Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, I'm Michael. I'd love to have you listen to
your morning show live. Every day We're heard on great
stations like News Talk five point fifty k f YI
and Phoenix News Radio eleven ninety k e X in
Portland and ten ninety The Patriot in Seattle. Make us
a part of your morning routine. We'd love to have
you listen live. But in the meantime, enjoy the podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:17):
Three starting your morning off right. A new way of talk,
a new way of understanding, because we're in this together.
Speaker 3 (00:28):
This is your morning show with Michael Bill, Joan, Oh,
I see the whole gang is here and ready to go.
Where's the other guy? You? Mike all? You want the Yeah?
How did you leave him out?
Speaker 4 (00:40):
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (00:41):
We got all the butt calls.
Speaker 5 (00:43):
Night you know?
Speaker 6 (00:44):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (00:44):
I want to know.
Speaker 3 (00:46):
That is the sound of your morning show.
Speaker 4 (00:49):
The minute of host says, the show belongs to you.
Look what happens eight minutes after the hour. Welcome to Wednesday, February,
the nineteenth year of our Lord, twenty twenty five. What
do I and Pope Francis have in common? Our lungs
have both had better days, But here we are COVID
Mike At eight minutes after the hour, A federal judge
is declining the request of fourteen attorneys generals. Actually, I
(01:12):
gotta get that right. It's fourteen attorneys general.
Speaker 3 (01:16):
The plural on that is tricky.
Speaker 4 (01:18):
If you meet one of them, they're an attorney general together.
They're attorneys general, not attorney generals. How is that real?
Who made that rule? I don't know, but you live
long enough to realize how stupid you are. I learned
that one a long time ago, and I almost just
did it wrong. Anyway. The judge declined the request of
the fourteen attorneys general to temporarily ban Elon Musk from
(01:41):
accessing data at seven federal agencies. There's a lot of
particulars in there, but there's enough notion that even if
they had made the case there was immediate harm for
the state, there still would have been problems for this
judge to approve this. Another tremendous defeat to the left.
They don't know what to do, and what little they're
(02:04):
discovering to do is failing. That adds to their sense
of urgency. The first piece, talks between the US and
Russia about the war on Ukraine are done. Now the
US Special Envoy for Ukraine and Russia, Keith Kellogg, pays
a visit to Ukraine.
Speaker 3 (02:17):
Today.
Speaker 4 (02:17):
Pope Francis is not doing well. This bacterial, fungal parasital
viral infection that he has has now turned into pneumonia.
For those of you of the Catholic faith waking up
this morning, it is you that need to be praying
for your Holy Father.
Speaker 3 (02:38):
He is looking like it's not good.
Speaker 4 (02:42):
And I didn't realize this till Red told me that
he had had some lung problems earlier in life and
had a portion of his lunger move. So I can
tell you somebody who's got a mom without oliver lungs
after surviving lung cancer. Infection at this age is tough
for anybody. You have pulmonary pre existing conditions like this,
and it looks pretty grim.
Speaker 3 (03:03):
So keep the Pope in your prayers.
Speaker 4 (03:05):
President Trump says he may impose tariffs of twenty five
percent on automobile imports. Look for that. In April and
we woke up to outside the snow. It's bald again. Friends,
are who is it?
Speaker 3 (03:18):
Calling you?
Speaker 7 (03:19):
Who?
Speaker 3 (03:19):
Or whatever?
Speaker 5 (03:20):
You who?
Speaker 4 (03:22):
It's a lovely it's lovely weather for a sleigh ride
today in Middle Tennessee. Most of the country is dealing
with freezing temperatures. Some have snow like we do. And
good morning and welcome to Wednesday, February nineteenth. A long
time ago, doing morning radio, I tend to notice that
other people would use the five o'clock hour to practice
(03:44):
some things. Ramp up was the expression used in the
radio industry. In other words, save your best stuff for
seven o'clock when everybody's in the car. There's very few
people up at five o'clock. And I said, this is
completely backs. The truth of the matter is if someone's
paying you, you work as under the Lord, and you
(04:07):
give your best every second. So there's no ramping up
in life, and there's no ramping up in a morning show.
That's number one. Number two. The people that are up
early are the most important. These are the movers and shakers.
These are the moms that are not raising children like
chicken and pigs. They're training up citizens and people. They're
(04:32):
up early, preparing their breakfast, preparing their lunch, or they're
up early praying for them. Business owners who provide jobs
for others, they're up early getting important thought done. And
so I decided to make my early morning audience, which
at the time was arbitron and maybe today is Nielsen
(04:54):
would tell you as your smallest audience, and I said, well,
you know, Jesus started with twelve and that worked out
pretty well. And so I called them Platinum card listeners.
Now we did some fun things with that because, believe
it or not, they would identify themselves. They may call
at eight o'clock in the morning later in the show
and they.
Speaker 3 (05:11):
Go, oh, Michael, it's a Platinum Card listener here.
Speaker 4 (05:14):
And we would literally push them to the front. So
you had privileges as a Platinum Card listener. You were
the first to get your call taken. When we would
do concerts or events, you were the first to have
access to tickets. And that was kind of a play
on the Platinum card with the American Express, so we
kind of came a signature. There are people that used
(05:34):
to listen. Hopefully they're up early listening and Telsa right
now on the Patriot. But remember the old days a KFAQ,
there were Platinum card listeners and I always loved that,
and that's why I'm not afraid to have important discussions,
especially this early. Now you have a nationwide show, and
you're on in San Diego, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Portland, Seattle, Phoenix.
(05:59):
I could go on and no, now it's three o'clock
in the morning. And when this originally happened, I was thinking, well,
these are people that are up in the middle of
the night, And boy was I wrong, because what I
found was the West Coast audience. I'm editing because I
don't want to say I mean, I just started knowing
(06:20):
these people are really smart, these people are really creative,
these people really get it, and I'm thinking to myself,
this isn't people up in the middle of the night
at three o'clock in the morning. I started realizing they
get up early. They're doing business with the East Coast
or maybe even abroad. So I don't hesitate to have
(06:42):
some of my deepest conversations in a ramp up hour,
in a throwaway hour, because you're not ramp up people,
and this isn't throw away time. I have a model,
and I don't know if it's the one I would choose,
But if you asked me looking around, what do you
(07:05):
see as the biggest problem, Well, you've abandoned God and
so now you're trying to find things to unite on
outside of God. Good luck with that. That's why you're
so divided. That'd be a big one. Another one is
you live in an information age. We just took a
(07:29):
tour at the University of Oklahoma, a very impressive place.
If I were eighteen years old, i'd be given a good, long,
hard look. And I've been to a lot of colleges.
It was really well done. We'll get to the library.
It's somewhat of an architectural historical place on the campus
of the University of Oklahoma. But when you get in there,
it's really not about books anymore. Why because the days
(07:54):
where if you're doing a project and you need information,
you've got to go to the library where there are
books over Why would you need to use the doing
decimal system and go find a book on some row
in some shelf. It's all at your fingertips. So what
you have is this scattering of books, almost like decorations,
(08:18):
you know, so it looks like a library, but your
laptop's your library. A library now is just a quiet
building because in a sea of people, in a sea
of noise, it's hard to find a quiet place. The
problem is you bring your social dilemma with you. So
even though the library is silent to the human error, Oh,
there's a lot of noise going on and whatever your
(08:39):
earbuds are listening to and whatever's on your computer. You
want to know how different the world is today, go
to a library.
Speaker 3 (08:49):
And look around. What to do with it?
Speaker 4 (08:57):
After all, it's just a chair and a table and
a quiet place. So what do we do in this
information age when there's a sea of information, a sea
of voices, an ocean of worldviews and thoughts?
Speaker 3 (09:15):
What do you do with that? Well?
Speaker 4 (09:17):
I can tell you what I observe when you don't
do well with it. And that is my motto. And
if I were to die today and I couldn't wait
to get there and see Jesus and he said what's
it like down there? I would probably say, well, Lord,
there's so much information, but there's so little understanding. That's
(09:42):
about how I see it too. Okay, that's a statement
of problem. Even Barack Obama did that. Well, where do
you go from there? Well, to some degree, it's a
quantity and quality thing. You might want to be careful
about the quantity and the intake. And the other is
(10:06):
the quality, which is you might not want to trust
your brain to every voice that's out there, and then
there has to be some kind of filtering system and
framework to process this. This is where God comes in.
This is where his word comes in. This is where
(10:26):
the truth comes in, because without that, you don't have
a filter and anything can get in. So the first
thing you have to acknowledge is you're a human being,
and even though you are alive in the information age,
as a human being, you're no different than previous human beings.
(10:48):
You have capacity limitations. I think that's the biggest difference
between Earth and eternity time, and you really can't play
around with it because even though you think and you
might get away with it when you're younger, Well, I
got a life, a lot of life to live. I
(11:09):
don't have time for sleep. If you don't sleep, any dies.
It's funny, you know, the smarter we get, the more
it comes back to I was watching this video of
this one doctor, brilliant guy, and the person asked him
a question, just give me a hack to live to
be one hundred.
Speaker 3 (11:24):
Do you know what he said?
Speaker 4 (11:25):
First and foremost, something you've known since birth.
Speaker 3 (11:31):
Sleep.
Speaker 4 (11:33):
There's nothing you could, by the way, in all of
the social dilemma and all the mental illness crisis we
have right now, what are we finding. It's use on electronics,
addiction to social media that causes what teens not to sleep?
(11:55):
Do you really think you're smarter than your body needs
to sleep, body needs to hydrate, and your body needs
to eat and have nourishment. Because as smart as all
this other crap is, now, it does matter if you move,
It doesn't matter what you eat. But by and large,
if you eat, if you hydrate, and if you sleep,
you pretty much got it covered. It's all the other
(12:18):
stuff you're doing that's impacting. Do you get time to eat,
are you hydrating? And are you sleeping eight hours? That
usually leads to your demise. Everybody's going to have a
different time of death and a different cause of death,
but you know what it's going to be. Everyone's cause
of death is ultimately life. Chew on that and we'll
(12:42):
come back to these thoughts after the break. Oh, it
might be that it was the heart that finally stopped
and so heart failure or you know, whatever would be
on your cause of death could be pneumonia. But was
it pneumonia that killed you. It was how you lived
(13:03):
for the eighty six years prior to getting the pneumonia.
Could say car accident, but who knows, it could have
been lack of sleep. Everyone's cause of death is life,
the choices we made and how we lived it and
what they all add up to. So we're all humans,
(13:26):
we all have capacity limitations. We live in an information
age where there's so much information, so little understanding. How
do we bridge the gap? We got to control what
gets in. We got to control what we allow in.
And then we've got to take the time. If all
(13:48):
you did was inhale, you die. If all you did
was exhale, you would die. If I just started pouring
water down your throat, that'd be fine for about three seconds.
After about a minute and a half, you're dead. Somebody's
got to control the faucet of information. Sometimes you gotta
stop information so you can process the information you already have.
(14:09):
Why am I saying all of this and why am
I making it so late for Jeffrey Because as CEO
somehow slipped under my radar and all of a sudden
he pops into my life yesterday, And I'm thinking this
guy gets it more than Trump. This guy gets it
more than Elon Musk. This guy gets it more than
anyone I've come across. Who is this guy? We all
(14:33):
need to know him and we all need to understand
what's processing between his two ears. This guy may have
solved not the statement of problem too much information, too
little understanding.
Speaker 3 (14:46):
He may have bridged the gap.
Speaker 4 (14:47):
You're gonna beat Alex Karp more in my thoughts in
this Platinum hour because you guys can get it the best.
Speaker 2 (14:54):
It's your morning show with Michael del Choano.
Speaker 4 (14:59):
Two of my favorite cities checking in early. Let's start
the Sacramento with Doug up early eating breakfast at in Sacramento,
Lincoln Hills, California.
Speaker 3 (15:07):
Love your show, listen every day.
Speaker 4 (15:09):
Thanks kept it simple. You gotta love that. I think
do we have time? Yeah, go to Youngstown real quick
before the break.
Speaker 5 (15:16):
I think society was actually smarter long ago. The further
society gets, the dumber the people get because they have
information ready to them, where the people years ago had
to think on their own.
Speaker 4 (15:33):
Why do you think they attacked common education and higher
education first to destroy critical thinking, to sell a narrative,
to propagate, to socialize, for the purposes of control, Yes,
you hit the nail right on the head. Critical thinking,
relationship with God, and discernment. It's all we have to
(15:54):
protect ourselves. It's all we've ever had to protect ourselves.
Speaker 5 (15:59):
I'm Keith Andrews in Mobile, Alabama, and my morning show
is your Morning Show with Michael del journal.
Speaker 3 (16:13):
Hi. I'm Michael.
Speaker 1 (16:14):
We'd love to have you listen every weekday morning to
your morning show lot, even take us along with you
on the drive to work. We can be heard on
great radio stations like one oh four ninth The Patriot
in Saint Louis, or Talk Radio ninety eight point three
and fifteen ten WLAC in Nashville and News Talk by
fifty k f YI in Phoenix, Arizona. Love to be
a part of your morning routine. But we're always grateful
(16:34):
you're here. Now enjoy the podcast, you know, it's like
like a set change this morning. Yeah, I mean I
can't say I slept well. You know, having COVID and
a CPAP not a good combination. So the minute is
get stuffed up, you're up, or the minute you start draining,
you're up.
Speaker 4 (16:51):
Because it's shooting it in your lines. But believe it
or not, somehow last night. I didn't wake up till
three this morning, and then I didn't go bother to
go back to sleep. So yeah, I stumble into the
bathroom to do what you do in the morning. Sure,
and I'm looking out the window and uh, the blanket
of snow. Like I said, change, I went to bed
last night, Grass, woke up this morning snow. I guess
(17:14):
that puts you in a hotel last night?
Speaker 3 (17:16):
Right?
Speaker 4 (17:16):
Why I don't understand this. There are people going to
work every day in snow. When we have snow, they
feel the need to put you in a hotel.
Speaker 8 (17:24):
Why, Well, because I live on top of a ridge
upon the Cumberland Plateau and coming down that ridge in
weather like we have and be very treacherous. And I
want to be here for the show. I'm a platinum
card listener. So you're fear drift that got a job.
Speaker 4 (17:41):
You're basically dripped by fear gripped over the home.
Speaker 3 (17:46):
You chose to buy.
Speaker 8 (17:47):
I said yesterday, I am the designated survivor for the show.
Speaker 3 (17:51):
I guess.
Speaker 4 (17:51):
So, yeah, we've got millions freezing right now with freezing temperatures.
Some of us have snow like here in Middle Tennessee.
Speaker 3 (18:00):
Whatever it is. It's called Winter.
Speaker 4 (18:02):
Enjoy and welcome to Wednesday, February the nineteenth to twenty
twenty five on the Aaron streaming live on your iHeartRadio app.
This is your morning show, and we can't have your
morning show without your voice. Use that talkback button. We'd
love to have your voice at our kitchen table this
morning as we're making sense of the day. Another big
loss for the Democrats a federal judge declining a request.
By the way, I got a text from John Decker.
(18:22):
I told you this what happened. You know what my
response was, And I told you Trump would win with
three hundred twelve electoral boots.
Speaker 3 (18:29):
I guess that makes sense both, right, But yeah, he
was right.
Speaker 4 (18:33):
The federal judge declined the request of fourteen attorneys general
to temporarily bandy Lon Musk from accessing data at seven
federal agencies. So a big theme for today when we
get beyond this Platinum card hour journey of discovery, is
going to be the Dems don't know how to stop Trump,
and everything they're doing is failing, and every step of
(18:56):
the way, the American people are behigh. So they're trying
to create a Elon Musk derangement syndrome to go with
the boogeyman Donald Trump derangement syndrome. The problem is it's
not twenty sixteen, and America gave them four years and
they failed.
Speaker 3 (19:17):
They elected Donald Trump.
Speaker 4 (19:19):
He's doing exactly what they elected him to do, and
issue by issue they stand behind him. Wait, you see
the rasmusem poll today on judges. The first piece talks
between the US and Russia on the war in Ukraine
are done. Now that US Special Envoy for Ukraine and Russia,
Keith Kellogg, is headed to Ukraine today, Pope Francis to
take a turn for the worst. He now has pneumonia
in both lungs. It's not looking good for the Pope's health.
(19:43):
Now what are we talking about? Well, we had a
long discussion about my motto, which is we live in
an information age, Yes, but are we smarter or no?
Speaker 3 (19:55):
Why?
Speaker 4 (19:55):
Because we have so much information and so little understand
What keeps us from keeping up with understanding? With information
capacity or human beings? We only have so much capacity
in our day. There's only so many people we can
allow into our life. Because people come into our life
and they take time, We've got to have filters and priorities.
(20:19):
In my case, nothing comes before my wife, nothing comes
before my children. And then after that we start talking
about capacity. We have limited capacity and we have to
guard it. Then we have to have filters. Critical thinking
is a filter. Discernment and truth is a filter.
Speaker 3 (20:44):
In this.
Speaker 4 (20:46):
Sea of information, in this ocean of voices. One popped
out of me yesterday and it was Glenn Beck and
The Blaze that did the story. And as I'm reading it,
(21:07):
I'm thinking to myself, one, who is this guy? And
why have I never heard of him? My second thought was,
I got to get this guy's book, and I got
to get it pronto. My next thought is, I continue
to read. This guy gets it more than anyone else
(21:32):
that's popped up on my radar screen. He may have
decoded it. So the Blaze article is CNBC host tries
to get CEO to side against Rubio and Musk on
European speech, but gets a surprise response. And that's where
(21:53):
I'm introduced to the CEO, Alex Carp who land based
to Germany for trying to shut down speech against massive
migration in Europe after a CNBC host tried to get
him to side against right wing political groups.
Speaker 3 (22:11):
And there's this long, long, long.
Speaker 4 (22:13):
Setup that I won't bore you with, but the host
basically says, you know, you lived in Germany half your life.
There's a big debate going on about politics in Germany
right now. You're also Jewish, and there's support Marco Rubio,
Elon Musk and others are very supportive of the alt
(22:35):
right movement in Germany. Watch this loaded question. While there
have been questions about their associations with their supporting Nazis
and other things, I'm just curious, where do you land
on that? All right, so typical death of journalism, typical
narrative based, not critical thinking, understanding based question. I'm used
(22:59):
to that, and then I'm used to some kind of
response that plays along. But I don't get that. This
guy doesn't take the other side or the same side.
He doesn't play the narrative game. And he goes into
a very very critical thinking, heady response that blew my mind.
(23:24):
And it wasn't the part about well, the real problem
in Germany is somehow a small portion of Germans that
believe you cannot talk about migration without being a bigot,
which is about fifteen percent. Ninety percent of them vote
for the Green Party. They've somehow been trick the larger
parties into saying they'll only vote for things if the
far right doesn't vote for them.
Speaker 3 (23:45):
And I'm skipping through all that.
Speaker 4 (23:49):
You know, there's a lesson in my book, which is,
do not allow yourself to become a problem.
Speaker 3 (23:54):
Now I stop.
Speaker 4 (23:57):
Do you know in all of my study of the
social dilemma, there was one key phrase I circled and
never forgot. And you would do well not to forget
it either. If you're online and you're in social media
and you're not paying, you're the product.
Speaker 3 (24:18):
Now.
Speaker 4 (24:18):
If you know that and you're fine with that, live on,
my love, Just don't come back at me two years
later and say I just to appreciate.
Speaker 3 (24:27):
Them sharing my information. I don't understand.
Speaker 4 (24:29):
I was just talking about cars, and all of a
sudden he adds there cars.
Speaker 3 (24:33):
Just shut up with all of that. If you get
it now.
Speaker 4 (24:36):
If you don't get it, that's when I patiently, calmly
tell you, if you're not paying, you're the product. Are
you saying I should do things I have to pay for? Probably,
but it's a dead giveaway. This guy gets it in
a much bigger level now, you're out of the social
dilemma and you're into the earth's life cycle dilemma. I
(25:03):
don't allow myself to become a product of people you
may tacitly agree with. Do you see what he's saying here?
Speaker 3 (25:12):
Wait a minute.
Speaker 4 (25:13):
You're gonna give a narrative side, and you want me
to join it or give you the opposing side. That's
all the world wants to do is us versus them.
They love when you take a quick, firm, immovable position,
especially before you have all the information that's gonna pop
(25:36):
up and sound of the day today, this guy's saying,
I don't play that game. I'm nobody's product. And even
though you bring this up, and I may take a
position with this person, that doesn't mean and you don't
have the right to make it mean. I stand by
this person and everything they've ever done and everything they've
(25:57):
ever said that wasn't in the conversation.
Speaker 3 (26:02):
Translation.
Speaker 4 (26:02):
I can agree with Donald Trump, but I can disagree
with two other divorces. I can agree with Donald Trump
as president today, but I have nothing to do with
what he said to Billy Bush on a bus during
his campaign.
Speaker 3 (26:17):
That's a trick the world plays.
Speaker 4 (26:19):
That's the game the world plays to make sure we
all end up on one side or the other and
keep it simple and stupid, because the main goal is
to keep everybody divided, while some elites are really controlling.
And I thought, who is this man? He gets it?
Then I scrolled down. Karp went on to say this
(26:41):
is the reason many in Germany are turning to the
right wing parties and compared it to the divisiveness in
the United States. We're not allowed to admit. We're not
allowed to be true false, like I agree with this person,
I don't agree with this person. We literally have to
(27:01):
say anything that's ever been We literally have to say
anything that's ever been uttered by this person and their
entire life has to be either right or wrong. And
that applies to border defense. He reiterated that it made
sense for the small minority of far left wing groups
(27:24):
to push extremism, but the extremism is not reflective of
what most society wants. Translation keep listening to this guy
from Germany. He might be describing what you can't figure
out in your country, America. None of us want what
society and it's not bigoty to say, wait a minute,
this is not working The cross Atlantic debate about free
(27:50):
speech over migration was sparked after Vice President JD Vance
scolded European leaders on the issue. And all this guy
said early on was, look, I really am not interested.
Speaker 3 (28:05):
In this conversation.
Speaker 4 (28:07):
If you're saying, well, if I'm for controlling migration, I'm
somehow a bigot. All I'm saying is there is a
proclivity of seventy to eighty percent that those that are
coming from these countries are more likely to commit crimes
against its citizens. In other words, I'm standing for them
on that fact that concern. Do you want to have
(28:29):
a discussion about that and actually solving the problem or
is this all about I'm a product and you've got
to filter me into one side. I got to be
stuck there and I got to join your fight. And
I thought, wow, who in America gets it like this guy?
(28:49):
Because that's exactly what you're living. And the only way
you decode this, and the only way you bust this
is to say, first and foremost, I am a human
and I have capacit city limitations and how did I
get there? Well, if there's a creator, he created me,
and if it's the God that I grew up hearing
about he created me in his image that makes me
(29:10):
different than animals and insects. So now you've got a god.
Now you've got his word. Now you have truth. Now
you've got a filtering system. Now you've got values and
beliefs that can help protect you. Then you only have
so much time. Stop taking in constant information until you've absorbed, critically,
(29:31):
thought through, and understood what you already have. Otherwise you're
getting water boarded with information and the stupidity's drowning you.
I do else to say it. Bottom line to all
of this, who is CEO Alex Karp? Never mind his company,
(29:56):
never mind his product. I want to know more about
his book, Technological Republic, because this German jew gets the
American dilemma better than anybody in America, and he pops
up in our sounds the day I'm getting his book,
and I'm going to learn more about him because in
a sea of information and a notion of confusion, where
(30:18):
there's so much information and so little understanding, this guy's
cracked the code. So for my Platinum card listeners, my
gift to you is find out who Alex Karp is.
A L e X Karp, maybe even order his book,
The Technological Republic, because he may understand the idiocy and
(30:42):
the division we're dying in better than we do. And
that's our journey of discovery. Although he comes back and
our Sounds of the Day next out.
Speaker 3 (30:53):
This is your Morning Show with Michael del Chrono. Good Morning.
Another victory for Donald Trump.
Speaker 4 (30:58):
A federal judge is declining a request from fourteen attorneys
general to temporarily ban Elon Musk from accessing data at
seven federal agencies.
Speaker 3 (31:07):
Mark Mayfield has our top story.
Speaker 6 (31:09):
Fourteen states ask for a restraining order to block Musk's
Department of Government Efficiency from firing employees and gaining access
to sensitive records. The group of attorneys general argued the
power granted to Musk by.
Speaker 3 (31:20):
President Trump is unconstitutional.
Speaker 6 (31:23):
However, the judge said the ags hadn't shown specific examples
of how Doge would cause irreparable harm to the states.
Speaker 4 (31:29):
I'm Mark meathiew Anti Semitism is peaking at an alarming
rate in the United States. The latest annual survey of
American Jews reporting one third have been targeted in person
or online in the past year.
Speaker 3 (31:42):
Brian Shook has our story.
Speaker 9 (31:43):
Former Congressman Ted Deutsch, CEO of the American Jewish Committee,
says that's led to fifty six percent saying they've changed
their behavior in fear.
Speaker 10 (31:52):
That's a decision that people make to not go somewhere,
to think about what they're wearing, what they say, so
that people don't know that they're Jewish.
Speaker 9 (32:03):
More than three quarters of Jewish Americans say they feel
less safe since the October seventh attack on Israel i'm
Brian Shuk.
Speaker 4 (32:10):
Millions of Americans are going to get to see the
first total lunar eclipse in nearly three years.
Speaker 7 (32:19):
Next month, the Moon will appear to turn red when
it aligns with our planet and the Sun. The total
lunar eclipse will be able to be seen throughout the
US on the night of March thirteenth into the morning
of the fourteenth. Special equipment isn't needed to see the
phenomenon that astronomers say the view will be even better
with binoculars or a telescope.
Speaker 3 (32:36):
Finally, said Tailor.
Speaker 4 (32:37):
Well, Francis's condition has taking a turn for the worst
to pneumonia. Now he's canceling his plans this week because
of his ongoing health problems.
Speaker 3 (32:44):
Michael Kastner reports.
Speaker 2 (32:46):
The Pontiff has been hospitalized since Friday with what's being
described as a polymicrobial infection of the respiratory tract Molly
Hunter as more.
Speaker 11 (32:55):
Another update from the Vatican on the Pope's serious case
of ronchitis. Statement says the Holy Father continues to be
without fever, adding his clinical condition is stable.
Speaker 2 (33:06):
And Archbishop will fill in for Francis and celebrate this
Sunday's Mass. That the Vatican has recently released autobiography says,
in part, the reality is quite simply.
Speaker 3 (33:17):
That I'm old. I'm Michael Cassner. Well, the fiftieth anniversary
of Sarah Night Live.
Speaker 4 (33:21):
You may have found funny or disappointing, but you can't
argue was a big ratings win.
Speaker 2 (33:28):
The special brought in an average of fourteen point eight
million viewers on Sunday Night. That's two hundred and two
percent more than the average number of viewers of regular
SNL episodes this season. NBC said it's the most watched
primetime entertainment telecast in five years since the twenty twenty
Golden Globes.
Speaker 3 (33:48):
I'm Michael Casson.
Speaker 4 (33:49):
In sports, the NHL's on Break for the four nations
face off, and the USA has made it to the
finals versus Canada.
Speaker 3 (33:54):
That'll be tomorrow night at seven.
Speaker 4 (33:56):
NBA enjoying All Star week break, although the Lakers return
to the court tonight against the Hornets.
Speaker 3 (34:01):
Birthday Stranger Things Millie.
Speaker 4 (34:03):
Bobby Brown is now an adult twenty one years old,
the actual seal, not the seal in the commercial, sixty
two years old. Smokey Robinson is eighty five years old,
and everybody boo. The NFL commission Roger Goodell is sixty six.
If it's your birthday, Happy birthday. We're so glad you
were born. And thanks for waking up with your morning show.
Speaker 3 (34:21):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael ndheld Joano