All Episodes

February 3, 2025 36 mins

Investigators have spent the weekend combing through the wreckage of two deadly plane crashes last week. National correspondent Rory O’Neill explains what they have learned.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced retaliatory 25% tariffs on US goods, hours after President Trump’s announcement of steep tariffs on most Canadian goods. WH correspondent Jon Decker looks at what maybe next. 

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, it's me Michael. Your morning show can be heard

(00:01):
live five to eight am Central, six to nine Eastern
and great cities like Jackson, Mississippi, Akron, Ohio, or Columbus, Georgia.
We'd love to be a part of your morning routine
and we're grateful you're here.

Speaker 2 (00:12):
Now.

Speaker 3 (00:13):
Enjoy the podcast.

Speaker 4 (00:14):
Well two three, starting your morning off right. A new
way of talk, a new way of understanding, because we're
in this together.

Speaker 3 (00:26):
This is your.

Speaker 4 (00:27):
Morning show with Michael Odel Trump.

Speaker 5 (00:30):
Seven minutes after the owl. Welcome to Monday, February the third.

Speaker 3 (00:33):
You have our No.

Speaker 5 (00:34):
Twenty twenty five The groundhowk Saw his Shadows? Six more
weeks of winter. Meanwhile, we're in the sixties. Israeli Prime
Minister bb Net Yeaho visiting the White.

Speaker 3 (00:45):
House this week.

Speaker 5 (00:46):
President Trump did enact those tariffs on Canada and Mexico.
All expectations are Canada will retaliate with a tax on
oil or tariff on oil.

Speaker 3 (00:56):
I should say, well, same thing. They're going to meet.

Speaker 5 (00:59):
Donald Trump will meet with both Canadian and Mexican leaders today.
And the Chiefs and Eagles arrived in New Orleans for
Super Bowl fifty nine. The biggest stories heading into the weekend,
and throughout the weekend were both crash sites. Roy O'Neil
are your morning show national correspondent is joining us as investigators.
Spent a very busy weekend and black boxes have been
acquired and information is starting to build.

Speaker 3 (01:20):
Rory, what's the latest.

Speaker 6 (01:23):
Well in the Philadelphia crash, they do have a black box,
but boy, not a whole lot of answers as to
what caused this lear Jet fifty five to nosedive about
two minutes after taking off. It was a plane filled
with six Mexican nationals heading back to Mexico after a
young girl had received extensive medical care.

Speaker 3 (01:43):
They are in Philadelphia.

Speaker 6 (01:44):
Six people on the plane were killed, as well as
one person on the ground. Really, this one's going to
be tough to figure out, so those black boxes are
going to be critical to figuring out why that plane
nosedive the way it did.

Speaker 5 (01:56):
The early working numbers are that they played had achieved
about fifteen hundred feet of altitude, was only in the
air about thirty seconds before nose diving straight to the ground.
There was a lot of speculation looking at the different videos,
one in particular that looked like the plane you couldn't
tell if it was light reflecting or if the plane
was on fire. We do know that they were not

(02:19):
responding to the towers, so there has been some question
about whether or not there was an explosion and were
these pilots incapacitated, and that's what led to the nose dive.
You know, I don't think that'll be on the black box.
I mean you'll get altitude and then you'll get what happened,
and you'll get anything they may have said, right.

Speaker 6 (02:39):
Yes, if that lear jet has a cockpit voice recorder.
But yeah, you're also looking at whether or not there's
a law if there were an explosion, you might be
able to measure a loss of hydraulic pressure and get
some indicator. But when you listen to the video as well,
you can hear it sounds like you can hear the
engines revving up. So it seemed that the pilots were
trying to do something, try to get that plane or

(03:02):
keep that plane up in the air.

Speaker 3 (03:03):
But yeah, again a lot of questions about this. The
only thing hoping I think the more video comes out too.

Speaker 5 (03:08):
Yeah, and by the way, that black box was recovered
eight feet underground.

Speaker 3 (03:12):
That'll give you an idea of the impact, but.

Speaker 5 (03:15):
There was some indications that there was low cloud cover,
which brings in, you know, spatial awareness kind of a
thing where because it does seem like the engines were reving,
the plane was not just speeding up from gravity but
from acceleration as well to all the other Right.

Speaker 6 (03:34):
Now, you also have you pilots who may not be
familiar with that airport as well.

Speaker 3 (03:37):
That could also be a factor in some of this.

Speaker 5 (03:39):
And yeah, as for the other fifty five of the
sixty seven victims' bodies have been recovered, they're gonna they're
starting even as we speak. His sun up is upon
the Potomac to remove wreckage, and there's optimism to get
the remaining twelve bodies.

Speaker 6 (03:54):
Yeah, hopefully obviously sooner the better for the sake of
the family's involved here.

Speaker 3 (03:59):
But yeah, they are.

Speaker 6 (04:00):
Making significant progress and the investigation continues to focus on
the altitude of that helicopter. There were some conflicting data
points the data recorder perhaps suggesting the plane was at
three hundred and twenty five feet, but some radar reading
that showed the helicopter was closer to two hundred.

Speaker 5 (04:16):
So we're trying to square that circle, but the more
accurate would be the plane black box, right, we think so,
But yeah, and then why you know why Yeah again,
and as it turns out, there was a black box
in this black Hawk, So I mean, eventually they were
at the same altitude they hit each other. But yeah,
the the NTSP was, you know, it was a very confusing.

(04:37):
I think it was Saturday night news conference because normally,
you know, you get a preliminary report after a month,
and you get conclusive report after about a year, sometimes longer.
They're trying to be transparent and get immediate information. But yeah,
so the black box shows that the plane was at
three hundred and twenty five give or take twenty five
either way, and then the radar, which is not hasn't
been confirmed yet, showed the helicopter at two hundreds. So

(05:00):
why the disparity And will that disparity when they further
examine the control tower radar and enhance it, and then
when they get the black box in the black Hawk,
what will those numbers be because that was a big point,
That was the big point of the ceiling. Yeah, right,
but in general, I know, we're down to thirty seconds,
but in general, everybody's just kind of looking at this

(05:20):
going of these corridors and only one hundred feet you know,
separating them.

Speaker 3 (05:26):
Is that a good idea?

Speaker 5 (05:27):
I think that will be looked at and NTSB recommendations
and FAA implementation. That's always the battle after the case
with a high profile one like this. We'll see what happens,
all right, Ror he's gonna be back next half hour.
We're gonna or next hour and the third hour rather,
we're gonna talk about what to expect with the tariffs,
and again the big question is and how long will

(05:47):
they be in place? Of all the things I was
looking at. I think it's called not Motorhead anyway. They
it's a husband and wife from Canada to do reviews
of vehicles and they do a questions and coffee segment
from viewers, and I'm telling you it was one of

(06:09):
the best discussions. And you know, unfortunately read and I
have to read a lot of stuff, watch a lot
of stuff, and it was one of the most concise,
on point discussions, and it was coming from a Canadian
perspective and they were not taking Canada side at all
in this, which I thought was very interesting and from

(06:31):
a Canadian perspective, but they walked through there's very few
vehicles that this is going to affect. So the question
had to do with, well, what's this going to do
the used car market? Because if you have these immediate
tariffs and then these already what I think too expensive
for new vehicles become even more expensive, people will turn
to used cars, and then you'll have a shortage and
then used cars will go up. We've lived this before

(06:53):
and they really didn't think it was going to happen
because if you're talking about Mexico and Canada, there's some
Chinese vehicles, and there some vehicles that are manufactured more
in Mexico really than Canada. I think they identified four
or five vehicles that are actually made in Canada and
they're not anything that would be in your top twenty.
So this is going to have very little effect on that. Now,

(07:14):
if Canada responds by tax and crude, and this is.

Speaker 3 (07:21):
Million barrels a day.

Speaker 5 (07:23):
And it's a type of crud that we use for
shipping oil, for aviation fuel and for home heating, that
could have an effect. So it's gonna be a interesting
conversation with Ory when we talk about what could all
of this. I think it's a negotiation. It shouldn't come
to a peeing match like this, but apparently it's going to.

(07:44):
And the real key is how long it lasts, because
the longer it lasts, the more likely it is that
you'll feel it. Now Donald Trump will tell you, sure,
you're going to feel something a little bit, but in
the long run, these countries have taken advantage of us.
Interesting point I wanted to make from the Canadian people
doing the car reviews was the wife Andrea made it

(08:07):
crystal clear this is stuff Canada should be doing anyway,
which I thought was interesting. I was ready for them
to be adversarial and anti Trump for doing something that
could affect jobs in Canada, but the wife was like
really reasonable in defending Donald Trump, saying, look, we got
border issues, and we live in Canada, and we know
we got port issues for both terrorism and for drugs,

(08:30):
and we should be doing this anyway. So I thought
that was very, very interesting. There's a lot of layers
to this, and that's why I always shorten it because
I don't want to go it off on long tangents.
This is a negotiation, and it just got really kind
of ugly and tough warnings didn't get everybody seriously to
the table. So now let's see if tariffs do or

(08:54):
retaliatory fuel tariffs do. The conversations begin today. We know
what the Canadian Prime minister. We're not certain if it's
the Mexican president or not. But that's the very latest
on that, and Roy will be back more than the
third hour on that. We have Sounds of the Day
coming up and your top five stories the day as
well straight ahead in Sounds of the Day. I just

(09:16):
got to do one little, quick, little tease. The big
question has nothing to do with the DNC chair form
that took place. The big question, even over and above
who the next chair is, although it's related, is have
the Democrats learned anything? Have they learned anything from the

(09:39):
meddling with Hillary Clinton over Bernie Sanders, or the meddling
with Joe Biden over Bernie Sanders, or the meddling with
forcing Biden out of the race, putting in Kamala Harris
and going through two and a half billion dollars that
nobody knows where it went, earning anything from the poles

(10:02):
of plenty that we see daily, and the answer from
watching this chair for him, which Jensaki and Simone Sanders,
and you know MSNBC hosted.

Speaker 3 (10:14):
Is no.

Speaker 5 (10:16):
And it's some of the most it looks there are
times Jeffrey watching he couldn't believe it. There were times
that looked like a skit. Like if Saturday Night Live
doesn't do something on Christy Nome, they should all be fired.
I mean, every day she's dressed in a different costume.

(10:38):
If she's in the Border, she's in kevlar. You know,
she's a special Ops Barbie. Now yesterday she's down on
the border on horseback, she's cowgirl Barbie, which is you know,
in her defense, that's how she dresses and goes around
her property in South Dakota. But you know, you would
expect them to do a skit on that. So when
you're watching this entire DNC form, it looks.

Speaker 3 (11:00):
Like a Sarah at Life skit. It's scary and.

Speaker 5 (11:05):
And it's like, you know, like when Sarah Live, you
take something and then you just because there's humor in
an exaggeration, taking something to its most ridiculous degree. But
this had that too. Is this the one right here?

(11:25):
I can't remember if this is it? This is a
show of hands, it's this one right here. This is
what I'm talking about.

Speaker 7 (11:30):
Listen, and we'll begin with the opening statements. Each candidate
will have thirty seconds, and we'll start with doctor Quintessa Hathaway.

Speaker 8 (11:40):
Good evening everyone. It is my desire to be the
nixt DNC chair and I just want to give you
all a little bit of something that's been on my
heart here over the last couple of days.

Speaker 9 (11:53):
You fed on, you fight all, you fighted all on,
you fight all.

Speaker 5 (12:03):
Good Tessicos. He just breaks into song. It was really
kind of bizarre. But we have more coming up in
our Sounds of the day, all right, can't have your
morning show without your voice. This one comes from Bill,
who writes, Hey, Michael, good morning. Would love to have
you at KFYI in Phoenix, Arizona. Keep in mind, though,

(12:25):
from July through September. I don't think you'll like the
one hundred and ten to one hundred.

Speaker 3 (12:29):
And sixty degree temperatures.

Speaker 5 (12:31):
It's not Maine, lol, which is exactly why you've never
seen me at kfy I. Was up for j I've
always I've loved this radio station for a long time,
and I was going to leave Nashville and go work there,
and I was talking with the boss and I said,
you know what I'm apprehensive about is I said, most
people on a sunny day are in a good mood.

(12:52):
A sunny day, I'm in a bad mood. Like I
am made for Seattle or London. I like a nice, cloudy,
you know, misty, rainy, chili day.

Speaker 3 (13:03):
That's me.

Speaker 5 (13:04):
And if it happens like that, I'm in a great mood. Sonny,
hot and humid, I'm miserable.

Speaker 3 (13:10):
Right.

Speaker 5 (13:11):
So I'm explaining this the guy and he goes, well,
here in Phoenix, it's Sonny every single and I think,
I think that's why we couldn't come to an agreement. Yeah,
I don't think I get involved in that kind of
a heat on the talkback line. I think I don't.
I've lost the name now. I think it's Terry and

(13:32):
young Sound, didn't it? Yeah, you get that one. Hi.

Speaker 3 (13:34):
The Mitch that Youngstown was referring to was Mitch Miller.

Speaker 10 (13:38):
Had a showback in the nineteen fifties called sing Along
with Mitch Miller.

Speaker 5 (13:42):
Okay, because he said Mitch McConnell, and I was thinking,
I don't think Mitch was doing country music radio.

Speaker 3 (13:47):
That's a different one. Back in the day. I'm sure
he was doing a lot of scotch and bourbon, but I.

Speaker 5 (13:52):
Don't think he was doing country music all right, So,
can't have your morning show without your voice. Michael D
at iHeartMedia dot com if you want to email Michael D.
D Is and dog d at iHeartMedia dot com. And
of course, if you're listening on the iHeartRadio app, there's
a talkback button. Use it.

Speaker 3 (14:06):
We'll count you down three two to one.

Speaker 5 (14:07):
You can ask your question, make a comment, and you're
instantly at the kitchen table with us and a part
of the show.

Speaker 3 (14:12):
No more waiting outible.

Speaker 4 (14:13):
It's your morning show with Michael del Chino.

Speaker 5 (14:18):
Can't have our show, your show without your voice. To Perry,
we go.

Speaker 11 (14:22):
Hey Michael, Perry again. I'm in quality in automotive supply chain.
We manufacture a lot of components that are shipped to
Canada and Mexico that get built up in larger assemblies
and then come back into this country to be assembled
in automobiles.

Speaker 3 (14:38):
That they claim to be American based. Love you show, brother,
keep it up. Yeah, it's interesting.

Speaker 5 (14:43):
I've been looking at this Buick convision because I'm watching
Buick and Chevy both in reliability flying up. Now again
you have the first three months and then you have
the three year studies. But all indications are that when
we get through the three year study, things like Buick
and Chevy for sure, Ram already has with trucks, are

(15:06):
about to surpass Toyota, Nissan and others that was once
thought unheard of. So they've really improved, and they've really
improved on luxury and technology and styling as well. But
I mean, I'm looking at this vehicle because it seems
to have everything for like twenty five thirty thousand less
than Mercedes or Lexus. And well you go down to

(15:28):
the bottom of the sticker and you see what Perry's
talking about. Blank percent from Canada, blank percent from Mexico,
assembled in Kansas City. Now, how the tariffs play out
in parts versus overall vehicle creation or what's really at
stake here? And it also my main point was how
long this lasts if this is a negotiation. At this

(15:50):
point in the negotiation, things have gotten a little rougher,
and that the tariffs have been imposed on Canada and Mexico.
Now what will the Canadian respond on speed? Most people
believe that Canada's response will be if they want to
keep the Pan match going, will be to impose a

(16:11):
terrify on imported oil. But they think it's about the border.
They think it's more about Mexico and ultimately about China.
So you would hope cooler heads can prevail. Maybe that's
why our top story today is Trump plans to talk
to the Canadian Prime Minister as well as Mexican leadership
after the tariffs SIPN imposed. More that and your sounds
of the day when your morning show continues next.

Speaker 11 (16:34):
Hi, I'm Keith Andrews and Mobile, Alabama, and my morning
show is your Morning show with Michael del Jarno.

Speaker 1 (16:45):
Hey, it's Michael reminding you that your morning show can
be heard live each weekday morning five to eighth Central,
six to nine Eastern in great cities like Nashville, Tennessee
to Below, Mississippi, and Sacramento, California. We'd love to be
a part of your morning routine and take the drive
to work with you. What better late than never. We're
grateful you're here now enjoy the podcast.

Speaker 12 (17:05):
Good morning, This is Shannon calling for Ottawa. You said
that Trump plans to talk to our PM. I think
he should in fact speak with the hopeful incoming PM,
Pierre Paulief, because I don't think any of this would
have happened if we had a real leader before he
became president. This is just going to be worse for

(17:26):
him if he speaks to that air ahead.

Speaker 3 (17:30):
Justin Trudeau.

Speaker 5 (17:32):
It's going to be Trudeau because he while he has
stepped down from the Liberal Party, he is still the
Prime minister. And I agree with you, this wouldn't be happening,
and I think Canada may go Pierre. The election will
be in October, but that's a lot of time between
now in October, so the current prime minister is who
the president plans to talk to. I also got this
from Roger, who writes, it is bothersome that many people

(17:55):
think that getting out of debt as a country can
or should be easy. Taking the easy path generally doesn't
provide good results or meaningful results.

Speaker 3 (18:05):
No pay, no gain.

Speaker 5 (18:07):
We can either start to do the hard things proactively
or wait until we're forced to. I believe the former
is better, well so does Donald Trump. That's why Doge
is there to address the overspending that I think, and
I think in Doge's case that both parties can even
agree on or we even saw with Elizabeth Warren the
ability to agree to free up the money in order

(18:29):
to do her agenda. The problem is they don't realize
what they step into. So if Doge finds hundreds of
hundreds of billions of dollars in waste, and as a
senator you say, yes, that is that's awful, that ways
needs to be addressed. Well why haven't you? Then you

(18:50):
mean you've been wasting that kind of money and it
was okay. So that's going to have a a reaction
and a response in and of itself. But to the
point of the emailer, stuff like Donald Trump is doing
now is a big part of that as well. Maybe

(19:11):
maybe not equal, but it's a big part of it.
And so what Donald Trump is trying to explain to
the American people is, from a national security standpoint, the
porest border to the north and mainly to the south.
From a drug standpoint, that's killing over one hundred thousand
Americans a year. It's coming from the north and from
the South. And these trade deals have simply been unfair

(19:33):
and the money we're sending them to be treated in
this way is unfair. So might you feel something well,
if it has to be enacted and stayed enacted until
they cave, yeah, you may feel it, but it's a
little bit of pain now for a whole lot of
solution later. And I think that's what Roger's trying to say. Now,
the question is can the president do that? I mean,

(19:54):
we're going to visit with Chris Walker next hour. He's
a Republican consultant. Things that kind of you know, I
wouldn't go to you know that Canada as a leader.
They're rejecting. You know, they're going to have a new
leader in October. So there's no real need to focus

(20:17):
too much on Trudeau, unless, of course, you want to
ensure the Canadians get they really need new leadership. Translation,
I'll come right out and say it. Could Donald Trump
be doing a lot of this to ensure Pierre is
the next prime minister. That he's not as interested in
Canada being the fifty first state, so that will give

(20:39):
fodder to the left.

Speaker 3 (20:41):
I told he was a tyrant.

Speaker 5 (20:42):
Now he's trying to invade the Panama Canal, He's trying
to invade.

Speaker 3 (20:48):
Greenland and Canada.

Speaker 5 (20:51):
Or is he just putting the final pieces in motion
to make sure Canada gets a more reasonable prime minister.
I think Sharon can figure it out. I think you
can figure it out. But here's the deal. If America
starts feeling pain again, I think journalism is dead. So
I'm not really worried what CNNMSNBC or the Washington Post

(21:13):
or the New York Times is going to do with
all of this. Is America willing to pay for a
little pain to get to a whole lot of solution
down the road if they understand it? Maybe if they
don't know. So let's look at where the president is starting,
and this will blow you away. This is the approval
ratings for President Trump in January. If I were to

(21:36):
ask you, right off the top, do you think older
people or younger people support Trump more? Jeffer, You're probably
the one that hasn't seen this, But would your guest
be I would probably say that what I've seen are
the younger folks are starting to well, you would be
right for Trump. You would be right, and this has
been a struggle. Now, remember this is key to this

(21:59):
whole discs rush. This was not a red wave, This
was not a Republican victory. This was a Orange wave
Trump victory. This is the view of trump Ism. This
is how much the intelligentsia has lost the youth in
their takeover of K through twelve and higher education for indoctrination,

(22:22):
not education, for socialization, not education.

Speaker 3 (22:25):
Boy, have they failed.

Speaker 5 (22:28):
Now there could be a little bit of this too.
If your teachers have all been liberal, if your parents
have all been liberal, if Hollywood's all been liberal, if
the music world's all been liberal. Guess what that leaves
for rebellious people to be conservative. Oh you want to

(22:51):
say we can't have sex before marriage, walk into the
decade of free love. Oh you want to say I
can be any gender and I can have sex with
anybody I want. Welcome to celibacy. Because this is a
natural rebellion. I found this fascinating. Forty six percent of
eighteen to twenty nine year olds approve of Donald Trump,
thirty eight percent disapprove thirty to thirty nine, Forty seven

(23:14):
percent approve, thirty nine percent disapprove forty to forty nine,
forty nine percent approve, thirty eight percent disapprove fifty to
fifty nine, fifty two percent approve, thirty four percent disapproved
sixty to sixty nine, Forty nine forty eight. Now it's
a tie seventy plus forty eight percent approved, forty nine

(23:38):
percent disapproved. Now there's two things to point out once
you get over sixty. There's not a whole lot of neutral,
no opinion. There is no lukewarm here, hot or cold.
But on the young end, there's more approval than disapproval
for Donald Trump. That's how January looks, how will February look?

(24:00):
And I believe this is a negotiation. So I don't
think these tariffs are just set and there forever. Apparently
they didn't take Donald Trump at his word. So now
the tariffs are in place, let's see where the conversations
go today. But to Roger's email point, if it causes
a little pain for a little while to get to
a whole lot of solution, is it worth it? And

(24:22):
will the president get credit for that? It's all how
he handles the messaging. And I think he's doing real
well with the young folk. All right, sounds of the day.
We talked about the the DNC chair forum.

Speaker 3 (24:42):
It really was. It was more like a skit.

Speaker 5 (24:45):
So here is the Democrat Party, who, by the way,
has lost the twenty twenty four presidential election, lost the
twenty six presidential election, so two of the last three
and the twenty twenty has been the debt somewhat skeptically,
this one a huge disaster. So they went all in

(25:06):
on law fare, they went all in on demonization, they
went all in on legacy media, and they came up empty.
And the view of the Democrat Party, now remember I'm
the guy that predicted both parties might be gone by
the end of the decade, one for sure, looking like
the Democrats. Why the view of the Democrat Party thirty

(25:27):
one percent favorable, fifty seven percent unfavorable. They have been deaf,
they have been disrespectful. So they have majored in minors
and meddled and it's blown up in their face. So
the question of the day is do they get it?

(25:47):
Are they ready to address it? Well, a good place
to take a temperature would be the DNC chair form
they're picking their next leader. Unfortunately, look more like a
Saturday Night Live skit.

Speaker 7 (25:57):
And will begin with the opening statements. Candidate will have
thirty seconds and we'll start with doctor Quintessa Hathaway.

Speaker 8 (26:06):
Good evening, everyone. It is my desire to be the
next DNC chair, and I just want to give you
all a little bit of something that's been on my
heart here over the last couple of days.

Speaker 5 (26:19):
Now, is this going to be about transparency with fundraising?
Me like, where did the two and a half billion
dollars go? Democrats deserve to know? Is this going to
be about how we meddled over Bernie Sanders with Hillary
Clinton and lost, meddled with Joe Biden and won, but
then meddled with Joe Biden forced him out and lost
with Kamala It's going to be about majoring in minors

(26:41):
global warming and diversity and inclusion and not necessarily on
the economy and the border and secure.

Speaker 3 (26:48):
What is this going to be about? Something heavy on
her heart?

Speaker 5 (26:52):
And she's wanting to be the next chair of the DNC,
So here's what's on her heart.

Speaker 9 (26:58):
You fight up on, you fed all, you fired all,
You fired all when your government is doing you roll,
You fed on w you fired all.

Speaker 3 (27:18):
As the sign language, ladies got you go do the
worlds of.

Speaker 5 (27:27):
Body can go for? And then there was this show
of hands. Now, remember the question is has the Democrat
Party learned anything?

Speaker 3 (27:39):
Show of hands?

Speaker 7 (27:41):
How many of you believe that racism and misogyny played
a role in Vice President Harris's defeating.

Speaker 5 (27:49):
Every single hand on the podium, on the stage, every
single hand in the audience, along with giggles. They think
they lost because Kamala Harris was a woman, India, Indian
and bahamand would what would that have been? Sixteen percent black?

(28:13):
They still think it's racism, nothing to do with the border,
nothing to do with DEI and going too far with
craziness and gender, nothing to do with the economy.

Speaker 3 (28:24):
You know, if you scroll down.

Speaker 5 (28:29):
And read the comments, how enlightening it is, including one
who posted a video of James Carvell and James Carvell's
is going on and on about where'd the two and
a half billion dollars go? That's what everybody needs to know.
This is a joke. And by the way, for all
their talk of diversity, which is what they still think
this is all about.

Speaker 3 (28:50):
In the end, read who did they finally give the
chair to an old white guy? Was even after this
little speech?

Speaker 10 (29:01):
Again, this is what we have to do for this
vice chair race. We have to elect one male, one female,
and one person of any gender. To ensure our process
accounts for male, female, and non binary candidates, we conferred
with our RBC co Chair, our LGBT Caucus co Chair,
and others to ensure that the process is inclusive and

(29:24):
meets the gender balance requirements in our rules. To do this,
our process will be slightly different than the one outline
to you earlier this week. I hope you will see
that in practice it is simple and transparent. The order
of balancing is designed to ensure equal access to the ballot,
regardless of gender identity.

Speaker 3 (29:43):
To it. There's them there, her, y, she, his z.
They them the old white guys.

Speaker 2 (29:51):
And you.

Speaker 3 (29:55):
Inspire to stop it.

Speaker 10 (30:01):
No, no, it is the motto keep come, come along.

Speaker 5 (30:08):
And that your sounds of the day you went into
the new year, probably saying that you wanted to prioritize safety.
That should always be a priority. I'm a gun owner,
but I've added the Berner launcher to my safety plan
and I'm so glad I did. Why do I love it?

Speaker 3 (30:26):
Well?

Speaker 5 (30:27):
One, it incapacitates an attacker up to forty minutes with
a range of up to sixty feet. But I don't
have to make that split second decision to take a life,
a split second decision I'll live with the rest of
my life and maybe even have to defend in a
court of law. It's legal in all fifty states. No permits,

(30:48):
no background checks needed. The Burner launcher has a powerful
to turn like tear gas or kinetic rounds, with a
range of sixty feet. One shot incapacitates an attacker for
up to forty minutes. With the Burner, you save two lives.
Over five hundred government agencies, police departments, and private security
firms trust Burner. I trust Burner. You should too. With

(31:11):
over fourteen thousand, four and a half star reviews. Check
them out online at Berne dot com, b y r
na b y r Na, Burna dot com slash del
Journal and get ten percent off your purchase. That's Burne
dot com slash del Jornal.

Speaker 3 (31:28):
This is your morning show with Michael del Chono.

Speaker 5 (31:32):
President Trump's going to speak to Canadian and Mexican leaders
this morning. As you know, Saturday, the twenty five percent
tariff went in to effect for Canada and Mexico. Today
the leaders will talk. I think the retaliation from Canada
and Trudeau is going to be a tax on crude,
a tariff on crude imported into the United States. But

(31:53):
let's see what our White House correspondent John Decker thinks,
good morning, John.

Speaker 3 (32:00):
Arding Tom Michael.

Speaker 2 (32:00):
Actually, the tariff's going to affect tomorrow.

Speaker 3 (32:02):
They were announced over the weekend.

Speaker 13 (32:04):
And as far as what retaliatory terariffs are going to
be imposed upon American goods, everything, every good that's manufactured
in America that will go over to the border that
Canada will be tariffed in the same manner that every
Canadian good that comes over the border into the United
States will face a US tariff.

Speaker 3 (32:26):
So there's several things I want to bounce off you.

Speaker 5 (32:27):
One, we had one caller from from Ottawa who called
in and said, you really shouldn't be talking to Trudeau.
We should be talking to Pierre and that's who's going
to get elected in October. Well, Trudeau is no longer
the leader of the Liberal Party, but he is still
the prime minister.

Speaker 3 (32:40):
He's still the one to talk to.

Speaker 5 (32:42):
So this is kind of a little negotiation and you
know what match going on. The question is how long
will it last, because that's how it will impact the
economy and the cost of things. Or is this an
ongoing negotiation and will cooler heads prevail from here?

Speaker 3 (32:57):
How do we see this playing out?

Speaker 2 (33:00):
I don't know What the endgame is for President Trump,
is it to force Canada.

Speaker 13 (33:04):
And Mexico to reopen the USMCA. That's the trade agreement
that was agreed to in Donald Trump's first term in
office that replaced the North American Free Trade Agreement. Maybe
that's his endgame.

Speaker 2 (33:17):
But you know, as far as how long these tariffs
will remain in effect.

Speaker 3 (33:21):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (33:22):
I mean, they're just.

Speaker 13 (33:23):
Going into effect tomorrow, and it's going to impact just
about everything that we purchase on a daily basis, whether
you're talking about produce forty of our produce comes from
Mexico or Canada, whether you're talking about electronics coming from China,
whether you're talking about auto parts, whether you're talking about

(33:43):
anything that involves electronics pretty much coming from China. It's
going to impact our daily lives.

Speaker 5 (33:50):
So we went over the numbers and it was surprising.
The younger someone is, the more a higher approval rating
President Trump gets, the older, the more it gets. Even
that was January, now February. If America's got to pay
a little and hurt a little to ultimately arrive somewhere
that the President believes is an ultimate solution, how much
are they willing to pay and suffer that time will

(34:11):
tell right, Well.

Speaker 2 (34:14):
That's right, you know. I speak to lots.

Speaker 13 (34:16):
Of people, and they understand the fact that those tariffs
are not going to be eaten by any company that's
in it for profit. They're going to be passed along
to consumers. And so people understand that concept. That's the
reason why they I mean, the people that I speak to,
it's anecdotal, but they're.

Speaker 2 (34:33):
All around the country. They're saying, this is not the.

Speaker 13 (34:35):
Way to do with a deal with a trade imbalance
that may exist between the US and Mexico, US and Canada,
US and China, or for that matter, potentially the US
and the European Union, where we also have a trade
and balance. The way to do it is to sell
more American products, to sow that we make the best
products in the world, better than anybody else in any
other part of the world. That's the way to lower

(34:56):
a trade imbalance.

Speaker 5 (34:57):
And different sectors will have different vantages and disadvantages. The
AUTO is often brought up as a scare tactic. I
don't know that that's as devastating for the US as
people think, but there are some you will feel, and
you'll feel immediately and if and if Canada comes with
a tarrify on crude, that would be significantly felt.

Speaker 3 (35:17):
And that is neat well, that's right.

Speaker 13 (35:19):
You know, refineries in the Northern States, they are structured
in such a way to handle Canadian crude oil, to
refine that so that you can, you know, put that
crude oil ultimately in your car as gasoline.

Speaker 3 (35:34):
And you know, where do you get you know, that oil.

Speaker 13 (35:38):
How do you restructure your refineries to deal with perhaps
oil coming from other parts of the world. That's a
difficult concept. I mean, there's no doubt about it that
you will see the price of gasoline go up, which
means to an increase.

Speaker 2 (35:50):
In prices of food. So that's something that we'll have
to contend.

Speaker 3 (35:54):
With in the near term.

Speaker 5 (35:55):
John Decker, White House Correspondent, Thanks for joining us.

Speaker 3 (35:58):
We're all in this together. This is your morning show
with Michael Del Jorno.
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

I’m Jay Shetty host of On Purpose the worlds #1 Mental Health podcast and I’m so grateful you found us. I started this podcast 5 years ago to invite you into conversations and workshops that are designed to help make you happier, healthier and more healed. I believe that when you (yes you) feel seen, heard and understood you’re able to deal with relationship struggles, work challenges and life’s ups and downs with more ease and grace. I interview experts, celebrities, thought leaders and athletes so that we can grow our mindset, build better habits and uncover a side of them we’ve never seen before. New episodes every Monday and Friday. Your support means the world to me and I don’t take it for granted — click the follow button and leave a review to help us spread the love with On Purpose. I can’t wait for you to listen to your first or 500th episode!

The Breakfast Club

The Breakfast Club

The World's Most Dangerous Morning Show, The Breakfast Club, With DJ Envy And Charlamagne Tha God!

The Joe Rogan Experience

The Joe Rogan Experience

The official podcast of comedian Joe Rogan.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.