Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, it's me Michael. Your morning show can be heard
on great stations across the country like Talk Radio eleven
ninety and Dallas Fort Worth, Freedom one oh four point
seven and Washington, DC and five point fifty k f
YI and Phoenix, Arizona. We'd love to be a part
of your morning routine or take us along on the
drive to work. But as we always say, better late
than never enjoyed the podcast I'm talking.
Speaker 2 (00:20):
Come on, friends, Mama, quit bothering me.
Speaker 3 (00:26):
Starting your morning off right, A new way of talk,
a new way of understanding.
Speaker 2 (00:32):
Because we're in the statehold. This is your morning show
with michael' deil charm.
Speaker 1 (00:40):
On the air and streaming live on your iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 2 (00:43):
I am Michael del Jarno.
Speaker 1 (00:44):
Jeffer's got the controls Red keeping an eye on the content,
neither or the lick playing password with So if I'd
have given you the clue oh in the movie Judge
Dread in a movie Perfect Storm, you'd have said, Diane Lane,
but I give you her biggest hits, unfaithful secretariat under
(01:04):
the Tuscan sun.
Speaker 2 (01:05):
Blank.
Speaker 1 (01:08):
My wife had to chime in on text, Diane Lane, Yeah,
to which I said, thank you, honey, bring me another diaper?
Speaker 2 (01:14):
All right?
Speaker 1 (01:14):
Eight minutes after the out for just waking up. The
Senate is expected to vote today on confirming Tulsey Gabbard.
I wish they would vote to confirm getting rid of
that white strip of hair or securing one hundred dollarationis
for her. Telsea will be the fourteenth cabinet member to
be confirmed. So far, no one has been rejected in
Trump's nominees. A federal appeals court is rejecting Trump administration's
(01:37):
bid to reinstate a massive funding freeze. Meanwhile, another court
dismissed any notions by CBS or Paramount as moot. Donald
Trump's ten billion dollar lawsuit against CBS moves forward in court.
Dozens of religious groups are suing the Trump administration to
block immigration raids in houses of worship. I like how
(01:59):
they had the Minna nits in there, the Quakers, because
there's so many illegals.
Speaker 2 (02:07):
Hanging out by candlelight.
Speaker 1 (02:09):
Well francis criticizing President Trump's immigration policy. Meanwhile, Donald Trump
promising now to divert all those being removed instead of
Guantanmo Bay were now sending him to Vatican City. We'll
see how that flies and Monty was the giant Schnauzer
that won the Best in Show at the twenty twenty
five Westminster Kennel Club Classic.
Speaker 2 (02:29):
Was that already on?
Speaker 1 (02:30):
I used to watch it every year. There's something I
just stopped watching. I guess fifteen years ago. Yeah, I
think it a rap last night. I used to love
Joe gerre Jola when he was on it, but I
can't tell you why. Yeah, don't do that. A feel
good story of the day is the release of sixty
three year old Mark Fogel, who had been held in
Russia for three and a half years. Promise made, promise
(02:53):
kept by Donald Trump to his ninety five year old mother.
He returned to America last night. It was amazing. I
have all that in the Sounds of the day. John Decker,
he got the red carpet yesterday. I talk you about
the video he sent me. Is Rory here yet?
Speaker 2 (03:07):
By the way? Oh he is?
Speaker 1 (03:09):
Well, you know it helps if you tell me I
decided to do this segment segment Rory standing up.
Speaker 3 (03:14):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (03:15):
Well, I read a story yesterday that I think was
sitting ten hours a day leads to early death, stroke
and heart attacks. I'm gonna stand up when I'm doing
the show. If you do Google map, explain how this works.
Depends on where you're at. It may say Golf of America.
Speaker 4 (03:34):
Right right, and it depends on how far you zoom out,
it will say either both. No, seriously, so if you're
looking at I'm granted my age, I can't see it
if you.
Speaker 2 (03:44):
Zoom too far out, so it's maybe a wash.
Speaker 4 (03:47):
It may say that, but yeah, so it depends on
how far you zoom out, it will say Golf of
Mexico or Golf of America.
Speaker 1 (03:54):
Now, just to be fair, it would have been It's
one letter away from being perfect in moment, why didn't
we just call it half of Americas. I'm not the
guy to ask. No, I know that, but I'm just
saying that. That would be about Boraka. And then, of course
Fort Bragg is now Fort Bragg again.
Speaker 4 (04:12):
Yeah, it slightly different. How so, well, it's not the
same Brag. So they renamed it in honor of a
different guy named Bragg. The original Fort Bragg was named
for a bad Confederate general. This time around, it's named
for Army PFC. Roland Brag, a hero of World War Two.
Speaker 1 (04:31):
And then environmental rules about light bulbs and dishwashers. I
couldn't speak to dishwashers. Mine hasn't a right from lows yet.
It's been five days.
Speaker 4 (04:40):
Go rolling back some of the rules under the Biden administration.
Some of the rules that went back. I think some
go back to the nineteen seventies. As I laughed when
Donald Trump said, these new light bulbs make him look orange,
blame the light bulb. Yeah, that's so they're gonna allow
some of the old Edison style bulbs.
Speaker 2 (04:58):
Again.
Speaker 1 (04:59):
I don't know what it is. I guess it's the
fluorescent the only lights that really bothered me. When I
get in a supermarket, it does something to me. I
don't or a grocery store that light. I wish we
could get to that. This is just a flurry of
things that Donald Trump's am busy doing.
Speaker 4 (05:13):
Yeah, what was the other thing, Oh, the penny and
the plastic straw.
Speaker 1 (05:17):
That was I'm glad you brought up the well, plastic straw.
That that's something we've got way too much plastic. I mean,
that's a real medical issue. Most of it centered around
drinking water. But yeah, there's nothing worse than a paper straw.
But no, the penny. The penny just makes no sense, Rory.
If a penny makes cost well, it makes one sad.
But you're on a roll today. No, but if it
(05:38):
costs just under four cents to make something, make one penny,
it just doesn't make sense. The nickel's even worse. It
costs eleven and a half sense to make a nickel. Yea,
we just need to round off to the tenth, don't
you think why not to fifty? Well, you could round
off to the dollar and get rid of all change,
couldn't you. I mean, they're not inflation the way it
(05:58):
is right now, penny's been How I'll give you my
two cents worth. I never thought about that. If we
get rid of the penny, I don't have to deal
with your smart alectness.
Speaker 2 (06:09):
Anymore, right, I never thought about that.
Speaker 1 (06:13):
When Rory comes back, Miami Beach is on the offense.
Students are not welcome during the upcoming spring break. Rory
will have that story in our third hour. Thanks for
joining us, Rory.
Speaker 2 (06:24):
I don't know what it is.
Speaker 1 (06:25):
I felt awkward standing up. I had to sit back down.
It's okay. I couldn't think the saying you got a
little exercise. Well, don't like I'm completely sedentary. Well, I
mean for three hours you sit there in that slump
like that. I mean it does you good to get
up there because you don't want to wake up and
you know, be like talk radio guy whose body's still
(06:46):
kind of half sick. Chucky Schumer's that way, He's still
kind of in a half sitting position. That's standing all.
We brought up a representative, Anna Paulina Luna, not a
name everybody knows, but it was announced yesterday that she
would lead the House Oversight Subcommittee to more answers on
the assassinations of John F. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy, and
Martin Luther King Jr. As well as I think she's
(07:06):
going to get into Jeffrey Epstein's client list and UFO sightings.
Now remember UFO doesn't necessarily mean aliens in spaceships, but
that's mostly what we think about, and there are many
that believe they exist. We'll find out and Anna Paulina
(07:28):
Luna will lead that investigation. Representative James Comer, Republican from Kentucky,
said that he walked up to the microphone with Luna
crowd to announce the creation of the Task Force on
the Declassification of Government and Federal Secrets. This test, I wonder,
I wonder if this is how this will be.
Speaker 2 (07:46):
Received compared to DOGE.
Speaker 1 (07:48):
DOGE digs into misspending, which I think everybody would be
interested in at least knowing where their money's going, knowing
if it's overspent, knowing if it's fraudulent or being abused,
you would. I just can't think of any reason to
be against that. Well, how about this? Will there be
opposition to this? We we don't need to know. Is
(08:10):
that gonna be the next chance? We don't need to know?
But this task Force is going to be a part
of the House Oversight Committee, led by a very talented
and persistent congresswoman from Florida and a Paulina Luna.
Speaker 2 (08:25):
Luna went on to say.
Speaker 1 (08:29):
The cases that they're going to be looking into the
assassination of JFK RFK doctor Martin Luther King, and we
think with the release of these documents and unredacted documents,
we're going to get more to the bottom line on
all three of those unidentified aerial phenomenon also known as
UAPs that I would think drones could fall under, right
balloons could fall under, though we kind of know where
(08:52):
they're coming from. Unidentified sub merged objects, also known as
USO's Jeffrey Epstein's client list. You could circle that one
that could end up being the biggest doozy if that
starts being revealed.
Speaker 2 (09:10):
Who could be on that list?
Speaker 1 (09:11):
Never mind, who's the rapper everybody's worried about being affiliated with?
Speaker 2 (09:18):
Not Diane Lane, you know, the one with all of.
Speaker 1 (09:22):
The sex I don't don't, I don't jay Z, which
is the one with the sex scandal. Oh jay Z,
indeed jay Z and Diddy. Yeah, this would be hotter
than jay Z and Diddy's list. Hanging out with Jeffrey Epstein.
You've been up to real no good. They're going to
be freaking out over that if their names are on it. Now,
that's kind of like who Delta smelted Delta kind of
(09:42):
a thing. The first people to speak out against that
are probably on the list. This is a big one,
the origins of COVID. She'll lead the investigation into.
Speaker 2 (09:54):
You know.
Speaker 1 (09:54):
One of the things Doge found was the one hundred
and seventy thousand dollars to build an exhibit honoring doctor
Fauci they ought to be decorating a cell for doctor Fauci.
What was his role and gain of function in Wuhan?
How did he mislead the American people, mislead his president
to shut down? The country was filled with mass assumption.
(10:18):
I don't think they're going to even get into that,
but to delve deep into the origins of how this
was all created. What you found in fossil form that
you thought was a good idea through gain of function
to bring back? Was this a biological weapon? What was this?
Did it accidentally leak? Was it leaked on purpose? Did
(10:41):
it have a political motive? Why was China so so
good at protecting its own people and so reckless with
allowing the virus to be spread to other countries? I
would think the world, I would think America. I would
think those who lost loved ones would want to know
the origins of COVID. I think you should know who
(11:02):
killed your president or who allowed your president to be killed.
But come on, let's be real, that's sixty two years ago.
How about COVID just five years ago? That didn't just happen.
Accidents don't just happen. They all have a cause, and
(11:23):
they should all have a consequence, and they should all
have a plan to ensure it never happens again. And finally,
the nine eleven Files. I think over the list one
more time, just for the sake of being dramatic. You're
going to finally understand what happened in the assassination of
John F.
Speaker 2 (11:42):
Kennedy R F. Kennedy, doctor Martin Luther King.
Speaker 1 (11:48):
UAPs USO's Epstein's client list, the origins of COVID, and
the nine to eleven files. Can you think in the
history of the United States a more significant trove of documents,
high profile subcommittee investigation and revelation in this in the
(12:11):
history of this country. Oh, something tells me You're going
to know Anna, Pauline and Luna's name for the rest
of your life. And what this committee reveals is going
to connect a lot of dots.
Speaker 2 (12:27):
So many dots. I'm sitting here wondering if.
Speaker 1 (12:31):
Doge Doge was the opening act compared to the impact of.
Speaker 2 (12:38):
This It's Your Morning Show with Michael del Chno Rowdy.
Speaker 3 (12:44):
From Mount Juliett, Tennessee to de traits that nobody thought
of E ray Vaum's own way to assume best guitarist
I believe Hey.
Speaker 2 (12:52):
Michael Prince should be on the list of best guitarist.
We forgot Prince.
Speaker 4 (12:56):
If you don't believe me, watch the performance that he
did at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame tribute.
Speaker 2 (13:02):
He played while my guitar gently, We've seated the solo.
It's on YouTube. Morne Michael.
Speaker 5 (13:07):
The results of del Jeanna Roulette this morning was three
thirty one a. Within a few minutes, you're reading an
email that I thought was from a fellow sacrament that
had discovered your show. Then I realized it was for me.
Was that a coincidence? I think not. I was supposed
to wake up today, thanks again for our show.
Speaker 1 (13:26):
That or you're having memory issues? You know what I love?
I love that, you know I mean? Mark Fogel, What
a great story. This guy's rotten in prison for three
and a half years. The previous presidency wasn't doing anything
about it. Donald Trump's in the campaign trail. A ninety
five year old mother comes up to me. He doesn't
forget everything he's been busy doing the last fifteen twenty days.
(13:47):
He negotiates this. Now there's a side note to this.
This kind of conversation back and forth in productivity with
Vladimir Putcha give you hope in terms of ending the
Ukrainian Russian War. But here's a guy that's home, draped
in a flag on a snowy evening, greeted by the president.
Speaker 2 (14:05):
This is a great story.
Speaker 1 (14:08):
Then you got this, You know, Anna Paulina Luna, Republican
representative from Florida, She's gonna unveil everything epstein, COVID, jfk
rfk MLK. I mean, this is going to be the
biggest investigative committee hearing revelation in American history. How about
(14:30):
the story we did in the first hour the Democrats.
Sure you lost Hispanic Sure you lost mail Black vote,
Sure you lost Asian vote, Sure you lost the working
class vote. But you so carefully crafted and indoctrinated from
kindergarten through twelfth grade and then at higher education to
music to videos, to movies, to television shows wokeness, and
(14:51):
you lost the youth. I said, one or two, one
or both parties will be gone by the end of
the day. I think we know which one is coming.
All these serious things. But you can go back on
the podcast and listen to it's in the iHeart podcast section,
or to your Morning Show, Michael del jornam. By the way,
when you find it, hit subscribe that way. It's waiting
for you every day. But this is what I love
(15:13):
about the show, all that going on and what's everybody
coming on?
Speaker 2 (15:16):
Who is the greatest guitarist? Now?
Speaker 1 (15:19):
My list had Glenn Campbell on there that I think
a lot of people forget how great he was. Most
people would bring up Jimmie Page, Edi van Halen, maybe
Eric Clapton. You guys, I got this email from Enrique.
Good morning, sir, How can you talk about good guitarists
and not mentioned Stevie Ray? Really enjoy your show. Have
(15:39):
a great day, Enrique. That's two now for Stevie Ray,
Vaughn and Prince. How do we forget Prince steal my guitar?
That was a great performance, but he had so many
in concert, mostly in after parties where he would just
play all night long for a private group of people.
You guys are all over who the greatest guitarist is.
That's why it's your morning show. Hey there, I'm Kenny
(16:02):
Stevens and my morning show is your morning show.
Speaker 2 (16:05):
It's Michael Malgorno.
Speaker 1 (16:13):
Hi, I'm Michael del Jorno and your morning show can
be heard live as it's happening five to eight am
Central and six to nine Eastern. Non great stations like
six point twenty WJDX and Jackson, Mississippi, or Akrons, News
Talk six forty WHLO and Akron, Ohio and News Radio
five seventy WDAK and Columbus, Georgia. We'd love to be
a part of your morning routine. But we're glad you're
(16:34):
here now, enjoyed the podcast.
Speaker 6 (16:36):
Web Morning here in Tennessee, and I just want you
to have a wonderful day.
Speaker 2 (16:42):
Bye. That's my job. It's my job to say, good morning.
Speaker 1 (16:47):
Do you matter? We couldn't be here without you. This
show belongs to you. Gon't make a difference in someone's life,
cherish your own, but you matter in good That's my job.
Speaker 2 (16:59):
But thank you.
Speaker 1 (17:00):
It's nice to hear it back thirty six minutes after
the hour on the East Coast, you got about twenty
four minutes to be to work on time. I'm gonna
save Jeffrey a lot of trouble. I think at this
point we're now just having a side discussion about great guitarists.
That's the whole process. How would we narrow it down
to the greatest. I actually added and nobody else has
(17:21):
brought it up. Don Felder and Joe Walsh from The
Eagles Red added Chuck Berry. I tried to add Chad Atkins,
but you said you had already said it.
Speaker 2 (17:33):
Roy Clark, I brought up BB King.
Speaker 1 (17:35):
Oh, I have a great Roy Clark story, but BB
King probably should be on that list. A lot of
Stevie Ray, Jimmy Page, Eddy Van Hanlin, Eric Clapton, Prince
The winner was Jimmy Hendricks. Is there any others you've
gotten that have kind of chimed in that would because
I think at some point when you get to like
(17:55):
Chuck Barry, now you're just talking about people that were
good guitarists. I mean you brought up the comedian Jim Stafford.
We know for don't lack Spotter's misteak, but he could
actually really play. He just made more money making people laugh. Sure,
but any other names that popped up that we might
have missed to make us go a hour to cover
them all? We had Angus Young from Acy d c Oh.
Speaker 2 (18:18):
Yeah, I mean, seriously, you wouldn't. You wouldn't make a
Casey was the greatest ever.
Speaker 1 (18:23):
I mean Jimmy, Jimmy Page, Jimmy Hendrix, Eddie Van Hamlin.
I think those are the three real names. And Prince
and then there's David Gilmour to Floyd, which one's pain
all right? Now, now seriously, here we go. Now you
know what, Now, now you can expect a lot more
calls everybody.
Speaker 2 (18:41):
I'm not joking from a group of people who can't
define what a woman is.
Speaker 7 (18:48):
That was just complete, as I.
Speaker 1 (18:55):
Like to say, just as impactful as a powerful meme
on social media in a wall of noise, just as
revealing your sounds of the day. Here's one the left
taking the position of obstruction. I mean, suddenly we don't
want to look at any books. Suddenly we want to
(19:17):
protect bureaucrats, We want to protect wasteful spending. It wasn't
always that way, not even for Elizabeth Warren. Here's the
Senator fifteen years ago.
Speaker 7 (19:27):
When that much money disappears, it's usually because somebody broke
some laws somewhere. But if we don't look, if we
don't ask, if we don't uncover it and make it
all public, we'll never find out.
Speaker 1 (19:41):
Fifteen years ago, if we don't look, we don't uncover it.
We don't make it all public, we'll never find out.
Fifteen years later.
Speaker 2 (19:49):
We are here to fight back.
Speaker 1 (19:55):
Elizabeth Warren, All right, loser of the day, here's another
club every who.
Speaker 7 (20:01):
Doesn't want some weird Elon Musk suck up searching through
your personal private.
Speaker 1 (20:07):
It's not about him, It's about what he's finding. They
want to make it about him because they don't want
to say to what are that? I brought this up earlier,
and I want this to be our main point today.
What are they going to do when Anna Paulina Luna
and her committee start giving you the real truth about
(20:29):
who killed JFK, RFK MLK, the real truth about the
origins of COVID, start exploring the real truth about a
lot of this stuff. If they're going crazy like this now,
what are they going to do then? When they start
(20:51):
telling you who is in Jeffrey Epstein's Little Black Book,
Feel Good Story of the Day, hands down this fall
under new Sheriff in Town. We opened the show with
a long conversation. In the Old West, if things got
out of control, you were stolen from daily, you were
beaten daily, you were shot and killed. Lawlessness was chaos,
(21:16):
and then a new sheriff would show up and restore peace,
restore law and order, restore justice. Oh, we can't even
relate to that expression anymore until Donald Trump two point zero.
It's certainly a feel good story. A ninety five year
old mother came to Donald Trump during his campaign and
(21:37):
talked about her son, a teacher, being held in a
Russian prison. Promises made to a ninety five year old mother,
Promises kept on a snowy tarmac. The President of the
United States greeted Mark Fogel home from Russian prison.
Speaker 3 (21:56):
I feel like the luckiest man on earth right now.
And I want you to know that I am not
a hero in this at all, and President Trump, this
is a hero.
Speaker 2 (22:13):
It was.
Speaker 1 (22:15):
It was extremely moving, you know, Donald Trump the first
time was kind of like reality TV meets the presidency,
shock jock meets the presidency. Quite frankly, egomaniac meets the presidency.
There's this guy's difference.
Speaker 2 (22:33):
Is being shot.
Speaker 1 (22:36):
You can't fake what he was doing in the Oval
office with Elon Musk's kid, and you can't fake what
I authentically saw last night with the return of this prisoner.
It kind of boils down to isn't the greatest thing
to know we have a president again, Annie, just we
(22:58):
know who the president is, and we know he's being
the president, and he's doing things at lightning speed. And
in the midst of that, it was a real tender
human moment.
Speaker 2 (23:09):
Thank you all.
Speaker 3 (23:11):
And I love our country and I'm so happy to
be back here.
Speaker 2 (23:17):
And I wish I.
Speaker 3 (23:22):
Could articulate it better.
Speaker 2 (23:24):
You've done beautifully. And he's got a great mother. And
when I show the mother at a rally.
Speaker 8 (23:30):
She said, will you if you win, when you get
my son out? And I promise, she's ninety five years old.
And I said, we'll get him out. And we got
him out pretty quickly.
Speaker 2 (23:40):
She told me that.
Speaker 3 (23:42):
Exact words.
Speaker 1 (23:44):
It was just it was feel good all night. I
really liked this version of Donald Trump. I'll be honest
with you. I'm having a hard time just being objective.
I really am digging this guy a lot. Here's the
difference between the mainstream media NBCCNN, Washington Post, New York Times.
They're all just propaganda, narrative, members of the cabal table.
(24:10):
But something's dying there too. Watches The Morning Show Wife
and ghost tries to go rogue and call this a
constitutional crisis and her own analyst won't even let her
go that far.
Speaker 9 (24:22):
I think we need to be careful with the term
constitutional crisis, because as I define it, that would be
a situation where the Constitution doesn't have an answer and
there is a pressing conflict. The flurry of executive orders
the chaos that I think doesn't get us to crisis.
Yet it is irritating for the courts. It is challenging.
It could lead to a serious problem if, as you said,
(24:45):
they become too congested with dealing with these orders. The
crisis occurs, and we've already talked about it at the
moment when there is a court order and the president
or the administration refuses to follow it because his Historically,
we don't really have a clear answer for what to
do in that situation on the first half of it,
(25:06):
issuing a bunch of executive orders. Not only do we
know that the courts can handle it, they already did
this back in twenty seventeen. This is the same mo
It's different in America.
Speaker 1 (25:16):
It's a different president. But let me cut right to
the chase. Could it be the president is playing chess
and you're still playing checkers. You're just playing the obstruction card,
and that may have played in twenty sixteen, it's not
going to play in twenty twenty four or twenty five.
See the election result and see the first twenty days.
(25:38):
I don't like government by executive order either. There's way
too much worship of the presidency in this country and
it needs to end and our attention needs to return
to the people's house in Congress.
Speaker 2 (25:52):
But what if he's playing chess? And that's part of it,
you see.
Speaker 1 (25:55):
For Donald Trump, all he has to do is keep promises.
And if you block any of these executive orders, he
kept his promise. He tried to do what was right.
That it's up to the American people. They want to
take it further. That it's not a constitutional cris crisis.
When members of Congress do it, well, there's a method
to this madness, even the stuff you challenge in court.
Speaker 10 (26:17):
Billions and billions of dollars in waste, fraud and abuse.
And I think it's very important, and that's one of
the reasons I got elected.
Speaker 2 (26:25):
I say we're going to do that.
Speaker 10 (26:27):
Nobody had any asia it was that bad, that's sick
and that corrupt, and it seems hard to believe that
judges want to try and stop us from looking for corruption,
especially where we found hundreds of millions of dollars worth
much more than.
Speaker 2 (26:41):
That in just a short period of time. I love that.
Speaker 1 (26:44):
Probably all of the consultants and handlers said, Time magazine
just did a picture and a cover with Elon Musk
at the resolute desk in the Oval Office. You don't
want to have a news conference with him and his
son in the Oval Office standing behind your desk. Donald
Trump's response is, probably, that's exactly why.
Speaker 2 (27:06):
I wanted to do it. In the Opal, we talked
about Elon Musk's son.
Speaker 1 (27:13):
Dressed in a beautiful crisp dress, shirt collar open with
a vest, slacks, a London fog overcoat, a very well
dressed eight year old whatever he is, Elon Musk, black jeans,
a T shirt and a hat that contrast was amazing.
(27:34):
The sun getting kind of add and playing on Trump's
desk and Trump keeping an eye on him. That was adorable.
Donald Trump interacting with Little X was adorable. What they
then went on to reveal and why very effective. In fact,
I think I would take this messaging straight to the
Joe Rogan podcast.
Speaker 6 (27:53):
You know, that's crazy things like just crushery examination of
social security. And we've got people in there about one
hundred and fifty years old. Not do you know anyone's
one hundred and fifty?
Speaker 1 (28:03):
I don't know.
Speaker 6 (28:03):
Okay, this should be on the Guests Book, the World records.
They're messing out, so you know that's the case. Where
Like I think they're probably dead, that's my guess, or
they should be very famous. One of the two.
Speaker 2 (28:17):
I think they're probably dead. Meanwhile, the Democrats are outside,
They're still alive. There're still alive. This is the kind
of nonsense. I mean, who would be against this stuff?
What do you love fraud? You love waste?
Speaker 1 (28:34):
I have said for thirty five years of talk radio,
we're not asking the most important questions, no wonder, we're
not getting the most important answers. What is the proper
size and role of government? What is the role and
responsibility of the self governed? This is digging into that
this has nothing compared to Epstein's Black Book or the
(28:54):
origins of COVID or who killed JFK. That's still to come.
You think they're freaking out? Now, why don't we start
revealing all that lack.
Speaker 6 (29:03):
Optional for us to reduce the federal expenses.
Speaker 2 (29:06):
It's essential.
Speaker 6 (29:08):
It's essential for America to remain solvent as a country,
and it's essential for America to have the resources necessary
to provide things to its citizens and not simply be
servicing vast amounts of debt.
Speaker 10 (29:20):
And also, could you mention some of the things that
your team has found, some of the crazy numbers, including
the woman that walked away with about thirty million.
Speaker 3 (29:30):
Right.
Speaker 6 (29:31):
Well, we often we do find it sort of rather
odd that, you know, there are quite a few people,
obviously who have ostensibly a salary of a few hundred
thousand dollars but somehow managed to accrue tens of millions
of dollars in net worth.
Speaker 1 (29:48):
But you guys are just figuring out you're poorer than ever.
But your representatives and your senators and politicians are all
multi millionaires.
Speaker 2 (29:57):
And how did that happen?
Speaker 1 (29:59):
Now you're finding out bureaucrats making two hundred thousand dollars
a massing wealth of thirty million.
Speaker 2 (30:05):
This is your Morning Show with Michael del Chrono.
Speaker 1 (30:10):
Monty the giant Schnauzer has won Best in Show at
the Westminster Kennel Club's twenty twenty five Dog Show and boy,
I got to tell you the red carpet that was
rolled out for John Deck. Was that you filming that
walk that you sent me?
Speaker 11 (30:24):
Yeah, of course I came out with that great idea.
I did that yesterday right here right Jordan's.
Speaker 2 (30:32):
That was like harpet treatment.
Speaker 1 (30:34):
And then you had a chance to sit down with
the Peter Navarro, who is the President's trumb trade advisor,
and you got to talk a lot about the tariffs
and trade.
Speaker 2 (30:42):
Give us the four one one.
Speaker 5 (30:45):
Yeah, that's right.
Speaker 11 (30:45):
So he was traded advisor to President Trump in his
first term in office, and he's traded advisor to President.
Speaker 2 (30:51):
Trump in his second chairman office.
Speaker 11 (30:53):
In fact, one of the few aids when you think
about it, that's return for Donald Trump's second term in
the White House. And I can't think of a more
loyal advisor or stafford to President Trump. After all, Peter
Navarro essentially went to jail, went to prison for Donald Trump,
as you know, because he rebuffed a subpoena from the
January sixth Committee in violation of the law, went to prison,
(31:15):
serve prison time. Still hasn't been pardon, which surprises me.
Maybe that's coming soon, but in any case, he spoke
to me about the tariffs the President Trump has already
imposed and will soon impose upon our trading partners.
Speaker 1 (31:29):
He was one of the economic advisors in the first
Trump campaign, and he happened to be in Nashville and
I had him in studio for an interview. Very intelligent guy,
very intelligent. All right, So we know that the pause.
Where do we stand with a pause with Mexico, in
the pause with Canada? And are they cooperating and doing
(31:52):
enough verifiably to keep that pause in pause? And what
will be the impact of the terrorists from China.
Speaker 11 (32:00):
Yeah, so there is a thirty day pause as it
relates to a majority of products coming from Mexico and Canada.
But the exception, of course, is the new tariffs the
President announced on imported steel and aluminum. Canada exports to
the US seven billion dollars of steel to the United States,
nine billion dollars in aluminum to the United States. So
(32:22):
those costs will be passed along to US manufacturers that
rely on that imported steel and aluminum, and the cost
of that will most certainly be passed.
Speaker 2 (32:31):
Along to consumers.
Speaker 11 (32:32):
There is a pause on other products that come into
the US from Mexico and Canada, namely produce and the
pause is in effect because both Mexico and Canada have
a short President Trump that they will crack down on
the flow of migrants and fence andol coming across the
US Mexico and US Canada border.
Speaker 1 (32:54):
What makes it talking to White House correspondent John Decker,
what makes this also trickies? You never know what's a
process of negotiation versus a certainty and an outcome. But
you know, we know a big part of the housing
problem is we need to build. I live in Nashville,
where there's at least seven to twelve cranes in the
air downtown at any given moment. Take steel to build
(33:18):
a lot of this stuff moving forward. But hopefully through negotiation,
this can all be settled before that. But if it isn't,
expect increase in production cost well.
Speaker 11 (33:28):
The President Trump's trade advisor, Peter navarro I, asked him
the question, you know, a year from now, will we
see an increase in terms of jobs created.
Speaker 2 (33:37):
Here in the US in the steel industry, in the.
Speaker 11 (33:42):
Industry that the services aluminum And he said absolutely, He said,
he said, that's what we saw in twenty eighteen and
He's right, those two industries were certainly helped. But the
big question is do those job gains and those two
particular makeup for the pay offset what may be a
possible increase in inflation that we may see, and in
(34:05):
addition to that a possible decrease in the job growth
rate as well as the economy growth rate here in
the US.
Speaker 1 (34:15):
Great reporting is always and you give us great access
to those in the know. As always, John Decker, White
House Correspondent.
Speaker 2 (34:22):
We're all in this together. This is your morning show
with Michael Nhild Joe