Roger Stone warns Congress’s rural hospital cuts threaten lifelines for emergency care and local jobs, sharing his wife Nidia’s near-fatal misdiagnosis—stress from persecution and a hacked bank account triggered treatable takotsubo cardiomyopathy—while praising Tulsi Gabbard’s Iran stance as a counter to neocon war-mongering like Iraq’s WMD lies. Conservative activist Christopher Ruffo frames today’s leftist movements as a 1968 revival, urging Trump to weaponize civil rights lawsuits against Ivy League discrimination and exploit his economic wins to unite working-class Democrats. Stone ties it back to rural healthcare, ending with a call to action against congressional neglect. [Automatically generated summary]
Rural Americans deserve access to the best our nation has to offer, especially when it comes to health care.
Across every state and every community, America's rural hospitals are the first line of defense, protecting our families, neighbors, and loved ones.
No matter where you live, hospital care doesn't clock out.
They're there 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year.
Each year, America's over 5,000 hospitals care for millions of patients, providing 24-7 emergency care, delivering babies, cancer treatments, and other life-saving care that patients rely on.
Behind every one of those patients are doctors, nurses, and caregivers working tirelessly to keep people healthy and safe.
Hospitals are our community's lifelines.
They employ our neighbors and keep our families health.
But now, some in Congress are threatening access to care.
Tell Congress, protect patient care to keep America strong.
Don't cut rural health care.
The Stone Zone.
Entertaining and informative.
On the Red Apple Podcast Network.
Welcome.
You are entering the Stone Zone.
I want to say a word about health care in America.
Two Thursdays ago at about 11 o'clock at night.
My wife experienced what they're now calling a cardiac event.
Now, my wife, Nidia, is a survivor of stage four cancer, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.
She is an extraordinarily upbeat, optimistic, extraordinarily healthy woman who eats carefully, drinks little, and exercises regularly.
During the Mueller witch hunt and the attempts to destroy me, she was my rock.
She was diagnosed with stage four cancer, which I think was brought on by the stress of being hunted by a vicious, weaponized judiciary almost immediately after I was given a full and unconditional pardon.
Misdiagnosis and Hope00:03:03
But around 11 o'clock, while trying to finish our taxes, she was seeking to upgrade Quicken, and there was a glitch, and I think she lost about two weeks of her clerical work.
The day before, somebody had attempted to hack our bank accounts only by going to the bank branch in the nick of time.
Did she prevent that?
And for some odd reason, we had received a notice that our health insurance was about to be canceled.
That was also an error.
So she was rushed to the hospital after experiencing severe chest pain and briefly losing consciousness.
And then after being examined by a cardiologist there, she was told that she had idiopathic cardiomyopathy.
Now, idiomathic cardiomyopathy is the classification of cardiomyopathy characterized by heart muscle dysfunction without any identifiable underlying cause, even after thorough testing and evaluation.
This condition, they say, is particularly significant because it will lead to heart failure, arrhythmias, and sudden cardiac death.
The doctor essentially told her that they were sending her home, that she could wear this harness, which was a defilibrator, and that if her heart stopped, well, it might give her an electric jolt that would bring her back to life.
She literally was told to go home and die.
Then, for three days, I could not get the cardiologist or his assistant on the telephone.
I wanted a second opinion, but any doctor who was willing to see her, any cardiologist other than one at the hospital, wanted to see the results of the various tests that she had been given.
It was a very difficult weekend because we both believed that, well, her death might be imminent.
Ultimately, I was able to wrench her medical records out of the hospital and take her to a different and thankfully much better cardiologist who told us that the diagnosis she had received at the hospital was completely wrong, that the tests they conducted were the wrong tests, and that the medications that they had given her were far too strong for her.
She's rather petite.
They told us what she has more precisely is broken heart syndrome, also known as tachatosubocardiomyopathy, generally curable.
And in most individuals, a full recovery is coming within weeks of months as long as they remain stress-free.
Iran Under Attack00:11:09
Thank you, Jesus, for this news.
But as for that cardiologist, I learned after the fact he never actually met and came face to face with my wife.
He was essentially phoning it all in.
I am particularly grateful to God Almighty for this good news, but it has been a horrific couple weeks.
In the meantime, Tulsi Gabbard, our director of national intelligence, is under attack from those who are upset that she is telling the truth about Iran.
Now, she is the director of national intelligence.
Tulsi Gabbard is a former four-term Democrat congresswoman from Hawaii, now turned a Republican.
And she is a lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Army Reserve.
She's a combat veteran of both Iraq and Kuwait.
She's also a crack shot and a championship surfer.
I said recently on the Alex Jones show that I believed that she would be the first woman president, and I still believe that.
That doesn't necessarily mean that she will be president in 2028, but she has it, meaning that elusive quality of charisma.
She's brilliant.
She's highly principled.
And she's very, very quick on her feet.
And the camera loves her.
She's going to be president.
But right now, she's receiving fire from the neocon Warhawks and my own party for refusing to spread alarmism about the threat from Iran.
Speaking before the Senate Intelligence Committee last month, Gabbert stated that the intelligence community continues to assess that Iran is not building a nuclear weapon and that Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ala Khomeini has not authorized the nuclear weapons program, which he suspended in 2003.
Her comments sent neocon friends of mine like radio host Mark Levin and the failed presidential candidate Nikki Haley into a tizzy.
They shared an op-ed in The American Greatness written by former John Bolton chief of staff Fred Fleets, calling the intelligence reports referenced by Gabbard as stupid in arguing for George W. Bush's aggressive war on Iran policy.
Very important.
Please read to the end, he said.
Red flags are everywhere.
Can't say we haven't been warned.
That's what Mark Levin wrote while sharing that piece on X.
I raised alarm bells, Levin wrote, about this when she was nominated, but chose not to attack her over it anyway.
There is no room for Iranian sympathizers in the national security team of the United States.
That's what Nikki Haley wrote, taking it a step further by accusing Gabbard of being disloyal to the United States.
Nikki Haley, which branch of the service did you serve in?
Which war front did you risk your life in?
These Bush era leftovers are once again misleading the public about Iran in an attempt to draw America into war.
Remember that once upon a time, these very same people claimed that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction in order to promulgate the basis for a war with Iraq.
They also told us that Iraq was involved in the 9-11 attack on America, which they weren't, but they used both as a basis for war and were successful to the great detriment of the world.
These same interests today are trying to do the exact same thing with Iran, using nuclear boogeymen as an excuse to ratchet up hostilities that could lead us to World War III.
While Iran's actions should not be ignored by any means, the source claiming that they are the major threat is not exactly credible.
Neocons have been claiming that Iran is on the verge of creating a nuclear bomb for over 20 years.
Their rationale is always that Iran is so close to nuclearization that America must take action now or calamitous circumstances will result.
But their dire prognostications never ever seem to materialize.
Iran weakened over the years, particularly in the aftermath of the horrific October 7th attacks by Hamas on Israel, and their Islamic extremist government may falter on its own without direct American intervention.
There are enormous demonstrations by the resistance among the Iranian people going on in that nation today.
A massive bombing campaign or an invasion by the United States would be counterproductive, in my opinion, and could actually backfire.
This would give the odds all Atolla something to rally the people against.
If we are successful in conducting regime change, the people could rise up and demand something just as bad, if not worse, in the event of a U.S. attack.
Some will remember what happened when the U.S. Allied forces propped up the Shah in 1953 and the blowblack that ensued from that.
Look at Syria and Libya for two recent examples of areas where the U.S. and NATO interventionism led to regime shame and violent terrorist killers took control of both those countries as a direct result.
This libel against Gabbard is absurd, similar to the insults that Democrats have lobbed at her in the past.
Hillary Clinton actually said while she was running for the Democratic presidential nomination that Tulsi Gabbard was a Russian intelligence agent.
No Trump administration official is defending the Iranian regime.
Their values are abhorrent and an affront to the American way of life.
But imposing our values upon them with bombs and guns, well, that's not going to work.
The track record of U.S. military inventionism has been a failure to everyone except for the defense contractors who profit mightily from death and destruction.
There's no reason to believe why a war with Iran would be any less catastrophic than the previous wars in Afghanistan or the Iraq war for that matter.
The military-industrial complex, that's what Dwight Eisenhower called them, and its neocon cheerleaders will use any pretext to drive the U.S. into conflict.
Even though some of those voices have been removed from the Republican fold, certain prominent characters remain, camouflaging themselves now as MAGA patriots in an attempt to push the same old, failed Bush-era foreign policy, which has hurt America.
They will attempt to railroad Tulsi Gabbard now, in my opinion, or any official in the Trump administration who authentically wants to put America first.
They are receiving flack because they're over the target.
This is also, in my opinion, this situation surrounding Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth.
He's under attack today, not because he did something wrong, but because roughly 10 days ago, he joined with Vice President JD Vance, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles, the first woman to hold that position, and others to oppose this unilateral attack on Iraq.
The Trump administration is a radical departure from the establishment of Republicanism on a myriad of issues, including foreign policy.
Recent news that President Trump resisted the call to launch this massive bombing campaign after listening to common sense from Gabbard and the others I mentioned is a demonstration that there is a new sheriff in town and that Donald Trump has no interest in rushing to war.
Expects their attacks to ramp up against the sane voices who oppose war in the White House.
My good friend Tucker Carlson has been particularly good on this subject.
America First Patriots must remain vigilant and repel this neocon influence whenever necessary.
The success of the MAGA movement ultimately depends on ignoring the warhawks who are demanding an attack on Iran.
If you're just tuning in, this is the Stone Zone.
I am Roger Stone.
And whatever you do, don't touch that dial because we'll be right back.
The Stone Zone on the Red Apple Podcast Network.
Rural Americans deserve access to the best of what our nation has to offer, especially health care.
Across every state and every community, America's rural hospitals are the first line of defense, protecting our families, neighbors, and loved ones.
No matter where you live, hospital care doesn't clock out.
They're there 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year.
Each year, America's over 5,000 hospitals care for millions of patients, providing 24-7 emergency care, delivering babies, cancer treatments, and other life-saving care that patients rely on.
Behind every one of those patients are doctors, nurses, and caregivers working tirelessly to keep people healthy and safe.
Hospitals are our community's lifelines.
They employ our neighbors and keep our families healthy.
But now, some in Congress are threatening access to care.
Tell Congress, protect patient care to keep America strong.
Don't cut rural health care.
The Stone Zone.
Entertaining and informative on the Red Apple Podcast Network.
Welcome back.
You're back in the Stone Zone.
President Donald Trump this week unveiled his latest plans to shake up the White House grounds on Wednesday, announcing that he will pay personally for two large flagpoles to be installed, as well as two 100-foot-tall American flags, one on one side and one on the other side in the Rose Garden area.
New York Insights00:14:57
Now, you may remember that back when President Donald Trump first bought the Mar-Lago property, which had been the palatial Spanish-style home of Meriwether Post, the heiress to the Post-Serial fortune, she willed it to the U.S. government.
Didn't know what to do with it.
It was a grand property, but they boarded it up and it remained boarded up and closed for 15 years until Donald Trump bought it in an auction.
I was actually with him when we flew from New York to Palm Beach, where he had a home on the island.
He didn't know I didn't care too much about real estate because all I cared about was politics.
But he said, Hey, do you want to walk through this property with me?
Now it was kind of like, I don't know, it was grand.
It was kind of like the Adams family, though.
You know, all the furniture was covered with these white sheets.
It was very dusty.
There was a substantial amount of water damage.
And I said, wow, this is like a haunted house.
He said, no, you don't see it.
This could be absolutely magnificent.
I said, are you going to buy it?
It's on an auction.
He says, I'm only going to buy it if I can steal it.
And indeed, he did.
I believe he paid $5 million for it.
Today, it is estimated as being worth as much as $200 million, notwithstanding the fact that a New York judge claimed it was only worth $18 million.
But his first big fight when he decided to convert it into a private club was over an enormous American flag that he wanted to install on the property.
The Palm Beach County Board of Commissioners said he had to take the flag down.
He refused, paying a $1,000 a day fine over his refusal to take down the flag.
Finally, the county commissioners threw in the towel, and today this enormous American flag remains.
You can see it for miles while you approach Mar-Lago.
It shows you how much Donald Trump loves this country.
Joining me coming up is Chris Ruffo.
He's a prominent American writer, filmmaker, and conservative activist.
He has written one of the most important pieces I have read about where America stands and the need for a counter-revolution.
This is an interview I've been looking forward to for a long, long time.
So we appreciate your tuning into the Stone Zone.
Christopher Ruffo will be right back with us on the other side.
So whatever you do, please don't touch that dial.
The Stone Zone on the Red Apple Podcast Network.
The Stone Zone, entertaining and informative on the Red Apple Podcast Network.
Welcome back.
You are entering the Stone Zone.
Again, joining me now is Christopher Ruffo.
Is a prominent American writer, filmmaker, and conservative activist, renowned for his influential role in shaping contemporary debates on culture, education, and public policies.
The author of America's Cultural Revolution, How the Radical Left Conquered America, a best-selling book that traces the intellectual roots of progressive ideologies and their impact on American institutions.
Chris, welcome into the Stone Zone.
Thank you for having me.
I have wanted to have you for a long time.
I'm glad we're able to finally get this set up.
You wrote a piece entitled Bring on the Counter-Revolution.
This is, I think, one of the most important things written in the last 10 years in terms of understanding how the past is prologue and how what America is going through today is what America has gone through in the past.
And as the subhead of your piece says, conservatives need a national agenda that reclaims America's institutions from the left.
A blueprint exists, but from a surprising source.
That source, according to your piece, is one President Richard Milhouse Nixon.
I'm just going to read the first sentence and let you kind of take it away.
America is trapped in the rupee of 1968.
The politics of that fateful year have set patterns and bounds of our current national life and national life for decades.
Chris, take it away.
That's exactly right.
And, you know, growing up, I bought into what was and unfortunately continues to be the conventional wisdom about Richard Nixon's presidency.
But as I dug deeper and read the history, and this is, of course, something that you know from your own firsthand experience and relationship with the former president, it was very different.
The reality was very different than the narrative.
And one thing I learned studying Nixon is that all of the great political questions and dramas and archetypes that we're grappling with today really first emerged in the first and the first part of the second term of President Nixon.
And in fact, he anticipated many of these questions.
He had some wisdom on how to potentially address some of these questions.
And I think that he really is the kind of skeleton key to modern politics and should be reappraised for those of us, especially on the right.
Yeah, I obviously agree with that.
I think one of the great tragedies, of course, is that many of his great accomplishments, strategic arms limitation agreement with the Soviets, the desegregation of the public school system without bloodshed or incident,
the saving of Israel unilaterally in the 1973 Yom Kippur War, federal revenue sharing where public monies are best spent at the local level, the war on cancer, Bringing China in out of the cold at a time that China was a dirt poor, agrarian society with little technology, without a strong military.
Most of the Chinese did not have indoor plumbing.
The rural areas had no electricity.
There was no way for Richard Nixon to know that 30 years later, President Bill Clinton would give the Chinese most favored nation trading status, and he would also sell the Chinese some of our top military secrets, including our missile targeting technology in the Loral strategy, those two things playing a major role in making China the great danger it is to the country today.
You make an excellent point about the fact that the Black Panther Party of the 1970s now reappears as Black Lives Matter, and the weather underground re-emerges as Antifa.
Past really is prolonged.
As you say, the cultural revolution that began a half century ago is now reflected in the, as you put it, deadening sequence of acronyms, CRT, DEI, ESG, and more.
So I think what you say is absolutely true that Nixon anticipated these things and frankly, he dealt very effectively with them.
It's a terrific piece entitled Bring on the Counterrevolution.
I highly recommend it to you.
But in your new book called America's Cultural Revolution, you talk more about the parallels between how the Chinese and American institutions have been conquered by communists.
Talk to us about that.
Yeah, I mean, that's right.
And I think, look, President Trump has really outlined this in his very unique and colorful way.
He talks about the radical left lunatics at Harvard and Columbia and Princeton and other elite universities.
And the ideologies that are really manufactured within those universities have now extended outwards.
And, you know, what I found particularly fascinating is that the Black Panther ideology, the weather underground ideology, the new left ideologies that were really at the fringes of that time, suddenly after 2020 became proliferating throughout our institutions, universities, corporations, schools, government agencies.
And really what Nixon feared came to pass.
And the tactics and techniques that he had contemplated then unfortunately were not implemented at that time.
And now we're going to have to take much more dramatic action.
That's why I think we've seen in the first almost 100 days of the Trump presidency this really brutal drag out knockdown fight with the Ivy Leagues.
And I think that is targeting exactly the heart of the problem.
He's kind of lifted up the rock and finding all of the critters that are hiding under these in the dirt.
And it's really time to take these ideologies, these ideas that have baked in these places for so long and to actually try to mount a proper and true defense.
He's certainly unique.
I watched him the other day talking about Canada.
I've never seen him so crisp.
And he basically said, look, we buy virtually nothing from them.
They really have nothing that we really need.
They buy a lot from us.
As I like to tell Governor Trudeau, I mean, who else would say that?
Can you picture Ronald Reagan calling the prime minister of a foreign country governor, a governor, as if they were governor of U.S. state?
I mean, the guy is part stand-up comedian.
He's part statesman.
He's part salesman, but he's also part stand-up comedian.
The guy is hysterical, but it was one of his most crisp deliveries in terms of messaging that I have seen.
I mean, look, we saw yesterday that tariff revenue is up to $15 billion, which is an all-time high.
That was in April.
Yet inflation remains relatively low, unless you're Jerome Powell and you can't read.
So that to me tells us that Trump's underlying economic theory is correct.
Well, yeah, it's a good question.
And I think that, look, his economic theory is really at odds with, again, the conventional wisdom.
And I'm not an economist.
I won't hazard any predictions, but we're going to see if the conventional wisdom holds or whether Trump, who arrives at these questions intuitively rather than purely intellectually, is actually right.
So we're going to see that.
But on the point of his humor, I'll admit, in 2015 and 2016, I was turned off by the way the president spoke.
I didn't quite click in with it.
I thought that it was outrageous.
But then there was a moment in his first term when I was watching him at length, and it suddenly clicked with me.
I said, he is hilarious.
I mean, he knows exactly what he's doing.
It's this dry sense of humor.
It's this New York attitude.
And from that moment, when I really understood the president's humor and wit, was really when I really understood him as a president, as a public figure.
And he really, I mean, I'll tell you my favorite line of his.
You know, during the 2020 debates, they were questioning him, you know, basically saying, oh, you're racist.
And he's in this big debate hall and he shields his eyes from the Klieg lights.
And he says, you know, I can't see all the way in the back, but I'm pretty sure I am the least racist person in this room right now.
And it's just the outrageous, you know, totally off the wall.
I mean, it's an inborn talent.
You can't teach that.
You can't develop that.
You can't practice that.
He's just a kind of creature that is totally unique in American life.
Well, something President Nixon once told me is that the only thing wrong in American politics than being wrong is being boring.
And Donald Trump completely understands that.
He is never boring.
He's always interesting and he's also entertaining.
I think he also recognizes that if you're not interested, well, the voters begin to look elsewhere.
But the other thing is that he is, I can tell you, he's completely unscripted.
I mean, what you see is what you get.
We couldn't get him to even think about using a teleprompter until after he had won the nomination in 2016.
He flatly refused to do it because he thought it was phony.
I don't want to look like a politician, he would say.
It was hard enough to get him to speak from just notes.
He spoke contemporaneously off the cuff almost all the time.
Now, after the first time that I think it was Paul Manafort persuaded him, please once, just once, try the teleprompter.
Well, once he tried it, he loved it.
However, when he's using the teleprompter, you can always tell when he goes off a teleprompter into one of his rhetorical cul-de-sacs that are always pretty funny.
And then he'll come back to his main topic.
He calls it weaving.
He will say, do you see how I weave that?
The guy is very, he's very funny.
Weaving Back to Schools00:07:14
Which American institutions that have been captured by the hard left are most crucial for the American people to reclaim in order to preserve the country?
Well, look, I think you have to start with the universities.
You have to then continue to the schools.
And then you have to burrow into the civil rights regime.
So HR, legal, and other professional class institutions.
And I think that that will go a long ways.
And what President Nixon saw the beginning of, and we're really arriving to this in mature form, he talked about what was known then as the Eastern establishment.
But I think now it's really a nationwide, kind of bi-coastal, professional managerial establishment.
And as much as we may disagree with the popular ideologies within that establishment, that really is where policy gets made, how the narratives that circulate through the country get made, and where politics is shaped and formed.
And I think conservatives are going to really have to think in the next three and a half years, how can we influence that sector of society?
Because what I see right now in President Trump's second term is that you have a charismatic leader at the top who really is a force of nature.
And you have the MAGA base at the bottom, kind of working class, middle class, a lot of especially working class men, massive support across racial demographics.
But what we need is a kind of middle layer of professionals, institutions, and administrators that can take the raw democratic power of the base and the charismatic leadership of the president and then translate it through these captured institutions so that we can start to arrive at significant reforms.
Yeah, I think, I guess the answer to my question is kind of obvious.
We have to take back the schools.
If we don't take back the schools, then we lose the youth.
If we lose the youth, well, we lose the country.
I also think people don't understand that Trumpism is far, far broader and far, far deeper than the Republican Party.
There are people who voted for Donald Trump, who voted for Jimmy Carter and voted for Barack Obama.
The appeal of the MAGA movement, the America First Movement, far more, far broader than the Republican Party.
And now when you add to it what I call the common sense Democrats like Robert F. Kennedy Jr., like Tulsi Gabbard, who's now a former Democrat, like Rod Blagojevich, like the mayor of Dallas, for example, you have a realignment very similar to the realignment that was fashioned by Richard Nixon in 1968, in which white Southern conservatives,
working-class blue-collar Catholics in the Northeast combined with traditional Republicans in the country to form a new majority.
That coalition may have been frozen temporarily by Watergate, but by 1979 it was flowing again.
It elected Ronald Reagan.
It is fundamentally the same coalition that would go on to elect Donald J. Trump.
If you're just tuning in, folks, we're talking to Chris Ruffo.
He is a prominent American writer, filmmaker, and conservative activist.
He's an amazingly good writer.
And I'm fanboying here, but I love his piece, Bring On the Counter Revolution.
Don't go away, because we'll be right back with more of Chris Ruffo.
the stone zone on the red apple podcast network the stone zone entertaining and informative on the red apple podcast network uh
If you're just tuning in, first of all, I'm happy to share the good news of my wife's recovery and her rebound and the fact that she's headed back to robust health after a horrific health scare.
But we're talking to Chris Ruffo, American writer, filmmaker, and conservative activist.
He's an amazing writer.
Chris, I ask this question of virtually every guest.
If you had to give one piece of advice to Donald J. Trump, who, by the way, does ask a lot of people for advice.
In the end, he makes the decisions, but he works the phones hard for advice.
If you had to give him one piece of advice, what would it be?
The president should hold the line with the Ivy League universities, and I think that he needs to actually follow through on his promise to defund at least one of them so he can make a dramatic example of what happens if these universities don't comply with American civil rights law.
And we can watch in dramatic and spectacular form one of these universities implode, which I think will accomplish his broader goal of reforming the universities as a whole.
It's interesting.
I see recently that Harvard has hired Brian Ballard and company as lobbyists in their dealings with the Trump administration.
I think he's on exactly the right course with these universities.
I agree with your advice.
Chris, tell people where they can follow you on social media.
Sure.
You can follow me on Twitter at RioChrisRuffo.
You can visit my Substack at ChristopherRuffo.com and I'll be really tackling some of these issues related to higher education in the coming weeks and months.
Post recently on the fact that you learned that Princeton University was violating the Civil Rights Act to discriminate against whites, Jews, and males.
It's a great piece.
You want to check that out on Chris's social media platform.
I'd hope to have time to get to it, but I appreciate this lively conversation.
And I want to invite you to come back again when we have a bit more time.
Again, my thanks to Chris Ruffo, our guest.
Yes, this weekend, I am going to make my famous Sunday gravy, one-third beef, one-third pork, one-third veal, San Marzano tomatoes, one can of tomato paste, all the appropriate spices, garlic, onions, parsley, and of course, lots of oregano.
Cooks for five and a half hours.
On Monday, it'll still be some left, but Sunday, maron.
Sunday Gravy Secrets00:01:51
I also want to thank everybody out there listening to the Stone Zone.
It has been a tumultuous week in the Stone family, as I told you earlier.
And we are grateful for your listening and very grateful for your prayers.
Until we meet again, God bless you and Godspeed.
Thanks for listening to the Stone Zone with Roger Stone.
You can hear The Stone Zone with Roger Stone weeknights at 8 on 77 WABC.
If you like the podcast, share it with your friends and listen anytime at WABCRadio.com and download the WABC Radio app.
Hit that subscribe button on all major podcast platforms.
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Rural Americans deserve access to the best of what our nation has to offer, especially health care.
Across every state and every community, America's rural hospitals are the first line of defense, protecting our families, neighbors, and loved ones.
No matter where you live, hospital care doesn't clock out.
They're there 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year.
Each year, America's over 5,000 hospitals care for millions of patients, providing 24-7 emergency care, delivering babies, cancer treatments, and other life-saving care that patients rely on.
Behind every one of those patients are doctors, nurses, and caregivers working tirelessly to keep people healthy and safe.
Hospitals are our community's lifelines.
They employ our neighbors and keep our families healthy.
But now, some in Congress are threatening access to care.
Tell Congress, protect patient care to keep America strong.