Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, gang, it's me Michael. You can listen to your
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(00:21):
listen live, but are grateful you're here now for the podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:25):
Enjoy starting your morning off right, A new way of talk,
a new way of understanding it because because we're in
the STUDI this is your morning show with Michael O'Dell Jordan.
Speaker 3 (00:40):
Thank you, Mike McCann.
Speaker 1 (00:42):
Seven minutes after the hour, Welcome to Thursday, July the
twenty fourth. Here About Lord twenty twenty five on the
air and streaming live on your iHeart app. It's my
honor to serve you. This is your morning show. I'm
Michael Jeffries, got the sound read keeping an eye on
the content. David Sinati, our senior contribute, is going to
be joining us in moments from now. If you're just
waking up. Direct of National Intelligence Telsey Gabbard is leaving
(01:02):
the Justice Department, leaving it up to the Justice Department
to decide on possible criminal implications regarding the Obama administration
and interfering in the twenty sixteen election. A judge is
sentenced Brian Coburger to life in prison. I have his
epic takedown of Coburger coming up later in our Sounds
of the Day and the Biden White.
Speaker 3 (01:22):
House Chief of Staff.
Speaker 1 (01:23):
This is the guy that was center to the shadow
campaign to save the Democracy and went on to be
chief of staff. Will he be the next to plead
the Fifth and House Oversight Committee subpoenas longtime Jeffrey Epstein
confidant Elaine Maxwell. They intend to get her testimony from prison.
Speaker 3 (01:41):
Now.
Speaker 1 (01:42):
She hasn't given a lot of testimony. She got a
twenty year prison sentence and she's been Mum's the word.
So if they can get her to sing like a canary,
you wonder what new information will come out.
Speaker 3 (01:55):
A new Gallup poll is out.
Speaker 1 (01:56):
I think it explains why two married people at a
cold Play concert went as viral as they did. National
correspondent Roy O'Neil is here with that finding. Another is
good morning Rory. Good morning, Michael.
Speaker 4 (02:09):
So, the poll by Gallup looks at a whole bunch
of different issues and asks whether or not you consider
them to be morally acceptable. Things like gambling, relationships with
gay couples, suicide, polygamy, abortion is on the list as well,
even the death penalty. So what things are now considered
(02:30):
to be morally acceptable? Birth control, divorce, sex between unmarried couples,
and having a baby outside of marriage are just some
of the things now deemed morally acceptable. But on the
other end of the spectrum, sex between teenagers, changing ones, gender, pornography,
and animal cloning are just some of the items that
(02:52):
are considered morally wrong to most Americans.
Speaker 1 (02:55):
By the way, I don't know what other people are
doing around the country with this story. I'm gonna take
a serious look at because we're a country that used
to be under God, indivisible with liberty and justice for all,
and the liberty comes from God, not from man. There's
a lot to talk about here. As a culture, we
turned away from absolute truth towards moral relativism. Therefore, what
(03:18):
is right, what is wrong? It's up to each individual
to decide. That's chaos in a culture. So this is
interesting because I always said, who's going to and I
would point out some of the oddities. You know that it's, oh,
it's okay to have sex before marriage, but you know,
make sure you wear a condom or you know, all
these crazy changing rules that we have that are the
(03:39):
flaw of the worldview of moral relativism.
Speaker 3 (03:42):
And yet here it comes out and it's point.
Speaker 1 (03:44):
So, first of all, it's a great poll to ask
in a country that has embraced moral relativism. There is
no truth, there is no absolute right and wrong. Only
matters what's right and wrong in your eyes. And yet
we see it play out right, how woken has died
with transgenderism, but it thrived with homosexuality. We're seeing those
in this poll. This is actually one of the more
significant poles I've ever seen.
Speaker 4 (04:05):
Uh yeah, And this also found in your intro that
about the Coldplay couple, whether or not married men and
women should have an affair, eighty nine percent said no,
that is morally wrong. That got the highest negative score,
I guess you'd call it in this survey. Cloning of
humans came in with eighty seven percent thinking it's morally wrong.
Suicide was it's seventy one percent wrong. So those were
(04:28):
the three biggest issues that Americans thought were morally wrong
these days.
Speaker 1 (04:33):
Where does cryptocurrency and working at home and all these
other ones that just pale in comparison.
Speaker 3 (04:38):
Where do they fall?
Speaker 4 (04:40):
Yeah, so these were a couple of so galloped at
a whole bunch of different surveys were at Leased yesterday.
The gal the crypto one was interesting because a lot
of Americans know about it, but they're not on board.
Only fourteen percent of adults report to owning bitcoin or
other cryptocurrency.
Speaker 3 (04:55):
A lot of Americans say they never will buy it.
Use can I interrupt you?
Speaker 1 (04:59):
I only have like a sure, we haven't met, but
cryptocurrency is so big and the future is going to
be I mean this is like fourteen percent of America
have any idea what a microwave is or what a
beta or VHS is, let alone where it's headed. Cryptocurrency
is the biggest blind spot in America today, Isn't it that?
Speaker 3 (05:19):
And AI?
Speaker 4 (05:19):
I would think, yeah, certainly is. Everyone knows about it,
but they don't know how it works. That comes for
AI and crypto, And right now it's only men eighteen
to forty nine who are the ones dipping their toe
into crypto, some more than others. But yeah, that's where
there's just a lot of people who haven't really been
educated on it yet.
Speaker 1 (05:40):
Well, what's so interesting is in a culture where there
is no absolute truth, apparently there still is. There is
no right or wrong. Apparently there are some wrongs. Gallup
with a great poll or he's going to be back
in the third hour. We may never know the reason
why for Idaho college students were murdered. The judge addresses
that in his takedown of Coburger, the why and how
(06:02):
that would empower him, or he had a stern warning
and you know stuff like, look, if Joe Biden can
get ten million dollars to write a memoir and he
has no memory, if somebody's gonna offer Goldburger money for
a book or a movie, it's just probably going to happen.
Speaker 3 (06:19):
It shouldn't, but you know that thirst for the why.
Speaker 1 (06:26):
The judge really addressed that in the in the fact
that you and I, of human status not animal status,
would never understand the why anyway.
Speaker 3 (06:37):
But Roy's gonna be back with that story coming up.
Speaker 1 (06:38):
Also, we got a great visit with one of Billy
Joel's closest friends and his creative director, Steve Cohen. He
was the person assigned to put the team together to
tell the story, and so it goes the Life of
Billy Joel Part one is already out. Will visit with
him in the third hour as well. All Right, I
used an analogy earlier this morning. It kind of I
get the visual of a dog chasing his tail, the
(07:00):
way these narratives are woven inside of narratives and spins
and cover ups, and you almost feel dirty for playing
the game. And again, if we trace the Wall Street Journal,
who's trying to imply the President is sweeping Epstein under
the rug, and we got proof because we've got that
letter that he's being sued twenty billion dollars for falsely revealing,
(07:24):
and then everybody forgets, you know, death of journalism, you know.
So do I really want to chase the tale of
the Associated Press and the Wall Street Journal? If I
really understand journalism is dead? I mean, it's just crazy.
And I got a long text from David's NATI this morning,
and I think, David, you probably wouldn't have used the
(07:45):
analogy of a dog chasing its tail, But I think
You're sick of playing the game of chasing your tail,
aren't you.
Speaker 3 (07:53):
Good morning, Michael, Good morning.
Speaker 5 (07:54):
Well do due diligence in the public policy arena.
Speaker 3 (07:58):
You know, our team is for to study this stuff.
And when the.
Speaker 5 (08:02):
Director of National Intel, excuse me, director of National Intelligence
comes forward and says, you know, here's this, this earth
shattering development, and you listen, and then you listen, and
then you listen and you read it back, you read
it through, and you read it forward, and you come
to the question of and and so what.
Speaker 3 (08:26):
It gets kind of boring after a while.
Speaker 5 (08:28):
You feel like a dog chasing its own tailor however
a dog might feel.
Speaker 3 (08:32):
I agree with you. It just doesn't make any sense. Now,
I'm not suggesting that wrong wasn't done. There's the Pada
of lawfare forever.
Speaker 6 (08:46):
I mean, he is the official stuffed mascot of the
word lawfare.
Speaker 3 (08:51):
They mobilized every.
Speaker 6 (08:52):
Possible mechanism against him to try to drive him out
of public life altogether, and they meet no bones about it.
They despised this man, They despise the threat that he
breaks to the internal stablishment, and they came after him.
Speaker 3 (09:08):
So I'm not suggesting for a.
Speaker 6 (09:09):
Minute that he hasn't been abused abundantly on ethically. The
question becomes, how do you make this all stick legally?
And we're dealing with people who are brilliant at manipulating
the system.
Speaker 1 (09:25):
Well, if you watch the news conference yesterday, and I'm
going to play some of Caroline Levitt's epic takedown of
the media, it is shocking that here's Telsey Gabbard getting
no respect as a national intelligence director who has declassified
very serious and very revealing documents that apparently everybody in
(09:46):
that journalistic pool has no curiosity to see, no interest in.
In fact, the attacks were the narrative defenses of the
left just spit back no matter what Tulsey Gabbard was saying,
and they even and so far is to suggest she's
doing all of this to save face. After all, she
blew it with Iran, I mean, and it was just
(10:08):
it's just shameless. So I would say that, you know,
there is a death of journalism in terms of it
has no credibility or trust, but it's still very active
and it's still playing the game. The same is true
for the deep state, The same is true for the
shirts and skins of the left and the right. And
I'm just wondering, is there's so much dysfunction that we
(10:30):
can't get back to function junction.
Speaker 3 (10:33):
Well, Michael, I did what I think sometimes you do.
Speaker 5 (10:37):
I played both sides watching television last night, and so
I would watch CNN, I'd flip back over and watch Fox.
And you know what you can pictures, you use all
of that stuff. Watch the matrix and it's unbelievable. One
group's telling you that the end of the world is
coming because of a scandal that happened twenty years ago,
(11:00):
which probably has the name of a private citizen named
Donald Trump and New York resident in the files reference
and the name of a former president Bill Clinton as well.
Probably okay, twenty years ago, and the person who is
involved at the ring of it was tried, convicted, incarcerated,
(11:20):
and committed suicide and his associate is currently in jail. Right,
what exactly more are we going to get out of
that day?
Speaker 6 (11:29):
Don't care who it is.
Speaker 3 (11:30):
Wait, can I do? What? Can I do? One better?
Speaker 1 (11:32):
Do this?
Speaker 3 (11:32):
I'll give you a chance if you got a cough
or make a turn signal.
Speaker 1 (11:36):
So the Wall Street Journal issues a report that President
Trump was informed in May by the Justice Department that
his name appears multiple times in the Epstein file.
Speaker 3 (11:47):
I could have told you that we've all known that.
Speaker 1 (11:50):
Uh, there's any number of other names. Now, these are
names not in a black book that mean anything, Names
that came up during DePass of victims, some of which
were accusing them of nothing.
Speaker 3 (12:03):
Some they were accusing them of something.
Speaker 1 (12:06):
The person who has seen those names as Alan Dershowitz,
so he knows what all the redacted names are. And
that's why they're apprehensive. That's why a judge has sealed
those names and will not release those names because they
haven't had a chance. They are to be presumed innocent
until they're tried. And this case will never be tried
because the accused killed themselves. I mean, that's the end
(12:26):
of the story. But watch the Wall Street Journal, who's
getting sued twenty million dollars. Watch how the story reads.
The Wall Street Journal reports President Trump was informed in
May by the Justice Department that his name appears multiple
times in the Epstein files. Now, they'd like you to
stop reading there and then fill in their narrative that
they've conditioned, which is and that's why they're sweeping it
under the rug and that's why they're ignoring, and that's
(12:47):
why they're talking about Mamdami so much. That's why they're
targeting Obama now to deflect from them. But they have
to go on and speak the truth. And so in
the next paragraph, the outlet said officials told Trump during
a routine briefing that files contain so what they believe
was unverified hearsay about many people, including Donald Trump. One
administration official told the journal that hundreds of other names
(13:10):
are contained in these documents as well. Trump was also
reportedly told the Department of Justice just did not plan
to release more documents because they contained child pornography. Then
they close it with this, David, I know, you don't
have to be a slewth of how to do media buys.
The new report comes days after the journal published a
(13:31):
story about an alleged birthday letter sent by Trump to Epstein,
which led Trump to sue the outlet for twenty billion dollars.
Speaker 3 (13:38):
I mean, it's just sickening, right, and I.
Speaker 1 (13:40):
Don't know where we're going to really, where we're going
to ever get to something now. If it's if the
shadow campaign is true, it's one of the three greatest
scandals in political history. If this Obama allegation that has
been revealed as true, it's one of the biggest scandals
in political history. And a fake presidency is certainly one
of the big scandals and political history. But will we
(14:01):
ever get to that. Got to get to reality before
we get to history.
Speaker 5 (14:04):
Right, Well, Michael, as far as the Epstein thing, Look,
if Donald Trump.
Speaker 3 (14:11):
Is guilty, as you know what, he was a private citizen.
Speaker 5 (14:16):
And so if there's charges and allegations of criminal activity
in there and they haven't passed the statute of limitations,
then we're talking about a criminal event. Show me the plaintiff.
Who's the plaintiff, who's coming forward? What are they looking
for now? I know there's discussion of a civil case. Fine,
this belongs in a courtroom. You can't just tell the
(14:36):
Justice Department go in and strip the grand protections that
exist in our constitutional form of government and tell what
is this television? What are we playing court on TV?
This is absurd And the hilarious thing about it is
the Democrats, insultans, are lapping their butts off because they
can make these allegations till they're blue in the face
and nobody could do anything about it.
Speaker 3 (14:58):
It is the perfect moment.
Speaker 5 (14:59):
Of when did you stop beating your exactly answer?
Speaker 1 (15:04):
Yeah, because the only way you can prove their lae
is to dismantle the very intent of our law, order
and way of life. I got to have you back
next week. We've got to talk about the key findings
of this Gallop poll. We've abandoned God absolute truth for
moral relativism, and yet we still have a couple of
things we think are wrong and a couple of things
that are still okay. Based on what we got to
(15:27):
come back and do that.
Speaker 2 (15:29):
This is your Morning Show with Michael Del Chrono.
Speaker 1 (15:33):
It's been a busy week for the president. New trade deals,
major amount announcements on artificial intelligence. Preparing for a trip
to Scotland. We're going to visit with White House correspondent
John Decker next half hour. We had massive epic takedowns
the judge, Alivia Kaylee's sister in the victim's impact statements,
(15:54):
and Caroline Levitt was in rare form with the media yesterday.
That's all in our Sounds of the Day.
Speaker 3 (16:00):
Coming up. Couple of quick promos.
Speaker 1 (16:03):
One, we redid completely the iHeart Radio app and now
it has presets like when you were a teenager. We'd
love to have our live show be one of your
presets or our podcasts so that you can catch up.
If you can't listen live in the morning, please do that.
Don't forget. We can't have your voice or your morning
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on the iHeartRadio app, and you can always email me
(16:24):
Michael D at iHeartMedia dot com. This is James from Greenwood,
South Carolina, and my morning show is your Morning Show
with Michael Dojorno. Hi, I'm Michael, and your morning show
is heard on great radio stations across the country like
(16:45):
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course we're so grateful you can aim for the podcast.
Speaker 3 (17:01):
Enjoy Michael. No place I'd rather be than serving you
right now.
Speaker 1 (17:04):
Jeffrey's serving us all with sound red, keeping an eye
on the content and if you're just waking up. Columbia
Universities forking over two hundred million dollars a fine over
the next three years to resolve the allegations from the
Trump administration in its discrimination of Jewish students. Meanwhile, in
Oversight Subcommittee is voting to subpoena the Justice Department to
(17:25):
release files related to the Jeffrey Epstein case. As for
Glayne Maxwell, she's being formally subpoenaed by the House Oversight
Committee as well to testify in subpoena form. And meteorologists
are always dramatic, but this doesn't sound good. Tens of
millions of Americans are under what forecasters.
Speaker 3 (17:42):
Are calling the ring of fire.
Speaker 1 (17:46):
Now, it was too hot for me to go to
the Coldplay concert, but.
Speaker 3 (17:51):
I had never thought to go so dramatic as to
call it a ring of fire. And all eyes are
on Marvel.
Speaker 1 (17:56):
The First Family is looking to get off to a
fantastic start at the Poxhafe this this weekend, expected to
do over one hundred and twenty million dollars in America
another hundred million abroad.
Speaker 3 (18:06):
There's a lot of money we made.
Speaker 1 (18:07):
I've never seen any of them, but we'll keep an
eye on all the top stories for you, and then
I have your Sounds of the day.
Speaker 3 (18:12):
Do we have John Decker. No, John Decker yet, I
have not seen John Decker yet.
Speaker 7 (18:19):
No.
Speaker 1 (18:20):
Sorry, okay, I don't know whether to move on to
Sounds of the Day. I don't want to relive yesterday.
We don't want another Oswald, another one of those. And
the Sounds of the Day, we're going to take a
look at Olivia Gonsalvez, that's Kaylee's sister, and victims' impact statements.
They're tricky and nobody likes to play armchair quarterback with
people's grief. If you get over emotional, and if the
(18:44):
point is to explain to the court and to the
accused how much they've destroyed your life, you might be
giving the perpetrator exactly what they're wanting. And then you
get into these issues a forgiveness. There was one aunt,
of course, who forgave him, which biblically is accurate, frees
you and it freeze God. To go deal with them,
(19:07):
it's actually a very it's a big thing to do,
bigger than I think I might be capable of.
Speaker 3 (19:13):
I would never want to have that test.
Speaker 1 (19:15):
We kind of single out Olivia, Kaylee's sister, because I
think she in essence addressed him. So if it's a victims,
and she's certainly a victim. Her sister was killed a
victim's impact statement. Her statement impact impacted the killer, and
(19:41):
that's what makes it stand out. And in our Sounds
of the Day, we take a look at and what
most people are in awe of as one of the
most impactful victim's impact statements.
Speaker 8 (19:58):
And here's how it sounded 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 are you exactly
what you always feared?
Speaker 3 (20:17):
Nothing?
Speaker 8 (20:19):
If you're so powerful, then why are you still hiding?
Speaker 3 (20:22):
Defendant?
Speaker 8 (20:23):
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's in yourself
and that darkness you carry, that emptiness, you'll sit with
it long after this.
Speaker 1 (20:42):
Now we played this in its entirety earlier, and when
we come back and Sounds the Day, there was another
epic takedown of Coleburger, and that was by the judge.
Sounds of the Day are next, all right, but a
busy week for the president. He cut new trade deals,
made major announcements, and artificial intelligence. He's preparing for a
trip to Scotland. More trade deals likely to come in
(21:04):
before the August first deadline. What else is on the
president's agenda? To the White House correspondent, we go in
John Decker, Good morning, John.
Speaker 3 (21:12):
Hey, Good morning, Michael.
Speaker 2 (21:13):
Yeah.
Speaker 9 (21:13):
You know, the trade deal that we didn't talk about,
that the President announced first on social media on Tuesday
is the trade deal with Japan. And that's a big
win for the president. Fifteen percent trade tariff now will
be applied on Japanese goods coming into the US. No
tariff on American goods heading over to Japan. And there
is a trade deficit that the US has with Japan,
(21:35):
so perhaps this will lower that trade deficit.
Speaker 3 (21:39):
In addition to that, the markets will.
Speaker 9 (21:41):
Be opened up for American products and agriculture and manufacturing,
the auto sector as well. And the President hinted that
more trade deals could be announced in the days ahead
leading up to that August first deadline that you just
spoke about.
Speaker 1 (21:55):
You know, I don't know what people look at the
scoreboard is there for a reason. In base ball, it's
the runs, that's the bottom line. But you might be
interested in hits. You might be interested in errors and
other things. There's two scoreboards here. So there are these
trade agreements that and you did wonderful explain to them
how it addresses the trade deficit. So this is going
to be good for the economy and future economies that develop.
(22:16):
But there's another scoreboard. The five hundred and fifty billion
dollars that they promised to invest, ninety percent of which
happens within the United States. So you have a market effect,
you have an economic effect. And by the way, for
all these other ones that are now adding up to trillions,
that would offset the budgeting forecasting in terms of debt increase.
Speaker 3 (22:37):
So there's a lot of success in here.
Speaker 1 (22:40):
There's a long way to go, but there's a lot
of early success, and we saw the market react to that.
Speaker 3 (22:44):
So that's good news for the president.
Speaker 2 (22:46):
Yeah, well, that's right.
Speaker 9 (22:47):
You know, let's not forget there's been a significant amount
of caraff revenue that's come into the US treasury. I
believe the estimate in terms of that tariff revenue well
over eighty billion dollars so far this.
Speaker 3 (23:01):
Year under President Trump. You know, and I don't know, maybe.
Speaker 9 (23:05):
American tax players want to get a rebate of some
sort you, given all this money that's coming into the US,
perhaps that's something that the President will think about, you know,
cutting some checks to send out to the American public
because of the wins that he talks about that the
US is having. So that is something to keep your
eye on. But in any case, I think that the
next trade deal that the President is hinting at could
(23:28):
be won with the European Union, and that would be big, Michael,
because the European Union, by volume, is America's largest trading partner.
So we'll see if that gets done before that August first.
Speaker 1 (23:41):
Deadline, and then it's on to Mexico and Canada and
let's win there exactly. Let me ask you this this Ai.
You know, I was just talking with roy O'Neil ai. Cryptocurrency.
These are things the American people don't really have their
arms around yet. It's the future and we understand very little.
It's like micros are coming and we don't know how
it's going to affect how we cook.
Speaker 3 (24:04):
In Ai. Is this his moonshot?
Speaker 1 (24:06):
I mean, there's so much distraction going on it's hard
to see it. But you know, if you peeled back
all the other drama, this is his Kennedy moment with AI.
Speaker 9 (24:15):
I think, well, it's a game changer AI. You know,
in terms of the way that America does business, the
world does business. It impacts the global economy. And as
the President said yesterday when he made remarks at an
AI conference here in Washington, he wants America to be
the leader in AI. And by the way, every time
(24:37):
a foreign leader comes to the White House, typically they
talk about trade, they talk about security. But now there's
another item that's often coming up on the agenda, and
that is artificial intelligence, because it is such an important
part and will become such an important part of trade
relations between the United States and our trading partners.
Speaker 1 (24:56):
John Decker, White House Correspondent, as always great reporting.
Speaker 3 (24:59):
We'll talk again tomorrow. God willing.
Speaker 5 (25:03):
Look, you just gotta try harder not to saw some
gravery opportunity for a brief civics lesson.
Speaker 2 (25:09):
Perhaps you'd like to be alone with you a deteriorating
mental condition.
Speaker 1 (25:15):
Politics always revealing, often entertaining your sounds the day, all right,
So we played in its entirety earlier, and I played
a clip just before John came on, of Olivia against
Salvizu and her takedown of Coburg. There was another epic
takedown from the judge himself. Right before sentencing.
Speaker 7 (25:35):
The quiet morning hours of November thirteen, twenty twenty two,
a faceless coward reached the tranquility of six beautiful young
people and senselessly slaughtered them four of them. Who committed
this unspeakable evil was unknown for several weeks, but due
(25:59):
to the killers in competence and outstanding police work by
numerous local, state, and federal law enforcement agencies, the person
that slithered through that sliding glass door at one one
two two King Road now stands before the world and
this court unmasked. This unfathomable and senseless act of evil
(26:22):
has caused immeasurable pain and loss, and in the end,
the more we struggle to seek explanation for the unexplainable,
the more we try to extract a reason, the more
power and control we give to him. In my view,
the time has now come to end mister Coberger's fifteen
minutes of fame. It's time that he'd been consigned to
(26:44):
the ignimity and isolation of perpetual incarceration. I know there
has been concern about him collaborating on books from movies
or other media projects, and I truly hope that someone
does not stoop to affording him this spotlight that he
desires in the name of clicks, royalties, or profits.
Speaker 3 (27:07):
It was.
Speaker 1 (27:09):
A judge very affected by this throughout all of the
victim Impact statements, intently listening, emotionally responding. This is a
judge you were seeing, sniffling, wiping his nose, his eyes.
It was a thirteen minute takedown of Coburg before giving
(27:34):
him four life sentences along with vines. I couldn't play
all thirteen minutes, but in what was an emotional victims
Impact statement day, a couple of fathers with some really
compelling moments, a sister, the judge himself closed, shining very brightly.
(27:57):
And that's it for Coburg. Somebody offers some money. Now
other epic takedowns. First, we start with Telsea Gabbard, who
makes the announcement because there's whistleblowers and more declassified documents
to come, and what it shows is something that needs
to be investigated, not any conclusions she's willing to make.
Speaker 10 (28:19):
Listen, the stunning revelations that we are releasing today should
be of concern to every American. This is not about
Democrats or Republicans. This has to do with the integrity
of our democratic republic and American voters having faith that
the votes cast will count. There is irrefutable evidence that
detail how President Obama and his national security team directed
(28:41):
the creation of an intelligence community assessment that they knew
was false. They knew it would promote this contrived narrative
that Russia interfered in the twenty sixteen election to help
President Trump win, selling it to the American people as
though it were true.
Speaker 1 (28:59):
By the way, if there was any curiosity by the
media in this, and there isn't because they were complicit
in it. But the bottom line is the Russians expected
Hillary Clinton to win, as everyone did, and they had
goods on her glittinger prescription drugs she was abusing. They
(29:21):
were waiting to reveal all that after she got elected.
This reminds me of how the Democrats had planned an
insurrection in the shadow campaign to save the democracy, where
they're basically telling you how we're going to change election laws,
weaponize COVID, steal the election, and swing precincts because we
(29:41):
have to. We got to save democracy. If it hadn't worked,
they planned insurrection and they had prepped you for insurrection
with Antifa and Black Lives Matter. You were conditioned carefully
that that was good. Trouble well, they won, and they
scrambled to call off the insurrection, only to pin insurrection
on Donald Trump.
Speaker 3 (30:01):
That's kind of what's going on here. The interference didn't work.
Speaker 1 (30:04):
Obviously Hillary lost, but the attempt was to get Hillary
elected and then take her down with their revelations. Instead,
they create their own. In other words, they took a
cue from Russia and our media played along with it.
Speaker 3 (30:21):
Now, what did everybody in the room do with this information?
Speaker 1 (30:24):
Tried to sweep it away, tried to attack Telsey Gabbart,
You was trying to justify yourself with the president after.
Speaker 3 (30:31):
Blowing it round.
Speaker 1 (30:32):
There's no curiosity whatsoever in new documents declassified. In other words,
there was nothing but curiosity and interest in the lie.
But there's no thirsting, no interest in, no curiosity in
the truth. And if you think Telsea Gabbert's impressive step aside,
(30:55):
Sweet Caroline, with a couple of epic takedowns of the media.
Speaker 11 (31:02):
You in this room should go through it and take
a look at this report and review the intelligence because
unfortunately that hasn't happened. And many of the people who
perpetuated this hoax, Clapper, Andy McCabe, James Comy, and many
others have been hired by major networks in this room
to go on television and continue to spew these lies
knowing that they are lies. And if you all recall,
(31:24):
just flashback to twenty sixteen, in the years after the
entire Trump won presidency was embroiled in this scandal that
was perpetuated by the Democrat Party, and you had major
Democrat Party officials in this city, namely Adam Schiff, Hillary Clinton,
Elizabeth Warren, who went on television and told the American
people Donald Trump is an asset of Russia.
Speaker 3 (31:45):
It was a lie.
Speaker 11 (31:46):
They always knew it. Hillary Clinton herself said that President
Trump would be a puppet for Putin. Senator Tim Kaine
at the time called President Trump Vladimir Putin's defense lawyer
Adam Schiff stated, and one of the worst things a
lawmaker can do is to tell the American people, I
know something you don't know. It's just classified and I
can't tell you. And that's what he said. I can
tell you that the case is more than that. I
(32:07):
can't go into the particulars. But there is more than
circumstantial evidence now, and not enough people in this room,
not enough journalists in this country pushed Adam Schiff to say,
what are you talking about? What evidence do you have?
Everybody just ran with the lies, and it led to impeachments.
It led to the division of our country. Unfortunately, so
many Americans, from listening to outlets in this room, believed.
Speaker 3 (32:30):
In these lies.
Speaker 11 (32:31):
And it's a complete scam, and it's a scandal, and
the president wants to see account of go and.
Speaker 1 (32:37):
That's why they don't want to see these lies revealed.
In fact, they stooped so low as to isn't she
just doing this Telsey Gabbard to get better positioned with
the president, you know, after she blew it and Iran
on camera.
Speaker 11 (32:52):
The only people who are suggesting that the Director of
National Intelligence would release evidence to try to boost her
standing with the president are the people in this room
who constantly tried to sow distrust and chaos amongst the
president's cabinet.
Speaker 1 (33:04):
And it is not working.
Speaker 11 (33:05):
I have the attorney, I am. I will just answer
your question directly. I am with the President of the
United States every day. He has the utmost confidence in
Director Gabbard. He always has, he continues to and that
is true of his entire cabinet, who is all working.
Speaker 1 (33:19):
As bart I warned you that the death of journalism
is not a victory for the right, it's a defeat
for a constitutional republic, and we're having to weigh through
this mess one last.
Speaker 11 (33:26):
I was right from the beginning about all of this,
and we are grateful that justice can be served. Now
we have even more damning evidence implicating those who tried
to sabotage a duly elected president and did grave material
harm to our republic.
Speaker 3 (33:40):
Thanks to additional.
Speaker 11 (33:41):
Important work done by CIA Director Ratcliffe Committee Chairman Crawford
over the past few months, a newly declassified twenty twenty
report prepared by the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence,
which DNI Director Gabert has declassified, found that the intel
community did not have any direct information Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Speaker 1 (34:01):
One to help one even worse, they inserted a false narrative,
and while there was great curiosity and followed through from
the media on the lie, crickets. When it comes to
curiosity and desiring to understand the truth.
Speaker 2 (34:18):
It's your morning show with Michael del Journo.
Speaker 1 (34:22):
You know, the tricky part about the matrix is it
keeps you distracted by narratives and you get caught in
the middle of a tugo war. You never really get
to the truth, let alone respond to the truth and
solve a problem. You're kind of caught in the middle
of one of those tugo wars with the economy because
(34:44):
as the President has a fight with the Federal Reserve
chairman to do what doesn't make any sense he's not
doing and lowering interest rates along with the big beautiful
Bill and some of these trade deals and investments other
countries are making.
Speaker 3 (34:57):
Economy would be exploding, but now it's.
Speaker 1 (34:59):
Person personal is getting in the way of our security
and prosperity. David Bonsen, as our money was an economist.
We'll talk about this personal struggle between the President and
Jerome Powell when your Morning Show continues next.
Speaker 2 (35:13):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael ndheld Joano