Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, I'm Michael, and your morning show is heard on
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Speaker 2 (00:20):
Enjoy two three starting your morning off right. A new
way of talk, a new way of understanding because we're
in this together.
Speaker 3 (00:32):
This is your.
Speaker 2 (00:34):
Morning show with Michael Dell Johno.
Speaker 4 (00:37):
You certainly are in something together.
Speaker 1 (00:40):
Seven minutes after the hour, thanks for waking up with
your morning show on the Aaron streaming live on your
iHeartRadio app. I am Michael del Journo and welcome to Monday,
the fourteenth of October. So many ways to talk to us.
There's a talkback button on your iHeart app. We get
those instantly. We can share them with the class. Just
click the microphone, it'll count you down. You can ask
a question, make a comment. There's always email Michael d
at iHeart media dot com. Lewis writes Kamala Harris never
(01:02):
had the lead, Michael, the polls were used to try
to help her, but it wasn't enough. Well, if that's true,
the same polls that were lying to you and telling
you she was leading now say it's a dead heat
nationally and some of these swing states are starting to
really slip away from her. You really are speaking to
another topic that maybe we'll kick around with Rory when
(01:23):
he comes back, and that is mistrust in the media
to go along with mistrust in government, to go along
with mistrust in each other. Mistrust is a big problem
in this government of formed by the people. If you're
just waking up, SpaceX successfully launched the starship Rocket.
Speaker 4 (01:40):
We will kick that around with Rory.
Speaker 1 (01:42):
Speaking of rockets, the Dodgers got off to a rocket
start nine to nothing over the Mets. They lead one
game to nothing in the National League Championship Series, and
the Yankees from the Bronx will join them in action
today or tonight actually seven thirty eight when they take
on the Guardenians in the ALCSST. Sixty people were injured
in a drone attack in northern Israel. The US is
(02:04):
sending more troops along with more anti missile battery systems
to Israel and a Las Vegas man.
Speaker 4 (02:09):
I love.
Speaker 1 (02:09):
There's one account from a local law enforcement official. There's
people listening in from around the country. Probably don't understand
how people get arrested. They don't stay in jail. Well,
that's just how we roll in California. This guy's out
of jail hours, he's got guns, fake license plate, and
he's headed to Coachella to see Donald Trump? Or was
he heading to carry out an assassination attempt that will
continue to be investigated? All right, So we kind of
(02:32):
went through what NBC laid out this weekend with Steve Kornaki,
got his sleeves rolled up and he's he's rolling everything out,
and what you're seeing is everything behind the numbers that
are slipping away from Kamala Harris. So one was feeling
towards the candidates themselves. Trump forty three percent positive, fifty
(02:53):
one percent negative, but Kamala Harris is forty three percent positive,
forty nine percent negative. As Chris Walker, who is a
Republican consultant, analyst and a Your Morning Show contributor, joins us, Chris,
we should start right there. The American people will write
a year and a half ago in not wanting either
Joe Biden, Kamala Harris or Donald Trump, it would appear,
(03:16):
but they're leaning towards Trump, and some of these swing
states are slipping away from Kamala Harris. The question becomes,
can they hold it? Okay, he cannot hear you, Oh well,
then that's a real problem.
Speaker 4 (03:31):
Yeh, Chris.
Speaker 1 (03:32):
If Chris can't hear me, then he's not going to
know what I asked him. While you guys try to
resolve that. Feelings towards the candidates minus eight for Trump
but minus six for Harris.
Speaker 4 (03:42):
No big advantage there.
Speaker 1 (03:43):
Then, when you go inside the numbers feeling towards candidates
in September, it was forty positive for Trump, fifty three negative,
and for Kamala coming out of that scripted Hollywood convention
and then the first debate she had a positive three.
So she went from positive three to negative sins. Donald
Trump went from negative thirteen to just negative eight. The
(04:04):
more they look at both of them, the more they're
arriving at Trump, and this maybe have something to do
with it. When you talk about immigration and the border,
Donald Trump at a twenty one percent advantage in September
that is now twenty five percent played a clip earlier
of jd Vance being attacked on ABC this weekend, and
(04:26):
Martha Cratics is basically saying, oh, you're exaggerating all of this.
There was only five apartment complexes that were taken over
by illegals. Just five apartment complexes, no wonder. Trump leads
now by twenty five percentage points. On the issue of
immigration in the border, inflation, and cost of living, Trump
leads by eleven, representing change that was plus nine for
(04:49):
Kamala in September. It's down to plus five. The more
time ticks, the more they're linking the Biden administration to
Kamala Harris. She's not getting away with it. So the
hiding her in plain sight and trying to distance her
from the Biden administration and their failures is perceived by
voters is not working. And it doesn't help when she
(05:10):
goes on Stephen Colbert in the View and says, I
can't think of one thing I would have done differently.
I suspect the more they do polling, that will not
even be plus five anymore. So these are the numbers
behind the numbers, and the question becomes can abortion be
enough to carry her? And what we're seeing in polling
(05:31):
in Michigan is they're not caring as much about abortion
as they are about jobs and cost of living and
the economy.
Speaker 4 (05:39):
So those are the troubles.
Speaker 1 (05:40):
Now the question becomes, can Donald Trump continued this momentum,
continue this lead and close the deal. Chris Walker is
a Republican analyst and a regular here on your morning show.
That question to you, certainly things are breaking Trump's way.
Can he close the deal in the final three weeks?
Speaker 5 (06:00):
Michael, Sorry about the technical difficulties there where you know,
this is the bill O'Reilly will do a live moment
for the new studio, So congratulations on that.
Speaker 4 (06:08):
Well, thanks y'all. You're real pretty yeah.
Speaker 5 (06:11):
I can't wait to see it, you know, getting onto business.
I know we're probably condensed in time, you know, Loo
look absolutely, but anything can happen. This is a fifty
to fifty race still, and you know, I don't want
any over exuberance now to not indicate that people shouldn't
be getting up and doing everything they can to win,
because ultimately we know that the Democrat machine is very
(06:32):
good at finding votes and places that you know, maybe
maybe questionable, but we'll still be counted. In a lot
of these Democrat run states. So you know, we have
a lot of work to do to make sure that
we overcome any advantages they may have with money and
kind of machine. But Trump's momentum is certainly a positive
and it's something that I'd rather kind of have that
(06:54):
than not. But I also just I'm very cautious, having
seen this song in dance in twenty and twenty two,
that we don't take polls as as an a substitute
for actual votes from our friends and our family.
Speaker 1 (07:06):
Yeah, there was an interesting story in polling revealed in
USA today and it clearly shows that Donald Trump is
doing better right now in polling than he was against
Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden. So you know, we always
talked about twenty sixteen map versus twenty twenty map. Well,
it's going to be a very unique twenty twenty four map.
But we know that because of a twenty twenty four primary,
(07:30):
a twenty twenty general election, and a twenty sixteen general election,
that Donald Trump under polls, and for good reason, supporters
of Donald Trump do not trust universities, do not trust
the mainstream media, and that's who's calling doing the polling.
Speaker 4 (07:42):
They simply won't answer.
Speaker 1 (07:43):
So if in twenty sixteen he was down by six
and still won the election, he's dead even right now.
That's gotta be a sign things are looking pretty good
for Donald Trump. And then when you go inside the
numbers of what's hurting Kamala Harris, it's her. She's a
weak candidate and this administration in the policies and how
(08:03):
America wants change, and she's more of the same.
Speaker 4 (08:07):
So I would.
Speaker 1 (08:08):
Think that's pretty tough to grab out of the jaws
of victory and find defeat.
Speaker 5 (08:14):
I think that's right, and let's not forget I when
you look at the cross habs of these poles, particularly
the Wall Street Journal poll that came out yesterday, one
of the things that you're going to find that Trump's
doing extremely well with African American men, with Hispanic men
in a way that you know, might be the best
since Bush in two thousand and fourth Hispanic men, and
possibly ever in terms of African American men, you know,
(08:36):
in some of these polls. So from a standpoint of that,
you know, perhaps the Democrat strategy of turning this into
you know, an election on you know, men can be women,
and you know, abortion on demand isn't necessarily a you know,
is a resonant message with you know, folks are kind
(08:57):
of like, hey, I want to start a family one day,
or I don't think gets right to my daughter's episodem
against the guy. And so from that perspective, the Democrat
is losing a lot of their support and that's why
you're seeing Pennsylvania turning red. I mean, you and I
have grown up in or like I've grown up with
politics thinking Ohio was a swing state and Pennsylvania Michigan
were we're never in play. Well they are in play,
(09:19):
and Trump won them in twenty sixteen, and it's very possible,
very possible going to win him again, in part because
he's changed the direction of who we're talking to. These
are blue collar workers who are you know, conservative in
their heart, but are concerned about their jobs. And so
that's why you're seeing this shift happen. And I think
Trump's been wise to do that now, enacting those policies
(09:42):
and doing that, it's going to be important as we
you know, potentially hopefully win here.
Speaker 1 (09:45):
Closing moments with the Chris Walker, Republican strategist on your
morning show, you know, when you look at Nevada and Arizona.
You wonder will abortion carry carry things for them there
or will the border override it. The border is a
huge distraction and that's a problem for him, the president,
former President Donald Trump has to win Georgia in North Carolina,
there's no question about it. But we're seeing abortion take
(10:07):
a back seat in Michigan, for example. That would do
it for Donald Trump, even if she wins Pennsylvania, because
they're more concerned about jobs. Especially these union polls that
have been ignored by union leaders. They seem to be
generating union voters for Donald Trump as well in Michigan.
Speaker 4 (10:24):
So things are certainly going well for him.
Speaker 1 (10:26):
I guess for Kamala Harris at this point three weeks out,
they might as well just put the word abortion on
the ballot instead of her name, because that's about all
they got left.
Speaker 5 (10:36):
Well, And I was in North Carolina last week and
every single ad is about that, and you know, gone
from the Clinton era of safe legal and where to
basically you know, let's let's let's put it on a
bumper sticker and a T shirt and it's it's gross,
it's inhumane, it is you know, it's anti human and
(10:58):
you know, I think even the most kind of you know,
moderate Democrat has to go. This is cringey. You know,
this isn't This isn't the direction that you know, if
I were a Democrat leader wanting my party to go.
And I think that's part of the reason why James
Carvel is ringing the alarm bell very loudly. You know,
the founder of this, it's the economy stupid is sitting
(11:19):
here screaming into the into the wind of the campaign.
Speaker 1 (11:24):
We're how about Senator Cliberg in South Carolina. Now, I'm
really concerned about black vote. We got to be concerned
about your party's platform and your party's results in consequence,
for black voters, you don't deliver, and you've created an
economy where they can't sustain themselves. In the same for Hispanics.
Speaker 4 (11:38):
That's right.
Speaker 1 (11:39):
So your your border failures and your economy failures, that's
what should concern you, not that they're not going to
vote for you no matter what, because you.
Speaker 4 (11:45):
Take them for granted.
Speaker 1 (11:47):
You said out Barack Obama to say if you're black,
you gotta vote for us. You know, I mean, it's
not cutting it. Those same old lines aren't working. This
time around. All right, Well, if you're for Donald Trump
waking up this morning things, they are looking really good
with a few weeks ago, But that means we've got
a few weeks ago and a lot can happen, and
Kamala Harrison.
Speaker 5 (12:02):
Is going to be done, a lot of work still
be done.
Speaker 1 (12:05):
My favorite story is the Axio story, because that's one
of those where the crazy left is being honest with
us all and there's fighting between Biden and Harris. And
I'm telling you it's not just presidential Joe and caring Joe.
It's spiteful Joe. He knows what's been stolen from him.
And I think Donald Trump nailed it in the debate
when he said turned to Kamala Harris and said he
(12:26):
can't stand you, because his action certainly bear that out.
So she's going to have to do it without him,
that's for sure. Appreciate it, Chris. We'll talk again next week.
Speaker 5 (12:35):
Congrats on the new to your brother.
Speaker 4 (12:36):
All right, thank you.
Speaker 1 (12:37):
Eighteen minutes after the hour, when your morning show continues,
your top five stories of the day, visit with Aaron Rayale.
Is America's higher education system too liberal? Do you really
need Aaron Rayel to answer that your morning show continues next.
It's Monday, October the fourteenth, nineteen minutes after the hour.
Speaker 2 (12:57):
Interesting and informative, of course, your Smileage Mayberry. It's your
morning show with Michael del Johano.
Speaker 1 (13:05):
Thanks for the disclaimer, Mike McCann, twenty six minutes after
the hour, Thanks for waking up with your morning show
on the air and streaming live on your iHeart app
Here to serve you. I am Michael del Jornon. If
you're just getting up. Has Bella taken credit for a
drone attack where at least sixty have been injured in
northern Israel. Mark Mayfield reports.
Speaker 6 (13:21):
Israeli rescue services since some of the injured are in
critical condition. Hez Bellah claimed responsibility for the attack, saying
it targeted a military training camp in a town south
of Haifa in retaliation for Israeli attacks on Lebanon. Somenday's
dronestrike comes as the US announced it's deploying another anti
missile battery to Israel to defend against further missile attacks
by Iran. I'm Mark Mayfield.
Speaker 1 (13:43):
We're learning more about a man arrested late Saturday afternoon
at a Trump rally in southern California. Was this to
be a third assassination attempt? Phil Ferrar has details.
Speaker 7 (13:53):
He is forty nine year old Vim Miller from Las Vegas.
Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco says Miller was able to
make get through one checkpoint, but deputies noticed something suspicious
at a second checkpoint at a Coachella farm near Palm
Springs before former President Trump was about to speak.
Speaker 1 (14:10):
The vehicle had an obviously fake license plate. The deputy
eventually found.
Speaker 4 (14:16):
Multiple passports, multiple driver's license with different names, a loaded handgun,
and a shotgun.
Speaker 7 (14:21):
The uncle says he believes his deputies prevented a third
assassination attempt on the life of former President Trump.
Speaker 4 (14:28):
I'm Phil Farrar.
Speaker 1 (14:29):
Now that's all stuff that's not suspicious. If you're breaking
into the country, but trying to go to a presidential rally,
you'll get flagged. A new poll shows we have a
tie between Trump and Harris Tammy Trijhio has more with.
Speaker 8 (14:40):
Just three weeks left to go before the November election.
Each candidate received forty eight percent support from likely voters
in the latest NBC News poll. The survey released on Sunday,
also found some uncertainty, with ten percent of voters saying
they might change their minds. Bolsters noted a shift away
from the post to eight momentum for Harris, with the
contest becoming a dead heat. I'm Tammy Trhio.
Speaker 4 (15:01):
Well, yeah, that's how wacky rapper turn.
Speaker 1 (15:04):
Country singer songwriter Jelly Roll is opening a bar in
downtown National.
Speaker 4 (15:09):
Will who Winsn't Lately.
Speaker 1 (15:10):
The venue is going to be called jelly Rolls good
Night Nashville, and a back bar is going to be
named after his dad, Buddy. He announced the new venue
on The Joe Rogan Experience this past Friday. The thirty
nine year old will join several other country music superstars
who all have bars in the music city, like Blake Shelton,
Luke Bryan, Morgan Whalen, and Miranda Lambert.
Speaker 4 (15:29):
There's no word yet on an opening date.
Speaker 1 (15:31):
In sports, your top five in college football, Texas number
one with a thirty one point win over OU, they
don't move. Oregon wins by one over Ohio State. They
move up to number two. Penn State in overtime thirty
three thirty over USC. That's good enough to move them
to third. Ohio State is fourth and Georgia is fifth.
How about BYU beating Arizona forty one to nineteen. The
(15:52):
Cougars are now six and zero and LSU with the
upset win overall miss in overtime twenty nine twenty six.
That bumps LSU into the top ten. Bengals seventeen to
seven last night over the g Men Baker Mayfield, Wow,
could the Cleveland Browns use him? Three hundred and twenty
five yards and four touchdowns. Bocks four and two now
(16:12):
winning over the Saints fifty one to twenty seven. Big
feature matchup Commanders and Ravens. It was the Ravens by
seven thirty twenty three. Both are now four and two.
No frozen Tronda Tundra. But the Cardinals got cold cocked
by the Pack thirty four to thirteen. Pack now four
and two. Cardinals fall to two and four. Titans and
Browns can't win without quarterbacks. Both lose. Titans now one
(16:32):
and four, Browns now one and five. Monday Night Football
Tonight has the Bills and the Jets. Josh Allen versus
Aaron Rodgers in the NLCS. Dodgers win game one, nine
nothing over the Mets Game two today at four oh
eight Central, Guardians and the Bronx to take on the
Yankees for Game one of the Alcs at seven thirty eight.
Birthdays usher forty six, Lyons quarterback Jared Goff is thirty
(16:54):
and pop singer from the seventies Cliff Richards is eighty four.
If it's your birthday, Happy birthday, So glad you were born,
and thanks for making your morning show a part of
your big day. More when we come back.
Speaker 8 (17:06):
Hey, this is Leigh Murphy in Cottontown, Tennessee.
Speaker 4 (17:10):
My morning show is your morning show with.
Speaker 9 (17:13):
Michael del Jorno.
Speaker 2 (17:14):
You're joining the Michael del Jrono Show already in progress,
and aren't you glad you did?
Speaker 1 (17:20):
We hope they are thirty five minutes after the hour
for those of you in the Central time zone, about
twenty five minutes to be to work on time for.
Speaker 4 (17:26):
Those of you on the West coast. Insomia continues.
Speaker 1 (17:29):
Hey, good morning, and welcome to your morning show on
the Aaron, streaming live on your iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 4 (17:33):
I'm Michael del Jorno. Jeffrey Scott.
Speaker 1 (17:34):
The controls the phone number one eight hundred and six
eight eight ninety five twenty two can always email Michael
de at iHeartMedia dot com, Michael d at iHeartMedia dot com.
And of course, if you're listening on the iHeartRadio app,
we have the talkback button. Just click that microphone. It'll
count you down. You can ask a question, make a comment.
We can share it with the class if you're just
waking up. Sixty people injured after a drone attack in
(17:55):
northern Israel, hes Belah claiming responsibility for the drone attack.
Speaker 4 (17:59):
The United States.
Speaker 1 (18:00):
Standing with Israel, sending more troops along with another anti
missile battery to Israel. New polls suggest the White House
is a dead locked dead heat nationwide between Donald Trump
and Kamala Harris?
Speaker 4 (18:13):
Does that mean Trump really leads by three or four?
Speaker 1 (18:15):
In a Las Vegas man facing charges after being arrested
at a checkpoint near Donald Trump's Southern California rally on Saturday?
And SpaceX finally launched its starship rocket. Both SpaceX and
NASA in the news this week, and we'll have more
with roy O'Neal on that coming up in about thirteen minutes.
Aaron Rayal is joining us. Why well is.
Speaker 4 (18:38):
American higher education too liberal?
Speaker 1 (18:41):
I think I know the answer to that, But I
don't think anything to do with two Texas billionaires who
think so, But tell us about the maren.
Speaker 9 (18:48):
Actually multiple Texas billionaires and just billionaires in general. We're
talking about the University of Austin, Texas. Trader Jeff Yass,
the real estate developer, Harlan Crow, investor Lenin Lovotnic. The
list goes on and on. These are billionaires or at
least hundreds of millions of dollars.
Speaker 10 (19:04):
And they are just.
Speaker 9 (19:05):
Some of the very high profile and very powerful individuals
that are donating to University of Austin, Texas. It was
founded by Barry Weiss and Joe Lonsdale. Joe Lonsdale is
a very wealthy venture capitalist, a big conservative donor. He's
given a lot of money to Trump. And Barry Weiss
is the former New York Times journalist who left and
started her own media company, Free Press, and she said
(19:28):
she did it to keep liberal orthodoxy in check with
mainstream media, and now she's doing it with university as well.
This is a swing. They say they are not politically
motivated one way or the other, but they want to
foster a place that has real debate, strong debate, and
you can't get that at classical liberal universities anymore.
Speaker 1 (19:49):
They believe, well, where would we begin the loss of
trust in the intelligentsia? Are universities that came out with
the Israel problem in the protest that were pro terrorist
or pro Palestinian, depending on which rioting you were watching.
So we have a breakdown and trust at our university level,
(20:09):
we break down a trust at our governmental level, primarily
in Washington, and then we have a breakdown and trust
in the media.
Speaker 4 (20:16):
I mean, all of them are in the tank.
Speaker 1 (20:19):
Probably what's lost in all of this is our mistrust
in each other to go along with it, and the
social dilemma that has produced a matrix a far left
and far right, and the two never communicate. But you
know one that has never brought up. And I think
it's the biggest difference between education today and when I
was there, probably even since you've been there, is the
(20:39):
loss of critical thinking that just doesn't seem to be encouraged,
sustained and prioritized. And so at that point you start
and begin a trajectory to be more about indoctrination than education,
because the ultimate education is of course to be curious, reading, writing, arithmetic,
(21:01):
I mean for common education, it's the preparation for higher
education or the workforce that's not happening. So I think
there's a general feeling in America today that it's more
about indoctrination and socialization than it is education. I don't
think we need two billionaires or three billionaires or four
billionaires to chime in on that. The question is what
do you do. They have endowments, they have their backers,
(21:25):
and there's no sign they're going to change anytime soon.
Speaker 9 (21:29):
No, there's not. Listen, what I think is interesting here
is the idea that like the kids and I feel
like it was twenty years ago, but I was in college.
I feel like recently relative to other generations, and the
idea that the kids today are too feeble to hear
here in an opinion that is not their own. You're like,
(21:50):
come on, like that. The part of me is like,
you have to be able to be to hear other opinions,
And frankly, it's a privilege to see two brilliant people
from different sides of an opinion go at it and
use their intelligence to and you just get to peek
in and see debate. Any sort of place that fought
and I think that you can decide no one's put
(22:11):
it like you decide what who did a better job,
and which opinion you align with, but let them go.
Like just turning off the other side, whatever side that is,
is bad and letting both sides, like smart people on
both sides do their thing is something that we should
always be encouraging of. It's what's moves the needle forward.
You have too much in one way or the other,
one way or the other, you get this heterodocty and
(22:33):
it's not a good thing.
Speaker 1 (22:34):
Remember when there was a difference between compromise and consensus.
Consensus is to people addressing the same problem having different ideas.
They fight about them, fight about them, and the first
person that introduced their solution maybe didn't cave to the
other side, but the other side helped build a more
perfect response, if you will, and so you get better
(22:55):
in thought. That's the kind of debate that built our country.
But what's lost in all that is the American people
aren't much better than the American kids. We don't like
having debates either. We're on social media. We've unfriended everybody
that disagrees with us. The narrative is coming from the media.
The silencing of any opposing views is being controlled by
social media. We're not very good at being curious and
(23:16):
studying and consuming information for ourselves and arriving at revelation
and conclusion ourselves. We just want some one of our
talking heads and tell us what to say. While they're
waiting on one of their talking heads, and tell them
what to say. We're not any better than the kids.
This culture of lack of curiosity and critical thinking and
prioritized learning is well, it's a crisis on all lens.
Speaker 9 (23:39):
Indeed, I know what listen. I often bring the bad news,
but at the coreum, I'm fundamentally optimistic and I do
believe that the pendulum always things. And yeah, we did
the whole let's not think, Just tell me what I
want to hear, and it goes the other direction. It
always does. Sometimes it takes a generation, which is too
long to wait for everybody.
Speaker 6 (23:56):
But it does.
Speaker 9 (23:57):
And I do believe you're one thousand percent. You are correct,
You are correct. You hit the nail on the head.
We it starts at the top. And frankly, if you
have politicians that are not willing to debate or you know,
just want they're like you're setting a really bad example
and you're hurting your country. But when you get people
that actually want to have the discussion and want the
(24:19):
you know, they both want the place to work, they
just have totally different avenues for getting there. Let them go.
And I think that the next generation is much more
keen to hear that because they have been silent for
so long and they feel like, wait, am I missing something?
And it's just an inkling of a feeling now, but
it expands.
Speaker 1 (24:35):
Well, and you know, we've said it a million different ways.
There's there's no way to state that. We can all
describe the problem, but nobody's taking any steps to fix it.
You know, It's like education is outrageously expensive. We have
trained people to just go in debt to go into fields.
Don't make sense to have that kind of debt to
(24:57):
pay off that kind of debt, but the university is
gladly to make the money. The federal government gladly takes
over these loans, and then some pandering politicians even forgive them.
But who's going to ever hold these universities accountable? Will
students get up and walk out? Will parents not allow
their kids to go there? Will a couple of billionaires
start impacting endowments. I mean, I think there is I
(25:18):
don't need billionaires to do this because I think wokeness
is kind of running its course. I think America's kind
of followed this parasite as far as they want to
before it kills the host. So we'll just see if
the universities plan to reinvent themselves, it's probably going to
have to come from within, and.
Speaker 9 (25:36):
It's probably going to have to come from within, or
you just get alternatives that people are more excited about. Listen,
this particular university only has ninety two students and it's
not accredited because you actually can't get accredited to your
first class graduates. But what these billionaires have done it
they're going to offset the risk for the kids that
are doing this. So the first class is everybody has
full tuition scholarship. It's about one hundred and thirty ges
(25:58):
in savings, and then forty percent on the students are
from Texas, a third or female. They have executives from
musk SpaceX, the boring company. They're helping develop the school's
engineering curriculum. You have other executives that want to bring
in healthy debate from either side, and even though the
funding comes mostly from the right, what we're seeing is that, like,
if they're real about this, and if they're really open
to having true debate fostered, then you want to see meritocracy,
(26:22):
and you want to see it in the form of
letting everyone speak.
Speaker 1 (26:24):
We talked about this last week. There's a difference between
knowledge and wisdom. Wisdom comes from having lived. One of
the attacks on the left, of course, is to erase
the past and erase wisdom and get to the indoctrinating, socializing,
socializing messages that are a part of their agenda. And
that's the problem. But you're surrounded so the media is
certainly controlled by the left. Universities patiently playing for the
(26:46):
future are controlled by the left. You know, I think
they're going to have to collapse on their own failure
rather than somebody targeting each one individually. But maybe that's
all a part of the clock ticking on wokeness in America.
We want to get back to re writing arithmetic grades,
preparation for workforce, preparation for higher education, and not just
competing but dominating other countries, because at the end of
(27:07):
the day, that's where they're really failing.
Speaker 9 (27:10):
Yes, agreed. I agree with you completely, and that's a
sad stay of a serge. You don't want that for
this country. I certainly don't. You want you want better,
and you want to be held you a higher standard.
And yeah, you have to hear the things you don't like.
It's okay, you're.
Speaker 5 (27:24):
Going to hear it.
Speaker 4 (27:25):
Aaron Rayale with our Reality of the day. We'll talk
again tomorrow. Good reporting when we come back.
Speaker 1 (27:29):
Rory O'Neil on the latest on the ground in Florida
and both SpaceX and NASA in the.
Speaker 4 (27:34):
News this week.
Speaker 1 (27:35):
He's always following space Next, we give the final story
to Rory, as your morning show continues forty six minutes
after the hour.
Speaker 2 (27:44):
It's been said that life is what happens while you're
busy making other plans. Lucky for you, we don't have
any plans. It's your morning show with Michael Del Juno.
Speaker 4 (27:55):
Nice I kind of too.
Speaker 1 (27:56):
We're ride ride riding to work on this Monday, the
fourteenth of October twenty twenty four. I am Michael del
Jorno on the air and streaming live everywhere on your
iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 4 (28:05):
This is your morning show.
Speaker 1 (28:07):
A Las Vegas man is facing charges after being arrested
at a checkpoint near Donald Trump's rally in southern California
on Saturday. Was this going to be a third assassination attempt?
Chris Garagio has details.
Speaker 10 (28:19):
The Riverside County Sheriff's office said ven Miller was found
to have multiple guns illegally in his possession. Federal officials
told CNN there is no evidence currently to indicate Miller
was attempting to assassinate Trump. In a joint statement along
with the FBI and Justice Department, the US Secret Service
said Trump was not in any danger at the rally.
Miller was taken in a custody just ahead of the
rally in Coachella. Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco said that
(28:42):
Miller showed up with multiple passports with different names and
an unregistered vehicle with fake license plates. According to the
Riverside County Inmate Information System, Miller was released from the
detention centers Sunday on five thousand dollars bail.
Speaker 4 (28:55):
I'm Chris Garagio. He's already out. I'm bail. We roll
in California.
Speaker 1 (29:01):
A new poll shows a tie between Trump and Kamala Harris,
Tammy Tricheo has More.
Speaker 8 (29:06):
With just three weeks left to go before the November election,
each candidate received forty eight percent support from likely voters
in the latest NBC News poll. The survey, released on
Sunday also found some uncertainty, with ten percent of voters
saying they might change their minds. Bolsters noted a shift
away from the post to eight momentum for Harris, with
the contest becoming a dead heat. I'm Tammy Tricheo.
Speaker 1 (29:27):
As for Minnesota Governor and Vice President knucklehead Tim Wallas,
he says he owns up to his misspeaks.
Speaker 11 (29:33):
Lisa Cardon has More, the Democratic vice presidential nominee, appeared
on Fox News Sunday and was asked about statements he's
made in the past about his military service and trips
to China.
Speaker 12 (29:44):
Look, I speak passionately. I had an entire career decades
before I was in public office. They know, and I'm
very proud of my twenty four years in service and
my record. I have never disparaged someone else in this
but i know that's not what Donald Trump does. They
disparage everyone the personal atten.
Speaker 11 (30:00):
Wall said he thinks voters and his constituents in Minnesota
know who he is. While responding to the question, Walls
also went after JD Vance for not acknowledging if former
President Trump lost the twenty twenty election during their debate.
I'm Lisa Carton.
Speaker 1 (30:14):
Political clowns aren't the only clowns battling this weekend at
the box office.
Speaker 4 (30:18):
Scott Carr has our two.
Speaker 1 (30:19):
Demented clowns trying to battle it out for number one.
Speaker 3 (30:23):
It's the chainsaw wielding clown that's taking the top spot
in its opening weekend.
Speaker 11 (30:28):
Who's the Santa.
Speaker 6 (30:30):
He's scaring my kids.
Speaker 4 (30:32):
Yeah, he's scaring me too.
Speaker 3 (30:34):
Terrifire three is easily beating out the other clown in
Joker Folly Abdieu, which has quickly dropped a fourth place,
coming in second this weekend, as DreamWorks Animated hit The
Wild Robot Sometimes to.
Speaker 11 (30:48):
July We must have become more than new program to.
Speaker 3 (30:52):
Keep, which made another fourteen million dollars, and Tim Burton's
Beatle Juice. Beetlejuice is still going strong at number three.
I'm Scott Carr.
Speaker 1 (31:01):
Meanwhile, both SpaceX and NASA they're in the news this week.
Speaker 4 (31:05):
They're badly it out.
Speaker 1 (31:07):
Actually they're working together. Rory O'Neil has that story. Good morning,
Rory h.
Speaker 4 (31:11):
Good morning, Michael.
Speaker 5 (31:11):
So.
Speaker 13 (31:11):
I don't know if you saw the video of that
SpaceX booster landing in Texas yesterday.
Speaker 4 (31:17):
Pretty remarkable.
Speaker 13 (31:19):
They launched what is the tallest, most powerful rocket ever.
Speaker 4 (31:22):
It's a two stage rocket. The first stop the starship.
Speaker 13 (31:25):
It goes on to sort of splash down as planned
in the Indian Ocean. But the real test was this
first stage booster. It actually came back to the launch
pad and landed vertically, and as it was about to land,
it was caught by two arms on the launch tower.
Speaker 4 (31:42):
Arms they called chopsticks.
Speaker 13 (31:44):
So to keep that analogy going, imagine catching an egg
roll two hundred and seventy feet tall with a pair
of chopsticks.
Speaker 4 (31:51):
Well, it was done. What was the was that?
Speaker 11 (31:54):
Uh?
Speaker 4 (31:54):
Karate kidder? Am I thinking a kung Fu where he
catches the fly? Kid? It was a karate kid?
Speaker 1 (31:59):
Yeah, catch the fly with Hey, that's impressive. A rocket's
even more impressive. And that's of course great for reusing them.
Speaker 4 (32:05):
Right.
Speaker 13 (32:06):
So the idea being that if we can do this
more consistently. The special secret sauce for SpaceX is this
cheap reusability. Ideally they would just refuel it and launch
that thing right over again. So that's that's what they're
trying to do long term with these kinds of boosters.
Speaker 4 (32:22):
As for NASA, their eyes are on Jupiter. Yes, they've
got to launch.
Speaker 13 (32:26):
That's happening this afternoon Eastern time. They're going to the
moon of Jupiter called Europa, one of ninety five moons
of Jupiter. This one no covet in ice, but we
believe just below the icy surface is an ocean that's
twice the size of all of Earth's oceans. And keep
in mind, Europa is about the size of our moon,
(32:49):
so it's a lot of water down there.
Speaker 4 (32:51):
And they all believe there's a lot of potential for life.
Speaker 1 (32:54):
I was just gonna say, where there's ice, there's ocean.
Where there's ocean, there could be life.
Speaker 4 (32:59):
Jupiter, all right.
Speaker 13 (33:00):
Yeah, and Europa they think there's also because there's stability there,
because there's a heat source, because there are enough chemical
reaction components there, they think it's possible that it could
have been a habitat for life.
Speaker 4 (33:15):
All right.
Speaker 1 (33:15):
That's what's happening in the skies and in space on
the ground in Florida cleanup from Milton.
Speaker 4 (33:20):
Where do we stand?
Speaker 13 (33:22):
Yeah, still about four hundred thousand people without power were
expecting an update from the governor in a couple of hours.
Gasoline probably the one thing frustrating a lot of people
in the Tampa Bay area, as there have been a
lot of shortages, but a lot of help arrived overnight
last night. More is being delivered today to try to
ease those concerns. But a lot of people depend on
(33:43):
those five gallon cans of gas to fuel generators, and
I think that's why people are clogging up the lines,
the gas lines, you know, five gallons at a time.
Speaker 1 (33:52):
I had talked about, just anecdotally, my friend Vincent, who
lives on the East Coast, they got power back. I
believe it was Saturday. Yeah, it was Saturday. Whereas my
friend Joe, who lives in Sefner, which is just east
of Tampa, just got us power back late yesterday afternoon.
And so Tampa is the one. But look, three million
almost have gotten their power back. That means four hundred
(34:14):
thousand or so to go, but it seems to be
more in the Tampa area where the four hundred thousand
remain right.
Speaker 13 (34:20):
And that's the area that really had the one two punch.
They were still recovering from Helene when Milton came ashore
last week. Again, a lot of the focus is trying
to get a hold debris cleanup operation underway in places
like Sarasota, Venice as well, and of course continue the
(34:40):
tornado clean up on the opposite coast in places like
Fort Pierce in Saint Lucie County.
Speaker 1 (34:44):
And then I ran by you the question because I
was hearing this from some Floridians. You know, the media's
just kind of moved on and they're acting like it
was no big deal, but they're not on the ground.
It's much worse on the ground. Some of that is
true depending on where you're at.
Speaker 13 (34:58):
Well, yeah, and it depends on what media you watching.
You know, if you're turning on the nightly newscast, then yeah,
they're going to move on. If you're looking though at
the day to day local newscasts, it's been the big
story all weekend and is still again this morning. But yeah,
I think it depends on what you're watching. Have the
networks moved on, absolutely, They've got a presidential race in
(35:20):
three weeks.
Speaker 4 (35:20):
Yeah, Has the locals.
Speaker 1 (35:22):
No, no, And on the ground, of course, you've got
storing everybody's power, solving this gas crisis with all the generators,
which the power will restore, will solve, and then you've
got clean up and then rebuild. Great reporting. Rory, we'll
talk again tomorrow. That'll do it for your morning show.
Go seize the day, make a difference in someone's life,
Cherish yours. We'll see you tomorrow morning, five Central, sixth Eastern.
Speaker 2 (35:44):
I'm Jim Schultz in Tampa and my morning show is
your morning show with Michael Gill John. We're all in
this together. This is your morning show with Michaeldenhild. Show
enough