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June 12, 2025 34 mins

 More cities are preparing for demonstrations as arrests and deportations ramp up. National Correspondent RORY O’NEILL looks at where the protests are expected in the coming days.

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

 

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, It's Michael. Your morning show can be heard live
weekday mornings five to eight am, six to nine am
Eastern in great cities like Tampa, Florida, Youngstown, Ohio, and
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. We'd love to join you on the
Drive to work live, but we're glad you're here now.
Enjoyed the podcast talk a new way of understanding because
we're in this together.

Speaker 2 (00:21):
This is your morning show with Michael O'Dell.

Speaker 1 (00:25):
Jordan seven minutes after the hour and good morning. Welcome
to Thursday, June the twelfth. You have a Lord twenty
twenty five on the air and streaming live on your
iHeartRadio app. This is your morning show and I'm honored
to serve you on Michael del journa. Well, we got
tragedy in air India. Flight bound for London, loaded up
with twelve hours of fuel, crashed within seconds after takeoff.

(00:47):
Two hundred and forty two souls on board. Anti immigration
clashes continue in their plans. Looks like Chicago might be
the next biggest Rory O'Neil are your morning show. National
correspondent is here and as they plan to disrupt the administration,

(01:08):
plans to arrest right they.

Speaker 3 (01:10):
Do, and they plan to continue these ice raids and
get onto this track where we've heard reportedly they want
about three thousand people who are in the country illegally
to be taken into custody by these ice agents. So
we saw places raids and places like Omaha this week
where more than seventy people in the country without the

(01:31):
proper paperwork. We're apparently working at a meat processing facility.
So I expect to see more of that kind of activity,
which is what voters wanted when they went to the
polls last fall.

Speaker 1 (01:44):
Well, my early gut was, you got a New York
governor's race in two years, you got a New Jersey
governor's race coming up.

Speaker 2 (01:55):
La is la.

Speaker 1 (01:56):
Chicago seems to be if there's one city where it
could get up out of control of the greatest concern
and they're the mayor. Brandon Johnson is urging Chicagoans to
resist the Trump administration, saying dissent matters, and now is
the time to fight it is necessary. He's inviting it
in wonder he's got a seven percent approval rating. But

(02:17):
is there any area I know the President's pretty much
secured our nation's capital for the two hundred and fiftieth
Birthday of the Army flag Day and his birthday celebration
coming up.

Speaker 2 (02:28):
I would think Chicago would be the one to keep
your eye on, right, Yeah, it could be.

Speaker 3 (02:32):
The weather might be a little dicey though, which could
help in this kind of situation. It sounds silly, but
if it's raining, people don't tend to show up to
outdoor protests. So if there's a bit of rain, that
could dampen things and keep things under control. That's also
why LA has these riots all the time, because it's
always sunny weather. So yeah, that's one of those silly
things though that could tamp this down. But these no

(02:55):
King's events they've got about they say eighteen hundred of
them planned across the country, all obviously of various sizes.

Speaker 1 (03:02):
All right, area India. The boy, the more footage we get,
two things will pop out. How close you know, how
soon it happened after takeoff, and how close the proximity
to the airport. But oh, these are city streets, and
I mean I'm seeing entire apartment buildings that look like
they have been incinerated. So there's probably no telling what

(03:23):
this death toll could be on the ground. As well, right,
I wouldn't imagine. I can't imagine anybody, although they're describing
part of the plane is wedged in a building and
seems to be intact. I mean, the explosion was such
you didn't think that was possible, But I would think
on the ground is of great concern.

Speaker 3 (03:41):
Well, especially because there was so much fuel on board
at the time and as you said, crashing into this
apartment buildings starting fires. The plane came down horizontally, it
didn't nose dive into the ground. There are videos that
show pretty much show most of the incident before the
actual impact itself. It does look like the plane was
struggle to gain altitude. We're all trying to look closely

(04:03):
at the position of the flaps, the nose gear or
the landing gear. All were deployed at the time, which
you wouldn't expect at that point in the flight. But
a lot to investigate, so we'll get those black boxes.
We hope the NTSB our NTSB will likely deploy a crew.

Speaker 2 (04:19):
Of course, Boeing will be involved.

Speaker 3 (04:21):
We believe this is the first deadly crash involving a
seven eight seven Dreamliner, so this is significant in the
history of Boeing.

Speaker 1 (04:29):
Big plane, a lot of fuel. Rory, great reporting today.
We'll talk again tomorrow.

Speaker 2 (04:33):
All right.

Speaker 1 (04:33):
One of the things Rory kicked around last half hour.
We have our polls of plenty. I want to go
through those with you thoroughly. Here In about one second,
they show the American people behind the president in deportation,
not this illusion or delusion that he is somehow Adolph
Hitler turning the military against his own people. The American

(04:55):
people unlike the Democrat Party is. Caroline Levitt would suggest
that distinction. You'll see that clearly. But the other one
is the interesting look at how each party views their
congressional members and the job that they're doing. But we
do have this other story, which is Elon Musk's apology.
We shared that with you about this time yesterday that

(05:16):
he did at two am post on x saying he
went too far and apologizing, and President Trump said he
thought that was nice. I thought that was an interesting response,
mister President, Mister President Elon Musk apologize that he.

Speaker 2 (05:38):
Went too far.

Speaker 1 (05:40):
I think that's very nice that he did that, that
he apologized, but didn't say whether he was willing to
let bygones be bygones. You're the president of the United States,
and this guy has shown a proclivity to be a
loose cannon. You just simply cannot trust him again. And
Donald Trump isn't the person to make a same mistake twice.

(06:03):
So I think he thought the apology was nice. I
think the relationship is probably over, and I think, you know,
the question becomes, what do we do with all of this?
There are some and there's nothing I can say that
will change their mind. Are convinced that this was orchestrated,
that he was done at DOGE. You know, he did

(06:25):
what he did to get the president elected. He did
what he did to find waste and mismanagement and fraud,
and he paid a big price with his business. And
this was intended to restore him as a friend of
the left again, because that's primarily who buys evs. Nothing

(06:47):
seems to add up to that this does. I think,
I go back to and this is my stance, and
you probably won't change my mind, but I'll just give
it to you for thought. There were these reports and
the Atlantic jumped on it. That should tell you right
away that there's something to it. That there was a
heated exchange between Elon Musk and Secretary Bissent, a lot

(07:10):
of f bombs, a lot of back and forth. I
think Elon must spend a lot of money helping the
president get elected, spent a lot of his image getting
the president elected, and that hurt his image even worse
rooting out misspending, fraud and waste. And I think he
was probably waiting for the President to take his side
over Becent. I don't think anybody sat down and explained

(07:32):
to Elon Musk it's not as simple as you think.
We can't just slash all spending. We have a Congress,
we have a Senate. It takes time to chip away
at this. It took time to get this foreign debt,
it took time to get into this pattern of overspending.
It's going to take time to fix it. It's going to

(07:53):
take the support of the American people and Congress. That
never happened. So he has a tantrum, he has a
fight with sent Trump doesn't take either side, and then
I think the tantrum seems to have happened. Now he
knows he went too far. And that's why I said
from the very beginning, if this is what it appears

(08:13):
to be, it's sad it's sad that two billionaire, smart
adults behaved this way.

Speaker 2 (08:24):
If this was a stunt to restore.

Speaker 1 (08:28):
The Tesla name and product, it's stupid because in the
end you're gonna end up with the left hating you
and never forgiving you for getting him elected. And now
the magis are going to hate you for turning on him.
But it does kind of scream he just lost it

(08:50):
and now he's sorry, and there's no way the president's
ever going to forgive him. All right to these polls
of plenty, I only have two minutes. This particular poll,
the RMG Research poll was conducted on June ninth, so
just three days ago and two days after President Trump
called out the National Guard, So you're going to get

(09:10):
some initial she deserved anything like the view he's hitler
and he's turning his military against his people. No, Fifty
eight percent say they favor the administration's actions, thirty four
percent saying they strongly favor. So it's nearly six to
ten on the president's side, not the rioters, thirty four

(09:32):
percent strongly on the president's side. The president has the
support of the American people. So if Governor knews them,
for example, or a mayor in Los Angeles or a
seven percent approval rating mayor in Chicago, wants to make
this political.

Speaker 2 (09:51):
It's not.

Speaker 1 (09:52):
It's not a political fight. They can win because they're
not opposing the president. They're opposing the American people. Of
those who were asked about the number of illegal aliens
deported so far, thirty six percent said the administration had
gone too far, twenty five percent said the deportations are
just right, thirty percent said the deportations haven't gone far enough.

(10:17):
In this particular case, you would weigh too far and
not far enough. And America's almost evenly divided thirty six
and thirty percent. And that's trying to understand the issue
through the death of journalism, through the lens of the matrix,

(10:38):
as everybody is in the matrix. Which is why I
end with this. Eighty six percent of those who approved
of deportations, eighty six percent were Republicans, only twenty six
percent percent were Democrats. People say, well, they're politicizing this,
this issue, completely politicized law and orders, black and white.

(11:09):
Among independent voters, forty five percent say they're in favor,
thirty five percent oppose. So Republicans and independents see the
sensibility of this. You come to the country illegally, you
face consequence you break the laws. Once you break the
law ventering the country illegally, you face even further consequences.
The only people that are not getting this are Democrats
who are caught in the bubble of their journalism and matrix.

(11:33):
Now you know why I keep saying, you got to
solve the matrix if you're going to solve America. When
it comes to their views of their own party, fifty
three percent of Democrats in a Quinnipiac University survey released
on Wednesday gave their parties members a thumbs down fifty
three percent thumbs down, forty one percent approve.

Speaker 2 (11:52):
According to the poll.

Speaker 1 (11:53):
Just twenty one percent of all voters approve of the
way Democrats in Congress are handling their jobs. Twenty one
percent approval is the same as Quinnipiacs February poll, matching
an all time low. Meanwhile, seventy nine percent of GOP
voter's approve of the way their Congress is handling their job.

(12:15):
Only thirteen percent disapprove. How much of this problem is
a Democrat problem, and for the Democrats, the problem is
they're not acting crazy and angry and leftist and dangerous enough.

Speaker 2 (12:29):
You can't make this stuff. It's your Morning Show with
Michael Del Journo.

Speaker 1 (12:36):
I'm just waiting for advil to kick in. I tell
you all about it in a few minutes. But I'm
definitely not ADHD. But I am a perfectionist and I
have no unsolred muscles left in my body after yesterday's powerwashing.
All right, all eyes are on India this morning. What
a tragedy, and we don't know what the extent of

(12:57):
the tragedy is.

Speaker 2 (12:57):
On the ground.

Speaker 1 (12:58):
A passenger plane fueled up for twelve hours crashes just
after takeoff with two hundred and forty souls on board
in India.

Speaker 2 (13:06):
Mark Mayfield has the latest.

Speaker 4 (13:07):
Police say the Air India flight went down in the
western city of a Metabad, but no word on any fatalities.
Aviation expert Paul Edward says it's still too soon to
say what went wrong. It looks like some wholemost catastrophic
failure which.

Speaker 2 (13:22):
Made it these speed.

Speaker 1 (13:23):
Now, that could be.

Speaker 4 (13:25):
One of the engines, It could be a whole heaste
of differences. The crash appeared to occur as the aircraft
was taking off, with local media showing smoke and fire
near the airport.

Speaker 2 (13:34):
I'm wurkneefield.

Speaker 1 (13:35):
Meanwhile, the State Department is ordering all non essential staff
to leave embassies in Iraq as tensions flare up between
the US and Iran.

Speaker 5 (13:43):
Staff members are also being told to leave US embassies
in Kuwait and Bahrain. The order came after Iran threatened
to target US military bases in the Middle East. The
US and Iran have reportedly reached a stalemate in their
nuclear negotiations, and President Trump is threatened to strike Iran
if the talks failed. Iran's defense minister responded to Trump's
threats by saying it will target without hesitation US basis

(14:05):
within its reach. I'm tammage for HEO.

Speaker 1 (14:10):
Bob Dylan, Elton John among the music royalty paying their
respects to the late Brian Wilson, the Beach Boys legend,
died yesterday at the age of eighty two. Dylan wrote,
heard the sad news about Brian today and thought about
all the years I've enjoyed listening to him and admiring
his genius. We're going to talk later with a music
historian and author, Scott G.

Speaker 2 (14:32):
Shay.

Speaker 1 (14:33):
But that's a single word You're going to hear a
lot describing Brian Wilson genius. No cause of death has
been given yet. Well, Nintendo their newest game console, breaking
all records.

Speaker 2 (14:48):
Mark Mayfield's back with that story.

Speaker 4 (14:50):
The switch To, released last week, managed to rack up
more than three point five million units sold in just
four days. That makes it the fastest selling console in
the history of the company. They switch To retails for
about four hundred and fifty dollars.

Speaker 2 (15:03):
I'm Mark Neyfield.

Speaker 1 (15:04):
Well, I say every day is, but today is jerky Day.
Bree Tennis with more on dried snack that can't be
made out of just any meat.

Speaker 2 (15:14):
You know.

Speaker 6 (15:15):
Jerki is seasoned meat, cook low and slow. It needs
no refrigeration, packed with protein and very few carbs. It's
a go to snack for about forty percent of us,
including astronauts. Competitive eater Joey Chestnut holds the world record
for most beef jerky eating in a contest, eleven pounds
in five minutes.

Speaker 2 (15:33):
Wow, you do that.

Speaker 6 (15:34):
You'll need to celebrate National and Acid Day. But that's
not till December thirtieth. I'm bre Tennis.

Speaker 2 (15:40):
Three years later, he still hasn't had a bowel movement.

Speaker 1 (15:42):
Thunderfelt one's sixteen one oh seven of the Pacers. They
now trail two games to one. Game four Tomorrow night
in Indiana in the NHL, the Stanley Cup Panthers up
two games to one. They'll be back on the ice
against the Oilers. Game four tonight in Miami. Tiger's Loss,
Cars loss, Guardians beat up the Reds eleven to two.
Dbacks won five two over the Mariners, Raise lost four
to three to the Red Sox, Brew Crew six to

(16:03):
two over the Braves, Dodgers won five to two over
the Padres, and the A's lost six to five to
the Angels.

Speaker 7 (16:10):
This is Pebe from White House and your Morning show
is My Morning Show with Michael del Jorno.

Speaker 2 (16:22):
Hey, it's me Michael.

Speaker 1 (16:23):
Your morning show can be heard live five to eight
am Central, six to nine Eastern and great cities like Jackson, Mississippi, Akron, Ohio,
or Columbus, Georgia. We'd love to be a part of
your morning routine and we're grateful you're here now. Enjoy
the podcast. So one of the characteristics of ADHD is
you start a lot of projects, but you can't stay
focused and you don't finish them, which is why I

(16:45):
see a lot of piles around my house.

Speaker 2 (16:46):
Thanks.

Speaker 1 (16:47):
My wife has started and hasn't stopped. I don't think
I have ADHD. So I get to powerwashing. First I
did the basketball court. Then I did a huge deck
out back. Did that, and then I have a little
deck between my studio here and my daughter's room. I
did that, and then I got the wild urge to
do my driveway walkway in front entryway.

Speaker 2 (17:07):
But you know, you go.

Speaker 1 (17:07):
Line by line and then a driveway, I mean the
little things of algae or whatever.

Speaker 2 (17:11):
Sure, I mean, I'm such a perfectionist. Nine straight hours yesterday.
Well you can't stop when you start, can you. No,
then Michael decided to do the whole neighborhood.

Speaker 1 (17:24):
No, I didn't do that, but and I'm such a perfectionist,
but I mean that's just a long time leaning over
and that pressure and I just and then I just
couldn't move when I was done.

Speaker 2 (17:35):
Did you take not finish?

Speaker 1 (17:37):
Well? I just took three ad bill but it's it's
not really kicking in.

Speaker 8 (17:41):
No.

Speaker 1 (17:41):
I need to seal my pebble driveway and I'm done.
I gotta stay in this side.

Speaker 2 (17:45):
Deck you can need to hire people for this.

Speaker 1 (17:50):
Uh. That crossed my mind this morning. It's okay, As
I tried to loosen up, so I'm sore from obsessively
Jeffrey's about to officially be an old man. He's about
to be a grandfather. So excited I fell asleep praying
for the safe arrival of your grandchild. That's all I

(18:10):
care about. I don't care if it's a boy. I
don't care if it's good. We know, though, don't we
We do know, we did.

Speaker 2 (18:14):
It's a boy. It's going to be a boy. We'll
be a big boy. We have to wait and see
how he feels about.

Speaker 1 (18:19):
It, right, But I was thinking, if she doesn't have
it today, do you really want the kid? I do
a C section before I had a baby on Friday
the thirteenth.

Speaker 9 (18:32):
And the whole thing was that this wasn't supposed to
happen till like next Tuesday. They were going to induce
next Tuesday. And then last night about five o'clock, we
started getting calls where she'd gone for a final checkup
and we need to put you in and then.

Speaker 1 (18:45):
Well, she was trying to have it a month ago.
I was praying for it to day and now I'm
praying for it to come out.

Speaker 2 (18:49):
It's great.

Speaker 1 (18:50):
I'm already praying for your grandkid more than I prayed
for my kids today. Jeffrey's going to be a grandfather
by the time we talk again in the morning. Isn't
that great news? You can wish him congratulations. And then
also with Brian Wilson's passing for me, I think we're
going to talk to a music critic, historian and author

(19:12):
Scott Gsha next hour. I think the word genius comes
up with Brian Wilson more than anyone else. And I
think that genius Right after that, you hear pet Sounds
come up as maybe one of the most ingenious and
significant albums in history. And I have I have to

(19:36):
separate it because I have contemporary Christian songs like we
had the thrill to interview Dion de Mucci and his
center of my life is what I want to play
it at my funeral. That is that that is the
song that most defines my life and my.

Speaker 2 (19:54):
Worldview and my priorities.

Speaker 1 (19:57):
That aside, there's a couple from Rust and one from
Steve camp I would throw in there, but contemporary and
or pop culture music over the Rainbow, Far and away
my favorite song in my life.

Speaker 2 (20:11):
I heard it first when I was six years.

Speaker 1 (20:13):
Old watching Wizard of Oz uh and it is always
There's been some great versions of it, too Wonderful World
with Louis Armstrong, fly Me to the Moon, Frank Sinatra.
These are something I've heard, but God only knows?

Speaker 2 (20:28):
Was you know? And it can only happen once?

Speaker 1 (20:31):
That one of my all time favorite songs, and for
me it was always a favorite song and it just
stood out. I don't know why this is gonna sound
terrible to do the day after he dies, but stuff
like you know, fun fun, fun till Daddy digs the
dva away.

Speaker 2 (20:48):
Or Sip and sifar is.

Speaker 1 (20:50):
I remember with the Beach Boys, the only one that
I liked was Sloop. John b loved it, and then
God only Knows was just like one of my favorite
songs ever period anyone. But I didn't really get into
that whole surf sound thing, so I'm not even like,
you know, a beach Boy's not.

Speaker 2 (21:11):
And that I liked. God only knows the most.

Speaker 1 (21:14):
I really didn't care for the Beach Boys much and
loved God only Knows. So then I had kids and
I just you know, I put that to music one Christmas,
to all the pictures to send to relatives, And now
the song is just synonymous with the most frightening question.

(21:34):
You know, I lay in bed at night, you know, God,
what if I'd never met Andrea? Oh my gosh, who
would I be? Where would I be? How miserable would
I be? Oh what if that hadn't happened? And then,
you know, then you just get that second wave, which is,
oh my gosh, there'd be no Anti, there'd be no Alex,
there'd be no Nick.

Speaker 2 (21:54):
What am I?

Speaker 1 (21:55):
And thus the song God only knows where I'd be
without you? So genius is going to come up today.
We'll see if that's how Scott Gche describes Brian Wilson.
He may be one of the most ingenious influences in music.
Bob Dylan thinks, so Elton John thinks. So today we'll
remember him coming up a little bit later on as
I wait up my advil to kick kid. But where

(22:19):
do I begin with Sounds of the Day? You know
we always say always revealing. The idea for Sounds of
the Day really came from memes I'm living life. I
can't imagine culture in the world getting it more wrong
or being more crazy, just insanity.

Speaker 2 (22:43):
And in the midst of it, there's memes online that
are just blinking like lights of truth in the midst
of all the chaos. And I thought I should do
a book every year with three hundred and sixty five
of the top memes from that year, because if you
follow the news, you're living lies and narrative. You follow memes.

(23:07):
The truth has been there all along. And I thought,
what if there was a way to do that was sound.

Speaker 1 (23:11):
And we found a way, and we call it always revealing,
often entertaining. It's the sounds of the day, waiting the consequences.

Speaker 5 (23:21):
This is the best way to get back on your faers,
to get up off your eye.

Speaker 2 (23:24):
I've been living rent free in that guy's head for years,
and that's.

Speaker 3 (23:26):
Just a ball.

Speaker 10 (23:27):
Do you call that chicken a d They're just blowing off, Steve, Seriously,
is there anybody who has become more of a caricature
of themselves and yet couldn't be more entertaining than Senator
Kennedy from Louisian Oh my.

Speaker 9 (23:41):
Gosh, I've been loving him for about the past two years.

Speaker 2 (23:44):
Yeah, that's kind of but he's kind of becoming a
caricature or something like that.

Speaker 1 (23:47):
Like, you know, Sean, I'll have him on just to
you know, to create a new saying.

Speaker 2 (23:52):
You know, you just got to try harder not to shock.

Speaker 1 (23:55):
You know, and then they all laugh. So every time
you do one of your sounds of the day opens,
you throw him in there. And that's all I can
think of it, all right, Caroline Levitt, I loved her
from day one. Every day I just love her more
and more. And you couldn't ask for a sweeter spirit.
But boy, even she got a little tough yesterday. So

(24:18):
why is America having a such a hard time understand
the difference between a citizen and someone who broke in
the country, a citizen and a criminal criminal who's a
gang member, drug trafficker, human trafficker, rapist, murderer. How is
America having such a hard time understanding the difference between

(24:41):
protesting and paid for anarchist rioting. I guess that would
even get somebody as sweet as Caroline Lovett to just finally.

Speaker 2 (24:54):
Let someone have it.

Speaker 11 (24:55):
Listen supports the First Amendment.

Speaker 12 (24:56):
He supports the right of Americans to make their voices
or He does not support.

Speaker 11 (25:01):
Violence of any kind.

Speaker 12 (25:02):
He does not support assaulting law enforcement officers who are
simply trying to do their job. It's very clear for
the president what he supports and what he does not. Unfortunately,
for Democrats, that line has not been made clear, and
they've allowed this unrest, in this violence to continue, and
the President has had to step in.

Speaker 2 (25:18):
Now I'm gonna stop right there, and I'm gonna make
you listen to it all over again. It's only twenty seconds.
You can handle it. She just made crystal clear what
the president supports and what the president doesn't support, and
then makes the bold statement. Apparently it's only Democrats that

(25:39):
can't continue to make this distinction. So we do have
a political party problem, and they're in bed with not
just the money that is funding this destructive violent force,
but also the media. So keep in mind.

Speaker 1 (25:58):
Here we are asking, you know, why can't you see
what the president supports and doesn't support. And by the way,
the American people share that view. We did that in
the polls of plenty a mandate majority of Americans get it.
Watch how the reporter proves her wrong. It's not just
the Democrats who don't get it, but also the media

(26:20):
that's in their pocket that can't get it. She gives
them the answer, and then they ask the dumb question
just in her defense. Imagine you just said this for
twenty two seconds and someone raises their hand and asks
this question.

Speaker 12 (26:34):
Supports the First Amendment, he supports the right of Americans
to make their voices heard.

Speaker 11 (26:39):
He does not support violence of any kind.

Speaker 12 (26:41):
He does not support assaulting law enforcement officers who are
simply trying to do their job. It's very clear for
the president what he supports and what he does not. Unfortunately,
for Democrats, that line has not been made clear, and
they've allowed this unrest, in this violence to continue in
the president has had to step in.

Speaker 13 (26:57):
So if there were peaceful protests on Saturday for the parade, president.

Speaker 11 (27:02):
Of course, the president supports peaceful protests. What a stupid question.

Speaker 2 (27:11):
Oh my god, the.

Speaker 11 (27:12):
President supports peaceful protests. What a stupid question.

Speaker 1 (27:18):
And then they zoom in on the reporter. The look
on her face classic, and who are these people? These
really American citizens? Outrage that the president is enforcing the
law or are they paid for? Bad actors and a
scripted and by the way, a movie we all watched

(27:39):
in twenty twenty and They would love to get themselves
a George Floyd out of this. But who are all
these people throwing bricks, throwing commercial grade fireworks, destroying cop
cars and buildings and city streets. Well, here's a guy

(28:00):
that was approached to be one of them.

Speaker 8 (28:02):
I just got offered two hundred dollars a day to
go protest ice in New York. The organization was called
No Kings. They said, June fourteenth, we're going to be protesting,
and well, these are the streets that you need to
be on, and this is what you need to do.
You need to cause chaotic disruptions. And they said that

(28:24):
there's going to be palettes of like bricks and different
things everywhere that that protesters could use.

Speaker 2 (28:32):
It's all scripted, it's all paid for. The bad news is.

Speaker 1 (28:38):
I think the FBI, the Justice Department, and Homeland Security
are putting together. They're following the money trail and putting
together RICO cases once in pro al to find out
who this arm of the Democrat Party is and where
this money's coming from, and go to the source of
the money rather than the rioters. I don't think they

(29:01):
see that coming. Also, I want to make the point
this is what I was describing yesterday, This is what
we need more of. In fact, there's a guy that
was approached and he does a video that goes viral.
How about we infiltrate these groups so we can find
out who the people are. That would be the best
way to stop it. Imagine if one of your morning
show listeners, FELICIANI, was in this group to find out

(29:25):
where the checks are really coming from and who's really
calling the shots on the streets. All right, for most Americans,
this is the encouraging thing. They get it. They see this.
This is political drama and the troublemakers are on the
wrong side of history. Well, I say everybody gets it.
They don't get it at the view of course, Trump

(29:46):
is not doing this just for optics. I think that.

Speaker 13 (29:49):
This is a test case so that he can dismantle
some of our institutions.

Speaker 11 (29:54):
I think it's a power grab. I think he is
trying to use.

Speaker 13 (29:57):
The might of the military to suppress people's rights.

Speaker 11 (30:01):
I think that is very clear.

Speaker 13 (30:02):
When you use the military against your own citizens, that
is a sign of fascism.

Speaker 11 (30:08):
That is just the truth.

Speaker 13 (30:10):
We've seen it in history over and over and over again.
But people have to wake up to that BAAP.

Speaker 1 (30:15):
So he's only using the military because they wouldn't use
the police department, and it's not against citizens.

Speaker 2 (30:25):
They don't really get the difference between. You know, this
would be like I used this analogy earlier. Somebody broke
into my home and I had to use a firearm
to either subdue them or remove them as a threat.

Speaker 1 (30:38):
Would the view take the stance that I am some
kind of hitler who chose to use a firearm against
my own family. They couldn't get the distinction between an
intruder that wasn't my son at two o'clock in the morning,
that was a stranger with the intent to harm or steal.

(31:00):
Do they really have these lines blurred or have they
told themselves this lies so much? They believe it so
and that's why they look insane and watch where it goes.

Speaker 14 (31:08):
Just to be very careful and not take the bait.
The National Guard of the US Marians.

Speaker 11 (31:13):
I haven't made my point yet.

Speaker 14 (31:15):
The ICE agents, those are non partisan actors for the
most part, who signed up for jobs, have stormed under
multiple administrations. They did not necessarily sign up to be
doing this, and they're falling in order of the commander
in chief, and we could say they could all I
resign in mass tomorrow's debate to start demonizing those individuals
as well. But I think it's very important. I remember

(31:38):
it's a commander in chief that's made these decisions there,
following orders.

Speaker 13 (31:41):
Yeah, it is the And you know, think back, y'all,
where have you heard that before? Nineteen thirty just following
orders by my commander.

Speaker 2 (31:50):
But again, can I just say fat, drunken, stupid, there's
no way to go through life.

Speaker 7 (31:54):
By the way, didn't their chief political reporter just get
fired for insinuating online, you know, demonizing the president as
evil and.

Speaker 1 (32:06):
There they're doing it on the view on ABC and
no one's stopping them. I always say this should be
this should be on the epitaph of the Trump presidency.
Much better than expected, in other words, the narrativized lies
of the journalistic dead, always telling you that what Trump's

(32:30):
doing is going to create this, and then it doesn't.
So they always just throw in the better than expected.

Speaker 2 (32:36):
Better than expected.

Speaker 1 (32:39):
You remember the Trump tariff war that was going to
drive up inflation, crash the market, cost everyone their job,
and then one by one we got the jobs report
on Monday.

Speaker 2 (32:54):
It was higher than expected. Now we get the inflation
and it.

Speaker 15 (33:01):
Was much better than well, John, Look we got another
month of positive inflation news despite these historic tariffs.

Speaker 16 (33:11):
The latest numbers do show that inflation remained relatively tame
in May. So the big number is the annual rate
that come came in at two point four percent. That
is a slight acceleration from two point three percent in April.
But this was better than expected. Month over month, prices
were up by just zero point one percent. Again, that's

(33:35):
better than expected, and that's actually a.

Speaker 1 (33:37):
Decent So what he's saying is better than expect.

Speaker 2 (33:43):
We will win. We will win. Now you won't look.

Speaker 4 (33:47):
Like a bunch of girly men the dip.

Speaker 2 (33:53):
There's no man I better take. We're all in this together.
This is your Morning Show with Michael Ntel. Joinom
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