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August 19, 2025 36 mins

A new list is out on the most stolen cars, and a muscle car tops the list. National Correspondent RORY O’NEILL runs down what cars are being targeted, and whether yours is on the list. 

White House Correspondent JON DECKER was with President Trump for his meeting with Ukrainian President Zelensky on Monday. He recaps the peace talks.

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 me Michael.

Speaker 2 (00:01):
Your morning show can be heard on great stations across
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Speaker 3 (00:19):
Two three, starting your morning off right, A new way
of talk, a new way of understanding, because we're in
this together.

Speaker 4 (00:31):
This is your Morning Show with Michael O'Dell Jordan.

Speaker 2 (00:36):
Another successful meeting in a dream and march towards peace.
Next step a meeting with Zelensky and Putin, and then
ultimately a tri trilateral meeting with Zelensky, Putin and Trump.
No date has been said as of yet. MSNBC will
soon be ms now. The Postal Service will honor Jimmy

(00:57):
Jimmy Carter with a forever stamp. He passed away at
the age of one hundred last year. And if you're
just waking up and you drive a muscle car, I
hope I have your attention. We have that annual list
of the most stolen Cars. National correspondent Roy O'Neil is
here to run down what cars are being targeted and
whether yours is on the list.

Speaker 1 (01:17):
Good morning, Rory, Hey there, Michael, Good morning.

Speaker 5 (01:20):
And I guess when you look at this list, it's
really done in terms of percentage of the vehicles that
are out there, because I'm sure that there are more
Honda Civics being stolen overall. But the top of this
list is a big old muscle car, the Chevy Camaro
ZL one model in particular, followed by the Accura TLX
four wheel drive and then the baseline Chevy Camaro. To

(01:43):
come to this as being the cars that are stolen
the most when it comes to the rate of theft
for those vehicles.

Speaker 2 (01:50):
So what is it about these cars that do they
have something in common that makes them targeted very.

Speaker 5 (01:57):
High resale demand, and I think it's also something the
thieves would like to drive and take out for a
spin when they can again, you know, having a zeal
one muscle car like a Camaro certainly kind of statement
vehicle that's out there, and perhaps they are also popular
on the black market as well for these resales.

Speaker 1 (02:14):
At least this is according to the Highway Loss Data Institute.

Speaker 2 (02:17):
And do these fluctuate by region or states do their service?

Speaker 5 (02:22):
Yet they haven't broken it down by state and by region.
I should note that the cars with the lowest theft
rates all have something very similar in common. They're not
just my nineteen seventy eight Folkswagon Rabbit. They're also Teslas.
The Tesla Model three, the Tesla Model Why and the
Tesla Model three two wheel drive are the top three

(02:45):
least stolen vehicles. And then when we talk about these vehicles,
by the way, they're the ones that are manufactured.

Speaker 1 (02:51):
Between twenty twenty two and twenty twenty four as a
battery life. I mean, I wonder why, well.

Speaker 5 (02:57):
No, that's what all the in all categories, it's twenty
twenty two to twenty twenty four.

Speaker 2 (03:02):
Oh okay, But the Honda Civic is traditionally number one
on this list, right.

Speaker 5 (03:07):
Yeah, But I think that when you look at it,
when it comes down to the number of Hondas that
are out there and compared to the numbers that are stolen,
you know, it's actually the Honda cr V hybrid that
comes in higher than the Civic, which I don't even
see on the list this year.

Speaker 1 (03:20):
Then you got to steal a charging station. Well, you're
so right. Well, the biggest question.

Speaker 2 (03:25):
Would be, you know, if your car's on this list,
I mean, you might want to check your insurance. Does
this affect people's insurance rate because already insurance rates are
through the roof.

Speaker 5 (03:35):
Yeah, I mean typically you ensure the driver and the vehicles,
so it's you know, I think if you're going to
have that comprehensive coverage, then certainly this would affect the
price you're paying for the insurance.

Speaker 2 (03:46):
Well, it begs the question, Rory O'Neil, if you could
steal any car, what car would you steal?

Speaker 1 (03:51):
Oh?

Speaker 5 (03:52):
Boy, we need convertibles. Again, we don't have convertibles anymore.

Speaker 1 (03:59):
Maybe a little lover Sads convertible for old Rory. By
the way, I think it.

Speaker 2 (04:03):
Was a seventy seven Volkswagen Beetle that I learned to
drive then stick shift.

Speaker 1 (04:07):
Yeah, mine was a rabbit so yeah, okay, which was
Jay and Chowski's.

Speaker 2 (04:10):
We went to Jefferson Racetrack at Jefferson Park in Kenner, Louisiana,
in the parking lot, and that's where I learned how
to drive, and I think I grinded his gears sufficiently enough.

Speaker 1 (04:22):
That was a lot of love, now that I look
back the way.

Speaker 6 (04:24):
I was.

Speaker 5 (04:26):
And then we Yeah, mine was a diesel. You were
not getting any trouble with that car. Boy, that's when
you were young. You know, you could have a drink
in your hand, be working your stick shift to justin
the radio. I'm old, everything's automatic. Yeah, there was a
smoke too where he's a bit back. In the third hour,
we'll talk a little bit about ending mail in ballots.

(04:47):
That seems to be the goal of the president and
he would like to get it done if he can
before the midterm elections. One of the keys on yesterday's
meeting from from Zelensky's standpoint was protection. And again, as
we said earlier, you could rush together some kind of

(05:12):
a ceasefire, rush together some kind of a end of
the war. But if the geography stays the same and
the intent stays the same, and there's just time to regroup,
and you know, you can wait until after Trump is
not president and make a move again, and you're Zelensky, you.

Speaker 1 (05:28):
Don't feel safe.

Speaker 2 (05:29):
And that's why I think the President's been pretty crystal
clear about his motives. He wants to see the loss
of life ended. It was very interesting. One of the questions,
We're gonna talk to John Decker next half. However, one
of the questions John Decker asked the President was about
a letter that the First Lady wrote for him to
give to Vladimir Putin.

Speaker 1 (05:47):
Listen post is it on social media? Mister president.

Speaker 7 (05:50):
A very touching letter from the First Lady, and the
letter was hand delivered to President Putin, and it calls
for an end to the war, essentially because of the
children and the children's future. Why did the First Lady
feel that letter was necessary? Was it because she believed
that mister Putin is the aggressor in the war? Is

(06:11):
a similar letter being to hand delivered to President Zelensky?

Speaker 8 (06:14):
So the First Lady felt very strongly. She's watched the
same thing that you watch and that I watch.

Speaker 9 (06:22):
But when she's got a great love of children, she
used to see something like this happening.

Speaker 10 (06:26):
And that goes for other wars too.

Speaker 9 (06:28):
I mean, she sees the heartbreak the parents, the funerals
that you see.

Speaker 10 (06:33):
Ali was always funerals.

Speaker 9 (06:34):
We want to see something other than funerals. No, she
felt it was a beautiful letter. It was very well received.

Speaker 10 (06:41):
By him.

Speaker 2 (06:41):
I think that's the interesting part of the comment. It
was very well received by Putin. Imagine a first lady
who has a son the age of a lot of
these young people sent to war and dying. You wonder
in the grand scheme of things, what a letter like
that can mean at a time like this. But I
think the President has been very consistent from the beginning.

(07:05):
He's about stopping the dying. Number two, he's been about
lasting peace. This is not the order that a lot
of people go in. Talk more about that with Mike
Gonzales in the third hour from the Heritage Foundation. The
President even addressed a ceasefire is not necessarily even being necessary.

Speaker 10 (07:24):
Thank you, mister President.

Speaker 7 (07:25):
Last week you warned of what you called severe consequences
if a thirty day seas far or any type of
sees fire we're not agreed to by Russia, Will there
be severe consequences?

Speaker 10 (07:36):
Does that change?

Speaker 7 (07:37):
Because I mean, if you need to cease fire, you know,
if you look at the six deals.

Speaker 10 (07:41):
That I settled this year, they were all at war.
I didn't do any cease fires. And I know that
it might be good to have, but I can also
understand strategically, like well, you know one country or the
other wouldn't want it. You have a cease fire and
they rebuild and rebuild and rebuild, and you know, maybe
they don't want.

Speaker 8 (07:59):
That, but we can work a deal where we're working
on a piece deal while they're fighting.

Speaker 10 (08:04):
They have to fight. I wish they could stop.

Speaker 9 (08:06):
I'd like them to stop, but strategically that could be
a disadvantage for one side or the other.

Speaker 10 (08:11):
But all of these deals.

Speaker 8 (08:13):
I made without even the mention of the words cease fire.

Speaker 2 (08:18):
That's kind of a game changing thought, isn't it. Usually
you have a ceasefire, then you have a negotiation. Either
they go back to fighting or you have an end
of war. The President's saying, we've been doing a lot
of these without a ceasefire. I wish there was one,
and it may be necessary to have one, but it's
not needed necessarily. We could move on straight to ending
the war, and then the president is laser focused on
lasting piece. I said this when he left Alaska, and

(08:41):
I was shocked more people weren't talking about it. But
when the Special Envoy came back and said Putin has
agreed to security guarantees in Ukraine after the war is over.

Speaker 1 (08:52):
That's huge.

Speaker 2 (08:54):
And yesterday you heard the President bring up Article five
type protections for Ukraine, and this follows up on the
report that Putin is willing to agree to a NATO
Article five type of security protection for Ukraine after peace
is determined. Well, for those of you that aren't familiar
with the Article five, that's an attack on one member

(09:16):
is considered an attack on all. It's the main benefit,
one of the main benefits of being a NATO. Now,
when this is all said and done, Ukraine, I'm sure
this is a non negotiable point, will not be allowed
to be a NATO nation bordering Russia, but still get
the Article five type protection. That's huge for Zelenski, and

(09:40):
I think if the President can negotiate no territory given
to Russia other than what they had prior to the invasion,
I think you got a lot of the pieces in place.
But the next step is clearly a meeting with Zelensky
and Putin, and then a trilateral meeting with Zelenski, Putin,
and Trump, and that's the march towards peace with or

(10:03):
without a cease fire as an intermediate step. That's about
everything that was accomplished yesterday. But again, we don't. We're
all in this together. None of us are no it alls,
and our goal is to understand the day. So we
have people to help us. Mike Gonzalez is a senior
fellow at Heritage Foundation. He'll be joining us to talk
about the complexity of this deal, especially with all of

(10:23):
Europe sitting there. That's a lot of chefs in the kitchen,
and I think the President navigated that masterfully yesterday. And
then a visit with John Decker himself as to what
he witnessed and where he thinks it'll go from here.
So we'll add some others to the list to help
you understand just how well yesterday went. All right, it's
seventeen minutes after the hour. Have you ever heard of karaaluma?

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Speaker 4 (12:18):
This is your morning show with Michael del Chrono.

Speaker 11 (12:22):
Nineteen seventy six, Barret Kudo or possibly a nineteen eighty
gto or a seventy six Camaro.

Speaker 2 (12:30):
Now the question is are those what he would steal
or what he learned to drive anything? A lot?

Speaker 1 (12:38):
You're quite the feel of my picklock. For crying out loud,
I might shoot you and go out with my business.

Speaker 2 (12:44):
All right, If you're just waking up twenty five minutes
after the hour, these are your top five stories of
the day. The French president does not believe Putin is
ready for peace in Ukraine. Buddy appreciates the President's hopes
and efforts. Mark Mayfield has that story.

Speaker 12 (12:59):
Speaking to NBC News after his trip to Washington for
a high stakes White House meeting, Macrohne said, when he
looks at the situation and the facts, he doesn't see
Putin willing to get peace. He went on to say
he may be too pessimistic and that the optimism of
your president is to be taken seriously.

Speaker 1 (13:14):
So if he considers he.

Speaker 12 (13:15):
Can get a deal done, this is great news, and
we have to do whatever we can to have a
great deal. President Trump says he's putting things in play
for a meeting between Ukrainian President Zelenski and Putin. After
Zelenski and European leaders were at the White House Monday,
Zelenski said he had a productive meeting with President Trump.

Speaker 1 (13:30):
I'm Martneyfield.

Speaker 2 (13:31):
I don't even bother looking at your lottery ticket. We
haven't had a winner. It's rolled over again.

Speaker 13 (13:36):
There was no grand prize winner on Monday night. Pushing
the already massive jack brought up to an estimated six
hundred and forty three million dollars. Taking the cash option
on that would net you nearly two hundred and ninety
one million. Of course, striking your rich is anything that easy.
Odds of walking away with all that money or roughly
one in two hundred and ninety two million. The next
drawing is coming up on Wednesday. I'm Tammy Truchio.

Speaker 2 (13:58):
It's number four on my list of things to fix America.
No more mail in ballots, just paper, just in person
that's the president's new goal, and before the midterm elections, the.

Speaker 14 (14:10):
President shared a post on truth social which outlined his
plan to lead a movement to get rid of mail
in ballots, and it targets what he called highly inaccurate,
very expensive, and seriously controversial voting machines.

Speaker 8 (14:22):
Ballots are corrupt mail in ballots, so you can never
have a real democracy with mail in ballots.

Speaker 14 (14:30):
Trump has previously claimed there's been widespread voter fraud involving
mail in ballots and pledged to fight for election integrity.

Speaker 1 (14:38):
I'm Brian schuck Ouch.

Speaker 2 (14:40):
Newsmax is agreed to pay sixty seven million dollars to
settle a lawsuit with Dominion Voting Systems. Matt Matinson has more.

Speaker 15 (14:47):
The cable channel is expected to pay Dominion twenty seven
million dollars this month and another forty million dollars in
the next two years. The lawsuit was filed against Newsmax
in twenty twenty one and stems from claims that the
twenty twenty election result for fraudulent. Fox News also settled
with Dominion in a similar lawsuit, which saw a seven
hundred and eighty seven million dollar settlement in twenty twenty three,

(15:09):
I'm at Mattinson.

Speaker 2 (15:10):
More announcements are being made ahead of this year's MTV
Music Awards.

Speaker 6 (15:16):
The mtvvma's revealing the first round of performers who will
perform at this year's ceremony. Sabrina Carpenter will take the
VMA stage for the second year in a row. She's
nominated for eight VMAs, including Video of the Year for
her song Manchild. Other performers include Jay Valvin and DJ Snake.
Alex Warren, Ricky Martin and Busta Rimes will also perform,

(15:37):
as they will each receive special awards. The twenty twenty
five MTV VMAs take place September seventh. I'm Jennifer POLSONI.

Speaker 1 (15:45):
Who's up for the best kiss in the movie? You
know all those have TV Awards.

Speaker 2 (15:50):
Well Over six thousand new words are being added the
Cambridge Dictionary.

Speaker 1 (15:55):
I wonder if canon event or lead character moment some
of the ones that my daughters use are in there. All.
Mark Mayfield is back to fill us in.

Speaker 12 (16:05):
Words including skibbety, traad wife, and de Lulu are being
added to reflect the growing influence of internet culture on
the English language. The dictionary's lexical program manager emphasized the
enduring impact of internet culture on language and said that
only words with stain power are added. I'm Mark Mayfield.

Speaker 15 (16:26):
This is Andy Hickson, formerly of Nashville, now living in Detroit, Michigan.

Speaker 2 (16:31):
Thanks to iHeartRadio, my morning show is your morning show.

Speaker 1 (16:40):
Hey, it's Michael.

Speaker 2 (16:40):
Your morning show can be heard live each weekday morning
on great stations like thirteen sixty The Patriot in San Diego,
News Talk one oh six point three and AM eighteen
eighty wm EQ Oh Claire, Wisconsin and one oh four
nine The Patriot Saint Louis, Missouri. Would love to be
a part of your morning routine. But so glad you're
here now enjoyed the podcast This is your Morning Show.

(17:01):
Jeffrey's got the sound red keeping and eye on the content,
and all eyes are on what was accomplished yesterday in Washington,
d C.

Speaker 1 (17:07):
Was Zlensky, Trump and the European leaders.

Speaker 2 (17:10):
The end of mail in Ballance is something Donald Trump
would like done by the end of the twenty by
before the twenty twenty six midterm elections, and MSNBC will
soon change its name, not its worldview, not its policy views,
not its product, just its name. So it'll go from
MSDNC to MS NOW and that'll make all the difference

(17:34):
in the world. We have our Sounds of the Day
coming up as well a couple of doozies. There are
some people that feel like they were treating Zelensky a
little like a child yesterday or uncomfortable with that. Red
and I had this conversation and Read talked about, you know,
situational football, which was really stolen from situational baseball, and

(17:55):
that's kind of what was more deeply happening yesterday when
you had all those European leaders in the room. Has
a lot of chefs and so there had to be
one main chef. But a Zelinsky did show up. I
win the prize. He showed up in a suit, and
even the President gave him a nice compliment on that.
We'll have that in our Sounds of the Day coming

(18:15):
up next. Well, the guy who spent the day with
him is John Decker. We're going to visit with John
shortly about what he witnessed. Now, we've played a couple
of clips from John Decker. One was the letter that
apparently the first Lady had written that the President gave
to Putin received well from a guy who's captured twenty
thousand children from Ukraine as well as somebody of that

(18:38):
kind of evil can respond to a touching, heartwarming letter.
And then more significantly, I think the news that the
Decker made was this notion that the next step has
to be a ceasefire, and the President basically shutting that down, saying, no,
there doesn't have to be a ceasefire. We can go

(18:58):
straight to end of war and to lasting peace. That's
what we've done in other areas. So the old school
notion of cease fire has to be first. The President
shoots down and basically acknowledges that can be a time
for people to regroup and re arm. We're having a
hard time getting you. Where are you, John Decker? Are
you out on the on the lawn in your chair? Yeah,

(19:24):
apparently he is. We didn't get him in an office
is what he need to get him into. I'm going
to give you one more shot that I'm gonna move
on dot org only because I don't I do love
our visits together, but I don't know why this happens,
and it only happens with Decker. Yeah, I don't understand.

(19:45):
He was sketchy when he called in.

Speaker 14 (19:47):
We trying to reconnect and so we're just having problems
getting hold of John this morning.

Speaker 2 (19:52):
Yeah, well you know what, we're moving on dot org.
Is that okay with you? Good for me? Yeah? Coactus
six two seven. We're gonn to move on.

Speaker 16 (20:04):
People who majored an online activision with a minor and
puberty book.

Speaker 10 (20:09):
They're getting a little bit.

Speaker 2 (20:11):
Any of you in the media clearly missed.

Speaker 7 (20:13):
The art of the deals.

Speaker 2 (20:15):
It's going to work out, well, they asked me, I
think it was Was it Mary? Somebody asked me yesterday,
do you think what do you think he shows up wearing?
And I said, well, you got all the European leaders
there and the president plus the last time he was there.
The reporter asked the terrible question, Uh, he's definitely showing
up in a suit, and he did.

Speaker 1 (20:35):
And the President like, you.

Speaker 10 (20:37):
Love fabulous in that suit.

Speaker 1 (20:40):
Ye look good.

Speaker 10 (20:41):
I said the same thing. Yeah, I said, you one
that attacked you last time. I remember that.

Speaker 1 (20:46):
I apologize to you. Look you look wonderful. No, my
first question for you president?

Speaker 10 (20:51):
Did the same suit.

Speaker 7 (20:56):
You?

Speaker 1 (20:59):
President? He caught the reporter.

Speaker 2 (21:01):
We're in this episuit, uh lynsky all black, which is
kind of a signature.

Speaker 1 (21:05):
But yes, he did have on a code and a suit.

Speaker 2 (21:09):
President Trump reacting to Zelensky canceling elections during the Ukraine conflict,
and then one of the main agreements walking out of this.
One of the five big takeaways of yesterday's meetings is
Zelensky will hold elections as soon as this war is over.

Speaker 10 (21:24):
So you say, during the war you can't have elections.
So let me just say three and a half years
from now.

Speaker 8 (21:31):
So you mean if we happen to be in a
war with somebody, no more elections.

Speaker 10 (21:37):
So I wonder what a question for you?

Speaker 2 (21:44):
So but but they later negotiated that, and and Zelensky
has agreed that he will face an election if the
war is over.

Speaker 1 (21:55):
As soon as the war is over. That's a big eat.

Speaker 2 (21:58):
What is the next step, Well, the next step is
meeting with Putin AND's Alynski and then ultimately a trilateral
meeting with Trump, Putin and Zelenski. As by reporters after
the meetings, is such a meeting set yet? Obviously, the
answer is no date yet.

Speaker 17 (22:11):
The date, Yes, no, Noly, we don't have any dates.
We don't have any date. We just conformed after this
productive meeting with President and then with all our colleagues,
with the partners who conformed that we are ready for
a trilateral meeting.

Speaker 1 (22:28):
And if Russia proposed to President.

Speaker 17 (22:32):
Of the United States bilateral, and then we will see
that the result of bilateral and then it can be
the trilateral. So I said always, so Ukraine will never
stop on the way to peace, and we are ready
for any kind of formas but on the level of leaders.

Speaker 2 (22:50):
Yeah, now that's the part that I don't know if
anybody else has been catching. So is the next step
a bilateral meeting or a trilateral meeting? And you just
heard Zelensky refer to the trilateral meeting or bilateral meeting
if that's what Putin wants. So it seems like the
balls in Putin's court. There might be the intermediate step
of the two of them together and then a trilateral meeting,

(23:14):
but it's too soon to tell and no date has
been set. Was the main takeaway. So what was accomplished yesterday?
What would have been accomplished if I could have visited
with John Decker, which I can do alone very well.

Speaker 1 (23:30):
Well.

Speaker 2 (23:30):
Number one, I think clearly the trilateral meeting or the
next step that is set, whether it's bilateral a trilateral,
the next step is a meeting. Lasting peace is the goal.
Donald Trump's goal is not for this war to end,
but for it to end and have lasting peace. Third,

(23:55):
the postwar election must take place. That's obviously something they
joked out a little bit in the Oval Office, but
was a problem for the president and a concession made
by Zelensky. Yes, they will have an election as soon
as the war is over. Fourth, big takeaway is that
the president doesn't feel the need for there to be
a cease fire. That's actual news that John Decker's question made.

(24:21):
We'll run it by Mike Gonzalez with the Heritage Foundation
next hour. But I kind of agree with that. I mean,
we've seen the president do that this year, where things
have gone to a ceasefire only to continue fighting. And
then we've seen other conflicts ended without a ceasefire, just
straight into peace. So that old traditional there has to
be a ceasefire before we can talk. It's not necessarily true,

(24:42):
and it may not be necessary even in this complex negotiation.
And the fifth, and I think the most important, and
this was the game changer coming out of the Alaska
summit that putin is willing to agree to a NATO
Article five type security protection for Ukraine because it's not
the Article five that you get as a NATO member,

(25:06):
because one assurance given to Russia is going to be
Ukraine will never be a NATO member on their border,
but they will get the NATO Article five type security protection.
That speaks giantly to the lasting piece part of this negotiation.
This is Eric Swalwell. Whenever we have forty seven, it's

(25:28):
been a while since forty seven has brought up the
shot heard around the world from Swalwell. But he's on CNN,
who is yet to decide whether to change their name
on the redistricting plans. And remember the old Michelle Obama
when they go low, we go high. That isn't how
Democrats play anymore. What isn't how Michelle Obama played or

(25:49):
Barack Obama played, But it was at least a positive slogan,
Swalwell saying, no, when they go low, we go destruction.

Speaker 18 (25:59):
Listen, in the earlier Obama years there was the, of
course old adage that at this point is old. When
they go high, or when they go low, we go high.
It seems that fighting fire with fire sort of meets
them at that low point, I guess to use that
metaphor do you have any concern could overreach or could backfire.

Speaker 1 (26:23):
No, when they go low, we're going to bury them
below the capitol. That's what we're going to do. Because
this is about protecting democracy.

Speaker 5 (26:30):
And right now, as you see, DC has been militarized
and we were weak as democrats.

Speaker 2 (26:36):
Frank by the way, you can do this narrative. You
can do this narrative all you want, that this is
a threat to democracy, that this is putting troops on
the ground in our inner city. Nobody's buying it. This
is an eighty twenty hill that they can't win on.

(26:56):
The American people realize our inner cities high crime, and
the municipalities themselves, whether it's mayor's chiefs of police or
activist prosecutors, they're not doing their number one priority of
keeping these cities safe. And they have no problem with
the President assisting. Now, no one should have a problem

(27:16):
with the District of Columbia because it belongs to Congress.

Speaker 1 (27:23):
By design.

Speaker 2 (27:24):
Now you start doing this in other cities, and I
think you better darnwell get Congress involved in it. But
this kind of narrative. It just isn't playing when the
American people are for fighting crime, not fighting for crime.
The American people want wars to end, not continue. The
Democrats continue to find themselves on opposite sides of that.

(27:48):
As American Majority founder and CEO and Ned Runyan made
the point on Fox last night.

Speaker 16 (27:53):
Well there's a pro war party, there's a pro criminal party,
there's a pro illegal immigrant party. It's called the Democrat Party.
I mean you can say Trump derangement syndrome. I mean
it's obvious. Clean and safe streets, peace, all of these
things are obviously very good for the American people. But
if Democrats have obviously decided that if Trump's for it,
it must be bad because Orange Man bad. But I

(28:14):
think it's more than that, Laura. I think it's more
than just arrangement. I think it's a cold, calculating, cynical
employ by Democrats because they realize that Trump's an existential
threat to the power. Let me explain, the mo of
Democrats for many years is to create these bureaucracies and
these processes by which they can actually gain power as

(28:35):
a party, but not solve any problems for the American people.

Speaker 1 (28:38):
Think of the Department of Education.

Speaker 16 (28:40):
So they create these processes and bureaucracies, and for those
things to continue to undergro the party with power and money,
they have to keep the problems going, whether it's crime,
whether it's illegal immigration, whether it's literacy. And again with
the illegal immigration, we obviously know that was a power play,
highly intentional, systematic illegal invasion for more bodies to count

(29:02):
and house apportionment, electoral votes and federal dollars. And the
problem is this Trump coming and solving a lot of
these problems is literally an existential threat to the future
power of the Democratic Party.

Speaker 2 (29:16):
Remember what we used to say as a Your Morning
Show family months and months ago. If they didn't have abortion,
what are they? If they don't have a border crisis,
what are they? That's what he's saying. I can't believe
he left abortion off unless you really think they care

(29:37):
about women's bodies.

Speaker 1 (29:38):
They don't. He just nailed it.

Speaker 2 (29:46):
Now there's another aspect that and he may have gotten
to it, it just isn't in the clip. Take Mom
Donnie for example, he's not a problem for the Democrats,
and if he will, it's not a crisis for the Democrats.
In fact, it's a victory because it's a strategy, it's
what they are. They really are that socialistic, communistic, and Islamist.

(30:12):
They are that anti Semitic. They do believe in deplorables.
This party's gone so far left it will not survive
the end of the decade, and it will fraction off.
The question of the hour is how does all this
fighting on the wrong hills and everything that has been
defeated that they use as they're feeding mechanism for power,

(30:36):
how does that impact the midterm elections, especially if the
president going to make sure it's only paper ballots. Ted
Cruz and the Democrats new strategy of rooting for war.

Speaker 11 (30:51):
You know, Jesse, people used to say politics and at
the water's edge. Unfortunately, today's Democrats they hate Donald Trump
so much that they are openly rooting for the present
to fail. They're openly rooting for this war to continue forever.
They don't want peace, and that is sad. We should
all want peace in Ukraine. I believe we're going to
see that, and I think President Trump is doing everything

(31:13):
humanly possible to achieve that piece and not a single
Democrat is cheering him on. They're all rooting for America
to fail. That's really sad.

Speaker 2 (31:22):
This is the level of stupidity I think, And this
is why I think you would be tempted to say
Trump derangement. You go from being an opposition party to
an obstruction party to just an all out dysfunctional, deranged party,
and it just leads you into ridiculous places. If your

(31:43):
goal is to be the opposite of Trump, and everything
Trump is doing is right, you're going to be wrong.
And this is how the Democrats find themselves fighting for
war to continue because the worst thing on earth would
be Donald Trump solved to war. You fight for open
border because the worst thing you would want is a
secured sovereign nation.

Speaker 1 (32:06):
And now you're even fighting for crime in our inner cities.
It's it's insanity.

Speaker 2 (32:11):
I want to close with something we played earlier in
our Platinum Card Hour. There's no secret. Denzel Washington is
my favorite actor, most quoted when we're off the air,
when I'm doing lines for movies, He's on highest to
lowest a podcast, and the notion of likes, the notion

(32:35):
of followers, the notion of cancel culture comes up. Well,
if you've ever heard Denzel Washington do a commencement address,
you would know she asked the wrong question.

Speaker 12 (32:46):
Listen, do you guys consider being quote unquote canceled?

Speaker 1 (32:50):
What does that mean?

Speaker 4 (32:51):
You can?

Speaker 1 (32:52):
It means you lose public support. Who cares? What made
public support so important to begin with? I guess because
followers now are currency. I don't care who's following.

Speaker 19 (33:03):
Okay, you can't lead and follow at the same time,
and you can't follow and lead at the same time.
I don't follow anybody. I follow the heavenly Spirit. I
follow God, follow man. I have faith in God, I
have hope and man.

Speaker 1 (33:20):
But look around. I don't.

Speaker 2 (33:25):
Follow anyone. I follow God. I have faith in God,
hopeing man. But look around. That's one to live by
faith in God, hope and man. And the summary of
it all, it.

Speaker 19 (33:41):
Ain't working out so well. Forget being followed. You can't
be canceled. If you're signed up.

Speaker 2 (33:48):
You can't be canceled. If you don't sign up, don't
sign up. Our winner of the day and wise words
from Denzel Washington.

Speaker 1 (33:55):
Everybody, Look, you just gotta try harder. Not for so so,
I'm grad the opportunity for a brief civics lesson.

Speaker 8 (34:02):
Sure, perhaps you'd like to be alone with a ratigly
deteriorating mental conditions.

Speaker 2 (34:11):
And that's your sounds of the day for this Tuesday,
August the nineteenth. What if you could delay your next
two mortgage payments. I don't know if they're two thousand
a month five thousand a month, but that's a lot
of money to put in your pocket.

Speaker 1 (34:22):
Finally, a little breathing room.

Speaker 2 (34:23):
If you will well, it's possible if you call American
Financing today. If you're feeling stretched by everyday expenses and
who isn't groceries, gas bills piling up? You're not alone,
and most Americans are putting these on credit cards now.
They're buried in high interest credit card debt and feeling
like there's no way out, But there is. American Financing

(34:43):
can show you how to use your home's equity to
pay off your debt. All you needed to do is
call American Financing today before you get in a situation
where you can't.

Speaker 1 (34:52):
Make those payments. That's bigger problems.

Speaker 2 (34:55):
Their salary based mortgage consultants are helping homeowners just like you,
restore their loans, consolidate their debt without any upfront fees,
and customers are saving on average eight hundred dollars a month,
and I'll bet you're not average. It's like getting a
ten thousand dollars raise. It's fast, it's simple, it's a
breathing room. It's a peace of mind. Call now before

(35:16):
it's too late. American Financing eight sixty six eighty to
five nineteen forty eight eight six six eighty to five
nineteen forty eight are online at Americanfinancing dot net forward slash.

Speaker 4 (35:26):
Michael, It's your morning show with Michael del Choino.

Speaker 1 (35:32):
What makes your morning show different? You like Verry in Nashville.
Good morning, Michael.

Speaker 16 (35:37):
Hey, you know Democrats would viet Me opposed to election
date and only paper ballots.

Speaker 1 (35:42):
It makes it very difficult for the day of people
to vote. Come That's one of the issues.

Speaker 4 (35:48):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael Hill Joino
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