Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, it's me Michael. Your morning show can be heard
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 oh 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
at the time two.
Speaker 2 (00:20):
Three, starting your morning off right, A new way of talk,
a new way of understanding, because because we're in this together,
this is your morning show with Michael O'Dell, charm.
Speaker 3 (00:36):
And just a friendly, desperate reminder. You can't if your
morning show without your boys.
Speaker 4 (00:42):
If you are.
Speaker 3 (00:43):
Listening on the iHeartRadio app, you'll see a little microphone
press it.
Speaker 4 (00:45):
I'll count you down three two one.
Speaker 3 (00:48):
Usually when Roy O'Neil here's the three two oney yawns
in your case, that means start talking.
Speaker 4 (00:52):
You got thirty seconds to ask a.
Speaker 3 (00:54):
Question or make a combent and join the show. Also,
you can email michaeld and I Heeard Media well if
you're just waking up eight minutes after the hour, welcome
to your morning show. The White House is signaling it's
not extending the real id deadline. As the President boards
air Force one to head to Michigan, he's got a
big announcement on reaching an auto tariff deal as well
(01:17):
as making his big one hundred day speech of accomplishments,
and the Canadian Prime Minister is probably crediting Donald Trump
as the reason he won a new term as the
Prime minister, who was primarily an anti Trump platform. On well,
Trump threatening them to be the fifty first date probably
not one of the wiser Trump moves. And the Calves
(01:38):
advanced to the NBA Playoffs round two after sweeping the Heat.
All I want is a Blues Caps NHL final. Those
are of the teams that are left far and away
my two favorites, and I'd love to see ob get
a cup to end this great year. And then I
want to see the Calves in the thunder because I
really believe they're far and away the two best teams
in the NBA and they should play in the champ
(02:00):
all right. I did catch Rory yawning earlier, and it's
probably only the second most defensive thing he's done. After all,
he's in front of me on Facebook seven times. Rory,
I want to start with a definition, and then I
can just leave the room and let you go on
and on. Here is the definition. A Ponzi scheme is
a fraudulent investment scam where profits are paid to early
(02:20):
investors using money collected from new investors rather than from
actual profits generated by the business.
Speaker 4 (02:28):
Essentially, it's a pyramid scheme.
Speaker 3 (02:31):
So Aria, and of course, well bash anybody who's called
social security a Ponzi scheme, the latest being Elon Musk.
But by definition and by your story today, this is
a problem. A few of us have been screaming about
the birth rate in America and the problem it is
financially unsustainable for America. Better solve the birth rates. So
(02:54):
your story is the number of eighteen year olds is
about to drop sharply, and wow, it's going to affect colleges,
the economy, and especially social security.
Speaker 5 (03:02):
Right did you see sixty minutes this weekend? My chance
they have to tell you this story. They happened to
do this story essentially about Japan, and they found one town,
one small village in Japan. They just had their first
berth in twenty years. So this is something that is
a much bigger problem for Japan. Up front, they may
be next, but now it's just starting to happen here,
(03:23):
and a lot of it dates back to the Great
Recession two thousand and seven, two thousand and eight. The
real estate housing markets collapse, people don't feel like it's
not a good time to start having kids right as
the real estate market's collapsing.
Speaker 4 (03:37):
And now we're paying the piper.
Speaker 5 (03:39):
The number of eighteen year olds is dropping off a
cliff next year. It's expected to hit another big decline
in twenty thirty three. So this is, as you said,
impacting colleges and universities. In the first half of last year,
more than a college a week announced that it was closing.
Speaker 4 (03:57):
So we're seeing so that's how many more we have
to go?
Speaker 5 (04:01):
I'm kidding, right, I was, But that's the problem of
college haes gotten too expensive.
Speaker 4 (04:06):
Colleges not necessarily for all of these.
Speaker 3 (04:08):
Are multiple though, right, I mean, Rory looks like you
do Agenda twenty one or the climate you know, global
warming scare that makes people think we're all going to die.
Why I would I bring a child into this earth?
Or it was designed ultimately for population control, and there's
this it's an all of the above out there, But
it's a crisis.
Speaker 5 (04:27):
I don't know now, I mean, because now you see schools,
even element I was talking to a teacher, she's a
teacher now at my old elementary school from a thousand
years ago, and she said, yeah, half the classrooms are empty.
Speaker 4 (04:40):
We don't even use them anymore.
Speaker 5 (04:41):
You know, when I was there, we were working at
our horriable classrooms because of the boom, and we couldn't
fit all the students. Now those are gone, and instead
half the school is empty because there just aren't as
many kids coming along.
Speaker 3 (04:54):
Of these, I would say, for colleges, you've got how
much time do we have because I'm paranoid that we're
running late?
Speaker 4 (04:59):
One minute? One minute? Okay.
Speaker 3 (05:01):
So for colleges, they have endowments, they have other ways
of raising money. The economy, there's technology that can replace
some of these jobs. I mean, the biggest of all
is Social Security, and it's going to hit and it's
going to hit big. It was already unsustainable in terms
of running out of money, and now you have running
out of people paying into it. That effect, we should
probably put some rough estimate numbers two and a pen
(05:24):
to and maybe do a follow up story to this.
How will the low birth rate affect social security?
Speaker 5 (05:29):
And I would just say, don't necessarily lump all colleges
and universities with endowments or because there are a lot
of public schools out there that don't have a big
endowments that are they really need that tuition money coming
in and need that population of filling seats and this
could be a big issue for them as well.
Speaker 4 (05:46):
Well, all three are a big issue.
Speaker 3 (05:47):
I was just trying to say, social security looks like
a real clear and present danger of great reporting. As always,
great story. Roy'll be back in the third hour. We'll
talk about the massive blackouts that hit parts of Europe.
That'll be in the third hour. Also, Brooke Burns. Brooke
was in bay Watch, which I did not watch. She
was in Melrose Place, which I did not watch. She
(06:10):
was in Ally McBeal, which I did watch. She is
an Emmy Award winning host. If I would actually say,
the Chase Who Wants to Be a Millionaire with Regis
Philbin and probably Dealer No Deal with Howie Mandel might
be the three best primetime game shows of the last
twenty five years. And I got to tell you something, man,
(06:32):
Brooke Burns is an amazing host.
Speaker 4 (06:35):
I mean, I'll never forget we were at the.
Speaker 3 (06:39):
Hospital because hospitals and nursing homes all watch Game Show Network.
Speaker 6 (06:43):
You know.
Speaker 4 (06:43):
My theory is every waiting room I.
Speaker 3 (06:45):
Got, a doctor's office, or a hospital or a testing
facility will always have Home and Garden none. And they
do that on purpose so that nobody fights. If you
put Fox on, they get some liberals that'll complain. You
put C on, you'll get some conservatives that'll complain. And
they just avoid anything controversial, so they put on Home
and Guard. You just watch somebody flip a house. But
in nursing homes and especially with elderly in the hospital,
(07:06):
it's always game show. They just put Game Show Network on,
leave it out all day, all night. It is the
waiting room. And I was sitting and this was hospital,
not nursing home with my brother, and the Chase came on.
Speaker 4 (07:19):
He goes, oh, watch this, and.
Speaker 3 (07:20):
I thought he was making a reference because you know,
Brooke is and I don't mean that with any lust
in my heart at all. She is beautiful, all right,
So she's physically beautiful. I don't know what it's like
to look in a mirror and go, oh wow, I
look great. You know, I thought that's what he was referencing.
I'll just tell you, oh yeah, you would know Red
(07:41):
has a buffalo humped. It wouldn't. But anyway, make a
long story short, I thought he was making a reference
to her appearance. He goes, oh, no, no, no, no,
Watch how slick she is, and I was just in
awe of how smooth and you know, wink Martin Neale.
I got the chance to get to know him. What
a wonderful human being. He was the host of Tic
Tac Dough in the Glory years. They're bringing back Tic
(08:02):
Tacto with brook Burns as the host. It actually already
started a week ago, and she'll visit with us coming
up next hour as well. That was a long way
to go for that promo, wasn't it.
Speaker 4 (08:09):
Yeah? It was worth it, all right, she's cut she
could host.
Speaker 3 (08:15):
All right, So here comes the President's trip to Michigan,
and we're obviously going to do more on this next
half hour. John Decker is going to be on Air
Force one with the President. The big announcement. I mean,
I guarantee you you can't take enough victory lapse over
the border. That's how much America perceives it as the
(08:37):
ultimate accomplishment of the first one hundred days. You had
no president in a scam that was covered up by
the media that is now covering you ninety two percent
negative compared to fifty nine percent positive for the fake
president Joe Biden. I mean that journalism is just so
debt of credibility. But there's no question you had had
(09:00):
an open border, you had an invasion, you had a
rise in crime. In other words, they were committing violent
felony crimes even after committing the crime of breaking into
the border. And you didn't need laws, and you didn't
need this, and you didn't need that. You just needed
a new president. And the new president stopped it. The
border crossings go from hundreds of thousands to like four thousand.
(09:25):
You have the deportations and getting these very dangerous people
off our streets and sent to prisons. He ran to
restore order at the border, and he achieved it remarkably fast.
So he can't take enough victory lapse on that. We
said it's time to get onto the tax cuts and
healing the economy. Given about a year for the results
(09:46):
to kick in prior to the midterm, the time is now.
We hear from the Speaker of the House he thinks
by Memorial Day that he can get the tax cuts done,
and that includes the making permanent of the twenty seventeen
tax cuts, which is important and for removing uncertainty. Also
the new texts on tips over time or social security.
(10:07):
So I get that done Memorial Day, that's good. And
then we said he's got to get one or two
either the nuke talks to go somewhere. We're gonna talk
next hour with Lieutenant Colonel James Carafinal. This is difficult
because if you're dealing with Russian Iran, they're untrustworthy, their
lips are moving there lying. So what is a reasonable
expectation of what you can achieve? And if he can
achieve that, that would be remarkable for his legacy. But
(10:30):
at some point it's time to pivot away from this
tariff war. And you're going to see the President today
in addition to taking victory laps over the border announcing.
But Howard Lutnik has kind of teased that a deal
has been reached on the auto tariffs. That's a big sector,
so and I hope that's a sign of the pivot away.
(10:53):
The Wall Street Journal had reported that President Donald Trump
was set to announce a new tariff structure for cars
that avoids stacking them on top of other tariffs already
in place. Currently, there's a twenty five percent tariff on
almost all imported cars, as well as a twenty five
percent tariff on steel and aluminum, two metals heavily used
(11:14):
in producing vehicles. This deal is a major victory for
President's trade policy by rewarding companies who manufacture domestically.
Speaker 4 (11:22):
While providing.
Speaker 3 (11:24):
Runaway to manufacturers who have expressed their commitment to invest
in America and expand their domestic manufacturing. Or so says
Howard Lutnick. We'll see how the President says it today
in Michigan. The White House told Reuters that the deal
would be made official today Tuesday, when the President is
scheduled to travel to Michigan, the heart of the American
(11:46):
automobile industry.
Speaker 4 (11:48):
For those of you that were saying, well, is he.
Speaker 3 (11:49):
Going to Michigan, because we had five swing states not
just Michigan go the President's way. But obviously the President's
in working with the auto Workers' union, everything points to
he's going to be making this tariff announcement from Michigan,
as well as summing up how the first one hundred
days have gone.
Speaker 2 (12:10):
It's your morning show with Michael del Chino, One guy.
Speaker 7 (12:14):
It's just a couple of comments about Social Security. Not
only is it a pyramid scheme, then it was later
propped up by the pyramid of the baby boon, and
when it was signed in nineteen thirty five, life expectancy
for white males was sixty one, for females sixty five,
for African American males fifty one point three, and females
(12:35):
fifty five point two. Dan, you're never really intended to
pay out much on this system.
Speaker 3 (12:41):
Well that's a flawless call. And he got it all
in thirty seconds before he got cut off. Beautiful job, Roger. Yeah,
let me update these numbers for you. So, in nineteen
thirty five, the average life expectancy of a male in
the US was sixty one. It's now seventy four point eight.
That's dramatic living nearly fifty was it thirteen years longer?
(13:03):
For women, it's gone from sixty five to over eighty.
That's fifteen years. Combine them, that's twenty eight more years
of living and taking a check. For blacks in America,
the life expectancy was fifty one point three in nineteen
thirty five. It's now seventy for black males, and it
(13:24):
was fifty five point three for females. It's now seventy
six years. That's a twenty one year difference, not percent
year difference at twelve months of checks. Twenty one years.
Imagine how your household budget would look if you were
(13:46):
making significantly less and spending significantly more. Yeah, that's accelerating
the Ponzi and life expectancy. Fewer people in the workforce.
You couldn't overcome those chains alone, let alone what has
led to the decline and birth rate. And many of us,
I say many, a few of us have been warning
(14:08):
for about twenty years, and no one's been listening. I
think when it comes to higher education, when it comes
to the economy, and certainly when it comes to social security,
you're going to realize two things. It was a Ponzi
scheme all along, and now someone's going to be left
holding an empty bag.
Speaker 4 (14:25):
All right, real quickly, because there's not much time.
Speaker 3 (14:27):
Top five stories in Arizona, man is under arrest after
setting fire in a Tesla dealership again.
Speaker 8 (14:33):
Authorlready said a cyber truck was set on fire early
Monday morning at the dealership in the Phoenix suburb of Mesa.
Thirty five year old Ian Moses is facing arson charges.
Graffiti with the word thief was also seen on a wall.
Several incidents involving Tesla vehicles and dealerships have happened since
CEO Elon Musk began his work with the Trump administration.
(14:56):
The company has also seen a more than seventy percent
drop in profits during that time.
Speaker 4 (15:02):
I'm Brian Shook.
Speaker 3 (15:03):
Another House Democrat is introducing articles of impeachment headed nowhere,
of course, but filing them nonetheless.
Speaker 9 (15:10):
In a statement, Michigan Congressman Street Tanadar said Trump is
unfit to serve as president and represents a clear and
present danger to our nation's constitution and our democracy. These
are the first articles of impeachment to be brought against
Trump since he retook office in January. It's considered a
long shot since Republicans control both the House and the Senate.
Texas Congressman Al Green, who was censured for interrupting Trump's
(15:31):
speech to a joint session of Congress, has also said
he plans to introduce articles of impeachment against Trump. I
only said Taylor.
Speaker 3 (15:38):
President Trump assigned an executive order related immigration.
Speaker 4 (15:41):
Tammy Trehillo has more.
Speaker 10 (15:42):
Trump signed multiple orders on Monday, ranging from one mandating
truck drivers be proficient in English to one cracking down
on sanctuary jurisdictions. The order calls for a list identifying
such sanctuary jurisdictions that obstruct the enforcement of federal immigration
laws within thirty days. The White House is focusing on
President Trump's immigration crackdown during the first one hundred days
(16:03):
of the second administration. It's the first of several days
meant to showcase Trump's sweeping agenda. I'm tammaged for HEO.
Speaker 7 (16:12):
This is Sean Paul from Avita, Florida, and my morning
show is your Morning show with Nostros del Jorno.
Speaker 1 (16:26):
Hi, I'm Michael. I'd love to have you listen to
your morning show live.
Speaker 4 (16:28):
Every day.
Speaker 1 (16:29):
We're heard on great stations like News Talk five point
fifty k f YI 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.
Speaker 4 (16:44):
This is your morning show.
Speaker 3 (16:45):
Remember if you miss anything that we did already or
gonna do later in the morning, you didn't really miss it.
You got all day to catch it in the podcast
section of your iHeartRadio app. Just search your morning show
or Michael del Jornam. It'll pop right up, by the way.
When it does, why not hit subscribe that waiting for
you every day. Better yet, put it in one of
your new presets on the iHeartRadio app. All right, if
(17:06):
you're just waking up, the White House is signaling it's
not extending the real ID deadline. Well, you've had twenty
years to get it. What's the longest license you can get?
Speaker 4 (17:15):
Six years?
Speaker 3 (17:17):
I don't think there's anything longer than that, is there.
Why would you have not have done it already? I
mean I did it like the first cycle after they
announced it. But anyway, they're not going to extend the
deadline any better have it, especially if you planned hair travel.
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Kearney wins a new term is
the Canadian Prime Minister. That was a race fueled by
(17:39):
the Trump statements of fifty first state and the caps
advanced Round two of the NBA Playoffs, sweeping the heat.
Speaker 4 (17:45):
Good news for our.
Speaker 3 (17:46):
Akron Young's town and maryon I forgot we're in like
six Ohio markets.
Speaker 4 (17:52):
All right.
Speaker 3 (17:54):
We affectionately call this the Sounds of the Day because
it's always revealing and often entertaining. Today, revealing is the key.
Speaker 4 (18:05):
We will win.
Speaker 11 (18:08):
They all look like a bunch of girly men human change.
Speaker 3 (18:18):
We're gonna start with the White House Correspondence dinner where
the president of the White House Correspondence Association delivered his speech.
Speaker 4 (18:25):
Uh, this is the key moment I want you to hear.
We journalists are a lot of things.
Speaker 11 (18:30):
We are competitive and pushy, we are impatient, and sometimes
we think we know everything. But we're also human. We
miss our families and significant life moments in service to
this job.
Speaker 3 (18:43):
By the way, I would just like to interrupt and
say that every morning, when I selflessly leave everything on
the studio floor serving you as host of your morning show,
that's time away from my wife children. I'd like to
be honored like a Special Forces soldier. Are going to
(19:07):
work every day. Oh the ego. Wait, that's not the
part I wanted you to hear.
Speaker 11 (19:12):
Listen, deeply about accuracy and take seriously the heavy responsibility
of being stewards of the public's trust.
Speaker 4 (19:19):
Well, the public doesn't trust you.
Speaker 3 (19:25):
They trust you about as much as they trust those
illegal rapists and murderers that you cover for, or the
presidency that didn't really exist that you'll later get to.
Speaker 4 (19:35):
What we are not is the opposition.
Speaker 11 (19:38):
What we are not is the enemy of the people,
And what we are not is the enemy of the state.
Speaker 3 (19:44):
Well, you are the enemy of Donald Trump and therefore
over half the country and state so far this year
in the second Trump administration, the president has had to
withstand from these quote unquote journalists sacrificing so much, being
away from their family and the name of accuracy and
(20:06):
service to you, the American people. How is it possible
that ninety two percent of all coverage of President Donald
Trump has been negative? ABC, NBC, CBS, whose flagship news
program averaged more than nineteen point three million viewers. By
(20:28):
the way, that number is staggering in and of itself,
three hundred and sixty million Americans. Only nineteen million watched
these people. But if they did, and for those caught
in the left of the matrix, this is where they
get their narratives from the ninety two percent negative of
(20:50):
the self proclaimed accurate, hard working.
Speaker 4 (20:54):
Truth telling journalists.
Speaker 3 (20:57):
Media Research Center analysts looked at eight hundred and ninety
nine stories on the Big Three evening newscasts that discussed
President Trump the Trump administration from January twenty through April ninth,
including weekends.
Speaker 4 (21:09):
Key findings.
Speaker 3 (21:10):
The network's highly negative coverage of President Trump stands in
stark contrast to the mostly fifty nine percent positive coverage
they provided for Joe Biden for four years. This same
White House Correspondence Association president would admit their complicit role
(21:31):
in the cover up of the fake Joe Biden presidency,
but just for the moment chew On that won under
but sixty percent positive coverage for the guy that was
clearly senile and wasn't president and created a border crisis
(21:51):
ninety two percent negative for Donald Trump, who solved it
and restored law and order. All TV coverage of Trump's
last term was heavily focused on an array of personal controversies.
This year's coverage has mostly been about serious policy issues.
Tariffs three hundred and sixty one minutes, DOGE three hundred
(22:12):
and ten minutes, Immigration two hundred and thirty three minutes.
See if you oppose their worldview, their policy view, their party,
because they're virtually all unanimously Democrats.
Speaker 4 (22:23):
Well, the journalists get negative.
Speaker 3 (22:27):
The network spin on Trump's teriff faced ninety three percent
negative coverage, while Doge cutbacks identifying and removing fraud overspending
that was greeted with ninety seven percent negative spin. Remember stories,
(22:48):
you cover, stories, you don't people, you talk to people,
you don't. Quotes you use, quote, you don't angles, you
choose angles, you don't spun ninety seven percent negative. And
this is just ABC, NBC, and CBS. Don't even get
(23:08):
started on late night talk shows, the Washington Post, of
New York Times, Hollywood sitcoms, even on immigration, the issue
of the public gives the president the highest ratings is
where they were really out of step with the American people.
Speaker 4 (23:24):
The spin was ninety three percent negative.
Speaker 3 (23:30):
The analyst tallied one eight hundred and forty one explicitly
a value to its statements about President Trump and the
Trump administration, of which one thousand, six hundred ninety eight,
or ninety two point two percent were negative, a mere
seven point eight percent which were positive. Unless you think
(23:54):
the president has done one hundred things and only seven
were right.
Speaker 4 (24:01):
Eight years ago.
Speaker 3 (24:02):
Using identical methodology, the analysts found that Trump was blasted
with eighty nine percent negative coverage at the hands of
these networks during the first weeks of his first term.
I think out of all of it, I mean, that
(24:23):
doesn't shock you, right, you knew. I mean you know
that that president's full of it, right?
Speaker 4 (24:32):
You know?
Speaker 3 (24:32):
The mainstream legacy media as an arm of the Democratic Party.
That's why they have no credibility. It's why journalism is dead.
That was made clear in twenty sixteen. But the biggest
takeaway is that Donald Trump would be perceived so negatively
with such a high negative percentage, and yet this same
(24:59):
media covered four years of a fake presidency sixty percent positive.
That part's just frankly breathtaking. Well, actress is Alex Thompson.
He had to admit the failures of the media. Listen
(25:21):
to this sound. This is beautiful.
Speaker 12 (25:24):
President Biden's decline and its cover up by the people
around him is a reminder that every White House, regardless
of party, is capable of deception. But being true tellers
also means telling the truth about ourselves. We myself included
(25:46):
missed a lot of this story, and some people.
Speaker 4 (25:49):
Trust us less because of it.
Speaker 12 (25:51):
We bear some responsibility for faith in the media being
at such lows.
Speaker 3 (26:00):
Smattering of applause compared to the other one that got
his standing ovation.
Speaker 12 (26:07):
I say this because acknowledging errors builds trust and being
defensive about them further erodes it.
Speaker 4 (26:15):
Well, Unfortunately, you were a voice of one.
Speaker 3 (26:23):
This got a reaction, even from Caroline Levitt, our White
House Press Secretary.
Speaker 4 (26:28):
Listen to the question.
Speaker 13 (26:30):
Alex Thompson said at the White House Correspondence Center, and
I'm going to.
Speaker 4 (26:33):
Read his quote.
Speaker 13 (26:34):
President Biden's decline and it's cover up by the people
around him is a reminder that every White House, regardless
of the party, is capable of decession.
Speaker 6 (26:42):
We myself included, miss a lot of this story, and some.
Speaker 4 (26:44):
People trust us less because of it.
Speaker 13 (26:46):
Can you comment on those remarks and whether you agree
with that assessment. I do agree with that assessment from
Alex Thompson, who I understand won an award for writing
a story months and perhaps years after the American people
are knew that story to be true. Millions of Americans
watched our mentally and competent President struggle with his day
to day duties of this office. We watched our country
(27:09):
be ran into the ground as a result, and nobody
in the media wanted to write about that.
Speaker 4 (27:14):
Talk about it.
Speaker 13 (27:14):
There were many many reporters, I will say, right leaning
reporters who did talk about that, who didn't get awards,
didn't get coverage. In fact, they were landbasted for their coverage.
And I remember being on President Trump's campaign talking about
Joe Biden's clear mental incompetence and being accused by people
in this room of manufacturing deep fake videos trying to
(27:38):
persuade the public into not believing what they saw with
their own eyes for many years, and I think it's
about time the legacy media finally admits that was one
of the greatest cover ups.
Speaker 4 (27:48):
Too much, too little, too late to listen.
Speaker 3 (27:54):
It's probably the biggest hoax, political hoax in the history
of our country, this fake presidency for four years of
Joe Biden, and I don't think America even can begin
to get its arms around that, which tells me it
could happen again. But the notion that the hoax was
(28:15):
getting sixty percent positive coverage and a real leader really
elected by the people is facing ninety seven percent negative coverage.
Remember when I coined the phrase death of journalism, and
I said it happened in twenty sixteen, and when it happened,
(28:36):
and for the years following, I said, this is not
a victory for the left, This is not a victory
for the right. This is a problem for the republic.
That part is yet to be sorted out.
Speaker 4 (28:52):
One last media bias quote. This one comes from Secretary
Scott Persent.
Speaker 14 (28:58):
Listen, when I look at at some of the things
that are being published, there was a story ten days
ago that said this is the worst April for the
stock market since the Great Depression. Ten days later, the
Nasdaq is now up in the month of April, and
I haven't seen a story that says, oh, stock market
has biggest bounce back ever.
Speaker 10 (29:20):
So I it certainly has.
Speaker 14 (29:22):
Gone back and forth with but I think a lot
of this is media driven.
Speaker 3 (29:27):
We got to move on quickly from that comment. There's
no such thing as fair and balanced anymore. There's no
such thing as news. You don't get news, and you're
not news consumers. We have narratives matrix. Narratives matrix on
(29:47):
the left, matrix on the right, and then we have
repeating of narratives, narratives and narrative repeating, not news and
not news consumers. And the problem with that is that
equal no understanding and.
Speaker 4 (30:01):
You have the same.
Speaker 9 (30:04):
Aspire and stop it good, some help.
Speaker 4 (30:08):
Don't you ever let invyan power from you? God? Please?
Speaker 6 (30:11):
No, no.
Speaker 4 (30:13):
It is the motto keep come, come along.
Speaker 3 (30:17):
And that's your Sounds of the day for this Tuesday,
April to twenty ninth, LA Loud to twenty twenty five.
Speaker 4 (30:24):
This is your Morning Show with Michael Del Chrono.
Speaker 3 (30:29):
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney wins a new term as
the Canadian Prime Minister, and he did run on an
anti Trump platform, after all, Trump taunted them with being
the fifty first state and a House Democrat is introducing
articles impeachment that will go nowhere against Donald Trump. And meanwhile,
President Trump is headed to Michigan to celebrate his one
hundredth day in office, and I suspect he has a
(30:52):
big announcement on the auto tariffs to go along with it.
John Decker will be on that Air Force one with
the President for this big day. John, I think we
would start with first one hundred days. You can't take
enough victory lapse over border success, can you Well, that's right.
Speaker 6 (31:08):
That was the first press conference out of the blocks
this week focus on border security, the successes the administration
beliefs they've had over the course of the past one
hundred days. When I walked into the White House yesterday, I.
Speaker 4 (31:21):
Saw line on the north lawn.
Speaker 6 (31:23):
And still there by the way posters of individuals who've
been arrested by Ice, individuals that were in the country illegally,
arrested for very serious crimes. And yesterday Tom Home and
the Borders are taking questions in the press briefing room.
Today the focus is on the economy, and Secretary of
the Treitury Scott Dessent, will be in the briefing room
(31:45):
that will be in a little less than an hour
from now.
Speaker 3 (31:48):
All right, So, the biggest success of the first one
hundred days clearly the border, not just securing it in
border crossings, but the deportation and securing of law and
order and protection of the people. Unfinished business the tax cuts,
although the Speaker says maybe by Memorial Day, securing and
making permanent the twenty seventeen tax cuts, the no tax
(32:09):
on tips over time and social security. That's unfinished business.
Ending the war with Russian and Ukraine is unfinished business
at this moment. The nuke talks with Iran or a
bit of a question mark. And I bet there's a
Conservative that wanted to be Prime minister in Canada that
would say that maybe the biggest failure of the first
one hundred days is the President making Canada a focal
point of this election.
Speaker 4 (32:31):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (32:31):
I think that changed the outcome of that election in
a very real way. You know, when you had Trudeau
as the leader for Canada, he was not in a
good place in terms of public opinion polls. But things
changed dramatically when President Trump spoke about Canada as a
fifty first state, and I mean dramatically. It flipped. I
(32:52):
think at one point you had the Conservative when Trudeau
is still the Prime minister up by in a potential
mash up by like thirty points, and here he as
he loses yesterday.
Speaker 4 (33:03):
To the Liberal standard bear.
Speaker 6 (33:06):
And I think that has a lot to do with
Donald Trump's attacks and things that he said regarding Canada.
Speaker 3 (33:12):
Someone will have to explain long and hard to me
what the thought process was behind that strategy. It's certainly backfired,
all right, big announcement. We've got to pivot on the tariffs,
and we at least we know from Howard Lutnik that
potentially the President will be announcing in Michigan, and I
think that explains why Michigan that they have reached an
auto tariff, an automobile tariff deal.
Speaker 4 (33:34):
Well, we'll see.
Speaker 6 (33:35):
You know, as things stand right now, there's a twenty
five percent tariff that's in place for all automobiles that
are manufactured outside the United States. That impacts a lot
of auto makers that are based in Japan and in Europe.
And we'll see what the president's announcement is as it
relates to auto tariffs in Michigan. That'll be this after
(33:57):
and actually the speech that he gives the celebratory speech,
and that's what they're calling it, a celebration that will
take place at six pm Eastern time tonight.
Speaker 4 (34:05):
As you point out, I be on that trip on
the air Force.
Speaker 3 (34:08):
I was going to say, I was gonna say, put
your seat in an upright position, get your trade table up,
and enjoy your flight. And we look forward to the
review of this speech and visit to Michigan tomorrow.
Speaker 4 (34:20):
We're all in this together. This is Your Morning Show
with Michael Ndheld, Joano