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May 23, 2025 35 mins

Big beautiful bill and big blue fraud.

What is next for President Trump’s agenda now that his tax and spending bill has passed? National Correspondent RORY O’NEILL shares the story.

Senior Contributor Dave Zanotti joins us to discuss the big, beautiful bill and the left’s big, beautiful Biden fraud!

 You may not be aware of it, but several big health breakthroughs were announced this past week: The FDA just approved a simple blood test to detect early Alzheimer’s—no spinal tap, no scan. – Scientists in the UK shrunk brain tumor diagnosis time from 8 weeks to 2 hours using real-time DNA sequencing in surgery.
– And in Philadelphia, a baby’s life was saved after doctors rewrote his DNA—the first personalized genetic fix of its kind that revolutionizes treatment for babies with rare genetic disorders. What’s happening in medicine isn’t just new tech—it’s a new time.  Futurist KEVIN CIRILLLI is available to discuss these medical breakthroughs.

 

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, It's Michael. Your morning show can be heard live
weekday mornings five to eight am, six to nine am
Eastern in great cities like Tampa, Florida, Youngstown, Ohio, and
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. We'd love to join you on the
Drive to work live, but we're glad you're here now.
Enjoyed the podcast.

Speaker 2 (00:15):
Starting your morning off Right, A new way of talk,
a new way of understanding because we're in this together.
This is your morning show with Michae o'pell Charman.

Speaker 3 (00:28):
Just starting your morning off Right's tired a year long
holiday weekend off right, Good morning, and welcome to Friday,
May the twenty third year of Our Lord, twenty twenty five.
Seven minutes after the ARFA just waking up. A candlelight
vigil was held near the White House last night, down
of the two Israeli embassy staffers who were killed on Wednesday,
both charged with first degree murder. Supreme Court granting President

(00:50):
Trump's request to fire independent federal agency members, and the
US and Iran are set to hold another round of
noop talks. That kind of begs the question, now that
the Big Beautiful Bill is headed to the Senate's certainly
next on the president's agenda. There's still the priority of
ending the Russian Ukraine War, and we're removing the threat

(01:12):
of a nuclear Iran if it's possible. Roy O'Neil is
our national correspondent. That's kind of an in general topic
for us this morning. What is next for a president
that has achieved so much in the first hundred days.

Speaker 4 (01:25):
Right, I mean, there's got to be at least four
or five big headline stories out of the White House
every single day for the past one hundred plus days,
and it is difficult just to keep up with what's
going on there. So on the international front, I think
they're trying to also make some progress with Israel and
Hamas and trying to get that ceasefire set up in
some way. If the same way, they're trying to help

(01:47):
the people who are suffering in Gaza, and of course
you mentioned Ukraine. Russia has also got to be getting
much more of the attention. I think because Secretary of
Rubio sort of put that gauntlet down and say we're
giving it two or three weeks, that's it. So we're
about to fall in that timeframe. All I think we
kind of estimate on that one. Marco Rubio came right

(02:09):
out and said it. This is going to have to
be a one on one with Trump and Putin. That's
the only way this marched forward.

Speaker 3 (02:14):
So we wait to hear if that's going to be
in person or if that's happening by phone. But that's
the next step there. Vladimir Putin, either he knows he
can't get any more. You would think he would take
an exit ramp, but he may choose to fight another year.
The only one's going to get him to stop and
come back to the table is Donald Trump. So we
know kind of where that stands. We got all of

(02:37):
our hostages back, but Israel is still i think waiting
on a few where that's probably the biggest question mark
that's kind of been on a back burner. Where does
all that stand? And that wasn't made any better by
the killing in Washington, DC this week exactly.

Speaker 4 (02:53):
And you know, there have been plenty of reports that
Israel is getting ready to launch some sort of a
strike on nuclear facilities. So that's something we're all waiting for,
I think, to see if that shoe ever drops and
what the fallout from that would be. So yeah, a
lot going on, and that's just the international stuff. And
while the Big Beautiful Bill did get through the House,
you know, they're obviously taken next week off. Obviously, let's

(03:17):
see what the Senate does with it. It looks like
they've got some big, big changes in mind. Yeah, and
then you brought this up yesterday, and this is gonna
be interesting. So no, no, you did. Could they separate
out the no tax on tips? But they leave the
no tax on overtime? The tax on Social Security still
in the build but that no tax on tips even

(03:39):
though it left separately from the Senate, it's kind of
somehow come back and get married into it.

Speaker 3 (03:43):
Right.

Speaker 4 (03:44):
Well, it's also in the Big Beautiful Bill as well. Right,
So yeah, it's a question of how they're going to
move that vehicle through. Do they do it as a
separate piece of legislation, which you know, President Trump, it
was his idea. Kamala Harris tried to glom onto it
as well. But I might want to do it as
a separate thing because it's got broad bipartisan support and

(04:04):
gives the president another opportunity to you know, doubt that
success or because you do get you fear that some
of these achievements get lost in that.

Speaker 3 (04:14):
Big beautiful bill. It has been abra I mean, I
think of our I feel like Brian Williams our esteemed
colleague John Decker, Poor Decker. I mean, if you went
from nothing to cover for four years of Joe Biden

(04:36):
to Donald Trump, who does not sleep. But it is,
it's been. It has been almost exhausting to keep up with.
But if after this sprint, the tax cuts are made permanent,
the big beautiful deal is done, if we can make
any ground with Iran on their nuclear ambitions, and we
can end this war with Russia and Ukraine. I mean, seriously,

(04:59):
this is man able to have it. He'll have it
all done in the first year. What happened to TikTok?
We should we bring that back? Yeah, and ended up
ended up. It ended up being a good tool to
get reelected. That's what happened with TikTok, which, by the way,
that's one of my favorite stories today, Rory. The Democrats
are trying to find a Joe Rogan of their own.
I remember when they were trying to find talk radio,

(05:21):
uh leftist talk radio that could compete, but where you
just can't go find it. Look, there's only one Joe Rogan.
There's not even a second Joe Rogan that's appeared yet,
but they're going to try to find one before the
next election. But yeah, that may be what happened with TikTok.
It became a very useful platform. All Right, Rory's going
to be back to talk about where we're all going
on this three day weekend with our travel plans. We'll
do that with Rory coming up. David Sanatti is the

(05:44):
CEO of the American Policy Roundtable. He's the host of
the Public Square, heard on two hundred stations nationwide, and
he joins us now on this holiday weekend to discuss
a the big beautiful bill and the big left, beautiful
Biden fraud. That's kind of the the two tales coming
out of Washington.

Speaker 5 (06:02):
D C.

Speaker 3 (06:05):
I don't know why he did the tariff portion first. Still,
I don't want to sound like I'm being critical or
second guessing somebody who's obviously a heck of a lot
more impactful on America and successful than I am in politics.
This is kind of where we thought the President was
going to go next, was to this and secure these

(06:27):
tax cuts for the economy. But there was a little
bit of a tariff game played in between, and now
it's time to get it done. The house has here
comes the Senate. Where does it go from here? David? Oh,
do you have mute?

Speaker 6 (06:41):
Hit? By the way, thank you, I was sneaking in
on Rory and I didn't want to say anything.

Speaker 3 (06:48):
I do that. I apologize.

Speaker 6 (06:50):
Oh, good morning, and thank you for your remarks about
Memorial Day, giving all of us a lot to think about.

Speaker 3 (06:59):
You know, we have to. I was going to start
with Memorial Day, but the transition from more Rory professionally back,
I just you know, I just want to be thinking. Look,
I can talk back too.

Speaker 6 (07:08):
I mean, I know there's a lot of listeners right
now that really appreciate what you had to say. They're
not going to be able to take the time to
say so, so I'll say thank you. The challenge in Washington,
d C. For those of us that have had the
unique privileges not a lot, and I'm very grateful. We've
got a team of people that have been banging around
on this whole government question for forty five years, and
we've spent a lot of time in Washington, a lot

(07:30):
of time with people that work there, and a lot
of time in state capitals and in the courts, and.

Speaker 3 (07:35):
A lot of time showering afterwards. Yeah yeah, and trying
not to drink the water when we're there.

Speaker 6 (07:41):
Look, so much of what Donald Trump is trying to
accomplish is timing because of how broken the system is
by the political parties. For example, he's had to do
what he can do by executive order and by executive momentum,
if you will, while he's been waiting for these special
elections to happen to boost the three or four more

(08:04):
seats that he needed that were empty on the Republican
side of the aisle so that he could win a.

Speaker 3 (08:10):
Big, beautiful bill with by one vote in the House. Yeah,
two didn't vote, Yeah, And I my presumption was that
one voted President. Two didn't vote because they would have
voted nay and they didn't want to face losing office,
because that's exactly if they'd have cost this bill, they
would have never got re elected. But it turns out
one just overslept something this important, and you oversleep, David,

(08:36):
this is a remarkable presidency, but we still have an
incompetent Congress. But go ahead and work.

Speaker 6 (08:41):
For that guy, just because he our gal whoever it
is is because they had the courage to admit what
they did.

Speaker 3 (08:45):
All right, that's a start, I guess, all right, finding
the bright spot again. But yeah, it was like, how
do you oversleep the most important bill of it.

Speaker 6 (08:53):
The thing about this whole rhetorical game is that it's
important to note that all of the tower media, the
seven towers that beam across the world and tell us
what reality.

Speaker 3 (09:03):
Is been lying from day one on.

Speaker 6 (09:06):
This the Big Beautiful Bill is simply extending the significant
tax reform that occurred in the first Trump administration, which
I didn't agree with necessarily the way that they went
about it. They did some things I think that still
aren't all that good, but they did effectively lower tax rates,
marginal tax rates, and general taxes for just about everybody

(09:29):
across the board. Now, you've got to remember, fifty percent
of the people in this country do not pay income tax.
Fifty percent of the households are tax free.

Speaker 3 (09:38):
When it comes well, it's worse than that. They're tax receivers.

Speaker 6 (09:41):
And then they receive benefits from the government. On top
of that, some of them actually get paychecks from the government.

Speaker 3 (09:46):
All right.

Speaker 6 (09:47):
Having that paychecks, they get benefits, literal benefit money checks.
So if we're going to talk about fairness and justice,
let's start with that is the fact that if you
work and you make more than fifty thousand dollars a year,
you're in the tar zone for the rest of your
life for everything that will ever happen. So what they
basically did was to keep what's been going on for
the past seven years moving forward, right, And that's important

(10:12):
because it would have disrupted everything in regards to the
way people are running their budgets. And right now we're
still finally recovering from the stupidity and lies of COVID.
We're now moving forward into we're getting some honest traction.
We've got international changes going and and that are that
are that are waking us up. We're moving, We're moving
in a good direction. To have blown up the tax

(10:33):
cuts would have been a disaster.

Speaker 3 (10:35):
The main the main thing is continuing these tax cuts
for the economy. The second thing is adding And again
Donald Trump says things, sometimes they're just clever at a rally,
and then sometimes they stick and their election defining. And
this was one I think, okay, well yeah, but I
mean this one was election defining. In fact, some would
credit this is how he took Nevada. No tax on

(10:56):
tips was big. It was one of the few of
the Democrats just chimed in and I'm down. So this
is the tax cut signal. Yeah, the tax cuts extended
with the no tax on tips, with the no tax
on social Security, and with the no tax on overtime.
There's also some things in there to help with child

(11:16):
costs as well. But with this Social Security, Michael, they
whiffed on that. Yeah, right.

Speaker 6 (11:23):
And not only did they whift, they put in a
weak and lame excuse for the reason we can't do
it is because the bird rule of the House, and
we can't reform social Security through budget reconciliation. And they
got all pompous and self righteous and excuse themselves about that. Look,
the single most persecuted tax group in the United States
of America are senior citizens who continue to work because
they have to. They are quadruple tax. I don't know

(11:46):
how many times their tax Think about it. You start
paying taxes for Social Security when you're fourteen years old,
if you got a job like you did and I did,
or even young, so.

Speaker 3 (11:54):
You pay your whole life.

Speaker 6 (11:55):
The government uses that money for whatever they dang, well, please,
it's supposed to be held in you.

Speaker 3 (11:59):
You gain no interest on your money.

Speaker 6 (12:00):
If you had even fifty percent of that money to
your own investment, you'd be worth five times more.

Speaker 3 (12:05):
He's in where you are right now, and we have
fewer babies being born, people living longer. It's not I'm
not going to even get one percent.

Speaker 6 (12:14):
So that's a forced system that's dishonest from the start. Then,
because you can't live on three thousand dollars a month,
no matter who you are, you can't. You got to
keep working. So while you're working, they're taking Social Security
out of your current paycheck. You might be seventy five
years old and still working, and they're still hitting you
just like you were, just like you were seventeen.

Speaker 3 (12:36):
Taking that.

Speaker 6 (12:37):
Then they're taxing your Social Security benefit when they send
a check back to you.

Speaker 3 (12:42):
Well, don't forget. All along the way, they're taxing more
of your income. Like it used to be. When my
dad was living, it was only what the first thirty
grand that he made. Now it goes all the way
up to one hundred and eighty grand. Then they keep
changing the age in which you can accept it. That
means you're paying in more and longer, and then eventually

(13:02):
when it's insolvent, you'll get less. You'll get less than
one hundred percent. So is the moral, Michael.

Speaker 6 (13:07):
And no one has the courage to talk about it,
Not even the President has the courage to spell it
out to the American people and speak the injustment.

Speaker 3 (13:15):
Well, he's got three years to go and he's getting
a lot done. He may get to it yet, but
all right, so we always say what we need ultimately,
because one of the big problems in this process and
the left of all people, which is laughable or trying
to play this narrative, and certainly the true Tea party
element of the Republican Party are keeping their eye on

(13:36):
the debt and this is going to add five trillion
to the debt. So never do we get away from
our five keys, which is a zero based prioritize balance
budget tied to the two year legislative session of Congress
and no continuing resolutions. It is legal. You have to
have a balanced budget that will stop the bleeding of debt.

(13:58):
And then the only way to get everybody's skin in
the game and get fairness as a flat and fair
attack system where everybody has skin in the game. I
think term limits is a big So when we think
of all of these different things, how big and how
beautiful is this? It's not, but it's what it is.

Speaker 6 (14:14):
Is it avoids a disaster or disrupting the entire economic
perspective of people who are working and earning and paying
their taxes. So we're in a good spot in that regard.
It was a good accomplishment. It was absolutely necessary.

Speaker 3 (14:25):
All right. So that is the big beautiful Bill portion
of our segment. Coming back, we'll have the big leftist
beautiful Biden fraud to discuss when we can continue with
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Speaker 2 (16:26):
It's your Morning Show with Michael del Chno.

Speaker 3 (16:30):
We're visiting with our senior contributor, David Sanadi. We talked
about the big beautiful Deal and how big and beautiful
is it really? Well, my youth pastor, you say there's good,
better and best. This is definitely good. I don't know
if it's better getting less good, and I don't know
if it's best, but it's a deal and it's moving forward.
Then you got the big beautiful Biden fraud. You know,

(16:52):
you said something earlier this week. I can't believe. I
haven't even got any emails. You said the only move
now for Democrats is to leave the party. That's what
the Democrat don't be. Yeah, that's about it.

Speaker 6 (17:03):
And I'm a registered independent, Michael, So I'm talking about
and because if the Republicans have pulled the same stunt,
I would say exactly the same thing. You and I
have been talking about the end of these political parties
because they are functionally dead men and women walking. It's
a zombie apocalypse when it comes to the political parties
in the United States worker because sixty percent of the
people have no reason to connect with them, and if
they ever understood how despicable they operate behind the scenes

(17:26):
they would never want to be.

Speaker 3 (17:27):
In and our Sounds of the day, you're gonna hear
Chris Cuomo eviscerate them, and then you're going to hear
a little conversation with Bernie Sanders. That's going to prove
what their biggest problem really is and that's what their
own constituents.

Speaker 6 (17:42):
Hey, everybody's John Ford Coley of England, Dan and John
Ford Coley And my morning show is your Morning show
with Michael del Giorno.

Speaker 3 (17:55):
Hey, it's me Michael.

Speaker 1 (17:56):
Your Morning show can be heard live five to eight
am Central Sick to nine Eastern and great cities like Jackson, Mississippi, Akron, Ohio,
or Columbus, Georgia. We'd love to be a part of
your morning routine and we're grateful you're here.

Speaker 3 (18:08):
Now. Enjoy the podcast. For those of you that are
already off or about to be off for a three
day Memorial Day weekend, don't forget those who paid the
ultimate price and gave their life. Remember them and the
family that remains, and your thoughts and prayers this weekend,
and then go have all the fun you want to have.
They would have wanted you to have that. We were
just passing pictures around. I can't believe my youngest graduated

(18:31):
high school last night, and there's one. I have two
favorite pictures of my son Nick. One is me and
him crossing the bridge over by Pinkerton Park, and I
don't think Nick's head even came to my knees. And
Nick was always particular about dress, so even when he
was very small, you know, perfect khakis, polo top. But

(18:55):
he's holding my hand and out of like the Hulk. Yeah,
and then he's walking across the origin. And the other
is this picture with his friend Joey Culabrace. They used
to play all his small children, both in cap and gown.
Last night I got a picture of them together to
go with my second favorite picture. When they were younger.
I think we were at Anna played softball one year.

(19:16):
My daughter Anna had the most beautiful left handed baseball swing.
I wonder where she got that, and it was natural
the minute she picked up a bad as a kid,
and when I would play with them up in the
game room, she would hit shots that were knocking pictures
off the wall. She was like a Marla Hooch. And
then she had a beautiful golf swing, neither of which
she would pursue. Art and swimming would become her thing.

(19:38):
But I think this was the one year she did
play softball and we were at the game and David,
just for the listener's sake, explain to them, and I
went ahead and put the picture in black and white.
But these are buddies like we had buddies. This could
be nineteen fifty five the Bronx by a stickball field,
couldn't it. Or it could be nineteen forty. Yeah, would

(19:59):
about Memorial Day.

Speaker 6 (20:00):
These two kids are gonna end up getting on after
high school graduation, get on a bus and go.

Speaker 3 (20:04):
To war together. And then then you flip in there
they are in cap and gown holding their diplomas together.
I mean, if that doesn't touch it, what I mean,
that's what life's all about. And they used to box
and I would do Howard Cosel, so they would literally
and by the way, they would. I have autographed Joe
Frazier and Muhammad Ali gloves because I got a chance,

(20:24):
honored to spend a day with both of them, and
that's what Nick was using. And then Joey had another
pair and they would sit and we would do two
minute rounds and I would announce and I go down,
cows Fresha down, go to which I think I'm lucky
I didn't get a knock at the door from DHS
to take both children. But they congratulations to all you

(20:48):
out there listening whose kids are graduating high school or college,
or grandparents whose grandchildren are graduating high school in college.
It's an exciting commencement. Fourth remind them of Matthew six
thirty three and everything will be just swell. Memorial Day
I talked about a little bit earlier. Out of all
the quotes, and there's a million of them around Memorial Day,
I picked patents. But do you think we conflate Veterans

(21:12):
Day and Memorial Day? And no, no, no, no, not
at all.

Speaker 6 (21:16):
These are not holidays that emanate from a picture of
Big Brother with required missile parades and tanks. This is
something that we stopped to remember by going to graveyards
into sites to remember people who laid down in the election.
And look at these pictures of these two young men,
and I do think about the generation that went before us,

(21:38):
because it would be these two guys that would grow
up as bands of brothers who would get on the
bus after high school graduation. Literally the bus was waiting,
and they went and they were off to war. Twelve
million Americans in the period of World War two, twelve
million people in uniform, men and women, and then the
people at home were unified in of one purpose. I

(21:58):
was thinking about this this morning. My it's been that
long since America acted as one nation under God.

Speaker 3 (22:06):
Nine to eleven had that effect for about seventy two hours. Yeah, yeah,
for about seventy hours. But nothing like World War Two.
Nothing like moms leaving the house and going to make
bullets or you know, working in factories that a lot
of people who didn't come home exactly. I mean, well,
saving Private Ryan was a great story, you know, the
notion that you could lose multiple sons in the same war.

(22:30):
But yeah, and these are the prices that were paid
at home and on foreign soil. And I often think
of the life they didn't get that they gave up
for us, and it tends to kind of be a downer.
And there was just something about the patent quote, you know,
don't be sad for them, be grateful for a God

(22:53):
who made them. I do think for many of them,
there are just certain people that are born to protect,
born to serve, born to be selfless. I really believe
that to protect each generation. But as you know when
you watch these documentaries and now that we can colorize them,
some of these were just scared seventeen year old kids
that never should have been on a boat with a

(23:14):
door opening and facing an entire German firing squad. And
why did they go.

Speaker 6 (23:20):
It wasn't pure pressure and no, granted, I mean they
were drafted, they didn't have a choice, But the point
was is they were lining up as volunteers.

Speaker 3 (23:33):
You didn't really have to dress. Some were Major League
Baseball superstars like Joe DiMaggio left flippers.

Speaker 6 (23:42):
You could have a person coming out of rural Appalachia
who could barely read standing next to a kid who
graduated from Harvard and they were a band of brothers.
Same thing with the women that were there, bands of
brothers and sisters who came together for common cause. Now
what was that cause? They recognized that there's evil in
the world. Not that we were morally superior to anybody,

(24:03):
but there is an objective thing called evil and we
are all at risk.

Speaker 3 (24:07):
Yeah. I was just getting ready to ask you that
in the form of a question, how better did they
understand good and how much more did they recognize evil?
It had to be a view of evil and a
view of what we stood for that was being threatened.
That had to be the only motivation, and then the
ultimate price.

Speaker 6 (24:26):
Well, the amazing thing about the human experience is that
history does move from point to point. We are on
a journey, on an adventure because we didn't start this
place and we don't end it. But the problems of
the human heart are also circular. They come back. It's
ironic to think that the conversations that I listened to
from the World War veterans that came back, and fortunately

(24:48):
they did, because we got born and they sat around
the table. They should have buried some of us in
the backyard and never let us see the light of
day into a college, because by the time we got there,
a lot of us were being saturated with the leftist
nonsense of the anti war movement that they went to
fight and free. But they had the vision of these
two boys in this picture, this beautiful picture of these

(25:09):
two kids hanging on each other in grade school who
would go on to have a life. They saw something
more than themselves and they knew that everything they had
hoped for was genuinely at risk.

Speaker 3 (25:21):
If we lost this war, we lose every year. David Sanatti,
by the way, it's the CEO of the American Policy Roundtable,
hosts of the Public Square, and our senior contributor for
your morning show. You had a tremendous impact on how
I view Memorial Day forever with your presentation of Christmas
in America. And we happen to be trying to find
the manger in the middle of the depression. That's a challenge, folks.

(25:46):
And really what I left with was the children of
parents in the depression were forged in such a powerful
way that only a depression could do to be able
to liberate the world from this evil. So without the depression,
you don't have the greatest generation. Now we have entitlement.

(26:11):
Uh you know, what do we call it? But what
do they call it? It's a first world problems so on,
So you know, where do you find this? We're a
divided nation. Like Bruce Springsteen bashing our history, bashing our existence.
I don't know that we have laser focus on good

(26:31):
and evil and have chose this day whom we're going
to serve we're a much different nation, and with a
lot of wars looming, we might want to look to
the past to find what we need to forge today
for tomorrow.

Speaker 6 (26:45):
Well, I can think of no better person to bridge
that gap than the late Cardinal Carol Wativa Ope. John
Paul the Second, our favorite Saint John Paul the Second.
He wrote in his book Crossing the Threshold, just read
this last night.

Speaker 3 (26:59):
I'm glad you wrote this up.

Speaker 6 (27:01):
He wrote these words, do not be afraid of men,
quoting the Book of Luke and the Pope says, man
is always the same. The systems he creates are always imperfect,
and the more imperfect they are, the more he is
sure of himself. Where does this originate? It comes from
the human heart. We're the same people, we have the

(27:24):
same conflicts, the same crises of faith, the same crises
of fear.

Speaker 3 (27:29):
And it's been a long time in.

Speaker 6 (27:31):
This country since we've been able to define what we're
really about and what we're really after. But times like
Memorial Day and Veterans Day help us to consider where
we've come from, to consider our hearts and ask ourselves.
And Michael, there's nothing pureer than looking at these pictures
of these graduates that we look at. We see them
as kids, and then we ask ourselves, who knows those
two guys hanging on each other as great school kids.

(27:52):
Maybe they're the next billionaire partnership that brings some great
cure to the culture. Maybe they go out to raised
children that change the world the hope for the future.

Speaker 3 (28:05):
Or maybe they just go forward live a simple life
that honors, serves, and protects the republic are founding fathers
and all the men and women who gave their life for.
Or maybe they just go forward to love others as
they love themselves and through acts of kindness. Whatever it is.
I come back to the George Patten quote. I mean,
who better than Patton?

Speaker 5 (28:25):
Is?

Speaker 3 (28:25):
Like as tough as they get? Right? Have we had
anybody tougher as forty seven? I say, highly respected? It
is foolish and wrong to mourn the men who died.
Rather we should be thanking God that such men lived.
I hope everybody takes time none of these people who
gave their life's and listen. There are mothers and fathers

(28:45):
that were never the same, brothers and sisters that were
never the same, wives and husbands that were never the same.
I mean, you need to take the time for a
living God who can is more than a conqueror, can
bring peace that passes all understanding, to heal their hearts
even today, and to give them a hope and assurance
that they'll be reunited for eternity, never to be stolen again.

(29:06):
But I'm gonna add that this year, with my cup
of coffee on my sacred deck, I'm gonna thank God
for these men and women who left baseball fields, left offices,
and went and served. And then I'm gonna I'm gonna
do two things. I'm gonna thank God for them. I'm
gonna pray for their family members who had to live
a life without them. And then the third thing I'm

(29:28):
gonna do is recommit myself to honor them by preserving
and protecting the republic they died for. I think that's
about And then and other than that, then go do
everything you were gonna do. If it's fish, fish, if
it's golf, golf, I can't. My friend's away, but and
my other friend is in ninety nine degree weather that
feels like one hundred and three. How is that possible?

(29:50):
Every time I'm in Tampa mid May, all I could
think of. Maybe I'm wrong about global warming. I don't know,
because it's felt like I was.

Speaker 6 (29:59):
Let me tell you, I got off the plane in
Cleveland yesterday and I can see my breath when I
walked out of the earth. Give me Cleveland or give
me death. Forty seven degrees and nearly snowing. Find a word,
I'm a morning Well, it's it's rightly named, and it's
rightly appropriate. And the key is the most important thing
about looking back is it's always a dangerous process. Unless

(30:21):
we see this in perspective. We look back to see
how far we've come. That's the difference, because looking forward,
there is always hope and there's no reason to be
afraid of the future.

Speaker 3 (30:32):
David Zanati, thank you so much. We'll talk again after
the holiday weekend.

Speaker 2 (30:37):
This is your Morning Show with Michael del Chuono.

Speaker 3 (30:41):
The US and Iran set to hold another round of
nuke talks. That's good. Another eleven hundred troops are headed
to the border. Some will even be doing construction work.
That'll bring the grand total to ten thousand. That's why
the border crossings are down. And you may not be
aware of it, but several big health breakthroughs were announced
just in the past week. Our futurist Kevin Sirilli, he

(31:04):
knows a thing or two about futuristic reality in real time,
and he joins us, Kevin, so great to hear your voice.

Speaker 5 (31:10):
Good morning, Hey, thank you so much for having me.
I think I've got some good news on this Friday
before the holiday weekend. I mean, anyone who's anyone who's
ever had to deal with Alzheimer's disease or dementia or
have seen a loved one suffer through it. This is
really really good news because the FDA just approved a
major approval. And I know this is typically we don't

(31:32):
really talk about FDA approvals, but this is.

Speaker 3 (31:35):
About a blood test.

Speaker 5 (31:36):
So right now, the FDA approved a blood test that
allows for early detection of Alzheimer's. So typically you'd have
to get a spinal tap or a pet scan, but
now doctors are going to be able to just draw
blood and say if a patient has early Alzheimer's before

(31:56):
and this is the best part, before the symptoms of
all Czeimer's even happen, which allows you know, there's no
cure for Alzheimer's right now, but it would allow for
early treatment, which the treatments are getting better and better
to delay, prevent and ease some of those some of
those symptoms.

Speaker 3 (32:15):
Would this would be something like, you know certain tests
we have that don't start until forty five or fifty
Would they just start doing this routinely in blood work
at a certain time.

Speaker 5 (32:24):
Yes, and typically in your mid fifties is when they're
saying it's and it's surviving faster because of the artificial
intelligence accelerating the pipeline. So I'm not a doctor, but
I report on the future and the AI train these
massive data sets of patients to help identify these blood
proteins which are the early markers. Translation, you're going to

(32:47):
go to the doctor, You're going to get a blood test.
They're going to be able to test for Alzheimer's and
separately from that, in the UK, this is another great story.
This week's scientists just announced and I don't want to
get two in the weeds nanoporta sequencing, but essentially if
DNA in real time and it is. It's really cool
because they can track a brain tumor and see whether

(33:09):
or not you have a brain tumor. And that used
to take two months. Now two hours, which means patients
are getting the right treatment before they even leave the
operating room.

Speaker 3 (33:18):
All right. So and in both cases we're just like,
we're seeing more autism, not why I want to get
into controversial, but we're seeing something's causing it. So we're
seeing more autism. We're seeing far a lot more dementia
in Alzheimer's. So this is gonna be great because even
the treatments we have now and they could get better,
can delay. So early detection is everything to maintain that level.

(33:41):
And I'm going through this with my mother in law.
This is not good for the person or the family.
It's an awful long goodbye. So this is a breakthrough,
but you know, if you have a family history, and
now we're also seeing more brain tumors, who knows what
that's caused by this. This is huge. I mean that
it's detection.

Speaker 5 (34:02):
It is because and here's another story that I think
is one of my favorites this week. This is all
happening in one week, by the way, which is a
big reason why I founded me in the Future, is
because this is the third major medical technology breakthrough in Philadelphia.
Did you see this, Michael? Because it made some waves.
But you know, ten years ago this stuff would have
led the nightly news. Doctors used crisper like technology to

(34:27):
rewrite a baby's genetic code. So this baby in Philly
had a very rare genetic disease that would spell candidly
like horror in the past. But doctors were able to
go in and write a personalized DNA fix that is
not a one size fits all medicine. So this wasn't
like a cure for the rare genetic disease. This was

(34:49):
code editing inside of a human self for this one
baby to save the baby's life. This is the first
time that this procedure has been done, not just in
the United States of America, but anywhere on the planet.

Speaker 3 (35:02):
In the medical significance, but what about the worldview significance.
I mean, now we're treating healing, saving lives in the
womb that maybe half the nation may not call a
life and just and take what it does to that
political argument. But this is amazing. How they do it,
I have no clue, but it is. It is amazing

(35:27):
what it has done. And in saving a baby's life
or a parent for making a tough decision, and this
is all just in the last week, AI, it's all
the last week. Yeah, it's all AI.

Speaker 2 (35:38):
We're all in this together. This is Your Morning Show
with Michael hild Joe Now
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