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September 19, 2024 34 mins
It’s all about that map and less than 50 days out…it’s tied!

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, it's Michael.

Speaker 2 (00:00):
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Speaker 1 (00:14):
We invite you to listen.

Speaker 2 (00:15):
Live while you're getting ready in the morning, and to
take us along for the drive to work. But as
we always say, better late than ever. Thanks for joining
us for the podcast.

Speaker 3 (00:22):
Well two three, starting your morning off right.

Speaker 4 (00:27):
A new way of talk, a new way of understanding,
not because we're in this stigific.

Speaker 1 (00:34):
This is your morning show with Michael Bill Trump.

Speaker 2 (00:38):
The Federal Reserve cut interest rates half a point, not
a quarter. Everything you need to know about interest rates
and what the cuts mean to you and your family
budget with Economist and Money was David bonson One Hour
from Now. The national Teamster's leadership declined to endorse the candidate.

Speaker 1 (00:54):
This is interesting.

Speaker 2 (00:57):
Donald Trump had fifty eight percent support of the Teamster
workers Harris thirty one. So the workers want Trump fifty
eight to thirty one, but their organizers won't give the endorsement.
Do they really represent their members and is a Democrat
party still the party of the working class. Oh, by
the way, that's a thirty four point swing from Joe

(01:19):
Biden who led Donald Trump forty four to thirty six.
So there have been some losses. Everything is not sugar
high in reality, which brings up the big questions of
platitudes and are they working the abortion play versus the
economy and the border and how that all impacts a
map that will decide the next president. And that's where
David's not He CEO of the American Policy Roundtable, comes

(01:41):
in host of the Public Square and also a senior
Morning show correspondent.

Speaker 1 (01:46):
Good morning, David, Good morning Michael. All right. So we
had an issue.

Speaker 2 (01:53):
And when we resolved my issue, it was oops, I
forgot to go turn one district in Maine read and
give three to the Democrats.

Speaker 1 (02:03):
That's why I was off.

Speaker 2 (02:04):
So once we figured that out and still giving the
other district in Nebraska to the Democrats, now we're looking
at two seventy to two sixty eight Kamala Harris if
she takes Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania, and that presumes that
Trump hangs on in North Carolina. Georgia, Arizona, Nevada. So

(02:28):
something's got to give. He's got to win somewhere. Last night,
you might think, listening to the President, he thinks it
could be New York State, but I would suspect it
has to be either Wisconsin, Michigan, or Pennsylvania. And Wisconsin
probably the best one to try to go for.

Speaker 3 (02:44):
Right, Well, there's three states that Donald Trump lost last year,
our less election by a combined vote count of the
three states of thirty two thousand votes. So basically looking
at ten thousand votes to state, and you would think
that a national campaign that's going to spend plus million
dollars would be able to find ten thousand votes. And

(03:05):
that's really the challenge if everything else breaks the way
that it seems, but breaks the big Ordon Michael, you
know you've seen it before. You can think about all
the way back to Carter Ford where the race was
too close to talk, too close to call, and it
was really a very close race. Gerald Ford lost the
presidency to Jimmy Carter and by a handful of votes.

(03:31):
It was a very very close selection. Now you take
a look at Carter Reagan, and there was a race
that broke the Saturday before Tuesday, Carter was advised by
his people that there was no way he was going
to win because that prior weekend the vote broke. Now,
in early voting, you don't get those indicators anymore, and

(03:53):
that's what frustrates everybody.

Speaker 2 (03:55):
All right, So looking at the map in general, let's
focus on Nevada and Arizona. Things that good in both
places for Donald Trump. I brought up something off the
air with you. It was a CBS Morning Shore. They
sent the reporter to talk to women at a kitchen
table at restaurants, and the hilarious part was they're ready to,

(04:16):
you know, talk about the Kama to train and all that,
and these people are like, no, it's all about the border.
I mean, these immigrants need to be deported. This border
needs to be secured. And others were saying, Oh, it's
about the economy. My kid's got to be able to
afford a home someday, YadA, YadA, YadA. So the question
is where is abortion a steel sword and could swing
this election? And where is it not? And I kind

(04:38):
of came from the perspective, and I know there's the
whole trust in polls and are they trying to get
us to arrive at where they want us or are
they trying to give us an accurate snapshot of where
we are. I would think border and economy in Nevada
and Arizona will hold. Where do you think abortion is
most likely to play and shock people?

Speaker 3 (05:00):
And in Nevada because these are states that are very,
very close, they have to have a reason to go
one way or the other. Unions play a big role
in Nevada. But Trump is a former casino owner and
someone who's very familiar with the casino world seems to
have the ability to compete there quite aggressively. Will the

(05:22):
Senate race in Arizona be the hinge? Well, if that's
the case, then again the abortion issue comes into play
even more dramatically. So I think that abortion plays everywhere
in these swing states. So I think that is the
issue now. Of course, all this is based upon presuming

(05:43):
that Trump goes back to a traditional map of sixteen
and that the people in Georgia and North Carolina stay
in the Trump camp. And that's been the case, then
Trump's pathway is really down to three states, whether he
wins Pennsylvania or not. Michael, I think abortion plays everywhere
because it is the issue that supersedes all the others
in the way that it's being marketed. And that's why

(06:05):
I think Kama Harrison is so far out on the limb.
She made a statement the other day talking about a
woman bleeding out in a parking lot and a in
a trump abortion state in Ishshama, Georgia. You know, as
a prosecutor, she should know better. There was a federal
laws passed, the nineteen eighty six e MTLA is the

(06:25):
nomenclature the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act. You cannot
let a person bleed out in the parking lot in
the United States of America. That's against the law. So
the question isn't did it happen? God forbid? And sadly
it has. The question is what are the prosecutors doing
about it? That's because it's not legal, has nothing to
do with the Doe decision. That law didn't change.

Speaker 2 (06:49):
Well we might add too that all the decision did
was send things back to the state.

Speaker 1 (06:53):
So it's a stretch. Yeah, it's change of venue.

Speaker 2 (06:57):
So that's a stretch to even you know, they did
a very clever commercial that aired on CNN a couple times,
and it's kids, little girls talking to adults about what
they're going to need when they're older, and how they're
afraid that Donald Trump is taking away rights that could
threaten their life.

Speaker 1 (07:13):
These are massive twists on the truth.

Speaker 2 (07:16):
The fact they don't even call it abortion anymore now
it's reproductive rights, and they've made it almost a fight
for life when we're really talking about change of venue
in the life of the unborn. All right, David's and I,
CEO of American Policy Roundtable joining us. You know, to
show people how close this is. And you got to
make this presumption that you know Nevada, Arizona, Georgia, and

(07:38):
North Carolina. And that's a big assumption. All hang on
for Trump. I mean without that, he loses big. But
I'm presuming that's going to happen. And if you give
her Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania, then you're really looking
at one district in Maine and one district in Nebraska.
Brasca that decide this, right that that's how close it is.

(08:01):
And by the way, let's say I'm going to pick one.
Let's say somehow we go into Nebraska and we get
District two to go red with the rest of the state.

Speaker 1 (08:13):
Then guess we're with me.

Speaker 3 (08:14):
Yeah, yeah, that's just sixty.

Speaker 1 (08:16):
Nine sixty nine, and we're headed to Congress.

Speaker 3 (08:18):
That's correct. That's That's exactly what would end up happening
if we go into the map and we and we
change the colors and we put this that tight. It
could come down to the one congressional district in Nebraska
or the one congressional district in Maine. It could be
that tight. And you and I have seen this before.
But again, the question is about when will the race break.
Like the teamsters, there's an interesting example. You've got fifty

(08:39):
three to thirty one. That's eighty nine percent. Where's the
other eleven percent? The race hasn't broken yet. In other words,
this race should be as tight as everything else that
you see in national polling. It should be one or
two points. If there's still an eleven gap, eleven percent
that didn't participate, didn't respond, won't talk. There's a lot
of people that aren't talking.

Speaker 2 (08:58):
Well, yeah, we're pump and we know traditionally anywhere from
two to five percent aren't talking that are planned to
vote for Donald Trump. And they see how people who
come out and say they're voting for Donald Trump are
treated and that's why they're silent. I circled three things.
I want to get your response to this one. I
think they're having a really rough time. Their platitudes aren't

(09:19):
working with the working class. Kamala Harris has a working
class problem. Joe Biden didn't have look in this Teamster
study in their survey, fifty eight percent Trump, and you're
right to bring up the eleven percent undecided, but give
them all to Harris. And he's still leading fifty eight
to forty two percent, and the Teamster leaders still won't
give the nomination even though that's what their workers and
members are wanting. There says a lot about the Teamsters

(09:41):
and unions. But anyway, so for Donald Trump fifty eight
to thirty one over Harris, he trailed Biden forty four
to thirty six. There is a working class problem Kamala
Harris has. There is also for Kamala Harris, and it
started with Joe Biden but has gotten worse with Kamala Harris.
Black vote, black vote is looking down to just dipping

(10:03):
under fifty percent. Remember Barack Obama ninety two ninety seven percent.
I know that the black vote is diminishing, but their
percentage of it is diminishing. That's the problem. They're going
to need all that black vote and turnout, and they
don't seem to have it. Hispanic vote doesn't seem to
be their working class vote, doesn't. I mean you need
abortion to do a lot of heavy lifting for you.

Speaker 3 (10:21):
Well, and that's yes, And we could say this another way.
You're exactly right on the methodology. The number, the base
the universe that they're trying to move is basically female votes.
That is a vote base that is as big as
all the others that we just talked about. Because when
you split the electric male and female and you effectively
move the female vote in mass, that's a very powerful tool.

(10:44):
And that's everything that the Democrats strategy is based on,
is inciting the female vote to come to Kamala. Now,
they might do it by gentle persuasion, They might do
it by brutality. They might do it by I shouldn't
say brutality, but by edgy stuff. Now, like you've mentioned
that commercial that aired on CNN at least one time

(11:05):
that we know, our team went into an intensive research
breakdown on that commercial to only discover that the study
that's cited, that's based upon the whole survey is an
absolute fraud. The statistic that one out of six American
young women are going to be raped in their lifetime
is simply not provable at any level. Now, we know
rape is horrible, we know that rape is one rape

(11:26):
ist too many, but the study itself is completely fraud.

Speaker 1 (11:30):
Yeah, they can put.

Speaker 3 (11:31):
That ad out, he'd be blown out of the water.

Speaker 2 (11:32):
Well, yeah, and then one on a six don't end
up pregnant either, even if that Yeah, I mean, I
don't want to get into all the crudeness of their
their play. I want to finish with this. Can you
believe somebody probably trying to support the Party of Joy,
the Democrats had the darkness and soul to literally do
a survey a Politan news service. While it's always difficult

(11:56):
to wish ill of another human being, would America have
been better off if Donald Trump had been killed? They
literally asked the question, Now, that's dark enough, that's sick enough.
Wait do you hear the answers? Among Democrats, twenty five
percent said not sure, twenty eight percent said yes, America

(12:16):
would have been better off. You wonder why, I mean,
you think we've got a mental illness problem. I think
we got a much bigger problem than that. And if
you're wondering whether the media has responded or even the
Secret Service and Homeland Security has responded so poorly, I'm
beginning to wonder if this survey didn't do au so
alid service to show us there's a lot of people
want Donald Trump dead. In fact, to be exact, twenty
eight percent of voting Democrats. Here's what's shocking. Never trumpers

(12:39):
are never let him livers. Seven percent of Republicans said
we'd be better off if he was dead, twenty eight
percent of Democrats. And if you add the twenty eight
percent of Democrats and say we'd be better off if
Trump were dead to the twenty five that don't know,
the vast majorities say they don't know, or we'd be
better off he's dead, Only forty seven percent of Democrats.

Speaker 1 (12:56):
Said No, that's a ridiculous question. This isn't nineteen sixty,
this is eighteen fifty.

Speaker 3 (13:03):
It's almost impossible to respond to that. That is one
of the saddest things. I heard that story yesterday. It's
one of the saddest things you could talk about the
electorate that is absolutely frightening. In fact, it's terrifying that
level of hatred in a political process toward an individual. Michael,
I almost I'm sorry. You have me speechless. It is

(13:24):
no horrible reality. That's so sad.

Speaker 1 (13:28):
So let's wrap up with this.

Speaker 2 (13:30):
The bottom line is everybody, whether they say it out
loud or not, the number one curiosity I've ever been listening.

Speaker 1 (13:36):
Right now is who's going to be the next president?
Who's going to win? Get down, Drumbeck, You're crazy.

Speaker 2 (13:40):
Yeah, And the reality is it's so close, no one knows,
and what little trust we have in polls to even
come to these prognostications make it really impossible to know.
But if you really play the game, and you play
it as stutely as you can, we're talking two seventy
to two sixty eight or two sixty nine to two
sixty nine, and we're less than fifty days away, and

(14:02):
that's saying something too.

Speaker 3 (14:04):
We're talking three states out of five, and it really
does look like we're talking three states, and again, we
could be down to an election being determined by thirty
two thousand votes out of I don't know, seventy five
million casts for Trump and seventy five something cast for Harrison.
That's a lot of votes to come down to thirty
two thousand.

Speaker 2 (14:22):
We are the divided states of America, and we are
becoming more and more violently divided, viciously divided, but we
are literally divided evenly.

Speaker 1 (14:31):
That's for sure. Fifty days out anyway.

Speaker 3 (14:33):
Well, if I can just take the thirty seconds more
and tell you that the biggest problem we have is
we've got to come up to it with an antidote
to this kind of hysterical fear. I mean there's a
million reasons why that. The biggest I one is think
our overestimation of the presidency that somehow it defines all reality.
I mean, Tony for some of the people saying I'd
rather have this guy dead than walking around because I'm
not afraid of him becoming president, that's an absurd notion

(14:56):
for an America.

Speaker 2 (14:58):
Well, they've been sold he's a monster, or he's a dictator,
he's an insurrectionist, and he's a boogeyman, and they're believing
it at least that percentage. Anyway, This is why I
almost love it if they could just swing that one
district in Nevada, I'd love two sixty nine, two sixty nine,
and show everybody it's really about Congress. That's where your
focus needs to be. And oh, by the way, that
so we'll choose the next president.

Speaker 1 (15:17):
That wouldn't be a bad way.

Speaker 3 (15:18):
For the show. You've got to be that risky and dangerous.
But your point is very well taken. It would be
a civics lesson that.

Speaker 1 (15:24):
We wouldn't forget for a long time.

Speaker 2 (15:26):
David's not appreciate your time, Senior correspondent and CEO of
the American Policy Roundtable and host of The Public Square.
Having said all that, we just said, what on earth
was Donald Trump doing in New York?

Speaker 1 (15:45):
His answer, because he thinks he can win.

Speaker 5 (15:47):
Former President Trump says the state of New York will
vote for him in November.

Speaker 6 (15:51):
It hasn't been done for a long time, but we
are going to win New York.

Speaker 5 (16:01):
Security was very tight at the rally in Uniondale on Wednesday,
the first since an apparent assassination attempt this past weekend
in Florida. New York officials said earlier reports about explosives
being found near the site were false. The state has
voted democratic in the last nine elections. Trump also said
during the rally he felt God saved his life.

Speaker 1 (16:18):
So he can make America great again.

Speaker 5 (16:20):
And a trio of new polls show Vice President Kamala
Harris a hand in two key battleground states, with a
third state up for grabs in the race for the
White House. Quinnipiac University surveys of likely voters in Pennsylvania
and Michigan both show Harris receiving fifty one percent support,
with former President Trump getting forty six percent support in
a hypothetical two way race.

Speaker 1 (16:38):
Meanwhile, a third pole.

Speaker 5 (16:39):
Conducted in Wisconsin is too close to call, with Harris
garnering forty nine percent support and Trump receiving forty eight
percent support.

Speaker 1 (16:45):
That's politics.

Speaker 5 (16:46):
I'm Mark Nyfield.

Speaker 2 (16:47):
I remember the good old days of radio where everybody smoked,
and smokers were frowned upon. They can't be getting as
much done. They're constantly on smoke breaks.

Speaker 1 (16:57):
Of course, the.

Speaker 2 (16:57):
Research would show they're actually getting the same amount done
or more, opposite of what you would think. So now
we have people working from home, and what are they
doing and are they working the same amount as those
at the office. A new survey shows you'll be surprised
that everything remote workers are doing while working at home.

(17:20):
In fact, it sounds like everything butt working. Tammy Trihilo
has more.

Speaker 7 (17:23):
Survey monkey poled over three thousand full time workers in
the US last month and found that nearly half of
those who work from home are doing laundry and other
items on their to do lists. About one third said
they run errands while remote working, while others like to
take a nap. About seventeen percent said they watch TV
or play video games. A survey also showed a lot
of multitasking during zoom calls, with nearly a third admitting

(17:46):
they have used the bathroom during a zoom call. I'm
Tammy Treheo.

Speaker 1 (17:51):
This is your morning show with Michael del Chna.

Speaker 2 (17:55):
From the nearly bottom of my cup of coffee to
the top of yours. Good morning, Welcome to Thursday, the
nineteenth of September. This is your morning show. I'm Michael
del Jorno on the air and streaming live on your
iHeartRadio app if you're just waking up. No bail for
p Diddy, No Teamsters endorsement, though the West Coast has
gone rogue. But we've looked at the actual votes of

(18:16):
the Teamsters themselves and it went fifty eight thirty one
to Trump. Yet still no endorsement, and we were all
expecting a quarter, but we got a half from the Fed.
Rory O'Neil is joining us. We'll talk a little bit
about that in a moment. But first things first, I
don't know if anybody noticed. First, the pagers are blowing
up now the walking talkies. What's the latest and what's

(18:38):
happening with hesba Lah and how they're responding to their
sudden electronic issues.

Speaker 8 (18:43):
Well, everyone is still talking about how did Israel do this? Now,
keep in mind, Israel denies the admitt firm or they
won't admit, so they're not saying they did or didn't
do it, but everyone but they did it, and everyone
is trying to figure out how did they pull this off.
The New York Times has some information about shell companies
that were created and hungry in order to try to

(19:05):
convince Hesblah that they were a legit, emerging new communications
company that could sell them these pages. We now think
that Israel actually made these pages from the bottom up.

Speaker 1 (19:16):
So that they're not something that were just augmented.

Speaker 2 (19:20):
The assumption would be what that somehow they got these
pages distributed. They've been walking around with them all this time,
and then the day was set when they felt like
they had enough people carrying them boom right.

Speaker 1 (19:31):
Well there's that, but there's also some.

Speaker 8 (19:33):
Reporting that perhaps Hezbollah was about to find out about
this program and that they wanted to set them off
before they did. So we had the pagers go off
two days ago. Yesterday was walkie talkies.

Speaker 1 (19:44):
You know.

Speaker 8 (19:44):
In all, about three thousand people have been injured, you know,
a couple dozen people or forty five rather thirty two
people have now been killed, including two children sadly, but yeah,
I mean, this is just a remarkable amount of violence
RK in Lebanon.

Speaker 1 (20:00):
And now the question is how does Hesbelo respond.

Speaker 2 (20:02):
And then apparently there's some walkie talkies in the mix
that have been blowing up. You know, we would say
this is like right out of Hollywood. It is like
what you'd see sitting in a theater. No, they don't
make movies as good anymore.

Speaker 1 (20:11):
The true enough.

Speaker 8 (20:12):
Yeah, and then and I think a lot of the
we saw Admiral Kirby yesterday trying to say, look, we
had no idea, and it seems like they Israel intentionally
kept the US out of the loop.

Speaker 1 (20:23):
For plausible deniability, a whole other conversation.

Speaker 8 (20:26):
Yeah, all the security experts here are impressed that Israel
was able to pull this off.

Speaker 1 (20:32):
All right, what Sezbo's planned for to respond open question?

Speaker 8 (20:36):
You know, last week or over a week ago, Israel
carried out that big strike, taking out a lot of
the rocket and missile positions just over the border into Lebanon.
You know, I think that Hezbollah is turned into Iran
saying hey, we need a little something something, you know,
do some more firepower to try to launch something in
response to this attack.

Speaker 1 (20:56):
A proxy war turns the page.

Speaker 2 (20:57):
Your war will figure all right, well you thought of
or I got to be honest with the I'm not
going to make fun of you. I was joking in
the five o'clock hour. Finally I got something to hang
over her little brother's head. He was wrong.

Speaker 1 (21:07):
Didn't I say it should be a half? But they'll
probably do a quarter? Isn't that what I said? I
don't thanks, I think I agreed with you. I never do.

Speaker 2 (21:15):
And we focused on it's going to be a quarter,
but it's all how it's presented in what's coming. And
what we got was a half and the notion a
couple of more quarters coming before the end of the year.

Speaker 1 (21:26):
What does this all mean.

Speaker 8 (21:28):
It could mean some great things for the housing market
in particular. I think that's really what they're trying to
shake loose, because it really has just been frozen by
these I'm using air quotes here high mortgage rates that
now might start to have a five as the first digit,
and that could really get things going.

Speaker 2 (21:45):
And Aaron brought this up earlier, and I got to say,
I'll give her a nod on that. I think they're
taking their eye a little bit off inflation where they've
been doing well and stabilizing it and putting it more
on the jobs reports that are looking troubling and the
housing crisis that continues.

Speaker 1 (21:59):
I think that's exactly why they went a half a half.

Speaker 2 (22:02):
A half kind of gives the you know, the volume
and feel an urgency of a whole almost especially when
they're saying two more quarters are coming before the end
of the year. They're obviously more concerned about the housing
market and job supports.

Speaker 1 (22:16):
Yeah, and look, the Fed's got that dual mandate.

Speaker 8 (22:19):
Yes, they've got to keep inflation close to two percent,
but they also have to maximize employment. And I think
they feel that this half point cut is a.

Speaker 1 (22:26):
Is a way to do that. But as Jeffrey was
pointing out earlier a bottom line, as you were wrong.
It was a half, not a quarter. But I was
I was never God's love you. I'm just kidding.

Speaker 2 (22:38):
We'll talk about a name all out in the battle
ground states Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin and what they're showing more
with our your morning show correspondent O'Neill on that coming up,
all right, top five stories of the day, waking up
this morning, and I think, do you know what the
big one is? All eyes are on Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania.
So why on earth is Donald try in New York?

(23:02):
Because he thinks he can win. Mark Mayfield has Today
in Politics.

Speaker 5 (23:06):
Former President Trump says the state of New York will
vote for him in November.

Speaker 6 (23:10):
It hasn't been done for a long time, but we
are going to winning New York.

Speaker 5 (23:19):
Security was very tight at the rally in Uniondale on Wednesday,
the first since an apparent assassination attempted this past weekend
in Florida. New York officials said earlier reports about explosives
being found near the site were false. The state has
voted Democratic in the last nine elections. Trump also said
during the rally he felt God saved his life so
he can make America great again.

Speaker 2 (23:38):
We talked about the trio of polls and what are
three very key swing states Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Wisconsin. Two
of the three leaning Kamala's way, just as slightly third
still up for grabs in the race for the White House.

Speaker 9 (23:55):
Brian Shook reports Twinnipeac University surveys of likely voters in
Pennsylvania and Michigan both show Harris receiving fifty one percent support,
with former President Trump getting forty six percent support in
a hypothetical two way race. Meanwhile, a third poll conducted
in Wisconsin is too close to call, with Harris garnering
forty nine percent support and Trump receiving forty eight percent.

(24:19):
I'm Brian Shook.

Speaker 2 (24:20):
Federal officials are warning that a drop in the vaccinations
of children in the United States is leading to an
increase in fluid deaths among children.

Speaker 1 (24:28):
Tami Trihilo reports.

Speaker 7 (24:29):
The CDC said Wednesday that nearly two hundred children died
from influenza related illnesses during the most recent flu season,
and that most of the children who died were eligible
for a vaccine but didn't receive one. It said the
death coincide with overall drops and vaccinations among children. As
of May, the CDC said only fifty three percent of
children in the US were vaccinated for the flu this season.

(24:51):
That's down from the previous year. I'm Tammy Trichillo ah the.

Speaker 2 (24:54):
Weaponization of COVID, the gift that keeps giving hip hop
mogul Sean Diddy. Combs going to wake up in a
notorious Brooklyn jail again. A judge has ordered him to
remain in custody without bail.

Speaker 1 (25:07):
Kristin Marx reports.

Speaker 10 (25:08):
Combs had appealed the first judges ruling that he'd be
detained until he faces trial on sex trafficking and racketeering
charges in federal court in Manhattan Wednesday. His lawyers highlighted
the deplorable conditions at Metropolitan Detention Center and proposed a
fifty million dollar bill package that included round the clock
monitoring and no access to a phone or internet. However,

(25:29):
Judge Robin Tarnowski agreed with prosecutors that Combs would thron
and intimidate witnesses in the case. The fifty four year
old is accused of forcing women to have sex with
prostitutes during drug induced so called FREA co ops. He
faces up to life in prison if convicted on all charges.
Kristin Marx and BC News Radio, Well.

Speaker 2 (25:47):
Some are celebrated for greatness. Some dedicate their lives making
others great, and they're just great people. That was JD. Souther,
who passed away yesterday. Michael Kastner reports.

Speaker 4 (26:03):
Souther was famous for collaborating with the Eagles, Linda Ronstad,
and other country rock stars of the era. He co
wrote several big hits for the Eagles, including Best of
My Love, New Kid in Town, and Heartache Tonight.

Speaker 1 (26:16):
He also had a solo career that.

Speaker 4 (26:18):
Included the nineteen seventy nine top ten hit You're Only Lonely.
In twenty thirteen, Souther was inducted into the Songwriters Hall
of Fame. His representative SA JD. Souther died peacefully Tuesday
at his home in New Mexico at the age of
seventy eight.

Speaker 1 (26:33):
No cause of death was given. I'm Michael Cassner.

Speaker 2 (26:37):
Big cities, probably not big scores, A six to three alert,
A six to three alert, A boring Thursday night football game.

Speaker 1 (26:45):
Could breakout Patriots of Jets.

Speaker 2 (26:47):
Tonight, Rangers won two to nothing over the Blue Jays,
Cardinals ten to five, doubled up the Pirates, Guardians five
to four over the Twins, Dbecs won six to two
over the Rockies, Nationals, Raised and Mariners all lost birthdays.
Jeremy Irons seventy six, Really good with her Irons LPGA
Great Brittany Linscombe thirty nine. Country singer Trish rear Wood

(27:08):
sixty years old, wife of Garth Brooks. I'm done using
my country syllable.

Speaker 1 (27:13):
Voice doing that. Tonight show host.

Speaker 2 (27:15):
Jimmy Fallon is fifty and if it's your birthday, Happy birthday.

Speaker 1 (27:18):
We're so glad you were born. And thanks for waking
up with your morning show.

Speaker 7 (27:24):
Hi, this is Jimmy Bourne.

Speaker 2 (27:26):
My morning show is your Morning show with Michael Joe Joanno.
Thanks for waking up with your morning show on the
Aaron streaming live on your iHeartRadio app. We can't have
your morning show without your voice, and thank goodness we
have it thanks to the iHeartRadio app and the talkback button.

Speaker 1 (27:40):
Here's some of what you're thinking about this morning.

Speaker 11 (27:42):
Your morning show is my morning Show.

Speaker 6 (27:44):
How about Trump talks to Nett and Yahoo in contracts
Massad to take care of his security.

Speaker 12 (27:51):
I believe the only reason Trump campaigned in New York
last night was to hold all the Republican congressmen because
we basically won Congress because of New York.

Speaker 5 (28:04):
I have one word for you for these immigrants, repatriation repatriots.

Speaker 13 (28:11):
This is Joe your friend of the Oak Claire Lis
in Wisconsin. Hey, Jeffrey, you might want to tell Michael
that the Brewers won the National League Central last night.

Speaker 2 (28:22):
Listening in EA Claire, I should have those call letters
handy and I don't. That's our old engineer, Joey. Yeah,
who wants to rub in that the Brewers won the division.
That's to rub into our Saint Louis Cardinal fan and Chicago.

Speaker 1 (28:36):
Cub fans listening everywhere. He's pretty shameless.

Speaker 2 (28:39):
Yeah, there's a lot of people that have speculated. Look,
it's all about the House, and it's all about the
Senate and control of that. That's what Donald Trump is
firming up. But he certainly portrayed himself and had a
pretty enthusiastic large crowd in Long Island last night that
he thinks New York is in play time will tell
on that John Decker is our White House correspondent. He's
also a court bar attorney. And you know, I guess

(29:05):
it could be exercises. Maybe we're all just a little
on edge. But there's so much going on with proxy
wars with Russia and Iran and China. What are all
these Russian ships and planes doing so close to the
United States?

Speaker 1 (29:20):
And how concerned should we be, John.

Speaker 11 (29:22):
Well, they're testing us, they're testing our defenses. In the
past week, Russia and China have conducted joint military drills
and during those drills, eight Russian military planes, four navy vessels,
including two subs, have come very close to Alaska, and
in response, the military has moved about one hundred and

(29:43):
thirty soldiers along with mobile rocket launchers to an island
in western Alaska. Because of this recent increase in Russian
military planes and vessels approaching American territory. Now they've never
breached US airspace, go On says, there's no cause for alarm.
But when you know you're moving that kind those resources

(30:05):
to western Alaska, I think that you're sending a message
that the US is will do everything again to make
sure that there are no breaches of American airspace anytime
by the Russians or China for that matter.

Speaker 1 (30:20):
Yeah, if Sarah Palin can see him, they're too close.

Speaker 2 (30:22):
As somebody went so long in a segment earlier this
hour that our second segment was ten seconds long. I
hear timing's everything. How much of this is, you know,
amplified because of the timing.

Speaker 11 (30:35):
Well, if you're talking about the timing related to the election,
is that what you're saying, Michael, I'm thinking.

Speaker 2 (30:40):
More of the timing related to Ukraine and tensions and
so on and so forth. Yeah, I mean, you know,
but because this happens from time to time and usually
it's corrected in one side or the other is sorry,
but nobody seems to be sorry, and people are kind
of moving chess pieces. That's why I'm engaged and concerned.

Speaker 3 (31:01):
Yeah.

Speaker 11 (31:01):
Look, you know, I think that Russia very upset by
the fact that they are not doing well, certainly not
as well as they expected in their war against Ukraine.
They've suffered a million casualties. That's pretty remarkable when they
thought that the war would be over in three days.
And you know, they've looked to their ally of China

(31:24):
in terms of having some sort of offset to what
we see with NATO and the rest of the world
united against Russia and its invasion of Ukraine's sovereign territory.
But what we saw over the past week, you know,
as it relates to this drill between involving Russia and China,

(31:45):
it's nothing new. You know, We've seen Russia test America's
defenses for literally years. And I think that one of
the things that has to be considered is whether the
US should reopen a shuttered base in Alaska that was
closed all the way back in nineteen ninety seven. Michael,

(32:05):
the world looked a lot different in nineteen ninety seven
than it does look now, and perhaps you know that
that would make sense, and in fact, one of Alaska
senators is urging the Navy to do just that.

Speaker 1 (32:16):
Well, you got more degrees, and you're probably smarter than me.

Speaker 2 (32:18):
I think I'm older than you, though, and I just
look over the span of my lifetime my life began.
And this is why nineteen eighty was so huge in
the miracle when we beat the Soviet Union, because they
were not just a powerhouse in hockey that seemed impossible
to beat with college kids, but they were bigger than
life in terms of threat to all of us. And

(32:40):
yet in my lifetime I watched them go into Afghanistan
and have a nightmare and leave with their tail between
their legs. And you're right to point out things are
not going well in Ukraine either. I mean, here's this big,
massive superpower in my lifetime with two very I mean,
we've got Vietnam, but they've got too embarrassing failures now

(33:01):
Afghanistan and Ukraine. I can't imagine they think they want
to start a war with the United States. I Meanwhile,
China's just sitting over there saying the way the United
States is divided against itself and the way Russia and
them are obsessed with each other. Hey, we'll just sit
and let's Donald Trump wins. We're fine here in China.
But yeah, this is proxy wars on top of proxy wars,
and saber rattling on top of saber rattling.

Speaker 1 (33:22):
All very troubling.

Speaker 11 (33:25):
Well it is, you know, it is troubling. And we
see we're talking about the US and Russia as it
relates to testing our defenses near the border with Alaska.
But let's not forget the Chinese test the US all
the time in the South China Sea that goes on
as well, So let's not forget. You know, China and

(33:45):
Russia major adversaries of the US.

Speaker 2 (33:48):
You know, I just noticed you didn't You didn't make
any effort to correct that. You're you're not smarter than me.
Why do I surround myself with people that don't respect me.
It would have been so easy for you to say, well, Michael,
I mean degrees don't mean anything.

Speaker 1 (34:04):
I find you just as smart as me.

Speaker 2 (34:07):
We rarely disagree, but when we do, I respect our
disagree nothing.

Speaker 11 (34:11):
I do respect you, Michael. Absolutely, you just.

Speaker 2 (34:14):
Left it there. I said you're smarter, but I'm older,
and you just left it there.

Speaker 11 (34:19):
Hey, you're making a big point.

Speaker 1 (34:20):
I let you go on for a little bit. You
got it. I love you, my brother. We'll talk again tomorrow.
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael L. Joano.
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