Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, It's Michael. Your morning show airs live five to
eight am Central, six to nine Eastern and great cities
like Memphis, Tennessee, Telsa, Oklahoma, Sacramento, California. We'd love to
be a part of your morning routine, but we're happier
here now. Enjoy the podcast starting your morning off right.
Speaker 2 (00:17):
A new way of talk, a new way of understanding
because we're in this together.
Speaker 1 (00:24):
This is your morning show with Michael o'deill chorn Oh,
good morning, rise and shot. Early bird gets the worm,
Sleepy squirrel misses the not seven minutes after the hour.
It is Wednesday, July the sixteenth on the Aeron streaming
live on your iHeartRadio app. This is your morning show,
honor to serve you, I'm Michael Jeffrey, serving us all
with sound Red. Keeping an eye on the content. Heavy
(00:47):
downpours along the East Coast has triggered sudden flash flooding.
Too reported dead in the East Coast flooding. President Trump's
doze related spending cuts bill cleared the hurdle of the Senate,
but it took the tie breaking vote a Vice President
jd Vance to do it. Speaking of tie breakers, we
had a first ever swing off. Now, this has been
in the rule books since twenty twenty two. That's the
(01:10):
first All Star game that ended six to six with
a tie, So it was the first ever swing off
in an All Star Game. I loved it. Listeners are
still chiming in red, still swig and bourbon. But Kyle
Schwarby Schorber got three for three and that gave the
National League the four to three advantage in the swing
off and they win the All Star Game. Last night,
(01:32):
all right, we had some fun with a conversation. Let
me get Rory O'Neil, our National Your morning show correspondent,
up to speed. So my son got a wild urge
to go buy a record player, and they go to
Target by the record player. They come home with three
different records. One's Wicked, one's a country album, one's Fleetwood
mag And watching them try to figure out how it
(01:55):
all worked was classic. And then Jeffrey brought up this
YouTube video of a father who gave us kids four
minutes to connect a phone call using a rotary phone
and they couldn't do it. And it was fascinating to
watch them because you know, they were raised on the
smartphone and so they think you dial and then pick
the phone up. Because you dial and then you hit sent,
(02:16):
it was it's hysterical. Well, and then here comes your
story today and it all happened kind of naturally. If
somebody calls, it used to be hello, or if it's
in a business setting, this is rory. How may I
help you? That's not the case with the younger generation,
is it. No, we're seeing gen zers.
Speaker 3 (02:34):
If you call a gen z, they're likely to pick
up the phone and then do nothing.
Speaker 1 (02:39):
That's my kids. The idea is you called, you start
the conversation.
Speaker 3 (02:46):
And this may be learned in part because of all
those robo calls. You know, when the computer calls and
it's a spam call, they typically don't start speaking until
you say hello. All right, let me tell you about
my rotten brats for a second. First of all, if
I call them, it says dad in big letters, right.
And then if it's my daughter's it's a great picture
usually of me with one of them. My son has
(03:09):
always unattractive pictures of me.
Speaker 1 (03:11):
But they know who's calling, and they still you just
hear it connect and you're like Anna, yeah, like that.
So it's exactly what you're talking about now. I do
something even more aggravating, but we'll do that in a minute.
Speaker 3 (03:25):
Well this has been Look it's an evolutionary thing, right,
you know, we didn't used to say hello before that.
Speaker 1 (03:30):
I think it was OI. So you know, these things change.
Speaker 3 (03:33):
If you call the Spanish household, you'll get digame, so
you know, you never know what you're going to get.
But it's interesting because nowadays it seems like you make
the call, you start the conversation.
Speaker 1 (03:44):
Okay, So that one's fascinating. What happens to me? And
I do this and it's very aggravating and I can't
stop it. So like, take David Sinati a call, Well,
I can see it's David Sanati, so I don't answer
and say hello. And then wait, I just launched right
into a converse SA because I already know it's And yes,
isn't it a terrible habit?
Speaker 4 (04:06):
You know?
Speaker 1 (04:06):
But you know? All right? So what other are there
any other social trends or etiquettes that have changed over
the years.
Speaker 3 (04:12):
Well, now you text five or ten times at least
in order to schedule when you're going to make that
impromptu phone call, right, so now you'll have you know,
are you good at seven thirty.
Speaker 1 (04:24):
Oh you haven dinner? All right?
Speaker 3 (04:25):
How about eight thirty? We try to do earlier? Oh
six all right, I'll call you for two minutes at
six thirty.
Speaker 1 (04:29):
That kind of a thing. I remember back when AOL
first came online and you would just pop in on
complete strangers, Hey where are you? You know, and everybody
would talk and it was just it was we were
just so thrilled to be talking online. And I thought
to myself, we never did that with phones, just started
dialing arbitrary numbers. Hey hi am Michael, Oh Judy. But
(04:55):
so I guess it's the times that change and the
technologies that changed that influence at all.
Speaker 3 (05:00):
And now it's also individualized. Right, Normally I used to
call the del Jornal house. I don't know who was
going to pick up of all the kids and the whatever.
So you didn't know, and so it was also a
different kind of conversation. Now, when you dial a number,
you're going exactly to the person you want to speak to.
Speaker 1 (05:15):
For an adulter most teens, right, although your analogy is
flawed and that you never call the del Jornal home,
and when I call you you never answer. I'm just kidding.
Frank calls to your house, Rory o'neilvin back in the
third hour, Nearly one in four credit card holders don't
think they will ever get out of credit card debt.
(05:38):
Are we buried and buried for life and enslaved? That
just may be the case. Also, speaking of David Sanadi,
he'll be joining us this latest Supreme Court ruling. It's
so much more than just another defeat for an activist judge.
It's so much more than just another victory for Donald Trump.
We're going to visit with David about the significance of
(05:58):
what Trump is doing, by and large, not only for
our time, but for all time. He is literally pulling
up leftist cultural victories over fifty to seventy five years
by the route. We'll have more on that coming up
in the third hour as well. Sounds a day coming
up next half hour. Although I'm gonna sneak and do
(06:19):
one right now, I thought this was very interesting. Let
me give you an example straight out of out of
our news House. Republicans are blocking efforts from Democrats to
force a vote on releasing files associated with convicted sex
(06:41):
offender Jeffrey Epstein. And in our case it's Brian Shook
doing the story. Okay, I'm sorry, I'm not bashing one
of my co workers. But when you word it, and
I speak English and I know the definition of each
world that was chosen, it paints a picture that the
(07:03):
Republicans are a blocking something and what they're blocking, according
to the story, is a forced vote on the release files.
This gives you the impression, and so does the story.
I by hit played. The Democrats want the Epstein case
files released. They don't. The only person that we know
(07:27):
who has seen these names and seen these depositions and
files is saying number one, there is no one still
in office on that list. And it's not really a
list like a you know, a book of John's. These
(07:49):
are all testimonies from victims that reveal these names. So
they're all redacted by a judge's doing. But this one
attorney knows the names that are redacted, and so we
know from Dershowitz most of them are Democrats, and we
(08:15):
know it's not of all people. It's going to paint
both from what I've read, Bill and Hillary would take
the biggest hip, but that's not what the story implies.
So that's why I want to do a sneak peek
into our Sounds of the Day. I thought this was
a fascinating piece of audio, and I'm not a fan.
(08:39):
But this is Representative Marjorie Taylor Green discussing that it's
not true that the Republicans blocked the Democrats' efforts to
release these files. It was a procedural vote that they blocked. Listen,
I got to.
Speaker 5 (08:56):
Correct something real quick. So it's being reported that that
House Republicans unanimously voted to block the release of the
Epstein files, and I want to straighten out the record
right now.
Speaker 1 (09:11):
That is not true.
Speaker 5 (09:12):
If I could vote, okay, if I could vote to
release the Epstein files, guys, you would have my vote.
I would vote yes. Here's what just happened. It was
a procedural vote, and we have these all the time.
It's called a PQ. It's voting on the previous question,
and if the if the Democrats had won the previous question,
which I know sounds insane. It's one of these crazy
(09:33):
rules in the House that are hard to understand. That
means they would control the House floor, and that means
they could bring up anything they could. They could bring
up impeachment articles against President Trump. They could bring up
a whole package of insane Democrat agenda items and force
votes on the House floor on these things. That's what
we voted against. We never allowed Democrats to have control
(09:55):
of the House floor because we control the House floor.
Speaker 1 (09:58):
So it's it's a it's a miss under well, we
don't control the House floor. The American people have given
you control of the House floor by majority. But that's
a big deal, and that's not what you're going to
hear in news stories all day long by any stretch
who wanted to clarify that for you. Two pieces of
(10:20):
research that are worth mentioning, and only have two minutes
to do it. That's about all it's going to take,
all right. So first we have a Harvard Harris poll,
and this is just up and down. How do the
American people feel about how the President is handling immigration?
Make no mistake about it, big picture, Democrats are walking
(10:43):
off a political cliff on this, and they still won't
let go. In fact, this is what they're choosing to
make the issue to get the most insurrection and violent over.
So this is an important question and this is a
first and foremost very damning poll for the Democrats. I
get that picture Thelman Louise in the car going right
(11:06):
off the cliff. But go inside the numbers. Eighty nine
percent of Republicans, fifty five percent of independence, but only
thirty four percent of Democrats support the president's border closing policy,
(11:27):
securing the border not being an open porous border that tens,
if not hundreds of thousands are just pouring through and
being released throughout the country. Let alone find the most
dangerous that went beyond breaking the law of entering the
country illegally, but went on to rape, murder, sell drugs,
human traffic so on. Now, if I nuanced the question
(11:51):
with that, I think these numbers go up higher. But
just in general, and who knows in a matrix, who
knows in the death of journalism how all that plays
in their mind? And you get the numbers. Sixty percent
overall support the president's border closing policy. That is a
mandate majority and a very significant victory for the president,
(12:16):
and a head scratcher, really, quite frankly, for what the
left is quadrupling down on with violence towards ice agents.
The other pole that I thought was fascinating is the
New York Mirrors race. So and Mandani was in the
news yesterday for a sticking to his socialist guns but
(12:37):
trying to sidestep the Ntifada side of things. But his
clarification was on the phrasing. Didn't really say anything about
Ntafada itself, just not comfortable with the phrasing globalize the Dafada. Well,
how about how do you feel about the Dafada. That's
(13:00):
what's relevant, not the phrasing. But we go inside the
polling and Mandanni is right now at twenty six percent,
Andrew Cuomo, the former governors, at twenty three percent within
the margin of error. Slee was at twenty two percent,
which I thought was high. I mean, I get a
sense that we're seeing undecideds break and they're breaking Republican
(13:22):
and they're breaking Cuomo. So time is not on Mamdanni's side.
But Maor Adams is at thirteen percent. If there's someone
to drop out to ensure a Cuomo victory, it's Adams. Now,
presumably if Adams gets out of the race, Cuomo wins easy.
If he stays in. If all four stay in, well
(13:44):
the leader is Mandanni. But there's still fifteen percent undecided,
and we're seeing that they're breaking primarily to Cuomo and
secondarily to Sliwa. So I even think time will play
itself out done will lose. But how much damage will
he do? And let me be more specific, because I'm
out of time, how this is an insightful way for
(14:07):
you to look forward. How much damage does this candidate
coming right out and selling socialism, coming right out and
selling Intifada with the leftist, most radical views. How much
does he damage AOC's chances in twenty twenty eight. And
I still think AOC will be the early leader because
Bernie was, and then the DNC will try to rig it,
(14:31):
I presume with Romney Manuel and Wes Moore. So it's
very interesting to see. I don't think this is my gut.
I could be wrong, and boy won't that be demised
for New York City. I think, ma'am Donne's going to
come up short. I think he loses easy if Adams
gets out of the race. But even with Adams in
the race, I think he loses. It's how much damage
does he caused to AOC come primary time right after
(14:54):
the midterms. This is your morning show with Michael. This
is your morning show, and we cannot have it without
your voice quickly. Big John is in Nashville listening to
WLAC Believe it or not.
Speaker 6 (15:08):
Big John's first album was Bred nineteen sixty nine.
Speaker 1 (15:13):
Well I came along just a few years later with
the album Best to Bread, so I was right there.
There were a lot of Carpenter's albums in the Del
Jorno team bedrooms as well, and we played them right
after Kansas or Boston or Zeppelin. It was a crazy time.
James is in Youngstown, James in Youngstown, Ohio, Morning Gang,
(15:35):
Mike wy have to agree with you. The swing off
was brilliant. America needs the winner, whether his Trump or
Baseball tied it right into the president. And finally David
and Telsa, Oklahoma listening on KAKC.
Speaker 7 (15:49):
If Epstein had an organization that facilitated the rape of
young boys and girls, and there was a client list
of people who would use that service, then I do
not care if it's Donald Trump, Pam Bondy, anybody in
this world that is on that list, I would like
to know.
Speaker 1 (16:06):
I would like them in prison.
Speaker 7 (16:08):
Anybody that covers that up, I would like to know,
and I would like them in prison.
Speaker 1 (16:13):
I do not understand why it's being Buried.
Speaker 6 (16:17):
Hi.
Speaker 1 (16:18):
I'm actress Lisa Varga and my morning show is your
Morning Show with Michael Del Giorno. Hi, it's Michael. Your
morning show could be heard live weekday mornings five to
eight am, six to nine am Eastern and great cities
like Tampa, Florida, Youngstown, Ohio, and Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. We'd
(16:38):
love to join you on the drive to work live,
but we're glad you're here now. Enjoyed the podcast. Thanks
for bringing us along with you and making us a
part of your morning routine. This is your morning show.
I'm Michael del Jorno. Well, heavy downpours along the East
coast of triggered sudden flash floods, killing two yesterday. Trump's
doze related spending cuts bill has cleared the hurdle of
the Senate. It took JD Vance to break the tie.
(17:01):
Oh and in baseball, the American League was down six
to nothing, came back to tie the game, and first
ever swing off went like this when Kyle Schwarber, the
later to be named MVP, came up.
Speaker 8 (17:13):
Schwarber in the air to center field, headed towards the
wall and that center's huge for the National League. So
there you go. He said if he could get it
on his first swing, and he did.
Speaker 1 (17:30):
In the All Star Game, tied it free.
Speaker 8 (17:36):
That's MVP material if he gets the third one right here,
al rallied in the game, NL has rallied in the
swing off.
Speaker 1 (17:44):
He did ten it one, chop house.
Speaker 4 (17:49):
Just nice.
Speaker 1 (17:51):
The National League wins the All Star Game using the
swing off, and from there Red just went off the rails.
All right, can't have your morning show with out your voice.
Let's go right back.
Speaker 6 (18:01):
Big John is back, So nobody is getting out of
the New York City may or race. Cuoma was ruining everything.
He should drop out. He's not even campaigning. He's not
in the streets, he's not in the suites like Curtis
Leewell bucket.
Speaker 1 (18:18):
But I think it was Big John earlier that said,
you know, Sleiwa has a chance, And I thought to myself, oh,
that's an outside chance. But think about this and this
will get Big John happy. Man. Donnie is at twenty
six percent, Cuomo is at twenty three percent, Sleeva is
at twenty two percent. Adams is at thirteen percent. Now,
first and foremost, we got a commie, a killer, a convict,
(18:41):
and a guardian Angel that alone is you know, like
I saidcom but the biggest number of all is the
fifteen percent undecided, And we know how the fifteen percent
are breaking, and I would say it's probably breaking as
much to Suela as it is to Cuomo, but it's
(19:03):
not breaking to Adams. So you could make a case.
Let it play out, and it's probably gonna be sliwa,
which is very interesting. Read me the comment, and I
tend to agree. They use this and this is what
keeps tripping them up. This kind of goes back to
the old saying cheaters never win. But they used the
ranked file to get the Kami through. Otherwise you'd have
(19:26):
had a runoff between him and Cuomo, and Cuomo would
have clearly won. So they do the Shenanigan to get
the Kami and then they may have set the table
for a Republican mayor. And then they'll all go, we
got a Republican mirror and you only got twenty eight
percent of the vote. Yeah, just as you intended. It
only a backfire and you shot yourself in the foot.
Kevin never shoots himself in the foot in Sacramento. Good morning, Michael.
Speaker 9 (19:48):
My first record player was wrapped in Denim a little
suitcase deal. My first record was the seventy eighth version
of Disco Duck.
Speaker 1 (19:57):
Go Frities, Disco Maybe You Laid Up My Life, Debbie Boone,
The Night Chicago Died, Indiana Wants Me, and Disco Duck
maybe four of the worst songs ever made. We were
(20:18):
talking about my son went and bought a record player,
and they go buy these vinyl albums and they come
home and they can't figure out how it works. That's
what got us on that fun topic. Perry and Nashville.
Speaker 9 (20:27):
Our last called if politics are keeping these names from
being uncovered? With Epstein, are you positively committed suicide?
Speaker 1 (20:36):
Just asking? Okay?
Speaker 9 (20:38):
On the first albums, I can't remember exactly, it was
either Grand Funk, Railroad Where American Band or Elton John's
Goodbye Yellow Brick Road.
Speaker 1 (20:48):
I grew up with the ninety six Tiers Gold record
on my wall as my dad discovered question Mark and
the Mysterians, and my dad formed and help promote Grand Funk.
The original Grand Funk guitarist was the night disc jockey
(21:09):
at my dad's radio station. Yeah, and he was like, man,
you got to come here, this gotta come here. Our band,
so my dad goes to ann Arbor and here's them perform,
and then Dad breaks Grandfunk. The guy that worked with
my dad at night chose to work at a big
offer in Detroit, not far from Flint, so he takes
the radio gig and misses out on Grand Funk. So yeah,
(21:32):
a guy named Bob Dell and his picture with his
dog Snoopy is on the back of one of the
Grand Funk albums, and that Bob Dell is actually Bob
del Jordan. Do I have to witness that kiss every morning?
Every morning? I gotta witness that kiss with yesterday's bourbon
breadth over there. Appreciate the calls time. I think we
kind of with that baseball It kind of already started
(21:54):
sounds of the day.
Speaker 10 (21:58):
Quest is the best way to get back on your favors,
to get up off your act.
Speaker 1 (22:01):
I've been living renfree in that guy's head for years.
And that's just a vote. Do you call that chicken
a d They're just blowing off Steve. Well, here's how
it happened, if not.
Speaker 8 (22:10):
On this vote, the yays are fifty and the nayser fifty,
the Senate.
Speaker 1 (22:14):
Being equally divided. The Vice President votes in the affirmative
and the motion is agreed to. And just like that,
President Trump's dow'ge related spendicuts bill was cleared through the Senate. Yes,
elections matter, as Red would want you to know. That's
why those Senate races were so key. That's why we
needed to win in Montana, win in West Virginia, win
(22:36):
in Ohio, win in Pennsylvania. And that's why presidential elections matter.
That's why our founding fathers matter. But that gets through.
This was something I think you need to hear. This
qualifies for Sounds of the Day. This is one of
the Home Depot founders, Ken Legong on MSNBC and here's
him talking about this is the guy that did not
(22:59):
like Donald Trump, opposed Donald Trump. Watch the turnaround and
on c NBC Middle East.
Speaker 2 (23:07):
With these deals, he's making three trillion dollars. These are
real numbers. Look, let me tell you right now, I
am sold on Trump. In fact, I'll say this, I
think he's got a good shot at going down in
history as one of our best presidents.
Speaker 1 (23:22):
Even that is a real turnaround. Because you didn't want
to vote for him.
Speaker 2 (23:26):
I told you the reason. I want to tell you
I'm a believer. What I'm seeing happening is is absolutely
nothing short of a great thing.
Speaker 1 (23:37):
Now, that's foreign policy, that's economy. I still don't get
the tariff thing. And he may be playing, as Glenn
Beck would say, he could be playing four dimensional chess
and I'm only playing three dimensional. I don't get that part.
But what he's done with foreign policy, what he's done
with the economy, the deals he's making, but the way
(23:59):
he is pulling out at the root seventy years of
progressive progress into woke ism, craziness that has me astonished.
We're gonna talk more about that with David Sonati. I'm
gonna have to use a sound effect here because one
of my favorite scenes in the play and then later
(24:19):
the movie Chicago with Richard Greer here is when you
just use tap dancing in the courtroom, you know, the
kind of hide that you're dodging. Something that has become
the case for Haeen Jeffries, who continues to have to
dodge why he has yet to endorse Mom Donnie in
the race in New York. Listen, your meeting was our
(24:41):
Mom Donnie. You have not endorsed him yet.
Speaker 10 (24:44):
What do you say to people say, what gives why
are you not endorsing the guy that won the Democratic primary.
Speaker 1 (24:49):
In a contested election in your backyard.
Speaker 11 (24:52):
Well, I look forward to sitting down and talking to him.
I didn't get involved in that primary election, and I
don't know him. Well, we had a very good conversation
the day after the primary. We agreed to meet, and
so I'm looking forward to having that discussion on product.
Speaker 1 (25:04):
How many times is this guy gonna dodge this question?
But this is the problem with Mam Donnie, and this
is if there's one thing you take away from listening
this morning, that race. That's why I went through that
polling information. That race is close and undecided will decide it,
and they're breaking Sliwa and Cuomo's way. My guess is
if it remains a four person race, well, if Adams
(25:27):
gets out, my guess is Cuomo wins. If Adam stays in,
my guess is time breaks it either Cuomo's way or
Sleewass way. But the problem is the attention. Like AOC
hosted a breakfast for Mam Donnie, AOC is going to
be the Democrat nominee for president until the DNC gets
involved to rig it again. How much damage is this
(25:51):
guy going to do to the party. That's why HAIKM
Jeffries doesn't want to answer the question. But the biggest
sight of the day is how much damage is he
going to do to AOC in her run in twenty
twenty eight? Oh my gosh, I think this is my
first Laura Ingram clip administration is corrupt. No one, not
(26:15):
even a president, is above the law.
Speaker 4 (26:19):
Well, we have a Fox News alert.
Speaker 10 (26:21):
The Angle has exclusively obtained the criminal referral for Democrat
Senator Adam Schiff. It shows the underlying conduct described could
result in claims of mortgage fraud.
Speaker 1 (26:34):
Isn't it ironic, don't you think? And then the President
had this to say from the tarmac, justice to see him.
I think what I think.
Speaker 12 (26:46):
Adam Shiff is one of the lowest ship the low.
I would love to see him brought to justice. He's
a dishonest, tricky guy. I don't know about the individual charge,
if that even happened, but Adam Siff is a low
life man.
Speaker 1 (27:03):
The President doesn't mix words, does he not? Very often
on the Epstein files. This came up on the tarmac
as well. Presidents trying to discuss business deals in Ai
and his visit to Pittsburgh. But everybody's wanted to talk
about Epstein. That's kind of a theme today. The left
wants to keep pushing Epstein, the right wants to keep
(27:25):
pushing Mam Donnie. And that's the tug of war in
the matrix. But here's the President's comments that I think
a lot of you are not going to like.
Speaker 8 (27:32):
I'm curious, why do you think your supporters in particular
have been so interested in the Epstein story and so
upset about how it's been handled.
Speaker 12 (27:39):
Why do you think that is why they would be
so interesting that we's did for a long time. He
was never a big factor in terms of life. I
don't understand what the interest or one that fascination is.
Speaker 1 (27:54):
I really don't.
Speaker 12 (27:55):
And the incredible information has been given, don't forget we
went through years.
Speaker 1 (28:00):
Of Lamulla witch hunts and all of the different.
Speaker 12 (28:02):
Things we could steal dossier, which was.
Speaker 1 (28:05):
Who'll think all that information would say?
Speaker 12 (28:08):
But I don't understand why the Jeffrey case would be
of interest to anybody.
Speaker 1 (28:14):
I'm guessing you guys are not a fan of that
particular piece of sound. Look, I'll remind you this is
a court case with redacted testimony from victims of who
victimized them and a case that has never been tried
because the accused killed himself. Now, I know a lot
of peop don't believe he killed himself, and if he did,
(28:36):
there was a lot of sheets. I mean, he's lucky
he didn't drown in sheets. You would need a judge
to remove the redaction and then you could at least
see those that victims testified in a deposition victimized them.
I don't know as a political football, if this is
(29:00):
a good ball for Donald Trump to look at you
and say, the guy's dead. Nobody cares. I don't know
why you guys are fascinated with this. Nobody cares because
I think you do. It's a problem. Now. Part of
what fed it is because if we can agree on
one thing, you've never seen any of these depositions unredacted.
(29:23):
I've never seen them. There's a lot of people that
made a lot of money off of talking about this story.
You could make a case that Epstein catapulted Bongino to
the head of all podcasts. I'm not saying that's wrong,
and I love Dan Bongino, but a lot of people
went overboard with this story. And now they're overboard with
(29:47):
trying to move on. How bad are things getting really bad?
When even Woope Goldberg comes to our senses.
Speaker 13 (29:55):
They're finding that they're not getting the money because people
are blaming the people who died in the floods, and
they're saying, well, why should I give you? We you
voted for this. Let me tell you. Let's be really clear.
Speaker 1 (30:09):
Wow yeah yeah, and.
Speaker 13 (30:13):
It's and it's unbelievable, but it's happening.
Speaker 1 (30:16):
And so I just want to be really clear.
Speaker 13 (30:18):
You know, you can't blame anybody for these floods. It's
nobody's fault. I didn't do it, You didn't do it.
Has nothing to do with Washington. This was what happened.
This was a natural disaster. And if you are writing
on people's socials where you should be giving, if you're
(30:40):
saying these kinds of things, damn you, damn you.
Speaker 4 (30:46):
People are trying.
Speaker 13 (30:48):
To get their lives together. These floods are no joke.
This is not light humor, this is not this is
not how we do in America. We show up for
whoever is in.
Speaker 1 (31:01):
Trouble, even even Whoop he's getting that, We will wait,
We will list.
Speaker 6 (31:13):
They all look like a bunch of early men.
Speaker 1 (31:19):
You're speakers, don't make even chance. I hope you're readitor.
That just sounds the day it's your morning show with
Michael del Chorno. Every downpour has led to flash flooding,
which led to two depths in the East Coast. The
President's doze related spending cuts bill cleared the hurdle of
the Senate thanks to the tie breaking vote a Vice
(31:40):
President JD. Vance. While I was a busy visiting mom
at the nursing home, our White House correspondent John Decker
was busy with the President asking very very important questions,
not the least of which was asking the President about
why he's giving Vladimir Putin fifty days to end the war?
Why not end it now or else? John? The President
(32:02):
likes to call on you. Good question. What was the answer?
Speaker 4 (32:05):
Yeah, the President actually bristled a little bit at that
question that I asked him yesterday. I asked the President,
why are you giving mister Putin fifty more days to
prosecute his war against Ukraine? He said he didn't believe
fifty days as a particularly long period of time, and
then he said, why didn't you ask that question to Biden,
and I told the President I did ask tough questions
(32:28):
to Biden, and he asked me what were his answers.
I said, he didn't give very good answers.
Speaker 14 (32:34):
So that was one of the questions I asked.
Speaker 4 (32:36):
The President yesterday concerning the war in Ukraine. I also
asked him about FED Chairman Jerome Pale. The President has
a very contentious relationship with him. I asked him when
was the last time they met and what did they discuss?
And the presidents that they met a few weeks ago
in the Oval office. He told the President he told
the FED chairman he wasn't doing a very good job.
And I asked the President any chance you'd reappoint him
(32:59):
as FED and he gave me a forward answer.
Speaker 14 (33:02):
He said, essentially, are you kidding me? And I think
that the answer right there.
Speaker 1 (33:08):
I don't think that's likely. No, all right, let's go
back to the to the Putin question. All right, so
clearly the enemy has to say, all right, that's just
something you gotta deal with. The President's clearly not happy
with Vladimir Putin, and he's doing everything he can to Titan.
I think he's doing it brilliantly in his support of
(33:29):
Ukraine and now in selling the arms to Natum. But
you're right to ask the question why fifty days because
Putin's actually I think Putin knows he can't win now,
and more than ever, he knows he can't win. He
had a chance to leave and save face, and now,
well now you get a chance to leave and you
don't get to save face. But yeah, just grabbing fifty days,
(33:49):
it was interesting that he chose not to answer it.
I might have gone thirty I mean, you got to
give him some time to process the ultimatum. But fifty days,
that's interesting, and you never really got an answer.
Speaker 14 (34:01):
No, I'm sure that question is going to.
Speaker 4 (34:03):
Be asked in different ways to the president. But you know,
I think that you and I were speaking yesterday and
we were talking about this, and you and I both
agreed this is the question to ask the president.
Speaker 14 (34:13):
And that's indeed when I had.
Speaker 4 (34:15):
The opportunity to ask the president that question yesterday. But
you know, it's fifty more days to attack civilian areas
in Ukraine, fifty more days to inflict more damage upon civilians,
innocent civilians. And that's the reason why I asked that question.
Speaker 1 (34:31):
If you don't.
Speaker 14 (34:32):
Like Putin, and clearly Putin's been.
Speaker 4 (34:34):
Lying to you, then you should give him, you know,
a lot less than fifty days in terms of coming
to a decision to end this war.
Speaker 1 (34:41):
Well, you know, I don't play favorites, and even if
I did, I wouldn't acknowledge it. But that's why you're
my favorite. Your morning show, Why Knows correspondent, I'm over
in Shaka, John Decker. We're all in this together. This
is your Morning Show with Michael Ndheld Jo Now