1 00:00:00,040 --> 00:00:03,080 Speaker 1: Oh, welcome everybody. Well, we had a decision made by 2 00:00:03,240 --> 00:00:06,080 Speaker 1: the Supreme Court Chief Justice actually just in the last 3 00:00:06,080 --> 00:00:09,880 Speaker 1: hour or two, and he has temporarily halted the end 4 00:00:09,920 --> 00:00:12,360 Speaker 1: of Title forty two, which was scheduled to take place 5 00:00:12,400 --> 00:00:16,200 Speaker 1: in just two days December twenty first. We talked a 6 00:00:16,200 --> 00:00:19,759 Speaker 1: lot about it last week. It's leading to an unbelievable 7 00:00:19,840 --> 00:00:23,640 Speaker 1: crush at the border. Cities like El Paso and now Yuma, 8 00:00:23,720 --> 00:00:28,120 Speaker 1: Arizona are being overwhelmed with migrants to the point where 9 00:00:28,360 --> 00:00:30,319 Speaker 1: all they can do is bring them in and send 10 00:00:30,360 --> 00:00:33,760 Speaker 1: them out somewhere, which brings us to New York City, 11 00:00:33,760 --> 00:00:38,199 Speaker 1: which has taken on an unbelievable number of migrants. This 12 00:00:38,280 --> 00:00:41,200 Speaker 1: is because they got word in these countries that Title 13 00:00:41,240 --> 00:00:43,559 Speaker 1: forty two is going to expire, and that's one way 14 00:00:43,560 --> 00:00:46,440 Speaker 1: we're able to turn people back. It was an order 15 00:00:46,520 --> 00:00:49,479 Speaker 1: under the Trump administration during the COVID pandemic beginning in 16 00:00:49,479 --> 00:00:52,920 Speaker 1: twenty twenty that allowed us to immediately turn back a 17 00:00:53,000 --> 00:00:55,800 Speaker 1: number of the migrants trying to seek asylum because we 18 00:00:55,880 --> 00:00:59,920 Speaker 1: had a health emergency. Understandably, the COVID emergency is over, 19 00:01:00,480 --> 00:01:03,080 Speaker 1: but they got to come up with something because these 20 00:01:03,120 --> 00:01:05,600 Speaker 1: countries and the rest of the world is probably South 21 00:01:05,640 --> 00:01:08,480 Speaker 1: American and Central America. Just wait for this kind of 22 00:01:08,520 --> 00:01:11,720 Speaker 1: news as a reason to come to the border, any 23 00:01:11,800 --> 00:01:15,240 Speaker 1: kind of news, distorted news, things like DACA, amnesty programs, 24 00:01:15,400 --> 00:01:18,040 Speaker 1: and now this one. Do you know, become legendary in 25 00:01:18,040 --> 00:01:20,240 Speaker 1: those countries title forty two? And do you know you 26 00:01:20,319 --> 00:01:22,759 Speaker 1: have to sign up with a coyote to get over 27 00:01:22,760 --> 00:01:27,240 Speaker 1: the border, because the coyotes are handing out color coded 28 00:01:27,760 --> 00:01:32,640 Speaker 1: wrist bands, and the coyotes have their own checkpoints before 29 00:01:32,680 --> 00:01:34,959 Speaker 1: you get to the US border, and if you don't 30 00:01:34,959 --> 00:01:39,560 Speaker 1: have a wrist band, they don't let you progress. And 31 00:01:39,680 --> 00:01:42,000 Speaker 1: color do you need to progress? Oh, I don't know 32 00:01:42,040 --> 00:01:46,800 Speaker 1: the color scheme? Yeah, light, I don't know. Yeah. So 33 00:01:47,360 --> 00:01:52,400 Speaker 1: you have to pay, and they're charging on a cover 34 00:01:52,480 --> 00:01:54,760 Speaker 1: the whole border. And people eye on this as much 35 00:01:54,760 --> 00:01:57,400 Speaker 1: as they can, yeah, because what they want, what they 36 00:01:57,480 --> 00:02:00,919 Speaker 1: charge on average I heard is about three thousand dollars 37 00:02:00,920 --> 00:02:04,560 Speaker 1: a family, and it has now become if you multiply 38 00:02:04,720 --> 00:02:07,760 Speaker 1: by all the people who've poured in, you know, in 39 00:02:07,800 --> 00:02:12,200 Speaker 1: the past year, they're doing seven billion dollars in business 40 00:02:12,200 --> 00:02:17,080 Speaker 1: a year, seven billion, and it's become a rapidly increasing 41 00:02:17,120 --> 00:02:20,200 Speaker 1: part of their empire. They still take in between twenty 42 00:02:20,240 --> 00:02:25,720 Speaker 1: and thirty billion in drug smuggling, you know, the Fenton 43 00:02:25,919 --> 00:02:28,200 Speaker 1: in the meth and everything else. Twenty to thirty billion, 44 00:02:29,080 --> 00:02:32,079 Speaker 1: seven billion is nothing to sneeze at, though, and it's 45 00:02:32,080 --> 00:02:35,600 Speaker 1: increasing all the time. And since people a lot of 46 00:02:35,600 --> 00:02:37,840 Speaker 1: them are coming on their own now because the word 47 00:02:37,919 --> 00:02:41,000 Speaker 1: is out, they don't have to organize so much or 48 00:02:41,040 --> 00:02:44,040 Speaker 1: advertise like they've been doing, but they are. You know, 49 00:02:44,080 --> 00:02:47,760 Speaker 1: they set up roadblocks along the main migrant paths and 50 00:02:47,919 --> 00:02:50,240 Speaker 1: you've got to cough up some cash and then wear 51 00:02:50,320 --> 00:02:52,320 Speaker 1: your wristband or you're not going to make it to 52 00:02:52,360 --> 00:02:55,560 Speaker 1: the next checkpoint. And as I was thinking about this, 53 00:02:55,680 --> 00:02:59,680 Speaker 1: with all this news, why are we creating such a 54 00:02:59,680 --> 00:03:02,880 Speaker 1: big or monster out of the drug cartels by by 55 00:03:03,200 --> 00:03:06,760 Speaker 1: allowing them access to a market here of drugs and 56 00:03:06,919 --> 00:03:11,000 Speaker 1: human smuggling. And it's it's thirty to forty billion dollars 57 00:03:11,160 --> 00:03:15,360 Speaker 1: in revenue a year. I mean, can you a year? 58 00:03:15,960 --> 00:03:19,120 Speaker 1: Can you imagine how much money this cartel has access 59 00:03:19,200 --> 00:03:24,079 Speaker 1: to with relatively few expenses. This is this is its 60 00:03:24,120 --> 00:03:28,880 Speaker 1: own nation. So we got here because a US district 61 00:03:28,919 --> 00:03:31,799 Speaker 1: judge by the name of Emmett Sullivan ordered Title forty 62 00:03:31,800 --> 00:03:34,720 Speaker 1: two scrapped. He was going to give them a couple 63 00:03:34,720 --> 00:03:36,920 Speaker 1: of weeks. The Biden administration asked for more time. He 64 00:03:37,000 --> 00:03:41,960 Speaker 1: gave him December twenty. First, a three judge Federal Appeals 65 00:03:42,000 --> 00:03:45,600 Speaker 1: Court panel agreed with Judge Sullivan they would not scrap 66 00:03:45,640 --> 00:03:48,440 Speaker 1: the end of Title forty two. So then a bunch 67 00:03:48,440 --> 00:03:51,560 Speaker 1: of Republican Attorneys general took this to the US Supreme Court, 68 00:03:51,840 --> 00:03:54,600 Speaker 1: and John Roberts gave them, at least for now what 69 00:03:54,720 --> 00:03:58,400 Speaker 1: they wanted. The program will not end on Wednesday, although 70 00:03:58,440 --> 00:04:01,080 Speaker 1: he gave the Department of Homeland Secure until five o'clock 71 00:04:01,080 --> 00:04:05,400 Speaker 1: tomorrow to respond to the appeal. And I'm not sure 72 00:04:05,440 --> 00:04:07,440 Speaker 1: what that means. Well, he wants to hear if they 73 00:04:07,480 --> 00:04:09,760 Speaker 1: have a plan or what they're gonna do. There's there's 74 00:04:09,760 --> 00:04:15,840 Speaker 1: two options. He can either on his own keep continue 75 00:04:15,880 --> 00:04:21,479 Speaker 1: to block the removal Title forty two, or he can 76 00:04:22,000 --> 00:04:27,000 Speaker 1: refer to the full Supreme Court for a vote. So 77 00:04:27,120 --> 00:04:29,719 Speaker 1: right now for the removal of forty two is blocked 78 00:04:29,720 --> 00:04:32,520 Speaker 1: and he can keep it that way or not, or 79 00:04:32,560 --> 00:04:34,919 Speaker 1: he can have the whole court rule on it all 80 00:04:35,000 --> 00:04:39,640 Speaker 1: right now. Meanwhile, um, we know last week, in fact, 81 00:04:39,680 --> 00:04:42,600 Speaker 1: it was a week ago today. Governor dippity doo went 82 00:04:42,640 --> 00:04:46,240 Speaker 1: to the border. Everyone knows why he's running for president. 83 00:04:46,839 --> 00:04:50,280 Speaker 1: That's the only reason. The man's been around in California politics. 84 00:04:50,320 --> 00:04:53,119 Speaker 1: How many years, and he's been governor, you know, since 85 00:04:53,520 --> 00:04:57,919 Speaker 1: twenty twenty right twenty eighteen. He just got reelected in 86 00:04:57,920 --> 00:05:00,279 Speaker 1: twenty twenty two. It's never really gone to the order. 87 00:05:01,560 --> 00:05:03,600 Speaker 1: So he went there to make a point for himself 88 00:05:03,600 --> 00:05:06,719 Speaker 1: and his future, to get a stake in national issues. 89 00:05:07,680 --> 00:05:12,400 Speaker 1: They reported with the Alsagando Times, tarn Luna and a 90 00:05:12,480 --> 00:05:17,400 Speaker 1: story headlined inside Newsom's trip to the Mexico border. It's 91 00:05:17,440 --> 00:05:20,719 Speaker 1: written like I got special access over the other reporters. 92 00:05:20,760 --> 00:05:23,120 Speaker 1: It was just me and a guy from ABC News, 93 00:05:23,520 --> 00:05:26,840 Speaker 1: and we get to really be right there with Newsom 94 00:05:26,880 --> 00:05:29,719 Speaker 1: and listen to what this is all about. My journey 95 00:05:29,760 --> 00:05:31,960 Speaker 1: to interview Newsom included an early morning, two and a 96 00:05:31,960 --> 00:05:34,640 Speaker 1: half hour drive from the San Diego Airport through a 97 00:05:34,680 --> 00:05:37,800 Speaker 1: mountain snowstorm to Imperial County, where I met him at 98 00:05:37,839 --> 00:05:40,880 Speaker 1: a state funded immigration center near the border. The off 99 00:05:40,960 --> 00:05:43,479 Speaker 1: late governor was running nearly two hours ahead of schedule. 100 00:05:44,080 --> 00:05:46,800 Speaker 1: I arrived to find him speaking with staff from the 101 00:05:46,839 --> 00:05:50,839 Speaker 1: Office of Emergency Services and staff at the Immigration facility. 102 00:05:51,080 --> 00:05:54,400 Speaker 1: I leaned in to listen. He paused, tried to soften 103 00:05:54,440 --> 00:05:56,920 Speaker 1: what he would say next with a rare compliment, then 104 00:05:56,960 --> 00:06:00,200 Speaker 1: asked me to leave the room. I awkwardly obliged. He 105 00:06:00,279 --> 00:06:03,280 Speaker 1: later explained that as we talked in one of the 106 00:06:03,360 --> 00:06:05,760 Speaker 1: many rooms that house asylum seekers when they're released from 107 00:06:05,760 --> 00:06:08,800 Speaker 1: federal detention, that he wanted to ask detailed questions out 108 00:06:08,839 --> 00:06:13,240 Speaker 1: of my earshot about how California could withdraw from its 109 00:06:13,279 --> 00:06:16,919 Speaker 1: humanitarian operation at the border. Newsom said the state has 110 00:06:16,920 --> 00:06:20,159 Speaker 1: already spent nearly a billion dollars working with nonprofits to 111 00:06:20,279 --> 00:06:23,680 Speaker 1: provide support to immigrants release from federal detention, most likely 112 00:06:23,720 --> 00:06:25,920 Speaker 1: to fill the void that was left by the Trump administration. 113 00:06:26,279 --> 00:06:29,920 Speaker 1: California can't continue that level of funding given its new 114 00:06:30,000 --> 00:06:34,360 Speaker 1: projected budget deficits. We blew a billion dollars to help 115 00:06:34,360 --> 00:06:39,960 Speaker 1: illegal immigrants, dah, who knew? Huh was that ever announced? Probably? 116 00:06:40,120 --> 00:06:43,119 Speaker 1: But what happened was this one of his emergency executive orders. 117 00:06:43,200 --> 00:06:46,400 Speaker 1: Nobody investigates to see what it really means. Do you 118 00:06:46,440 --> 00:06:49,159 Speaker 1: think most of the public would want the state to 119 00:06:49,200 --> 00:06:54,160 Speaker 1: spend a billion dollars of state tax money considering the 120 00:06:54,200 --> 00:06:57,800 Speaker 1: conditions we're living in Yeah, the conditions were living in 121 00:06:58,160 --> 00:07:01,040 Speaker 1: are atrocious in many areas, and he blew a billion 122 00:07:01,040 --> 00:07:04,560 Speaker 1: dollars on that. You think that would pass if it 123 00:07:04,600 --> 00:07:08,120 Speaker 1: went up for a vote. A billion dollars And now 124 00:07:08,160 --> 00:07:09,920 Speaker 1: he's trying to pull out of it because we don't 125 00:07:09,960 --> 00:07:12,040 Speaker 1: have the money, because we're going to be going into 126 00:07:12,080 --> 00:07:15,160 Speaker 1: deficits soon. Well I saw that, and I was like pissed. 127 00:07:15,240 --> 00:07:17,360 Speaker 1: I was pissed off. It's like, who asked you to 128 00:07:17,400 --> 00:07:24,240 Speaker 1: do that? That's the federal government's job. Newsom then called 129 00:07:24,280 --> 00:07:28,120 Speaker 1: out the GOP. Of course, he aimed his grievances at 130 00:07:28,200 --> 00:07:31,560 Speaker 1: Republicans in Congress with jabs that earned national attention and 131 00:07:31,640 --> 00:07:34,840 Speaker 1: retorts from Fox News hosts like Sean Hannity, who called 132 00:07:34,880 --> 00:07:38,200 Speaker 1: him mister sanctuary state. To that Newso sent those guys 133 00:07:38,200 --> 00:07:41,120 Speaker 1: are just day holes. Well I'm sorry. You had a 134 00:07:41,160 --> 00:07:45,840 Speaker 1: Democratic president, Senate, and House for the last two years. 135 00:07:45,840 --> 00:07:48,360 Speaker 1: He says. All the Republicans talk about with immigration is 136 00:07:48,400 --> 00:07:51,440 Speaker 1: bord of security. Yeah, well that's a big part of it. Well, 137 00:07:51,440 --> 00:07:54,480 Speaker 1: how off do you stop the flow? Yes, we need 138 00:07:54,520 --> 00:07:56,280 Speaker 1: board of security, but it's not just about that. It's 139 00:07:56,280 --> 00:07:59,400 Speaker 1: about a broken immigration system. An asylum system has to 140 00:07:59,400 --> 00:08:01,680 Speaker 1: be reformed, do you know. Yeah, Biden's done a good 141 00:08:01,720 --> 00:08:04,960 Speaker 1: job at that, hasn't he. These are your this is 142 00:08:05,000 --> 00:08:09,160 Speaker 1: your party. Why do other people who want a strict, 143 00:08:10,360 --> 00:08:13,120 Speaker 1: strict border security method, why do we have to go 144 00:08:13,160 --> 00:08:16,560 Speaker 1: along with your silly ideas? Yes, we want the border 145 00:08:16,600 --> 00:08:19,680 Speaker 1: sealed off. We have a very generous legal immigration system. 146 00:08:19,880 --> 00:08:24,400 Speaker 1: That should be it. We're not responsible for humanitarian problems 147 00:08:24,440 --> 00:08:28,240 Speaker 1: in every other country in the world. And people aren't 148 00:08:28,400 --> 00:08:32,880 Speaker 1: mean and nasty and faithful because they can't afford to 149 00:08:32,920 --> 00:08:36,320 Speaker 1: take care of everybody else's problem in all of Central 150 00:08:36,360 --> 00:08:40,320 Speaker 1: and South America. They're gonna have nuts. We're gonna have 151 00:08:40,360 --> 00:08:43,240 Speaker 1: more on this with Mark Ricorian ahead of the Center 152 00:08:43,240 --> 00:08:46,320 Speaker 1: for Immigration Studies, who knows a lot about Title forty 153 00:08:46,320 --> 00:08:48,800 Speaker 1: two the Border. He'll be on at four oh five. 154 00:08:48,960 --> 00:08:54,520 Speaker 1: We understand, h there is breaking news. The Weinstein jury 155 00:08:54,559 --> 00:08:58,720 Speaker 1: has reached a verdict. Wow after ten days. Yep. Now, 156 00:08:59,280 --> 00:09:00,840 Speaker 1: I don't know if they reached the verdict on all 157 00:09:00,920 --> 00:09:04,040 Speaker 1: counts or some counts, but we'll be looking for that 158 00:09:04,120 --> 00:09:07,560 Speaker 1: story to this afternoon on the show. Yeah, they had 159 00:09:07,600 --> 00:09:11,160 Speaker 1: been asking to have testimony read back to them. It's 160 00:09:11,200 --> 00:09:13,439 Speaker 1: just the judge never released that to the public. Over 161 00:09:13,480 --> 00:09:15,440 Speaker 1: the last few days. Yeah, you see, I wondered that, 162 00:09:15,480 --> 00:09:17,160 Speaker 1: I said, did they ask for anything? But I heard 163 00:09:17,160 --> 00:09:18,760 Speaker 1: that this morning too. That's the first time I heard 164 00:09:18,760 --> 00:09:20,720 Speaker 1: that they asked for some jury readback, or they've had 165 00:09:20,760 --> 00:09:25,079 Speaker 1: testimony readback, They've had questions, and they've wanted to examine 166 00:09:25,760 --> 00:09:28,280 Speaker 1: some of the testimony over again. Now I remember there 167 00:09:28,280 --> 00:09:33,520 Speaker 1: were four accusers. One of them's Newsome's wife, Jennifer, So 168 00:09:33,640 --> 00:09:35,280 Speaker 1: we'll see. I don't know whether or not they're gonna 169 00:09:35,320 --> 00:09:37,520 Speaker 1: read this verdict later because they got to assemble everybody. 170 00:09:37,559 --> 00:09:39,760 Speaker 1: So it usually doesn't happen right away, but stood happen 171 00:09:39,760 --> 00:09:42,559 Speaker 1: before it shows out. More coming up Johnny kenkf I 172 00:09:42,640 --> 00:09:45,400 Speaker 1: AM six forty Live Everywhere, the iHeartRadio app coming up 173 00:09:45,440 --> 00:09:47,880 Speaker 1: after the news at three thirty. The headline over the weekend, 174 00:09:47,880 --> 00:09:51,440 Speaker 1: it's just too much to bear. LA unified in California, 175 00:09:51,520 --> 00:09:56,160 Speaker 1: showcase record graduation rates. There was even one version the 176 00:09:56,160 --> 00:10:00,800 Speaker 1: El Segondo Times had said, amid skepticism, we will talk 177 00:10:00,840 --> 00:10:03,960 Speaker 1: about the story. It is really laughing. Maybe he should 178 00:10:04,000 --> 00:10:07,720 Speaker 1: permanently close the schools to exact that's the best thing 179 00:10:07,760 --> 00:10:10,599 Speaker 1: that ever happened. Everybody, Everyone doesn't go to school for 180 00:10:10,640 --> 00:10:13,720 Speaker 1: a year and a half and everybody graduates. Does this 181 00:10:13,760 --> 00:10:16,079 Speaker 1: bring new meaning to the idea of just passed the 182 00:10:16,200 --> 00:10:19,520 Speaker 1: kids through, right, don't worry about whether or not they 183 00:10:19,559 --> 00:10:22,240 Speaker 1: know anything or do well any standardized tests. Just push 184 00:10:22,320 --> 00:10:24,600 Speaker 1: them through. They don't they have to do. It's pretty 185 00:10:24,600 --> 00:10:28,120 Speaker 1: clear they don't care nobody. The teachers never showed up 186 00:10:28,120 --> 00:10:31,199 Speaker 1: for work, and now the administrators have decided to pass everybody. 187 00:10:31,480 --> 00:10:34,280 Speaker 1: So you judge people by their actions. They don't care 188 00:10:35,000 --> 00:10:38,080 Speaker 1: they got They're just moving cattle along. That's all in 189 00:10:38,120 --> 00:10:41,319 Speaker 1: their minds, just moving the cattle along. And again, a 190 00:10:41,480 --> 00:10:45,080 Speaker 1: verdict has been reached in the Harvey Weinstein's sex assault 191 00:10:45,120 --> 00:10:49,760 Speaker 1: trial here in La forming accusers involved. We will find 192 00:10:49,760 --> 00:10:53,079 Speaker 1: out probably before the show's over, what they decided after 193 00:10:53,200 --> 00:10:56,440 Speaker 1: a real long was it ten days? You said this 194 00:10:56,559 --> 00:10:59,959 Speaker 1: was day ten of the deliberations right now? They did 195 00:11:00,200 --> 00:11:02,560 Speaker 1: exactly work eight hour days. It seems like they worked 196 00:11:02,559 --> 00:11:05,280 Speaker 1: like four hour days. But yeah, and we know they 197 00:11:05,320 --> 00:11:08,160 Speaker 1: did not work last Thursday and Friday. They quit after Wednesday, 198 00:11:08,480 --> 00:11:10,240 Speaker 1: but they came back today and maybe that's why they 199 00:11:10,240 --> 00:11:11,640 Speaker 1: took some time off. They're like, all right, I think 200 00:11:11,640 --> 00:11:13,319 Speaker 1: we've reached verdicts. They could sit on it for a 201 00:11:13,320 --> 00:11:14,839 Speaker 1: few days. We'll come back and see if you still 202 00:11:14,880 --> 00:11:17,079 Speaker 1: feel that way. So I'm guessing I don't know I 203 00:11:17,360 --> 00:11:23,240 Speaker 1: happened today. It's the whole thing's inexplicable to me. All Right, 204 00:11:23,280 --> 00:11:27,000 Speaker 1: here's something that should happen much more often if we're 205 00:11:27,000 --> 00:11:29,079 Speaker 1: going to get a handle on any of these horrific 206 00:11:29,559 --> 00:11:33,280 Speaker 1: mass shootings, particularly when they are done by young people. 207 00:11:34,200 --> 00:11:38,000 Speaker 1: Last July fourth in suburban Chicago, there was a guy, 208 00:11:38,120 --> 00:11:41,719 Speaker 1: Robert Cremo Junior, who opened fire at a Fourth of 209 00:11:41,800 --> 00:11:45,920 Speaker 1: July parade. This is Highland Park, Illinois, and he killed 210 00:11:46,000 --> 00:11:50,840 Speaker 1: seven people. He of course, has been charged with those murders. 211 00:11:51,160 --> 00:11:54,559 Speaker 1: But the good news is they charged his father. We 212 00:11:54,720 --> 00:11:57,880 Speaker 1: talked about his father a lot, Robert Cremo Senior. He 213 00:11:58,000 --> 00:12:00,319 Speaker 1: was a deli owner who at one time actually ran 214 00:12:00,440 --> 00:12:05,160 Speaker 1: from mayor of Highland Park. And there was an incident 215 00:12:05,200 --> 00:12:09,280 Speaker 1: that occurred in the Cremo household not too long before 216 00:12:09,320 --> 00:12:13,760 Speaker 1: these shootings would be twenty nineteen, someone reported that Kremo 217 00:12:13,960 --> 00:12:17,680 Speaker 1: tried to kill himself. They came to his home seized 218 00:12:17,720 --> 00:12:20,800 Speaker 1: a knife collection after a family member reported that he 219 00:12:20,800 --> 00:12:24,800 Speaker 1: had pledged to kill everyone. But even after all that, 220 00:12:25,480 --> 00:12:29,640 Speaker 1: the father sponsored the son's application for a state gun 221 00:12:29,640 --> 00:12:33,000 Speaker 1: ownership permit, a step that was required to receive the 222 00:12:33,000 --> 00:12:37,079 Speaker 1: permit because the son was a young adult at the time. 223 00:12:37,960 --> 00:12:40,400 Speaker 1: After the shooting, the father tried to claim he didn't 224 00:12:40,400 --> 00:12:43,400 Speaker 1: do anything wrong. He was shocked by what had taken place. 225 00:12:43,679 --> 00:12:46,920 Speaker 1: You have a mentally unstable son that was going to 226 00:12:47,000 --> 00:12:50,080 Speaker 1: kill himself and then kill everyone, and you're fine with 227 00:12:50,160 --> 00:12:52,920 Speaker 1: him getting a gun. I mean, what's the matter with you. 228 00:12:53,800 --> 00:12:56,440 Speaker 1: I've often said that if we don't hold the families 229 00:12:56,480 --> 00:13:00,240 Speaker 1: responsible they're the closest to these lunatics, then we have 230 00:13:00,280 --> 00:13:02,480 Speaker 1: no hope in a lot of these cases. So they 231 00:13:02,520 --> 00:13:04,360 Speaker 1: have to be held responsible when they don't do their 232 00:13:04,440 --> 00:13:06,800 Speaker 1: job as a parent and keep their kid from I mean, 233 00:13:06,800 --> 00:13:09,000 Speaker 1: he's signed on for the kid to buy the gun. 234 00:13:11,240 --> 00:13:15,160 Speaker 1: We've got all kinds in the world, don't we. Yeah, 235 00:13:15,240 --> 00:13:17,800 Speaker 1: they file the charges because the parents allowed their son 236 00:13:17,960 --> 00:13:21,000 Speaker 1: access to a handgun while ignoring warnings that he was 237 00:13:21,000 --> 00:13:24,880 Speaker 1: on the brink of violence. And it's the same thing 238 00:13:24,880 --> 00:13:28,000 Speaker 1: that happened up in Michigan to the Michigan school kid 239 00:13:28,040 --> 00:13:33,400 Speaker 1: that shot his classmates. So what's the punishment for this? 240 00:13:33,559 --> 00:13:36,800 Speaker 1: I wonder he's gonna have to go to some classes 241 00:13:36,800 --> 00:13:40,600 Speaker 1: like parenting classes. Now these are felonies, They're really yeah, 242 00:13:40,640 --> 00:13:43,440 Speaker 1: I know, I just say. I mean, Illinois is about 243 00:13:43,480 --> 00:13:47,360 Speaker 1: as leaning in as California these days, so I'm wondering, Oh, 244 00:13:47,440 --> 00:13:48,920 Speaker 1: but it's one of those states that wants to do 245 00:13:49,000 --> 00:13:52,120 Speaker 1: something about guns and violence and gun violence. Don't you 246 00:13:52,160 --> 00:13:53,880 Speaker 1: think they might step up here to try to make 247 00:13:53,960 --> 00:13:56,240 Speaker 1: up there's a point of this. There's always been this 248 00:13:56,320 --> 00:14:00,200 Speaker 1: weird dichotomy between this crowd being anti gun at the 249 00:14:00,200 --> 00:14:02,920 Speaker 1: same time not wanting to put people away on gun charges. 250 00:14:03,320 --> 00:14:06,600 Speaker 1: I mean, Gascone is the clearest example of that. No 251 00:14:06,760 --> 00:14:11,640 Speaker 1: gun enhancements, but I'm sure he's a big gun control freak. 252 00:14:10,760 --> 00:14:13,319 Speaker 1: But well, we're starting to break new ground here. We'll 253 00:14:13,360 --> 00:14:14,959 Speaker 1: have to see how this plays out because they mentioned 254 00:14:14,960 --> 00:14:17,600 Speaker 1: the Michigan case and now this case, they're actually going 255 00:14:17,600 --> 00:14:20,400 Speaker 1: after parents who are knowingly aware that their child is 256 00:14:20,480 --> 00:14:22,760 Speaker 1: violent and unstable, and yet the same thing after in 257 00:14:22,840 --> 00:14:24,440 Speaker 1: Michigan they bought him a gun till he got a 258 00:14:24,440 --> 00:14:26,360 Speaker 1: gun for his birthday. I think the Michigan kid. I 259 00:14:26,400 --> 00:14:31,600 Speaker 1: wonder if these kinds of dense parents can be reached 260 00:14:32,920 --> 00:14:35,440 Speaker 1: by news of these cases, like would that actually change 261 00:14:35,480 --> 00:14:38,800 Speaker 1: their behavior when their kid goes leaning, well, like we 262 00:14:39,200 --> 00:14:41,960 Speaker 1: would just hearing if they even hear about these news stories, 263 00:14:42,640 --> 00:14:44,520 Speaker 1: and if they do hear, would that would that change 264 00:14:44,520 --> 00:14:46,240 Speaker 1: their behavior? And then they're going to go and report 265 00:14:49,720 --> 00:14:52,200 Speaker 1: they gave they got him a gunn even though a 266 00:14:52,240 --> 00:14:56,240 Speaker 1: local police report said that after the knife seesure that 267 00:14:56,320 --> 00:15:01,560 Speaker 1: he was a clear and present danger now. Brendan Kelly, 268 00:15:01,600 --> 00:15:03,760 Speaker 1: director of the Illinois State Police, said in July the 269 00:15:03,840 --> 00:15:07,040 Speaker 1: report did not offer enough legal proof to sustain those findings, 270 00:15:07,040 --> 00:15:09,560 Speaker 1: but last month the State Police announced it was expanding 271 00:15:09,600 --> 00:15:12,200 Speaker 1: the potential uses of those reports as part of a 272 00:15:12,240 --> 00:15:15,360 Speaker 1: review that started after the Highland Park killing. I said, 273 00:15:15,360 --> 00:15:16,960 Speaker 1: this is they're trying to break no I see them 274 00:15:16,960 --> 00:15:19,360 Speaker 1: breaking new ground. I understand that, But when actually goes 275 00:15:19,400 --> 00:15:22,560 Speaker 1: to trial, then it's gonna revolve it might be pled 276 00:15:22,600 --> 00:15:26,200 Speaker 1: down and my ultra revolves around intent, like did did 277 00:15:26,240 --> 00:15:28,800 Speaker 1: he did the father really have an understanding about the 278 00:15:29,360 --> 00:15:34,720 Speaker 1: severity of the mental illness When you threaten to kill 279 00:15:34,880 --> 00:15:38,160 Speaker 1: yourself and everybody else with guns and knives, right, I 280 00:15:38,200 --> 00:15:41,800 Speaker 1: think it's pretty clear to the right. Then you don't 281 00:15:41,840 --> 00:15:44,120 Speaker 1: have a normal child. And it's not like this happened 282 00:15:44,200 --> 00:15:46,560 Speaker 1: years ago. It only happened two years prior, right, But 283 00:15:46,600 --> 00:15:50,520 Speaker 1: did he sincerely believe that the kid had somehow been 284 00:15:50,520 --> 00:15:54,280 Speaker 1: counseled or was feeling better, had gotten over it. You 285 00:15:54,320 --> 00:15:56,000 Speaker 1: see what I'm saying. When you have to when you 286 00:15:56,040 --> 00:16:03,680 Speaker 1: have to apply a conviction, I wonder if it'll stick. 287 00:16:04,120 --> 00:16:07,560 Speaker 1: I guess you can send him through the process. But 288 00:16:07,600 --> 00:16:10,320 Speaker 1: will a jury actually convict will a judge really put 289 00:16:10,360 --> 00:16:14,200 Speaker 1: him away? He faces up to three years in prison 290 00:16:14,240 --> 00:16:17,600 Speaker 1: on these charges. According to the prosecutor in Lake County, Illinois, 291 00:16:17,800 --> 00:16:20,280 Speaker 1: I hope they put him away, claiming the father knew 292 00:16:20,280 --> 00:16:23,320 Speaker 1: about a series of concerning episodes involving his son before 293 00:16:23,360 --> 00:16:28,320 Speaker 1: he signed the gun application permit, endorsing the application was reckless. 294 00:16:28,800 --> 00:16:31,360 Speaker 1: The government's not typically going to know more than apparent 295 00:16:31,400 --> 00:16:34,440 Speaker 1: about what's going on, especially within eighteen, a nineteen or 296 00:16:34,440 --> 00:16:37,600 Speaker 1: a twenty year old, said one of the prosecutors. So 297 00:16:37,640 --> 00:16:41,120 Speaker 1: that's what they're looking for, getting him all right, We 298 00:16:41,200 --> 00:16:43,960 Speaker 1: got more coming up when we come back. We will 299 00:16:44,000 --> 00:16:48,200 Speaker 1: talk about a pretty shocking story that passed over the weekend. 300 00:16:48,680 --> 00:16:51,600 Speaker 1: LA Unified School District, along with the state of California 301 00:16:51,640 --> 00:16:58,520 Speaker 1: public schools, just announced record graduation rates. Now, what about 302 00:16:58,560 --> 00:17:01,400 Speaker 1: the learning loss and the pandemic and the lockdowns, and 303 00:17:01,440 --> 00:17:03,680 Speaker 1: then those test scores that came out just like a 304 00:17:03,720 --> 00:17:07,840 Speaker 1: month ago that were no abysmal, None of it mattered. No, 305 00:17:08,359 --> 00:17:11,719 Speaker 1: we should celebrate. Apparently the kids overcame all of that. 306 00:17:11,880 --> 00:17:16,040 Speaker 1: No consequences, no nothing, just go already, here's your cheap 307 00:17:16,080 --> 00:17:19,280 Speaker 1: piece of paper. Good luck with the rest of your life. 308 00:17:19,760 --> 00:17:23,760 Speaker 1: And the Times actually found John our favorite category of person, 309 00:17:23,960 --> 00:17:28,840 Speaker 1: an academic who's skeptical of this news. An academic skeptical 310 00:17:32,200 --> 00:17:34,680 Speaker 1: Johnny ken k if I am six forty live everywhere 311 00:17:34,720 --> 00:17:38,720 Speaker 1: the iHeartRadio app. Well, the Supreme Court stepped in. Title 312 00:17:38,760 --> 00:17:41,680 Speaker 1: forty two is not going to end necessarily on Wednesday 313 00:17:41,680 --> 00:17:45,000 Speaker 1: as originally planned. I don't know that matters, because people 314 00:17:45,000 --> 00:17:47,080 Speaker 1: are already coming here with news that it was going 315 00:17:47,119 --> 00:17:49,479 Speaker 1: to end. They showed up even before it was going 316 00:17:49,520 --> 00:17:54,119 Speaker 1: to be completed. We'll talk to Mark Kricorian the Center 317 00:17:54,119 --> 00:17:57,320 Speaker 1: for Immigration Studies, coming up after the news at four o'clock. 318 00:17:57,359 --> 00:18:00,679 Speaker 1: But the Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts put a 319 00:18:00,760 --> 00:18:04,440 Speaker 1: stay on the day or the ending of Title forty two, 320 00:18:04,720 --> 00:18:08,360 Speaker 1: So we'll talk about all this. It's a double negative. Yeah, 321 00:18:08,400 --> 00:18:12,080 Speaker 1: and they stop place. They're stopping the stop. One of 322 00:18:12,080 --> 00:18:14,800 Speaker 1: the people that's been caught embarrassingly in the middle of 323 00:18:14,840 --> 00:18:18,879 Speaker 1: this is the mayor of El Paso, Texas, because his 324 00:18:19,240 --> 00:18:23,840 Speaker 1: town has been completely overrun by migrants, but he's refused 325 00:18:24,119 --> 00:18:26,959 Speaker 1: to declare a state of emergency over it. They finally 326 00:18:27,000 --> 00:18:29,119 Speaker 1: did this past weekend. What is that that happened? There 327 00:18:29,200 --> 00:18:31,840 Speaker 1: was a pretty funny and embarrassing press conference. Yeah, but 328 00:18:32,000 --> 00:18:34,480 Speaker 1: was declaring a state of emergency do anyway? You get 329 00:18:34,520 --> 00:18:37,120 Speaker 1: more resources, you probably get money, you get more help 330 00:18:37,960 --> 00:18:40,239 Speaker 1: the federal government and then can step in. It's like 331 00:18:41,119 --> 00:18:43,800 Speaker 1: that's the new thing, is to declare a state of emergency. Yeah, 332 00:18:43,840 --> 00:18:45,960 Speaker 1: and the problem remains the same. Well, I don't know 333 00:18:46,000 --> 00:18:48,960 Speaker 1: about the homelessness in La thing, but I think because 334 00:18:49,000 --> 00:18:52,080 Speaker 1: immigration belongs to the federal government, that's where if you 335 00:18:52,119 --> 00:18:54,879 Speaker 1: declare a state of emergency, allegedly you can get something 336 00:18:55,200 --> 00:18:57,879 Speaker 1: for that. But I will talk about this in the 337 00:18:57,920 --> 00:19:00,399 Speaker 1: four o'clock hour, including the dope l Passo mayor who 338 00:19:00,440 --> 00:19:02,240 Speaker 1: didn't want to answer a question about the state of 339 00:19:02,240 --> 00:19:05,040 Speaker 1: emergency and try to take the microphone with him from 340 00:19:05,040 --> 00:19:13,000 Speaker 1: a news conference. Dope. Now the shocking headline LA Unified 341 00:19:13,680 --> 00:19:17,760 Speaker 1: and the state of California announced record graduation rates. We 342 00:19:17,920 --> 00:19:21,280 Speaker 1: he does this fly in the face of everything you've 343 00:19:21,280 --> 00:19:23,639 Speaker 1: been hearing for the last couple of years that the 344 00:19:23,680 --> 00:19:27,560 Speaker 1: pandemic led to big amounts of learning laws. They did, 345 00:19:27,760 --> 00:19:30,639 Speaker 1: They did lose a tremendous amount of learning time, and 346 00:19:30,720 --> 00:19:34,080 Speaker 1: they are way behind. If you do any testing, the 347 00:19:34,160 --> 00:19:36,600 Speaker 1: kids are just not uped anywhere near the levels they 348 00:19:36,640 --> 00:19:41,080 Speaker 1: should be. Huge, huge numbers of children cannot read it 349 00:19:41,320 --> 00:19:44,000 Speaker 1: at the grade level they should, or do the math, 350 00:19:44,680 --> 00:19:49,000 Speaker 1: and they're just being passed on anyway because school doesn't 351 00:19:49,000 --> 00:19:52,400 Speaker 1: know what to do. They don't know what to do, 352 00:19:53,200 --> 00:19:55,160 Speaker 1: and I don't know if there's anything they can do. 353 00:19:56,200 --> 00:19:58,159 Speaker 1: The sentence and the time story that tells you at 354 00:19:58,160 --> 00:20:00,720 Speaker 1: all is part of the explanations that Plinny of course 355 00:20:01,280 --> 00:20:07,399 Speaker 1: does not equate precisely to learning. No, that tells me 356 00:20:07,440 --> 00:20:12,160 Speaker 1: they're passing them through. Well, yes, because you can't. When 357 00:20:12,280 --> 00:20:15,239 Speaker 1: when everybody was saying, you know, some months ago, it's like, 358 00:20:15,280 --> 00:20:18,160 Speaker 1: you can't make this up. You can't make this up. 359 00:20:19,400 --> 00:20:21,520 Speaker 1: There's about one hundred and eighty days in a school year, 360 00:20:22,280 --> 00:20:25,640 Speaker 1: and about a year and a half was lost. It's 361 00:20:25,680 --> 00:20:28,600 Speaker 1: well over two hundred days. Oh, they're making them up 362 00:20:28,600 --> 00:20:31,960 Speaker 1: this week with extra school days, right, the two of them. Okay, 363 00:20:31,960 --> 00:20:34,399 Speaker 1: so now you know there's set being out of school 364 00:20:34,400 --> 00:20:36,080 Speaker 1: for two hundred and forty days. You're out of school 365 00:20:36,080 --> 00:20:38,359 Speaker 1: for two hundred and thirty eight. No, they screwed this 366 00:20:38,400 --> 00:20:41,719 Speaker 1: generation of kids. They're not going to catch up, and 367 00:20:41,760 --> 00:20:44,480 Speaker 1: so they're going to be given fake grades, fake test scores, 368 00:20:44,680 --> 00:20:49,680 Speaker 1: fake graduation certificates, and you move on. I mean, here's 369 00:20:49,680 --> 00:20:52,280 Speaker 1: the headline from just two months ago. Three months ago. 370 00:20:52,600 --> 00:20:56,280 Speaker 1: LA students scores show deep pandemic setbacks, with seventy two 371 00:20:56,280 --> 00:20:59,879 Speaker 1: percent failing to meet math standards. From that, we're supposed 372 00:20:59,880 --> 00:21:04,680 Speaker 1: to jump to record graduation rates. That completely makes no sense. Well, 373 00:21:04,800 --> 00:21:08,560 Speaker 1: you are correct, it says here they eased grading standards. 374 00:21:09,880 --> 00:21:11,800 Speaker 1: If a student appeared in a live session with a 375 00:21:11,880 --> 00:21:15,119 Speaker 1: teacher of classmates on a zoom however briefly the student 376 00:21:15,200 --> 00:21:18,400 Speaker 1: was counted as present for the entire day. Everything got 377 00:21:18,440 --> 00:21:20,920 Speaker 1: completely downgraded, so you could just pass the kids through. 378 00:21:21,040 --> 00:21:22,880 Speaker 1: We used to talk about this, like twenty years ago, 379 00:21:22,880 --> 00:21:25,800 Speaker 1: how they started to do this. Remember the self esteem movement, 380 00:21:26,359 --> 00:21:29,560 Speaker 1: and the idea was to make kids feel like they 381 00:21:29,560 --> 00:21:31,399 Speaker 1: can do the work, not whether or not they can 382 00:21:31,440 --> 00:21:34,560 Speaker 1: actually do the work, but that they feel good about themselves, 383 00:21:36,400 --> 00:21:41,440 Speaker 1: because it's just there's no motivation. It's this is another 384 00:21:41,520 --> 00:21:44,240 Speaker 1: extension of government. There's no motivation to do a good 385 00:21:44,320 --> 00:21:47,040 Speaker 1: job because nobody's going to get fired to do a 386 00:21:47,080 --> 00:21:51,240 Speaker 1: bad job. There is a huge gulf between us working 387 00:21:51,280 --> 00:21:54,320 Speaker 1: in the private sector and them working in the government, 388 00:21:54,680 --> 00:21:57,480 Speaker 1: and the school is just an extension of government. They 389 00:21:58,359 --> 00:22:02,359 Speaker 1: it doesn't matter because if the kids aren't doing well, 390 00:22:02,680 --> 00:22:06,879 Speaker 1: then you lower the standards, you change the grades, you 391 00:22:07,000 --> 00:22:11,520 Speaker 1: hand out phony certificates, you keep the train moving. You 392 00:22:11,640 --> 00:22:14,840 Speaker 1: just reload the cars and try again next year. And 393 00:22:14,960 --> 00:22:18,119 Speaker 1: those kids will graduate, and you know, most of them 394 00:22:18,160 --> 00:22:21,200 Speaker 1: don't go to college, and they'll get some menial job, 395 00:22:21,359 --> 00:22:23,919 Speaker 1: and maybe they'll do the menial job badly, you know, 396 00:22:24,000 --> 00:22:26,439 Speaker 1: and then you end up with all the people I 397 00:22:26,440 --> 00:22:30,560 Speaker 1: see who can't count change at the bakery. There is 398 00:22:30,600 --> 00:22:34,119 Speaker 1: the numbers for the high school class that graduated in 399 00:22:34,160 --> 00:22:36,800 Speaker 1: twenty twenty two. The percentage of students who earned a 400 00:22:36,840 --> 00:22:41,280 Speaker 1: diploma in four years in LA Unified, the nation's second 401 00:22:41,320 --> 00:22:45,439 Speaker 1: largest school system, was eighty six percent. Wow, if seventy 402 00:22:45,440 --> 00:22:49,080 Speaker 1: something percent can't meet the math standard, how are eighty 403 00:22:49,119 --> 00:22:52,720 Speaker 1: six percent graduating? The rate for all California was eighty 404 00:22:52,760 --> 00:22:55,240 Speaker 1: seven point four percent. Do you know this has always 405 00:22:55,240 --> 00:22:58,280 Speaker 1: been a sham because as far back as I can remember, 406 00:22:58,840 --> 00:23:02,399 Speaker 1: the testing scores for math and reading in LA have 407 00:23:02,520 --> 00:23:07,800 Speaker 1: been abysmal, have been atrocious, embarrassing, awful, and they've never 408 00:23:07,840 --> 00:23:10,640 Speaker 1: done anything to change it. All those people graduated. Those 409 00:23:10,680 --> 00:23:13,240 Speaker 1: people now that maybe we were talking about twenty years ago, 410 00:23:13,400 --> 00:23:16,439 Speaker 1: they're they're now in their late thirties, they might be 411 00:23:16,480 --> 00:23:18,840 Speaker 1: pushing forty years old, and they just never got the 412 00:23:18,960 --> 00:23:23,920 Speaker 1: education and and and they're living life at whatever level 413 00:23:23,960 --> 00:23:26,879 Speaker 1: they are and they just don't know stuff. They just 414 00:23:26,920 --> 00:23:30,359 Speaker 1: don't know anything. The other suspicious thing here is, and 415 00:23:30,440 --> 00:23:33,920 Speaker 1: I got to say it that the LA School Superintendent 416 00:23:34,000 --> 00:23:37,240 Speaker 1: Carvalo said that in general, the greatest gains were among 417 00:23:37,280 --> 00:23:40,720 Speaker 1: black students, and students learning English, and students with disabilities, 418 00:23:41,280 --> 00:23:44,680 Speaker 1: just the three groups that are normally seen as underserved 419 00:23:44,680 --> 00:23:48,920 Speaker 1: and underperforming. Suddenly they had the best graduation rate increases. Right, 420 00:23:49,160 --> 00:23:51,159 Speaker 1: I got to be skeptical of that. Announced, Well, it's 421 00:23:51,400 --> 00:23:54,800 Speaker 1: a lie. It's completely a lie. And everybody knows it. 422 00:23:54,920 --> 00:23:58,679 Speaker 1: Carvallo knows it. Everyone just acts in front of the camera. 423 00:23:58,760 --> 00:24:03,480 Speaker 1: Now it's the now, right because because again what are 424 00:24:03,480 --> 00:24:07,399 Speaker 1: you going to do about it? The teachers are entirely 425 00:24:07,440 --> 00:24:10,439 Speaker 1: responsible for this, and they have no conscience about it. 426 00:24:10,480 --> 00:24:14,320 Speaker 1: They don't care. The academic I was talking about is 427 00:24:14,520 --> 00:24:18,800 Speaker 1: Tyrone Howard, Professor of Education at UCLA School of Education 428 00:24:18,920 --> 00:24:22,639 Speaker 1: and Information Studies. Here's his quote. Well, I'm pleased to 429 00:24:22,640 --> 00:24:25,160 Speaker 1: see the data showing that students are doing well academically. 430 00:24:25,359 --> 00:24:28,600 Speaker 1: It completely flies in the face of data that suggests 431 00:24:28,600 --> 00:24:31,439 Speaker 1: students have fallen behind due to the pandemic. It'd be 432 00:24:31,440 --> 00:24:33,840 Speaker 1: good for LA Unified to help the public understand the 433 00:24:33,840 --> 00:24:36,920 Speaker 1: two narratives and how they can coexist. It's a big 434 00:24:36,960 --> 00:24:40,120 Speaker 1: disconnected it's hard to apprehend. I wish yeah, I would say, Sherlock, 435 00:24:40,160 --> 00:24:41,960 Speaker 1: you're on to something. Yeah, I just speak a little 436 00:24:42,000 --> 00:24:45,399 Speaker 1: more bluntly. You know they're lying. They know they're lying. 437 00:24:45,560 --> 00:24:49,080 Speaker 1: There's no two narratives to be reconciled. There's the truth 438 00:24:49,480 --> 00:24:52,399 Speaker 1: and then there's a lie. And the teachers union wants 439 00:24:52,400 --> 00:24:54,840 Speaker 1: to lie out there because they've been beat up for 440 00:24:55,280 --> 00:24:58,960 Speaker 1: over two years now for walking off the job, for 441 00:24:59,040 --> 00:25:02,080 Speaker 1: refusing to work, and everybody's tired of the criticism. So 442 00:25:02,119 --> 00:25:05,760 Speaker 1: now anytime anyone brings up the teachers refusing to work 443 00:25:05,800 --> 00:25:07,480 Speaker 1: for a year and a half. Well, I don't know 444 00:25:07,520 --> 00:25:10,359 Speaker 1: if you noticed, but we had a record high graduation rate, 445 00:25:10,800 --> 00:25:13,880 Speaker 1: so I guess it wasn't so bad. This is the 446 00:25:13,920 --> 00:25:19,959 Speaker 1: teachers union demanding that some polish is being put on 447 00:25:20,000 --> 00:25:25,800 Speaker 1: the turn and that's all. And so the superintendents are 448 00:25:25,880 --> 00:25:28,840 Speaker 1: notoriously weak. The school boards are weak, and they cave 449 00:25:28,920 --> 00:25:31,280 Speaker 1: into whatever the teacher's union demands because they don't want 450 00:25:31,280 --> 00:25:33,520 Speaker 1: to strike. And I'm telling you this was probably a 451 00:25:33,560 --> 00:25:36,000 Speaker 1: demand by the teachers union. Hey, you know, I put 452 00:25:36,000 --> 00:25:38,200 Speaker 1: on a good face. Here, make up a big lie. 453 00:25:38,320 --> 00:25:41,800 Speaker 1: Just repeat the lie over and over again, and eventually, 454 00:25:42,000 --> 00:25:43,600 Speaker 1: you know, no but nobody in his media is going 455 00:25:43,640 --> 00:25:46,960 Speaker 1: to question this. You get this vague, halfhearted Wow, there's 456 00:25:46,960 --> 00:25:49,800 Speaker 1: two narratives that I can't really reconcile. You know. You 457 00:25:49,840 --> 00:25:51,800 Speaker 1: get the quote from the academic, it's like, stop it, 458 00:25:51,920 --> 00:25:54,439 Speaker 1: let's be straight. The Time's headline over the weekend just 459 00:25:54,480 --> 00:25:57,640 Speaker 1: said skepticism about yes, skepticism. The else agin the Time 460 00:25:57,680 --> 00:26:01,440 Speaker 1: should write the big lie, all right, a big lie. 461 00:26:01,720 --> 00:26:06,280 Speaker 1: And the story is a link. LA Unified did reduce 462 00:26:06,800 --> 00:26:08,840 Speaker 1: the great standards? And you hit the link and here 463 00:26:08,880 --> 00:26:11,560 Speaker 1: it is. This is back in twenty twenty, LA Unified 464 00:26:11,600 --> 00:26:14,639 Speaker 1: will not give FS this semester. Instead give students a 465 00:26:14,680 --> 00:26:17,600 Speaker 1: second chance to pass. So this is what they did 466 00:26:17,960 --> 00:26:20,680 Speaker 1: to try to rig this. Some kids at least pass 467 00:26:20,720 --> 00:26:23,000 Speaker 1: a class, and that's all you need to graduate is 468 00:26:23,040 --> 00:26:26,280 Speaker 1: just to pass right. It's really just a pass failed situation. 469 00:26:26,480 --> 00:26:28,240 Speaker 1: Who cares if you got old DS, you can still 470 00:26:28,240 --> 00:26:30,800 Speaker 1: get your diploma. That's how it works well because we 471 00:26:30,840 --> 00:26:33,560 Speaker 1: don't have we don't have standards in public education in 472 00:26:33,560 --> 00:26:37,359 Speaker 1: big city schools. You see that they haven't had it 473 00:26:37,440 --> 00:26:41,840 Speaker 1: for decades. That's an old fashioned twentieth century way. And 474 00:26:42,440 --> 00:26:44,400 Speaker 1: maybe it was like that in the nineteen sixties. It's 475 00:26:44,440 --> 00:26:46,399 Speaker 1: not like that now. It hasn't been for a long time. 476 00:26:46,680 --> 00:26:48,159 Speaker 1: If you want to go to a good school, you 477 00:26:48,160 --> 00:26:51,399 Speaker 1: go to a private school or a Catholic school or 478 00:26:51,440 --> 00:26:55,679 Speaker 1: a Jewish school. And there are some suburban public schools 479 00:26:55,680 --> 00:26:59,480 Speaker 1: that are really really good. But you don't go to 480 00:26:59,480 --> 00:27:01,480 Speaker 1: a city scholl. I mean, if you're serious, you know, 481 00:27:02,160 --> 00:27:05,240 Speaker 1: I mean, here's here's how it works. The state sets 482 00:27:05,440 --> 00:27:09,040 Speaker 1: minimum graduation standards in terms of the classes that must 483 00:27:09,040 --> 00:27:13,000 Speaker 1: be passed, but districts, including LA Unified, they add additional 484 00:27:13,040 --> 00:27:16,200 Speaker 1: required classes. But during the pandemic, state officials suspended all 485 00:27:16,280 --> 00:27:19,560 Speaker 1: but the minimum state requirements, which could have resulted in 486 00:27:19,600 --> 00:27:23,480 Speaker 1: students receiving diplomas exactly. I remember they used to have 487 00:27:23,480 --> 00:27:25,560 Speaker 1: the high school exit exam, but that was back in 488 00:27:25,640 --> 00:27:27,919 Speaker 1: nineteen ninety nine. It was statewide, but they got rid 489 00:27:27,960 --> 00:27:30,720 Speaker 1: of it after a year or two because everyone it's unfair, 490 00:27:30,920 --> 00:27:34,120 Speaker 1: because they were failing, because the kids were failing. Because 491 00:27:34,240 --> 00:27:38,600 Speaker 1: because we produce kids into it, we create adults that 492 00:27:38,640 --> 00:27:41,760 Speaker 1: aren't very bright, and if you walk out in the world, 493 00:27:42,520 --> 00:27:46,200 Speaker 1: you run into them all day. I mean just interacting 494 00:27:46,320 --> 00:27:51,520 Speaker 1: with employees and in various businesses. Yeah, I mean, ever, 495 00:27:51,600 --> 00:27:53,800 Speaker 1: get on the phone with somebody, get on the phone 496 00:27:53,800 --> 00:27:55,879 Speaker 1: with somebody from government, Get on the phone with somebody 497 00:27:55,880 --> 00:28:00,359 Speaker 1: who works for the cable company, right, or or the 498 00:28:00,400 --> 00:28:04,320 Speaker 1: electric company or the internet service company, right, just talk 499 00:28:04,359 --> 00:28:07,800 Speaker 1: to those people. Dumb as a boxer, rocks every one 500 00:28:07,840 --> 00:28:13,000 Speaker 1: of them. I have more intensely frustrating conversations dealing it 501 00:28:13,000 --> 00:28:15,800 Speaker 1: seems like everybody works in customer service. Now at a company, 502 00:28:16,119 --> 00:28:19,040 Speaker 1: there are no actual there's no managers you can speak with, 503 00:28:19,080 --> 00:28:21,879 Speaker 1: there's no supervisors, there's no there's no nothing. It's just 504 00:28:21,960 --> 00:28:24,800 Speaker 1: a cover customer service rep. God knows where they are 505 00:28:25,200 --> 00:28:27,680 Speaker 1: and they and their job is just to read from 506 00:28:27,680 --> 00:28:32,280 Speaker 1: Emmanuel another academic who said something right on Robin Lake, 507 00:28:32,359 --> 00:28:36,920 Speaker 1: director and professor the Center on Reinventing Public Education at 508 00:28:36,920 --> 00:28:39,440 Speaker 1: Arizona State. It's a wasted well. I'm glad these students 509 00:28:39,440 --> 00:28:41,520 Speaker 1: got a degree under their belt, but it's hard to 510 00:28:41,560 --> 00:28:43,840 Speaker 1: square the uptick with the fact that eighty one percent 511 00:28:43,920 --> 00:28:47,280 Speaker 1: of LA unified eleventh graders didn't meet grade level math 512 00:28:47,360 --> 00:28:49,760 Speaker 1: standards last year and the fact that the district saw 513 00:28:49,840 --> 00:28:53,040 Speaker 1: deep setbacks and scores across student groups and across grade levels. 514 00:28:53,200 --> 00:28:57,080 Speaker 1: Either something truly miraculous happened, or they were handed a 515 00:28:57,120 --> 00:28:59,560 Speaker 1: degree and ushered out of the K twelve system largely 516 00:28:59,560 --> 00:29:02,800 Speaker 1: without and knowledge they're gonna need. Yeah, boy, and there's another. 517 00:29:02,800 --> 00:29:04,560 Speaker 1: Which one do you pick there? Yeah? But but why 518 00:29:04,600 --> 00:29:09,200 Speaker 1: not say it directly? This is a lie, This is fiction. 519 00:29:09,800 --> 00:29:14,760 Speaker 1: Of course, they were given a fake degree and ushered out. 520 00:29:15,960 --> 00:29:19,600 Speaker 1: What what is this? Miraculously it happened? I mean they 521 00:29:19,680 --> 00:29:22,920 Speaker 1: talk in a very vague way. They talk in circles, 522 00:29:23,360 --> 00:29:26,360 Speaker 1: they talk around it. Every Nobody wants to be direct, 523 00:29:26,440 --> 00:29:29,080 Speaker 1: nobody wants to be critical, nobody wants to tell the truth. 524 00:29:29,360 --> 00:29:32,800 Speaker 1: That really what Carvallo, the superintendent, and the teachers union 525 00:29:32,800 --> 00:29:35,560 Speaker 1: and the rest of him are committing as fraud. They 526 00:29:35,640 --> 00:29:38,880 Speaker 1: defrauded all these kids and the parents. When these kids 527 00:29:38,920 --> 00:29:43,560 Speaker 1: got into kindergarten, they were promised a public education paid 528 00:29:43,560 --> 00:29:47,120 Speaker 1: for by the taxpayers. They're defrauding us because forty percent 529 00:29:47,200 --> 00:29:51,120 Speaker 1: of a budget goes for education. Everybody gets defrauded by 530 00:29:51,160 --> 00:29:55,040 Speaker 1: the by these by these clowns. But the kids and 531 00:29:55,080 --> 00:29:57,400 Speaker 1: the parents don't didn't get an education. What did we 532 00:29:57,480 --> 00:30:00,880 Speaker 1: pay for? We got more? Co up Johnny Ken Show, 533 00:30:00,960 --> 00:30:03,120 Speaker 1: k if I Am six forty Live everywhere, the iHeart 534 00:30:03,200 --> 00:30:06,240 Speaker 1: Radio app. Nobody, nobody speaks directly anymore. John and Kenn 535 00:30:06,320 --> 00:30:09,400 Speaker 1: die a couple of breaking stories this afternoon. The jury 536 00:30:10,000 --> 00:30:12,720 Speaker 1: has reached a verdict. We don't know how many verdicts 537 00:30:12,880 --> 00:30:16,120 Speaker 1: in the case of Harvey Weinstein. He was on trial 538 00:30:16,160 --> 00:30:19,840 Speaker 1: for two rape counts and five sex assault counts that 539 00:30:20,000 --> 00:30:23,040 Speaker 1: involved four women spanning from two thousand and five to 540 00:30:23,080 --> 00:30:26,360 Speaker 1: twenty thirteen. One of them, of course, is Gavin Usom's wife, 541 00:30:26,840 --> 00:30:30,640 Speaker 1: Jennifer forty nine witnesses more than four weeks of testimony 542 00:30:30,840 --> 00:30:34,360 Speaker 1: and now ten days or so deliberating but not that 543 00:30:34,400 --> 00:30:36,640 Speaker 1: many hours. We think they only met for a couple 544 00:30:36,680 --> 00:30:39,440 Speaker 1: of hours a day in those cases. But yeah, they 545 00:30:39,480 --> 00:30:41,720 Speaker 1: did surpass the New York jury which took i know, 546 00:30:41,800 --> 00:30:45,120 Speaker 1: twenty six hours to find him guilty, where he got 547 00:30:45,120 --> 00:30:50,200 Speaker 1: twenty three years in prison. So we'll see, hopefully by 548 00:30:50,200 --> 00:30:52,120 Speaker 1: the end of the show we should What did people 549 00:30:52,200 --> 00:30:56,000 Speaker 1: talk about? You imagine being on a jury where everybody's 550 00:30:56,000 --> 00:30:59,200 Speaker 1: babylin and babylin and babylin. I mean, this Weinstein thing 551 00:30:59,240 --> 00:31:03,160 Speaker 1: isn't that complicated. What's there to talk about? Well, they 552 00:31:03,280 --> 00:31:05,440 Speaker 1: sit there, though, and they never talk to each other 553 00:31:05,480 --> 00:31:07,239 Speaker 1: at all until they get in the jury room. They 554 00:31:07,240 --> 00:31:10,080 Speaker 1: haven't said anything about any of all this stuff. But 555 00:31:10,200 --> 00:31:13,160 Speaker 1: after they've listened to all these days of testimony, all 556 00:31:13,200 --> 00:31:15,440 Speaker 1: these witnesses, they've never talked about any of them with 557 00:31:15,480 --> 00:31:18,440 Speaker 1: each other. So I gotta start by doing some of that. 558 00:31:18,480 --> 00:31:21,840 Speaker 1: I guess. Oh, I would just say, hey, guilty. You 559 00:31:21,880 --> 00:31:24,160 Speaker 1: would have a definite cut to the chase. Right, Well, 560 00:31:24,200 --> 00:31:25,880 Speaker 1: why would I want to talk about it? I already 561 00:31:25,920 --> 00:31:28,160 Speaker 1: wasted all these weeks of my life listening to all 562 00:31:28,160 --> 00:31:30,560 Speaker 1: this disgusting stuff. I mean, sitting there, I gotta listen 563 00:31:30,600 --> 00:31:34,200 Speaker 1: about fat bloated Harvey Weinstein with his weird testicles dangling 564 00:31:34,280 --> 00:31:35,640 Speaker 1: from his thigh. It's like, I don't want to talk 565 00:31:35,640 --> 00:31:38,000 Speaker 1: about this anymore. It was bad enough the first time 566 00:31:38,000 --> 00:31:40,680 Speaker 1: in the in the courtroom. Well, what are they going 567 00:31:40,720 --> 00:31:43,080 Speaker 1: to argue about it here? It's like, no way, I 568 00:31:43,120 --> 00:31:45,560 Speaker 1: don't think they were arguing about his testicles being at 569 00:31:45,560 --> 00:31:48,160 Speaker 1: his thigh. No. But it's whether or not they believe 570 00:31:48,160 --> 00:31:50,440 Speaker 1: these wins. Well, you know what, I'm the defense attorney's 571 00:31:50,440 --> 00:31:52,080 Speaker 1: trying to say that a lot of this was made 572 00:31:52,160 --> 00:31:54,600 Speaker 1: up in some of the cases, or it was consensual. 573 00:31:56,120 --> 00:31:58,840 Speaker 1: The big line from Alan Jackson, one of Weinstein's defense attorney, 574 00:31:58,880 --> 00:32:02,960 Speaker 1: is regret is not so I just how do you 575 00:32:03,240 --> 00:32:06,760 Speaker 1: how do you debate that? Because if you think it's 576 00:32:06,840 --> 00:32:10,479 Speaker 1: just regret and the other person thinks it's rape, how 577 00:32:10,520 --> 00:32:12,120 Speaker 1: do you how do you how do you solve that 578 00:32:12,960 --> 00:32:16,240 Speaker 1: it's just whoever, whoever's the whoever's the bigger bully. Where 579 00:32:16,360 --> 00:32:18,520 Speaker 1: you have to decide how you find more credible either 580 00:32:18,640 --> 00:32:21,160 Speaker 1: the witness who said it was rape or the defense 581 00:32:21,200 --> 00:32:22,880 Speaker 1: which got up there and talked about how it was 582 00:32:22,920 --> 00:32:25,400 Speaker 1: just regret. All right, okay, right, But the other juror 583 00:32:25,800 --> 00:32:28,880 Speaker 1: finds the other person more credible. Okay, fine, what do 584 00:32:28,920 --> 00:32:32,200 Speaker 1: you do about that? Well, then you're locked. And then 585 00:32:32,200 --> 00:32:33,920 Speaker 1: do people just change their minds so they can go 586 00:32:34,000 --> 00:32:38,560 Speaker 1: home maybe after ten days? Yes, that's what I'm saying. Well, 587 00:32:38,640 --> 00:32:40,840 Speaker 1: kind of destill whatever. Admit that though, once they come 588 00:32:40,840 --> 00:32:43,480 Speaker 1: out of the jury room. I just gave him because 589 00:32:43,480 --> 00:32:44,920 Speaker 1: I wanted to go home. I'm tired of being here 590 00:32:44,960 --> 00:32:46,960 Speaker 1: with these people in the smelly room. How many times 591 00:32:46,960 --> 00:32:50,560 Speaker 1: have you ever persuaded somebody on anything to change their mind? 592 00:32:51,480 --> 00:32:54,160 Speaker 1: And how many times has anybody ever persuaded you to 593 00:32:54,240 --> 00:32:56,800 Speaker 1: change your well, persuaded people to go to a different restaurant? 594 00:32:56,920 --> 00:32:59,120 Speaker 1: Can I break in? Guys? This is marking the newsroom. 595 00:32:59,280 --> 00:33:02,320 Speaker 1: We have a verdict in the Harvey Weinstein trial. He's 596 00:33:02,360 --> 00:33:04,200 Speaker 1: been found guilty of one count of rape in the 597 00:33:04,240 --> 00:33:07,280 Speaker 1: sex assault trial, and jurors spent nearly two weeks on it. 598 00:33:07,840 --> 00:33:11,880 Speaker 1: He's already serving twenty three years for a different sexual assault, 599 00:33:12,080 --> 00:33:15,720 Speaker 1: a series of charges in New York. So one count, 600 00:33:15,800 --> 00:33:18,000 Speaker 1: I'm confused. He was charged with two rape counts and 601 00:33:18,000 --> 00:33:20,760 Speaker 1: five sex assaults. All he got his one verdict there? Yes, 602 00:33:20,800 --> 00:33:22,880 Speaker 1: that's all we have right now is one count of rape. 603 00:33:22,880 --> 00:33:25,640 Speaker 1: He's been found guilty. That just came in. Okay, they're 604 00:33:25,640 --> 00:33:27,800 Speaker 1: probably so they haven't announced the rest of them. I 605 00:33:27,840 --> 00:33:31,480 Speaker 1: suppose that's all I have right now, but I'm sure 606 00:33:31,520 --> 00:33:34,200 Speaker 1: more is going to come in throughout the afternoon. Okay, 607 00:33:34,320 --> 00:33:37,920 Speaker 1: all right, that's right. That's the update. So, like I said, 608 00:33:38,120 --> 00:33:40,800 Speaker 1: what I have here is two rape counts, five sex 609 00:33:40,840 --> 00:33:43,920 Speaker 1: assault counts for the four women. So what we have 610 00:33:44,040 --> 00:33:46,920 Speaker 1: is a verdict of guilty on a rape count. We'll 611 00:33:46,960 --> 00:33:48,840 Speaker 1: see what the rest because they have to they have 612 00:33:48,880 --> 00:33:51,479 Speaker 1: to announce verdicts or announce that they're deadlocked. It might 613 00:33:51,480 --> 00:33:54,000 Speaker 1: be the bullet they might be the bullet in. It's 614 00:33:54,040 --> 00:33:56,960 Speaker 1: coming one by line, yeah, right right, because you know 615 00:33:57,040 --> 00:33:58,760 Speaker 1: Hameras in the court. You know how long it takes 616 00:33:58,800 --> 00:34:03,120 Speaker 1: to actually announce these verdicts, right, Sometimes it takes quite 617 00:34:03,120 --> 00:34:08,879 Speaker 1: some time. The other breaking story is the announcement by 618 00:34:08,920 --> 00:34:11,640 Speaker 1: the US Supreme Court and Chief Justice John Roberts that 619 00:34:11,760 --> 00:34:14,319 Speaker 1: Title forty two is going to stay there. It's not 620 00:34:14,360 --> 00:34:16,640 Speaker 1: going to expire on Wednesday unless he hears something by 621 00:34:16,640 --> 00:34:20,640 Speaker 1: five o'clock tomorrow that changes his mind. He has overturned 622 00:34:20,640 --> 00:34:22,759 Speaker 1: a ruling by another judge which said you got to 623 00:34:22,760 --> 00:34:24,320 Speaker 1: get rid of Title forty two, and you got to 624 00:34:24,360 --> 00:34:27,080 Speaker 1: do it by December twenty one. And that's what the 625 00:34:27,080 --> 00:34:29,680 Speaker 1: Biden administration said it was going to do. But a 626 00:34:29,719 --> 00:34:34,000 Speaker 1: bunch of attorneys general Republican States appealed that decision. They 627 00:34:34,000 --> 00:34:38,279 Speaker 1: went to another judge, didn't get it there an appeals court. 628 00:34:38,400 --> 00:34:40,439 Speaker 1: The three judge panel said nope, We're going to stick 629 00:34:40,480 --> 00:34:43,279 Speaker 1: with ending Title forty two. But the Chief Justice of 630 00:34:43,320 --> 00:34:45,799 Speaker 1: the Supreme Court, John Roberts, then took the case and said, 631 00:34:46,320 --> 00:34:48,400 Speaker 1: I'm going to put a hold on getting rid of 632 00:34:48,480 --> 00:34:51,759 Speaker 1: Title forty two for now. So we will also be 633 00:34:51,840 --> 00:34:55,680 Speaker 1: talking next hour to Mark Krikorian, Center for Immigration Studies, 634 00:34:55,680 --> 00:34:58,080 Speaker 1: who can really go into much more detail on this. 635 00:34:58,200 --> 00:35:02,000 Speaker 1: One of the things I want to ask Mark, because 636 00:35:02,040 --> 00:35:05,400 Speaker 1: this is such a curious case. Obviously, we should do 637 00:35:05,440 --> 00:35:10,719 Speaker 1: whatever we can to block the migration stampede. Right, yes, 638 00:35:11,520 --> 00:35:15,040 Speaker 1: but the Title forty two is a bogus way of 639 00:35:15,080 --> 00:35:17,759 Speaker 1: doing it. It's based on a COVID health emergency that 640 00:35:17,840 --> 00:35:22,040 Speaker 1: does that doesn't exist anymore. Right, So you know, if 641 00:35:22,040 --> 00:35:25,759 Speaker 1: I'm a Supreme Court judge, I've got away between a 642 00:35:25,800 --> 00:35:29,360 Speaker 1: fake emergency. This is a moot point now, right, This 643 00:35:29,480 --> 00:35:34,480 Speaker 1: Title forty two or you know, protecting the nation from 644 00:35:35,239 --> 00:35:38,040 Speaker 1: you know, tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands of people 645 00:35:38,480 --> 00:35:43,360 Speaker 1: that we have no place to put, and that we 646 00:35:43,440 --> 00:35:46,160 Speaker 1: have no money to take care of. There's nowhere to 647 00:35:46,160 --> 00:35:49,479 Speaker 1: put all these people. I mean, did you see that 648 00:35:49,480 --> 00:35:53,080 Speaker 1: that the detention center I think in El Paso is 649 00:35:53,120 --> 00:35:56,840 Speaker 1: set for a thousand people and there's almost five thousand 650 00:35:56,880 --> 00:36:01,040 Speaker 1: in there. And where where is all the media coverage 651 00:36:01,040 --> 00:36:06,040 Speaker 1: like they did for Trump. You've got five times as 652 00:36:06,040 --> 00:36:14,520 Speaker 1: many people crammed into the cells, the holding rooms. I 653 00:36:14,680 --> 00:36:18,839 Speaker 1: have a a clarification, I think from the La Times 654 00:36:18,840 --> 00:36:24,800 Speaker 1: on Weinstein, let's say it, Well, they found him guilty 655 00:36:24,840 --> 00:36:29,680 Speaker 1: of raping a woman, but they either acquitted Weinstein or 656 00:36:29,719 --> 00:36:31,680 Speaker 1: could not reach a verdict on the other charges based 657 00:36:31,719 --> 00:36:35,560 Speaker 1: on the other three women. Oh that's what That's how 658 00:36:35,600 --> 00:36:39,839 Speaker 1: they're interpreting this in the story they just posted. But 659 00:36:40,040 --> 00:36:42,120 Speaker 1: the rape conviction means he's going to get a pretty 660 00:36:42,120 --> 00:36:45,839 Speaker 1: heavy sentence. Yeah, and he's already getting He's already got 661 00:36:45,840 --> 00:36:50,400 Speaker 1: like twenty three yeah plus in New York. But as 662 00:36:50,480 --> 00:36:52,520 Speaker 1: as you read this, three out of four women were not. 663 00:36:53,440 --> 00:36:55,680 Speaker 1: I wonder where the newsome story came out of this? 664 00:36:55,760 --> 00:36:59,360 Speaker 1: And yeah, I wonder that's how they're interpreting this. She 665 00:36:59,680 --> 00:37:02,640 Speaker 1: could well, like, our case was really weird because she 666 00:37:02,840 --> 00:37:07,560 Speaker 1: was speaking with and emailing him for years afterwards, right 667 00:37:07,840 --> 00:37:12,920 Speaker 1: you know, And I that's because he's so such a 668 00:37:12,960 --> 00:37:17,240 Speaker 1: horrific monster and he's deformed. It's like, why why would 669 00:37:17,239 --> 00:37:20,839 Speaker 1: you contact him? Ever? Again, I mean, didn't you have enough? 670 00:37:22,719 --> 00:37:25,080 Speaker 1: All right, Well, we'll be on that story too, but 671 00:37:25,280 --> 00:37:27,719 Speaker 1: Mark Krikorian's coming on next Johnny Ken CAF I AM 672 00:37:27,760 --> 00:37:29,719 Speaker 1: six forty five everywhere in the I Heeart Ready to Act, 673 00:37:29,800 --> 00:37:32,040 Speaker 1: and Mark Ronner live in the twenty four Hour Cafe 674 00:37:32,160 --> 00:37:32,600 Speaker 1: news Room