Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, it's Michael. Your morning show can be heard live
weekday mornings five to eight am, six to nine am
Eastern in great cities like Tampa, Florida, Youngstown, Ohio, and
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. We'd love to join you on the
drive to work live, but we're glad you're here now.
Enjoyed the podcast two.
Speaker 2 (00:15):
Three Starting your morning off right, A new way of talk,
a new way of understanding.
Speaker 3 (00:23):
Because we're in the stigold.
Speaker 1 (00:26):
This is your morning show with Michae O'Dell Charman seven
minutes after the hour. We always say it's your morning show,
and we can't have your morning show without your voice,
and your voices have kind of responded to a lot
of the things that we've been talking about.
Speaker 4 (00:39):
Here's a quick little montage.
Speaker 5 (00:41):
It's really embarrassing. Latsia James is looking up the good Marshall.
You can see where she utters and models him. She
disponts to be him. Well, I say then that if
there's any funding going to Howard University, unfortunately, then I.
Speaker 3 (00:59):
Think, don't mean you need to pull it.
Speaker 6 (01:01):
Have a great day, Michael, doug journal I listened to
my morning show every morning. That press conference was unreal
in the history of press. Thomas's I don't think any
press conference ended with absolute silence.
Speaker 3 (01:17):
It was gold and keep up the good work. Love
your monologues. Good morning, Michael. This is Corey.
Speaker 7 (01:23):
As a father of three daughters, I can tell you,
beyond the shadow of a doubt, if someone ever did
that to one of my girls, there's no jail that
could protect him from me.
Speaker 3 (01:40):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:41):
I think you can hear in Corey's voice. I think
he probably represents every father of a daughter listening this morning.
It was a pretty extraordinary news conference with Patty Morian
telling the story of what happened to Rachel. All right,
it's eight minutes after the hour your morning show. Davids
and Audius are yes, our senior contributor, but he's also
(02:02):
the CEO of the American Policy round Table. He's host
to the Public Square, heard on two hundred stations, and
presides over Eye voters as well. And David, the purpose
of our visit today is Donald Trump will reach one
hundred days this weekend, and so a look at his
first one hundred days and the accomplishments and the still
unfinished business. But before we get to that, I blew
(02:22):
up forty minutes of the show because of what you
all were talking about on the golf course. And then
I chose right before an interview with a small business ceo,
and I read the President's White House address on Easter,
and then the break ended and it was time to
do the interview. I don't even know what I said
to that or woman that was my guest at five
(02:44):
point thirty this morning. I was so blown away. You
said something on a tea box, and I understand what
you're saying. I mean, I used to cover Barack Obama's
Easter messages and then I read this Easter message and
three things went through my head. Number one things that
we didn't even believe when we were praying them for
decades seemingly have been answered. Something changed in this man
(03:07):
when he was shot, and I continue to see evidence
of that political correctness and wokeness is certainly dead. When
we had fun with the Barack Obama, I read two
thousand and nine's Easter address, and it quickly became about Islam, Buddhism, Judaism,
and then it became about man and the brotherhood of man,
(03:29):
and then it became about work and his job numbers.
I mean it was just extraordinary. And then I read
Donald Trump's this year. I don't know that I've ever
had a pastor or heard a priest succinctly explain and
exeguate the Easter story the way the administration has in
its defensive Christianity. I mean, what is remarkable. And you
(03:50):
actually said it almost made you feel uncomfortable.
Speaker 4 (03:52):
It was so remarkable.
Speaker 3 (03:54):
Yeah, thank you, Michael for being willing to talk about
this because it's something that nobody else is talking about.
I really appreciate this. I've had the privilege of studying presidents,
writing about presidents Washington, yes, but mostly hanging around with
people who are a lot smarter and a lot more
prolific than I am on the study of presidents and in fact,
(04:16):
even on presidential speeches. And this one is exceptional. Now,
this is a statement that was written. We don't know
who wrote it. It's clearly not written in the presidency,
and it's not the way that he writes or communicates.
Now that doesn't mean it's disingenuine. It means that it's
a joint sta I mean, they put this together because
it was very important. They wanted he wanted to speak
(04:38):
these words, and he took great care that they should
be crafted in this fashion. So this is not policy.
By the way, it's very important to understand, this is
not an executive order. This is not a statement of
public policy. This is a confession of how Donald Trump
and his wife see the reality of faith in common
(05:00):
culture and in American history. And he makes a very
sincere and forthright confession of the biblical reality of the
person of Jesus.
Speaker 1 (05:10):
Had a depth and doctrinal understanding and exegy that is
absent in the body of Christ itself.
Speaker 3 (05:19):
Well, it's a statement that I would think that any
denomination of the Christian faith would embrace, because it's the
core truth that Christ has come, Christ has died, Christ
has risen. It's the fundamental core truths of the New Testament,
and he personalizes it to himself. But nowhere in that
(05:40):
speech is there any compulsion requiring that anyone should do
what he says, or that the government should somehow implement this,
other than to protect the freedom of the expression of
these truths.
Speaker 1 (05:54):
Which is another way of saying it was. In addition
to being detailed and doctrinely and biblically sound, it was constitutionally.
Speaker 3 (06:02):
Constitutionally sound exactly, so it's worth nothing. And again, in
the college realm, where we enjoy master's classes and master's
teaching with scholars around the country, this particular speech should
be added to the context for that very reason. Yeah.
Speaker 4 (06:17):
I mean, you just.
Speaker 1 (06:19):
I know what you're talking about yourself, so it would
be pride to go any further. But you've written excellent
books on excellent presidents with very amazing people, and you're
working on one now with somebody that we respect as
much as anyone on earth, doctor Allen, on a different president.
Speaker 4 (06:38):
But I mean this is listen.
Speaker 1 (06:42):
I do a Good Friday address every Good Friday. I'm
almost embarrassed to deliver it tomorrow after.
Speaker 3 (06:47):
This, after this one.
Speaker 1 (06:49):
This is an extraordinary document, period historical document.
Speaker 3 (06:53):
Yeah, it's a bell ringer, Okay.
Speaker 1 (06:55):
So, and when you guys are talking about that, I
was more worried about my physical aches and how poor
I was playing after two pars to really get involved.
Speaker 4 (07:02):
And then today I reminded myself.
Speaker 1 (07:04):
And so I'm in a news break and I read
this for those of you just tuning in.
Speaker 4 (07:08):
I'm just going to give you a paragraph.
Speaker 1 (07:10):
This Holy Week, Milania and I join in prayer with
Christians celebrating the crucifixion and resurrection of our Lord and Savior,
Jesus Christ, the living Son of God, who conquered death,
freed us from sin and unlocked the gates of heaven
for all humanity. During this sacred week, we acknowledge the
glory of Easter Sunday cannot come without the sacrifice Christ
(07:31):
made on the cross in his final hours on earth.
Christ willingly endured excruciating pain, torture, and execution on the
cross out of a deep and abiding love for all creation.
Through his suffering, we have redemption. Through his death, we
are forgiven of our sins. Through his resurrection, we have
the hope of eternal life. On Easter morning, the stone
(07:52):
is rolled away, the tomb is empty, the light prevails
over darkness, signaling that death does not have the final word.
I mean, wow, how much of this has answered prayer
of faithful saints who didn't even pray with with with
power and faith but probably doubt I mean.
Speaker 4 (08:12):
And then no acknowledgment.
Speaker 1 (08:15):
Or any apologies or nods to other religions. This is
an Easter address, will address Easter and Christianity. It was,
It was pretty powerful stuff. It's one, as Jim nansmoud say,
it's one for the ages.
Speaker 3 (08:30):
Yeah. Well, and and by comparison to the Easter Sunday,
which Joe Biden celebrated lgbt Q Transparency Day, it certainly
is a very different approach, uh, and certainly a more
historic one.
Speaker 1 (08:46):
I want to there's go ahead, but no go ahead
and finish because I'm gonna move on to another topic.
Speaker 4 (08:50):
Sure.
Speaker 3 (08:50):
Well, there's a great deficiency in our educational systems that
have not given people an opportunity to honestly embrace the
role that the creator of the universe and the God
of the Bible plays in the Declaration of the Constitution
of the founding era. We've dedicated our lives for forty
five years to basically bringing that story back to the public.
(09:12):
Now this the founders of our country would be very
comfortable with this address.
Speaker 1 (09:18):
Yes, and I might add two because I took so
much time to do all. By the way, in my book,
I gave a whole chapter to the preambles of each state.
Speaker 3 (09:29):
You ought to go very smart on your partner.
Speaker 1 (09:32):
You ought to go look up wherever you live and
we're in I don't know how many states were in
twenty twenty different states. Go reach your preamble, you'll see
how important God is. All right, So, because I took
so much time to do that, and it was extraordinary
and worth the time. I started the show by saying
I got five stories, I could do an entire show on,
let alone a segment. And then I didn't get those
segments in. So let's try do these really quick. The
(09:55):
UK obviously common sense to cross the pond. The Supreme
Court of the United Kingdom finally defined a woman. It
does not include trans and they ruled unanimously the definition
of a woman is equality. Legislation refers to a biological
woman and a biological sex. Why is our mother country
(10:18):
so much smarter than us on this or is this
coming to America soon too?
Speaker 3 (10:22):
I think it's coming across the entire Western world. The
LGBTQ agenda has simply gone too far. It's the end.
We are now living in the post era of the
sexual Revolution, because we're simply abolished man in the process.
We've gotten rid of the very question of humanity. We've
gone so far over the edge, and it's unsustainable because
every morning people wake up look in the mirror in reality,
(10:45):
mugs their world.
Speaker 4 (10:48):
Well, that'll lead us to this story which.
Speaker 1 (10:50):
I again I may save this for overtime. I'm going
to do it last, and that is the Yale University
research that was revealed by Newsweek and what it shows
about our young people and how they have broke Republican
and conservative and they're just starting to vote. But I'm
gonna do that in an overtime segment. Let's cut to
(11:13):
the chase on the Trump administration suing Maine. First of all,
there's two sides of this coin. On one side of
the coin, why does the Democrats continue to refuse to
pivot and continue to die on hills that aren't worth
dying them. So you've got Governor Mills and Maine standing
up for one percent and political agenda and ignoring ninety
nine point nine percent of women and how they feel
(11:34):
about this, but trans in women's sports, this is clearly
a hill Maine wants to die on. You made a
comment yesterday. I want you to elaborate on good. The
sooner this gets to the court, the better.
Speaker 3 (11:45):
Yeah, it is a good point because the court is
hung on the Kennedy doctrine. Justice Kennedy going all the
way back to two thousand and eight through twenty and eighteen,
in which Justice Kennedy began to add to the dicta
or the additional right of the Court and decisions regarding
the defensive marriage. This concept of personhood being equated equal
(12:06):
to sexual activity or proclivity. That's never happened before. Humans
have never been defined that way in the history of
Western jurisprudence and law. And so we've got to get
back to the court enabling themselves to pull that doctrine
off the record. So it may come in the most
(12:27):
unusual case where a position like Maine looks like they're
attacking the Trump administration and their policy may very well
give it to the court a chance to say time out.
We agree with Great Britain. A woman as a biological
woman a least dephonic. She was originally going to be
a cabinet member. Then she was pulled, we thought because
the votes were needed in the House, so all that
(12:47):
could be. But now there's talk about her running for
governor in New York. The question is can you win well.
Speaker 1 (12:53):
The Marriage University poll finds forty six percent of New
Yorker's disapprove of Hocel. Thirty nine percent approved she is
being there's something shifting in New York and a good
candidate came close to her in the last race. Can
Stephanic become even closer? Well, New York is the media state.
Speaker 3 (13:12):
I mean you fly into New York City and you
feel like you're flumed the inside of a television set.
Everywhere you turn, it's all about television. So it's going
to become a personality contest. It's going to depend which
way Lauren Michaels breaks, which way, Saturday Night Live breaks,
which way, the city breaks, which way the boroughs break
because the majority of New York outside of New York
City will definitely vote for someone other than Hokeel.
Speaker 1 (13:35):
Upstate versus Manhattan. Can somebody say it out loud, Upstate
versus Manhattan. And by the way, we talked about this
movement within the Democrat Party from the Justice Socialist Democrats,
and they're going to play the youth versus old game,
and we talked yesterday about how the gfp's already beat
them to that.
Speaker 4 (13:51):
Look at j D.
Speaker 1 (13:52):
Bance, look at Marco Rubio, look at a Governor DeSantis. Well, Christy, no, Christine,
He's going well yeah, But look at Stevanic, forty years
old running for governor in New York. The Republicans have
beat them to the punch on that one. And then
finally Gail and the ladies get back from their ride.
(14:14):
And you know, I actually thought America acknowledged it.
Speaker 4 (14:18):
I mean we did on this show.
Speaker 1 (14:20):
I don't know why, but she was trying to compare it.
I mean, I think Red nailed it. This was more
space tourism than spaceflight and exploration. So you know the
fact that she's trying to compare herself to other astronauts.
I'll tell you who really nailed this was Jim our listener.
He said Michael Leftter returning back to Earth along with
(14:40):
five other women on Jeff Bezos Blues Origin spacecraft. Miss
King derided all who called their spaceflight just that a ride.
Gail said it would never have been called a ride
if it had been men astronauts like Alan Shepard, the
first US astronaut to go into space. Gail should have
done a research. What did the first astronaut, Alan Shepherd, who,
(15:01):
by the way, I think it's Alan Shepherd that fell
asleep during it. They could hear him storing those early
mercury and you know they were unbelievable, but when he
landed he said, boy, what a ride. I mean the
great Iron But of course it's sexist, and we course
didn't make a big enough deal of their flight.
Speaker 4 (15:19):
I mean that old chestnut. This is the very stuff
that isn't playing.
Speaker 1 (15:23):
Why is the left finding such a hard time to
realize wokeness has died? And these narratives that used to
work even three years ago, six years ago, to you,
they're just.
Speaker 4 (15:33):
Not working anymore. Nobody's looking for a flight on every corner,
are they?
Speaker 3 (15:37):
And I know we got a break. Let's just say this,
they're in too deep.
Speaker 4 (15:41):
I'll end on that note too.
Speaker 2 (15:43):
It's your morning show with Michael del Chino.
Speaker 3 (15:48):
Or Michael and kru.
Speaker 8 (15:49):
I usually in my day, probably after nine pm, watching
the gut filled show on Rumbled and so to get
your show means I got to get it parly, and
I just it happened today out of a two forty
five started listening you talk about ten pounds and a
five pound bag. My soul is stilled, my heart is full,
my intellect has been fed.
Speaker 1 (16:11):
Wow, an amazing compliment. By the way, I want to
do a quick follow up and I don't know if
I can do it. In twenty second, somebody asked the
cost of a legal immigration, we'd come back.
Speaker 4 (16:20):
I'll share it with you.
Speaker 3 (16:23):
I'm actor jeff E.
Speaker 9 (16:25):
Howard and my morning show is your Morning Show with
Michael Del Jorno aka.
Speaker 10 (16:32):
Beazz the Boy.
Speaker 4 (16:39):
It's me and Michael.
Speaker 1 (16:40):
Your Morning show can be heard live five to eight
am Central, six to nine Eastern and great cities like Jackson, Mississippi, Akron, Ohio,
or Columbus, Georgia. We'd love to be a part of
your morning routine and we're grateful you're here now.
Speaker 4 (16:53):
Enjoy the podcast.
Speaker 3 (16:54):
Is Jim in Nasston, Ohio. You are my morning Show.
Speaker 9 (16:57):
When I first heard about those five ladies going on
up in the space, the first thought I had was
keep going. I'm old enough to remember Jackie Gleason saying, Alice,
keep her going.
Speaker 3 (17:08):
Brother.
Speaker 1 (17:10):
I'm glad you said it, not me. Reg just went
on a rant. Can you do it again? Or do
you want me to try to paraph? I can't do
justice to how you did it. Basically, You're gist was
they had two days of training, They got on a
spacecraft where they touched nothing. They were just on long
(17:32):
for the ride looking out the window. They landed in
less time than the ride at Space Mountain, and they
want to be perceived as serious astronauts. I mean, this
was space tourism. They had the money to afford the ride.
This was not spaceflight. Now, David, of course had the
(17:54):
great privilege, not that he was welcome by the office,
but to actually meet John Glenn and spend time with
his impressive physical stature and clothing.
Speaker 4 (18:09):
But your line would have been I knew John Glenn.
John Glenn was a friend of mine. There are no
John Glenn for crying out loud. But yeah, I mean,
it's just it's nonsensical.
Speaker 1 (18:20):
I wanted to do this real quick before we talk
about our feature story. Somebody had asked, yesterday, you know
what is the cost of this illegal immigration? Well, and
I said, look, there's three things you can count on.
You'll never know the cost of illegal immigration. The cost
of gambling in our country. Now we know wherever you
have gambling, every problem gambler cost you one to three
(18:44):
thousand dollars each per year, per year. Now that's a
problem gam You know what a problem gambler is. They
lose everything and then they stop a pathological gambler doesn't
even stop there. And then you get into crime and
all of it's expense. No one will ever tell you that.
And then I throw in there, no one will tell
you the taxation and a gallon of gas how much
of that three hundred and seventeen CENTSUS tax?
Speaker 4 (19:06):
Good luck, you won't find it anywhere on the pump.
Speaker 1 (19:10):
And when they would do these arguments about big oil,
big oil made about one to two cents a gallon.
The taxation is almost a dollar, and that's not even
counting the boutique blends. But let's get back to the question,
so what is it costing? Well, it's funny. Thanks to
Gavin Newsom and the bankruptcy of Medicaid in California that
he's had to subsidize, we do get this cost release
(19:31):
from the White House. There were one point six million
illegals in California placed on Medicaid at the cost of
eight point seven billion, not million billion dollars. So one
point six percent in California is eight point seven billion
in a single year just to medicate. Now try to
(19:53):
figure out what twenty to thirty million illegals are costing us.
It's trillions. My calculator went into air. I mean, you
can't make this stuff up. Doesn't even include housing, all right,
So David, let's get to the two things that.
Speaker 4 (20:06):
We needed to cover today.
Speaker 1 (20:08):
One, this amazing poll and it's a Yale Youth poll,
and Newsweek does the story and it's a very large
sample in this poll. We talked yesterday about the generational
wars that are going on. We've got the far left
socialist attack on Democrats for being old literally Joe Biden,
(20:31):
you know, these people that stay till the toe tag,
and so their target is the youth. The socialist Democrats
are also targeting more I guess establishment Democrats for their
takeover for socialism, but look at these numbers. Young Americans
are supporting the Republican Party in greater numbers. The new
poll found and highlighted a large divide among people under
(20:54):
the age thirty. According to the New Yale Youth Poll,
and this is my children, all three of them. Voters
aged eighteen to twenty one lean Republican by eleven point
seven percent when asked who they will support in the
twenty twenty six congressional election. Voters twenty two to twenty
nine favorite Democrats by six point four percent, So you
(21:15):
can figure out where that line is. They have lost
the very youth in this country who are just starting
to vote and are going to vote for many, many
years to come. They've already lost Hispanics, They've already lost Asians,
They've already lost the male black vote. The total Black
vote has gone from ninety six percent down to under
seventy percent and falling.
Speaker 4 (21:35):
Have they lost the youth?
Speaker 1 (21:36):
And then you're going pouring through these numbers, going I
can almost not believe some of these numbers. I mean,
this is a real this is an amazing this generation.
This isn't their parents coercing them. It certainly isn't Republican
media bias coercing them. I don't know if it's Internet,
I don't know, if it's podcast, I don't know. It's
because they've been in the pit of the hell as
(21:57):
the experimental rats in k through twelve, I mean, or
maybe it's just all of the above, but boy, have
they lost this youth.
Speaker 3 (22:07):
Yeah, I'm my first and instinct to me is to
say this is the result of COVID and Kamala. Yes,
because if you look at transgender do yeah, this is
in sellin and this particular eighteen to Now understand that
this is a not a huge population block. It would
probably not swing elections on a national perspective at this stage.
(22:32):
It is a glimpse of the food future. But it's
an interesting question that you'll asked. They said, when asked
who they would support in the twenty twenty six congressional elections,
they didn't talk about the presidency. They scoped it right
down to Congress and eighteen to twenty one lean Republican
by eleven point seven eleven point seven points. Now, again,
this is not a high voter participation group either. And
(22:57):
but what the COVID break is that when they ask
the same questions twenty two to twenty nine, the age bracket,
they went Democrat by six point four points because they
escaped the prison of COVID in the educational model in
their high school years. Now they still had it in
their college years. And I will tell you that.
Speaker 1 (23:16):
Only that would also be post pre transgenderism, because I
can tell you I've got kids this age, this generation
does not view homosexuality as sin at all. But you
go too far with the transgenderism, and they reject that.
So I think that and they could be just me
anecdotal and I'm boring that. By the way, when you
do get presidential this was amazing. It found that jd.
(23:38):
Vance was the most popular figure among Republicans, with a
net favorability rating of sixty five percent and fifty four
percent among Republican voters under the age of thirty.
Speaker 4 (23:48):
You'd be smart to run JD. Vance and that's what
these numbers are shown.
Speaker 3 (23:51):
But as long as he doesn't fumble another football.
Speaker 4 (23:54):
Or break another trophy.
Speaker 1 (23:56):
But no, I mean, this is a pretty telling tale,
and I think people need to acknowledge the way the
youth have discerned all of this. I go back to,
you know, one of the and there's many things that
they do well. Democrats. First of all, there used to
(24:17):
be more of them. I don't know how true that
is anymore, especially versus trump Ism, but or MAGA or
whatever you want to call what the Republican Party and
the movement in America has become. But the truth of
the matter is they would go to campuses, campuses and
inner cities. Is how they swung swing districts, really swing
(24:37):
precincts and swing districts of swing states. And what they
ran into this time was it wasn't working on campus,
and it wasn't working in podcasts and on social media influence,
primarily TikTok. Then we talk about TikTok being an agent
of China. No, it's been an agent of Maga. So
I'm wondering if it's not so much the people that
(24:58):
were given a lot of money to go battle at
the campus level as much as the worldview and the
victimhood of that generation. It's like misreading the Jesus movement
or the Hippie generation in the sixties.
Speaker 3 (25:11):
That's the point, And we talked about this earlier. In fact,
yesterday we were talking about this is a generational matter
because if you take a look at the population demographics,
we're moving now to where the boomers and their kids
are still the biggest voting block, but now it's becoming
sort of a fight between the boomers and their kids
and everybody else. So tracking the trends of where, if
(25:34):
you will, the spiritual and worldview mindset of generations are
is a significant factor. And it may be that the
godless equation of the Left is wearing out because we're
seeing that it's an insufficient platform to deal with matters
of crisis like COVID, and that it doesn't add up
(25:55):
when we want to talk about questions of equality and justice,
that it prefers some people over others and it persecutes
those who disagree. It may be that we're getting a
longer look down the tunnel and people are waking up
saying what we're doing isn't working. But I'll tell you
the unsung hero, and a lot of this might be
Elon Musk and Doge because I don't think anyone enjoys
(26:17):
the idea that government is throwing away money and they
are going to have to pay for it. That's a
factor as well.
Speaker 1 (26:25):
That and I can tell you kids that age I
shouldn't call them kids, they're young adults. Now young everybody's
a kid, I'm turning into that stereotype, but young adult law.
They were born with a level of faith that I
have no explanation for. Didn't come from their parents, didn't
come from being trained up as much as they were
just born with a level of faith. That tells me
(26:45):
God's raising a generation for something. But that's a whole other,
deeper story that's not appropriate for this show. But I
can tell you this, that dream of home ownership that's real.
And the minute they thought there's no way I'm ever
going to be able to make enough money to own
a home oom, the Dems really lost out huge on.
Speaker 3 (27:04):
That, and that question still is not resolved in the country.
It's going to take another eight years to bring that question,
eight to ten years to bring that question into a
genuine resolution for many, many reasons. That's a whole nother
show that is appropriate for this program. But it's the Democrats. Basically,
they're in it too deep. Michael. There are consequences to
(27:25):
your worldview, and consequences to your policies, and consequences to
running people whose names have so many syllables to them
that no one can pronounce them.
Speaker 1 (27:35):
Senior contributor David Zanatti joining us our big question of
the day. We're going to geeze into good Friday and
Easter weekend. Donald Trump will complete his second first one
hundred days. It's rare that he gets one, like most
presidents don't in their second term. But first one hundred
days they went by fast. But it's it's over accomplishments
(27:58):
versus unfinished business.
Speaker 3 (28:00):
Clearly, he's made tremendous progress on the border without needing
any additional laws, which many of us have been saying
for twenty years, do the job that Congress has already
said to do, and you've got it. Immigration is a
significant gain. I think that Elon Musk is an extraordinary
American and he's done great work and still has much
much more work to go. So dog has been significant
(28:20):
order doge. Yeah, And I would say simply the courage
of the President to not get out over his skis,
to move along the line of controversy and make his
points and make his case and to not flinch has
been very, very powerful. I think his courage, but his
quiet courage has been extraordinary.
Speaker 4 (28:40):
And unfinished business. The big text cut.
Speaker 3 (28:44):
Good Congress, come on, let's go. Let's let this big,
beautiful bill. That's the game changer, and that's the one
that's got to come to foulish And now.
Speaker 2 (28:52):
This is your morning show with Michael del Trono. If
you're just waking up your top five stories.
Speaker 1 (28:58):
The President says, is it administration is fighting what he
called anti Christian bias in the US more with Mark Mayfield.
Speaker 10 (29:06):
Trump held an Easter prayer service Wednesday night in the
Blue Room of the White House, attended by religious leaders
like the Reverend Franklin Graham and White House Faith Advisor
Paula White Kane.
Speaker 11 (29:17):
So there's so much to celebrate this Easter. This is really,
I hope going to be one of the great Easters ever,
because we have something going that I don't think this
country's seen in one hundred years.
Speaker 10 (29:28):
Trump also promoted his new White House Faith Office as
Holy we continues. The White House is expected to host
a Passover event today to celebrate the Jewish holiday that
ends this weekend.
Speaker 3 (29:39):
I'm Mark Neathield.
Speaker 1 (29:39):
Maryland Senator Chris van Holland says El Salvador denied his
request to speak or meet with the Maryland man, you know,
the Maryland father, not the MS thirteen gang member and
citizen of El Salvador mistakenly deported to his home country,
Brian Shukesmore.
Speaker 12 (29:53):
The Democrat, traveled to L Salvador Wednesday to try to
secure the return of kilmar A break O Garcia. The
Department of Justice has said Abrego Garcia was in the
country illegally and a member of the.
Speaker 3 (30:06):
MS thirteen gang.
Speaker 12 (30:08):
Van Holland said the vice president of L Salvador told
him the government does not have information linking a Brago
Garcia with MS thirteen. The Supreme Court ruled last week
the Trump administration must facilitate a Brago Garcia's return to
the US.
Speaker 3 (30:24):
I'm Brian Shuk.
Speaker 4 (30:25):
We always impersonate him. I see dead people and they
don't know they're dead.
Speaker 1 (30:30):
Actor Haley Joel Osmon is facing charges after he was
arrested in the Mammoth Mountain ski resort.
Speaker 4 (30:37):
Daniel Martindale has to tail.
Speaker 13 (30:38):
Multiple media reports say the thirty seven year old Osmond
was arrested on April eighth on suspicion of public intoxication
and possession of an unidentified controlled substance.
Speaker 4 (30:48):
He was later released.
Speaker 13 (30:49):
The Memmouth Lakes Police Department in Mono County Sheriff's Office
both confirm his arrest. The Mono County District Attorney's Office
will decide whether to prosecute the case. I'm Daniel Martindale, no,
just I don't want delight to the misfortune.
Speaker 4 (31:03):
Of another comedian, Nate BARGHETSI.
Speaker 1 (31:06):
Oh, I'm very close with his father, Steve, and who's
also very funny. He's going to be honored by hosting
the Emmy Awards. He had a big year in twenty
twenty four, selling more than one point two million tickets.
He's in Nashville, Treasure. We're so proud of him. He
will be Hostasarian Live for a second time this year.
He will host the seventy seventh Annual Emmy Awards. They're
(31:27):
going to take place September fourteenth at the Peacock Theater
in Los Angeles. Congratulation to Nate and the Barghezi family.
People are in a panic to buy imported cars. Why
because turffs are going to go into effect. What does
that mean for inventory? What does it mean for the
future of new car sales? We go to our resident
to know it all. National correspondent Rory O'Neil, I think
(31:47):
you can connect these dots real quick.
Speaker 4 (31:49):
What it means. Yeah, And here are just a couple
of numbers.
Speaker 14 (31:52):
At the beginning of March, Cox Automotive said we had
ninety one days worth of new cars available at the
beginning of March. Now that number is to seventy days. Clearly,
people are out there snatching up cars in case the
prices are going up. And honestly, we don't know if
the prices are going to go up, or by how much,
or on which model, And in fact, we've seen some
(32:12):
US makers actually lower prices to sort of stir the
pot and move out some aging inventory they have as well.
So we've seen discounts by Ford, Chrysler and Stilantis by
offering customers employee pricing deals out there. So it's a
real wild time at the local car lot.
Speaker 1 (32:31):
And what's on the horizon in three four months when
the twenty twenty six.
Speaker 4 (32:35):
Is start arriving.
Speaker 1 (32:36):
And then I think it's probably not just easy to say,
like when you say imported vehicles. Honda, for example, eighty
percent of Hontas are manufactured in the United States. It's
not you would think, oh wow, that's Japanese. First of all,
Japan is liable to have a deal with the US,
most likely more than other countries. But you know, there's
(32:56):
one that you might think would be problematic, but it's not.
And yet some are and you'd be surprised the Americans
if you don't solve Canada and Mexico could be greatly
because of parts. So it's not a really easy thing
to dissect. Although I got my ducks in a row,
all my cars are accounted for. I'm ready to lay
(33:17):
low for a year or so, But how do you
know which ones are going to be affected more than
the others. That will sort itself out in pricing, probably right,
well right?
Speaker 14 (33:26):
And how much the car companies are willing to absorb.
A lot of those cars you talk about too, are
assembled in the US, so not necessarily made here. That's
a fine line. You know, how the BMW parts all
come in and then are assembled in the US. But
the parts would be tariff on arrival depending on where
they come from. So how much do the companies absorb that,
(33:47):
how much do they pass it on? It's all an
open question right now. But it seems that Americans are saying,
let's buy now. You know, we're already going to replace
old Betsy out in the driveway, and now is the
time maybe to pounce in case there could.
Speaker 1 (34:00):
Be a double win for them, you know, as far
as you know, everybody buying now and then if you
resolve this terrificsue, they can buy later as well. But
it can't get around supply and demand, can you. Nope,
that's inevitable. That's inevitable, like taxes and death. Roy and
Neil great reporting again today. We'll talk again tomorrow.
Speaker 2 (34:17):
We're all in this together. This is Your Morning Show
with Michael nhild jow Now