Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, I'm Michael. We'd love to have you listen every
weekday morning to your morning show live, even take us
along with you on the drive to work. We can
be heard on great radio stations like one oh four
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Love to be a part of your morning routine. But
we're always grateful you're here. Now. Enjoy the podcast, a
(00:24):
new way of talk, a new way of understanding, because
we're in this together. This is your morning show with
Michael O'Dell charm.
Speaker 2 (00:35):
Omaha, Omaha, how are you doing?
Speaker 1 (00:37):
Omaha? I don't have an audible I just like doing omaha.
Ol Lah. There you go, seven minutes after the hour.
Speaker 3 (00:43):
It is the.
Speaker 1 (00:44):
Tuesday after Memorial Day, May the twenty seventh year of
our Lord, twenty twenty five. Here's something that's true. Uh,
it was not easy getting up this morning. We have
had a sick dog who has kept us up all
three day weekend long, and so you know, I'm a listening,
but there is still from the bottom of my heart
(01:05):
there's no place Red would rather be, Jeffrey'd brother be,
or I'd rather be than serving you right here this morning,
and we simply cannot have you. Did I mention, by
the way the speaker nude Gingrich on the show tomorrow,
I think you have, but you may want to say
it again out with the new book, Trump's Triumph. I
want to be nice to pick that big brain about
(01:25):
what he sees that has happened that is coming the speaker.
He doesn't know it yet, but I'm thinking about keeping
him for the full LAWA. At any point, mister speaker,
did you feel for your life? Oh my peabody, I'll
buy your lunch if you'll do the whole interview with
Larry King. Larry, Larry, I thought you were dead. I'm
(01:47):
alive and well, mister speaker, we'll pick nuts bring tomorrow
before you'd be listening for that. No, but what I
was saying was this, there's nothing we love more than
you all. I want to start with the Jimmy suits.
He quick, he's to the point, and he'll give us
the energy we lacked this morning.
Speaker 2 (02:03):
Hey Mikey, when do you think Trump's gonna go after
Washington University?
Speaker 1 (02:07):
Because of COVID. Wow, well that would be another one
of those studies paid for with taxpayer dollars. The reference
to Jimmy's making and really this is where the journey
in COVID began. So with COVID you had the gain
of function research that was taking place, and still to
(02:29):
this day no answer as to why then it leaks.
Obviously in Wuhan. Obviously China does everything to protect their
own country and their own people and were reckless to
ensure its spread. Donald Trump, of course, has America great,
(02:49):
flying high. China is on the ropes. If you want
to look for means, motive and opportunity, the off point
to China and boy, mission accomplished because in the end,
COVID destroys Trump. The Democrats weaponize it. They change election laws,
they harvest ballots, They swing the election with an incompetent
(03:11):
guy who then refuses to leave, and they hide him
with a fake presidency. Another question still not answered. All right,
we've all established Joe Biden wasn't the president. Who was Podesta, Klaan,
Jill Hunter. I mean, we'll get to the bottom of
who's who cocaine it was. The FBI is reopening probes
(03:32):
into a number high profile unsolved cases, including that one.
But remember we had no data. So all the decisions
and the biggest decisions, you know, the mantra stay home,
why stay safe? Why because this is the new normal.
(03:53):
Why because if you don't, two million will be dead
by easter. What where do you get that to? Jimmy
suits point the University of Washington. And when you don't
have hard data, and we didn't have it barely from
Italy and Europe, let alone in America, you must put
assumptions into these models. So my first journey at the
(04:16):
time a local morning host, was well, I'm going to
the University of Washington to see what these assumptions are
in these models to come up with these numbers nowhere
sighted you could not find them, and what might they
have been? And how is social distancing or a mask,
especially a gator cloth mask, or how about how long
(04:40):
you wear the mask or how you handle the mask?
True story, and this is not a bash, as you know,
I always say if the girls I have not been
in the Hooters. I went once. My brother took me
there with his kids, and I think that was twenty
(05:02):
eight years ago. But he used to have a theory.
If the girls were good looking, the wings are kind
of but if you went in there and the girls
weren't good looking, it was probably gonna be good wings. Yeah,
so it's kind of good. The dirtier the waffle house, oh,
the better the breakfast. I sat. This is of all
the COVID insanities that go through my head, and there's
so many. I'm sitting in waffle house where they installed
(05:26):
plexiglass between each booth, made us wear a mask that
we could only take off when we got to our table,
so COVID could get you literally two and a half
feet away where you were standing, but not once you
sat down. There's some real science there, so I'm safe
with my mask off. I'm sipping my coffee with plexiglass
(05:49):
blocking me on the front and the back, but not
on the side, and not on the side towards the cook,
who I couldn't help but watch because half his crack
was revealed. He's wearing a mask, he's making breakfast. He
takes his left hand, pulls the mask out two inches,
takes his other hand under the mask, wipes his sweaty forehead, nose, face, mouth,
(06:13):
to his neck, and then he puts it the mask
back down, and then he was handling the food with
that other hand. And I'm thinking to myself, I don't
think the gloves. I don't think he's going to change
these gloves now, And he did to which at another point,
(06:34):
shortly before he patted down my toast, he reached into
the half revealed buttocks and scratched and then touched the bread.
You're probably thinking, well, you got up and left. No,
that was the best breakfast I've ever had. Baby, that's
the COVID lunacy right the left telling you can't tell
a woman what to do with your body, but they'll
(06:54):
tell you you got to get a vax. Bosses would
tell you you can't do anything to discourage people from
getting a vaccine. But don't tell them about any alternatives.
They don't tell about any side effects. They don't tell
them about untested mr mRNA technology, which I had a
feel days to play the Milk and Institute audio, which
(07:17):
was beautiful. The Milk and Institute audio was Fauci and
all these scientists talking about mRNA and they were like, yeah,
but it's gonna take us about a decade, and it's
going to be billions of dollars and testing before we'll
get approval for this. And another scientist chimes and he goes, well, yeah,
that may be true unless we have some kind of
global emergency. Then all the scientists are looking at him
(07:39):
and he goes, well, I mean we could have like
a virus. Yeah, maybe he gets out of a lab
in China and it forces us to have to use
this before the testing. No, the mantra was stay home,
stay safe. And then the worst part of the mantra,
this is the new norm. Viruses are never a new normal.
(08:03):
Viruses are not new and even deadly ones, they all
play the same way. You never defeat a virus. You
get it and die because of your cole morbidities. Life
really killed you. But that was the final straw. Or
you get it and you have immunity. And they used
to shoot that science down. Then you had the daily
news conferences, you had the death tolls and the infection rates.
(08:29):
Never mind, we did with the most vulnerable and nursing
homes and then just sent everybody home and decided who
was essential who wasn't. Destroyed The economy paid them to
stay home, which created inflation. I mean, think of all
the Nightmas And it all goes back to why, because
if you didn't, two million would die by Easter? Says
(08:50):
who the University of Washington where What's in their models?
And you never could find them? I wonder Jimmy Suits
is still asking the question, you know, like, haven't we
heard enough? Didn't we see enough? Joe Biden was seen
now obviously in late dementia. The whole thing was a
(09:10):
fake presidency and a cover up. But the real question
unanswered is well, who was president? Are we going to
get that answer to who was really using that auto pen?
If it wasn't Joe? Where are the assumptions? Shouldn't we
once and for I'll get them, But we will find
(09:34):
out who's cocaine it was? I guess so we got
that going for it. But yes, I would hope Jimmy
Suits to Perry and Nashville.
Speaker 4 (09:45):
Perry, I'm with you when it comes to listen to radio.
If I won't listen to music, I won't listen to music.
If I won't listen to somebody jabbering and yammering and
going own and own and own and own on radio,
I'm won't listen to the well show.
Speaker 1 (10:00):
Brother keep it up. No, your caller of the day. Now,
that was beautiful. No, I don't know the diarrhea's hereditary.
It runs in your jeans. That was still a good line.
That was still yeah, that was John so Ohio and
in Nashville. Up for caller of the day. Let's go
(10:21):
to Telson call to see what we find. David Phil
Robertson recently passed away. If you've never seen his movie.
Speaker 2 (10:27):
The Blind, it does an excellent job of telling the
story of his life and an even better job of
presenting the gospel.
Speaker 1 (10:35):
Well, what a treasured brother in Christ. I have to
come clean, and this one I probably should do. But
I have never seen Citizen Game. I have never seen
Gone with the Winds. I have never seen all of
Sound of Music. Oh yeah, I thought I was the
only one. Well, I had to turn it off because
(10:57):
I couldn't lust after a nun. Julie Andrews was adorable.
Come on, man, I never saw an episode of Duck Dynasty. Now,
I have watched, believe it or not online several Bible
studies taught by mister roberts about I have never watched
Duck Dynasty. But treasure, what's that unashamed, Oh, unashamed of
(11:22):
the gospel. He's just amazing. Yeah, terrific, terrific people. That
was a huge loss over the weekend. Talk about dominance.
What we have in Sacramento. KFBK, which is where Rush
worked before he got his national show, dominates that market
and not far behind the station we're on, KSTE, both
(11:42):
owned proud iHeart stations. I would say, I'm very proud
of our radio stations there in the station that I'm on.
What I'm most proud of is in Sacramento. Man, you
guys love understanding, you love conversation, You're very curious, and
you're very aware. Are great, great, one of the great
radio audiences in America today, and that's where we find Roger.
Speaker 3 (12:05):
Morri and Michael. I want to chime in on the
Harvard money. Yeah, I would like to see it go
to trade schools. I mean, it would be better if
government didn't do all this kind of stuff, But as
long as they're spending it, spend it there at the
trade schools. I also like to see hands on shop
classes get back in the high schools. I think guys
and gals that want to go into blue collars should
be able to make that choice around the ninth grade
(12:27):
and take a different path through high school.
Speaker 1 (12:29):
And I think micro should be the blue collars are one.
We've got to make the distinction. Make sure you understand
that the money we're talking about, and it's billions, so
it's significant, but the money we're talking about it is
when federal grant dollars, your taxpayer money is granted to
(12:50):
universities to do studies so that we can govern. Harvard
University study shows, blank clinic, Cleveland Clinics study shows. But
if they're not going to comply and if they're gonna
not solve their little anti semitic problems, yeah, stop stop
(13:12):
sending money there for studies. Now you have billions of dollars.
You could say that, or I like the focus on
trade schools or the way we began shameless plug for
the podcast to the platinum platinum, howark we're failing. Common
education is failing. There's only eight percent of Americans who
(13:35):
don't see it as so and think it's excellent. The
majority do not think we're preparing kids for higher education.
They do not think we're preparing kids for the workforce.
They do not think we're preparing them for citizenry. We
should probably first and foremost focus on that Harvard by
(13:55):
the way, just to introduce remedial math classes, remedia, all
to get you into community college, not Harvard. We've dumbed
down the standards. Nobody fails anymore, but nobody's prepared anymore either.
An excellent should be our desire, ambition, and requirement for
our children, the vanguard of our future. But yeah, now,
(14:19):
I will tell you ed it almost boils down to
this simple question. College isn't for everyone? When are we
going to get beyond that elitist mindset? You know where
a graduation everybody wants to hear.
Speaker 5 (14:38):
He will be attending blank university, and he will rack
up blank amount of student debt, and he'll only make
blank when he gets out of college. And he didn't
even know need to go to that expensive college to
get that job that he'll never get a return on
his investment.
Speaker 1 (14:58):
And everyone would frown at the kid that went to
electrical school a plumbing school, and he'll be out with
little to know dad and making eighty grand to one
hundred and twenty grand right out of training. It's all
in your head. But yeah, and I will say this
for our local high school. I don't know that they
(15:21):
had auto but like they had a beauty salon and
they did all the courses. They had several. But we
need to get back to auto shop. Early in high school.
I loved to this day. If I had time, it's
how I would spend it. I redid one of our
(15:41):
kitchen tables. I spent a ridiculous amount of time, and
sure I could have got a power standard, but he
did it all by hand and it was gorgeous. Shop
class Auto class. Yes, we got to get back to trades.
Why because they're great career opportunities. They're great jobs for people.
(16:03):
And I got a news for you. Depending on the
pain in my chest, I may need a doctor. Depending
on my toilet overflowing, I may need a plumber. All
your calls were terrific. Roger, Jimmy Soots, Perry David. Can't
have your morning show without your voice. Keep using that
talkback button on your iHeartRadio app or email me at
Michael de at iHeartMedia dot com. Hey there, I'm Kenny
(16:27):
Stevens and my morning show is your Morning show with
Michael belgornou. Hi. It's me, Michael, Your morning show can
be heard on great stations across the country like Talk
Radio eleven ninety in Dallas, Fort Worth, Freedom one oh
four point seven in Washington, DC, and five point fifty
KFYI and Phoenix, Arizona. We'd love to be a part
(16:49):
of your morning routine or take us along on the
drive to work, but as we always say, better late
than never. Enjoy the podcast.
Speaker 3 (16:56):
Hey Michael, this is Tom from Western Wisconsin referring to
that poll that showed how epically our.
Speaker 1 (17:04):
Schools are failing us.
Speaker 3 (17:06):
Just think how many teachers responded to that survey and
feel the same way.
Speaker 1 (17:12):
Yeah, this poll, I thought was very significant, and it's
a perception poll. So the latest Rasmusen National Telephone Online
survey asked the question and it found thirty percent of
American adults think most high school graduates have the skills
needed to enter the workforce. That doesn't mean that that's
(17:37):
the reality, but that's the perception. In fact, the reality
may be worse. Fifty three percent now say graduates do
not have the basic skills to enter the workforce. Oh, well,
are they prepared for college? Well? Twenty nine percent believed
that most high school graduates have the skills needed for college,
but forty nine percent say they don't, and only eight
(17:59):
percent rated the performance of common education in public schools
in America today to be excellent, and the scoreboard would
suggest that's about right. It doesn't mean I mean. I
watched the valedictorians at our graduation. One kid was so
extraordinary he actually, just for his spare time reading, got
(18:25):
a textbook from one of the teachers for a course
that wasn't even offered, and then went on to get
the credit for it and passed an honors test on
a course not even taught by the school. Oh, the
exception will rise to the top, but by and large,
en mass, we all know our public school system is failing,
not at in doctrination, not at social engineering and political correctness,
(18:50):
but certainly at preparing kids for citizen read the workforce,
and higher education. And then we had a discussion that
higher education isn't for everyone. There's nothing wrong with getting
a degree, an apprentice and then becoming an electrician. You
don't have any student loans, any big debt. You're making
(19:10):
eighty one hundred and twenty grand a year. I got
a response in one of the emails from Catherine who
said another big advantage of non college career paths like plumbers, electricians,
AC techs. You know those careers will never be replaced
by AI. Rachel wrote, the most encouraging thing to me
is the general increase of involvement that parents have had
(19:32):
in their kids' education over the past few years. You
know that's interesting. While the test scores are way down
from when I was in school, parent participation is certainly
much higher. And we've all identified it's broke, we have
not identified how to fix it yet. All right, My
favorite three stories of the day, hands down. This one
(19:55):
comes from the Atlantic. And remember the Atlantics, like the
old fashioned UPI and AP used to you could control
narratives by controlling with the wire fed and then every
radio station we determine are's like fourteen thousand of them
would rip and read and you could control the narrative
in the country. Now, for the Left, that's done through
(20:16):
the Atlantic. The Washington Post takes excuse from the Atlantic.
The New York Times takes excuse from the Atlantic. CNN, MSNBC, ABCNBCCBS, Dateline,
sixty minutes, Meet the Press, they all take their cues
from the Atlantic, and so do university professors of indoctrination.
And what's their headline, the coming Democratic civil war. Coming
(20:39):
Democratic civil war. It's just about over and has been
won by the socialists, far left coming. It's already here
and darn near over. But now the Atlantic has discussed it,
so now obviously it's real. They are preparing for a
(21:00):
civil war in their party. A civil war has broken
out among Democrats. And what's interesting is, and it's been
going on the left that is taking over the party
and now represents almost half of the party and an
influence over the majority of the party. They want to
(21:22):
go further left, not right. So the Democrat Party voters
from the grassroots level, they chose Bernie in twenty sixteen,
the DNC replaced it with Hillary. They chose Bernie. In
(21:43):
twenty twenty, the DNC replaced it with Joe Biden. They
got enough delegates to go Biden's way in the primary,
then they got rid of him and just gave it
to Kamala. They've been three times betrayed. And meanwhile, most
of the great ass roots of the party want to
go further left. And that's why Jasmine Crockett is the
(22:06):
new AOC, and AOC is the new Bernie. And I
know how this plays out, She'll be the early and
long leader for the Democratic nomination for president. And then
they're going to try to bait and switch you Romney
Manuel and Wes Moore, or maybe Rommy Manuel and Shapiro.
I don't know, but either way they lose because neither
(22:31):
of the If AOC gets her way, the party's over forever.
Now you've had a socialist nominee for president, the inevitable
scale has been tipped. We can see that by the
way the president's approval rating. Donald Trump's approval rating among
Democrats is up four percent. And that's for all those
that haven't already left the party to become independent. In
(23:03):
recent years, the party's internal divides have been defined almost
entirely in relation to the issue positions taken by groups.
So the most progressive and this is what's really tricky
in this, and you're gonna they'll call Barack Obama a progressive,
but he's probably he's closer to the squad than true progressives.
(23:32):
But people like Shapiro, Wes Moore, Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton,
Gavin Newsom, they're progressives. The aocs, the Bernie Sanders, the squad.
They're socialist justice Democrats, but they won't use those terms.
(23:54):
So the most progressive Democrats have been the ones who
have advocated the group's position most forcefully. In other words,
the party doesn't have a leader, the party doesn't have
a voice, the party doesn't have a messenger, but it does.
The problem is it's now AOC. Modern Democrats have been
defined more by their relative lack of enthusiasm for those
(24:17):
influential groups. But they don't have a real big constituency
of their own, and they certainly don't have a spokesperson.
They're going to try to make that and occupy that
lane with Romney Manuel, but it's going to be perceived
as just what it is, another bait and switch, and
now you will have the people in a primary process
(24:38):
ignored a fifth time in a row by the party.
That will lead a great movement out of the party.
So if AOC wins, the parasite wins, the host dies.
If they do the bait and switch again, the parasite
creates the revolt that abandons the host. Either way, they're
(24:58):
in a big pickle. But keep in mind, overall, you
have two choices, progressive socialism light or progressive socialism, but
there is no other offering for anybody within the party,
(25:24):
And with all the seismic political shifts in America, let
alone cultural shifts, they want to go further in the
wrong direction. How will that influence the midterm elections? How
will that influence the next presidential election? Time will tell,
but it doesn't look good for them. The other is
(25:46):
the Wall Street journal who wants to now give you
a glimpse of Romie Manuel. He's teasing a white teasing
a white house bid. I mean, how will the straight
face can the Atlantic talk about a civil war brewing
in the Democrat Party that's been going on for three decades,
two for sure, and it's about to be tipped in
one and lost once and for all. And they're just
(26:07):
now getting around to identify in the war. Robney. Manuel's
made it crystal clear the lane he's trying to occupy,
which is everything I just described that is beyond common sense,
beyond self evident truth, crazy far left nonsense. And here's
(26:27):
the shame of what they're going to learn. That's not
a very big lane within the Democrat Party. It's probably
a bigger lane with exiled Democrats who are now independents,
But how are you going to get that the nomination?
He's already made it crystal clear. And that's the Obama
(26:48):
former chief of staff who want on to be a
mayor presiding over the homicide crime ridden Chicago and now
he's the proven force. But that's what they're going to
steer you to. And the Wall Street Journal, they're just
getting around and telling you it's coming. What's Ram's vision?
(27:13):
Shift the Democrat Party back to the center. What if
he finds out the party doesn't want to go there?
He keeps telling him, your brand is toxic, it is
weak and woke, and it can't win. But what if sensible,
common sense, a turn towards the American people, not just
(27:35):
the center? Can that win? Emmanuel is considering a presidential bid,
planning to attend an Iowa fish fry and speak widely.
He defends his banking career, emphasizing his focus on family
and contrasting it with lobbying and writing tell all books.
He's trying to accomplish something that seems far fetched even
(27:55):
for him, push his Democratic Party, rooted in the identity politics,
to the center and away from identity politics. I mean,
this was a strategist and a chief of staff for Obama,
The creator of identity politics and division victory and power
through Division, calls the party's brand toxic and weak, a
(28:20):
nod of the culture war issues. He thinks Democrats have
become too often fixated on Trump. Well, that begs another
question is not even in the story, which is if
Trump's gone, then what are you? That's all they had
for you a year ago, and really four years ago,
(28:42):
the final one the Democrats seeking to buy the next
Joe Rogan. By definition, it's already failed. First, you're ignoring
the power being first. Who was the first to make
radio great? Who was the first to make tell television
relevant and great? Or who was the first to make
(29:04):
morning radio grade or late night television grade. We all
know who those names are, and they all had one
thing in common. They were unique and unique just rises.
And it's not the first time they tried to find
the next Rush Limbaugh. They couldn't. They tried to find
(29:25):
something to silence talk radio's power. They couldn't. Why because
the message, it's not the messenger, it's the message. It's
counter to our intent, counter to our history, proven failed policies.
This is lipstick on a pig and you can't even
(29:47):
be first. We did the test on the earlier first
to fly across Atlantic. Everybody knows Lindberg, all right, Now
tell me who was second, which, by the way, we
looked it up, who was it it was? We couldn't
even remember. No, it was Chamberlain something. Chamberlain was the second,
but nobody knows them. Everybody knows Limberg. Who was third? Oh,
(30:10):
that you do know, because it was a first woman,
Amelia Earhart. The Rogan beat you at first. They'll never
be another Joe Rogan. They'll never be another Rush Limbaugh.
That's the power of first. Second, it was real, it
was organic, and you can't televise, well, we're gonna go
look for We lost the election because we were focused
(30:30):
on rallies and radio ads and everybody went to podcasting
that we were too afraid to go to. Well, good luck.
Now you're just going to create one where they can
hide the lies. No amount of money can buy you
something that's real and organic. You can't create a star
(30:51):
stars or they just appear. The Left is seeking the
next Joe Rogan. Now here's the best part. Red brought
this up earlier, and then the list just goes on.
Right here is the Democrats signaling, after all the billions
(31:15):
wasted in the Kamala Harris campaign, we're gonna And they
didn't refuse to go on with Joe Rogan. Now the
Megadonas are throwing money to create the next Joe Rogan.
You had Joe Rogan and you lost him with your lies.
You lost him with your alienating and ignoring and refusing
(31:38):
to go on a show. But wait, let's not stop there.
You lost Joe Rogan, you lost Elon Musk, you lost
Rfk and Telsey Gabbert and they were Democrat Party presidential candidates. Heck,
you lost Ronald Reagan and Donald Trump. That's what you're
really trying to figure out. Wait, what are you going
(32:02):
to try to recreate next? The next FDR, the new
new FDR for the new new new Deal. I don't
care too much for money. The money can't buy you
a president or a Joe Rogan. Those are my top
three stories of the day. This is Your Morning Show
(32:23):
with Michael del Chrono. FBI reopening probes into a number
of high profile unsolved cases. President Trump thinking about funding
that was going to go to Harvard being sent to
trade schools and a special US envoy, Steve Whitcop says
a ceasefire hostagel is on the table, urging Hamas to
take it. And it was not a good weekend at
all in Ukraine, heavy bombing and the seizing of more
(32:47):
territory for Russia in a couple of villages. Roy O'Neil
has been keeping an eye on that throughout the Memorial
Day weekend. And where do we stand now, Rory Yeah.
A lot of frustration at the moment.
Speaker 2 (32:59):
And actually just a short time ago we learned that
Russia has just launched major navy drills in the Baltic Sea.
Add to that the concerns that Russia is actually amassing
forces along the Ukrainian border to launch an offensive this summer.
This is an addition to some of these record breaking
strikes by drones and ballistic missiles that had President Trump
(33:22):
calling Vladimir Putin quote absolutely crazy unquote and the Kremlin
responding by saying that President Trump is getting too emotional
about all this. Clearly, President Trump has just about had
it with the foot dragging by Putin.
Speaker 1 (33:39):
Yeah, and now weighing sanctions as an option. This notion
that perhaps turning up the heat at home and bankrupting
maybe the only way to slow them down. We had
kicked around, you know, two ways, take the exit ramp,
take what you've gotten, you know, and so on, or
fight another year. Clearly the plan is to fight another year,
(34:01):
or so it looks, and then some right.
Speaker 2 (34:04):
It doesn't seem that Putin has got sort of an
exit strategy or I'm satisfied with this and I got
my pound of flesh or whatever it is. It seems
like he wants to keep on going, as we've heard
President Trump say, you know the fact that you know
he wants a deal that doesn't give all of Ukraine
to Russia. President Trump thinks that's a victory for the Ukrainians,
(34:27):
so's It has clearly been frustrating for the President, who
has said in recent weeks that it's going to take
a face to face sit down with Vladimir Putin to
make any progress toward a ceasefire.
Speaker 1 (34:39):
At least sooner the better, good reporting. Worry, We'll talk
again tomorrow. We're all in this together. This is Your
Morning Show with Michael Penhild Choo