Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, It's Michael. Your morning show airs live five to
eight am Central, six to nine Eastern and great cities
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be a part of your morning routine, but we're happier
here now. Enjoy the podcast one, two.
Speaker 2 (00:15):
Three, starting your morning off right. A new way of talk,
a new way of understanding, because we're in this together.
This is your Morning Show with Michael Gill.
Speaker 1 (00:29):
Johny Cannon. Good morning, one and all. Welcome to Tuesday, September,
the thirtieth year of Our Lord, twenty twenty five on
the air, streaming live on your iHeartRadio app. This is
your morning show, Honored to serve you. I'm Michael del Jorno.
Jeffrey's got the sound, Red's got an eye on the content.
Let's get started, President Trump. We'll speak at an unprecedented
meeting of US military commanders this morning. This is where
(00:52):
Pete hag Seth had summoned all generals and admirals from
around the world to the US and so far we're
being told it's just to tell them we're doing a
great job. Jeez, Well, I'm one day old. I was
born yesterday. Signs are pointing towards a government shutdown. I
(01:12):
love this story. When you say government shutdown, it's as
if you're threatening we are going to unplug your very life.
I mean, it's like the ultimate no. But what for
(01:35):
have we become that government centrist? Have we become that
government dependent? Now, if you just leave it dangling like
a participle, well, the implication is, hey, you're not gonna
get your solid security. You're not gonna get your None
of that's true. In fact, even Axios is admitting it.
(01:55):
More on that. In a moment, Keith Urban and Nicole
Kidman are splitting up after nearly twenty years of marriage.
I'm telling you that movie Baby Girl did it you
think it was? It was awful. It was disgusting. Her
interviews afterwards were even more troubling. My son and I
looked at each other and I said, they're gonna end
(02:17):
up split up over this. This movie's too much. And
sure enough, now in the story they talk about, well,
I'm on tour, she's always making movies or shows. And
I just stopped and I thought, does anybody prioritize marriage
and family anymore? Just is marriage with show business? People
just kind of like a I don't know, part of
(02:40):
a pr package. I mean, why are you making so
many shows and movies? Why are you on so many
concert tours? How much more money do you too need that? Oh,
we're just never home together anymore. So we didn't see
why we should stay married. In fact, we may not
even get divorced. We may just have all these empties houses.
What in the world. I was blown away by the
years it worked for nineteen years. All right, you know what,
(03:03):
I've changed my mind. It's the most wonderful time. There
is something about and most people would say the temperatures
dropping in its football season. Oh, but the real beautiful
feelings come from getting chili and Major League Baseball playoffs
(03:23):
are here. That's a good time of year, time of
year your morning show cities, Well, Detroit's definitely won, Cleveland's
definitely won. San Diego's definitely won. The Dodgers Los Angeles
has certainly won. So we've got a lot of our
cities still alive. Walkart playoffs begin today. This is the
(03:47):
strangest of draws. And you should have heard me try
to explain this to David Zanati. So the target the
Tigers and the Guardians go back and forth for that division,
the big fade by the Tigers, the big rise of
the the Guardians. Then it ties up the final couple
of days and the Guardians get by and who do
they get in the playoffs? The Tigers again. So we'll
(04:10):
start today with the Tigers and the Guardians at noon.
Podres in Cubs Cubs could be in the National League.
It's either the Cubs or the Reds. Right one of
these two wildcard teams are very dangerous. Padres will be
a regular field to take on the Cubs at two.
Red Sox Yankees. That great rivalry will kick off today
at five oh eight. And then you got the Reds
(04:32):
and the Dodgers. Remember the days of the Big Red
Machine and the Dodger Blue. This could be a great
matchup as well. And boy, the Reds came on strong
at the end of the year. The Dodgers got the payroll,
but the Reds got the mo as in momentum. So
we have baseball playoffs beginning. It was all Dolphins and
Broncos last night in the doubleheader of Monday Night Football,
(04:54):
and now the Jets joined the Saints and the Titans
as the only two winless teams. All right? Getting started
with this, this whole threat of government shutdown. I would
like to make the point that the government shutdown is
not the big boogeyman that Washington tries to make it
out to be, which is why they usually threaten it.
(05:17):
But they always cover their you know what in the end,
and they may not this time, and we may have
another government shutdown. So what's going to happen? Is the
world as you know it going to end? Is this
the worst possible thing? What was the old song in
the sixties, It's the Brooklyn Bridge, the worst that could
(05:38):
have happened. Oh, it's a great song. And that's how
they play the government shutdown. Now, this story comes from Axios,
which is a far left news organization, So why would
they suddenly be selling you government shutdowns aren't a big deal.
(05:58):
It's all scare reality. First of all, the other people
really affected are government employees, which there are far too many.
Number one. Number two, it's really a paid vacation. They
always end up getting back pay, which is why you
don't see any economic effect. Here's Axios's case. When the
(06:19):
US government heads towards a partial shutdown, a natural instinct No,
the sold threat, the sold doom by the left is
always to anticipate dire consequences. But history doesn't support that,
(06:39):
says Axios. In the past, at least, government shutdowns have
been a micro story, not a macro story. That is,
they have caused plenty of annoyances disruptions to the work
of individual agencies, but haven't had any meaningful impact on
(06:59):
any thing that really matters, like GDP or unemployment. The
open question is whether the Trump administration's handling of the
imminent shutdown will change that. That's a little slide cover year.
You know what for, Oh, you want to shut down
the governor. Good, let's make all these government jobs gone permanently. Look,
(07:23):
when the best paying, best benefits, most secure, and best
jobs are government jobs, you don't have a healthy economy.
You got to bload a government. So that's what they're
ultimately worried about. They're playing a hand of poker with
(07:45):
a guy that gets this and might even take full
advantage of it. By the numbers, Axios continues, the most
recent shutdown lasted thirty five days from December. I mean,
the real crisis is the debt. I shouldn't have to
interrupt this fun story to give you a real shot
of reality. You want to get scared about something. You
(08:08):
want to scream like you're seeing a monster about something.
Scream over thirty seven trillion dollars, a debt and a
trajectory that at the end of this fake crisis will
make the real crisis worse. There that should be a promo,
bully you get back to this. By the numbers, the
most recent shutdown lasted thirty five days from December twenty
eighteenth through mid January twenty nineteen. In those two months,
(08:31):
payroll employment grew by an average of two hundred and
twenty one thousand jobs, better than the one hundred and
sixty six thousand a month notched for the entirety of
the year twenty nineteen numbers. Actually want I thought it
was interesting yesterday. Did anybody notice the market? We were
(08:54):
getting to be like t minus hours till the government
shut down and the market's up. Well, they've been through
this before, haven't they. There's no panic, but yeah, for jobs,
look for more jobs, not less. In October of twenty thirteen,
we had a sixteen day shutdown. It coincided with two
hundred and twenty thousand jobs added that month we should
(09:15):
shut down more often, and that was better than one
hundred ninety two thousand average for the year. Jobs went
up in both cases. Similarly, you can't see much impact
in data like unemployment or GDP or retail sales. Even
(09:37):
initial jobless claims, perhaps the best real time indicator of
the job market distress, doesn't show much. In the weekending
January twelfth, twenty nineteen, last shutdown, there were two hundred
and eighteen thousand unemployment benefit claims, almost exactly the number
of the twenty nineteen average two hundred and seventeen thousand.
(09:58):
It's like three hundred nothing. Traditionally, government workers remain employed
during a government shutdown, even if they're not allowed to
work during that time, and they always get back pay afterwards.
It's like recess, summer, recess, it's like going on holiday chap.
Speaker 3 (10:20):
So what I'm hearing, Michaels, If we do a government
shutdown to actually gain more jobs, do.
Speaker 1 (10:26):
Its spending will increase, spending will and the market goes
up right, and the market goes up for your retire
And yet someone is convinced someone that big government every
day is okay. Overspending every day is okay, massive accumulation
of debt is okay, what's my point? My point is
(10:52):
every time somebody says government shutdown, I don't even know
what the analogy is. Here comes the the Boogeyman, Here
come no, here comes the grim Reaper. This is like
the ultimate crime, the Titanic cancer. What I mean, what
are the words that alarm us? Terror, attack, cancer, death?
(11:15):
I mean they sound the alarm. You should be screaming
and sounding the alarms the other days. Government shutdown, no
big deal, even the lefts admitting it. Government wide open,
light the borders, scream and run like the houses on fire.
Speaker 2 (11:37):
This is your Morning show with Michael del Chona.
Speaker 1 (11:41):
You're right, it might be a Hollywood marriage. However, they
do have two daughters, so I guess they did procreate
for whatever Dan's were. So is that you read? Was
that really a listener and away for a few minutes,
I think, read left us and talk about it? All right?
Who was that supposed to be? Was that real? That
(12:02):
was real?
Speaker 3 (12:03):
That was Chris Abraham leaving us a talkback via k
e x A. M all right, so that's Portland, okay,
all right, I want to guess it's all right.
Speaker 1 (12:13):
Well, see there's my audience there one. Never mind the
government shutdown. Yeah, never mind the twenty point peace plan
to end more eternally in the Middle East, or so
the president claimed, they want to do Nicole Kidman and
Keith Urban. Sorry, it's just travesty. That was my point
that you know, doesn't anybody prioritize marriage. They have two daughters. Family,
(12:37):
isn't that more important than concert tours? And but I'm
telling you this movie baby Girl, but filthy nasty. And
then she did a lot of interviews afterwards that he's.
Speaker 3 (12:49):
Done a lot of Yeah, Southern, questionable type of movie.
Speaker 1 (12:53):
I think I think Keith just you know, pulled a
Barack Obama. I'm a nice guy, but I'm not all.
Israeli Prime Minister bibdt Yah, who is apologizing for Israel
strikes in Cutter Mark Mayfield fills us in Prime.
Speaker 4 (13:12):
Minister Benjamin Netyah, who says such a strike will not
happen again, and he apologized to Cutter's Prime.
Speaker 5 (13:17):
Minister Isel was targeting terrorists, wasn't targeting Katar, And of
course we.
Speaker 4 (13:22):
Regretted the loss of the Katari citizens.
Speaker 1 (13:26):
Wasn't our target.
Speaker 4 (13:27):
The strikes were targeting Hamas leaders, but a Cuttery official
was also killed. It comes as Trump hosted netnya who
for an Oval Office meeting, during which he held a
trilateral call where Trump expressed his desire to put Israeli
Cutter relations on a positive track after years of mutual
grievances and miscommunications. After the call, the Cuttery Prime Minister
agreed to work with Israel on peace talks with Hamas
by Mark Maefield.
Speaker 1 (13:47):
Well step aside, CBS, Step aside, ABC. Here comes YouTube
with their checkbook, agreeing to pay millions to sell a
lawsuit brought by President Trump. Jim brupezmore the.
Speaker 5 (13:58):
Law Street Journals reporting the Goo Goal owned company will
pay twenty four and a half million dollars related to
the suspension of President Trump's account after the January sixth
Capitol riot. The settlement makes YouTube the final big tech
company to settle a trio of lawsuits mister Trump brought
against social media platforms after leaving the White House. Meta
agreed to pay twenty five million dollars in January X
(14:21):
paying ten million.
Speaker 1 (14:22):
I'm Jim Roup, so this is what I'm talking about.
You got a big twenty point plan to bring peace
and settle the Israeli Palestinian issue. On the same day,
you decide to do an AI generated video depicting Jakeem
Jeffries wearing a sobrero and mustache. I can't even do
(14:43):
this on the street fee and Chucky Schumer speaking in
a fake voice as the potential government shut drawn draws closer.
This is where the Trump two point zero and Trump
one point zhos sometimes meet each other in the mirror.
Tammy Trihio has more.
Speaker 6 (14:57):
Video to pick Schumer and Jeffries as if they're speaking
to reporters following their meeting with Trump at the White
House Monday, with the fabricated audio depicting Schumer as arguing
for undocumented immigrants to get free healthcare because minority voters
hate Democrats.
Speaker 1 (15:10):
It's a disgusting video, and we're going to continue to
make clear bigotry will get you nowhere.
Speaker 6 (15:16):
Jeffrey spoke about the video on MSNBC Monday night. Democrats
say they're drawing a line in the sand to stop
a Republican assault on the healthcare of the American people.
The government will partially shut down Wednesday at twelve oh
one am Eastern if no deal can be reached. I'm
Tammy Trihillo.
Speaker 1 (15:32):
In sports, we have not one, but two NFL football games.
Last night two TUA Tds led to the Dolphins twenty
one or twenty seven to twenty one victory over the Jets.
Jets now owned for join the Saints and Titans as
the gapage of the league. And it was all Broncos
in the late Affair. Broncos twenty three over the Bengals,
who just don't look like the Bengals. They look like
(15:55):
the Bengals. Playoffs start today, Tigers and Guardians at noon.
Oh my padre comes at two. Red Sox Yankees at five,
and the Reds and the Dodgers at eight to eight.
Birthdays today, succession actor Kieran Culkin is forty three. The
Nanny Fran Drasher is sixty eight. Heat star Tony Ale
is fifty five. Great movie Keeping the Faith if you've
(16:17):
never seen it. Jenna Elfman fifty four years old. If
it's your birthday, Happy birthdays. So glad you were born
and thanks for waking up with your morning show. I'm
Joe Wigan, Tampa, and my morning show is your morning
show with Michael Del Jorno. Hi, it's Michael Your morning
(16:40):
show can be heard live weekday mornings five to eight
am six to nine am Eastern and great cities like Tampa, Florida, Youngstown, Ohio,
and Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. We'd love to join you on
the Drive to Work live, but we're glad you're here now.
Enjoyed the podcast. Good morning, and welcome to Tuesday, September,
the third thirtieth Yea of Our Lord twenty two twenty five.
Early bird gets the worm, Sleepy squirrel misses the nut.
(17:03):
Rise and shine, Throw that leg over the bed, grab
that coffee, and join the misery like the rest of us.
All Right, President Trump will speak at an unprecedented meeting.
Unprecedented because they won't tell us what it's early about.
Every general and every admiral has been summoned to Washington,
d C. And where to believe it's to say, how
are you doing a great job? Now? Go back? Signs
(17:26):
are pointing towards the government shutdown, though, is that really
a big deal? Keith Urban and Nicole Kevin are splitting
after nearly twenty years of marriage. I think baby Girl
was the reason and I'm sticking to it. And the
twenty twenty five Major League baseball postseason arrives today with
some great matchups. All Right, the President is the big
story far and away of the day. Let me give
(17:47):
you a little piece of dramatic audio. This is the
President yesterday and his announcement of his twenty point proposal
for peace to the Middle Least. Listen.
Speaker 7 (17:56):
So this is a big, big day, a beautiful day,
pretent actually one of the great days ever in civilization,
things that have been going on for hundreds of years
and thousands of years. We're gonna at least we're at
a minimum, very very close, and I think we're beyond
(18:16):
very close. And I'm not just talking about Ghaza, guys,
is one thing, but we're talking about much beyond Ghaza,
the whole deal, everything getting solved. It's called peace in
the Middle East, and let's call it eternal piece in the.
Speaker 1 (18:34):
Middle East and also with you. So this is so,
here's what the twenty point plan entails. Gaza will be deradicalized,
terror free zone that does not pose the threat to
its neighbors. We'll get to who police is that in
a minute. Gaza will be redeveloped for the benefit of
(18:55):
the people of Gaza, after all they suffered the most
point three. If both sides agree to this proposal, the
war will immediately end. That is the number one thing
everyone's wanting to hear. Israel last degree to in the war,
Amas has degree to in the war. Israeli forces will
(19:15):
withdraw to an agreed uponline to prepare for a hostage release.
During this time, all military operations, including ariel and artillery bombardment,
will be suspended within seventy two hours point four of
a twenty point plan. Within seventy two hours of Israel
publicly accepting this agreement, all hostages alive and deceased will
(19:39):
be returned. Lot's got to happen, right, I think you
can get to four pretty easy. Now. Within seventy two hours,
will Hamas turn over all hostages alive and deceased. Five.
Once all hostages are released, Israel will then release two
(20:01):
hundred and fifty life sentence prisoners plus seventeen hundred gozzens
who were detained after the October seventh invasion, including all
women and children detained in that context. For every Israeli
hostage who remains whose remains are released, Israel will release
(20:25):
the remains of fifteen deceased cousins once all hostages are returned,
Hamas members who commit to peaceful coexistence and to decommission
their weapons will be given amnesty. Six is a problem
(20:47):
for me. I mean at that point. First of all,
you know, we call them radical Islamists, we call them evil.
They're worshiping. There are three conflicting examples of Muhammad in
the Quran, and there are many hadiths and surahs that
(21:11):
call for jihad and war. And there is no higher
calling than to die for Allah. So you're gonna be
leaving suddenly. You're going to say, oh, that cancer cell
is now a healthy cell. We'll let it remain. That's
(21:33):
going to be a problem, but I'll keep moving. Seven.
Upon acceptance of this agreement, full aid will be immediately
sent into the Gaza Strip. Eight Entry of distribution and
aid in the Gaza Strip will proceed without interference from
the two parties, through the United Nations and its agencies.
(21:55):
Nine Gaza will be governed under a temporary transitional government.
And it's actually nine is the one thing I'd like
to see be permanent. This is what's going to be necessary.
You cannot leave this region up to the people to vote.
We saw this in Afghanistan with a Taliban. The Taliban
(22:17):
will patiently wait and when the troops lead, they'll let
you know, Hey, as soon as these American forces are gone,
I'm going to come to your door and kill you.
And they did and Hamasta similar things. So it's not
that the Palestidian people foolishly vote for these people. They're
all Muslim brothers and they're different warring factions. And then
(22:40):
whoever threatens the best wins. Nine is a tricky one
for me. Ten. A Trump economic development plan to rebuild
and energize Gaza will be created by convening a panel
of experts who have helped birth some of the thriving
modern miracle cities in the Middle East. This is where
(23:02):
you start getting the riviera of the Middle East. Vision eleven.
A special economic zone will be established with preferred tariff
and access rates to be negotiated. A little bit of
Atlantic City mixed in to this negotiation. Twelve. No one
(23:25):
will be forced to leave Gaza, and those who wish
to leave will be free to do so and free
to return. We will encourage people to stay and offer
them opportunities to build a better Gaza. Thirteen. Hamas and
other factions agree to not have any role in the
governance of Gaza. Oh, that's the cancer cell that's going
to suddenly now act like a healthy cell, directly, indirectly,
(23:48):
or in any other form. That's an awful lot of trust.
That's an awful lot of wishful thinking. Fourteen. A guarantee
will be provided by regional partners to ensure that Hamas
and the factions comply with their obligations and the new
gazapposes no threat to neighbors or it's people. Fifteen. The
United States will work with the Arab and international partners
(24:08):
to develop a temporary International Stabilization Force ISF to immediately
deploy in Gaza. This. Oh, there's shades of cashmir in this.
I get that, But this I don't know. If you
send in a world police, then nobody has to be
(24:30):
the bad guy when things go awry. It doesn't have
to be Israel, it doesn't have to be America. In fact,
it can be more reasonable Arabs and Muslims, primarily that
keep the radical terrorist Muslims in line, kind of like
fifteen sixteen. Israel will not occupy or annex Gaza, and
(24:54):
they have been true to that until things get so
out of hand that they attack, which is the cycle
of radical Islam. Now, the question is appeasement always emboldens
an aggressor, Yes, but especially a radical Islamist because it
(25:15):
almost becomes their religious text. They commit acts of terror
to strike fear. But when they actually think they have leverage,
when they actually think they're up against somebody who's bowing
or someone that's taking the form a submissive posture, they're
really emboldened, and they're emboldened to holy war. So there's
(25:39):
symbols of that that they want to be a footing
of lasting peace. That's spiritually problematic. What I'm dancing around
is I want to get excited about this, but there's
a lot of wishful thinking. There's a lot of pretending
(26:00):
we're dealing with reasonable elements or pretending we're dealing with
evil elements that we're going to hold back, when in fact,
from their perspective, they're not evil, they're surrendered, they're faithful,
they're worshiping. You can't expect the leopard spots to change,
(26:22):
and you certainly it's insulting to expect they're worship to
change just because you're not honest about understanding their history
and faith and prophet doesn't mean they're not. Eighteen Now
it's going to really start getting problematic for me. Eighteen,
an inner faith dialogue process will be established based on
the values of tolerance and peaceful coexistence to try to
(26:46):
change the minds and narratives of Palestinians and Israelis by
emphasizing the benefits that can be derived from peace. How
the Great mush God kid in this twenty point plan.
Speaker 5 (27:00):
At eighteen, they're gonna put coexist stickers on all the cars.
Speaker 1 (27:05):
They don't see the Muslims don't see Israel's right not
to any portion of land. It's not a land dispute,
it's an existence dispute. Nineteen. While Godza redevelopment advances, and
when the Palestinian Authority reform program is faithfully carried out,
(27:30):
the conditions may finally be in place for a credible
pathway to Palestinian self determination and statehood, a state within
the borders of Israel, of differing kingdoms, of differing views
on what peace really is. Islam is always a religion
(27:57):
of peace as long as you're willing to be conquer.
Islam is always a religion of peace as long as
you're willing to die, pay the tax or be defeated. Tolerance.
(28:21):
This is where they're nothing like us, and political correctness
hasn't allowed you to study it properly. There's no religious
freedom in Islam. There's no right of assembly in Islam.
There's no freedom of speech in Islam. There's no all
(28:41):
are created equal in Islam. Naive, I would say, slightly ignorant.
I mean, if the almost to sit down and create
(29:01):
twenty points that could, you know, maybe lead to something temporarily.
The only thing permanent would be a Nobel Peace prize
for the president. Then let me get to twenty. I
didn't finish. The United States will establish a dialogue between
Israel and Palestinian's degree on political horizon for peaceful and
prosperous existence. Just a whole lot of wishful thinking. But
(29:26):
believe it or not, this kind of nonsense and is
getting really good reaction from the Arab world, the Muslim world,
and especially from the Palestinian authority. Now I will be
quick to point out the Palestinian authority, of course hate
some oss. So the enemy of my enemy is my friend.
We're going to visit with Lieutenant Colonel James Carafano's out
(29:48):
of the country again, but we'll be filling in with
another senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation, step and Bucci.
I'll see if he's buying any of this. Michael, do
you think they should have stopped with eight? Maybe? Four?
I don't mean number ten, I just mean four and
four tops? Four maybe? Oh? The four tops? Do we
(30:11):
have any four tops rejoin music we could play out with.
I'll try to make that happen, all right. That's the
latest down the twenty point plan for peace, or the
latest attempt for the president to go after a Nobel
Peace Prize. There's a lot of naiveta and wishful thinking
in this one. I'm having a hard time buying it.
Speaker 2 (30:26):
It's your Morning show with Michael del Chno.
Speaker 1 (30:31):
Yeah, let's get a little two way conversation going. We'll
start down in Florida by way of Saint Louis and Gabe.
Speaker 3 (30:38):
No, Jeffrey bad, good morning.
Speaker 7 (30:41):
Gosh.
Speaker 2 (30:42):
Well, I don't.
Speaker 4 (30:43):
Know with any rocks.
Speaker 7 (30:45):
He's uh gonna tell them to go.
Speaker 1 (30:48):
After Anton's full force.
Speaker 2 (30:50):
That's how I feel.
Speaker 1 (30:53):
Well. Antifa has been designated a terrorist organization on US soil.
HAMAS is a terrorist arm of Iran inside Israeli borders
in the Gaza. How those two connect, I don't know.
I'll add that to another point in the twenty point plan.
I'm concerned about who's next. It was, I know is Ohio.
Speaker 3 (31:15):
You've got a listener from w KB in no name. No,
we don't know the name, Michael.
Speaker 1 (31:20):
I don't think you have to worry about number six
because I don't think Hamas will greet these terms. They
don't want peace, well, I mean that's what I'm trying
to explain. No, they don't want peace. They're not called
to peace. They're called for world dominance. They're called to
(31:44):
die if it takes them dying to convert the world
to Islam. Look, when the world gets serious about honestly
studying the three contradictory Mohammads, then I'll engage in a conversation. Yeah,
he was peaceful, intolerant for a very short period of time.
(32:06):
He was one of three hundred and sixty five religions
in Mecca, and he turned down his uncle. Then he
started robbing. Then he became kind of a political force,
which is why you still have peace loving Muslims today.
And then you have political Islamist today. They will come
and populate, they will infiltrate, they will agitate, they will
(32:28):
play patiently, and then they in the end, when they
feel the timing is right, will become warriors. Then you
kind of have the instant warriors and jihadists, and they're
following the final Medina example of Mohammed. So, which is
the good Muslim depends on which Mohammed you're emulating. And
(32:51):
here's your problem. You don't know which of the three
they are until they act. But that middle one is
the one I want you to remember. That's why I
was using the analogy of the cancer cell. Oh So,
we're going to leave these Hama cells that denounce the
you know, the warrior aspect of it, and they just
(33:11):
want to live peacefully in Palestine. We'll give them amnesty
and they can stay like they're going to change their spots.
At best, it's temporary peace until they rise to strength again,
and then they'll wage war again. It's very naive of
true Mohammedism. The best thing they ever did was change
(33:35):
the name. I can't understand Mohammed. I can't understand the Surahs,
I can't understand the hidith. I can't understand history, I
can't understand the geopolitical system of Islam and take this
twenty point plan serious at all is my problem? At
(34:00):
Michael d at iHeartMedia dot Com, Jim writes, good morning, Michael.
I have a proposal I've been pitching, and it is
to relocate the United Nations headquarters from the Upper East
Side of Manhattan to the newly established Gaza Strip. Trump
could call it Maragasa. Jim in Franklin, Okay, we dot.
Speaker 2 (34:21):
An, We're all in this together. This is your morning
show with Michael Ndheld, Journo