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Michael has the day off so, Chris Krok is filling in.

If Trump is a King, then why would he allow “No Kings” protests to occur? Plus, someone might want to tell Canada they have a King. Also, “Sounds of the Day” from the Army’s birthday to Leftist protests.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, it's me Michael. Your morning show can be heard
live daily on great radio stations like News Radio six
fifty K E n I Anchorage, Alaska, Talk Radio eleven
ninety Dallas Fort Worth, and Freedom one O four seven
in Washington, d C. We'd love to have you listen
live every day and make us a part of your
morning routine. But better late than never. Enjoy the podcast.

Speaker 2 (00:20):
Starting your morning off right.

Speaker 3 (00:22):
A new way of talk, a new way of understanding,
because we're in this together.

Speaker 2 (00:29):
This is your morning show with Michael O'Dell Charna.

Speaker 4 (00:34):
We are in this together, and we are also in
this with our friend Rory O'Neill, our national correspondent with
all the latest on the war between Israel and Iran.
It's wild, Rory. Nice to talk to you this morning, sir.
Sure Chris, good morning. I should say this is Chris

(00:57):
crockin for Michael del Chano. So Rory, this is wild.
I mean, first of all, reading this morning in the
which one it was CNN Fox, but with the fourd
oh plant, which has barely been scathed as of last reading,
we have to be able to get down we Israel

(01:19):
or US eighty to ninety meters up to two hundred
and ninety five feet deep and the only thing that
gets down there is our GBU fifty seven, what you
call it duster bunker buster, but this is one that
can only be delivered by a B two and nobody
has it except for US. So now, also, producer read

(01:39):
wisely said, what we know the Massaka can get into
so many places everywhere basically with Iran, and maybe they
bring down a suitcase bomb. Where are we at with
maybe US doing something? Trump has said he has not
ruled out US getting involved, right, So what do you
thinks going on with that? Where we're at? And how
do you maybe see this play off from what you do?

Speaker 2 (01:59):
Right?

Speaker 5 (02:00):
So, And the reason why it's unlikely that the US
would deliver a bunker buster is because our position is
that we support the defense of Israel and that this
may not be considered a defensive action to drop a
bunker buster on a nuclear enrichment site is the argument anyway.
But one of the things that Israel may be able
to do is to isolate and cut off that plant

(02:23):
so much so that it is unable to function, either
cut off the power to it, the roads to it,
or other utilities that run to it so that there
are other things they can do that could perhaps essentially
starve the site out.

Speaker 2 (02:37):
Well.

Speaker 4 (02:37):
The other thing is the war going on is having
a heavy toll, not just on the Iranian population, particularly
the folks with the military, but israel civilian population is
getting hit hard in this. Their energy grid hitting getting
some hits as on a hypha, the energy right a

(02:58):
plank got hit. Fine, reason I believe was, well, tell
me what we know about that, and then how Israel
is striking back because of that.

Speaker 2 (03:05):
In Iran.

Speaker 5 (03:07):
Yeah, there's been a lot of back and forth with
ballistic missiles, drones. Israel, though it really has the air
superiority at this point, so many of the anti aircraft
systems inside Iran have already been taken out by Israeli forces,
and again with Friday's strike, they were able to take
out top military commanders as well. So there's a bit

(03:29):
of chaos there in the Iranian military right now trying
to coordinate a response here. But Iran has been able
to loby nearly four hundred ballistic missiles and hundreds of
drones at Israel since Israel launched the attack to take
up those Iranian military leaders and the nuclear site, so

(03:49):
significant volleys back and forth from both sides, and as
you said, sometimes targeting other infrastructure like energy development.

Speaker 2 (03:58):
If you take out Iran's.

Speaker 5 (04:00):
Ability to sell oil to the world, then you really
cripple an economy that's already been hobbled by sanctions. You know,
without China buying up around Iranian oil, they wouldn't have
much of an economy at all.

Speaker 2 (04:14):
Yes, And then that's the other thing too, is.

Speaker 4 (04:18):
I can't remember the name of the island where one
point five million barrels a day are shipped away, most
of it to China from Iran, but I'm seeing stuff
about Israel might want to take out some of the refiners.
I think they're also hitting some of the refiners who
might not mistaken in Iran.

Speaker 2 (04:36):
Yes, yeah, we believe so.

Speaker 5 (04:38):
But you know, it's interesting we haven't seen big shocks
to the oil prices just yet.

Speaker 2 (04:43):
You know, I think we were expecting more of that.

Speaker 5 (04:44):
Maybe cooler heads prevailed over the weekend, maybe people weren't
paying attention, but we haven't seen huge shocks to the
oil markets just yet.

Speaker 2 (04:53):
But of course, all that could change.

Speaker 4 (04:55):
A royal more question for you. I mean, Israel was unbelievable.
They can used and led the head of the Iranian
Air Force and many top leaders to go down underground
to a meeting where they purposely confuse them and got
them down there so they could kill them. Twenty I
think if I'm off, maybe, but twenty some odd generals.
It seems to have been taken out. Between twelve and

(05:19):
fifteen or more scientists have been taken out. How successful
and wildly successful I should say. Really has Israel's attack
been on Iran so far?

Speaker 2 (05:29):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (05:29):
I think though, you know, there's already been some talk
though that Iran's military has been able to reconfigure faster
than many had expected, that the tune of command has
gotten back together more quickly than was anticipated. So it
hasn't been a completely devastating blow. And again it's tough
to analyze exactly what the effect of the nuclear strikes

(05:52):
has been. You know, at one of the sites that
was attacked, it really did take out all the centrifugees
where the majority of centrifugions were.

Speaker 2 (05:59):
That was successful. But yeah, but the other.

Speaker 5 (06:03):
Location that you mentioned, I get much deeper underground. They
think that is the much more significant facility, and that's
where they may not have had much of an effect yet.
But again, if they starve them out, if they cut
the power to the site, cut the line of food
and water the kids in there, maybe they can have
a longer term success.

Speaker 4 (06:24):
Very interesting, Steff Rory, thank you very much. We'll talk
to again very soon, Sir. I appreciate you. Thanks, Chris,
You're welcome, sir. Okay, Chris crocking for Michael Bill Jerome
and it's it's it's crazy with what we've seen their
I don't see it with Israel around. I do not
see Rory's idea of that that being good enough for Israel.

(06:51):
Producer ready agree with me. You really think Israel's gonna say, oh,
we'll cut the power. All I gotta do is send
an electrician to dig deep in there.

Speaker 2 (06:57):
And fix it, or we'll starve them.

Speaker 4 (07:00):
Well, that's great, the next round will come in and
you know after that and they'll they'll be fine with food, right.
I don't see that as an option for Israel. I
just don't think that's going to be allowed. You're literally
taking out a tremendous amount of the leadership of Iran.
You're literally encouraging the people to overthrow their government, which
is very good and they want to and they tried

(07:22):
under foreign President Barack Obama. Remember when Nita the protester
died live on social media. We all saw it in
during Obama's presidency. It's the Arab Spring thing, and he
didn't lift a finger to help or to encourage it
in any way, shape or form. The people overthrow the
government because the overwhelming majority of Iranians want freedom. They

(07:43):
don't support this Islamist regime in any way, shape or form.
They are repressed and oppressed by this regime, and they
seek to be free and to overthrow this government. I
would I would just guess from my knowledge, I would
say eighty percent of more of the people if Iran
are good people who have no beef with Israel or

(08:04):
with us.

Speaker 2 (08:05):
They just want to be free. I've met some.

Speaker 4 (08:08):
I had the privilege when I was doing a talk
show in Atlanta to have a wonderful Iranian family like
a block or so down for me, and she told
me she made some homemade baklava, and then she was
a little afraid. It was it was the grandmother of
the of the family, and she was a little afraid
to tell me that she's Iranian.

Speaker 2 (08:24):
She said Persian.

Speaker 4 (08:26):
I told her it didn't bother me at all because
she was worried because some people that are ignorant might
not realize. So, you know, I mean, this is this
is a no brainer as far as the people might
want to want to overthrow the government, and they're being
encouraged to do so. But we'll see how this plays out.
But I don't see there's no to me, there's not

(08:47):
a snowballs chance. And how that that Israel would let fourdah.
They're one of their mass they're massive nuclear facilities under
a mountain. Just let it go because it's too deep.
And I don't think Trump is going to let that
stand either. I think there's a way that they're gonna
work together. I mean, look, Luca Trump did he already

(09:07):
did Roberto with Iran and pretended that he was going
on the route of Obama and Biden.

Speaker 2 (09:13):
Oh things are going, Oh yeah, you know, I think
I'm pretty hopeful.

Speaker 4 (09:16):
And all of a sudden, on the sixty first day,
he give him sixty days. On the sixty first day, right, yeah,
that's not an option if if that were to happen,
which I don't think Israel would ever let that happen,
and I don't think Trump would ever let that happen.
To finish this last you know, major underground nuclear facility,
then that's just that would be absurd. Oh, we wanted

(09:40):
to cripple half of the nuclear program. We wouln't let
him have a chance to still get a bomb in
five years or three years or two years or one
year or six months.

Speaker 2 (09:48):
Now.

Speaker 4 (09:48):
And by the way, whatever you leave behind for Iran,
they will double down, triple down, quatrobant to get that bomb.

Speaker 2 (09:58):
Now.

Speaker 4 (09:59):
You know, I'm saying now that you've poked the tiny bear.
If you will compare to Israel or the United States,
now you've poked the Islamists in Iran, they are going
to triple, quadruple, you know, whatever the efforts to get
that bomb, if they have anything left over to work
on it with. Okay, that's my heart take. I want

(10:19):
to hear from you, though. Join the conversation. Use that
talk back button on your iheartstream, click the microphone icon,
go to town, have a lot of fun. Let me
hear from you. How do you feel about this war?
Who do you think is winning? And do you support it?
Would you be okay with our b two bombers dropping
bunker busters to finish off this one plant that is

(10:43):
deep underground under a mountain before dope plant. I would
I would be okay, and if not, then I would
absolutely allow Israel to do what it needs to do
and work with them to finish it off because it
can't it can't stand. You can't stand, can't stay okay,
the no King's protests. So it's quite funny that calling

(11:10):
Trump a king and a dictator. How is it that
up to five billion people were allowed to rally in
the streets of America's major cities and say that Trump
is a king trying to be a king as a dictator,
and yet all these protests, five billion people were allowed

(11:31):
to do it, and the only ones that were getting
cuffed and stuff with the ones who were being violent
and attacking cops and rioting. He's not saying that's quite
a poor excuse for a king, right, not stopping the
protests against him. Oh, my favorite line of all this

(11:52):
does for producer read reminding me that there was a
Canadian there were Canadian no King's rallies. The only problem
with that is Canada actually has a king. So they
want no, no, no, what are you talking about.

Speaker 2 (12:10):
No, We've been very clear.

Speaker 4 (12:12):
We want our king, but not your king. We're against
kings except for art what never mind, which is so funny.
So here's some of the great examples of the violence
that was at this no King, no kings, the riots,

(12:36):
the rallies, et cetera. Here is somebody getting shot in
Salt Lake City and that certainly is horrifying, and somebody died.
Oh my god, that's a gun.

Speaker 2 (12:52):
That's a gun. Come on, come on, get out.

Speaker 4 (13:07):
Okay, that was what happened on that. Actually, I'm gonna
explain it. Coming up next, it's Your Morning Show with
Michael Del Johno Chris Krock doing it for Michael del Johno.
He's back tomorrow on your Morning Show. I love hearing
from you, and we did get some folks chiming in,
and I would love to hear mu as well. Go
to join the conversation. Whether you're from Seattle and Portland

(13:32):
to Tampa and DC with Saint Louis and Nashville in between,
this is your morning show and you should chime in.
Use that talkback button on the iHeart stream with the
microphone icon and just let loose go nuts. For example,
a listener from WKBN chimes in.

Speaker 6 (13:50):
They don't necessarily have to bomb all the way down
the three hundred feet or whatever it is to take
out the facility. They gotta do is cave in all
the entrances and stuff that so they can't get down
to them.

Speaker 4 (14:07):
Okay, so that listener is talking about instead, we're talking
about the four Dough power of the four Dough nuclear
plant in Iran, which hasn't been hit hard at all yet.
According to reports, they are buried to three hundred feet
deep underneath a mountain intentionally.

Speaker 2 (14:27):
Obviously.

Speaker 4 (14:28):
The only thing you can get that low, get that
deep is a bunker buster from the United States, and
it's only deliverable via a B two, which Israel doesn't have. So,
but I gotta tell you this collapsing. We've had some
people recommend cutting the power off. That's ridiculous to me,
called the electrician.

Speaker 7 (14:50):
Okay, I fixed out hold Done's you mean one million dollars?

Speaker 4 (14:57):
You know it's a big blunt. Okay, Uh No, that's
not gonna work.

Speaker 2 (15:01):
What else? Oh look, I blow up the tunnel.

Speaker 7 (15:05):
Oh that's okay, no problem. Send twenty guys in there.
They dig it out tomorrow, alright, we're back in. We've
built on nuclear bumps.

Speaker 4 (15:12):
Tomorrow, we take the next day off, then we go
make Boom go to a salt mine, Mike Boom. Anyway,
uh No, I'm not trying to be rudy of it.
To come on, you're gonna collapse the tunnel. Go in there,
all right. I don't mean to be rudy there. I'm
just saying, you know, come on, right, they're gonna let

(15:33):
a collapse tunnel. Stop the new program, I don't think. Okay,
and let's talk to We have an wonderful woman from
a twenty year military veteran from KSTE.

Speaker 8 (15:44):
I was raised in the army, and I loved the parade.
It was fabulous and it was overdue. What I didn't
love was Fox's coverage. They nattered on through the whole
damn thing, and we missed a lot of what was

(16:04):
actually going on because it was a tiny picture.

Speaker 6 (16:09):
This is Richard from Clovilla, Georgia, and my morning show
is your Morning Show with Michael Del Giorno.

Speaker 2 (16:22):
Hi, I'm Michael.

Speaker 1 (16:22):
I'd love to have you listen to your morning show
live every day. We're heard on great stations like News
Talk five point fifty k f YI and Phoenix News
Radio eleven ninety k e X in Portland and ten
ninety The Patriot in Seattle. Make us a part of
your morning routine. We'd love to have you listen live.
But in the meantime, enjoy the podcast.

Speaker 4 (16:40):
Chris Doctors and Michael Dogonald He's back tomorrow, Join the conversation,
hit that, talkback, budd, use that and on the Anheard stream,
cook to Micaehon and Icon and just let loose. A
lot of people like myself are panting Fox News coverage
of the two u fiftieth anniversary of the Army yesterday.

(17:01):
The most annoying thing was what Sadham saying. Incredible every
five words. Anyway, chime in on any of that, or
of course, the Iraq Iraq, the Iran Israel War.

Speaker 2 (17:16):
But let's go to sounds of the day today.

Speaker 4 (17:19):
Tim Walls, the Government Minnesota in the field. Vice presidential
candidate has the solution to how to negotiate Middle East peace.
This will not shock you, but it will make you
slap your forehead or have a woozy stomach.

Speaker 9 (17:41):
I truly worry now, I'm you know, I'm sure there's
great strategic thinkers in the Trump administration that have now
have now said, how is this going to? You know,
A tweaked from the President today said I told him,
I told him they should have done something, And here
we are. Yeah, here we are with the middle least
back on fire in a way that has now expanded

(18:03):
with I ran hash to retaliate in their mind, I'm sure.
And now, who is the voice in the world that
can negotiate some type of agreement in this? Who holds
the moral authority, who holds the ability to do that?
Because we are not seen as a neutral actor, and
we maybe never were.

Speaker 2 (18:23):
I don't want to tell anybody that.

Speaker 9 (18:24):
I think there's a lot of people say you always
lean one way in this, but I think there was
at least an attempt to be somewhat of the.

Speaker 2 (18:31):
Arbitrator in this.

Speaker 9 (18:32):
We saw President Carter do it with Began and Sadat
We've had certain wins along the way that we're actually
mutually beneficial both ways. Now I ask who that is,
and I mean consistently, over and over again, we're going
to have to face the reality.

Speaker 2 (18:48):
It might be the Chinese.

Speaker 4 (18:50):
Absolutely, the Chai comes our greatest adversary, if not our enemy,
they can fix the Middle East piece absolutely, Jiji Ping.
I know it's a burden, but I think you'll be
happy to help us out. You think, I think so,
like a job of the hut O all. Yes, I

(19:10):
will help.

Speaker 2 (19:11):
Isn't that? Thank God? That man's not our vice president? Okay?

Speaker 4 (19:17):
And how about the military parade? This is this is fantastic.
This is to some highlights. Here Trump is President Trump
is saluting West Point as they the soldiers are they
soon to be soldiers from West Point as they march
by him.

Speaker 3 (19:37):
One of the most prestigious institutions in the world where
leadership is forged and duty becomes testiny.

Speaker 2 (19:43):
This is West.

Speaker 3 (19:45):
Points, where army leaders army with the model of duty,
honor and country. West Point trains the best and lightest
to serve their country, as Army officers value back at
Aco two by President Thomas Jefferson.

Speaker 4 (19:59):
West Point is the the home of a long gray line, a.

Speaker 2 (20:02):
Legacy of courage and.

Speaker 3 (20:03):
Excellent state that includes seventy seventh Medal of Honor recipients,
two US presidents granted Eisenhower and numerous generals including John J. Pershing,
Douglas MacArthur enormous Schwartz goof.

Speaker 4 (20:27):
And then there's a we'll play a portion of your
Trump's speech. Let's see if he's acting like a king.

Speaker 10 (20:32):
Thank you to the greatest, fiercest, and bravest fighting force
ever to stride the face of this earth, the United
States Army.

Speaker 2 (20:42):
Thank you very much, because the.

Speaker 10 (20:49):
Army keeps us free. You make us strong, and tonight
you have made all Americans very proud. They're watching from
all over the world, actually made them all very proud.
Every other country celebrates their victories. It's about time America
did too. That's what we're doing tonight and watching this

(21:15):
magnificent display. Our souls are filled with gratitude for every
generation of warriors who have worn the uniform all the
way back to the very beginning. So to every veteran
across our land and right here in our nation's capital,
including six recipients of the Congressional Medal of Honor, we

(21:36):
love you, we honor you, and we salute your noble
service to our flag and to our country.

Speaker 4 (21:43):
Okay, doesn't sound like a king, just sounds like a
president the army. But what's the difference, Because maybe you
would prefer to have been at the No King's rallies.
Oh here we are in Salt Lake City yesterday, or
at the yeah, it was Saturday. Excuse me. At the
No King's rally, here we go.

Speaker 2 (22:07):
Oh my god, that's a gun. That's a gun. Come on,
come on, get out.

Speaker 4 (22:19):
At Salt Lake City. And then of course there was
rioting and chaos. Oh we have Denver, Colorado, seventeen were arrested,
including for hurling rocks other objects at officers during their
quote protest or rite, if you want to call it that.
In Portland, a stop sign was used to smash through

(22:41):
one of the doors to the ice facility. They injured
several officers and several people were arrested for that. In
Los Angeles, the sheriff revealed ten of his deputies have
been injured by projectiles in the past week of protests,
including downtown Los Angeles Sunday. Of course, yesterday, late in

(23:02):
the afternoon, projectiles throwing a police from the street in
high buildings. Police department ordered the crowd to disperse. Right
gear used tear gas rubber bullets to deal with the attacks.
So I don't know, I think it'd be much better
to be with you and your family at the DC
Military see the Army's two hundred at the anniversary, that

(23:23):
it would be to be one of these riots or
quote unquote protests. Okay, now, let's shift over to Shannon
Bream interviewing the Federalists Molly Hemingway about the US Army parade,
and let's hear what she had to say about this.

Speaker 2 (23:43):
I think the.

Speaker 11 (23:43):
Imagery was a good idea for this president, included Peggy
Newton and writing over the Wall Street Journal. It all
sounds showy, militaristic, and braggadocius, the kind of thing the
Soviet Union did in its May Day parades and North.

Speaker 2 (23:54):
Korea still does. We don't do that.

Speaker 11 (23:56):
We don't have big military praides with shining, gleaming weapons.

Speaker 2 (24:00):
Been through the streets before.

Speaker 4 (24:01):
Mall Hemingway answers. I want to say this, there is
a that is the shame position. Okay, like a dog,
you know, being told shame, shaman, it puts its head down.
And Peggy Nowton sometimes is right and sometimes I very
much disagree. They're kind of fifty to fifty on are
really the best. But uh, that's the idea of shame

(24:25):
in hiding our military and being ashamed of it. Trump
is proud, whether it be the military of the country,
and I can see how somebody might look at it
that way, but clearly it wasn't and it isn't, and
you know what it is.

Speaker 2 (24:37):
It's about the men and women.

Speaker 4 (24:40):
It's about the sacrifice and the bravery, and about the
power it might of the United States, and how if
you're on our side, you should be very proud, and
if you're not on our site, you should be very afraid.
There's nothing wrong with this. Let's see what mal Hemnuay
said about this.

Speaker 2 (24:54):
Well, well that's not true.

Speaker 12 (24:55):
We actually have had military parades in our past, and
I think a lot of Americans want to see more
of it. There is this hunger for where we feel
like we've lost something of a patriot, patriotic zeal and
people are hungry to get that back. My family was
more Marines and Air Force, not army, but I went
with my family and we loved learning about the history
of the US Army. And one of my favorite things

(25:16):
they showed yesterday was just the gratitude that Americans feel
for the army. And so I think a lot of
people try to make it seem like celebrating your military
and its successes is some politically divisive thing, but for
the vast majority of Americans, they are proud to be American.
They do think this is a great country, and they
understand that a lot of that rests first.

Speaker 2 (25:33):
And foremost with the army.

Speaker 12 (25:34):
We wouldn't even have a country without the United States Army,
and a lot of people are very happy to celebrate.

Speaker 2 (25:39):
You're getting full sign off obviously.

Speaker 4 (25:43):
Now Bill Maher sat down with Senator John Fetterman, and
they've the Democrats. What's so sad as they're not allowing
diversity in their party. Instead, they destroy you if you
veer from what they decide is allowed what's not allowed.
Here is Fetterman with Delmar.

Speaker 13 (26:03):
Do you think this is the issue that made people
sort of turn on you? I see so recently reports
you had I think your chief of staff quit on
you and start talking about you. Yeah, and we know
you made no secret of it, but you purposely publicized
it so that people would take inspiration from it that
you had a stroke, you had issues with depression, and

(26:26):
it seemed to me like they were sort of weaponizing
that to say you'd gone crazy.

Speaker 2 (26:30):
And I did smell kind of a rat here.

Speaker 13 (26:33):
When I read that you were driving recklessly and too
much time on Twitter and like, you know Meglomania, I'm like, hmmm,
so defend yourself here, John, I mean, I don't think
you're crazy, you don't seem crazy. But and I have
certainly seen people who refuse to go all the way
with the purity lovers on the left suddenly castigated and

(26:55):
cast out as an attack like this.

Speaker 2 (26:58):
So is that what's going on? Yeah? Yeah, absolutely, yeah.

Speaker 14 (27:01):
Parts of my party just wants to turn me into
a Colonel Kurtz, you know, and just claim that it's like.

Speaker 2 (27:06):
Oh, like I just like it look like.

Speaker 14 (27:12):
Really that what happened after Israel and if the border
and some of the times I might have to disagree
with with my party, and that's really we brought us
to that place where, you know, it just that kind
of a canceling was a little bit of different thing.
But now we've all moved on from that. But but
absolutely that's the truth.

Speaker 2 (27:29):
Some of this, all right.

Speaker 4 (27:30):
And then here Laura Ingram is talking to law what
do you call it? The University of George Washington University
law professor, scholar and chief legal expert if you will
on Fox News all the time talking about the Democrat
Party becoming a party of Jacobins and going after the

(27:56):
most extreme possible views. What are Jack coins and producer right,
if you want to enlighten us a little bit more,
But I had a double checking list look it up
to make sure, and it's basically far left wing people
who will do violence and attack and undermine the government

(28:17):
if it doesn't if they're not doing what they wanted
to do. So far left activists, terrorists, whatever you want,
you know, somewhere in that whole round, really actually terrorism
is actually very correct. So let's hear what Ingram and
Tertily talked about with that regarding and Jonathan.

Speaker 15 (28:31):
A lot of us think that this is all a
prelude to if the Democrats regain control of Congress, to
impeachment proceedings, whether against cabinet officials, you know, take your pick,
whether it's Christina Homer or the president himself, that the
Democrats are setting, you know, setting in the narrative piece

(28:54):
by piece, and that's what we're looking at all these cases.

Speaker 16 (29:00):
I think, Laura say, I take an even dimmer view
of this and listening to some of these politicians on
your show and these clips.

Speaker 2 (29:08):
I mean, it's as if they've become a.

Speaker 16 (29:10):
Party of Jacobins, that they are endorsing the most extreme
possible actions. I just wrote a book on the age
of rage, and this is what rage does. It gives
you a license to do things and say things you
would not ordinarily do or say. And what these people
won't admit, what they won't admit tomorrow, is that they

(29:30):
like it and that they need it, and that it's
contagious and it's addictive.

Speaker 2 (29:34):
That's what rage is. And you're going to see that tomorrow.

Speaker 4 (29:37):
Wild chaos, wild huh. That was Friday night, and Laura Ingraman,
we know that Saturday a lot of that did happen
Los Angeles, Portland, Seattle. Was a lot of bolence at
these places and a lot of arrests. And meanwhile, you
look at the Trump event, the in the Trump event

(30:00):
actually the Army's tour and fiftieth anniversary, and there was
no violence, no hate, no rage. Very interesting, huh, very
interesting juxtaposition.

Speaker 2 (30:14):
This is your morning show with Michael Del Trono.

Speaker 4 (30:18):
John Decker, White House correspondent. He has seen it all
and stands there in the Oval office questioning President Trump
as a member of the press, et cetera. Unshakable Good morning.

Speaker 17 (30:34):
John, Hey, Good morning to you, Chris. Hope you had
a good weekend, a good Father's Day weekend. Thank You're
in Washington, d C. The President has left Washington DC.
He is in Canada today. He's there for the G
seven Summit, the annual meeting of the leaders of the
seven largest economies in the world. Had an opportunity to

(30:54):
ask the President a few questions before he departed the
White House yesterday on the way to Canada, and I
asked him whether we can expect to see the announcement
of any new trade deals while he's in Keounnedy. He
said that, indeed is a possibility. In fact, trade certainly
a big topic of conversation for everyone of the leaders
that will be meeting with President Trump over the course

(31:16):
of the next few days.

Speaker 4 (31:19):
So you actually think we might get a few deals announced,
or at least one or two big deals perhaps from
the G seven.

Speaker 17 (31:27):
Well, I wouldn't say that, I said.

Speaker 2 (31:28):
The President told me that.

Speaker 17 (31:31):
It is possible that the announcement of some trade deals
could be announced.

Speaker 2 (31:35):
I really think that.

Speaker 17 (31:36):
Most countries in the world, if not all countries in
the world are waiting to see what happens with the
federal courts. Federal courts are weighing in on whether it
was legal, permissible, constitutional for the President to institute those
what's known as reciprocal tariffs on every one of our
trading partners. And the Circuit Court of Appeals will hear

(32:00):
a hold of hearing on that particular issue.

Speaker 2 (32:02):
That will be at the end of July.

Speaker 17 (32:04):
Whoever loses at that level will likely appeal to the
US Supreme Court, and the Supreme Court.

Speaker 2 (32:09):
Will have the final word on this issue.

Speaker 4 (32:12):
So John, I want to ask you about this. To you,
Israeli UN Ambassador Danny Dannen said Sunday he and other
leaders from his country ahead of the G seven expect
moral clarity and that the world understands Israel is doing
the dirty work for democracies around the globe by taking
on Iran before it can develop a nuclear bomb. Will
they get that? Do you think will they get moral

(32:34):
clarity from other leaders at the G seven?

Speaker 17 (32:37):
Well, that's another big topic.

Speaker 7 (32:39):
You know.

Speaker 17 (32:40):
Obviously, this is a big issue that impacts not only
the region but also the world, and the President indicating
today that or yesterday when he left the White House
telling me that he and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Nett
Yaho are on the same page in terms of how
to deal with Iran. So I don't know if that's

(33:00):
the case with every one of the other world leaders
that will be at the G seven summit. The President,
of course, pulled the US out of the Iran nuclear
deal his first day back in the White House for
his second term. That's something he did also in his
first term as well. They were in the end stages
of a new negotiation when israel I'll launched this attack

(33:23):
on several locations inside Iran. So I think these are
some of the unknowns that we do not know the
answers to right now at the beginning of this week.
Perhaps we'll get a better feel for it after the
G seven summit, during the G seven some and also
of course see what happens next as it relates to
Israel taking on Iran.

Speaker 4 (33:43):
John Decker, what else, correspondent. Thank you for your time
this morning, sir. Thank you have a great day. About
you too, Yes, sir.

Speaker 2 (33:50):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael Ndheld, Joino
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