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June 20, 2024 33 mins
My most interesting stories of the day and you are not as old as you feel!

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, I'm Michael, and your morning show is heard on
great radio stations across the country like one oh five,
nine twelve fifty w HNZ and Tampa, Florida, News Radio
five seventy w k b N and Youngstown, Ohio and
News Radio one thousand KTOK in Oklahoma City. Love to
have you listen to us live in the morning, and
of course we're so grateful you came for the podcast.

Speaker 2 (00:20):
Enjoy wal two three, starting your morning off right, A new.

Speaker 1 (00:26):
Way of talk, a new way of understanding. Well, because
we're in this staget, this is your morning show with
Michael del john Now from halfway through my cup of
coffee to the top of your brim, welcome to your
morning show. I am Michael del Jarno, and together we
all get to enjoy the first day of summers. I'd

(00:49):
like to say day three under the heat dome our
so they'll try to convince you if you're just waking up.
We often do our top five stories of the day,
and that is the news cycle. I mean, that's part
of what we deliver for you. And then I have
my favorite stories of the day. They don't necessarily fall

(01:12):
under the news cycle, but I think they're the most
interesting things. I told somebody one time early on in radio,
I said, well, And he was at a Washington d
C all news station that did very well, and I
was the program director of a talk station. We were
just kind of comparing both products and the difference between
the products, and I said, well, I could never do

(01:35):
what you do, though what you do is very important,
and what you do you do very well, but I
couldn't do it. And he said why. I said, well,
because news is always important, but it's not always interesting.
I'd rather live because I'm a curious person in the
world of interesting and that's what I think talk radio
allows that news doesn't. And that's kind of the difference

(01:55):
with these segments. So this would not and by any
stretch of the imagination, and qualify as a top news
story today. Thursday, June twentieth, tropical storm Alberto Wood, the
White House canceling a meeting with Israel, Wood, Russia and
North Korea building an alliance. Would Fox newsball showing Joe
Biden leading? Where they getting mad information from? But I

(02:21):
love these stories. Here's a great one, weightlifted. Now why
this resonates with me? Is I mean ice lift weights.
I had my bench in my garage. We had our
weight room next to the locker room. I played football, basketball, baseball.
Don't get excited. I was too small to play football,

(02:41):
but I loved it. I was short. Nick and I
were watching the NBA and wondering, what's it like to
be in an NBA final and score thirty points? I mean,
the most I ever scored was in a JV game
six against Delta Heritage, and I was high as a kite.
Ice goed and sick. I still know how they went in.
I'm in the zone, all right, So I stuck. I

(03:02):
was good at baseball, but I stunk at football and basketball.
But I looked at weights then, and you did that,
and then you get into life, you know, twenties, thirties, forties.
I'm in my fifties and here comes my son, a teenager,
and he's getting ripped and then walking up to me
and patting my belly. So like an idiot, I start

(03:25):
going to the gym with him, and I let this insane,
youthful nut train me. What are you thinking? You know
what my son does when he's a little bored, just
hops up and whips out about forty chin ups. When's
the last time you try to chin up? It's it's
an impossible feat getting well, well, what about twenty of them?

(03:50):
But he's got me lifting weights, and I'm getting stronger,
and I'm looking in the mirror and I'm starting to
look like an old me. And then it come across
this story in the Washington Post. This way, it's gonna
give you a specific workout. It's not rocket science. I mean,
you're working your forearms, your biceps, your shoulders, your chest.

(04:13):
It's this. You know, the stuff that we do. Weightlifting
in your sixties can preserve your strength for years. Older
people had stronger leg muscles years after a simple study
with a twelve month weightlifting program. And this was very

(04:34):
I'm gonna spare you a lot of time, very moderate weightlifting,
nothing like what my son is putting me through and
nothing like you would just put yourself through three sets
of twelve and you know a weight that you'll notice.
God created an amazing body. You start hydrating it, you

(04:54):
start feeding it right, you start moving, you start lifting.
It'll come back like you don't use it, it will
wither if you let it with her too long. It
thinks it's time to go and starts checking out. So
this study shouldn't surprise us. But researchers at the University
of Copenhagen and Denmark took these sixty year olds, put

(05:16):
him on a moderate twelve month month late moderate lifting
training program and regimen and did so for a year. Nothing,
nothing dramatic, just three days a week. Now, I can
tell you when I used to lift weights, I would
do like upper body one day, cardio the next, legs

(05:40):
the third day, cardio the next, and then maybe do
something else like you know, setups or whatever. The third day.
Not my son, one day's shoulders and you do seven
different weightlifting things of shoulders alone till you're shaking and
you're ready to hate somebody sculpting. Yeah. Then you do
another day check and I'm like, well, I do bench

(06:01):
presses right, Oh no, there's like fifteen different things that
you do. So I mean that would not be what
this is. So imagine if we took these sixty year
olds in Copenhagen and game a week with nick let
alone a year, but this is just light, three days
a week moderate weight training. What happened. Leg strength a

(06:26):
critical indicator of wider health and mobility among older people.
I once try a study and it's very very accurate.
If you can stand, lift your left leg and keep
your balance for ten seconds, then lift your right leg
keep your balance for ten seconds, you're probably not dying,

(06:46):
not health related for ten years. And you're like, how
could that be true? How much our weakness is revealing
to us, so this doesn't surprise me. Leg strength a
critical indicatory like strength, very important to the medical researchers.
We use the legs in a lot of everyday tasks
like getting up and getting down from chairs. It's so

(07:08):
important for reducing the risk of falls for a lot
of everyday tasks that we do. As part of the study,
scientists from the University Hospital in Copenhagen divided four hundred
and fifty one people at retirement age into three randomized groups,
each task with completing a different one year exercise regiment.
The heavy weightlifting training group visited a commercial gym three

(07:30):
times a week for a supervised program of full body strengthening.
Participants determine the most weight that they could lift at
one time using typical weight machines, and then they worked
out at seventy eighty five percent of that maximum strength
that's kind of how you figure out what you should
be lifting. Although there's a guy so ripped at Planet
Fitness and he's sitting there with twenty pound dumbbells, So

(07:52):
don't think it's all about weight, But anyway, that's kind
of how they determine it. They trained three times a week,
doing three sets of every exercise. Each setting included six
to twelve reps. All of the scientists described the regiment
as heavy weightlifting. Compared to the other two groups in
the study, the weight training program may be similar to
many standard weight training routines. The second group underwent a

(08:15):
year long moderate intensity training regiment using body weight and
resistance bans three times a week, and you can get
a lot of results from that. The third group control group,
did less than one hour of strenuous exercise a week.
Over four years, scientists observed the participants and their physical strength,
including leg strength, hand grip strength, lean leg mass. Researchers

(08:40):
measure participants strength at the beginning of the supervised twelve
month training and then again after it ended. They followed
up every year after for four years. After three years,
researchers noted that a small minority of exercise participants had
continued with the same program, so many of them just
did it for a year and then stopped, and they
still saw lasting, massive results. We found that if you

(09:05):
did one year of resistance training with heavyweights, you were
able to maintain the strength in your legs that you
had when you began. The other groups were found to
have lost strength from their baselines four years after the
start of the study. Leg strength performance decreased on average
among those with the modern intensity training and the non
exercise control group, although most significantly, most significantly under the

(09:30):
ladder bottom line of this whole story. That makes it
of interesting. As much as I gripe about my son,
he has probably in this year changed my sixties and
seventies remarkably. Again, nobody knows how long they're going to live,
but you can't control how you're going to live. No

(09:50):
matter how long you live, do you want to spend
it in the bed in the nursing home or do
you want to be active and strong and able. It's
never too late. This This group was done with all
sixty five year olds and older. Remember when you when
we were young in the seventies, your sixty eight year
old grandfather looked like an old old person looks like

(10:11):
a ninety year old today. It's never too late to
strengthen today. Had to do it this segment because we're
going to talk to Roy O'Neil next half hour. The
average American feels ten years older than they actually are.
You're as old as you feel, well, you feel ten
years older. So the answer is you're not as old

(10:34):
as you feel. You feel worse than you should. But
it's never too late. Look at this regimen and what
it showed and the lasting results. Do it for one year,
it can impact your decade. I thought that was a
fascinating story. Another favorite story caned I can artificial intelligence
actually police itself? Experts say chatbots can contect each other's

(10:55):
own gaffs. So we've got a gene out of the bottle,
we got the toothpaste out of the tube. There's no
getting it back in. Artificial intelligence, by the way, never
stops learning and it's continually mastering whatever course you set
it on. If you ever watch a documentary the Social Dilemma,

(11:20):
the very people that created all these algorithms, we're telling you, oh,
we created them, like anybody would. I mean, what television producer,
what program director in radio. What business owner wouldn't want
more customers spending more time and buying more. So we
set these algorithms to get you to come to our
websites and stay there, come more often, and stay longer

(11:43):
when you come. Well, once you set that in motion,
and you see that it arrives at obsession, isolation, loneliness, depression, suicide, addiction,
deadly addiction. How do you stop it? You don't if
you try, The algorithm doesn't know how do. It just
keeps perfecting. And now everybody's scratching their head, going, now,

(12:07):
what do we do the AI and mean you think
deep fakes or something? Why do you see AI fakes?
It's already begun. I'm seeing videos every day and I
start watching. I'm like, there's no way Trump did this,
There's no way Biden did this. There's no way Biden
was dancing with this burs and so what do we

(12:28):
always say at the end of the day, and this
is early in the journey, what does it look like?
You remember the early days of internet, the early days
of social media, the early days of smartphone, compared to
how we see it today, Imagine where AI goes. There'll
be no reality. You won't no reality from fake. Therefore,

(12:50):
a guy could really kill someone on camera, you'll assume
he didn't, or someone to get killed on camera, you'll
assume he's dead, and then he's back and you're like,
oh my god, he rose from the dead. You will know,
So nothing will be real. That's the problem. If there
is no absolute truth, then everything's a lie. And now

(13:18):
they're going to look you in the eye and say, oh, no,
no problem. The same problem. Artificial intelligence will be the
solution to artificial intelligence. Right up there with the wolf
guarding the henhouse, right and maybe my favorite story of
the day and only got one minute left. The headline
really says it all. Senator Ran Paul, one of my favorites,

(13:39):
a true statesmen, says, a partisan Department of Justice continues
to refuse to investigate Fauci as the guy had said,
we had nothing to do with any type of gain
of function research. Oh yeah you did. We had no
funding involved in that. Wuhan lamb oh? Guy stually did.

(14:01):
This guy has perjured himself. He is lied, and is
there going to be any accountability or is partisan politics
going to protect him? Look, there was a COVID virus
there was gain of function research, Why was it being done?
How to get out of that lab? Why did China

(14:21):
do so much to prohibit any spread within their country
but recklessly allowed spread to other countries? And why did
other countries worth spread react one way, others react another?
Why did some I mean never mind if it was
being created to be a biological weapon, look at how
they used COVID as a political weapon, as a control mechanism.

(14:51):
Is anybody going to go back and understand and hold
accountable those that were wrong. You can't tell everybody get
a vaccine, it'll stop the spread, knowing it wouldn't. Get
a vaccine, It'll keep you from getting COVID knowing it wouldn't.
That's not what vaccines do. Or how about it's not

(15:15):
even in the story. The Milk and Institute video or Fauci
and others are all sitting around griping, Wow, this mRNA,
this is this is the direction. But you know, we
got at least a decade and trillions of dollars of
expense to get this to become mainstream where we can
just you know, map out vaccines. And then one of
the scientists goes, well, we could create an emergency, you know,

(15:39):
so we can get by all the time period and
the spending and the trials. You know, Let's say, if
we have like a virus spread from China and then
it happened a month later, is anybody gonna go back
and investigate any of this? And why aren't they and
who are they protecting? And how vulnerable are we for
the same weapon to be used against us again? Well

(15:59):
there's wondering, one guy saying at one guy asking, and
a senator ran Paul Hi, It's Michael. Your morning show
airs live five to eight am Central, six to nine
Eastern in great cities like Memphis, Tennessee, Telsa, Oklahoma, Sacramento, California.
We'd love to be a part of your morning routine,
but we're happierre here now. Enjoy the podcast. Thanks for

(16:21):
waking up with your morning show. We you know, the
old expression is you are as old as you feel.
What do you feel? And how would you know? I mean,
I know I don't feel like when I was twenty,
because I lived the twenties and I'm no longer in

(16:41):
the twenties. But how do I know what seventy feels
like when I haven't even lived the sixties. Yet well,
turns out you're not as old as you feel. You
actually feel older than you are. I'm just trying to
figure out how we know what that feels like. Roy
O'Neil is here to join us and sort this all
out for us. Rory, how old are we and how
old do we feel? Yeah?

Speaker 3 (17:02):
I want to know what time of day they ask
the question, because when my alarm is going off at
three thirty in the morning, I feel pretty darn old.

Speaker 1 (17:10):
You know this time of day, I'm pretty good.

Speaker 3 (17:12):
But yeah, they found that you can almost break it
down by generations, by the feeling that people have of
how much older they actually are. So baby boomers feel
fourteen years older than their actual age. Gen xers feel
ten years older. And a lot of this all goes
back to joint pain and aches, all.

Speaker 1 (17:32):
Right, So we're going to focus on joint pain, all right.
So yeah, because I don't know what seventy feels like,
I don't know what sixty feels like, but I know
I don't feel like twenty. So I mean, how do
they determine what it is? It's all perception, right at
the end of the day.

Speaker 3 (17:49):
It's all in your head, right, and I can't remember
what thirty five feels like.

Speaker 1 (17:53):
That's my problem. You no, I don't.

Speaker 3 (17:55):
Yeah, And then you know, the people blame why they
feel older on the aches and pains, but also as
how they get tired more easily, or how they just
have less energy. You can feel overall less active, all
different factors.

Speaker 1 (18:09):
And to your point, yeah, it's all in your head.
As we did a study reported on a study that
was done in Denmark, and they did it was really fascinating,
fascinating to me. I don't know, maybe the audience thought
it was boring, but they took a bunch of sixty
five or older people and they put them through three
different regimens for a year. One did kind of, you know,

(18:30):
pretty intense weightlifting three days a week, some did more
moderate strength training with bands, and then some did very
little to none and then looked at the muscle loss
after that. I mean, you can go for one week,
for one year, three days a week, do some weightlifting
and it can impact the next decade for you. So
you know, again, how much of this is I think

(18:52):
you look at pictures, you know, I know what my
sixty five year old grandfather looked like, and I'm only
six years old. Away from that, he didn't look anything
like me. So I think we look younger than we
used to faces everything, but I don't know that we're
as healthy. My grandfather would have probably played handball with

(19:13):
me into the ground. So it's all I don't know.
I don't know what to make of all of it,
other than eat well, small meals, often hydrate. Move you'll
be fine. Don't smoke. That's the other reason older people
looked a lot older.

Speaker 3 (19:26):
You know that those previous generations more than were smokers,
and that makes you look a whole lot older, a
lot quicker.

Speaker 1 (19:33):
This may sound like a crazy statement, and I don't
know if I could even prove it, but I think
they drank more than we drink. Sure, I mean they
drank a lot back then. They smoked a lot back then.
I mean, I remember it was uncommon to see something
it didn't smoke two packs of cigarettes a day, and
it wasn't Spike Seltzer's. It was the real stuff, but
the thing, and in small offices or in the homes,

(19:55):
which you know, we learned that second hand smoke was
actually more more dangerous than first hand. So all right,
there's a lot of this I again at the end
of the day. Exercise move move, move is good. I
think you look marvelous. I don't know. I can't tell
how bad you for radio? Yeah, got a face perfect
for radio. We're both ready for the lunar module. I mean,

(20:16):
I think our joints would do much better.

Speaker 3 (20:18):
Weightless, zero G baby, that's the one way around all this.

Speaker 1 (20:22):
But yeah, you should have seen me after a couple
of roller coasters at Cedar Point. I was not feeling like,
not feeling like they old me at all. When Rory
comes back later in the show, do you have emergency
savings accounts? This is going to be fun to talk
about because you know, long term retirement should be about
twenty percent, your tithes should be about ten percent, your

(20:43):
short term savings should be roughly ten to fifteen percent
or six months of your total expenses, that kind of thing.
And I'm wondering. My curiosity goes, what do we call
an emergency fund? Because I think I can prove to
you when we talk about this, Rory, in a couple
of hours, that we've been using our four one k's
not for retirement, but for emergency savings accounts. And that's

(21:07):
two completely different things. But yeah, we obviously we spend
way more than we should and we save way less
than we should. I think that will be the findings,
but you won't know till Rory returns in hour three.
All right, forty one minutes after the offer. You're just
waking up. These are your top five stories of the day.
Welcome to summer. It's officially here. The first day, Mark

(21:29):
Mayfield has more.

Speaker 4 (21:30):
It's the summer solstice, the longest day of the year
north of the equator. Earth has a solstice every six months,
in June, which has the most minutes of daylight, and
in December, which has the fewest minutes of daylight. Thursday,
we'll show sunlight for over fourteen hours. Temperatures are already
feeling like summer across the US, as there's no relief
in sight for the heat wave which is roasting the

(21:51):
Northeast and the Midwest. It's been decades since such dangerous
heat has lingered for this long in some of those areas.
Multiple cities from Chicago to Boston are expected to reach
the highest level of the Weather Service Heat risk forecast
over the coming days. Our Mark Mayfield.

Speaker 1 (22:05):
Sounds like a good day to sneak into my wife's
my mother's apartment complex and spent some time at the pool.
I don't belong to the US Central Command says. An
airstrike in Syria killed a senior ISIS official. Lisa Taylor
has more.

Speaker 5 (22:19):
The strike took place on Sunday. Sentcom says the death
will disrupt isis' ability to conduct terror attacks. It adds
there is no indication any civilians were harmed in the strike.
I'm Lisa Taylor.

Speaker 1 (22:30):
The White House reportedly canceled a high level meeting with
Israeli officials on Iran that was scheduled for today. They
were actually on the plane on their way here when
the White House canceled the meeting. According to the Access report,
it had to do with Benjaminette Yahoo in a video
that posted claiming the US was withholding military aid. President
Biden's top advisors were reportedly enraged by the video, and

(22:52):
some Israeli officials were already en route to Washington, DC
when the meeting was called off. US and Israeli officials
were expected to discuss Iron's nuclear program and the ongoing
war in Gaza. You would think two subjects far more
important than their over emotional feelings. Justin. Timberlakes attorney finally
spoke out over the pop stars d WI arrest early

(23:13):
on Tuesday morning in Sagharbor, New York. Lisa G's here
with the details.

Speaker 2 (23:16):
In a statement to page six, Edward Burke Junior said,
we look forward to vigorously defending mister Timberlake against these allegations.
He will have a lot to say at the appropriate time.
After leaving a local hotel restaurant, cops say forty three
year old Timberlake ran a stop sign and when you
got pulled over, he reportedly refused a breathalyzer test. Timberlake

(23:38):
was taken into custody, arraigned, and released without bail. The
incident comes in the middle of his World tour. He
set to play Madison Square Garden next week. Lisa G
NBC News Radio, New York.

Speaker 1 (23:49):
What do you do when you have a problem too
big to solve? You form a federal task force? What's
the big problem? Children struggling with ob city? Mark Mayfield
is back with more details.

Speaker 4 (23:58):
The US Preventatives Services Task Force published its recommendations on Tuesday,
and it's calling for behavioral interventions for kids age six
and older with high body mass index. The new guidelines
replaced their twenty seventeen guidance that only recommended that children
be screened for obesity. The new report claims that nearly
one in five kids has obesity and that the RADI

(24:19):
is higher among Latino, Black, and Native American children, as
well as children from lower income families.

Speaker 1 (24:25):
I'm Mark Mayfield. I got to tell you I made
an observation. Right next to the hair salon I have
to bring my mom to once a week is a
weight Watchers location. And so as I'm walking my mom
to the door at the beauty shop, I passed by
and I see the sign in the door closed, and
then there was a sign next to it, what's coming soon?

(24:47):
And I thought, oh my gosh, weight Watchers went out
of business. How crazy is that? I mean, what was
the final straw when Miss Alabama was four hundred pounds
of that? These people want to lose weight. They don't
care anymore. I quit, we quit, they don't want to.
I thought, Wow, they just giving up the fight. The

(25:09):
Solstice is science, but today is also a lot superstition.
Pre Tennis has that story.

Speaker 5 (25:15):
In some cultures.

Speaker 6 (25:16):
If you harvest a plant today it'll possess magical powers
that can protect against evil spirits. Fire is also a
big deal for the solstice. It drives away evil spirits
in case you don't have a plant to harvest. The
solstice is also associated with fertility, so be careful man
eating sharks, poisonous jellyfish, even quicksand all big today, and

(25:38):
be on the lookout for curses. But it is said
if you make a wish at sunrise or sunset today,
it will come true. I'm pre Tennis.

Speaker 1 (25:46):
Oh, I love bre Tennis. You know the thing is,
most of the things we worry about never happen. Now,
your body doesn't know the difference between what you worry
about and what actually happens. So if every day you're
convinced Joe Biden's real, we're all gonna die, that's a
lot of stress. That's so I it's over GDP, this

(26:06):
whole thing's gonna collabse. That's a lot of stress. And
it may or may not happen. I mean, these are
all bad things. They need to be addressed and changed.
But I said, I want to live in pre Tennis.
This world.

Speaker 7 (26:17):
Every good wars, rus of wars, depression, recession, be careful today.
There's a lot of rescisions that some results is equals fertility.

Speaker 1 (26:28):
NHL Stanley Cup Finals. The Oilers have forced a Game six,
so we're flying all the way back Deadmond tomorrow night
for Game six. Florida is still up three games to two.
The Cardinals loss to the Mariners four to three. Rangers
won five to three over the Mets, raised one three
to two over the Twins, and that's a three to
one winner over the d Backs, and the Guardians with
a shutout, went over the Mariners eight nothing. So we
had four city winners and three city losers. Hey, this

(26:55):
is top Top Kathy Henters and my morning show is
your morning show with Michael vale Joorno. Welcome to Thursday,
Jude the twentieth You havel Lo twenty twenty four. This
is your morning show on the air and streaming live
on your iHeartRadio app. I'm Michael del Jorno at fifty
two minutes after the hour. I don't know how you live.
I don't know what shapes your life, what shapes your vision,

(27:18):
your capacity, your view of opportunities versus what's holding you back.
I don't know how much the past dictates your future.
The past is gone, it no longer exists. It can
be learned from. But that's about it. There is really
the future isn't in our control. It isn't here yet.

(27:39):
All we have is the moment. Now, that's not what
I see in our culture today. I see a culture
that's abandoned God. Well, from my worldview perspective, that's everything.
So I don't know where you go from there. I
think you lose everything. I look at my life and

(27:59):
I see failures and successes. I see failures that were
my failure and my fault. I see failures that were
not my fault. Some of the greatest things that have
happened in my life and some of the toughest times
of my life all seemingly were orchestrated or controlled for

(28:22):
the good. So it's not even on my scoreboard. But ultimately,
as people, whether you find it in faith or lose
it in lack of faith, or culture fails you, you're
given a choice. Be a victim or be a victor.

(28:46):
Now what does this have to do Well, it's what
we talk about often all, according to the Bible, have
failed and fallen short. Pretty inclusive group. All right, God
is good, we are not and so as countries were

(29:11):
no different. And our country has failed on certain things
and righted its course. But what if you were drawing
all of your conclusions today based on all the negative
things that happened versus the positive. You become a victim mentality,
not a victor. And we tend to as humans, have

(29:34):
this tendency. We don't do anything to solve mass shootings.
We just become Nashville strong after one. Sometimes we fail
to even help those around us after a tornado or hurricane,
but we become New Orleans strong because we have a
victim mentality, not a victim mentality. Now, this is really key,

(29:56):
and what we're about to talk about. Some of this
is ancient stuff that hasn't even happened to those living now.
Some of this is perception over reality, and then some
of it's real, and it's a combination of all that
makes it powerful. But here's the research. Many black Americans

(30:18):
view themselves at least somewhat successful and are optimistic about
their financial future. But the Pew Research Center also found
most believe the US institutions fall short when it comes
to treating black people fairly. This is one of the

(30:42):
big problems we have in our country today. We've lost trust,
lost trust in the media, lost trust and government leaders.
So while many Black Americans view themselves at least somewhat successfully,
they still think there's a failure from government. A new
and now also suggest that many Black Americans believe the

(31:03):
racial bias in the US institutions is not merely a
matter of passive negligence, it is the result of intentional design. Specifically,
large majorities described the prisons as unfair seventy four percent,
politicians sixty seven percent, the economy and economic opportunities sixty
five percent. Black Americans mistrust the US institutions is informed

(31:30):
by history, slavery, implementation of Jim Crow laws the past,
to the rise of mass and incarceration, which we would
say as a recent past and has been narrativized presidently presently.
Several studies show the racial disparity and income, wealth, education, imprisonment,

(31:51):
and health outcomes persist even to this day. So you know,
day in and day out, we talk about what's really shifting.
I mean, we got a Fox poll that shows Joe
Biden in the lead, but that's the only poll, and
that's not even the battleground states and A big part
of the shift is young voters, A big part of
the shift is Hispanic voters, and a huge part of

(32:11):
the shift is black voters, and so understanding what they're
really feeling like. Some of it is what they've been told,
it's just the narrative, you know, coming back, and then
some of it is real. And for the Democrats, they've
got to try to reach these people as a solution,

(32:33):
and they've pandered to them, and they've promised them, and
they've underdelivered. And now you've got Donald Trump, who's already
anti establishment, anti government, coming along and reaching them real quickly.
Only got twenty seconds. Prison system is number one on
the list. Courts and judicial process number two on the list.
Policing number three on the list, so law and order,

(32:56):
then political system, then economic system. Lowest on the list
is healthcare system and news media. I'll just leave it
with a question, how much of this is what you've
told them, what you've taught them, what you've indoctrinated them,
and what you've reinforced. We're all in this to get it.
This is your Morning Show with Michaelndel Joano
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