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July 29, 2025 35 mins

Always revealing and often entertaining, it’s The Sounds of The Day! 

President Trump adds a cease-fire with Thailand and Cambodia to his peace mission, Russian collusion heads to the DOJ for criminal referral and the big, beautiful deal is joined by two big, beautiful trade deals with Japan and the EU!  Lieutenant Colonel James Carafano joins us to breakdown that and the possibility of air strikes in Yemen?

Workers in Las Vegas are said to be “freaking out” as tourism and tips are dropping. National Correspondent RORY O’NEILL explains why Vegas may not have the same cachet it once did.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, It's Michael. Your morning show can be heard on
great radio stations across the country, like News Talk ninety
two point one and six hundred WREC in Memphis, Tennessee,
or thirteen hundred The Patriot in Tulsa, our Talk six
fifty KSTE in Sacramento, California. We invite you to listen
live while you're getting ready in the morning, and to
take us along for the drive to work. But as
we always say, better late than never. Thanks for joining

(00:21):
us for the podcast.

Speaker 2 (00:22):
Well two three, starting your morning off right. A new
way of talk, a new way of understanding, because where
in this together? This is your morning show with Michael
Bill Charman.

Speaker 1 (00:39):
Seven minutes after the hour, Welcome to Tuesday, July, the
twenty ninth year of our book. Can you believe it's
just about August on Friday? Where does the time go?
July to the twenty ninth? Do you have our Lord
twenty twenty five on the air and streaming live on
your iHeart app. This is your morning show. Honored to
serve you on Michael all Right. Top American and Chinese

(00:59):
official meeting for trade talks in Sweden today. A New
York City police officer is one of five people dead
after a mass shooting inside a midtown Manhattan high rise
and investors. They're going to keep an eye on the
FED who are meeting this week hoping interest rates will
be cut. And arguably the best second basement in the
history of baseball, certainly the best second basement in the

(01:20):
history of the Chicago Cubs. Ryan Sandberg is dead at
the age of sixty five. A cause of death is
long battle with prostate cancer. Now President Trump has added
a ceasefire with Thailand and Cambodia to his mission of
a ceasefire with Russia. We got the Russian Russian collusion case.
We've got the big, beautiful trade deals with Japan and

(01:43):
the EU and China coming, maybe even samhar strikes and
Yemen coming. But let's start from the top. A lot
of people were wondering why the President was giving Vladimir
Putin fifty days to come to the table and talk
ceasefire in peace. Well, the President decided yesterday and second thought,

(02:03):
I'm not giving you fifty days. In fact, you've got
ten to twelve days. Lieutenant Colonel James Garafana was joining US.
I guess there's two questions, right why fifty to begin with,
and then likely got his answer in less than fifty,
and so now it's ten or twelve, right, Yeah, So,
I mean it's pure speculation.

Speaker 3 (02:20):
There was talk of a Trump visit to Beijang and
one of the few places that Putin can go without
being arrested as a work criminalist Beijang, and so maybe
there was some thought that maybe they could do something there.
The politics that I just didn't seem to work for me.
But I don't know. But it's very clear that that

(02:44):
the fifty day thing was having no impact on the Russians,
and the president is nobody's fool.

Speaker 4 (02:50):
I mean, he's not going to give.

Speaker 3 (02:51):
Somebody fifty days when they're very clearly not interested, and
so he is just you know, putting the pressure on. Look,
you know, we've talked about this on your show, you know,
since the first day of the war, and I've always said,
the United States is never going to throw Ukraine under
the bus. We're not going to abandon NATO because it's
not in our interest.

Speaker 4 (03:11):
To do so.

Speaker 3 (03:12):
Letting Russia and China run wild in Europe is not
in the agenda. I don't care if you're a restrainer
an isolationist, an Indo Pacific first, or it doesn't matter
giving them an easy win in Europe, which is our
world's which is our largest trading partner. And people forget
that our forces in Europe, in Yukon, fifty percent of

(03:35):
the operations they do are not in Europe. Europe is
a base that we use to protect our interest in
about a third of the world.

Speaker 4 (03:44):
So we were never going to walk away from this.

Speaker 3 (03:47):
I never believe that Donald Trump was going to walk
away from this. I always believe that pairing his strategic
insight with his incredibly compassion on human suffering and recognizing
that the Rusians can't win the war, all they can
do is kill a lot of innocent people and being
and just seeing that as completely intolerable, that of course

(04:08):
the President was going to come down on the side
of this. But equally important was the Europeans had to
step up, and he was not going to take no
for an answer. And that's so we're exactly there. We
talked about this years ago, we said this is exactly
where we wound up.

Speaker 4 (04:28):
And I don't know what Putin was thinking. He made
some big mistakes.

Speaker 3 (04:32):
One was invading because the day before he invaded, He
had everybody freaked out.

Speaker 4 (04:36):
He could have gotten whatever he wanted.

Speaker 3 (04:37):
The second mistake was not cutting a deal on Trump
the day Trump came in office.

Speaker 1 (04:42):
Yeah, because because Trump was giving him a chance to
get off this highway and save a little face. Right
now he doesn't get to save face. He brought up
the compassion. I really think that drives the president. He's
sick of seeing whether it's North Koreans or young Ukrainians
or young even Russian soldiers senselessly dying. And I think
when he makes him think it said enseless is nothing's worked.
His deal with NATO is done and NATO is paying

(05:04):
its fair share, so he doesn't have that internal hurdle anymore.
That's done, He's committed, he's standing with NATO, he's standing
with Ukraine. So you didn't I think ultimately Putin's trying
to reassemble the Russian empire map that clearly doesn't look possible,
and it clearly doesn't include Ukraine. And he clearly hasn't

(05:25):
diminished the NATO alliance or ties with the US. So
he didn't respond to fifty days. Will he respond to.

Speaker 4 (05:32):
Ten or twelve? Look?

Speaker 3 (05:35):
I think I don't think there's anything that can force
Putin to stop fighting. Remember, he's the invader. If he
wants to, if he's having a tough time, he can
just slow things down, he can take a pause or whatever.
So if Putin wants to continue to fight, he can

(05:57):
continue to fight. The problem is, you know they're saying,
now that you know it would take at the pace,
they're going to take them a hundred years to conquer you, Graine,
in one hundred years, they'll be saying they'll take them
one hundred years to conquer you.

Speaker 1 (06:09):
Right, Well, he's not going to be here in a
hundred years, and things are getting tight at home, all right,
So the answer probably is, well, if he doesn't respond
in ten to twelve days, and I don't think the
president expects him to, he's just not gonna give him
the full fifty days to do nothing, here come the tariffs,
and not just on them, but anybody that does business
with them. Here comes the sanctions. This is going to

(06:31):
make a tough war even more expensive.

Speaker 4 (06:37):
I think it is. And the this is and this
is the art. This is the supreme mart of strategy.
This is why we won the Cold War, right.

Speaker 3 (06:44):
The Cold War was supposed to be this war of
attrition between US and the Soviets. But if you look
at actually, decade by decade in the Cold War, we
got freer, stronger, and we're powerful, and.

Speaker 1 (07:00):
Russia they got broke, they got broken.

Speaker 3 (07:03):
Right, and so the way, so the way to fight
a war of attrition is the other guy or tritz
and you don't. And this is what Donald Trump has done.
Some guy Renarcles said, well, the three big problems are
you know, we can't fight both wars, you know our economy,
and you know so well, I suppose that's a fine article,
But who cares because Donald Trump's strategy is designed to

(07:25):
do all three, all three freer at home, right. So
the reason why he's going after all these is not
political retribution. It's rebuilding confidence in the resilience of the
American system of governance, prosperity, obviously, trying to grow the economy,
deal with the debt, and then peace restrength, which means
not only increasing our military, but forcing our friends and

(07:48):
allies to step up as well. You know, I tell people,
is every American president since the end of the Cold War?

Speaker 4 (07:54):
Actually no, no, let me.

Speaker 3 (07:56):
Correct that, every American president since the end of World
War two, has told our friends and allies, you need
to do more so I can do less. Donald Trump
is the first president to make them that is that
you need to do more, because I'm doing more.

Speaker 1 (08:13):
James Carafan is one of the finest military and foreign
policy minds in America today. Visits with us every Tuesday
for our briefings and you can hear his read his
great work and his colleagues great work at Heritage to
Dodd Org. Get everybody up to speed. And now the
president's adding to the plate, not just a ceasefire in
peace for Russia and Ukraine. He's still working on that
between Israel and Iran and radical Islamic terrorists. And now

(08:35):
we're adding to that plate Thailand and Cambodia. What's going
on in this conflict?

Speaker 3 (08:39):
Yeah, I also, you know, because what we don't talk
about is we don't talk about terrorism. And these guys
have actually taken about two hundred major terrorists off the
grid since they came in office in six months.

Speaker 4 (08:50):
Nobody's talking about that either.

Speaker 3 (08:51):
But I think I think, you know, this is a
really interesting deal because Thailand's along standing ally although.

Speaker 4 (08:59):
They have been really great of lately.

Speaker 3 (09:01):
But these we're not talking areas of vital interest in
the United States. But what Trump is doing is using
American power in a prudent, judicious way. We're not We're
just saying. He just said to them, he said, look,
you both want trade deals with me?

Speaker 4 (09:20):
Stop fighting? What's more important to you? You know? And
I mean, what what did the United States put it risk? Here? Nothing?
And what did they get? You know? And what do
we get?

Speaker 3 (09:31):
Look, you know, we we'll get trade deals with two
countries that are very marginal. But this is an impulse
about why are people killing each other? That p over
stupid stuff?

Speaker 4 (09:40):
Uh? And Trump doing good in the world.

Speaker 3 (09:42):
So you know, over and over again we're reminded he's
not an isolationist, he's not a globalist. He's this weird
animal at the zoo that you what is that? Should
that be in the monkey cage? Or should that to be.

Speaker 4 (09:55):
Over with them? You know, he is he is a
prudent realist. Right. I want to do good in the world, but.

Speaker 3 (10:05):
I'm only going to do good if I can actually
do good. It's very different than the leftist impulse, which
is I have to do something or I have to
appear to be doing good and show empathy. It doesn't
matter if everybody dies, that's irrelevant. It just matters that
I show that I care. Right, Trump is exactly the opposite.
He's not the guy that's going to give ninety nine

(10:25):
cents a day to peta to you know, take care
of injured pets. He will do something if he can
actually help. And consistent with Americans interests.

Speaker 1 (10:36):
In bringing up this example of Thailand and Cambodia, this
this kind of speaks to people don't tend to go
to war with people they do a lot of business with.
All Right, So all these trade deals, are they beyond
economic victories? And do they lead to more security? Now,
in the case of Japan and European Union, these are allies.
But in the case of China or in other cases,

(10:58):
could this be a life leverage that can actually solve
military issues as well?

Speaker 4 (11:04):
No, I think people get that wrong.

Speaker 3 (11:06):
You know, they used to say, uh, trade follows the
flag for the British Empire.

Speaker 4 (11:12):
What they never told you is that war often followed trade.

Speaker 3 (11:16):
When when when trade is between enemies, it actually as
a level of friction and confrontation that makes things worse.
One of the reasons why we could manage the Cold
War so well is thankfully we didn't do any trade
with the Russians, right, So trade between like minded countries

(11:36):
strengthens bonds of trust and confidence.

Speaker 4 (11:39):
Trade with your.

Speaker 3 (11:40):
Enemy is just another, uh source of friction. This is
why we're having such a tough problem with China. So no,
I don't think you know that necessarily get a trade
deal and that's going to lead to more peace.

Speaker 4 (11:54):
It's the opposite.

Speaker 3 (11:56):
You You should trade in areas where you have peace,
trust and confidence or not.

Speaker 4 (12:00):
Worried about work. This is one of the things I
think we need to put a lot.

Speaker 3 (12:04):
More attention on Africa because everybody thinks Africa is this
place where you know it's unsafe and you're gonna die,
and that's not true. There are great places in Africa
to invest, great partnerships to be had, people that would.

Speaker 4 (12:17):
Love to show the Chinese the door.

Speaker 3 (12:19):
And so from the trade perspective, we need to be
smart and go and try to do trade where where
we're welcome and where we are friends and where there's
a good business environment. So you don't do trade deals
to stop wars.

Speaker 1 (12:32):
Last question for Lieutenant Colonel James Carafano, President seems to
be out of grace and mercy on waiting for hostages
to be released. Can we expect more air strikes?

Speaker 3 (12:45):
I think, you know, potentially in Yemen, potentially in Iran.
I can see in the next six months that we
do follow up strikes and eromics and the Iranians the message.
I think in Gaza, I would not be surprised if
we're seeing both Israeli and American forces, you know, looking, looking,

(13:06):
you know, for hostages. The situation is increasingly intolerable and
it has to end with the destruction of Abas.

Speaker 1 (13:14):
I expected the air strikes and Yemen this weekend. They
may still happen, Yeah, James, Yeah, yeah, they'll happen. Your
pause told me they're going to happen. James Carafado, Lieutenant Colonel, thanks.

Speaker 4 (13:27):
For joining us.

Speaker 1 (13:28):
We'll talk again next week. God bless you, my friend.
I can always tell when there's a long pause what
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This is your Morning Show with Michael del Chuno. President

(15:15):
Trump on Monday said he's giving Russia not fifty days.
You got ten to twelve more days. The President spoke
to reporters.

Speaker 5 (15:22):
I'm going to make a new deadline of about ten,
ten or twelve days.

Speaker 6 (15:28):
From while it's coming 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 1 (15:46):
I'm Mark Mayfield, all right. So we got a guy
traveling from Las Vegas all the way to New York City, Okay,
thinks that he has CTE and blames the NFL for
his ct even though he never played football in the NFL,
which is why he targets an office that he opens
fire in. Five people are dead, including the gunman himself

(16:09):
in a midtown Manhattan shooting. More from the New York
City Police Commissioner Jessica Tisk.

Speaker 7 (16:14):
The building security camera footage shows the shooter enter the lobby,
turn right, an 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 1 (16:32):
He walked right down the street using the gun like
a cane. There's just simply no explanation for it. Well,
eggs do not raise your cholesterol. They actually help lower cholesterol.

Speaker 8 (16:43):
Runs counter two decades old advice to limit egg consumption
because it can raise your risk of heart disease and stroke.
But now a paper published in the American Journal of
Clinical Nutrition adds to the growing evidence that eggs are
actually good for you. Researchers say while the popular breakfast
food may be high in cholesterol, they're low saturated fat,
which is believed to be the real driver of cholesterol elevation.

(17:04):
The study suggested eating eggs as part of a low
saturated fat diet can boost your health.

Speaker 4 (17:09):
I'm Tammage for HEO.

Speaker 3 (17:12):
Hi, this is so and so from such and such
and my morning show is your morning show with Michael
del JOURNA.

Speaker 1 (17:22):
Hi, I'm Michael, and your morning show is heard on
great radio stations across the country like one oh five,
nine twelve fifty w hn Z and Tampa, Florida, News
Radio five seventy wkb N and Youngstown, Ohio and News
Radio one thousand KTOK in Oklahoma City. Love to have
you listen to us live in the morning, and of
course we're so grateful you came for the podcast. Enjoy

(17:44):
this is your morning show. I am Michael del journal
honored to serve you. Good morning. Baseball Hall of Famer
and second baseman Ryan san Sandberg finally lost his battle
with prostate cancer, dying at the age of sixty five.
Investors keeping an eye on the Fed. Who will meet
this week? Will they finally cut rates? Top American and
Chinese officials met in trade talks in Sweden yesterday? They'll

(18:05):
continue to meet. And he walked right down the street
using a high powered rifle like a cane, before walking
into a midtown Manhattan building. An open fire and killing five,
including himself. Roy O'Neil is our national correspondent with the
very latest on this man's journey from Vegas to New

(18:27):
York and what we know from his note left behind. Yep, Michael,
we're trying to confirm some of the data or information
in that message, including things like this gunman had been
diagnosed with CT, the brain trauma condition that has been
tied to professional football. Maybe that's why he was in

(18:48):
that building targeting that group. Again, a lot of this
is in this note claimed in this note, but what
is factual we're not exactly sure just yet, since this
only happened about what fourteen hours ago. The gunment never
played in the NFL. We do think we know that
though he's blaming the NFL for something, he was diagnosed

(19:08):
with long term mental illness as well. How he got
to walk through the streets with that gun and enter
that building and get so many shots off time will tell.
He killed an officer with two small children and another
on a way, three others and then goes up to
like one of the higher floors, and part of the
note said he wants his brain studied, which is why

(19:31):
the self inflicted gunshot wound was to his chest. Just
another senseless shooting in America's biggest city. Speaking of the
city of origin for the shooter, Las Vegas. They're said
to be freaking out as tourism and tips are dropping.
What's the story with it? What doesn't get to Vegas
never stays right. It's a pretty significant drop off.

Speaker 9 (19:53):
Trips to Las Vegas for the first five months of
this year are down about six and a half percent.
Hotel industry report that occupancy rates fell fourteen point six
percent from June to June of last year, a hotel
room revenue down almost twenty percent. So this is nothing
to sneeze at, considering about one hundred and eighty thousand

(20:13):
people in the metro Las Vegas area have jobs that
depend on tips, and you know, you have that kind
of drop off and visitors the tips are going down,
and I don't care how much you can deduct.

Speaker 4 (20:25):
If you're not get it in there, you can't deduct it.

Speaker 1 (20:26):
Yeah, there's no tax on no tips, but no tips
equal no money and tax savings. So what are they
pointing at? I mean, I would think, you know, this
is just dangling like a partisiple out there, But you know, casinos.
They really don't want to make food, They really don't
want to make beds. They love you betting on sports
something someone else is doing twenty four hours a day somewhere,

(20:50):
and have you bet on that? I mean, how much
of this is they're getting what they ask for? How
much is online gaming on sports and other things affecting
people's desire to go to Vegas or casinos in other places?

Speaker 9 (21:03):
Yeah, and I was going to say, it's not just
the online component, but the fact that there are casinos,
you know, within an hour's drive. You don't have to
fly to Vegas anymore for that casino experience. And Vegas
had been pursuing the high roller and really pricing out
a lot of the American population as the price has
got higher and higher. Also, we've seen a big drop
off in Canadian tourism to the US. That's for political

(21:26):
reasons but also financial reasons because the Canadian dollar has
been doing so poorly against the American dollar, so they're
looking elsewhere to spend their dollars. And domestic US travel
is also down pretty sharply. Flights are down. The airlines
are cutting back capacity on domestic flights, even though those
flights to Europe are packed and sold out, as you

(21:47):
can tell by your social media feed well.

Speaker 1 (21:49):
And Americans, of course have been paying for inflation. The
credit cards are all racked up. I mean, just a
lot of things that point to gambling at this moment.
Not the brightest thing anyway, but not a good sign
for Vegas and for all of their economy that depends
on it. Roy Odeo, great reporting, as always, We'll talk
again tomorrow. I'm waiting on the consequence.

Speaker 7 (22:13):
It's the best way to get back on your page
is to get up off your ears.

Speaker 5 (22:16):
I've been living rent free in that guy's head for years,
and that's just the bull.

Speaker 4 (22:19):
Do you call that chicken a add They're just.

Speaker 1 (22:21):
Blowing off Steve. You know, every time I don't say
goodbye and I keep forward momentum and just go to
the next element, I feel rude. And then when I
say goodbye and wait for goodbye back, it never comes
and creates an awkward boma. I can't I can't wait
for loz Oh, yeah, he's gone. As soon as you
go into the next thing, he's done, all right, always revealing,

(22:44):
often entertaining time for your sounds of the day. We
had a long talk, not a shameless blog, but you know,
you miss Ali, you miss a lot around here. If
you want to go back and listen to the first
hour of the podcast will be up in about an hour.
But we talked about quicksand we played a clip from
the movie with the replacements, and and you know, Donald
Trump's on a roll. He has secured the border and

(23:05):
border crossings are at zero. He has rounded up the rapists,
the drug pushers, the human traffickers, the murderers, and he's
sending them to prison or back to their country of origin.
And we're seeing crime rates pommel. Carjackings are down twenty
four percent already this year. Robbery's down twenty percent, homicides

(23:28):
down seventeen percent. Then the big beautiful bill is followed
by two big beautiful trade deals Japan, twenty seven nations
in the European Union. They're working on China. Now, remember
the left narrative was this was going to destroy the
market and collapse the economy. What are they planning. They're

(23:50):
going to send their most radical left irrelevant politicians, Jasmine Crockett,
the New AOC Elizabeth Warren into Red State during the
August recess and they're calling it the won't back down
tour more on that, because they could go to blue
districts and they're not polling very well, let alone in

(24:13):
red districts. And the mantra is fuck around and flip
the house. It's quicksand they're in over their head. They're
getting beat no leader, no message, and at the end
of the day, as the border is secure, they fight
against it. As the American economy is getting seven hundred

(24:40):
and fifty billion, five hundred and fifty billion invested in
and over above what nations have been invested, markets opened
up with zero percent tariffs for US to trade into
and fifteen percent tariffs of revenue coming in. That's already
up twenty six point six billion dollars in June alone,
and that's before the tariff deals were done. I mean,

(25:01):
this is all good stuff that they're saying is bad.
They'd rather have political control and more d's than ours
than actually have your nation secure and prosperous and filled
with opportunity. Matrix. No matrix. That's a bad message. Even

(25:27):
Bill mart gets it.

Speaker 10 (25:29):
Pariffs now, I remember I, along with probably most people,
were saying at the beginning, oh, you know, by the
fourth of July, somebody had to think how the country
was the economy was going to be tanked by then,
and I was kind of like, well, that seems right
to me. But that didn't happen now, it could happen tomorrow.

(25:51):
I'm just saying that's reality. So let's work first from
the reality of that, not from I just hate Donald Trumpy,
boring and doesn't get us anywhere and lead you to dishonesty.

Speaker 1 (26:04):
And that's exactly what they continue to do. Wait till
Bill Maher responds to the left's plan to go into
red districts with the f around and flip the House
won't back down to her now, Like I was saying,
they could go into blue districts right now and their
approval rating couldn't be lower. Imagine going into red districts

(26:29):
with Jasmine Crockett and Liz Warner.

Speaker 11 (26:30):
Listen, Democratic Party, and let's take a look at them's
and let's look at their net favorable ratings.

Speaker 1 (26:37):
Whoof, woof?

Speaker 11 (26:38):
I mean, my god, you know we mentioned CNN, we
had that pole come out a little while ago. On
their net favor rating, they were twenty six points underwater.
You think that's low enough? How about we go even lower.
We'll go to this side of the screen. I'm gonna
walk over here. We go to the Wall Street Journal
minus thirty points, thirty points underworld.

Speaker 1 (26:55):
They're lowest on record.

Speaker 11 (26:56):
These poles have records going all the way back since
the earlynineteen hundred and nineties. And when it comes to
the Democratic nets Democratic Parties net favrile rating in both
the Wall Street Journal PAL and the CNN poll, the
Democratic Party is breaking records in the way Jessica Dean,
you don't want to break records.

Speaker 1 (27:13):
One or both parties will be gone by the end
of the decade. An Islamic portion of the Democrat Party
is in formation, the Socialist Party is taking over. Where
are the independence day? Oh well, harrietn't had that too. Yeah,
you don't want that. What about how they do among independents?

Speaker 11 (27:31):
Okay, so we're talking about overall here, but we started
off this segment for the first three slides talking about independence.
Why don't we talk about the Democratic parties favorule rating
among independents and our CNN SSRs poll. Look at this
nineteen one, two, three, four, five, six, seventeen, nineteen eleven, twelve, thirteen, fourteen, fifteen, sixteen, seventeen, eighteen, nineteen,
nineteen percent. If I can count it, you know it's low,

(27:55):
and it is extremely low when it comes to independence.

Speaker 1 (27:57):
And these guys need a leader, they need a message,
they need a pivot, and they can't find it. In fact,
they're going further left. Democrats and the media are trying
to run the same grift on the same marks.

Speaker 5 (28:12):
Listen, trying to let you know and the media know
that we found something we didn't know before.

Speaker 1 (28:21):
At the end of the day, I'm not calling for.

Speaker 11 (28:22):
A prosecution against President Obama for treason, but I am
calling for an investigation.

Speaker 1 (28:28):
All right, so, and by the way, just interrupt quickly.
That's a key point. New information and the media should
be responding like it's new information, but they're not. That's
number one. Number two. A prosecutor should be named and
an investigation should happen, and then charges should be recommended

(28:53):
or filed. I don't think they're coming for Obama, and
they're probably not coming for call me, though I wish
they would. But there are others perjuryal law and if
nothing else, for all to see finally, the truth. If
they advise to see end ears to hear. Now, we
did the poll earlier. There's not many Americans, only twenty

(29:13):
eight percent. Even those sixty percent these think these are
serious revelations. Think any arrests are going to come from it?
Will they? That was a question That was the follow up,
let's go Jonathan, Well, it's going to go forward.

Speaker 12 (29:29):
What the CIA director just said has everyone on a
bit of an edge in town because this is going
to be some of the raw data, some of the
raw evidence that led to the conclusions of the recently
declassified report, and that's going to be rather hard to
rebut from many people in Congress and the media. The
problem for Democrats in the media is that they're trying

(29:51):
to run the same grift on the same marks. I mean,
they're trying to tell the public, don't look at this stuff,
there's nothing to see here. The public largely rejected that
whole pitch when they re elected Donald Trump.

Speaker 1 (30:05):
Well, we went through the research, and the research clearly
showed the matrix. So Republicans see this is very serious
and one of the greatest political scandals in history. Democrats
not so much enough, more so than their base. There
are some Democrats troubled but by and large. It's a

(30:27):
very partisan. Republicans think it's a big deal. Democrats think
it wasn't. When they were selling the lie, Democrats thought
it was a big deal. Republicans didn't. The matrix is
still the bigger problem. The question is will anything ever
come from it. We went through these numbers earlier on

(30:50):
the trade deal. It's significant. It's so significant, and it's
going to be so significant. Everybody's finding ideas of what
to do with the new revenue. But let's start with
the revenue.

Speaker 13 (31:03):
Well, all of this comes as revenue from the President's
tariffs is surging. In June alone, the US collected more
than twenty seven billion dollars. Look, I don't know what
kind of reporting can really skip this, but in some avenues,
as you know, in legacy and liberal media, they will
skip this.

Speaker 4 (31:20):
This is a big deal.

Speaker 5 (31:23):
A big deal indeed, And as you know, I've been
kind of a skeptic of this approach. I do because
I don't like terrists, but I have to say, I mean,
you look at what Trump has done one country after another,
whether it's Canada, whether it's Japan, Korea, China. Well, I
want to see the fine print on the China deal
because I don't trust in the Chinese. But now if
you get the big plumb here, which is the European Union,

(31:46):
I would have thought that this would have been the
toughest one to get because the Europeans are protectionists. They
discriminate against American technology products, they discriminate against our agricultural products,
our automobiles. So this is huge for American workers in
the American economy. Now again, I want to see the deal.
I want to see the fireprint, because you know, I

(32:06):
don't know whether these.

Speaker 1 (32:07):
Countries, but the framework is opening up trade in twenty
seven nations of the European Union. Things we could now
sell to them at a zero percent tariff a fifteen
percent tariff on everything they're selling here, BMW, Mercedes, and
that's just one sector. Not to mention six hundred billion
more in investment than they're doing already in the US,

(32:30):
and then they have to buy seven hundred and fifty
billion dollars worth of our energy and continue to buy
military assets from US. It's interesting You've got the crazy
left targeting blue districts during recess in August, thinking they
can sell won't back down as we're heading in the

(32:51):
right direction, have around and flip the house. You have
perhaps the birth of an Islamist sect of the Democrat Party,
the socialist sect taking over the Democrat Party, and people
like Bill Maher and now even Chris Matthews going, this
is getting way too weird for me. Well, now I

(33:15):
gotta sit to a commercial, So hold on a second.
This will take a minute. I just wanted to finish.
I didn't get a chance to do this one yesterday
with Chris Matthews. And this is what's left of the
establishment liberal left.

Speaker 14 (33:30):
I always watch and see who buys the New York
Post because it tells me that people want an alternative
to people like you. Me right, they want an alternative.
They went to the Trumpian view, and maybe they want
to expose themselves to the Trumpian view so they can
expose the weaknesses they've got. But also, to be honest

(33:51):
with you, the country is moving towards Trump, and they
had these polls they come out and show them not
doing well.

Speaker 4 (33:57):
I don't buy that.

Speaker 14 (33:59):
I think his strength, his strength is still greater than
the Democratic strength. He is a stronger public figure then
the Democratic people.

Speaker 1 (34:09):
Now I want to just end with this because we're
out of time. They're addressing symptoms, not root, cause they
still don't get the death of journalism. They still don't
get the matrix, and they don't get the death of
the Democrat Party. But they're getting closer. That's your Sounds
of the Day.

Speaker 2 (34:25):
It's your Morning Show with Michael del Chno.

Speaker 1 (34:29):
Top American and Chinese officials met for trade talks yesterday
and Sweden. Those talks will continue today. He walked right
down the street, using as rifle as a cane, into
a high rise Midtown Manhattan building and then open fire.
A police officer was one of the five killed in
the mass shooting before killing himself. The FED will kick

(34:49):
off two days of meetings with the mounting pressure to
lower interest rates.

Speaker 9 (34:55):
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

(35:17):
the year.

Speaker 1 (35:18):
I'm rory O'Neal Hall of Fame, second baseman Ryan Sandberg
at the Cubs dead at sixty five, prostate cancer. The Cause.
Representatives for Phil Collins of Genesis. They're shutting down all
these online rumors. This singer is not in hospice care.
And that's your top five stories of the day. That'll
do it for today. We're all in this together. This
is your Morning Show with Michael nhild Joano
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