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Jeff Poor Show - Wednesday 9-18-24

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18 Sep 2024
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[music] From Buck's Pocket to the shores of Orange Beach, at all points in between, an insider's perspective on Alabama politics. It's the Jeff Poor Show. ♪ I don't think hang down in this way ♪ ♪ No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no ♪ Welcome to the Jeff Poor Show, Defend Talk, 106.5. [music] Thank you for being with us on this Wednesday morning, halfway through the week, send a little tired late night for me last night, make a trip up to Tuscaloosa, talk to a group of college Republicans. So as that goes, you can get back mobile to Tuscaloosa, the Tuscaloosa, the Fair Hope. It may wear on you, so please forgive me. Coming up on the program this morning, we'll talk to Stephanie Holtz-Smith for the Alabama Policy Institute. I've got some fascinating news there about a bunch of different things going on, and we're going to get into the gambling discussion once again a little bit. The Alabama Republican Party on Saturday, and if you listened to our conversation with John Wall yesterday, you had us talk about it, a passing resolution opposing the expansion of gambling in Alabama. Well, the casino gambling, I should say, not a lottery. Some people have taken that a bunch of different ways, but it's never been an issue that the Republican Party has officially taken the position on in Alabama until now, and we're going to talk to Stephanie. She is the Alabama Policy Institute, I should say, is a long-time proponent of gambling in Alabama. I mean, you could go back, if you've heard of the Alabama Policy Institute, if you're familiar with this organization, the origins of the Alabama Policy Institute began with that 1999 vote for the lottery that failed. That's where Gary Palmer, you could go back and that said everything in motion for it to become what it is today. Well, like I said, we're going to talk about that with Stephanie, and that's about 30 minutes from now. Also, in the program today, Joey Clark, who's talked 93-1 in Montgomery or Wednesday regular, and finally, US Senator Tommy Tuberville, it's been in the news a lot lately. We've been spending a lot of time on obviously this Haitian migrant crisis, but also the presidential election and, you know, oh, yeah, on Sunday, we almost forgot. Former President Donald Trump was almost shot again. What's going on here? A coach has some interesting ideas, let's deploy Seal Team Six or the Army Rangers or whatever it takes to keep Donald Trump safe. I don't know if that's a feasible solution, but he told, I think it's all Fox Business, but he's done a bit of a bunch of different places to say, "Look, Donald Trump's probably going to get shot at again." You can't rely on the Secret Service right now. They just seem unwilling, very hesitant to get this right. Guys, it's one thing to break that perimeter and get a shot out, but two times in the span of a few months, and it's not a show line as the media have been about it. It's clearly a problem. It's undeniable. It means there is not a show line about it, and I think they've actually somehow managed to successfully turn the corner here. I mean, they're barely even talking about it. They're more concerned about the claim that Haitian migrants are eating cats or whatever it is, going on there. Let's talk about that with Coach here at 11 o'clock hour, so make sure you stay tuned for that. By the way, 2513430106, that is how you get in touch with the program. If you so desire will respond to whatever it is that is on your mind. Back to this though, it does seem to do cycle settle back down and gotten away from assassination mainly. We are still this topic of migration. It's been a time in that last segment if you're listening on mobile mornings. What I think is our one I've been told is going on here and what I've kind of been able to deduce. There are estimates between 300,000 to 500,000 Haitians that have found their way on American soil claiming asylum. The Biden administration has this parole program, CHNV, I think it's Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela that you can come from those countries, seek asylum, and then under a Biden executive order, I mean, you're automatically paroled. So you're in effect here, but you're here legally. Legally in the eyes of the executive branch of the federal government, which is what matters. Well, that executive order is going to be rescinded at some point. Donald Trump is elected president. I mean, there's no reason to think that he will keep that program in place. It's being abused, it's being misused by the Biden administration. For whatever reason, maybe it's ideological. I don't understand if they want to give as many people in as they can. There is a component, would you make Alejandro Mayorkas, who is an open borders anti, you know, regulated immigration guy as your department of Homeland Security Secretary? This is what you get. It'd be like putting Ron Paul, those of you throw back there, you libertarians out there, they're like putting Ron Paul in charge of the Fed. And then maybe as like the Board of Governors there, we had the guy from the von Mises Institute, we have like a gold guy every here, whatever. I mean, it's antithetical to the system. So yeah, you've got that situation and you have this big, big number of Haitian asylum seekers or they've already saw the asylum as they're now technically get this refugee status. And they know that if Trump comes or they don't know what Trump's going to do, but the suspicion is it will just deport them and send them back or whatever. So we got to figure out how to settle as many of these Haitian migrants in different places around the country as we can in case Trump wins, and in case he swore it on January 20th and he had acts his deportation strategy. He resends this program and he says, Hey, sorry about your, your politics on your domestic homeland here, but you guys got to figure that out for yourself. And it makes it harder to send them back because here they had this like legalized status, right? They got the card. They got a work visa. They may have a little money in their pocket or an EBT card or they're getting some kind of financial assistance from the federal government. And they're here that they got them in a home or they got like a hotel or wherever they they're here and they're working, you know, they're working at the cabinet factory and click out here, the chicken plant and Albert mill or wherever it may be. And trust president, he says, well, I'm going to send you back and then one of these liberal left wing storefronts out there says, Oh, no, no, no, no, no, no, you don't. We're going to court and they go ACLU or Southern property law center or whatever goes and finds a liberal judge in Colorado or whatever and gets a, we don't think this is legal even if it's on shaky illegal ground and the judge says, all right, I'm going to put a stay. The Trump administration cannot act on its executive order until it gets a fair hearing in the name of due process. So you're buying time for these Haitian migrants and then the judge rules in favor of the migrants. Wow. As he reading, I don't know, but the Trump administration's, well, this is, this is not how the Constitution works where it will appeal it. It goes to this appeals court is probably left wing and it probably rules in favor. They need to go to the Supreme court and then ultimately, as we learn from the travel ban of 2017, yes, in fact, the president of the United States does have the legal ability to regulate immigration in America. That's what he gets to do. He's the president. So we have to, you have to adhere to it by then, I mean, it's 2000 and 27 or something. And, you know, people have forgotten about this. There's a midterm coming up and those midterms, man, you know, those midterms after Donald Trump wins. Oh, who knows? Well, that's going to go 2026. I mean, it can be any number of factors if he's president that keep him from fulfilling this objective. But that's what they're trying to do. This is exactly what you saw dirty Obama administration guys, they're just laying the groundwork for when you do have somebody like president Trump in the White House. There's all of these avenues they could take to seek illegal relief, to seek judiciary relief, to create a cloud of suspicion that there's something untoward going on or something illegal going on. It's the Mueller probe. I mean, you know, this is, this is the time, this is the spring or when they start planning the seeds of this stuff and maybe, maybe they have to use it. Maybe they don't. But it just in case, because if you're a Democrat right now and you're looking at this and you think that Kamala's going to bail you out, it's probably wishful thinking unless something really changes, it's probably very much wishful thinking to think that the former president won't be reelected. Just go around. So what do you do? And there's, you know, they got to work on this, they got to figure this out. And this is what you're doing now. And this Haitian settlement resettlement stuff is just part of that two, five, one, three, four, three, zero, one, zero, six. But I mean, if you are the Trump administration and you're trying to send these Haitians back and there in thousands of different small towns throughout America, how do you, where do you even start? How do you do this and they're making it very difficult for the next president who, if he is elected, part of the mandate will be, Hey, do something about immigration to execute those duties. These people are evil. This is, this is the way they think everything is a power place, a game of chess and they're trying to predict what is happening for moves ahead. And the four moves ahead is what do we do with Trump's president? And forget about whatever the human impact on our lives is. Forget about that. They don't care about that. This is, this is what they care about creating wedge issues, creating pitfalls, setting traps for the next president. And they probably still believe they are thinking they can win. But I'm telling you, just in case, and you heard this like about Peter Stroke and Lisa Paige and all of these, uh, foiled tax messages that made it out like this, we, we have a, we have a backup plan. We have an emergency plan. They're setting up for an emergency plan because, and they probably waited a little late because what's happening, I mean, silicaga is making national headlines. I mean, Springfield certainly is that I do think it is impacting people's sensibilities about how they want to vote now the Haitian stuff is multifaceted here. It's very, very intriguing to me watching the media play defense on this. We haven't seen, I mean, this is your red flag. This is your tail guys. The way the media are play a defense and say, and that's not true. We talked to these people and they said it's not true. Why are you lying because they know this will have an impact. We'll be right back. This is a Jeff Porte show of Fib Talk with O six five. Thank you for staying with us on this Wednesday. Morning two five one three four three zero one zero six. If you want to be in touch with the program, please, by all means, utilize the text slide still a comment in the next segment. We're going to talk stuffy. Hold Smith off the album have a policy institutes to stay right where you are. Let's see here. What do we got? We got a text up, up, up, up, up, up, up. First up here community notes want to be Jeff poor rhetoric causes political violence. It's also Jeff poor. These people are evil. Hey, I can call people evil and it should make you want to go out of commit political violence. You moron. Yeah, it's like really dumb comment. I think you could call people evil. No, no, no, a radio host mobile, Alabama could call people evil. But if I start calling you Hitler, I start calling you a threat to democracy, but these people that are, are, are setting up the next president to fail. Like this is what they are tasked to do. That is not, that is not good. Okay. It's good versus evil and that is evil. Gene asked coach why he and his family, loving colleagues voted down IVF in the Senate. Because it's a, it's, it's a bad bill. It is a political pitfall, Gene, look, it's like, okay, Democrats, you want this round of the IVF debate, you get to put, you get to put whatever bill you want to out there. Um, they know what they're doing. And what is the wedge issue? It's a very emotional issue. It works for them. Let's see. What else do we have here? The future states to enter the US proof of has to be given that you won't be a financial burden to the government. Uh, that's from firecracker, firecracker. While you are correct, unfortunately the, uh, the, the, the, the powers that be right now don't care about that. Look, uh, I mean, we, we know what to, we have three branches of government. We had the legislative branch that makes laws that has the power to purse strings. We have the judiciary that it keeps the, uh, it makes sure that the law is being adhered to, make sure that, uh, whatever laws of the legislative branch passes fall within the parameters of the constitution, it has the final say, uh, the Supreme Court does. You have the executive branch, well, the legislative branch could tell the executive branch by law, what to do and the judiciary could say, well, you can or can't do that. You're so like a referee, but the executive branch says to hell with both of them, it just does whatever it wants, then it's all, it's all kind of a moot point. That's what's going on here, firecracker. It is a constant, you learn this in civics is a constant battle by the three branches to, I mean, there's always a power struggle and it was sort of designed that way. But it, it, it, the legislative branch tells the executive to do something that they just say to hell with you. What, what, what do you do there? Yeah, it's like when Merrick Garland or a Mayorkas decline in congressional subpoena, the house says, well, you're in contempt of Congress. And then they issue a criminal citation of the DOJ just throws it into trash. What do you do? I mean, the, the legislative branch has no arresting authority, they had the power to perstering so they could cut off funding for the DOJ. How do you think that goes over? I mean, it, it, it, I, I'm not like trying to make an excuse here, but that's sort of what you're up against. Martin writes this, these Haitians here seeking asylum had to stay somewhere, be fed, careful toward every way who's paying for that as taxpayers to the tune of how many hundreds of millions of dollars and not, uh, uh, Martin billions of dollars at some point, perhaps. But you don't really get to say, yeah, finally, Tim writes this, the Secret Service has just challenged, hasn't been challenged enough. And now the flowers are starting to show, but it's tough to say, think they are possibly with all the weakness of the system. Maybe, uh, I think Dave, well, we'll get into that a little later in the program. We'll be right back. This is the Jet Force Show. What if I'm talking about those six, five? Well, we'll go back to the Jet Force Show and talk about those six, five. Let's say it with us on this Wednesday morning, text line 2513430106 need to be a touch of the program. All you need to do is text and we got a bunch to get to there from some nefarious actors, I would say. If not downright evil, uh, still a couple of the program produced talk 93 one and Montgomery Joey Clark. That's about an hour from now. And then, uh, two hours from now, now that 11 o'clock hour, uh, our senior United States Senator Tommy Tuberville will be with us. So stay right where you are. But joining us now on the line, she's, uh, always a pleasure to bring on my next guest. Uh, she runs the Alabama policy institute, Stephanie Holden Smith, Stephanie, uh, good morning. How you been? Good morning. I'm, I'm doing well and I'm pretty impressed you got coach Tuberville to call you on his birthday. Oh, I know you know what, uh, I'm going to have to wish him a happy birthday, aren't I? Yeah, you may have to say. Oh, no, that's, that's not likely to happen. Hey, uh, let's start here and, you know, the, I kind of, you and I, uh, talked a lot about gambling this last legislative session, um, you're not sure, but, but, and then, you know, it's just kind of, it was kind of funny. Like the Republican party itself had, you know, they, they've kind of sat on the sidelines. And I suspect one of the leadership roles within the Republican party were vehemently or stridently anti gambling expansion. I mean, you know, maybe they were pro lottery at, you know, at best, but they were certainly pro casino gambling. I mean, anti casino gambling right now, uh, a little behold, uh, I think this is important what they did with that resolution of just putting something down a marker down to say, Hey, we as the party are not 40 for casino gambling. I don't know that any of this matters if these lawmakers look at this and they say, Oh, well, well, I mean, but, but, but, you know, it's, it's to me, we needed this, uh, we needed to know where this, this party was on this issue. Right. Yeah. So it's interesting because, you know, there's kind of the internal, the external here, the, you know, the apparatus of the Alabama Republican party is an elected body, um, you know, for the most part, there are, there are appointed people that are part of that committee. But for the most part, the folks that serve on that committee are elected in the primary, um, you know, every four years, just like, um, you know, other elected officials are. And so it was interesting to me that one that the party had not, has not really opined on gambling, specifically a whole lot in the past. And then two that, um, the decision was made, you know, to put that resolution forward specifically about the expansion of gambling. And then three that, um, the vote was so decisive. It was not close. Uh, I think it was, you probably have it in front of you, but I think it was 74% of the people that elected body said we're, you know, we're for this resolution against the expansion family. And I mean, this is like one of the biggest issues that the legislature has dealt with, right? Like this is, they have, uh, we, we've talked about this so much that what does it mean to be a Republican now and, and that needs to be, that needs to be defined when it comes to this issue, I think, because you have a super majority Republican legislature trying to ram through a, what I think is a very, very, um, I don't know, reckless at best, a pursuit of gambling in Alabama. And I mean, is that, is that really where the Republican, what's Republican party should stand for? Right. Yeah. It's a foundational question, I think, is a question that you're asking and, you know, I, I routinely say, you know, that I'm against the expansion of gambling for several different reasons. Some are practical, some are moral, but they're mainly ideological as a conservative expanding gambling in the state expands government. It expands the structure of government and it expands the budget of government. And so, from a limited government perspective, even if you're pro gambling, you know, from a limited government perspective, um, you know, it's pretty clear that the expansion of gambling is an expansion of government. There's also the free market question because every single one of these bills that then, that have been presented, you know, since 1999 takes winners and losers. I mean, give credit where credit do the, the legal men bill that was actually voted down by the people, um, didn't do that. It was, it was more of a free market approach except for the fact that the big winner was the, the expansion of state government. And so, um, but these bills that we've been debating for the last 20 plus years actually name locations or counties or specific entities that state government is nighting as legal or illegal. Um, and so, it's not a free market, it's not a, it's not answering a free market question either. So, you've got a situation where, you know, our Republicans for free markets, like they say they are, are they for, you know, limiting government and increasing freedom and it's become kind of a strange question to ask if not just the subject that we're asking those questions on either. Um, but I do think it's important that that elected body made it very clear, um, to the general public and then also to, you know, legislators who represent them in Montgomery, you know, the, the Republican party in the state of Alabama is not for the expansion. Well, I'll tell you what though, and this is the, the, the assumptions that they operate off. This just premise that, uh, we sure could use that money in Alabama. Alabama's lasted education, Alabama doesn't have this, Alabama doesn't have that. And therefore we should legalize gambling or any other vice and you hear the pro marijuana owners, uh, say in this too, I, I reject that. I don't, I don't believe that I don't believe it is a, it is a revenue source because with so many strings attached, so many societal costs, go take a trip to Biloxi, Mississippi and look at the homeless encampments if you don't believe me, but like let's, let's look at the return on investment here and let's stop saying that. I mean, cause it's just, I don't think it is true. Right. And we're talking about an industry that doesn't produce anything. Um, really the only thing that, that the gambling industry produces the side, you could make the argument to the positive that it produces entertainment. But on the negative side, really the only thing that the gambling industry produces besides money for the people running the gambling industry are societal negatives. Uh, increases human trafficking, increases addiction, increases, um, you know, joblessness, increases, all kinds of negative things on society. And so when you're doing the calculation of quote, how much money it was bringing into state coffers, even if you are very optimistic about gambling and ignore all of those negative society, it's still not very much money depending on which type of gambling you're talking about. Right. I mean, and then on the other side, do we need more money in state governor? Well, let's be honest about what this is, Stephanie. And this is me talking the people that want gambling that are investing the lobbying dollars and the ad campaigns and all the marketing, they don't care about government coffers. Somebody is going to get rich off of this. It is a special interest play here to make somebody wealthy. And that's why like, you know, you try to say, explain this to my listeners, but like, yeah, they will sell you on all of these ideas and why, how good it's going to be and how great it's going to be for the state. But why are they doing that? Are they just doing it because they, um, they have some kind of philanthropic, uh, uh, idea about government and government getting more money to do more good or no, there is a profit incentive here and you need to be like skeptical of that. Maybe they're right, maybe they're wrong, but at least they know that they got skin in the game here to, uh, to, to financially benefit. Well, and some of those are inside the state that a lot of those are outside of the state. And so you're creating a situation where state government would be setting up a structure that taxpayers would pay for, um, out of our taxpayer dollars to set up a structure so that out of state gambling moguls can make money and take it out of the state. So the whole argument of, you know, well, this money is going out of state. Um, if you look at, you know, car license plate, just the other side, uh, of the border on one side or the other is still there. It's just a matter of this. If the, if the money goes outside of the state on the front end or the back end. Joined by Stephanie Holt Smith, the ABN policy institute here on the program, uh, will move on from gambling to, uh, Justin bogey, uh, interesting column out. And I, I wonder if Alabama is, uh, or we're just kind of, this is the legacy that we inherited and we're going to be stuck with, but like this idea and you hear this all the time, right? That, you know, we're so lucky to, we're so fortunate to have this appropriate or that appropriate or it's so awesome that we get so much money from the federal government. We need to be, uh, kissing the, the ring of Richard Shelby or whatever. But I mean, this, this federal government dependency, it has it really, uh, bore fruit. I don't think in ways that we maybe have been sold over the years. Yeah. And the frustrating thing about the level of federal dependency that the state has is that there's no understanding that that brings chemicals with it. I mean, if you, if you recall, um, you know, recently in the last year or so, I guess it may be a year and a half ago now, the Biden Harris administration actually threatened Alabama schools with taking away lunch money for needy kids if they didn't allow boys and the girls bathrooms and vice versa. So, you know, we're, we're pretending like the money that the state of Alabama and the entities in the state of Alabama hate, don't have any bearing on the way these live. And that's just false. So, you know, we have this situation, you know, with NIH funding, go into UAB. We have, um, you know, basically all of, um, our universities taking a lot of federal money and that federal money has tentacles that has strings to it. And so, you know, the difficult thing for, for us, you know, from that Alabama policy institute perspective is that there's very little transparency with those grants, um, on the state level. And it's difficult to know where all the money is coming from and what all those tentacles are. And so, that's part of a project that we're working on at API, which is, we're calling it the federalism project. And it's one of those things we are trying to figure out the pots of money that are coming into the state and how it impacted the people of the state in very practical way. Well, we got like kind of baptized on this, um, Stephanie, the whole COVID, uh, vaccine discussion, right? And the Biden administration say, Hey, if you're, uh, if your place of employment gets 80 kind of, you know, government work or government contracts by executive order, we will, uh, you, you, you are hereby, uh, going to get the vaccine or will withhold your, your federal money. And look, I mean, there was, you know, questions, can you do that? Oh, no. But a lot of these, especially some of these defense contractors are like, all right, we don't want to deal with it. We don't want to fight it. We don't have the time for this. We just want to make sure to check clears. You will go get the vaccine or you will go find another job. And I mean, that was the reality. And then that is like an example, like when you have a federal government dependency that you are beholden to somebody somewhere and perhaps to the circumstance like that where you do have your rights violated. Yeah. A hundred percent. And it's one of those things I think, especially during COVID, most people who don't work in those areas don't think about it on a daily basis, but, you know, how far down those strengths go because you had a situation where even vendors and suppliers of those organizations were being pressured to also mandate the vaccination because they were worried that they wouldn't get their bill paid. So, you know, it became apparent, a lot of things became apparent during COVID, but it became very apparent that, you know, it's pretty easy to pull those strings and a state that is pretty dependent on federal money. And so, you know, we're trying to make sure that people know and understand that federal money is not free money, one, because there's no such thing as free money, it's all someone's money. And then also, you know, those big checks and the big announcements of, you know, "Hey, isn't this fantastic? We got this money," aren't always often for the people of Alabama. Finally, Stephanie, let's talk about this. Your big event coming up here. You got Ben Carson coming to speak at your event. Give us the details. Yeah, we're really excited about it. Next week, it's September 26th up in Birmingham, and then in Candy Carson are coming in town. They have written a new book about the family being the cornerstone of society and how promoting families and doing it better if Alabama and America could do a better job at paying attention to what is good for families, then we would have a better state and a better nation. And so, we're excited about him coming in town. We've had a fantastic response, I will say, after, you know, talking to people for about the last six months without bringing him in town, I've had not one negative comment. It's clear to me, and I'll tell this, I'll tell this to him when he comes next week, it's clear to me that he may be one of the most well-respected people in the nation that people consider a politician because he's such a good and quality man. He's done so many things with his life, and he's got, you know, the quintessential American story of, you know, coming up through poverty and becoming, you know, a physician, a brilliant physician who has stayed countless lives and then shifting gears to public service. And so, we're really excited about having him back in the state of Alabama, and I would encourage anyone who, any of your listeners who want to make the trek, that please join us. And if they want to find out more about it, point them in the right direction. Sure, you can find the information on our website, which is alabamapolicy.org, and there's a tab there for, and the 2024 annual dinner is the tab that you need. Stephanie, we always appreciate your time, we'll talk again soon. Absolutely. Thanks so much, Chef. No problem. Stephanie Holden, Smith of the Alabama policies to, we'll be right back, this is the Jeff Porsche, a Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford, a Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford Ford that they're ready. The media are ready to walk away from that. It's a media research study. Just like the negative like 75% negative coverage of Trump. It's sure it was too short. He should have never have said this or he wouldn't have been shot at. It seems to be a common theme among our friends in the media. Let's get a break here. Be right back. This is the Jeff for show. If I'm talking about one of six five. This is for the one who drives the big win from Bucks Pocket to the shores of Orange Beach at all points in between an insider's perspective on Alabama politics. It's the Jeff for show. I don't think this way. Welcome back to the Jeff course show that I'm talking about. Six five. Thank you very much for listening on this Wednesday morning. Two five one three four three zero one zero six. That's how you get touched with me, your show host. So to come on the program today. We'll talk to Joey Clark here in about 30 minutes. Our associate will stay tuned for that also on the program this morning. We'll hear from Tommy Tuberville, our senior United States, Senator Spley stayed tuned for that as well. The news like I mentioned this just a moment ago. New explosion of devices reported in Lebanon, limited state media, at least three more people killed as more wireless devices explode one day after pager attacks. Yeah. So, uh, phase two of this operation, it appears to be underway. Um, let's see. What else do we got going on here? I, let's go to the text gene, take federal money out of Alabama and you get Haiti. I will be paying now. Those are the old timers of Mobile know what happened when Linda Johnson pulled the air force out of Berkeley. And I mean, it took 20, 30 years to recover from that. It did. It took a long, long time. And now I, you know, finally, uh, 50 years later, 60 years even, you know, there's, there's things going on at Berkeley and they might bring the airport back there, or they are bringing the airport back there, build it airplanes. It's sort of like it's closer to downtown and it appears that Mobile is finally overcoming that. That's what happens in the federal government pulls its resources out, but, and now, you know, it's not that it's a totally free private enterprise out there. It's still defense contractors are, it's still, um, you know, but part of it is certainly part of the private economy building airplanes to be used by airlines. Certainly is part of it. But the point is this like when you have, let's say you have an economy, I think of the economy as just sort of, um, a hole to fill. And if you have a lot of government, federal government or any kind of government filling that hole, it takes away the state's capacity that private enterprise fill that hole, which is way more lucrative, way more successful, less of a burden on the taxpayer. Now, like I said, it took 60 years for Mobile to overcome the loss of Berkeley, but that's what happens. We have federal government and he creates this dependency on federal government, and then it pulls the rug out from under you and it's devastating. But you're, you know, the long term implication is a such that you're taking services, labor, resources away from the private economy, the private sector economy is what you're stealing. So the idea, it makes sense. It's just, you know, we, we don't think in terms of decades, we think in terms of like minutes, but a federal government, uh, heavy economy, not always a good day. Now, some places you're just going to have that to Washington, DC area. I mean, here in Alabama, you would point to Huntsville as being a federal town, but it changes things. It changes your community. I mean, people who work in federal government type jobs, Gene, I mean, they tend to be more left of center that you have an inherent belief in government. You're probably voting Democrat. Like, you know, if you're relying on government for your paycheck, some government program and there's a Republican out there sniffing around looking for places to cut because they don't ideologically believe in a big giant government and they want the government to be fiscally responsible. Well, you're going to cut my, my employer. You're going to cut my livelihood. But see, this is a question for you, Gene, should the federal government be a jobs program? I think in the long run, Alabama would be just fine. I mean, your, your, the insinuation here is that Alabamaans are too stupid. They're not resourceful enough. They have to have the federal government. They have to have federal government jobs or assistance or whatever it may be to survive. Do you really believe that? Is that what you really think? You may be saying it's a completely different, but that's my takeaway, would you say, take federal money out of Alabama and you get Haiti? I guess we could all emigrate to Haiti and maybe they will resettle us and pour the prints or wherever and give us food stamps and a free place to stay. Look, the federal government involvement in your local economy has consequences as the point. And too often, we don't talk about it. A federal government dependency, a cultural strings attached. They tried, the federal government longer go determined that they could try to, like, social engineering, you know, make the world a better place by making strings attached to this federal money. So for example, like, like, why is the ITN Mobile Bay River Bridge so expensive? You know, why, why have the costs going up? I mean, and there's a lot of reasons there, but what are the reasons? What are the big reasons? Is that when you take federal money, they mandate that you have to do certain things to come with that federal money. For example, you need a bicycle path or you need to use products that don't contribute to the carbon footprint or, you know, global warming is coming, so you have to build your bridges this high. You have to meet the standards. And that makes it more expensive, more time consuming. And sometimes it's better to try to forgo the federal government and figure things out on our own. And that's always possible. It's not always something that's, you know, that's easily done. But it's something to consider. I think that's the point of the Alabama Policy Institute's effort here is to explain this, like, "Oh, you know, we got this big federal jobs program and the government's going to come in and give a bunch of people jobs and they're going to dig ditches or whatever." But it also is going to come with, like, okay, but they also have to have this many minorities, you have to have this kind of DEI training, you have to dig the ditches of this certain way using these kinds of shovels that everything has, like, it's just any big bureaucracy. They micromanage everything down to a T. And do you want, Gene, your life or your state's economy being micromanaged by Washington, D.C., because, like I said, federal government dependency, we need to be educated on this. Chris, I got the city tax and folio hearing aids eliminated. Thanks to your help. Thank you very much, brother. This was a big thing. And the hearing aid tax, I surprised, first of all, you have to be, like, kind of surprised at these medical device equipment like that has any tax on it, right? But I don't know that I did a whole lot there. You probably need to think, I tell you to think, is Eric Thomas or did a lot of work on this story. That opens the text line 2513430106. Back to the news here, a few things. Last night, you sent a report over there to the Chicago to check on the ongoing Haitian migrant resettlement problem. People still don't want it, but you still have some city officials, kind of with a narrative counter to that. Speaking of narratives, counter to the whole immigration migration resettlement issue. We were able to get in touch with Mayor Fairhope, City Council, McCory Martin about, I guess, a year ago or so, he signed on to a letter, a campaign, a pseudo, I don't know if it's nonpartisan, let's say, campaign to try to encourage resettlement in your communities. This group speaks very highly of resettlement efforts and these refugees being brought into your local communities. There's a virtue in that. There's good that comes from that. We need more community leaders around the country signing on to this effort. What they did, they found people in all 50 states, elected officials, signed on to this letter. And part of it was like, and encouraging, and it was a letter to President Joe Biden, encouraging him to put more federal resources toward this. And it's just very peculiar. The three people from Alabama who signed it to state lawmakers, Travis Hendricks of Fairfield, Thomas Jackson of Thomasville, and a Fairhope City Council, McCory Martin. Well, this is winds up in our inbox and we see it. And I guess the letter didn't arrive to Biden's desk or it wasn't sent to Biden until September 12. So it's a relatively recent letter that was made public, but their signatures on the letter came in 2023, they claim. They generate a whole discussion and like, you know, we put this letter out there. And Councilman Martin, we finally get in touch with him and he has no comment on it. I just, how can you like walk away? Like you're, you're a community leader by virtue of being on the city council and you are a man of the cloth. He has some religious convictions. And he sent it to this letter that is, it's not made public until a couple of weeks or a week ago. Last Thursday to be exact. And not expect like some kind of reaction to it, but did like not really willing to defend like what you were trying to convey there. Do you want refugees resettled in your town, Councilman? Do you mean, I mean, maybe you don't. Maybe you don't think it's appropriate. But why would you sign on to this letter or do you think, I mean, are you speaking on behalf of the people of Robert still say, well, you know, I'm for the idea of resettlement in America, but just just not fair hope. Or do you want them in fair hope? I mean, it's a simple question. But anyway, this letter is kind of circulating out there and it's causing quite a stir. The Mayor Thomasville Sheldon Day. Not really thrilled that his member of the Alabama legislature would be a part of this. But here's, and this is the fear, I think, and a legitimate or not. Do these gestures create the perception that your communities open to these refugees coming there and settling. And then are you prepared to accept that responsibility with all that it entails? We'll be right back. This is the Jeff Moore Show at FIT Talk with '06 Five. ♪ And the one can change my mind but mama tried ♪ ♪ Get on me wanna know why do you drink ♪ ♪ Why do you roll smoke ♪ ♪ Why must you live by the song that you wrote ♪ Welcome back to the Jeff Moore Show at FIT Talk with '06 Five. Thank you for staying with us on this Wednesday morning 2513430106. Yeah, I am seeing some reports about a bomb found at the side of the Trump rally out along Ireland. I don't know only really right side news, but maybe there'll be some more reporting on that. I haven't seen that on the cables, just watching social media. I believe that was a question from an earlier texter. Captain Doug, Jeff, did I hear you said in addition to the bomb pager attacks, the cell phones are being used as well? Please elaborate. Reportedly, two-way radios that Hezbollah has are exploding as well. I don't know what's going on there, but that is what's being reported. Josh, I mean, these are more precisely mobiliars. We're stupid to heckle the first lady bird. There's a kid, well, but it hurt her feelings and had to leave the country for a while. The heckling has affected the majority of my life, like crap jobs and mobial. Now, though the future is looking bright, I might need to wear shades, excluding the death and violence. Let's see here. A New Textured Fair Hope should be a sanctuary city. Look, I mean, I'm a Fair Hope resident. The idea that they were, you wouldn't even suggest that you could settle refugees here. I mean, guys, it's taken like five years to get a Walmart, and still it's like on the outskirts of town. I don't know. I just like can't imagine that going over will. Maybe Councilman Martin is a fan of ducks and geese poop at Pier Park and figured it was a good money saving way to eliminate waterfowl. That from Michael. Mr. Valentine, that's why you have a massive amount of apartments being built elsewhere. Government subsidized loans for construction, future slums planted everywhere. No need to avoid bad areas. Government will bring one to you. And they text or drop them off in the middle of the night in the fruit and not district. I just, well, I just, I, I look, if you want to be welcome, need to refugees. And I think I, Councilman Martin is maybe his heart's in the right place. But like, this is a big responsibility. And just signing on a letter that I think is nothing more than kind of a political like virtue signaling exercise. Maybe not a good idea. Especially when like, I would say the lion's share your constituents are really concerned about this. Maybe not in Fairhope precisely, but throughout the country. Now he says when he signed it, this was the issue of 2023, but I'm telling you, the letter was sent to the Biden administration less than a week ago. Tony, I know Corey had asked him about it and he claims he did not sign that letter. Go figure. He's now saying that he did, at least according to our reporter. And just refuse to comment on it. Hey, guys, wait, wait, wait, wait, I don't, this shows up in our mailbox in 1819 news. And it's a letter dated September 12, 2000 and 24. And meanwhile, in the silicaga, there is Athens, there is Albert Mill and the people there are having a hard time grappling with the idea that they better learn some French Creole because that influx is coming. And you see this and you see three prominent or two prominent Democrats and a city councilman nonpartisan. What, what, what did you think was going to be the response? And then you don't want to defend it or rescind it or whatever it may be. What did you think was the response, what was the right thing to do there? Say, Nana, any boo boo, I'm not going to talk to you. So I'd suggest shipping them off at J.D. Christ or step. And I'd like to take a look at this. Okay. Keep them all in the textures. Maybe they aren't eating dogs and cats. But the Haitians are definitely being dumped like dogs and cats. Drop off all the refugees of blue states. They're the reason we're having this issue with the open borders. So, whatever the talk, one of six people. I'm going to run for me. Have a real bad morning. I'm from Santo. Everything that I got is just what I've got on. I ain't going to go back to the Jumpboard Show. I can talk one of those six five. Thank you for staying with us on this. Wednesday morning, 2513430106, you need to be in touch with the program. What you got to do? You got to text me and I will do my best to respond to whatever it is. That's on your mind. Keep in mind an hour from now. We'll talk to our senior United States Senator Tommy Tuberville. That's in the 11 o'clock hour. So don't go anywhere. Join us now, though. We do this every week. Always a pleasure. Joey Clark from News Talk, 93 ones and News 8 views. You can hear him in the afternoon. The three, if you're ever up in Montgomery, Joey, good morning. How are you? Doing great this morning. What are you doing? I need to survive. I made a trip up to Tuscaloosa last night. It's always like I went to a college Republican meeting and then I, you know, like it's just kind of listening to like what they care about and what's important to them. And it's always like 180 degrees from where like you and I would be. You know what I mean? Oh, absolutely. Well, it is interesting. I wasn't even part of all that when I was in college. So I guess it's Charlie Kirk's organization is now pretty dominant and both Tuscaloosa and all of them. I'm not sure. I could tell you. I know that they do big events, but I don't know if it's the, you know, if it's overshadows your, like traditional college or public at your. Yeah, it just seems that way. Like they're the ones being to drive the youth participation. Well, and they know how to get their people in media, I guess, with what Brian Holly and I'm forgetting the young lady's name, it was just on Fox. So, yeah, I mean, the traditional college books, though, I mean, it would be interesting to see what young folks are saying, especially the ones branding themselves. I'll tell you, like so much of it is kind of like, not surprised, but like how much of it is what goes on on campus. And I mean, the DEI band, the device of concepts, Bill, like got a lot of discussion. I mean, it's just, it's what they're literally is what their professors care about and are inundating with them. But while that, you know, is that really the most important thing going on in the world right now. Something else, though, and I haven't given this much thought, Joey, but like, you know, we made a big deal about that constitutional carry bill a few years ago. Well, exempted are the universities. And like a couple of guys brought this up about, and I never really thought about this, but how like campus carry is like an issue that's important to them. I mean, like we never talk about that, right? But it's kind of interesting. I mean, like if you're a believer in the Second Amendment, then why are we putting up a wall at the college gate there? Well, and I'm a big believer in the Second Amendment. I would say that also property owners have the right to put restrictions on their property. I think the issue with the universities and most of them are private, number one. And number two, they almost function as their own cities at their own police department. So I think they should be more under the wall just like any other city. And I'm even thinking back to my time at Auburn, a Marine I know who always carried was real frustrated because he could just be kind of on the edge of the campus and be running a risk of getting into a lot of trouble with the cops just for, you know, exercising is right. Now, I hadn't thought of that. I think the general principle that like a local school or a local business wants to say you can't bring guns in here. I think that's fine. But these big, sprawling campuses, the different questions. Yeah. I mean, like if you're old enough, like if in the eyes of the law to carry, and this is like a government, I mean, this is a quote, quote, quote, private property, I guess, I guess it. I mean, it's sort of pseudo private property. I don't know, I think you're right. Big sprawling college campus. What do you, are you able? Should you be allowed to have some kind of self protection mechanism? Yeah. I think it's almost like we need a definition of a city side. Like if cities did this, it would be clearly illegal. So how big of a campus are we talking? How much government money is it taking? And, you know, if it's a very small private campus, I kind of understand they can set their own standards in all sorts of ways. But yeah, I don't know. It's an interesting question. I haven't thought about it much. Yeah. I mean, but I guess the bigger point is just this, like that these universities really are like little tiny, like left-wing bastions in this state, blue dots on the map, right? And they, I don't think they're like, say, you most vote for Kamala Harris or whatever, but what they're emphasizing in these academic settings is so irrelevant to the big picture. And I think it distorts a lot of these young people's minds because they may disagree with that professor and they may even take the other side of whatever the professor is whining about that the state of Alabama is doing or whatever, but where they put the emphasis is totally, totally misplaced. Well, and I, Auburn is a very conservative campus by national standards, but back when I was going there, I guess, '07 to 2011, there were definitely a lot of professors that were just constantly pushing the little thing because I was in Bali-Sai. And if especially in the social studies, I think it's just a mess. I think peer review is kind of inherently, like, corrupted. And this is how you get this transgender stuff. This is how you get the critical race theory stuff. This is more, it's more activism than it is, I think, actual study and scientific understanding. And I ran into a lot of that in classes at Auburn. I had some good teachers. I tend to like the political philosophers more than the everyday political professors they seemed above all that stuff, but I would say if your kid wants to say good Auburn to become a pharmacist or a nurse or an engineer or an industrial design school, go for it, man. But if your kid wants to get Auburn or Alabama or anywhere for an English degree, you'd better watch out what they're going to be taught and told. Well, tell me this, though, and so I got a political science minor from the University of South Alabama. And that's the reason when you go study at a mobile's finest four-year public school there, public college, you have to have a minor at already in one degree, but yeah, in a journalism degree or communications or whatever it was. But the minor, political science, and I think I'm like, maybe a few classes away from a political science degree. But like what I found like these political science professors like really believing that we can recreate Plato's Republic. And I mean, just this asinine, irrelevant tripe. And they were peddling it like they were the real smart ones and all of the stuff that goes on on cable news and that you're seeing Washington DC misses the big point. Whereas I would argue none of that garbage is practical. Yeah, and I think you run into folks kind of who are in a certain slipstream of thought. Even if they're trying to be unbiased as professors, they end up pushing that on folks. Like I remember a class I took on board affairs. It was the first time I ran into an issue where I thought I got a lesser grade because of my opinion. I actually was assigned a write-a-time page paper on what Ukraine should do to you, particularly. And this was I guess in 2008. And I called for them to essentially do the Switzerland as a Eastern Europe. Or be essentially gay between East and West. Be a buffer zone, play Russia and the European Union against each other, yada, yada, yada. And he was such an EU guy. My professor was so about the European Union that he just hated it and started marking it up like crazy. And then you get into things like gender and politics and all this intersectional stuff. I ran into that and I just come pretty quickly reading it. It's a bunch of comic comedy. Yet people get degrees and get paintably sometimes they go and teach it again to other folks like a guild system. They're just copying themselves. I think about this a lot. Why do they go down this rabbit hole and then all of a sudden barricade them in this weird place in academia? But I think these academics, when it comes to government and policy and all of that, they really believe they discount human nature. They think a government plan or program or some kind of form of government and everybody just falls in line and does what they want and somehow the world works. Like human behavior is a wild card, right? And you can't predict it. And so thinking that you could like any form of government, be it federalism, capitalism or any form of economics, that you could plan on such a grand scale really is where they miss the point. Yeah, and I think it's because they live in a system that is constantly brought up by government that is, I think different than any sort of market signal. There's an old question you can read. And I think it's a question that people are looking at. People are wondering on visas, even in the 20s and 30s writing about this, like why are academics so less wing? And it's because, well, one, maybe it's a little reductive, but one is, look at where the bread is spotted. Look at how they're getting paid. So, you know, when you're being paid for by Uncle Sam's printing press, you're probably going to say things that Uncle Sam likes and wants to hear. You know, independent and don't, you're probably not going to get funded as much as the other researcher. And yeah, I think there's just a lot of perverse incentives that lead to the folks. And then it creates a culture that's kind of become its own thing ever since the universities are especially what infiltrate it in the 60s. And we've been living with the fruits of that for a few decades. Well, another thing to think about it, let's talk about socialism, right? Why does socialism work so well in Sweden but is like a disaster in Venezuela? Why? And I mean, like you can't like discount, like part of the you can't discount the cultural impacts where in some cultures, they just go along to get along or they all want to do their part or it takes a village. And in some, it's just like, you know, it's in the DNA. Like it's every man for themselves. And, you know, so like it's not in one size fits all thing. And I think some of these like at least at the commuter college here in Mobile, the way they looked at the way, you know, governments ought to be set up was like almost like a one size fits all thing. Yeah, and I think that's absurd. And I mean, I would be willing to bet the Swede would tell you we flirted with socialism, but we work apples country. And I think all the Nordic countries that say, you know, progressives like Bernie Sanders, socialist Bernie Sanders point to are very capitalist actually in terms of their business structures. They have very generous welfare states. But I think you're right. Like if you go look at say a nation like it was a mess like 80. This is the best thing the Haitians need is like a welfare program and like a higher minimum wage. No, they need like basic order. When you look at Venezuela, I think they really did go full. It's hard core in dissertions and same thing with Argentina. But it can change. And I get your point about the cultures that are beyond what the government can put into law really do a matter. I think Americans take for granted. It's getting worse. We don't trust each other as much anymore. But we're one of the more trustworthy. I trust society is where you can call up somebody on the blue and make a business deal with them. That just doesn't exist in a lot of parts of the world. It's something that came out of our culture organically over centuries. Look at the British common law. And when you try to impose that in other places, it doesn't seem to work. How we're going to make Iraq an Afghanistan what Jeffersonian democracy can be a break. I think your point is a good point. Yeah, I mean like that's where a place where there is this overwhelming like tendency to want a theocracy. They want it. They desire this. That is their custom. And you know these these elitists and this is goes beyond academia. This is I mean this is good old neo conservative philosophy here of exporting democracy. Oh, just give us some time. They will adapt and they will like it. But but that's just not that that's that's not how these people are programmed and and like that. I guess the point here is Joey is like it's taboo to say that people are more programmed a certain way because we're all equal and you know we all desire the same things and that's where the left makes such a huge mistake because it kind of looks at like people like on paper right it doesn't look at like the big swath of humanity which is just full of like all kinds of different views and wildcards and walks of life and you know personal experiences that you have to speak I think what capitalism kind of works it's like it's in a base. Yeah, and I think it reflects the human nature correctly at least it channels the best and worst of human nature and probably the best way for humanity is power described capitalism in part and you know I wrote this week breaking 19 about that Matt Wall's documentary and my race is and I just feel I think a term I heard you say last week that I called these academics a cloistered set of hot house flowers and I think what's happening is some of these theory they're so high on their own supply and so cloistered that their theories are getting weirder and weirder and more removed from not only everyday people like you're suggesting but I think removed from reality and because they never ever challenge it's becoming I think just more more absurd in a way I think it's hope because these folks are not very impressive when they're actually put on their scrutiny. Joey we've been talking for I don't know 11 12 13 14 minutes and the president got shot at on Sunday and we haven't mentioned it. I know well it's kind of I mean we're banana republic is what comes with that. I mean we're desensitized to this stuff now right? It's crazy. It's absolutely insane for the so much of the national media to go well he essentially at this coming to him. USA today I believe literally had a letter to the editor that said that from coming to him. They've lost the moral. I think they've lost the moral high ground here. Yeah. No I don't know the eyes of the American I mean the moral high ground for the media and sort of the establishment if he wills whatever they decide they want it to be but like I think this erodes that they're you know January six of democracy and all of that hysteria and I guess it was like kind of becoming sort of the reality like that stuff wasn't working anyway guys think it's something different. Yeah and it's just unnerving that it continues to happen and you know I saw the Trump campaign coming out and showing all the rhetoric like quotes of rhetoric used by the Democrats over the years. I think is kind of warranted at this point but I'm a little worried about even in flaming this more because it seems to play into the worst people's hands. If you I don't know it is ironic that people Democrats calling me yesterday and like well Boston prayers to the literal threat to democracy and the Hitler the 21st century. I'm glad Hitler didn't die. Like you can't have it both ways when you go this far over the top talking about Trump being a dictator. Of course you know somebody's going to do something. It's it's terrible and again I don't want to inflame it further but you know what else are you going to do with fight fire in the middle of the campaign. Joey we got to leave it there but thanks for making time for us and we'll do it again next week. Appreciate it. All right Joey Clark leads the gentleman. We'll be right back. This is FFTAC 10065. The charges have been dismissed against John Cooper. I wasn't just in. That came yesterday. Al Dot Director acting like a maniac up in Gunnersville. So thanks for that. A name textured. Do we still think that he ought to be? The Al Dot Director. Chris I don't know how much he paid. Director Cooper paid. His neighbor. But I guess like the lesson here guys is like he's a hot head. Like a shameless shameless hot head. And this is what the way he handled that property dispute tells you everything that you need to know about the situation guys like well if you're a law maker, if you're a county commissioner, if you are a city councilman even or whatever and you go to this man and you say hey, this roads falling apart. Can you fix it? And he starts like his face turns red and he, well at one time it would have. Nowadays he's, I think he's getting a little old up there. This group of, well some of them are really, really good. But some of these people that Governor Ivy has on the payroll there that the end of this regime can't come soon enough. A name textured. Plenty of feral cats in Fair Hope to feed the refugees in this Democrat city. It's Fair Hope a Democrat city. I don't think that it is. It may be more blue than others in Baltimore County, Democrat. I don't know. We'll be right back. This is a Jeff Porte Show. I've been talking 106-5. ♪ Don't it make my brown eyes ♪ ♪ Don't it make my brown eyes ♪ ♪ Blue ♪ ♪ Blue ♪ ♪ Blue ♪ ♪ Blue ♪ ♪ Blue ♪ ♪ Blue ♪ ♪ Blue ♪ ♪ Blue ♪ ♪ Blue ♪ ♪ Blue ♪ From Bucks Pocket to the shores of Orange Beach at all points in between. An insider's perspective on Alabama politics. It's the Jeff Porte Show. I don't think I ain't done it this way. ♪ Don't it make my brown eyes ♪ ♪ Don't it make my brown eyes ♪ ♪ Don't it make my brown eyes ♪ ♪ Don't it make my brown eyes ♪ ♪ Don't it make my brown eyes ♪ ♪ Don't it make my brown eyes ♪ ♪ Don't it make my brown eyes ♪ ♪ Don't it make my brown eyes ♪ ♪ Don't it make my brown eyes ♪ ♪ Don't it make my brown eyes ♪ ♪ Don't it make my brown eyes ♪ ♪ Don't it make my brown eyes ♪ ♪ Don't it make my brown eyes ♪ ♪ Don't it make my brown eyes ♪ ♪ Don't it make my brown eyes ♪ ♪ Don't it make my brown eyes ♪ ♪ Don't it make my brown eyes ♪ ♪ Don't it make my brown eyes ♪ ♪ Don't it make my brown eyes ♪ ♪ Don't it make my brown eyes ♪ ♪ Don't it make my brown eyes ♪ ♪ Don't it make my brown eyes ♪ ♪ Don't it make my brown eyes ♪ ♪ Don't it make my brown eyes ♪ ♪ Don't it make my brown eyes ♪ ♪ Don't it make my brown eyes ♪ ♪ Don't it make my brown eyes ♪ ♪ Don't it make my brown eyes ♪ ♪ Don't it make my brown eyes ♪ ♪ Don't it make my brown eyes ♪ 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I don't think Coach knows really what he's dealing with. But then again, I mean, he played Major League Ball dealing with the DC crowd. 2-5-1-3-4-3-0-1-0-6, we'll be back. This is D. Jeff Moore Show on FM Talk 1006-5. ♪ Or I may simply be a single drop of rain ♪ ♪ But I will rain ♪ Welcome back to the Jeff Moore Show on FM Talk 1006-5. They're staying with us on this Wednesday morning. Text lines are going to be in touch with the program. It's up there, 2-5-1-3-4-3-0-1-0-6. Show us on the line now. He is our senior United States Senator Tommy Tuberville, ours. I like to call him Coach. Coach, good morning, aren't you? Good morning, Jeff. I'm doing good at raining up here in DC right now. I've been at the office for about an hour and getting ready for early meetings this morning. But it is starting to turn a little bit fallish-looking and trees are changing colors. It's a beautiful time of the year. Well, speaking of that time of the year, real quick, just your thoughts, Alabama Auburn football before we get into the gruesome world of politics. Yeah, Auburn's got a lot of work to do. Their defense is how you win championships and it's falling away behind. They're getting ready to play a lot better football teams coming up. I thought their quarterback was a positive move this past week, and played well at Alabama. They got the talent and they're getting better. The quarterbacks don't be the key, along with keeping people healthy. But as we talked earlier, this conference is brutal. And you better be hitting on all cylinders when you play some of these things, or you'll get blown off the map. Yeah. Alabama, you feel pretty good about, well, I mean, Alabama fans are a constant, I mean, they're hard to please, but you feel good about where they're going. Oh, yeah. Yeah. And again, it's a team coming together and playing together as a group. The rules have changed so much, you know, with the NIO. NIO is kind of leaked down in terms of, you know, how you practice, how you push the players. It's more than an individual sport now. So it's even harder for coaches to bring the team together, play hard together because football is a team sport. And I think it's even less important now that you have a head coach that understands that and get the best of players, but also keep them playing in the same direction as a group and not individuals. Let's move on here. It's another, you know, appearance on this program, and we're going to talk about another assassination attempt. I mean, I saw your comments earlier. You think that there could be more. I mean, do we got to make it to election day, coach? Well, I don't know. I'm worried about it. You know, I've played golf with him many times on that course that he played. I know exactly where he was at or the shooter was at. The Secret Service did their job. And so I feel good about that part. But I've told people in press conference yesterday Donald Trump is different. He works. He's a hard worker and working as president or working as a campaign and he's going to do his own due diligence. He's going to do two or three shots a day for the next 48 days. He's going to be out there going from Philadelphia to St. Louis to Dallas. And you need people that are leapfrog and getting in front of you, vetting people. And I just worry about it. And I'm not sure that the Democrats, obviously, they don't want to shot, but they're trying to keep him in the house and the end of basement and not get out and selling what he's actually going to do for the American people. I know they're not doing it. This is our first A.I. president presidential candidate in Kamala Harris, meaning that everything that she does is artificial intelligence thrown out there in terms of doing interviews that come to a computer, how you answer. She doesn't answer to basic computer goals. So this is a different world, different time. President Trump has got problems. He knows it, but he's not. You're not going to cook him up and hopefully we can get more help for him. But they're not very realistic up here. And even the Republicans, I don't see them cry out for hate to help the guy be able to campaign. But I tell you, it's I'm very disappointed even a lot of Republicans. Well, and we can talk about this. I mean, the campaign itself, it does seem to be trendy in a good direction. I mean, you never know. You can't count these things for sure. But even pre assassination attempt, I mean, it really felt to me like troubles finding a stride kind of similar to like that 2016 run. Yeah, I don't think there's any doubt. Jeff, he's leading. They got him trailing in some of the polls. But I'll tell you, I've been all over the country talking to people. Just listen to their comments all over Alabama. You know what's amazing? I think Jeff is what we've got. We're looking down the barrel of a war war. We're in a recession. Prices are out of sight. Our education to heck in a hand basket. Crime is rampant. Migrants are coming across the border. And the first thing people were no coach is this going to be a fair election? That's how concerned people are about the future of this country. When the American people have this much concern for the integrity of our election, our country is in trouble. That means that they don't trust government and I wouldn't trust us as far as you can throw us to be honest with you because it's like the assassination in protecting President Trump. There's not a whole sense of urgency. What happens? What happens is what politicians believe in. You know, I just feel bad for the American public. People don't know because it's going to be hard for them to be satisfied with what's going on. Well, you're right. There's a general distrust of our like our elite institutions. And you're right. You look around at immigration, finance, entertainment, all of these things that we kind of have looked up to over the years right now. And people were very cynical about it. The elections to fix us in, I hear it all the time, the election system is going to fail us. I mean, I'm not, I don't know, like, that's not healthy for the country at all. No, no, it's, it's not. And you got the, you know, the, the Democrats every day have been trying to remove President Trump, whether it's the two impeachments. The bank rep leaves to put in jail, the weaponization of our Department of Justice going into its home. They've done things that no other parties ever done to a woman president, much less than a candidate for president. And now the two assassination attempts, again, the American people deserve better than this. Donald Trump deserves better. He deserves a chance. But they're trying to get this lady over the line of scrimmage and over the goal line for some reason. And she's not a candidate. You know, I don't care who they put in there, but at least put somebody in there that really knows what's going on. But they're trying to sell her or something that she's not. Even the Democrats, I talked to them daily and they're wondering, how in the world did she get in there? I know for a fact that some were planning on running for this position when Joe Biden got out. And everybody said, listen, this has been done. This is our plan. We're going to run her. I just hope the American people don't buy into this because we need a strong leader in this country. And right now, of course, President Biden doesn't know what day it is and he hadn't. But they're trying to keep Donald Trump out because they know he will do something for the American people and not for the deep state. Well, and you listened to her coach, she saw that interview she did for Philadelphia TV last week. And then we saw the debate. There's all kinds of questions there. Did she get the -- was she informed of the debate questions ahead of time? Certainly the moderators were on her side. But just with all the things she has going for, if you just look at it, take the party affiliation away, I don't see how people, especially Democrats, feel good about her as a candidate. And maybe they will vote for anything with a D next to its name. But there -- I mean, there really is something missing there with the other party's nominee. Oh, there's no doubt. I mean, you've got some people up here in the Democratic side, Senators, Klobuchar, Elizabeth Warren, all of them, that they're a lifetime goal. And efforts were put into trying to become the president of the United States. Now, all of a sudden, here comes this lady from California. It's never done anything. But she just threw in as a running mate. And the running mate, she did -- I don't know what she did. I mean, nobody knew, you know, she was the boarder's arm. And we've had 10 to 15 million people come across the border in daily, told us, "Oh, the border's closed." And they're just trying to play off the uninformed public, you know, for this election. Can they call it off? There's a chance they might be able to. And they haven't helped us if that happens, because we will never survive as a country. If we get four more years of 10 to 20 million more people come in. Because we're overrun as we speak, hospitals, education are -- you know, we're spending 10 billion a month on illegal immigrants. And it seems like the Democrats just don't care. They just want power and control. And they don't want to do anything for the working people. And I'll tell you what's going to happen. The American people who play these taxes have just about had it. And you're going to have an upper present. And so, you know, we don't need anything to happen. But first thing, we need a fair election. Whoever wins. That's the reason we have this safe act, Jeff, that I and Mike Lee, Senator Lee, came up with two months ago saying, listen, let's just pass this bill saying only United States citizens can vote. And win or lose, whoever wins, whoever loses, the other sides don't feel a lot better. Almost every one of the Democrats have voted against this. Chuck Schumer won't bring it to the board. And you know what the reason it is? He goes, well, we already know that illegal is illegal to vote. Newsflash to Chuck Schumer. It's also illegal to rob a bank. But people still do it. And we have to have some semblance of organization. A clean and fair election. Because let me tell you, if it was like it was last time, it is going to be chaos again. And I just hope that we people understand how we're doing the best we can. You know, we're not just set to whatever happens up here. Because we can't afford this country can't afford more chaos. We need to get back on the same page. Joy, bye, U.S. Senator Tommy Tuberville, here on the program for a few more minutes. Coach, let's talk about this Haitian migrant situation. I'm sure you're well aware of it. Silicaga, Alberville, Athens had like now enterprise. A little bit about Russellville, some other places. It's not a coincidence this is happening. A lot of places, not just here in Alabama, but all around the country. What do you hear in there? Have you got any answers? What can you tell us? Well, they're trying to hide it as much as they can. But we all know, and so about a year and a half, two years ago, where they had 20,000 Haitians that came to the border. You know, they were trying to get across at one time. We stopped them. And then the Biden administration, a lot of them up on all buses and planes, and sent them to South Florida. Now we had another influx come in only for the fact that Joe Biden and Kamala Harris stretched a law already in place, and we're going to parole these people. We started years ago for people that, if you need a heart transplant, if you need emergency surgery, you can't get it outside the country. We're going to let you come in and get that done and go home. But they used that to allow these Haitians, thousands and thousands of them to come into our country, emergency work effort. And so they'd bust them. Yep, gunnersville, rainsville, silicaga, and they're running the streets. They don't have the money. They're trying to drive cars. They're crashing cars. Of course, they brought this up with President Trump in the debate, and he said something about new cats and dogs. And of course, the Democrats just hit the hole. This is fake news. It is not fake news. We all know in Alabama, this is true. They're there. They're still coming. We can't stop them because we don't have the authority to stop because it's a parole. But this is what this administration is trying to do. And I'm telling you, a huge part of these people will vote in our election, and we're trying to stop it and trying to figure out how we can get this done and where they do not have the ability. And that goes back to the say-back of you have to be a citizen to vote. So you think that they're going to try to get them to register to vote in this election cycle, potentially? Well, in some states, I think there's 19 blue states, not one red state. Blue states, they already give them the opportunity to get a driver's life. So what are they going to do? They're going to allow people to vote. They're going to go to these driver's life places, and they go to Social Security office, which a lot of these are getting, they're getting the Social Security that you paid, by the way, that will not be available five or six years. Now, I couldn't get broke. They're signing them up to vote. There's going to be millions of them that will vote. Hopefully, there's just in the blue states where Republicans are probably not going to win anyway. But the problem that we're having, Jeff, is they're sending these people to red states like Alabama. I was on a plane from Bogota, Columbia, a few weeks ago. I went down there and looked at some talks to some people down there about some Alabama businesses that are there to make sure that they're safe and protected. Coming back, half the plane was loaded with Venezuelans and Colombians. They all had things around their necks saying, "Hey, help us. We need help. We don't speak language. They had a vanilla, a vanilla envelope for, you know, they have money and cash. They were going to Houston, and then from there they dispersed throughout the country. But most of them are going to red states, or they can try to change the elections. Here's the thing. They brought in more illegal immigrants. I think it's 10 to 15 million. We really don't know. It could be closer to a coin. But they've changed 13 to 15 areas where we're going to add a congressman, not this election, but that, so we'll have 15 different Congress people in the next election because of the influx of illegal immigrants. Last question will get you out of here on this. What do you make of this, though? The timing of this. The influx of the, especially these Haitian migrants, and you see it in red states, but maybe even some other states, this close to the election. Well, it is what it is. They try to take their focus off one thing. There's so many bad things going on right now in this country that we can't, we can't sustain as a democracy, as a constitution republic. And that will happen. And so there's so many things going on, but they want to change it. These are all globalists. They don't want borders. They want a one world order. You see the while hairs and some of these white jobs going, hey, we've got to turn the page on this old America and change it to something new. Well, we don't want to do that. We don't want to change it to socialism and communism, but that's what they want to do. And folks out there listening, it's going to work. Well, where do you coach get this from? I live and breathe this every day for the last three and a half years. I've seen it, seen it with my eyes, listened to them. I'm real disappointed in a lot of the Democrats up here that are not socialist, that are not communist, but they follow the party line. And they vote for this craziness because they won't get any campaign money to get reelected. That's the reason we have to have term limits up here. More and more important that we bring people up here. You do your job. And after a couple of terms, your tail goes home and you can't manipulate the system. But it's what's scary right now, do you have 40, what, 40, 7, 48 days? And President Trump's are only hope along with, I think we'll get the Senate 51 to 53 seats. If things were to be remote today, I think we get 51 to 53 seats. We gain the majority and we can stop some of this nonsense. But we can't have Kamala Harris and they're doing all these executive orders. The Biden has done men playing women's sports and spending money. Like they just sent 700 million dollars to Ukraine on power. $100 bills wrapped in cellophane. You saw that they're in Afghanistan when Obama was there. He said billions and did that. Well, what do you think they're going to do with cash? I mean, what do you do with cash? We're going to pay their government employees. No, you're not. You're going to still ever get out of it. And that's what they do. And I'm sure a lot of it comes back to people that organize it over here. So, yeah, I mean, this is a huge scam going on right now. And, you know, I'm scared to death. Also, hey, we've allowed, we're allowing Ukraine to shoot long range missiles into Russia. And so we're basically in a war now with Russia, which we shouldn't, they're all around the world. We've got a war here on within our borders and this group doesn't even recognize it. But that's what they want. They want turmoil here, control whatever we do. Lots of you every day and end up witnessing a socialist communist state. And we're getting pretty close. Coach, as always, we appreciate your time. Stay safe up there and let's talk again soon. All right, let's fight for 48 days. It's a big fight. Thank you, Jeff. Thank you. U.S. Senator Tommy Tumblerville there. We got to get a break here and be right back. This is the Jeff Ford show. What up, let's talk 106.5. ♪ I'm a little boy, I'm a little boy, I'm a little boy, I'm a little boy, I'm a little boy, I'm a little boy ♪ ♪ Yeah, you're out there, now you know what God knows how ♪ ♪ And I'm stuck here, having a record, yeah ♪ ♪ Once was a thought inside my head ♪ Welcome back to the show. If I'm talking 106.5, thanks for staying with us on. What's left of this Wednesday morning? Tomorrow on the program, I guess we would have logged here. Potentially, Robert Adderholt, but April Marie Pogle and Barry Moore. Biddeboville coming up here shortly. Sean, let's go. Hey, Cameron Smith joins me, Erica Thomas, and exploding pagers and more on the wait in just minutes. That's exciting stuff y'all stayed tuned for that. Just said we're a little along with Coach there, so I got to get out of here, but it's been a pleasure. We'll try to do better tomorrow. Sorry, Phyllis, I forgot to say goodbye. This has been the Jeff Ford show. What up, let's talk 106.5. The last and my's the hardest one to say. This is where the cowboy rides away. (upbeat music)