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November 5, 2025 18 mins
You Can Skip Breakfast, But No Pictures!
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
From major events to local headlines. This is Charleston's Morning
News on ninety four to three WSC now back to
Kelly and Blaze.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
In California, Prop fifty has passed, paving the way for
a plan to redraw their congressional maps that will probably
boost the number of Democrats in Congress. Democratic socialist Zoran
mam Donnie won the New York City mayor's race. Trump
called him a lunatic communist. Democrat Abigail Spanberger won the
Virginia governor's race. Democrat Gazala Hashmi won the Virginia Lieutenant

(00:36):
governor's race. Hashmi's the first Indian person to hold statewide
office in the Commonwealth, then the first Muslim Muslim woman
to win a statewide race in the United States. Democrat
Jay Jones wins the Virginia race for Attorney General. Democrat
Mikey Cheryl won the governor's race in New Jersey. So
the Democrats are celebrating today, thinking that they're odd into

(00:59):
something here.

Speaker 1 (01:00):
If anyone can show a nation betrayed by Donald Trump
how to defeat him, it is the city that gave
rise to him.

Speaker 3 (01:08):
Listen to the lunatic, As the President said, communists.

Speaker 2 (01:14):
Yeah, well, I mean I feel sorry for New York,
but they get what they voted for.

Speaker 3 (01:20):
Well, yesterday there was some video of going kind of
viral during the elections. Course they started over the weekend
on Saturday with early voting, but there was literally admitting
it walking into the polls. I'm going to vote legally
six times for zoron Mondami. I'm like, this guy's just

(01:41):
admitting that he's going to commit voter fraud. I mean,
the we already know that New York was going to
go this way doesn't make it, and it's like we
need to have a day of mourning and then you know, regroup.
But these states all were mostly blue. I mean they
say Virginia's purple, but I mean look at last night's
results with regards to Abigail Spamberger and the idea that

(02:03):
they elected Jay Jones in Virginia as the attorney general,
the two bullets guy, right, So that to you know,
say that this is some defeat of Trump is a stretch.
They've been working on this. I mean, yesterday you looked
at any of the CNN, all the headlines, all the
talking heads, it was this is going to be you know,

(02:24):
a referendum on Trump and the Republican Party. These were
blue states from the start. This, if anything, I think
puts wind in the sales of Republicans, Conservatives and Trump
frankly of really the amount of people. Look at the
amount of red votes that actually came in in these

(02:46):
blue states. They had some pretty high numbers despite the
fact that yes, no, there's not high enough.

Speaker 2 (02:52):
Well right, and if you go to the areas that
voted for Trump, no, the Republicans did not show out
in the same numbers that they did when they voted
for Trump. Now that's an off your.

Speaker 3 (03:02):
Election exactly that was expected. Sadly. I mean, these off
your elections are always disappointing when it comes to voter turnout,
and that's a shame.

Speaker 2 (03:12):
Well so, I mean the real litmus test will be
the midterms, you know, coming up next November. But in
the meantime, and everybody was encouraging, you know, Curtis saw
Well to drop out of the race or slee wall rather,
I'm mixing them up with that lunatic in Florida his name,

(03:34):
but the Curtis Sliwa. Everybody was encouraging him to drop
out of the race, saying that it paved the way
for Mom Donnie. If you add up all the votes
that Curtis Sleewa got and all the votes that Andrew
Cuomo got, and then all the votes that Mom Donnie got,
Donnie still would have beat Andrew Cuomo if Curtis Sleewoh

(03:54):
was not in the race.

Speaker 3 (03:55):
You know, Cuomo didn't run a great campaign. I mean,
why he was not out here you know, sooner h
and you know, saying that the things that he continues,
by the way, even after his win, to promise can't
possibly happen. He wasn't doing that soon enough, long enough,

(04:18):
you know, from enough of the highest rooftops. And then
when President Trump, because they're almost I mean I'm listening already,
you know. Of course, overnight end of the morning of
oh well, Trump endorsed Canada. At the last second, he didn't.
He kicked that endorsement in the teeth, by the way,
he didn't want that. And some were saying, oh that
was that wasn't going to help him. It's like the

(04:40):
president and his endorsement at the end of the day
was I think to Sliwa voters to say, listen, swallow
the bitter pill. Here wasn't so much to a nod to.
It was more against Zoron Mundani than it was you know,
for well, he said Governor of New York.

Speaker 2 (05:03):
He said he'd much rather vote for a bad Democrat
than you know, a communist any day of the week,
is what the president said. And President Trump's slamming Jewish
New Yorkers who support Mayor elect Zora and Mom Donnie.
The President attacked Jewish Mom Donnie supporters in a post
untruth social writing, any Jewish person that votes for Zora

(05:24):
and Mom Donnie have proven and self professed jew hater
is a stupid person.

Speaker 3 (05:29):
Well, I mean I would agree. I mean, I don't
know if I would call someone stupid, But how how
else do you describe the notion that you know, he
has been out here saying anti embracing, anti Semitic people, phrases, policies,
and ideas. If you really want to dig into it,
we'll see. Since now he's, you know, going to be

(05:52):
the first Muslim mayor of the largest city in the
United States of America.

Speaker 2 (06:00):
Well, meanwhile, the chair of the Democratic Governors Association is
calling Abigail Spamberger's victory in Virginia a warning sign of Republicans.
Kansas Governor Laura Kelly went on to say Tuesday nights
results are a resounding rejection of President Trump's chaos. Kelly
says the win is a warning sign of Republicans who
continue to roberts stamp Trump's failed economic policies.

Speaker 3 (06:24):
Well, I think that's a ludicrous statement. In fact, yesterday
when I was live with our White House correspondent John Decker,
and we were talking about this, one of his last statements,
and you know, we have a heart out with him,
a heartbreak, And he said, well, you know, the governor's
race in Virginia is going to go the way that
it's going to go because the Republicans didn't run a
good candidate. I said, I couldn't disagree more with you.

(06:48):
I think wins Earl Sears was a bad candidate. Think
about Glenn Youenkin, who was term limited out. I believe
in Virginia he barely won his race with a couple
of percentage points. Virginia isn't just purple, it's pretty blue.
But Youngkin didn't even you know, officially endorse what he

(07:13):
said was and this was literally the day people are
heading to vote yesterday that they need to vote for
the GOP candidate. So that was very shameful frankly for
the Republican you know, governor's candidate with winsome earl seers there.
So I you know, that was a massive misstep. He

(07:35):
should have thrown his endorsement behind her immediately, knowing that
this state is hardly purple, mostly blue in Virginia, he
needed the nod.

Speaker 2 (07:45):
California's once dominant tech industry appears to be losing its edge.
A new report finds the states share of the US
tech workforce has fallen to its lowest level in more
than a decade. According to the comp TIA State of
the Tech War, California has shed nearly one hundred thousand
tech jobs since twenty twenty two, erasing gains made during

(08:07):
the remote work boom. The decline reflects deep job losses
and a migration of tech talent to states like Texas
and Florida, which offer lower costs and fewer regulations. And
let's say California's high taxes, housing prices, and complex labor
laws are driving companies and workers away.

Speaker 3 (08:28):
Well, first California, now New York. I mean, the mass
migration is going to continue now from New York City
now that America's largest city has fallen to a socialist.

Speaker 2 (08:38):
Yeah, so California's finding out that high taxes and a
high cost of living really do affect the job market,
no matter how much they get up there and how
much Gavin Newsom gesticulates with his hands, with his freaky
little movements.

Speaker 3 (08:52):
He's creepy, freaky, creepy all the things. And this guy,
you know, potentially wants to run for president.

Speaker 2 (09:01):
Well, that victory lap he took yesterday was, you know,
after Prop fifty past hard to watch with his It
was just strange and his wife standing there like with
I don't know it was she had a weird look
on her face. It looked very forced, and he was
pointing at his head and rubbing us. But I mean

(09:22):
doing all the usual hand whatever he does with his hands.
What are gesticulations.

Speaker 3 (09:29):
Well, and of course Prop fifty, I mean you mentioned Texas.
This is this is all about taking back control of
He talked about it in his victory lap, taking back
control of the House. Of course, Democrats want to take
control of something, whether it's the House or the Senate,
to stymy the current president's agenda, to make him a
lame duck frankly, and they Texas, of course did. This

(09:53):
was his push Prop fifty to you know, directly go
after Texas and they're quote unquote redistricting, gerrymandering, whatever you
know people want to go after and call it. And
I think it was six seats to six seats, meaning
they kind of canceled each other out with these moves.
So I don't know, we'll see where this in the
future leads.

Speaker 2 (10:14):
Well, and what nobody mentions about in California is California
has an independent board that decides, you know, districting, and
what stressed and what Prop fifty did was totally ignore
this independent board for the next two cycles. I guess

(10:37):
that's what they're saying now. Anyway, I think everybody knows
that's it for this independent board in California. So what
they did was change it for the next two cycles
so that they could seize power and fight Donald Trump.
That's all the Democrats have is cheating in manipulation.

Speaker 3 (10:55):
Oh my gosh. I mean we could get into this
with the with the elections, well, much easier to get
a victory when your state has no voter ID of
mail in voting, rank choice, voting, I mean that's Democrats
Trojan Horse right there.

Speaker 2 (11:09):
But yeah, well yeah, the fact of the matter is
they're ignoring their own laws with this Prop fifty, So
they decided to set that aside for now so that
they could gain power.

Speaker 3 (11:23):
Well, and this is the this is the playbook that
New York needs to be looking at. Here and the
fallout of the in the consequences from California. It started
there and it's continuing. I mean, New York City's going
to see a mass exodus. The workforce is going to
not just you know, people moving living also working somewhere else,

(11:45):
and it's going to be in places, you know, like
Florida and Texas well.

Speaker 2 (11:48):
Of course it is. I mean, it doesn't take much,
you know, it doesn't take much sense to figure out
that companies and people are going to go where it's
cheaper and easier to do business and also for their
workers to you know, be able to afford housing and food.

Speaker 3 (12:07):
Well you say that, yet New York just handed the
mayorship to, you know, a communist who wants to you know,
hike everybody's taxes and give everybody free healthcare and free
buses and government run grocery stores. So not a lot
of common sense there.

Speaker 2 (12:25):
Well, the majority of voters who voted for Mom Donnie.
Or here's again how dangerous the liberal women are. And
it's just a fact. Liberal women are dangerous. And you know,
I'll stop short of the name calling, but insane, it's insanity.

(12:46):
But anyway, they're the ones calling the shots. And people
that were not born in this country.

Speaker 3 (12:52):
I mean, I go back to you want to talk
about people not born in this country shouldn't have a
vote in our country, and you got to I wonder
how many people would just cast ballots in New York
City for it to fall to commie mom Donnie for
the fact they have no voter ID. People are actually
caught out here walking into the ballot, I mean, just
praising themselves on social media. They have no problem admitting

(13:14):
voter front sharing it on their social I'm going in
to vote for, you know, for Mom Donnie. Six times.
It's like and they said, legally, I mean, this is
these it's unbelievable.

Speaker 2 (13:26):
Well, there was no way to do that legally. And
we need to make the distinction that sure, you have
a right to vote if you weren't born in this
country as long as you're a naturalized citizen and you've
taken all the steps to make yourself legal. So the
problem is we're you know, were these people that were
not born in this country that voted for Mom Donnie

(13:47):
in huge numbers? Were they legally voting. It's not that
they shouldn't have a vote because they weren't born here.
If they're naturalized, of course they should have a vote.
But that shows you who Mom Donnie's supporters are and
they're not learning the lesson. You can say, well, look
at California with this latest story we just had, you know,

(14:10):
where they're losing the chech industry because of regulation and
high costs. And you can say, well, how come New
York hasn't learned that lesson? Well, you can look at
socialism around the world and the failed experiment of the
last what one hundred and fifty years. Everywhere it's been tried,
it has failed and it's caused suffering and death. But

(14:32):
they didn't take the signals there either, So you know,
I don't know. I mean, it's disturbing what's happening in
New York, and that's going to be the plan that
they're going to roll out across the country. It's simple,
don't look at pictures of food. Who knew it was
that simple? They say breakfast is the most important meal
of the day, but it may not actually be that

(14:54):
important for adults. A new study has found that adults
who skipped to breakfast were just as cape a bull
of problem solving and paying attention as those who ate
a meal. People who did miss a meal did perform
a little worse, but only while looking at pictures of food. Children,
on the other hand, still get a boost from breakfast.
The study was published in the journal Psychological Bulletin.

Speaker 3 (15:18):
So not so much for breakfast food, but I love
what I love food period, so taking pictures of it. Yeah,
I'm that person that we go annoyingly so go out
to eat. I'm like, wait, don't touch it, let me
take let me take some pictures of it. Literally started
a Facebook page called the Dirty Dish, and I need
to go back and start posting back there again. But
just so I could get rid of the pictures on

(15:38):
my phone of food. It's ridiculous. But for whatever reason,
I don't post that much about breakfast. I'm not sure why.

Speaker 2 (15:45):
Well, you shouldn't be looking at pictures of food.

Speaker 3 (15:48):
All I do. I mean, we'll have That's all I do.
I mean, I love, love it, love it. I'm saving
I'm scrolling online, I'm saving recipes. There's an app where
I save recipes of you know, and if it's yummy
looking sure of the food, I'm saving it in my
app and my recipes app. I literally texted last night,
my I need a warm hug soup I made from scratch,

(16:09):
because you know, it was so depressing watching these you know,
election results come in.

Speaker 2 (16:14):
Well, I think it's pretty interesting that people who skip
breakfast there was no discernible difference between the way they
were performing, you know, if they were capable of problem
solving or paying attention, But once they looked at pictures
of food that had that made a difference.

Speaker 3 (16:33):
You know. They say the breakfast is the most important
meal of the day. You know, it's the way that
you kick start the rest of your day. So I
find it interesting, Well, the whole crux of this story
is that it's not I know, that's what I was saying.
I find it interesting that that kind of flips that
notion completely on his ear. For me losing what you

(16:54):
and I both have been in a weight loss journey
starting the day with protein is for me has been key.
I mean because I was skipping breakfast in a lot
of ways. I was, you know, rushing right into coffee
and then later eventually getting around to you know, mid
morning snack and then lunch, and I don't know, it's
it's been key for me to start the day with

(17:14):
protein in the morning.

Speaker 2 (17:16):
Well you know, wait, well fat there's something to be
said for fasting too, all right, And so even in
the word breakfast, you're breaking the fast. This was not
really about weight loss. This was about how does breakfast
affect you cognitively, right, your brain, And it's saying that

(17:37):
it pretty much doesn't unless you look at pictures of food. Now,
it does have an effect on children, so you have
to keep that in mind too. So it's not, you know,
one size fits all. You should make sure the children
have breakfast, but as an adult, you know, not so
important as they say, it turns out.

Speaker 1 (18:00):
Thanks for listening to the Charleston Morning News podcast. Catch
Kelly and Blaze weekday mornings from six to nine
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