This is the official website of Seven Five Radio starring Walter Yurkiw and Peter "Scoop" Stanton heard on Liberty News Radio. This is the radio show that will break your neck, if your neck needs breakin'!
Author: scoopstanton
Host of 75 Radio syndicated on the Liberty News Radio Network.
“If you’re going to dance with the devil, you’re going to get burned.”
Lil’ Nas X was arrested Thursday in Los Angeles walking around in his underwear and cowboy boots. This is the same man who mocked God and Jesus Christ!
All that money and success and he’s walking around Los Angeles like a homeless man!
This year has been a tough one. We lost mom, dad is touch and go and I broke my hip! But; I haven’t been this happy in years! I thank God for everything I have. My family, my health, my success and my happiness. Yes, we have done and will do things that we will regret, but we will always give thanks and praise to God!
Miller brought up the fact that old white people protesting Vance and company has no connection to the District, no family ties, no kids attending DCPS, and many of them live outside the District of Columbia yet advocate for the 1% of the people who terrorize the 99% of residents, workers and visitors to DC. Miller also brought up the fact that DC is majority black. Yet the old white liberals from Montgomery and Arlington County want the same old same old. Miller is 100% correct.
As for Union Station. it looks like something like Escape from New York. Junkies, mentally ill people, thugs and smelly homeless people milling about.
And again; these rich white people who don’t deal with these people because they don’t live in the city (with the exception of Georgetown, Kalorama, Embassy Row) don’t get harassed by the junkies at the intersections or lose family members due to gun violence are the same people who want to stop President Trump!
When I was a cub reporter at The New York Times, I was talking with an editor about a strike at an auto-parts plant in Flint. There was some story in the paper that day about workers who were spending their idle time antique shopping and speeding around the lakes in their powerboats.
I complained to the editor.
“Since when is it bad to have a boat and make good money?” I asked.
The editor, a smart guy with a weak chin and wire-rimmed glasses, put his palm to his nose and said: “Those people had about this much foresight. They should have seen the writing on the wall and gone to college.”
That’s what he said.
But if we were all poets, we’d starve on words.
That was more than 25 years ago, just as NAFTA began to kick in, and I can’t help remembering it now as Labor Day approaches.
Look around. That plant in Flint is long-gone, for one. A casualty of the global thirst for profits. And with the factories gone, legions of First-World workers in America have become a generation of second-hand shoppers as Third-World workers have flowed in.
As the work in America has changed, so too has the definition of work itself. Being a white-collar worker now means you have a bachelor’s degree, even if you work in a coffee shop rather than an office with a desk and a chair and a mug.
The definition of blue collar now means that you don’t have a college degree, even if you sit at home typing in your underpants while drinking cappuccinos.
Notice today how the chattering class of cable TV refers to people as the “working-class” rather than “middle class”?
I don’t know if Trump’s tariffs will bring the good work back home to America. But it’s worth trying. The UAW thinks so. The Teamsters think so. Without the unions there would be no Labor Day. No great American Middle Class. No shack on the water. Championing those used to be a Democratic Party thing.
The so-called experts—those who have never physically labored I might add—are ginning up anxiety over the rising prices of automobiles should the tariffs fully go into effect. It may happen.
But the Manhattan editors never speak about the price of labor, the cost to a person who has married his life to a machine but is unable to afford the product he’s built.
A person should earn a good wage. A house and a car. A shack and a boat. We used to have that here in Michigan, and our companies still made profits. Now the companies make more profit somewhere else, while our shacks on the water have been repossessed.
We want it back. Words won’t get us that. Only work will get us that. Work for a fair wage.
Joy Reid went on her podcast the other day and told it like it is: white men can’t invent anything and stole everything from black people. With the exception of a couple of dudes such as Benjamin Frankin, Westinghouse, Benz, Salk, Edison, Tesla, Goodyear, Deere, Jobs, Bell, Whitney, Singer, Ford, Otis, and Jefferson just to name a few.
Reid also complained that white people stole black music. Well, Les Paul invented the electric guitar (thank you), Paul Tutmarc invented the electric bass. The upright bass has been around for centuries. The modern drum set was pioneered by Gene Krupa, the synthesizer invented by Roger Moog and the microphone was invented by Emile Berliner. All white dudes. The DJ turntable was invented by an Asian man, Shuichi Obata.
I can see how the white boys from Yes stole the chords from Rocket “88.” You got us Joy!