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April 30, 2025 34 mins

Birth rate crisis, media bias and The Atlantic manifesto of the left!

The Atlantic editor says we now live in the reality President Trump has created. We ask YMS senior contributor Dave Zanotti, "Is the left suddenly seeing the matrix?"  because they still seem blind to the reality they want to force everyone to live in! 

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

Do you have your “Real ID?”  The long-delayed deadline for having yours is next week. But what exactly IS the “Real ID” and why do you need it? National Correspondent RORY O’NEILL shares the story. 

 

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, I'm Michael del Jorno and your morning show can
be heard live as it's happening five to eight am
Central and six to nine Eastern on great stations like
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part of your morning routine, but we're glad you're here now.

(00:22):
Enjoy the podcast on.

Speaker 2 (00:23):
Two three, starting your morning off right. A new way
of talk, a new way of understanding, because we're in
this together.

Speaker 3 (00:34):
This is your Morning Show with Michael del Jordan.

Speaker 4 (00:39):
Seven minutes after the hour. Welcome to Wednesday, April to thirtieth,
the final day of the April May is tomorrow time
fries when you're having fun. If you're just waking up.
President Trump is calling the first one hundred days of
his second term in office the most successful of any
administration ever. Harvard University loser of the day with what

(01:00):
they're calling a vow to change and an apology. But
the apology was so awful. The task Force found real
instances of anti Semitism. Then they combined it with what
Muslim students feel, you know, after doing protests not acknowledging
Israel's right to exist. One is what they feel. The

(01:21):
other is what's in the curriculum, what's in the classroom,
what's affecting hiring real anti Semitism. So not quite the
apology that you should be expecting, and you're not supposed
to play favorites with the shows. Tomorrow, we're going to
visit with Christy Brinkley. And I know all of you

(01:42):
know her as a supermodel and a beautiful person, but
it's been anything but a beautiful life, and her life
lessons are things you'll really relate to. I don't know
what it's like to look that perfect at twenty years old,
but I know what it's like to have life beat
you up and the wisdom that comes from having lived.
And I don't want you to miss that interview tomorrow,
and I'm so glad you're here right now. Everything that

(02:04):
we're about to talk about is what I wanted you
to hear the most today. I brought something up earlier
on the show, which is what really ended up killing wokeness.
One will debate this for years, but the minute you
couldn't define what a woman is any longer. Never mind
biological men boxing against women, or swimming against women, or

(02:25):
playing sports against women. When you couldn't figure out what
bathroom to go do all of that, the bottom line
is when you could not look a camera with your
eyes and define what a woman is. That was when
woke went too far and it crumbled like a house
of cards. Well, guess what, I got a new question
for you? What is an American? Because it's not a

(02:48):
GPS location. A GPS can show you in my home,
but that doesn't make you a del journal Maybe we'll
get to that because we're living in a matrix right
now where the president is removing rapist murderers, gang members,
human traffickers, criminals, and you got half the country defending them,
even a judge hiding them. We're getting to a level

(03:11):
of insanity on this that could go either way, and
I hope it's about to be a house of cards
that falls. The other is the birth rate crisis in America.
The other is the coverage numbers of the first one
hundred days, ninety two percent negative for the president, sixty
nine percent positive for Joe Biden, who wasn't even a

(03:32):
real presidency and was a cover up. And finally, if
you hear us talk about the Time magazine manifesto and
that really we've been talking about that now for almost
five years. Well you're gonna hear us talk about the
Atlantic editor's piece acknowledging I guess the matrix on the
right while ignoring the reflection from their own mirror. We're

(03:55):
going to do all of that right now with David Early.
Start much of that right now with the senior contributor.
He is the CEO of the American Policy Roundtable, host
of The Public Square, and a Your Morning Show, senior contributor,
David Zonati. David, let's start with something that you put
on my radar a long time ago, which is the
birth rate crisis. Abortion plays a role in this, but
so does climate change and other things of fear in

(04:17):
the left agenda that has people literally not having children.
When Social Security began in nineteen thirty five, Roger and
Sacramento brought this up. The lifespan of a male was
sixty one and a female sixty five. Today the life
span of a male is seventy four point eight and

(04:38):
for a woman eighty point two. So I think you
can see that collectively, we're now living thirteen an extra
twenty years of receiving checks. For blacks. In nineteen thirty five,
the average male life expectancy was fifty one point three
and for females fifty five and two months. Today, at

(05:00):
seventy and seventy six years, respectively, we're living longer, yet
fewer are paying in and fewer are working because fewer
are alive because of the birth rate crisis of which
Rory did the story yesterday, that's about to be felt
at eighteen. One of the things that we talked a
lot about was everything that our entitlement programs or our

(05:25):
car programs were designed and based on are unsustainable without birthrate.
And now we've been warning for twenty years, Well, here
comes the reality because this batch of eighteen year olds
is too low to begin to cover this. So an
already unsustainable social security is about to get unsustainable real fast.

Speaker 3 (05:44):
Yeah, Michael, and I appreciate you bringing up the fact
that abortion is a part of this, because it is.
We are not having more abortions in America than we
were under Roe versus Wade. In other words, we had
a law that said do anything you want so to speak,
in the States, and that law fell down and planned

(06:05):
parent are told us it was the end of the world.
And now we have more of our abortions in a
nation that is pretty much evenly divided between states that
regulate access and states that don't. So what's going on here?
First off, the technology has changed. The issue is the same,
but the technology has changed. Description and a stunning report
came out just this week and was passed on to

(06:28):
me by Eric carry outing the decision in California, who
passed it along, and it came from a Washington basing tank.
It's now being fact checked around the world and found
out to be quite valid. And this particular report indicates
the fact that the side effects of chemical abortions through
using the pills are let's see, what's the right word,

(06:52):
exponentially higher than we're reported in the FDA reports. But
as a part of that as well is the fact
that now the significant majority of all abortions are being
done by these pills, which means that doctors are no
longer there, ultrasounds are no longer there, clinics are no
longer there, and so we have an expansion of abortion

(07:12):
in a very dangerous technology. So that's just a part
of why it's growing.

Speaker 4 (07:18):
Can I interrupt and ask you this all right? Yeah?

Speaker 3 (07:20):
Sure?

Speaker 4 (07:20):
For the left, the good news is the ultrasound isn't
there by the way, I used to be a spokesperson
for Preborn that ultrasounds a game changer. You show any
woman what her baby looks like before she takes its life.
The decision is overwhelmingly made towards life. So abortionists or
anti life people for whatever reason, financial, whatever, they don't

(07:42):
want you to see that ultrasounds. That's a big victory
for them that they can get babies aborted without you
ever having to have an ultrasound or see it. The
bad news is you, as a woman are in jeopardy
because now you're doing something medical without any medical oversight
or accountability. And they don't get any medical they don't
even and they don't go smoothly, do they David?

Speaker 3 (08:02):
Not all Well, these kills are designed for a specific
gestational age, and if a person doesn't know that specific number,
they could be in a position of self prescribing medicine
that's not going to work well for them. And that's dangerous.
And this report that came out is based upon insurance claims. Now,
this is on the ground, This isn't theoretical mess and

(08:23):
planned parent are reporting. This is what the insurance companies
are paying for. So abortion is a piece of it,
but it is a bigger piece. In your language already
animates that people that believe we need a replacement level
and then some birth rate are called pronatalists. And it's
becoming a negative, pejorative term.

Speaker 4 (08:41):
What I didn't know we had a name.

Speaker 3 (08:44):
Yes, yes, we're now being called pronatal.

Speaker 4 (08:46):
Go forth and multify you. Yes.

Speaker 3 (08:49):
However, the people who are fighting this concept of a
survival or replacement rate are really anti natalists. But there
really are is they're anti human right. They've decided they
don't care any longer if the human race survives. And
this is manifested in the culture of China, where people
were penalized for having more than one child and for

(09:11):
years and now they simply don't want to have any children,
and they refuse to change no matter what the government
attempts to do. Once you cross over that threshold, you're
looking at the extinction of a nation and a culture.

Speaker 4 (09:22):
Remember when the left's mantra was abortion should be safe, Well,
it's never save for the baby. It dies every time,
and it's not always safe for the woman. It should
be rare. Why should it be rare if there's nothing
wrong with it and it should be legal, And of
course it was. If they go back to their old mantra,
the prescription abortion plan, the way it's set up right now,

(09:45):
the way it's playing out right now, it's not safe
for the baby or the mother, and no one's regulating it,
no one's overseeing it, all right, So we have a
population crisis. This would be just like us not to
notice the real moral relevance of this, let alone the
Islamic game plan of this, which used to be always
on my radar. No, we'll notice it through social security.

(10:09):
How unsustainable is social security now? It was already going
to run out, and I was I'm projected, and I'm
not that old. I'm projecting only get seventy percent of
my benefits. My guess is that's going to be closer
to fifty percent based on this birth rate crisis. And
you won't get anybody in Washington do addresses they've been
kicking the can. Do you remember what the big issue
was in Gore versus Bush? Sure, the lock box, the

(10:32):
lock box, all right, and then ended up being hanging
chads and then ended up being a holy warm. But
that's what we were doing. That's how twenty five years
we've made no progress. But I got news for you.
It is a clear and present danger and this already
unsustainable and by definition a Ponzi scheme. The early people
get the benefits, the last ones get holding the empty bag.

(10:53):
This bag is going to get empty really fast. And
this may be the first anybody looks at this birth crisis.
Of course, they're missing the much bigger questions that we.

Speaker 3 (11:01):
Will talk and they've been losing it for twenty years. Instead,
what they were doing through the Clinton administration and then
through the Obama administration was trying to figure out how
to ration healthcare so that we could get rid of
the old people to sustain this. Well, that still yes,
and that's still the other part of it. But there's
another part that's not being talked about at all, Michael.
People today can't retire before sixty seven and a half

(11:23):
and gain access to their full benefits. Now that doesn't
mean they'll get their full benefits, it means they can't
get access to them. So if you want to get
your access, you have to wait to at least sixty
seven and a half. Remember it used to be sixty five.
That's a significant change. Plus on top of that, no
one can afford to live on Social Security, so almost
everyone is still working. And if you work while you're

(11:43):
getting Social Security or taxed on your income that you're
working on, you are then taxed on your Social Security
number numbers, which were taxed when you put them in
when you started at fourteen years of age. So the
Social Security recipients are now triple tax tax more than
any other Americans, tax more than American billionaires, tax more
than people in the poverty level. The retired community has

(12:05):
to work more and pay more tax.

Speaker 4 (12:07):
Getting zero representation or thank you, I might.

Speaker 3 (12:10):
Represent where's AARP when you need it? So here's what
we're to say.

Speaker 4 (12:14):
I probably paid more into Social Security in five years
than my dad did over a lifetime, all right, because
they keep raising how much of my income they will tax.
Then they keep raising the age in which I can
begin to receive it, and then of course taxing me
later if I and penalizing me if I work and
receive it. This is a Ponzi scheme by definition definition.

(12:37):
It is unsustainable, making it worse well, and it's going
to make be made even worse by the global warming,
abortion unanswered issues as we now have a birth rate crisis.
So think about how much more we're living sixty one
versus seventy four and zero point eight for men, and
sixty five versus eighty point two for women, living way longer,

(12:57):
receiving way longer, and we got fewer people going to
work because we we were afraid to have kids. They
were all going to die of global warming. The Media
Research came out with its new statistics, and this is
basically centered around ABCNBC and CBS, but it'll show you
the death of journalism and the matrix ninety two percent
of all coverage on the president. When you get specific

(13:18):
on the two big issues, which is the border in
the economy, it gets closer to ninety seven percent negative,
but ninety two percent negative for the first hundred days
of Trump, sixty eight percent positive for Joe Biden, the
fake fraudulent scam presidency positive, the real presidency, the movement
of the people percent negative. No big shocks there, same

(13:44):
condition exists.

Speaker 3 (13:46):
Let's just say I can't resist this for five years,
the media never bothered to ask a single question about
what was in the mind of Joe Biden, And now
suddenly all they're interested in is what makes Donald Trump tick?
How does he think? I just find that remarkably fascinating,
and it's reflective in this coverage. Their goal is to

(14:08):
bury Trump. They're absolutely convinced that they've got him and
that they're winning, and they are going to bury him.
They believe they are winning. And the only news agency
that's out there that thinks otherwise is Fox. Fox actually
thinks that the Democrats are losing. But in reality, the
media is convinced they're winning.

Speaker 4 (14:24):
The Atlantic, which is really the voice that speaks to
the intelligencia at the university, speaks to the Disney Comcast
leadership of all media. They have a new manifesto. It's
right up there with the Shadow Campaign, to say the
democracy and it may take us years to get to
the bottom of but the editor comes out and says,

(14:44):
we all live in the reality that President Trump is created.
Is this suggesting that the Atlantic sees the matrix of
the right while they can't see the matrix of the
left reflecting right back at them in the mirror.

Speaker 5 (14:58):
It's Your More show with Michael del Joano.

Speaker 4 (15:03):
We're visiting with David Sanati. Red brought something up in
the break and I stopped both of them because I
wanted it to happen on the air. Leaving you mentioned well,
Fox is telling everybody, of course, Trump and Republicans are winning,
and the left believes they're winning and right instead time out,
What do you think, David, who's winning?

Speaker 3 (15:20):
And your answer, well, my answer is this, The presidential
election is a binary choice. Always. We don't know who
the players are going to be in the next open
seat election. Donald Trump's been elected twice because he wasn't
his opponents. Both times, am Americans rejected his opponent as
much as they embraced him. He won farre and square.
Some people think three times, we'll just settle for two

(15:42):
right now, but he definitely won both those elections because
he wasn't his opponent. Secondly, the Atlantic and others want
us to believe that Donald Trump defines reality for all
human beings every day and we live inside his bubble.
We win or lose based on what narrative we accept.
The reality of our country is not based on upon
who our president is. Right, The reality of our country

(16:02):
is based upon self evident truths discovered in the Declaration
of Independence and documented. There's the birth of our nation.

Speaker 4 (16:09):
And by the way, Romans twelve one has nothing to
do Yeah, I was gonna say, Romans twelve one has
nothing to do with the patterns of presidency. It has
to do with the patterns of this world. But it's
a great question that and the unknown, right, we don't
know what's going to happen. Could have a terrorist that
don't know what, have a virus, you could have you
know a lot of things.

Speaker 3 (16:26):
We don't know what's coming next. That's the other.

Speaker 4 (16:28):
Part of it.

Speaker 3 (16:31):
Hey, everybody's John Ford Coley of England, Dan and John
Ford Coley And my morning show is your morning show
with Michael del Giorno.

Speaker 1 (16:44):
Hey, Gang, it's me Michael. You can listen to your
morning show live. Make us a part of your morning
routine or your drive to work companion on great stations
like Talk Radio ninety eight point three and fifteen ten
WLAC in Nashville, Tupelo's News and Talk one to one
point one and ten sixty WKMQ, and how about Talk
six to fifty KSTE in Sacramento, California. Love to have

(17:06):
you listen live, but are grateful you're here now for
the podcast.

Speaker 4 (17:09):
Enjoy. I'm Michael. President Trump is calling the first one
hundred days of his second term in office the most
successful of any administration ever. The Wisconsin Supreme Court has
suspended that judge accused of obstructing the rest of an
illegal immigrant, and have a university with a very disingenuous apology.
Their own task force found anti semitism prevalent in the classroom,

(17:32):
in the curriculum, in the hiring, but they made it
all about Islamophobia and anti semitism because some Islamic students
feel as though there is bias against them. That more
coming up in your Top five Stories of the Day.
David Sanati's joining us. He's the CEO of the American
Policy Roundtable and host of the Public Square, also our

(17:52):
your morning show senior contributor. And you've heard us talk
for years now about the Manifesto and Time Magazine, the
Shadow Camp to save the democracy. It's how they weaponize COVID,
it's how they change election laws. It's how they stole
Farre and Square an election, and they admit it and
then those people want on to be chief of staff
and other key positions, and they'll do it again. In

(18:14):
twenty twenty eight, we got a new manifesto, this time
from the Atlantic. Why does that make it different from
the editor himself? Why does that make it different? And
the headline, of course, is we now live in a
reality President Trump has created, so an acknowledgement of one
side of the matrix while ignoring the reflection of their
side of the matrix from their own mirror. Is this

(18:38):
a manifesto? And why does this need to be on
everybody's radar? More importantly, David, how long is it going
to take for us to explain this to everybody? Because
again will be the only ones talking about it.

Speaker 3 (18:49):
Yeah, and that's true because it takes so much reading.
It's part of the Atlantic's powers to write stuff that's
so long in laborious that nobody reads it. Yet the
people in academia read it, and of course all of
as you mentioned, all the media tower empires read it.
Jeffrey Goldberg is the person that started the signal controversy

(19:10):
by illegitimately utilizing data he wasn't supposed to have received.
Now he's got a qualm and a problem of conscience.
About that, which is interesting and it's a part of
this story. But that's the same Jeffrey Goldberg, who is
the quote editor in chief of The Atlantic. They now
have a series of articles that are coming out and
in the June edition, and they're publicizing them now, and

(19:31):
they've gone into an interview series with Donald Trump that
will dominate the news for probably the next ninety days.
The first and most important thing to understand about this
is it validates what we've been talking about for forty
five years. Not that it means that we're right. It's
just that it's real. And that is that the Atlantic
is attempting to define all reality based on who the

(19:52):
president is.

Speaker 4 (19:53):
Now.

Speaker 3 (19:54):
I know that sounds ridiculous, it sounds religious, excuse me,
and it is. But listen to mister Goldberg's own words.
He says it this way. I want to get this
so right. One is not required to admire Trump to
acknowledge that he has become the most consequential American political

(20:17):
political figure of the twenty first century and that we
all live insider reality that he has made and makes
new every day. I mean, I'm ready for an altar call.

Speaker 4 (20:30):
Well, but no different than no different than what he
would have said about Barack Obama or about Bill Clinton
quite frankly, or Ronald Reagan quite frankly.

Speaker 3 (20:37):
Well, there's there's an interesting question or quart of away
into the end, into the new century, and he's saying
that Donald Trump is more significant than Barack Obama. I
think that's a good two hour debate at that stage
in the game.

Speaker 4 (20:50):
Yeah, but he means it's a threat.

Speaker 3 (20:52):
What he but But the thing that that most people
are going to miss here is that what what what?
What Goldberg actually believes is that Donald Trump has the
power to create reality and none of us have the
ability to alter it.

Speaker 4 (21:09):
Oh so he can just so you can just choose
to do a third term and get away with it.

Speaker 3 (21:14):
We're all trapped in the bubble of the reality of dead.

Speaker 4 (21:17):
That's what they do every day in K through twelve classrooms,
in university classrooms, in sitcoms, in children's programming and dramas.
This is what they do through every newscast. They create
a reality. How can they notice that are presumed to
notice the Donald Trump narrative in reality, but not the
one they try. In other words, it's it's not a

(21:39):
crisis until the opposing view is in power.

Speaker 3 (21:44):
Oh and suddenly now it's a disaster that the entire world,
the minds of every American are now being controlled by
the reality created every day by Donald Trump. Really, that's amazing.
I'll bet you there. I bet there's at least one
American that goes through this entire and never even thinks
of Donald Trump. What are they a pagan? I mean
is that when did Donald Trump become the arbiter of

(22:06):
all reality?

Speaker 4 (22:06):
All right, thirty thousand feet talking about this at thirty
thousand feet. This is the weaponizing of the matrix to
try to frighten everybody, and it's seeing only one side
of the matrix while not acknowledging its own if I.

Speaker 3 (22:20):
Might, if I might, sure also saying that all that
matters is the presidency, that the presidency defines all reality
for American lives.

Speaker 4 (22:28):
That's a trademark for Zanati because I could have never
gotten through COVID without you. There's a lot of things.
Mostly we go back and forth as equals out and
both get Then there's some like you brought Zuckerberg to
the table to me, I would have been unaware of
what he was doing in States on issues trying to
steal elections. But this is a big one. That's that's

(22:48):
a David Zanati, and that is the worship of the presidency.
And you you know, it kind of goes on a
back burner because everybody's got their president. But I got
news for you, whether it's Donald Trump, and I thank
God every day for him. I'm so glad he turned
to look at that screen at just the right moment.
I mean, I love this president. I didn't even support

(23:10):
him in the first primary, but I you know, I
gave up Marco and I've been behind him and I
love this president. But I still don't worship him. And
I don't view the worship of the presidency any less
dangerous when he's president than when Barack Obama was president.
The way they worshiped Obama is as wrong as the
way you're worshiping Trump. You're found Your heavenly father wants

(23:34):
you to be only worshiping him. Your founding fathers wanted
you to keep your eyes on the People's House in Congress.
And by the way, the one that keeps presidents, they come,
they go, some fail us, some don't. Congress continually fails you,
session after session till the toe tag arrives and they
die as you're worshiping a presidency, but the real country

(23:55):
is steered from Congress. That is an exclusively you, And
this is the manifesto against you.

Speaker 3 (24:02):
Yes, and we're glad that they're finally coming to the
ability to don't trust do you? And they're doing it
all themselves. Their obsession is remarkable. They've got three articles
out and they have a radio interview. If you listen
to the actual interview that they've done on their interviews
with Donald Trump, they sound like adolescent kids who got
into a country club and now don't know what to

(24:24):
do next. It's remarkable.

Speaker 4 (24:26):
Okay, So the original manifesto was the shadow campaign to
save the democracy Time magazine. How they stole the election
farent Square or they would save Faren Square. They had
to to save democracy. This manifesto, this is the shadow
campaign to destroy Donald Trump. Now I would say it
this way. Donald Trump just gave you a victory speech
last night in Detroit about his first one hundred days.

(24:49):
This is the Atlantics way of saying, and then we'll
take the next hundred days to reshape America. I already
see Time magazine doing it with the world done fire
that you set me?

Speaker 3 (24:57):
Oh yes, yeah Tho's New York Times. Yeah, look at that.

Speaker 4 (25:00):
What did I say? Did? Yeah?

Speaker 3 (25:02):
You're close? Is just short two words New York Times. Yeah, unbelievable.
The world's on fire.

Speaker 4 (25:07):
See.

Speaker 3 (25:07):
Their goal is to convince everyone that Trump is crazy,
and so are all the.

Speaker 4 (25:14):
People who followed him. Well, yeah, we were insurrection. That's
when he was running for president. Why aren't we insurrections?

Speaker 3 (25:20):
Yeah? Yeah, Well, and here's another one who want to
ask them about those kind of comparisons, which I think
are valid at this stage of the debate. For five
years they spend all their time defending the mind of
Joe Biden, which was barely operative. Now they've run up
against the person that has a mind that is genuinely competitive,
and the first thing they want to do is say
is crazy.

Speaker 4 (25:38):
Well, and more energy and more credibility than they have.
But I thought the interesting thing was, how you know?
Here it comes this manifesto from the editor causing all
the trouble with Signal and trying to get rid of
hegset and and hurt the presidency. He comes out with
this manifesto and then the next day of The New
York Times they got their opinion hit piece. And I

(25:58):
mean the graphics, you know, because people forget and bias,
you can have visual bias as well. I mean little
fires that are going on as you're scrolling through the stories.
And then that the images of the White House. I
guess that is the ambers of a flame from within.
I don't know what I guess Like Amityville Horrors poster
Elon Musk is walking in It's in the trail of

(26:19):
firefo follows.

Speaker 3 (26:20):
They're basically all trying to tell us the same thing.
These people are burning down the country and their derangement syndrome.
And see it's beyond Trump. Now this is important. This
is beyond Trump. It's now the presidential reality. I mean,
this is amazing.

Speaker 4 (26:33):
But that will pivot too because assuming Donald Trump is
leaving uh and I don't know how the Republican thinks
are going to pass this torch because the minute everything
that supported Donald Trump sees this as the Republican Party
that's going to crumble. But if you can successfully transfer
all trump Ism to the Republican next candidate, you know

(26:55):
that that remains to be seen. But if they do,
here we come next generation, it's going to turn very
quickly to us the voters. In other words, it's not
about Donald Trump. They hate your stance on life, They
hate your stance on border security, they hate your stance
on what the definition of America is. They hate your

(27:17):
stance on your view of debt. They hate all of
the hate capitalism, they hate energy, you know, they hate
all this stuff. You are going to become the target.
This is the transferral of Donald I believe, and I
may be wrong, and they have to play this out
at the Atlantic, but I think this is turning it

(27:37):
to a post Trump America where now you are the
clear and present danger, not Donald Trump.

Speaker 3 (27:45):
I don't think there's any question about That's where it's going, Michael.
The objectification of people who hold to a traditional worldview
as less than American. So, in other words, if you
celebrate the Declaration of Independence on its two hundred fifth
at the anniversary, you're less than an American. Now, I
know that sounds absurd, but you read their stuff, and

(28:06):
that's where they're all going.

Speaker 4 (28:07):
Final thirty five seconds. If we tease this as well,
this is going to be like the Time magazine manifesto.
We're going to be talking about this for years.

Speaker 3 (28:14):
There were only one paragraph in.

Speaker 4 (28:15):
Well, yeah, this is gonna say. And if somebody said,
well sounds like you're done. No, no, no, no, just
begun right.

Speaker 3 (28:21):
That's right. This is just the beginning and there's much
much more to see and much much more to hear.
And again it's important to understand that they're all playing
this into the presidential election. Where they're going with this
is to make Trump such an alien figure that anyone
who attempts to walk in his wake must be defeated,
whether you're a pipefitter or whether you're running for the presidency.

Speaker 4 (28:45):
David Zanati, American Policy Roundtable and host of The Public
Square and your Morning Show, senior contributor, and we will
be following this, probably for many years to come.

Speaker 5 (28:53):
We'll talk again very soon. This is your Morning Show
with Michael del Chona.

Speaker 4 (29:00):
The President touting his first one hundred days as the
best in history in irrally in Michigan.

Speaker 6 (29:05):
This is the best they say one hundred days start
of any president in history, and everyone is saying it.
We're just we've just gotten started. You haven't even seen
anything yet.

Speaker 4 (29:16):
It's all just speaking at Makham County Community College and
Warren Michigan, just north of Detroit. Trump said, the government's
power trips, they're a thing of the past.

Speaker 6 (29:26):
After a lifetime of unelected bureaucrats stealing your paychecks, attacking
your values, and trampling your freedoms, we are stopping their gravy,
trained ending their power trip, and telling thousands of corrupt
and competent and unnecessary deep state bureaucrats you're fired.

Speaker 4 (29:47):
You know, the president has huge victories on the border,
some uncertainty with the tariff negotiations and the economy, and
some wars to settle Ukraine, Russia nukes and Iran, and
of course the continuation of peace along the Israeli border.
Did a really good job of framing the first one
hundred days of serious change.

Speaker 6 (30:09):
In one hundred days, we have delivered the most profound
change in Washington and nearly one hundred years. I read
a editorial today that this is the most consequential presidency
in history.

Speaker 4 (30:21):
How about that New data out today shows, for the
first time ever, there are now more than seven million
Americans living with Alzheimer's disease.

Speaker 7 (30:30):
New York doctor Nikhil Pellakars' is the latest Alzheimer's Association
Facts and figures. Report shows seven point two million Americans
now living with the disease.

Speaker 3 (30:39):
This is cotonos keep going up.

Speaker 4 (30:42):
You know.

Speaker 7 (30:43):
It's two new FDA approved meds, la canabab and nananomab
are helping to slow the progression of symptoms in people
in early stages.

Speaker 8 (30:51):
The tip of the iceberg that we now have newer
treatments and many more new treatments are currently under a
research study and not showing some good.

Speaker 7 (30:58):
Potential dresses research examining the benefits weight loss drugs could
have on targeting brain inflammation to reduce the risk of disease.

Speaker 3 (31:06):
I'm Jennifer Bulsony.

Speaker 4 (31:08):
Well, you've had twenty one years to get your real ID.
What is that?

Speaker 3 (31:12):
When's the deadline?

Speaker 4 (31:13):
Rory O'Neal, your morning show national correspondent, is here. Rory.
I struggle with this one. I don't even know how
through the natural order of license renewal, this hasn't all
been achieved. But apparently it hasn't.

Speaker 8 (31:25):
Well right because some states have been late to the
game to get this system up and running. Because it's
not just a big national system, it's all fifty states
have to have their driver's licenses and other IDs conform
with the requirements from the Department of Homeland Security. All
these requirements were passed back in two thousand and five

(31:45):
in response to the attack of nine to eleven believe
it or not, So you have one more week to
get your real ID now if you're stuck and you
don't have it, or you can't get an appointment at
the driver's license office at Kentucky, by the way, has
been trying to kick this can or down the road still.
But if you don't have your real idea and you
are flying soon, you can use your passport. That'll get

(32:06):
you through just fine. Use the passport or a passport card.
Nobody has traveled the world more than Rory Rory. If
they don't have a passport, what would be faster getting
a real ID driver's license? The little star are getting
a passport because even with a senator's help, I don't
think you get.

Speaker 4 (32:23):
A passport that fast, can you.

Speaker 8 (32:25):
Well, right now, it's tough to get the appointment for
the driver's license at a lot of places because of
this deadline that's finally approaching. So it's been a real
challenge for people to get this. They're either hours long
waits or when you schedule these things online, you could
be weeks out, so it's an either or. And by
the way, now and if your a passport has expired,

(32:46):
you can now renew your passport online as well.

Speaker 3 (32:49):
That speeds up the process.

Speaker 8 (32:51):
But if you do that, please make sure you're on
the State department website, not some third party something something
that promises they can do it.

Speaker 3 (32:59):
Make sure.

Speaker 4 (33:00):
I have to have two final questions and you're probably
not going to really appreciate either of them. But the
first one would be if they don't have a passport
that hasn't expired, and they don't have their real ID
driver's license, what happens when they go to board the plane.

Speaker 8 (33:16):
Well, they'll stop you at the TSA checkpoints.

Speaker 3 (33:19):
So you want to be allowed to get out to
the gate. You want to even get that far.

Speaker 8 (33:22):
Now, there are some other alternatives, military IDs, Tribal nation
and Indian Tribe IDs. Some states have what they call
enhanced driver's licenses Washington, Michigan, Minnesota, New York, and Vermont.
Those will work on and after May seventh, those enhanced IDs.

Speaker 4 (33:39):
But try to get that real ID. Put it by.

Speaker 8 (33:41):
Oh, by the way, do I have a real ID?
We look at your license. If there's a star in
the upper right corner or if there's a flag on it, you're.

Speaker 4 (33:49):
Good, all right? And then the final question was this was
all designed in two thousand and five. Talk about speed
twenty years later, finally getting everybody to comply. How much
you know? So lack of security? Has there been twenty
years without people having this? And is any of this
obsolete now based on threats twenty years later?

Speaker 8 (34:09):
Well, a lot of it is just to confirm the
address that's on here. It was again, it goes back
to nine to eleven. Making sure full names show up
on these ideas. Some states were allowing first initials or
middle initials, not the full names. These real ideas will
have your full name. By the way, I didn't get
my real idea until last fall. Oh, I think, Yeah,
I've had my at least seven years. My driver's license

(34:32):
renewed and I get to renew online and it was
fine and you just click click, and that didn't count
as a real ID, so they so I didn't actually
get my real ID until just last year.

Speaker 4 (34:42):
Yeah, you gotta do that, all right, Roo and Neo.
Great reporting.

Speaker 5 (34:46):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael En, Hild Joe Now,
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