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September 9, 2025 35 mins

A different view of Americans' growing desire for socialism…and a Gen Z gender poll that will further feed the depopulation crisis coming!

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, it's Michael. Your morning show can be heard live
on great radio stations across the country like wilm and
w DOV and Wilmington and Dover, Delaware or wgst AM
seven twenty the Voice in Middle Georgia. And We're gonna
need some blankets. News Radio six fifty k e n I, Anchorage, Alaska.
We'd love to be a part of your morning routine.
Now enjoy the podcast.

Speaker 2 (00:21):
Two three starting your morning off right. A new way
of talk, a new way of understanding. Because we're in
this together. This is your morning show with Michael O'Dell Jordan.

Speaker 1 (00:37):
I feel like we're all in this together. We are all.
Do you think Johnny Carson was ever standing by the
curtain hearing ed in the background and somebody leans over
and goes, hey, let's have a better show tonight than
last night, Johnny, And then the curtain opens, he comes out.
I was just trying to be encouraging. You know, yesterday's

(00:57):
show is really good. We should always try to let's
have a good show today, not like yesterday. Something that
does have a better show than yesterday, that it applies.
There was something I think that was our journey discovery.
The first hour. Almost see what I'm saying. You have
to up your game and be better than yesterday. Oh,
I mean it's always a striving Why don't you just

(01:17):
tell me I look fat today too well, and my
hair looks bad or something. Your hair always looks incredible.
There's a receding hairline right there. Look at this up here.
I know this is getting old. It's exhausting, it hurts.
All right, I'm gonna start over. Even after that negative
first impression from Jeffrey, I'm going to overcome that. In fact,

(01:38):
hit the intro again. All right, Yes, I want to
start over a minute. Okay, try saying something encouraged, red,
do something other than have your headphones beep, you know,
like a tower. If I was a plane, i'd land
on your head right now. It's like a beacon calling
me said, why are they blinking? Do they need to
be charged? What are they? We got to get you

(02:00):
a real microphone too. All right, say something positive and
then hit the intron and you'll still notice the difference.
You is kind, You is smart. It is important.

Speaker 2 (02:13):
Starting your morning off right. A new way of talk,
a new way of understanding that because we're in this together.
This is your morning.

Speaker 1 (02:24):
Show with Michael O'Dell Chorman. Good morning, Rise and shine
one and all, and good good morning. Let me be
the first to say that to you. You can't really
control the rest of your day, but we can't start
your morning off right. Thanks for waking up with your
morning show, making it a part of your morning routine.
The Chicago mayor says setting the National Guard to his
city is wrong. It's the wrong solution for a real problem.

(02:49):
I couldn't agree more. They need a new mirrorge what
they really need. A Supreme Court ruling means ice officers
will have more flexibility to conduct immigration stops in LA.
Congress will be investing getting charges that meta buried research
about how virtual reality devices and apps harm children? What
about adults? Do you realize if I told the story

(03:11):
on the on the show before, but my son and
I had some time to kill, I forget what we were.
I think we were shopping for the girls' laptops or
Imax or I don't know what all the names are.
I still can't figure out the thing you put to
our partners in crime, who me and Nicky? So I
don't know it's gonna be like twenty minutes in line
waiting to be called on. So we went and signed

(03:33):
up for the I still don't know what they're called,
the goggles you put on. They're meta, aren't they? Or another
apple anyway? Yeah, yeah, yeah, I can't remember whatever they're called.
And it was a twenty minute instructional demonstration, and oh
my goodness, it was unbelievable. Kind of like the same

(03:53):
reason why I've never done cocaine, if or heroine. If
everybody's going to ruin and throw their life away, I mean,
people with looks, fame and money must feel really good
for a while. I don't want me to try it.
That's how I should have felt about these goggles. Because
the next thing you know, I'm in a recording session

(04:14):
and I'm standing right next to the star although recording
the album is that the vision pro vision PROMP thank you.
Then I'm sitting at first base at Fenway Park watching
a Red Sox game. Then finally said, what would you like
to do? You know, do your work from different atmospheres?

(04:35):
I thought, okay, And it teaches you how whatever you
look at, then you just do your finger so it
knows my eyes and so if my eyes looks at
something on the screen and goes like that it opens it.
So in this particular case, I decided to work from
the surface of the moon. It was wonderful. Let me
tell you something, it's a whole different day at work
when you're not in a cubicle, you're sitting on the moon.

(04:56):
I thought to myself, are you kidding me? Someday? I said,
everybody w walking around with their head lurched forward, staring
at a phone. We're all just gonna sit in a
ten by ten room with these goggles on and be
wherever you want. They're gonna turn us into like, why
are you looking at me like you don't understand what
I'm saying. No, I'm just that sounds like the make
exactly next thing. You know, We're gonna be like batteries,

(05:18):
just plugged in, living a virtual life. Literally, So I
mean I bring I'm sorry I brought that story up.
I feel like the show isn't as good as yesterday already.
It's let me take you No, I can tell you're
looking at me like with such question marks in your eyes.
I'm like, at least Red is, you know, still shaking
off the bourbon for last night. He's clueless. Let me

(05:38):
tell you he does his best work, does any when
he's on a hundred proof? Let me tell you your
show prep gets really interesting. But anyway, I'm like, looking
at this, I'm thinking, come on, this can't be good
for adults either, ken it. But apparently Congress investigating that
they buried research that proved how harmful. Well, isn't that

(05:59):
the whole story of the social dilemma? They all knew
doing it. The whole game is to get you addicted.
So at no point when we're discussing the symptoms of addiction,
whether it's lack of sleep and what that means for
young people, whether it's the perfection culture and how that

(06:21):
leads to eating disorders and how they feel about themselves,
and you do this all in the vacuum of no
God and no sense of family. They knew, They've known
all along. Quite frankly, they have even buried that research
as they continue to provide it. But I got to

(06:41):
tell you, I every day I drive my wife crazy
with this. I have about seven people that keep coming
up in my in my feeds, and I see how
social media has created monsters, monsters or loneliness. I can't
figure it out for the life of me. There are

(07:03):
some videos where you're like, don't you have I mean,
it sounds so mean, and I don't mean it mean.
I mean this very compassion. Don't you have someone to
talk to about these things? And I don't mean a professional.
I mean I think of the mundane conversations that my
wife and I have. Imagine if I stopped having them

(07:24):
with her and just started filming them and talking to nobody,
and then you look down and like, nobody's liked it,
nobody's commented. I mean, you know, what are you doing?
Who you talking to? Stop it? Go put out Hogan's
heroes something. Stop embarracing yourself. That's why I look in
the radio back in the day, because you didn't necessarily

(07:45):
worry about the likes, but people were forced to listen.
Now there's too many options for everybody. Well, I can't
even get you to like it. I like it, Michael,
Wait a minute, I didn't sound good yesterday. So anyway,
I'm like, and the women actually with the getting up,
putting a pound of makeup on, and then they just
kind of like film themselves in the round. They're just

(08:08):
like creepy staring at you and you're like somebody's wife.
Don't you have something to do? Better? Be careful. Some
of those wives will talk about their husbands and then
it's really not good. I just don't. I mean, look
five minutes on Facebook. This is more than just virtual
reality devices and apps that are harming children. I think

(08:31):
it's harmed us all, which is going to take us
very long to get to our poles of plenty. We
got two doozies today, you know, with the pressure of
Jeffrey saying, well, that was a great journey of discovery
yesterday top of today. Yeah, you got to be What
am I just a juggler for you? What am I
a clown getting out of a little car. You're like
that little monkey on the Give me somebody, give me
a balloon. I want to make an animal for him.

(08:51):
The organ grinder make me laugh, fat man, make me laugh.
Here's your tin cup, go make red and some money.
A lot of people ask, are you really that fat? No?
But if I talk about how fat I am when
you meet me, you'll go, oh, you're not fatue great,
Whereas if I don't say that, you'll go, kun, he
was kind of chubby, you know what I mean? So I, Oh,

(09:12):
my gosh, is it going to be an add Tuesday
second day after because I stayed up watching the Bears, which,
by the way, if you fell asleep in the fourth
quarter of last night's Monday Night Football, you're not alone.
So did the Bears. And my brother's last tech, well,
his last text was go to bed. I mean, what
are we five again? Michael, go to bed. Now my

(09:32):
brother's yelling at me to go to bed. But we
spent the whole first half talking about how who's worse,
Rattler or McCarthy. Rattler is the quarterback for the Saints,
McCarthy for the Vikings. And then it ended with, oh
my gosh, I mean something just got in McCarthy and

(09:55):
the Vikings twenty one points in the fourth quarter and
they go on to steal the game. But but the
second to last text to my brother was, well, the problem,
the problem for the Bears is Josh Allen's two thousand
miles away, right. You know, all you got is Caleb
Williams to come out and try to create some heroics.
And it didn't happen. Bears lost at home twenty seven
twenty four. But there is the fear of a add

(10:17):
Tuesday Morning. Now, two poles I want to hone in on.
One is a poll of gen zers, and the one
that the thing that NBC would like you to take
away is, Hey, these gender differences, they're going beyond politics.
Well that's a very simple exegy. There's far more frightening

(10:40):
things in here. I'm gonna beg David Zonati, and I
don't want to scoop his team. Did I mention, by
the way, what a wonderful time he showed me in Cleveland? Oh?
Not at all. Oh. I got to play golf. I
got to play golf, see all the friends I loved there.
I ate good. I got to spent time with his

(11:01):
with Claire Behart had her tenth birthday. His granddaughter is
just a great We crammed in three rounds of golf
in less than forty eight hours. Wow, that's a lot
of the golf. I was kind of like very presidential.
I was in, I was out, but I made a
lot of memories. I saw a lot of people, shook
a lot of hands, kiss a lot of babies. But
had a wonderful time. But one of the great privileges

(11:21):
was I just happened to be there and they had
their weekly meeting and they were talking about the population
decline and it's a serious problem moving forward. Well, you're
going to see it in this gen Z. If I
can get him to introduce that to our show, I
know they're going to do it very extensively at the
public square. You guys really need to know this crisis

(11:45):
is on the radar. And by the way, am I
the only ones seeing all these things? They're not meteors
coming at us? But ships? What's with that? On social media?
Everything is a giant spaceship's coming towards us. Have you
guys been seeing that or have it seen that? I
must have clicked on something outer space And now I'm
getting all these because I noticed they're having the it

(12:06):
looks like a truck garbage. No it wasn't. I kind
of like kept his log, but they're they're doing a
UFO committee meeting today. And then I'm thinking to myself,
you know, you never know what's real and what isn't
anymore with social media. I mean, if there is this
alien spaceship coming, I'd like to know. In fact, i'd
like bre Tennis to tell me about it. But I digress.

(12:27):
So obviously, We're going to have a big problem with population,
and it's going to be here before you know it.
And when it arrives it's too late. You have a
lot of things to thank for this. Abortion is a
big part of this equation. The LGBTQ movement's a big

(12:48):
part of this equation. Waiting so long to grow up,
let alone get married, let alone have children beyond the
fertility ages. In this gender gap poll way, do you
see how men view having children versus women. Remember when

(13:11):
it was every girl's dream to have a wedding someday,
to be a mother someday, It's not their dream anymore.
And then we have one other poll that I think
could give us the kind of journey of discovery we
had yesterday in terms of it gives you the flip view.

(13:31):
So yesterday was you now got fifty four percent of
eighteen to thirty nine year olds who are interested in
a socialist candidate. Today you get the view from Gallup
of our views on capitalism and it's slipping to fifty
four percent from sixty percent. And again, just as we
talked about yesterday, two words to keep in mind hope

(13:53):
that comes from God, a confidence in him, his love
for us, his promises that he will supply all our knees,
that if you're in relationship with him, he will prove
it to you when you're young, when you're a teenager,
when you're a young adult, early in marriage, late in marriage,
doesn't matter what the enemy or life throws at you.

(14:14):
He is faithful to calm the storm every time. He
is faithful to make away where there is no way. Two.
Timothy says he's faithful even when we're faithless, because he
cannot deny himself this nature. But if we're not a
nation under God, indivisible with liberty and justice for all,

(14:36):
and we abandon God and we abandon family, what do
we got a tremendous need that needs to be solved?
And if there is no God, we'll turn to government. Now,
as we came to the conclusion yesterday, what a bad trade.

(14:56):
I don't know how much recent history, ancient history, you
would have to ignore to embrace socialism. That's never worked.
Margaret Thatchers said it best. Yeah, it works to you
run out of everybody's money. Well, we're starting thirty eight
trillion dollars in debt. Do you want a god who
can do all things? Who has endless ability to provide

(15:20):
or do you want to trust your government thirty eight
trillion dollars in debt. I mean, if you haven't noticed,
everybody that goes to Washington supposedly to serve you leaves millionaires,
and we leave more and more in debt with a
dollar that buys less and less. Not a good equation.

(15:43):
This is Your Morning Show with Michael del Chrono. I
was on a show recently and they were talking about
how unique this show is, and I started talking about
what my favorite part of it is. And I never
liked talk show hosts that like to fight or like
to argue. I'm a solver, so you know, whether it's

(16:05):
solving it through understanding or changing things, that to me
is the goal. But I never liked monologue saying usually
there's cast chemistry. My favorite part of this show is you.
Every day you never fail. You're the most entertaining part
of the show. But you gotta take your place. Use
the talk back if you're listening on your iHeart app.
It's a microphone. You press it, count you down, three
two one, Very professional. Gives you thirty seconds to make

(16:28):
a comment, ask a question, and take your place at
the kitchen table this morning on a show that belongs
to you, your morning show. Hey, this is John Watson.

Speaker 2 (16:39):
My morning show is your morning show with Michael del Jorno.

Speaker 1 (16:47):
Hey, it's me Michael. You can listen to your morning
show live on the air or streaming live on your
iHeart app Monday through Friday from three to six Pacific,
five to eighth Central, and six to nine Eastern on
great radio stations like Talk six fifty in Sacramento or
one oh four nine The Patriot in Saint Louis and
Impact Radio one oh five nine and twelve fifty w
h d Z in Tampa, Florida. I'm sure hope you

(17:09):
can join us live and make us a part of
your morning routine. In the meantime, enjoy the podcast Embrace Tuesday, September,
the ninth Year of Our Lord, twenty twenty five. Good morning, Michael.
Jeffrey's got the sound. Red's keeping an eye on the content,
though he's not pleased. I haven't jumped on Senator Tim
Kaine yet. He'd like, I'm mugging here in the subway early.
I'm like, yeah, okay, where do our rights come from? Comparing?

(17:35):
You know, Thomas Jefferson to a Jia Muslim moolah. I guess,
I guess there was probably a lot to get you irate.
I'll do my best a little bit later on. I
wanted to start with these polls today and red lights
to gin me up with poles. But this one, I

(17:55):
think in particular, is a nice follow up to yesterday.
So yesterday's poll was that we have a majority of
eighteen to thirty nine year olds, so younger Americans the future,
a glimpse of what the future may look like, and
they're embracing socialist candidates by majority. So we've had this
war going on with the Democrat Party with socialists within

(18:17):
trying to take over. Well, that led to yesterday Bernie
Sanders saying, condemn me. First of all, this this is
bigger than a giraffe. He's not even a Democrat, folks.
He caucuses with the Democrats, but he's actually a socialist
who runs as an independent. Now he's telling Democrats who

(18:37):
they should be endorsing and shouldn't be. Now he's representing
Democrats saying this is our guy, well not your guy,
because he's a socialist like you. You better be careful and
hope he's just a socialist. He may be an Islamist,
but he's like, this is our guy. Why aren't we
supporting him? And I'll show you how that war is

(18:58):
going within the Democrat Party. But there's obviously a lot
of young people that embrace this. So why I believe
AOC will be the early front runner for the Democratic
presidential nomination for the Democrat Party. Now I will say this,
you get two views. Yesterday was young people all out socialism,

(19:19):
and we discussed that from two words, hope that comes
from God, optimism that comes from man, and the youth
are getting neither. They don't get any optimism from a media, unless,
of course, a socialist Democrat is in office or a
progressive socialist. So then they're left with no hope because

(19:47):
you taught them to abandon God. He's silly and hateful
and only creates division and war. Abandoned family, in fact,
abandon reality and live on social media. You're empty, you
have no foundation, no purpose, and now just by the
absence of God, no hope that only can come from

(20:10):
him and no optimism. Well, of course you're going to
desperately look for someone to take care of you because
there's no reason to believe that anyone is going to
or that you can take care of yourself. So now
we arrive at the views of capitalism, which is the
flip side of the coin. Americans are more positive towards

(20:33):
capitalism overall than socialism, but it's falling. So if yesterday
was a view of eighteen to thirty nine year olds,
not look at everybody, well, fifty four percent few capitalism favorably.
That's down from sixty percent and twenty twenty one. We
talked about this early. Many of you cities weren't even

(20:54):
on board. I can tell you, having been from New Orleans,
that there is New Orleans pre Katrina and post Katrina.
Some events are forever. They're forever marked by what it was,

(21:14):
but forever marked by the inability to ever be the
same again. Do you remember during COVID when they were
saying stay home, stay safe, as if you can only
be safe at home, stay home, stay safe, this is
the new normal. I was immediately against that statement. Viruses

(21:39):
are not new, no matter how deadly, they're not new,
and viruses this is virology one oh one. You really
die from life, But if you're fragile with enough comorbilities,
like a flu, it can kill you. So you get

(22:01):
a virus and you die, or you get a virus
and you don't and you slowly become immune to it.
We don't ever saw viruses. We learn to live with them.
So no virus is ever a new normal. The normal
is they exist, and when they do, you get them

(22:23):
and they finish you off, or you get them and
you become immune, but they sold you fear. And because
of that, there's pre COVID and post COVID America, just
like there's and we're gonna have the anniversary here in
two days. There's America prior to nine to eleven and

(22:44):
after nine to eleven. There was America before Pearl Harbor
and after, which is in a sense saying before World
War and after World War. There's some things that happened
that leave you never the same. And I'm beginning to
wonder here's another one that dates and continues to fall

(23:06):
since COVID. Americans do remain at the moment overall more
negative fifty seven percent than positive thirty nine percent towards socialism.
But you get under forty years old and it becomes
the majority at fifty four percent for socialism Gallup First

(23:28):
Measures measured American's opinions on various economic systems in twenty
ten and has repeated the question six times since. Democrats
and independence view capitalism less positive positively this year, each
showing eight percentage point declined since twenty twenty one. For

(23:49):
the first time, less than half of Democrats forty two
percent view capitalism positively. Now, your finding fathers never intended
a two party system. I'd like to see him both go,
and there's a good chance they'll both be gone by
the end of the decade. Godspeed to that. But these
numbers are coming from one party, the Democrat Party. I know,

(24:15):
we don't like to play shirts and skins. We don't
always like to say, look at the bad guys, the Democrats.
But in this case, stability in US adults opinions on
socialism obscures Democrats more positive views over time, from fifty
percent rating positively in the initial twenty ten to roughly

(24:35):
two thirds in three readings by twenty nineteen. The Democrat
Party from I mean, I always talk about the pendulum
from John F. Kennedy to Ted Kennedy, and that's the
same womb. I mean, that's bread digging, right, but from
John F. Kennedy to Bernie Sanders or AOC or Barack Obama,

(24:59):
that's a big pendulum. So the Democrat Party has gone far,
far left, and drug by virtue of half of Americans
being Democrats, a portion of America with it. So yesterday
we get the view that points to young people being
the socialist problem, or at least being duped into thirsting

(25:24):
for it or seeing it as a solution. You lose God,
you lose man. You lose God, you lose man, you
lose capitalism. Because hope comes from God, his promises, his
love for you, his ability to provide for you. Now
today that argument goes even further with Tim Kaine saying

(25:46):
our rights don't even come from God, and that's dangerous.
I mean, see Iran. All that proves is their failed
worldview that all gods are the same. They are not.
The God of the Mulahs doesn't believe in separation of

(26:08):
church and state. The God of Christianity does. The God
of Islam doesn't believe in right of assembly and freedom
of speech and free and open press and women's rights,
all the things that our God does. Just because you
don't understand the difference in gods and you've brought into universalism,

(26:30):
which is a flawed worldview. Doesn't make Tim Kaine's statement correct.
But today you get a better view, not just the
youth that have been taught for decades, for generations to
abandon God, abandon family. That's where this problem is coming from.

(26:52):
That gets me to this pole, which I think is
even more important. This particular poll looks at gender differences
and it's powerful. Gen Z's gender divide reaches beyond politics

(27:13):
and into the views of marriage, children, and even success.
Is the NBC headline, the gender gap between men and
women has been a durable fact of life in American politics. Now,
what the media likes to do is focus on the

(27:33):
gender gap with women, but there's an equal gender gap
with men. But it's not just politics driving this divide
any longer. According to the latest NBC News Division Desk
poll powered by survey Monkey, it shows how the political
gender gap persists alongside different social beliefs between young men

(27:54):
and young women. I'm telling you, I got two daughters
and they're wondering how they're going to find a husband
with a shared worldview and with masculinity. It's a real
crisis for young women, and it comes out in this
gender divides with an Adults eighteen to twenty nine show

(28:15):
up in questions ranging from how Americans feel about President
Donald Trump? I think you know where that one's headed.
Among gen Z ors, overall, sixty four percent disapprove of
Trump's performance versus thirty six percent who approve, But young
men are more evenly split fifty three to forty seven percent.
Young women seventy four percent disapproved, twenty six percent approve,

(28:40):
and by the way, that holds true on issues from
border security, deportation, to trade to inflation. Despite their differences,
gen Z men and women both rank the same three
things as the most important in defining success, but there

(29:01):
were differences. Gen Z women ranked having emotional stability as
the fourth most important thing in their personal definition of success.
Men ranked at tenth. This will scare you. Gen Z
men ranked making their family or community proud fifth. Gen
Z women ranked at ninth. Gen Z men who voted
for Trump right having children as the most important thing

(29:25):
in their personal definition of success. Gen Z women voted
who voted for Harris ranked having children as their second
least important thing in their personal definition of success. This
is never often brought up in church. Even God's first
command to humanity was be fruitful, multiply, fill and subdue

(29:54):
the earth. Having children is part of his design for creation.
Lose God, lose man, lose God, lose population. And then
in the vacuum of no God, no way, no truth,

(30:16):
no life, there's no hope. There's a mounting case for
no optimism, you get desperation. Hey lose God, lose population.
David'sonai and his team at the American Policy Roundtable to
the Public Square are going to be looking at this
depopulation crisis. It's a big problem. It's probably the one

(30:41):
that your elected officials are being the most quiet about.
And don't get me wrong, I think Russia, Iron and
China are a problem, but this is a big one too.
And this is going to impact I mean, this whole
economy is going to crumble because of it. Even our
quote unquote entitlement programs they can't withstand this. Everything collapses.

(31:09):
And if you started doing something today, you still have
something pretty critical coming. And I don't say anybody doing
anything today, but I can't wait till tomorrow. We talk
to David Zanati, who is sounding the alarm on the
depopulation crisis. Well, here's your young women. And by the way,
if they woke up today, for many of them, they're

(31:29):
beyond the best years of fertility, even simple things, and
they're difficult. Part of me is a father wants to
see my daughters. Wait, get married later if it means
avoiding a mistake. But it also brings fertility into question

(31:52):
and an issue. But why are we splitting hair when
gen Z women who voted for Kamala Harris rank having
children is the second least important thing in their personal
definition of success. Oh, that's a depopulation crisis problem buried
in a gen Z study of the difference between young

(32:16):
men and young women. After all, they're just the future
of this republic. And that's your journey of discovery. For today, Tuesday, September, ninth,
Year of Our Lord, twenty twenty five.

Speaker 2 (32:27):
It's your Morning Show with Michael del Chino.

Speaker 1 (32:31):
If you love us on the year, you're gonna love
our website, Your Morningshow online dot com. You'll find the
link to our website all the cities and stations you
can listen to us on live or after the fact.
Bios on the entire team, correspondence and contributors. It's all
online at your morningshow online dot com. Well, if you're
just waking up fifty six minutes after the hour, these

(32:51):
are your top five stories of the day. The Chicago
Mayor Brandon Johnson says setting the National Guard into his
city is the wrong solution to a real problem.

Speaker 3 (33:01):
Johnson made the comments in a new opinion piece for
The New York Times, saying that the lowering of crime
in the city doesn't require an occupation. He went on
to say that if Trump listened to city leaders, he
would recognize that Chicago just experienced record low homicide numbers.
Trump said Sunday he wasn't going to war with Chicago,
saying he was going to clean up American cities a
Mark Mayfield.

Speaker 1 (33:21):
Governor of California, Gavin Newsom's office says the deployment of
federalized military troops in Los Angeles has already cost taxpayers
nearly one hundred and twenty million dollars. Tammy Trehillo has
details that includes.

Speaker 4 (33:33):
More than forty two hundred National Guard soldiers a seven
hundred marines since June seventh. Expenses total about seventy one
million dollars for food, thirty seven million for salaries, four
million for equipment, three and a half million for travel,
and one and a half million forty mobilization. Newsmith's requested
detail cost records from the federal government, which have not
been received yet. He says the California National Guard calculated

(33:55):
the expenses of his request. Currently, three hundred Guard members
remain in LA to protect federal buildings. I'm Tammy Trihillo.

Speaker 1 (34:03):
Well. The Eagles are adding more shows to their residency
in Las Vegas. The band added four additional shows for
January of next year, with tickets going on sale September nineteenth.
Their residency at the Shia began in September of last year.
That's a residency total of forty eight shows. Fans have
an additional chance to see the Rock Hall of Famers

(34:26):
on stage. Tickets start at one hundred and seventy five dollars. Well, today,
time to hug your teddy Bear. It's National Teddy Bear Day.

Speaker 5 (34:35):
Most people were given a teddy bear as a child
and if you were odds are you still have it?
They were named after President Theodore Roosevelt back in nineteen
oh two. They offer comfort, they're great listeners, they catch tears,
travel well, and can rock up party hat. And according
to sleep dot com, forty percent of all adults still
sleep with their childhood teddy bear. And that's okay. I'm

(34:57):
free tennis.

Speaker 1 (34:58):
We're all in this together. This This is Your Morning
Show with Michael del Journo
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