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March 4, 2026 34 mins

Senior Contributor David Zanotti joins us with how the Dems all going to anti-Ice and anti-Israel will impact the midterms, especially the early primaries?

National Correspondent RORY O’NEILL will have the latest update on Iran and the Middle East. 

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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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 KFYI 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. Enjoy the
podcast two.

Speaker 2 (00:20):
Three, starting your morning off right. A new way of talk,
a new way of understanding.

Speaker 1 (00:27):
Because we're in this together.

Speaker 2 (00:31):
This is your morning show with Michael Dell Charna.

Speaker 1 (00:35):
Good morning.

Speaker 3 (00:36):
It seems that Fetterman is one who actually reads things
before making decisions on things. If only there were more
of them in Congress and the Senate, we could really
be a great nation.

Speaker 1 (00:51):
Good morning, Michael. Poundcakes. I'm so delicious right now. But
my doctor told me don't eat anything fatty. And I
said to him, do you mean don't need anything like cake?
And he said, no, don't eat anything fatty? Is that Mary?
My Mary's not fat? Let me tell you something. You're
surrounded by Italians. Mary. I'll send Luca Brozi Sanadi del Giorno.

(01:13):
Somebody go take this doctor out talking to you that way?
Doesn't a moist pound whence I can't even remember the
last time I had a pound cake? And get the
boys together. We'll get the boys together. Nobody insults Mary,
talk about Mary. Hi, Michael, it's whack a moola. Well,
we were saying whack a mole with all the mulas,
trying to find a successor to the itel. It's true,

(01:35):
wackamula is all we need to really say instead of
whack a mole. That was Joe and Akron Roy. I
can't repeat the meme that you sent the Iranian War Department,
but yes, they are connecting people one way or another.
I did have this one, Howard said Michael. I was
restocking the salad bar at the hottest night club near Youngstown,

(02:00):
smugglers In. DZ's here, DZ. You've ever been to smugglers
In in Youngstown? Heard of it?

Speaker 4 (02:05):
Haven't been there. I go way back with Youngstown. I'll
go back to the days of the Coconut Grove.

Speaker 1 (02:10):
So how is there a salad bar at a nightclub
near smugglers In? Anyway? Said makes its own rules what
it is. So he's stocking the salad bar when Ray
boom Boom me and Seene. He walks over to him
with a disappointed look on his face and sadly said,
referring to the beautiful girls around him, they're all looking

(02:31):
for the same thing. It took him a long time
to find a good wife. Ray Boom Boom Manscini's birthday
is today. Was a great fighter. That's from Youngstown. My
or ring has notified me that everyone should be very
gentle with me today. According to my aura ring, what
do I do with the wording of it? It closed?

(02:53):
It seems that you didn't sleep that well last night,
and your heart rate is higher than usual. Your body
and mind may not be up to peak performance today.
It's important to calm down and rest your mind in
thoughts before bedtime. Like life ever gives me a chance
to do that. It's just like do you just scream
at your ring. I don't understand that. Well, it knew

(03:15):
we were at the emergency room all night. Nothing gets
by this ring. I don't understand how this work. I'm
beginning to think that this ring is really intelligence. That's
why it knows every thought I'm having. All right, we
did get started on the midterm elections, and I don't
want to just talk nonsense. We've got a wonderful opportunity.
David and his team have been in the policy business

(03:36):
and the voting business for the better part of half
a century. Ievoters dot com American Policy Roundtable. He hosts
the Public Score on two hundred stations. So we get
this first glimpse of the midterms with North Carolina, Arkansas,
and Texas, and in it some threads to pull on.
Dan Crenshaw shows you that when the President says I

(03:56):
will primary you, he means it, and you cannot serve
any state you are not safe standing against the president
of the Republican Party. At Dan Crenshaw learned that lesson
al Green Lassine on the State of the Union Night,
acting like a moron, he finds himself in a runoff.
And for Jasmine Crockett, she is out. She is in
the dustbend of history. She goes Stacy Abrams, not AOC

(04:21):
but very early. And some of these are obvious threads.
It's hard to really find some patterns that we would
exegete and say this is a glimpse of what is
to come.

Speaker 4 (04:32):
Yeah, that's good analysis, Michael. And when you introduce us,
thank you you're always very kind. What I would like
to say is that the difference between most of the
talking heads that we hear in media and what we're
trying to accomplish, and we're not the only ones, is
that we spend our time on the ground in elections.
In other words, we've been on the street collecting petitions.
We've been on the street, we've been the voting booths,

(04:55):
we've been in the back rooms of the consultants. Well,
we do all of this stuff from the ground up,
so it's a different perspective. And because of that, there's
a compelling need to be honest. And that's that this
particular primary season, this off off election year, is very
problematic in the American system. It is very difficult to

(05:19):
get a summary statement because this is so splintered. You've
got half a dozen states where elections are in play
that could could change the Senate, a half a dozen
states where House races are in play that can change
the House. Nobody knows who the candidates are even going
to be yet yet the primary elections have already started
to sort that out, and most Americans are thinking the

(05:39):
elections in November.

Speaker 1 (05:41):
So let me give you a summary statement in the
New York Times today. I was just going to say,
because by November, when you go to the polls, the
dinner's already been determined. Yeah, you may get a choice
for dessert. It's okay.

Speaker 4 (05:55):
New York Times this morning on the talking about the
election in Texas. On the Republublican side, National Party leaders
bought a May runoff election for Senator John Cornyn of
Texas for the price of at least seventy million. Now
they made that sentence again, repeat. On the Republican side,
National Party leaders bought a May runoff election or Senator

(06:16):
John Cordyon of Texas for the price of at least
seventy million. You know, I remember you making statements like
that and getting fired. How dare you say the elections
bought and paid for? Okay, I mean I can I
can remember people trying to tell you that you can't

(06:39):
say stuff like that.

Speaker 1 (06:40):
It's in the New York Times, you know, it's beautiful.
Though I don't remember any of that anymore. It's as
though it never happened. Ah No, but I think you know,
by and large, excuse, let me restate that I can
remember you making statements like that and being threatened to
be fired better. Thank god states are so far behind me.

(07:01):
But yeah, no, we know bias exists. I want to
go back to what I thought was more interesting, though,
is where you were headed, and that is everybody is
kind of taking an old school approach to this. I'll
give you the oldest of old school. You run to
your base in the primary, you come back to the
center in a general. That doesn't happen anymore. In fact,

(07:21):
you left off the redistricting impact on this as well.
Or how about districts that center around cities. In other words,
a Jasmine Crockett and a leftist, socialist hater of America,
obsessively hateful of the president. You can pull that off
in a blue inner city. But now you're in a

(07:42):
state wide race in the state of Texas. It's not
even how bad would she have done in the general
if she got taken out like this in a primary?
I mean making the point is it's more geographic than anything, now,
isn't it.

Speaker 4 (07:55):
Well, let me go back to the New York Times statement,
what National Party leaders? Yeah, okay, that comment right there.
It's not even biased, it's just absurd, illogical laziness. What
national first, state and federal election laws prohibit anyone from
giving seventy million dollars, any cabal from giving seventy million dollars.

Speaker 1 (08:15):
I don't doubt that seventy million dollars was spent.

Speaker 4 (08:18):
But let's go ahead and break down the reality and
say it's not some conglomerate group of high hat people
sitting behind a curtain. That there is an organized network
of people that are manipulating this election right now and
voters haven't got a clue who they are or what
their intentions are.

Speaker 1 (08:37):
Now let's do let's just too quick reaction Jasmine Crockett.
First of all, there is a Jasmine Crockett that can
speak in a normal voice and could have been a
potential superstar. She chose to play the theatrical political role
of the next AOC. Now AOC will be the next

(08:58):
Bernie Sanders, and that's and I think she'll be in
the early lead for the Democratic nomination for President of
the United States. The problem is they don't have her
replacement now in the House. They redistricted that she ran
percented and now she's gone set a significant blow to
the extreme left.

Speaker 4 (09:16):
Well that entire First off, your analysis again not trying
to be patronizing. Your analysis is ahead of the curve.
But the difference between the question of the presidential election
and what's happening in twenty twenty six on the ground
in these states is like the difference between me and
Tom Brady playing quarterback.

Speaker 1 (09:36):
It is so vastly different. So we talk about Crockett.

Speaker 4 (09:42):
The crocket contention was that she was a part of
a reality that's going to turn Texas blue. All right,
Texas is going to turn blue right after New Jersey
turns red.

Speaker 5 (09:53):
No, actually, New Jersey could turn red, Texas can't turn blue. Yeah,
maybe or or yeah. So this is and what do
we mean even by red and blue?

Speaker 4 (10:04):
Which I'm about a presidential race, But again, we've got
to get to apples and apples.

Speaker 1 (10:08):
So Crockett was a.

Speaker 4 (10:12):
It was taken out because she's too far ahead of
Texas going blue, right, And so they put an Italian
name in there talking out a Bible versus in Texas
and a Democrat party and he beats Crockett. What is
that all about?

Speaker 1 (10:30):
But it's way too early to say, oh, the left
has gone too far left. Like I can tell you
the one that came in third, How would you like
to be Hmad Hassan as this war has begun, you know,
on the ballot with Crockett and Tall Ricar, I can
tell you why that name is probably problematic and there's
probably not a big Muslim population in that in that

(10:51):
state enough yet to carry something like that. But for
Jasmine Crockett, I mean, she's history and I don't know
what kind of a blow. I don't know who fills
that vacancy of AOC if she should choose presidential over
US Senate and taking out Chucky Schumer. But time will tell.
It just doesn't play at a state level, you can't.

(11:12):
I mean, those are the kind of candidates that have
to be in inner city areas where that kind of
nonsense can play all the way to make enough about that.
What do you make of Dan Crenshaw. I mean, he's
clearly gone for opposing the president and when a president
right now, because I don't even know what the Republican
Party is outside of Donald Trump, and we're all going

(11:32):
to find out in twenty twenty eight. But you can't
stand against the president survive a primary, and he's gone, well,
he even won't be on that. I mean, if you
heard any of his spots.

Speaker 4 (11:42):
I mean, did you hear a spot about how he's
handling anyone who challenges him in regards to getting rich
in congress office? Off of stocks? I mean, he got
into what was Sean Ryan the podcast? I mean, he
look mean? Is not a good look okay. And and
the bottom line was that campaign turned into nothing but
mean and he just not does not have a Trump

(12:06):
or no Trump. Now, let me tell you something about Trump,
though you brought it up, and this is really important.
It's difficult enough for a seated president to run well
in and off off election year through congressional races, et cetera.
The distraction of attention, the requirement of being superhuman. Now
you're conducting a war. The vulnerability of Republicans is they
are all busy doing something that has global significance and

(12:28):
historic import and they could very easily forget that there's
an election that could get away from them in a hurry.

Speaker 1 (12:35):
Yeah, especially when these kinds of elections focus more on
the economy and everyday issues that that that aren't of
national or geographic international perspective. Al Green in a runoff,
he's up against a young person. You know, he's an
incumbent you would. You would think if he had, if
he wasn't vulnerable, he'd do fine in the primary. It's

(12:58):
got to be any Yeah, it's got to advantage to
the opponent, right, getting in the run off.

Speaker 4 (13:03):
Yeah, the story and these stories, I mean, Al Green's
got the courage to stand up and get put put
up signs. He looks like Morgan Friedman in Almighty I
standing there with his signs. Okay, but I mean has
the courage to do it, myers courage. He gets thrown out.
It's like it's like a signature moment.

Speaker 1 (13:18):
We wait for it. Yeah, I because we're on the
State of the Union address.

Speaker 4 (13:21):
But that's that's totally a circumstance of redistricting. And when
you get yourself into a situation where you're being redistricted,
you've got two quality candidates running against each other, a
who knows what's going to happen. That's a redistricting game.
All right, Let's go to North Carolina and Arkansas. North
Carolina looking like it's not up for any kind of

(13:42):
liberal wave anytime soon, but dable it'll have more when
we come back.

Speaker 1 (13:47):
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(14:09):
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(14:31):
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(14:53):
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(15:13):
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(15:34):
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Speaker 2 (15:48):
This is your Morning show with Michael del Chronow.

Speaker 1 (15:53):
Breaking news out of Northern Ohio. Rob Walgate was just
let go from the American Policy Roundtable Public Square and
I voters. I pulled the deal. No, he sent me
your VP just sent me his sleep score of ninety
four last night, two hours and sixteen minutes of IRIM
an hour and thirteen minutes of deep sleep. He's rested.

(16:15):
I want some productivity out of him today.

Speaker 4 (16:18):
For those people that just heard the first part of
that on one of the fastest growing national radio programs
in the world, you have just made my life. You
really have pallims our shop when off. First off, he's
president of the American Policy round Table, got promoted a
year ago to that.

Speaker 1 (16:32):
No, his job is saying, but how dare he brag
his sleep?

Speaker 4 (16:35):
So then I made him and your precious rings, We're
going to get you an aura ring legal In the
midst of all this, and then we started talking about
I was in the emergency room with my mother in law.

Speaker 1 (16:44):
Then I got fitted for Clubs one hundred and fifty
swings earlier in the day, which by the way ended
up cobra irons and ping hybrids. I'm looking forward to
a new level of game that'll be coming up in
April when the clubs arrived. I'll be taking on Davidson
Nanti probably at the season sor right when we come back.
Let's put a rap on North Carolina. This is setting
up to be one of those really big races that

(17:07):
the President may really get involved in. Arkansas very strong
for the Republicans, and then Texas Crenshaw is gone for
bucking the President, and then some and Jasmine Crockett's fifteen
minutes of fame is up in a primary. She is history.
She may even have Stephen Colbert to thank for that.

(17:27):
This is Dan calling from Grie, Pennsylvania. My morning show
is your morning show. Michael del Jorno. Hey, it's Michael.
Your Morning show can be heard live each weekday morning
on great stations like thirteen sixty The Patriot in San Diego,

(17:48):
News Talk one oh six point three and AM eighteen
eighty WMQ oh Claire, Wisconsin and one four nine The
Patriot and Saint Louis, Missouri. Would love to be a
part of your morning routine. But so glad you're here
now in the podcast, it's that Senate race. What did
you make of these two primaries? Well, a little history here.
Tom Tillis is the former Speaker of the House in

(18:09):
North Carolina. In North Carolina, North Carolina is a state that,
if we go on the color scale, purple would be
a fair estimation. But the reason that it's purple is
because so many people are dramatically disaffected with the political parties.
Until you get into the urban core where there is
that Democrat base. And when you say urban core, we're

(18:30):
not talking about black people. We're talking about people that
are living inside city structures who are all kinds of
colors of people. And particularly when you've got a core
in the research triangle of Raleigh and Durham and around
the universities, there is an intelligentsia community inside North Carolina
that is radical leftists. There are urban centers that are

(18:52):
are radical leftists in their in their in their leadership,
not necessarily in the hearts and minds of the people,
but in their leadership, and the money going to flow
from those radical left groups into those pockets, which is
going to keep North Carolina exceptionally competitive. Tom Tillis won
because of about eleven counties where there are a high
percentage of independent voters that lean conservatives.

Speaker 4 (19:14):
So those people came out and voted for Tillis because
he sounded like he was going to be a conservative.
He then governed left and managed to get reelected, but
he never built a popular support base because he couldn't
cross over that threshold. He played to the middle of
the whole time, and he got out because it's hard
to you know, people that walk in the middle of

(19:36):
the road end up being ro killed. And tell politics
you got to pick a side, and he said, well, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no no. You really have to stand for something or
you get run over by everything. And Tillis tried to
play the middle consistently and he got left out of
the process. So now it's a new day and we're
going to see what happens in North Carolina.

Speaker 1 (19:53):
So when we look at Whatley by the way, very
easy win, as well as Roy Cooper, very easy win.
But North Carolina, it's very early to be pulling these
threads and looking for patterns other than the ones that
we stated. You get around universities, you get there's inner
city America, there's university Intelligencia centers, and then there's the

(20:14):
rest of America. We see that in the electoral college
maps and presidential races, and you see it in state
wide senate races. But I think it's we don't see
any trends that would say, Okay, they've gone too far
with socialism or socialism and wokeness are both dead and
it's going to you know, be hurting the This is
a clear sign of a rough a rough day ahead

(20:34):
for the Democrat. We don't see any of that, but
we do see in North Carolina this struggle, this solid purple,
and in Arkansas the solid red, and then Texas. It
really does come down to each individual race.

Speaker 4 (20:49):
Well, when you get into a race like North Carolina, Michael,
which you end up happening is most often you don't
have a race on issues. You have a race on personalities,
and it ends up being one of these endless negative
campaigns of what he did, what he did the other
and you try to just drive the other side underground
in negative advertising because there's really you're trying to win

(21:13):
a statewide election based on something other than the issues.

Speaker 1 (21:16):
We've always talked about the president's role coming up in
this midterm election. He is a king maker, just like
he can and Dan Crenshaw, he can make someone. Do
you suspect North Carolina is a place he's going to
spend a lot of time.

Speaker 4 (21:29):
Well, if he should choose to make North Carolina a
place of a referendum, if you will, that could be
very very interesting, and that would change the dynamic significantly.
In other words, run a national election inside that state.
Then all of his decisions on where the war is
at by the time we get to a general election
will be a very big issue, and where the economy is.

Speaker 1 (21:48):
David Sanadi is the American Policy round Table President or no,
you're the CEOO of American Policy round Table and host
of the Public Square heard on two hundred stations and
our senior contributor. You often talk about it really boils
down to half a dozen to a dozen really key
races that will decide the control of Congress. To find

(22:11):
which ones you think those are, and nothing new I
don't think comes out of yes from.

Speaker 4 (22:15):
The Senate right now, and it's arguable as to what
they would be. We know for certain that Maine and
Ohio and North Carolina are three of the four.

Speaker 1 (22:23):
Question is what the other fourth one will be.

Speaker 4 (22:24):
And that's because the number is so small to flip
in the Senate, and then you probably got a dozen
in the House, and it's hard to say which dozen
it will be because we don't know who the candidates
are going to be at so we don't know what
is going to be close, what isn't going to be close,
and using prior elections to try to prognosticate that's the
district is difficult because there's so much redistricting that's going on,

(22:46):
So we won't get a clear picture on this probably
until the fourth of July, but.

Speaker 1 (22:50):
This early out, if you had to kind of glance,
you would say probably a higher proclivity for the Democrats
to maybe get control of the House than the Senate.

Speaker 4 (23:03):
Yes, the likelihood right now and this is a you know,
big John, worry when we need you. The likelihood is
the split House goes to the Democrats and the Senate
retains in Republican control, which then sets the tone for
twenty twenty eight. And by the way, the consultants and
all the money players, they'd be happy with that.

Speaker 1 (23:22):
Bet oh get that? Yeah, all right, there's the analysis.
Anything else going on that's got your attention? Well, if
we get a chance to talk tomorrow.

Speaker 4 (23:31):
I got to talk with you about this Churchill thing
you've been talking about, because I've been listening for a
couple of days and I want to weigh in on that.

Speaker 1 (23:37):
I thought it was just so spooky that because I'm married.

Speaker 4 (23:41):
Did you watch now? I got to catch up to
see where your head's at on this.

Speaker 1 (23:44):
It was a Netflix documentary on Churchill. I want to
say five or six episodes on Netflix, just absolutely brilliantly done,
and basically it takes all of the real speeches of
Churchill and then puts it chronologically. But you will see
Churchill's childhood rejection from his mother, sent away his father,

(24:10):
the influence of his father who many thought would be
a prime minister and didn't and died young after his
political career crashed, and that chip on the shoulder. But
the similarities between Churchill and Trump were breathtaking, the similarities
between America and the fight at home. We don't need
another endless war. Well, it is an endless war, and

(24:31):
this might end the endless war not actually started, but
the lack of involvement of the US or the call
from the left or the right to abandon Israel. It's
Israel's problem. Back then it was Americans saying, no, this
is great Britain's problem. We bailed them ount World War
to one. We're not going to bail them out world
War two. It's just an absolute fascing. But by the
end of it, you're taken with the similarities, with the

(24:54):
exception of smoking and drinking, between Trump and Churchill. It
begs a question, who's Churchill now? Because you're seeing history
repeat itself with American sentiment, and you come to the
conclusion Donald Trump is Churchill. And then yesterday in the
White House, he's talking about how upset he is and
disappointed he is with Great Britain and how they didn't
cooperate in this operation, and making a jab at the

(25:18):
Prime Minister. He goes, he's no Winston Churchill, and I
was like, one, are the odds did that? I mean,
who on radio is talking about Winston Churchill right now?
I told you he listens to your program forty seven does,
but I didn't know the real one did. But yeah,
it is. It's an amazing documentary. I think it'll blow
you away. What a fascinating Winston Churchill, maybe one of
the most fascinating creatures ever, And for a time such

(25:41):
as that, it was who we.

Speaker 4 (25:43):
Should cast as Churchill in this current dynamic. But I'll
save that for later because there's so many interesting parallels
between another character in this mix.

Speaker 1 (25:54):
In Winston Churchill. I won't tell you till tomorrow. Tomorrow,
would it be? That would be in the Second Tower Tomorrow.
We're also going to a visit with Yale Extin, who's
with the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews tomorrow from Israel,
and we'll catch up with our economist and David Bonson
and see what he thinks all this oil uncertain. He's

(26:15):
going to do the economy as well. We'll do all
that tomorrow, David. Thanks for your time, appreciate it all right.
If you're just waking up real quickly, here are your
top five stories of the day. The US military says
operations in Iran are ahead of schedule. What that means exactly,
maybe Mark Mayfield knows.

Speaker 6 (26:30):
Centcom Commander Admiral Brand Cooper spoke late Tuesday.

Speaker 4 (26:33):
In my overall operational assessment is that we are ahead
of our game plan.

Speaker 6 (26:36):
Cooper also said the US has severely degraded Iran's air
defenses and destroyed hundreds of ballistic missiles, launchers, and drones.
He said what the US unleashed in the first twenty
four hours doubled that of shock and awe during the
war in Iraq. Cooper added that the US is sinking
Iran's navy, taking out seventeen ships and it's only submarine.
He said Iran is launched over five hundred missiles and

(26:57):
two thousand drones. In retaliation a Mark Mayfield.

Speaker 1 (27:00):
I know you're still enjoying your Bill Clinton and Hillary
Clinton clips from their deposition, But Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnik
is volunteering and agreeing to testify before the Oversight Committee
about ties to Jeffrey Epstein. Jim Roupeesmore.

Speaker 7 (27:13):
Committee chair James Comer shared on Next that he looks
forward to the testimony and he commends Lutnik for what
he calls lutinex demonstrated commitments of transparency. Last month during
Senate testimony, Lutnik admitted to visiting Epstein's private island with
his family in twenty twelve, but he has not been.

Speaker 1 (27:29):
Accused of many wrongdoing.

Speaker 7 (27:31):
The Commerce Secretary told Axios that he looks forward to
testifying that he has done nothing wrong, adding he wants
to set the record straight.

Speaker 1 (27:40):
I'm Jim Roop. Oh. We all know how bad, dangerous
and deadly drunk driving is, but what about being stoned
and driving? Tammy Trehillo has details The.

Speaker 8 (27:49):
University's Transportation Institute tracked drivers using cameras and sensors between
twenty twenty one and twenty twenty three. The data collected
indicated the cannabis related trips spike during life times, in
the evenings and on Fridays. It also indicated that participants
sometimes took alternate roots, like rural roads, to compensate for
their substance use. Researchers urged more study, hoping additional data

(28:11):
would lead to a baseline for judging real time cannabis impairment.
I'm Tammy Trichio.

Speaker 1 (28:16):
At no winner. The Mega Millions jack pot is rolling
over again, this time to a half a billion dollars.
Daylight savings time is coming this weekend. Come Sunday, you'll
spend some time setting things right.

Speaker 9 (28:27):
According to YouGov, the average American has five to ten
clocks in their home. At about half will not automatically
reset to the new time. Think kitchen appliances and wall clocks.
After the time changes at two am Sunday, You'll have
to figure out how to do that, And don't forget
the one in your car. If it's older than twenty ten,
it likely won't automatically reset, and you may start your

(28:50):
Monday commute with a fright.

Speaker 1 (28:52):
I'm pre tennis so much fun to look forward to,
all right. In college basketball, balls seventy and fifty nine
over South Carolina Bandy eighty nine eighty six by three overall.
Miss Georgia beat Alabama ninety eight eighty eight, clemes And
lost to North Carolina sixty seven sixty three, and the NBA.
The Caves beat the Pistons thunder up the Bulls. Grizz
lost one seventeen one ten to the Tea Wolves, Suns

(29:13):
beat the Kings and the Lakers one ten, one to
one over the Pels on the ice, Penguins lost two
to one in Boston to the Bruins. Brad's lost three
to two to the Blue Jackets, Sabers won three to
two over the Golden Knights, Lightning lost five to one
to the Wild and the Ducks beat the Abs five
to one. Birthdays Today Ray Boom Boom from Youngstown, Ohio
man Seene eats sixty five Today the middles Patricia Heaton

(29:36):
is sixty eight and from Wings Stephen Webber is sixty five.
If it's your birthday, Happy birthday, I'm so glad you
were born, and thanks for waking up with your morning show.
I'm really glad eighty thousand were born thanks to you.
Last year, Preborn helped rescue over eighty thousand babies isn't
it wonderful to go beyond just a political position or

(29:58):
an opinion, or just saying your pro life and being
pro life and ensuring life. And I think we can
say more this year. Every single day, women are told
the devastating lie abortions are only option, and they're all
alone and there is no hope. But everything changes when
they walk into Preborn Network clinic and they see their

(30:19):
baby on an ultrasound for the first time, fingernails, eyelids,
nose lips, hear their baby's heartbeat, probably for the first time,
they come to the realization this is not a problem
to be solved, this is a life to be protected.
We get a chance to be a part of that
beautiful moment. For twenty eight dollars, you can provide one

(30:43):
life saving ultrasound that will double a baby's chance of
living alone. Obviously, if you do the math, one hundred
and forty would provide five chances of life. Go beyond
an opinion a difference. Don't just choose life support Life

(31:04):
support preborn called pound two fifty and say baby, pound
two fifty and say baby, or give securely online at
preborn dot com, forward slash yms that's Preborn dot com
forward slash yms or pound two fifty and say Baby
sponsored by Preborn.

Speaker 2 (31:21):
It's your Morning Show with Michael del Chorno.

Speaker 1 (31:25):
US military says operations in Iran are ahead of schedule.
The four service members, four of the six who lost
their life in this operation Epic Fury, have been identified
and a grateful nation is forever in their debt, and
the Navy may start escorting oil tankers due to rising
gas prices. Roy O'Neil, our national correspondence here with the

(31:47):
very latest update and all things concerning Iran in the
Middle East. Good morning, Rory, Yeah, good morning.

Speaker 10 (31:52):
A Secretary Besson from the Treasury said that they'll make
a series of announcements, especially as it relates to insurance programs,
to try to get more of that oil flowing through
the straits of horror moves. Essentially, it's the insurance companies
that are stopping the transit, not so much the Iranian Navy,
which is pretty much at the bottom of the ocean
right now, but it's the insurance companies that are afraid

(32:14):
of their ships coming under fire or being mined in
the straits. There is something like that, and that's what
they're trying to shake loose here as oil prices continue
to climb modestly but still enough to start raising concerns
if this is a prolonged operation, which goes back to
your point of how long is this going to last? Well,
we just got an update from Secretary Hegseth and the

(32:35):
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs essentially not committing to a timeline,
more of a series of objectives that they're trying to meet,
with the Chairman saying they're going to start going deeper
into Iranian territory as part of this operation.

Speaker 1 (32:48):
What's interesting, Rory, is that we did targeted strikes the
first time on the centrifuge sites. This time you wonder
if there's something even deeper and more precision coming to
ensure that all these elements have been destroyed. And it's
been whack a mole with you know, future Supreme leaders.

(33:10):
Although it does seem like they've settled in on the
Iatola Sun.

Speaker 10 (33:14):
Yeah, the second born son seems to be the go
to man, but that's still sort of that's still trying
to sort itself out. And to your point about last
time last June, targeting those nuclear sites, that was one thing. Now,
we're going more after command and control. Right, We've taken
out their command and control of the skies, of the navy,

(33:36):
end of their government overall, and what more than twelve
hundred targets have been successfully eliminated. And for the very
first time since the end of World War two, US
submarine used a torpedo to sink an enemy ship and
happened off the coast of Sri Lanka, with the Secretary
confirming it a short time ago attack some.

Speaker 1 (33:56):
Well, wh whoever the next diatola is is more in
danger that endangered anybody else. At the bottom line, Roy
O'Neil break recording, We'll see you all tomorrow morning. Go
make a difference in someone's life. Today.

Speaker 2 (34:06):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael Ndeld, journo
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