“Israel’s Response to Iran's Assault” – HOUR THREE - podcast episode cover

“Israel’s Response to Iran's Assault” – HOUR THREE

Apr 19, 202430 min
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Episode description

ICYMI: Hour Three of ‘Later, with Mo’Kelly’ Presents – Breaking News coverage, and analysis of ABC News reporting on “Israel launching a missile attack on Isfahan in response to Iran assault” …PLUS - A look at yet another attack on LA Metro AND where 7 of 10 safest cities in California are located - on KFI AM 640…Live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app

Transcript

You're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on demand from KFI AM six forty and I would get it if you said to me, Moe, what's happening in the Middle East is so far away, it's so far removed from my life. Yeah, maybe my gas will be a little bit more in the coming weeks, but it's hard for me to understand everything that's happening over there. I don't know how it's going to impact me here, but I know I live in an area in which serves high crime, there's high prices. Already

gas was already high. I'm not so sure where our country is going, much less Israel and Iran. I don't know what's going to happen with Israel Tamas. If you were to say that to me, I would completely understand. And to that end, let me just talk about some of the things which are going on here locally before we get out of here and turn it

over to George Nori and Coast to Coast. Remember last night I was going on a rant of one of my mini rants regarding Metro, talking about how a guy, unprovoked with brass knuckles, struck a bus driver, a Metro bus driver and then proceeded to stab him again unprovoked. What I did not know is there was a preceding incident, unrelated, different person, in which

someone else was stabbed and was accosted by another person. There were two incidents ten hours apart, different people, different locations, both tied to Metro. Good Samaritan Erica Diaz was driving behind the bus when it pulled over at a stop. Within seconds, she noticed a young man in his thirties shouting for help just outside her car. He had it so much, a blooded in his chest, so I knew that he was hurt in his chest. You know. He was like walking back and forth, asking, streaming for help,

and no one was helping him. No one was helping him. I just rolled down my window. I screamed to him, get inside my car, Get inside my car, and I just said, calmed down, it's going to be okay. You're going to be okay. Diaz rushed the bus driver to a nearby hospital. A Metro spokesman says the stabbing victim is now resting at home. Erica Diaz is keeping in touch with the young man and says his recovery from emotional trauma may take longer than healing from his physical injuries.

This is a young person that almost last his life working and we have a new statement tonight quote Metro is saddened to hear about this senseless act of violence against our bus operator, which has apparently been fueled by drug abuse and untreated mental illness crises that are plaguing our nation. Okay, that's what we reported on last night, the bus driver who was attacked with brass knuckles and stabbed, But an La Metro passenger was stabbed on a bus earlier that night,

I should say later intnight turning into mourning. But there's been no update on that victim's condition. So there were two different stabbings on two different buses. One had to do with a passenger, one had to do with the bus operator. So again, how can I, in good conscience recommend Metro for anyone? How can I say to someone I care about Let's say you're visiting La for the Olympics, visiting La for the World Cup, visiting LA

and you don't want to pay for an uber. You want to ask about rapid transit, you know, a Metro transit getting around the city, going to see the different sites, different landmarks, maybe go to Hollywood and you say, what is it with Metro? Is it? Is it okay? Is it a good way to get around town? I can't in good conscience recommend anyone get on Metro. That's two stabbings in the course of eight hours. Let's talk about the months preceding it. How many other incidents of violence

have we seen on Metro? There are so many that I can't keep up with them. Here's what actually happened. I finished my show last night and I was going out outside the studio and Tuala was working on the podcast, and there was this news report of a Metro stabbing. I thought, wrongly, thought that it was talking about the Metro bus operator. No, it was actually in regard to the Metro passenger stabbing. But since they happened in close proximity as far as location and also time, I confused it too.

I thought it was the same one. It wasn't until this morning Talla said, no, there were two different ones. We missed one. There was one which happened actually before it. And there's nothing funny about this. It's absurd at this point because we can't talk about what is actually happening right in front of our eyes. It doesn't matter. I should say nothing else matters in regard to Metro. If you can't get the safety and security parts straight,

you can't control everything, you can't prevent everything. But you have to start there in the conversation of what needs to improve and change, because thousands of people tomorrow have no choice but to ride Metro. In fact, they're not even going to concern themselves with the issues in the Middle East. They're just going to concern themselves with getting to work and getting home safely. And maybe they are not as concerned as they should be about the safety of Metro,

but it's a real thing. People are really getting hurt. Bus operators are really getting hurt. People on platforms are really getting hurt. I'm not going to over am not going to be prone to hyperbole and saying it's happening every single day. But I can say it's happening just about every single week, some act of violence perpetrated against a Metro employee or a Metro passenger, be it bus or trained, just about every single week. And I'm not

a gambler. I don't like to play the odds. I rarely play lotto, with exception of the company Lotto pool. It's not something I actively think about, but I'm not getting on Metro and it's not a fear thing, it's a smart thing. How many times do you have to read about people getting attacked on Metro before you think maybe that's not such a good idea. I passed my number. I don't know how many times, but I passed

my number. At this point, it's up to you. If you want to get on Metro, and you have a choice not to get on Metro, well that's on you, and I don't wish any thing bad to happen to you. But at this point we kind of know there's a distinct possibility at something. Well, mathematically, I don't know what that number is. It could be infiniteestable in nature of excuse me, in the sense of how many people may ride Metro every single day. But do you really want to

pressure luck Twaula. You were telling me like you wouldn't even recommend your own family members to ride. No, no, no, My son was going to catch the bus home this morning after his presentation of learning and because of the coverage that you provided on Metro last night and then now today, I said, you know what, I will leave work and come and pick you up. You are not getting on a bus when there is someone walking around

with someones with knuckle dusters and knives attacking individuals unprovoked. That's a no. There is no bus riding for you right now. I will come and get you. I'll make that. It's Later with Mo Kelly KFIM six forty. We're live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app. But that's that's the bad news, or at least some facet of the bad news. But there is a bright side to this. We're going to tell you about seven of California's top ten

safest cities and you know what, they're all in Orange County. That's next. You're listening to Later with Mo Kelly on demand from KFI AM six forty. Of course, we've been talking about the events in the Middle East. Not much more information has come in. If something definitives should come in, we'll have that for you. We're still on that story, the KFI twenty

four hour News from this definitely still on that story. But we also want to let you know about some things which are happening more locally, in in the sense of where you live and write, where you are. Last segment, we talked about Metro once again, how another stabbing happened there. Unbeknownst to us, we thought there was only one one yesterday. There were two evidently yesterday. So we talked about the second one and got me thinking about,

well, that's the crime aspect. Let's talk about the safety of it all. Seven of California's top ten safest cities are found right here in Orange County. And this is according to safe Wise, a home security company, So you can take it for what it's worth. I'm quite sure they have their own statistics, but this is the list in which safe Wise compiled. Seven of California's top ten safest cities are in Orange County. But also this

the top six safest cities in California are all located in Orange County. Number ten is Irvine, Number nine is Rockland. Number eight is Powway. Again, this is according to home security company safe Wise. Number seven is Lincoln. There's Lincoln. I don't know where that is. I have no idea where that is. Number six is Lake Forest. I know where that is. Number five, Mission Viejo, number four, Laguna Neguel, number three,

Yorba Linda. Number two Aliso Viejo, and the top city in terms of safest cities in the state according to safe wise, is Rancho Santa Margarita. Other Southern California cities in the top twenty include San Clemente and the inland empires Marietta, Fontana, and Menifee. I don't know what to make of

it. I mean, obviously we know that Orange County has done a much better job with respect to public safety than Los Angeles County, and I think there's a discussion to be had why there that is, it's more than just George Gascone. He's easy to pull the finger at, but the issues of La County precede him. Now you can say that he's made it worse, and I'd agree with that, But as far as safety is concerned, it didn't start the day that George Gascon got in office. I think that's a

misrepresentation of facts. But it has gone in the wrong direction in a severe way since he's become La County DA. But La is not the place to be when it comes to being safe. And this is an arbitrary list, you can say from safe wise, I can't give you any data to support all this, but also there's something else. Safety for me has always been a state of mind. You can't necessarily predict all the danger which may be around you. I talk often about how I try to limit the dangerous situations

I may find myself in. I don't go to gas stations late at night. That has nothing to do with whether I'm in Los Angeles County or Orange County. I'm telling you i could go to Rancho Santa Margarita tonight and if I'm low on gas, I'm not stopping. Why Because I am more susceptible and vulnerable in a situation like that. So safety is more than just where you live. It's also how you conduct yourself. There's certain places I don't

go at night, There's certain places I don't go in the daytime. As a matter of fact, I'm not gonna put myself in certain situations like on metro. It's really difficult to stab me on a metro bus or train if I'm on neither. Now I can say I'm blessed to be able to be in a position where I can be in a car and not have to ride Metro. But when it comes to making decisions, and Taula was talking about he made a decision, an active decision to intervene and make sure his son

did not ride metro. That's a part of the whole safety quotion, not just where you live. It's what you do, It's how you conduct yourself, it's how you carry yourself. I try to explain that to my sons all the time. It's like, look, part of being safe is not doing dumb stuff, and they laugh at me. It's like, what are you talking about. I'm saying you have to play an active role in your

level of safety. You have to know when you go to this club or you go to this spot at two am, it's probably diminishing your safety. And you have to know that the decisions that you make in that moment will largely impact whether you make it home. The car that you get into, the decisions you make, what you put in your body at a nightclub or something, if you get into it with someone verbally, how it may escalate into something physically. All those have much more impact on whether you're safe as

opposed to just where you live. Those are the lessons that I try to impart not only to my sons, but also my students in martial arts. I'm not teaching you how to fight. I'm teaching you how to manage your emotions. I'm teaching you how to control your anger. I'm teaching you to be aware of all your surroundings. That applies to whether you're in Santa Margarita, your Belinda, or Compton. It's the same approach and if you understand

that, then you will be generally more safe. Now, the environment does make a difference. Yeah, you are more likely to get stabbed in one location as opposed to another location. But I'm not going to help you out. I'm not just going to get into a verbal confrontation which may escalate to a physical confrontation because I don't know how crazy that person are, desperate that

person may be. For example, safety is a relative term as well as it is considering Orange County and the fact that we just had the home invasion in Newport, So it's relative, it's relative, but we're going off the generalities of statistics. Yeah, yeah, and again, like I said before, safety is a feeling. Yeah, it is how you feel about where you are. It doesn't magically change when you go from Orange County to Los

Angeles County. As far as the border, it's not some magical line says, Oh, I'm safe here and then I'm unsafe here when you cross into La County. It's much more complicated than that. Yeah, most of the smash and grabs are happening in moren't upscale neighborhoods. It's large, it's changed. So when I look at this Orange County report, I understand where it's coming from. I also know that it's relative. Well, not only that

it's a it's a report from a private company. Then it's that, you know, it's it's not a public policy white paper report with just statistics. It's a you know, it's a security company. They have a vested interest. Yeah. You know, if I really want to be cynical, I can say where the places we're going to spend more on security Orange County. You know, you can look at it through that lens as well. But

the only thing I would say is safety is a mindset. Safety is relative, and safety has a lot more to do with our individual decisions than necessarily where we may happen to be physically. You're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on Demand from KFI AM six forty. We are continuing to follow the events in the Middle East and have to say that getting some conflicting reports coming out

of different news agencies. There's a lot that is unknown and unclear. CNN is reporting that Iranian airspace has reopened and that Iran will not respond to Israel's attack. I don't I can't describe a reason or motive for either of those days. But that's what CNN is reporting. It's unclear as to where the information is coming from, whether it's Iranian State TV or some other source,

but that's what CNN is reporting. ABC has not changed their information as far as Israel, early Friday morning local time, had launched missiles into Iran, which was a retaliatory strike, allegedly hitting a military base or a portion of a military base in Iran Isfaham, quite near the international airport there, which goes to why the airspace was reopened. There's a question in my mind, if this was an Israeli missile attack on Iran, why they would reopen the

airspace. That just doesn't make sense on any level. So I know in situations like this, you're going to get conflicting information, and as you get more information, hopefully it will be more accurate and precise. In nature, but we just don't have that right now. We just were not getting that. We don't know what was hit, We don't know if there were any

casualties whatsoever. We don't know if there's going to be an official statement from President Biden or President excuse me, Prime Minister Benjamin net Yahoo, or any Iranian official. We've heard from Iranian state news sources, but we've not heard from any recognized Iranian official. We've not heard from any Israeli official, for

that matter, or American official. Most of these reports, at least from ABC News, came from an unnamed senior US official, which means that person wasn't what's the word I'm looking for, wasn't allowed to speak, wasn't authorized to speak, so that person spoke on a condition of anonymity. CNN again is reporting that Iran will not respond to the Israeli strike, which I guess

is good news. That it's not going to be an escalation, which fundamentally changes how all this may be perceived in the morning our time, whether it's going to be looked as an act of escalation and aggression which needs another response. Hopefully it will end with that. As far as the military activities.

Hopefully it ends with that. We don't know. We still have very little information as to the weapons which were used, the missiles which were launched, where they hit, specifically at this Iranian military base, whether it actually was successful targeting the military infrastructure of Iran. Again, we don't know if there were any casualties whatsoever, and there's been no official statement by any head of state or official within Iran, so there's not much to report at this point.

We don't know beyond the initial reports that there was an Israeli strike on a target inside of Iran. And this is a moment I like to ask someone who's a little bit younger than me, Keana, You've worked tonight as a producer, but you're also a student of this business and also an American. You see the news, and not only do you participate the news, you have to digest the news. You may not remember the issues between Israel and Iran, or Iran in the United States. Of course, you didn't

remember. You weren't alive in the late nineteen seventies and early nineteen eighties. You probably don't even remember the Gulf War of nineteen ninety one. When were you born, Okay, yes, you don't have memory of that. Oh wow. But when you see this news as it's growing at least what we thought was an escalation, what do you think about I really just I that's a hard question because I read it and I take in the information. I understand it, and I know that it's happening. But for myself, I

don't have any kind of reaction to it. Okay. I remember when I was in college at Georgetown and the ramp up to Kuwait and that i'll say, beginning of what we call now the Desert Storm. I remember my concern because I'm maybe twenty one twenty two at the time, I didn't know where the world was headed. I didn't know that if and I'm being serious, I didn't know if they were going to bring back the draft at that point.

We last had the draft in nineteen seventy three. But I grew up in an age post Vietnam, and I have very little memory of Vietnam. I didn't know what war felt like as an American citizen to be able to firsthand digest all the news reports, and there was a lot of uncertainty.

Then That's the way I looked at it, and many in my generation looked at it because that was a good ten years before nine to eleven, which again changed the world in which we live, and also what it meant to be an American and how we perceive what was going on in the Middle East. But do you, as a person who now works in news and a person who's having your eyes open to a lot of other things which are going on in the world, do you have that level of concern that this may

lead to something much more widespread in nature. Yes, but I try not to think about that because there's issues here on our soil that you know, need to be addressed more closer to me. Uh huh, I wonder. Okay, let me just have you speak for everyone your age in the country. I'm gonna put it on your shoulders. Okay. Do you think they more care about what's going on in their immediate surroundings or what's going on in

the Middle East. I think that in hindsight, we care about the situations that are happening to us that's directly affecting us here in the US and here in California and locally. But also we are passionate about everything that's going on in the Middle East, like We a lot of friends that I know have family in the Middle East, both on the in Israel and in Gaza, and so everybody is, you know, very tense right now with stuff that's

happening here, stuff and family that is happening in the Middle East. So we're concerned, but it's starting it's starting to take a toll on our well being and just our mental state and who we are, because it's kind of becoming our identity that we were stressed out about what's going to happen war wise over there or what's going to happen here with you know, all of the politics going on here and just being our age and not being able to afford

groceries, not being able to dream about having a home, struggling day to day, being paycheck to paycheck, Like it's hard to kind of grasp at one issue when we're grasping at all of them to try to figure out, you know, how can we help the future be the future. I'm quite sure it's cyclical, but I remember that same level of concern at different points in my life. I remember the Iran hostage crisis, I remember the OPEC crisis, the gas crisis of the mid to late nineteen seventies. I remember

that. I remember that uncertainty. I remember gas rationing, where you would get gas on certain days of the week depending on your license plate number. I remember that, and I remember worrying about what was going to happen with my limited understanding at that age of in the Middle East. But it was

always a constant. Yes, there was the threat and thought and worry about nuclear war because I was a Cold War era with the Soviet Union, but there was also the issue with Iran and the Middle East, which was a constant as well. And as I got older, it never went away, and it got to be more real, as they say, with the war in Kuwait, because my friends were going away to war people I knew people in my age group, my friend circle who were serving. Some did not

come back, which made it much more real. And it's been kind of constant ever since then. In the broad sense we talk about America having war fatigue. Going back to Kuwait, We've been in this constant state of war and military involvement in the Middle East, and it seems like, or I should say, it feels like we're moving back to that again. It feels like whether it gets back to that. I don't know, but for me, as someone who's lived through everything post Vietnam, this feels like one of

those similar moments prior to nine to eleven. You're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on demand from KFI AM six forty. Before we get out of here, I just want to formally check in with you Mark if there were any new updates regarding Iran and Israel. There's some conflicting information now, there certainly is, as you've been able to see in the camera. I've been scrambling all evening and not really been able to chime in like we usually do.

But yeah, we started the evening thinking one thing. Now we don't know. All we have is A says one thing, B says another, and so that's what we have to report. And we're waiting for the for the picture to solidify here and it's been very confusing. Well that's the part of

breaking news that you know, some people may not understand. You're you're flying along and you're taking in information as it comes and hopefully you try to corroborate, You try to verify as much as you can, either through trusted news sources or trusted sources you have separate and distinct from those news sources, and you go from there and hopefully you'll get more information over the course of the evening to fill in that picture and to make that picture as accurate as possible.

Yeah, and this is this really goes to reaffirm what we were talking about earlier about be careful what news sources you choose and make sure that they're legit new sources, because tonight, among all nights, when we don't really have a one hundred percent clear picture of what's going on, you want to go with a legit news source that you can trust, not somebody from your own echo chamber or whatever side that may be on, but legit news professionals.

And as we know more, that will definitely shape the discussion tomorrow. We were talking about what has been happening on college campuses. When we get a better sense of exactly what transpired, what degree of damage there was, were there any fatalities, if there's going to be any further escalation from around when we know that, then that will greatly dictate what happens here in America. As we talk about the connectivity of all this, None of this is

is separate and distinct. None of this is in a vacuum. None of this happens on its own. There will be a reaction on some level, be it here in a rhetorical sense, how we discussed it on college campuses, be it how our president and government may respond, or hopefully we were watching CNN and CNN had on their ticker that Iran has vowed not to respond. We don't know what that means because we don't know who is making that particular statement. No, we don't. And it's such a complex and nuanced

situation, and so much is interconnected. I mean, you've got Israel and Gaza and Hamas and then Iran and Hesbalah and Libya, and it's enough to make your brain bleed. Well, we'll find out more tomorrow, so just keep it right here on KFI. We're live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app, phone, car radio, smart toaster. We don't care how you listen, just that you do. KI and the KOST HD two Los Angeles, Lynch County live everywhere on the radio. He

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