
their record if they live in your neighborhood, because they're
not gonna go out and do that again.
Speaker 2 (44:13):
Here's the thing most likely I want. I want to
know whether there are people living on my block who
are in witness protection.
Speaker 6 (44:22):
Well, you're not gonna know that.
Speaker 2 (44:24):
I want to know.
Speaker 6 (44:26):
Look, if you're listening, Steve Martin, if you're listening Blue Heaven, My.
Speaker 2 (44:29):
Blue Heaven, there's a movie we don't reference nearly enough.
That's an excellent eighties movie. Reference You're gonna melt all
the food.
Speaker 6 (44:40):
I don't remember that line.
Speaker 2 (44:42):
Maybe the best line in My Blue Heaven, Steve Martin's.
The whole thing was I don't like guns. I don't
like guns. And he pulls out a gun and with
expert marchsmanship, starts taking people out. Rick Morris Rick Moranis says,
but you said, And before I even finished that, Steve
Martin says, I lied. It's a great movie. It's all right,
(45:02):
it's not a great movie, but it's it's a lot
of fun.
Speaker 6 (45:05):
It's it's campy. So you want to know even about
I want.
Speaker 2 (45:10):
I want to be the kind of a guy where
they say, look, Scott's a good guy. I'm I feel
I mean, I'm just bursting at the seams. I got
to tell somebody what I know. I want them to
know that if you're listening, if you're my neighbor right
now and you're listening to me, I can keep a secret.
I know you're thinking now you're gonna blab it on
the radio. You're gonna tell everybody. I probably won't, And hey,
(45:37):
what better offer is on the table? Like, you know
you want to tell someone right you want to You
want someone to know what you're up to, what your
whole past is. Maybe you need a partner like I
can help you look to see if like like black
SUVs or circling the neighborhood or something like that. I
can help you look. You know that right now, it's
(45:58):
springtime means door to door salesman. All these kids like, Hey,
I'm a freshman at your local college. I'm like, it
looks like you just got busted in here, but whatever, Okay,
I'm here at the College of West Omaha and we're
going door to door. Looks like you could use windows. Hey,
(46:22):
you've got lawn, we do lawn stuff. Get keep moving,
get out of here. Uh So maybe some of these
people are casing the joint. I could help you keep
an eye out for members of the mob or the Taliban,
or whoever it is. It's looking for you, a crazy
ex wife, you can confide in me. I won't tell anybody.
Speaker 6 (46:46):
Now, that's something they should do. They should make witness
protection for crazy xes, not for the crazy x.
Speaker 2 (46:52):
Yeah, well they do. I mean yeah, if it's like
a restraining order or something like that. Yeah, they you'll
give people a new home, new identity. Yeah, sure you can.
You can do that absolutely. So you want to you
want to come clean, You want to share your secret
because it's just eating at you, Like you feel like
my life is a lie. I know it's from my
(47:14):
and my family's best protection. Maybe maybe that family out
there they're throwing the ball around with that boy that's
not even your son, Like this is just a pretend family,
just to just to keep up appearances. We spent it
was a beautiful evening a couple of nights ago. We
had a nice long walk and uh, you know, maybe
(47:34):
the family's just there to keep up appearances, and it's
just gnawn at you, like you gotta tell somebody. You
can't tell anybody, you know what you can you can
tell me call now four two and I'm kidding. No,
just next time we're out, you know, getting mail at
the same time, go hey, I uh, I wanted to
tell you something.
Speaker 6 (47:56):
So you've kind of described another movie.
Speaker 2 (47:57):
We're the Miller's if you're the Millers, whereas we're pretending
to be a family and we're going across the country
for I don't remember what they did to to have
to get into that situation. And before I catch your
what is supposed to be your son and daughter making out,
why don't you just let me know what's going on,
(48:19):
get me a heads up. Your secret is my secret,
That's what I'm saying.
Speaker 6 (48:23):
You're just a gossip you can tell I don't want
a gossip.
Speaker 2 (48:26):
I don't want to tell anybody.
Speaker 6 (48:27):
You just want them to tell you.
Speaker 2 (48:29):
No, I just I think that it would probably help
them out to tell somebody, and I can be that somebody.
Don't tell Lucy, she'll tell everybody. You tell. You want
everyone to know, Tell Lucy you want no one to know?
Tell Scott Voorhees. That's me.
Speaker 6 (48:45):
Well, I can vouch for you in that because I
never know where the gourmet clubs are going to be
until everybody else knows. See, so you can keep a secret.
Speaker 2 (48:53):
See, and I teased earlier like perhaps it looks like
next Wednesday, big announcement, something else we're doing here in
honor of Kfab's one hundredth great thing we get to
be a part of. Have I told you what that is?
Speaker 3 (49:08):
No?
Speaker 2 (49:08):
No, and I won't.
Speaker 1 (49:10):
Scott Voice News Radio eleven ten.
Speaker 2 (49:14):
KFAB talked about the sex offender registry, but they're not
a registry for other stuff like you. You could murder
a guy and be caught by police. You're chewing on
his ear when they show up here, and there's no
registry for that if you get out.
Speaker 3 (49:29):
No.
Speaker 2 (49:31):
Doug says there should be a registry for people who
like to steal. That's yes, you steal something in jail
for a short time. You get out. Next thing, you know,
no one on their block can find their lawnmower anymore,
and we don't know who to check with because there's
no theft offender registry. Great point. Sarah says, I once
(49:55):
had an apartment neighbor who played loud music. He once said,
you know, after I'm sure several conversations about whether or
not the volume of the music was too loud at
certain hours, he says, turn it down, or she said,
I'm turn it down or I'm calling the cops. He
turned it down right away. Years later I found out
he's on the sex offender registry. My threat to call
(50:19):
the cops was immediately heated, possibly because of it. Yeah,
but I don't think a condition of his well, I
don't know. Maybe. I mean, if there's a noise pollution
ordinance that you're in violation of, that might be in
violation of your parole and it's back in the SLAMMA.
(50:41):
I don't know. Here in Omaha, we have people who
are concerned that we have unaccompanied minors in our community,
young people who are on a list according to our
Department of Health and Human Services and Homeland Security and
Immigration and Customs and all that these are kids who
(51:03):
were brought to our southern border, allowed into the country,
and then completely lost track of. Now, the Biden administration said,
we've got four hundred and forty eight thousand unaccompanied children
who are on a list where we don't know where
they are, and they didn't even go look for them.
(51:24):
Apparently they at one point said, we don't have the
staff to do it, we don't have the resources. So
the problem is young kids brought into our country, released
into the wild, and we don't know where they are.
Are they safe and sound? Are they being trafficked? Are
they traffickers themselves? For those of who are like male teenagers,
(51:47):
you know, sixteen seventeen years old, that kind of thing.
We got to know this, right, These are kids? Are
they Have they been kidnapped? Is there a family wanting
to know where they are? In forty eight thousand unaccompanied
children with addresses that were missing, incomplete, or undeliverable, and
Biden's administration said, oh, what are we supposed to do?
(52:10):
So Trump gets in there. Tom Holman beefs up Department
of Homeland Security and Immigration Customs Enforcement. We have the
agents who are going in communities to try and find
these kids. And since Trump took office, thirty one thousand
of these reports have been marked now as complete, including some,
(52:33):
according to the story here from KETV News Watch seven,
including some here in Omaha. They have been going to
the door to see like kind of like Terminator two,
but with better intent. Have you seen this boy?
Speaker 5 (52:51):
Now?
Speaker 2 (52:52):
They said, we're conducting welfare checks on these children to
ensure that they're safe and not being exploited, abused, or trafficked.
Are people in the community saying this is great? Thanks
a lot for looking out for these kids. Oh oh no,
I'll tell you what they are saying. After a Fox
News update. Next Scott Voice Soncer's custom was inbox hoping
(53:15):
for you. Scott at kfab dot com got a beautiful
email from someone who was truly moved by what I
said earlier this morning and was going on and on
about how he had tears in his eyes and he
wanted to make sure I posted it online so we
could share it with others, and he just thought it
was just the most beautiful thing that he'd ever heard
(53:37):
on the radio. And even though he was talking about
Jim Roses Rosie to Genozi this morning, which was a
very beautiful Easter message about the power of faith and
forgiveness discipleship. I have a couple of things I can
do with this email. I can either reply to him,
(53:59):
copy Jim and say, actually that was Jim that said that,
or in fact, let me email him back right now,
dear Rick, thank you Scott and send there. Look, I
say this all the time. I know some people think
(54:21):
Jim and I sound similar, and I admit there's there's
a similarity there. But if you hear something on the radio,
you like, that's me. If you hear something on the
radio you don't like, that's Jim Rose. So we're just
gonna hey. I get blamed all the time for things
that Jim says that people don't like. They're like, I
(54:41):
don't know why you say that. I email back and go,
it wasn't me, that was Jim. So I got to
take flak for things Jim says all the time because
they think it's me. Once in a while, I'm gonna
take one. That's something that says that Jim says. That's
great if people think it was me, that's just balance.
Some might call it petty. I call it balance. Now
(55:03):
where was I?
Speaker 5 (55:05):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (55:05):
Yes, k E TV News Watch seven has this big
story about this so called new practice by Immigration and
Customs enforcement. Well, I suppose it is fairly new. The
timeline is people came to our border with Mexico and said, please,
(55:29):
I'm seeking asylum for me, and oh, what's his name
over here? This kid or in some cases the people
who came here to this country were unaccompanied miners on
their own and they're like, but I have family, and
so they're like fourteen fifteen year old boys, and rather
than like match them up and make sure everything's okay,
and do you have documentation that this kid you're with
(55:51):
is really someone you're with, because some people are kidnapping
kids south of our border bringing them to America because
they're given more leniency for asylum seeking if they have
a kid with them. So if you don't have a kid,
what do you do. You get a kid and you
come to America, you get in, you abandon the kid,
and you go and do drug gang stuff until you're
(56:14):
deported by the Trump administration and the judge says, you
can't do that. That's the timeline. So we had under
the Biden administration four hundred and forty eight thousand unaccompanied
children whose addresses were missing, incomplete, or undeliverable. That's just
the kids that we couldn't keep any track of. We
(56:37):
didn't have any kind of details about who they were,
where they were, their status. So the Biden administration was
asked about this and they said, we don't have the staff.
So here comes President Trump and suddenly Department of Health
and Human Services and Department of Homeland Security and ICE
suddenly they have the staff. They're getting the staff. They
(56:59):
think it's actually important to check on these kids, so
they go into the communities where they you know, last
known address, any details, And some people look at it
as as Department of Homeland Security says, we're leading efforts
to conduct welfare checks on these children to ensure that
(57:20):
they're safe and not being exploited, abused, or sex trafficked.
And then you've got someone like this Omaha immigration attorney
who talked with k E TV. Her name is Julia,
and she says, when ice shows up with full tactical gear,
all black or unidentified saying we're ice, all right, you
(57:41):
can't say they're unidentified when they say we're ice, And
they probably don't say that someone's like iced tea is
at the door, or is it vanilla ice? Is it
ice cube? Some ice? Is that we're immigration Customs enforcement
and we're here to check on this kid. And she
says it's scary for people. I imagine it's scary for
(58:05):
people who are in a home with a kid who
they are using as a drug mule or trafficking, or
they use just for entry into this country, or you're
the unaccompanied miner yourself and you're living there by yourself,
(58:25):
which they're finding.
Speaker 6 (58:29):
So these are older than ten twelve years, these are some.
Speaker 2 (58:32):
Of them, well some I mean, if you came into
this country as an unaccompanied miner at the age of
fifteen in the Biden administration, Like what, there's one story
here about a kid who's nineteen. Now he's living there
by himself. How how I'm thirty years older than him,
and I have a hard time off fording housing and
(58:53):
everything I need. Now he's probably not getting money together
to put a kid through school, but I'm.
Speaker 6 (58:59):
Sure he still gets a bunch of money. The people
that came here were given and I'm assuming are still
being given tons of cash, right, And so.
Speaker 2 (59:08):
This person's like, well, it's just scary seeing them. Why
are they in full tactical gear because they don't know
what they're going to come up with. You knock on
one door and you're going to find a very nice
family who they they're trying to do everything the right way,
working hard, kids are in school. In some cases these
(59:30):
kids were You might have new kids that are being
born and raised in America. You know, yeah, there's some
problems with some paperwork and documentation, but we're not talking
about gang members and all the rest of this stuff,
and you end up having a conversation with the family
and make sure everyone's okay, okay, and you go right
(59:51):
next door and you've got gang member, drug trafficking, sex trafficking,
child of abuse using warlords living there who start shooting
at these So she's like, well, why can't they just
send over a nice guidance counselor to see because they
don't want to go. It's dangerous. It could be very,
(01:00:13):
very dangerous. And she says it's dangerous for people in
the community. She says, well, people are afraid. Immigration and
Customs Enforcement needs to tell them first when they're coming
and what they're doing. All right, Julia, I love that name.
I'm not a big fan of what you're saying. Let's
(01:00:33):
think about what you're saying. If the idea is is
we don't know what's going on on the other side
of that door. Could be some simple paperwork mishap. Kids
are fine being raised, love and care and everything's great.
Could be a horrible situation. What you're saying is for
(01:00:58):
the people who are in and the kids who are
involved in a horrible situation, we want to tell the
people who have kidnapped them or have them in there,
as you know, in a sex trafficking ring. We want
to give them a heads up. Hey, just letting you
guys know. We're coming by on Thursday afternoon, probably about
(01:01:22):
four o'clock in the afternoon. Just wanted to let you know.
We don't want you to be scared. And they're like, oh,
thank you. That does help a great deal as they
pack up their crap and they move five states away
to continue what they're doing and keep that kid in
a dangerous situation. Yeah, it's a great idea. Let's just
(01:01:42):
give them a heads up. Julia. I know your job
as an Omaha immigration attorney specialist. You you're dealing with
people who have horrible stories, things that they fled, situations
(01:02:03):
they faced in their homeland. They're so thankful to be
here in America, to be given a shot. They want
to build a live for themselves. They want to live
that American dream that they've dreamed about themselves. You hear
these stories every day. You know why, because they've come
to you for help. They're trying to do things the
right way. These are not the people we're concerned about.
(01:02:28):
This is also not representative of every single person who's
been allowed entry into this country. So when you start
and look, I'll put it the other way too. There
are people who think, if you're in the country illegally,
you're probably on many levels super criminal and need to
be deported. I don't think that's the case either, but
(01:02:49):
we don't know. And if you think everyone's great and
the government shouldn't be bothering them, it's scaring people. That's
just as bad as someone thinking everyone's a criminal. We
need to deport them all right now, send them to
an l Salvador prison and figure it out later. Either
extreme is wrong, but what is the reality here? The
(01:03:11):
reality is ICE is helping fix the glitch. They're trying
to figure out where is this kid? Four hundred and
forty eight thousand unaccompanied children. We don't have any idea
where they are, what situation they're in. We're trying to
find them. And the Biden administration said we can't do that.
(01:03:33):
The Trump administration said we have to do that. And
so since Trump's been in office, or about one hundred
days or so, thirty one thousand kids have been accounted for.
This is questions about their welfare and safety, So what
(01:03:55):
is your problem? What are you complaining about that we
have government officials checking on the well being of children.
Is that what you're complaining about?
Speaker 5 (01:04:09):
You know?
Speaker 2 (01:04:09):
Kind of when I put it that way, it kind
of sounds like you're part of the problem, doesn't it.
Speaker 1 (01:04:12):
Scott Bhees where you're going News Radio eleven ten kfab
regarding this is this issue with you know, some people saying, well,
the Trump administration is just deporting you know, good family
people and all the.
Speaker 2 (01:04:28):
Look, I don't know. I have no problem saying I
don't know, and I'm fine with people asking questions. I
will take the same tact here that I did during
COVID for example. So I've got my thoughts, but I
think it's okay to ask questions about some of this
stuff on both sides. So when you've got the Trump
(01:04:49):
administration who knows this the details in this person, and
they say this person's an MS thirteen gang member and
should not be in a country, Okay, what evidence do
you have that they don't know what they're talking about.
That's fine, ask questions, let's figure it out. But when
(01:05:09):
you've got a senator from Maryland who had barely a
response to the family of someone in his community who
was killed by an illegal immigrant, Rachel Morin, and he's
going down to El Salvador to advocate for the release
of this alleged gang member, to get him back to America.
(01:05:29):
How is that really serving your constituents? Now, I know
Klay and Backer going to have a lot more on
this there next Tone eleven ten Kfab.
Speaker 1 (01:05:38):
Scott Voyes Mornings nine to eleven. Our News Radio eleven
ten Kfab