Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Hi, It's Michael. Your morning show can be heard live
weekday mornings five to eight am six to nine am
Eastern in great cities like Tampa, Florida, Youngstown, Ohio, and
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. We'd love to join you on the
drive to work live, but we're glad you're here now.
Enjoyed the podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:16):
Well two three starting your morning off right, A new
way of talk, a new way of understanding.
Speaker 3 (00:24):
Not because we're in this stage. This is your morning
show with Michael o'dryl Choran.
Speaker 1 (00:32):
Six minutes after the hour, Thanks for waking up with
your morning show. I am Michael del Journo on the
Aaron streaming live on your iHeart app. Welcome to Tuesday,
July the thirtieth, twenty twenty four teen. USA added eight
more medals in Paris that are getting ready for action again. Today,
Democrats are rallying behind the president's call for a Supreme
Court overhaul. Republicans, of course, stand against it. It's a
(00:54):
hypocritical narrative going nowhere. And text messages between law enforcement
before or President Trump's assassination attempt show officers race concerns
ninety minutes before the incident, not to mention the shooter
planned for the better part of a year, and the war.
Speaker 3 (01:12):
Continues in the Middle East.
Speaker 1 (01:13):
James Carafano is not only lieutenant colonel, he's one of
the finest military and foreign policy minds in America today
presides at the Heritage Foundation, one of the largest thing
tanks in the world. You can read his great work
and his colleagues great work at Heritage dot org. Lieutenant colonel.
First of all, planning for a year ninety minutes, and
we talk about poor planning, poor communication ninety minutes prior
(01:36):
to the assassination attempt, local law enforcement tried to communicate
the Secret Service. Is this starting to look more and
more like something worse than incompetence?
Speaker 4 (01:47):
Well, actually it does look like incompetence. I got to
tell you on day one. I think that for the
first time we talked about this. You know, there were
two super obvious issues that appeared really kind of within
five minutes of the shooting, which is one is how
do you know why was the roof not protected? What
was the guy allowed to get through? But the other
(02:08):
one was is if why wasn't the fact that there
was a threat in the crowd communicated to the Secret
Service so they can keep the president off the stage
till they had determined whether it was safe or not.
I mean, so this just confirms that these were really
the two big gaping holes all of this. When we
(02:31):
talk about competence, it is normally you go out, you
survey the site, you coordinate with local and state law enforcement,
you divvy up the task, You establish a system for
communications in case you need to respond during the events,
(02:52):
so situational awareness in case you have a medical emergency
you need to evacuate somebody to a hospital. This is
all routine or just thinking. This is a basic blocking
and tackling of event security, and clearly didn't happen, and
we got the news about failures staggering.
Speaker 1 (03:10):
And then we got the news that the snipers that
reported for duty said, well, usually you're briefed by Secret
Service at the site.
Speaker 3 (03:16):
It never happened.
Speaker 1 (03:17):
And that was when we first realized something's different, something's
going wrong here.
Speaker 4 (03:21):
Yeah, there was a complete failure of leadership. And and
you can't say, well, we had you know, DHS folks,
and I don't know what they were doing. And maybe
this is the this is the responsiblity Secret Service. They
have one job. They have one job, and this is
by the way, historically the most likely form of assassination
(03:47):
attempt against the president or or a senior official, which
is a loan gunman on a operating on a scenario,
which by all accounts ought to completely fail that normal security,
the layers of normal security would screen this thing out.
And so they have one mission. And not only did
(04:09):
they fail in their one mission, they failed against the
thing they're actually designed to prevent, the number one thing.
So the scale of this failure is you know, it
would be like Normandy and the Army just like forgot
to show up.
Speaker 1 (04:28):
Well, I will add this weekend past weekend and Nashville,
the President was here speaking at the cryptocurrency conference, and
there were two suspects of suspicion which was the same
things the same standard that was met by the PA shooter,
and the event was delayed until they were found and removed.
(04:50):
All right, now, is that a story of see they've
already learned from Butler or they never needed to learn
and Butler that lesson. That's basics right exactly.
Speaker 4 (05:00):
That is this is event security one oh one. So
the Secret Service, who was by the way in charge
of not just defending the president, but all designated national
security events, the Super Bowl, you know, stuff like that,
the March Show, when the president is inaugurated. The guys
(05:26):
literally the AA plus team, right, this is the simone
biles of security made the most fundamental basic errors in
event security that you can make. How else to put it?
Speaker 1 (05:40):
Lieutenant Colonel James Carafinal joining us for a weekly foreign
policy and military briefing. Let's start in the Middle East
where rockets killed twelve israelis. So now you're in a
position to proportionally and timely respond without war escalating. You
know as well as I do. You taught history at
(06:00):
West Point. Wars rarely end where they begin and with
the same players involved. So escalation is something that to
always be concerned with. So for those that are waking
up this morning, this is the epicenter of the world Israel.
It's not Hamas now, it's Hesbelah expanding to the north.
Put our concerns in perspective, please.
Speaker 4 (06:20):
Well, yeah, I think headline number one is Israel would
not be turning their attention and threatening hes Blaw unless
they pretty much cleaned up the threat of Amas in Gaza.
And so the number one takeaway for this is we
don't have the hostages back. That's a tragedy. They're going
(06:42):
to now they'll actually be able to be more aggressive
and searching for them. But the Hamas operation in Gaza
is in the wrap up phase, which is not good
news for Hezbolah because it means that Israel can turn
full attention has Bla. Now we all know that Hezbla
has ten times a military capacity of Amas. We get that,
(07:02):
but Israel has a lot of military capacities. And if
your heads blow on you want to pick a fight
with Israel, you should have done it when they were
tied down and got them, not now when they can
turn their full attention to you. Right, you know, it's
about making a face, like making faces of Freddy Krueger,
you know, after he's polished off the last fix for
the next one, or.
Speaker 1 (07:23):
A hungry bear when he just finished his last meal.
All right, So you and your colleagues, you've briefed presidents,
you've done a lot of this stuff. Your take on
the odds any hostages are still alive to be found.
Speaker 4 (07:40):
Well, I talked to a source just last week who
said that they were actually very close to a deal
to get thirty people out, mostly women and children, and
then we're pretty sure that that would be the last
the last get So what's.
Speaker 3 (07:57):
The estimate on how many have been killed?
Speaker 4 (08:01):
I don't have that number, But if you're asking me
how many living hostages can be returned, my guess is
the best case it looks like about thirty.
Speaker 1 (08:11):
About thirty, all right, and you know here at home,
you've got Joe. I mean, there's a massive pivot by
the media. So the way I like to say it is,
for a couple of weeks, we got to see what
it would look like if journalism wasn't dead again, where
everybody covered the president honestly, and for the people with
free press, course, it was only to behoove them. They
(08:33):
had a candidate they thought couldn't win, and they wanted
to aid the political operatives in stepping him aside. And
then the minute he's aside, some of the same media
that was telling you, oh, the president's fine, he's running
circles around interns were the same ones that condemned him
for being senile, and now we're telling you he's one
of the greatest presidents of all time and he's going
to cure cancer and he's gonna you know, I guess
(08:54):
change fundamentally the Supreme Court, it's not going anywhere. But
what do you make of all this pivot? And frankly,
my question for you is explain to the audience what
our founding father's vision was for a free press compared
to what we're living today.
Speaker 4 (09:13):
Well, okay, to be fair, it's a free press. It's
not a responsible press. It's not a credible press. Right,
it's not even the press per se. I mean, the
press is in there because that was the dominant technology
at the time. They didn't have social media, otherwise they
would have said that. But it was basically most powerful
(09:34):
tool for communicating, which was the press should be free.
And it was a reflection of a more basic freedom,
which is the freedom of expression. And so people are
free to express stupid ideas. I mean, what we have
learned is our media is duplicitous and horrible. And you know,
to your point about you know, changing the narrative about
(09:56):
how wonderful a president Joe Biden was, you know, a
nice uncle Joe, and how stellar a leader, Kamila Harris's
is that let's go to the real news, right, Harris
came out and said, you know, basically diminished US commitment
to Israel. Okay, she met with net Yahoid, We're going
to support Israel, but basically said, oh, I'm concerned about
the death of children. This is terrible and everything. And
(10:17):
the day after she did that, as the Israeli's war
and they say, if you give aid a comfort to
Hamas and Balsinians, things will just get worse. The day
after she said that, Hamas turned down a ceasefire deal,
and the day after that has blot killed children in
the Goalen Heights, demonstrating the fact that her approach to
foreign policy was dead wrong. And then yesterday we had
(10:39):
this incredible situation in Venezuela. We're literally the Venezuelan president,
despite losing by overwhelming odds, he sais no One'm still
the president. I won, and half the countries in Latin
America have condemned it, and the United States has literally
kind of just sat on its hand like and been
like googleized. So the leader of the free world, the
leader of the Western Hemisphere, basically is just standing there
(11:01):
and watching a murderous dictator steel election and really doesn't
have much to say about it. So those are stories.
I'm not being political, I'm not being Republican or a
Democrat or whatever. Those are global stories that are completely ignored.
And why because they don't put the narrative.
Speaker 1 (11:20):
Yeah, and from a historical perspective, news took days, sometimes
weeks if it happened in point A far away from
point B. So it was really necessary to have a
system in a way for the voters who had given
their consent to be governed, to hold them accountable and
(11:41):
know what they were saying or what they were doing
or what was happening. Today, that's all done kind of
instantly with our phone in our hand. On social media.
You bring up a great point. They lack credibility all sides,
I might add, they also lack ratings, and they certainly
lack influence. We saw that in the Hillary Clinton election.
So that's really kind of been true answered in the
(12:01):
freest and formed social media right right.
Speaker 4 (12:04):
And look, I mean to me, it's a good news
bad news story. So yes, the other day there was
a story somebody posted the thing Jimmy Carter died, which
which several actually several credible news sites reposted, but in
literally minutes that story was debunked and it was all
over the internet. So that's called crowdsourcing where you can't
(12:26):
necessarily hide the truth when everybody has an opportunity to
jump in and say something. And we've seen that a
lot with X, where X has really been a platform
to debunk kind of nonsense stuff. Here's I think we're
at the tipping point is you know, we treat media
like advertising. We give people what they want or we
(12:48):
want them to have the purpose of ultimately the purposes
of a free press and a free Sorry about that. Nice,
there you go. I'm in the speedway now. The purpose
of freedom of expression is not so people get the
information they want or the information you want to give them,
(13:11):
and so people can get the information they need that
they need to survive, that they need to thrive, that
they need to make decisions. This is why people.
Speaker 5 (13:18):
Listen to your radio show, because it's like, I just
don't want somebody to tell me what I want to hear,
what I need to get by in the day. And
when when enough people make that decision, that's me hit
a tipping point. So the point that you made about
traditional media dying and nobody paying attention, it's because people
realize that's where that's not where I can go to
(13:41):
get the information I need to make a good decision.
And this is and again I'm.
Speaker 4 (13:45):
Not political, but look, we've already seen the plot here,
you know, you know, run Joe from the basement. That
was the twenty twenty plan. The plot here is to
hide who Kamala Harris is for one hundred days, right,
and just for just keep telling people she's just really wonderful.
Speaker 6 (14:02):
Right.
Speaker 4 (14:03):
We'll see if they can sustain that with the support
of the media and the support of all these elites,
or if people get a real honest debate about who
hurt she is and not just her race and her
color and her historic but as a person, as a leader,
as a decision maker, as a policymaker. And we'll see
(14:24):
if people are really interested in that information and if
they make decisions based on it.
Speaker 3 (14:28):
Well, we're days.
Speaker 1 (14:29):
Away from her veep choice, We're two weeks away from
a convention, We're ninety days from an election, and thirty
days away from early voting. This narrativised perceived momentum is
about to meet a political reality and at a unfold
for all of us together. The one thing I'm trying
to get to the bottom of is the US bought
back a bunch of barrels of oil to replenish the
Strategic Petroleum Reserve, which was designed, of course for security
(14:53):
of our nation and in case of a crisis. The
crisis was political for Joe Biden, so he borrowed was
to kind of dampen down the cost of energy from
his policies. And now we're buying back with Americans dollars
to replenish that reserve.
Speaker 3 (15:09):
But nowhere in any.
Speaker 1 (15:11):
Of the stories can you find who we bought it from.
I suspect potentially even some of our enemies. But yeah,
we got to get to the bottom of the truth somehow, someway,
and it's certainly.
Speaker 3 (15:19):
Not going to happen to the mainstream media.
Speaker 1 (15:21):
You can read the great work of Lieutenant Colonel James
Carafano and his colleagues in Heritage dot orgon.
Speaker 3 (15:26):
We'll talk again next week, Lieutenant Colonel. Thanks. This is
your morning show with Michael Deltona.
Speaker 1 (15:33):
Am I that much old? Jeffrey Lions here our engineer.
I'm Michael del Jorna. This is your morning show. How
much older than you am?
Speaker 7 (15:39):
I I'm fifty six, So just a couple of years,
Just a couple of years, Yeah.
Speaker 1 (15:45):
But it's enough to give you a look. He just
asked me off the air, so because I was a
grinder in my sleep. And eventually what happens if you
don't wear your mouthguard and I didn't, you run out
of enamel, then you have to get you know, crowns.
Speaker 7 (16:00):
Dennist referred to it as cupping you.
Speaker 1 (16:02):
Yeah, it's gone, and so you know what, And so
he asked me, you know, how bad is it now?
Assuming you don't have any complications, Oh, there's going to
be that are necessary for root canal, depending on if
you waited too long.
Speaker 3 (16:16):
So I just said, you know, it's a bad couple
of weeks. So this is how it's going to be
as we get older. I'll tell you what's coming.
Speaker 7 (16:22):
Yep. And then he came back and you said it's
gonna be a bad couple of weeks.
Speaker 3 (16:26):
You said its gonna be a bad couple of weeks.
Speaker 1 (16:28):
That's a pretty good summation of how it goes.
Speaker 6 (16:31):
Now.
Speaker 1 (16:31):
I can get into some of the particulars. You don't
need to know them, but it's a bad cover. I
get the gas and you will be getting up in
the middle of the night soon to go to the bathroom,
and the.
Speaker 3 (16:40):
Grim Reaper will see you on your seventy second birthday.
Any other questions you have, very all right if you're
just waking up.
Speaker 1 (16:46):
Text messages between law enforcement and former President Trump's assassination
attempting secret Service apparently began ninety.
Speaker 3 (16:55):
Minutes before the incident.
Speaker 1 (16:56):
Next up for Kamala Harris and her brother Loves Traveling
Salvation Show is to choose a vice presidential running mate.
It won't be Carolina Governor Roy Cooper and Team USA
added eight more medals yesterday.
Speaker 3 (17:07):
My favorite, of course, was the.
Speaker 1 (17:08):
Men's gymnastics, and I really got into women's rugby yesterday.
Speaker 3 (17:12):
Hey it's me Michael.
Speaker 1 (17:13):
Your morning show can be heard live five to eight
am Central, six to nine Eastern and great cities like Jackson, Mississippi, Akron, Ohio,
or Columbus, Georgia. We'd love to be a part of
your morning routine and we're grateful you're here now.
Speaker 3 (17:25):
Enjoy the podcast. I am Michael del Jorna.
Speaker 1 (17:28):
This is your morning show and coming up in about
one hour. Far be it from me to rain on
the Mama La Kamala brother Loves Traveling Salvation show. That's underway,
but we will go beyond the narrative momentum of Mama
La Kamala to the political reality. And I don't just
mean the electoral College map, Yeah, that old one. It's
(17:49):
the economy stupid. It's rearing its ugly head in the
form of reality as well.
Speaker 3 (17:54):
And the Senate.
Speaker 1 (17:56):
Expected to pass sweeping new rules for the Internet safe today,
kind of like the president's attack on the Supreme Court.
It may ultimately be heading nowhere. Roy O'Neil has that
story and mere moments from now. But first, Aaron rayales here,
we have a new study that's out which states have
(18:18):
the best and worst healthcare?
Speaker 3 (18:21):
Is this really a state question?
Speaker 4 (18:25):
Yes?
Speaker 2 (18:26):
Yeah, So what's interesting to me.
Speaker 8 (18:28):
It varies widely, and the average American apparently spends thirteen thousand,
five hundred dollars per year on healthcare. That is mind
boggling to me, and that's why it's a large portion
of a lot of people's budgets. So finding which state
can offer you the best value or turn on your
investment in terms of how much of that is going
(18:48):
out the door is really important.
Speaker 2 (18:50):
So the states with the best healthcare.
Speaker 8 (18:52):
And by the way, this is wald have they looked
at forty four metrics. It's everything from the cost of
health care, but not only that, it also looked at
things like life expectancy, time it takes to be seen
in an emergency room, the average out of pocket.
Speaker 1 (19:08):
All of that's before you get to that the thirteen thousand,
five hundred. Is that what we're spending in care and
does that include premiums or is that just for our insurance?
Speaker 8 (19:18):
That's that is like the number that's coming out of pocket.
That's not like the insurance that's covering the thirteen.
Speaker 2 (19:24):
Thousand worth of you know, whatever it is you had
to do.
Speaker 8 (19:27):
That's how much we are spending on top of whatever
we were spending from our intro.
Speaker 2 (19:32):
You know, whatever we do.
Speaker 8 (19:33):
If the amount that you spend on your internance, so
let's say you have like an insurance plan through your employer,
and three hundred a month ago is towards that that
is included in this.
Speaker 3 (19:41):
But outside of that number, I'm sorry that number seems low.
If you're if you're.
Speaker 1 (19:46):
Getting off at thirteen thousand and five hundred, you need
to thank your Mama La Kamala stars.
Speaker 3 (19:51):
But all right.
Speaker 1 (19:51):
Let's say, let's assume it's thirteen thousand, five hundred and
that's high.
Speaker 3 (19:54):
Mine's double that. But what does it say? What does
it show?
Speaker 8 (19:58):
Minnesota best for healthcare, followed by Rhode Island, South Dakota, Iowa,
New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Utah, Vermont, Maine, and Colorado.
Speaker 3 (20:06):
It sounds very blue to me, but go ahead, it does.
Speaker 8 (20:09):
It sounds very blue War states Mississippi, Alabama, West Virginia, Georgia, Oklahoma, Alaska, Texas, Arkansas, Louisiana.
Speaker 2 (20:18):
And then this one blew my mind, rounding out.
Speaker 8 (20:20):
The top ten Florida, I know, given how many people go,
and so.
Speaker 1 (20:26):
It sounds like a wallet hob attacking on the red
But yeah, okay, so I know that it's not, but go.
Speaker 8 (20:30):
Ahead, Yeah, it's really not.
Speaker 2 (20:33):
It just looked at the data.
Speaker 8 (20:34):
And this is why I love it and hate wallethud,
because like you're looking at the data, this is not
it's it's.
Speaker 2 (20:40):
Not artisan in any way.
Speaker 8 (20:42):
It looks like the percent of adults with no dental
visit in the last year Mississippi is the highest, followed
by Alabama, Texas, West Virginia, Arkansas. And then it looked
at things like stroke and heart disease rates. Mississippi again
the highest, Kentucky, Alabama, Arkansas, cancer rates.
Speaker 2 (20:56):
New Jersey the highest. If you ever enter New.
Speaker 8 (20:58):
Jersey from New York side, you're like, yeah, this can't
be good to be breathing it and it's like nothing
but smoke stacks, followed by West Virginia, Maine, Iowa, and Kentucky.
So it looked at so many different metrics. The percent
of insured children at ages zero to eighteen, Oklahoma had
the lowest.
Speaker 2 (21:17):
That's not great. These are this is very comprehensive.
Speaker 1 (21:22):
Listen, I know you like to nerd out over all
these stats. I look at this from the surface, you've
you know, gone through it. What screams to me is obesity,
smoking and poverty. That's what put all those states in
the red. And then life expectancy in Florida, I don't know,
you do have an elderly population on fixed income, right.
(21:44):
I mean, there are explanation, but I'm just pulling that
out of logic and common sense. Anything in the matrix
that kind of puts its finger on the cause.
Speaker 8 (21:52):
Honestly, you kind of nailed it, and your logic is
quite sound, Michael, Like it's being obese. I know this
is like a controversial thing to say, which it shouldn't be,
but being obese will kill you ultimately, whether.
Speaker 2 (22:05):
Or not you died, Like it causes. The knock on effect.
Speaker 8 (22:09):
To your health from obesity is profound, everything from heart.
Speaker 2 (22:13):
Disease to diabetes to like it goes on and on.
Speaker 8 (22:16):
I actually have a girlfriend who is an obgyn surgeon
and says that ninety five percent of her people who
come in with some sort of you know, ovary type
surgery needed and have cancer, they're all obese ninety five percent. Like,
it's just it's very unusual to find a person in
her And I'm like, really, I didn't know that it
(22:36):
like attacked your own.
Speaker 3 (22:38):
Yeah, no it does.
Speaker 1 (22:40):
But by the way, and when we have the debates
about the cost of care, you know, people for decades
targeted the smokers. You're causing all this trouble with your
secondhand smoke, with your cancers, whether you're this, whether you that, no,
nobody obesity and the expense of obci and all we
do in America is address it as some kind of
an image that has solved through acceptance.
Speaker 3 (23:03):
No, it is a medical crisis.
Speaker 1 (23:05):
By the way, this is why I was very quick,
you know, I was like, Okay, you know, I'm not
going to say anything outrageous on the air. But we
do know that COVID began in China. We do know
it got out of that lab. We do know the
actions they took after it got out of the lab
to protect the spread within China and how reckless they
were with the spread elsewhere. And we do know who
(23:27):
it affected the most, and that was the United States.
If you were going to create a biological weapon to
try to take down Trump, who was busting China? As
you know what, you know, what's our biggest problem? Obesity?
What was the biggest impact of death due to COVID obesity?
And that was a shock to the medical community. They
(23:47):
didn't figure that out till it was already in progress.
I mean, everybody knew if you had a heart problem
or pulmonary problems that was going to be problematic, but
no obesity.
Speaker 3 (23:55):
That was what it targeted, obese diabetics.
Speaker 1 (23:58):
And that's why if you get this stuff and you're
not following the cultural narrative, obesity is very dangerous.
Speaker 3 (24:05):
To walk around with.
Speaker 1 (24:06):
For stroke, for heart attack, for heart disease, for diabetes,
for kidney, for cancer, for a lot of things. But
all right, well that pretty much defined all the red
states that are on that list.
Speaker 8 (24:18):
Yes, and I like that you bring up the idea
that we're like no healthy at any rate.
Speaker 2 (24:22):
Nope, not true, not a thing. And it's like, I'm
not trying to be mean here.
Speaker 8 (24:25):
This isn't like this is your loved ones you want
like this is a great way. You're looking at someone
who's wildly obese, and this is not their fault.
Speaker 2 (24:34):
It happens.
Speaker 8 (24:35):
There's a lot of many different reasons why this happens,
but it will kill you, and you're looking at someone who's.
Speaker 2 (24:41):
Very sick and it's important to address it.
Speaker 8 (24:43):
Which is why you know these blocks these blockbuster drugs
like the semon glue tides will go vi et cetera.
Speaker 2 (24:49):
They are actually really.
Speaker 8 (24:51):
I know that this is extremely controversial, but and there's
no biological free ride. There are knock on affectionmate, for sure,
But if you look at like the actual takeaway and
what it won't kill you from pretty darn good.
Speaker 1 (25:03):
Do you want to get mother? And this is the
mom in you that's gonna get wild? But go online.
There is a young girl I don't know if she's
a teenager or maybe twenty, somewhere in that range. She
was an adorable, perfectly healthy, normal weighted girl who gets
on TikTok and begins a journey to eat herself to death.
(25:24):
And I have watched this girl gain almost one hundred pounds,
and every day there's new videos and.
Speaker 3 (25:30):
All the kids around the car. She's getting rich.
Speaker 1 (25:33):
I cannot tell you how viral she is, how much
money she's probably making. And all she is is a
close up camera and you're watching her eat. It is
the celebration of gluttony. She's literally showing you how she
can eat herself to death. You're watching a live suicide.
I mean, one of the things about obesity that people
don't like to say out loud is you're digging your
grave with a fork. All right, it might be slow,
(25:54):
but that's what she means. I mean, if you google that,
oh well, I mean you all the strength you need
to keep your kids off social media for at least
till sixteen.
Speaker 2 (26:05):
I mean, for sure, we'll disgust you. Yes, like this,
everything about it. It's like, you know, I've Austen said this.
Speaker 8 (26:13):
It's kind of like watching an addict shoot up where
you're like, that's going to kill you.
Speaker 4 (26:19):
Man.
Speaker 8 (26:19):
Maybe not this time, but eventually it will. It's not
dissimilar in that sense. And this isn't judgmental like some
of my favorite family members are obi. It's like, it's
not I'm not judging here, but it is some sort
of release that needs to be channeled elsewhere kind of.
Speaker 1 (26:37):
But the segment is profound and its simplicity. Which states
have the best and worst healthcare? Well, it depends on
where the most healthy and worst healthy Americans live.
Speaker 2 (26:49):
Yeah, it's not right.
Speaker 3 (26:50):
That's the bottom line of the It's a great report.
We'll talk again tomorrow.
Speaker 1 (26:52):
Aaron real, ladies, And by the way, ladies, if you
want to hang Aaron, she's not a.
Speaker 3 (26:57):
S outse of fat anywhere easy for her to think.
I mean I am.
Speaker 1 (27:02):
I am with doctors marvel at as moderately obese as
if you saw me, I just kind of look athletic.
But you know, I got about fifteen twenty pounds. I
could lose too.
Speaker 7 (27:13):
I think you would. You would bet clean up on
myself ball team.
Speaker 3 (27:17):
Yeah, but you know, well that's the other thing.
Speaker 4 (27:19):
You know.
Speaker 1 (27:19):
I used to win a lot of prizes at carnivals
because nobody could guess my weight. Really, I look, you know,
a lot less than I am. I think I have
like I really think I might be big boned.
Speaker 7 (27:31):
My grandmother may say, you carry it well.
Speaker 3 (27:33):
I carry it well.
Speaker 1 (27:34):
The Bide administration is condemning the attack that killed twelve
children in Israel and the occupied territory of Golan Heights.
Speaker 3 (27:41):
Mark Mayfield has that story.
Speaker 9 (27:43):
National Security Council spokesman John Curry blamed the Iranian back
to militant.
Speaker 3 (27:46):
Group has Mala.
Speaker 9 (27:48):
Kirby said he doesn't believe the attack will impact ongoing
negotiations to strike a ceasefire deal in Gaza between Israel
and Hamas. Israel meanwhile carried out airstrikes against targets inside
Lebanon and along the border over the weekend.
Speaker 3 (28:00):
I'm Mark mayfhew or.
Speaker 1 (28:01):
President Trump explaining what he meant when he told conservative
Christians at a summit in Florida that you won't have
to vote anymore after the November election.
Speaker 10 (28:09):
Christians are not known as a big voting group. They'll vote,
and I'm explaining that to him. You never vote this time. Vote,
I'll straighten out the country. You won't have to vote anymore.
I won't need you vote.
Speaker 3 (28:21):
I love the way the story's written.
Speaker 1 (28:23):
His comments in Florida Friday drew swift backlash from those
who interpreted them the media, suggesting there'd be no more
elections after a second Trump presidency. Well, a typical starter
home at America is at least a million dollars in
some two hundred and thirty seven cities across the nation.
Speaker 3 (28:43):
Ah, it's.
Speaker 1 (28:45):
It's startling to even read that to you, let alone
believe that as a reality.
Speaker 3 (28:51):
Alisa Taylor has more. It's real.
Speaker 11 (28:53):
That's according to new numbers published by real estate marketplace Zillow,
which defines a starter home as those in lowest third
of home values in a given area. Five years ago,
only eighty seven cities saw starter home prices of a
million dollars, or more more than half of the city
seeing the surge or in California. New York came in second,
followed by New Jersey, Florida, and Massachusetts. I'mly sid Taylor.
Speaker 1 (29:14):
Won't be a North Carolina governor, but Vice President Kamala
Harris has hours, if not days, to announce her deep
running mate, Tammy Trehila.
Speaker 3 (29:20):
Reports Michigan Governor.
Speaker 12 (29:21):
Gretchen Whitmer told CBS Mornings Harris will likely decide on
her pick to be vice president in the next six
or seven days. Whitmer's co chair of Harris's presidential campaign
and shot down speculation she could be a possible contender
for Harris's running mate. This comes as the Democratic National
Committee plans to start a virtual roll call vote to
choose its presidential nominee by August first. I'm Tammy Truchuello.
Speaker 1 (29:44):
DMusA added eight more medals yesterday and continued to lead
the world in the overall standings at the Paris Olympics.
The Americans have now won twenty medals, including three gold,
eight silver, and nine bronze old The men's gymnastics team
led the way. A lot of stars and stripes in
the pool. And I'll tell you I have a new
found favorite sport. I think in the Olympics. Women's rugby.
Speaker 3 (30:06):
How did you find that?
Speaker 1 (30:07):
Seventeen to seven over Great Britain. They've now advanced to
take on New Zealand and the semi finals today, and
I for one will be watching Tough Girls, Rangers, one Guardians,
One's Dbacks, one NAT's Cardinals and Mariners lost the race.
We're off birthdays today, just having my baby Paul Anka
eighty three years old. Today, Actor Governor Arnold Schwazeneger is
(30:28):
seventy seven. Great actor Laurence Fishburn and also from CSI
on Television sixty three years old. Today, friend star Lisa
Kudrou is sixty one.
Speaker 3 (30:39):
Good morning, guys.
Speaker 12 (30:40):
This is Jeff a pleasant New Tennessee and my morning
show is your morning Show with Michael Dale Joano.
Speaker 1 (30:46):
You know when you're on a roller coaster and all
the dread of the going up, and then you get
to the top and there's that little turn yep, and
it's that moment you just come to the realization, well,
whatever's gonna happen.
Speaker 3 (30:57):
It's about half to go down. That's kind of where
we're at. So we're ninety eight days from election day.
Speaker 1 (31:04):
We're about a month away from early voting, We're about
two weeks away from the DNC, and something tells me
we're moments away from having a weep selection more with
John Decker coming up in minutes. First, roy O'Neil's here
to tell us and remind us of the old Reaganism.
Hi'm from the government, and I'm here to help the
Senate expected to protect us all from the internet, as
(31:25):
if they know how.
Speaker 3 (31:26):
He protect children anyway.
Speaker 13 (31:29):
So this is named specifically at trying to protect kids
on the Internet. It looks like it will pass the
Senate overwhelmingly. Some issues though on First Amendment grounds have
some people raising the red flag here Ran Paul from
Kentucky among them.
Speaker 3 (31:42):
But you've got like, oh, I go forgot it.
Speaker 14 (31:45):
Rick Santorum and the ACLU essentially in the same bed
together on this one, with these concerns about this bill
going too far. Essentially, it would make social media companies
do more to stop bully or violence or promoting suicide,
and the platforms would have to provide minors with options
(32:06):
that protect their information and disable the algorithms that make
social media so addictive for so many of us.
Speaker 3 (32:13):
All right, so we all know.
Speaker 1 (32:14):
If anybody's watching a documentary the Social Dilemma, we know
what happened. They were creating a product not any different
than radio Rory. It was all of our intent to
get people to listen to our radio stations, then to
listen on more occasions, more days, and more times per sitting.
I mean, that's the goal because more listeners listening longer
meant a higher share men a higher revenue. All right,
(32:36):
So these were all designed to get people to go
to their sites and stay on their sites. What part
of that is normal business? And what part of that
is dangerous? And who do we say is dangerous? And
who do we say isn't dangerous? I mean, that's where
I think the ACLU and a former Pennsylvania senator are concerned.
Speaker 3 (33:00):
Lose you was I so profound? I finally silenced the
great Roory O'Neil.
Speaker 10 (33:08):
I don't know what I'm he's calling now standby, I
think I make a stellar point.
Speaker 3 (33:16):
My point was so powerful it disconnected your line, right,
I mean, well that was voluntary.
Speaker 4 (33:22):
I don't know, he's at it again.
Speaker 1 (33:23):
I just but I mean, how do we decide, you know,
what is a normal get people to use your site,
get them to stay longer, and then what is dangerous?
And who picks these winners and losers? That's the problem, right, Well.
Speaker 6 (33:38):
And that's been the debate and why they've been trying
to craft this into a bipartisan bill. From Blumenthal from Connecticut,
Marshall Blackburn from Tennessee, UH, putting this together for the
past few years now, and it's finally starting to move.
When it gets to the House, that may face a
few more difficult questions.
Speaker 3 (33:54):
House Speaker Johnson, though, says he does want this to
pass by the end of the year. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (33:58):
I think, you know, something's got to be done with algorithms.
I don't know that you can protect everyone because you
know where you and I grew up in an era
where bullying was a part of life, and I think
it's part of what shaped us. I mean we you know,
we we learned from it and you learn to ignore
it or so on and so forth. I mean some
of that has to be parenting and managing versus just
(34:19):
controlling the internet.
Speaker 3 (34:20):
But it'll be sell.
Speaker 1 (34:21):
It'll be interesting to see what they shape and if
it can make any kind of impact.
Speaker 3 (34:25):
God knows. We need to do something right right.
Speaker 6 (34:28):
Well, and then you know, should they be profiting off
it At the same time as the.
Speaker 3 (34:31):
Other question, right, Roy's gonna be back next hour. We're
all in this together. This is your Morning Show with
Michael Nhild Join