Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, It's Michael. Your morning show can be heard weekday
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Speaker 2 (00:19):
A new way of talk, a new way of understanding
because we're in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael Gell Chorna.
Speaker 1 (00:31):
Elon Musk says he's disappointed in President Trump's so called
Big Beautiful Bill. You'll find out why Senator Tommy Tumravel
is launching a bid to be the next governor of Alabama.
And the COVID vaccine is no longer being recommended by
the CDC for pregnant women and healthy children. Why no
evidence that they ever needed it? Only took five years,
(00:53):
but the science has finally caught up. Oilers, our one
went away from going to the Stanley Cup Finals, as
are the Indiana Pacers who took care of the next
last night, Good morning, and welcome to Wednesday, May the
twenty eighth. You have out Lord twenty twenty five on
the air and streaming live on your iHeartRadio app. As
we always say, can't have your morning show without your voice.
Don't forget that talkback button. If you're listening on the
(01:14):
iHeart app, you don't have to wait on hold any longer.
You're instantly on the air. Just press that microphone. We'll
count you down three two, one, Ask a question, make
a statement, and you're taking your place at this morning's
kitchen table. Also, for those that prefer writing, you can
email Michael d at iHeartMedia dot com. Well stock market,
it depends on close you're looking at. It may look volatile,
(01:35):
some may see a whole lot of correction, but there
was volatility. Inflation is actually cooling. There is some troubling
signs in the labor market. National correspondent Roy O'Neil is
joining us with a look at this economic roller coaster
we're riding with an explanation of why the price of
coffee is piping hot while luxury homes are losing their value.
Speaker 3 (01:56):
Wow, that's a mouthful. You much just to explain. I'd
like to talk to the boss about editing that.
Speaker 1 (02:04):
But a little worries.
Speaker 3 (02:06):
It's a little much, so for my whole economics two
two class. Stand by for the next three hours while
I discuss all this. Yeah, where to start, Well, let's
just go to the coffee prices.
Speaker 1 (02:18):
A whole bunch of different reasons.
Speaker 3 (02:19):
Your coffee cup will probably be a bit more expensive
as we go into summertime. We've got climate factors, geopolitical turmoil,
and of course the tariffs as well. But the average
price of a ground of coffee a pound of coffee
about seven dollars and fifty four cents. That's up from
six dollars and six cents a year earlier. So expect
(02:41):
those prices to keep on climbing.
Speaker 1 (02:44):
All right. There were some troubling labor market stories yesterday.
I think Tammy had one of them. What are the
concerns there?
Speaker 3 (02:53):
Yeah, what we're seeing is a slow down in actual hiring.
I don't know if you know people who are unemployed
right now, but boy, the level of frustrating among them
is getting pretty crazy. As they don't hear from h
R they get strung along for month after month after
month before companies actually conduct some hiring. What we're seeing
is that companies are now listing fewer jobs and taking
(03:15):
longer to fill them, and that really is just making
people incredibly frustrated as they try to look for new opportunities.
You know, pre pandemic, about ninety one percent of job
listings from top companies were filled within six months of
the jobs posted last October, Fewer than half were filled
in that same six month period.
Speaker 1 (03:34):
All right, what's going on with luxury homes losing their values?
Speaker 3 (03:38):
Yeah, the values are actually going up again with the
boss on that one. The values are actually going up,
but it's taking longer for them to sell, to close
on those homes. Pending sales of luxury homes actually fell
ten percent last month from the year before, in part
because the prices are getting a bit out of reach.
We're talking homes of one point four million in higher
(03:59):
according to redfe In. And of course the mortgage rates
have also been climbing again. So other than a buckmore
for a pound of coffee.
Speaker 1 (04:08):
Basically nothing in this description. As it appeared, things seemed
to be improving, although uncertainty is still looming in terms
of hiring practice. What do you make of this? I
know we have less than a minute, but the SpaceX
engineers trying to troubleshoot went went wrong, and a lot
went wrong. Yeah, you know what went right.
Speaker 3 (04:25):
They were able to reuse one of those boosters for
the first time, so that's good. But you know, they
were trying to put it through some extra tests before
it splashed down in the Gulf of America, and it
essentially blew up before.
Speaker 1 (04:36):
They got there.
Speaker 3 (04:37):
Then a bunch of leaks meant that the starship itself
couldn't deploy test satellites, couldn't even open the payload bay
doors hal and then it came in humbling and disintegrated
before it hit the Indian Ocean.
Speaker 1 (04:52):
So not a great performance.
Speaker 3 (04:54):
I know they're trying to polish that herd over its SpaceX.
Speaker 1 (04:57):
But yeah, last night was not good. Not a good test,
all right, Right, he's gonna be back in the third hour.
The feud between the Trump administration and Harvard University continues.
He'll fill in all the blanks. Hopefully the report will
be the same message a scripture. We'll find out if
I you know, I like to. It's easy to find
bad news, just like it's easy to find the weaknesses
(05:23):
and people or the bad character traits in people in
the end. If you go through life looking for the best,
you'll find it. And what happens in talk radio is
well outrage, being provocative, maybe even being angry and divisive,
(05:52):
tends to be entertaining or tends to try belief fulfill
but it's not cultivating a good end of game. There's
a lot of good around us. Have you seen what
local television news has become. I mean, if you never
(06:17):
left the house, if you never had any human interaction,
you would think outside these doors is a very dangerous place.
Why because for twenty minutes they filled it with every robbery, arrest, murder, rape, tragedy.
I mean, you would board up the windows and never
leave the house. But there is good news all around us,
(06:41):
if we care to see it, if anybody cares to
share it, this is by far the good news story
of the day. A lot of people go, I don't
know what's happening in this world? In this younger generation
is entitled brad why taking its cues from a few
idiots at a protest or a few idiots rioting. I
(07:09):
actually seen this young generation miracles. We've dissected how it
possibly happened, but the truth of the matter is there
is a major cultural reawakening happening right now. Now. We've
(07:32):
had other cultural awakenings and revolutions in the past. The
difference is the news was fascinated with these rock and
roll listening, non shoe wearing, long haired hippies and reported
on them. But you don't see a lot of reporting
about the youth of today. And I observed them because
(07:55):
we're that house. We're that house where all the kids come.
If four or five kids were going together, Hey, let's
do something, it would always be at my house. We
were the fun house. So I wasn't just observing my
kids the result or the miracle compared to how I've
been raising them. I'm watching their friends too. I'm exposed
(08:19):
to a lot of people in their age group, and
I kept saying, there's something special about this age group.
I'm telling you, these people are just naturally trending away
from bad towards good, trending away from political correct towards
traditional values. There's something going on with this generation. I
don't know what God's preparing them for, but I'm telling you,
(08:41):
and we see that in today's good News report. So
gen Z. According to a twenty twenty five World Happiness
Report gen z or is now that be your eighteen
to twenty nine year olds ranked sixty second amongst the
one hundred and forty country surveyed in terms of self
(09:04):
reported well being and life satisfaction, far below all US adults,
who rank twenty fourth. So you've got to kind of
understand this. You've got to kind of weed out the
country comparative. Is this a happiness because of America problem
or compared to other places in the world. But that's
(09:25):
not what this is about. We're going to go inside
the oyster, grab the pearl, and study the pearl. A
small segment of young Americans are bucking the trend and
finding happiness. So it can't be an American problem only
because young people are finding happiness in the midst of
(09:46):
the nation as a whole, not ranking very high in
world happiness makes sense so far before move on? Okay,
several stated that they all noted that limiting their time
on Instagram TikTok. So you realize what we're doing.
Speaker 4 (10:01):
Now.
Speaker 1 (10:01):
We're going to break down the keys to happiness, and
in doing so, we're going to reveal the happiness robbers, right,
because happiness comes from happenstance. It's not like joy that
is unspeakable, not like joy that is present even in
(10:24):
bad circumstances. So several stated that they limit their time
on Instagram. Your kids aren't happy. Talk to him about
the time they're spending on Instagram TikTok, because it's robbing
developmental sleep, it's isolating. It's while they're doing that, they're
not having human interaction to the things that actually fulfill
(10:46):
a human being. The average zoomer spends three quarters of
their day consuming content that's scary. Do you remember our
dad's you see Elwis? Turn that television off. It's gonna
to rot your brain? Can you? And what did we watch?
I watched Partridge Family, Brady Bunch, Gilligan's Island an hour
(11:08):
and a half. Compare that to the six to ten
hours a day surfing social media. A self described happy
twenty eight year old said social media in and of
itself is very negative and it's a very toxic place.
I don't use it that much. It's a key to happiness.
(11:30):
You want to plug into happiness, unplug from this negative,
toxic social dilemma. He suffered from cerebral palsy since birth,
uses crutches for mobility. His disability taught him that comparing
comparison is the thief of joy. So imagine he's watching
(11:52):
people play football, baseball, get around, taking their health for granted.
Just getting up and getting to the school bus is
a journey for him. If he focuses on his disability,
he loses joy. But if he doesn't compare himself to
those that don't have that, he has joy. And he
(12:14):
said that taught him to avoid social media. It's easy
for me if I focus on this, the negativity and
toxicity joy, Robert. If I remove myself from it, I
can find joy. Another twenty year old, a sophomore mail
studying business at Georgia Tech, believe social media is bringing
his generation down and credits his positive outlook to restricting
(12:36):
his use of it. If you ever watch a documentary
the Social Dilemma, what's the final conclusion? All these people
that created Facebook, created Google, created the algorithms that create
these addictions and robbing of joy. Their final conclusion was,
(12:58):
can't let your kids be on it? We didn't allow
our kids to be on it. As your kids were
addicted to it. It isolates, creates depression, suicide, negativity, bullying, toxic,
It's awful. This twenty year old said he turns off
notifications on apps so he's not tempted in by Instagram.
(13:23):
My friends will be very conscious of who's on their
phone and call them out. We stack up our phones
on a table. Whoever picks theirs up first is the
one that has to pay the dinner tab. These are
the little things that they do. So if you're looking
for the happiest they've disconnected from social media and the
(13:44):
toxic social dilemma. What else have they done? What are
the other keys to their success? Nearly all of the
happy Zoomers cited their religion as a major reason for
their contentment. Ah, now you get to piece passes and
all understanding. Now you get to joy unspeakable. Now you
get to right standing with God, right standing and relationships
(14:05):
and fulfillment. Now you open the door to miracles. So
it's interesting where Americans place worldwide and happiness. But if
you want to find a pearl in this oyster and
filthy water, it's the baby. It's the z generation, the
Zoomers generations ears who are actually happy, and they found
(14:30):
happiness on plugging from social media. And culturally reawakening to religion,
family and relationships.
Speaker 2 (14:39):
It's Your Morning Show with Michael Delchno.
Speaker 1 (14:43):
Elon Musk has what I call descent descent. He's disappointed
with the president so called Big Beautiful Bill. We'll talk
more about that with DZ code. Vaccine is no longer
being recommended by the CDC for pregnant women or healthy children.
Should it have ever been? Why are they no longer
recommending them? Well, we just found no evidence it was
(15:04):
ever needed. How did I not going to bring up
my biology teacher or her her foot? But how do
I an average student? How did I get that five
years ago? And the CDC is just getting around to it.
In sports, we had a couple of interesting developments last night.
The Pacers one thirty one to twenty one, took Game
(15:24):
four over the Knicks. They are in a commanding lead
of that series three games to one. Okase can close
out the West with the win. Tonight Minnesota in the
Western Conference of the NHL Final, Eilers beat the Stars
four to one. The Edmonton Oilers up three games to one.
Speaker 5 (15:40):
I'm Joe Big in Tampa and my morning show is
Your Morning Show with Michael Del Jorno.
Speaker 1 (15:50):
Hey, it's Michael. I'm so glad you found the podcast,
and don't forget you can listen to your morning show
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just to name a few. You can find the your
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Morningshow online dot com. And We're glad you're here for
(16:10):
the podcast. Enjoy. This is your morning show on the
air and streaming live on your iHeartRadio app. Brad's got
an eye on the content. Jeffrey the sound. I'm thinking
about starting a new feature. Okay, what we just talked
about behind your back during the commercial break, that's better
than anything we did on the air all day, as
(16:31):
we explored when on Earth did Kelly Ann Conway become
Carol Channing? I got do you think her search and
has a fascination with Carol Channing all the sudden, I'm like,
what has happened to Carolyn Gunway? Is Karen Gunning? To which?
(16:52):
Then you guys start launching into Mary lou Reddin's dui
And I said, well, you know how she failed the
sobriety test. She failed to stick the landing, and you
had apparent just texted that you read behind my back.
That's what happens when three people who think just alike,
who are close friends, actually work together. Oh, I know
what I was saying. Thirty six minutes after the hour,
(17:14):
one hour from now, former US Speaker Nute Gingrich will
join us his forty fourth book, Trump's Triumph, America's greatest comeback.
Was it a Republican victory or a Trump victory? Was
it a red wave or an Orange wave? And how
does America's greatest comeback impact both parties moving forward? That more,
(17:40):
Nute Gingrich for the full quarter hour, an hour from now,
and everybody, look a look, you just got a trial
after the opportunity for a brief civics lesson.
Speaker 2 (17:51):
Sure, perhaps you'd like to be alone with the deteriorating conditions.
Speaker 1 (18:01):
Alan Dershowitz knows exactly what parts of Harvard Trump should defund.
He joined Fox Business to discuss.
Speaker 6 (18:08):
Harvard's endowment is more than fifty three billion dollars alone.
Speaker 1 (18:12):
That's bigger than a Wall Street hedge fund.
Speaker 6 (18:14):
They nearly a dozen ivies have a two hundred and
eighty three billion dollars endowments. Government has massively increased spending
on grand student loans and bailouts for schools. Tuition is
at four times the rate of inflation, and colleges are
padding their salaries and administrative staff with irresponsible of spending
while they're allowing this woke ideology and rampant anti Semitism
(18:35):
and bullying of students on campus. You know, these Israeli
leaders have said it doesn't go far.
Speaker 1 (18:41):
We interrupt this out of the day to say that's
not a question. In fact, that's a sound of the
day from the reporter. But I promise he gets to
Drshowitz here shortly from words.
Speaker 6 (18:51):
To bullets, as you just pointed out. So something has
to be done to stop it and clean it out
for good.
Speaker 1 (18:57):
I agree, and I think that.
Speaker 7 (19:01):
I'm praising President Trump for starting at least a dialogue.
Speaker 1 (19:04):
About how to deal with these issues.
Speaker 7 (19:07):
As usual, when you have a dialogue, it may start
by going a little.
Speaker 1 (19:11):
Bit too far. But I think that what we need
to do is have targeted defunding of all.
Speaker 7 (19:18):
For example, the Divinity School and the Public Health School
should be completely defunded. The Car Center for Human Rights
at Harvard, which is a stess full of anti Semitism,
should be defunded. Any student who has made anti American,
anti Israel, anti Christian statement should.
Speaker 1 (19:35):
Not be allowed into the country.
Speaker 7 (19:36):
There's no fresh amendment right to come into the country
and attack your host nation.
Speaker 1 (19:41):
So it's a good beginning, but there's a lot of
work to still be done. Yeah, it's interesting. I'm always
bringing up the endowment funds, the support from alum, and
in the case of Harvard, you have some billionaire alum.
But I love the way the reporter dusted out the
other disparities, with tuitions outpacing by four times inflation. Red's
(20:09):
always quick to point out, you know, it's not like
NPR where it's funded with taxpayer money. These are studies
that are being conducted that the government funds. But it
adds up to a billion, and if they're not in compliance,
you know, take those billions elsewhere. I think most people
would have thought to other universities who are not, you know,
(20:31):
perpetuating such divisive stances, or, as Donald Trump has suggested,
to trade schools which address the failure of common education
and preparing students for the workforce. I thought That was
a great little sound of the day, although I think
the reporter kind of out shined Dirsha with all Right this,
I have to I thought we got to this yesterday,
(20:55):
but maybe we didn't. This is Obama's former senior advisor.
There's a whole big topic here that I haven't had
time to do because I chose to do AI instead.
But there's people that are wanting what's left of the
Clinton Democrats, what's left of the Obama Democrats? Guess what
(21:15):
they're Both history and the timing couldn't be worse for
the Democrat Party because right now you have the socialist
justice Democrats making up almost half of the party and
they're wanting to go further left. And the apparatus of
the Clintons and the Obamas, which were fine four years
(21:36):
ago enough to form a ticket which was Biden from
the Obama apparatus and Kamala Harris from the Clinton apparatus,
now both apparatuses including Obamas, which is shocking to a
lot of people. In other words, there's no constituency left
for Michelle Obama, even if she decided to run. But
(21:59):
we'll get to the maybe a little bit later on.
This is the former senior Obama advisor discussing on POD
Save America. The huge trouble the Democrats are in, especially
with Latino voters.
Speaker 4 (22:14):
Listen, twenty twelve, even with Latino voters, actually is the
one group where Hillary Clinton did better.
Speaker 1 (22:18):
They did better than Obama. Sheieved two points better. But so.
Speaker 4 (22:24):
In twenty twenty sixteen, Hillary Clinton won seventy percent of
Latino vote, Kamala Harris won fifty four percent to sixteen
point trap. And then you would like to think that gender,
you know that this is all about men. It's not
all about men. Latina's moved seventeen points in eight years.
Latino men went fourteen points in eight years. There is
(22:45):
no path to the Latinos are the fastest growing population
in the country. They are particularly politically powerful because of
how the population is distributed in electoral rich Sun belt
states like Texas, Florida, Arizona, Nevada, et cetera.
Speaker 1 (23:08):
And urban populations. I hope he brings out so.
Speaker 4 (23:11):
They're becoming more of the electric and we were losing
more of them at a very fast rate. Like if
that trend continues, there is no path to Democrats winning elections,
and so we have to take that everyone was telling
themselves stories about.
Speaker 8 (23:25):
That.
Speaker 4 (23:25):
Maybe twenty twenty was an aberration because Trump made gains
there because of COVID. Like we talk about COVID, this
is something bigger than that, and we have to address that.
The second thing here is that Democrats lost new voters
for the first time. Obama got fifty eight percent of
new voters in twenty twelve, Biden and Clinton got fifty
five percent. Commeyers only got forty nine point five percent
(23:45):
of new voters, which is now.
Speaker 1 (23:48):
But here's what's interesting. I mean, in red I could play,
there's another seven minutes. I can't do all seven minutes.
Would you agree that at no point does he really
identify that they have any real working theory as to
how they've lost these voting blocks, because they don't. So
(24:08):
you know, here I talk every morning about I'm telling you, guys,
they're in my house, their friends are in my house.
This young generation. There's something different.
Speaker 7 (24:19):
Now.
Speaker 1 (24:19):
I don't know if they were just rebelling against woke
parents and that's how they ended up godly and conservative,
but there's something up. And I know it's anecdotal in
my house, but I'm telling you, I'm seeing something different
in these kids. There's a cultural reawakening, there is a
political shift. There's been a loss of trust and where
(24:40):
the left went too far. And I am not perfect
and I don't know everything, but I can tell you
that young gen z ers will look you right in
the eye and profess their faith in Jesus Christ and
tell you they have no problem with homosexuality. But you
go to transgenderism, you don't know what you are. You
(25:03):
want to be them? They it. I mean, they've had
friends who I've identified as dogs. My kids actually had
the younger brother of one of their friends who I
forgot what they call it. Not that I'm not hip,
I just my mind's gone blank. But they identify as
an animal. And so you would go to the house
(25:23):
and have dinner and the kid was dressed like a
dog and he was eating on the floor out of
his plate near the dog. That all was too far
for this generation. So the whole, the the LG part,
they're okay with. Where you went from There was too far.
(25:43):
Boys playing against girls, wanting to go in girls' bathroom,
all too far. You lost them. That was a big
part of it. The other part of it was COVID.
You robbed. You forget how long a year took when
you were a kid. I can't believe it's almost the
(26:03):
end of May right now. That feels like about a
week ago we were celebrating Christmas. But do you remember
when you went third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh grade. Do
you remember staring at that clock waiting it to strike
three o'clock so you could get the heck out of
that classroom mouth and say, waiting for sixth period to
be over, or how long sixth grade felt compared to
(26:26):
how last year at work felt. Come on, this government
destroyed a childhood they can never get back. Somewhere between
COVID somewhere with this woke movement, they went too far.
And I just did a whole story on how the
gen zers in all of the world, the gen zers
(26:46):
in America returned to religion and family. Hispanics, they don't
even get them. They treat them all like the imported
illegals that they were trying to set up a voting
block with. And they're not. These are people of faith
and family and you're selling abortion and debauchery. They're hard
(27:11):
working people who want to be left alone and take
care of their family and you're constantly meddling. I could
play you all one hour, sixteen minutes and thirty one
seconds of this interview, and I will tell you this
the former Obama senior advisor. He gets the problem, he
(27:32):
doesn't know why, and therefore they don't have a clue
on how to solve it. No wonder they're eating caviar
in San Francisco trying to figure out how to talk
to men before the twenty twenty eight election. This is
Alex Thomas Thompson. He is the co author, along with
Jake Tapper, on Original Sin, the book that reveals that
the journalists have identified the greatest scandal in American political history.
(27:57):
It was a fake presidency something of course they sold you.
But now they want to be heroes for telling you. Well,
the biggest question that comes out of this is, Okay,
if Joe Biden wasn't president, who was? Well, maybe you
can find the answer in what if he hadn't dropped
out of the race and what if he had one?
(28:20):
What the heck were they going to do with him
for four years? Because I think somewhere in this answer
is what they did with him the previous four years.
Speaker 5 (28:26):
Quote A long time Biden aid, basically admitting he shouldn't
be running again. They said to you on page eighty five,
he just had to win and then he could disappear
for four years. He'd only have to show proof of
life every once in a while. His aids could pick
up the slack who would have been running the White
House in a second find term.
Speaker 9 (28:43):
Well, this person went on to say that when you're
voting for a president, you're voting for the aids around him.
But these aids were not even Senate confirmed aids. These
are a White House aids. These were unelected people. And
one of the things that really I think comes out
and are reporting here is that if you believe, and
I think a lot of these do sincerely believe that
Donald Trump was and is an essential threat to democracy,
(29:04):
you can nationalize anything, including sometimes doing undemocratic things, which
I think is what this person.
Speaker 1 (29:09):
Is talking about. What I love. And for those of
you that listen to Nashville, you've been hearing this for
so long it's going to make you want to get nauseous.
But how many times have I pointed you to the
shadow campaign to Save the Democracy? Time Magazine, February fifteenth
to twenty twenty one, where they tell you we weaponized COVID,
(29:33):
we changed election laws, we harvested ballots, we stole the
election because we had to to save the democracy. They'll
never come out and tell you, but the truth of
the matter is Joe was supposed to go. He refused,
so we ran it anyway. Don't forget what John Podesta
wrote on inauguration Day in twenty twenty one. This is
(29:57):
the new administrative state headed by Joe by in Kamala Harris.
By the way, these are things Thompson knows because he's
been hiding them and believing in them behind the scenes.
Now he's trying to profit from revealing them. This party
(30:17):
has no path forward because everybody now can clearly see
what they've been doing. But that doesn't stop stupid. Here's
Mamala Kamala Harris in the midst of their biggest scandal
in political history, trying to make Trump still Hitler, still
(30:41):
the PABAC, still the boogeyman. It's important we.
Speaker 10 (30:44):
Remember the nineteen thirties. It's important that we remember that
history has taught us that isolation does not equal insulation.
It is important that we understand and remember history, which
taught us the interdependence and interconnection between nations history that
(31:10):
has taught us the important relationships of trust, the importance
of friendships, integrity, honesty.
Speaker 1 (31:25):
Don't you love getting a lecture on integrity and honesty
relationships in the right side of history from Kamala You
know the one that told you Joe's great. He's never
been more vibranties and always revealing often and er dating.
Speaker 11 (31:45):
People who majored an online activision with a minor and
puberty bought.
Speaker 1 (31:50):
They're getting a little bit y. Any of you in
the media clearly missed the art.
Speaker 7 (31:54):
Of the deal.
Speaker 1 (31:56):
It's going to work out. This is your Morning Show
with Michael del Chono. The COVID vaccine it's no longer
recommended by the CDC for pregnant women or healthy children.
Some say, why was it ever? Art Mayfield reports.
Speaker 11 (32:10):
Healthy Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Junior made the
announcement in a video posted on x Tuesday.
Speaker 2 (32:16):
Last year, the Biden administration urged healthy children to get
yet another COVID shot, despite.
Speaker 1 (32:21):
The lack of any political data.
Speaker 11 (32:23):
Previously, the CDC hand recommended the vaccine for everyone six
months and older. This comes after the FDA announced last
week the new COVID shots would no longer be routinely
approved for healthy children and adults. There isn't a COVID
shot mandate for anyone in the US.
Speaker 1 (32:38):
I'm Mark Meefield. The war between Trump and Harvard is escalated.
Speaker 8 (32:41):
The Trump administration is set to cancel the remaining Harvard
federal contracts worth about one hundred million dollars.
Speaker 3 (32:47):
This is going to be a battle in the courtroom
if it goes all the way to the Supreme Court.
Speaker 1 (32:51):
Trump is going to do that.
Speaker 8 (32:53):
That's Leo Terrell, the head of the Department of Justice
Anti Semitism Task Force. The move comes as the White
House has accused Harvard not doing enough to end anti
semitism on campus. It also accuses the university of racial
discrimination in its admissions process and while hiring I'm Steeler.
Speaker 1 (33:10):
Well, if you think your kids are driving you crazy,
you might be right.
Speaker 12 (33:13):
The study published Tuesday by Columbia University looked at nearly
two hundred thousand mothers over a seven year period and
found only twenty five percent reported excellent mental health, as
down from thirty eight percent in twenty sixteen. The study
also showed declines in physical health among US mothers, especially
among those who were single, younger, less educated, and whose
children were multiracial or uninsured. I'm Tammy Trihio.
Speaker 1 (33:37):
We're all in this together. This is Your Morning Show
with Michael ndheld Chono