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October 4, 2024 33 mins
The real history behind the abortion movement.

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

Speaker 2 (00:00):
Your morning show has heard live from five to eight
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on the drive to work, but better late than never.

(00:22):
Enjoy the podcast two.

Speaker 3 (00:24):
Three starting your morning off right, A new way of talk,
a new way.

Speaker 2 (00:30):
Of understanding because we're in the stead.

Speaker 3 (00:35):
This is your morning show with Michael dell Shorn.

Speaker 2 (00:40):
Just like that, It's Friday, just like that. Wow, it's
not Fday a second ago. What did we do this week?
Did we achieve anything? Did we impact anyone's life? It's over,
never to be lived again. But that does mean the
football zone wise, I'm not like lover Boy ever about

(01:02):
his work in for the week, but when it gets here,
I do enjoy some football. And we've got a little
Christmas in the air major League Divisional Baseball playoffs. Anyway,
let me be the first to say good morning, Happy Friday,
or you like to scream at people. Well, usually, man,

(01:25):
I don't get that one. I like Friday. It's a
nice smooth ring to it seven minutes after the hour.
Thanks for waking up with your morning show on the
air and streaming live on your iHeartRadio app. Can't have
your morning show without your voice, so throughout the morning,
I want you mostly listening today and I'll explain that
in a minute. But if you want to ask a question,
if you want to make a comment, maybe you want

(01:46):
to record your I'm so and so from such and
such and my morning show is your morning show with
Michael del Jorno. We'd love to have that so we
can share it with the entire country, and it's your
way of introducing yourself to fellow Americans who wake up
listening to your more show. You can do that on
the iHeart app with the talkback button. You'll see a
little microphone. You press it, it'll count you down three
to two to one, and as soon as you finished recording,

(02:09):
we get it. We can share it with the class.
You can always email to Michael did at iHeartMedia dot com.
Well waking up this morning. Hurricane Helene is now the
deadliest storm to hit the mainland of the United States
and Hurricane Katrina. The number of people killed by Hurricane
Helene and its remnant now stands at two hundred and fifteen.
There are still hundreds unaccounted for, so this number could

(02:31):
even grow further. The striking dock workers, they're all back
to work. Tentative deal. Now what do I do with
all my toilet paper? He can be selling it like
a lemonade stamp. I thought I was reading it wrong
last night. We didn't panic and buy toilet paper, but
a lot of people did, and it's already over. Makes

(02:53):
you wonder if some Democrats got together with them and said, here,
here's your raise, union union union work out the automation
stuff after the election. Oh you gotta kill us if
you stay on strike. Boy, that came to a rapid conclusion,
did it not. Lebanon says its army has returned fire
on Israel today for the first time. Country music legend
Karth Brooks being accused of raping a hair and makeup

(03:16):
artist and big surprise, right Caitlin Clark was named the
WNBA Rookie of the Year. She's kind of in a
league of her own in a sense, not necessarily in
scoring and all the statistics, but for what she has
done for the game reminiscentive like Tiger Woods and golf.
I think it was a combination of Caitlyn Clark entering
the WNBA and then a pretty remarkable Olympic team. But

(03:41):
I've noticed, for the first time you watch these games,
those stands are full. I mean there are people watching
it on TV and going to games. I don't think
people understood the women's game is a lot more physical
than anybody ever knew. Those ladies get after each other
on that court. Yeah, I really jo with the Olympics.
I haven't watched, to be honest, I just haven't spent

(04:03):
any time with the playoffs, and I think they're heading
into the championship round of that. But I'll tell you what,
our best women from the WNBA and the Olympics. That
was a lot of fun for me to watch, all Right.
One of the things we're gonna do today, I'll never forget.
There was a window of time where if I really

(04:25):
wanted my audience to understand the hour in which they're living,
I narrowed it down to these three recommendations. Watch the
movie Matrix, watch the movie The Circle, There was actually
a Black Mirror episode that even did a better job
of that. But that's the mob rule in social media.
Combining the matrix is the altered reality. That's what we're

(04:49):
kind of living in. You don't even see the world
for what it is. You're in a far left bubble,
you're in a far right bubble, and you only see
and talk to people who think like you share that
it sets up the whole death of journalism and narrative
repeating over facts and critical thinking. And then the last
was The Social Dilemma, which is a documentary. You can
still watch it on Netflix. These are the very people

(05:10):
that created the algorithms, created the facebooks and the Googles
and everything that's controlling our lives. And they're telling you
we built a monster and we don't know how to
stop it, and it's destroying lives, and every day maybe
somebody brings it up, but nobody ever really changes anything.
I kind of feel that way. With today's show, David

(05:31):
Zanati's organization, the American Policy Roundtable through the Public Square
put together Abortion in America, subtitled The Facts about Abortion.
It's about forty pages. Somebody who constipated that's one sitting
it will debunk all these narratives because everybody is competing

(05:55):
for your mind. I sit here with this sign that says,
too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the
discomfort of thought. This will give you the facts. This
will give you the thought. This will help you discern
what our narratives and lies and what is actual in truth? Oh,
can they have the truth well? Fact based? And I

(06:18):
feel like if you get this, and if you get
a hold of the documentary, the nineteen sixteen Project, you'll
be able to decode what is one of the most
pressing issues of this election cycle. I always like to
whenever I visit with somebody, I like to understand the
making of the messenger as much as the message itself.

(06:40):
But we got a chance to catch up with Seth Gruber.
He is the founder and president of the White Rose Resistance.
You'll understand the meaning of that name after this interview.
And the documentary, which originated as a book, is now
the nineteen sixteen Project. And if Abortion in America gives
you the facts, this gives you the context and the

(07:03):
complete history. If you think all of this abortion, LGBTQ
and trans and chaos and debauchery just happened overnight. You're wrong.
It's been over one hundred years in the making. And
you may know the narratives, but now you'll know the
history with Seth Gruber.

Speaker 1 (07:22):
Yeah, yeah, that's right, Michael.

Speaker 2 (07:24):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (07:24):
Thank you so much for your voice.

Speaker 4 (07:26):
And we need to amplify more of these voices because
this stuff has been hidden from the American people for
so long, and I decided it was time to kind.

Speaker 1 (07:38):
Of blow the cover off.

Speaker 4 (07:39):
I'm a former homeschool kid raised in Los Angeles County.
My mother was the director of a pregnancy resource center
before they were as well, let's say, as hip and
cool on the right and has hated and.

Speaker 1 (07:53):
Targeted on the left as they are now. She was
leading one of those in AZEUSA in.

Speaker 4 (07:58):
California and Los Angeles County, and she was in her
late twenties in the late eighties. And then I was
born in ninety one, and she was waddling around the
pregnancy center pregnant with me, loving on moms and helping
save babies. In fact, she would often babies at the
toddlers whose lives she helped save as unborn children because

(08:20):
the degenerate deadbe boyfriend listen in the picture. So I
was then homeschooled. We supported our local pregnancy center.

Speaker 1 (08:26):
Growing up.

Speaker 4 (08:27):
I helped raise funds for them. As a kid, fast
tracked to public high school. There's actually Nixon's.

Speaker 2 (08:32):
All the mater.

Speaker 4 (08:33):
What are your high school senior year? I picked the
topic of abortion. It's my senior project, Michael, and they say, well,
you can't pick the topic of abortion.

Speaker 1 (08:41):
Then I said, here's the copy of the Constitution. You're
making me reading government class. I recommend you read it
or you're going to have a lawsuit on your hands.

Speaker 4 (08:49):
So in two thousand and nine, at eighteen years old,
I threatened to sue my high school. They backed off
real quick, and I did my senior project on abortion.
And it was in those volunteering hours in order to
graduate that I saw for the first time mutilated, aborted,
dissected baby photos of unborn children killed and aborted in

(09:12):
between five and ten weeks, all in the first trimester,
little hands and feet and noses and eyes. And this
destroyed me. I went to a fake Christian college in
Santa Barbara called Westmont College somewhere.

Speaker 1 (09:26):
If your listeners are listening.

Speaker 4 (09:28):
You should never send your children to and I found
that there's pro abortion faculty professors on the payroll, so
I started the first pro life club that had ever
been there. I challenged the institution for not taking a
position on killing little babies and for hiring professors who
I guess would have aborted Christ.

Speaker 1 (09:46):
In the womb, I guess.

Speaker 4 (09:48):
And then I started speaking full time when I graduated,
and we launched the White Rose Resistance right after the
overturning of Roversus Wade. We're now the fastest growing pro
life organization in America, and we're trying to put ourselves
out of a job.

Speaker 2 (10:01):
I was just going to say, and I cannot wait
to explain to them why you chose that name. You know,
I come across brothers and sisters all the time and
being light in darkness and being godly in the midst
of an ungodly world, which is the highest calling. And
people's reaction is often where do you get this knowledge,
Where do you get this thirst, where do you get
this courage? The fingerprints of God are all over people

(10:23):
like you. Nothing was by chance from whom whose womb
you came, through what you watched her do for a lifetime,
what was born in you, through what you saw and
what you experienced. This is what I call the making
of the messenger, and I always start there because the
trusted making of the messenger has a lot to do
with trusting the message. And there is no more powerful

(10:47):
message on planet Earth right now than the nineteen sixty
Project documentary. I'm sitting here with a flag made out
of wood, and somebody asked me, I have a guy.
He's very gifted. He makes these beautiful flags out of
wood and he puts quotes on them. I know you're
a big fan of John F. Kennedy. What's your favorite
John F. Kennedy quote? And the one that they put

(11:07):
on it is the one that I told them, too
often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort
of thought, John F. Kennedy. That's never more true than
with the abortion issue. Everybody takes an immediate position. And
by the way, this documentary is not necessarily for the
pro abortionists out there that think it's as simple as

(11:29):
it's a woman's body. This is for everybody that has
spent their life being passionate, passionately pro life. You don't
know the history, you haven't connected the dots, you don't
even get the issue. And at the end of this
documentary you're going to see you are face to face
with Lucifer himself. And it shouldn't shock you. He comes
after children, and it shouldn't shock you that he is

(11:49):
the author of death. But when you started collecting, when
you started connecting all these dots, I'm telling you this
is a documentary you got to watch fifteen sixteen times.
You surround yourself by very brilliant people, But in your
life have you ever seen an issue that applies to this?
John F. Quin Kennedy quote more than abortion for the
pro choice or pro death and the pro life. They

(12:12):
don't get it at all. They have an opinion, they
have a position, but they don't get the history. And
they must.

Speaker 1 (12:19):
That's right, Michael, that's very well said. Brother, I do.

Speaker 4 (12:22):
I would like you listen, brother, so Hileire Block GK.
Chesterton's best friend. They were such a good friends. People
call them Chester Block. Helena Block once said, to comprehend
the history of a thing is to unlock the mysteries
of its presence, but more to discover the profundities of

(12:42):
its future. In other words, we don't study the path
just to like, you know, Tinker and poke around and
debate about what happened when and how we study the
past understand like how that's still happening now and where
this will continue to go moving forward if nothing changed.
Is in Oseah four six, God says my people are

(13:04):
being destroyed for lack of knowledge, meaning it's actively happening now.

Speaker 2 (13:10):
And I think that that Hebrew translates to their overcome.
You're just conquered. Yeah, and we are being and that,
by the way, and by design, is the endgame of this.
All right, we're talking with Seth Gruber nineteen sixty project
is a must see documentary. You'll be coming out on
x October twenty second. After that, there'll be other platforms,
and this is a must for everyone to see before

(13:31):
you can even begin to understand the abortion issue, which
has become one of the top issues of this presidential election.
I don't say this to sound prideful. I say this
to give you the highest compliment. There's not a lot
of things that I partake in where I learned something.
Throughout this documentary, I was constantly learning, and I am

(13:52):
somebody who at fourty this is where world likeseth at
fourteen years old. Guess who I was studying Deerdrik Bonhoffen,
all right, and you know, and I thought I I
knew everything about what went on there, and then you
introduced me to Hans and Sophie. I want to start
with the name of your organization, the White Rose Resistance.
One of the greatest stories of I think encourage truth

(14:16):
being the church, which is not a place you go.
It's something we are that I have ever heard in
my life. And why it took your documentary to introduce
that to me, I don't know. But I'm so grateful
to know Hans and Sophie's story and they'd be so
proud of you right now.

Speaker 1 (14:30):
Hey man, Yeah, thank you, Magrea.

Speaker 4 (14:31):
We named our third child, our daughter, Sophie, after Sophie
and the White Rose Resistance. And once you watch this film,
and by the way, it's the book as well. The
book is called the nineteen sixteen Project, the subtitle The.

Speaker 1 (14:45):
Lying, the Witch and the War We're in. The Lying,
the Witch and the War We're in, and the book
we go even deeper. But we tell their stories in
the book and the.

Speaker 4 (14:53):
Film, and once you see the movie and read the book,
you'll understand why we finish with their story because By
at that point in the film, Michael, if you well
know you're realizing we're facing the same ideologies, the same evils,
the same doctrines of demons, the same worldviews. We're still
facing eugenics today. And we're fools if we think that

(15:13):
somehow we're too enlighten him to free in America, to
ever repeat the mistakes of the genocidal maniac of the
twentieth century. That kind of tyranny and evil just takes
a little longer to arrive fully on stage in America
because our form of government.

Speaker 1 (15:30):
But it's just made us more asleep. And so we
decided to do We had to visit the.

Speaker 4 (15:35):
Locations where evil really reached its natural and most keenous
conclusions to remind the blood bot right of Christ in
America that the enemy of our souls will not rest,
he does not take water breaks, he does not stop
for gatorade.

Speaker 1 (15:53):
And if we are not.

Speaker 4 (15:54):
Vigilant in our defense of life, liberty, little babies, all
the things God cares most about, one day we'll wake.

Speaker 1 (16:01):
Up and find that there's nothing left.

Speaker 4 (16:02):
To conserve, and our grandchildren will curse our names for
our cowardice in these days.

Speaker 3 (16:08):
This is your morning show with Michael del Chona.

Speaker 2 (16:12):
Thanks for waking up with your morning show. We're on
the airin We're streaming live on your iHeartRadio app everywhere.
Hurricane Helen now the deadliest storm to hit the mainland
US since Katrina. The death toll has risen to two
hundred and fifteen. All those outrageous fears you had over
a doc workers strike heads over. They're back to work

(16:32):
with a tentative agreement. And we're kind of spending this
hour having a conversation with Seth Gruber. He is the
author of the book The nineteen sixteen Project that he's
now turned into a documentary that beginning on October twenty second,
you'll be able to see for free on x and
there'll be other platforms for you to watch this documentary.
If the number one thing we're all talking about, certainly

(16:55):
from the left, is abortion, it's my body, mind, your own. Oh,
I know, you know all the narratives, but do you
know the history even if you know Margaret Sanger, Oh,
you don't know Margaret Sanger, not like you're going to
or the people thirty fifty years before her that influenced her,
some of which she slept with You're going to connect

(17:20):
all the dots and a lot of the chaos, not
just the death of the unborn. It's going to start
making sense. And that's where we picked up with Seth
Connecting the dots, understanding the history beyond Margaret Sanger, or
more on Margaret Sanger.

Speaker 4 (17:37):
Well, Margaret Sanyer is a little teaser here for your listeners, Michael.
Margaret ser wasn't just like a feminist. She wasn't just
like some abortion gal. She was a socialist, Marxist. She
was an anarchist, She was a free love activist. She
was all of the radical things that the the hippie

(18:01):
and free love movement would become before.

Speaker 1 (18:03):
It was hip and popular.

Speaker 4 (18:05):
She didn't follow a path others others had blazed. She
blazed the trail where none existed. She's a wicked, wicked woman.
She said things like the marriage bed is the most
degenerative influence in the social order.

Speaker 1 (18:18):
I like the woman launched the Negro project.

Speaker 4 (18:20):
But she was discipled by a guy named Havelock Ellis,
who was sort of the Alfred Kinsey of England, a
real sexual weird o' kook okay.

Speaker 1 (18:31):
The guy hosted orgy's in his homes. There's more to
that anyways.

Speaker 4 (18:35):
But Havelock Ellis, who Sanger refers to as her most
significant mentor.

Speaker 2 (18:39):
Michael wasn't Wasn't that the ones you she had affair with?

Speaker 4 (18:44):
Oh yeah, yeah, started an affair with him, along with H. G.
Wells and others. But Havelock Ellis was very special to
Margaret Sanger while she's cheating on her husband and having
her socialist friends in.

Speaker 1 (18:54):
New York raise her children.

Speaker 4 (18:55):
But Havelock Ellis was mentored by Francis Galton and Francis
Galton and is known for creating a word for coining
a term, and that term is eugenics. The guy who
coined the stinking term. Michael is the direct mentor to
have locked Ellis well Francis Galton, who's the father of
the modern eugenic movement. He was inspired by his half

(19:16):
cousin Charles Darwin, who wrote Origin of Species and the
Preservation of the Favored Races, who says animal kingdom survival
of the fittest. His cousin reads this book and goes, well,
if it's survival of the fittest, then the way we
really need to accomplish that is by the elimination of
the unfit. So we went from man as an animal
to obliterate the week, to sexual chaos, weirdos, to child

(19:40):
sacrifice with Margaret Sanger with four people directly mentoring each
other before Singer opens up her first planned parenthood clinics
in nineteen sixteen, and we've only scratched the surface of
today's culture and Duffers.

Speaker 2 (19:51):
Show right now, All right, Seth Grueber with the White
Rose Resistance. The documentary as the book is called the
nineteen sixteen Project. You can see it free on x
the platform beginning October twenty six, twenty second. There'll be
other platforms for you to receive this. This goes back
to something I learned when I was fourteen years old.

(20:13):
I think this comes by way of either Finny or Ravenhill.
But this generation of believers is responsible for this generation
of souls. Hans and Sophie Gotta we need to get
it today. This is a failure of the church and
this documentary is going to help you connect us. Now
you're going to be frightened at how this is all connected,
not just from evolution to eugenics. Let me tell you something.

(20:39):
This ties to we have all these little tips of
the Iceberg views of sex with underage people or even children,
or some of the darkest things that are starting to
be revealed that's in this. You can connect the dots
from Ellis to Sanger to Hugh Hefner. By the time
this documentary is over, let me tell you something you think,

(21:01):
And I mean, if you've spent your life like I have,
trying to give a voice to the voiceless, trying to
represent those that are not granted life and the unborn
who have been silenced, who deserve life, libery in pursuit
of happiness. I don't care how deep you're into this.
You don't know nothing until you see this documentary. And
I am convinced I knew nothing, but I'm dangerous now

(21:23):
that I've seen it. What are you hoping people? I
think this is probably the softest of softball questions. I
don't use any one thing anybody can take away from
this documentary. You take about thirty away and you're going
to see who the enemy really is, and it's going
to scare you a little bit. But what are you
hoping they come away with from this documentary? Is there
any one thing over the other.

Speaker 4 (21:44):
Yeah, Michael, I want people to live differently. I want
the church in America to recognize that when they refuse
to get quote unquote political, or they said, I'm neither
left nor right. I just preached the gospel. I just
listen to Tim Keller servants right, I'm a political. I'm
neither left nor right because the Kingdom of God is
above politics and Jesus is neither a Republican or a Democrat,

(22:07):
which by the way, is of course, but of course
that's true. But they use the Kingdom of God is
sort of this get out of the jail free card,
as if they're too holy and righted, they're called you
a higher thing this physical world, I.

Speaker 1 (22:18):
Mean, the kind of function like Gnostics.

Speaker 4 (22:19):
Actually the physical world is all going to burn anyways,
and so you know, I just got to save souls.

Speaker 1 (22:25):
I just got to give people to the Kingdom.

Speaker 4 (22:27):
And everything else is just the culture war, and that's
somehow out of my purview as a Christian. I want
Christians to recognize that you thought you were being strategic,
you thought you were being a political. Actually you were
refusing to contend against and preach against false religion that
masquerades as politics to keep the politically impotent pastors silent

(22:47):
who are still under the spell of the Johnson Amendment
and care more about keeping their five oh one c
three statuses than they do on putting a smile on
the face of King Jesus by being like Gideon and
judges sick and tearing down some high places for King. Okay,
this is doctrines of demons. This is the enemy of
our soul who wants to wipe out the image of
God from the earth because while angels were created by God,

(23:10):
they don't get redeemed. Satan and the third of the
angels thrown into hell, Michael Christ doesn't come to die
for them. They're not redeemed. His blood will not forgive them.
It's only human beings that get that. So he hates
the image of God. He hates human beings because it
reminds him that there's a day on the calendar coming when.

Speaker 1 (23:28):
He will be thrown into the Lake of Fire.

Speaker 4 (23:30):
So in the meantime will cause as much chaos and
heartiche as he can. This is spiritual and theological that
it manifests in the political and cultural realm that's our territory.
As the blood bought Bright of Christ. That's our territory
as the church.

Speaker 2 (23:44):
Prior to this documentary, which I have seen, you can
see free on X October twenty second. There'll be other platforms.
Nefarious was probably the most moving real view of Satan
I have ever seen. And I thought to myself, whoever's
making this horror movie, they know God and they certainly

(24:05):
know the enemy. It's a brilliant movie. Nepharious. It's really
the gospel told by Lucifer through a demon possessed death
row inmate. And you see that the person that did
the killing that's on death row, he's victim number one
and the person interrogating him is victim number two. And

(24:27):
when you see how the devil speaking through this inmate
delights in his child being aborted as they're visiting, and
he wasn't even aware his girlfriend was pregnant and having
an abortion. Trust me, Seth knows of what he speaks.
When it comes to Satan and demons, they hate human creation.

(24:51):
It is beyond a jealousy, It is a rage and
hatred and it is always targeted first to the unborn.
We see that throughout the Bible. I know you think
you understand the pro life and the pro abortion argument.

(25:12):
I know you've hurt all the narratives, but you don't
know the people who started it all and who influenced them,
and the progression from it all just happened to where
all just evolved from an ape to survival of the fittest,

(25:32):
to target the defected and the unwanted and remove them.
And these minds and their influence on Nazi Germany. One
who influenced Margaret Sanger even became a right hand person
to Adolf Hitler. But all of it, from what you
saw on Jeffrey Epstein, what we may be seeing in
p Diddy, how it's all linked and it has an

(25:58):
endgame and it has one enemy. I said this to
begin the hour, and I just want to end with it.
I encourage you to go to the Public Square dot
com and get Abortion in America, the facts about abortion.
That's just gonna sip through all the narratives that don't
match reality. Since Roe v. Wade was overturned and returned

(26:19):
to the States, there's been more abortions, not less. And
what we're really headed is someplace very dangerous for women
because they're taking pills that are unregular, unregulated by the
FDA and what little regulations they give you, and not
being overseen by a doctor either is going to lead
to complications of death. This is gonna sit through that.

(26:41):
It's two things I want in your heart, in your minded,
in your hand. If you're gonna understand the hour in
which you're living, let alone a part of either shaping
or allowing to be shaped, and that is abortion in America,
the facts about abortion. Get that at the Public Square
dot com and this documentary, the nineteen sixteen Project on

(27:02):
x October twenty second. A lot of places should be
in your church today and you can find out how
to get copies. Just go to the nineteen sixteen Project
dot com. Our gratitude for our visit. By the way,
we visit with Seth for over thirty minutes. That entire
thirty minute will be in our podcast section. For those
of you want to hear more.

Speaker 5 (27:21):
Wef you just waking up real quick. Look at our
top five stories of the day. The striking doc workers.
They're headed back to work. There's been a settlement. Mark
Mayfield has more.

Speaker 6 (27:35):
Sources say that members of the International Longshoreman's Association and
management groups have reached a tentative deal in wages. The
dock workers will be back on the job at ports
on Friday. According to the reports, The two sides are
agreeing to extend the expired contract until January fifteenth. Fifty
thousand union members working from Maine to Texas walked off
the job early Tuesday morning. The strike had led to

(27:55):
uncertainty about the movement of supplies as the nation heads
into the holiday season.

Speaker 1 (28:00):
I'm mark mayview.

Speaker 2 (28:01):
Hurricane Helen is now the deadliest storm to hit the
mainland US since Hurricane Katrina. Lisa Taylor has more from Raleigh.

Speaker 7 (28:08):
Offici'll say at least two hundred two people have died
due to the storm that slammed the southeast a week ago,
and sixty one people have died in bunkhom County alone
in North Carolina, where Sam Brock reports there.

Speaker 8 (28:18):
Are still dozens of towns that are not accessible except
by plane or either mule in some cases supplies being
taken up that way. And then the infrastructure hit is enormous.
This is one micro example, a huge crater in the
road here. It's lining up and down this main highway,
Highway seventy as. Residents don't know if it's going to
be weeks or months before they have running water again.

Speaker 7 (28:38):
The death toll will likely continue to go up as
hundreds remain missing. I'my se tailor.

Speaker 2 (28:43):
Donald Trump making his final pitches where it matters most,
the battleground states. Brian Shook has our Road to the
White House. Road to the White House twenty twenty four.
Former President Trump is busy focusing on battleground states. With
a little over a month to go before election day,
thirty three days from now, we are going to win
the state of Michigan.

Speaker 5 (29:05):
We are going to defeat lion Kamala Harris, one of
the worst candidates ever.

Speaker 9 (29:12):
Speaking at a rally Thursday in Saginaw, Michigan, the GOP
presidential candidate reminded supporters that mail in voting has begun
in several states. Trump urged supporters to vote, saying the
results will have to be too big to rig. He
also criticized the Biden Harris administration for open borders in Washington.

(29:33):
I'm Brian Shuk.

Speaker 2 (29:34):
Country music star Garth Brooks is accused of sexual assault
and battery by a hairstylist and makeup artist. Texas is
suing TikTok over its handling of child and children's data.
Tammy Trehuilo has that story.

Speaker 10 (29:48):
On Thursday, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton followed a lawsuit
saying TikTok violated the state's parental consent laws. He claims
TikTok failed to comply with Texas Scope Act, which requires
social media companies to take steps to protect kids online
and prohibits them from selling any child's personal data without
parental permission. The lawsuit seeks civil penalties of up to

(30:09):
ten thousand dollars per violation. I'm Tammy TRHUEO.

Speaker 2 (30:12):
Well, Tampa was outscored by Atlanta last night, but let
me tell you something. Both those football teams looked very
very good to me. Falcons went at thirty six thirty
over the Buccaneers. Games of your morning show interest this weekend.
The Browns have the Commanders. That's two of our cities.
Cardinals have the forty nine Ers, again two of our cities.
Seahawks have the Giants. The Pack will be taken on
the Rams, and Sunday night, Dallas Cowboys will be taking

(30:33):
on the Pittsburgh Steelers. Why that Super Bowl seems like
just yesterday.

Speaker 3 (30:40):
Hey, this is John Watson, my morning show is your
Morning Show with Michael Del Jorno.

Speaker 2 (30:45):
It is fifty six minutes after the hour. I hate
when our time gets shortened. Aaron and I were just
having a conversation on mules versus Tennessee walking horses versus
the kind of horses she plays polo on. But that's
for the third hour when we talk about the cavalry.
This time we have just about a minute and a half.
This is an interesting story too. Americans are on the move. Literally,

(31:06):
where are we going?

Speaker 11 (31:08):
So we're going to the South, which is no new
surprise here. This is it's like, what, so, where's the news. Well,
apparently we're going to the South in record numbers. It's
turning North Carolina purple, as you know. But we're also
going to South Carolina, Florida in like Groves, Texas, Tennessee,
which I'm sure you also see a lot of California news.
And we're going from the northern states. But here's the

(31:28):
interesting part of this story. In the nineteen sixties, apparently
like one in five Americans moved each year that has
fallen below ten percent, and the reason for this are demographics,
the baby boomers. We're America is aging as an entire population.

Speaker 2 (31:44):
And as I don't need to be reminded of that era,
just stick to the story.

Speaker 1 (31:47):
Just get to the point.

Speaker 11 (31:49):
Apparently, the older you are, the less likely you are
to move, and younger people. This is all in spite
of the demographic data from the pandemic. Younger people are
responsible for the bulk of the moves. And yes they've
been moving, but it's still less than we saw, particularly
like inter county, interstate.

Speaker 12 (32:07):
Fascinating now, but we saw yesterday in our conversation southern
universities doing better and better in the particular case you
just gave, with the exception of North Carolina, you named
all states with no income tax.

Speaker 2 (32:20):
I we can't ignore that either, can we. Now I'm
one of the few people that wants to get away
from the heat and go north and be cold. This
should play out well for me. There ought to be
a lot of homes available up north.

Speaker 11 (32:31):
Yeah, exactly, Frankly, that's what we're seeing. But then, like
you said, the income tax and what I also think
is important and like particularly important to discuss right now
as we're going into this very heavy hurricane season and
we just saw with the hurricane in western North Carolina,
these We're moving to places that are more likely to

(32:54):
be struck by hurricanes. This is not a great trend
and all the natural disasters, but all of that said.

Speaker 2 (33:00):
You always gotta go to the weather, don't you. That's spot.

Speaker 3 (33:04):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael del Choano

Speaker 4 (33:14):
H
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