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October 9, 2025 35 mins

The market seems unfazed by the shutdown, but for how long?  We’ll ask that and get an analysis of the jobs report with our economist, David Bahnsen. 

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

Another vote, but the government shutdown drags on. National Correspondent RORY O’NEILL will have the latest on negotiations to restart the government, as well as how the shutdown is starting to affect the public. 

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, I'm Michael. I'd love to have you listen to
your morning show live. Every day we're heard on great
stations like News Talk five point fifty k FYI and
Phoenix News Radio eleven ninety k e X in Portland
and ten ninety The Patriot in Seattle. Make us a
part of your morning routine. We'd love to have you
listen live. But in the meantime, enjoy the podcast.

Speaker 2 (00:17):
Oh two three, starting your morning off right. A new
way of talk, a new way of understanding because we're
in this together.

Speaker 3 (00:29):
This is your Morning Show with Michael gil CHORNA.

Speaker 4 (00:34):
Good morning America.

Speaker 5 (00:35):
This is bench Min Daniel on this sunny side of Columbus, Georgia.

Speaker 2 (00:38):
Belle.

Speaker 4 (00:39):
You all been dying to find out, so I'll tell
you right now.

Speaker 1 (00:42):
My morning show's a your morning Show with Michael del Jorne.

Speaker 4 (00:46):
I'm God bless have a great day. Thank you he has.
I think Benny and Mary ought to fill in for me.
Maybe Thanksgiving. I think Chard you're on a board on
those days. I like the energy. Benny, good morning, God
bless you, my friend. All Right, it's eight minutes after
the OUF. You just waking up, President says Israel and
Hamas have agreed to the first phase anyway of a

(01:07):
proposed peace plan, and that will lay out this way
first assigning today. Then all hostages will be released, some
fifteen seventeen hundred that belong to Hamas. There are forty
eight fox Is reporting twenty believed to be alive. There
are probably far more presumed dead, including two American hostages,

(01:29):
but dead or alive hostage releases take place, then Israel
will withdraw its troops to an agreed uponlines. So there's
quite a bit to go. Might even involved the president,
whether it's Egypt or Israel, making a trip as this
peace process moves forward. A twenty nine year old man
is behind bars in connection with the deadly destructive Palisades
fire in California. Ten months they finally got him, and

(01:53):
he's behind bars and faces charges, and Tigers comes and
pirates stay alive, Yankees get eliminated. We have Thursday Night
football tonight, the Eagles and the Giants say hello to
our money wiz economist, and I might add theologian David Bonson,
who is joining us from New York. David, before we
get the money in the epicenter of the world, what

(02:15):
looks like at least a step towards a solid cease
fire and hostage exchange and on to the really heavy lifting,
which is lasting piece. Your reaction to the peace announcement yesterday, Yeah.

Speaker 6 (02:28):
So far, I feel really encouraged.

Speaker 7 (02:31):
I believe that if this all comes together, there's still
a lot of ifs that you're dealing with some people
that are not necessarily trustworthy.

Speaker 4 (02:42):
But what it appears to me is a pretty remarkable.

Speaker 7 (02:45):
Deal that I just want to point out could have
never been made possible if President Trump had not been
so supportive of Israel decimating Hamas.

Speaker 6 (02:56):
Yeah, that in.

Speaker 7 (02:57):
The aftermath of what Hamas did had two years ago,
in the grotesque attack on Israel. Had people began immediately
appeasing Hamas instead of as President Trump did, allowing Israel
to do what they needed to do, then there would
be no deal right now, There'd be no leverage. This

(03:20):
was a peace through strength approach, and assuming it does
work out, it was only made possible by the strength.

Speaker 4 (03:28):
Yeah. I did a piece of research from Rasmussen that
came out yesterday, and it's America's hope for peace, and
it was at forty four percent. And then you look
at the bipartisan aspect of it. Seventy one percent of
Republicans think the president's doing a good job. I'd like
to know who the twenty nine percent of Republicans who
don't think he did a good job and how they're
feeling today. But sixty one percent of Democrats think he's

(03:52):
doing a poor job. And of course you would think
they'd all have egg on their face today and that's
not what it's about. But it won't change their opinion.
That's how divided we were. Humble Was that pole?

Speaker 7 (04:03):
Was that pole about Israel Hamas specifically or you mean
in general?

Speaker 4 (04:07):
And well just in I think, well, I don't know that.
It was about peace between Hamas and Israel, the likelihood
of that, and then President doing a good job with everything.

Speaker 6 (04:18):
It was a general Oh no, no, no, no, it was.

Speaker 4 (04:21):
It was about bringing peace with these two sides. But
but I'm just struck, and this is more the theologian
than the economist I'm asking. But I mean, here we
have and I'm not delusional about lasting truth. I know
the three types of Muslims, I know what Hamas is,
what Iran is. I think this is a genuine kicking
of the can things will lay low for a while.
This is what strength creates. Weakness invites what happened, But

(04:46):
lasting piece is a heavy lift. It may not even
be a biblical possibility to we're we're very rarely toward
near the end. But I'm just struck by how Hamas
in Israel can come to terms on a framework for peace,
and meanwhile we can't find a two party solution in
America kind of shutdown or any other topic that comes up.

(05:09):
You know, we might want to spend some time in
the mirror too here.

Speaker 7 (05:15):
Well, I mean, I think you've brought up two separate things,
and I totally understand what you're saying.

Speaker 4 (05:20):
I would be careful just in the fact that the
that the parallels are different.

Speaker 7 (05:25):
You're right, our government shutdown and the Republicans Democrats don't.

Speaker 8 (05:28):
Talk to each other, and it's all dysfunctional.

Speaker 7 (05:30):
But you know, in fairness for the most part, where
we're not at war with each other in the way
in the guerrilla warfare sense. Now, I know people can
point to the various random acts of violence and other
things like that that are becoming more.

Speaker 6 (05:45):
Frequent in are all too unacceptable with.

Speaker 4 (05:48):
Their own right, But what we have.

Speaker 7 (05:50):
Is a political dysfunction, which is very different from a
military coup. But I will agree with your underlying point
that the dysfunction of our government and not just of
our government, because it is not really starting with them.
All right. We have Republican and Democrats in Congress, they
don't talk to each other and can't get anything done.

(06:11):
Because we have Republicans and Democrats in the masses. They
don't want anything done, they don't want them talk to
each other. The system incentivizes this tribalization, and it is
not the system that you and I grew up with.
The filibuster, for example, that required sixty votes in the Senate,
when we've almost never had sixty votes from one dominant party.

(06:35):
It always required, it required certain degrees of bipartisanship, and
since Bayner Obama that's been nearly impossible, and any attempt to.

Speaker 4 (06:46):
Do it is mocked. Well, yeah, because what we once
embraced is checks and balances and liked has now become dysfunction.
Needs to be relooked at. David Bonson, as our money,
was an economist. He also is our counselor of mental anguish.
We've been tapping into the theologian a lot in twenty
twenty five. I don't have to do the short version
of this. The way I would have worded it was

(07:09):
if and I do agree. And Donald Trump, by the way,
took very little credit last night. I mean he was
just praising Marco, praising his son in law, you know,
praising the Arab world and the Muslim nations that also
helped with us. I mean, he was giving out gratitude
everybody and didn't take any praise for himself. And I
do believe, and people can disagree with me. I think

(07:29):
whether it's Ukraine and Russia or Hamas in Israel, the
president wants the dying stopped. He wants the hostages released
so families can be a piece, and then he wants
to build lasting piece. I really think that's his motive
and not a Nobel Peace prize. And I think the
president also knows that this isn't done yet, and even
when this is, this was the easy phase one. Phase

(07:50):
two is the heavy part. But that's where he wants
to get to. And I know people made fun of
him calling it the Riviera of the Middle East, but really,
if you can bring prosperity to these Muslims in this region,
they won't rely on the radical dangerous ones.

Speaker 6 (08:06):
Well, it's certainly.

Speaker 7 (08:07):
True that radicalism is born out of their own destitute theology.
I think that a lot of people became very critical
of President Bush for believing that democracy could be contagious
in the Middle East. And I think that if President
Trump really did believe that Western capitalism would all of

(08:30):
a sudden become contagious, it's equally missing of a few
points here. But what is not missing is that the
first point has to be peaced. So whatever has to
happen to both stabilize and let alone flourish and bring
hope an opportunity to the region, it has to first

(08:50):
start with people not shooting each other and bombing each other.
And then yeah, I mean, my own belief would be
that for them to ever get to a point where
where there can be hope and opportunity and young men
that don't get radicalized into a nihilistic religion but instead,
you know, find opportunity. It's flourishing and productive work. You're

(09:13):
not going to get that until you sow the seeds
for democratic capitalism, and essentially why US has allies at Israel.
In my own theological framework, it is not because of
any particular vision of biblical prophecy.

Speaker 6 (09:29):
It is because Israel is.

Speaker 7 (09:30):
Our political and economic ally that shares our values, and
there is no other country in the.

Speaker 6 (09:36):
Middle East that does that.

Speaker 7 (09:37):
That's why Israel is our ally and other countries have
every opportunity to join that. But I would admit I
don't believe it will be happening anytime soon.

Speaker 4 (09:47):
Yeah, and again, if you study Muhammad the three contradictory lives,
we're left with peace loving Muslims and we have political
Islamist They will populate, infiltrate, agitate, but they will patiently
play for tomorrow. Jihadis are ready to fight and kill today.
What happens is weakness embolden's aggressors. And you can there's

(10:08):
two ways you can take a political Islamist and if
they feel like they're getting defeated and controlled, they get
fearful and then they start leaning towards the radicals who
are ready to fight now if they sense weakness and
think this is the hour for conquering, because remember there's
only peace in Islam once they've conquered you and you've surrendered,

(10:30):
So you know, again, weakness emboldens. They're bad actions strength
puts it in that. That's clearly what we're seeing right now.
But I'm just struck by the irony that that if
Donald Trump is to credit for the peace process of
the last ten months compared to what weakness created, maybe
we need to start discussing peace at home too, you know,

(10:51):
putting America first, it would be it'd be a nice
use of the momentum. I also one of the momentium
will carry on to Ukraine and Russia. Boy, that could
maybe salvage the year, kind of like the lunar message
of Genesis salvage nineteen sixty eight. Maybe that can salvage
twenty twenty five. All right, real quickly on money, that
is your expertise. Market hasn't reacted at all to this closing,

(11:13):
even though there's no sign by the way, if they
resolve it now, we're going to be right back at
another closing in three weeks. So I don't know what
we think we're gaining. But what do you see the
market doing and how long will it stay steady? Well,
the market couldn't care less about the shutdown.

Speaker 7 (11:29):
I've said that from the beginning, and so there's no
surprise in that, and the markets up and down movements
are not going to have anything to do with what
does and doesn't happen with the shutdown. What essentially it
has to happen with markets is we're going to go
into earning season. Pepsi kicked off earning season this morning
by releasing their quarterly results, and now you're about to

(11:53):
have most of corporate America tell you how they did
in the third quarter and what they see happening in
the fourth quarter and that they see going into the
next year. So you know, earnings drive markets profits. Some
companies are getting hit by the tariffs, other companies are
going to report good news, and and there is a
very heavy over reliance right now on AI cap X,

(12:16):
and a significant part of the market is dependent on
companies announcing that they're spending a lot of money on
AI and other companies announcing that those other companies have
announced they're spending a lot of money with them, and
sort of circularity to.

Speaker 4 (12:34):
I'm just laughing. Yeah, but do you see the do
you see the similarities with when all the dot com
wave happened with AI? Yes, yes, yes, and yes, uh.

Speaker 7 (12:49):
There's a lot of similarities that I'm going to be
writing about in givdingcafe dot com tomorrow as a matter
of fact. But look, it's when you say similarities, it's
a really important word.

Speaker 6 (12:59):
It doesn't mean it's identical.

Speaker 7 (13:00):
It doesn't mean everything is set up the exact same way,
but there are certain things in the way it's shaping
that rhyme a great deal. With the experience many of
us had with the tech boom of the late nineteen nineties,
there's no question about that.

Speaker 4 (13:16):
Final question is apparently the Fed they're in agreement that
cuts are needed, but they're not agreed, not necessarily an
agreement of how many between now and the end of
the year. How important might that decision be to help
things go.

Speaker 6 (13:31):
Well?

Speaker 7 (13:32):
What we know is that the predominant number, the needed majority,
is at two more cuts, and that's why the futures
market has a ninety four percent chance of another cut
at the end of October and one more cut in
the middle of December. So there is a little more
hair around the median, if you will, a few more

(13:52):
that want you know less, and more than want more
than is normal. However, there is an overwhelming majority already
that are right down the middle, and that's what's going
to happen.

Speaker 4 (14:03):
So the FED is the easy part right now.

Speaker 7 (14:05):
For the end of the year, we'll start getting into
more FED drama into twenty twenty six because Japowe asked
the place, and Secretary Besant is busy at work interviewing
people to replace him.

Speaker 4 (14:19):
I cherish our weekly visits and I cherish your time
and thank you for taking it for both me and
the listeners. Dividendcafe dot com tomorrow. The similarities between what
do we call them? Was it the dot com boom or.

Speaker 7 (14:33):
Well, it was the dot com boom and the tech boom.

Speaker 4 (14:37):
It was all sort of one and the same.

Speaker 7 (14:39):
You ended up with a dot com boom that became
a bigger tech boom that became a bubble that burst.

Speaker 4 (14:47):
Bubbled, it burst, and now we have the AI boom.
Does it burst? Dividendcafe dot com is the website. David
Bonsen is the economist and the money whiz. Thank you
so much and have a great week. God bless you.
Thank you for your theological insights as well.

Speaker 3 (15:01):
Today this is your morning show with Michael Del Chrono.

Speaker 4 (15:06):
The President says Israel and a Moss have agreed to
the first phase of the proposed peace plan that includes
a signing today, maybe even a visit from the President
to the region, all hostages to be released within seventy
two hours, Israel to withdraw its troops to an agreed
upon line, and it all begins today with the signing.

(15:26):
Yesterday was the handshake in the announcement from the President. Meanwhile,
a twenty nine year old's behind bars in connection with
the deadly and destructive Palisades fires in California.

Speaker 9 (15:35):
Jonathan Rinderneck, who was arrested in Florida on Tuesdays, accused
of intentionally starting the Lockman Fire shortly after midnight on
New Year's Day. The fire was put out, but continued
to smolder underground. Strong Santa Anna wins caused it to
flare back up on January seventh, becoming the Palisades Fire,
one of the most destructive fires in California history that
left twelve people dead.

Speaker 6 (15:56):
US Attorney Bill A.

Speaker 9 (15:56):
Sale says Rindernck was initially interviewed by authorities on January four.
He allegedly lined to them about where he was on
the night the Lockman Fire started. Rendered nectars facing arson
charges involving destruction of property.

Speaker 4 (16:08):
I'm Marknefield. The Fad appears to be on the same
page and lowering rates, but are a little split still
on how many cuts should happen before the end of
the year. Dolly Pardon made it clear to her public
she is fine, just getting some work done. Sorry for
the scare, and the scare was real. For the Yankees,
they're eliminated by the Blue Jays, But for the Cubs

(16:30):
and the Phillies they stay alive. Cubs winning four to three,
Phillies eight to two over the Dodgers, and the Tigers
three in the fifth, four and the sixth, pounded the
Mariners nine to three Game five, a decisive Game five
in Seattle. To come. Hey, I'm Mike Aragon in Santauel,
Arizona and my morning show, The Pure Morning Show with
Michael dejo Ho. Hi, I'm Michael.

Speaker 1 (16:57):
We'd love to have you listen every weekday morning to
your morning show live, even take us along with you
on the drive to work. We can be heard on
great radio stations like one oh four ninth The Patriot
in Saint Louis, or Talk Radio ninety eight point three
and fifteen ten WLAC in Nashville and News Talk five
fifty k f YI in Phoenix, Arizona. Love to be
a part of your morning routine. But we're always grateful

(17:17):
you're here. Now enjoyed the podcast. No, I know she's
fine and it's nothing life threatening. I just want to
know how the work's going.

Speaker 4 (17:23):
Hey, hello, if you could just yeah, give us the
feind of Dolly parton getting work done. I'm just getting
some Can you imagine her alarm ast sisters scares the
snout out of all of us. And then Dolly's got

(17:45):
to do a video listen, and I just haven't had
some I need to get some work done. You're not
have family, but my first doll is work done. Got
her down of just going tire.

Speaker 10 (17:56):
She did say that she was going in for one
hundred thousand miles check out check.

Speaker 4 (18:00):
I mean she did say thirty six minutes after the
hour in the Central time zone, twenty four minutes to
be to work by eight o'clock. Good morning, and thanks
for taking us along with you can't have your morning
show without your voice. I'd like to start with Woody.
Woody is in Arizona, Arizona.

Speaker 6 (18:15):
Yeah, Phoenix.

Speaker 10 (18:15):
So with this pending peace in the Middle East, you
think the pro Palestinian free Palestine, useful idiots that are
protesting in our cities and college campuses will finally go away,
go back to a normal life and quit being a
public nuisance. Or will they find another grievance to continue

(18:40):
their nonsense.

Speaker 4 (18:41):
I think that's a rhetorical question. But I'm going to
go ahead and defer and let the great Flip Gregory,
who called in just about twenty minutes ago. I'm going
to let him respond to Woody may get it off
off of my sal Flip Gregory, Ladies, not proper, here's

(19:05):
the talkback, But we will, we will. I think there's
one hundred percent chance that particular talkback from Flip is
never going away. In fact, I'm very entertained. I think
from now on, if something should happen and I'm busy,
sure you guys panic when the rejoy music comes and

(19:26):
I'm not ready, just go right into Flip. Let flip
the world going all right, always revealing, often entertaining time
for your sounds of the day. Well, the sound of
the day was one small step towards lasting peace, one
giant leap towards the ceasefire. Here's how it happened.

Speaker 11 (19:48):
In the moment, see I was just given a note
by the Secretary of State saying that we're very close
to a deal in the Middle East and they're going
to need me pretty quickly. So I will take a
couple of more questions. You could say a little longer.
But you know, the problem is, although you have some
very honest journalists, and here you also have some mostly

(20:10):
largely dishonest journalists like MSDNC and CNN.

Speaker 6 (20:14):
I think they're very dishonest.

Speaker 4 (20:16):
Unbelievably it's I thought only forty seven, said MSDNC.

Speaker 6 (20:20):
They're like a waste of time even talking to him.

Speaker 11 (20:22):
But I have to go now to try and solve
some problems in the Middle East.

Speaker 6 (20:27):
Although I'm very well.

Speaker 11 (20:28):
Represented by our secretary of State, he could probably do
an even better job than me, but who knows.

Speaker 6 (20:34):
We don't want to take any chances.

Speaker 4 (20:35):
So he does love Marco, doesn't he. He later appeared
by phone with Sean Hannity. I don't think the president's
thinking about a Nobel peace price. I think he's thinking
about hostages. I think he's thinking about death stopping and
aid being moved in. And then he's on the lasting piece.

(20:58):
But here's how he he handed out the things.

Speaker 12 (21:03):
Tremendous help, as you know, with everybody from Steve Witkoff
and Jared Kushner and Marco and that we had everybody, JD.
The whole group was just amazing. And the military was,
as you know, very instrumental in getting this done. We
have a great military with great leadership. The whole world

(21:23):
came together, to be honest, so many countries that you
wouldn't have even thought of it and they came together.
The world has come together around this deal, and that's
something I would say that without that, it wouldn't happen.
So many countries that you wouldn't have thought of have
wired their best wishes and their commitment to do whatever

(21:44):
is necessary. The country surrounding of all signed. I mean,
they're all signed up, and it's been really an amazing
period of time and so great for Israel, so great
for Muslims, for the Arab countries, uh, and so great
for this country, for the United States of America, and
that we could be involved in, you know, making ideal

(22:07):
like this happened because it was you know, many years
they talked about peace in the Middle East. This is
more than guys, this is peace in the Middle East.

Speaker 4 (22:16):
Pretty remarkable. A couple of comments, Uh I said this yesterday.
I think Red said it off the air and I
said it on the air. We found it interesting that
a colonel and a military briefing, who was the other
one that came to the pastor Alan Jackson brought it

(22:36):
up even before yesterday. We bet we were way better
off than we were a year or two ago. Was
where Hamas is, where Hesbalaya is, where Hamas is the
Hoho Thi's and now this this all the invasion happened

(23:03):
under Biden's watch. The response to the invasion, which was,
we can't figure out who we're rooting for, the terrorists
or Israel. That's a chaos. The President entered the White
House in but the way they took out the houthis,
the way they took out Hesbalah, the way they took
out Hamas, the way they then targeted ran. Everything's weakened.
There's nowhere else for them to go. There was a

(23:26):
lot of actions of strength and goodwill and desire for
peace that made this happen. And I realized this is
only phase one, and this is the easy phase, and
it still isn't done. We need the signing today. The
hostages exchanged within seventy two hours, and then Israel to

(23:49):
withdraw to the line green upon and then we move
on to the heavy lifting of Phase two, which is
rebuilding lasting peace and ensuring this now happens again. If
it results in a Nobel Peace Prize, great for the president.
He would certainly deserve it. Lasting piece is what we're

(24:09):
praying for, and I think that so is the President.
I can't believe this person is the leading candidate for
governor right now according to the polls. But again, that's
not that bad. What would be bad is if she
still is in the next poll. Say hello to Katie Porter.
She sits down like the other goubernatorial campmate. Look in

(24:31):
one clip she makes Kamala Harris make sense, all right.
Cavin Newsom looks like a founding father compared to this.
But she sits down with CBS to do an interview.
A Republican president just negotiated peace between Hamas and Israel.

(24:54):
The Democrats at home, they're struggling with these types of questions.

Speaker 6 (25:01):
Listen.

Speaker 13 (25:02):
We've also asked the other candidates, do you think you
need any of those forty percent of California voters to win?

Speaker 8 (25:07):
And you're saying, no, you don't.

Speaker 14 (25:08):
No, I'm saying I'm going to try to win every
vote I can. And what I'm saying to you is
that well to those voters.

Speaker 8 (25:14):
Okay, so you I.

Speaker 14 (25:16):
Don't want to keep doing this, I'm going to call it.

Speaker 6 (25:18):
Thank you.

Speaker 8 (25:20):
You're not going to do the interview with them?

Speaker 4 (25:22):
Nope, I'm not like this.

Speaker 14 (25:23):
I'm not not with seven follow ups to every single
question you ask.

Speaker 8 (25:26):
Every other candidate has a care.

Speaker 12 (25:29):
I don't care.

Speaker 14 (25:30):
I want to have a pleasant, positive conversation which you
asked me about every issue on this list. And if
every question you're going to make up a follow up question,
then we're never going to get there, and we're just
going to circle around.

Speaker 8 (25:41):
I ask you ever had to do this before?

Speaker 6 (25:44):
Ever?

Speaker 13 (25:45):
You've never had had an inversation to end in order? Okay,
but every other candidate has done this.

Speaker 14 (25:51):
What part of I'm me? I'm running for governor because
I'm a leader. So I am going to make so you're.

Speaker 13 (25:57):
Not going to answer questions from reporters.

Speaker 8 (26:00):
Okay, why don't we go through?

Speaker 13 (26:01):
I will continue to ask see I had a different
take than Red.

Speaker 4 (26:05):
When this all begins, she can't figure out how to
answer it like a Sarah Palin moment. She looks up
at the sky, kind of you know, searching for the words,
and that's when she goes So part of me is like,
and then I go back to that COVID Whenever she
can't think of the right thing to say. She seems

(26:29):
to have a pattern of temper tantrums. I mean, it's
not leadership to not be able to answer questions. I
don't know what she would consider a wonderful experience of
an interview.

Speaker 7 (26:40):
She might have just walked away at that point.

Speaker 4 (26:44):
I'm willing to answer the seven questions, but just don't
give me any follow ups. Well, but the follow up
wasn't you know that difficult? And then she goes into
the tantrum. I mean, this is the kind of thing
ten fifteen years ago. You're done. Wait, does it sound
like somebody that's ready to run a state that's bankrupt,

(27:05):
a state with the challenges of California, any of.

Speaker 13 (27:07):
Those forty percent of California voters to win And you're saying, no,
you don't.

Speaker 14 (27:11):
No, I'm saying I'm going to try to win every
vote I can. And what I'm saying to you.

Speaker 8 (27:15):
Is that well, to those voters.

Speaker 14 (27:17):
Okay, so you I don't want to keep doing this,
I'm going to call it.

Speaker 8 (27:23):
You're not going to do the interview with them.

Speaker 6 (27:25):
No, not like this.

Speaker 14 (27:26):
I'm not not with seven follow ups to every single
question you ask.

Speaker 8 (27:29):
Every other candidate has a I don't care.

Speaker 4 (27:32):
I don't care.

Speaker 14 (27:32):
I want to have a pleasant, positive conversation which you
asked me about every issue on this list.

Speaker 4 (27:37):
I mean, it's just not a very serious party right now,
are they compared to the seriousness of the leadership that's
leading to peace in the Middle East. Now, for this
reporter who was just doing her job, she ought to
be grateful because I've read the divorce papers. You're lucky
you didn't get hot potatoes dumped on your head. That's
what she normally does when she's having a tantrum. Now

(27:58):
we get Hama yesterday. This is the visual in my
head I just share with you. We have Hamas and
Israeli officials shaking hands today. They may sign a peace
agreement and it may lead to the exchange of hostages
by Monday and a withdrawal of troops to an agree
uponline shortly thereafter. That's what a terrorist radical Islamist Organization

(28:23):
and Israel were able to do in the Middle East yesterday.
This is a Democrat minority leader and a Republican member
of Congress outside of Hakim Jeffrey's office. This is how
far apart the two parties in America are compared to

(28:45):
the enemies of the Middle East. Lizabeth fraud and abuse.

Speaker 7 (28:47):
By the Controller of New yorksk re question pointed out
that one point two billion dollars waste.

Speaker 6 (28:55):
You're not going to waste.

Speaker 4 (28:56):
You're not going to talk wasted.

Speaker 6 (28:58):
We're going to talk to new on and.

Speaker 4 (29:01):
Because you don't want to hear what I have to say,
you just keep your mouth shut because that the way
showed up. You showed up, and so you voted for.

Speaker 6 (29:10):
This one day.

Speaker 4 (29:11):
You get how I came mad enough. He starts turning
into mic tthing, I'll flap your faith right here. I'm
gonna punch you in the faith. But this is it.
And they don't even listen to each other. This just
goes on and on and on. Does anybody have any
divorce media? You know what I really wanted to hear
was somebody just go I'm gonna stop. That's it. Now,

(29:36):
I'm gonna Star.

Speaker 13 (29:36):
Center California voters to win and you're saying, no, you
don't know.

Speaker 14 (29:39):
I'm saying I'm going to try to win every vote
I can. And what I'm saying to you is that.

Speaker 8 (29:44):
Well to those voters.

Speaker 4 (29:45):
Okay, So there's the Democrats and that is the vote leader,
I might add in the goognatorial race. This is Tamala Harris.
Now this is a fantastic word salad. We join in progress.
What are you worried about? Red We you don't think

(30:07):
we can do our job. I'm a little worried about
the end. Well, because that's the new Democrat thing, right, Swearing,
cursing is the new smoking. That's what makes you cool.
So one is I don't want to answer your questions.
I'm ready for governor. The other one doesn't want to
run for governor there, but she's going to run for president.
And all she can surmise is as the president is

(30:30):
negotiated peace from the mess they made. She's calling the
mother efforts listen.

Speaker 15 (30:36):
Told with my voice being president, and I say that everyone,
we are living history, and you all story tells our
living is. You're not has to observers, you know it,
you're living it. And I ask you.

Speaker 14 (30:57):
That all the emotions that we are feeling.

Speaker 16 (31:02):
Can't those emotions, can't that experience to those people that
you were writing about and writing for, because that's.

Speaker 14 (31:11):
Kind of helping people.

Speaker 15 (31:13):
Just put a laying on it, even if it doesn't
change the circumstance, because there's so much about this moment
that is trying to make people feel like they've lost
their minds.

Speaker 5 (31:25):
When these mother efforts are crazy, as these mother efforts.

Speaker 4 (31:42):
Just negotiated peace with two parties with thousands of years
of fighting. At some point, it's just not serious, is it.
This is how out of touch they are. This is
how i'mserious they are. These are the sounds of the day.

Speaker 6 (32:07):
You did to questions.

Speaker 12 (32:09):
It's the best way to get back on your pagers,
to get.

Speaker 8 (32:11):
Up off your arm. I've been living rent free in
that guy's head for years.

Speaker 4 (32:14):
And that's just a book.

Speaker 8 (32:15):
Do you call that chicken a d They're just blowing off.

Speaker 3 (32:18):
Steve, It's your morning show with Michael del Chino.

Speaker 4 (32:25):
Far and Away. Today, the big story the President announcing
a agreement reached between Hamas and Israel that could be
signed as early as today. What all does it entail?
Understanding Phase one from phase two. Roy O'Neil are, your
morning show correspondent, is here to walk us through it.
Good morning, Rory, Yeah, good morning.

Speaker 17 (32:44):
I was just talking to a colleague who has spent
he's in Tel Aviv now and has spent part of
this week in Gaza believe it or not, and was
in Gaza in the hours before this deal was announced.
He said, there is a lot of cautious optimism there.
My question, though, is what gets us from this phase one,
which give credit President Trump all the credit Prime Minister

(33:05):
netanyahuo as well, But how do you get to phase two?

Speaker 6 (33:07):
Right?

Speaker 17 (33:08):
What's going to be the motivating factor there? Because the
hostages and a ceasefire now almost seems like low hanging fruit,
tough to get, but still that seems like the easy part,
and that the hard part is going to be the
idea of having Hamas agree to get rid of all
of its weapons not have any governing authority in Gaza.

(33:28):
That seems like an even harder debate moving forward. Yeah, well, that.

Speaker 4 (33:33):
That's why everyone acknowledges that phase two is going to
be more difficult. I will remind everybody that it's been
ten months that Donald Trump has been president and it
hasn't been easy getting to hear even so, Yeah, I
think how do you get there? Well, one step at
a time. Right, first step is get this agreement. We
had a handshake yesterday, get it signed today. The hostage

(33:55):
exchange would have to happen by Monday, right seventy two
hours from signing, and then after that whatever the agreed
uponline for Israel to withdraw. Your next motivating factors is
getting some relief and aid into those areas that were affected.
But you're right, the heavy lifting is the individuals that

(34:17):
live there and their proclivity to turn to radical jihadist
Muslims to fight for them or care for them, or
even out of fear, you know, submit to them versus
some kind of a new governing influence in body. And
I think some of the visions are there that look
at least different than the insanity we keep bouncing back

(34:38):
and forth to in the last three to four decades.
And so there's hope, right.

Speaker 17 (34:44):
And if you're releasing those about two thousand Hamas members
are being released, where do they go and how are
they still suddenly willing to surrender, not take authority, give
up all their weapons and so on?

Speaker 4 (34:56):
And so on, and there's still a lot of.

Speaker 6 (34:59):
Un Yes.

Speaker 4 (35:01):
Rory's point is, oh yeah, they'll exchange the hostages. They
got nowhere else to go, but leave forever. That's heavier lifting,
and time will tell. Let's take the victory we have
today and pray for peace and the continued march towards peace.
You go make a difference in someone's life today. Make
sure you cherish your own. You only get to live
this day once. Make the most of it. We'll see

(35:22):
it tomorrow morning. See what history we have to discuss.
Then on your.

Speaker 2 (35:25):
Morning show, We're all in this together. This is Your
Morning Show with Michael nheld Choo
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