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August 6, 2025 35 mins

Will A.I. really create new jobs? Meanwhile, there are indications that the public is frustrated with emerging technology, and a backlash is brewing. National Correspondent RORY O’NEILL has the latest on how the world is dealing with the fast-paced race to create artificial intelligence.

The House committee investigating the Jeffrey Epstein case has subpoenaed former President Bill Clinton, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and several top former Justice Department officials for their testimony. White House Correspondent – and lawyer – JON DECKER has the details.

Always revealing and often entertaining…it’s the sounds of the day!

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, It's Michael.

Speaker 2 (00:00):
Your morning show can be heard weekday mornings in great
cities like Tulsa, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, Memphis, in Nashville, Tennessee,
and we got you covered in California, San Diego, Los Angeles,
San Francisco, Sacramento. We'd love to be a part of
your morning routine. We're thrilled you're here. Now, enjoy the podcast.

Speaker 1 (00:16):
Because we're in this together.

Speaker 3 (00:19):
This is your Morning Show with Michael gil Truman.

Speaker 1 (00:24):
Seven minutes half of the hour.

Speaker 2 (00:25):
Good morning, and welcome to Wednesday, August six, twenty twenty five,
on the air, streaming live on your Rheart Radio app.
This is your morning Show. President Trump is threatening to
take over Washington, DC.

Speaker 1 (00:39):
More on that coming up.

Speaker 2 (00:41):
The Department of Health than Human Services canceling nearly two
dozen vaccine development projects in the NFL has kind of
deal with ESPN Basically, NFL Network and NFL Red Zone
become ESPN in exchange for a profit share. Will AI
really create jobs? That's the claim, That's the question time

(01:04):
will tell. Meanwhile, there are indications that the public is
frustrated with the emerging technology and backlash is brewing well.
That could affect whether or not it creates jobs or
net losses. Roy O'Neil, our national correspondent for Your Morning Show,
is with us. Good morning, Rory, Yeah, Good morning Michael.

Speaker 4 (01:20):
A fascinating podcast from Moe Gaudad. He's the former chief
business officer at Google X now that's Google's innovation lab.
And he says, anytime some CEO tells you, oh, ay,
I is going to create jobs, he says, that's one.

Speaker 1 (01:36):
Word I'd rather not use at this time of day.
So he's calling out catatology.

Speaker 4 (01:42):
Yes, yes, So he's calling out these companies saying, no,
the whole worker.

Speaker 1 (01:47):
You know.

Speaker 4 (01:47):
The funding behind this movement is because companies are eager
to try to find ways to save money, and that
would mean job cuts. About half of American companies probably
plan to downsize their workforce due to AI. But first,
about seventy seven percent of employers are planning to upskill
their current workforce, so meaning they're going to seventy seven

(02:10):
percent of companies are going to train their workforce on
how to use the AI that will likely replace them.

Speaker 1 (02:19):
Think. I think I would train really slow.

Speaker 2 (02:22):
Have we talked about before the jobs that are most vulnerable,
most obvious Today, I would replace well, I.

Speaker 1 (02:30):
Mean, well, it's interesting.

Speaker 4 (02:32):
So this former Google X guy said, you know, you
think it's sort of those front end jobs.

Speaker 1 (02:37):
But he says, no, no, no, no, no.

Speaker 4 (02:39):
Bad CEOs could get replaced by AI. He says, video editors,
even podcasters and top executives are all vulnerable because you know,
AI is learning fast.

Speaker 1 (02:50):
What about shifting?

Speaker 2 (02:52):
In other words, could AI allow a really smart person
who's not really comfortable being verbal or doesn't have a
great voice type in content that AI brings to life
with a different face and a different voice, and that
becomes a star of tomorrow.

Speaker 1 (03:09):
I mean, that's what I mean.

Speaker 2 (03:10):
There's gonna be shifting, there's gonna be net losses. I
don't The only thing I can't really get my arms
around is how it creates any kind of gain.

Speaker 1 (03:19):
I guess positive as well.

Speaker 4 (03:22):
If you just can have single employees doing the work
of three people with the help of AI, well yeah.

Speaker 1 (03:29):
That's the positive for the company.

Speaker 2 (03:30):
But I mean the positive in terms of net jobs gained.
Will AI create new jobs? I can't even begin to
try to make the.

Speaker 1 (03:39):
Case that it would.

Speaker 4 (03:40):
Social media has this new little thing that's buzzing and
bubbling underneath the surface.

Speaker 1 (03:45):
The term is clanker.

Speaker 4 (03:48):
So a clanker is what you call that robot that
patrols the supermarket aisles, or is that automated rover that's
delivering pizzas, or it could be your drone delivery system.

Speaker 1 (04:00):
So that's a clanker.

Speaker 4 (04:01):
So you'll see TikTok videos screaming clanker at various pieces
of technology that are just doing what they've been programmed
to do.

Speaker 1 (04:10):
Yeah, the real victims.

Speaker 2 (04:11):
I'm sitting at a restaurant, one of these, like Abaci restaurants,
and the robot came and delivered our There you go drinks.

Speaker 1 (04:21):
It's already happening.

Speaker 4 (04:22):
All I really did was saved ten steps from the server, right,
because they had to put them on the tray, and
then they just didn't walk them halfway across the restaurant, right.

Speaker 1 (04:28):
And then I guess Roy's gonna be back.

Speaker 2 (04:31):
In the third hour, the US is planning to put
nuclear reactors on the Moon. Nobody has followed space exploration
closer than Rory will see what nuke reactors on the
surface of the Moon brings to the table.

Speaker 1 (04:44):
In the third hour.

Speaker 2 (04:45):
Also in the third hour, by the way, Attorney General
Pam BONDI launched the grand jury investigation, taking the hand
off from Telsea Gabbard. Don Brown is a constitutional bar attorney,
a JAG officer, a special assistant US attorne, and also
a candidate for the United States Senate North Carolina. He's
going to share his legal expertise on where this goes

(05:06):
from here will what most Americans want.

Speaker 1 (05:09):
We did that research yesterday.

Speaker 2 (05:11):
Seventy percent seven and ten Americans want to see some
accountability for this, and they're following it even though the
left journalists aren't. Are we heading towards that? And what
would that journey look like? He'll lay it all out
for us coming up in the third hour as well.
I just got this.

Speaker 1 (05:26):
This is.

Speaker 2 (05:28):
The guys, know, I say this off the air. What
do I love about my listeners? I love everything about them.
They're smart, they're fun, they're funny. I love the days
when our listeners are calling in and they're doing shtick
on the talk back. I mean they're doing like seventies
radio shtick. This is a first. This is a listener

(05:50):
who's actually writing liners for Mike McCann.

Speaker 1 (05:53):
Do you want to hear a few of them? Yeah? Please?

Speaker 2 (05:56):
Finally a solution to that truly impossib simple teenager. This
is his comment first a trip to the Denmark Zoo bottom.
So he's doing stick hand liners. He said, I used
to hate mornings. That was before Michael Uh.

Speaker 1 (06:13):
He said, I got some liners for you.

Speaker 2 (06:16):
Why don't you suggest that as one, I used to
hate mornings, that was before Michael del Jorno, and then
play a montage of some of his characters. I hate you,
mikey d you make a morning person out of me. Hey,
I still hate mornings, but I can't resist the smiles
that Michael sends my way.

Speaker 1 (06:36):
What do you think?

Speaker 5 (06:37):
I think that's pretty good. We can work with stuff,
you know what I'm saying. No, you know what I
was thinking. We could just open the talkback up today.
If you know, you guys hear Mike mccannliners all the time.
Sure wouldn't it be fun to have our listeners write
a few of them.

Speaker 2 (06:49):
I love that idea, and maybe we'll use one of yours.
He doesn't give me his name, He just says, a fan, Okay,
we'll pick one. When's our next session with mikey Uh?

Speaker 5 (06:59):
Whenever you would like to sit down with Mike mccannon,
he would love to sit down with us, but we'll
do that.

Speaker 2 (07:05):
Uh, we do have some talkbacks. First, we're going to Youngstown, Ohio.

Speaker 6 (07:09):
I looked on the website. See the bios of everybody.
I didn't see Red. Is he like Wilson on toll Time?
You hear him, but you don't see him?

Speaker 1 (07:21):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (07:21):
And in Red for the fifth week in a row.
What's the deal with your bio?

Speaker 1 (07:27):
I've been a little busy. Well, get I'm busy. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (07:33):
I used to like mornings too, Red content producer, is
it are you?

Speaker 1 (07:38):
Are you? You? Are you uncomfortable sharing your picture? Yes?
Is that?

Speaker 7 (07:44):
It?

Speaker 1 (07:44):
Is that why you're delaying?

Speaker 5 (07:45):
Just pick a guy he doesn't want to show up
the you and you and me because he's much more
handsome than we are.

Speaker 2 (07:51):
I want you to get that done this week. There's
people that want to see what you look like. Ye,
why don't we do a freeze frame of this picture
so they can see what we see every morning? Him
with this little head said on you know, like Gellman
on the old days of Regis and Kelly, and he
is a b This protection program. This one confuses me
because it's Tennessee Terry. But he's calling from the Redneck
Riviera Riviera in Florida. But anyway, so go to Florida

(08:14):
by way of Tennessee.

Speaker 8 (08:16):
This is Tennessee Terry from the Redneck Riviera, Sunnyside, Florida.
And my morning show is your morning show is my
friend in Christ, Mickey d.

Speaker 2 (08:27):
This guy sounds like he may be at the Redneck
Riviera Southern Baptist Church of Alligator County. Good morning, my
brother in Christ. All right, here's my favorite story of
the day. And you're going the way I arrive at
it is going to strike you strange. So, according to Gallup,
who has the highest favorability you could say, among newsmakers

(08:51):
or that are in the news, or just in the world.
Who is the highest favorability rating in the world. If
we want to take a guess, Decker John Decker, would
I mean, he's mi mind. I'll give you a hint.
Number two on the list is Zelensky. Oh who couldn't.

(09:13):
Donald Trump is way down. Donald Trump said negative sixteen.
Zelensky's plus eight. But I did the story. Well, that's
true when you weren't doing your bio. But I digress.
Among the fourteen prominent US and global figures, Pope Leo
has the most positive image by far, with many more
Americans viewing him favorably than unfavorably. His fifty seven percent

(09:38):
favorability rating and eleven there's people with a negative view
of him, probably because he's a Sox fan, not a
Cubs fan. How on earth would you justify it eleven
percent on favor book he has another rockstar though, Well yeah,
that's a net result of a forty six net favorability score,
far ahead of Zelensky at plus eighteen. By the way, hey,

(10:00):
among politicians in America ranking the highest, it's not Donald Trump,
it's Bernie Sanders at plus eleven. This is the part
where I, you know, I remind people, do you know
that Bernie Sanders is at a net eleven? AOC is
at a net minus four, But a net minus four
is a.

Speaker 1 (10:17):
Good number in this list. And Bernie at.

Speaker 2 (10:23):
Plus eleven third is handed his torch to AOC at
minus four.

Speaker 1 (10:29):
And that's everybody.

Speaker 2 (10:30):
Can you imagine within half of America that's on the left,
when I tell you AOC is going to be the
front runner for the Democratic nomination for President of the
United States. There's another piece of the puzzle, and here's
another one to keep an eye on. Do the reverse order.
We just want to know what's the future of MAGA.
Is it jd Vance or is it Marco Rubio. Jd

(10:52):
Vance is at a net minus eleven and Marco Rubio
is at a net minus sixteen.

Speaker 1 (10:57):
Now within.

Speaker 2 (11:00):
Republican Conservative America, first MAGA, that's what would really be
the decider. Or combine them, would be a good combination,
both ranking well, Rubio is tied with Trump. But some
interesting What I like about this is, first and foremost,
the more this is proof, the more we know anything

(11:23):
about anyone, the less likely they are to have a
high favorability.

Speaker 1 (11:27):
So don't speak, but you know.

Speaker 2 (11:31):
In other words, anybody takes a stance or has an opinion,
they get put through the matrix queasin aar and this
is what it comes out. And Pope Leo just hasn't
spent enough time in the public opinion realm of the world.
He will those numbers will go down. But yes, the
highest favorable figure in all of the world is pop Leio.

(11:55):
Have you ever heard of keraluma? It's an edible cactus
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(12:16):
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(12:58):
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(13:20):
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Speaker 3 (13:23):
This is your morning show with Michael del Chrono.

Speaker 2 (13:28):
If you're just waking up, these are your top five
stories of the day.

Speaker 1 (13:33):
Ms dods with Lila.

Speaker 2 (13:36):
Israel seems to be on track with the plan of
their own to control the Gaza Strip.

Speaker 1 (13:40):
Local media reports.

Speaker 9 (13:42):
That a source in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahuo's office since
the decision has been made, and that the Palestinian militin
group Hamas will not release the remaining hostages taken in
twenty twenty three unless the area comes under full Israeli occupation.
The company security cabinet is set to me to discuss
the next steps in the war, which starts after a
deadly Homoss attack on Israel. There are believed to be

(14:03):
some fifty hostages still in Gaza and Israel. Thinks that
more than half of those are dead. I'm Mark neythew.

Speaker 2 (14:09):
Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer met with President Trump and other
administration officials at the White House yesterday.

Speaker 10 (14:15):
According to Whitmer's office, the governor made a visit to
the nation's capital to raise concerns about the effects the
president's tariff policy is having on her state. The closed
door meeting also included discussions on fallout from changes to
Medicaid and natural disaster recovery efforts. It marks Whitmer's third
time meeting with Trump this year. I'm Brian Schuck. Oh

(14:37):
Governor Gavin Newsom better look out for the terminator. He
does not like the initiative to change the state's congressional districts.
He calls it late Jerry manderin an evil.

Speaker 11 (14:46):
A spokesperson says, the Hollywood legend thinks it's wrong for
politicians to strip power from people. Newsom's plan could create
five additional Democratic leaning districts ahead of the midterms. Newsom
says it's in response to Texas Republicans push for more
redis districts at President Trump's urging. It's also part of
a broader effort to retain house control. I'm DNA Kodiak.

Speaker 2 (15:06):
Howard Stern may be leaving Sirius EXAM after his contract
expires this fall.

Speaker 12 (15:10):
Report from the British tabloid The Sun claims the seventy
one year old Stern is not likely to agree on
a contract extension with the satellite radio company before his
current deal winds down later on this year. Stern and
SiriusXM have not commented on the report. The legendary shock
jock has been on serious ExM since two thousand and
six and makes one hundred million dollars per year in

(15:31):
his current five year contract. I'm Tammy Trihio.

Speaker 2 (15:34):
Roku launching a new ad free streaming service.

Speaker 1 (15:38):
Michael Kasner reports Exology Are You Ready to Fly? I'm
Ready Read at a Fly?

Speaker 13 (15:46):
Howd He cost just three bucks a month and includes
almost ten thousand hours of content.

Speaker 1 (15:51):
A library.

Speaker 13 (15:52):
Content will include shows and movies from studios like Warner Brothers,
Discovery in lions Gate. Some of the titles included on
the first day of service include Elvis, the Back to
the Future Films, and Mad Max Fury Road. As of now,
Howdy is only available on Roku devices, but the company
has plans to make it available elsewhere soon.

Speaker 1 (16:12):
I'm Michael Kassn I A I may say howdy later today.

Speaker 2 (16:16):
Researchers in Australia have discovered a link between caffeine and
hearing things.

Speaker 14 (16:21):
The science shows auditory hallucinations hearing things that are not
there can't appear in people who consume five or more
cups of coffee a day. What said he was based
on coffee, but the link is caffeine combined with stress.
Researchers say auditory hallucinations are more like hearing a TV
or radio that's not actually on, and not voices commanding
you to do things. And they say not everyone who

(16:44):
drinks a lot of caffeine will get them. But dcaff
is good too. I'm Bree Tennis.

Speaker 1 (16:48):
I never had that. Oh, I hear things. I just
never thought it was from the coffee. NFL and ESPAN
have reached a media deal.

Speaker 2 (16:55):
ESPN announced they'll be revealing the NFL network and NFL
Red Zone will become the property of ESPNNFL retain ownership.
In exchange, the NFL will get ten percent equity stake
in ESPN.

Speaker 1 (17:12):
I'm executive chef George Harvel.

Speaker 8 (17:14):
My Morning show is Your Morning Show with Michael do Jorna.

Speaker 2 (17:23):
Hey, it's Michael. I'm so glad you found the podcast,
and don't forget. You can listen to your Morning Show
live each weekday morning. Your Morning Show can be heard
in great cities like Youngstown, Ohio, Nashville, Tennessee, Saint Louis, Sacramento, Phoenix,
just to.

Speaker 1 (17:36):
Name a few.

Speaker 2 (17:37):
You can find the your Morning Show city closest to
you on our website, Your Morningshow online dot com. And
We're glad you're here for the podcast.

Speaker 1 (17:44):
Enjoy. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (17:46):
I did used to wear English leather, though I would
love to smell that Hi karate English leather.

Speaker 2 (17:51):
No, Hi Karate was nothing like English leather, but still
it was all the same period. And the movie Family Man,
when he goes and picks up his stuff from college days,
there was a bottle of English leather in there.

Speaker 1 (18:04):
I think I were English leather.

Speaker 2 (18:06):
Then I went to Polo, then I went to Eternity,
and I'm a little bit of everything.

Speaker 5 (18:11):
But remember the Christmas gift packs of English Can you
still get English leather? Sure you can.

Speaker 2 (18:15):
I'm sure I would like one of you to give
me that for Christmas. I would just like to see
what you know. Just I mean, I wonder what this
the old smell of me, looking at the old face
of me in a mirror would be like that was
my That sent got me a lot of dates. I

(18:36):
don't know who you're talking to, but it's not me.
Must be a must be Decker, all right, if you're
just waking up. President Trump says jd Vance is most
likely the next leader of the MAGA movement. Polls suggests
it's him, or it's Marco Rubio, And wouldn't that be
a great ticket? Just combine him and then the conversation.
President is also threatening a federal takeover of Washington d

(18:56):
C will tell you why. And the Health and Human
Services Department has canceled nearly two dozen that's about a
half a billion dollars worth of vaccine development projects. And
the House committee investigating Jeffrey Epstein's case has subpoenaed Bill Clinton,
former President of the United States, former Secretary of State,
former First Lady Hillary Clinton, and several other top former

(19:19):
Justice Department officials for testimony. Our White House correspondent and
Supreme Court bar attorney John Decker is joining us. John
the Clintons are coming back to Washington.

Speaker 15 (19:30):
Well potentially.

Speaker 1 (19:31):
You know, it doesn't mean that they'll comply with that stubpoena.

Speaker 15 (19:33):
That stupoena has been issued for both of them.

Speaker 16 (19:36):
In addition to that, a number of former Attorneys general
who've served in that capacity leading the Department of Justice
have been subpoened as well. And all of this must
be complied by August nineteenth, according to the subpoena requests
that have been made by the House Oversight Committee, which

(19:57):
is led by James Comer, he's a Republican Kentucky. They're
also seeking communications about Epstein between former President Biden and
his administration.

Speaker 1 (20:07):
So a pretty all.

Speaker 16 (20:09):
Encompassing subpoena that was voted upon in the househover Site
Committee just yesterday.

Speaker 2 (20:14):
All right, where are these names coming from in terms
of people they're wanting to talk to? I hate doing
the review of this because it takes so long. But
there was a case with victims coming forward mentioning names
in deposition. The case never happened because the accused killed themselves.
Then a judge has redacted all these names. So everything

(20:35):
still looking for a black book, they're not. That's where
the names originated. That's why they're redacted. So where are
these names coming from?

Speaker 16 (20:42):
Well, to me, in reading these subpoenas and the people
that have been subpoena it is really at the very start,
and it often is with investigations of phishing expedition. They
want to know essentially what kind of information various individuals
have regarding Epstein, the criminal investigation. Some of these individuals

(21:03):
may add nothing to the investigation. Let's be honest here.
Some may add nothing, but some may add something. And
that's what the House Oversight Committee, of course, led by Republicans,
is seeking. And this obviously intensifies the.

Speaker 15 (21:16):
Pressure on the Department of Justice to release.

Speaker 16 (21:19):
All of the files that they have in their possession
regarding the criminal investigation into Jeffrey Epstein.

Speaker 2 (21:26):
I think you'll see John Deck or White House correspondent joining.
I think you'll see quickly where I'm heading with this.
You know, that's not how it's going to be received today.
When the headline is Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton among
others are being subpoenaed to come to Washington to testify
on Jeffrey Epstein.

Speaker 1 (21:41):
Social medias gonna take that and run.

Speaker 2 (21:43):
And this is why those judges sealed those names because
the assumption will be anything affiliated with Epstein means you
are having sex on the island or sex on the plane,
and that's I just wanted to call attention to why
that judge did the right thing. Other cases can arise, Well,
then let them come forward, let them be tried, and

(22:04):
let justice have its day. But until then, anybody you
talked to affiliate with this case, isn't the concern that
people are going to assume that means they were up
to no.

Speaker 1 (22:12):
Good with him?

Speaker 15 (22:14):
Well, that's right.

Speaker 16 (22:15):
You know, even when you hear these media.

Speaker 15 (22:17):
Reports that President Trump's name.

Speaker 16 (22:20):
Is mentioned in the files that the DJ has several times.

Speaker 15 (22:25):
You should not jump to any conclusions. You know, the former.

Speaker 16 (22:30):
President and now current president was friends with Jeffrey Epstein
for a number of years.

Speaker 15 (22:35):
He's acknowledged that.

Speaker 16 (22:37):
So it shouldn't surprise anybody that perhaps his name pops
up in files that the DOJ has in its possession
that the Attorney General, Pam Bondi says she will not release.

Speaker 2 (22:49):
Well, I will say it's a little different. Two things
make a different one. Clinton. We know from the flight
logs both Bill and Hillary were on the plane a lot,
so they were obviously closer than Trump was with Epstein.
I'm not implying anything, but they certainly traveled more with him.
But then you go back to Alan Dershowitz. Now, this

(23:11):
is the attorney that was in all these depositions, and
he knows everybody that was accused and every name that
came up in testimony that is now sealed. And he's
saying there's nobody currently in office. There are some that
are dead, but there are a lot of live but
not currently in office. That would still leave the Clintons
on the hook because Donald Trump is in office. But
I'm splitting hairs. The main thing is this is the

(23:32):
beginning of a long process.

Speaker 15 (23:35):
It is the.

Speaker 16 (23:35):
Beginning of a long process. But you know, this is
a story that just won't go away, Michael. It's pretty remarkable.
And one of the reasons is because of the action
taken by the Houseoversite Committee yesterday.

Speaker 1 (23:48):
Another reason is.

Speaker 15 (23:50):
A question posed to President.

Speaker 16 (23:51):
Trump yesterday which he responded to, and that keeps, you know,
the oxygen in this story, and it keeps it relevant
and it keeps it moving forward. And that's another reason
why this story will not go away.

Speaker 2 (24:05):
Well, you hang out the last wee because I don't
need to go, but you hang out with all the
people making news and covering news. I think the American
people are moron. And we did the research yesterday is
sixty nine percent, so nearly seven and ten want to
see accountability for Russia Gate. I think that's the one
that's not going to go away. And I think if

(24:25):
they even if they get as much as they like
to play it up with Epstein, I think Russia Gate
is a great of much greater concern to the American
people to see justice.

Speaker 1 (24:36):
Well, you know, we don't know.

Speaker 16 (24:38):
That also starts out, Michael, in the same way that
the Epstein investigation starts out.

Speaker 15 (24:44):
It is a phishing expedition.

Speaker 16 (24:46):
Let's be honest here, we don't know where all the
bodies are buried. We don't know if there is nefarious activity.

Speaker 15 (24:53):
But that's the.

Speaker 16 (24:54):
Whole point of investigations. That's the whole point of a
grand jury probe, and that is what has I'll just
been launched this week by the Attorney General.

Speaker 1 (25:02):
All right, and here we go.

Speaker 2 (25:04):
Jeffrey Epstein case continues with the subpoenaing of Bill Clinton.
Hillary Clinton, another top former Justice Department officials, now let's
see who shows up. Great reporting is always John Decker
will talk again tomorrow, all right, by the way, And
speaking of the other case, we're going to have Don Brown,
who is, like John Decker, a Supreme Court bar attorney.

(25:26):
He's a constitutional attorney. He is a US assistant attorney
as well as a long jag career. He's also running
for the Senate in North Carolina. He's going to join
us and lend his legal expertise and analysis to the
conspiracy allegations that have now been passed on from Tulsea
Gabbert to Pam Bondi in the Department of Justice and

(25:48):
how this will all play out.

Speaker 1 (25:49):
We'll do that for you next hour in our journey
of discovery.

Speaker 5 (25:54):
Waiting on the consequence is the best way to get
back on your phasers, to get up off your act.

Speaker 2 (25:58):
I've been living renfree and that guy head for years
and that's just a ball.

Speaker 15 (26:01):
Do you call that chicken a d They're.

Speaker 1 (26:03):
Just blowing off.

Speaker 2 (26:04):
Steve always revealing, often entertaining. It's time for your Sounds
of the Day on this Wednesday, August the sixth, Well,
the big question at one of the big questions at
a news conference with the president was who do you
think is the heir apparent to the Mega movement? It
was asked by Peter Deucy of Fox and here's the
president's answer.

Speaker 17 (26:23):
This weekend, Secretary of State Rubio said that he thought JD.
Vance would be a great nominee. You could clear the
entire Republican field right now. Do you agree that the
heir apparent to MAGA is JD Vance?

Speaker 18 (26:38):
Well, I think most likely, in all fairness, he's the
vice president. I think Marco is also somebody that maybe
would get together with jd in some form. I also
think we have incredible people, some of the people in
the stage right here. So it's too early obviously to
talk about it, but certainly he's doing a great job
and he would be probably favored at this point.

Speaker 1 (27:00):
What I loved about that President handled it perfectly.

Speaker 2 (27:05):
It's not his to say our influence on's's attorney general
ones as vice president, and they're both great, and there
are other people in the stage that are great. Because
the future of the MAGA movement moving forward and the
Republican Party with it could be a twelve to sixteen
year reign. Easy we talked about in the Platinum Ower
and that's not a shameless plug, although if you missed it,

(27:26):
you can hear the first hour in the podcast.

Speaker 1 (27:27):
It'll be up by nine Central, ten Eastern.

Speaker 2 (27:31):
I always view this next presidential election a lot like
I viewed nineteen eighty. In nineteen eighty, the Republican Party
couldn't decide between Ronald Reagan, who had run before and
came up short, and the resume H. W.

Speaker 1 (27:49):
Bush. And how did they?

Speaker 2 (27:51):
And they knew they had to unite, and they knew
they needed united energy to unseat an incumbent. They combined
the two and a united the party, and it defeated Carter,
and it created the Reagan Revolution, and it went from
eight years of Reagan to four years of HW till
Bill Clinton arrived on the scene. That's the opportunity. To me,

(28:15):
the no brainer, it would seem, is a let whatever
Republican voters are now, because a lot of them are independents,
a lot of them are old Reagan revolutionary conservatives, or
Tea Party movement people or MAGA people, let them decide.
But combining him and the president alluded to that not

(28:35):
a bad idea either. This is a long response the
president's making, and he's talking about what he has sacrificed. Again,
like everything else, including his accomplishments, this will be appreciated
greater later than in real time. But this man, Donald Trump,

(28:58):
has done everything he's done. There is no financial logical
reason for it. It came at great expense, like the
great expense are founding fathers paid an expense he says
he'd pay again.

Speaker 19 (29:11):
Listen, most of the stuff that I have because now
instead of having one hundred percent of the market that
loves you and then love your brand and it's luxury
and it's great, now you have fifty percent of the market.

Speaker 7 (29:22):
Let's called politics. I fully understood that.

Speaker 19 (29:25):
So it's cost me between two billion and five billion dollars.
And if I had it to do again, I'd do
it in an instant because who cares if you could
afford it. What differences are men, if I had this
to do again, because I'm making a big difference for
the country.

Speaker 7 (29:38):
The country is stronger now that it's been in many years,
maybe ever.

Speaker 19 (29:43):
Our military has rebuilt, our economy is hitting records, as
I said, best unemployment numbers, best employment numbers.

Speaker 1 (29:51):
We're strong.

Speaker 19 (29:52):
We're bringing our soldiers back home from the endless wars.

Speaker 7 (29:55):
We're doing great. So whether I lost two billion.

Speaker 19 (29:59):
Dollars more or less doesn't make any difference to me.

Speaker 7 (30:04):
I don't care if you're rich, it doesn't matter. I'm
doing this for the country.

Speaker 1 (30:09):
I'm doing it for the people.

Speaker 7 (30:11):
Then show up.

Speaker 19 (30:11):
I haven't had an empty seat at a rally. I
always say, what is the rally? It's in a certain places. Okay,
just get the biggest.

Speaker 2 (30:17):
Arena by the way. Two to five billion dollars. Don't
forget it almost cost him his life. There are times
I sit here in the morning and I think the
me Later today, at two o'clock, we'll look back and
wish I spent these moments with you. Now, live differently

(30:39):
said something differently haunts me daily, like the me of
the future. If I could come into the present and
tell you, appreciate this moment, it's going to be gone.

Speaker 1 (30:50):
Don't dread your drive to work.

Speaker 2 (30:52):
Spend some time with me, Spend some time with God,
spend some time on the phone.

Speaker 1 (30:56):
Call your father if you haven't talked to him. Seize
the moment. That's what I would tell you.

Speaker 2 (31:03):
Most of the good days of our life we didn't
see as good when they were happening. I take that
back my freshman year of high school. I knew I
was having the time of my life. Well, the exception
of that, you will look back at today very differently
than you look at today while you're living at Let
that quote, by the way, somebody write that quote down

(31:25):
because somebody could steal and get credit for it.

Speaker 1 (31:27):
Okay, we got that.

Speaker 2 (31:28):
But mark my words, your view of this moment will
never look like your view of this moment. In this moment,
Donald Trump is going to be considered at a founding
father's level looking back someday out of the fog of

(31:50):
the war, of this divided country, as well the sacrifices
he made for all of us.

Speaker 1 (31:59):
Perfect man, No, I don't. I don't look at.

Speaker 2 (32:01):
Him through rose colored stained glass windows, and I certainly
don't look at him through the prism of Trump arrangement.
But the things he will have accomplished by the time
he leaves, and the legacy and the trajectory of the
Maga revolution moving forward for what should be, unless they

(32:21):
really suck a decade, the future will have no problem
seeing you're living through a great revolution right now, a
great political shift in America, the undoing of slow creep

(32:42):
over decades. Instantly, you're gonna view it differently. Somewhere down
the road. He already sees it that way, and he
has no regrets, and he's the one out five billion
and a portion of his ear.

Speaker 1 (32:57):
Oh, I guess I gotta chalk this.

Speaker 2 (32:58):
I gotta throw some love to This is really hard
for me to do, to check Todd. But here's Chuck
Todd on the biggest mistake that the Democrats are making
fleeing Texas to obstruct redistricting. And it's where they fled
to the part that I think is sort of bad.

Speaker 20 (33:21):
I think it's a bad look for a party that
claims to be always trying to be protected democracy is
to hole up in a state that jerry manders.

Speaker 1 (33:30):
I mean, one of the worst. You know.

Speaker 20 (33:32):
Look Texas, Florida, Illinois, and Maryland. Those are your four
giant jerrymandered states, you know. And if you're trying to
make a point on jerry mander, I don't think i'd
be going to the state of.

Speaker 8 (33:41):
Illinois opportunity for a brief civics lesson.

Speaker 19 (33:50):
Perhaps you'd like to be alone with you a conteriorating
mental condition, and that is.

Speaker 1 (33:58):
Your sounds of the day for Wednesday, August is.

Speaker 3 (34:00):
It's your Morning Show with Michael Del Joorno.

Speaker 2 (34:05):
I want to go to someone I always want to
co host a show with Mary and Boise Idaho on
the talk back line.

Speaker 1 (34:12):
Good morning, Michael. How's this for? Mike mccannon?

Speaker 17 (34:16):
Morning has broken, but Mickey Del Giorno is the super
clue that keeps the your morning show.

Speaker 1 (34:23):
Have a great day.

Speaker 2 (34:24):
I love you, but I don't like things that are
boastful about me. But I do like the start of it.
So in the spirit of how I'd like to co
host a show with you, I'm going to co host
the liner with you.

Speaker 1 (34:35):
So remember this one and write it down.

Speaker 2 (34:36):
Jeffrey, all right, morning has broken, and that's why we
must unite to make sense of it and put it
back together. This is your morning show. Can we do that?
You know I don't like things that puff me up. Yeah,
this show is not about me.

Speaker 5 (34:53):
Mike right now, Mike, please make a note of that.
I've got it recorded if you need to hear it again.
He listens every day. Oh absolutely, kidnap Red doesn't even
do that.

Speaker 1 (35:01):
Well.

Speaker 3 (35:02):
I know we're all in this together. This is your
Morning Show with Michael del jorno
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