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May 21, 2025 • 33 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome to Wednesday. Thanks for sharing part of us with us.
I always appreciate you being here. A good morning tea
in the Big Three today, Big breaking news last night,
the Justice Department opens an investigation into allegations that Andrew
Cuomo lied at a congressional hearing over his actions that

(00:20):
led to fifteen thousand COVID deaths at New York State
nursing homes.

Speaker 2 (00:26):
Oh we know is Governor Cuomo ordered contagious patients into
nursing homes. He lied about it, then he covered it up,
and now he's threatening anyone who tries to cross him
to get accountability.

Speaker 1 (00:39):
A spokesperson for Andrew Cuomo claims, say it with me,
this is all political. Democrats are supporting the actions of
Jersey lawmakers at the ice facility that led to a congresswoman,
you'll remember Lamonica mcgiver from Newark getting arrested and now
faces three federal charges. And she says, say it with me,

(00:59):
it's all.

Speaker 3 (01:00):
It's political intimidation, and I will not be intimidated. I
expect to continue to do my job. Once again, very
unfortunate situation. I did not think when I came to
Congress in September that I would be, you know, dealing
with something like this, you know, or dealing with being
charged with anything.

Speaker 1 (01:17):
And get this. Democrats now say they're going to follow
mcgiver's lead at ICE facilities across the country. The Democrats,
I feel so bad for them. They're looking for an
issue in all the wrong places. Star Wars is back.
The idea of a strategic defense system first imagined by
Ronald Reagan forty years ago, may finally be accomplished by

(01:40):
Donald Trump. He calls it the Golden Dome.

Speaker 4 (01:43):
This is very important for the success and even survival
of our country.

Speaker 1 (01:48):
It's as lave a world out there. And finally, George Went,
who played Norm on Cheers, has passed away.

Speaker 4 (02:00):
What's happened to Norms?

Speaker 5 (02:01):
A doggy dog world, Sammy and I'm more in milk
phone underwear.

Speaker 1 (02:06):
George Went was seventy six years old. Now let's get
right to Jeffrey Lickman. I was looking forward to talking
to him today because there's so many stories out there
that play right into his wheelhouse. He's a high profile
criminal defense attorney, host of Beyond the Legal Limit podcast
found on the iHeartRadio app. Let's start Jeffrey, Good morning,
to you. First of all, Larry, I'm doing well. I'm

(02:30):
looking forward to hear what you have to say about
Andrew Cuomo and the fact that it looks like he's
going to be charged with lying to Congress. I don't
think there's any doubt that he did. They have him
pretty much dead to rights. So talk about what this
means and how it's going to affect the mayor's race.

Speaker 5 (02:47):
Well, the first thing is, I can't stand Andrew Cuom.
I don't know many of us that really like him,
but this is kind of like an appalling turn for Trump.
All we've been hearing for the last few years is
how he was the target of political witch hunts and
he was indicted four times, and he's now got a
czar that's in charge of dealing with political targeting. Then

(03:11):
all of a sudden, out of nowhere, they're now going
to indict Andrew Cuomo for lying to Congress last year
about something that occurred five years ago. And don't you
know what just happens to be when he's leading the
Democratic primary against Trump's good friend and should have been
a felon and a criminal, Eric Adams, And it's just

(03:35):
kind of grotesque because This is everything we were told
by Trump that he was against, and now he's targeting
political opponents, a guy who's constantly harping on how much
he can't stand Trump. So not only is that appalling
that part of it, but what's going to happen if
they indict and they take Cuomo out of the mayor's race, Well,

(03:56):
who's second behind a Cuomo in Democratic primary who presumably
is going to be elected because the city is so
far left. They'll elect Adolf Hitler if he was leading
the Democratic primary wins the Democratic primary. Well, guess what
Adolf Hitler is in second place? You've got this islamis

(04:17):
this pro Hamas candidate who there is not a Jew
on the planet that he doesn't hate. And this is
the guy that very well may become our next mayor
because Trump wants to deal with a personal vendetta against
this Cuomo. It's absolutely insane on two different levels that
I've just described, and I'm frankly imapault.

Speaker 1 (04:36):
Well, let me back up for a second, because you're
blaming Donald Trump for going after Andrew Cuomo. They right
at the hearing afterwards, all the members of the Republican
members of the committee, they said they were going to
look for charges against him, and they're the ones that
were pushing for charges. Are you saying that Donald Trump
should have got involved and stopped the charges from happening.

Speaker 5 (05:00):
Of course Trump is involved with this. I mean, this
happened a year ago, Larry.

Speaker 1 (05:04):
I know it happens.

Speaker 5 (05:06):
It just happened to rear its ugly head just as
the primary is about to come, and we know that
that Trump and Cuomo hate each other. I mean he
he appointed Helena Baba to be the US attorney despite
the fact that she's never been inside a criminal court
room in her life. As the US Attorney of New Jersey.
He then appoints Janine Piro, who has never tried a

(05:28):
federal case in her life. She was the Westchester County
DA and knows nothing about federal criminal law. And she's
a former Fox Not only she a former Fox talking head,
but she should have been indicted along with her husband
for tax evasion because she signed the very tax returns
that al Piro signed that landed him in jail.

Speaker 1 (05:47):
Of course, it has nothing to do with the two
people you just mentioned. This was referred a month ago.
This was referred a month ago, and it was pushed.

Speaker 6 (05:55):
I think that it.

Speaker 5 (05:57):
Wasn't You actually think that it wasn't pushed by Donald
Trump to make the Republicans do this. You don't think
Donald Trump could stop this?

Speaker 1 (06:04):
And and what's your proof of that? You just believe
that because you believe it, because you want to take
a shot at Donald.

Speaker 5 (06:09):
Trump, proof at Donald Trump.

Speaker 1 (06:13):
Ru I know that so much. So what are you
doing now?

Speaker 5 (06:17):
There's no doing this because it's obvious. It's obvious that
Trump could stop stop. Listen to me, just as he
stopped the Eric Adams indictment. He stopped that, didn't he? Yeah,
what reason?

Speaker 1 (06:30):
I agree?

Speaker 6 (06:31):
Reason?

Speaker 1 (06:32):
I agree with that. No, your it's apples and oranges.
It's not the same thing. It is apples and oranges.
It was it was it was referred to the to
the Washington District by Congress. They were furious about this.

Speaker 5 (06:52):
Eric Adams indictment.

Speaker 1 (06:53):
He could stop the Eric Adams is different. It's a
whole different story. You're grasping.

Speaker 5 (07:01):
Literal investigations. And he stopped one for for Eric Adams,
his good friends. He could easily stop this for Andrew Clmo.
Otherwise we're gonna have Hamas is gonna be the mayor
of New York City. Isn't that the greater bad here?
Who gives a damn about Andrew Clomo getting indicted on
some silly one thousand and one violation which won't even
put him in jail. Why don't we care more about

(07:24):
protecting New York City and not putting it in the
hands of hamafs. I would consider that to be something
that Donald Trump should pick up the phone and ends.
That's just me.

Speaker 1 (07:33):
I don't think it's appropriate for him to do that,
to tell you the truth.

Speaker 5 (07:36):
But appropriate for Eric Adams.

Speaker 1 (07:39):
That's a different thing.

Speaker 5 (07:41):
It's completely Why isn't a different thing. It's stopping it's
stopping the prosecution. He stopped it for Eric Adams, but
he can't stop it for Andrew Clomo. And Eric Adams
actually committed a massive fraud on on New York City,
on Brooklyn all the way back to when he was
Brooklyn Borough President. Andrew Clomo is a pin but he
lied in Congress. Who gives it damn?

Speaker 1 (08:03):
Congress?

Speaker 5 (08:03):
Care we want to save New York City? Do you
want Hamas running New York City?

Speaker 6 (08:10):
No?

Speaker 1 (08:10):
No, I get no, listen, listen. I understand the ramifications
of this and you're leading with that, and so you're
saying Donald Trump should have got involved in an investigation
against Andrew Cuomo that, by the way, is still just
being studied by the US attorney in Washington right now
now Jinny and Piro, but it started before her, and

(08:32):
so you just don't like what's going to happen down
the line. I get that. I'm with you on.

Speaker 5 (08:38):
I wouldn't have liked it about Eric Adams if that
was such an important thing that he needed Eric Adams
to help with his immigration policies. If that's so important
that Donald Trump he's stopped in indictment, which caused a
bunch of conservative US attorneys to quit their jobs. The
fact is we don't need Hamas running New York City.

Speaker 1 (08:55):
I understand that. Let's talk about it real quick. We're
running out of time. So I did to talk to
you about Zorin Mamdani a little bit. And the fact
that he is taking a little bit of flak right now.
It's the first time he's really taken any flack for
being against acknowledging the Holocaust in legislation. Now he's claiming
now that that's all wrong. But he's voted against this

(09:18):
Bill several times.

Speaker 5 (09:20):
Listen, everything that comes out of this guy's mouth is
anti Semitic. He constantly hates Jews. He's been marching against
Jews for years, every single thing. Somehow he's absent on
the day when they have to talk about the Holocaust,
He's absent when they have to vote on anything pertaining
to Israel, or he's slamming Israel. This guy is Hamas.
He is openly Hamas. The reason that he's second in

(09:42):
the primary is because eighty five percent of New York
City is left as garbage, which hates Jews. And the
idea that this guy could have an opportunity the happiest
guy on the planet about Andrew Cuomo being investigated by
by the FEDS is this Hamas candidate. And you know something, Larry,
If a Hamas candidate is happy, I'm unhappy. So this

(10:05):
is outrageous that this guy has a chance to become mayors.
Absolutely insane.

Speaker 1 (10:09):
I get it. I agree with you on that part.
Thank you so much. Jeffrey Lickman, high profile criminal defense attorney,
host of Beyond the Legal Limit podcast found on the
iHeartRadio app. Well, that was interesting. Some of the biggest
stars in the NFL are competing to play flag football.
We'll tell you why it's in vogue next, plus tickets

(10:32):
to see the Brotherhood of Rock tour at age twenty five. Oh,
He's love your talkbacks. Go to seven ten WR on
the iHeartRadio app and you click the talkback button and
then we put you on the air. Now, Jeffrey Lichtman
and I just had a disagreement and I thought it
was I thought I enjoyed it. And he wrote to

(10:52):
Natalie and said, I hope that was okay, and she
wrote back, No, that was great, and he wrote, I
thought so too. So No, we can just agree and
we can have debates, but you don't have to. There's
nothing bad about it. Debate is healthy, even when you
agree on most things. Debate is healthy. And I love
that you got to hear that on the air. But one,

(11:14):
we've ruined the breakfast to one person, apparently, Larry. I
feel like I just watched mom and dad fighting at
dinner time, and now I'm trying to eat my breakfast
and I can't thank you. Yeah, which one am I?
My mom or dad? My mom or dad? Now? A

(11:35):
lot of people called about George went and that's appropriate
because we miss one of the great actors and one
of the best characters ever. Well, he'll still live on.
The character is still going to live on on Cheers.
He was Norm.

Speaker 5 (11:49):
Good morning, Larry.

Speaker 6 (11:50):
One of my favorite George Went shows was when he
appeared on Colombo as a horse trainer who kills his
brother Rest in peace, George.

Speaker 1 (12:00):
Did anybody see that?

Speaker 7 (12:01):
No? I looked it up to make sure, and yep
he did.

Speaker 1 (12:04):
Oh wow, Yeah, No I miss that. Norm. What's shaken?

Speaker 5 (12:10):
Norm?

Speaker 8 (12:10):
Four cheeks and a couple of chins.

Speaker 1 (12:12):
Besides that, not much. He did have the best lines
on that show. He had the best lines. That was great. Now,
a lot of you also wanted to talk about the
cover up of President Biden's mental decline.

Speaker 9 (12:30):
Hey, Larry, Guys like John Stewart and Bill Maher who
have audiences, who have some sway in that party, they
could have easily come out and said what everybody knew,
which was that Joe Biden was unfit for office. He
should never even been elected. But they didn't. They took
part passively in the cover up too. They can't come
out now and try to cover their butts and act

(12:50):
like they weren't a part of it and like they're
better than Jake Tapper.

Speaker 1 (12:55):
Great point. I guess I gave them a pass early
on because they're comedians. But no, you're absolutely right. I
don't remember them. I'm gonna look back. I don't remember
them calling out the mental decline when it was happening
like most of the media, and they should be ashamed
of themselves.

Speaker 4 (13:13):
Good morning. They should put up a web page where
you can turn in all these people getting medicaid for
no reason. I know a guy that have a handicapped
sticker on his car. I see him carrying furniture walking
to his car. Put it in his car. He could
talk and walk. He could be a crossing god for
all I care. But there has to be a web
page where we could just punch in a number and

(13:33):
the people can go after these oysters.

Speaker 1 (13:35):
Thanks Larry, Yeah, punching a number. I'd like to punch
those people in the face. That really makes me upset
when I see somebody that's not handicapped with a handicap
sticker using it to get a good spot, or using
it in traffic, you know, to get some sympathy.

Speaker 7 (13:49):
I detest that they don't have like a hard condition
and they can't walk far or.

Speaker 1 (13:55):
Something because they see it. Well, maybe they do, maybe
we should be in talking to them. But there's been
this fraud for a long time in city after city
after city after city. Let's talk about flag football. By
the way, I'm now a huge fan of flag football.
You know why because my granddaughter excels at it. And

(14:15):
I don't think unless you have a granddaughter or a
child that's playing flag football, you probably don't understand that
the NFL is behind all of this. The teams that
my granddaughter plays with and then plays for, and then
I watch all the other teams, huge huge fields of
flag football. They are all wearing outfits that are NFL teams,

(14:43):
every single one of them. And the NFL pays for
it all. They sponsor these teams.

Speaker 7 (14:48):
Oh, they across the country, and they pay for their uniforms.

Speaker 1 (14:51):
And all that too, everything everything, And they're pushing for
it to be in schools. They want to spread the
NFL and they want to expand the audience. One way
to get women is for girls sports. But now and
so they pushed the NFL pushed hard to get flag
football into the Olympics. So they got it for both

(15:12):
men and women and the NFL just voted yesterday unanimously
to allow NFL players to play in the Olympics playing
flag football.

Speaker 3 (15:25):
No, just to think about the chances of you know,
playing in the Olympics, and you know, getting a gold medal.

Speaker 1 (15:33):
Is a dream, right, Everybody thought, well, this isn't gonna work.
Why would the NFL players play flag football because they
get a gold medal and it is the pinnacle of sports.
That's why the NBA works so well when they had
the Dream Team playing in the Olympics as well. The
rule is that every team can only have one player

(15:56):
playing flag football in the Olympics. But Roger Goodell, well,
that's the reason he makes so much money. Some of
the fans hate him, the teams love him because he
is expanding the brand globally.

Speaker 10 (16:09):
I think this is news represents a great opportunity for
the sport, for the NFL. It's truly the next step
in making NFL football and football a global sport.

Speaker 1 (16:23):
That's exactly what they're doing. That's why they've been playing
games overseas, that's why they've been expanding and getting women involved.
You'll see ads that are expensive during the Super Bowl
four flag football, the NFL brand. That's why they are
a multi billion dollar business. Now let's get to Jacqueline
Carl with the news Jacqueline Good Morning at seven thirty.

Speaker 7 (16:46):
Work continues at this hour in the House of Representatives
as a GOP tries to push through President Trump's budget priorities.
The spending bill must first make it through the Rules Committee,
which started meeting around one am Eastern Timeblicans can only
afford three no votes from its members if all Democrats
remain opposed. The annual Parade of Ships along the Hudson

(17:07):
River kicks off today for the first of Fleet Week.

Speaker 11 (17:10):
Naval and Coastguard ships will travel up the Hudson River
and pass by the Intrepid Museum as part of the
Parade of Ships, with hundreds of service members manning the rails.
Once they dock. At least five ships will be open
for public tours throughout Memorial Day weekend. It comes as
Mayor Irick Adams plans to attend a candlelight vigil this
evening to honor the victims aboard the Mexican Navy vessel

(17:32):
that crashed into the Brooklyn Bridge over the weekend. Natalie
Migliori woar news.

Speaker 7 (17:38):
Well, you know those annoying spam emails that we all get.
According to MSN, the USA is number.

Speaker 1 (17:44):
One in that department.

Speaker 7 (17:45):
A new report has found the United States generates fifty
seven percent of spam emails that go out into the world,
and that's just in the first quarter of twenty twenty five.
Viiper made the discovery after analyzing one point five billion emails,
focusing on the location of the RG and IP address
found in email headers. We're number one. Russia and mainland

(18:07):
China round out the top three, at least for number one.

Speaker 1 (18:10):
Yeah, yay.

Speaker 9 (18:12):
I don't know about you, guys, but I delete more
emails than I open.

Speaker 7 (18:16):
Do you actually delete them? I just leave them? Oh no,
I just just die on their own.

Speaker 1 (18:20):
Sometimes. I know you're like me, Jacqueline. I look at
my mailbox and it says you have four thousand emails.
I don't even look That's how bad it is. Thanks
so much, Jacqueline. Well, how severe is former President Joe
Biden's cancer and how long has he had it? We'll
ask a cancer expert whose name you know very well.

(18:40):
Doctor Gil Liederman is next. Also in a candid, hilarious,
and unexpectedly moving new episode of On Purpose, Jay Shetty
sits down with comedian, actor, and podcast superstar Bert Kreischer
for a conversation that goes It goes way beyond the jokes,
as Jay and Bert dive deep into the real stories

(19:03):
behind the spotlight, open the free iHeartRadio app, and search
on Purpose with Jay Shetty to listen now, welcome back.
This week, former President Joe Biden let the world know
that he has stage four prostate cancer that has spread
into his bones, and that led to so many questions.

(19:23):
And who better to answer those questions than somebody here
right here on WOR seven to ten WOR. He is
a radio star. He's treated ten thousands of patients and
nearly every location of cancer, every size, every type of cancer,
large and small, primary or advanced. So we're very proud

(19:45):
to be able to talk to doctor Gil Liederman Radio
Surgery in New York. Sarah, thanks for spending some time
with us.

Speaker 8 (19:52):
Larry, thank you. It's an honor to be on your show, well.

Speaker 1 (19:55):
An honor to have you. We have so many questions.
Can we start just about prostate cancer, the type of
cancer Biden has, and how does somebody realize they have it?

Speaker 8 (20:08):
Okay, So he has a Gleason nine cancer. So prostate cancer,
like a lot of cancers we talk about or we
see friends all they have breast cancer, lung cancer, and
they don't talk much more about it than that. But
prostate cancer is peculiar and different in that some people
have a very slow growing cancer, some people have a
very fast growing cancer. And doctor Gleason recognized that years

(20:29):
ago and he made a scale. He made a scale
from two to ten, and it's based on two different
areas of the prostate that get buyop seed and they
add it up and that's why they're two to ten.
It's kind of funny scale. So one in one is
two is the best. In five plus five equals ten
the worst, and he's just about it the worst. So
Gleason nine is just about the worst cancer as far

(20:50):
as aggression that one can personally have. So that's issue
number one. Issue number two is then he has stage
four cancers. So in prostate cancer, and almost every cancer
is aging system usually from one to four. One is
usually localized and four is metastatic means it's got into
the bloodstream most commonly and it's traveled. So for his
prostate cancer, to go from the prostate to the bone

(21:12):
means it got in the blood stream and it's traveling,
which also means it's not curable.

Speaker 1 (21:18):
It sounds like he's had this for some time. Would
is that correct?

Speaker 8 (21:23):
I believe so. His data has come out yesterday that
his last PSA was done in twenty and fourteen, so
it's been more than a decade since PSA, which in
my view as a no no. Some doctors say, oh,
when you're seventy years old, you know you're over the hill,
you're going to die, don't do any screening. So many
people don't get colonoscopies or mammograms or PSAs. I personally

(21:47):
view its age discrimination. It's funny because you have glass
against age discrimination. Yet here's a man whose doctors may
be avided by guidelines to say always seventies over the hill.
Here's the President United States and billions of dollars protecting him,
and no one could do a five dollars test to
detect this cancer early.

Speaker 1 (22:06):
Or he did get the test, it would be hard
to believe, wouldn't it that staff of twenty White House
doctors never tested him for this. My feeling is he's known,
he's had this for some time.

Speaker 8 (22:18):
That does Maybe that's one Yeah, that's one strategy or
one set of feelings. I see lots of people and
high flyers and low flyers whose doctors just never get
PSAs and never think about it. They just general doctors. Often.
My brother's a general doctor. I have no problem about
general doctors, but a lot of people are not just
tuned into it. And that's why I'm stressing so much

(22:40):
the need to be screened. And there's just a recent
study of thousands, actually tens of thousands of Europeans of
men who are asked to get screening for prostate cancer
and oh, this is over decades, and the men who
showed up for screening had a twenty percent higher chance
of being alive. The men who never showed up for
one screening forty five percent greater death. So it's very

(23:04):
clear that screening helps. It's not only for prostate cancer,
but for breast cancer and colon cancer and lung cancer.
Screening saves lives.

Speaker 1 (23:13):
Yeah, I think the White House doctors should be fired
if they didn't test him for this. But you're right,
maybe it was going to.

Speaker 8 (23:19):
Be a lot of unemployment. There'd be a lot of
unemployment if they fire all the guys. If you think
about he was at Walter Reed, he's been. He was
vice president, he was on his own. He was a
free citizen from twenty seventeen to twenty one, so he
was on his own. He was seeing his own doctors,
so he talk his own doctors, his White House doctors,
president doctors, Vice president doctors, and he was senator. You know,

(23:41):
these may have well been high for years. Then what
they're not telling you is how high his PSA is.
So you know, it may well be that this PSA
is five thousand, It maybe ten thousand. It could be
very high. Usually when you have a glease of nine
cancer and it's in the bones, that PSA number. PSA
is prosthetics specific antigen. It's a blood test. It's a painless,

(24:02):
easy test to get. Every man should be getting it.
Every loved one should have their man get that, whether
it's a wife or girlfriend or child, and it helps
saves lives. Forty thousand men die a year of prostate
cancer in America. It's one of the biggest killers.

Speaker 1 (24:17):
If the President was your patient, what course of action
would you recommend at.

Speaker 8 (24:21):
This point today or ten years ago. Today, well, I
don't know everything about his case. I just know that
he's got cancer in the bones. He's got cancer obviously
in the prostate. He may have it in the lymphodes.
They didn't talk about the lymphodes. Prostate cancer loves to
go to the lymphodes and then it usually goes to
the bones afterwards. Usually, and sometimes it's even more aggressive

(24:44):
than that. Sometimes we see it in the liver or lungs,
so it should be staged up. The best staging test
now would be called a PSMA test. It's a pet
scan specifically for prostate cancer. It's an expensive test. Most
insurance companies will cover it, so I believe every man
and with prostate cancer should get a p SMA test.

(25:04):
He probably had an MRI test of the prostate. He
probably did have a bone scan, so those tests should
be done. As far as treatment, he's had a peculiar
walk and having cancer in the bones mate cause him
to be walking like he's walking. If you look at
his posture and his walking, it's a little bit strange.
It's not a fluid walk. So he may well have

(25:24):
had symptoms from this cancer and his bones for some time.
I would obviously recommend systemic therapy for him. Most men
hate hormonal therapy. Hormonal therapy like lupron or eliguard take
away testosterone, so men hate it. Most men hate it
because not every man, but most men hate it because
it takes away sexual feelings and erections. It takes away

(25:45):
some of your power. It basically makes a man feel
like he's going through a woman's menopause, hot flashes, weight gain,
and other things. So I'd so much better to be
diagnosed early. If you take two politicians, for example, you
take Rudy Giuliani treated with radiation and break you therapy
twenty five years ago, and you see him now and
he seems to be doing great, and you have this man.

(26:08):
There's similar ages, and this man most likely will die.
The five year survival rate of stage four cancer prostate's
only thirty five forty percent, so it's very serious condition.
He's got obviously other medical issues that are competing with this.

Speaker 1 (26:24):
Yeah, it is so sad, and you know, no matter
how you feel politically, your heart goes out to him
and his family for this news. Two things can be
true at the same time. You can feel for him
and disagree with his policies, but I guess the good
part about this for the rest of the country is
you talking about this now. Is people talking about this

(26:46):
now and the PSA test and prostate cancer coming to
the forefront so people will do the right thing.

Speaker 8 (26:54):
I think it brings a lot of attention. I think
you're totally right. I've had a total number of calls
are off the way, all because people are waking up.
They say, is that if the president can have stage four
prostate cancer, they can too. And there's a problem with
a lot of men. A lot of men think they're
invincible and cancer can't affect them. And God, God has
other plans for some of us. And men should get

(27:16):
and women should get checked up. And there's so many
simple things mammograms, PSA, colonoscopy, CHESS, cts for people or smokers.
There's so many things that increase survival rate by about
forty fifty fifty more people will be cured to their
cancer if they're detected early.

Speaker 1 (27:35):
Hey doctor laterman, just amount out of time. But real quick,
how you said you got a lot of phone calls?
How can people get a hold of you?

Speaker 8 (27:43):
Two and two choices our phone numbers two and two
choices which you hear all the time on WR. They
can call, they can email me emails Gil at rs
NY dot org. I phone calls are best, two and
two choices. They can come in. We accept most insurances.
For a man who should get a PSA might well
save his life. If you're the wife, or the girlfriend
or the child, get your loved one in here. It's

(28:06):
a simple thing, it's a short thing, it's a painless thing,
and it may well save his life.

Speaker 1 (28:10):
Great advice, Doctor Liederman. Thank you so much for your time,
Doctor Liederman, Radio Surgery in New York. Two one, two choices.
Thanks again, doctor.

Speaker 8 (28:18):
I Bless you, Larry, and thank you for inviting me on.

Speaker 1 (28:20):
Bless you as well. Donald Trump shows up in the
Capitol to rally support for his big beautiful Bill. So
how did he do well? Ask Rury O'Neil, WR, National correspondent. Next,
Welcome back. As always, you can leave a talkback by
going to seven to ten wor and on the iHeartRadio

(28:41):
app you look for the talkback feature, You hit the
microphone and then you're on the air.

Speaker 9 (28:46):
Hey, Larry, Guys like John Stewart and Bill Maher who
have audiences who have some sway in that party. They
could have easily come out and said what everybody knew,
which was that Joe Biden was unfit for office, he
should never even been elected.

Speaker 1 (28:59):
But they didn't.

Speaker 9 (29:00):
They took part passively in the cover up. Two, they
can't come out now and try to cover their butts
and act like they weren't a part of it and
like they're better than Jake Tapper.

Speaker 1 (29:11):
Yeah, you're great, you're right, You're right. I think they
got to pass because they're comedians. But they are cut
from the same cloth as Jake Tapper, and they have
not taken as much incoming, So you're absolutely correct. Speaking
of Donald Trump, he was at the Capitol yesterday. Rory
O'Neil wr National Correspondent is covering this. He was there

(29:33):
because he wanted to push the big, beautiful bill that
has his entire agenda on there. Rory, correct me if
I'm wrong. Was that his first trip as president over
to the Capitol? I mean, aside from except for the speech.

Speaker 6 (29:47):
In this administration, that may well have been, yes, his
first time over there to try to twist some arms,
as it were, And look, he said there was a
lot of love in that room and that there was
a lot of agreement, but there's certainly an undercurrent there
with some members on left and right side of the
Republican Party with problems with the Big Beautiful Bill. Leny

(30:08):
say it doesn't do enough spending cuts, that this will
add four or five trillion dollars in new debt and
they're not happy with that, while others say the cuts
are too deep and it would make them impossible to
win re election again. Of course, the Salt Conference is
another big part of this. They've been a big stumbling block,
although apparently they've been making a lot of progress in

(30:29):
some of these overnight negotiations.

Speaker 1 (30:31):
Yeah, it sounds like at least there are sources that
have been saying it sounds like they have come up
with a forty thousand dollars cap, which would be raising
the cap on state and local tax deductions. When the
people in big states like New York, and most of
them are Democratic states, which is why they're pushedback. In
New Jersey and California and New York, they have higher

(30:53):
property taxes and when it was Donald Trump that cut them,
right Rory, I mean in the first place. Yeah, he
was the first one to cut them. And because they're lower,
they can't deduct as much, so they're pushing to raise that.
It sounds like that was settled.

Speaker 6 (31:08):
Well, right, and now he has since moved to Florida,
so he doesn't pay those salt taxes.

Speaker 1 (31:13):
Right, Yeah, he's changed.

Speaker 6 (31:14):
The President's changed to his residents, well now his residencies,
I guess Washington. But yeah, they made progress. I'm not
sure everyone on that salt caucus is on board just yet.
But boy, this whole thing is still being written in pencil.
The Rules Committee started meeting. They started their meeting at
one o'clock this morning, so they are still at it.

(31:34):
The House Speaker wants to get a final vote on this,
at least from the Rules Committee today, but maybe a
full House vote later today. Of course, what happens in
the Senate is still anyone's game by the time we
get to reconciling these big pieces of legislation.

Speaker 1 (31:49):
Now we talked about the salt deductions. The other big
issue seems to be medicaid. But we heard the President
come out. I think he's all four cuts to medicaid.

Speaker 6 (31:58):
Well, right, he said only he cut waste, fraud, and abuse.
But he also said that well with his executive order
to cut drug prices. He thinks that's going to save
Medicaid a lot of money. There's a big weight and
see on that. By the way, he thinks they can
cut drug prices eighty five percent hopefully's right, but that's
going to be quite the threshold. And they also think

(32:20):
that by putting in work requirements for able bodied people
that they could be moved off of Medicaid and thereby
saving more money. So it's a lot of fingers crossed
here in order to make some of these numbers work.
But again a lot of Republicans saying, look, they need
more structural reforms because we're just not cutting enough. Because
adding another four or five trillion in debt at a

(32:44):
time when Moody's is already lower in the nation's credit
rating is a bad sign, right, and.

Speaker 1 (32:49):
It goes against brand for some of the conservative Republicans.
Rory O'Neil WLR, National Correspondent on the Big Beautiful Bill.
Talk to you again tomorrow, Rory, thank you, Thanks Larry. Yeah,
this is gonna be tough. You know, they can only
lose three votes. If they lose three Republican votes, well
they won't even go forward. If they don't think they
have the votes, this won't even go to the House,

(33:10):
and then it's gonna go to the Senate and the
whole thing's gonna change. Anyway, It's gonna be fascinating to watch.
It's also fascinating to watch AOC touring the country running
for who knows what. She's also ignoring her district in
the Bronx and wow, that is suffering. We'll talk to
New York City Councilwoman Vicki Palladino about that after the

(33:30):
eight o'clock News
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