All Episodes

June 2, 2025 33 mins

President Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill” is making its way through the Senate. What is in the spending plan, and how could it change before reaching the President’s desk? National Correspondent RORY O’NEILL has the story.

After some legal setbacks, what is next for President Trump’s plan to impose tariffs on dozens of countries? White House Correspondent JON DECKER is back from vacation.

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

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Transcript

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
on great stations across the country like Talk Radio eleven
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seven and Washington, DC and five point fifty k FYI
and Phoenix, Arizona. We'd love to be a part of
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to work. But as we always say, better late than never.
Enjoy the podcast.

Speaker 2 (00:20):
Starting your morning off right, A new way of talk,
a new way of understanding.

Speaker 3 (00:26):
Because we're in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael Bill Chorna.

Speaker 1 (00:34):
Seven minutes after the hour heard it, Bird gets the worm,
Rise and shine and welcome to Monday, June the second
year of Our Lord, twenty twenty five on the Aaron
streaming live on your iHeartRadio app. This is your morning show.
Honor to serve you. I'm Michael del Journal, honor to
serve all of us. As Jeffrey lyon with the sound
a very quiet red keeping an eye on the content.

(00:55):
President Trump's Big Beautiful Bill is headed to the Senate
this week. Should have talked between President Trump and Chinese
President she on working out either working out a trade
agreement and or finding out why they're breaking the temporary
agreement to provide.

Speaker 3 (01:16):
Goods and services in Europe.

Speaker 1 (01:18):
We do not quite sure which, but they're going to
be talking, and of course the big story.

Speaker 3 (01:22):
Waking up this morning.

Speaker 1 (01:23):
The White House says that the suspect of rested in
connection with Sunday's attack in Boulder, Colorado, was an illegal
alien overstaying his visa. Mohammed Solomon through accelerants into the crowd.
And Roy o'neillis here with the very latest on what
we know about mister Solomon. Obviously, his motive was pretty clear,
Free Palestine.

Speaker 4 (01:45):
Indeed, and the damage is serious. We saw eight people injured,
four men, four women. The age range here is remarkable,
fifty two to eighty eight years old. At least one
of them has injuries that are still considered life threatening.
Apparently this group would take part in the Run for
their Lives event regularly weekly.

Speaker 3 (02:05):
In fact, it was a gathering.

Speaker 4 (02:07):
Of Jewish community members to support the hostages who were
being held by Hamas in Gaza. And so whether or
not because this was a routine demonstration, if that's why
they were targeted by this forty five year old suspect,
was it something spur of the moment. Yeah, that's all
part of the ongoing investigation. We know he used an
improvised flamethrower molotov cocktails as well, So again the FBI

(02:32):
helping with state and local police to figure out how
all this came together.

Speaker 1 (02:36):
Probably the only thing that's unsolved at this point is
and it can only be one of three things, misinformation
or they haven't contacted next to Ken yet. But he's
been charged with murder, and yet we don't have any
reports of anyone dying.

Speaker 4 (02:50):
So yeah, let's see how that shakes out today. Look,
you know I always say, you know, that was the
weekend staff. Let's see who's working Monday through.

Speaker 1 (02:58):
For the other big story is President Trump's big beautiful
Deal's headed to the big beautiful Senate.

Speaker 3 (03:05):
What happens there.

Speaker 4 (03:07):
Remember, Republicans only have about three votes they can afford
to give up, and you've already got people like Ran
Paul saying they are no here. But there's a lot
of negotiation that's going to be happening. The House got
it passed by their deadline of Memorial Day. The Senate
wants to get it done by the fourth of July,
so that means This is going to be battered about
for a whole month now as they try to figure

(03:28):
out ways to keep everyone happy. Some jefficit hawks want
to see bigger, deeper budget cuts. Others say that they
can't sell these Medicaid cuts. So we'll see how this
shakes out with a lot of back and forth. Keep
in mind it can pass with just a simple majority
in the Senate the way this has been structured, but
it's also got to pass the House again, so they

(03:49):
can't mess it up too much because it barely got
out of the House.

Speaker 1 (03:52):
Now it's starting to feel like was that the electric company?
Or was that Sesame Street? These did the bill song?
I think it was an electric company.

Speaker 3 (04:01):
Wasn't it Schoolhouse Rock? That was it?

Speaker 1 (04:06):
I'm sorry I didn't really watch those shows that I
was watching.

Speaker 3 (04:10):
You Gotta zoom a zooma zooma zoom zoom was my
show when I was looking all right, But yeah, here's
the issue. The issue is.

Speaker 1 (04:19):
You know, I think primarily if you'd have split it
all up and you could have you know, made permanent
the tax cuts, I think Rand Paul would.

Speaker 3 (04:30):
Have been fine.

Speaker 1 (04:30):
But you know, if you're looking at increasing the dead
three to five trillion dollars. I think that's the big
challenge for this bill, but simple majority, it's going to
be a close one.

Speaker 3 (04:40):
Roy'll keep an eye on it all week.

Speaker 1 (04:41):
And Rory's going to be back in the third hour
to give you the latest. Done what Ukraine claims it
achieved over the weekend in battle that's coming up? All right,
I you know, I don't know. I don't know that
you need a talk show host to explain this story

(05:02):
to you of Colorado. And then this coming a week
after the two young Israelis were killed in our nation's capital,
which all comes in the midst of a still kingdom
versus kingdom holy war that.

Speaker 3 (05:16):
Is playing out in our world. What do I mean
by that?

Speaker 1 (05:19):
It really doesn't matter what the borders are or what
the nations are. You have Islamists and Jihadists who believe
that they are to kill their enemy and ultimately control
the world, and in doing so, a hidden Mahdi will
appear for a few years and then judgment of all mankind. So,

(05:43):
whether we're talking about Iran or Islama, Jihad or ISIS
or al Qaeda or Hezballah huthis now the problem for
the Democrats have been Israel because we said this earlier,

(06:04):
but I don't even know where it stands. I'd used
to be comfortable saying about a third of the party,
and I think it's probably pretty close to that. Maybe
a little above that are socialist justice Democrats. They cloud
and murk the water by calling everybody progressive, but there's
a big difference between. There are no such thing as

(06:27):
Reagan Democrats. There's very few establishment democrats that exist. Most
of them are either progressive and or socialist. They wouldn't
want you to see it that clearly, but a third
of that party easily. That's why Bernie would have won
the nomination twice. That's why AOC will be the very

(06:49):
hard early leader to get out of the way. For
the DNC and for a third of them. They have
taken sides in this war against Israel, where there's some
old Testament scriptures that ought to make it a little
scared there. I'll bless those who bless her, I will
curse those who curse her. O good luck with that one.

(07:14):
But they have taken sides against Israel. Heck, they've taken
sides against America. Basically, they went take sides against Israel.
So we used to always say they have an eye problem,
an Israel problem, and their biggest problem was the economy
and the border. But right after that, in that tertiary
zone was the eye problem. And it continues to be

(07:36):
a problem. And yesterday was no great favor because not
only does it turn out to be a pro Palestinian
named Muhammed Soliman attacking on American soil in Boulder, Colorado,
those elderly people peacefully marching, just wanting Israelis held hostage
to be released. Remember it was the Muslims that invaded Israel, killed, raped,

(08:07):
took hostages, and now this guy's burning them in the
streets saying free Palestine. Pretty revealing stuff, but it's a
double WHAMMI. He turns out to be an illegal alien
who came out of visa. Red and I were talking
off the year, and I'm sure there's, you know, more

(08:29):
to it. But as someone whose background is data analysis,
I'm sure there's a program that could spit out every
day the list of new expired visas, but you got
to go track them down because they don't report.

Speaker 3 (08:52):
But to reds to Red's point.

Speaker 1 (08:54):
I bet they had no problem all getting their COVID checks,
so and again we saw this on nine eleven. This
is why the biggest vulnerability we had is we did
not know who was in our country.

Speaker 3 (09:07):
People come on student.

Speaker 1 (09:08):
Visas, work visas, overstay their visas, blend in, and for
nineteen of them they were training to be pilots to
kill thousands on nine to eleven. So this is the
dangerous game we play. It has apparently played itself out
in Colorado Springs. Just to keep your eye on the
ball so that we're not guilty of what the mainstream

(09:29):
media is often guilty of, taking one two incidents and
focusing on them to give you the sense that this
is happening everywhere. But anti Semitic attacks and harassment are
up three hundred and fifty percent in the last five years.
Remember when I said the Democrats have an eye problem Israel.

(09:49):
It's becoming an American problem. And anti Semitic incidents are
up eight hundred and fifty six percent in ten years.

Speaker 3 (09:57):
It's becoming an issue now, Thank goodness, it's been so long.
This will blow you away. Do you realize that when
I was.

Speaker 1 (10:18):
Young, I don't know how old, I would have had
to have been maybe six seven years old, and I'm
watching like Midway. I'm trying to think of some of
the movies Tora to Torah, you know those kinds of movies.

Speaker 3 (10:28):
Do you realize that was the same distance.

Speaker 1 (10:33):
Or closer Pearl Harbor to that than kids today watching
things about nine to eleven? Does it seem different though,
like when we were kids, because I think black and
white was the big issue that had to be a
long time ago. I remember I used to think of
my mom telling stories about when she was a kid,
and I would picture her in black and white.

Speaker 3 (10:53):
Isn't that crazy? But I did.

Speaker 1 (10:55):
And so we have generations that see stuff about nine.

Speaker 3 (11:00):
To eleven, but they didn't live it.

Speaker 1 (11:05):
And I just want to be the first to tell you,
and I do this every nine to eleven address, to
remember that's a function of the mind to honor, which
is to make sure it doesn't happen again, because it
was them and it could have been us, and next
time it may be us. Make no mistaken about it,

(11:27):
A nine to eleven could happen again. So I was
very encouraged to see both Speaker Johnson and Chuckie Schumer
speaking against this. This is two pro Palestinian, anti Israeli
terrorist attacks in consecutive weeks in an ongoing growing problem,

(11:51):
up eight hundred and fifty six percent in a decade.
The Democrat's eye problem is becoming an American problem. I
think it's time to nip this one in the butt.

Speaker 2 (12:00):
Your morning show with Michael del Churno.

Speaker 1 (12:05):
Anyway, we're just fighting off the air. It is twenty
five minutes after the hour. Welcome to Monday, June the
second here of Our Lord, twenty twenty five. If you're
just waking up. At least six people were hurt, including
one critically, after what the FBI says was an act
of terrorism against people marching for Israel was held in Boulder, Colorado,

(12:26):
and Mark Mayfield has what we know at this point.

Speaker 5 (12:30):
Acting Agent in Charge Mark Michael Jacks says the victims
range in age from sixty seven to eighty eight, with
the suspect using a makeshift flamethrower and shouting pro Palestinian phrases.
The FBI identified the suspect, who is in custody, as
forty five year old Mohammed Soliman.

Speaker 3 (12:43):
The Boulder County Police Department.

Speaker 5 (12:44):
Said that it has investigated reports of a second suspect,
but has not found anything to suggest those reports are true.
Solomon was injured during the attack and was taken to
a hospital by Mark Mayfield.

Speaker 1 (12:54):
So the Big Beautiful bill leaves the House victorious by
one vote to the Senate this week. Don't change it
too much. You won't get it back through the House.
And what's all the fighting about. Scott Carr has more
from Washington.

Speaker 6 (13:09):
The multi trillion dollar package narrowly past the House, and
the Senate will debate the measure this month, where Republicans
can only afford to lose three votes to pass it.
Democrats complain the White House is trying to cut Medicaid
and other social safety nets by billions of dollars. Republicans,
like Office of Management and Budget Director Russell Votes, say
the bill will cut the federal deficit.

Speaker 3 (13:30):
He spoke with CNN State of the Union. This bill
doesn't increase the deficit or hurt the debt.

Speaker 1 (13:35):
In fact, it lowers it by one point four trillion dollars.

Speaker 6 (13:37):
After passage in the Senate, House lawmakers will have to
approve any changes.

Speaker 3 (13:41):
I'm Scott Carr in Washington.

Speaker 1 (13:43):
The Trump administration has released a list of so called
sanctuary cities across the US Tammy Trehio reports the.

Speaker 7 (13:50):
List has about six hundred cities and counties, including Los Angeles,
New York City, Chicago, and Seattle. Sanctuary cities have limits
on what questions residents can be asked about their immigration status,
and the cities won't help federal officials with immigration enforcement.

Speaker 3 (14:04):
All Land Security.

Speaker 7 (14:05):
Says it will notify those cities that are not in
compliance and send out updates as the federal enforcement rolls out.
I'm Dammage for Heo.

Speaker 1 (14:12):
Disney's Leayloan Stitch and its second week at a wave
a wave of sixty three million dollars.

Speaker 3 (14:24):
Paramount's Mission Impossible.

Speaker 8 (14:25):
The Final Reckoning, also in its second week on screens,
drew win over twenty seven million dollars over the weekend.
Opening weekend for Sony Pictures, Karate Kid Legends picked up
twenty one million dollars for the franchise film Warner Brothers
Final Destination. Bloodlines, in its third week, scared up just
over ten million dollars. A twenty four's newly released Bring
Her Back brought the studio back a little over seven

(14:46):
million dollars in its theater debut.

Speaker 1 (14:49):
I was bragging earlier how I achieved absolutely nothing. Yesterday
I started watching the old cartoon of Beautying the Beast.
My girls, who approaching twenty one, put it on while
I was trapped on a recliner. Is he doing nothing?
And I started watching and I thought, Man, I forgot

(15:10):
how brilliant this was Beauty and the Beast. I mean,
all the songs, the story. And the more I watched,
the more mad I got at what the heck happened
at Disney And they go, oh, well, Dad, you know
they did a live human version, so I really most
of the cartoon, and they said, put that on. Yeah,
And of course I didn't realize they made Gastone's friend

(15:32):
his lover in the or his crush in the in
the film versus the cartoon. But oh, I forgot how good.

Speaker 3 (15:40):
Beauty the Beast was. Good morning, guys. This is Jeff
in Pleasant View, Tennessee.

Speaker 7 (15:46):
And my morning show is your Morning Show with Michael
Dale Jorno.

Speaker 3 (15:54):
Hey, it's Michael.

Speaker 1 (15:55):
Your Morning Show can be heard live each weekday morning
on great stations like thirteen sixty the Pay in San Diego,
News Talk one oh six point three and AM eighteen
eighty WMQ oh Claire, Wisconsin, and one four nine the
Patriot and Saint Louis, Missouri. Would love to be a
part of your morning routine. But so glad you're here.
Now enjoy the podcast. This is your morning show. I'm
Michael del Journal, honored to be serving you if you're

(16:18):
just waking up. The Atlantic hurricane season began yesterday on Sunday.
I don't expect anything, and historically the intense hurricanes are
later when the temperatures get higher the water temperatures get higher,
usually August. But the season has begun, and first up
will be Andrea if she should appear. Speaking of Andrews,

(16:40):
you may appear with my protein bar that I've yet
to have, among other things. Today, the Big Beautiful Bill
is headed to the Senate and six people are injured,
including one critically, after what the FBI calls an act
of terrorism against those marching for israelis being held by
Hamas and Boulder, Colorado. We'll have more on that throughout
the morning. It turns out to be Mohammed Solomon, a

(17:03):
forty four year old Egyptian who came here on a
work visa, has overstayed that visa and was screaming free
Palestine as he was setting people on fire coming up.

Speaker 3 (17:15):
In our Sounds of the day.

Speaker 1 (17:17):
What to do with what we knew about Biden? When
can you say I just want to move on and
I don't want to discuss it? Can you say, oh,
I thought he was fine and a great president. Both
tried over the weekend, either probably working. First things first,
John Decker is back and oh did I miss you?
Let's talk about the legal setbacks for President Trump. That

(17:39):
which is a setback on Monday usually appealed to no
longer setback on Tuesday.

Speaker 3 (17:43):
Which ones are we talking.

Speaker 9 (17:44):
About, Well, we're talking about what happened most recently on Thursday.
That's when the US Court of Appeals Michael for the
Federal Circuit allowed the president's tariffs to temporarily mat in effect.
These are the reciprocal tariffs that we're talking about. That's
just a day for the US Court of International Trade
on Wednesday rule that the President overstepped his authority over

(18:06):
teriffs and so dislikely will be decided by the US
Supreme Court. This particular issue as to whether or not
President Trump has the power to unilatterly impose these tariffs
under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. That's the issue
that will likely come before the US Supreme Court.

Speaker 1 (18:26):
All right, So, as I often remind everyone, our White
House correspondent for eight presidents is also a Supreme Court
bar attorney. So John, walk us through that. And do
you anticipate the Supreme Court being favorable towards the activist
judges who have been barring or for Donald Trump and
the appellate courts that have been reinstating.

Speaker 9 (18:48):
Well, well, that's a great question. You've always asked me
what the Supreme Court.

Speaker 3 (18:51):
Is going to do? Michael. I love how you put me.

Speaker 9 (18:53):
On the spot when we particular I ask.

Speaker 1 (18:57):
You, how might the Supreme Court interpret that Emergency Act
versus federal judges?

Speaker 9 (19:03):
Well, the US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit,
they allow these Trumps, the President's terrorists, to temporarily mate
in effect, I think they recognize this issue will ultimately
be decided by the US Supreme Court. And it's interesting
that the judges that have ruled on this particular issue,
they've been judges of all ideological stripes. They have included,

(19:24):
including a judges that have been named to the federal
bench by Donald Trump his first ternam in office. I
think that's the thing that really gets to him as
it relates to the six to three super conservative majority
and the way that they will ultimately roll on this.
I must tell you I'm in the court when these
types of issues come up, you know, I'm there for

(19:46):
oral arguments. I read the briefs, and we're not at
that step just yet. It's premature to say how the
US Supreme Court, the nine justices on the highest court
of the land, will rule on this particular issue until
we see the argument that are put forward to the court.
And I think that's going to happen relatively quickly.

Speaker 3 (20:04):
All right.

Speaker 1 (20:04):
So John Decker, White House Correspondent, closing moments. So we
often say, you've got the in the matrix, the left,
it would seem I'm just trying to call balls and
strikes here the left saying this is an activist president.
He is, you know, just wreaking havoc, doesn't even care
about the Constitution. Then you got the rights saying these
are activist judges waging war against command, you know. So,

(20:29):
and then you know what that all checks at the
door when once the Supreme Court arise, because they stick
to the letter of the law.

Speaker 9 (20:34):
Usually well they usually do. You know, there are people
that criticize the various decisions made by the highest court
in the land. I respect what the Supreme Court ultimately does.
And you know, elections have consequences. Three out of the
nine Supreme Court justices named to the bench by President
Donald Trump his first term in office. Who knows, you
may get another opportunity during the second term in the

(20:56):
White House. But they do not always rule on the
pre as it inside. We've seen Amy Coney Barrett. We've
seen the Chief Justice John Roberts, not.

Speaker 3 (21:04):
An appointee of Donald Trump, but.

Speaker 9 (21:06):
We've seen Amy Coney Barrett sometimes side with the liberals
on the Supreme Court, and that I think is not
pleased the President. But he's never gone after her in
the kinds of ways that we've seen him go after
the founding person who founded the Federal of Society.

Speaker 3 (21:23):
For instance.

Speaker 9 (21:23):
That's the person who recommended so many federal judges that
Donald Trump named to the Federal bench during his first
term in office.

Speaker 1 (21:30):
Boy, I sure miss you when you're gone. Welcome back.
I hope we talk again very soon. Jack Michael, White
House Correspondent for your warning show.

Speaker 10 (21:40):
People who majored inn online activision with a monitor and any.

Speaker 1 (21:47):
Of you in the media clearly.

Speaker 3 (21:49):
Missed the art of the deal.

Speaker 6 (21:51):
It's going to work out.

Speaker 3 (21:51):
It's all gonna work out all right.

Speaker 1 (21:53):
Time for your sounds of the day, as we say,
they're often revealing, sometimes entertaining. This one would fall under revealing.
I just love how CNN has a narrative twenty four
to seven, but every now and then they'll give you
thirty seconds of some truth that doesn't match their narrative,

(22:14):
and then they all act shocked.

Speaker 11 (22:15):
How Americans sort of see the parties. Which party is
better described as the party with strong leaders?

Speaker 3 (22:22):
Look at this? Wow?

Speaker 11 (22:23):
Sixty percent of Americans say Democrats, forty percent say that
of the Republican Party. Overall, no party is doing great.
Lots of Americans say neither of these qualities apply to
either party, but look at how much worse off the
Democrats are a party that gets things done. Only nineteen
percent of Americans say that about the Democrats, thirty six
percent say it about the Republicans. In fact, the only
place that the Democrats, who americally had party of the

(22:45):
middle classes is basically a tie. Though thirty four percent
say that of Democrats, thirty two percent say that of Republicans.
But this, I think is the most fascinating. How do
partisans talk about their own party? So among Democrats and
Democratic leaner leaners, thirty two percent say Democrats are the
party with strong leaders.

Speaker 3 (23:05):
I mean of their own kind, right.

Speaker 11 (23:07):
Eighty two percent of Republican Republican leaders say that about
the GOP. Only forty one percent of Democrats say they
they're the party that gets things done of their own kind.
And I will just say fifty one percent monu. A
majority of Democratic and Democratic leaners say neither.

Speaker 1 (23:22):
Party yet the party they get by the way, he
keeps skipping over this Party of Change. Remember Barack Obama
ran on the slogan of change, hope and change. This
is something they marketed and created. Even on Party of Change,

(23:44):
Only forty five percent of Democrats think their own party
is the party of change anymore. Sixty three percent of
Republicans party of extremism Democrats nine percent, Republicans sixteen percent
the party of the middle class. It's actually higher with Republicans.

(24:08):
Why do we bring up extremes, Well, obviously they're failing
their own party. And the reason those numbers look like
that is because that party is divided. So no matter
what question you're asking, you're talking to a perception that's split.
The socialist Democrats don't think they've gone far left enough.

(24:29):
The regular progressives or establishment Democrats think they've gone too far.
Need to pivot back to the American people. And so
when you're split in half, no one's happy. How do
you get out of this mess? Can you get out
of this mess? Or is this just what polling numbers

(24:52):
look like when you have no leader and no message. Oh,
one of our favorites addressed just that, Scott Jennings. Listen,
I'll defend the Democrats.

Speaker 12 (25:04):
They are for things, illegal aliens, you're for boys and
girls sports.

Speaker 3 (25:09):
We are for things.

Speaker 12 (25:11):
And that's why you have such struggles right now in
your party, because you're not for anything that's on the
right side of any of the eighty twenty issues that.

Speaker 3 (25:18):
Are driving this cultural divide in America.

Speaker 12 (25:20):
I think west Moore is actually a pretty talented communicator.
The other person who spoke in South Carolina, Tim Walls,
is this special mixture of extreme buffoonery and a mean spirit,
which is a toxic brew. He is not the future
of the Democratic Party. More is interesting. More is interesting,
probably more interesting than some of the radicals you have
out there, Crockett AOC. I mean, those are the true
leaders of your party right now, but it probably be

(25:42):
better off a place I'm not going to, yes, Sue,
And here's the thing, well, who is it them?

Speaker 1 (25:48):
They're not gonna be able to hide from that much
longer anyway, because AOC is going to be the early
front runner for president of the United States or the
nomination within their party. Speaking of the one that's the
top combination of buffoonery and hatred.

Speaker 3 (26:05):
Tim Walls did speak in South Carolina. Listen.

Speaker 2 (26:09):
What Republicans understood was is they identified the problem with people,
and they got people thinking that they were with them.
Like Donald Trump, what the hell does he know about
somebody in South Carolina struggling to make ends meet?

Speaker 3 (26:21):
Almost nothing, but people believe that.

Speaker 2 (26:24):
Because what I have to think about is we've got
to have people know that we're actually listening to them,
that were actually hearing what they're saying. And then I'm
just going to say this because it seems so simple,
and I have to interrupt before he gets to what
he thinks. It's so simple. We have to listen to
them and speak. Frankly, if you listen to the American people,

(26:45):
you would have heard were heading in the wrong direction.
If you had listened to the American people, you would
have learned the borders are porous and open, invaded and
were in danger. They only listen inside their own vacuum.

(27:07):
That's why they listened to boys and girls' sports and
ran with it. They listened to open borders and ran
with it. They listened to all cops are bad and
ran with it. They listened to Palestine, not Israel, and
ran with it. They don't even know they're blind. That's

(27:33):
what makes this.

Speaker 1 (27:35):
Nothing but well, the only thing worse than doing something
thinking you're doing something you're not doing. But anyway, now
he gets to the simple part.

Speaker 2 (27:43):
We've got to show the guts that we're willing to
I feel like there's folks that aren't willing to say
the things necessary because they might be worried they might
not get reelected if they did.

Speaker 8 (27:55):
That.

Speaker 1 (27:55):
Maybe why you didn't get elected, which is a very
important Before dismounting from our sounds of the day, the
difference between how to handle things with words. Take Former
President Bill Clinton, when asked and challenged about Joe Biden's

(28:20):
mental decline, he takes this approach.

Speaker 13 (28:23):
Speaking of aging, there's this book that came out that
talks about Joe Biden and the people around him seeing
that he had cognitive and physical decline. Did you ever
have a moment with him where you thought maybe he
was unfit to run for the president.

Speaker 14 (28:42):
No.

Speaker 10 (28:43):
I thought he was a good president. The only concern
I thought he had to deal with was could anybody
do that job? Until they were eighty six and we
did several long talks, I had never seen him walked
away thinking he can't do this anymore. He was always
on top of his brief.

Speaker 7 (29:05):
Briefs.

Speaker 1 (29:06):
He didn't even get his briefing but a handful of time.
For most people, they're going to dismiss this on credibility.
I mean, Bill Clinton is the most highly recognized confirmed
liar in American history, saying he didn't notice anything, and oh,
I think he did a great job. And by the way,

(29:28):
the Clinton apparatus was not necessarily a Biden apparatus. They
were more of a Kamala Harris apparatus. These are the
same people think Kamala Harris should have been president, and
both Hillary and Bill made that clear at the DNC convention.
So no, credibility there, but nobody buying that there were
no signs. That's one way to handle it. Another way

(29:49):
to handle it is to like Raphael Warnock has done
in Georgia where he gets on meet the press and
just basically says, don't really want to address him. These
are still not stopping the drip drip drip, and the
drip drip drip is this is one of unless the

(30:10):
American government killed Kennedy. This is the greatest scandal in
American political history of fake presidency, and it's going to
cost Democrats. So they find a way to handle the
issue and come clean in a way that allows them
to move on. But then again, Joe Biden doesn't let
him move on, does he?

Speaker 7 (30:29):
And there's also been a lot of discussion recently about
you or mental and physical capabilities while you were in office.

Speaker 3 (30:36):
You can see that mentally competent.

Speaker 2 (30:39):
Walk the hell.

Speaker 1 (30:44):
All right?

Speaker 13 (30:44):
He is back horse. Do Democrats feel happy about that?

Speaker 3 (30:48):
Are they ready to close that chapter?

Speaker 14 (30:51):
I was wondering why he was making any appearances. He
reminds me of the Jason Voorhees of the political His
party is in dire straits, and rather than give them
the space. They need to sort of collect themselves and
to get better outcomes. President Biden meandering and wondering and

(31:15):
reminding people of exactly why the party is in such
poor rebuke.

Speaker 1 (31:21):
You know, nobody's ruled this out yet. He could run
again for president because he didn't finish the race. I
think he might be able to The point is well made,
though he won't go away, and they need him to
go away.

Speaker 3 (31:41):
But don't forget.

Speaker 1 (31:42):
They wanted Joe to go away right after being elected,
and he wouldn't go away and gave the poison apple
of the border to Kamala Harris. And he's very resentful
that he was forced out of office. Joe Biden Sara
Night Live in the nineteen seventies, the thing that wouldn't leave.

Speaker 8 (32:04):
Alright, everybody, fluckerlaw, Look, you just gotta try harder, not
for saw.

Speaker 12 (32:08):
So I'm glad for the opportunity for a brief civics lesson.

Speaker 3 (32:11):
Sure, perhaps you'd like to be alone with you. I'm
deteriorating mental condition. Politics, I don't know us.

Speaker 1 (32:20):
Yeah, that is your Sounds of the Day.

Speaker 3 (32:23):
This is your Morning Show with Michael del Chno. The
Big Story.

Speaker 1 (32:28):
The White House says the suspect arrested in connection with
the attack in Boulder, Colorado is an illegal alien who
overstayed his work visa. White House Deputy chief of Staff
for Policy and Homeland Security, Stephen Miller said in a
statement on x the suspect was granted a tourist visa
by the Biden administration and then illegally overstayed that visa.

(32:49):
Went on to say that the Biden administration gave the
man a work permit. The attack, which left six wounded,
one critically, is in custody. His name Mohammed Solomon, a
forty four year old Egyptian, a legal immigrant in the US.
Once again, another attack of anti Semitic hatred on American soil.

(33:14):
That's two and two weeks. Meanwhile, the Big Beautiful Bill
is headed to the Senate. The Atlantic hurricane season is
here officially yesterday, although we don't expect anything usually severe
until late July and August. And well, you got both
your championship set for the NHL Wednesday night, Stanley Cup

(33:36):
Finals is a rematch Florida Panthers Edmonton Oilers Game one
in Edmonton, and then the.

Speaker 3 (33:41):
NBA Finals are set.

Speaker 1 (33:42):
It'll be the Pacers in Oklahoma City to take on
the thunder that'll be Thursday night.

Speaker 3 (33:47):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael ndheld, Joano
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