Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, it's Michael.
Speaker 2 (00:00):
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Speaker 3 (00:21):
On two three, starting your morning off right. A new
way of talk, a new way of understanding because we're
in the streets.
Speaker 1 (00:32):
This is your.
Speaker 3 (00:34):
Morning show with Michael o'deil chorno.
Speaker 2 (00:37):
Well, you know what we always say. We can't control
whether or not you have a good day. We can
control starting your morning off right. Thanks for making us
a part of your morning routine. This is your morning show.
I'm Michael del Jornal, Honored to serve you. Jeffrey serving
us all up with sound REDS keeping an eye on
the content DZ coming up in mere moments from now.
If you're just waking up. President Trump says it was
(01:00):
being worked out with Greenland. Everybody freaking out, tariffs for Europe,
NATO falling apart.
Speaker 1 (01:05):
He's gonna invade Greenland.
Speaker 2 (01:07):
Canada's flinching, and he just crafts the deal for the bases,
the mineral rights.
Speaker 1 (01:14):
It's just another art of the deal.
Speaker 2 (01:15):
More on that coming up next half hour with John Decker,
our White House correspondent. The Oversight Committee is advancing a
resolution to hold former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary
of State Hillary Clinton in contempt of Congress. And we
got our silk, We got ourselves up. Polar board tax
expected through the country. Brutally cold temperatures for two thirds
(01:37):
of the country and for about an eleven state area,
a lot of ice and snow which could lead to
power outages and a lot of traffic issues.
Speaker 1 (01:45):
More on that coming up.
Speaker 2 (01:47):
All right, JD vance the New Expecting Dad along with Usha.
The Vice President's headed to Minneapolis today. What's on that agenda.
Our national correspondent Roy O'Neil is following the Vice president
and this story.
Speaker 1 (02:00):
Good morning, Rory. Hey there, Michael.
Speaker 4 (02:02):
Yes, the Vice President will be in Minneapolis today meeting
with some of the ICE agents who've been deployed there
these past few weeks, other community leaders and essentially doubling
down saying, look, we are not changing course here that
Ice is going to continue its operations, even expand them,
as we saw in Maine yesterday with significant ICE action
(02:23):
trying to round up more people who are in the
country illegally. But yeah, the Vice president essentially putting out
the message today that they are undeterred and will continue
this enforcement operation as the President has of course threatened
to use the Insurrection Act.
Speaker 1 (02:39):
But let's see what happens.
Speaker 4 (02:41):
You know, I don't know if you saw that clip
yesterday where mister Bevino actually was throwing some canisters of
chemicals himself in order to bring down some of the
crowds out there.
Speaker 1 (02:51):
Yeah, you know, it's interesting.
Speaker 2 (02:52):
You know, the Greenland's a great example of and we
talked about this at length, and I know you're busy
at doing other stations, but I think history will remember
what Donald Trump has achieved in real time. We remember
how we did it, or the style he did it,
or the words that he did it. The reality is
there is problems in Minneapolis, but ICE has been operating
(03:13):
in many states without that, and so there's a lot
of talk of that, but really the operation continues even
in Minneapolis with ten thousand arrests. I wouldn't think Maine
is a hotbed, but that's where they're headed next. And
I think there's a lot of talk and a lot
of flinching, and you know, but the operations are what
they are, and the same is true for the war
(03:36):
on drugs. We get the announcement that drug overdose deaths
have plummeted twenty percent, and that's twenty percent down from
what had already started plummeting in twenty twenty four. So
these operations continue because these operations are working, especially the
ones that get the main element of crime removed that
was allowed in. But yeah, I don't suspect Maine we're
(03:57):
going to have the problems we had in Minneapolis, do
you think.
Speaker 4 (04:01):
I don't think so. Just the population scale isn't there.
But yeah, I don't think that we'll see the same
kinds of protests we've seen in Minneapolis there in Maine.
Speaker 1 (04:12):
But it's just interesting I think that.
Speaker 4 (04:14):
This really hasn't We haven't seen the foot come off
the gas here in that these demonstrations are still pretty
intense despite some tough weather conditions out there that you know,
these operations are still going in the dead of winter.
Speaker 2 (04:27):
In Minnesota's are pretty remarkable. Well, we got the winter vartech.
Is the winter vortex going to make its way to
central Florida and get.
Speaker 4 (04:35):
You No, it's actually just the opposite. Because of the
way the low pressure system goes, it's pumping up warm
air from the tropics. So we are looking at record
heat of eighty six degrees on Sunday.
Speaker 1 (04:48):
But but but bump, but bump. But I'm showing up
at your door with pots in my hand.
Speaker 2 (04:56):
I'm staying with Rory instead. All right, coming up with
the he's already gone.
Speaker 1 (05:02):
Third hour.
Speaker 2 (05:03):
We'll talk about the winter storm and how it's going
to impact America with Oreo O'Neal.
Speaker 1 (05:06):
Stick around for that, ladies and gentlemen.
Speaker 2 (05:08):
David's then good morning, Boyce joining us from Central Florida.
Speaker 1 (05:14):
There's a lot of things you want to kick around.
Speaker 2 (05:15):
I want to start with what we were talking about
behind your back last hour, which is I think and
I'm wondering if you agree. I think history will remember
what Donald Trump accomplished. It may actually influence how we
grade presidencies. I mean, keep in mind, I have a
clip that probably won't make it in Sounds of the Day,
(05:35):
but it's Brett Bear having a soda strong moment where
Jan Williams is trying to make the case about the
president's approval rating being so low, and then he pulls
up the graphic and says, no, it isn't. With the
exception of one blip for George W. Bush, He's really
where every president is. But I would say two things. One,
it's remarkable what Donald Trump is achieving with only a
(05:56):
forty two percent approval rating, because that's what all presidents
will operate in and he's getting a lot done. Will
history remember the accomplishments minus the style and verbiage that
we kind of major in in real time? Do you
think history is going to be kinder to Donald Trump
than reality?
Speaker 1 (06:15):
Oh? Sorry, that was me. Gosh.
Speaker 5 (06:17):
I hate when I do something wrong. Go ahead, Oh good,
because I probably answered the question correctly. No, I don't
think history's history will be kind to Donald Trump. I
think that Donald Trump has managed to stamp an image
on this process is certainly history will note Donald Trump
and his accomplishments are unavoidable. And I'm talking about the
(06:40):
political accomplishments of first off, achieving the presidency, then losing
the presidency, then reachieving the presidency. Those things are definitely
going to make an impact for generations.
Speaker 2 (06:53):
Let's a time in regard to the story of the
American presidency. Let's do the achievement. He really wasn't independent,
even though he ran as Republican. He had to take
out a free agent. Yeah, he had to take out
nineteen Republicans that nobody thought he could beat any of.
Speaker 5 (07:06):
In that first one minute though, when they all raised
their hands and he didn't, Yeah, that was that.
Speaker 1 (07:10):
It does great.
Speaker 2 (07:11):
All right, Look, I think I'm pretty good at this,
and I think it's pretty obvious for anyone to see
affordability is going to be one of it's really ultimately
Donald Trump. Whether it's you know, never mind all the
things that Joe Biden did to drive up the debt
and drive up inflation, They're going to blame Trump. Never
(07:33):
mind what Joe Biden did to open the spicott through
our poorest borders compared to what Donald Trump did to
secure them and then remove the dangerous elements. It's going
to be ultimately a referendum on Trump in the midterm election.
But I think it's probably going to center around affordability.
And if that's the case, how do how do the
(07:54):
Republicans craft a message on affordability in favor of Trump,
and even harder ultimately their party and what they've done.
Speaker 5 (08:03):
Yeah, I gave up a long time ago trying to
figure out how Republicans do anything. The question you're asking
is exactly the right question. And of course, whenever we're
dealing with a question in regards to the history, philosophy, morality,
you first have to have just define your terms. So
the word of affordability right now is the twenty five
(08:25):
cent gumball machine word that's being used at every grocery
store change in strip mall center in America. But what
we're really talking about is not affordability. I'm talking about envy.
I'm talking about greed. We're really talking about a reverse entitlement.
In other words, if I don't have what you have,
(08:46):
it's not fair, so I should be entitled to it.
This is envy and greed. This is Marxism one oh one.
This goes back to the eighteen hundreds in Marx and Engels.
So the only way to deal with this is to
call it what it really is, which is envy and greed.
Speaker 2 (09:02):
Are the Republicans smart enough to know that and do that?
This is the mic we have right now.
Speaker 5 (09:07):
Well, and it's a question of whether or not they
find some consultants that actually are students that are able
to communicate with them. But this is the problem that
we have right now, and that whether it's Donald Trump
or most of the members of Congress, we have people
in office who are not students.
Speaker 1 (09:22):
Now.
Speaker 5 (09:22):
I don't mean a students in high school or even
junior high school. I'm talking about students of the Declaration,
students of liberty, students of first principles of civil government,
students of the things that really matter in regards to
core reality, in regards to leadership and how we get
along together down here. I mean Michael, our organization, the
(09:43):
American Policy Around Table, spent forty five years so far
trying to bring forth these questions because they actually matter.
Speaker 1 (09:52):
When's the last student? You know?
Speaker 2 (09:54):
I do think people are going to crunch at the
radio if you go back and watch Bill Clinton. That's
why you have so many gotcha moments you can do
with Bill Clinton in a State of the Union address
addressing a legal immigration and it doesn't jibe. He was
a good student. He was a Rhodes scholar. He was
a great student, and he mixed that in. But nobody
(10:16):
did it better than JFK. And nobody did it better
than Ronald Reagan. Nobody's really done it very well since
Well and Clinton was a poser, a great actor.
Speaker 5 (10:27):
Reagan, the actor, actually was a better student. It's kind
of an there's a great irony there, but you are right, JFK. Jack,
while his life was not one I could even keep
up with, he was not afraid to read. But he's
why is he always going to get a dig in?
Speaker 1 (10:41):
Why can't you give me a compliment? I know Jack
is embarrassing, and I'll handle it.
Speaker 5 (10:46):
Go ahead, we kind of go back to it least
twenty years before Seinfeld to be honest about when's the
last time Americans read? They were actually readers, And since
the age of the screen, people don't read now. We
do read on screens. And that's not bad, that's not
a bad idea. But it's still tough to read a book.
It's tough to read history. And I can tell you
(11:06):
there were times when I was involved in doing master's
coursework with doctor Allen, we'd have two computers and a
laptop on a phone going at the same time just
to keep up with the references. So there's a lot
of research that's essential to understand where you are and
where you're go. And if you don't know where you've
come from, you don't know where you're.
Speaker 2 (11:24):
Going, don't You don't know where you're at for sure,
and that'll that'll dictate you don't know where you're going.
Speaker 5 (11:28):
And Trump is not a student. Doesn't make him a
bad president or a bad person.
Speaker 2 (11:33):
It's just not a He's just playing out out of
the deal over and over again in the world's following.
I mean, he this is beautiful. You had Canada flinching
over Greenland.
Speaker 1 (11:41):
Ye, Canada is just right now, so weird, that is okay.
Speaker 5 (11:45):
I understand I be all the angry at Trump you
want to be, but go kind of deal with China?
Speaker 1 (11:51):
What are you thinking? Well?
Speaker 2 (11:52):
Yeah, but and then some of it is just plain
believing these narratives, which are insanity.
Speaker 1 (11:59):
Uh.
Speaker 5 (12:00):
I don't think the people Michael and Europe are fooled
by Trump's act. I think they're taking this short version
because they know they're not going to change him, and
they know they've got to outlast him. And what he's
doing isn't silly. Of course, all of a sudden everybody's going, yeah,
you know we should put tepy artic from the Russians
and the Chinese.
Speaker 1 (12:16):
How about that?
Speaker 2 (12:19):
You brought up something that I would say, and this
is not God's word, which is alive and can ignite
with raima, it can be bred and nourish not just
your soul and eternity, but abundant life on earth. And
enough of my short explanation of the Bible and how
(12:41):
it's different, but short power in that book, I get you, Yeah,
but short of outside of that, the two most impactful
word studies of my life. And I do this all
the time, so and I don't say to impress anybody,
but just so you'll understand why I pick these two.
And then one day I was like, you know, reaction
(13:03):
versus responding, and I made.
Speaker 1 (13:05):
A whole study of it.
Speaker 2 (13:07):
Oh my gosh, David, and how it applied not only
did my faith walk, but to all of us as
human beings. Somebody unprepared reacts, somebody prepared responds the other one.
And believe it or not, I think prior to it,
I would have told you they were the same thing,
(13:28):
envy and jealousy. Jealousy is very different from envy. Jealousy says,
really like your house, wish that was mine. Jealousy says
you got a better car than me. Jealousy says, you know,
I wish my wife was more like your wife. That's jealousy.
Envy is you have something it belongs to me, and
if I can't have it, you can't have it.
Speaker 1 (13:48):
Either.
Speaker 2 (13:49):
One is destructive for all America. Better wake up and
understand the roots of envy with socialism, with history, or
you'll bite and buy it again. Hold that thought, and
let's talk about the difference between jealousy and envy. The
(14:09):
left is selling envy in the name of equality. When
your morning show continues next in COGNI, I am so
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If you're somebody that likes to shop online, but if
(14:55):
clothes don't fit you send them back, you get a
score that says this person's all sending stuff back. How
does that translate to you? When you're online trying to
buy that shirt, it says sold out in your size,
But somebody with a VIP status is buying it right
now in that same size and at a lower price
than you would have paid. And that's why many of
(15:15):
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Speaker 3 (15:58):
This is Your More Show with Michael del Chuno. There's
no question that.
Speaker 2 (16:04):
We're making progress on drug overdoses and cracking down and
winning in the war on drugs. We're going to break
those numbers down for you. There's no question that I
think the Left is showing its hand on where it's
headed narratively to keep you from ever reading the Declaration
of Independence on our two hundred and fiftieth birthday. That's
a document like a cross in the movie Exorcist. They
(16:25):
just don't want to see it and they don't want
you reading it. But David, just to wrap up this segment,
we were talking about the difference between jealousy and envy.
Speaker 1 (16:35):
I want to tie a bow on that.
Speaker 5 (16:37):
Well, and the politics of envy is this For the
last heaven knows how many generations, For at least one
hundred years, with certainly the last fifty years and most
essentially the last twenty five years, we've been teaching identity politics,
which is fundamentally tribalism, and we've divided people based on
socioeconomic standing and status, which is the antithesis of the
Declaration of Independence, on says that all men are created equal,
(17:00):
that they're a doubt by their creator, that they're given
an eternal purpose and a conscience that.
Speaker 1 (17:05):
No one can touch.
Speaker 5 (17:07):
All Right, So the whole premise of America is that
we all start from the same place. Now, once you
start there, yes, it's true, you get slotted in the
environment of the age in which you live, and the
struggle is not equal for everyone.
Speaker 1 (17:23):
We get that.
Speaker 5 (17:24):
But we start with the same value and we end
with the same value because it's given to us by God,
not simply by economics.
Speaker 2 (17:31):
Yeah, and this was introduced by Barack Obama. And that's
Sololensky one oh one. And we're still dealing with it.
Until we ultimately deal with it, it's going to continue
to be a problem.
Speaker 5 (17:45):
Hey there, I'm Kenny Stevens and my morning show is
your Morning Show with Michael Doljna.
Speaker 1 (17:54):
Hey, it's me, Michael.
Speaker 2 (17:55):
You can listen to your morning show live on the
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(18:16):
Sure hope you can join us live and make us
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the podcast. This is the show that belongs to you.
This is your morning show. I'm Michael, honored to serve you.
Jeffrey's got the sound Reds Keeping an eye on the
top stories. President Trump says a deal has been worked out,
or the framework of a deal has been worked out
on Greenland, and it's one that will last forever. Everything
(18:39):
that is being leagud is it has the mineral rights,
it has the land for military security and basis that
the President was wanting all along. So we got everybody
to freak out on tariffs and threats and this and that.
Speaker 1 (18:51):
The art of the deal strikes again.
Speaker 2 (18:53):
ICE's latest operation is now underway in the state of Maine.
Nobody thinks we'll have the craziness that we've had in Minnesota.
We know that Zelensky is going to meet with Trump
at the World Economic Forum. We don't think Putin is
to have any meetings along the Russian Ukrainian warfront and
the House Oversight Committee advancing the resolution to hold Bill
(19:16):
Clinton and former Secretary of State his wife Hillary Clinton,
contempt of Congress.
Speaker 1 (19:20):
And we got that polar vortex expected.
Speaker 2 (19:23):
To bring brutally cold temperatures to two thirds of the
country and that's by Sunday for many states, ice snow,
potential power outages. We're keeping an eye on that. I
did a little coup, if you will. We all know
that sports betting is destroying not only sports, but real lives.
Speaker 1 (19:43):
The question is do we care?
Speaker 2 (19:45):
Because we don't seemingly care because nobody's doing anything to
stop it.
Speaker 1 (19:50):
Is anyone winning?
Speaker 2 (19:51):
Why are both political parties playing along with this? I
know why the networks are. It's the only commercials that
are left. I mean gaming commercials and big farm. If
they both went away, we'd all be well talking to
each other and not enslaved to a screen. We're starting
a two part series with Danny Funt. Danny's a young
(20:13):
journalist who has really taken this issue up. He's out
with a new book called Everybody Loses the Tumultual Tumulch.
I hate that word. To mult us Rise of American
sports gambling. Part one of the two part series is
coming up next hour. Now John Decker spent most of
the day. I know because I saw his seating arrangement
(20:34):
at the Supreme Court, And just as we suspected, it
doesn't look like the Court is going to be inclined
to keep Lisa Cook off the FED board. In other words,
a defeat for President Trump. Good morning, John, Hey, good morning.
Speaker 1 (20:50):
That's right.
Speaker 6 (20:51):
That was my sense yesterday, sitting through more than two
hours of oral arguments Conservative Justices Michael they were not
buying into the arguments being put forward by the Solicitor General,
that's the lawyer for the Trump administration. They do not
want to give essentially unfettered power to President Trump or
(21:12):
any president for that matter, over reserve.
Speaker 2 (21:15):
Any president for that matter, is big, right, do presidency
any more powers?
Speaker 1 (21:19):
Come on? Yeah?
Speaker 6 (21:21):
So they want to maintain the independence of the Fed
to raise and lower interest rates without any undue influence
or pressure coming from the President. And let's face it,
you know, the President would like to replace a number
of FED.
Speaker 1 (21:36):
Governors with his choices.
Speaker 6 (21:38):
And you know, the President has claimed that Lisa Cook,
a current FED governor that he wants to remove, committed
mortgage fraud. She denies that there's been no civil suit
brought against her. In that regard, it's just an allegation,
and so that was also problematic as it relates to
the way the Supreme Court justice.
Speaker 1 (22:00):
Is view this case. And as for ruling on the tariffs,
still don't have it. Still don't have.
Speaker 6 (22:06):
It waiting any day now for that, I'm waiting.
Speaker 1 (22:09):
You're waiting.
Speaker 6 (22:10):
The President, most importantly is waiting because it will really
impact Michael his domestic agenda. A win there will give
certainly a shot in the arm to his domestic agenda.
A loss on this particular issue will be a setback.
It won't mean that the President cannot apply tariffs. In fact,
even if the Supreme Court rules against the President on
(22:31):
his reciprocal tariffs, tariffs on imported aluminum, tariffs on imported skiel,
tariffs on automobiles, they will remain in place because the
President has cited a different authority under the Constitution to
impose those tariffs upon those various countries that do business
with the United States.
Speaker 2 (22:52):
White House Correspondent John Decker joining us from DC. Obviously,
you've covered presidents for thirty years. We all know the
uniqueness of Donald Trump and the Coop Schmid s ofb
Donald Trump, right, he got everybody freaking out over Greenland.
I mean you even had Canada flinching, like we were
going to invade Canada on our way to invade Greenland.
All the talk about threats of tariff, that's all in
(23:14):
the back seat.
Speaker 1 (23:14):
He has the framework for a deal.
Speaker 2 (23:16):
We think it's got the minimal rights and the land
for bases, and it is a I'm.
Speaker 6 (23:21):
Laughing because I'm laughing because a framework for a deal.
No one knows what the President is talking about. NATO,
the Secretary General doesn't know, the Prime Minister of Denmark
doesn't know. No one is aware of what the President
talks about when he speaks about this so called framework
for a deal. I can tell you two things regarding Greenland.
(23:42):
Denmark says it's not for sale and it's not for sale.
And Denmark also says they are not conveying the world's
largest island to the United States, and I believe them
on that front as well. So I don't know what
the President is referring to when he talks about this
framework of a deal as it relates to Greenland.
Speaker 2 (24:00):
My biggest question for you was even yes, I didn't
think to ask the second question, could the President just
be doing more art of the deal and we really
don't have a deal. But even if he had this
deal and it gave him the mineral rights, gave him
the land for bases, how is.
Speaker 1 (24:16):
It any different than the treaty already has It's not.
Speaker 6 (24:19):
That's the thing that is the head scratcher to me.
We've spoken about this many times. A nineteen fifty one
treaty signed between the United States and Denmark gives carte
blanche unfettered access to the United States to establish as
many military bases and military installations on Greenland as the
US wants, and the President could simply cite that authority
(24:40):
to do what he wants to do. But for whatever reason,
the President says that's not good enough. We want to
own Greenland. He says, We're not going to spend all
this money on security for bases that release. Every base
in the world that the US has Okinawa, Germany, you
could go through the list is a base that is
(25:00):
leased in the country in which.
Speaker 1 (25:02):
It is based.
Speaker 2 (25:03):
You can hear more from John Decker. He's got a
podcast every day called The White House Briefing Room. It
comes out not long from now. Nine am Eastern eighth Central.
When you find it, go ahead and make it a preset.
So it's waiting for you every morning the White House
Briefing Room with John Decker. John is always thanks for
joining us. Thank you, Michael. I appreciate it. Bye, appreciate it.
Forty two minutes after the hour, visiting with David Sinati.
(25:24):
Two things we kind of have to dust out. One
the two hundred. I mean, I remember, like yesterday by
Centennial Arlington Heights, Illinois, nineteen seventy six. If there was
a door I could go through, I'd either go to
nineteen sixty or I go to nineteen seventy six. But
we are at the two hundred and fiftieth birthday of
(25:46):
our country, and one side doesn't want you looking at, reading,
or living the intent of the Declaration of Independence, or
focused on the Constitution. And they might even be showing
their hand. You're following an AP story that shows this David,
a little bit about where they may be headed in
their big dollar movement to blind America to our actual intent.
Speaker 1 (26:12):
Yes, a wild.
Speaker 5 (26:12):
Story came out on AP nows all over the country
and it just broke this week. A group of people
fifty big foundations, the ones that you're used to hearing
at the end of national public radio programming, and those
types of folks that jumped together to form a first
year operating budget of two hundred million dollars and a
ten year commitment to make certain that we the people
(26:37):
become be the People.
Speaker 2 (26:40):
This sounds like the back of an NFL helmet, All right,
where we're going with?
Speaker 3 (26:43):
There?
Speaker 1 (26:44):
You go there? It is either that or it's like
the end of a Jim Carrey movie.
Speaker 5 (26:47):
Okay, so we've got be the People assigns us to
aspire to change the perception that the US is hopelessly
divided and the individuals have little power and.
Speaker 1 (26:57):
So on and so forth.
Speaker 5 (26:58):
Okay, well, here's here's the story. The Declaration of Independence
doesn't begin with we the people. That's the Constitution. So
in essence, what's happening is the Declaration of Independence is
such a dangerous document to the people that are involved
in this process, to the understanding of the left.
Speaker 1 (27:15):
They know what a problem the declaration is.
Speaker 2 (27:19):
It's such a problem that they want to change the
subject and move us to the Constitution immediately, and they're
willing to spend two hundred million dollars this year or
the coalition of fifty organizations to change the subject as
fast as possible and then have a ten year budget
which will take us right to the threshold of the
two hundred and fiftyth anniversary of the of the Constitution,
(27:41):
so that they're in a position to have repositioned what
the constitution is.
Speaker 1 (27:44):
What is it they're so afraid of.
Speaker 5 (27:46):
They're afraid of the concepts and the principles of the
Declaration of Independence, and they want to change the subject.
Speaker 2 (27:52):
Well, they have groomed America's you know, remember children are
the vanguard of the future. So when you're talking about
the Soros's dad or son or any of these, I
always remember Audre Sabash when they were trying to indoctrinate
(28:13):
Islam in schools. They know to play for the next generation.
So they have carefully I don't know. I mean, I
can tell you this. By the and I had children
late at forty. By the time I was looking at
my kids textbooks, by the time I was hearing about
what they were doing in class and what subjects they
were taking. It was unrecognizable from my common education experience,
(28:36):
which ended in nineteen eighty two.
Speaker 1 (28:37):
For high school.
Speaker 2 (28:39):
So they have purposely taught revised history. And that's if
they're not taking history and just talking about really socialization
and indoctrination, they're not even doing the subject matter. Even
math sometimes wasn't map. But I got news for you.
They did more than just revise history, abandoned civics. These
(29:02):
are all things that were masured in your generation, my generation,
and in our parents' generation. In fact, in our parents'
generation they would memorize the Declaration of Independence, let alone
never look at it. I mean, so they've done a
lot of work. Now you follow it up with this
key birthday and two hundred million dollars.
Speaker 1 (29:20):
How effective might it be?
Speaker 5 (29:22):
Well, this is the activist answer to a philosophical problem.
Just do something, Just do anything to change the subject.
And the reason the Declaration is such a threat, Michael
to the progressive left is first off, because the progressive
left doesn't like the Constitution either.
Speaker 1 (29:39):
But the Constitution is the practical.
Speaker 5 (29:41):
Working out of a worldview that's manifested in the Declaration.
And because that declaration begins with the American creed is
what Chesterton called it, that all men are created by
a personal creator equal.
Speaker 2 (29:54):
So they don't like the god part, and they say
they don't like the equal parts, right, because they're trying
to create it. Equality is what they think they can.
Speaker 5 (30:02):
Only createactly, and they must disenfranchise you in the process
and make you envious so you can overthrow this concept
of self government because after all, we can't have self
government until everything is fair.
Speaker 2 (30:13):
How different is America in an era of give me
equality or give me death versus give me liberty or
give me death. Wow, I mean there's the return answers.
But seriously, what does it look like?
Speaker 5 (30:26):
Yeah, but it looks like where we are today looks
like hell yeah, yeah, it's it's pretty awful and it
could and he couldn't get worse.
Speaker 2 (30:34):
So it's fascinating. But liberty always came from God, not man.
Their equality comes at the expense of liberty, and there
can be no God. I hope people are getting this.
Our hope was that being two hundred. I mean, you
know those key birthdays. This is gonna sound crazy, You're
gonna ge aggravated with me. But Lyle Lovet did a
simple song called this So Porche, and I'd have to
(30:58):
sit down with Lyle to know what he what he
was thinking. I can tell you we all have this
old porch, a place we go where we reflect on
who we were, where we were, what we were intended
to be, where we're at, and where we're going, and
where we're at and getting to where we're going.
Speaker 1 (31:15):
It's the porch was a reflective thing.
Speaker 2 (31:17):
And he paints pictures of the times, from the anchiladas
to the heat, to the cows. And that's what we
were kind of hoping the two hundred and fiftieth anniversary
would be. And it's funny how it turned into a
big tug of war and a war over who will
own the narrative of two hundred and fifty years.
Speaker 5 (31:35):
Yeah, and the other side knows most media outlets will
not cover this story at all.
Speaker 1 (31:42):
No one will hear about this.
Speaker 5 (31:43):
But let's make a note here on your morning show
for your magnificent listening audience. We called it the day
of They want to change the subject, and they're going
to spend two hundred million dollars this year to try
to get us off.
Speaker 1 (31:57):
The Declaration of independence because they're so frightened by what
it's follow the money. Nothing new there, David, thank you
so much.
Speaker 2 (32:04):
I don't know if we're talking again tomorrow, but if
we talk after the Freezing Vortex. Either way, your contributions
to the show are amazing, all right. Here is our
senior contributive. He's also the CEO of American Policy Roundtable.
Great shows on the Public Square, heard on two hundred
stations on demand whenever you want them at Theepublic Square
dot com. Everyone forgets things now and then. Could be
(32:24):
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Speaker 3 (33:45):
It's your Morning Show with Michael Delchono.
Speaker 2 (33:49):
ICE and its latest operation now underway in the.
Speaker 1 (33:53):
State of may Maine. Sorry Mark Mayfield has more.
Speaker 7 (33:58):
According to Fox News, authorities arrested more than fifty people
on Tuesday, and more arrests were taking place on Wednesday.
ICE Deputy assistant director Patricia Hyde said there are approximately
fourteen hundred targets in Maine and it comes as part
of the Trump administration's broader crackdown against illegal immigrants.
Speaker 1 (34:13):
Portland Mayor Mark Dion.
Speaker 7 (34:15):
Issued a statement opposing the prospect of ice in the area,
and noted that Portland Police does not cooperate with ICE
and they do not participate in enforcing federal immigration law.
Speaker 1 (34:24):
I'm Markneyfield.
Speaker 2 (34:25):
President Trump is catching heat online after he repeatedly called
Greenland Iceland.
Speaker 8 (34:29):
Trump has been trying to seize Greenland for the US
and spoke about the Danish territory during his speech at
the World Economic Forum in Davos. Referring to Greenland, Trump said,
our stock market took the first dip yesterday because of Iceland.
So Iceland's already cost us a lot of money. Iceland
is an island nation east of Greenland and light. Greenland
is a member of NATO. White House Press Secretary Caroline
(34:51):
Levitt denies that Trump misspoke and says he was calling
Greenland a piece of ice. I'm Tammy Trijello.
Speaker 2 (34:56):
The FCC is clearing up questions about talk shows having
plot local candidates as guests.
Speaker 1 (35:01):
Jim Roopaz details.
Speaker 9 (35:03):
The FCC's equal time rule requires a station to provide
equal airtime for all candidates running for the same office.
President Trump's FCC chairman, Brandon Carr previously targeted the view,
questioning whether that show was exempt from the policy. The
agency's Anagomez says the FCC has not adopted any new
regulation to alter news exemption or the equal time format,
(35:24):
and adds that broadcasters should not feel pressured to avoid
critical coverage out of fear of retaliation.
Speaker 1 (35:30):
I'm Jim Roop.
Speaker 2 (35:31):
The upcoming Artemis two mission around the Moon. It's going
to carry some historic artifacts with it. Mark Mayfield's back
to explain.
Speaker 7 (35:38):
NASA says the flank kit aboard the Orion spacecraft will
include a small piece of cloth from the original right flyer,
which made the first powered flight in nineteen oh three.
An American flag that flew on the first and final
Space shott emissions will also make the trip, along with
the flag that was supposed to fly on Apollo eighteen.
Also included in the kit will be an SD card
that holds the millions of names of those who took
(35:58):
part in the Send Your Name to Space campaign. The
launch window for the crude Artemus two test life opens
February sixth.
Speaker 1 (36:05):
I'm Mark Neefield.
Speaker 3 (36:06):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael vnteld Joano