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January 22, 2025 68 mins
Yes, if you jam this audio up your nose, it will make you happy.  Or your money back.
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Scott Vorgiez. I hear a news report here on news
radio eleven ten KFAB that says, if you spray something
up your nose, that you're in a better mood and
your depression goes away. I'm like, what exactly do you
spray in your nose that makes these stresses of work, family,
personal life, health issues. I don't know what's happening in

(00:24):
your life, but I don't know any nasal spray that
you just like, all right, I'll just throw this up
in old Lefty here, and next thing you know, my
wife comes back to me, my kids respect for me
is restored. Everything's going splendidly at work, everything's great. I'm
not talking about my personal life. I'm saying, like, I

(00:45):
don't know what's going on with you. And then you've
got the incredibly asinine reality that there are people out
there who have life better than ninety nine percent of
everyone on who's ever lived in the history of life.
Yet they've got some stupid chemical and balance and so

(01:06):
suddenly like they can't enjoy everything they have going on
for them. And so you spray something up your nose,
and it's like, oh, so much better is it? Because
you can breathe. And then when do we find out
that whatever you're spraying up your nose just gives you
nasal cancer or something like that.

Speaker 2 (01:26):
I just if you buy it out of the back
of a car in a dark alley, that's probably what
is going on.

Speaker 1 (01:32):
Yeah, I just I heard that this morning, and suddenly
my mind couldn't get off the fact, like, what are
you talking about? A nasal spray to help with depression?
And that would be true of I think anything you
might inject, or anything you might ingest, or any of
the rest of that stuff. It's a heck of a

(01:55):
deal this life, isn't it a heck of a deal?
I understand where some people are. I don't know if
it's full blown depression or what it is. When you
have this kind of message coming on the National Day

(02:17):
of Prayer, the newly elected president and inaugurated president sworn
in on Monday yesterday, goes to the Washington National Cathedral
where the Right Reverend Marianne Edgar Bood or Bud or buddy,
but is it buddy, b U D d E. Buddy, Hey, buddy,

(02:38):
I'm not your buddy pal. I'm not your pal friend.
I'm not your friend, buddy, there's your South Park reference
for the segment of the radio program. That's the way
the Canadians speak to each other anyway.

Speaker 2 (02:50):
The maybe it's Boudet the right.

Speaker 1 (02:53):
Reverend Marianne edgar Bee is up there, you know, preaching
that gospel.

Speaker 3 (03:01):
Millions have put their trust in you.

Speaker 1 (03:04):
Thank you, oh talking.

Speaker 3 (03:05):
I told the nation yesterday you have felt the providential
hand of a loving God. In the name of our God,
I ask you to have mercy upon the people in
our country who are scared.

Speaker 1 (03:24):
Now scared.

Speaker 3 (03:26):
There are gay, lesbian, and transgender children in Democratic, Republican
and independent families, some who fear for their lives.

Speaker 1 (03:39):
They fear Okay, so they're in their families and they
fear for their lives. Did I miss the part where
during the first four years of the Trump presidency there
were gay, lesbian and transgender children in Republican, Democrat and
independent families who were just being slaughtered. Is one after

(04:04):
the other, Like I don't know about those shoes, like no, no, no, no, no, nothing,
All of these shoes, I don't know. They look kind
of fruity, kill them, you know, I what is she
talking about? They fear for their lives? Oh, it's not

(04:24):
just them.

Speaker 3 (04:25):
And the people. The people who pick our crops and
clean our office buildings, who labor in poultry farms and
meatpacking plants, who wash the dishes after we eat in restaurants,
and work the night shifts in hospitals, they may not
be citizens.

Speaker 1 (04:42):
You arrogant. This is what you think, This is what
you think. Just happened. Over the last four years. We
had absolute, unfettered access to this country and all that
it offers. This access to our country has created major
problems with education, with healthcare, with public safety. We've got

(05:08):
people who have been sent to New York City, Denver,
Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, They've been sent to these
places Boston, and there's no room for them there by
these southern border towns. It said, you keep letting people

(05:29):
coming into this country. We don't have resources to take
care of them. So since you like it so much,
you deal with it. And suddenly it was a national emergency.
People were going up to like New York City, and
the people in New York City said, wait a second,
we don't have any place to put these individuals. We

(05:49):
don't have the money to take care of these people.
We don't have the jobs to get them started. And
then on the path towards finding some sort of domicile
to take care of these people. And so in some
cases they took like hotels if there was any kind
of room there, or buildings that had been previously empty

(06:11):
that were supposed to be you know, for work or
hotel or school or whatever. And they're like, all right,
just put these migrant people in here. And the people
in the community said, wait a second, our tax dollars,
we're working hard, We got tax dollars going towards to
try to take care of our kids. But now that
money has been diverted to all the people who've just
come across the border, and now they're just hanging out.

(06:32):
They got money, they got debit cards, they got a phone.
People are trying to help them find work. What about me?
What about my family? And this arrogant reverend at the
Washington National Cathedral is going to lecture President Trump and
America to say, of all the millions and millions of

(06:55):
people who came across this border absolutely unchecked over the
last four years, all they are are hardworking people who
are in the fields and washing dishes. Like how, first
of all, why do you think the only thing that
people from nations south of America, Why do you think

(07:19):
the only thing they're qualified to do is pick crops
and washed dishes and clean office buildings. That's what I'm
hearing from you. They don't have any other skills, hopes, dreams,
anything else they offer this country. This is what they're doing,
and this is why we brought them here. Suddenly we
had thirty million jobs open up and office building cleaning,

(07:42):
and thank goodness, we've got these people to do it.
And they're scared right now, scared of what exactly. This
is also the message we have here in Omaha. As
Omaha as immigration attorneys are going out and talking to
the media again. This story from k e TV News
Watch seven that said, we're concerned because President Trump has

(08:07):
directed the Immigration Customs enforcement officers that they're able to
go into places of worship or schools or health facilities
to start rounding up brown people. What are you talking about. Yes,
if we have someone who's an identified serious criminal in

(08:29):
this country and they're in this country illegally and they're
being harbored in a place of worship or a school
or a health facility, police can go in there the
same as they can go in there now. But of
course we got to come out and say ICE has
the ability to enter places of worship. They're going to
be coming to church here in our communities. Looking at

(08:51):
people going, can you pass me the hymnal? Please also
your papers. As they're passing the collection plate, please put
some money in the collection plate, and we want to
see your papers. We want to make sure you have
status in this country. This isn't happening. They know it's
not happening. This woman up here knows that there aren't
gay and lesbian and transgender kids across this country fearing

(09:15):
for their lives because of anything having to do with politics,
national politics. What happened this week? We had one old
guy leave the oval office and another old guy came in.
If you look right at the the the the facts

(09:38):
of the matter. Guy left, another guy came in, and
you're like this, but this new guy, he's got all
these fights. Yes, remember he was already president. He was
already president. We had four years to see what this
guy was going to do. No gay, lesbian, transgender, Hispanic

(09:58):
illegal immigrant kids were killed. No wonder there are people
out there walking around going, man, I wish I had
something to spray up my nose to make me happy
because everything out there is terrifying. Trump's gonna kill everybody.
As these guys continue to make statements or speak at

(10:18):
the National Cathedral and lecture the president, please during the
time in your president, please find God's grace upon thee
and try not to murder any trans kids. What are
you talking about. It's amazing that they think, you know,

(10:42):
it's easy just to have their comments directed at Trump.
The comments aren't directed at Trump. That's what they think
about you. If you voted for Trump, that's what they
think about you. You think they think you just want
to round up all the illegal immigrant transgender gay kids

(11:02):
and just murder him. We got to go find him
and kill him. That's what they think about you. So yeah,
if I sound a little testy because I'm tired of it,
the American people are tired of it. And I think
even a lot of the people who didn't vote for

(11:24):
Trump listen to this and go well, for crap's sake,
I don't think that my Maga neighbor with the Maga
bumper sticker on the back of his truck and the
snake flag flying in his yard. Because this guy loves
the country, loves our nation's military, stands up for law enforcement.

(11:47):
He would give me the shirt off his back if
I asked him for it. I don't think he wants
to round up and kill all the gay kids guys
in the country illegally. He's married to this girl and
his father in law votevoted for Trump, and he went
out and had to go, of course, talk to the
media about it, or the media saw social media posts.
Somehow they got connected and he goes and talks to them,

(12:09):
and he says like, yeah, it's caused a little problem
in my family. My father in law voted for the
guy who might end up deporting me. First of all,
are you a murderous criminal, gang member, terrorist? If so,
you should be deported. Secondly, which father in law doesn't

(12:34):
want to deport their son in law. I get along
so great with my father in law. I love and
respect that man greatly. But I don't think for a
moment that he wouldn't, given the opportunity, wanted to get
me deported. That's how it works. I'm never going to
be good enough for his daughter, and he's right, I'm

(12:56):
not good enough for his daughter. While we get along great.
I think if given the chance to go into a
ballot box and secretly cast a vote to have me deported,
he would do it.

Speaker 2 (13:09):
I don't think it'd be a secret.

Speaker 1 (13:10):
No, I don't do so either. We put a sign
in the yard, make my family great again. Deport Scott
like deport me where he was born and raised here.
My parents were born and raised here. I don't know
somewhere your family came over here from lands of Dutch repute.
Go back there like Pennsylvania. I don't know where do

(13:32):
you want me to go? I don't know where you
want me to go. I love that story guy guys
complaining my father in law voted for Trump and I
might get deported. Like yeah, be a better husband. Read
the room, pal, No one wants you here at Christmas?

(13:54):
All right, scottikfab dot com. The Zonker's custom was inbox.
That's Lucy Chapman. I'm Scott Vorhees. This is news Radio
eleven to ten KOFAB and I said, you know what
happened this week? One old guy left the Oval office,
another old guy moved in. I say that with all
due respect for all old guys. I know, there's a

(14:16):
lot of old guys that are like, hey, first of all, Scott,
you're not as young as you used to be, Like,
I know, I feels solidarity now. And secondly, I could
still put a whooping on you. I'm like, Dad, please
don't text me during the show. And he's right. Andrew
email says, this new seventy eight year old man is

(14:38):
dancing and waving a sword. He's going to kill somebody.
You see that. Well, I don't know what ceremony that was,
but I did see the video where they gave President
Trump a sword and he starts dancing with it. Malania
almost looked up from underneath her smooth criminal hat, like
what is he doing now? I even made a mention

(15:02):
last night to my wife about our first lady, the Hamburgler.
She's like, will you stop talking about her hat? She
looked great? I like, she did look great.

Speaker 2 (15:13):
She did look great. Spy versus spy.

Speaker 1 (15:15):
She looked like spy versus spy from Mad Magazine. From
Mad magazine, Surely, emails says, Scott, you are speaking my
exact thoughts today.

Speaker 2 (15:26):
Really, she must have a son in law. She wants
to do boord.

Speaker 1 (15:31):
Yeah, I don't know. Derek email says, I love the show,
listen almost every day almost. He's probably talking about Saturday
and Sunday. It must be when I'm not always on
the radio Saturday and Sunday. Thank you for reporting on
an absolutely inappropriate rant from your reverend bishop. Whatever she

(15:56):
is marrying. But she obviously did not read the room
nor reckon recognize what happened when Trump was elected. Oh
yeah she did. I'll finish reading your email in a moment, Derek,
But oh yeah she did. She jumped at the chance.
Who wants to speak of the National Cathedral for this
day of prayer in praying for our nation and our

(16:16):
new president. She's like, I'll do it. I'm gonna tell
them exactly because there are there are all these people
out there who feel like they're counting on me to
speak truth to power or say something, and I have
to take advantage of this. It's the same mindset that

(16:37):
a few years ago here in Omaha, I said the
same thing about her, the dormant Douglas County Health Director.
When's the last time we heard about doctor Lindsey Hughes.
What does the health director do when we're not in
a pandemic and she can tell us what to do
and what masks to wear, and what side of the
aisle at the grocery store to walk up and down?

(16:58):
What does she do the rest of the year she
get pay last year? What does she do?

Speaker 2 (17:02):
I haven't heard anything at all about her.

Speaker 1 (17:05):
What is that job? And not in a pandemic? They
go running in, like doctor, doctor, please, Uh, there's people
out there with gonorrhea. I will tell them to stop
rubbing their gonorrhea on each other. Great idea, doctor, Thanks.
They go running out like what does she do? Doctor?

(17:26):
Is people bleeding out here? Well, I'm gonna need some
uh gauze pads? All right, doctor? Are you the best?
They were running around to find some gauzepads. What she
doesn't do any doctor stuff? And she's not conducting surgery
or checking anyone for sniffles or even asking anyone to
turn their head and cough, though I'm sure she'd like

(17:47):
to take a squeeze at me right now. Any What
was I saying? Oh? Yeah, when she really late in
the game instituted the mask mandate for Omaha again, like
the third or fourth mask mandate, and she's like, well,
I just thing we need to put the masks on.
And even some of the people who had always worn
masks were like, oh, for crying out loud, We're not

(18:09):
doing that again, are we? Like, no one followed the
mask mandate hardly. It was not enforced anywhere. Even those
haughty servers at restaurants are like, sir, if you're going
to come into our restaurant and walk three steps from
the front door over here to your table where you
can take your mask off, you have to wear a

(18:31):
mask when walking those three steps.

Speaker 2 (18:34):
I'll gotta die. All right.

Speaker 1 (18:38):
That felt really good to get to get that out.
I took it up a notch because it just felt
really good to get all that out. So even those
people were like, I don't care, Come on in, what
do I care? And we were talking. People are all mad,
like where does she thinks she? You know, who does
she think she is? Where does she get off telling
us to put on the face diaper and all the

(18:59):
rest is I was like, because there are people who
are coming to or Saint please, you're in a position
of authority. You're the only one that they'll listen to.
You have this tremendous opportunity, you have this incredible job
and if you don't tell people to take these protective measures,
we're all gonna die.

Speaker 2 (19:18):
Do you want my grandma to die?

Speaker 1 (19:21):
You know? And so when you hear I don't know
eight people tell you that, twenty I don't know how
many people, thirty people tell her that in the entire community,
she's like, well, I don't want all these thirty of
their grandmothers to die. I guess I must do something.
People will put an enormous amount of power and influence

(19:43):
on me, and I don't want to let them down.
Never mind the fact that everyone else was like, well,
you stop telling us what to do. We're fine, We're
three years into this pandemic. Knock it off or whatever.
It's the same thing here with this reverend. There are
people saying, I understand you're going to give the prayer

(20:05):
at the National Day of Prayer to Donald Trump, that
Orange monster. You gotta tell him what a scumback he is. Like, well,
I can't tell him he's a scumbag. What You've got
to say something. So she did this so she could
go get high fives from all of her lesbian friends
at the next party and whoever else might be there.

(20:27):
I don't know the parties I dream about have a
lot of lesbians. To be honest with.

Speaker 2 (20:32):
You, what what Sorry Breakfast did not bring a filter
into the studio today.

Speaker 1 (20:41):
So with that, Scott Boies Snooze Radio eleven kfab. I'm
DJ Scott Vorhes. There is mc Lucy Chapman. This email says,
I don't know what Scott is shooting up his nose today. Well,
I talked about how there's a nation that can cure depression.

(21:02):
They say that sounds that sounds very dangerous. Not I
hope it works. But I just think about these people
who maybe they don't have, like a chemical imbalance that
could be corrected by the spray. I don't want to

(21:23):
come off like a doctor or a psychologist, but it
seems dangerous to tell some people. They say, well I'm depressed.
Oh yeah, why are you depressed? You got a chemical
imbalance or something. No, I'm depressed because I just keep
making the worst decisions possible, and I don't do anything
to try and improve my life. I just keep waiting

(21:43):
for someone to come along and snap their fingers and
make it better. Like, well that doesn't work. Here's some
nasal spray, and all right, I'll try it. And they
try the nasal spray and they're like, how is it? Like, well,
I used it for more than three days and now
I'll never breathe again. They're like, wait, did you use
the nasal spray we gave you it, or did you
use Afron? I just used Afron. It's a lot cheaper

(22:06):
than what you gave me. Yeah, you can't use that
more than three days or you'll never breathe again. Afron addiction,
it's a real thing. Are you familiar with that?

Speaker 2 (22:18):
No, I'm not.

Speaker 1 (22:20):
Actually there's a nasal spray that if you get really congested,
it's called Afron AFRN. This is not a paid endorsement
for Afron. The great thing about Afron, though, is if
you can't, like if you're lying there, you're trying to sleep,
you can't breathe. You spray just a little bit of
affron up your nose, clears everything out. Immediately, you can breathe,

(22:45):
you can sleep. You're like, I've never known this level
of elation in my life. But then the next day
here comes the congestion again, exce at this time a
little bit worse, and you're like, no problem, I got affron.
So you spray affron. It says right there in tiny
little letters in the bottle. Don't take this for more

(23:07):
than three days, because then you get basically an affron addiction,
because that congestion keeps coming back and back, and each
time it's a little bit worse.

Speaker 2 (23:18):
Can you ever get past it?

Speaker 1 (23:20):
No, you just keep taking it for years.

Speaker 2 (23:22):
But my point is, at some point if you stopped,
would you wait, what's the next line?

Speaker 4 (23:31):
No?

Speaker 1 (23:31):
It was basically like coming off of any anything that
you that you take and your body gets used to,
whether it's your drug or whatever, you have to go through.

Speaker 2 (23:41):
Detox sinuses go back to normal.

Speaker 1 (23:45):
I don't know. I'm guessing that these detoxs. Have you
ever been in a detox facility and you see these
people just shaking and screaming.

Speaker 2 (23:54):
They see it in the movies.

Speaker 1 (23:55):
They need the drugs or the alcohol, or they need
whatever chemicals their body is used to. It's horrifying, horrifying
to watch someone go through that. I'm guessing it's probably
a million times worse for those who are addicted to
these nasal sprays, because you know they're they're really mad,
but they can't breathe and they're trying to tell you

(24:17):
like if if you've got someone else drug out on
drugs and alcohol and they're like, come on, man, come on,
you've got to give me, you know, and they're like
they're super lucid for the first time in many instances,
but they're also having the shakes. Then you got these
people addicted to afron nasal spray and they're like, come like,

(24:39):
they're all congested, they can't talk. It's got to be awful,
got to be awful. So we were talking about this
nasal spray that you take in this says, oh, curious depression.
What if you're not clinically depressed. What if you're just
an a hole and you've just made a bunch. That's

(25:00):
a terrible to In fact, I'm going to this story.
I wasn't gonna do this until next hour. Who the
heck had it? Mike McKnight had it. So let's go
to the first Alert six website WWT six news. I
don't know, it doesn't seem fair or right for me

(25:20):
to go on the radio here and just trash some
fourteen or fifteen year old kid, but boy, I really
want to was the story gone. It was there a
couple of hours ago. I'll see if oh here it is. Nope,
not gone, got it. So there was this kid at

(25:43):
Lewis Central High School in Council Bluffs. He's a freshman
and apparently he uh here, let's go to the story.
Here's Mike mcnight WWT First Alert six News go and begin.

(26:06):
I don't hear anything, Lucy, do you hear anything? Am
I deaf?

Speaker 2 (26:10):
I hear nothing?

Speaker 1 (26:12):
Shoot? Well, like I said, I was gonna do this
in the next hour. Anyway, if we play the video,
you're gonna hear just basically a lot of beeping in
the kid's name, and we don't need that. So I'll
tell you the story and then maybe we can reset
it here in the next hour. When I got all
this figured out, there's a freshman kid at the school.
His first name is Gavin, because of course it is

(26:36):
Wait a second, my kid's name Gavin. I'm not talking
about your kid. This kid's name is Gavin. He's a
freshman at Lewis Central. And he says, well, yeah, I've
been in trouble a lot this year, and in this
particular classroom instance the other day, I basically just told
my teacher, you know, the adult in the room who

(26:57):
has freaking had it. I told my teacher I'm just
going to take a nap instead of paying attention in
doing my work, and apparently the adult the teacher had
a problem with this. Wait a second, I told the
adult what I was gonna do, and he had the
audacity to suggest that I wasn't allowed to do that.

(27:20):
He told me no. No one tells Gavin no. So
Gavin says, all right, so I just put my hoodie up.
Figure if he can't see me, then he can't scold me. Like, dude,
you are not a wizard. He can see you. It's
not an invisibility cloak. You're not Harry Potter. So he

(27:41):
puts his hoodie up and the teacher's like, are we
doing this again? Meanwhile, there's what twenty three other kids
in the classroom. They're like, all right, I guess we're
just stopping everything. So the teacher can yell at Gavin again.
Gavin sounds like a real treat. So Gavin decides he's
going to take a nap. Teacher says, you're not going
to take a nap. Gavin says, you don't get to

(28:03):
tell me what to do. Teacher says, all right, let's
go get out of the class. You're going down to
the principal's office so the principal can do nothing with you. Well,
Gavin decides he doesn't want to get up. Gavin's comfortable.
I mean, after all, he was just about to take
a nap. Isn't that the worst? You're just about to

(28:24):
fall asleep and here comes someone that wants you to
do something like are kids throwing up? Or the toilet's clogged?
You know? Can you get up? Someone just broke into
our house. You're like, I'm comfy. You're supposed to pay
attention to class. I was just about to take a nap.
Gavin decides that he's not gonna get up. The teacher
then puts his hands on the kid's back and tries

(28:46):
to like get him, like, come on, get up. Gavin
now gets up and pushes the teacher, and he tells
Mike McKnight First Alert six News, Well the teacher touched
me first, and I've got marks on my back, like dude,
one of your classmates, of course, filmed this interaction. This
teacher did not start clawing or whipping your back. You've

(29:10):
got on a big like hooded sweatshirt. Teacher put his
hand on your back with a flat palm. You don't
have marks on your back again, real treat this kid.
So now the teacher and the student. This is where
the teacher starts lowering himself to Gavin's level. And now

(29:34):
they're jawing at each other and cussing at each other.
The kid tells the teacher, you know, like, you don't
get to blank and do this, and the teacher tells
the kid, well, you're going to jail because you pushed me,
and the kid says, well, you you touched me first.

(29:54):
And you're thinking, at what part in this story did
dad come in there and grab his son by the
scrub and go you don't get to act like this,
and in school, you're coming with me. Don't worry school,
I'll deal with it. Here's dad. He comes up there.
His name's Nick. Nick comes in there and decides he
is standing by his son. He does yeah, Nick says,

(30:18):
well you put hands on him first. All he did
was push you away from him because you're putting your
hands on him.

Speaker 2 (30:27):
But we have it on video, right, Oh, yeah, we got.

Speaker 1 (30:29):
All this on video. Yeah. The adult tried to get
the kid up out of the chair and out of
the classroom so the teacher could teach the kids who
are sitting there dealing with all of this again. And yeah,
am I picking on Gavin and his crappy father? You
bet I would have no problem. And I here's what

(30:50):
I in my Christian heart, here's what I want. I
want them both maybe have shown the error of their
ways on this news piece. Maybe they look at it
and go, wow, we don't look as cool and as
good as we thought we did. We need to both
do better. Maybe they'll see that, you think, well, I hope.

(31:11):
But if the next news I get from Mike McKnight
at First Alert six is it turns out the Gavin
and Nick accidentally wandered into a super collider and turned
it on and they just started to spin in you know,
one's going this way, other one's going that way, And
turns out they collided into each other and created a
black hole. I was like, oh, my gosh, does anyone hurt, Like, well,

(31:35):
they were hurt, like oh yeah, I mean anyone else. No,
the black hole just kind of swallowed them up and
they're gone like wow. And I'd say that's terrible. Do
we get it on video? But what I in my
Christian heart, not the evil black heart that sometimes takes
over my mouth hole. What I want is for them

(31:56):
to do better and apologize to this teacher and probably
all the other teachers at that school. But even though
I'm picking on this guy and his dad, this is
happening in just about every single classroom with just about
every single teacher right now, in all the school districts

(32:18):
within the sound of my voice. This happens all the time.
And this kid gets on the news and he is like, well,
he came at me first. He came at you first.
This isn't a gang fight, Gavin. He goes, so, I
felt attacked. God, I could throw up into my mouth.

(32:40):
I could throw up in my mouth. He says, he
got in my face, he grabbed a hold of my back,
and he left Marx. He's not a honey badger, Gavin,
He's a man. He put his flat hand on your back.
He didn't leave Marx.

Speaker 2 (32:57):
Well, if he pulled him off of his on his back,
how did he get in his face, It's one or
the other.

Speaker 1 (33:03):
Well, he leans over into the kid and says, come on,
you're coming with me, Okay, I'd loved it for you
to hear the kid's voice. But maybe that'd be bad.
Maybe that'd be too bad. All right, here's Gavin. I
will admit that I'm in the wrong too. I don't
know if he will or not, but he I just
don't think that any adult should grab a hold of
a kid like that.

Speaker 4 (33:22):
A classmate took video, but countsel Buff's police say they
don't see any charges being filed, so we won't show
the security supervisor's identity, only his reaction to the students defiance.

Speaker 1 (33:34):
Come on, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go.
I just touched you. What are you going to do?
Doing nothing? Is the kid cussing at the adult? Yeah,
that's it's.

Speaker 2 (33:54):
The kid that's being beaped, right or is it both
of you?

Speaker 1 (33:57):
No, that's the kid. A kid is oozing class all
over the classroom, well, leaking gallons of class.

Speaker 2 (34:05):
Okay, but this does show a little bit of a
different angle. This kid said he understands where it's partly
his fault.

Speaker 1 (34:12):
Yeah, the kid says, I told the teacher I was
going to take a nap the teacher, the adult had
the audacity to suggest I couldn't sleep in his class right.

Speaker 2 (34:20):
No, the kid's wrong, but at least he's taking some
responsibility for it. It sounds like more than the dad is.

Speaker 1 (34:25):
They're not taking responsibility for this. Email from Dave said
to Scott at kfab dot com says, falling asleep in
class What happened to the day is where the teacher
just dropped a stack of books next to your head
or kicked one of those loud, those hollow, loud plastic
chairs to the point where you soil yourself. Oh, you

(34:46):
could do that, or you could do What was it,
mister Contreras who did this? I think I think it
was We were in study hall, in the cafeteria. Down
the hall little bit was the science lab, mister Contreras's
science lab, And suddenly all the kids come out of

(35:08):
his classroom into our study hall. We're like, well, this
is weird. What happened? Someone starts spraying hydrochloric acid all
over the place. No, there was a kid that fell asleep.
Think his name was Bo. And so the teacher said,
all right, everyone quietly get up and walk out of
the classroom. They leave the classroom. Now they're down in

(35:32):
the study hall. They turn off the lights in the classroom.
Bow's still asleep, sleeping soundly dreaming. I don't know if
he was having a nice dream or a dream like
I had last night. Man, I was working so hard
I had to rent out this apartment I have for rent.
Do I have an apartment for rent?

Speaker 3 (35:51):
No?

Speaker 1 (35:51):
But when I was asleep last night, I sure did.
And apparently one of the kids on my son's basketball
team needed to rent it out for thirty dollars a month,
and that sounded like a good deal. But I'm like,
he's a kid, how's he gonna sign the paperwork? And
where's he gonna get thirty dollars a month? This is
what I spent all night doing. I don't know if
bo was having one of those dreams or was just

(36:14):
dreaming about Candy. Who knows, But all of his classmates
quietly got up, walked out, came down to our study
hall at Ralston Middle School, and the science teacher instructed
our study hall supervisor or the janitor, I forget, but
someone went into the classroom to wake the kid up

(36:36):
and tell him what are you still doing here at
six o'clock at night, which is exactly what happened. And
we're all in the hallway listening to this. The janitor's like, absolutely,
I get a chance to screw with one of the kids.
Make my lives miserable on a daily basis, I'd be
happy to. They go in there and he starts like
tapping the kid, going, hey, what are you doing? Kid

(36:59):
wakes you know, six o'clock at night, what are you
still doing here? Everyone's gone, He's like, wait what what
you freaking out? Oh man? That was classic.

Speaker 2 (37:09):
Those were the days.

Speaker 1 (37:11):
That's how you do it.

Speaker 2 (37:12):
That's yeah, that's right.

Speaker 1 (37:14):
You know what else would have happened in those days.
Let's say Bo gets up, punches the janitor, or socks
the science teacher, or starts mouthing off and cussing it
everyone something like that. That's when Bo's father would have
come down there and grabbed Bo and said, I'll take
it from here. Guys, so sorry, you had to deal
with this.

Speaker 2 (37:34):
Yeah, that's not happening. Well, I mean maybe maybe some
parents are like that. I don't know.

Speaker 1 (37:40):
I most parents when we were growing.

Speaker 2 (37:42):
Up, Oh, all of the parents were like that.

Speaker 1 (37:45):
Yeah what most every single parent would have been mortified
if their kid had acted like this in class, and
now their kids act like this in class all the time,
and then they're like, should we call the kids parents
in here? Oh? Jeez, that worse. They're worse than the kid.

Speaker 2 (38:03):
You know, while you're talking about kids in school, and
there is a post on my page and it's on
the kfab page.

Speaker 1 (38:10):
Now here's the part of the show where Lucy says
she's glad she doesn't have kids. Is that what you're
going to say?

Speaker 2 (38:16):
That's exactly what I was going to say. And I
was actually going to say it twice to make sure
you heard me correctly.

Speaker 1 (38:21):
Yes.

Speaker 2 (38:23):
So there is a government entity, the archives or something
of the forms documents from the past that are looking
for people that can help them translate these documents because

(38:43):
they're written in cursive.

Speaker 1 (38:45):
Cursive, we get out the Rosetta stone. No one can
read this.

Speaker 2 (38:51):
I don't even know how to reply to that. This
is not hieroglyphics.

Speaker 1 (38:56):
I have a question about this word. Oh, that word
is question. That can't be question. Question starts with a que.
This looks like some sort of weird z thing. Yeah,
that's a that's a cursive que. What nuts? I don't
remember how to do a cursive uppercase Q.

Speaker 2 (39:13):
Well, let's be honest, none of us actually ever did
learn how to do it.

Speaker 1 (39:18):
It's kind of like a day I don't know now
I could do I remember how to write my name
in cursive, because my my signature now is kind of
a broken combination of cursive and print. You're supposed to
but my handwriting has always been bad. I've been told

(39:39):
since I was a kindergartener that I hold my pencil wrong.
And I'm like, how do you get tell me I
hold my pencil wrong. I'm holding it, do you said,
falling out of my hands? I'm holding it. I'm writing.
But they told me when I was a kid, they
sent me home with this thing that goes over the
like a batting donut. It goes over the pencil and

(40:02):
that's where your finger and it's got little indentations where
your fingers are supposed to go. You're supposed to hold
it more upright. And they said, if you don't learn
how to correctly hold a pencil now, it's gonna haunt
you the rest of your life. I'm like, you guys
are crazy, And now like I can't make an eight
like I.

Speaker 2 (40:21):
Have to, like because you didn't wear the brace, I
don't know I.

Speaker 1 (40:27):
I have I when I have to occasionally write something down, numbers, letters, whatever.
My wife starts making fun of me because I hold
my pen wrong, and then I have to like pick
the pin up in a weird way, and my wife
calls it like I write like a chicken scratches, uh

(40:53):
for scratch, you know, like a chicken pecks for scratch.
And she starts going peck peck, peck, peck peck. She
thinks it looks like a chicken trying to eat something like.
Shut up.

Speaker 2 (41:03):
You should have listened to the teachers. You're at that age.
You're right at that breaking point where teachers were starting
to give up because of the the new curriculums that
were being fed into the system, and parents were just
starting to kind of.

Speaker 1 (41:22):
I can write fine, can you though? Yeah, well, I'm
not as good as when when I was a teenager
I worked at the park for a movie theater in Ralston. No,
I don't need my pen brace. I don't know if
they still have those. I don't know if anyone cares anymore.
I don't know if anyone writes anything. Now, you're.

Speaker 2 (41:42):
Right, it was so amazed that they were bringing typing
classes back. Why is it? Why are you amazed? By
that that's all kids use.

Speaker 1 (41:49):
I can type, And if I had to use a
typewriter where you can't just delete, delete and all that,
I probably do pretty well. I can type.

Speaker 2 (41:58):
Would you do all right without spell check?

Speaker 1 (42:00):
Yeah? I can spell. I can tie.

Speaker 2 (42:02):
Really, oh I am that's the one thing. I am
so grateful for spell check.

Speaker 1 (42:08):
When I was working at the park for a movie
theater Beautiful Ralston, USA, there was a manager we had
there because we had we were If you worked the
box office where people are coming in going what when
did you guys raise prices on the matine ticket to
a dollar fifty? We're like, well, sorry, that's what it costs. Now.

(42:28):
This is insane. I'll never I can't believe I'm paying
this much like, Wow, Scott, did you work at the
movie theater in the nineteen fifties? Yes? Now, I think
a ticket, a matinee ticket was three dollars and if
you weren't gonna go see a movie after five, the
regular price ticket I think was four fifty or something,

(42:49):
we had to raise it to five and people lost
their minds. Anyway, you worked the box office and you
had to None of it was computerized. Computer existed, but
for whatever reason, we at that movie theater just wrote
down our statements. We can't we people didn't use credit

(43:09):
cards or anything like that. They paid cash. We counted
cash back to them and we write down We had
to tear their ticket, put it in the bag, and
then count up the tickets for each movie and write
down how many tickets were sold at this amount making
this much money. Then we had to make sure our
drawer matched what was written on the piece of paper,
and the piece of paper had carbon behind it, so
we'd have a copy. One copy goes here, one copy

(43:31):
goes to corporate, and the numbers you wrote down had
to be legible, and you couldn't write and if you
went in there, well, the nice thing about ticket prices
being what they were was you very rarely had to
write an eight The tax was included in the price
of a ticket. We didn't have to factor that. So

(43:54):
unless like eighteen people showed up to see Man's Best
Friend about a Killer Dog starring Ali Sheety. We didn't
have the best movies all the time at the park.

Speaker 2 (44:04):
Four at four fifty yeah, or a dollar fifty.

Speaker 1 (44:08):
Yeah, whatever, So then we would, you know, write down
and we go in there and then Dave, our manager,
would look at our work and he'd look at it
and go, what number is this? I was like, well,
I started to write this number, and then I wrote
this number of the top of it. He's like, do
it again. And it wasn't like white out, which you
absolutely could have done on both you know that and

(44:30):
the carbon. It wasn't white out. It was do the
whole report again. I had to do a lot of
reports again until I took more care in writing everything
legibly and not just hurrying through it.

Speaker 2 (44:43):
How many times did you have to redoce stuff before
you learned that if you do it right the first time,
that's all you'll have to do. How many times did
it take you?

Speaker 1 (44:54):
Several times? One of the best bosses I ever had,
And if a boss like that ever came. There was
another guy. He was our assistant manager, and he was
the one who trained me and how to put the
money in the drawer. He's like, all the money has
to go in the drawer here, all facing up and

(45:14):
facing this way. And I said, why why does it
matter what way? I mean, haveing snotty little freshmen or whatever.
I was talking to this, you know, junior, you know
was some man of the world who was sixteen seventeen.
I said, why does it matter which way it goes
up and which way it faces? And he gave me

(45:36):
the only answer I would accept. He looked at me
and said, because that's how it is best answer I've
ever received. So if these guys had tried to go
in there and teach today's youth how to how to
work and how to have some pride in their work

(45:58):
and do it again if you don't get it right
the first time, these guys would be murdered. First they
would murder them, and then they'd tell their dad. Dad
the boss told me I didn't do something right. Don't worry, son,
I'll kill him. And then they go in there and
they kill him together, which at least as a father
and son doing something together what you don't see as

(46:19):
much anymore. I try to take my son to a
basketball game last night. He goes, okay, and we go
in there. He says, I'm going to go hang out
with my friends, and he went over to the student section.
So I did what any father would. I went over
to the student section. Hey, can I hang out with
you fellow kids.

Speaker 2 (46:35):
That's what I did about you were the kick out.

Speaker 1 (46:39):
No, none of that happened. Well, we went to the
basketball game together and we sat together for a brief
period of time. Anyway, I look at the story here
about this freshman kid. Here's another thing about this kid.
Mike McKnight from First Alert six News goes over to
interview the kid at his house. Kid puts on a

(46:59):
ball cap, like you're gonna be on TV. Do your hair?
Is there no mom in the story, Like, honey, the
news that's coming over here to talk to you. Hang on,
let me put on my best ball cap. Ball cap,
it's the news. You got TV cameras. Ball cap? Is

(47:21):
the dad wearing a ball cap? Nope, he didn't have
a cap on. This kid's got a hat on. Got
a red hat on. Uh oh no, not to make
America great again. Hat. Yeah, Mike mcnight, he's got his
hat backwards. But that's just because that's how Mike always dresses.
I'm kidding. Sorry, Lucy, I told you I wouldn't get

(47:43):
back on the story again, but I can't stop. I
can't stop this story. It's not that it doesn't get
me that the kid and the security officer at Lewis
Central High school had this situation or that a kid

(48:03):
filmed it and put it online. It was that like
it it gets to the level where it's on the
news and the kid and his dad are like, well,
they shouldn't, you know, put he shouldn't have put his
hands on my son, like, oh, did he punch him. No,
he just kind of put his hand in his back
and said, come on, get up, and he kind of
like patted him, like when you're trying to get a
teenage boy awake in the morning, like, come on, you've

(48:26):
got to get up and go to school. Come on, bud,
come on, You're like patting his shoulder. He patted him,
come on, get up, Time to go. Kid's like, well,
it started over me saying I'm gonna take a nap
instead of doing my work. He says he should have

(48:47):
done he should have dealt with it, talking about the
teacher and the supervisor. He should have dealt with it
a different way being an adult. He should not come
at a kid with aggression like that. I was not
threatening a harmon anyone, even though yeah, I've been in
trouble a lot and I'm a constant distraction to this class.
The dad's like, yeah, ah, So now I got to

(49:15):
think about, like, all right, so let's say my kid's
in this class. Because if you got a kid in
a local class, high school, middle school, probably even elementary school,
you've got a kid like that in your kid's class
and a dad liked that standing by his kid, and
they're all like, you can't touch my kid, you can't
kick my kid out. And you got a kid in

(49:37):
that same class, and you're looking at all this going bolt,
when does my kid get to learn what happens with
my kid? My kid's trying to do things the right way.
When's the news going to come over and do a
profile on young Michael. Michael did all of his homework
and Michael paid attention in class, Michael didn't fall asleep

(49:57):
in class. Michael was called on by the teacher to
do something and he actually did it. Here's a profile.
In mind, we don't do any of that. These teachers
are exhausted, they're frustrated, and they got a deal with
kids like this and parents like this all the time.
And this is the I think the funniest thing to

(50:19):
me was when we had the Opportunities scholarship thing and
they said, like, if you've got a kid in a
public school because you can't afford to send them to
a private school. You can take the opportunity scholarship and
you can take that kid and put them into private school.
And the private school people are like, eh, no, no, no, no, no,
we don't want we don't want this kid and his
dad in our school. No, you keep them in public school.

(50:44):
Like that was That was the eh, the hush hush
thing about that whole situation. Man, I haven't talked about
Trump in like twenty minutes. It's time to institute a
Trump date. So get out to seating. Tip around, trumble, brown, tremble, round,

(51:05):
temple round, Trump, bump, can get it down? Trump Trump Trump?
All right, Tump Trump. We're in a Trump date here
and we'll be for the next four years. Trump. Who
are the things gonna be president four years from today?

Speaker 2 (51:21):
Vance?

Speaker 1 (51:22):
You think it'll be a vice president? Advance?

Speaker 2 (51:24):
Well, I think there's a good shot at it.

Speaker 1 (51:26):
Do you can you know who I think it'll be?
Donald Trump?

Speaker 2 (51:32):
Can you imagine?

Speaker 1 (51:33):
I just like saying that because it really causes the
people who hate him to freak out.

Speaker 2 (51:37):
But can you imagine ten years ago if somebody would
have said to you, you will still be talking about
Donald Trump as your president in ten years.

Speaker 1 (51:46):
I know we talked about this on Mondays. We're leading
up to the inauguration. How so many people, there are
a lot of people who are genuinely depressed by this,
and a lot of times when like if I get
into like a really super like sad mood, you can't

(52:10):
help but start running through various timelines in your head.
Well if I'd only done this, then this and that
and this, and for some people it's like, well, this
was supposed to be the end of two terms of
the Madam president reign, as Hillary Clinton served two terms

(52:30):
in office, So of course they're sad about that, even
though the people who are really really upset here most
of a lot of them are Bernie Sanders supporters, so
they weren't That's why Hillary didn't win, by the way,
So there was there was that though at least it
wasn't supposed to be Trump. I didn't think he was
actually gonna win, And then it was geez, if we'd

(52:52):
only let him win in twenty twenty, he'd be gone
by now. We would have had just two terms of
Trump and he'd be gone. It'd be over Michelle Obama
could be pre or whatever. So they're they're really struggling
with the timeline. They can't they can't get past the

(53:13):
fact that, like, he's not supposed to be president. Now
he got beat asterisk. He got beat in twenty twenty asterisk.
And he was supposed to just go away. They always
just go away. But he didn't have the decency just
to go away. And now he's back from outer space.

(53:37):
Just walked in with that Trump look upon his face
and started signing executive orders in front of a crowd
in Washington, d C. Cheering as he signed papers. I've
seen this on social media a lot the last couple
of days. It says, your validity is not dictated by

(53:59):
an executive order, and it's got a little heart on
there with various colors that I guess is supposed to
be I don't know, some sort of some sort of
lgbt Q heart, I imagine, because their hearts are different
than everyone else's hearts, that are some sort of maroon apparently,

(54:21):
I don't know, you mean for real, been a while
since I've reached into a guy's chest, grabbed a still beating.

Speaker 2 (54:27):
Heart with my bare hand and it's been a while.

Speaker 1 (54:30):
Fed it to him. Yeah, it's been a while. So
apparently the lgbt Q heart has got like all kinds
of colors and stuff on it.

Speaker 2 (54:41):
What were you doing in Kansas City when you lived
there and on the air up and down the dial?

Speaker 1 (54:48):
I did the Heart Grabber radio show.

Speaker 2 (54:52):
Apparently, Yeah, I wassed it.

Speaker 1 (54:55):
Yeah. People thought like, oh, is it about like finding
love and dates. No, it's about grabbing, reaching through a
guy's rib cage and grabbing his still beating heart and
then feeding it to him while he's still alive.

Speaker 2 (55:06):
It's dark. I know, it's so dark. Didn't you have
a Trump date?

Speaker 1 (55:10):
Well, you're in a Trump date, so you're valid. What's
the phrase there about your validity is not dictated by
an executive order? I presume this has to do with
the executive order by President Trump that says that the
federal government is recognizing two genders, male and female. And

(55:30):
there are people that are like that is so hateful.
Oh yeah, did you at any point in the last
few years or your entire lifetime go and get a
government issued document? You get a driver's license? Unless I'm wrong,
and that's happened one of the guys, I ripped his
heart out of his chest and fed it to him

(55:50):
while he was still While he was still alive, had
turned out had like a an allergy to still beating hearts,
and that caused him to break out in hives. Even
I didn't know that. I didn't read the bracelet, so
it's I've been wrong before. When you go to get

(56:12):
a government issued ID, you've got to make a decision
on there. It's a binary decision male female. You're flying,
you've got to fill out official paperwork. So most things
you have to make that decision, everything from government issued
IDs to those pesky restrooms and locker rooms, there's a

(56:35):
decision in front of you. One says male, one says female.
Or you got a little picture of a guy wearing
pants or a girl wearing a skirt, because you know,
that's what everyone looks like. When I go out to
the bars that I go hang out in, the guys
all wear some neat trousers and the women all wear
some nice skirts. Neat, yeah, some neat. Some are dressed

(56:59):
very keen, their hair's not must up. They've got on
some neat trousers, and the women all wearing nice bonnets.
And they wear skirts. So you got a decision to make,
don't you. Am I feeling right now? Male or female?
Gotta do this? And so what Trump did was, in

(57:21):
terms of the federal government, there are two genders. I
wonder what in the world caused him to do that.
Maybe it was science. Maybe it was when it says
your validity is not determined by an executive order, that's true.
I agree with that statement.

Speaker 2 (57:43):
Well, now, unless the executive order is being laid out
for people who do not live in this country yet
but want to live in this country.

Speaker 1 (57:53):
That doesn't make any difference to what I'm talking about
here at all.

Speaker 2 (57:57):
I'm just talking about executive orders giving you validity.

Speaker 1 (58:01):
Yeah, Okay, let's presume for this conversation we're talking about
people in this country. Trump signs an executive order says
that you're either male or female in the eyes of
the federal government. Okay, so let's say that you feel
that they're wrong. Go ahead, go ahead and feel that way.

(58:21):
I don't care what you wear, I don't care what
you call yourself. Now that pesky chromosome is going to
tell you whether or not you're male or female. It's science.
You can't cling to science and talk about things like
everyone should get a vaccine and wear a mask, and
then bristle at the idea that scientifically there's male and female.

(58:46):
Not for me, Well, aren't you special? Now again, I
don't care what you do. I really don't. Adult wants
to go make a decision to dress a different way,
be called by a different name, and tell people that
these are my pronouns. I don't care. I would. I
don't think that anyone should be fired over calling you

(59:10):
by the wrong pronoun. I think if you have to
tell people your pronouns, you're probably not doing a very
good job of it. Frankly, my pronouns are he him like? Really,
my pronouns are she and her? Like? Yeah, your Adam

(59:32):
Zapple suggests differently, But you know whatever. Honestly, honestly don't care.
I honestly really don't care. Your validity is not determined
by an executive order. Yeah, but if here, how about this,
I'm a guy. I'm one of these cis gender males
born male. Still identifies as male because I'm male, Maybe

(59:54):
not as male as some other guys, maybe not more
so than some not as much as of I'm probably
not nearly as manly as several transgender males. But whatever
be that as it may. Some people would say that
if I choose to change my gender, that's perfectly fine.

(01:00:19):
I feel like, you know, I've always been a woman
trapped in a man's body, and I'm now going to
be female. And there'll be people that say, well, all right,
your validity is not determined by an executive order, right
this way, come on into the ladies' locker room. And
I'd say, that's not exactly what I wanted. But what

(01:00:40):
if I say, also, in addition to being transitioning from
male to female, I'm also black. Now. I don't know
if you can tell from listening to me, but I
am not only a white guy. I'm a very very pasty,
translucent white guy. So what if I say, and also,

(01:01:01):
I'm not just changing my gender, I am changing my
race and I am black as well. Well we've already
seen that, haven't we. We've seen some white girls say
I'm black and and black people said, no, you're not
like that was that was a step too far for
this point in our history. Now, thirty years ago, if

(01:01:24):
someone said I know that yesterday I was a guy,
but today I'm a girl. People have been like, Eh,
you're not. You're a guy who dresses like a girl
and you've taken on a normative female name, but you're not.
That doesn't make you a girl. Oh yeah, watch this. Hey, hey,
you can put that thing in a guillotine all you want,
cut it right off. Doesn't make you a girl. But

(01:01:48):
now thirty years later, it's like, absolutely, you're a girl.
Thirty years from now, people'll be white people going I'm black,
and everyone's just gonna have to say. You know, my
dad said that there were white girls that tried to
be black when he was a kid, and society wouldn't
let them. But thank goodness, we've evolved to the point
now in the year twenty fifty five where little white

(01:02:11):
girls can go out and say I'm black and we
all accept them for who they really are. You know,
that's probably going to be the case, but as of
where we are right now, it's a step too far.
Why is the science going to change in thirty years? No,
did it change in the last thirty years. No? Did

(01:02:34):
Trump change your gender with this executive order? No, your
gender was the same under President Biden and any other
president who was in office during the time you were alive,
and your gender's going to be the same during President
Trump and then Vice President Vance, when JD. Vance becomes
president for two terms and then hands things off to

(01:02:55):
Donald Trump Junior for two terms, who hands things off
to Baron Trump for two terms, and then just to
spice things up, ivaka Trump is gonna be president. I
know she's gonna be a little bit old at that
time and currently isn't political, but hey, this is this
is America's future, and throughout all of that, your gender

(01:03:16):
will be the same. Your validity is not determined by
executive order. No, and your gender isn't determined by your
whims either. That doesn't mean that you start boiling people
in oil unless they're into that kind of thing. Doesn't
mean you start beating people up and discriminating. You know,

(01:03:38):
the Golden rule still applies. Do unto others as you
would have others do unto you. That's also still valid.
It was valid under President Biden and then the Trump
the first time, and Obama will be valid under the
next several presidents, which, as I said, let's see here,
the next president will will do JD. Vance two terms

(01:04:01):
of JD. Vans and then uh then President David Lee
Roth for one term. It's going to be the most
awesome term of any president anywhere. Diamond Dave for a term,
but that's just because he's not going to run for reelection.
And uh and and then Baron Trump for three terms.

(01:04:23):
So uh and and your your validity and the Golden
Rule will be in effect the entire time. An executive
order from the President doesn't change your gender anymore than
your whims. But we still got to treat each other

(01:04:45):
with respect because there was a preacher at the National
Cathedral yesterday that said, we better do it because there
were gay kids living in fear under President Trump. One
of the executive orders President Trump signed after taking off
office was ridding the Federal government of DEI offices and
requirements and programs. There was an Office of Personnel Management

(01:05:11):
memo issued last night advising agencies to put all federal
DEI employees on paid administrative leave no later than four
o'clock al Maha time today as the agency takes steps
to close SLASH and ALLDI initiatives, offices and programs. DEI Diversity,

(01:05:36):
Equity and Inclusion. Oh, they're getting rid of all the
people of color. No, they're not. The biggest problem with
DI is the E. Equity that means equality. No, equality
means equality. Equity means I want what you have, give

(01:06:00):
it to me. Not that we each had the same
opportunity to get someplace. But I want what you have now.
I don't want to work for it. I just want
it now. It's equity. The brand new Press Secretary for
the White House, Caroline Levitt, a recent guest on this

(01:06:20):
radio program, said President Trump campaigned on ending the scourge
of dei from our federal government and returning America to
a merit based society where people are hired based on
their skills, not for the color of their skin. This
is another win for Americans of all races, religions, and creeds.

(01:06:41):
Promises made, promises kept. Unquote. There are so many and
too many people that really, over the last few years,
really wanted race wars and discrimination in this country. Now,
there have always been people that wanted those things. They're
called races, but these are like people that call themselves

(01:07:03):
anti racists. They wanted to feel like they were growing
up in a society where there was cultural upheaval and
importance and all these guilty white people said black lives mattered,
and black people went, well, our lives didn't matter before
you said that on Facebook. Yes, look I put a
sign in the yard like, well yeah, but did our

(01:07:23):
lives not matter until some guilty white person on social
media said so? And they like, they really wanted this
cultural upheaval, and so they instituted all this stuff. And
there are people like but I want to be hired
based on who I am and what I bring to
the table. After all, I've had this tremendous opportunity in

(01:07:43):
this country and now I want to work for it.
I want to all people want to be where they
are because they deserve it, not because it was handed
to them. Well that wasn't DEI uh, And now that
in terms of federal policy, that's a thing of the
past as well. We'll let Clay and Buck take it

(01:08:05):
from here. They're coming up after your next opportunity to
win one thousand dollars that keyword coming up in just
under ten minutes on eleven ten KFAB Scott Voices Mornings
nine to eleven, our News Radio eleven ten Kfab
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