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July 23, 2024 34 mins
Poor advance planning, lack of personnel, or worse, after the Secret Service hearing…both parties agree, WORSE!

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, I'm Michael, and your morning show has heard on
great radio stations across the country like one oh five
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to us live in the morning, and of course we're
so grateful you came for the podcast.

Speaker 2 (00:20):
Enjoy two three, starting your morning off right, A new
way of talk, a new way of understanding because we're
in this together.

Speaker 3 (00:32):
This is your morning.

Speaker 2 (00:34):
Show with Michael Dell JOHNO.

Speaker 4 (00:37):
Hello America, I'm Casey has been and we're counting down
the top interrogations of our Secret Service officers on great
stations across the land like six point fifty k STE
and Sacramento it's really good, or one oh four nine
the Patriot in Saint Louis, Missouri.

Speaker 3 (00:55):
Anyway back to the countdown.

Speaker 1 (00:57):
Wow, So I don't know, conspiracy theories will abound. What
happened in Pennsylvania. Poor advance planning by the Secret Service,
lack of personnel, stretched a little thin by a Jill

(01:18):
visit to Pennsylvania, stretched a little thin by a Kamala
visit to Pennsylvania?

Speaker 3 (01:24):
Or was it worse?

Speaker 1 (01:26):
I always talking about the three presidents that were never
supposed to happen, Lincoln, Kennedy and Trump. Two of them assassinated,
one survives an assassination attempt, and then Biden decides to
go away. Some conspiracy theorists will say, well, they tried impeachment,

(01:47):
they tried insurrection, they tried law fare, then they tried
to kill him. After that there was nothing left but
Joe to go. Or did chose timing of rushing to
step down on X? Was that an attempt to distract
you from watching this hearing. Let's say it's a ladder.

Speaker 3 (02:09):
Well, guess, guess, hey, hey, hey, you okay over there?

Speaker 1 (02:17):
Oh boy?

Speaker 3 (02:22):
For it shall be as the beetle disappears under the
floorboard of the brag, So shout it be.

Speaker 1 (02:35):
Dad?

Speaker 5 (02:35):
Are you proud of me? Hello?

Speaker 3 (02:39):
Okay?

Speaker 1 (02:40):
Wow?

Speaker 3 (02:41):
Happened? I don't know.

Speaker 6 (02:43):
You just kind of your eyes rolled back in your
head and you started talking gibberish.

Speaker 3 (02:47):
What did I say?

Speaker 6 (02:49):
You said something about a beetle crawling up underneath.

Speaker 1 (02:52):
Ah, that's the great nose to del journal predicting. By
the end of the week, cheat will be gone, all right?

Speaker 3 (02:57):
So where was I?

Speaker 1 (02:59):
Uh?

Speaker 3 (03:00):
Okay?

Speaker 1 (03:01):
So if they were hoping you'd be so enthralled in
the Mama La Kamala and Joe's out of the race
story that you wouldn't watch this hearing, I don't think
that worked. If they thought the media, which they control,
would be so enthralled with mamaa Kamala in and Joe
out that no one would pay attention, they were wrong.

(03:21):
If they thought technocracy and social media would be so
busy following Mama La Kamala and of course Joe making
an audio appearance with Mama la Kamala that you wouldn't
follow this hearing, boy, that would they wrong. And if
they thought that the Democrats would cover for them not

(03:41):
be American focus on guns with the exception of one
or two, and there were many but one or two
that just simply didn't happen. Democrats and Republicans alike on
this Oversight Committee were Americans first. So we've been highlighting
three of the most revealing interrogating moments. And I started

(04:02):
with AOC because when you think about when AOC went
two and a half hours in and she's hearing this
Secret Service director Kimberly Cheedd'll not answer any questions. Y'all
are free to the FBI investigation. I'll afree to this investigation.
I'll have to wait till I get the findings of
my internal investigator. Finally, about two hours, then somebody goes,
how many days are we talking about?

Speaker 3 (04:20):
Before you can answer some questions?

Speaker 1 (04:24):
She wouldn't answer that for about ten minutes, and then
eventually she gives the days of roughly sixty days. AOC
gets what I get, which is most important moving forward.
This could have easily turned into chaos or civil war.
If that shot hits, it probably would have. AOC gets

(04:45):
our first game ball for understanding what was at stake
and what's still at stake, and how unacceptable this is.
And may I say this is gratuitous. I think every member,
whether Republican or Democrat, walked into their thinking, how incompetent
is this woman? How incompetent is secret service in planning,

(05:07):
in judgment and execution, in personnel? Or is this something worse?
And I think at this point they're all thinking something worse.
And you know what worse means.

Speaker 3 (05:19):
Here's AOC you, respectfully what you.

Speaker 7 (05:22):
Had just laid out about sixty days. We are currently
in the midst of a of an especially concentrated presidential
campaign in the moment that is also paired with of
course elections happening across the country that are happening in
about one hundred days.

Speaker 8 (05:44):
So the notion of a report coming out.

Speaker 7 (05:46):
In sixty days when the threat environment is so high
in the United States, irrespective of party, is not acceptable.
There need to be answers again, this party, this this committee,
This is not.

Speaker 8 (06:01):
A moment of theater.

Speaker 7 (06:02):
We have to make policy decisions, and we have to
make them now. We do and that may be a
a that may require legislation, that may require policy that
we must pass in the immediate term, and without that
we are flying blind. So the lack of answers and

(06:22):
the lack of report is just simply not something that
we can accept. Here, Director Cheetle, is there a standard
perimeter that the Secret Service establishes of R.

Speaker 1 (06:32):
And she goes into her line of questioning, so even
AOC bartender Socialist chief Squad member, she gets how this
could lead to civil war.

Speaker 3 (06:47):
Then we get to Representative Pat Fallon of Texas well,
it was just it was just beautiful.

Speaker 6 (06:55):
Listen, we have satellite images from the Butler Fairgrounds. Have
you visited the site?

Speaker 8 (07:01):
No, I have not.

Speaker 6 (07:02):
Nine days and you have not visited the site. You
should have been there that night. Did you talk to
that in evening? Did you talk to the team the
heroes that surrounded the president?

Speaker 5 (07:11):
Did you call them that night?

Speaker 8 (07:13):
They were still operational work, so that's an answers.

Speaker 4 (07:15):
No.

Speaker 5 (07:16):
Did you call them the next day?

Speaker 9 (07:17):
Yes? I spoke.

Speaker 6 (07:18):
You call them the very next day, not the day of?
Or was it seventy two hours after?

Speaker 8 (07:23):
I don't know the timeline, but I spoke.

Speaker 6 (07:24):
Because you're under immediately, I think it was seventy two
hours after you waited three days. What is immediately clear
is that there are a number of structures that need
to be secured of these director other than the first
you know, immediate four. What's the most dangerous site that
should have been secured, because you know security one on one,
you got to mitigate the high ground? Yes, okay, do
you know what the next most dangerous site? What was

(07:46):
the closest structure to the president other than the four
immediate ones that you had your counter sniper teams on.

Speaker 8 (07:53):
There are a number of structures around that event site.

Speaker 6 (07:56):
Yeah, you know who the shooter knew. The shooter has
visited the site two more times than you have, and
he had a drone and he picked the AGR building.
So you said, do you remember in an ABC interview
you did that you didn't have people on the roof
of the AGR building because you were worried about safety
because of the slope.

Speaker 8 (08:13):
I recall that statement.

Speaker 6 (08:16):
Does the Secret Service have written policy you can share
with us about slope roofs?

Speaker 10 (08:22):
No?

Speaker 5 (08:22):
Okay, So why'd you act like.

Speaker 3 (08:24):
There was one?

Speaker 6 (08:25):
Because is it your practice to comment on enormous events
of enormous national implications when you're ignorant.

Speaker 5 (08:32):
To the facts.

Speaker 6 (08:33):
That's rhetorical.

Speaker 3 (08:35):
So here's this thing with the slopes.

Speaker 6 (08:36):
You go all up to like eighteen twelve, you can
get to a one twelve, which is about as flat
as you can get without being completely flat, and you're
saying that there was a danger safety concern there. But
the problem is director you put your counter snipers on
a three twelve roof, which is steeper than the one twelve.

Speaker 3 (08:53):
And by the way, the one twelve.

Speaker 6 (08:54):
Is ADA compliant. You can build a ramp for a
wheelchair on a one twelve roof so these are nothing
but pathetic excuses and they make no sense in their
bunch of cow done. All the law enforcement I've spoken
with over the last nine days are amazed at the
AGR rooftop was not secure, and you want to know why,
because it's dangerous. I have never had any long gun

(09:17):
training in my life. I own an AR fifteen, and
last time I shot it, I shot it one time.

Speaker 3 (09:22):
My whole life was six years ago.

Speaker 6 (09:24):
That isn't ntil Saturday where we recreated the events in Savoy, Texas,
where you recreated what happened about her. I was lying
prone on a slope roof at one hundred and thirty
yards at six thirty at night, and I knew that
he had a scope of I know, a kind red
dot or magnified. So I shot eight rounds from both.

Speaker 5 (09:39):
You know what.

Speaker 6 (09:40):
The result was fifteen out of sixteen kill shots and
the one I missed would have hit the President's ear.
That's a ninety four percent success rate. And that shooter
was a better shot than me. It is a miracle
President Trump wasn't killed.

Speaker 3 (09:55):
By the It was six hours of this.

Speaker 1 (09:57):
Now, if I have to pick one, I'm gonna go
with Nancy mays, don't worry everybody at I heeart.

Speaker 3 (10:08):
I've beeped, thank.

Speaker 8 (10:09):
You, mister chairman, Director Cheeto.

Speaker 9 (10:12):
The American people are watching and they're wondering if there
are any questions you can answer honestly today. So Director Cheeto,
I have a series of questions, very specific questions. I
want very specific answers. Most of my questions are going
to demand a yes or no answer. Do you understand

(10:32):
I do?

Speaker 8 (10:33):
Okay?

Speaker 9 (10:33):
My first question, both sides of the aisle today have
asked for your resignation. Would you like to use my
five minutes to draft your resignation letter?

Speaker 8 (10:41):
Yes or no?

Speaker 4 (10:43):
No? Thank you?

Speaker 8 (10:46):
Was this a colossal failure? It was a failure?

Speaker 9 (10:50):
Yes or no? Was it a colossal failure? Is the question?

Speaker 8 (10:53):
Yes or no?

Speaker 9 (10:55):
I have admitted this is a This is a yes
or no series of questions.

Speaker 8 (10:58):
Was this a colossal failure? Yes or no?

Speaker 9 (11:01):
Yes?

Speaker 8 (11:03):
Was this tragedy preventable? Yes or no?

Speaker 9 (11:07):
Yes? Has a secret service been transparent with this committee?

Speaker 8 (11:12):
Yes?

Speaker 9 (11:14):
Would you say the fact that we had to issue
a subpoena to get you to show up today as
being transparent?

Speaker 8 (11:20):
Yes or no? I have always been yes or no?

Speaker 9 (11:23):
You didn't want to ask the question we had to
issue a subpoena to get you to show up today.

Speaker 8 (11:27):
That is not transparent.

Speaker 9 (11:29):
By the way you stated earlier, Secret Service is not political?

Speaker 8 (11:33):
Is that correct?

Speaker 11 (11:34):
Yes?

Speaker 8 (11:35):
Okay?

Speaker 9 (11:35):
Would you say leaking your opening statement to punch Full News,
Politico's Playbook, and Washington Post several hours before you sent
it to this committee as being political?

Speaker 8 (11:48):
Yes?

Speaker 9 (11:48):
Or no?

Speaker 8 (11:49):
I have no idea how my statement got out.

Speaker 9 (11:52):
Well, that's bold, So, mister Chairman, I would like to
ask unanimous consent to enter into the record. Pulls by
punch Bowl News, Political Playbook, Washington Post, all done at
five twenty four am, six twelve am, six thirty four am,
a solid three to four hours before this committee got
your statement with that objection to ordered.

Speaker 3 (12:14):
Okay, Oh, it gets worse.

Speaker 9 (12:16):
Is a Secret Service fully cooperating with our committee?

Speaker 4 (12:21):
Yes?

Speaker 9 (12:23):
Okay, you say you're fully cooperating with this committee? On
July fifteenth, this committee since you a list of demands
of information that we wanted. Has the Secret Service provided
this committee a complete list of all law enforcement personnel
that were there that day?

Speaker 8 (12:38):
Have you done that? Have you provided a list to
the Oversight Committee?

Speaker 11 (12:42):
Yes?

Speaker 12 (12:42):
Or no?

Speaker 8 (12:42):
I'll have to get back to you on that. That
is a no.

Speaker 9 (12:45):
Have you provided all audio and video recordings in your
possession to this committee as we asked on July fifteenth?
Yes or no?

Speaker 8 (12:51):
I would have to get back to you.

Speaker 9 (12:52):
That is a no.

Speaker 8 (12:53):
You're full of today. You're just being completely dishonest.

Speaker 5 (12:57):
Mister Hermann of Missearch.

Speaker 3 (13:02):
We have to maintain decorum in this committee.

Speaker 9 (13:04):
Any you provided any and all memos to this committee
that we've asked you on July fifteenth? Have you provided
all memorandas within the Secret Service? I would have to
get back to you on That is a no. You
are being dishonest or lying. I just you're being dishonest
here with this committee. These are important questions that the
American people want answers to and you're just you're just
dodging and talking around it in generalities. And we had

(13:27):
a subpoena you to be here and you won't even
answer the questions. We have asked you repeatedly to answer
our questions. This isn't hard, These are not hard questions.

Speaker 1 (13:35):
Representative Nancy Mace, Republican from South Carolina, interrogating in the
hearing yesterday's Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheedle, and before that
you heard pat fallon Republican from Texas, And of course
I kicked it all off with aoc A bartender, an
anti American socialist leader of the squad, calling for her resignation,

(14:00):
saying her lack of cooperation is unacceptable and getting the
ultimate threat, which has had that kill shot succeeded, we'd
be in chaos or civil war today. And if Kamala
Harris or Donald Trump or any other candidate is assassinated
in the future, let alone sixty days when she gets

(14:20):
her findings, the chaos and civil unrest, the potential civil
war threat is still there, making it a national security risk.
We said from the very very beginning, this is either
poor advanced planning, lack of personnel.

Speaker 3 (14:37):
Or worse. It looked like worse all day yesterday.

Speaker 1 (14:43):
Lee Harvey Oswall, before being killed, said I'm nothing more
than a patsy. Well never know what he meant, because
his life was taken. Let me tell you something, Kimberly
Cheatle looked like a patsy sitting there yesterday for six hours.

Speaker 3 (15:02):
They were counting on him not missing, but he did.

Speaker 1 (15:09):
They were counting on with Biden out so much so
that they rushed a formerly known as twitter x announcement.
And then if that weren't enough to distract you, they
had Joe Biden by phone during this testimony at a
Kamala Harris event. They were counting on all of you

(15:30):
being distracted and not watching yesterday. The problem is all
the networks carried it. All the social media was buzzing
on this, not Kamala. And then finally, I often talk
about our last bastion of hope being where the founding

(15:50):
fathers wanted it to be all along in the People's House.
Yesterday it came through. It was Republicans and Democrats asking
the right questions, demanding the right answers, not allowing the
Patsy game and the dishonesty game and the evasive game
to work, and calling unanimously and collectively for the resignation

(16:16):
of director Cheeta.

Speaker 3 (16:18):
This is your morning Show with Michael del Chno. Welcome
to Tuesday, July the twenty third.

Speaker 1 (16:24):
If you're just waking up, Kamala Harris has enough delegates
to receive the official Democratic presidential nomination.

Speaker 3 (16:30):
This is moving off a fast, almost too fast, isn't it?

Speaker 1 (16:34):
Pro Palestinian groups are organizing a major protest as bb
net and Yahoo plans to visit DC this week, perhaps
a tune up for the DNC convention coming in Chicago.

Speaker 3 (16:43):
And Joe Biden haven't seen him since his big Twitter withdrawal.

Speaker 1 (16:46):
He did finally speak by phone at Kamala's campaign event.

Speaker 3 (16:51):
Listen.

Speaker 13 (16:52):
No, yesterday's news is surprising and I'm Sahara ar tree
to hear, but it was the right thing to do.

Speaker 1 (16:59):
Meanwhile, Republicans say, if he's not fit to run, he's
not fit to serve. And the Oversight Committee, as you
heard at length, Republicans and Democrats who found something they
both agree on, whether a patsy or a failure Cheatle's
gotta go. Hi, It's Michael. Your morning show airs live
five to eight am Central six to nine Eastern in
great cities like Memphis, Tennessee, Telsa, Oklahoma, Sacramento, California. We'd

(17:22):
love to be a part of your morning routine, but
we're happy you're here now. Enjoy the podcast. Thanks for
waking up with your morning show on the air and
streaming on your iHeart app on Michael del Jornam Well,
I think Kamala Harriscott it in her interrogation of Secret
Service Director Kimberly Cheatle, yesterday, had Donald Trump been killed,
who might have had civil unrest, who might have had chaos,
who might have had civil war, and they could still

(17:44):
happen if something should happen moving forward, and that vulnerability,
if yesterday's hearing is any indication remains and at that
point is this not a national security issue? Attenant Colonel
James Carafano will join us in less thirty minutes. Also
Rory O'Neil on the Prime Minister's visit. And it looks
like the troublemakers on the far left, the pro Palestinian protesters,

(18:07):
are gearing up for the DNC convention in a month.
They'll get some practice this week in Washington. First, Aaron
Rayal was joining us. Aaron, I'm curious there's a new
study out about what states have the best schools. Because
people like to live a where it's safe, B, where
there's jobs in C, where there's good schools for their kids.

(18:28):
Is this determined by actual academic achievement or lack thereof,
or by perception of people to.

Speaker 8 (18:35):
The poll part of it, this is wallet Hub.

Speaker 10 (18:38):
They did an analysis. It's very comprehensive. It's one of
the reasons I like wallet hub reports also why they
can drive you out sometimes. But they looked at performance,
they looked at funding, they looked at safety, they looked
at class size, they looked at instruct instructure excuse me,
instructor credentials as a key, scores, reading scores, everything peopil

(19:00):
to teacher ratio. The list goes on and off.

Speaker 3 (19:03):
So this becomes a combination of perception and reality.

Speaker 10 (19:07):
Absolutely, this is not just like, oh, is everyone happy? No, no, no,
no no. It has to do with outcomes. It has
to do with how the kids feel. Bullying was taken
into account here. I actually think has a profound effect
on one's academic career for sure. But the average cost
for pupil in the US is sixteen thousand dollars. That
varies widely depending on what state you're in. But I'm

(19:27):
not going to bury the lead any longer. The best
public schools in the nation Massachusetts they score the highest,
followed by Connecticut, Maryland, New Jersey, Wisconsin, New Hampshire, Nebraska,
New York, Virginia, and North Dakota rounding out the top ten.
The other side, of that list worst public schools in
the nation New Mexico, followed by Oklahoma, Arizona, Alaska, Louisiana,

(19:50):
West Virginia, Oregon, and Alabama.

Speaker 1 (19:56):
Kudos to the Northeast. Apparently, or at least driven by
the person option. Anyway, the price per student is pretty high.
You can go to a pretty good private school for
that amount of money. I was one of the things
I was thinking when you were giving that list, was
do public schools suffer where private school abounds. I'll give
you an example. In Louisiana, where I grew up. You

(20:17):
didn't go to public school, right went you went to
private school, you went to Catholic school, or you didn't
get much of an education, and you weren't very safe
from eight am to three pm.

Speaker 3 (20:28):
So that one doesn't shock me.

Speaker 1 (20:29):
But I'm wondering where there's high levels of private school
attendance or Catholic or Christian school attendants, if the public
fail begins to fall.

Speaker 10 (20:44):
It's a great question, it seems like so if you
just look if you look at public school studying per
student very significantly depending on the state, And according to
the Census Bureau from twenty twenty two, which is the
most recent for schooling, Connecticut spent the most at twenty
four thousand per student, But then if you look at
like Alaska, it's spent eighteen thousand. They're still on the

(21:04):
top of the table. To be honest, they're not towards
the bottom, but the outcomes aren't as strong. So it's
really it's difficult to determine. We spend more in the Northeast,
for sure, there's also more money in the Northeast and
in terms of the tax space, and we spend far
less in like let's say a Florida. This isn't picking
on one state for the other, but it's interesting. It's very,

(21:26):
very difficult. I think that one of the reasons you
have better outcomes in smaller states might be because it's
easier to teach too smaller like smaller groups, it's difficult
and and listen, it's hard to make. This is why
education is so broken and why we have so many issues,
because if it was easy to solve, it would be
solved already. It's really important to have a very well

(21:47):
educated populace. And you know, dumbing down the test does
not help. That doesn't help the situation. But at the
same time, only teaching to the test doesn't help, and
then finding how much I don't know, in the inflationary
world in which we live in, do we need to
pay teachers more? And if so, how do you how
do you do that without you know, blowing the budget.

Speaker 1 (22:07):
No, you bring up all great points, you can't lower
the standard. Failure just begets failure. It's not necessarily the
more money you spend, the better results you get. Money
isn't always the solution. I think focus is get back
to reading, writing, arithmetic. Look, common education is about preparing
children for citizenship, higher education, or the workforce. We've lost

(22:28):
that focus. We think it's about collectively the moral village
ors you know, you know, socialization or indoctrination, and we
aughty just get back to reading, writing, and arithmetic. But
it's interesting, Yeah, you always see that you get better
the closer you get. Look, the one thing you didn't
mention I haven't mentioned yet. That is central parents. You know,

(22:48):
I'm not even gonna bash my parents other than to
say my kids have had a much different education experience
than I had because of their mother. She was up
before they got up, their food was ready. They there
wasn't an option to not do your homework. It wasn't
your option to get a bee. If you got to
be that became a hyper focus to you got an a.

(23:10):
But I think the closer we get parents to teachers
to children, the better the success outcome. It's interesting, though,
you would think, after all this time, we would be
taking an honest look at this, just like we would
social security, just like we would.

Speaker 3 (23:25):
In the border. But we don't.

Speaker 1 (23:26):
But this latest study shows who's doing it better than others.

Speaker 3 (23:29):
Anyway, I don't know that we can put our finger on.

Speaker 10 (23:31):
How exactly, and like this is I actually get really
frustrated this, and probably because I'm a mother of small children,
and you know, you think about these things a lot.
But when we can easily come up with the billions
of dollars needed to fight foreign wars, and you're like,
can we just use like one billion of that for
the schools, I don't know, maybe even just like yeah.

Speaker 1 (23:50):
But I don't know that you've given any I don't
know that you've given any evidence that a billion dollars
would help. In fact, I was in freshman year of
high school before the government was ever in the education business,
and things were better than they are today.

Speaker 3 (24:02):
Let me tell you something.

Speaker 1 (24:03):
I would cut to the chase this way, Aaron, your
kid's best hope is not a president, is not a congress,
is not a Department of Education in Washington. It's not
a governor. It's not a superintendent. It's not a school board.
It's not even a teacher.

Speaker 3 (24:17):
It's you. End of story.

Speaker 1 (24:20):
And we never talk about the breakdown of the American
family and its effect on the education system. So you're
their best hope. And trust me, if you don't do it,
no one will. And I know, and I know you're
a nag, So go get them. You know what.

Speaker 3 (24:40):
The other thing is, everybody's got a mom voice.

Speaker 1 (24:45):
And I'm leaving out one adjective as an adverb as
I say that, But do.

Speaker 3 (24:49):
You have a mom voice? Like my wife?

Speaker 1 (24:51):
My wife was the most beautiful one I ever saw,
the most intelligent, the highest character, most charming, has the
most pleasant voice.

Speaker 3 (24:58):
And then we had children, and something else came out
of my bedroom. Do you have a mom? Do you
have a mom voice? That we don't get to hear everything?

Speaker 10 (25:06):
We sure, Dode, I assure you, and I sometimes hear it.
I'm like, ooh, that sounds condescending, Like why did you like,
you don't do that, and you're like, no, but they're
all listening. Yeah, I think that everyone does.

Speaker 1 (25:17):
That's why the best hope for our future is the home.

Speaker 3 (25:21):
I really believe that wholeheartedly.

Speaker 1 (25:23):
Great report, though, look a touchdown everything, it's all there.
I just don't know that anybody's ever going to act
upon it. And I don't know that anybody ultimately can
change things until things change individually in our hearts and
at home. But another great one for a wallet hub.
Why don't they sponsor this segment while we're at it?

Speaker 10 (25:41):
I know, I actually I really do love these because
I think, like I as a data nerd, You're like,
look just look at the number, Like these are not arguments,
Like I'm not picking aside, We're just looking. I find
them helpful and also infuriating, which is a fun place
for talk morning radio.

Speaker 1 (25:57):
By the way, I'll be forwarding all the hate mail
from Oklahoma shortly, Aaron Real, we'll talk again tomorrow.

Speaker 3 (26:03):
Bakers always sorry. Forty four minutes after the hour.

Speaker 1 (26:07):
If you're just waking up, here's what you need to
know your top five stories of the day. Pro Palestinian
groups are organizing major protests well bb Netanya, who's coming
to Washington this week.

Speaker 3 (26:17):
Mark Mayfield has more.

Speaker 11 (26:19):
The groups are organizing bus trips from cities like Boston,
New York, Atlanta, Chicago, and Philadelphia in a bid to
surround the US Capitol Building. Protesters are being told to
wear red to symbolize a red line against genocide. Net Ya,
who is set to address a joint session of Congress
on Wednesday.

Speaker 1 (26:38):
I'm Mark Mayfield, so the president of the United States,
unlike LBJ, who from the Oval Office told us, I
will not except the nomination for President of the United
States or seek the nomination president. I did his on
Twitter X and then a few minutes later his endorsement
of Kamala on X. But no one's seen him, no

(27:00):
one's heard from him, because some people assume he's either
dead or didn't even know that he had dropped out
of the race. He made an appearance by phone at
a Kamala Harris campaign event. Here's how it sounded.

Speaker 13 (27:11):
I know yesterday's news was surprising and it's har art
for you to hear, but it was the right thing
to do.

Speaker 3 (27:18):
Biden went on to thank his staff.

Speaker 13 (27:20):
I know it's hard because you've poured your heart and
soul into man. So help us win this thing, help
me get this nomination, help me win the nomination, and
then go on to win the win the presidency.

Speaker 3 (27:32):
Yeah, and that's what I kind of knew, was him
there towards yet.

Speaker 1 (27:36):
Kamala Harris, meanwhile, has raked in eighty one million dollars
in her first twenty four hours after announcing that she
will seek the presidency.

Speaker 3 (27:44):
Brian Shook reports.

Speaker 14 (27:45):
That amount includes money raised across the campaign, the Democratic
National Committee, and joint fundraising committees. The Harris campaign noted
that more than eight hundred eighty eight thousand grassroots donors
donated over that period, with sixty percent making their first
contribution of the twenty twenty four campaign cycle.

Speaker 3 (28:06):
I'm Brian Shook.

Speaker 1 (28:07):
I don't a Bob anybody else but this Kamala Harris
rise and ascension.

Speaker 3 (28:11):
It's awful fast one careful what you ask for? If
she's your candidate, Well she is.

Speaker 1 (28:18):
Miss geography, miss the past and present, Miss I understand time.
I mean, what a disaster or is it rising fast
so she can fall before the convention?

Speaker 5 (28:31):
Well?

Speaker 3 (28:31):
Time will tell.

Speaker 1 (28:32):
Meanwhile, we highlighted the top three interrogations of Kimberly Cheatle,
director of the Secret Service, yesterday and hearings before a subcommittee.
Lisa Taylor has more on the consensus of both Republicans
and Democrats.

Speaker 12 (28:45):
Kentucky Republican James Comer and Maryland Democrat Jamie Raskin released
a rare joint letter calling on Director Kimberly Cheadle to
resign for failing to protect Donald Trump from an assassination
attempt that ultimately killed one rally goer and injured at
least two others. The lawmakers said Cheetle failed to provide
answers to basic questions today that led to the shooting.
During a congressional hearing, congress members on both sides of

(29:06):
the aisles took turns grilling Cheetle over the security lapses. Only,
said Taylor, well, here's.

Speaker 3 (29:11):
One thing we know. Young voters are volatile. Sometimes they
show up if it's Barack Obama. Sometimes they don't.

Speaker 1 (29:17):
Older voters they've showed up their entire life, and they'll
show up again. Older Americans they've got fixed incomes, housing costs, food,
energy on their minds as they make their picks in November.
All this switching of candidates and faces and personalities has
nothing to do with what they're focused on.

Speaker 3 (29:36):
Mark Mayfield is back with more.

Speaker 11 (29:38):
A survey from Retirement Living dot com. Since senior's first priority,
regardless of party affiliation, is high housing costs, nearly one
in five name that is their biggest concern, crime, immigration, abortion, access,
and climate change.

Speaker 3 (29:52):
Follow those up.

Speaker 11 (29:53):
I'm Mark Mayfield.

Speaker 3 (29:54):
Did you just say to me nice setup? I did?
I did? I said, I broke over here de anchoring
my team, my news. You just surprised me at times.

Speaker 1 (30:04):
In sports, everyone, we had a terrible day yesterday in
cities of your morning show interest. Mariners lost three to
one of the Angels, Cardinals lost two to one of
the Pirates. D Backs lost ten to four to the Royals.
Guardians lost eight to two to the Tigers. The Rays
lost nine to one to My Yankees. Our only winner
the Rangers. Congratulations Talk Radio eleven ninety and Dallas Fordworth.

(30:28):
You're our only winner of the day four to three
over one of the worst teams in baseball, the White Sox. Y.

Speaker 9 (30:34):
Good for Jimmy burn My morning show is your morning show.

Speaker 8 (30:38):
It's Michael Gchorno.

Speaker 3 (30:40):
Well the Prime Minister. Bb net.

Speaker 1 (30:41):
Yahoo of Israel is coming to Washington for the first
time in years. Our national correspondent Roy O'Neil is following
this story. There's security, there's protests, and then there's that
war in the Middle East.

Speaker 5 (30:53):
Rory, good morning, Yeah, good morning. So a lot on
the agenda. Nett Yaho will speak to a joint session
of Congress. By the way, he goes into the history
books as the foreign leader who has addressed more joint
sessions of Congress than any other, breaking the current tie
he has right now with Winston Churchill. Hmmm, yeah, on

(31:15):
the books for a Thursday visit to the White House
with President Biden. President Biden resumes his work schedule this
afternoon after battling COVID, and we believe that's when he'll
also meet up with Vice President Harris on Thursday.

Speaker 3 (31:30):
You know, I was watching.

Speaker 1 (31:31):
I watched the entire House Oversight Committee hearing with Secret
Service Director Kimberly Cheedle, and you know, really AOC just
to show you if they were expected the Democrats to
play you anti gun or soft pedaled as I mean,
a couple did, some did, but most Democrats and Republicans
were Americans.

Speaker 3 (31:49):
First.

Speaker 1 (31:50):
They were following the line of question they were outraged
to the lack of transparency, the lack of answers, the
lack of security, the poor judgment, and they all virtually
unanimously called on her to resign, if not be fired.
That's still looming, but AOC hit the nail right on
the head. Had Donald Trump been taken out, we could
have had chaos, we could hit civil unrest, we could

(32:10):
have had civil war. That threat still exists. And oh,
by the way, not just for our candidates, but people
like bb net and Yahoo coming to visit that would
be very significant. I mean, if they're watching that hearing,
I hope security is good for.

Speaker 5 (32:23):
Bb right because they are expecting a lot of protests
at Capitol Hill tomorrow as well. So this is a
big part of it. You know, we heard that the
Secret Service is now watching thirty six people as protector protectees.
That's probably going to go up to thirty seven in
the next week or two. It went up from thirty
four the week before last when RFKA Junior and JD

(32:44):
Vance were added to the list, and then we're going
to add one more when Vice President Harris picks her
running mate. So this is an expanding number and the
Secret Service as we heard yesterday, is already short staffed.
They want about ninety five hundred people. They've got eight thousand.
And it's consistently ranked among the worst government agencies to
work for in Washington.

Speaker 1 (33:04):
And they're organized, some of them are even paid for,
and they're being bussed in from all over the country.
Protesters the same protesters they could probably get a glimpse
at and plan for and expect later in Chicago at
the Democrat Convention. I thought yesterday, I mean, everybody plays
the clips from Nancy Mace. She did a great job

(33:25):
of revealing how little transparency, how little cooperation has been
coming forward from the Secret Service. I always highlighted Pat
Fallon because I think he brings out that she never
has visited the site of the assassination attempt. She waited
seventy two hours to talk to the agents that were involved.

(33:46):
He dismantled the slope of the roof. That was a
really bad testimony. And then, of course what I touched
on with AOC, she gets it. We can't wait sixty
days for findings. There's too much that can happen in
sixty days. What does disaster you know? Oswald said he
was a Patsy, and then we didn't know what he
meant because he got killed.

Speaker 3 (34:04):
That was a disaster yesterday.

Speaker 1 (34:06):
So that was either incompetent, a failure, or a Patsy,
one of the three.

Speaker 5 (34:11):
Well, and that's also that intentional thing that a lot
of people do when they testify in Washington. They say,
don't tell me. I don't want to know, because I'll
have to testify to it under oath. So that way
she gets to go in their ignorance, say I don't know,
I don't know, and that way she's not lying to Congress.
So you notice she never referenced a report, you know,
when they said how many times did Donald Trump's security

(34:33):
of requests get denied? It's not like she said, oh wait,
let me turn to page forty seven.

Speaker 3 (34:36):
No, nothing, We're all in this together. This is Your
Morning Show with Michael endel Chow or on
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