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March 9, 2026 35 mins

Is there a crisis developing among young men? At least one college professor says “yes.” National Correspondent RORY O’NEILL says it may be affecting their focus, maturity, and even masculinity.  

Always revealing and often entertaining, it’s The Sounds of The Day!

White House Correspondent JON DECKER has been keeping a close eye on developments in Iran, and how the administration is responding. He will have the latest. 

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, it's me Michael. Your morning show can be heard
live daily on great radio stations like News Radio six
fifty k E n I Anchorage, Alaska, Talk Radio eleven
ninety Dallas Fort Worth, and Freedom one O four seven
in Washington, d C. We'd love to have you listen
live every day and make us a part of your
morning routine. But better late than never. Enjoy the podcast.

Speaker 2 (00:21):
Starting your morning off right. A new way of talk,
a new way of understanding because we're in the stigem.
This is your morning show with Michael O'Dell.

Speaker 3 (00:33):
Jordan going up next hour, the voice of the men's
and women's Olympic gold hockey teams, Kenny Albert NFL, NHL, NBA, Olympics.
He's a voice and a man for all seasons. That's
the name of his new book.

Speaker 2 (00:51):
Son of Marv Albert. Kenny Albert will join him.

Speaker 3 (00:54):
Do you think I'll be able to talk to him
without talking to him in his voice?

Speaker 2 (00:57):
I don't think so. I don't either.

Speaker 3 (01:00):
Trump says rising on prices a very small price to
pay for safety and pace. Saran has a new leader.
Everybody just says it fast. So I still don't know
how to pronounce it, but I think it's a Jaba.

Speaker 2 (01:11):
I was pretty That's what I've heard.

Speaker 3 (01:14):
They just do it real fast, but it looks like
it's Machtaba Kamani is the country's new supreme leader, and
the State Department says it's.

Speaker 2 (01:23):
A three Michael.

Speaker 3 (01:25):
It would be funny for us. Miguelini is Michael and Italian.
The State Department says over thirty two thousand Americans have
been returned safely home from the Middle East. Well, is
there a crisis developing among young men? At least one
college professor says yes. National correspondent Roy O'Neil is here

(01:47):
says it may be affecting their focus, mate and even splinity.
A very masculine Roory O'Neill, I say, good morning, Yay,
good morning.

Speaker 4 (01:58):
This is from Eric ho the president actually at Colorado
Christian University, writing an interesting op and over on Fox
News this weekend, essentially laying out this argument that America's
boys need noble masculinity, not a toxic masculinity.

Speaker 2 (02:15):
He says, in order to.

Speaker 4 (02:17):
Correct a toxic masculinity, does all in on femininity or
attacking masculinity in general, but redefining what masculinity is and
a more noble type of it, showing strength under control
and courage while in service of others. He does right
about cell phones, saying, yeah, cell phones are the symptom

(02:37):
of a larger problem and not the bigger problem facing
boys and men today.

Speaker 2 (02:42):
What else besides cell phones?

Speaker 3 (02:44):
I mean, you also have social media, You also have
fatherless homes. You also have the influence of television and
how it's portrayed. Oh, there's a lot of people who
have worked very hard to redefine masculinity. Which one is
going to take his cue.

Speaker 4 (03:00):
And his also is expectations. He says, boys often rise
or fall to the expectations. He says when expectations disappear,
many do not become stronger. Instead, they become fragile. And
he says that's something that he's seeing in those young
boys who are becoming young men oftentimes set a drift.

(03:21):
He says, it's not that they're not smart, it's just
that they've grown up in a culture where they're not
rewarded for focusing their attention and making long term commitments. Instead,
it's a culture of instant gratification, and that spills over
into other aspects of life.

Speaker 3 (03:35):
You know, It's also interesting the influences of culture and
feminism in decades past. You know, one of the things
that would have been a sign of masculinity would have
been hard work. Is that allowed to be presumed is male?
Or opening the door of a car or a building

(03:56):
for a woman. I mean, there's just you know, I
guess you gotta pick where you're going to take your
cues from. And are you going to take them from
your father? I hope he's living in the home. And
are you going to take him from the Bible? Are
you going to take him from you know, from something?
And unfortunately, there is cultural confusion, and therefore there's masculinity

(04:17):
confusion for the next generation.

Speaker 5 (04:18):
Right.

Speaker 2 (04:18):
I mean, it's just that simple.

Speaker 4 (04:20):
Somebody can not like it, but I don't know if
he can change it, he says. It's also the constant
gratification culture that's also out there, right, If you don't
like something on TV, there are one hundred and fifty
other channels to flip to or pass on to the
next video, he says. And then you struggle with those
unglamorous habits, you call them, things that are required in adulthood,
like showing up, sticking to it, with difficult tasks and

(04:42):
finishing things that you start on time. Those things just
aren't rewarded today. Well it used to be.

Speaker 3 (04:48):
And this sounds so subtle, but I think it may
be the most profound of all of them. You talk
about all these different choices. It used to be. You've said,
some days it was your favorite meal, some days it
was your brothers, someday it was your sister. But you
all sat and ate together, and you ate one thing.
Then you went to the television. It may have been
dad's favorite show, it may have been something he was
putting up with for you, but you sat and watched

(05:11):
the same TV. The shared human experience. Now everybody's got
their headphones in. Everybody can go do whatever they want.
They can serve that selfishness. But it's always isolation that
leads to loneliness. It really is a it's a vicious trap.
He might be onto something, but he's got a lot more.
He's got a long way to go, I think, but
at least he's one voice out there. Orory O'Neil's gonna

(05:33):
be back in the third hour. We're gonna talk a
little bit about developments in the Middle East and how
it can impact very soon and very dramatically, even the
cost of an airline ticket. And if Congress doesn't get
around to funding ICE, that's if you get on the plane.

Speaker 4 (05:58):
People who majored in online activision with a minor and
puberty bomb, they're getting a little bit.

Speaker 6 (06:04):
Any of you in the media clearly missed the art
of the deal.

Speaker 2 (06:08):
It's gonna work out, We're hoping.

Speaker 3 (06:10):
So anyway, thirteen minutes after the hour, always revealing, often entertaining,
it's time for your Sounds of the day.

Speaker 2 (06:15):
We start with AOC, so let the cat out of
the back.

Speaker 3 (06:20):
I guarantee you AOC is gonna I know this sounds crazy,
and you're gonna think I'm crazy. People that start out
listening to me always think I'm crazy till they keep happening,
and then they start calling me no Strudel journal or
pizza boy.

Speaker 2 (06:36):
Either way, I deliver. We haven't slept, he come on,
come on, hey.

Speaker 3 (06:46):
Hey, hey, what if I am asleep right now and
this is all a dream. It's a pretty good show
for a dream.

Speaker 2 (06:51):
And then I'm getting cheated because I'm actually here. Oh
you are.

Speaker 3 (06:57):
I was saying that I told the Platinum Card audience
earlier I have this or a ring. Best gift my
wife ever got me. I don't even get paid to
do commercials for them, but I'm telling you it'll change
your life. So it tracks every I mean everything. And
so when I woke up this morning, it saw well.
And the problem wasn't that I didn't know the time change.
My body's used to the other time. So sure, when

(07:18):
seven o'clock rolled around last night, I was it was
like I wasn't even near tired. So I went to
bed late. So when I woke up this morning, my
sleep rating was seventy two. Oh so I got five
and a half hours sleep, but only thirty seven minutes
of RAM and only thirty five minutes of deep sleep.

Speaker 2 (07:38):
And you know what, you know what my ring told me?
What's that?

Speaker 3 (07:41):
Don't push it today, Just don't push it for you
got fragile. Oh, I just got to do a national
show that I got around the golf and I gotta
go to the nurse thing.

Speaker 2 (07:50):
Oh, but I won't push it.

Speaker 3 (07:52):
But aoc the mantle has been passed and the torch
has been handed. She is the new Bernie Sanders. So
it's not that I'm a rocket scientist. Bernie Sanders would
have got the nomination in twenty sixteen, he would have
got it in twenty twenty, he'd have got in twenty
twenty four if they opened it up and didn't just
sneak it to Mama l Kamala. So who's going to

(08:13):
get at this time? Well, the party's increasingly radical, increasingly
socialistic to the AOC, and the DNC is going to
have to do what it did in twenty four the
scam of hanging on to Joe, then revealing Joe with
Senile then after all the primary votes have been gathered,

(08:37):
just handing it to Common and not asking the Democrat.

Speaker 2 (08:40):
Voters to pick. Now that Joe's out who.

Speaker 3 (08:45):
Prior to that, they cut a deal with old Joe,
who was fourth in Iowa, sixth in New Hampshire. They
cut a deal in South Carolina because they didn't want
it to go to Bernie twenty sixteen that he was
super delegates rigged it for Hillary because it didn't want
to be Bernie. And this time it'll be EOC off
to the fast leave. So that's why AOC went to

(09:06):
a national security conference and then made a fool of herself.
Now there's only one thing worse than having a bad moment.
You have a bad moment, just distance yourself from it.
What struck me about this piece of audio is this
is their attempt and I don't know if America's is
dumb hasn't been in the past, but this is their

(09:30):
attempt to try to give her a duel over. And
so it's meant to look like she's walking out of
the Capitol and somebody happens to be pointing their down
at her and asking her a question, and she just
tries to give you a spontaneous answer. So this is
weak and this is the due over south of the day.

Speaker 2 (09:55):
AOC.

Speaker 3 (09:57):
Listen, it's what's your message to Americans who are concerned
another forever war in the Middle East.

Speaker 2 (10:02):
Well, I think, first.

Speaker 7 (10:03):
And foremost, the reality that we have here is very clear.
The vast majority of Americans are against a war with Iran.
Two things can be true. At the same time. We
can acknowledge the brutal reality of the Iranian regime but.

Speaker 2 (10:19):
Do nothing about it, of.

Speaker 7 (10:20):
Course, and they're murdering of protesters and targeting.

Speaker 3 (10:23):
Of people, and their ultimate gola blowing up Israel and
America and killing every Jew and Christian and is the
answer to that doing nothing as well, dish slapping the
narrative here and trying to make us believe that she's
the voice of reason at this time of war. This

(10:46):
is their due over how's it going so far?

Speaker 7 (10:49):
And we can also know for sure that a forever
war will not resolve that issue. We've seen what has
happened in other areas in the Middle East, in Libya
and Syria, and beyond, of course, the war in Iraq,
and we are already at multiple American service members that
are dead for in illegal action that the President has

(11:12):
pursued with no plan out. They don't know why they
got into this war. They're talking about four or five,
one hundred different reasons, and they.

Speaker 2 (11:21):
Don't know how they're getting out.

Speaker 7 (11:23):
They have plunged the world into major global instability.

Speaker 2 (11:29):
Things have never been.

Speaker 7 (11:30):
More dangerous in many ways, and it is our responsibility
to stabilize a situation.

Speaker 2 (11:36):
And bring us back from the brink.

Speaker 7 (11:38):
And a war with Iran is not how we do that,
and it's not how we accomplish anyone's goals.

Speaker 3 (11:43):
But it is how you become a nominee of president
of the United States with a radical left, Internet educated
TikTok voter, and one of these times it's going to

(12:04):
get all the way and win. We said from the
very beginning, we saw it a mile away, right, it
didn't happen and completely, and I'm convinced it didn't happen
because of Jesse Jackson's family, and that was the political

(12:24):
takeover of a man's funeral. We saw it with Muhammad Ali,
we saw it with Aretha Franklin.

Speaker 2 (12:31):
That was crazy.

Speaker 3 (12:37):
This is Jesse Jackson's son, and I don't think he
appreciated it.

Speaker 8 (12:45):
Do not bring your politics out of respect to Reverend
Jesse Jackson and the life.

Speaker 2 (12:53):
That he lived.

Speaker 8 (12:55):
To these homegoing services, come respectful and come to say
thank you. But these homegoing services are welcome to all Democrat, Republican,
liberal and conservative, right wing, left wing, because his life

(13:20):
is broad enough to cover fullroom of what it means
to be an American. We only ask people to come
and be respectful in the context of the extraordinary life
that he lived. Dad would have wanted us to have
a great meeting to discuss our differences, to find ways

(13:41):
of moving forward and moving together. And if his life
becomes a turning point in our national political discourse, a man.

Speaker 3 (13:52):
Well, I don't think it's going to be that. I
also don't think this lived up to that admonition. Here's
the failed presidential candidate, vice former Vice president Kamala Harris
doing exactly what Jesse Jackson's son asked her not to do. Listen, well, actually,

(14:13):
you know what, I'm gonna go back a little bit.
I want you to hear this in context. So here
she is arriving on stage, embracing the family, and now
she's coming to the podium.

Speaker 9 (14:28):
Good afternoon, Good afternoon everyone, missus Jackie, and to the
entire Jackson family on behalf of Doug and my family,
we pray with you as we did a couple of
weeks ago in your home, and we thank you.

Speaker 10 (14:48):
I thank you.

Speaker 3 (14:50):
I'm trying to make a clean that he was in
the home meeting the needs of the family.

Speaker 2 (14:54):
Now watch the first thing out of her mouth.

Speaker 9 (14:56):
I you know, so, let me just say I predicted
a lot about what's happening right now. I'm not into
saying I told you so, but we did see it coming.

(15:18):
But what I did not predict is that we would
not have Jesse Jackson with us right now to help
us get through this and this afternoon has been such
a beautiful remembrance of his spirit, his life, and his faith,
and in a way that revern Now talked about it

(15:40):
in so many other staff I do think of this
afternoon as what it is doing for me to renew
my faith in what is possible, fueled by the hope
that Jesse Jackson.

Speaker 3 (15:57):
So often she's weaving Jesse into her camp pain speech
and slogan, which was a word salad. Bottom line, is
any attempt to make this some big unifying far left gathering. No,
because this party has gone stupid and so far left

(16:22):
of Jesse Jackson, it's not even welcome. There really was
no bigger story. We talked about a couple of years
ago in the presidential election cycle. The Democrats have a
real problem, and it's an eye problem Israel. Their party

(16:43):
is anti Semitic, their party is for the terrorists and
against Israel. Well, now we've seen that growing on the
far right, Cannice Ollen, some of the others. It's now
a party problem. I'm going to cover that with Senator Fetterman,

(17:03):
who is now the new Darling of Fox News, coming
up for you next half hour as well.

Speaker 5 (17:09):
My name is Joey from Goodyear, Arizona, and my morning
show is your Morning Show with Michael del Jorno.

Speaker 2 (17:22):
Hi, I'm Michael.

Speaker 1 (17:22):
I'd love to have you listen to your morning show live.
Every day we're heard on great stations like News Talk
five point fifty k FYI and Phoenix News Radio, eleven
ninety k EX in Portland and ten ninety The Patriot
in Seattle. Make us a part of your morning routine.
We'd love to have you listen live, but in the meantime,
enjoy the podcast. Morning and Welcome and hopefully you're on
the right time. My car switched automatically, my phone switched automatically,

(17:45):
and I really don't look at any other clocks other
than when I'm in studio here, so I didn't get
fooled by anything I did.

Speaker 2 (17:52):
I did.

Speaker 3 (17:53):
I do remember forgetting temporarily and yesterday thinking wow, I
slept late.

Speaker 2 (17:58):
Really no, I really didn't. We all justic to Churchesterday.
That was kind of fun.

Speaker 3 (18:03):
Yeah, we all lost an hour and we're dragging our
feet because of an NCAA conference tournament. Week begins for
some today, for most tomorrow. That's always an exciting week.
You might look around the office and see a lot
of empty cubes, and that's what caused that there was
a I know a lot.

Speaker 2 (18:20):
Of people take this week off ahead of.

Speaker 3 (18:22):
The Players Championship which is coming up from Sagrass. But
actually by Batilla and Daniel Berger had an amazing last
round of the Arnold Palmer Invitational first time and I
think I don't know twenty something years that they had
to have a playoff and it was Batilla winning in
the playoff over Berger.

Speaker 2 (18:42):
Was really exciting.

Speaker 3 (18:43):
And Team USA in the World Baseball Classic tonight against
Mexico that will be at eight o'clock Eastern on Fox.
President says it's a small price to pay rising gas prices,
small price to pay for security and peace. Iron has
named a new and it is the son of the
former Ayatola and two ied devices ignited on Saturday outside

(19:08):
Gracie Mansion, which is the home of the New York
City Mayor, so Aron Mom Donnie. It's being described as
highly dangerous. White House correspondent John Decker is keeping an
eye on just that the dangerous, the developments in Iran
and how the administration is responding, and he has the
latest force Now, Good morning, John.

Speaker 2 (19:25):
Hey, good morning, Michael. You're noticing it.

Speaker 5 (19:28):
Those gas prices continue to rise of fifty cents over
the last week on average according to Triple A. You
just mentioned what the president's reaction to that was. But
it is more expensive, certainly. And the problem is, of course,
the straight up removes. As long as oil cannot move
through that straight you're going to see oil and gas

(19:48):
prices continue to rise.

Speaker 2 (19:50):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (19:50):
I know, as Jackie Schumer is calling on the President
to release oil from the reserve. As if the President
doesn't have that, plans to do just that, along with
other plans, which I thought was very political over the weekend.
But the question is at what point does he start
initiating some of these plans, whether it's military escorts to
the Strait of Horne moves although insurance companies may not

(20:12):
be willing to allow that just yet, or releasing reserves.
I would imagine this would be the week to look
at some of that.

Speaker 5 (20:19):
You're going to see an announcement coming from the Treasury
Department this week about mitigation that the US government that
the Trump administration will be taking because of these rising
gas prices. You know, look, I think that the public
expects that this is not a war that some in
the public view is a necessity.

Speaker 2 (20:40):
The President views it otherwise.

Speaker 5 (20:43):
But regardless, this is one of the ramifications of what
happens when you go to war with a country that
has controlled the straight up for moose for quite some time,
it threatens to control the straight up for Moose for
quite some time. The President, as you mentioned, just mentioned
saying that perhaps the US Navy would escort those oil tankers,

(21:03):
but even that may not be comfort to those oil companies.

Speaker 2 (21:07):
That don't want to risk that precious cargo.

Speaker 3 (21:09):
Yeah, we had a one on one monologue in the
first hour Shameless Blood for the podcast.

Speaker 2 (21:14):
People want to go back and listen.

Speaker 3 (21:15):
That's really the perception versus reality, the President said is
very revealing now, is to Americans view fifty cents more
a gallon and raising as a greater threat than fourteen
hundreds of radical Sharia Loomey. That's reality versus near those

(21:37):
that are enemies of the president or in desire of
his power. They're going to sell the narratives. The President
is going to sell the threat because somewhere in the middle,
hopefully ready to make a good choice reaction from the President.
The Ayatola Son being the new Supreme Leader who was expected,
well it was expected.

Speaker 5 (21:57):
The President warned against that as he was in the
best interests of Iran. And you may recall last week
the President said he wanted a role in choosing Iran's
next leader. Where we see the reaction coming from the
Iranian government that's essentially thumbing their nose at the president.
So the new leader is fifty six years old, as

(22:18):
you just mentioned, son of the Iyatola that was killed
in that first day of military strikes against Iran, and
he is a person who is close with the IRGC,
which is essentially running this war against both the United
States and Israel.

Speaker 3 (22:34):
Yeah, but unlike his father, he inherits Hamas in disarray,
the Huthi's in disarray, all their proxies in disarray. Russia's
got its hands full. Can't be that much help altho.
I'm gonna get to that in a second. And this
operation has certainly depleted not only their nuclear capabilities but
their military capabilities. He's got a tough job, and that's

(22:55):
if he doesn't get targeted. I thought the most significant
story of the weekend was Iran Foreign minister.

Speaker 2 (23:00):
You're discussing.

Speaker 3 (23:02):
The very close relationship and partnership they have with Russia,
and then he said.

Speaker 11 (23:09):
Well, they are helping us in many different directions.

Speaker 2 (23:13):
I don't have any detailed information.

Speaker 3 (23:14):
I always said, worst case scenario would be Russia getting
involved in this. If it's intelligence, that's one thing. If
it's boots on the ground, of course, that's another. But
make no mistake about it, this is the alliance we
have seen for decades with Iran.

Speaker 2 (23:29):
Iran is kind of.

Speaker 3 (23:30):
Russian China's proxy, and then Iran has its proxies how
close And is the president concerned that Russia is working
with them? The President was asked that very question on
board Air Force One over the weekend, and he said
he's not concerned. He said, look for whatever help that
Russia may be giving Iran.

Speaker 5 (23:50):
The President did not dismiss that out right. It's not
helping Iran in any discernible way. And also, flying aboard
Air Force One, we heard from Ustike Wikoff, who has
been involved in those mediated talks between the US and
Iran over the course of the past few months. He
said he hopes that that story that was first published

(24:11):
by the Washington Post is not true of Russia cooperating
with the Iranians in terms of providing them intelligence. So yes,
it's one of those alliances that we've seen play out
over the course of decades, and we see how this
alliance is now playing itself out in this conflict.

Speaker 3 (24:29):
Boy, losing an hour sleep doesn't dull you at all.
Still the sharpest night for the drawer. John's going to
be back with a complete look and a roundup on
everything concerning the Iranian operations. The White House Briefing Room
will come your way in less than an hour. We're
right about an hour from now, nine eastern eighth Central,
the White House Briefing Room. You'll find it on the

(24:49):
iHeartRadio app. John, we'll talk again to more. Thank you,
Michael Byby You got it all right. So this is
John Fetterman, who has kind of become like a darling
of Fox News, wrapping up our sounds at the day
in Fox rather dramatically, and I'm okay with being dramatic.

Speaker 2 (25:07):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (25:08):
Scroll the names of all of the Democrats who voted
against the resolution to label and reaffirm Iran as a
state sponsor of terror, which is a truth, a reality.
There is no greater state sponsor of terrorism than Iran.

(25:30):
That's who has funded Hamas, funded the Hohu Thies, Hezballah, others.
Now we've gone from in twenty twenty four. Gee, I
think the Democrat Party's got an eye problem Israel. This

(25:54):
shows you that they are almost halfway to actually supporting
terror tourists over not just Israel, but America. I don't
know how long he can remain a Democrat, but Fox
turned to Senator Fetterman for his response to this.

Speaker 12 (26:14):
Yeah, I mean, if you look at the same list
that was there there, probably it's the same part of
the same list that refused to condemn Hamas after ten
to seven. Uh So, I mean, that's that's part of
our party, you know, And that's fifty three, that's you know,
that's almost twenty five percent of Democrats in the House

(26:36):
that can't just call I ran As as the world's
biggest terrorism under writer. That's I mean, that's that's where
our party has been heading now and now anti anti Israel.
That's part of the ongoing conversation. I can't imagine why
you wouldn't just identify that what I ran is and

(26:58):
we all agree that.

Speaker 7 (27:00):
Yeah, well, we uner some sound from the former Democratic
nominee for president of your party, Kamala Harris is sounding
very different today versus just a short time ago.

Speaker 2 (27:10):
Let's watch this.

Speaker 12 (27:12):
Which foreign country do you consider to be our greatest adversary?

Speaker 9 (27:19):
Well, there are different reasons that we should be thoughtful
about each. Most recently, I think there's an obvious one
in mind, which is.

Speaker 3 (27:30):
Iran now that is running for president in twenty twenty four,
running for Jesse Jackson's funeral in twenty twenty six.

Speaker 9 (27:41):
And look, I mean, Iran has American blood on their hands.

Speaker 10 (27:45):
Donald Trump has dragged us into a war the American
people do not want. He has put American troops in
harm's way. I unequivocally oppose this war of choice, and
everyone should.

Speaker 3 (28:01):
I mean, this is the bottom line. We've already got
a three party system. The Democrat Party is split in
happen now. There's some splits in the Republican Party. I'm
not blind to that. I'm not either, by the way.
I think both are the problem. And what you are
loving and living in Donald Trump is not Republicanism. It's
trump Ism. So I don't even know what the Republican

(28:23):
Party is going to be in two years. I'll wait
to see, and I might caucus with him and vote
for him, but it's already a three party system. The
Democrats have lost control of their party to what is
now almost the majority of their party, the socialist far left,

(28:44):
and in that is an Islamist sect.

Speaker 2 (28:48):
Now listen to kinds of Islam.

Speaker 3 (28:52):
One tried to kill you today and either succeeded or didn't,
but their intent was to kill you. There's jihadas that's
like the Shiaians. The other is political Islam. They will
play for your children, They will come, they will populate,

(29:12):
will infiltrate, then they will act, then they will wage war.
And they don't need fifty one percent to do it.
And you're seeing how just probably and I'm guessing fifteen
percent of the Democrat Party is controlling the whole Democrat Party.

(29:33):
And because there are people still loyal to the Democrat
Party in the legacy media or in the back rooms
of the intelligentsia, or the party itself, and they're leaving
poor Fetterman all alone to stand against this.

Speaker 2 (29:51):
Now, it's like, what do we do with our kids
in public schools? Well, I don't want to pull my
kids in public school.

Speaker 3 (29:56):
If I put my kids from public school, then there's
no light in public schools.

Speaker 5 (29:59):
No.

Speaker 2 (29:59):
I want to s and I want to fight and
I want to take it back. But you're not.

Speaker 3 (30:04):
You're not effectively fighting, you're not taking it back, and
your kids are being socialized and indoctrinated. That's kind of
where that that's that's the hostage situation we're in now
with the Democrat Party. They're not just anti Semitic, they're
pro Islamist and socialist and anti American and all about

(30:27):
power for themselves. That's your sounds of the day.

Speaker 12 (30:32):
All right, everybody, Look, you've just got to try harder.

Speaker 3 (30:37):
Which somebody would you a brief specifics lesson perhaps you'd
like to be alone with your deteriorating mental condition forty
nine minutes after the hour, every spam called you get,
every scam text you receive, or every sketchy email with
your name on it, it all starts one way. Your information

(31:00):
was found by someone. Your phone number, home address, work address,
email age, names of your family members. Someone's got it
and they're selling it to others. Now you should be
a outraged and be prioritizing stopping it. But they got

(31:21):
you so outnumbered. And if you think of block here
or block there is going to make a difference, it's not.
The solution is you've got to disappear. And that's where
Cognate comes in, and Cogne understands they can't spam you.
They can't scam you if they can't find you. So
we make you disappear. And that's why I use and

(31:43):
rely on in cognity to protect me and my entire family,
and I strongly believe you should too. It's affecting whether
rooms are available for you or the rate that you're paying.
It's affecting your insurance rate because they're tracking everything. Heck,
you go the DMV and they turn you into the
product that ends up raising your insurance rates. And Cogni

(32:04):
removed me from three hundred and fifty eight data broker
sites in the first forty eight hours. That would have
taken me five hundred hours to do. And that's if
I did it right. Take your information back, take your
privacy back, and get sixty percent off just for being
a your morning show listener. Go to Incogniti dot com,

(32:25):
I n cog n I in cogni dot com, forward
slash Michael, Take back your privacy, disappear in Cogni dot
com forward slash Michael. That's in Cogni dot com forward
slash Michael.

Speaker 1 (32:39):
It's your morning show with Michael del Choino.

Speaker 3 (32:43):
And don't forget we can't have your morning show without
your voice. Use that talkback button on your iHeartRadio app.
Email Michael d at iHeartMedia dot com. We think of
this as a conversation and it takes two to tango,
if you know what I mean. If you just taking
up fifty five minutes after the hour, President Trump says
rising oil prices are a very small price to pay

(33:06):
for safety, security, and peace.

Speaker 13 (33:09):
On truth social Trump said prices will drop rapidly when
the destruction of the Iron nuclear threat is over. Oil
is now at one hundred dollars a barrow for the
first time since July of twenty twenty two. The repel
effects from the conflict in Iran are continuing to hit
global markets, with US crude oil futures up as much
as twenty percent, while Brent, the international benchmark, has jumped
over at fifteen percent. I'm Tammy Trichillo.

Speaker 3 (33:31):
State Department says nearly thirty thousand American citizens have been
returned from the Middle East to the US safely at
least a Cardon reports.

Speaker 11 (33:38):
In an update on Saturday, officials said the numbers don't
include Americans who safely relocated to other countries or were
still in transit back to the US. They noted the
agency's twenty four to seven Task Force has also helped
over sixteen thousand Americans abroad, offering security guidance and travel assistance.
The State Department said it is actively assisting American citizens

(34:00):
who want to leave the Middle East.

Speaker 2 (34:02):
I'm Lisa Carton.

Speaker 3 (34:03):
The Trump administration is reportedly eyeing a surprise economic deal
with Kubab.

Speaker 14 (34:08):
That's according to a report from USA Today, which sites
sources with knowledge of the administration's plans. Details and timing
of the deal remain unknown. It's also unclear what the
US would achieve in a potential deal. It comes after
President Trump told CNN on Friday that Cuba quote is
gonna fall pretty soon. Trump also said the country wants
to make a deal so badly, adding that he plans

(34:30):
to send Secretary Rubio to Cuba. I'm Rob Bartier.

Speaker 3 (34:34):
Harry Styles first concert for his new album is streaming
on Netflix beginning today. The Grammy winner just dropped his
new album Kiss All the Time Disco occasionally.

Speaker 2 (34:44):
On March sixth he hit the stage.

Speaker 3 (34:47):
Friday for one night only and the UK and the
Netflix team was filming and it's set to air beginning
at three Eastern today today, which is actually National Nap Day.

Speaker 2 (35:00):
Say you really need to take one.

Speaker 6 (35:02):
The day after the switch to daylight saving time is
the most sleep deprived day of the year. We've lost
an hour of sleep. And according to the Sleep Foundation,
channeling your inner cat and taking a nap is good.
It improves alertness, coggnitive performance, boosts memory, and puts you
in a much better mode. All good things, but sleep
experts say it actually takes four days of solid slumber

(35:22):
to fully catch up on that one hour of miss sleep.

Speaker 2 (35:25):
I'm Bree Tennis, We're all in this together. This is
your Morning Show with Michael Entheld, journo
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