Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Good morning to you, thanks for listening today. In the
Big Three, it's tough to fathom what happened yesterday, a
mass shooting targeting children from a Catholic school. They were
inside a church which is supposed to be sanctuary. A
murderer shot through the stained glass windows and after boarding
(00:22):
up the front door, killing two children injuring seventeen. And
the murderer put out a sick video manifesto on YouTube
the night before tomorrow.
Speaker 2 (00:39):
I'm sorry to my family, but that's it.
Speaker 3 (00:44):
That's the only people.
Speaker 2 (00:46):
I'm sorry to those kids.
Speaker 1 (00:49):
There have been five shootings in the Bronx in a
twenty four hour span. The last thing we need now
is a soft on crime socialist like Zorin Mom Donnie.
We need a crime fighter.
Speaker 4 (01:04):
I'm dealing with what is becoming the number one issue, crime,
public safety, and quality of life. I'm the expert in
that field. These other three candidates have failed the public
in that regard.
Speaker 1 (01:16):
This stuns me, but I'm so happy to have some
honesty from the other side of the island, the nation's capital.
The Democratic Mayor of Washington, DC, Muriel Bowser, is now
admitting that the federal involvement in fighting crime in her
city has worked.
Speaker 5 (01:37):
The difference between this period, this twenty day period of
this federal surge and last year represents a eighty seven
percent reduction in carjackings in Washington, DC. We know that
when carjackings go down, when the use of gun goes down,
(01:57):
when homicide or robbery go down, neighbor hoods feel safer
and are safer.
Speaker 1 (02:04):
Good for her being the bigger person, maybe some Democratic
mayors and other cities will learn from this. And New
York is getting a new Accela train and a new
Penn station and it's going to happen at record speed
thanks to Donald Trump. So what should the new station
be called?
Speaker 6 (02:22):
I imagine you're asking, is this going to be Trump's station?
Speaker 1 (02:26):
I think that is a nice ring to it.
Speaker 2 (02:28):
But listen, we're we're all working on building this project
and get into town.
Speaker 6 (02:31):
And if you want to have a conversation about name changes,
that's a conversation that could happen at some other point.
Speaker 1 (02:39):
And now let's go to doctor Arthur Kaplan, professor of
bioethics at New York University Land Gone Medical Center. Of course,
he's with us every Thursday at this time. Good morning,
doctor how.
Speaker 6 (02:50):
Are you no menty stations.
Speaker 1 (02:54):
Yeah, A couple of people have mentioned that now. I
think it's a growing trend in just may happen. That'd
be wonderful. There's so many things to talk about today.
Let's start with Connecticut. Connecticut now kind of leaving the
federal government to do things in their own or at
least thinking about it when it comes to health services.
Speaker 6 (03:17):
So you've got basically the main public health agency, the CDC,
issuing recommendations that mainstream science groups and medical groups think
are wrong just out of think. They're saying one thing,
and then the American College of Kynecology and the American
(03:40):
Association of Pediatrics says something else. So Connecticut, and by
the way, New York and a couple of other New
England states are doing this too. Watching is saying, we've
got to set up our own shop. We have to
basically secede from federal control over medicine, start to make recommendations,
collect evidence, set out guidelines for new drugs approvals, vaccines, whatever,
(04:05):
on our own. So Yep, there is a movement, and
I think you're going to see it to split away
from what traditionally has been a federal responsibility.
Speaker 1 (04:16):
There will be ramifications in that right, especially in federal funding.
Speaker 6 (04:21):
Huge ramifications. The federal government could certainly say, if you
don't follow what we're doing, it's going to mean more
funding cuts for research in your state. They could certainly say,
if you don't do what we're doing, some of the
legal protections that are there when you follow federal recommendations
won't be there. If something goes wrong, the state's going
(04:45):
to be responsible for that, if that's what they're going
to do. And you know, Larry, in a lot of
these areas, you really don't want, say, ten states with
ten guidelines telling people what to do, they'll just get confused.
Right in healthcare, what you really want is unified, agreed upon,
consensus message. It shouldn't matter if you cross the border
(05:09):
from Connecticut into New York State and go to the
CBS there and they say, well, we don't have that drug.
It's not approved in New York. You have to go
over to over Island.
Speaker 1 (05:19):
Yeah, doctor Kaplan, I know you're no fan of RFK Junior,
and we're going to get into a lot of topics
where you're going to have to talk about him before
we start. Is there something is there anything he's done
so far that you agree with.
Speaker 6 (05:35):
Well, I don't like red dye number two. On the
other hand, if that's the big move to make food safer,
it's not going to make a big difference unless you're
eating a pound of red dye number two M and
ms every day. Not much, not much.
Speaker 1 (05:49):
So you just don't like the guy across the board.
You didn't like him when he was nominated.
Speaker 6 (05:54):
I haven't liked it for twenty years that much. With
Trump politics, this guy has just been you know, he
did a nice job, Larry working on the Hudson River.
People may remember old timers that he was involved with
trying to get it cleaned up, and he did a
good job. And then he got hooked up and I
don't know why, with this anti vaccine movement. Then he
(06:18):
got hooked up with kind of the alternative movement in
medicine again long ago. We're talking ten fifteen years, and
he's been promoting, you know, don't use seed oils, use
this supplements. He's had a long history of suing the
vaccine companies like Murk and so I'm saying they're lying
(06:39):
about whether they cause autism. I just don't think He's
been a reliable source of scientific medical information for years
and years and years. So what I think happened, Larry,
You tell me this is political, but I think he
swung his support to Trump, gave him a few percentage
(07:00):
points from his you know, kind of small presidential campaign,
and Trump probably says, you helped me win. So I
think he got a political appointment.
Speaker 1 (07:10):
Yeah, Well, he didn't need to make him head of
Health and Human Services, even though he wanted that. He
still could have given a political appointment. So he must
have bought into to some of what he wanted to do.
So you want to.
Speaker 6 (07:24):
Look one other kind word. Look, he's been big on
health prevention, trying to improve diet, and that's great and
I'm all for that, but that's his hardest road in
its political because if you want to go after big
agriculture making all the corn syrup and grown all the corn,
you want to go after big food growing all the
(07:46):
meat and cattle and pork, all the things that are
we know are bad in the American diet. They're all
in the red States. And Congress may go along with
a lot that Trump wants, or even Kennedy one, but
they are not going to see their industries attacked, and
they're already sending out signals to Kennedy. I know this
(08:07):
behind the scenes. Don't mess around with our agriculture. So
I don't think he's going to get far on the
most important thing where he and I agree.
Speaker 1 (08:17):
Yeah, he is not only skeptical on our food sources
and the food we eat, he's also very skeptical, skeptical
of the medicines we use and the vaccines we take.
And the problem with that, I think is that sometimes
these medicines save lives, and these vaccines save lives.
Speaker 6 (08:34):
They do. And by the way, he's skeptical too about
our new generation of weight loss injectables, the Manjaros and
the Wagobi's and all that stuff. He says, it's a
band aid. You know, we really want to fundamentally change
how we eat. I'm all for that. I think he's right,
But I'm not going to not use these shots to
(08:55):
get people's weight down or get their diabetes under control
right now. Changing the food habits that we have. I
don't know what would that take? Ten years?
Speaker 1 (09:06):
Yeah, years, But also, you can do it a long time.
You can do both, can't you, doctor? You can lose
the weight and then try to keep it on right.
Speaker 6 (09:14):
Yeah. By the way, one other idea just floated yesterday,
which I was laughing about. He said he wanted more
nutrition taught to kids who were pre meds in college. Well,
there isn't really a major pre meds in college where
everybody has an agreed upon curriculum. But I was laughing,
because where do you learn to eat from your doctor?
I doubt it. You learned to eat from your parents,
(09:36):
probably your mother. Yeah, you want to change nutrition, You know,
you got to get education into the high schools and
junior high schools. It's not at medical school. I don't
know about you, Larry, but the last time my doctor
told me something was good for me to eat, it
lasted in my head about a minute.
Speaker 1 (09:54):
Well that's another problem, doctor Kaplan. Yes, bioethics at New
York University Land going Medical Center with us every Thursday
at nine oh five. Thanks a lot, Doctor, good to
talk to me. What could make chocolate taste even better
than it already does? Well, how about this music? Of course,
(10:16):
we'll talk about the song made by a scientist to
help you love chocolate even more. That's next. Now let's
get some talkbacks. Thank you so much, it's been great today.
Remember if you get Talkback of the morning and the
committee listens to everything and they get the select I
have no say in this, but if you win, you
(10:38):
get the highly coveted MINTI in the Morning T shirt
and you're automatically entered for talk Back of the Week,
which will be given out tomorrow and every Friday, and
then you get a sea crane radio.
Speaker 7 (10:51):
Good morning, Larry. Did you ever notice that Democrats never
ever say anything post anything, or talk about anything pro Democrat.
They always talk anti Trump, an anti Republican, but they
never ever ever say anything pro Democrat. Is that odd
(11:14):
to you or what? It's odd to me? And I
think a lot more people need to recognize that.
Speaker 1 (11:19):
Yeah, no, I get you. It's where the Democratic Party
is right now. What are they going to say? Is good?
Speaker 6 (11:25):
Show me?
Speaker 1 (11:25):
What have they done? What do they do? The last
four years? That's great? Everything they did was a failure.
Are they going to talk about crime? They had their
highest crime rate in forty years in major cities. Are
they going to talk about the economy? They were in
a recession. They didn't they denied it, but by every
standard economic standard, we were in a recession. Are they
(11:48):
going to talk about how well they did overseas? We
had word start, we had the embarrassment of Afghanistan. They're
going to talk about the border immigration. Twenty million people
got into this country with the most open border we
ever had. Tell me it is, what are they going
to say? And they still have no policies, they're not
running on anything. You aren't wrong. Pick out tell me
(12:14):
who's going to run for president first of all, and
what they're going to do and saying I just don't
like Donald Trump isn't good enough. You're right, there's nothing out.
Speaker 8 (12:25):
There, doctor Kathlin. I think it's a great idea. The
more states that do that, you have more researchers, and
you don't have one group that's making every recommendation. Why
not have more scientists and doctors working on things that
independently and showing that there might be different ways to
cure people. I think it's a great idea.
Speaker 1 (12:44):
Well, I think I don't think it's I don't think
it's research, right is because research is done most of
the time in universities and hospitals, and I think they
get grants to work on research. Federal grants The problem
is when you break away, then we have no federal
(13:05):
standard for things, and there needs to be a federal standard.
If you disagree with the federal standard, try to fight it.
But just pulling away. If state after state after state
pulls away, there's going to be a pull in funding.
There's no question that's going to happen. But yeah, no,
I'm not sure it's a really good idea. I know
(13:28):
New York's talking about doing it too. As doctor Caplan
just said a moment ago, probably New Jersey is probably
all the Democratic states are because they're willing to do
stupid things because they dislike Donald Trump so much. That's
been the kind of the magic of what Trump can do.
He takes the right side of an issue, or just
a side of an issue, and the Democrats immediately go
(13:50):
to the other side of that issue. And most of
the time they are on the wrong side of that issue,
even if they didn't want to be there, they're just
there because the only thing they have right now is
running against Donald Trump. Thanks so much for your talkbacks today.
They have been tremendous. We will announce the talk back
of the Morning coming up in about a half an
hour now. There's this. The University of Bristol has come up, apparently,
(14:17):
with a song that actually makes chocolate taste even better
when you listen to it. It's a little hard to
believe that that could be the case, isn't it? But
after doing sixty years of research, it found that the
music's pitch, speed, and key can trick the brain into
(14:37):
thinking something particularly sweet taste more decadent than it already does.
Doctor Natalie Hyneth, a composer and sound expert, created a
musical track meant to be listened to while eating a
sweet treat to make the experience that much more better. Wow,
(15:00):
I'm not I don't really quite understand how that works.
Speaker 8 (15:05):
I don't buy it.
Speaker 1 (15:05):
Yeah, I you know, I don't buy it either.
Speaker 3 (15:08):
Is that like when you pinch your nose when you're
eating something gross, or like they taking a shot and
it you.
Speaker 6 (15:15):
Know what I mean?
Speaker 3 (15:15):
Or like if you smell something and then you drink
like a like a like medicine, it supposed to taste better.
That must are we just like tricking our brains in
the in the in the in the stuff like this.
Speaker 9 (15:26):
You can't trick my brain with music to make chocolate better.
Speaker 1 (15:30):
You just can't. Also, like chocolate is good?
Speaker 3 (15:32):
Yeah, why does it? Why does it need to be better?
Speaker 1 (15:35):
I want to get back to the pinch the nose thing?
Did I miss out on that? Never?
Speaker 3 (15:41):
When you have to, like take cough medicine something like kid, Yeah,
you pinch your nose or something, you know, does that work?
That's what they told me.
Speaker 6 (15:51):
I love that.
Speaker 3 (15:52):
I think probably because it still tastes like it still
tasted like cough medicine. It was always gross.
Speaker 1 (15:59):
But I smell it too.
Speaker 3 (16:01):
Yeah, my mom told me if I pinched my nose.
Speaker 1 (16:03):
Oh, isn't that cute? You believed your mom even after
it didn't work?
Speaker 3 (16:06):
Well, what are you telling me?
Speaker 1 (16:07):
My mom lied to me.
Speaker 9 (16:11):
Them's fighting words at all.
Speaker 1 (16:13):
But after all these years, you think maybe you would
catch on. Do you still pinch your nose when you
take something you don't like? Yeah?
Speaker 3 (16:20):
Like she told me, Santay was hey, I still believe
that he is.
Speaker 1 (16:23):
Yeah. Curry Schweitzer is in from Natalie Vodka today, by
the way, doing a wonderful job. So is Jacqueline Carl.
Let's go to her with the nine to thirty news.
Speaker 9 (16:31):
Jacqueline Larry, Good morning, two children are dead and Seventeen
people injured after a shooting at a Minneapolis Catholic school
on Wednesday morning. The shooting happened at Annunciation Catholic Church
during a mass celebrating the first week of school, and
among the injured were fourteen children between the ages of
six and fifteen, along with three parishioners in their eighties.
(16:54):
Police say the shooter died of a self inflicted gunshot wound.
And Reverend Al Sharpton and the NAST Action Network are
leading a march on Wall Street in Lower Manhattan today
against President Trump's rollback of DEI policies.
Speaker 2 (17:08):
Al Sharpton says Trump's attacks on diversity, equity, and inclusion
we're only the prelude as he's now dangling threats to
take over American cities led by black mayors. Sharpton says
this march is to remind Trump of the power of
Black Americans and their dollars. The Trump administration has argued
DEI initiatives are discriminatory, but Sharpton says if we leave
Trump unchecked on DEI, he'll completely erase the freedoms previously
(17:31):
fought for. I'm Scott Pringle WR News.
Speaker 9 (17:34):
So big changes at Southwest Airlines, and not all are popular.
According to CBS News, Southwest Airlines not only changing to
assigned seats policy on January twenty seventh, but a new
policy announcement is causing backlash among the plus size flying community.
Beginning on that same day, larger passengers will be asked
(17:54):
to quote pay for an extra seat in advance, with
the option of getting their money back later, or they
can ask for a free extra seat once they get
to the airport. The new Southwest policy says that a
refund is quote possible, but not guaranteed. Some speculate that
this new policy, along with the elimination of their bags
fly free policy, could end up being a one way
(18:17):
ticket to destroy loyalty. Sounds like a lot of changes
that people aren't going to really like buy an airline.
Speaker 1 (18:23):
Wasn't that great to be any one? But hey, who knows. Yeah,
I will tell you something. That last thing you talked
about about people that are oversized having to buy another seat,
that's a huge controversial thing. They're going to get a
whole lot of backlash over that back You're right, You're
right about Southwest. They've they've changed to the point where
there they're like every other airline.
Speaker 10 (18:45):
Now.
Speaker 1 (18:45):
It used to be a bargain to go to Southwest
Now now it's not.
Speaker 9 (18:49):
No, And I didn't think they were that great. So anyway,
the opening bell is sponsored by Dime Community Bank. We've
got your bank coming to Lakewood, New Jersey in twenty
twenty six, but serving New York over one hundred and
sixty years. There's the opening bell, and the Dow opened
up eighty points, the S ANDP opened up seven points,
and the Nasdaq opened up twenty five points.
Speaker 1 (19:12):
Thanks so much, Jacqueline Carl. A new iPhone model is
on the way, and WR host of rich On Tech
Rich de Muro will talk to us about it next
and what else we can expect to see at Apple's
big upcoming event. Also, we all remember that one teacher, right,
the teacher who made a difference, who believed in us,
(19:34):
challenged us, just made learning fun. Well, now is your
chance to say thank you to them in a big way.
With iHeartRadio's Thank a Teacher powered by Donor's Choice, you
can nominate an outstanding public school teacher who has gone
above and beyond for their students for a chance to
win five thousand dollars to stock their classroom with whatever
(19:56):
they want. Teachers like our teacher of the day, Kristin Hutchison,
who IT teaches at hospital schools in the Bronx. Kristin
works with students affected by traumatic brain injuries, many of
whom are nonverbal. People who nominated her tell us that
Kristin uses patience, creativity, and deep compassion to help every
(20:20):
child find their own voice, whether through communication devices, gestures,
or other small breakthroughs. Help us say thank you to
educators shaping our future and doing God's work like Kristin.
Nominate your favorite teacher now at iHeartRadio dot com slash Teachers.
Let's get right there. Rich Demiro rich on Tech has
(20:43):
heard Sunday nights from a to eleven pm on wor
riches with us every Thursday at this time. You can
also follow him at rich on Tech on Instagram. That's
at rich on tech on Instagram.
Speaker 10 (20:58):
Good morning Rich, Hey, Good morning Larry. Real quick, I
do have a small bone to pick. Yes, you can
hold your nose and you don't smell anything. I just
taught my kids that trick the other day when they
had to eat like a vegetable that it wants, So
it does work.
Speaker 1 (21:12):
I'm vindicated. Well, Chris sar, it doesn't work.
Speaker 10 (21:18):
You did he backtracked, He backtracked after you he said
it didn't work. It definitely works. It still works to
this day.
Speaker 3 (21:25):
Now I'm back on which is my favorite guest?
Speaker 1 (21:27):
Now, Chrischwitz are filling in for Natalie Vodka. Hey, listen,
you got my attention when you said Apple they have
a big event coming up. What are we going to hear?
Speaker 10 (21:39):
I know you're a big Apple guy. This is the
super Bowl of tech events for folks like myself. Tuesday,
September ninth, ten am Pacific. I guess that's one pm
your time. We are you know, I can't do the math. Nevermind,
I don't even know at the time. But it's ten
am Pacific in Cooper, Tino. This is when Apple is
(21:59):
set to show off its latest iPhone seventeen models. Yes,
we're gonna get all the typical upgrades, faster, better camera,
all that good stuff, new software. But this year they're
supposed to have a new phone called the iPhone seventeen Air,
which is supposed to be super thin and super light.
That's gonna be exciting in the tech world.
Speaker 1 (22:19):
You know, I'm always suspicious of the new iPhones because
you know, you feel the pressure to always upgrade, always upgrade,
always upgrade. I feel like I should wait a couple
of models, and because you know, the iPhone I have
is fine, it's pretty good, but there seems to be
this push to get the newest iPhone every time it's out.
(22:40):
Will this one be better than the sixteen? I mean
I I can't imagine it could be that much better.
Just thinner.
Speaker 10 (22:48):
Well here's the deal, and we'll have Apple's new motem inside.
And this modem makes the battery last a really long time.
So that's the trick of this thin phone, because we
saw the thin phone from Safe the battery does not
last very long. Apple has this incredible you know, they
control everything from the hardware to the software and now
(23:09):
the modem of this phone. I know it doesn't sound sexy,
but the reality is if the battery can last a
really long time on this thin phone, people are gonna
love it. And I think that's the main thing that
we have to look out for here. But do you
have to upgrade? The answer is no. People are keeping
their phones longer than ever, average of thirty six to
thirty nine months. The only thing that's making them upgrade
(23:30):
at this point is the jealousy of AI features.
Speaker 1 (23:33):
They want that.
Speaker 10 (23:33):
Built into their phone. But quite honestly, you can download
chatch ebt and get a lot of the AI right
off the bat.
Speaker 1 (23:39):
Well, that is a pretty big deal. Having the battery
last longer. How much longer are we talking about?
Speaker 10 (23:46):
I mean, they came out with this battery on the
iPhone sixteen E, which is their budget model, and that thing,
I'm not kidding in my testing, you never have to
charge it. It's so good. The battery just goes on forever.
And so yeah, we could look at some pretty decent
battery life from this thin phone. The fact is the
phone itself has a much smaller battery inside. So if
(24:06):
Apple can still make that phone last a whole day,
that's going to be a pretty good thing for people.
Speaker 1 (24:11):
Yeah, that is a big deal. Let's talk about chat GPT.
They've had some problems recently in conversations with teenagers and
young people, especially when they're in distress and they're in
some trouble on that, aren't they.
Speaker 10 (24:26):
Yeah, this is the first lawsuit directly attributed to chat
GBT assisting with a teen in their suicide and This
is just heartbreaking. Out of California, parents are suing sixteen
year old took his life and chat GBT did nothing
about it. Parents discovered hundreds of conversations back and forth
(24:49):
with chat CBT, not just talking about this but explaining
how to do it, and CHATCHYB, you know, in a
blog post, says, yeah, we kind of failed here. We
really did in a major way. And we're gonna up
our safeguards. We're gonna flag these conversations. We're gonna make
sure that the thing was larry. The longer you have
a conversation with CHATCHIBT, it turns out the less those
(25:12):
safeguards kick in, because they may kick in at the
initial conversation when you say something, but over time it
sort of forgets that initial conversation safeguard. And so CHATCHI,
he says, is going to get better about these safeguards,
referring you to therapists and also crisis hotlines.
Speaker 1 (25:29):
My son who is a bit of a techie, and
you don't have to respond to this. I just want
to find out if this true is true, if maybe
some of our listeners could call me, And he said,
if you talk to chat GBT, long enough, it always
becomes anti semitic. I had never heard. That was like
shocking to me. So again, you don't need to respond
(25:50):
to that, but I'd like to find out from people
that are listening if anybody else has been there. You
just made me think of that instead. See you're gonna
stay away. You're a smart man, and.
Speaker 6 (26:02):
I have not seen that.
Speaker 10 (26:03):
But here I will say this, I have not seen
that to be true. And I chat with chatchbet all
day long, but I will tell you that chatchubt will
eventually do what you want it to do, no matter
how many safeguards are in place, because you can convince
it otherwise. And that, I think is what most people do,
is they get around these safeguards in various ways.
Speaker 1 (26:24):
I get it, I get it. What is this about
Facebook scanning your camera role?
Speaker 10 (26:30):
Yeah, this is one of those examples of Facebook kind
of sliding something under the radar. And thankfully there's people
like me that notice this stuff and tell you about
it because they've they set up these two options in
your settings called camera role Sharing Suggestions, and you might
have toggled them on by accident, but basically it gives
(26:51):
Meta the ability to not only look at the photos
on your camera role. But in the second the second
toggle gives them the ability to upload them to their
cloud and analyze them to do things like make them
interesting or you know, give you these like suggestions for sharing. No,
we don't need Facebook to be looking at our camera
(27:11):
roll our private pictures we have not uploaded. So you
can go into settings look for something called camera role
sharing suggestions. I personally would toggle both of those switches
off if they are on. I posted this to my Instagram.
All the instructions are there at rich On Tech. Larry,
I don't like this kind of stuff when they do this.
Speaker 1 (27:29):
No way. Yeah, it's funny. I hear all these stories
about AI getting something wrong. There was a paper turned
in I guess recently in Michigan where all of all
of the references were made up. And now you have
an example of them getting a menu wrong.
Speaker 10 (27:46):
Oh yeah, this is wild. There's a restaurant in Missouri
that's saying please do not do not rely on Google
AI overviews for our pizza specials. It's a pizza restaurant
and so well, basically, you know how when you search
Google up at the top, it has all those AI
overviews well, that sometimes could be a gobbledegook of whatever
(28:07):
Google finds on the web, and when it comes to
this restaurant, apparently it's just mistaking all these different signals
it's getting. And when people are searching for specials on
that restaurant, they just see the results at the top.
They've trusted Google for twenty years with their search results,
and they call the restaurant and they say, hey, yeah,
I'd like this special that gives me a large pie
for the price of a small and the restaurant's like, no, we.
Speaker 8 (28:29):
Don't have that special.
Speaker 10 (28:30):
That's AI hallucination. And the customers get mad, so they're saying, please,
don't do this.
Speaker 1 (28:35):
It's not perfect, is it. Thanks so much, Rich DeMuro
Rich on Tech has heard Sunday nights from eight to
eleven right here on wo R. Riches with us every
Thursday at nine to thirty five. Be sure to sign
up for his newsletter at richontech dot TV. Thanks a lot, Rich.
When we come back, my final thoughts, a recap of
(28:56):
today's show and the talk back of the morning. It's
many in the morning on SHO and ten WR. Now
with some final thoughts. Here's Larry Well. We keep hearing
from Democratic mayors and governors that crime is down and
not a problem at all in their cities and states.
They say Donald Trump should stay out of their cities,
(29:16):
stay out of their states. But a new Associated Press
poll shows an overwhelming number of Americans disagree. Sixty six
percent believe crime is a major problem in their cities
and states, and fifty three percent approve the actions that
Donald Trump is taking to fight crime. They like that
(29:36):
someone is finally tackling the problem. But the Democrats, who
are offering no solutions at all and in fact cause
the new wave of crimes with casulest bail and sanctuary cities,
call Trump a dictator for trying to fight crime. It's
important to remember that these are the very same people
who said the border is secure for four years under
(29:56):
Joe Biden, and now they say their cities are safe,
like Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson and of course norm from
Cheers aka JB. Pritzer, the governor who is like a
clueless nero playing a violin of denial while Chicago burns
with crime, he walks the lakefront with security to prove
(30:18):
to us how safe it is in Chicago, and of
course the Lakefront. Lakefront Drive is maybe the safest area
in town. That's where Oprah lives. For God's sake, he
didn't go into the areas where they had twenty six
people shot in thirty six hours this week. You know,
Muriel Bowers of the mayor of Washington, DC, is a
(30:41):
new believer in Donald Trump's federal involvement in fighting crime
in her city after seeing the results. Good for the
mayor putting her city, putting the truth over politics. But
not New York Governor Kathy Hokeel, not New York City
Mayor Eric Adams, not Governor Printzer, not Brandon Johnson from Chicago.
They all have been offered help, but are playing to
(31:04):
their democratic crowd by fighting Donald Trump instead of fighting crime.
Let me ask you something, when did losing lives take
a back seat to winning elections? Coming up next, Ken
Rosatto fills in for Mark Simone and he welcomes New
Jersey Senator Owen Henry and trauma and bereavement specialist doctor
(31:28):
Norman Freed. Now a recap of today's show. Woor White
House correspondent John Decker believes that despite President Trump's positive
attitude in Hopes, it is proving very difficult to negotiate
a peace deal between Russia and Ukraine.
Speaker 11 (31:43):
I think that's one of the great character traits of
President Trump, and that is he's an optimist. The reality
is is that we aren't any closer. There's that optimism
that existed at the beginning part of last week after
the President met with not only President Zelenski at the
White House, those European leaders. That optimism has gone away.
Speaker 1 (32:05):
Retired NYPD first grade Detective Michael Sapracolin thinks that even
though the response to the Minneapolis shooting was great, it
could have been a whole lot better.
Speaker 12 (32:17):
We need to think about how we safeguard our children
and everybody from these terrorizing attacks. I mean, the response
time is terrific, with ATF being there and the FBI
being there right away, but this whole situation appeared to
be done before anybody responded to this.
Speaker 1 (32:33):
Political analyst and University of Mount Saint Vincent assistant professor J. C.
Polanco sees a pathway for Mayor Adams to save his
reputation by pulling out of the race to make it
easier to beat Mom Donnie.
Speaker 13 (32:45):
If he says for the safety of it, I disagree
with the criminalizing prostitution. I disagree with the criminalizing misdemeanors.
Me staying in this race makes them more likely. I'm
going to do the best thing for the city and
continue that leadership he's always shown, even in his days
in lawn for weeks to think about the future of
the city.
Speaker 1 (33:04):
And the talk back of the morning and winter the
MENTI in the morning T shirt things. Our focus should
be in one place. Following the tragedy in Minneapolis.
Speaker 14 (33:13):
I think we need to concentrate today on just praying
for those two children that lost their lives and their families,
and also that all the other kids and teachers and
staff and everything are able to recover from this and
get through this mentally. And don't forget they have a
(33:35):
long road to travel.
Speaker 1 (33:37):
And don't forget we awarded the best talkback of the
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