Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, it's Michael. I'm so glad you found the podcast,
and don't forget you can listen to your Morning Show
live each weekday morning. Your Morning Show can be heard
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just to name a few. You can find the Your
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Morningshow Online dot com. And we're glad you're here for
(00:20):
the podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:21):
Enjoy two three, starting your morning off right, A new
way of talk, a new way of understanding.
Speaker 3 (00:30):
Because we're in this together. This is Your Morning Show
with Michael Gill Truman.
Speaker 2 (00:38):
Seven minutes after the hour, and just like that, Welcome
to Thursday, July.
Speaker 3 (00:42):
The twenty fourth. You have our Lord twenty twenty five.
Speaker 2 (00:44):
The Director of National Intelligence, Telsey Gabbard, is leaving it
to the Justice Department to decide on possible criminal implications
regarding the Obama administration of the twenty sixteen election. The
judge has sentenced Brian Coburger to life in prison without parole.
The victim impact statements yesterday were These are never easy
(01:06):
to listen to, but yesterday was. As you can only
imagine the pain that these families have been experiencing. Alicia,
the one sister, certainly was the most impactful and profound.
(01:26):
Will play you some of that a little bit later on.
But his fifteen minutes of fame are over, as the
judge said, and he is off to prison for the
rest of his life. The Biden White House chief of
Staff scheduled to testify today in the GOP probe of
the former president's mental fitness in office. Ron Klain is
(01:46):
also a central figure in what got Joe Biden to
the White House. He was behind a key central figure
behind the shadow campaign to say the democracy. This is
the guy if you could get him to talk, I mean,
he and Podesta is about as close to the epicenter
(02:09):
of corruption as you can get. I don't even need
Big John to chime in on what the odds are.
He pleads the Fifth Today House Oversight Committee Subpoena's longtime
Jeffrey Epstein confidante at Glene Maxwell. They'll be going to
conduct a deposition in prison with her. There's a lot
(02:33):
to this story because she didn't really share much before
getting her twenty year sentence. This bird's got a lot
to sing. I think there'll be a lot of conversation
about Columbia University. I can't think of all the I
mean like a riff on all the angles. I think
(02:54):
most of this will just be consumed, turned and forgotten.
Two hundred million dollars. That's quite a fine to agree to.
That's a two hundred million dollar fine for discriminating against
Jewish students in an agreement with an administration in order
(03:16):
to continue to get federal funding for research. How hot
is it? And I am in no way trying to
justify skipping the Coldplay concert?
Speaker 3 (03:27):
How hot is it?
Speaker 2 (03:28):
Tens of millions of Americans are under what forecasters are
now calling a ring of fire.
Speaker 3 (03:34):
What did Joli Cash have a ring of fire? Wasn't
it ring a fire? Yeah? Hur a ring of fire.
They're calling it the ring of fire.
Speaker 2 (03:42):
Why are weather forecasters the most dramatic people on Earth?
Speaker 3 (03:46):
It comes out every time they're.
Speaker 2 (03:49):
Let's go to your safe place, go to your say
they talk like children too, I'm your free in. Don't
go outside today. It's a ring of fire. That more
is just some of the things we're going to be covering.
I mentioned that Billy Joel's one of Billy Joel's closest
friends as well as his ongoing creative partner, was put
in charge of putting a team together to tell his
(04:11):
life story.
Speaker 3 (04:14):
I know from watching the documentary.
Speaker 2 (04:17):
Not a life story Billy Joe really cares to tell anybody,
but life story we all want to hear. And what
Steve and the team put together and we've only seen
part one and so it goes was just compelling revealing.
It was justelie a contrast that prior to the Fleetwood
(04:42):
Mac documentary, I would have said the Eric Clapton documentary
and it's sad. You know, you'll watch and you watch
with this guy's life right sure? I mean other than
having an affair back and forth with George Harrison's wife
and doing a lot of drugs and drinking and playing
some good good there really wasn't much more to his
life than that.
Speaker 3 (05:01):
It was just and I turned it on. I was like,
that's kind of sad.
Speaker 2 (05:04):
I'd like somebody see my life story and being bored.
He had all the opportunity and that's what he chose
to do with it. And that's how the Fleetwood Mac
documentary was. Oh, put me right to sleep. The Billy
Joel and So It Goes will not do that. This
this is an amazing life.
Speaker 3 (05:22):
A pretty.
Speaker 2 (05:25):
Pretty dysfunctional childhood that gave way to a pretty dysfunctional
early adulthood which all kind of worked together with the genius,
his musical genius to create a one of a kind
artists for our lifetime.
Speaker 3 (05:39):
So and So It Goes is out.
Speaker 2 (05:41):
We'll talk to the man who creatively directed it and
put it all together, Steve Cohen. A little bit later
on the show, David and I was going to be
joined us. Then we have the tariff deals. Three more
got done this week and the market seemed to love it.
So are we heading in the right direction? Are we
putting uncertainty behind us? What can we expect on Wall
(06:01):
Street and in the economy, because for don't forget the
hidden scoreboard in all of this. Take Japan for just
one example, is the five hundred and fifty billion dollar
investment commitment into the United States that will create jobs
and economic growth. So we'll talk to money was an economist,
(06:22):
David Bonson. He'll brief us on what we can expect
in the market and the economic impact as these deals
become reality. And this one's just so easy that you know,
I made a pledge a long time ago, and I
don't know that I've lived up to it. But you know,
the whole Joe Biden thing was uncomfortable because I was
(06:43):
I was torn. You know, sometimes little codes that I have,
right Like, I was one of those people if I
didn't have anything nice to say, I just didn't say anything.
Speaker 3 (06:54):
I really was.
Speaker 2 (06:56):
It kind of stuck with me. And then of course
you get paid to on this stuff, on everything that's
going on, and sometimes there's nothing good to say, but
it needs to be said. The other thing is respect
your elders. So I remember early on it being obvious
to me and understanding the shadow campaign that they confess to.
(07:18):
I knew what they did, so that made it hard
for me to respect this presidency. Then I could clearly
see a guy I mean remember before he got elected.
Speaker 3 (07:27):
Was cornpop?
Speaker 2 (07:29):
I mean, corn pop is a classic nursing home story.
Speaker 3 (07:37):
It could have happened. I doubt it happened.
Speaker 2 (07:40):
It definitely didn't happen the way he was describing it
and how uncomfortable he was describing it and referring to
black people in a black neighborhood. And because I deal
with dementia and Alzheimer's. I know how it all works.
So I'm listening to him, and I know he's weaving
west Side story and who was the one with something
(08:08):
in the Switchblade?
Speaker 3 (08:11):
It was a.
Speaker 2 (08:12):
Gang member who got born again, became a Christian and
an evangelist, crossing the switch Blade. Yeah, he was conflating
Crossing the Switchblade with west Side story and maybe some
memories of what happened a long long time ago when
he was a lifeguard. All right, So to me, that
was classic. And I hate to say this, that is
(08:35):
not late dementia. That's actually quite not early but early
mid dementia. What you experienced once he was in the
White House after about a year, you got to be
more deep into the levels of dementia. Why am I
bringing all this up? Joe Biden sells memoir for roughly
(09:00):
ten million dollars. Now that's less than Obama and Clinton. God,
I don't have to get the dictionary out, I don't
think for you, but it would beg the question, how
can one write a memoir if they have no memory?
Speaker 3 (09:19):
What on earth?
Speaker 2 (09:21):
I mean, does anybody really think that Joe Biden can
sit down at a computer and write a memoir, so
old Joe's going to get ten million dollars and who's
going to write this? And do you really think this
is going to be a memoir? Would you really put
this in the nonfiction section of the library?
Speaker 3 (09:51):
Maybe science fiction?
Speaker 2 (09:54):
Well, and then you know, everything today is just a
bunch of I didn't know whether to say.
Speaker 3 (10:00):
I'll tell you what I see in my mind. I
see a dog chasing its tail.
Speaker 2 (10:06):
Okay, now to you looking at the dog, that makes
no sense, right because you know that's his tail.
Speaker 3 (10:13):
Where you go with this game, it's going to always
be attached to your bearer.
Speaker 2 (10:17):
End, It's going to always be there, by the way,
if you catch it could hurt. I mean, it's not
quite as dumb if people look at a dog chasing
tec but why that dog is really dumb? Not as
dumb as the dog chasing a car, who if he
catches it gets run over. But the games that were playing,
and then I feel like from my audience, do everything
(10:39):
need to do this every day? Because you know it's
a tail like the judge story. Of course, they're not
going to release the sealed transcripts of a grand jury.
That's protected for a reason. I mean, without that, you'll
never have a grand jury.
Speaker 3 (10:58):
You know what I mean?
Speaker 2 (11:00):
I Redd and I look at each other, reads about
the only one right now listening and really enjoying this conversation.
Because if you're in our business, are you serious? How
lost in a narrative? How much would I have to
dumb myself down? How big of I mean, I have
to get like secretariats, old blinders and put them on
(11:23):
to just chase the tale of the narrative to the.
Speaker 3 (11:25):
Point where I have no common sense anymore.
Speaker 2 (11:30):
Now, what Glenne Maxwell never had to say in court
and still has to say and could say in a
deposition in her jail cell.
Speaker 3 (11:42):
That could go somewhere.
Speaker 2 (11:45):
But you're never going to get a judge to unredact
the testimony of victims who, let's face it, unless you're
ready to give up our entire justice system, an intent,
and way of life, are merely accused names in a
(12:08):
sent until proven guilty, never to be proven guilty in
that testimony because the.
Speaker 3 (12:14):
Accused killed himself.
Speaker 2 (12:17):
Maybe, But you know a lot of these stories like
the judge ordering Garcia released, or the judge in Florida
not going to release an unsealed grand jury transcripts.
Speaker 3 (12:32):
But that doesn't mean the New York one might not.
It's just like it's just one big chasing tamp.
Speaker 2 (12:39):
I'd almost seriously, I would almost rather talk about my theory,
which I think would be the theory of the day,
or should be the theory of the day. Is it
dawned on anybody that Ozzy Osbourne's last concert strapped in
that chair with like a puppeteer behind him to add movement.
It was really sad to watch, but it was really
(12:59):
kind of inspired to watch, right that Ozzie wanted one
Let you look back at it. It was really his
orchestrated funeral and his final moment. I mean, if you
could imagine the body and the casket having the opportunity
to tell all of you what you meant to them,
(13:20):
including one hundred and eighty million dollars he he's making
Sharon right that charity, he didn't take any of the
money from the entire tour, and then days later he
just dies. I mean, Parkinson's will kill you. But the
timing does it strike anybody else on? I know this
(13:42):
sounds crazy to say, but that that concert, as painful
as it was for him to do, is hard physically
and painful for him to do. Was really his I
love you to the fans and his by to them,
which is kind of the opposite of a funeral, which
(14:03):
would be so auzy osborne, and that maybe he went
home and used he was gathered the family was gathered on.
Did he use one of these assisted suicide drugs because
he didn't want to suffer anymore?
Speaker 3 (14:13):
I mean, does anybody put it?
Speaker 2 (14:15):
I would really have those conversations that sit down and
try to break down the chasing of the tale of
the associated press that has come of the earth. Oh
the story I could do there? Or how about the
Wall Street Journal? This may be I amount of time
I'll do this at thirty This may be the loser
(14:36):
of the day, the Wall Street Journal. I mean, now,
I'm absolutely rooting for Donald Trump to win that lawsuit.
Way do you see the wording in the Wall Street
Journal report? Their big bombshell today is Trump was informed
in May by the Justice Department that his name appears
multiple times.
Speaker 3 (14:54):
In the Epstein files. First of all, that's been going
on for years.
Speaker 2 (14:57):
As has Clinton's, as has a number of people who
did filthy things and a number of people who didn't
do anything. In fact, they've got to clarify that for
you in the next line. But they know and they're
preying upon people to just read headlines. How can we
(15:18):
be informed, entertained, start our morning off right, be in
this all together without chasing our tails like a dumb dog.
Speaker 3 (15:28):
That's my channel. Does this make sense to anybody but me? Today?
This is your Morning show with Michael del Chrono.
Speaker 2 (15:38):
A House Oversight Committee is voting to subpoena Justice Department
to release the files related to the Jeffrey Epstein case.
Speaker 3 (15:44):
Mark Mayfield fills us in.
Speaker 4 (15:45):
The subcommittee approved the motion eight to two. House Overside
Committee Chairman James Comer will have to sign the subpoena
before it's officially issued, with a source telling ABC News
he plans to do so. This comes after a judge
denied a DOJ request who have grand jury transcripts least
related to a probe into Epstein in Florida?
Speaker 3 (16:02):
I'm Mark Mayfield.
Speaker 2 (16:03):
Resident Trump's planning a big visit to the Federal Reserve today. Oh,
tensions get higher, and the more they fight with each other,
the more the interest rates don't come down. The Biden
White House Chief of Staff Ron Klain. Now you're getting
close to the epicenter of corruption. But will he just
plead the fifth today he will testify. Nuber is launching
a new feature in the US that pairs women drivers
with women riders as the father of daughters. Okay, I
(16:26):
want to hear more about that. I did a little
better in baseball, but not great. Most of our teams lost.
They'll give you those scores coming up. And birthdays today.
J Low is fifty six from Broken Arrow, Oklahoma, just
outside of Telsa.
Speaker 3 (16:39):
She's wickedly talented.
Speaker 2 (16:40):
Kristin Chenna with this fifty seven, The home run King
Barry Bonds is sixty one, and the Mailman, as we
called them NBA great Karl Malone sixty two.
Speaker 3 (16:49):
If it's your birthday, Happy birthday, was so glad you
were born.
Speaker 5 (16:54):
I'm a ANDOMU in Smyrna, Tennessee, and my morning show
is there Morning Show with Michael Dale Journal. Hi.
Speaker 1 (17:06):
I'm Michael del Joerno and your morning show can be
heard live as it's happening five to eight am Central
and six to nine Eastern on great stations like six
point twenty WJDX and Jackson, Mississippi or AKRONS News Talk
six forty WHLO and Akron, Ohio and News Radio five
seventy WDAK and Columbus, Georgia. Love to be a part
of your morning routine. But we're glad you're here now
(17:28):
enjoyed the podcast.
Speaker 2 (17:30):
I have a curing that if you don't have enough
water in it instead of just telling you there's not
enough water, so that I'll fill it up before it'll start,
and then you get like short cheated.
Speaker 3 (17:41):
So I got like a half a cup of coffee today,
So you bought one of the cheap ones. The best
part of my day is half a cup. I'm got
a factory second curing or something. No, I don't know
what it is.
Speaker 2 (17:50):
Thirty six minutes after the hour, early bird gets the worm,
rise and shine. Remember the sleepy squirrel, missus a nut.
So grab yourself a cup of coffee. I hope yours
is full. Two epic takedowns, one by sueet Caroline the
Way first of all her and Telsea Gabbert, two very
(18:14):
very articulate women, forceful women, and I'll tell you seeing
them side by side in that news conference yesterday, I
was like, you know what, and the champion is Caroline
Levitt she's just she's a monster. She might be the
well I think, hands down best White House Press secretary ever.
(18:37):
I never I haven't seen a president articulate the way
she articulates. Her takedown of the media yesterday epic. I'm
going to play you Olivia Consalves and her takedown of
Coburger in the victim's impact statements. But I want to
(18:58):
give an honorable mention to the judge. I thought his
and this this is a man that was in and
out of wiping his eyes nose. I mean, this judge
was affected. But his takedown of Coober and his addressing
what everybody kind of thirst for, which is a why
why you shouldn't give him the power to give and
(19:21):
a why that'll never make sense to you because you're
not a murderous animal like him. It was an unbelievable
judge takedown. We'll get to those takedowns a minute. Can't
have your morning show without you voice, so I don't
want to make you guys.
Speaker 3 (19:32):
Wait, John, I.
Speaker 2 (19:33):
Believe it's in Youngstown, Ohio. You know I am the
king of Youngstown.
Speaker 6 (19:39):
Good morning, Michael. I think we just got to be
careful that Tulsea Gabbert doesn't come after Obama in much
the same way that the left came after President Trump
with their law there and you know, using the justice
system as a weapon. I think it's just we got
(20:00):
to be careful that this doesn't become that same arena.
Speaker 2 (20:05):
Well, yes, is the simple answer. Of course, we need
to Two wrongs don't make a right. The question is
do you have something? Do you have a narrative, a
cover story, or do you have the real story. What
impressed me most about Telsea Gabbert yesterday it was not
(20:25):
that she was on the top of her game, especially
when it got uncomfortable, because the media added a third angle.
So the media's big defense is we need to sweep
this under the rug, the old Barack Obama.
Speaker 3 (20:37):
You know, when you hear colaps in the clouds, it's over.
Speaker 2 (20:42):
And then they move on to he's just deflecting because
he doesn't want to talk about Epstein because he's in Epstein.
Now their latest is, well, Telsa Gabbert's just trying to
save face with Donald Trump because he thinks she blew
it on Iran, and the meeting just kept coming back
with that, which is finally, I mean, I think I
(21:05):
think you if you go back and watch carefully, there
were three epic takedowns. I mean, Tulsa Gabbard is a
very impressive woman. I've interviewed her, very impressive. And I
watched three times Caroline Levitt step in to fight for
(21:32):
a combat fighter. I mean, I don't I know I'm
being dramatic, but I can't. I can't say no this
Caroline Levett. The force is strong with this one. Maybe wow,
But anyway, make a long story short. When impressing most
about Tulsa Gabbard was that she kept she kept it
(21:52):
from doing John, what you're afraid of. Hey, look, I'm
telling you I have done. I've declassified very clear evidence.
You ought to be pouring through that evidence right now.
Instead you're pouring through reasons we need to move it
aside or discredit it or ignore it. And then they
(22:16):
kept trying to get her to say the word treason,
and she wouldn't. She wouldn't play the game that they
have played. So I think you should feel better about
that if you Maybe you didn't see the news conference,
but if you watched it. And then when they were
pressing her and pressing her and pression, and she kept saying, look,
I've declassified the documents. I think what's in it is
(22:37):
clear and compelling, and it's up to the Justice Department
as to whether they want to file criminal charges. So
she's avoiding that in a way that I would think
answers your concern. All Right, to Nashville, we go.
Speaker 5 (22:53):
Hey, Michael, to help me understand Columbia University, the two
hundred million, Who gets that money? And also who got
Jeffrey Edpstate's money. He had five hundred million dollars well
in the forty million that was spent on the fraud
at Obama and his crew forty million dollars out of
(23:16):
a taxpayer's pocket for special investigations.
Speaker 3 (23:20):
What about that money?
Speaker 5 (23:22):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (23:22):
For me, I think probably.
Speaker 2 (23:25):
You know, again, this goes back to my analogy of
the dog chasing a tail, and I don't you know
human being an adult looks a dog chasing a tail
and thinks, Wow, you're really dumb. That's your tail. It's
attached to your rear end. You're not going to catch it,
and if you do, it's going to hurt. That's the
game you play with all of this. So avoiding that,
(23:46):
I would say, how is it the Columbia University has
reached a settlement with a government of two hundred million
dollars worth of guilt of being anti Semitic. But my
mood Khalil is still roaming free. And don't forget yesterday
or day before. He's on a television show and he
will not renounce and speak against Tamas. He's a terrorist
(24:06):
Tomas supporter, not a pro Palestinian protester, And had he
been honest about that, he wouldn't have been allowed in
the country. But he purposely lied in order to get
entrance into the university and the country. Nobody even talks
about that he's roaming free. The university is writing a
(24:28):
check for two hundred and twenty million, which begs the question, gee,
just how much of our money goes to these universities
for research? That two hundred million over three years is
a drop in a bucket compared to what you were
going to withhold from us. But yeah, oh, by the way,
it's another Trump victory. Under the agreement, the Ivy League
school will pay two hundred million dollars settlement over three
(24:49):
years to the federal government.
Speaker 3 (24:51):
Where does the money go? The federal government will.
Speaker 2 (24:53):
Also pay twenty one million dollars to settle investigations brought
by the United States Equal Opportunity Commission. So million will
pay back what the government spent to investigate. Two hundred
million goes to the federal government. That's the answer to
your question.
Speaker 3 (25:07):
David is in Columbia, Columbia, Georgia.
Speaker 7 (25:11):
Hey, Michael, that's the same thing that I was telling
my friends and family about my thoughts on Ozzy Osbourne's death,
that it was very coincidental that it happened shortly after
his farewell concert, and that maybe it was his way
of saying, thank you for all you've done to support me,
(25:31):
but I have got to go.
Speaker 3 (25:33):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (25:33):
I brought that up mainly to make the point I'd
rather spend our time rather than chasing tales of narratives
and degrees of narratives, or where we're at and disproving
a narrative or fighting to keep the narrative going with
another narrative. I really spent my time talking about what
seems to be obvious to me. So that's why I
(25:54):
brought that up. With respect. You know, I was never
a Black Sabbath fan other than all about which I
know as a rejoin I mean every every talk station
in America uses it as a rejoiner. I know very
I mean, Ozzy Osbourne to me is the Ozzy Osbourne
on the reality show with Sharon and the Kids. That's
(26:14):
the Ozzie I know. So I have no connection to
the music or love for the music or the artist.
I see the funny husband and father and the real
person that he was. H He's not a prince of
darkness to me, He's a dad on a reality show.
So that's in just full disclosure. But I think you
(26:37):
know what we saw was and this much. I think
I was able to pick up.
Speaker 5 (26:43):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (26:45):
Ozzy's been suffering for a long time and a great
deal of pain with a with many surgeries, none of
which really worked, and then on top of that Parkinson's,
and I think he was done. I mean, if you
go back and watch that final concert or you know,
you could see him screaming and cursing. He just wanted
to stand up. That's all he wanted to do was
(27:08):
stand up and say goodbye and couldn't. So there was
just too much premeditated goodbye. That was a reverse funeral.
At a funeral, the bodies in a casket, the spirit
I believe to be absent of the body is to
be in the presence of God. That's not getting your
new body second coming. Trust me, I get theology. Usually
(27:34):
you're paying tribute to them by being there the things
that you say. That last concert was more of a
reverse funeral. To me, that's what I observed. That was
Ozzie telling them what they meant to him, how much
he loved them, and saying goodbye to them. And then
I don't think it's a QUINCIENSI dies days later. I
(27:55):
think it was planned. I think he was done suffering.
It's a very controversial time topic. The You know these
pills that you can take, but you gather your family,
you take it and you're gone in about in most
cases thirty minutes or less. And that's kind of what
I felt like. The statements from the family sounded like too.
There's not a lot like cause of death. If they do,
(28:17):
it's just loosely implied he suffered from Parkinson's, but I
don't think that was the cause of death. I don't
even know if those pills are even illegal in England.
Here it's recognized, and I think where I don't know
where I said this one of the I used to
say all the time. You don't get questions about when
life begins, right You're not gonna get questions about when
life ends right now. This pill is a person's choice,
(28:39):
just like being cremated as a choice. But maybe down
the road it won't be choice. Maybe somebody else is
going to make the choice. Oh, these people are in
a nursing home covered by Medicaid. They have no quality
of life. They're just being kept alive. They don't have
any family members. Yeah, we'll give them the pill. That's
what concerns me where that could go. But I didn't
(29:01):
mean to get into a whole ozzy thing. Last one
was on Crossing Switchblade. I believe right, I believe that
one is That one is gone. Sorry, Oh it's gone.
He was just making the are you going to have
it or not?
Speaker 3 (29:15):
I'll do it for him. I think it was Youngstown too.
I pulled it back. Sorry. Oh.
Speaker 6 (29:23):
The cross in the Switchblade was written by Nicky Cruz,
who was befriended by David Wilkerson in the Times Square
New York City area. David Wilkerson went on to found
Times Square Church, and Nicky Cruz was an evangelist eventually
after writing the book.
Speaker 2 (29:42):
Yeah, that's what I said. I couldn't remember the name
of the title of Cross in the switch Blade. David
Wilkerson is one of the greatest influences in my life,
along with Leonard raven Hill, along with Watch mc knee,
a lot of people. But yeah, David Wilkerson led a
gang member to christ Nicki Cruse, who became evangelist, wrote
the book Across the Switchblade. All that to say, you
could tell And this is before Joe Biden even cut
(30:04):
the deal in South Carolina and long before he became president.
He was in dementia that popcorn visit to an area pool.
I mean, he's telling West Side story. Remember they were
sharpening the rusty blades on the curb and then he
had the chain that the guy game he's doing Crossing
the Switchblade. He's doing West Side story of its classic
(30:29):
nursing home dementia storytelling. And it only got worse a
year in two years in and the guy at the
epicenter of all this, one of the main characters is
Ron Klain. Ron Klain worked side by side in the
shadow campaign to save the Democracy, which was stealing an
election because we had to do to save democracy, and
(30:51):
they admitted all in a Time magazine manifesto. Go look
it Upbruary fifteenth, twenty twenty one. Then they proceeded to
do a four year cover up of a fake presidency.
Well that ron Klain, who went on to be chief
of staff after he rigged the election. He's the one
that's testified today, and I promise you he'll be pleading
(31:12):
the fifth or maybe we'll all be shocked and he's
going to sing like a canary. It's the theme today.
We're a dog chasing a tailor, and I'm trying to,
you know, have some reality and truth mixed in.
Speaker 3 (31:27):
It's your morning show with Michael del Choano.
Speaker 2 (31:32):
Victim impact statements are always just that impactful. The judge's
ultimate takedown of Coburger is something to hear. I don't
have time to play that, but again, none of us
can imagine. Right there was an aunt. I know it's
truck read this way and in full transparency, it struck
me this way. This is a test I don't ever
(31:54):
want to have to try to pass. I can tell
you that biblically, forgiving is the proper thing to do
to free yourself and to free God to go deal
with them, and I get that, but most of them
were very hurt, scared, and angry and affected. One stood out.
It may be the most impactful victim's impact statement I've
(32:15):
ever heard in my life. Her sister was killed in
the middle of the night, and Olivia Gonsalvez speaks to
the killer of her sister.
Speaker 8 (32:29):
Listen, what's it like needing this much attention just to
feel real? You're terrified of being ordinary, aren't you? Do
you feel anything at all? Or you exactly what you
always feared?
Speaker 1 (32:48):
Nothing?
Speaker 8 (32:51):
If you're so powerful, then why are you still hiding? Defendant?
You see, I'm here today as me, But who are you?
Let's try to take off your mask and see you
didn't create devastation. You revealed it in it, in yourself
and that darkness you carry, that emptiness, You'll sit with
(33:12):
it long after this is over. That is your sentence,
and it was written on the wall long before you
ever pled guilty.
Speaker 3 (33:24):
You didn't win.
Speaker 8 (33:25):
You just exposed yourself as the coward you are. You're
a delusional, pathetic, hypochondriac loser who thought you were so
much smarter than everybody else, constantly scolding, turning your nose
up to grammar mistakes, nitpicking and criticizing others. You wanted
(33:47):
so badly to be different, to be special, to be better,
to be deep, to be mysterious. You found yourself thinking
you were better than everyone else, and you thought you
could figure out the human psyche and see through it
all while tweaked.
Speaker 3 (34:00):
Out on heroin.
Speaker 8 (34:03):
Lurking in the shadows made you feel powerful because no
one ever paid you any attention. In the light, you
thought you were exceptional, all because of a grade on
a paper. You thought you were elite because your online
IQ test from twenty ten told you so. All of
that effort just to seem important. It's desperate. There is
(34:24):
a name for your condition, though your inflated ego just
didn't allow you to see it.
Speaker 3 (34:29):
Wanna be.
Speaker 8 (34:32):
You act like no one could ever understand your mind.
Speaker 3 (34:35):
But the truth is you're basic.
Speaker 8 (34:37):
You're a text bookcase of insecurity disguised as control. Your
patterns are predictable, your motives are shallow. You are not profound.
You're pathetic. You aren't special or deep, not mysterious or exceptional.
Don't ever get it twisted again. One is scared of
(35:00):
you today. No one is intimidated by you. No one
is impressed by you. No one thinks that you are important.
You orchestrated this like you thought you were God. Now
look at you, begging a courtroom for scraps. You know.
Speaker 2 (35:14):
Impact statements are too In some cases they showed the
perpetrator how much they've succeeded impacting your life.
Speaker 3 (35:22):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael Ndheld Joano