Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, I'm Michael del Jorno 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
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(00:21):
here now. Enjoy the podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:24):
Starting your morning off right. A new way of talk,
a new way of understanding because we're in this together.
Speaker 1 (00:33):
This is your morning show with Michael, Bill, Trum, Rise
and Shine one and all.
Speaker 3 (00:39):
Learnie Bird gets the worms seven minutes after the hour.
Thanks for waking up with your morning show and making
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button on your iHeartRadio app. All right, if you're just
waking up top, American and Chinese officials are meeting for
trade talks in Sweden today. The US with a lot
(01:21):
of momentum coming out of the Japanese deal and the
twenty seven nation European Union deal. Now the President seeks
to secure a deal with China. Investors are going to
be watching the FED as they gather and meet this week.
Will they cut the rates or will the personal back
and forth between Donald Trump and the FED chair keep
that from happening? In Baseball Hall of Famer second basement
(01:43):
from the Chicago Cups, Ryan Sandberg has died at the
age of sixty five, prostate cancer being the cause of death.
All Right, I love when the news keeps supporting We
had a man with a gun ar fifteen style walk
into a Manhattan and building where the NFL is housed
(02:03):
one and they actually they don't have a motive when
his note and his mental health background gives us a
lot of clues, but I'm seeing footage of him. Roy O'Neil,
our national correspondent, is joining us. All these shots have
been walking right down the street using this rifle like
a cane as he's walking. I mean, he didn't pull
it out and open fire. He walked in with it out.
Speaker 4 (02:24):
Yeah, he did, apparently, as he drove in from Las Vegas,
double parked and then just walked right up to that
building there on Park Avenue, open fire in the lobby,
then went up to the thirty third floor of the
building and continued the shooting spree. Yeah, seemed to just
walk up rather brazenly and didn't really seem to gain
much attention. That's also something New Yorkers are famous for.
(02:47):
Was just sort of not reacting by anyone walking by.
Speaker 3 (02:50):
All Right, So he's at that building, we presume from
his note, because the NFL is housed there. Five through
eight I think are the floors there. On he opens fire.
He kills an officer with two children and one on
the way tragic, three others, and then the note says
that he's been suffering from a brain disorder that he
(03:13):
blames the NFL for, even though he never played in
the NFL. But he blames his CTE on the NFL,
and the note says, study my brain, and that's why
he shoots himself in the chest. He could have started
there and spared four other lives, but he didn't. Do
we know anything else since then.
Speaker 4 (03:32):
Not really, you know, this really only happened about twelve
hours ago. I think they're trying to confirm a lot
of the story that he's got in that suicide note
that they found, what was about three pages handwritten, So
I think they're trying to confirm a lot of that
data there. They did secure where he lived in Las
Vegas as part of their investigation, and as you said,
(03:53):
he had a history of mental health problems, still was
able to qualify for a concealed carry permit there in
Nevada and then make the drive across country.
Speaker 3 (04:02):
Yeah. I mean people first question because say why need
you do this in Vegas? Well, it wasn't about publicity. Clearly,
in his mental illness, he thinks he has CTE and
he blames the NFL for it. So he clearly made
the three thousand mile trip to get to the building
where the NFL was or so that's how it looks
from his note early on. All right, we're also taking
a look at how your state stacks up compared to
(04:24):
others when it comes to healthcare. What's the latest in
the survey? Rory.
Speaker 4 (04:28):
Yeah, We've got the wallet Hub study that looks at
healthcare state by state.
Speaker 3 (04:31):
New Hampshire comes in number one.
Speaker 4 (04:33):
A lot of the states are in the northeast, Rhode
Island at number two, Minnesota and Iowa sneaking there at
three and four. Then Massachusetts and Maine come into the survey.
They break it down into three different categories, the total cost,
the access to healthcare, and then the outcomes. Tennessee came
in forty fourth out of fifty.
Speaker 3 (04:53):
One in the survey. Roy's gonna be back in the
third hour. We're going to have a little conversation, if
you will, about but workers in Vegas. They're said to
be freaking out as tourism and tips are dropping more.
With Rory in the third hour, appreciate that. Rory. Also,
we're gonna visit with the tenant, Colonel James Carafano. In
the third hour. The President adds a ceasefire with Thailand
(05:15):
and Cambodia to his peace mission. They got the Russian collusion,
heading to the DOJ for a criminal referral. The Big
Beautiful Deal has turned into two big beautiful trade deals
with Japan and the EU and now working on China.
And what are the possibilities of more air strikes, this
time in Yemen to target radical terrorist organizations. Lieutenant Colonel
(05:36):
James Carafano will be joining us later. One of the
big stories, obviously is what to do with Russia. Russia, Russia,
And it's going to pop up in our sounds of
the day if we get to it as well. There's
not a lot of latest survey, not a lot of
real hope that this is going to lead to any arrests.
(05:59):
So it's look, if I bring these three things up
all the time, the well, really, the way they stole
the primary from Bernie in twenty sixteen and gave it
to Hillary, plus the Hillary emails, and then the twenty
twenty shadow campaign, and then the hiding of a fake
(06:20):
president who was cognitively impaired, and then somewhere in the
midst of this was how they planned to discredit and
block Donald Trump's presidency. So these are some of the
biggest scandals in American political history on Russia. Russia, Russia.
This is a new information that has come forward, and
rightly will be referred to the Justice Department, and it
(06:43):
will be their job as to whether or not charges
are filed. I don't know what would satisfy the thirst
of the American people. Does it have to be called me?
Could it be Brettan, could it be you know? But
in the old they were all surveyed by rasmusim Most
(07:03):
voters think the accusations surrounding Russia Gate, collusion, Russia, Russia, Russia,
whatever you're calling it, are a serious scandal, but few
expect any criminal prosecution of the Obama administration officials. Now
Obama himself being criminally charged could be protected by presidential immunity,
(07:26):
But what about others. There's not a lot of hope.
They're either sixty percent of like the US voters believe
it is a serious scandal. The top officials manufactured and
politicized intelligence to create a false narrative of a collusion
between Russia and Donald Trump, and now documents that prove
they were really anticipating Hillary Clinton being the president. They
(07:49):
had goods on Hillary Clinton, and they were going to
destroy Hillary Clinton once she got into office. They turn
around at the request of the then president Barack Obama
leaving office and deny any intelligence reports and then order
intelligence to create a false report. By the way, take
(08:09):
a moment and soak that in. And only six and
ten of likely US voters think that's a serious scandal.
I'm guessing the Monica Lewinsky scandal got a higher number
than that. I know Watergate got a higher number than that,
and they both pale in comparison. And of the sixty
percent of likely voters that believe it's a serious scandal,
(08:31):
that includes forty two percent who think the scandal is
very serious. Translation matrix forty two to fifty percent. That's
your right matrix. And of course it's very serious for
the left, and apparently is not very serious at all
(08:53):
because it was our guy. Cheating's bad when it's the
other team. Cheating's not so bad when it's our team.
Including forty two percent who think the scandal is very
serious and thirty one percent who don't consider that very
serious at all, there's your matrix. Only a ten percent
difference between very serious and not very serious. It's a
(09:18):
pure matrix reflection of an American political scandal, kind of
like what we talked about last hour. Donald Trump secured
the border. Isn't that a victory for all? No, not
the matrix. He's arrested, imprisoned, or deported violent criminals who
(09:45):
committed felony crimes after the crime of entering the country illegally.
And now all the crime stats are down, from carjacking
to murder to robbery. And that's not good for everyone. No,
just have Director of National Intelligence Telsa Gabbard released newly
(10:06):
declassified documents last week's showing that in late twenty sixteen
and early twenty seventeen, the Obama administration officials engaged in
what Gabbert called a treason, his conspiracy against Donald Trump.
Twenty eight percent of voters believe it's likely that officials
involved in the scandal will be criminally prosecuted. Well, I
see your hopes are not high. There are ten percent
(10:29):
who think prosecutions are very likely. However, sixty three percent
don't consider criminal prosecutions likely, including thirty three percent who
say not at all. Is America surprised about Russia Gate? No,
it's matrixed, but no, would they be surprised if anybody
(10:49):
actually pays a price? Yes? Among those who consider the
Russia Gate scandal to be very serious, only thirty six
percent at least somewhat likely that an Obama administration official
involved in the scandal will face any criminal prosecution. And
Watergate people went to jail, and Russia Gate nobody thinks
(11:11):
they will. The accusations made by Gabbart are considered at
least a somewhat serious scandal by eighty percent of Republicans,
forty nine percent of Democrats, and fifty five percent of
unaffiliated voters. Forty two percent of Republicans, only twenty four
percent of Democrats and seventeen percent of unaffiliated voters believe
(11:32):
it is at least somewhat likely that the Obama administration
officials involved in Russia Gate will be criminally prosecuted. Expectations
are low, and if those low expectations are met on this,
no one's going to care about the shadow campaign on this,
nobody's going to care about a fake presidency. On this,
(11:57):
no one's going to be afraid to do it again,
and they may come twenty twenty eight.
Speaker 2 (12:05):
This is your Morning show with Michael del Chrono.
Speaker 3 (12:09):
Can't have your morning show without your voice. Use that
talkback button on the iHeart app, just like Richard did
just outside of Atlanta.
Speaker 4 (12:16):
Richard Minckle, could you explain to us what you mean
by living in the Mitris?
Speaker 3 (12:20):
Thank you glad you asked. By the way, it's a
great example of why you should ask the questions. We're
adding new cities, new stations all the time. All right,
So what's the matrix. The matrix is that we all
live in our bubbles. Happens over time. Take your Facebook
on social media, an old friend checks in from high school.
At first you're reminiscing. Everything's great. Then he starts not
(12:40):
liking your post any comments. Next thing you know, you're fighting.
Next thing you know, you're unfriending him. Eventually, after we're
all done fighting, we just donefriend And then what does
that leave That leaves us only talking to people who
think like us, believe like us. Meanwhile, they've done the same,
so they're in their bubble. We're not news consumers anymore.
(13:02):
We've got news that's feeding the left and news that's
feeding the right. You're sharing stories from the right, they're
sharing stories from the left, and they create a matrix,
simultaneous alternate universe. That's why when you see these false narratives.
It make sense to you, well, that's ridiculous. Not to them.
They don't know the truth. The false narrative is their truth,
(13:27):
and they think your truth is a false narrative. And
the two shall never meet until you solved the matrix.
That's why I warned people the death of journalism like
we saw in twenty sixteen. They've always been biased and
getting away with it, and I've been exposing that for
about thirty years in my career. But in twenty sixteen,
they didn't care that you saw it, and they wept
(13:47):
and had a tantrum after they lost and didn't care
that you saw it. Then they weaponized and took over
late night television and cable went off the rails. But
it fed the matrix, destroyed the republics, and we're not
news consumers anymore. We're narrative sharers. There are some on
(14:11):
the left that only see the left. They're big. They're
walking around today. That whole European Union tariff deal. It's
a fake, just like the Japan deals, a fake. Just
like innocent people are being rounded up and just taken
off the streets senselessly because there's a dictator in office
and it's real for them. Ah, that's the matrix. All right,
(14:34):
Let's give you five top five blue pills, shall we?
Jeffrey Epstein's associate, Gallaine Maxwell, is calling on the Supreme
Court to overturn her sex trafficking conviction.
Speaker 5 (14:44):
In a new brief, Maxwell's lawyers argue an agreement made
between Epstein and the US government shields her from prosecution.
Speaker 3 (14:50):
The Second US Circuit.
Speaker 5 (14:51):
Court of Appeals had ruled the agreement made by Epstein
with Florida prosecutors to plead guilty did not apply.
Speaker 3 (14:56):
In New York.
Speaker 5 (14:57):
Maxwell is currently serving a twenty year sentence in federal prison.
Speaker 3 (15:01):
She met with a Deputy.
Speaker 5 (15:02):
Attorney General, Todd Blanchford, questioning last week, as the Trump
administration faces pressure to release all files related to the
Epstein case.
Speaker 3 (15:09):
I'm Mark nephew. Five people are dead, including the gunman,
after a shooting in midtown Manhattan. The shooting took place
last night. A man just walking with a high powered
rifle right down the streets of New York walks into
a Midtown Manhattan skyscraper and begins to open fire. We
lost four souls who are another senseless act of gun violence.
(15:33):
May Adams, who said. One of the victims was an
NYPD officer with two small children and another on the way.
Suspect is identified as traveling across the country from Las
Vegas to New York City with the history of mental
illness and left a note blaming the NFL for his
CTE brain disorder, which is why he shot himself in
the chest so his brain could be given to science
(15:54):
for study. New York City Police Commissioner Jessica Tiske says
a police officer was among those kis the building.
Speaker 6 (16:01):
Security camera footage shows the shooter enter the lobby, turn right,
and immediately open fire on an NYPD officer. He then
shoots a woman who took cover behind a pillar and
proceeds through the lobby, spraying it with gunfire.
Speaker 3 (16:18):
Baseball Hall of Famer and one of the greatest second
basements in Cubs history, Ryan Sandberg is dead at sixty five,
dying of complications due to prostate cancer.
Speaker 2 (16:28):
Which is boring from Boca, Wisconsin.
Speaker 3 (16:31):
In My Morning Show is Your Morning Show with Michael.
Speaker 1 (16:34):
Designa, Hey gang, it's me Michael. You can listen to
your Morning show live. Make us a part of your
morning routine or your drive to work. Companion on great
stations like Talk Radio ninety eight point three and fifteen
ten WLAC in Nashville, Tupelos News and Talk one oh
(16:55):
one point one and ten sixty WKMQ, and how about
Talk six fifty ks in Sacramento, California. Love to have
you listen live, but are grateful you're here now for
the podcast Enjoy. Top American and Chinese officials will meet
today for trade talks with Sweden. New York police officer
is one of five people dead after a mass shooting
in Manhattan, and investors will be watching the Fed this
(17:18):
week as they decide whether or not to spite the
president or actually cut interest rates. Well, it was only
a few days ago.
Speaker 3 (17:25):
White House correspondent John Decker asked the President, why are
you giving Russia fifty days? Well after John Decker asked him, hey,
have you ever thought about giving a check to the
American people with all this tariff money? He thought that
was a good idea. Apparently, after some thought, John, he
thought your idea fifty days was a good idea because
he's cut it to ten to twelve. Now what.
Speaker 7 (17:47):
Yeah, now, what so ten to twelve days? We'll do
what the President does in terms of what he has promised,
and that is tougher trade tariffs on Russia one hundred
percent trade tariffs not only on Russia, secondary terriffs, meaning
tougher trade tariffs on every one of Russia's trading partners,
so that includes China and Brazil and South Africa. They
(18:10):
will face trade tariffs as it relates to the goods
coming into our country from those countries. The President, I
think essentially got the message not just from me but
from others that why are you giving fifty days to
someone like Vladimir Putin to prosecute his war against Ukraine,
to continue to attack civilian areas in Ukraine. And that's
(18:31):
the reason why ultimately the President yesterday's saying I'm not
giving him fifty days. I'm not giving him n till September. Second,
it's just ten to twelve days from yesterday in which
that deadline expires.
Speaker 3 (18:43):
Yeah. I don't think it took fifty days for him
to notice they weren't going to do anything. I think
he got his answer in less than fifty days, and
now they have ten to twelve formal days. You brought
up a very key point, not just Russia, but anybody
doing business with Russia. So this is that strategy that
would isolate Russia. By their own choosing, they'll be isolated.
(19:06):
And then there's also sanctions involved.
Speaker 7 (19:07):
Right, Well, that's exactly right. And so when you think
about trade between the United States and Russia, it is minimal.
It's three billion dollars a year over the incourse of
an entire year. By contrast, the US and the EU
do five billion dollars in trade every day. So it
(19:28):
gives you a sense that the trade tariffs that the
US will impose upon Russian goods really minimal in terms
of hurting Russia in any discernible way. However, those secondary tariffs,
that's where it's going to hurt, and it's going to
hurt and make countries think twice before doing business with Russia,
knowing full well that their products will face a very
(19:51):
stiff one hundred percent tariff when they come into our country.
Speaker 3 (19:54):
Yeah, and at some point, you know, I actually think
Vladimir Putin's not so I don't think he's delighted that
they're not the Soviet Union, but I think he was
trying to put back together the Russian Empire MAPU probably
weaken NATO, none of which has happened. And there, you know,
the President game an opportunity to get off this train
(20:16):
with a saved face. Now you've got to get off
this train, and there is no saving face. So time
will tell, and that time is ten to twelve days
for Vladimir Putin. John, what do we expect from the
FED this week? After the President completely and rightfully, I
might add, he humiliated the FED chair over a billion
dollar over budget planned a renovate a building that most
people don't even understand why they exist. I would imagine
(20:40):
if there's any spite between these two, it's still pretty
strong heading into this.
Speaker 7 (20:44):
Well, you know, remember that Jerome pal.
Speaker 3 (20:47):
Only has one vote.
Speaker 7 (20:48):
There are twelve SED members that are on the Federal
Open Market Committee. I do not think you're going to
see a change in interest rates when the FED meets
this week. However, you could see in the statement that
comes from the said the idea that they will look
specifically at a meeting down the road in which to
(21:08):
lower interest rates. That may satisfy President Trump to a
certain extent, but he's not going to be happy with
the results that come out of this.
Speaker 3 (21:16):
Week's said meeting. Yeah, I think the President wants them
at zero or one percent. They probably belong to two
and a half and three percent, So a step in
that direction would be a good thing. Let's see if
cooler heads prevailed. Finally, top American and Chinese officials to
meet to talk in Sweden. The President handled the EU
negotiations firsthand. What do we read with officials meeting, this
(21:38):
is just a preliminary volley.
Speaker 7 (21:41):
Well, it's it's a person who certainly speaks on behalf
of President Trump. That's the US Trade Representative Jamison Greer.
He's the person representing the Trump administration in Sweden trying
to hammer out a trade deal between.
Speaker 3 (21:54):
The US and China.
Speaker 7 (21:55):
And the US does a significant amount of trade between
the US and China, and the US has a significant
trade deficit with China. So all eyes will be on that,
and all eyes will be on whatever other trade deals
are announced between now and Friday of this week. That's
that August first deadline. The President said yesterday Michael that
(22:15):
any country that does not have a trade deal with
the US by this coming Friday is going to face
a trade tarff of anywhere between fifteen and twenty percent.
So that is a pretty significant number right there, and
we're talking about, as the President said, a significant number
of countries. The President said, two hundred plus countries that
could be facing higher trade tariffs on their goods coming
(22:38):
into the United States.
Speaker 3 (22:39):
Now, the twenty seven nations of the EU, Japan, if
they can get a deal done with China, that's the
big hurdles. And at that point, China's or Canada is
sitting across the border going oops, they're probably the one
that's rooting against the China deal because then it'll be
just them left after that. Great reporting is always John Decker,
White House responder, We'll talk again tomorrow.
Speaker 7 (23:02):
Thanks a lot, Michael, Bye, bye.
Speaker 3 (23:03):
Bye bye. Try of you just waking up forty one
minutes after the hour. These are your top five stories
of the day. As you heard John and I talking,
President Trump yesterday said enough of fifty days. I'm giving
Russia less than two weeks to come to the table
and reach a ceasefire with Ukraine. The President spoke to reporters.
Speaker 2 (23:22):
I'm going to make a new deadline of about ten,
ten or twelve days.
Speaker 5 (23:28):
From Wiland, Scotland to meet with UK Prime Minister Kia Stormer.
Trump said, I'm disappointed in President Putin very disappointed. Trump
had given Russia a fifty day deadline to reach a
deal with Ukraine or face consequences. The President added he
has had discussions with Putin, but that too many people
are dying in the war and Putin has got to
make a deal.
Speaker 3 (23:46):
Mark Mayfield Spared Airlines is doing more melt tightening. Brian
Shook as that story.
Speaker 8 (23:51):
The Florida based discount carrier said Monday it will furlough
two hundred and seventy pilots this fall as it reduces
its off season scheduled to cut costs. The airline will
also downgrade more than one hundred pilots from captain to
first officer. As of October, First Spirit has struggled to
turn a profit since it emerged from Chapter eleven bankruptcy
(24:12):
in March.
Speaker 3 (24:13):
I'm Brian shug. The FED kicks off at two day
meeting today amid mounting pressure to lower interest rates.
Speaker 4 (24:19):
President Trump has made it clear he wants FED Chairman
Jerome Powell and the governors to lower interest rates now
to make it cheaper to borrow money and spur investment.
The Fed has said inflation is still a bit too high.
And looming tariffs complicate the issue. Most investors predict the
FED will choose to hold interest rates steady for now,
anticipating at least one rate cut before the end of
(24:41):
the year.
Speaker 3 (24:42):
I'm rory O'Neil. Representatives for Phil Collins are shutting down
all the online rumors that the singer is somehow in
hospice care.
Speaker 5 (24:59):
According to a spe when provided to The Independent, is
Refs said that he's currently in the hospital recovering from
knee surgery. It's not clear where the rumor of hospice
care surfaced on social media, but Collins has been very
candid about his health. In a conversation with Mojo last month,
the singer said he thinks about going downstairs through the
studio to see what happens, but I'm.
Speaker 3 (25:18):
Not hungry for it, adding that he's been very sick.
I'm mark me for you. Today is National Lipstick Day.
The lip tin dates back five thousand years and once
was considered a status symbol in Egypt for both men
and women. Pretennis has more, as.
Speaker 9 (25:34):
With any makeup, lipstick is an enhancement, but it's not
just for women. In two thousand and three, on Friends,
Joey Tribiani.
Speaker 3 (25:41):
Woreren Bet You lipstick for men, and a.
Speaker 9 (25:44):
Recent Hipsos poll shows eighty percent of women and about
fifteen percent of men wear it on the regular. Elizabeth
Taylor famously said, when facing a bad day, pour yourself, drain,
put on some lipstick, and pull yourself together. She might
have been onto something. Study show men tend to gazze
longer at women wearing red lipstick. I'm Bree Tennis and then.
Speaker 3 (26:03):
There was strawberry lip bum Freshman year, John Tweeze. But
enough about that.
Speaker 2 (26:09):
It's your Morning Show with Michael Delchno.
Speaker 3 (26:14):
We launched our website. It's our one stop everything you
need in one place. Now, the name of the show
on the radio is your morning show. The name of
the show online your Morningshow online dot com. How easy
is that to remember? So go to your Morning Show
online dot com. That's where you can find out what
stations we are and what markets so you know where
(26:34):
to listen. It's where you can find our podcast bios
and all our contributors, our correspondence. Basically everybody but Red.
Why is that red? You hiding in secrecy? I'm in
the Witness Protection program. Links, the talkback button links to
the podcast. Everything you need in one spot. All things
(26:58):
your Morning Show are online at your Morning Show Online
dot com. Speaking of the talkback again, have your Morning
Show without your voice. We start with Dave. Good morning, Michael.
Speaker 10 (27:09):
This is gonna sound a bit selfish, but I believe
that since I'm about to collect my social Security and
the issue with social security is one of the biggest
problems we have in our deficit, I think that we
should prevent the looming twenty five percent decrease and shore
(27:29):
up social security for those of us in the future.
Speaker 3 (27:32):
I mean, people are gonna have a lot of ideas
what to do with this. The main thing is you're
gonna have something to do with it. I mean, you've
got to address our biggest problem is overspending in terms
of social security. It's just not what it was designed
to be anymore, and it's not the wisest way to
invest this movie. But well, they ever get money, but
they'll never get around to it. I mean, people forget this,
but that was the big debate twenty five years ago.
(27:56):
This is what Al Gore and George W. Bush debating
the lot bos versus privatization. I mean, I go through
a lot of numbers, and mostly I'm to blame. I
look at a lifetime of earnings on my mysocial security
dot com account or whatever that's called, and where did
(28:16):
it go. Well, it went because I have a spending
problem cars homes. But that needs to be addressed. Because
that needs to be addressed. I don't know if America
is willing to make the sacrifices. We'll see in time
if they were willing to make the sacrifices. But there's
(28:37):
going to be a lot of people that find very
good ideas of what to do with all this tariff
revenue surplus and investment from other countries. And the main
thing is reel in your spending, fix your spending problem.
If you want to do something radical, you want to
do something to protect those security a zero based prioritize budget,
(28:57):
not spending more than you make, creating industries and jobs
and higher paying jobs. That's the ultimate solution that it's
just a matter of prioritizing. And for people that have
paid into Social Security in a lifetime, over a lifetime,
that would be worth prioritizing. So Dave, it's not a
bad idea. I'm not shooting you down. It's just everybody's
(29:20):
gonna have a great idea of what to do with it,
which is exactly why you should just do with it
what it's tended to be done, and that's paid down
the debt. Time to do right for all the things
you did wrong. Mary is calling him Michael.
Speaker 11 (29:34):
I think Liz Warren had an oopsie Daisy moment because
she said out loud, we had a bad situation.
Speaker 3 (29:40):
Yeah, a situation yet.
Speaker 11 (29:42):
And she's blaming the president for making it worse. So
we had a bad situation. Okay, good, good to.
Speaker 3 (29:48):
Know you admit it. I also want to say that.
Speaker 11 (29:50):
Who's ever advising Democrats to use all the profanity? It
just comes across as so gimmicky and jiv and unstatesmanlike,
oh please stop.
Speaker 3 (30:00):
Yeah. By the way, she's making a reference to we
may get to this again next hour. With all the
victories and just today alone, Donald Trump has new data
all of this rounding up of criminal aliens, people who
broke other crime, who committed other crimes after the crime
of breaking into the country, felonies, robberies, rape, human trafficking,
(30:23):
rounding them up, sending them out of the country, or
sending them to the prison. Just mysteriously this year so far,
carjacking is down twenty seven percent, robberies are down twenty percent,
homicides are down seventeen percent. Then you have the Japanese
tariff deal. Now you have the twenty seven nation European
Union deal. Now you have negotiations with China. Remember when
(30:47):
all this was going to lead to the market collapsing,
to our economy collapsing. It was going to be the
most self inflicted political failure in his tree. And tariff
revenue is surged twenty six point six billion dollars in
(31:08):
June alone, and that's while the negotiations were going on.
We're not even seeing the revenue from the deals that
have been made. And what are the Democrats planning to do?
They won't back Down tour. They're going to take Jasmine Crockett,
Elizabeth Warren and a couple other leptist progressives and send
them to the reddest of red districts while they're on
research in August, on recess in August, with a won't
(31:30):
back down tour, with the slogan if you see you
know what, f around and flip the house. You'll see
in sounds of the day. They could even flip their
own district. And what's with all the f bombs? Is
(31:50):
this to appeal appeal to what's left of the radical
left gen zers, because that's not your ticket out in
the midterm election for sure. Corey, my yard boy is here.
Speaker 12 (32:07):
Good morning, Michael. This is you, ol buddy, Corey the
yard Boy. Yes, it is hot. It's like the end
of July early August it's supposed to be. Do you
need some help carrying your purse?
Speaker 3 (32:20):
First of all, it's a satchel. I don't even carry
a satchel. But all right, listen, I make no bones
about it. I don't like heat. I hate heat, and
it has been I'm not saying global warming. I'm not
saying hottest. Ever, I will say this, and you couldn't
find a hotter summer except for nineteen fifty four, of
(32:43):
which neither of us were here in nineteen fifty four.
But still, all I said was, this is the most
miserable hot summer I've experienced in nineteen in Nashville. Then
I'm watching the national map and this cool front is
coming down. Saint Louis. You got relief coming tomorrow. It
doesn't even get here to Friday. Good things come, can't
I gripe about the weather seems a little needy. Taking
(33:08):
my air conditioners out for a romantic dinner later in
the week.
Speaker 2 (33:11):
We're all in this together. This is Your Morning Show
with Michael dentheld journow