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October 10, 2025 35 mins

Last week, asteroid 2025 TF passed just 266 miles over Antarctica — the second closest asteroid flyby ever recorded. Kevin explains what astronomers learned from the near miss, why tracking these objects matters more than ever, and how AI is already transforming space detection and defense. Kevin’s HELLO FUTURE podcast explores how science, innovation, and geopolitics are rewriting the future. 

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

Speaker 2 (00:00):
Your morning show can be heard on great stations across
the country like Talk Radio eleven ninety in Dallas, Fort Worth,
Freedom one oh four point seven and Washington, d C
and five point fifty KFYI and Phoenix, Arizona. We'd love
to be a part of your morning routine or take
us along on the drive to work, but as we
always say, better late than never. Enjoy the podcast.

Speaker 3 (00:19):
Good Morning American, It's Friday two three.

Speaker 4 (00:24):
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'dill Trump.

Speaker 2 (00:38):
The ceasefire plan agreed to by Israel and Hamas has
been ratified by the Israeli cabinet. Senators are leaving Washington,
DC without a deal to end the government shutdown. So
shut down and in placed through the weekend, and a
grand jury in Virginia's indicted Attorney General of New York,
Letitia James on mortgage fraud charges. Good morning and welcome

(01:00):
to Friday, October, the tenth year of Our Lord twenty
twenty five on the Aaron streaming live on your iHeartRadio app.
This is your Morning Show. I'm Michael del Jorno, honored
to serve you. All right, Obviously, the big story of
the week is the agreed Phase one agreed to plan

(01:22):
to end the war between Israel and Hamas and set
in motion, first and foremost the exchanging of hostages and
then the withdrawal of troops to a line that has
agreed upon. We all knew from the very beginning that
the heavy lifting is phased too. There's no one that
disputes that. There is no left versus right argument on that.

(01:47):
But it is interesting, and it's not so much fan by,
you know, the I can't tell you. I mean, I
don't know how many peace deals you have to do
to show up on the scoreboard of the Nobel Committee.
But the Israel, Iran, Pakistan, India, Thailand, Cambodia, Egyptyhiopia, Serbia, Kosovo,

(02:17):
I don't know why they would kick the can give
it to an opposition leader in Venezuela and not the
president other than the close proximity, or they want to
see the Phase two, or they want to see Russia
and Ukraine play out. What's interesting to me is about

(02:37):
the whole Phase one versus Phase two, because I guess
what I'm I guess what I'm feeling is there is
a left narrative that this is nothing, that it's a
twenty point plan and it's not ultimately going anywhere, and
maybe that's how the Nobel Committee looked at it. I
don't know. I want to share a peace with you

(02:58):
that was out on NBC and it's done by the
defense priorities. Defense priorities by and large, more you know,
more restraint, less US involvement in issues around the world.

Speaker 1 (03:15):
I get that, so, you know, Cooch brother funded so on.

Speaker 2 (03:19):
But these watch how even they present this Israeli Prime
Minister bb Netanya, whose cabinet on Thursday approved of the
first phase of President Trump's twenty point peace plan, There's
something diminishing about the way that is said, and then
it's clarified. In exchange for Hamas releasing the rest of

(03:40):
these really hostages, twenty of whom are believed to still
be alive, Israeli defense forces will institute a ceasefire and
implement a partial withdrawal from its current positions. The hostages
will reportedly be set free by Sunday or Monday.

Speaker 1 (03:54):
They have seventy two hours from the signing of the agreement.

Speaker 2 (03:58):
Although it may take a dish time for Hamas to
locate the bodies of those who have died. Either way,
one can't avoid feelings of relief. The celebrations are hard
to miss for the roughly two million Palestinians in the
Gaza who have been living through the hell over the
last two years. The seasfire will provide much needed respite

(04:23):
from a war that has gutted the entire coastal territory,
ruined it's already dilapidated healthcare system, and destroyed approximately ninety
percent of its homes that it goes in Israel. Families
of the remaining hostages who are alive, who have been
pressing that Yaho designed the agreement that ends the war,

(04:43):
will soon have their loved ones back, and Trump is
quite predictably pleased.

Speaker 1 (04:52):
It's a great day for the world, he said. So
there was no hell in Israel.

Speaker 2 (05:01):
Upon invasion and attack, whether it's Hesbaalah or Hermas, There's
been no missiles or destruction in Israel, no disruption and
way of life. Yet, as understandable as it may be

(05:21):
to bask in the success, we shouldn't get ahead of ourselves.
It's important to reiterate that Israel and Hamas have only
come to terms on the first phase, and Trump has
a tendency to declare historic success and then quickly move
on to other things. But this approach that's not going
to work on this issue. Ultimately, here's a conclusion. Trump's

(05:47):
peace plan was less a plan per se and more
rough guideline touching on all of the major issues, from
hostage release to Israeli military withdrawals to Hamas disarmament, an
establishment of a technocratic Palestinian administration. So what you're saying

(06:09):
is he's halfway through the major issues in his little
guideline touching point and that's kind of I'm gonna stop
because I used to always joke in my local show,
I don't do reading for the blind. You can go
read this kind of stuff. But this has kind of
giving you a glimpse of where the narrative's going. No

(06:33):
Nobel Peace Prize, no big deal, long way to go.

Speaker 1 (06:39):
This is the easy part.

Speaker 2 (06:41):
Well, the way these conflicts go is the enemy has
to say that's always the case. I want to end
the week officially where the week kept leading us all along,
even before or Marco Rubio leans over and whispers into

(07:03):
Donald Trump's ear. Decisive leadership action and not quick to
move on to other topics. He's more than I mean, look,
I'm rough on the President when he asks goofy. He
hasn't been goofy on this. This is a guy I
don't know when he sleeps, but he's able to do

(07:23):
more than one thing at a time. And what the
United States and Israel have done have decimated Hamas, decimated
hes Belah, decimated, the Hohu thies.

Speaker 1 (07:38):
Really set back round.

Speaker 2 (07:41):
That all led to this, and these things happen all
the time because the enemy is of a mindset. I mean, ultimately,
can I cut to the chase? This isn't over and
there isn't lasting peace until one side ultimately wins. If

(08:04):
Islamists throughout the Middle East have a worship mission to
conquer the world for Allah, they either win or they lose,
and it doesn't end until then.

Speaker 1 (08:27):
So it is foolish for.

Speaker 2 (08:31):
Defence Priorities or MSNBC to play this game of well,
there's so many points. When we move on down the road,
you know that's not all gonna happen. Well it may not,
but at that point the hostages are back. Israel is secure.

(08:51):
If they don't keep complying and don't keep moving forward,
of course war is going to continue unleashed. But if
the Palestinians want to take a chance on not being
a war zone, not being controlled by warlords who are

(09:15):
on the attack, and want to really build the territory
and live peacefully and prosperously, there is a plan to
move forward with that. But what was my point of
throughout the week, don't lose. We had Pastor Alan Jackson
on he came to this conclusion. We had Stephen Bouchie,
the Colonel, and he came to this conclusion. I had

(09:36):
already come to this conclusion. Hey, things aren't as I
would take today. And this is before the peace deal
over two years ago, five years ago, or ten years ago.
Because of what we achieved in Iran, what we achieved
in the north and to the south with hesbalon Hamas,
what we achieved in the waters with the houthis these

(09:58):
people are all set back. Israel safer. Americas say, I
don't have America saber, but I hope it is. The
borders are certainly more secure than they were two years ago.
And if all I mean, I'm just gonna say this
out loud. I don't mean this in any sense of

(10:21):
hubris or you know, no desire for ultimate peace, because
that's what I want, But the enemy has to say
and I can't control what the enemy is going to do.
At least you'll have the hostages back and that's closure.
And if they don't continue to move forward, I mean,
I get at Phase two is heavy lifting. I get

(10:44):
a little uncomfortable if Hamas is allowed to remain in
the region disarmed and claiming that they're no longer loyal,
because they'll just regroup. But there is a plan for
Phase two, and Phase two can move forward if the
Palestine and people should choose it. If they don't, there's

(11:05):
a lot in Phase one.

Speaker 1 (11:06):
Now. One of the things we're going to do.

Speaker 2 (11:08):
I don't prematurely celebrate either, but we're going to visit
with yl X team with the International Fellowship for Christians
and Jews only because that article does such a poor job,
I thought we should go inside Israel and see what
they've been living for two years and what they're making
of this peace process and what they're making a Phase
one versus Phase two, and the needs and how great

(11:29):
they are, and no one but Yale will know that.
We're also gonna have John Decker with the latest done
on what does a peace deal look like for the
you know, for the Jewish people. And I can tell
you this. Obviously, the first hurdle is does hamas or

(11:56):
least the hostages. I mean, that's the first hiccup. Well,
I guess the first hiccup that could have happened was
the Israeli government didn't approve, and they did. Now the
next big hiccup is the hostage exchange. But presumably Trump's
headed there. Presumably the exchange will take place by Sunday

(12:18):
or Monday at the latest, and then we start looking
at withdrawal lines for the Israeli troops.

Speaker 1 (12:28):
I used to have a youth pastor.

Speaker 2 (12:32):
I still love the way he'd syd Indian style during
Bible study, played with his toes. But he would always
have this one expression. He'd go, look at where we
were a year ago, Look where we're at now. I mean,
in other words, just to get you to see the
progress that's being made. It's not where you ultimately want
to be, but it's a step towards it, and so

(12:53):
you take that step.

Speaker 3 (12:55):
In hope.

Speaker 2 (12:59):
I don't think it's going ahead of ourselves to hope
and pray for lasting peace. I don't believe the President
was in this for a Nobel Peace prize, so I
really don't care that he didn't get it, although I
will compare who did and what he's done already, and
if they want.

Speaker 1 (13:14):
To wait till January, let him.

Speaker 2 (13:17):
I think the President wants the dying stopped, and I
think he wants the peace and prosperity to begin. And
I think he feels the same way in Ukraine as
he does in Israel, and he's been very consistent about that.
Look sometimes the tariff thing, I don't get, but he's
been very consistent about it. What's the level of the

(13:37):
playing field. It certainly wasn't the easiest political way to go.
He could have secured the border and rode that for
two years, but he didn't. But you move forward in
hope for peace. I used to love the way Kennedy

(14:01):
would say it, and it's a great way to down
the segment because phase one could give us peace in
our time, Phase two could give us peace for all time.
We hope and pray for both, and we understand the
moment together, because we only have one chance to live
and understand. Friday October, the tenth year of Our Lord,
twenty twenty five.

Speaker 4 (14:23):
This is your Morning Show with Michael del Trono.

Speaker 5 (14:27):
The Nobel Peace Prize has become a jove. If I
was Trump, I would drive it my brand new Garby
Struck except it, throw it in it, crush it, drive away,
honking the horn.

Speaker 1 (14:43):
Yeah. I don't know how Barack.

Speaker 2 (14:46):
Gets it for doing nothing, and Trump hasn't got it
for all he's done. All I know is we're headeded
to a ceasefire and a hostage exchange. And you know what,
that's a bigger deal than a Nobel Peace Prize. Let's
put it that way. Mark Mayfield has more.

Speaker 6 (15:02):
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netnyah who spoke at the Cabinet
meeting and thank the US where it's help brokering the deal.

Speaker 5 (15:07):
We couldn't live with you without the extraordinary hope, President
Trumps to Steve Whitkom Sharon Kushmer.

Speaker 6 (15:16):
The first phase of the US broker deal includes the
release of all remaining hostages in Gaza. It also includes
a conditional Israeli withdrawal from Gaza.

Speaker 1 (15:24):
And the release of some Palestinian prisoners.

Speaker 6 (15:26):
Meanwhile, there are multiple reports that the US is planning
to set as many as two hundred troops to Israel
to monitor the Seasquare agreement in Gaza by marketing Field.

Speaker 2 (15:34):
So while the narrative is developing that this is not
a big deal because the big deals all in Phase two, well, no,
Phase one's a big deal too. I saw a meme
that said, here's the leftist media cycle one.

Speaker 1 (15:46):
It isn't happening. They ignore the.

Speaker 2 (15:49):
Eventually they get too, well, this rarely happens, and then
they get to it's actually a good thing to They
get to, well, if you're against it, you're a racist.

Speaker 1 (15:59):
And that's all ready.

Speaker 2 (16:00):
I think we're dealing all four at once over the
Latitia James indictment, but we'll have more on that next
half hour for you. A grand jury has indicted the
New York Attorney General Latitia James on mortgage fraud charges.
A federal judge is temporary blocking the president's deployment of

(16:21):
the National Guard, and the Dodgers blocked the Phillies' ability
to continue their baseball season, winning an eleven innings last night.
The Dodgers are headed to the NLCS. Meanwhile, the Cubs
forced a game five in Milwaukee, and it was a
really bad day for Philadelphia. First the Phillies get eliminade,
then the Flyers lose, and then the Eagles losing Thursday

(16:42):
Night Football. All right, we'll make sense of all of this,
including a visit with our futurists.

Speaker 1 (16:47):
Next, stay with us.

Speaker 7 (16:50):
This is some bok Wisconsin in My Morning show is
your Morning Show with Michael design.

Speaker 1 (16:57):
Of Hey, it's Michael.

Speaker 2 (17:03):
Your Morning Show can be heard live each weekday morning
on great stations like thirteen sixty The Patriot in San Diego,
News Talk one oh six point three and AM eighteen
eighty WM EQ oh Claire, Wisconsin and one O four
nine The Patriot and Saint Louis, Missouri. Would love to
be a part of your morning routine. But so glad
you're here. Now enjoyed the podcast.

Speaker 8 (17:21):
There once was a Nobell so heard they snubbed Trump,
though he tamed every herd to some rando. They playing
with democratic bling while Obama won.

Speaker 1 (17:34):
For a mere word.

Speaker 2 (17:38):
Do you know I used to always say, at the
end of every year, I'd like to put out a
book of memes because the news and the narratives was
lies all year, and in the midst of the lies,
kind of like in Bruce Almighty, when you know you're
you're not supposed to notice that it's really God Morgan Freeman,
but the homeless guy's always holding up the right message

(17:59):
and the sign through all the chaos. That's kind of
what memes are like. The memes are like the only
truth anymore. And we could almost publish Steve's poems at
the end of the year.

Speaker 1 (18:12):
If he keeps us up, we'll do it out.

Speaker 2 (18:14):
I mean, somebody needs to look you right in the
eye and say, first and foremost good morning, and welcome
to Friday, October the tenth. You know what, Friday October
the tenth, twenty twenty five is a big deal. You
know why. It's never gonna happen again. And best of all,
right now it hasn't happened yet. You can still make
a difference in someone's life today. You can cherish your own.
You can notice the tree, the breeze, whatever, and you

(18:38):
can cherish the moment. There are some people for two years.
Can you imagine if two years had your daughter or
your son, this could be a big weekend. If hostages
are exchanged and everybody's already moving on to how Phase
two won't work, or you think Amas everywhere else is
going to lay down their guns.

Speaker 1 (18:59):
And get no.

Speaker 2 (18:59):
I don't I can tell you how this end. One
eventually wins and one loses. But I do know that
this enemy responds to strength, and they will stand down
to strength and wait for a better hour. I think
that we are headed towards and I know that today's

(19:20):
a heck of a lot better than a year ago,
and way better than two years ago when the invasion happened.
And to prove it, we're going to go inside Israel
with the President and CEO of International Fellowship for Christians
and Jews, yell Exstein, will be joining us. Maybe you
need to have an inside Israel perspective on this. I
think I've plenty of inside Palestine perspective from the mainstream

(19:42):
media can't speak to everything. But if this all ends
with the hostages are returned, and then they don't want
to comply moving forward, or the Palestinian people don't want
to make better choices for leadership.

Speaker 1 (19:54):
We'll deal with that when it happens.

Speaker 2 (19:56):
And then there's this other narrative that is kind of developing,
and I can see talk radio take in the Bay
and you know, just peeling the row and.

Speaker 1 (20:07):
Reel of this.

Speaker 2 (20:10):
I'll tell you I do feel sorry for is who
did get the Nobel Peace Prize, because she'll be diminished
as Trump is being ignored. And for what reason, I
can only speculate, but I can tell you I really
don't think Donald Trump cares about that.

Speaker 1 (20:26):
There's plenty of time for awards.

Speaker 2 (20:27):
There's plenty to do right now and create safe and
prosperous futures for America and for Israel and for the
Palestinian people frankly for that matter, if they choose it.
If they don't, sure, I see more war in the future.
But at least the hostage is a return. They'll be
closure on this two thousand or not two thousand, seven

(20:48):
hundred day event. Kevin Sirelli is a futurist. In fact,
he's got a new podcast out now called Hello Future,
and it explores how science and innovation and geopolitics are
rewriting the future. We're struggling, Kevin, in reality right now,
let alone, we can't see today very clearly, let alone

(21:08):
the future. But this one caught my attention. Asteroid twenty
twenty five TF or whatever it's The label is, Yeah,
two and sixty six miles over Antarctica.

Speaker 1 (21:18):
That's a little close.

Speaker 9 (21:20):
Not good, not good, and listen.

Speaker 7 (21:22):
I'm an eternal optimist, and yesterday for the podcast, I
interviewed this astronaut who is on board the International Space
Station for six months.

Speaker 9 (21:33):
Imagine being an outer space for six.

Speaker 7 (21:35):
Months and guess what the guy he was up there
with only one other person, a Russian. Can you imagine
just you and and a Russian in a confined space
for six months? I thought lockdowns were bad all those
years ago.

Speaker 1 (21:49):
Now, and the Russian was wearing a mask, right, wouldn't
that be funny? Get all way up the space and
one guy's afraid of COVID.

Speaker 9 (21:57):
I should have asked that that's great.

Speaker 3 (22:00):
This is why I learned from you. That's a great question.

Speaker 2 (22:05):
Class, don't worry so, but I mean it will help me.
I mean, two hundred and sixty six miles that's pretty close,
isn't it.

Speaker 3 (22:12):
Well.

Speaker 7 (22:12):
He's the head of the Asteroid Institute, which which is
an organization that tracks the millions of asteroids that are
in our Solar system. Millions of asteroids that are in
our Solar system, and we do our technology now with
our telescopes is just beginning to track all of them
in our Solar system. And this one was was very small.
It was the size of a van and it zoomed

(22:33):
over Antarctica and astronomers just discovered it within a couple
of hours. Now that's not a failure of any astronomer,
it's just the capability of our technology right now. And
essentially this one was okay, but it it wouldn't have
taken us out like the dinosaurs.

Speaker 9 (22:52):
But it begs the question that as we've become.

Speaker 7 (22:55):
More reliant on our space based technology, we've got ten
thousand satellites and now in low orbit as zooming around
our planet. If it takes them out, or one takes
some of them out, that could have ramifications here on Earth.
Ditto if it hits the Moon and we start building
on the Moon. So there's all of these different options
that we have to target an asteroid to prevent it

(23:17):
from hitting Earth. The one that's getting a lot of
headlines this week is nuking it, setting a nuclear weapon,
but you know, there's other options that we have as well.

Speaker 2 (23:26):
By the way, how long ago was that movie where
they all go up in space?

Speaker 3 (23:33):
I love that movie.

Speaker 9 (23:34):
That's one of my favorite movies.

Speaker 2 (23:35):
Yeah, that one I saw in the theater for some reason.

Speaker 7 (23:37):
That one had start Willis ben affk. Yeah, that movie
is incredible, and that's honestly one of my favorite movies.
And the footage in that.

Speaker 2 (23:47):
That was a young live Tyler too, says the filthy
old man Jeffrey told yourselves over there.

Speaker 9 (23:55):
But yeah, for sure.

Speaker 7 (24:00):
And the reason I love that movie is because Bruce
Willis is like a blue collar refinery worker and he
goes up to save the world. And I believe that
space jobs are blue collar jobs, and that's a great
job for it. But I don't want people to panic
about asteroids, even though that we have a better shot
of getting hit by an asteroid.

Speaker 3 (24:18):
Than winning the lottery. Sorry, it'd be I know you
just gave.

Speaker 7 (24:20):
This beautiful, optimistic, awesome vision, but honestly, it's not really
good that we could die of an asteroid more than
winning the lottery.

Speaker 2 (24:28):
But before we run out of time, I wanted to
pick your brain up because this one was the size
of Like, I don't know why when you say this,
I don't picture like the van that nearly killed me,
which was like a big white work fan.

Speaker 1 (24:41):
I always picture like the old Volkswagen, you know.

Speaker 2 (24:44):
Those vans, So you know the size of a van,
and of course depends on where it hits too, But
I mean, if it hit an Antarctica size of van,
it wouldn't have been a very big deal. How big
does it have to be to be a really big deal?

Speaker 7 (24:56):
It only has to be like literally a couple of
one hundred yards.

Speaker 9 (25:01):
In order to suffer it to like take us out
and hit the ocean, we could just.

Speaker 7 (25:06):
Fly like a Kamakazi satellite into it to dult halt,
to dart the h and send the asteroid just like
a fraction of an inch off course to prevent it
from hitting us.

Speaker 9 (25:18):
We could nuke it, or we could even send.

Speaker 3 (25:20):
A laser at it.

Speaker 7 (25:21):
So we do have the technology to protect the planet,
which is awesome.

Speaker 1 (25:24):
That's good, all right.

Speaker 2 (25:25):
So this is, by the way, at two hundred and
sixty six miles over Antarctica. This was the closest recorded,
and of course this is all new technology to track
and record. There may have been one closer we didn't
even notice.

Speaker 9 (25:37):
Right, yeah, exactly, But again I just want to keep
saying that.

Speaker 5 (25:43):
Like it.

Speaker 7 (25:44):
We always think of the dinosaurs, but if an asteroid
were to just hit a bunch of satellites and wipe
out our communications, that's pretty bad. And then this will
kind of blow your mind as well. There isn't any protocol.
Let's say there is a huge asteroid that's coming and
we discover it years.

Speaker 9 (26:00):
Because typically with the big ones, you'll discover it a
couple of years in advance, which is good because then
we can we have more time to either laser it,
fly a kamikaze.

Speaker 7 (26:09):
Thing into it, or send a nuclear weapon on it.
But which country gets to hit the button that sends
the nuke or sends the laser. None of that from
a planetary defense system is worked out, and so that
is actually really.

Speaker 9 (26:24):
Interesting as we talk about going.

Speaker 7 (26:26):
Back to the Moon and colonizing Mars and becoming more
interplanetary as a species and as.

Speaker 9 (26:31):
An economy, even with our artificial.

Speaker 7 (26:33):
Intelligence or robots if it's not humans, which country has
the upper hand in order to make those decisions.

Speaker 9 (26:40):
For the planet is up for.

Speaker 7 (26:42):
Grabs, and that power struggle right now is obviously between
the United States and China. But I want the us
to be able to put press the button to save
the planet. I don't want Chi Jinping to do it.
And that's another really big issue that's being worked through.

Speaker 2 (26:57):
All right, So no, but this is fascinating and it
is progressed. So it does fall under futurist and the
planning or the forming of a commission as you're describing.
That's here today and should be looked at today, and
perhaps asteroid twenty twenty five TF just missing by two
hundred and sixty six miles as a reminder that that

(27:18):
ought to be on the radar.

Speaker 1 (27:19):
As much as the space station is a cooperative.

Speaker 3 (27:21):
Effort because these.

Speaker 1 (27:24):
Things are real and they could happen.

Speaker 2 (27:26):
And it's amazing, you know, because I think of Executive
Decision was a movie where the radical Islamist hijack the
plane and we're going to use it as a missile.

Speaker 1 (27:36):
Then that happened on nine to eleven.

Speaker 2 (27:38):
I mean it's not We often see movies before they
actually really happened. In this case, Armageddon asteroid could be
on the horizon. These are just some of the things
that you tackle in terms of innovation science in geopolitics
and how the future is shaped by today and the
futures arriving fast, isn't it?

Speaker 9 (27:58):
It is? And just a couple of years ago, I
think it was twenty.

Speaker 7 (28:00):
Thirteen or twenty twelve, there was a meteorite that crashed
in a more rural part of Russia.

Speaker 9 (28:06):
And like twelve hundred people were in the hospital because
of the burns and the destruction. I mean when this
thing hit, it didn't even.

Speaker 7 (28:13):
Hit a largely popular population place, and thankfully no one
lost their lives, but it took out windows. I mean,
it looked like a war zoner. It looked like an earthquake,
And so it doesn't have to be big or an
end of the world.

Speaker 9 (28:28):
Catastrophe in order to make attacked exactly.

Speaker 7 (28:32):
And I think, you know, I feel really optimistic that
we are now just having the technology with the Reuben
telescope and the James Webb telescope to be able to
map the Solar System. And if there's just one thought
that I can leave people with on this Friday, it's
literally that that our Solar system has hundreds of millions

(28:53):
of rocks in it and a planets, moons, asteroids, meteors,
not just nine planets and a couple of moons.

Speaker 3 (29:03):
We live in a very large neighborhood.

Speaker 7 (29:05):
Yeah, we don't even have a map of it, and
to map it is important.

Speaker 2 (29:10):
Yeah, And I would just say, I mean, I don't
want to make I like our segments to be.

Speaker 1 (29:13):
Fun, because they should be. They should be journeys of discovery.

Speaker 2 (29:16):
But I mean, look at the obsession over global warming
and the world's.

Speaker 1 (29:20):
Obsession with it and planning for it.

Speaker 2 (29:23):
I mean, there's a part of me that, you know what,
I would love it you spend three decades telling everybody
that they're going to die over a tenth of a
degree and then have an asteroid that you haven't been
paying attention to just wipe you out like a dinosaur.
I'd actually find that humorous. I'd sit and chuckle with
God that. Or you on the space station getting ready
to deliver the nuke with a Chinese guy wearing a mask.

Speaker 3 (29:46):
And you say.

Speaker 1 (29:48):
The mask on.

Speaker 7 (29:50):
But so I'm an optimist, And this is why I
do think this is really fun. Is I think the
best way to protect the planet is to start mining elsewhere.
To look at the helium three on the Moon, to
look at the other rare minerals that are on Mars,
to look at the asteroids, which there's one asteroid called Series.

Speaker 3 (30:12):
This will blow your mind.

Speaker 7 (30:13):
That has it. It's built of so much material that
is worth a gazillion times more money than the entire
global GDP. You want to solve the debt literally.

Speaker 9 (30:26):
Just start mining asteroids and getting it back year.

Speaker 7 (30:30):
That's true, it's great, It's totally true.

Speaker 9 (30:33):
So like we talk about Taiwan and building semiconductor chips
and blah blah blah, the rare earth mineral crisis on Earth,
why not just start mining our solar system. It's right
there for this.

Speaker 2 (30:45):
Like it's in heaven, just floating around waiting to be yes.
Hello Future. That's the name of the podcast. You'll find
it on your iHeartRadio app. It's host Kevin SURREALI thanks
for joining us, and God bless you, my friend.

Speaker 3 (30:56):
It's always wonderful to you.

Speaker 1 (30:58):
Oh may I say for the record, I'm glad it
man two hundred and sixty six miles.

Speaker 2 (31:04):
That's a that's what we call it national terms, a
close call near miss. You would be funny though, right,
all this obsession over global warming in order to just
it's really about control.

Speaker 1 (31:17):
Population.

Speaker 2 (31:18):
Control gets you afraid, Control you get you to behave
a certain way, but all the obsession for decades, and
al Gore never thought of the asteroid coming pop. All right,
you two, and your weird mood has now spread to
me virally.

Speaker 3 (31:35):
Yeah, it says, right, that would be an inconvenient asteroid.

Speaker 1 (31:38):
I'd be an inconvenient asteroid. I shall come back professional.

Speaker 4 (31:44):
It's your morning show with Michael del Chorno.

Speaker 1 (31:48):
Suppose here in the Northeast is all about Letitia James.
The hunter has officialcy call the Hunting.

Speaker 2 (31:57):
Uh big John, why's the big story? Every We were
fifty four minutes after the our top five stories a day.
Let's begin with that New York Attorney General Letitia James
responding to being indicted indicted Thursday on mortgage fraud charges.

Speaker 1 (32:09):
Sarahly Kessler has the details. He's charges are baseless.

Speaker 10 (32:12):
Letitia James released a video Thursday afternoon, just hours after
grand jury in Virginia indicted her. She blamed President Trump,
who's repeatedly called for his political enemies to be prosecuted,
including James, who won a multimillion dollar civil fraud case
last year against Trump.

Speaker 1 (32:31):
His only goal is political retribution.

Speaker 10 (32:33):
Tish was indicted just weeks after former FBI director James comy,
this is nothing more than a continuation of the president's
desperate weaponization of our justice system. James says she'll fight
the charges vigorously. I'm Sarah Lee Kessler.

Speaker 2 (32:48):
Of course, these are all people that were using legal
attacks to try to destroy Donald Trump and keep him
from being president so they could keep their fake presidency
with an old man. And they did it all under
the mantra of no one's above the law. Now suddenly
it's just retribution, has nothing to do with what the
law is or what had been broken. The US is

(33:11):
reportedly planning to send as many as two hundred troops
to Israel to monitor the ceasefire agreement in the Gaza.

Speaker 1 (33:17):
Mark Mayfield reports.

Speaker 6 (33:18):
US official City of the Military will help with a
flow of humanitarian aid and security into the enclave. What
official told NBC News there will be no US boots
on the ground in Gaza.

Speaker 1 (33:28):
This comes after President Trump announced Wednesday.

Speaker 6 (33:30):
The first phase of a seafire plan between Israel and Hamas.
The plan has since been ratified by the Israeli Cabinet.

Speaker 1 (33:37):
I'm Mark Neefield.

Speaker 2 (33:38):
Researchers at U mass Amherst are announcing the development of
a cancer prevention vax. Now this may be one vax.
I'd go to Walgreens and get Tammy Trihio has more.

Speaker 11 (33:47):
The university says the vaccine has been proven to prevent melanoma,
pancreatic and triple negative breast cancer, and mice, with almost
all of them being tumor free for the entire study,
despite being exposed to cancer as cells. To say, the
vaccine teaches the immune system to recognize and attack cancer molecules,
much like the flu shot does. They believe the vaccine

(34:07):
could bring a boost to the fight against cancer. I'm
Tammy true. No, God, I love this.

Speaker 2 (34:20):
Lee Greenwood says he's ready to sing God Bless I
know you are anywhere, He'll sing anywhere. Lee Greenwood says
he's ready to sing God Bless the USA.

Speaker 1 (34:31):
At the Super Bowl.

Speaker 2 (34:31):
The eighty two year old count I can't do this.

Speaker 1 (34:34):
Story with his straight face. Uh all right, I'm back
the house speaker.

Speaker 2 (34:42):
The House speaker mentioned that Greenwood would be better than
the halftime performer Bad Bunny. Greenwood told The New York Post,
I agree with the speaker. I'd be a great performer
for the Super Bowl, and I'm always thrilled to perform
the national anthem or God Bless the USA. He also
added that he'd be happy to sing the song prior
to kick off, maybe even at a party, at any

(35:04):
gig you can book me at.

Speaker 1 (35:06):
Suddenly, that's all it took. Bad Bunny sounding good to me.

Speaker 4 (35:10):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with michaelndel Chorno.
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