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B
Good
morning,
everyone
I'm
bill
miles
with
the
hilton
head
island,
bluffton,
chamber
of
commerce
and
it's
masters
week,
so
we
know
we're
only
days
away
from
the
rbc
heritage
presented
by
boeing.
You
know
speaking.
A
B
B
The
golf
course
was
in
wonderful
shape,
another
sold
out
event
and
serve
pro
served
as
our
spa,
our
presenting
sponsor
for
the
16th
straight
year,
but
today
we're
going
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
the
rbc
heritage
and
we're
delighted
to
have
one
of
our
former
champions
with
us,
wesley
bryan,
who
won
the
2017
rbc
heritage
and
also
just
the
week
before
last,
came
in
number
fifth
number
15
at
the
in
the
dominican
so
playing
well
coming
into
hilton
head
and
after
that
win
in
2017.
B
I
think
it's
important
to
note
that
wesley
rose
to
to
number
37
in
the
world.
So
let's,
let's
welcome
wesley
and
wesley,
is
a
certainly
a
south
carolinian
and
and
played
at
the
university
of
south
carolina
and
we're
looking
forward
to
welcoming
him
back
to
hilton
head
island
next
week.
Wesley
thanks
for
joining
us
today.
B
What's
up
mr
miles,
how
are
you
I'm
doing
great
you're,
looking
you're
looking
relaxed
and
like
you're
ready
to
go
today.
B
All
right
great,
so
coming
in
coming
in
next
week,
tell
us
what,
where
your
mind
is
and
why
you
like,
coming
to
hilton,
head
island
and
and
what's
special
besides
winning
the
rbc
heritage.
A
I'd
say,
I
think
my
favorite
part
of
this
upcoming
week
is:
it
has
to
be
just
knowing
that
all
the
family
and
friends
are
going
to
be
there
and
it's
a
place.
Obviously
I'm
comfortable
at
golf
course
wise,
but
just
knowing
that
we're
going
to
have,
I
mean
basically
my
whole
side
of
the
family,
my
wife's
whole
side
of
the
family,
we're
going
to
be
renting
houses
and
having
some
good
meals
together
and
just
a
time
to
hang
out
with
family
and
friends
for
sure.
B
So
how
you
know
we
know
you're
coming
off
a
couple
injuries
and
playing
now
again
playing
pretty
well
tell
us
how
how
you
feel
going
into
it.
A
Starting
to
feel
a
little
bit
better,
I
I
struggled
a
little
bit
to
start
the
year
and
the
golf
game,
I
would
say,
was
in
a
really
good
spot.
I
thought
and
then
it
wasn't
translating
on
the
golf
course
and
then
put
in
a
lot
of
hours
over
the
last
couple
months
or
so,
and
I
feel
like
it's
in
a
pretty
good
spot.
A
couple
weeks
ago
was
the
first
week
with
your
son
on
the
bag
full-time
or,
I
guess,
part-time
full-time,
and
I
would
say
the
vibes
were
high.
A
B
Well,
that's
that's
great
talk
to
us
a
little
bit
about
what
a
a
pre-round
looks
like
for
you,
our
listeners,
I'm
sure
would
like
to
hear
what
you
do
before
you
actually
get
out
there
and
get
on
the
tee
box
at
number.
One.
A
Man,
I'll
tell
you,
that's
changed
a
lot
over
the
years.
I
would
say
the
the
day
I
turned
30
about
is
when
the
body
started
to
shut
down
and
needed
to
pay
a
little
bit
more
attention
to
the
pre-round
routine.
I
remember
in
high
school
you
just
roll
out
of
the
car
and
go
straight
to
the
first
tee
and
play
your
high
school
matches
like
that,
and
I
mean
now
it
it's
every.
A
And
then
the
warm-up
on
the
golf
course
starts
about
55
minutes
before
I
usually
putt
for
about
15
to
20
minutes.
I
hit
balls
for
25
to
30
minutes
and
stroll
on
over
to
the
first
tee
and
and
really
I
would
say
that
the
biggest
part
of
the
warm-up
for
me-
and
I
would
say
it's
probably
across
the
board.
The
most
important
is
that
five
minutes
leading
up
to
it
when
you're
walking
to
the
tee
preparing
yourself
mentally
for
all
the
things
that
could
come,
whether
you
get
off
to
a
good
start.
Bad
start.
A
A
It's
really
just
going
through
a
little
bit
of
that,
like
every
football
team
will
have
their
first
series
of
kind
of
premeditated
plays
and
mine's
kind
of,
like
the
the
you're
you're
pre-meditating
like
your
first
few
holes
and
seeing
a
couple
different
scenarios,
so
that
five
minutes
before
is
is
really
important.
Mentally.
B
Wesley
we're
looking
forward
to
welcoming
you
back.
We
know
you'll
have
a
big
following
all
week
and
thanks
for
being
with
us
we'll
let
you
get
ready
to
know
you
need
to
get
out
and
and
play,
but
again
thanks.
So
much
for
being
with
us.
A
B
Right
all
right
see
you
well
that
was
wesley,
brian
and
he's
certainly
looking
forward
to
get
getting
back
to
hilton
head
island.
B
I
also
had
the
opportunity
recently
to
chat
with
last
year's
champion
stuart
sink
and
you'll
find
the
that
interview
in
the
chat
box
there
that
you
can
go
in
and
listen
to
later
on
and
and
stuart's
a
great
champion
as
well
and
has
done
a
lot
for
hilton
head
island,
and
we
look
forward
to
seeing
him
next
week,
but
we're
going
to
shift
gears
now
from
golf
to
really
what's
happening
around
the
globe
and
cyber
cyber
security
is
in
the
news
and
we're
very,
very
fortunate
today
to
have
an
expert
in
that
field.
B
That's
with
us!
That's
going
to
speak
to
us
just
a
little
bit
about
that.
I
will
tell
you
that
he
has
a
hard
stop
at
9
45..
He
has
to
go
basically
across
the
street
from
the
u.s
chamber
of
commerce
to
the
white
house
for
a
meeting
there
at
10
o'clock,
and
so
our
speaker
this
morning
is
the
vice
president
of
cyber
intelligence
and
supply
chain
security
for
the
u.s
chamber
of
commerce.
He
works
in
the
arenas
of
homeland
and
international
security,
with
a
focus
on
cyber
security.
B
This
also
serves
on
the
national
homeland
security
consortium
and
helps
kill
corporations.
Businesses
of
all
sizes
understand
cyber
security
threats
and
how
to
protect
against
them.
Miss
welcome
and
we're
glad
to
have
you
and
look
forward
to
hearing
what
you
can
tell
us
about.
What's
going
on
in
the
world
and
cyber
security
wise.
C
Well,
good
morning
bill
just
a
quick
thumbs
up.
If
you
can
hear
me
all
right,
gotcha
excellent,
well
pleasure
to
be
with
you
and
your
members
this
morning,
as
was
mentioned,
my
name
is
vince
fosse,
I'm
a
vp
for
cyber
policy
here
at
the
u.s
chamber
of
commerce
and
as
many
of
you
have
witnessed
over
the
past
few
weeks,
and
certainly
since
the
beginning
of
the
new
year,
cyber
security
is
a
top
business
issue
in
the
context
of
the
current
war
in
ukraine.
C
So
I'll
talk
a
little
bit
about
kind
of
what
we
are
seeing
on
the
cyber
threat
side
from
nation
state
actors
and
their
proxies
and
how
that
is
how
we
are
internalizing.
The
lessons
learned
from
what
is
happening
on
the
battle
space
through
cyber
in
ukraine
and
then
I'll
talk
a
little
bit
about
what
that
should
mean
and
how
businesses
here
in
the
united
states
should
internalize
with
what's
going
on
in
the
united
and
for
their
organizations
and.
C
Open
up
for
a
few
questions,
if
members
have
those
as
well
so
in
both
the
the
days
and
the
weeks
leading
up
to
the
russian
ground
invasion
in
ukraine,
a
whole
host
of
cyber
attacks
were
propagated
by
russia
and
many
of
their
state-sponsored
adversaries
against
entities
primarily
within
the
territorial
geography
of
ukraine
and
those
came
in
the
forms
of
a
number
of
different
kind
of
campaign.
C
Adversarial
campaigns,
the
first
and
probably
something
that
you
are
seeing
play
out
on
them
on
the
media
every
day
are
very
significant
information
and
influence
operations
and
those
are
primarily
are
being
propagated
by
both
sides
to
advance
their
geopolitical
national
security
imperatives.
C
But
they
are
things
like
the
episode
on
a
snake
island,
where
ukrainian
national
guard
defenders
ultimately
have
scum
succumb
to
russia
invaders,
but
through
very
low-tech
cyber
operations.
That
message
was
carried
forward
across
the
globe
and
that
became
widely
remembered.
Russian
agents
very
famously
are
very,
very
noteworthy
for
their
information
and
influence
operations,
but
generally
these
are
low-level
operations,
something
to
sow
misinformation,
disinformation,
distrust
in
government
and
there's
a
variety
of
resources
out
there.
C
The
things
that
are
really
getting
and
things
that
people
like
me
stay
up
at
night,
worried
about
are
some
of
the
more
destructive
operations
and
those
would
be
evidenced
by
some
of
the
wiper
attacks.
Some
of
the
malware
attacks
on
ukrainian
either
financial
services,
government
institutions,
health
care
institutions,
both
in
lead
up
to
the
war
and
in
the
days
and
weeks
that
have
since
followed.
C
So
these
sorts
of
destructive
attacks
will
generally
come
from
known
russian
actors,
whether
they
are
russian
sbr,
gru
and
fsb.
Those
are
the
russian
intelligence,
military
intelligence
and
domestic
intelligence
agencies.
They
have
long
been
known
for
their
adversarial
campaigns
in
ukraine,
dating
back
to
2014
and
2015,
with
the
injection
of
the
not
pecha
petri
malware
into
the
power
grid,
disrupting
the
supply
of
electricity
to
the
nation
and
communication
services
for
a
prolonged
period
of
time.
It
also
had
worldwide
spillover
effects,
not
only
in
the
shipping.
C
A
C
Of
malware
and
and
what
that
mean
internalizing
what
that
means,
and
then.
C
C
This
is
especially
pro
especially
prolific
on
government
websites
that
are
attempting
to
get
kind
of
the
message
out
of
the
ukrainian
message
out.
So
what
does
that
mean
for
businesses?
A
couple
of
points?
One?
I
think
we
are
still
in
a
kind
of
wait
and
see
mode
for
many
of
us
in
the
cyber
community
were
really
interested.
Why
those
russian
agencies,
svr
gru
fsb,
didn't
engage
in
a
more
offensive
cyber
campaign
and
lead
up
to
in
prepping
the
battle
space
for
a
ground
invasion
of
ukraine.
C
C
For
the
most
part,
that's
a
broad
generalization,
but
for
the
most
part,
the
the
information
warfare
operations
have
been
contained
relatively
to
ukraine
now
going
forward,
as
sanctions
are
have
the
ability
to
take
effect
and
those
effects
are
felt
within
the
russian
federation.
It
is.
It
is
well
within
the
capabilities
capacity
of
the
russian
federation
and
it's
it's
instruments
of
national
power
to
to
go
offense
of
and
to
conduct,
as
they
call
it.
C
Information
warfare
against
a
certain
types
of
entities,
so
the
white
house,
in
particular,
has
been
evolving
its
messaging
on
how
u.s
businesses
should
respond
to
the
cyber
threat
they,
whether
that
is
through
the
president
and
his
principal
deputy
national
security
advisor
for
cyber
and
emerging
tech,
have
have
very
recently
made
statements
from
the
white
house
press
briefing
room
saying
that
evolving
intelligence
shows
that
russia
is
preparing
to
launch
cyber
attacks
against
u.s
entities
or
allied
entities,
primarily
that
will
focus
on
those
businesses
and
organizations
that
are
either
a
part
of
the
sanctions
regime,
think
oil
and
natural
gas,
financial
services
or
those
that
are
involved
in
the
conduct
of
the
war
in
ukraine,
and
that
would
be
principally
defense
manufacturing.
C
This
has
gone
back
as
far
as
november
and
maybe
even
a
little
bit
earlier
to
ceos
of
some
of
the
major
electricity
generation
companies
within
the
united
states
or
those
that
have
been
subject
to
attempts
at
russian
intrusions.
It's
important
really.
C
To
remember
that
the
statements
from
the
white
house
a
couple
of
weeks
ago
do
not
indicate
a
single
specific
threat,
action,
intrusion
or
attempted
intrusion
by
one
of
russia's
most
capable
cyber
actors.
There
isn't
that
level
of
threat.
Yet,
however,
we
know,
as
far
back
as
you
know,
certainly
last
fall,
but
as
as
open
source
will
tell
you
as
far
back
as
I
think,
the
the
office
of
director
of
national
intelligence
worldwide
threat
assessment
in
2018.
C
I
think
one
thing
that
we
preach
to
all
u.s
businesses
at
the
corporate
level
and
through
all
of
our
interactions,
is
that
if
there
are
disruptions
in
essential
services,
whether
that's
electricity,
communications,
energy,
they
are,
for
the
most
part,
temporary
time,
limited
and
recoverable,
not
to
say
that
they,
these
things
don't
happen,
but
they
do
happen
like
most
crimes
do
and
that
for
the
vast
majority
of
cyber
attacks
do
not
result
in
a
loss
of
human
life
or
injury
to
a
person
or
fiscal
heart.
C
That
is
a
really
important
thing
to
keep
in
mind
other
recommendations
that
we
have
for
u.s
businesses
from
a
corporate
level
and
from
a
corporate
executive
level.
We
have
kind
of
several
key
questions
that
senior
managers
should
be
asking
their
teams,
what
are
our
most
important
assets
and
how
are
we
protecting
them?
What
layers
of
protection
have
we
put
in
place
around
our
most
important
systems
or
data
sets?
C
A
C
An
incident
response
from
this
entertainer
do
we
have
outside
or
inside
some
council.
That
is
familiar
with
what
our
obligations
our
regulatory
obligations
are.
Do
we
have
connection
with
either
our
local
law
enforcement
or
federal
law
enforcement
officials
and
then,
in
the
event
of
an
incident?
What
is
the
responsibility
of
our
board
of
directors?
C
What
are
our
business
recovery
plans
and
is
our
current
investment
good
enough
to
meet
the
threat
we
like
to
say
that
organizations,
if
they
haven't
been
doing
some
of
these
things
now
it
might
be
too
late
if
you're
a
victim
of
a
russian
sponsored
cyber
intrusion?
Now,
finally,
and
I'll
get
to
my
close
and
and
invite
some
questions
from
bill
and
and
the
members
here
for
those
that
are
technical
experts,
we
recommend
a
series
of
protections.
Many
of
these
are
laid
out
in
on
a
public
website.
C
Cisa.Gov
shields
dash
up
that
is
kind
of
the
one
stop
shop
for
both
threat,
information,
intelligence
sharing
and
also
defensive
measures.
But
certainly
you
know
on
the
technical
side,
deployment
of
multi-factor
authentication,
encryption
for
and
multi-factor
authentication
is
just
a
two-factor
way
for
for
either
access
to
information
technology.
Desktops
laptops
and
such,
but
also
for
operational
technology.
C
Some
of
that
can
be
done
either
at
scale
or
at
all.
At
one
time,
encryption
is
a
huge
technological
advantage,
so,
even
if
data
is
stolen,
it
is
unusable
deployment
of
either
antivirus
into
malware,
and
certainly
spam
filtering
so
that
email
is,
is
reviewed
judiciously
as
it's
coming
into
a
network.
C
C
Organizations
to
lower
the
thresholds
for
reporting
information
to
the
government,
whether
that
is
either
through
your
ice
act
through
council
through
an
incident
response
firm
or
more
directly,
through
your
local
fbi,
secret
service
and
mostly,
most
importantly,
for
corporate,
for
corporations,
employ
and
empower
security
teams.
So
with
that
bill,
maybe
I'll
turn
it
back
over
to
you,
sir,
and
invite
questions.
B
C
So,
as
I
think
many
folks
have
known,
russia
has
entered
a
period
of
digital
isolation
and
some
of
our
some
of
the
chamber,
member
companies
have
totally
have
have
very
much
either
stopped
operations
within
the
russian
federation,
and
those
could
be
organizations
like
facebook,
instagram
meta
in
particular,
have
ceased
operations
and
in
some
cases
president
putin
has
banned
them.
Are
there
social
media
affiliates?
C
B
B
C
Yeah
absolutely
100,
I
think
you
know
one
one
thing
that
you
can
broadly
characterize
about
the
ground
invasion
of
ukraine
by
by
russia
is
the
the
surprise
by
which
it
captured
the
commanders
on
the
ground.
C
It
didn't
seem
like
from
our
observations
that
it
was
a
well
well
established
and
well
disciplined
campaign,
so
you
know,
and
traditional
military
and
traditional
us
doctrine
there
is
a
there
is
a
essentially
a
prepping
of
the
battlefield
and
that
would
include
both
information
operations,
reconnaissance
operations
and
establishing
things
like
air
superiority
before
a
ground
invasion
is
conducted.
C
It's
surprising
in
some
ways,
but
I
think
also
demonstrates
some
of
the
some
of
the
president
putin's
thinking
that
this
would
have
been
a
short-term
conflict
and
that
his
national
security
objective
of
removing
president
zielinski
would
have
been
achieved
in
the
first
24
and
72
hours.
There's
also
some
technical
reasons
why
we
haven't
seen
some
of
those
more
destructive
attacks
happen.
C
C
So
by
disabling
that
and
turning
that
off
they're,
thereby
disrupting
their
own
military's
ability
to
communicate
and
move
in
this
battle
space.
So
there's
a
number
of
different
reasons
that
we
think
that
we
assess
some
confidence
why
the
the
things
have
unfolded,
the
way
that
they
have,
but
it's
definitely
surprising.
B
All
right,
thank
you
for
that
answer.
Our
next
question
is
coming
from
trish
and
trish
says
russia's
military
capability
may
have
been
overestimated.
Do
you
believe
their
cyber
abilities
are
as
well.
C
Absolutely
not
the
russian
federation
is
a
highly
sophisticated
cyber
adversary,
the
and
they
have
long
been
able
to
so
they
they
conduct
a
number
of
different
campaigns
for
for
a
host
of
different
reasons.
Last
year
might
have
been
defined
by
the
year
of
ransomware,
the
disruption
of
colonial
pipeline
by
dark
side
and
rebels
disruption
of
cassaya
and
jbs
foods.
C
Both
of
those
organizations
dark
side
and
ripple
are
russian
steep-sponsored
criminal
syndicates
that
operate
within
the
russian
federation
at
the
at
the
tacit
approval
of
president
putin
they,
yes,
the
the
deployment
of
ransomware
is
a
relatively
simple
cyber
attack,
but
it
yields
them
a
lot
of
money
in
particular,
and
with
some
of
the
payouts
that
organizations
have
to
have
to
pay
out
in
order
to
decrypt
data.
C
On
the
on
the
most
mature
and
sophisticated
side,
we
look
at
campaigns
propagated
by
organizations
like
apt,
28
or
apt-29,
which
are
russian
svr
and
gru
units,
and
things
like
solarwinds
solarwinds
was
the
active
exploitation
of
a
software
company
that
does
a
very,
very
a
tactical,
a
back
end
network
management
service
in
in
tens.
A
C
Thousands
of
different
organizations
around
the
world
what
svr
did
in
that
campaign
was
inject
malware
such
that
they
could
maintain
presence
in
a
very
clandestine
way
and
be
able
to
for
espionage
purposes,
exfol
collecting,
exfilter
data
from
a
host
of
different
critical
infrastructure
and
government
agencies.
This.
A
C
Tough
one
to
a
tough
one
for
the
for
for
me
to
answer
absolutely
in
terms
of
when
we
look
at
it's
tough
for
us
to
to
to
answer
that
question,
because
satellite-based
communications
have
the
benefit
of
both
being
independent
of
but
also
dependent
on
ground-based
systems.
So,
yes,
they
provide
a
satellite
satellite
based
services.
C
C
A
C
Another
global
satellite
provider
that
provides
encrypted
handsets
to
to
customers
all
over
the
world,
l3
harris
the
thing
that
we
are
seeing
in
ukraine,
more
than
anything,
is
that
there
is
a
surge
of
u.s
and
western
allied
support
in
terms
of
both
weasel
supplies,
but
also
non-lethal
supplies
as
well,
and
that's
everything
from
from
the
handsets
to
ground-based
systems
for
communications
and
anything
in
between.
So
we
know
that
supplies
are
running
low.
B
C
Yeah,
the
next
meeting
might
see
that
one
up
for
a
better
answer.
You
know
I,
I
think,
independent
of
the
conflict
in
ukraine.
C
But
I
think
that
the
general
answer
is,
if,
within
kind
of
my
community,
that
there's
a
consensus
that
that
there
that
we
should
expect
some
kind
of
attack
some.
A
C
Of
cyber-enabled
operations
against
u.s
institutions,
now
what
that
will
look
like
and
what
u.s
resilience
will
look
like?
I
think
it
really
just
depends
on
the
campaign.
C
You
know:
could
they
go
for
a
supply
chain
attack
absolutely,
could
they
and
could
they
task
their
proxies
like
rebel
and
dark
side
and
lock
bed
to
go
after
us
institutions
and
hold
them
at
risk
in
ransomware
campaigns?
Absolutely
could
there
be
targeting
of
the
grid?
C
Yes,
yes
and
no,
but
I
I
I
think
that
what
what
our
message
to
americans
is,
you
know
employ
your
security
teams,
do
some
of
those
basics,
multi-factor
backup
data,
encrypt
data
and
and
do
some
of
those,
and
you
really
buy
down
your
risk,
especially
for
small
businesses
and
also
you
know,
trust
that
if
there
is
another
disruption
to
either
oil
and
natural
gas
or
electricity
that
there
are,
there
is
a
very
significant
and
mature
capability
within
the
us
government
and
those
firms
to
bring
services
back
to
back
quickly
and
that
these
are
not
prolonged
outages.
B
Vince
it's
time
to
put
on
your
robe
and
run
across
the
street
and
represent
business.
Thank
you.
We
appreciate
it
being
with
us
appreciate.
Y'all
have
a
good
day!
Thank
you.
You
too,
all
right!
How
about
that?
Certainly
a
wealth
of
information
and
we're
so
glad
that
he
could
be
with
us
and,
if
you're
not
familiar
where
the
u.s
chamber
of
commerce
is
it's
literally
right
across
the
street
from
the
white
house,
and
so
he
just
needs
to
walk
out
of
his
office
there
and
really
two
blocks
down.
B
I
think
it
is
and
right,
there's
the
the
white
house
so
incredible
knowledge
and
we're
delighted
to
have
him
with
us.
I
also
want
to
mention
to
our
listeners
that
if
you're
a
small
business
out
there
you're
a
member
of
the
u.s
chamber
of
commerce
through
the
hilton
head
island,
bluffton
chamber
of
commerce,
it's
a
relationship
that
we
have
with
them
and
if
you're
not
taking
advantage
of
that,
I'd
certainly
encourage
you
to
and
reach
out
to
our
team
here
at
the
chamber
to
learn
more
about
that.
All
right.
B
B
D
Good
morning,
it's
good
to
see
you
guys.
We
are
definitely
gearing
up
for
our
our
sea
turtle
season,
which
we
will
start
may
1st.
As
you
said
every
morning,
we'll
go
out
at
5
a.m,
on
the
beach
and
look
for
those
sea
turtle
tracks
and
start
marking
them.
We
always
hope
to
have
at
least
300
nests
on
the
beach
and
they'll,
be
nesting
through
august
and
then
hatching
through
october.
So
it's
a
six
month
program.
A
D
Programs
and
one
of
the
big
ones
that
we're
planning
pretty
soon
here
is
on
april
25th
at
uscb,
and
we
are
actually
asking
for
help
from
the
community.
Primarily
the
people
who
deal
with
the
visitors
with
a
face-to-face
encounter,
so
you've
got
waitresses
and
bartenders
and
concierge
activities,
directors
and
property.
D
D
Know
a
little
bit
about
what's
going
on
on
the
beach
so
that
when
they
get
the
questions,
what's
that
triangle
with
the
orange
sign,
they
have
a
little
bit
of
information
to
impart
and
beach
etiquette
is
really
important
for
us,
because
we
have
a
lot
of
visitors
as.
D
And
it's
important
for
them
coming
from
places
that
aren't
near
the
coast
to
know
that
their
impact
is
really
significant.
They
if
they
leave
holes
unfilled
on
the
beach,
for
example,.
D
It's
really
hard
to
get
to
enforce
that
because
we
have
14
miles
of
peach,
but
it
only
takes
a
hole.
That's
less
than
a
foot
deep
to
entrap
a
hatchling.
That's
trying
to
make
it.
B
Hello
senator
this
is
bill
miles
in
the
hill
bed.
Hey
bill
thanks
for
joining
us.
Thanks
for
joining
us
today
know
that
you're
on
the
run
would
just
like
to
have
an
update
on
whether
it's
ukraine,
washington
supreme
court
justices,
got
a
lot
to
talk.
E
About
well,
let's
start
with,
I
wish
I
were
in
hilton
head.
Every
other
place
you
named
is
not
so
good,
so
the
tournament
will
be
coming
up
in
a
few
weeks
right.
E
Okay,
well
I'll
try
to
get
there.
I
always
you
know,
love
watching
it
and
being
there
so
we'll
vote
on
the
supreme
court
nomination,
probably
thursday
or
friday,
she'll
make
it.
I
preferred
michelle
chiles
from
south
carolina,
I
think,
should
have
been
in
the
liberal
camp,
but
a
little
more
balanced.
I
think
judge
jackson
was
picked
because
they
seeing
her
somebody
who's,
really
I'll,
be
honest
with
you
going
to
be
an
activist
judge,
not
very
pro-business
at
all,
and
that's
what
happens
when
you
lose
an
election
but
she's
a
decent
person.
E
I'm
you
know
qualified.
You
know
got
a
lot
to
be
proud
of
in
her
life.
I
just
it's
a
bridge
too
far
for
me.
If
we
take
back
the
senate
in
2022,
we'll
have
a
chance
to
have
say
about
judges.
We
don't
today
because
we
we
haven't,
had
a
situation
since
we
changed
the
rule
requiring
a
simple
majority
to
pick
a
judge
where
you
have
a
party
senate
in
the
hands
of
one
party
and
the
president
hands
of
others,
and
that
will
create
a
new
new
territory.
For
us.
E
You
know
a
new
country.
Almost
we
got
to
figure
out
how
to
handle
that.
It
looks
like
right
now.
If
the
election
were
held
next
tuesday
it'd
be
a
blowout.
The
the
border
is
completely
broken.
E
Re
repealing
the
title
42
authority
to
deport
people
based
on
a
covet
threat
over
a
million
people
are
deported,
turn
right
around
and
sent
back
once
you
take
that
tool
out
of
the
toolbox,
we're
just
going
to
be
flooded
in
the
southern
border.
I
worry
that
terrorists
will
come
across
and
kill
a
bunch
of
us
because
of
afghanistan.
E
Ukraine,
the
ukrainians
have
just
fought
like
tigers,
had
dinner
with
the
ambassador
last
night.
Putin
is
a
you
know,
he's
a
war,
criminal
steroids.
I
don't
know
how
we
ever
deal
with
him
normally
again,
but
if
you
had
fighters
and
tanks
and
more
sophisticated
missile
systems,
I
think
the
ukrainians
could
break
the
russian
army.
It's
going
to
be
a
slugfest,
but
if
putin
loses
in
this
misadventure,
then
it
makes
it
less
likely
that
china
will
take
taiwan,
I'm
going
to
taiwan
next
week
to
fly
the
flag.
E
You
know
we
just
can't
be
focused
on
one
part
of
the
world.
You
got
three
bad
actors.
At
the
same
time
you
got
in
asia,
china
is
rattling
the
saber
all
over
asia
and
that's
a
big
market
for
us.
You
got
the
the
map
of
europe
being
redrawn
by
this
invasion
of
putin
into
the
ukraine,
and
you
got
the
nuclear
threat
from
iran
and
the
mideast
is
very
much
on
edge.
E
I
was
just
got
back
from
israel,
so
if
this
new
agreement
to
allow
money
to
go
to
the
ayatollah
for
their
nuclear
program,
the
the
jcpo
round,
two,
the
arabs
and
the
israelis-
are
not
going
to
like
it
very
much,
and
I
worry
that
we're
going
to
get
a
conflict
between
israel
and
iran
because
they
want
to
build
a
bomb,
not
a
peaceful
nuclear
power
program.
So
I've
never
seen
the
world
this
unstable.
E
E
If
he
gets
away
with
this
putin
he's
still
standing
and
stronger
and
in
power,
then
all
the
laws
that
we
passed
and
all
the
things
we
say
about
rule
of
law,
world
kind
of
dissipates
we've
got
a
bill
to
make
us
more
competitive
with
china
to
look
inward
to
rebuild
our
supply
chain.
That's
a
big
bipartisan
effort,
the
effort
to
regulate
social
media.
E
You
know
facebook
and
twitter
did
not
allow
the
hunter
biden
story
from
the
new
york
post
to
to
be
disseminated
right
before
the
election
it
turns
out.
The
laptop
was
was
actually
accurate
and
we
got
to
deal
with
these
social
media
companies.
If
you're,
conservative
and
liberals
too,
but
particularly
conservatives,
they
can
basically
shut
you
out
so
bill.
I
really
don't
see
anything
much
happening
other
than
a
china
competes
bill,
which
could
be
very
good
for
for
our
economy.
I
voted
for
the
infrastructure
bill
which
will
be
helpful
to
your
part
of
the
world.
E
It
was
a
bipartisan
deal
and
between
now
and
november
I
don't
see
a
whole
lot
happening.
The
budget
was
good
for
the
military.
The
air
base
and
buford
got
a
good
plus
up.
You
know
I'm
back
in
the
ear
marking
business,
so
I
take
some
of
the
money
in
the
budget
and
spend
it
on
projects
back
home
things
that
I
think
are
worthy
so
well,
then
I'll
take
a
few
questions,
but
it
does
look
like
we're.
E
E
Yes,
to
be
honest
with
you,
they
told
us
this
thing
will
be
over
in
four
days
I
sort
of
bought
what
we
were
being
sold.
You
know
russia's
got
a
you
know
they
put
a
lot
of
money
in
the
army.
I
never
underestimate
the
desire
of
people
to
fight
for
their
freedom,
but
the
answer
is
yes
and
what's
lacking
on
the
ground
to
turn
the
tide
of
battle
is
that
you
need
to
go
on
offense.
Some
of
the
russian
units
are
basically
withdrawing
they.
Don't
they
don't
like
killing
their
cousins?
E
So
if,
if
the
ukrainians
had
more
fighter
jets,
they
could
reach
out
and
hit
targets,
they
need
more
tanks.
You
know
to
combat
the
russian
infantry
and
more
sophisticated
missile
systems.
We're
in
day
like
40
almost
now,
and
the
weapons
flowing
in
is
at
a
snail's
pace.
These
switchblade
drones
are
suicide
drones.
E
E
He
wants
to
do
more
than
the
ukraine,
but
if
we
could
up
the
cost
by
giving
them
security
guarantees,
I
think
would
keep
putin
in
a
box.
But
I'm
surprised
at
how
poor
the
russian
army
has
done
very
proud
of
the
ukrainians
and
I'm
all
in
to
help
and
putin's
got
to
go
the
guy's
a
war
criminal.
He
needs
to
be
prosecuted.
E
It's
never
going
to
happen
until
we
change
our
energy
policy.
If
we
get
in
charge
of
this
place,
the
house
and
the
senate
we'll
have
legislation
to
to
make
drilling
easier
and
fracking
easier
and
see.
What
democrats
do
biden
is
a
candidate
declared
war
on
fossil
fuels
so
we're
now
looking
to
venezuela
we're
looking
to
opec,
saudi
arabia,
to
produce
more
oil,
because,
because
of
covid
sort
of
moving
forward
moving
on
demand
is
up.
E
Buying.
Stop
the
keystone
pipeline.
He's
made
it
harder
to
get
leases.
He's
taken
the
tax
advantages
away
from
oil
companies
to
do
exploration,
listen
for
every
you
drill,
10
holes!
You
may
find
all
in
one
if
they
can't,
you
know,
write
off
business
costs
of
trying
to
do
exploration,
they're
going
to
do
less
of
it.
So,
no
matter
what
you
hear
from
the
valley
administration,
they
made
it
harder
to
get
oil
and
gas
developed
here
in
america.
I'm
working
with
some
democrats
on
sort
of
a
gas
bridge
to
europe.
E
E
The
food
supply
chain
is
going
to
be
hurt.
Ukraine
is
the
fourth
largest
producer
of
corn,
the
fifth
largest
producer
in
wheat
in
the
world
they're.
Basically,
war
torn
can't
produce,
so
I
don't
see
an
end
in
sight
until
we
change
our
energy
policies
and
deal
with
the
supply
chain.
It's
just
too
damn
hard
to
create
a
job
in
america.
E
B
Senator
you're
that's
a
great
lead
into
our
next
question
and
really
our
final
question
for
you,
because
I
know
you
need
to
run,
but
this
is
coming
from
debbie
and
w
is
asking
saying:
workforce
shortages
are
a
critical
issue,
not
only
in
south
carolina
but
along
around
the
country,
and
you
see
any
relief
in
this
area
anytime
soon.
E
Well,
the
relief
debbie
would
come
from.
You
know,
restructuring
our
benefit
package
so
that
you
don't
make
more
not
to
work
than
to
work.
During
covid
we
had
a
problem.
You
know
businesses
had
to
shut
down.
The
ppp
program
kept
a
lot
of
you
from
going
bankrupt
and
I
don't
mind
helping
people
are
out
of
work
at
no
fault
of
their
own,
but
the
unemployment
package
of
924
a
week
was
more
than
most
people
were
making
and
we're
still
having
a
problem
with
that.
E
The
bottom
line
is
we're
going
to
need
a
rational
immigration
system
where
we
can
bring
people
in.
You
know:
h2h
h2b
visas,
where
you
can
get
people
to
help
out
at
kiwa,
but
you
know
just
finding
native
born
labor
is
going
to
get
harder,
not
easier,
and
the
only
solution
to
this
is
to
automate.
Some
of
these
businesses
are
going
to
get
automated
artificial
intelligence
will
take
over
a
lot
of
space,
but
there's
just
some
jobs
that
machines
can't
do
so.
E
E
So
right
now
we're
stuck,
and
we
just
need
as
a
country
to
deal
with
the
fact
we
have
a
declining
population,
and
I
hear
it
everywhere.
The
number
one
problem
I
hear
when
I
go
home
if
you
own,
a
business
from
manufacturing
to
a
restaurant,
is
finding
people
to
work,
and
the
only
solution
I
know
is
just
to
build
a
larger
pool
of
workers
and
that's
going
to
take
training
our
kids
better,
getting
them
motivated
to
work,
changing
the
benefit
package,
but
also
bringing
in
people
from
the
outside
that
are
willing
to
work.
B
All
right
senator
thank
you
so
much
for
joining
us
as
you're
so
kind
to
do
periodically
and
keep
up
the
good
work,
and
we
hope
to
see
you
soon
at
the
rbc
heritage.
E
Yeah,
I
hope
I
can
make
it
if
I
can
I'll
I'll
be
in
town
soon,
but
you
live
in
a
special
part
of
the
world
and
hopefully
this
infrastructure
bill
will
help
17
and
some
other
needs-
and
you
know
you're
growing
very
rapidly
and
the
military
base,
the
marine
corps,
air
station
and
and
the
military
community
is
very
important
to
to
me
and
and
to
that
part
of
south
carolina,
so
I'll
always
be
in
there,
pitching
for
those
guys
and
gals
thanks
a
bunch
and
keep
chin
up,
I'm
hoping
kovit
gets
we'll
get
to
get
back
to
normal
here
pretty
soon.
B
All
right
we're
going
to
shift
gears
now
back
to
our
turtle
watch
program
in
amber
kuhn,
amber
thanks
for
your
patience
and
when
the
senator
jumped
on
there.
Thank
you
for
pausing
and
we're
looking
forward
to
hearing
the
rest
of
your
story.
D
Bill
if
it
was
the
first
time
that
environment
got
bumped
for
politics,
I
would
be
surprised,
but
it's
it's
never
the
case.
So
that's
okay,
I
mean,
but
what
I
was
saying
has
to
do
with
the
community,
and
I
know
that
there's
nothing
that
we
and
hilton
head
can
really
do
about
ukraine,
there's
definitely
something
we
can
do
about
our
turtle
population
and
preserving
that
on
hilton
head
and
our
ecology.
D
That's
super
important
to
us
because
we
live
here
so
anyone
that
is
working
in
the
industry,
that
involves
tourism
and
it
could
be
you
own,
a
coffee
shop
or
you
have
a
hotel
anyone
that
is
face
to
face
with
the
visitors.
This
season
needs
to
come
to
this
event
that
we
have
on
april
25th
it's
at
uscb
on
april
25th,
it's
a
four
to
six
pm
and
what
we're
going
to
do.
There
is
just
give
simple
answers
to
simple
questions.
D
D
But
what
we
really
are
trying
to
do
is
to
introduce
all
the
ordinances
that
have
been
passed
recently,
dealing
with
holes,
personal
property
left
on
the
beach,
which
is
confiscated
in
june
july
august
and
september
after
sunset-
rules
that
you
might
not
know
about
that
are
meant
to
help
the
sea
turtle
population,
that's
nesting!
The
picture
that
you
also
see
is
stumpy.
This
is
a
turtle
that
we
first
recorded
with
dna
in
2012
and
it
wasn't
nesting
on
hilton
head,
but
it
laid
four
to
six
nests.
I
can't
remember
exactly,
but
it
was
fine.
D
It
was
normal.
The
event
thank
you
is
at
uscb
on
hold
and
had
very
convenient
for
all
of
you.
So
stumpy
sea
turtles
nest
every
third
year,
so
they
take
a
two
year
break.
But
this
one
went
missing
for
four
years
and
everyone
thought
it
was
gone
and
then
it
showed
up
in
2017
on
hilton
head
beach
without
a
flipper.
D
D
D
All
the
hatchlings
went
to
the
home
that
was
being
rented
behind
her
nest.
So
after
all
of
that
effort
in
this
turtle,
who
always
already
struggles
but
can't
even
dig
a
nest
by
herself
now
has
just
no
progeny
for.
For
that
reason,
and
if
we
can
just
get
the
word
out
about
lights
out
after
10
pm
all
these
rules
that
we
have
on
home
heads
to
preserve
our
wildlife,
that
would
be
so
helpful.
We've
tried
turtle
talks,
we
have
clings
everywhere.
D
D
We
are
responsible
for
the
ones
on
our
island
and,
if
you
guys
have
any
questions
about
this
event
or
want
to
know
a
little
bit
more,
please
contact
us
website
is
sea
turtle,
patrol
hhi,
dot,
org
and
please
let
us
know,
because
we
need
all
the
participation
we
can
get.
We
would
like
everybody's,
particularly
on
the
south,
end,
to
contact
us
and
let
us
know
how
you
would
be
able
to
help
us
and
what
we
can
provide
for
you
to
be
helpful
as
well.
B
D
We
have
the
biggest
territory,
but
the
density
per
square
mile
per
mile
is
is
not
near
what
it
should
be,
but
that's
simply
because
we
have
a
lot
of
activity
on
the
beach
and
turtles
like
dark
and
quiet
and
they
can
hear-
and
they
can
see
so
we
have
a
lot
of
visitors
that
are
on
the
beach
all
night.
Long
300
nest
is
nothing
to
block
at.
D
We
do
a
lot
of
work
to
preserve
those,
but
it's
important
to
get
all
of
the
hatchlings
to
the
water,
and
this
is
where
we
have
our
problem
on
hilton
head
with
the
lights.
If
people
would
just
know
the
ordinances
and
obey
them,
then
we
would
have
a
very
big
success
and
possibly
return
in
30
years
when
they
come
back
to
nest.
So
it's
it's
super
important.
It's
been
almost
30
years
for
me,
so
I'll
be
seeing
some
of
the
hatchlings
that
I
release
in
the
late
90s.
D
So
it's
very
important
and
we
get
maybe
20
new
recruits.
We've
never
exceeded
20
new
recruits
each
season,
but
we
do
get
over
20
strandings,
which
are
dead.
Turtles
hit
by
boats,
entanglement
and
fishing
line.
Ingestion
of
plastic
things
like
this,
so
we
need
your
help.
D
We
have
a
sister
organization
called
turtle
trackers.
It
was
developed
in
2016
to
do
everything
that
we
don't
have
time
to
do
everything
that
we
do
on
the
beach.
The
18
members
of
sea
turtle
patrol
are
permitted
by
the
state
agency
department
of
natural
resources,
so
we
have
specific
training
and
I'm
responsible
for
all
of
those
members
and
the
guidelines
that
they
have
to
work
within
turtle.
D
Trackers
is
our
army
of
volunteers,
almost
500
members
with
six
chapters
in
every
beachfront
community
that
go
out
each
night
and
put
the
beach
to
bed,
so
they
fill
holes.
They
pick
up
trash
to
talk
to
visitors
on
the
beach
and
try
to
do
what
I'm
asking
the
hospitality
industry
to
do.
D
We
we
need
more
than
500
people,
believe
it
or
not
to
control.
What's
going
on
in
our
beach
town
of
hilton,
head
pays
contractors
all
the
five
hours
a
day
to
pick
up
trash,
and
that
would
be
between
the
hours
of
2
a.m
and
6
or
7
a.m.
So
it
is
an
issue.
We
are
trying
very
hard
to
use
education
to
and
communication
to
control.
D
What's
going
on
in
our
beach
as
more
and
more
people
come
here
and
may
not
know
what
it's
like
to
live
on
the
coast
and
what
we
would
like
to
keep
seeing,
which
is
the
beauty
of
our
natural
environment,
so
turtle
trackers
is
the
way
to
go.
You
have
to
start
with
turtle
trackers
and
then,
when
turtle
trackers,
you've
you've
participated
with
all
their
beach
sweeps
and
they're,
putting
the
beach
to
bed
and
their
property
management
committees
and
the
contact
that
they
have
with
the
community.
B
All
right,
thank
you.
We
have
information
on
our
destination
website,
which
is
hilton
head
island.org,
a
campaign
helping
to
inform
and
educate
visitors
and
then
amber.
I
think
it
would
be
great
if
you
would
repeat
the
two
websites
again
that
you
have
so
our
listeners
can
write
those
down
and
check
yours.
D
Turtletrackers
on
our
website,
you
can
also
find
us
on
facebook
and
instagram
which
people
find
more
convenient,
sometimes
and
there's
ways
to
donate.
If
you
can't
participate,
donating
100
of
the
donations
go
to
beach
operations,
and
we
would
just
like
to
thank
the
town
for
their
support
with
atax
and
our
our
marketing
things
that
are
for
education
to
to
supplement
what
we're
trying
to
do
with
the
community
and
there
is.
There
are
several
ways
to
contact
us.
If
you
just
type
in
sea
turtle
patrol
hilton
heads,
you
should
find
us
and
turtle
jackers.
B
Great
all
right
well,
thank
you
and,
as
I
like
to
say
that,
as
the
health
of
our
sea
turtles
go
is
also
the
health
of
our
our
destination
and
keeping
our
environment
the
way
it
it
needs
to
be,
and
so
thank
you
for
all
you
do
for
all
the
years
and
we're
very
very
appreciative
of
your
leadership
amber.
D
B
Very
good
all
right!
Well,
as
we
come
to
close
today,
I
want
to
remind
everyone.
We
have
the
plant
party
tonight,
that'll
go
from
5
30
to
7
at
uscb,
and
it's
sponsored
by
airmark.
So
if
you
haven't
registered
yet
I
would
encourage
you
to
do
so.
We
have
a
few
spaces
left
and
it
looks
like
we're
going
to
have
a
great
crowd
and
there'll
be
trustees
there
and
a
couple
other
surprises
that
goes
along
with
with
the
plant
part
t
and
as
we
as
we
sign
off.