Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, it's me Michael. Your morning show can be heard
live daily on great radio stations like News Radio six
fifty K E n I Anchorage, Alaska, Talk Radio eleven
ninety Dallas Fort Worth, and Freedom one O four seven
in Washington, d C. We'd love to have you listen
live every day. Make us a part of your morning routine.
But better late than never. Enjoy the podcast well two three.
Speaker 2 (00:22):
Starting your morning off right.
Speaker 3 (00:23):
Thank you, A new way of talk, a new way
of understanding because we're.
Speaker 2 (00:29):
In listen together.
Speaker 1 (00:31):
This is your morning show with Michael Dell Chorno America
prepares to remember those lost on nine to eleven, twenty
three years later in New York, d C. And Shanksville, Pennsylvania.
Francine will make landfall in Louisiana, not far from Nollins
as a hurricane Cat one or Cat Cat one for sure,
(00:51):
maybe even potentially a Cat too by landfall. And the
big debate was last night. You know, I just call
it like I see him, But maybe Dana Perino said
it best. He took every bait and he didn't seize
any opportunities. It was a poor performance for Donald Trump.
It was a prosecutoryal performance by Kamala, Mamala joyful. Kamala
(01:13):
did not show up, the prosecutor did. And an innocent
man looked like he got convicted last night because we
had a disgraceful judge in ABC that was not moderators,
that was an orchestrated, staged event by ABC. So for
Donald Trump, the one excuse it was three against one.
There is no excuse for the lack of preparation and
the lack of seizing opportunities. And for Kamala Harris, she
(01:36):
certainly didn't knock herself out like Joe Biden, and she
performed well. So that's that. Now they're saying they want
a second debate, Don't believe them. That's just to look
like they want one. They'll never agree to one. What
does all this do to this race? I suspect people
that were for Donald Trump, remembering all of his great moments,
(01:59):
I should give you a magga hat. You know he had.
He had several good moments. And the Kamala Harris crowd
is feeling confident now that she can perform at a
debate the way she did at the convention. But they
were already voting for her, and they were already voting
for him. What will this do to move the needle
with undecided, especially those in the Swing States. David Sanadi
is the CEO of the American Policy Roundtable. Their crown jewel,
(02:20):
I believe is the Public Square. It's hurt on two
hundred stations nationwide, on demand any time at the public
Square dot com. And he is a senior contributor for
your morning show, the only person that despises the mouse
potentially more than me. Do I even bring it up.
ABC was the big loser in my mind. Donald Trump
was a close second, but ABC was a big loser.
Speaker 3 (02:42):
Well, Michael, I would suggest that the entire media, aside
from a few people on talk radio this morning, and
yes we're friends, but I have great respect for your
program as a standalone voice in our country. But by
and large, the media missed the entire story. Debate was
over in the first ten seconds. Yeah, Harris walked out
(03:05):
like a junior high school theater drama performer, walked across
the center stage, walked behind Trum's podium, stuck her hand
out and said.
Speaker 1 (03:15):
I'm Kamala Harris.
Speaker 3 (03:17):
She didn't say, She didn't say, I'm Kamala Harris. I've
replayed it five times. She said, Kamala Harris.
Speaker 1 (03:23):
I'm surprised she didn't do her Kamala Harris, full of the.
Speaker 2 (03:26):
People, thank you.
Speaker 1 (03:28):
Yeah, David, I got everything. Yeah, I mean I saw
it through it all.
Speaker 3 (03:33):
But nobody else will talk about it because that was
a punk, scripted smart a move to tell the world
that A she's an alpha dog and she's going after
the other dog and she presumes she's too stupid to
know her name.
Speaker 1 (03:53):
And then gets asked the first question about are we
better off or worse off? For the last four years,
she never answers it, like all night long. AB, I mean,
I know you were frustrated with ABC fact checking Trump
but not her coming back. You didn't answer the question
to Trump, but letting her get away with it. But
there were times ABC was doing her job for and
(04:15):
making that much frustrated with it. Was it was just
ABC was I have never That's the worst ever. That's
the worst ever.
Speaker 3 (04:22):
You can't moderate a debate and be a fact checker.
That is an absolute violation. So listen, and I don't
have much respect for Dana Parina for priam Mine. I
don't either, right, So let's let's let's let's try.
Speaker 1 (04:35):
But I agree with her statement. I agree with her.
Speaker 3 (04:37):
Statement well, but but again that's post fact. The reality
is Donald Toronald Trump's mistake was to accept debating Kamala
Harris at all, but more importantly, debating her on ABC.
What did anyone expect? What was going to happen? I've
got a two inch finder next to me right now,
(04:59):
on my way into a meeting with our board at
two inch finder from Harvard University, talking about the American
corporate media and their total absolute control over the thought
processes of our native And.
Speaker 1 (05:12):
You know I'm on the exact and you know I'm
on every page with you. The bottom line, with all
due respect, the bottom line is if I set you
at that podium last night, it would have gone differently. Obviously,
David's having the same technical day.
Speaker 2 (05:28):
We are a Michael, I'm sorry, I got the question.
Let me let me put it to you this way.
Speaker 3 (05:36):
ABC would have done exactly what they did last night.
If it was Nicky Haley or Ron DeSantis on the stage,
it wouldn't have mattered.
Speaker 1 (05:47):
If it had been Marco Rubio, it would not have
gone that way. If you don't want to, if you
don't want to embrace it. If it was David's an
audio wouldn't have gone that way. I just want you
to you know, somebody's got to say out loud, that
was a terrible performance. I'm looking at the TV when
she said I'm not running You're not running again. I'm
not Joe Biden. You're running against me. I would have
(06:07):
loved I mean, why didn't he just ask more questions
on If ABC wasn't going to ask him, he should
have used his time to ask him.
Speaker 3 (06:13):
Yes, I agree with all of that, Michael, But the
point is is that the mistake was taking the debate.
Speaker 2 (06:19):
Well why green?
Speaker 1 (06:20):
But you did, and you were there and for an
hour and a half I had to watch you. And
I know you don't like Dana Brino. I don't like Listen.
I say this to my audience all the time. I
am of a Christian worldview and I am a conservative.
FOX is not conservative by the way. Their establishment Republican
all right, but but something about them appalls me more
than even CNN. Uh but where where ABC went as
(06:42):
a new low? But no, I love I think I
can't say it better than Dana Prino. He took every
bait and he didn't seize any of the moments.
Speaker 3 (06:51):
Yeah, well again, he's got to own that defense. There's,
of course, there's no defense for his performance. And I
don't hear his people running around saying they wanted to
it's because it wasn't a debate.
Speaker 2 (07:02):
It was a mugging.
Speaker 3 (07:03):
And Kamala Harris is not a candidate. She's a sock puppet. Okay,
she's under the control. She was a performer yesterday. That
was a performance. I just asked Americans to do one thing.
Turn the volume off on YouTube, mute it and watch
the process for ten minutes and ask yourself, just looking
at the way these people behaved, watching their language and
(07:27):
their face, would you want any of them to be
your neighbor, Any of the people, any of the four
people on the screen, would you want to be a neighbor.
That tells you how poorly we have done this and
what a joke it is. We can't do presidential debates
any longer, Michael, because there is no one willing to
even play the role of an objective moderator simply ask questions.
Speaker 2 (07:53):
But we don't have it. And so that's the reality.
Speaker 1 (07:56):
Seeing a contributor David Sinati joining us on the debate
last night. I can't tell you how many times this
is the part that I almost needed to get the
trash can out of the bathroom and put it next
to the bed. How many times she would bring up
January sixth, or she would bring up how you know
they had a border bill, and I'll do the border
bill one, I'll just pick one. She'ld bring up the
border bill that he got on the phone and killed,
(08:18):
and that's why we have a problem at the border.
Four years later they did a border vote, and he's
at fault for the border, not their administration. And you're
debating me, not Joe Biden. Well it's a Biden Harris administration,
and you were the borders. How is this not your
favorite your failure? But he wouldn't come out and say that,
and he.
Speaker 2 (08:35):
Had to do all he had to do.
Speaker 3 (08:37):
Michael was looking at her and say, that's a great point,
Madam Vice President. By the way, where is Joe.
Speaker 1 (08:44):
Well, yeah, there's a million questions he could have asked,
and he should have throughout the night, because ABC certainly
wasn't going to do it. But my point was going
to be, how often did she pull everybody back bring
up his rate, bring up his thirty two felony prosecutions.
Bring up January sixth bring up what he did, never said.
It's been debunked a million times in South Carolina, she
brings back, and then it would end with the American
(09:05):
people are tired of this. They don't want to look back.
Have these civil conversations. You started the selling conversation. So
here's but here's my two questions for you to make
the best use of our time. One, every time people
underestimate the intelligence of the American people, whether somebody wisey
like Nixon says there's a silent center and I'm talking
to you or not, they get it. So never underestimate America.
(09:27):
Saw through a lot of ABC's orchestration, saw through a
lot of her dodging and pivoting and performing. And my
guess is, if you were voting for Kamma, you feel
better about your vote. If you're voting for Donald Trump,
you thought he'd performed terribly, but you're still voting for him.
So what does this really move? If anything, it moves
everybody that can't stand either of them. Too bad. Bobby
(09:49):
Kennedy's not still in the race, but I mean so
all right, So we had the event, and I don't
think there's going to be a second one. What comes
of it. I think we've got a closer race, but
I don't think it's game changer. I disagree with John Decker.
I don't think this is like the Biden debate. Trump
isn't knocked out, he's not ready to drop out of
the race. So it's not that what is it?
Speaker 3 (10:11):
Well to ask the question what is this? That's always
the right question. What this is is something no one's
talking about. What this is as far as the election goes.
And here's where I'm going to challenge your theory, Michael. Yes,
I agree when the American people get an honest look
at the facts and they're able to see it for
what it is. And sometimes it takes a terrible, terrible
(10:32):
set of circumstances like nine to eleven before America will
wake up to the threat of radical Islamic terrorism, and
very quickly then forget about it.
Speaker 2 (10:43):
Now.
Speaker 3 (10:43):
Kamala Harris is actually on a psychological tour. She has issues,
and she is acting out and walking out her issues
in a political campaign, and John Podesta and George Soros
are happy to use her because she's got great energy,
and she's a drama and she's able to pull all
of this off. But this has nothing to do about
(11:04):
the American people or public policy. She stands on the
stage and says, I'm the only person on the stage
that's ever prosecuted.
Speaker 2 (11:11):
Blah blah blah.
Speaker 3 (11:11):
Well, let me tell you something, man, Vice President. He's
the only person that's ever run a business, so he
can tell you that the idea of a fifty thousand
dollars tax credit is a pile of you know what,
because if you start a.
Speaker 2 (11:22):
New business, you're not going to make enough money to.
Speaker 3 (11:25):
Need a fifty thousand dollars tax credit for the first
five years anyhow, and you won't be president then. I mean,
the whole thing is just a joke. Every idea she
comes up with, they end up having to get rid
of within a week because it gets completely Why.
Speaker 1 (11:38):
Didn't he just say that to her? Tell me how
that works? What do you think giving a pick?
Speaker 3 (11:41):
Of course, we can go nuts saying why Donald Trump
doesn't do this or why he does the other. The
point is these people have issues, and she's playing out
her issues. This is a psychological tour for her. But
she said she's acting out at so many levels. And
the problem, Mikael is this with the American electorate. There's
a lot of angry peace people out there. There's a
lot of her people out there. There's a lot of
(12:03):
people in America who don't want to listen to someone
who takes a position of male authority or who says
I have the courage to fire people. Oh, you must
be a bad person. Then if this campaign is run
and executed on the emotion that we saw from Kamala
Harris last night, she will win the election because we
have a lot of people who never get out of
(12:23):
high school who.
Speaker 1 (12:23):
Vote all right, closing moments, we said, whoever keeps the
other on the defensive wins. She certainly kept him on
the defensive. If he takes the bait, he'll lose. He
took the bait. Often. Can she overprepare? Clearly not. She
was well prepared. It was all scripted. You and I
may have saw through it, but a lot of Americans won't.
(12:44):
So that's a victory for her. Would abc be despicable
and make a three on one, well, beyond our wildest imagination.
The mouse was at work last night. No surprises there
and then we said visually. Visually is the only one
where I'm not so fast, As Lee Corso would say,
I don't think she'd performed very well. She was constantly
(13:05):
staring at him, constantly smirking, making some using her hands. Visually,
they both lost everything else he lost, but ABC was
the disgrace. I really don't have anything to add other
than that, and I don't know that it changed. And
by the way, I've already given her Pennsylvania. I've given
her Michigan, I've given her Wisconsin. I will say this,
(13:28):
Donald Trump accused them of cheating and says he can
prove they cheated, and then the case was thrown out
on standing. ABC did a terrible job of fact checking that.
But if they play any games, they'd like to play
them in Philadelphia, they'd like to play them in Milwaukee,
they'd like to play them in Atlanta. So George is
the one I'm worried about. But assuming Georgia hangs on,
I've already given her Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, and it's still
(13:49):
two sixty nine to two sixty nine, And what about
last night changed that anything? I don't think so.
Speaker 3 (13:56):
No. I guess the question is going to be which
set of Americans will show.
Speaker 2 (14:01):
Up and both will the people who have been mugged.
Speaker 3 (14:03):
By reality and realize that we've got to get over
our high school selves. Are were the people who are
still interested about someone prosecuting their issues from their childhood? Michael,
every answer starts with someone talking about their childhood.
Speaker 2 (14:16):
You've got to ask about their childhood.
Speaker 3 (14:19):
In addition to that, when you look at her performance
last night in the debate and then watch her post
debate performance, you realize this is a person that lives
in two stages of reality or as pretending to do so.
These people, the four people that are on that stage,
everyone they got issues.
Speaker 1 (14:38):
I will say this because somebody's got to be the
adult in the room beyond politics. In fact, we're all
going to be adults in the room above politics, because
we're going to turn our attention to nine to eleven
in about twelve minutes, which is what I think Satan
was really trying to keep me off the air from doing.
But sorry, I'm here and I'm going to do it
in twelve minutes. And maybe the only thing I can
do the way I plan today the lies. Look, you know,
(14:59):
there is there is Bible versus discussing. In certain times,
there'll be people who love lies more than the truth.
I think we're definitely living in that hour, and the
lies are getting trickier. I would say this came to
me last night watching Without Discernment. Look Out, because they're
making reality and lies look just like reality and truth,
(15:23):
and it's going to take David. I am the one
that coined the phrase death of journalism. But the rotting
corpse I saw and witnessed and smelled last night in
the Morgue was like nothing I had ever seen before.
Our republic is on the line, and only the truth
will set us free. And I am sixty years old
(15:43):
now and I've never seen the truth so hard to
find and discern.
Speaker 3 (15:46):
Well, outside of Michael, I'm almost about to open a
Twitter account, and you know I feel about social media.
That'll tell you everything. I agree with you about what
ABC did. It is despicable, but it's totally perfect.
Speaker 2 (16:00):
And the problem is is.
Speaker 3 (16:02):
That people who are sitting in c suites of major
media who have emotional issues are playing out their emotional
issues in an election cycle. We do need grown ups
to realize we're hiring a chief executive officer, and who
which of these people can for forty eight months run
the executive branch of the government more effectively, not play
out their childhood issues and take care of their friends,
(16:24):
but be a hollow sock puppet that ext to try
to do something intelligent. Trump was right also, by the way,
on the fact that you can't wave a magic wand
and make laws as the president.
Speaker 2 (16:33):
You've got to have helpful No.
Speaker 1 (16:34):
That was a good moment. Yeah, but when she would
say stuff like these generals and the people that worked with.
Speaker 2 (16:40):
You didn't Why didn't ever believe?
Speaker 1 (16:42):
I know, I know, all right, so I know you're
not letting me do that. But look at her. What
general give me his name, what nation, what leader of
what country?
Speaker 4 (16:50):
List of her employees that quit? I mean, where was
the NBC or is she fact checking the number of
people who quit for working from workcause it couldn't stand her.
Speaker 3 (17:01):
Yeah, honestly, I would say it was a high school student, consoles,
But the truth is it was a junior high school.
Speaker 2 (17:08):
They can't even get the ball.
Speaker 1 (17:10):
We we had a talkback guy who really nailed it.
He said it was like watching two third graders argue
and the teacher was on one of their sides. That's
really what it was.
Speaker 3 (17:18):
A decent parent would ground all four of those people,
put some into the rooms and say start over again.
And this is the sad thing. The world's watching us,
and this is what they think American politics is all about.
Speaker 2 (17:30):
That's a shame.
Speaker 1 (17:31):
Well, if I can say, we're a long way from
Ronald Reagan. We're a long way from Jack Kennedy. We're
a long way from Harry Truman. We're along. I'm trying
to get all.
Speaker 2 (17:39):
Away from Gerald Ford.
Speaker 1 (17:41):
I was gonna, you know, my punchline was gonna be heck,
we're looking a long way from Barack Obama, my friend.
This is your morning show with Michael deltona.
Speaker 3 (17:58):
I number one up and our five.
Speaker 2 (18:01):
This is Dad talk about Jack?
Speaker 4 (18:07):
What's going on?
Speaker 2 (18:08):
That? The crabs a rag again? There? Right dy Eddy
be there, Betty, Betty.
Speaker 5 (18:27):
Right here?
Speaker 2 (18:28):
What the world? Who are talking to?
Speaker 1 (18:32):
Oh gosh, oh my god?
Speaker 6 (18:36):
One seventy five here?
Speaker 2 (18:38):
We have some problems over here, right go and we
might have a high jack over here to of them
very play. That's a hijack that thing. If I'll go,
I'll go do the pet know and have be the
fun here I want to period, so have your time.
Fame for my d and everybody that utterly body down.
Speaker 5 (19:01):
Hopefully really up.
Speaker 6 (19:03):
My David, What do how to do?
Speaker 1 (19:13):
All the od is a book down? Oh my god,
so both powers are now.
Speaker 2 (19:21):
I'll carey. I gotta hear craft for the white down.
Speaker 4 (19:26):
Hear Prince the City just going to Pristal City here too, Yeah, stop.
Speaker 2 (19:34):
Out markers.
Speaker 4 (19:38):
Hit, don't play that.
Speaker 2 (19:40):
I got to say, I canna. I did ninety three.
That traffic three is one flop twelve three.
Speaker 6 (19:50):
I get a contact. We're looking out in ninety three.
I did ninety three, Clay when if you hear the tuner,
I done.
Speaker 5 (19:57):
I got that big a dome, remain the big the
whole hold.
Speaker 2 (20:09):
Tuesday nine forty seven am, Hi, baby, baby, you have
to beach sipety carefully.
Speaker 3 (20:16):
I do want to plane as a hieck.
Speaker 6 (20:18):
I'm honest, pay, I'm calling from the plane.
Speaker 3 (20:20):
I want to tell you I love you, blease, tell
my children that I loved them very much, and I'm
so sorry.
Speaker 2 (20:26):
Baby.
Speaker 3 (20:27):
I hope to be able to see your face again.
Speaker 6 (20:29):
Baby, I love you, y. We're five six eighty six,
five times we have I believe it is a seven
fifty seven. Can you see him up this or that's occurred?
It looks like it's rockets wing brother's rocking back and forth.
We're five sixty eight six five by five as you
stay way from the aircraft, still.
Speaker 5 (20:50):
North and passed the kid United ninety three.
Speaker 3 (20:53):
Have you got information on that yet? Here?
Speaker 2 (20:54):
You're down? You don't yeh.
Speaker 5 (20:57):
When did you land? It did not land?
Speaker 3 (21:00):
Yeah, northeaster cam David.
Speaker 2 (21:06):
See okay, I love you in New York.
Speaker 5 (21:12):
You want to smoke and you could want.
Speaker 3 (21:14):
People want you.
Speaker 2 (21:18):
Chat on the two ball places row.
Speaker 5 (21:22):
We're not really say get them gone.
Speaker 7 (21:36):
No no, no, no no no, say I'm.
Speaker 2 (21:37):
Going to die and then say your fast.
Speaker 3 (21:40):
I'm gonna be.
Speaker 4 (21:40):
Content because you gotta help.
Speaker 3 (21:42):
You gotta get off the floor. Now die.
Speaker 1 (21:53):
As it was just before eighty on September eleventh, two
thousand and one, I was hosting The Morning Buzz in Tulsa, Oklahoma,
getting ready to concede the season for the Chicago Cubs
and a silly mock news conference. As we were laughing
and joking our way through another morning show, thousands of
(22:13):
innocent Americans were about to step into eternity. We had
no idea of the lives that were about to end.
Nor could we imagine the unspeakable sites, emotions, and historic
events that we were about to describe for our audience.
I remember the first moments of shock, I mean innocence,
lost and awakening. We had enemies and I knew nothing
(22:34):
about them. I remember asking my producer, Elvis Paulo, get
me Governor Keating, knowing that his brother Martin had been
a prophetic voice and a warning an authority on terrorism.
I also knew of the Governor's past service heading up
the FBI. I began quickly to memorize names like al Qaeda,
hamas Hezballah, Usama Bin laden terms like Fatoi, jihad, and infidels.
(22:57):
I knew that a new face of war had emerged.
Yet I couldn't even keep up with the historic happenings
of the moment. I saw things I wasn't trained to see.
I felt devastation, I felt fear like never before. I
was speechless in being paid to speak. I remember thirteen
hours later in silence, and I don't just mean verbal silence, intellectual, physical,
(23:22):
and spiritual utter silence. I concluded my broadcast. I got
into my car and I wept. I guess I cried
for what I saw, the lives lost, and for the
helplessness to stop what might be next, but mostly for
the realization of the hour I knew I now officially lived,
(23:47):
And even still twenty three years later, I remember vividly,
and because I remember, I cannot forget. And because I
remember and cannot forget, I must speak and what I
must say twenty three years later, It's not enough to
just remember. That'll get me wrong. Remembering is important the
thousands of lives taken before on and since nine to eleven,
(24:10):
because it was them, because it could have been us,
because it may be us next, And by remembering it
forces us to focus on further understanding and hopes that
through knowledge of our enemy, eternal vigilance, and united determination,
we can prevent another major attack from ever happening again.
(24:33):
In the end, remembering gives us two choices. It gives
us two choices. This morning, I'm this the twenty third anniversary.
Will we be victims or will we be victors? I
choose to honor my fallen fellow Americans by doing all
I can to prevent the next attack and eliminating the
threat for our time and for all time. Today, like
(24:57):
every day, is about remembering accurately and appropriately, speaking the
truth frankly and in love, identifying the enemy, and ultimately
defeating them. For we are not afraid, we are not
in secret, we are not in hate, We are not confused,
and we are not intimidated. And we are not victims.
(25:18):
We are one nation under God, indivisible. We are inspired
by liberty, guided by our constitution, and called to preserve
our freedom, preserve our republican, secure our way of life
for all generations to come. I have always felt that
to simply remember, that's a function of the mind. But
(25:39):
to honor, that's a function of the heart. Remembering looks back,
but honoring focuses forward and lives on purposefully. Today, let
us remember, but tomorrow and all our days forward, let
us commit to honor the lost. These constant images of
horrific past can serve to fan the flames of fear
and panic through time, can build a victim mentality and posture.
(26:04):
So the choice, the choice is ours. We can be
victims or we can be victors. I know our accusers,
our enemies. Heck, a majority of the political leaders and
even the mainstream media would love for you to stop
at just being a victim, but not me. I will
look back silently today, and only for a few moments,
(26:27):
for there's too much to focus on right now, Act
on right now, speak about right now, and defeat now
and moving forward. Reminds me of a JFK quote, not
one of his famous ones. Change is the law of life,
and those who look only to the past or the
present are certain to miss the future, which reminds me
of another famous quote, and this one was famous. Let
(26:51):
every nation know, whether it wishes us well or ill.
We shall pay any price, We shall bear any burden,
meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe to
ensure and assure the survival and the success of liberty.
Oh how we need this type of understanding, leadership and
inspiration today if we plan to achieve the ultimate victory
(27:15):
and avoid the ultimate victimization. Twenty three years later, I
still remember, And because I remember, I can say it's
not enough to just remember. We must honor. I'm Michael
del Jorno and this is your morning show.
Speaker 3 (27:40):
Hey, everybody's John Ford Coley of England, Dan and john
Ford Coley and my morning show is your morning show
with Michael Dell journal.
Speaker 1 (27:50):
People have asked me in the past, why do I
always start with that montage clip, Because sometimes you can
get a sense that this is like some movie or
a Pearl Harbor clip of a long, long time ago,
and it was some kind of a news event. It
was a human tragedy. These were real people jumping out
(28:11):
of those buildings, real lives, saying goodbye on planes. I
don't think anybody has a right to even discuss nine
to eleven, and it certainly doesn't matter what any individual
host's perspective of where they were was without first getting
in that mindset. And because of that, it makes me
cry every time. So I apologize for that. All right.
(28:31):
It is the nine to eleven twenty third anniversary. There
will be commemorative ceremonies in New York City today. Francine
is a hurricane making landfall in Louisiana, dirty side towards Nolans,
and a lot of conversation about the debate last night.
My summary is it was not a good performance for
Donald Trump. It was a prosecutorial performance by Kamala Harris.
(28:53):
So you didn't get joyful. Kamala, Mamala, Kamala word salad Kamala.
You got a prepared Kamala who was in a courtroom
prosecuting Donald Trump throughout the evening, and we kind of
had a bias judge an ABC. That was the real disgrace.
The question is what does it do to the race?
What is it didn't move? I mean, I thought Donald
Trump did awful, but I'm still voting for Donald Trump.
(29:15):
There are people that were planning on voting for Kamala
Harrison probably feel better about that vote. But what about
those who hadn't made their mind up? What did they see?
Could they see through the bias of ABC? Could they
see through the bad performance? And will they go Google
and search and find the truth for themselves and make
the right choice. Time will tell, especially in swing states.
Are your morning show national correspondent Roy O'Neil always Rory
(29:38):
with the final story?
Speaker 2 (29:40):
Rory?
Speaker 1 (29:40):
Anything we're missing about the debate today in our coverage?
Speaker 6 (29:45):
Yeah?
Speaker 7 (29:45):
Well, now let's turn our attention to the vice presidential
debate coming up on October first on CBS. You know,
let's see if this one now gets a bit more
heat considering what happened last night.
Speaker 1 (29:56):
Is it unfair to say, okay, Kamala and pull off
a convention Hollywood written script and do it with great style.
And she was fantastic at the DNC convention. She was
not so good in an interview and hasn't done any
before or since. But apparently she can pull off debates.
Maybe her only weaknesses interviews. So avoid interviews and certainly
(30:19):
avoid a second debate no matter what they're saying.
Speaker 7 (30:22):
Yeah, I don't expect a second debate here. I think
the Harris team will say they'll just leave it all
on the field and let's see what walls can do.
Walls and vans could be interesting, you know, they could
mix it up pretty good. You know, especially since they're
not on the top of the ticket.
Speaker 1 (30:39):
It does give them a little bit more freedom when
they're out there.
Speaker 2 (30:42):
It should be interesting.
Speaker 1 (30:43):
If I gave you the challenge, give me the best
two moments of Donald Trump. How hard is that for
you to dig up off the top of your head
from last night? Yeah?
Speaker 7 (30:53):
His at the end, I think when he brought up
the you've been at the office for three and a
half years, what have you been doing?
Speaker 1 (31:00):
I think that kind of comment the maga hat. Yeah,
that when he said, yeah, the maga hat line.
Speaker 7 (31:06):
That was pretty good. Yeah, I'll get your mega hat.
Speaker 2 (31:08):
That was pretty good.
Speaker 1 (31:09):
What about this one? He got fourteen million votes and
they got rid of him like a dog. And I'll
give you a little secret. He hates her. That was
steps right.
Speaker 7 (31:18):
But I just it's just he's this whole America is
being destroyed and it's just so down and I'm not
sure what makes you want to vote for someone when
it's all just so.
Speaker 2 (31:29):
Down and negative.
Speaker 1 (31:30):
And what he let her and what he let her
get away with an ABC letter get away with it.
Of course, there was no holding her accountable for her
economic stance, for her hiding of Joe's condition or you know,
changing and flip flopping was the biggest part. But he
didn't make it painful for either very effectively.
Speaker 7 (31:49):
No, well, because he was on his heels, because he
took the bait when she set him up on things
like crowd size, you know, then off he goes and
starts meandering and responding to that rather than flipping it
back and saying, you know, these are Americans who are
struggling and I'm trying to help them.
Speaker 1 (32:05):
You what have you been doing three and a half years.
Speaker 2 (32:07):
To help these people?
Speaker 7 (32:07):
That do show up at my rallies who are experiencing
the pain of inflation that you created.
Speaker 1 (32:12):
What was really frustrating for me is when ABC would
bring up January sixth, so she would bring up the borders.
His fault because he got on the phone until Congress
not to prove a bill, and then he doesn't explain
that the bill would have just made the lawlessness. The
law was that they would drag up the past, and
then she would take the highroad and say, and the
American people don't care about all this nonsense. They want
to move forward.
Speaker 7 (32:33):
It was just so frustrating, all right, Yeah, And again
that also speaks to his lack.
Speaker 1 (32:39):
Of preparation and her and her well preparation. Yeah right,
all right, Francine. Look, no hurricane going New Orleans is
good because A that warm golf water intensifies it. B
you got the mouth of the Mississippi, which creates a
storm surge from the golf and the river, and then
it's to the North Lake Ponta train and they both overflow,
and there's New Orleans under sea level like a bowl.
(33:02):
We don't think it has the intensity or the trajectory
to do that. What will Francine pose for those in
the New Orleans metro area.
Speaker 7 (33:09):
Yeah, a storm surge threat, but south and west of
the city, I think for the most part, so that's
going to really act as a buffer.
Speaker 1 (33:17):
The people in the low lying areas there have already.
Speaker 2 (33:19):
Been told to evacuate.
Speaker 7 (33:21):
Many are responding since this could create a storm surge
five to ten feet. It is already picking up forward speed,
meaning it's moving faster.
Speaker 2 (33:29):
That's a good thing.
Speaker 7 (33:30):
When these things move fast, they don't have as much
time to dump rain on an area, So rain expectations
are from five to twelve inches.
Speaker 2 (33:38):
Again, to your point, the place is already underwater anyway,
so well, hell.
Speaker 1 (33:43):
We lived and died on those pumps, so that's always
a niffy thing. But I don't think it too it's.
Speaker 7 (33:47):
Going to be a nast to Tennessee the better.
Speaker 2 (33:49):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (33:50):
Final question is nine to eleven. I guess Pearl Harbor
was a wake up call. You're not protected by oceans
and war can come to you. What was the wake
up call of nine to eleven? And how good of
a job have we done staying awake in vigilant.
Speaker 7 (34:06):
I think the fact that it was not a military target.
You know Pearl Harbor, as horrible as it was, was
alary military target, right, and a military attack even though
we weren't at war with Japan.
Speaker 2 (34:16):
At the time. This though obviously a civilian target.
Speaker 7 (34:20):
I think that was the jarring part of it, and
of course a cultural icon as the Twin Towers have
been in TV shows, movies for decades and still I
think I told you before, every time they flash up
in an episode of Friends or come up to the
old movies, sort of twinge a little bit every time
you see that picture of them.
Speaker 1 (34:39):
Absolute.
Speaker 7 (34:40):
Yeah, I'm not sure we're being as vigilant as we
should be.
Speaker 1 (34:43):
No, we're also focused on who's going to be the
next president. The question of the hour really is are
we any safer today than we were on nine ten,
two thousand and one, And a lot of the data
will point to we are less and it's just as
predictable there'll be a second attack, and it's not enough
to just remember we gotta honor and we gotta stay vigilant.
Always appreciate you, Rory. We're all in this together. This
(35:06):
is your Morning Show with Michael hild Show Now