Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
Morning. Everybody is the dj n V jess Hilarius, Charlamagne
the God. We are the Breakfast Club. Let's get in
some front page news, National, Quick Sports, and Monday Night Football.
The Bears beat the Commander's twenty five to twenty four,
and the Falcons beat the Bills twenty four to fourteen.
And Major League Baseball, the Dodgers beat the Brewers two one.
They lead the series one nothing, and the Mariners beat
(00:23):
the Blue Jays ten to three. They lead that series
to nothing. All right, what's that to me?
Speaker 2 (00:28):
Hey girl, past Mamie back in big Good morning everyone,
Good morning. All right. Well we start this morning in
the Middle East, where President Trump just wrapped up a
fast moving trip, calling it a historic dawn of a
new error, and the President he signed a US broker
piece still in Egypt, alongside key leaders from Israel and
across the region, marking the official end of the two
(00:50):
year war between Israel and Hamas. Trump says, the agreement
will not only end the fighting in Gaza, but could
reshape the Middle East, calling it his most significant foreign
achievement yet. Let's listen to some of that speech.
Speaker 3 (01:03):
But the momentous breakthrough that we're here to celebrate tonight
is more than the end of the war in Gaza.
It's with God's help, it'll be the new beginning for
an entire beautiful Middle East. From this moment forward, we
can build a region that's strong and stable and prosperous
and united and rejecting the path of terror. The final
(01:24):
sprint to this deal began less than three weeks ago
on the sidelines of the United Nations in New York.
I met with many of the people in this room,
and it all just started coming together.
Speaker 2 (01:37):
So as part of that deal, the last twenty living
Israeli hostages held by Hamas were released yesterday. They were
released in exchange for the freedom of nineteen hundred Palestinian prisoners.
Now President Trump declared the war over, but experts warn
the piece may be very fragile. The deal requires Hamas
to give up its weapons, something many believe will be
(01:57):
difficult to enforce, and while selling aberrations took place in
Israel and in Egypt, Gaza's future remains uncertain. After two
years of relentless air strikes. Much of the region is
in ruins, and humanitarian groups say rebuilding could take decades.
But back here at home. The deal is drawing rare
bipartisan praise. Former Presidents Biden, Clinton, and Obama are all
(02:19):
applauding the release of the hostages and the pause and fighting,
with Biden calling it a long overdue moment of relief
and a chance for civilians in Gaza to rebuild their lives.
Speaker 4 (02:30):
So yeah, I mean, listen, let's hope. So I hope
they maintained peace. I'm glad the hostages just came home,
and I hope you know, they both keep you know,
a ceasefire. Yeah, but it is kind of strange tho,
right because Hamas feels Israel shouldn't exist, and you know,
the current is rarely government BB and them. They don't
want a two state solution. So what is peace going
(02:50):
to actually look like? Long time?
Speaker 2 (02:52):
And that's what they're still trying to find out, because
it's like a twenty point deal and so right now
they're still like on the first phase, and so who
knows as this keeps going on, Charlamagne, what this will
look like. So we will continue to follow that. And
a warning this morning for the forty two million families
who rely on Snap benefits, better known as food stamps,
states are alerting recipients that big changes are coming. So
(03:13):
a November first deadline is approaching for states to comply
with the new One Big Beautiful Bill, a sweeping law
that passed this summer that completely overhauls the SNAP program
that the program helps low income Americans put food on
the table, but with federal spending on SNAP being cut
by one hundred and eighty six billion dollars over the
next decade, experts warned that many could lose access. Now,
(03:35):
one of the biggest challenges targets what they call able
body adults without dependents. So to keep their benefits, they
now have to prove that they're working eighty hours a
month or they're in school or in a training program. Now,
without that proof, their benefits will stop after three months.
Now that role used to only apply to people between
the ages of eighteen to fifty four. It now applies
(03:56):
to anyone under sixty five and then just a few
more exemption, so only parents with children under fourteen are
excused from that work rule that I just mentioned. Before
it was eighteen and veterans, people without stable housing, young
adults leaving foster care will also now have to follow
that work rule. So the law is just changing for
(04:17):
anyone who can receives snaps. We're talking refugees, asylum seekers,
and survivors of human trafficking. They are all expected to
lose eligibility. But the federal officials say that they will
be putting out more guidelines soon, and so we'll have
to keep checking back to see what that looks like.
But for families, you guys already stretched thin, these changes
could mean a lot of tough choices at the grocery store.
Speaker 4 (04:39):
I'm telling you it's going to be a cold winner, y'all.
Bet a bundle up word the freeway. Your folks is
going to be starving, you, hear me. This is going
to be the year that you really gonna have to
remember the reason for the season when it comes to
the holidays, because the ain't gonna be no gifts, all right.
Speaker 2 (04:53):
Absolute, And speaking of the holidays, yeah, jess what we're saying.
Speaker 4 (04:57):
I said, I've been doing that f years there anyway,
just been knowing the reason for the season, all right.
Speaker 2 (05:04):
Well, in speaking of holidays, if you're looking for a
little extra cash whose holiday season, there may be some
good news on the job front. Will tell you who's
hiring and How to cash in that's coming up at seven.
Speaker 4 (05:12):
It ain't only fans