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FM Talk 1065 Podcasts

The George Williams Show 10-1-24 Dr. Phillip Brown, Dr. Lou Campomenosi

Broadcast on:
02 Oct 2024
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other

It's time for the George Williams Show on FM Talk 1065. George Williams, retired U.S. Marine Major, Vietnam veteran, retired federal agent, former vice chairman of the Alabama Republican Party and World Traveler, brings his wealth of information, sharing his thoughts on today's politics, and taking your calls and texts at 251-343-0106. Now making the mission possible, here's George Williams. Welcome, welcome, welcome, everyone out there in Radio Land. I am George Williams, your host, and this is the George Williams Show. Our number here is 251-3430106, and for those of you who are outside our listening area or who are inside our listening area and know if someone want to tune into the program, they can do it over the internet at FMTalk1065.com, that's FMTalk1065.com. All right, folks, we got a lot to talk about, a lot to talk about, and that's what we're going to do. I mean, well, we've got to talk about the sheriff of Peier, who's coming, the candidates in the congressional district too, Israel, what's happening in the Middle East, and some of the things that are happening here in Alabama, or at Night Good, and also our Mayor Mobile is not running for a fourth term, so there's a lot of news tonight, and the presidential election, oh, I forgot, tonight is the debate right after this program with the two vice presidential candidate, the Republican Vans, and the Lion Democrat, or Demon Democrat, whatever you want to call him, Walt, tonight, so it's going to be very interesting, and we'll tune in to listen to his lives, okay, and a Chinese conspirator, that's what I call Walt's, the Vice President of Canada, because folks, he has been in tune with the Chinese for years, for years, and man-o-man-o-man, that is, to me, that's very dangerous, folks. It's very, very dangerous, so we'll be listening to him, and we'll talk and buy it. All right, folks, we've got a special guest tonight on the phone, Philip Brown. Philip is the chairman of the Alabama Minority GOP, how you doing, Philip? Uh-uh, I hear music, Philip, are you there? Nope, I know he's supposed to be on, and we are waiting for him to get on, until such time as he's connected, folks, we're just going to go ahead and talk about what's going on. Next? Sorry, we appeared, have lost him, tried to get it back on the line just as quick as we can. All right, we've lost him, folks, I'm not in the studio, okay, and also adjust how close you speak to your mic a little bit, kind of a slip on the waveform you volume was. All right, folks, we'll get Philip Brown. Just calling that. Okay, we'll get him on, he's calling back now. Let's see, try now, hello, Mr., hello, Dr. Brown. Hey, how are you? All right, Philip, how you doing? I'm doing well. Great, great, folks, this is Philip Brown, he is the chairman of the Alabama Minority GOP, and we're going to be talking about a few things tonight. One thing is, at Philip, we are on the 11th of this month, our annual banquet in Mobile. Yeah, so we're excited about that, we're looking forward to being down there with you, George. Right, right, and folks, that would be chef Joe Arpaio, out of Maricopa County, the Phoenix, Arizona area, and he's a legend, he's a legend, and prior to him becoming chef, he was a special agent with DEA, a special agent in charge, regional director for DEA. So we are looking forward to him coming down, not this Friday, but the following Friday in Mobile. Philip, what do you think about that? I think that's exciting, we're looking forward to seeing the amplifier, like you say, he's a legend, he stirred up a lot of controversy when he ran the prison system out there. Right, right, that's what we're looking forward to, I think a lot of law enforcement is looking forward to being involved in meeting him and getting a chance to spend the evening with us. Right. And you're in Birmingham, and Jefferson County, and you're also running for an office. That's correct, I'm running for the Jefferson County Board of Education. Okay. And we're a retired school teacher and, you know, real concerned about the direction in our education system is going and it has been going for years. And I think one of the things, sometimes we miss in the Republican Party is how important the local races are. Right. And we've got to be able to get ahold of our school systems and our local election officials positions, so forth, so that we can control what happens in our local areas. That's one of the things that I'm very interested in. Right. And Philip, you and I have been involved in Alabama politics for a number of years. What happened to Jefferson County? It was a red, red, red county. Yes. We got, we got kind of relaxed and, of course, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the Republican Party took it over and over the, the last 10 years that we've lost every county wide election that we've run, we have still have a very slim majority in the legislative delegation. We have a very slim majority in the county commission. And at this point, we have a very slim majority in the, in the Jefferson County Board of Education. So we owe, you know, none of the position, the election officials, the CRS chairs raised, we've lost several times the circuit clerk, as well as the probate judge. All three of those are all officials that oversee the election process. Right. And we, we have not been able to hold any of those positions for at least 10 years. And one of the things about it, George, is that people, they get excited about presidential and gubernatorial races, but they don't really turn out for just local races. Like I'm sure you remember, recently where John Rogers had to resign because of the corruption, today is the special election for, for the replacement of his seat. And we have a Republican running in that race. And one of our biggest issues is that we were having a problem getting the Republicans to turn out that vote of those elections. We have less than 1,500 people at the close of their polls, less than 1,500 people that have actually turned out to vote. Wow. Wow. And I tell you what, Phillip, since the Democrats took over Birmingham in that area, crime has gone up. There was a big shoot out there, and a lot of people were wounded, and about four or five had died. Yeah, four were killed, about 17 were wounded. Wow. It says, you know, it's right down in the, in the heart of downtown, it was about the five points area. Right. A lot of nightclub activity, people out late at night, a lot of teenagers and college students. Okay. And we have seen such a decline, but we lost this year's race about 10 years ago. We have seen a steady incline in the crime rate, you know, we're almost leading the nation. Wow. Somebody's getting killed in Birmingham every day. Yes, absolutely. And then you go to some of these community meetings, and you hear people ringing their kids and saying, oh, man, we got to stop the violence, we got to stop. But there's only where you can stop the violence is the fourth loss. Right. Right. All right, Phillip, we're going to be going on a break, a first break. So can you hold on until after a break and then we'll continue? Sure. We're glad you're here, folks. We're talking with Phillip Brown, a chairman of the Alabama minority GOP, which is the minority wing, the black wing of the Alabama Republican Party. And I'm telling you, folks, we're getting ready for this election. Phillip himself is running in Birmingham for the Jefferson kind of board of education. So we'll be right back after these messages. Welcome back to the George Williams Show, your texts and comments at 2-5-1-3-4-3-0-1-0-6. Now, making the mission possible, here's George Williams. All right. Welcome back. Welcome back, folks. We are on the mission. Our number here is 2-5-1-3-4-3-0-1-0-6, and we're talking to Phillip Brown. He's the state chairman of the Alabama minority GOP, and we're talking about the annual banquet, which would be held not this Friday, next Friday, folks in Mobile, Alabama, and our special guests will be retired DEA special agent, retired sheriff, Maricopa County, Phoenix area, Joe Appiah. So, Phillip, are you hearing a lot about the sheriff coming down? Yes. We're excited. Of course, we're a little far away from Mobile, but we're certainly looking forward to being down there with you. We bring it up and starting it up and now it's up here, and we expect people to come down and enjoy it along with me and some of our staff up here to make this thing up. Great. Great. Phillip, I forgot to ask you when we were talking about politics in Jefferson County. Why is it so difficult for a Republican to be elected in Jefferson County? Well, because the majority of the county is Democrat, but it's not by much. And so over the last several elections, we've only lost about two to four points, but it's been a consistent and we've slowly gained just a little bit. We've continued to fight, but a lot of people think, well, you know, all black people are Democrats and all white people are Republicans, but the fact of it is that we have a pretty large white constituency that are also Democrats. Wow. And so when you add that to the, the large population of black Democrats, then you come up with a liberal arts Democrat. Even with the terrible economic situation, the border situation, et cetera, the crime situation, white folks are still voting Democrat. It made me the black people still voting Democrat. We launched a radio campaign this week and it basically it spells out that the crime is out of control in Jefferson County, where our communities are crumbling, their politicians are lying in pockets and you've been voting Democrat for years. You know, this, like Donald Trump said, you know, what do you have to lose? And we ended up commercial by saying if you won't do it for yourself, do it for your children. Right. Right. Right. I definitely, I'm concerned about my children and grandchildren, okay, totally unbelievable. Montgomery is almost the same way, right? Is Jefferson County now? Absolutely. In Montgomery Jefferson County and have basically, for the most part, they've just surrendered. In Jefferson County, we have continued to fight because we have a strong county party, but the county party in Montgomery has basically surrendered and just said, you know, I'll never win nothing else in Montgomery County. Wow. And your thing that I feel the most is that Madison and Mobile is very far behind. Yeah, we, our mayor is not going to run for a fourth term, so I'm sure we're going to get a whole bunch of folks who are going to announce that they're running. Mm-hmm. Because the Democrats definitely want more beer, but we're not going to let them have it. Yeah. We're not going to let them have it. Both of them. You know, we still hold slim with your, just in Mobile and Madison County, but I tell you, we're losing ground every day. Wow. And so we've got to continue to fight, even at Jefferson County, we've had former chairman of the party here in the county that has said, you know, it's just, it's just a waste of time. We're not going to win, but if we don't fight, it just gets worse and worse. Wow. Now, Phillip, you're also, you're the vice chairman of the county party up there, right? That's correct. Okay, good, good, maybe we're working real close with the county party and our efforts to reach out to the minority community. And we have quite a bit of people, the jazz you do, Georgia, down in Mobile, but we have quite a number of Black, Jefferson County citizens that have decided, hey, you know, we're tired of the Democratic Party. Okay. Well, the Democrats, the black Democrats in Alabama are fighting the white Democrats. So I don't see why the whites are still voting for the Democratic Party. Yeah, it's shocking because in Jefferson County, very few white Democrats hold any positions at all. And then they're very open about there, you know, they'll go to rallies at the Democratic Party and they'll say, we're unapologetically black in order to elect folks who look like that. Right. Right. Well, Phillip, we hope you're successful in getting elected for the board because you just retired this year from the high school teaching job. Yes, in Jefferson County, I've been 22 to a new year career in Jefferson County school system. And we just at the close of last school year, we retired. All right. All right. All right. Phillip, we're going to how can our folks down here help you out up there? What can they do? Well, we certainly, you know, the back with the week I'm going on in Friday after next on the 11th is the way in which we do fundraising that helps us all across the state in Georgia. But we're encouraging people to go to our website, a L M G O P dot org and do a sponsorship on one of our tables for our banquet that's coming up. We're going to be at the Marriott and we're going to look forward to a great event with Sheriff Joe Arpaio. All right. All right, Phillip, we appreciate you coming on and talking to our audience. All right, George, we always, always enjoy coming on with you. All right. And we'll see you down here and a week and a half just a little while we'll be down there. All right, folks. Phillip Brown. Thank you, Phillip. We appreciate you. All right, folks, Phillip Brown, we are looking forward to Sheriff Joe Arpaio coming down, coming over from Phoenix and speaking to our, our Alabamians, folks, I mean, he's a dynamite person. Now, speaking of politics, as you know, in district two, congressional district two, which is the southern part, not the most southern part, but the next level up, the appeals court, redistrict that area. So we have on the Republican side, Caroline Dobson. She is running against the fingers guy, whomever he is. And I was just reading, reading folks that, now, Wes Allen, our secretary of state, he is purging the dead people and illegal off our voting rolls. Okay? Let me say we don't have dead folks and illegal on our voting rolls, according to Wes, they're crazy. All right? So what he's done, he's been over the past six months, a year purging that and getting rid of the dead folks. They should be in the cemetery and not on the voting rolls and the illegals who should not be voting, who should not be voting. So guess what? The Democrats are taking him to court, talking about voter suppression. And figures made that comment the other day, that is voter suppression. Why is it folks that only the Democrats talk about voter suppression? Why is it? Why is it? Why is it voters suppression to ask for ID when you vote? Why? Why is it voters suppression when you try to take illegals and dead folks off of the voter rolls? Why is it voters suppression when you ask for ID cards to make sure one that you will are on the rolls to that you're a citizen? Why is that? And only the Democrats. Why is it? Only the Democrats are talking about that, okay? And then if they don't lack what the Republicans are doing, it's not just the Republicans who want to see ID cards when you vote, okay? The Democratic machinery doesn't want to see it. And why is it so difficult in these blue states and blue counties that you don't have prosecution surrounding illegal voting? Why? And then according to the media, see, nobody was prosecuted so there's no illegal voting or there's no voter suppression because they're Democratic prosecutors, okay? And a lot of these prosecutors are running for reelection or they're running to be elected. So that is what's happening here. And remember, District 2 folks, District 2, Ms. Dobson is running and we cannot allow another figure. As you know, Vivian figures has been in for our state senator in the mobile Baldwin County area for the past 25 years and what has she done? Nothing. As a matter of fact, what have any Democrat done? None. Nothing. Uh, our District 7 where we have, uh, uh, uh, Robin Lattaker running against, uh, Sioux L, Congresswoman Sioux L. She's done nothing for Alabama. She is a zero. She's a zero. And uh, folks, we, we, we can't allow these Democrats to get in office, okay? That Phil Brown said earlier, once the Democrats took over Jefferson County and burned him, crime rose, crime rose. Think about that before you pull that level and before you vote, dot the dot, dot the eyes and how you voted, uh, registration for, okay? Think about that, folks. Don't vote Democrat. Please don't. Welcome back to the George Williams Show. Your texts and comments at 2-5-1-3-4-3-0-1-0-6. Now, making the mission possible, here's George Williams. Welcome, folks, to the George Williams Show and we are still on a mission for us. We'll be on that mission until November 5th, when we get all of those demon-crats, aka democrats, out of the way, okay? And uh, our number here is 2-5-1-3-4-3-0-1-0-6. And I think we have our next guess on. Hello, Don here. I'm here, George. All right. Nice talking to you, Doc. How's it going? How's my what? How is it going? Everything's going good here in Louisiana. And even though it's in Louisiana, I'm still involved with Alabama politics. Yeah. Dr. Liu has been involved with Alabama politics and then last year, he relocated to uh, Louisiana. We hate to lose you. I don't think it is a very difficult transition, but we have family over here. We're getting older. We just felt like we're comfortable and be closer, closer to family, um, before we're forced to do that. You know how that goes as we get older, George? Oh, yeah. And Dr. Liu is also retired United States Marine Corps major. So he's been all over the place like me, right, Doc? Uh, really, yes, sir, have been around, of course, and about it. Right. So, Doc, what do you think about the political situation now? What are your thoughts? How are things in Louisiana for the Republicans? Um, the Republicans are just like Alabama. We have a super majority in the House and the state Senate and we have a Republican governor and all the constitutional offices are held by Republicans. The only difficulty here in Louisiana is that Democrats still somehow hold a, um, a slow majority in registration, but it hasn't turned out to be making a big difference because this has been a Republican state for any number of years now. But, um, I think that, um, you know, I'm gradually getting into all of it, but, um, I think that for me right now, there are some loose ends, uh, on, in Alabama that I want to try to help sort out one of which is helping Robin Whittaker, who you just mentioned, running against Cherry Sioux up in, uh, District 7 here at Birmingham. Um, and I've been working with the common sense campaign in Baldwin County as they've transitioned to a new leadership, um, and I just, I feel that it's not just for me to just work them, um, until they get their feet on the ground. And then the last thing that I'm doing with Alabama is, is our weekly radio show, um, on, I don't know if WABF, um, AM is one of your rival stations with, with, with, uh, I listen, I listen to it all the time, Doc. I like the music. I'm glad to hear that, George. Thank you. And I heard other people just on Friday morning, uh, at 10 o'clock on the F, uh, 1240 AM. Uh, no, 1288 AM, sorry. So, um, you know, it's, it keeps me going, but I also have two people working with me on it. I'm a celebrity, um, Rebecca Watson and, um, and the new president of the common sense campaign in Baldwin, uh, Angelo Forma, who ran for the state house two years ago. And I think he'll probably be very, very special in re-running it. So that's basically what's happened with the George, um, um, as I mentioned earlier, I've been working with Rob Liedker and, um, she has been working with the minority with Republicans up there. In fact, she's going to be speaking with some, uh, very soon and she's going to come down to, um, be able to hear a share of a pile. So all of that is working to the benefit as you all are talking about, I listen to him that you're discussing with Phillip Brown, Dr. Brown, and, uh, it's, it's pretty clear that what, what, what they're using on the radio show is exactly like what Rob and Liedker is using. Uh, in, in her discussions, meeting with minority representatives and meeting with other members of the minority groups that are up there and, you know, making the pitch to whites that they've got to come in and save this country. This isn't a, a, a, a black, white issue. I mean, this country is going down the tube fast if Harris is elected. And I think that more and more it's so self-evident, which you just said in terms of why people should vote, you know, not vote for figures down in district two, these people have brought so much destruction to this country, whether it's in question, whether it's soft crime, all of these things, like a difference to ordinary Americans. And I think that, from that standpoint, we should have a landslide election at the, at the top level. And I would argue a very close election for Robin and for, um, Miss Dobson down in your area. Right. Right. I, I agree with you and I, I think we will just, you know, I'm, I'm very optimistic about those two races, Doc. Yeah. I, I mean, I think of it. And you know, what, what Dr. Phillips is saying in terms of, you know, here you have this major crime issue up in Birmingham and what, what, what is the cause of it? Well, there are root causes that, that I think are absolutely true, the breakdown in the family, the education system has failed, failed us as far as I'm concerned because they adopted common core. And that, that was done by a Republican governor in 2010. And all that did was deemphasize American history and, and create the very, the very real problem of not looking at history in, in the way that people can understand what happened and why things happen. And they deemphasize civics in, in, in, in, in the, in the, in the schools, I mean, we're not asking our kids to do better. We're not asking them to take responsibilities because they're, they are the next generation and we're not disciplining, you know, the, the classroom, what, the way it should be disciplined so that the students can learn. And, and that means that they have to have a concentration camp in the schools. I don't believe that. But you can't have kids with cell phones going off. You can't have kids during all sorts, you know, behavior, having these behavioral problems that make it impossible for the teachers to control and to teach. And George, you know, institutions like poverty law center, I'll never forget this. In 2012, they sued the mobile school system because the school system was, in their words, using a set of verses of the Spanish for black students and scoops the state of them. They, they, they went along with it and, and here again, one of the key issues about teaching and learning is that the classroom has to be a place where it can be done. And if you're having to discipline kids and they can do this and they won't do that. And we're injecting black issues into this. I mean, I'm not quite sure why discipline and, and again, you and I have both been in the Marine Corps, your white, your black, it doesn't matter. You follow through. And it kind of worked for us, George. But, but now you have a situation where all of a sudden, color is the predominant issue. And, and, and that makes it very difficult for teachers to, to hand at what's necessary to keep the classroom a closer learning. And I, I think that, you know, getting someone like Dr. Brown, you know, it, you know, with his background in education, elected, is absolutely necessary. But it's also necessary to have someone like Dr. Robin Lydaker, who was herself a former principal and who has, what many, many black children, has a relationship within the black community and has worked very hard to make her points within the black community and to the white community that times, that, that time for changes now. And you mentioned it earlier about these politicians up there and Birmingham and a black, they have been corrupt. And I think Terry Schul's corruption is going to be a major factor in, in, in asking, asking the community, what have you got to lose? You know? We'll see. True. True. Next week, uh, uh, Robin is going to be on our, this radio show, so we'll, we'll get heard. Oh, good. I think that would be very helpful. Yeah. And that, that would be good. And just for our audience, Dr. Lou, are you still a college professor now? No, I, I was retired from that. Um, I really kind of gave it up because family health issues. And I think it just got to be too much, to spend too much time doing that. So, um, doing the politics things just did not require as much of a time commitment as being prepared for, you know, college classes and all like that. And so, um, I've moved away from it. Um, you know, I keep my, I, well, through the radio show, I really have to stay up just like a George. You have to stay on top of these issues and do the first and the bottom of my arm. Right. Although I don't have a radio show that, that, that does talk call lens. So you really have to ready for all sorts of questions, if, if when you're on the air. Right. Right. Well, that, that's what we're, you know, we're trying to, what we're trying to do. We're trying to help the politicians and the public, Dr. Liu, because if you're a politician and if you're zero, we're going to let the public know. Yeah. I mean, exactly, I mean, that, that the role of the press has always been to inform the public and to keep politicians honest. I mean, that, that, that, that, that journalistic role, and, and I don't want to get into another discussion that we could do for a whole show. But the question of what has happened to journalism as a result of what, of, of, of I would argue the Vietnam war, but however one wants to interpret it and tell them why the journalists have gone completely over to one side being the Democrats, why they have adopted workism, why they have become, you know, nothing more than mouthpieces for the Democratic Party. That, that is a question that needs to be answered, you know, by a lot of PhD candidates who should be writing dissertations about journalism as move away from the founding necessity of having a free press. And it's not, it is pretty good in that, Dr. why are these journalists journalists just lying out, right, lying, but George, because they're lying, because they want, they are on a political, you know, they're taking political positions. So as part of the propaganda machine, they're going to lie their butts off. Wow. Wow. So tell you what, there used to be integrity in journalism, not anymore. No. Well, there are, I will say, there are some journalists out there trying to be journalists. You just don't find them at CNN and MSNBC and the legacy media, you know, the Washington Post and the New York Times. I mean, these guys have completely sold out to being just pawns for the Democrats. They just do what they're told, what is that, what are the talking points are, maybe they're just changing. Right. Doc, we're going to be going into our last break, and I really want to talk to you about some important issues regarding Israel. So can you stand by until after the break, sir? Yes, sir. Glad you, George. We'll be talking to Dr. Luke, come up my nose, we'll be right back after these messages. Welcome back to the George Williams Show, your texts and comments at 2-5-1-34-3-0-1-06. Now, making the mission possible, here's George Williams. Welcome back. Welcome back. I'm George Williams, and we are on the mission. We're talking with Dr. Lou, Dr. Major, Lou Capimanosa, who has relocated to Louisiana, and we hate to miss him, but he's here, and as you know also, folks, when I'm away from the mic here, I call Dr. Lou and to Lou, do you want to take over my shell? He said, "Yeah, that's it." So he's done a great job. All right. Well, listen, thank you, George, and I'm only an hour away from the show, so I always love to fill in for you. It was always a good experience, but listen, it's really funny. I mean, you have a long reach here. I just had a text from one of my old friends from Baldwin County, Judge Bill Scully, and he said he wanted to tell you hello, and so I told him I would definitely pass that on hand. So there you go. All right, great. How are you done, Judge? All right. Thank you. Okay. So you want to talk about some far, I don't see issues? Yeah. What are you thinking about? I love what Israel is doing, okay? Oh, I do do. And I think right now there's a whole, there are a whole bunch of bombs coming into Israel. So what do you think about that situation, Doc? Well, they were. I mean, there was a major attack from the Iranians. And what they ended up doing was shooting about 180 ballistic missiles, which according to what I've been hearing is that this is a historical moment in terms of a number of pure ballistic missiles that have been attacked and most of our destroyers, a couple of gods through it. They did not hurt anyone. Now, the latest casualty numbers will probably be shown by tomorrow, but it didn't seem like it did not, but that's not the issue. And let's put this into historical context, folks. I mean, when I was teaching my war of terror class at Tulane, one of the things that we spent a lot of time on was the Arab-Israel question. The issue of terrorism aimed at Israel has always been focused on what the Iranians did. They were the head of the snake. They employed, they paid for, and they directed Hezbollah, Arab Lebanon, and Hamas. It was created in 2006 in Gaza. And of course, the Houthis are owned and operated by the Iranians in Yemen. So you have these democracies that are taking orders and getting paid and doing their job, which is to attack Israel in any way they can using terror methods. Now fast forward until when Trump took over in 2016, what ended up in terms of Iran's ability to fund all of these cross-characters groups? The long and the short is Trump was able to bring them to their knees. And he sanctioned them, he worked against them, and he killed the master terrorist, Tulamani, a clear example to the world that the United States was not going to permit Iran to continue to chant "yes" to America with his basically "yes" to the Great Satan and "yes" to the little Satan, meaning Israel. Now this situation created a middle piece that no one could ever believe what happened. Very little terrorist attacks to deal with. After 2019 you had a situation where the Abraham Accords were signed. This is a major political barrier for Trump because the Arabs were now talking about making peace with Israel. Not the terrorist in Hamas, I get that, but Egypt, Saudi Arabia. Other states that made a difference after all of these years from 1948 on, peace was on the cable, and they signed it. They just had the fourth anniversary of it last month, I think. George, what happened after Biden and Harris came to power? It's very simple. The sanctions that Trump put on the oil business were waged, okay, what did that do? They brought in billions of dollars, especially because the Chinese needed money and now they're buying it from them. What else did Biden do? He paid billions of dollars for hostages. And of course, the state government said, "Well, don't worry about that money." It's clearly going for humanitarian purposes in Iran. You've got to be kidding it. So, here again, the context of today is all due to threats imposed by Iran because Biden and Harris gave them the means to do what they have always been doing, but they couldn't do it under Trump. And now we're supposed to believe that they're going to be tough on Iran. George, this is so much BS. It's hard to even talk about it. So, here's my theory on this. And I've been saying this in my classes since I started the War on Terror and seeing what was going on with Iran. The only way to bring peace to the Middle East is to head of the snake, cut it off. And that means, and again, on my show last week, I basically said, I think, a preemptive strike by the Iranians. It's absolutely necessary before Iran gets the bomb, and they're getting closer. Now, George, here you have this situation where the Iranians are forced to act to defend Hezbollah and make the Hezbollah people think that, "Well, the Israelis can't do anything they want to do. We're going to protect you." That's BS, too. And here's why. Everyone knows that the core emotional forces between the Israelis and the Iranians have shifted in the favor of who the Israelis, the Israelis can go and do anything they want, and just as they showed that they could do back in April. And that's what I've been saying this since a preemptive strike, it's necessary, and it's justified. Right. And if the United States didn't have their heads up, you know, where the U.S. would be working with them and would take them out and end it, and it would be a war of national liberation to free the Iranian people from these crazy molars. That's my theory on that. All right, all right, Doc, I tell you, I know I took over the time, George. Thank you for giving me that. It's a pleasure of having you on, Doc, you know, all right, George, and I'll be listening in that any time. Okay. You take care, George. Go for a pop, babe. Oh, right. Dr. Lou Campamanosa, folks, outstanding gentleman, the Marine, a college professor. He is just an outstanding person, and we enjoy having him and not him on. Another thing, I think we got a couple more minutes, folks. Why are we issuing driver's license to illegals? Why? Just the other day, there was a surgeon from Georgia, and he was killed by an illegal, going the wrong way, okay, and the wrong direction. And he killed this young surgeon, folks, what is wrong with our country? Why are we giving driver's license to illegals who can't even speak English? But yet, still, we put, we hire interpreters for them, and they get driver's license. Why, folks? Now you have a young surgeon. He's dead. He's got a wife, and I think two or three children, okay? Why is this happening in our country, folks? I mean, I spent six years in South America as a DEA special agent, and almost six years in Africa, based in Nigeria, as a DEA agent. I see our country turning to what I saw in those countries, and it's not good, folks. It is definitely not good, so we're going to have to do something. That's why we need Donald Trump back in office. Paris, she went down to the border the other day, and that was a joke. That was the first time, folks. She didn't even really get to the border. You know, now she was a border czar, and now she's going to do something. And she had four years, almost, to do it, and she did zero, zero. Folks, we can't vote her in office, we've got to make sure we get Donald Trump in office. All right, folks. That's it. Until next week, Vaquan Dale, 71. [MUSIC]