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October 14, 2025 35 mins

SpaceX is scheduled to test Starship on Monday night. It is the world’s biggest rocket – though it has yet to launch humans. National Correspondent – and space expert – RORY O’NEILL is available to talk about the new rocket – as well as the commercial space industry.  

President Trump is back in Washington after a whirlwind trip to the Mideast – and Tuesday night, he will be posthumously awarding the Presidential Medal of Freedom to Charlie Kirk. White House Correspondent JON DECKER will look at the President’s busy schedule – and recap the latest developments. 

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

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, It's Michael. Your morning show can be heard live
on great radio stations across the country like wilm and
w DOV and Wilmington and Dover, Delaware or wgst AM
seven twenty the voice in Middle Georgia. And we're going
to need some blankets. News Radio six fifty k e
n I, Anchorage, Alaska. We'd love to be a part
of your morning routine. Now enjoy the podcast.

Speaker 2 (00:21):
Two three.

Speaker 3 (00:23):
Starting your morning off right, A new way of talk,
a new way of understanding due because we're in the Stageton.

Speaker 2 (00:32):
This is your morning show with Michael'bill Jordan bring.

Speaker 3 (00:38):
To Washington about four pm Eastern from the White House.
He will present Erica Kirk with Charlie Kirk's posthumous Medal
of Honor Medal of freeda award highest honor you can
give a civilian Nune what would have been Charlie Kirk's
thirty second birthday today.

Speaker 2 (00:54):
White House. I'm also mentioning that.

Speaker 3 (00:58):
It doesn't look like, even though we have solved peace
in the Middle East, were anywhere near solving the shutdown
government and the Mariners and Dodgers both winners in LCS
games last night, SpaceX scheduled to test the Starship last night.

Speaker 2 (01:11):
Let's see how that went.

Speaker 3 (01:12):
This would have been the world's biggest rocket, though it
is yet to launch. Humans National Your Morning Show correspondentt
Roy O'Neil, who is also our space expert, I might
add is joining us, said, did the test go as scheduled?

Speaker 4 (01:28):
As scheduled and probably the results are better than expected.
It's the second real big winner of a test for Starship.
This was test number eleven. Also significant, the last test
of version two of Starship. They'll start version three next year.
Also the last time they'll use this launch pad in
Texas at Starbase. They're just moving over to another new pad,

(01:50):
and the last time this super heavy booster would be used.
That's the bottom half of this tuesdage rocket. That's where
all the engines are. It actually landed on the those arms.
It was caught by those arms earlier this year in
its first flight. This time around, though, it was splashed
down in the Gulf of America.

Speaker 2 (02:07):
To wrap things up, all right.

Speaker 3 (02:08):
So this one doesn't return it splashed, all right. That's
number one.

Speaker 2 (02:12):
Number two? What do we each phase?

Speaker 3 (02:15):
There's obviously kind of like we went from Mercury to Apollo.

Speaker 2 (02:18):
That was all to get.

Speaker 3 (02:20):
In orbit, then to get out of orbit, then to rendezvous,
then to ultimately get to the Moon. What's the long
term for this? And where does stage two? Does stage
three put us?

Speaker 4 (02:30):
Yeah, so this is Stage three is going to do
our first orbital flights. So stage two is still suborbital,
but it got us to Australia in about an hour,
which is you know, wouldn't that be great? But it
was so you know, from that standpoint, it was all Look,
there was some really nerdy testing going on. It was
about heat shields and putting stresses on the rocket by

(02:51):
coming in and descending in different angles. It was about
starting and restarting engines to make sure you had that capability.
You know, there's thirty three and on this thing the
way it's separated, so it's a lot to coordinate and
test at the same time.

Speaker 2 (03:05):
So all that stuff seems to have gone well. There
was one.

Speaker 4 (03:08):
Engine that wasn't quite behaving, but still all pretty successful.
From early early days. You know, the engineers are really
going through.

Speaker 3 (03:16):
The data now so they're able to do this without
anybody on board really forever, right, So I mean when
they do put somebody on board. It's just to have
them get where they're going, right. I don't think the
technology needs any assistance, right.

Speaker 4 (03:29):
And this rocket is huge, bigger than the rocket we
use to go to the Moon, so bigger than that
old Saturn five rocket.

Speaker 2 (03:35):
Amazing lift capacity. So if we're building.

Speaker 4 (03:38):
That base on the Moon or ultimately on Mars, you know,
this is what's sending up the hardware. Ultimately we'll get
to people being able to fly on this thing. But
short term it's going to be about payloads, but a
major success, even better than planned.

Speaker 3 (03:52):
Government has now been shut down for two weeks with
no end in sight.

Speaker 2 (03:55):
Royal'll be back in the third hour.

Speaker 3 (03:57):
Is we talk about the longer this goes on, how
much bigger did the bumps in the road get?

Speaker 5 (04:03):
All right?

Speaker 3 (04:03):
We were talking earlier Mikey sra Cheryl in New Jersey.
She's running for governor, a state rep. I believe it
has come out and she's being criticized for taking money
from a businessman, a businessman linked to the Chinese Communist Party. Now,
is this just you know, narrative attack. Well, it's multiple donations,

(04:27):
it's tens of thousands of dollars to her campaign and
Ben Knee, he's the founder of the Juanshang American Corporation,
donated sixty thousand dollars to the one Giant Leap super
pack that's backing her, and it came in the form

(04:47):
of two checks plus an addition to giving fifty eight
hundred dollars of individual Now the problems are twofold for her.
One political campaigns in the United States are only permitted
to accept money from American citizens or permanent legal residents.
Penn status is unclear. That's problem number one. Problem number

(05:11):
two is how you can trace him to the Chinese
Communist Party. Oh but wait, it gets even worse. Spamberger
also got money from this same guy. So you've got two,
well three. Governor's racist right now, I mean porter. Basically,

(05:33):
she's just a little miss. A woman threw hot mashed
potatoes on her husband's head, all right, so she's a
little volatile. Then the video during COVID and how she
treated her assistant, and then most recently, how she treated
a CBS reporter. She has now fallen. She went from

(05:53):
the highest early polling candidate for governor of California to
just out of it. And I don't know what this does.
Kamala Harris is getting nowhere on the national stage. Maybe
she changes her mind and runs for governor. I don't know,
but I doubt it's going to be porter. So there's

(06:14):
a Democrat leading candidate for governor in California whose campaign
is blown up. Then you go to Virginia, where it
starts with the attorney general candidate. I think his candidacy
is over, but those text messages were just despicable, and
at least you know, he apologized he didn't think there
should be any consequence, and he certainly wasn't going to

(06:35):
step down.

Speaker 2 (06:35):
He immediately canceled the fundraiser.

Speaker 3 (06:37):
I think his candidacy is over, but I remember read
saying anecdotally to me, oh, trust me, if this starts
affecting the governor's race, he'll be gone. Well, that candidate Spamberger,
she needed no help hurting herself in the first debate,
and now add to that she's taken money from this
same tied to Chinese Communist Party and maybe not even

(07:02):
a legal or American citizen. They're all blowing up, and
I think Red hit the nail right on the head.
If I can just praise him on air. This is
the new Democrat Party. They think they can all do
like Joe Biden and just run for office and they
don't have to answer any I mean that's what Porter
basically said, right, I don't want to answer your follow

(07:22):
up questions.

Speaker 2 (07:26):
Now.

Speaker 3 (07:26):
The Shadow Campaign to Save the Democracy, as the leftist
Operator Operatives, self proclaimed in a Time magazine piece February fourteenth,
twenty twenty one. This was basically their manifesto of how
they weaponized COVID, changed election laws, harvested ballots, and stole

(07:51):
the election in swing precincts of swing districts of swing
states because we had to. We had to save democracy.
That's not me saying it. Go read the article for yourself.
And by the way, had it not worked, they cut
a deal. See, the problem for the Democrats was twice
Bernie Sanders was going to get the nomination and they

(08:14):
used super delegates and Shenanigans and the DNC rigged it
for Hillary and then she lost. Then he was going
to win again. They cut a deal in South Carolina
with Joe Biden, who came in fourth in Iowa, sixth
in New Hampshire. I mean, this guy's candidacy was as
alive as his cognitive ability. Then they just hit him,

(08:34):
hit him in a basement during COVID and got him elected.
And I wonder if Red's right that a lot of
these candidates who don't have what it takes to lead anything.
I mean, when you're a state rep. There's no executive
experience there. I'm not suggesting that Mickey Cheryl would be

(08:54):
the first ever state Rep. To go on to be
a governor. It's just qualifications there. The military backgrounds there.
But remember what we did a week or so ago.
Military background is a great plus. In fact, there's no
better thing to have on your resume if you're running
as a Republican, But as a Democrat it's no help
and if anything, it is a liability. But maybe all

(09:19):
of them just feel like they I mean I felt
that way.

Speaker 2 (09:23):
With Spamberger and Porter for sure.

Speaker 3 (09:25):
I mean Spamberger is in the middle of a debate
her opponents asking herself to distance herself from this attorney general,
and she won't answer the question.

Speaker 2 (09:32):
They think their height is kind of like a kid.

Speaker 3 (09:35):
Well, my dog is the greatest example that ever happened
in my life. Boomer Baker Mayfield, better known affectionately as Scout,
his whole life is food. Now he's very ashamed of
it doesn't stop him. He's literally one of those that's
sad because he eats, and then he eats because he's sad.

(09:57):
So somebody left out cheese its and it was like
the Costco sized box of cheese its. And Scout is
an English shepherd, so he's kind of got like a
long snoot, but his whole head is in the cheese
at box. He's just in there, like having holy cheese

(10:18):
communion with the entire box, to which my wife walks
up with the camera rolling Scout and the crunching stops,
but it keeps his head in the cheese at box. Scout,
what are you doing? And I'm telling you, this dog
thought we couldn't see him because he couldn't see us,
hiding in plain sight.

Speaker 2 (10:38):
That's what these candidates are doing.

Speaker 3 (10:40):
But they're not Joe Biden, and nobody's running a shadow
campaign to save democracy for them. They're just standing there
like idiots, like unserious people, while a very serious president
is being president. It's pretty remarkable. I don't know how
the midterms are going to go, and I'm not gloating
ahead of time. Believe it or not, you could be

(11:02):
shocked and they could get control of the House or
the Senate. You might be shocked and they get the
White House after Trump leaves. I don't know. You take
it one day at a time. But something remarkable is
going on right now. We're in three very big states,
New Jersey, Virginia, and California. All three Democratic leaning candidates

(11:23):
are in trouble. And I'm wondering if they think they're
old Joe, because they're not. They're young Mikey, old Spanckenberger
and Porters not old. But I mean they're just making
fools of themselves for all to see. And they're falling early.

Speaker 5 (11:37):
Now.

Speaker 3 (11:37):
That could be part of it, and there'll be another
candidate that still has time to rise, but it better
happen in a hurry where they're in trouble. Can't have
your morning show without your voice. First up, Daniel listening,
Daniel lets traveling tonight in Sacramento.

Speaker 6 (11:57):
Hey, Michael, think about this former McDonald's fry cook and
garbage truck driver, the.

Speaker 2 (12:04):
Salt Peace in the Mid East.

Speaker 6 (12:06):
Amazing? I mean, just what nine months? Yeah for Donald Trump.
We're going to talk about that with a senior military
fellow at the Heritage Foundation, Stephen Bucci. There's a lot
of crowns in this president's legacy, a lot of jewels

(12:27):
in his legacy. Crown this would be I think the
crown jewel, with a space for one more in Ukraine
and Russia. Bill is in Tampa, Florida.

Speaker 2 (12:36):
Good morning, Michael.

Speaker 7 (12:38):
The border wall was so important to securing the border
and preventing illegal crossings. Yet we've never finished the wall,
and now they're touting that we've had zero border crossings.
I just find that rather hard to believe when the
wall hasn't been finished.

Speaker 2 (12:57):
Well, there are several factors.

Speaker 3 (12:58):
One, when you have a administration that doesn't welcome illegal crossings,
we tend to see the crossings go down. One was
provoking it and inviting it. One party by presence invites
it because they know that party won't enforce it, so
you have less trying.

Speaker 2 (13:16):
Number one, and I mean there's a place for all
of it.

Speaker 3 (13:22):
Wall, technology, troops. This president uses all of them. I
don't know that I would, but again, I know everything's
a conspiracy theory. You're right, they're probably crossing by the millions.
We're just making it up.

Speaker 5 (13:34):
Is jym next did not the signatories of the Middle
East tell us that if we took care of Iran,
they would take care of Halas well. Now it's time
to see if these signatories to this peace plan are
going to fulfill their into the bargain and take care
of Halas.

Speaker 3 (13:54):
Yeah, we just don't know what the plan is going
to be. We can tell you that only four remains
of hostages who do are being returned. There's a lot
of families that think that this is a breach in
the hostage exchange deal, and perhaps maybe Israel shouldn't continue
to release Palestinian hostages. We also have hamas attacking people

(14:15):
in the Gaza, exerting their strength. So I don't know
that everybody got the memo. We'll see how they plan
to handle it and who plans to do it. I
assure you as always, Russia is capable. I mean Iran
is capable. Israel is capable. I can't think today because
I'm staring at this name. I couldn't get over a
woman named Mikey, and I can't get over a man
named swerve Swervell.

Speaker 2 (14:38):
I'd be swerving.

Speaker 8 (14:40):
I just wanted to make a point about the babies
and the Ai stuff. Remember John Wayne Gacy dressed up
like a Clown's just saying.

Speaker 2 (14:52):
The clown.

Speaker 3 (14:55):
Oh Bob's in Mississippi.

Speaker 9 (14:57):
Makes sense of this, Big Buddy Dean, You're right. Evil
never sleeps, But right now Evil is thinking President Trump, Mike,
send them a little something, something special.

Speaker 2 (15:12):
And last, Big John.

Speaker 10 (15:14):
So Big John and his boys are headed into Nashville
this weekend. We know there's a lot of barbecue joints,
but we're looking for one Italian restaurant that we can
have a good dinner. Right if they had espresso, that's
a plus. Thanks, guys.

Speaker 2 (15:28):
Okay, it's easy, this is not this is not Saint Louis.

Speaker 3 (15:33):
We don't have the hell. I know you're Italian. I
know you're from the East Coast. I know you're like
good Italian food. That's not what our city is known for.
There is one, though, that is spectacular, Giovanni's. It's on
Music Row on Twentieth Street.

Speaker 2 (15:46):
Nashville. Can't go wrong.

Speaker 3 (15:48):
Giovanni's is one of the finest I've ever ever been to.
So you're lucky we got one and only one.

Speaker 2 (15:53):
But you and your buddies are gonna have to pay up.
It's a little Aspenson.

Speaker 11 (15:59):
Yo.

Speaker 2 (16:00):
Hi everybody, this is Dion the Wanderer.

Speaker 5 (16:03):
My morning show is your morning show with Michael del Jorno.

Speaker 2 (16:14):
Hey, it's me Michael.

Speaker 1 (16:15):
You can listen to your morning show live on the
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Talk six fifty KSTE and Sacramento one oh four nine,
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oh five nine and twelve fifty w HDZ in Tampa, Florida.

(16:35):
Sure hope you can join us live and make us
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Speaker 3 (16:44):
Like I just talked about Steven Bouche and you're thinking, well,
I'll be in a meeting, then uh, well, that's why
we want to be everywhere you are when you need
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(17:06):
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after the hour in the Eastern time zone. You got
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o'clock and thanks for bringing us along.

Speaker 2 (17:25):
This is your morning show.

Speaker 3 (17:27):
President Trump returns to Washington after signing the Mid East
Peace Deal today, the Big Deal. Charlie Kirk would have
been thirty two years old today. He'll be celebrated at
the White House. Erica Kirk, his widow, will be there
to receive the Medal of Freedom, highest civilian honor posthumously
being given to Charlie today at the White House.

Speaker 2 (17:50):
And for that and more. John Decker, our White House correspondent,
is joining us. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (17:54):
I think that was a pretty historic busy day yesterday.

Speaker 2 (17:59):
For you to cover.

Speaker 11 (18:01):
Yeah, very historic and clearly the biggest foreign policy victory
of President Trump's two terms in office. I can't think
of anything that even comes close to what we saw
occur yesterday. The President using his powers of persuasion, not
only with Israel but also with the Arab world. I
can't think of any other president who could have done

(18:24):
what President Trump has done during his first nine months
in office.

Speaker 3 (18:29):
So just to give people a sense of the even
after the arrival in Israel is dramatic, as that was
flying into Freed Square. Then they visit at the Kanesset
and the rally slash speech, he goes.

Speaker 2 (18:48):
To sign the agreement.

Speaker 3 (18:49):
I mean, you had the Egyptian president there, the Turkish
president there, Cutters Emir, the British Prime minister, Italian Prime Minister,
German Chancellor.

Speaker 2 (18:59):
I mean, it's a big deal.

Speaker 3 (19:02):
It is a crowning jewel of his foreign policy crown,
that's for sure. But already now this morning, we got
a couple of stories that don't look so good. One,
only four of the remains of hostages are going to
be returned. We're presuming that Hamas is simply saying we
don't know where the rest of them are. They'll be
in aternational team to search for them. But there's a

(19:22):
lot of families think they're already renigging on the agreement.

Speaker 2 (19:28):
Yeah, I don't know.

Speaker 11 (19:29):
I don't think anybody knows with certainty. Hamas during the
negotiations indicated it's going to take a lot longer than
seventy two hours to return the remains of twenty eight hostages,
the bodies of twenty eight hostages, so they gave a
heads up to negotiators.

Speaker 2 (19:46):
Israel was well made aware of that.

Speaker 11 (19:48):
I don't think that this will be the ideal breaker,
you know, in terms of caring forward the rest of
what the president envisions for peace in Gaza.

Speaker 2 (20:00):
But the hard part really is phase two.

Speaker 11 (20:02):
Phase two concerns who will govern Gaza, how and when
will Gaza be reconstructed? Well, security will look like in Gaza?
And also how and when and will Hamas disarmed. That's
another issue that has not yet been resolved.

Speaker 3 (20:21):
What do you make of there's some reports of some
Hamas people not getting the memo and operatives attacking those
that may have cooperated with Israeli forces in the Gaza strip.
I mean, that's kind of common after these things happen,
but that needs to calm down or be put out
otherwise it could could jeopardize the moving forward.

Speaker 11 (20:43):
Some have not already disarmed. Well, that goes to the
security situation. A lot of celebration yesterday, but the hard
work really begins today and going forward. I think it's
just a joyous day obviously in Israel to have those
twin any hostages who were held for over two years
home with their families. You saw the images, Michael, only

(21:06):
imagine what those families have gone through and what they're
experiencing right now. They had the complete joy to see
their loved ones back in Israel. But look, I think
that as it relates to what you just talked about
going after individuals Mosque, going after individuals who they view
as collaborators, I don't think that's a surprise to anybody,

(21:27):
and I think that that is what negotiators envision would
happen in the immediate aftermath of this piece. I think
they're going to be snippets of violence. There will be,
let's face it, but I don't think it's going to
be anything like we saw that precipitated this war in
the first place.

Speaker 3 (21:44):
I pray so Jerusalem Post would the headline God Blessed
the Peacemaker and a picture of the president time making
its cover his triumph and an image of the president
even former President Joe Biden with praise. Hillary Clinton was
before actually happened the exchange, congratulating this.

Speaker 2 (22:04):
This is certainly a victory for the president.

Speaker 3 (22:06):
Will we get the answer, John, to our question moment
they give the Medal of Freedom to Charlie Kirk posthumously.
We wondered if it would be done at the memorial service. No,
it's going to be at the White House today what
would have been his thirty second birthday. It's going to
be emotional.

Speaker 10 (22:19):
Yeh.

Speaker 11 (22:20):
I'll be there, Thank you be you know, it's going
to be emotional, obviously, and the President boy would turn around,
you know, he got into bed essentially this morning at
three point thirty in the morning. So it's a long day,
a long plate for the President, but his energy is remarkable.
He'll be there this afternoon at that ceremony posthumously honoring

(22:41):
Charlie Kirk.

Speaker 3 (22:42):
The White House Briefing Room is a podcast hosted by
John Decker. So if you want to learn more about
what's on the docket today, that'll be up by nine
a m.

Speaker 2 (22:50):
Eastern The White House Briefing Room with John Decker.

Speaker 3 (22:53):
Encourage you to check it out and go ahead and
hit the preset on that that way, it's waiting for
you every morning, all right, forty two minutes after the hour.

Speaker 2 (23:01):
If you're just waking.

Speaker 3 (23:02):
Up, these are you're always revealing, often entertaining sounds of
a day.

Speaker 2 (23:09):
All right, everybody block alone.

Speaker 4 (23:11):
Look, you just gotta try harder not to saw.

Speaker 2 (23:13):
Some after the opportunity for a brief specifics lesson.

Speaker 7 (23:16):
Sure, perhaps you'd like to be alone with a raverately
deteriorating mental condition.

Speaker 2 (23:21):
Politics.

Speaker 5 (23:23):
I don't know us.

Speaker 3 (23:25):
You know, all you need to say is babe, and
you think, babe, Ruth, there's somebody share you think? You know,
there's very few people. You say, speaker, and everybody thinks
of nude Ingridge. He's a historian first and foremost a
college professor, historian turned representative turned one of the most
influential Speakers of the House ever. He was asked how

(23:48):
to put into perspective the accomplishments of Donald Trump and
what this means to his legacy.

Speaker 2 (23:53):
I think it's worth your listen.

Speaker 12 (23:55):
Yeah, Look, I think historians are going to study for
the next fifty years to try to understand what was
the magic that President Trump brought you. We first talked
about this in a speech that Jared Kushman wrote for
Apek during the campaign in two thousand and in sixteen,

(24:16):
So he was thinking and talking about peace in the
Middle East all the way through. And the amazing thing
about President Trump, and maybe it's because he's a Gemini
so has twins. He can focus totally in the moment,
and yet the other part of him is strategically thinking
years and decades ahead, and the two somehow come together

(24:37):
in a way that's almost magical. I watched this afternoon
and I was close and I both watched it. We
watched Jerusalem, then we watched Charmel shaik. It's an extraordinary
moment and figuring out why is it that for all
these years, I mean, Israel's been in battled for almost
its entire nearly eighty years of existence, and now suddenly

(25:00):
Donald Trump comes along changes the whole game. No American
president has gone anything like this. Theodore Roosevelt got a
Peace Prize for having helped bring the Russian Japanese War
together and I think nineteen oh five.

Speaker 2 (25:15):
But this is totally different.

Speaker 12 (25:17):
Here is a moment in history when you saw all
these countries.

Speaker 2 (25:21):
Paul, Yeah, I love that he caught that.

Speaker 3 (25:26):
Remember, yesterday's a great day, but yesterday only happens because
of all the previous yesterdays. It was the patience, you know,
I'll never forget. People thought it was crazy when I
said this. Of all the things, even over Obamacare, the
most destructive thing Barack Obama did, in addition to dividing

(25:50):
our country was losing Turkey. That's a pretty strategic piece
of the over all puzzle. And yesterday when I saw
the Turkish president at this signing and I know how
they're on board moving forward, that was a remarkable accomplishment.

(26:13):
That was a remarkable answer to prayer that the president
has pulled off. But he didn't stop there. It's the
way he brought Saudi Arabia on board, cut her on board.
He put this coalition together flawlessly to where I could
say this is different. This gives me hope because Arab

(26:34):
nations and reasonable Muslim nations are on board to oversee
the Palestinian territory moving forward and give them a glimpse
of what they give their Muslims at home, security, prosperity,
peace without radical terrorists roaming the streets.

Speaker 2 (27:02):
I think the.

Speaker 3 (27:03):
Speaker nailed it. I don't know why everybody's so obsessed
with this peace Prize. Again, my take on that is
if you look at the deadline date, you'd be giving
the president the Nobel Peace Prize long before he did
any of it. He was basically on the border. So
unless it was for that, you're just going to give

(27:24):
him a Nobel Peace Prize after sixty days. It's the
same thing we all graped about, and they did it
for Obama. No January. He's appropriate time for to get it,
but who cares. What he did was masterful, and it
is different when you have Italy the Prime Minister, the

(27:44):
German Chancellor, the British Prime Minister, the Turkish president, the
Cutter Emir and the Egyptian president all there sign that
that's a different coalition than we've ever had.

Speaker 2 (27:55):
That's a different level of building. Now.

Speaker 3 (27:58):
I talked earlier about don't get ahead of your skis.
You don't want to proclaim the war on terror is over.
It's far from over. Ron's not gonna give up Hamas
isn't going to behave suddenly any more than the Taliban will.
But it's a giant step not just for ending this
war there, but for a coalition to create a tomorrow.

(28:26):
But it'll make it not just a revolving door to
the next terrorst sect. Pretty good summary from a pretty
good historian, Nude King Krich. Here's how the Pakistani Prime
Minister discussed yesterday.

Speaker 2 (28:38):
This is going to blow you away, this is Pakistan. Well.
I would say.

Speaker 13 (28:45):
Today's a one of the greatest day in contemporary history.

Speaker 2 (28:52):
Because peace has.

Speaker 13 (28:55):
Been achieved after undouiding efforts, efforts led by President Trump,
who is genuinely a man of peace, who has relentlessly
and untiringly worked throughout these months, day in and day out,

(29:22):
to make this world a place to live with peace
and prosperity. I would say that Pakistan had nominated Present
Donald Trump for Nobel Peace Prize for his outstanding extraordinary

(29:48):
contributions to first stop war between India and Pakistan and
then achieve ceasefire along with is very wonderful team.

Speaker 2 (30:03):
I'll never forget.

Speaker 3 (30:04):
I was on the air in Tel's, Oklahoma, and it
was interesting to just want and this was national media,
not so much just other local stations. Nobody aware of
how close we were to Pakistan and India having a
nuclear exchange and how many tens of millions would be

(30:27):
gone in an instant, and we dozed that bullet nearly
two thousands, they were close.

Speaker 2 (30:33):
Again.

Speaker 3 (30:37):
I'm so glad that the Pakistani president said it that way,
because really, as remarkable as this is, as remarkable as
ending the Russian Ukraine War could still be. He already
kept Pakistan and India from going to war. That alone.
You might need more than one Nobel Peace Prize come January.

Speaker 2 (31:00):
All right, everybody block them out.

Speaker 12 (31:01):
Look, you've just got to try harder not to saw.

Speaker 11 (31:04):
Some gat the opportunity for a brief PA civics lesson sure.

Speaker 1 (31:07):
Fashion, Perhaps you'd like to be alone with a deteriorating
mental condition.

Speaker 2 (31:13):
Politics that don't know us.

Speaker 3 (31:14):
All right, we'll talk about what this military and foreign
policy accomplishment does to shape the legacy of Donald Trump,
uh for not just his time, but for all times.
Steven boochill join us from the Heritage Foundation on that
next half hour. Did you hear the best performing assets
of twenty twenty five were not stocks, the precious metals.
This year, gold and silver has risen as staggering twenty

(31:36):
nine percent, and some experts believe the gold and silver
bull market has just begun. Central banks are even buying
gold to protect against the falling dollar and silver. It's
powering the future with skyrocketing demand for solar evs and AI.
Silver is like the new oil. So how high could
gold and silver sar? You can find out Call my

(31:58):
friends at Lear Capital Today, the Precious Metals Leader one
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You could even get up to fifteen thousand dollars in
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and five one one thirty seven hundred for Lear Capital
Today one eight hundred and five one thirty seven hundred.

Speaker 1 (32:32):
It's your Morning Show with Michael del Chino.

Speaker 3 (32:36):
The White House will be hosting a celebration in honor
of Charlie Kirk's life and give him the highest civilian
honor on what would have been his thirty second birthday today.

Speaker 14 (32:46):
President Trump says he'll be posting mostly awarding Kirk the
Presidential Medal of Freedom.

Speaker 15 (32:50):
They can have a great celebration at the White House.

Speaker 2 (32:53):
In the East Room of the White House.

Speaker 14 (32:55):
Kirk's wife, Erica, will be in attendance. The thirty one
year old conservative activist was shot and killed while speaking
at a rally in Utah in September.

Speaker 2 (33:02):
I'm Marknefield.

Speaker 3 (33:03):
He saw this talk of peace Ukrainian President Zelensky saying
I'd like a little bit of that piece.

Speaker 2 (33:07):
Can some of that momentum flow my way?

Speaker 15 (33:10):
Ukraine's leaders shared a post on x where he wrote,
when peace is achieved for one part of the world,
it brings more hope for peace in other regions where
life is still under threat. President Trump and Zelinsky discussed
the war in Ukraine and sending long range Tomahawk missiles
on Sunday. I'm Michael Kasner. No worries for either the

(33:30):
Baldwin brothers. They're just fine. After an accident of.

Speaker 16 (33:32):
The Hamptons now Like Baldwin was driving at East Hampton
Monday afternoon, he said in a video, when he claims
a garbage truck cut him off, forcing him to crash
into a tree. The garbage truck company denies any fault.
The Baldwins were there for the Hamptons International Film Festival.
Video shows the brothers talking with police. Baldwin thanked them
in the video. No report of any citations. Andrew Whitman,

(33:56):
NBC News Radio, New York.

Speaker 2 (33:58):
Well this just.

Speaker 3 (34:02):
The Taylor Swift's latest album is topping the Billboard two
hundred chart.

Speaker 2 (34:06):
The Life of a Show Girl.

Speaker 3 (34:07):
Is now swiss fifteenth number one album, breaking a tie
with Jay Z and Drake for the most time by
a solo act. Only the Beatles have more nineteen chart
topping albums. The album finished the week with just over
four million album units being sold. Well, no matter where
you are today, I know just how to make today

(34:31):
a great day, and so does pre Tennis.

Speaker 17 (34:32):
Today you have permission, maybe an obligation, to indulge as
we celebrate National Dessert Day. The endless variety can be overwhelming.
Ice cream, pie cake, candy, grim brewlet, flawn, cookies, cheesecake,
too many to dame. And they're not just good, they're
good for you. Sugar makes your brain release indorphins and serotonin,
and those make you feel good. So after a meal,

(34:55):
take a moment and half dessert, you know, for your health.

Speaker 2 (34:58):
I'm Bree Tennis all in this Together. This is your
morning show with Michael del Jorno
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