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May 30, 2025 21 mins

Polls a plenty, the civil war in the democrat party that has been won, not starting…and how to live longer!

Right now, there are nearly half a million more houses for sale than buyers. Why aren’t people buying, and what does that mean for housing prices? National Correspondent RORY O’NEILL has the story.

Science is now pushing the boundaries of human longevity, allowing people to live healthier, longer lives. Can YOU hack the human lifespan and become a “super ager?” Futurist KEVIN CIRILLI looks at the biotech revolution that is changing how long people live.

 

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Hey, it's me Michael.

Speaker 2 (00:02):
You can listen to your morning show live on the
air or streaming live on your iHeart app Monday through
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oh five nine and twelve fifty WHDZ in Tampa, Florida.

(00:22):
Sure hope you can join us live and make us
a part of your morning routine. In the meantime, enjoy
the podcast.

Speaker 1 (00:29):
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 Michael o'dill chornan.

Speaker 3 (00:43):
Really is your show. Can't have your show without your voice.
Make it heard. Use the talkback button on your iHeartRadio app.
It'll count you down three two one if you get
thirty seconds to make a common ask a question and
take your place at this morning's kitchen table on a
show that belongs to you. Now, for those of you
that would rather would then vocalize, there's always the email

(01:03):
Michael D at iHeartMedia dot com and then don't forget
the podcast. By the way, this weekend, there's so many
things we featured in our spotlight interview the speaker of
newt Ingers. But we had some great, great segments all
week long. And if you missed the lead, you might
have missed a lot. So you can catch up with
the podcast. Just search your morning show or Michael del
Journo into the iHeartRadio app podcast section. It'll pop right up.

(01:26):
What it does, hit subscribe. That weight's waiting for you
every day. Well, good morning if you're just waking up,
it's Friday already. Well, it was a short week. That's
part of why I went by so fast. It's also
the end of May, our final May week. I could
break down and we got some new breakdowns on the
Hispanic votes or blackmail vote or irregular voters, oh pendant voters,

(01:53):
and economic realities, real solutions. They may not fit a
political correct agenda, a populace agenda. The reason they're losing
kids was how you handled COVID, and they've convinced themselves

(02:14):
they'll never have the dream of home ownership. You better
solve the housing crisis. You would think they need a
leader to rise up but the problem is they're followers worldview,
and it shares the worldview of its leaders, and it's

(02:37):
a worldview and a policy view that has failed, and
they don't know how to see it any differently. They're
going to keep choosing. In other words, it's not just
the aocs and the Bernie Sanders that want to go
further left.

Speaker 1 (02:53):
They're constituents to too. Hey, this is John Watson. My
morning show is your morning show with Michael del Jorno.

Speaker 2 (03:07):
Hi, it's me Michael. Your morning show can be heard
live daily on great radio stations like News Radio six
fifty k e n I Anchorage, Alaska, Talk Radio eleven
ninety Dallas Fort Worth, and Freedom one oh four seven
in Washington, d C. We'd love to have you listen
live every day. Make us a part of your morning routine,
but better late than never. Enjoy the podcast.

Speaker 3 (03:27):
By the way, in radio, things happen, and usually you
know what happens is you start getting emails.

Speaker 1 (03:34):
Hey, station's off the air.

Speaker 3 (03:36):
When you're a national show, you start getting them from
all over the country. David Tellsaven Tulsa, I'm only getting
on hold music. Oh, you had a talkback from one
from from Phoenix, right, yeah, from Gary Gary, let them
hear what Gary it is.

Speaker 1 (03:55):
Apparently that's what they were sending that.

Speaker 3 (04:01):
That's what they're playing right now at five point fifty
kfy I am.

Speaker 1 (04:05):
When there's a blackout and your show can't get through,
this is Carrie, we missed part of your show. Sorry
to hear that.

Speaker 3 (04:12):
Yeah, well sorry that happened. That sounded like the beginning
of dream Weaver. And then I got this from Sacramento.
Are you guys having technical issue? Yeah, well you had
a big loss of power for some reason. Yeah, I've
never seen that before.

Speaker 1 (04:23):
Michael.

Speaker 3 (04:23):
I just listened to your interview with Newt Gingrich. He
is a smart man. Really enjoyed listening to him speak.
There is a book I read several years ago called
When the Almond Tree Blossoms by David Aikman. It talks
about the next great civil war between the socialists and
the constitutionalist. Well, that's a civil war threat Newt was,
of course, referring to a civil war within the Democrat Party.

(04:46):
That's a civil war that's been ongoing. Newt's probably only
another person Newt Gingrich, me and David Sanati that I've
ever heard. He've ben addressing I'll never forget the day.
This is an open segment where we can just be
one on one together, so I hope you can appreciate this,
this story. So I'm just googling around trying to figure

(05:07):
out I think at the time, just what was the
origins of AOC. I mean, how do you go from
bartender to defeating a ten term Democrat and get to
the United States Congress and all of this stuff that
came up was this one video and it's the guy

(05:29):
that heads up the Justice Democrat movement.

Speaker 1 (05:33):
And he's just not hiding anything.

Speaker 3 (05:38):
Yeah, we just you know, we went out, we targeted
some people, we found AOC, and just the way she looked,
the way she talked, we decided that's who we were
going to run. And then he starts talking about the
overall vision, which is we don't target Republicans. We target
Democrats because our goal is to take over the Democrat Party.
Then once we take over the Democrat Party, then we're

(05:59):
gonna challenge the Electoral College, and then we're going to
dismantle the republic. It's an anti American movement at its root,
but its goal, like a parasite, is to first kill
its host and then somehow think it can survive it.
That's the problem for a parasite. If the parasite wins,

(06:20):
it kills the host. Guess what happens to it. Once
the host dies, it dies too.

Speaker 1 (06:26):
So what they.

Speaker 3 (06:26):
Hadn't thought through was if they defeat the Democrat Party,
the Democrat Party in essence becomes two fringes or one fringe.
And if this populist movement of Donald Trump Americanism continues
a lot of these become free agents and independent or
they join the Republican Party to some degree. Look, we

(06:48):
talked for years after Ronald Reagan about Reagan Democrats. We
have a study today that we were looking at and
it was very very compelling, I mean, dramatic laws of
Hispanics on the young end and on the mail end.

(07:08):
And then the study is trying to compare irregular voters
to regular voters. So Red and I have this fascinating conversation.
This is the one takeaway other than loss of power
I'd like you to have today. They're trying to map
and figure out what we're wrong. And it's fun to

(07:28):
laugh at a bunch of elitist liberals in a San
Francisco hotel eating Cavia, trying to figure out how to
talk to males in America today when they can't define
a woman and they've hated males for decades. Now they
want to find the language way to communicate. I mean,

(07:48):
that's probably what the Minnesota governor's role was on the ticket.
Let's get a coach to talk to men about hunting,
and of course it doesn't work. They have a worldview problem,
they have a policy view problem, and it's failed. And

(08:10):
now they have a trust problem and that's been revealed.
They got a lot of problems, but the biggest is
this civil war within their party, and they haven't thought
it through now. The problem is Bernie would have gotten
the Democrat Party nomination for President of the United States
in twenty sixteen if the DNC didn't rig it for Hillary.

(08:31):
He would have got it again in twenty twenty if
the DNC didn't rig it for Biden. And then they
had Biden, a sitting president physically not in mind, secure
all the electoral primary votes, then drop out of the
race and they just handed them to Kamala. I mean,
the actual Democrat voters haven't had to say in over

(08:55):
a decade, really a decade and a half, and this squad,
I mean AOC is going to be the front runner.
They represent now somewhere around thirty five thirty six percent
of the party, but post Biden and with reasonable Democrats

(09:15):
wanting to come back towards America and the center, that
number could be as high as forty five percent. Like
political Islam, to give you an example, what do they do?
They first populate, then they infiltrate, then they agitate, then

(09:39):
they take over. And they do that with only thirty percent.
This is already enough to take over the Democrat Party.
And now they're at a fork in the road. And
not just the far left justice socialist Democrats that want
to go further left, but there are is a portion
of progressive Democrats that want to go further left. This
is an unwinnable scenario. So this plays out one of

(10:01):
two ways. The socialist Democrats take over, or they fail
again with DNC involving itself, and then they just get
even more radical. The civil war is not coming my
personal opinion, it's already been won by the socialist faction.

(10:26):
And it didn't just happen organically. It was strategized, it
was organized.

Speaker 1 (10:34):
And it was executed.

Speaker 3 (10:37):
Now that's one half of the story that Newt was addressing,
and he's also the only other person that's addressed it.
The other half is and he's very, very optimistic. I
don't think he should be. Five years ago, I said
by the end of the decade, one or both parties
are going to be gone.

Speaker 1 (10:55):
People thought I was nuts.

Speaker 3 (11:02):
Or five years into this decade and I can't see
a scenario where both parties are intact at the end
of the decade. But what will become of the Republican
Party post Donald Trump? Because these haven't been red waves,
they've been orange waves. What do you do when orange
man leaves? To use their expression, you have to have

(11:23):
some kind of a seamless handoff. Is it Rubio? Is
it jd Vance? What will the establishment Republican apparatus at
the grasstops and grassroots too? So the Republican Party has
already gone in a sense that it's become the Reagan
Revolution meets the Tea Party meets MAGA. But establishment Republican

(11:46):
Party it may be as fringe as establishment Democrat Party
in some ways both have already changed. New touches on that.
I also made one of the comment, and I don't
mean this as a backhanded compliment at all. In fact,
I'll do two others just so you know I'm serious.

(12:07):
Pat Buchanan, Remember Pat Buchanan used to be on Crossfire
on CNN. It was also really big in Republican politics
and behind h I think it was he goes back
to the Nixon administration.

Speaker 1 (12:18):
I believe Pat Buchanan.

Speaker 3 (12:20):
I can't watch Pat pu Cannon, never could, but oh
I love to read him. His books were unbelievable. He
had one book that talked about was talking about immigration.
And we used to be a great melting pot, but
then we changed because we stopped dissimilating. So it used

(12:45):
to be in the great days of America. You would
leave your failed country and it's failed politics and its
failed culture, come to America of hope and freedom and liberty,
and you would denow I mean I saw this in
real life experientially with my great grandparents and grandparents.

Speaker 1 (13:05):
They gave up their life in Italy.

Speaker 3 (13:07):
We weren't allowed to speak Italian even though they did,
and they were usually talking about us because they knew
what they gave up for our future and the reality
my children are now living. But there was an assimilation.
You left your God, your government, your loyalties, and you came.
You denounced them, and you came and you assimilated. You
learned this language, you contributed. You became an American. An

(13:29):
American wasn't defined by a GPS pin. It was defined
by what America is and the role of the citizen
and the self governed. That stopped, and so we just became.
We went from being a melting pot to a melting culture.
I mean, it was a great book by Pat Buchanan,
and I was like, Wow, you read Pat Buchanan. You

(13:53):
don't watch them. Same thing with Chris Matthews. But Chris
Matthews wrote a book on the Nixon Kennedy race.

Speaker 1 (13:59):
Fabulous.

Speaker 3 (14:00):
I can't stand chrismath use I can't watch him. The
Boy I can read him. And some of you may
be put off by Newt. I think most of you
are not the boy. If you've never read a new
Gingrich book, oh is he a read?

Speaker 1 (14:12):
So yeah?

Speaker 3 (14:13):
If you thought the interview was good, you're gonna love
the book. Trump's Triumph, it's his triumph. It was his sacrifice,
his determination, self sacrifice across him everything, character, assassinations, physical, assassination.
It was his triumph, but it's America's greatest comeback. And

(14:37):
just as we talked about for years the Reagan Revolution,
what is the Trump revolution? Just as we talked about
for years, what is the Reagan Democrat voting block, You're
gonna see what is the Trump voting block. That's why
I know one disappointment read has as we're going to
break down all these Democrat numbers with Hispanic voters. But
here's the ultimate problem I'm going to dismount with. They're

(15:01):
trying to figure out what wrong by comparing twenty twenty
four to twenty twenty, which is to say, they're trying
to figure out where thirty million voters in twenty twenty went.
When you know, and I know, and none of us
are allowed to say, they probably never really existed.

Speaker 2 (15:20):
It's Your Morning Show with Michael del Choano.

Speaker 3 (15:24):
Israel is accepting a new proposal for a ceasefire. We'll
say goodbye to Elon Musk in a news conference today,
but the Doge mission will continue at the Eastern Conference
finals in the NBA are not over yet. Big John's Knicks,
They're staying alive. Got to have a futurist and today's
topic is science. It's now pushing the boundaries of human longevity.
My pison, Kevin SERRILLI is here and you know, Kevin,

(15:47):
I spent all my life knowing I'm going to live
forever and making sure I spend that forever in the
presence of Christ. Others are trying to linger here on
earth and I don't know why, but they can. And
if they can, what does that mean? Is that a
good thing?

Speaker 4 (16:02):
I love that.

Speaker 5 (16:04):
Right on with you there on that intro, great intro.
It really really that, really this is awesome. You know,
it's super aging and it's living longer. But it's not
just who wants to live long, you know and to.

Speaker 4 (16:17):
A hospital bed?

Speaker 5 (16:18):
Yeah, exactly, it's so it's it's it's living longer. But
like with with with it, we all know an elderly
person who is still with it, and you think, what
are their secrets? Well, scientists at Northwestern University looked into
super agers they're calling them super agers, and they mapped
their brains with artificial intelligence, and what they looked at

(16:39):
was the part of their brain and the cortex that
the region that controls at tension and memory. And they
found that as you get older, which might not surprise people.
Your brain shrinks or it gets inflamed because of diet
and being connected and exercise or lack of exercise. But
super agers brains didn't shrink, and it's still it looked

(17:02):
almost as if that their brain was someone in the
age of their thirties and forties, all right, And do.

Speaker 3 (17:06):
We know and do we know why? In other words,
did they maintain their purpose? Did they maintain work? Because
you know, I find this human body that God made
and I've seen this because I hang around nursing homes
with two elderly parents.

Speaker 1 (17:19):
You know, you use it or you lose it.

Speaker 3 (17:21):
My dad's still walking around the woods today doing stuff
and that's why he's a superager at eighty what would
he be now eighty seven?

Speaker 1 (17:28):
Others all are laying in bed, all right?

Speaker 3 (17:31):
So you got to have purpose, you gotta have movement,
You got to have proper diet. But do we have
the keys to what it is that's keeping the yes.

Speaker 4 (17:39):
So there's a guy named there's a guy named.

Speaker 5 (17:41):
Dan Spner, and he studies to your point, blue zones,
he calls them. And the blue zones are parts of
the world where there are more people higher concentrations of
people who age beyond one hundred years healthy. And these
blue zones they have daily rhythms, he calls it, which
is similar to what Northwestern is and very you're talking
about it as well, the daily rhythm of daily habits

(18:03):
of practicing everything from going on walks or even light
strength training, checking in and reading, but also.

Speaker 1 (18:11):
Learning a new skill. So these blue zones.

Speaker 5 (18:14):
The highest concentration in the world with people over the
age of one hundred is Akinawa, Japan, and then start Dinia, Italy.
But there's only one blue zone in the United States.
Where do you what state do you think it's in?

Speaker 3 (18:27):
Oh, man, I'm gonna guess Washington or.

Speaker 1 (18:35):
I don't know, Washington or New York. Definitely not New York.

Speaker 5 (18:40):
Yeah, it's Lone Molinda in California, California, Okay, this, yeah,
and it's it's it's a little more rural part of California.
But they eat a lot of plants and vegetables that
they practice the Sabbath rest day and they've got walking groups.
And so it's proof that it's possible in the United
States that we can age gracefully because is one in

(19:00):
five Americans. This really shocked me one of.

Speaker 3 (19:03):
The bucket of chicken and fries at Yankee Stadium.

Speaker 1 (19:07):
That's not a part of it, all right, go ahead, No.

Speaker 5 (19:10):
One in five Americans are going to be older than
sixty five by twenty thirty.

Speaker 4 (19:14):
So we're aging very poorly in our nation. But we've
got a kind of correct course.

Speaker 1 (19:18):
Fast, all right. So it's it's what healthy diet? Which
would you know?

Speaker 3 (19:24):
I mean, we see that in Japan, we see that
in some European countries, healthy diet movement.

Speaker 1 (19:30):
We haven't really addressed purpose.

Speaker 3 (19:32):
I think social securities and solvency is going to force
us to work longer.

Speaker 5 (19:36):
That could help too, right, yeah, but also just staying
you know, having a purpose, but also just being able
to have strong family ties, simple diets and just and
the pace is slower, but the purpose is sharp. And
that's really I think.

Speaker 4 (19:51):
With Northwestern found But it pivots to something.

Speaker 5 (19:55):
That you and I were talking about the other week,
which is how do we convince people to inject this
into their lives. And with the artificial intelligence being able
to tell us about our early signs of Alzheimer's Parkinson's dementia,
and as the science continues to revolutionize, that we're able
to treat our brain more like a muscle or even

(20:17):
the engine to a car and get a peek under
the hood of it. So if people are given the
information earlier in life, Hey, you're showing this part of
your brain is developing here, then hopefully they would be
able to make better choices so that they are more motivated,
so that when they're in their eighties and nineties, which
is going to become increasingly more likely, that they are

(20:39):
able to actually enjoy being in their eighties and ninety.

Speaker 3 (20:43):
And I want to make it to the nineties just
to see how fat I'm going to get.

Speaker 1 (20:46):
Kevin Sarelli is our future as to make it to
one hundreds, you want to go to a hundred.

Speaker 3 (20:50):
I'm not suicidal, but at some point I'm ready to
go be with Jesus. But anyway, make the bottom line
is we don't know how all this isolation of social
media or AI is going to fact it, because human
relationship is key, just like diet and movement. Futurist Kevin
Cirelli is always cherish every second, but he we'll talk

(21:11):
against soon.

Speaker 1 (21:11):
I pray we're all in this together. This is your
morning show with Michael Hild Choo,
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