About the Episode

MONOLOGUE

Jagmeet Singh: The Man Who Ripped Up His Principles—But Never His Seat

NEWSMAKER

Canada’s female Donald Trump ready to take on president

https://torontosun.com/news/local-news/warmington-canadas-female-donald-trump-ready-to-take-on-president

 We’re Getting an Election We Don’t Need, But Not Getting the One We Do!

Ford calls for early election and hopes for Massive Mandate to Take on Trade War

 Joe Warmington, Columnist with The Toronto Sun

OPEN LINES

THE CULT OF CLIMATE CHANGE

Sea levels could rise by up to 6.2 FEET by 2100, warn scientists – so, is your hometown at risk?

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-14328807/Global-sea-levels-rise-6-2-FEET-2100-plunging-entire-cities-underwater.html

 Global warming to prevent 3.4 million deaths from cold … but at a deadly cost

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2025/01/27/how-global-warming-save-three-million-lives-northern-europe/

 Tony Heller – Geologist, Weather Historian and Founder https://realclimatescience.com

MONOLOGUE

“Dying for Care: How Canada’s Socialized Healthcare System is Killing Its Own People”

NEWSMAKER

Did Trump Have the Greatest First Week in American Presidential History

https://www.dailywire.com/news/heres-everything-trump-did-his-first-week-back

 

Stacy Washington, host of the nationally syndicated SiriusXM Radio show Stacy on the Right, and author of the book Eternally Cancel Proof: A Guide for Courageous Christians Navigating the Political Battlefront, is an Emmy Nominated TV personality and documentarian.

OPEN LINES

THIS DAY IN ROCK HISTORY

 In 1969, Fleetwood Mac scored their sole UK No.1 hit with the instrumental “Albatross,” from the Peter Green-era of the band.

 In 1972, Concert for Bangladesh went to No.1 in the UK. The live triple album, which captured the first major benefit concert, featured performances by Bob Dylan, Ravi Shankar, Billy Preston, Eric Clapton, Ringo Starr, members of Badfinger, and George Harrison, who organized the event.

 In 1983, Australian new wave heroes Men At Work had simultaneous No.1s in the UK and US on both the singles and album charts with “Down Under” and Business As Usual, respectively. The last artist to achieve this feat was Rod Stewart in 1971.

Jeremiah Tittle, Co-Host of The 500 with Josh Adam Myers podcast, CEO/Founder of Next Chapter Podcasts

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