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November 6, 2025 33 mins

Investigators are piecing together the latest clues in the Louisville plane crash, with new details emerging about possible equipment failures and flight-path decisions. National Correspondent RORY O’NEILL is following the investigation closely and will have the latest.  

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

The Supreme Court heard blockbuster arguments on whether presidents can unilaterally impose tariffs — a case that could rewrite the limits of executive power. White House Correspondent -- and attorney – JON DECKER was inside the Supreme Court for the arguments and will explain what the justices signaled and what this means for consumers, businesses, and the next president.

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
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 two.

Speaker 2 (00:16):
Three starting your morning off right.

Speaker 3 (00:20):
A new way of talk, a new way of understanding
because we're in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael Opill Charny.

Speaker 4 (00:32):
I just realized that Congress gave the president emergency.

Speaker 5 (00:35):
Powers to enact tariffs.

Speaker 6 (00:37):
So under the emergency powers ability.

Speaker 7 (00:40):
I think that the Supreme Court will probably allow it,
which is problem.

Speaker 1 (00:45):
Well, that's the trick proving there's an emergency. I don't
think that's necessarily on the horizon. Jim didn't seem to
go very well yesterday, but we'll no more. We're going
to talk to our White House correspondent John Decker about
thirty minutes. He was in the Supreme Court yesterday for
the entire hearing. I thought that the read made the

(01:06):
comment off the air, you can't bash the Supreme Court.
I mean they handled it so respectfully, so professionally, so
thoroughly and again they show us how you can have
very thoughtful debate, conversation or even disagreements. They may be
the only group of individuals that know how to still

(01:28):
disagree in a productive way. All right, Supreme Court wing
the legality of President Trump's tariffs. At least twelve people
now dead in the ups plane crash, and federal officials
announcing cutbacks the number of flights in US airspace due
to the government shutdown. Roy O'Neil's following all of our
top stories, Rory, let's start with the announcement. This would
be a ten percent cutback in flights at the forty

(01:53):
biggest airports, which makes that ten percent a little heavier.

Speaker 8 (01:57):
Right, And it's also the airports that handle like Louisville,
but also Memphis for FedEx, even Anchorage, Alaska because of
the overseas travel, so a lot of these cargo flights
could also be impacted by this ten percent cutback, which
is going to start to roll out on Friday and
then extend into next week. Essentially, a lot of the

(02:18):
air traffic controllers have got to get other jobs that pay,
so they're driving uber and delivering pizzas to make some
kind of money to people roof over their head and
food on the table and gas in the tank.

Speaker 5 (02:30):
Two things keep an eye on.

Speaker 1 (02:31):
If one out of ten flights that are being canceled
are at the forty busiest airports, which are the connecting
flights and hubs, you can see the disruption as we're
heading into travel season. The other observation is this is
usually when these shutdowns end, when it begins to affect
goods and services and travel of citizens. Well, we're about
to find out if that's true this time.

Speaker 8 (02:52):
And as I always say, a reminder that those five
hundred and thirty five members of Congress are also members
of frequent flyer clubs fly a lot, so this is
what they see. Plus you got these members now I agree.
Many of them have said I'm not going to get
paid until the shutdown's over, but they could afford to
not get Many can afford not to get paid. But

(03:13):
they are getting paid technically while their staff members are not.
So it's got to the awkward times in the office
when the boss is getting a paycheck but this congressional
staffer isn't.

Speaker 1 (03:23):
Turning to Louisville, Kentucky, that death toll nearly doubled to
twelve and now fifteen reported injured. And probably what you
know broke my heart the most was when the mayor said,
and then we have five individuals were looking for and
hoping they weren't where they were supposed to be.

Speaker 8 (03:38):
Right, And remember there were three on board that MD
eleven from ups as it crashed it while taking off,
So it was three fatalities from the plane. The rest
were all on the ground in this industrial commercial area
at the end of the airport, some of them. There
was an auto parts store right there. I think we've
all seen that surveillance video of the crash. From there.
There was also an oil recite facility. That explains why

(04:02):
there was so much black smoke after the crash because
it impacted that area. But as you said, also the
search for people workers likely or customers who may be
among the missing.

Speaker 1 (04:12):
So moving into the investigative part of this, any new
details on what failed. I know it's a thirty six
year old aircraft. It seemed to be on fire as
it was taking off, whether or not the pilots knew that,
but we're too far down the runway or if something
happened on the runway. Do we get any more clarification
on that? I know you need to go so right, No,

(04:33):
I got time.

Speaker 8 (04:34):
We did get the flight data recorder and the cockpit
voice recorder, so that's going to help, especially the voice recorder,
so that is being recovered and analyzed and processed. But
we also know that that left engine is on the
side of the runway, so it clearly fell off long
before the attempt to take off.

Speaker 5 (04:51):
But at what point did it fall off?

Speaker 8 (04:53):
How did the pilots have any other options but to
try to take off considering where they were on the runway.
And then what caused it to fall off? Was it
the engine mount? Was it an explosion in the engine
that led to it to fall off?

Speaker 3 (05:06):
You know?

Speaker 8 (05:06):
And then now we're going to delve into the maintenance
records on this aircraft, as you said, more than thirty
years old, so obviously a lot to process. But when
you see the engine on the side of the runway,
clearly that's where the investigation is focused.

Speaker 1 (05:20):
In this particular plane. At three engines, one on the
left wing, one on the right wing, and then one
on the tail. I don't know with the engine completely
falling off as it did. Could they have still made
the judgment what will take off will circle over land?
That seemed to be I mean they had to know
it was on fire. I mean it was a pretty
big blaze, and you would think there'd be a warning light,

(05:41):
so you know, like obviously the recorder, we're going to
know what they were saying tragically right right.

Speaker 8 (05:47):
And then oftentimes though, if there are explosions in the engine,
and then that can also cause parts of the plane
to lose functionality, depending on exactly what was damaged in
that engine fire.

Speaker 5 (05:57):
So that's something else they'll have to look at.

Speaker 1 (06:00):
Or he's going to be back in the third hour,
we're gonna talk about President Trump urging Senate Republicans to
nuke the Filipbuster. There is also we'll talk about this
with Rory next hour. A group of Democrats senators who
it's being rumored are looking the cave. So the pressure
is mounting.

Speaker 5 (06:21):
Now.

Speaker 1 (06:21):
Had they come to some kind of resolution yesterday or today, boy,
I would have been really suspicious that a lot a
lot of the shutdown was a strategy to get the
sweep they got yesterday, a sweep they were likely to
get no matter what.

Speaker 5 (06:36):
These were very blue states and blue cities.

Speaker 1 (06:40):
And now you wonder, well, even if that's true, are
they just giving it a few days? Because as soon
as the election results are in, we start getting stories
about a group of Senate Democrats eyeing abandoning the shutdown.
These are centrist Senate Democrats that are sounding out to
Democrat colleagues on the potential deal to reopen. I just

(07:03):
get a sense of my gut. This is all about
to end very quickly, and it really doesn't matter to speculate,
you know why it went so long? I think I
think we know what's going on here. For the Democrats.
They're having an internal fight with an extreme far left,
an extreme far left that if you think the average

(07:26):
Democrat has h Trump derangement syndrome, these people are at
war with the president and you can't fight enough.

Speaker 5 (07:33):
And so we've had this capitulation.

Speaker 1 (07:35):
So some Democrats are caving to that fear, uh, and
then others are leading in that fear.

Speaker 5 (07:43):
But I'm your gut, what's your guts? Say, Michael?

Speaker 1 (07:46):
Do you think this was all a strategy to show fight,
fight fight, so for the selection?

Speaker 5 (07:53):
Yeah? Yeah, I mean, how how cynical, how how well?

Speaker 9 (07:58):
No?

Speaker 1 (07:58):
But I mean but how you know I've I'm thinking
of oh and I can't remember his name now we
did him yesterday. He used to be the Democrat strategist
during Clinton. Now he's upholster Mark penm. I think Mark
Penn sound yesterday in our sounds of the day, Like
I always try to, I just try to put myself,

(08:21):
like when Mandani won, whether he is a dangerous political
Islamist or not, I just put myself in the body
of a political Islamist or ashi hottist Islamist. And how
would I respond to seeing this person who doesn't apologize
for being a socialist and an Islamist being elected in

(08:41):
the largest city in the United States, a city that
we attacked twenty five years earlier. I think I'd be
pretty emboldened, pretty encouraged. So I always like to put
myself in other people's positions, and I think it gives
me the fairest view of what might be coming next.
And studying hundreds and hundreds of years of Islam, I
can tell you that they don't celebrate and think Allah.

Speaker 5 (09:07):
They fight.

Speaker 1 (09:10):
In other words, I can't believe nobody has been wise
enough or courageous enough to tell you. And this has
nothing to do with mam Donni, but in Mamdani getting elected, the.

Speaker 5 (09:22):
Chances of a terror attack are great. Right now.

Speaker 1 (09:26):
The outbreak of violence is that is emboldened. You ought
to be concerned. So everybody's reacting to a socialist victory. No,
it's an Islami's victory. And the reaction from islamis to
that Islami's victory. You ought to be focused on, but
you're not. And I think with this I go back
to him, because he was saying, how could you miss

(09:48):
the lesson of twenty twenty four? The lesson of twenty
twenty four, whether narratives takeover or far left interest takeover,
the lesson was the Democrat Party went too far left
of the American people. Now, whether you pin that on wokeness,
whether you pin that on open borders, whether you pin
that on whatever issue you think it is, the bottom

(10:13):
line is they as a party, as a brand, were
far too left for the American people. They were far
too left for some in their party that they're waging
war against. So the natural political history would tell you
you come back to the American people or you lose. Now,
we used to live in a time I got two minutes,
I'm going to do it. Here's how old fashioned politics

(10:35):
used to work, and again technology communications media was completely different.
You could campaign to the extreme far left of your
party in a primary, get the nomination, and then in
a general election come back.

Speaker 5 (10:53):
To center, so you could win and actually serve.

Speaker 1 (10:57):
That can't happen anymore because if you say something radically
left in a small town today in a twenty four
hour news cycle, the whole world knows that you're branded
with it. You know, that's played a role in the
left going left and staying left. And now with the
war within the party, you've got socialists with the goal

(11:19):
of taking out Democrats and then intimidating the rest of
the Democrats who aren't socialist. The party socialist. And so
that's what the consultants saying. I'll remind you of a
time where the Democrat Party went from control of the
electoral College to winning only one state in the eighty
four Reagan landslide. And that's what he sees ahead for

(11:42):
the Democrat Party. So if the American people haven't changed,
this isn't the revolution beginning of a new socialist Democrat Party.
This is the death of the Democrat Party. And so
I see it as and by the way, I never
get this from the perspective of a parasite. A parasite

(12:03):
wants to grow, it wants to win, It wants to
take over the host. The problem is when it wins,
the host dies and the parasite dies with it. I
don't know what these socialist Democrats think they're going to
end up with. If they succeed in their revolution, they
just become a third party, and other Democrats become independents,
Republicans or another third party. But the two party stranglehold

(12:30):
is broken. So whatever this stunt is, and I think
it is a part of the left's takeover of the
Democrat Party and the intimidation of sensible Democrats and the
ignoring of the lesson of the twenty twenty four election.
That's why yesterday my conclusion was simple. This was a

(12:50):
very predictable winning night for Democrats that they falsely think
is a sign of the future, when it's just the opposite.
It was a great night creating a headache of a
year ahead.

Speaker 2 (13:05):
This is Your Morning Show with Michael del Chono.

Speaker 10 (13:09):
I thought it was a very angry speech, certainly angry
toward me, and I think he should be very nice
to me. You know, I'm the one that sort of
has to approve a lot of things coming to him,
so he's off.

Speaker 7 (13:18):
To a bad short The President said the victory speech
was harsh and added that he felt Mom Donny would
be better suited being kind to him and should reach out.

Speaker 5 (13:25):
Mom.

Speaker 7 (13:26):
Donnie says he's building a city hall that will deliver
on the promises of his mayoral campaign. The New York
City mayor elect told reporters his win represents a new
era of government. He announced some officials that he's stapping
for his transition team and perhaps future cabinet.

Speaker 5 (13:40):
I'm Mark Neefield. Are we sure on Friday we're not
actually talking to the President of the United Times?

Speaker 1 (13:46):
We wonder Federal officials are announcing a cutback in the
number of flights in the US, how many and where
Tammy Trichillo has more.

Speaker 4 (13:52):
It's a result of staffing shortages during the federal government shutdown.

Speaker 8 (13:56):
We have decided that a ten percent reduction and scheduled
capacity would be appropriate to again continue to take the
pressure off of our controllers.

Speaker 4 (14:05):
FAA Administrator Brian Bedford said the agency will reduce air
traffic at forty high volume airports if there's no deal
to end the shutdown. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy had said
earlier in the week that the FAA would be forced
to shut down airspace in some markets if the shutdown continued.
I'm Tammy Trhio.

Speaker 1 (14:21):
The death toll has risen nearly doubled in Louisville, at
least twelve people now dead even more injured following the
fiery crash of a UPS plane in Louisville, Kentucky NTSB
member todd Enman said investigators have zeroed in on a
critical piece of video taken from the ground.

Speaker 8 (14:37):
Which shows the left engine detaching from the wing during
the takeoff.

Speaker 1 (14:43):
Row and as Rory mentioned just moments ago, we do
have all the boxes recovered, so we'll learn a lot
from that and what the pilot's knew shortly before the
decisions made that led to the crash. Sewn Denny Combs
is reportedly expecting a presidential pardon and he expects it
by New year.

Speaker 11 (15:02):
TMZ is reporting the imprisoned Moguls been boasting to other
inmates about an alleged pardon from President Trump at twenty
twenty six, and he also claims he'll take care of
them after he gets out of prison. Colmes has been
pushing for a presidential pardon since he was convicted of
violating the Man Act in July in New York and
sentenced to fifty months in prison. The White House Communications

(15:22):
Office denying the possible pardon, but President Trump has pardoned
other rappers before during his time in office, including Kodak Black,
Lil Wayne, and most recently NBA Young Boy.

Speaker 5 (15:33):
I'm Jim Roop.

Speaker 1 (15:34):
Today we celebrate a dish that eighty one percent of
us love, and I love one hundred percent pre Tennis
with more.

Speaker 12 (15:41):
Today is National Nacho Day chips with gooey cheese and anything.

Speaker 4 (15:45):
Else you want piled on top.

Speaker 12 (15:47):
A one pole survey says it's a dish only disliked
by two percent of the population. Three percent of us
say we only eat them when we're drinking. The dish
was created in northern Mexico by a chef named Nacho
back in nineteen forty three. For US military spouses, today
is easy to celebrate, look for a deal and dig
in sherry not required.

Speaker 5 (16:06):
I'm Bree Tennis chef Naucho. This is Steve the wrestler,
a refugee from the People's Republic of Minnesota. And my
morning show is your Morning show with Michael del Jorno. Hey,

(16:27):
it's me Michael.

Speaker 1 (16:27):
Your Morning show can be heard live five to eight
am Central, six to nine Eastern and great cities like Jackson, Mississippi, Akron, Ohio,
or Columbus, Georgia. We'd love to be a part of
your morning routine and we're grateful you're here. Now enjoy
the podcast. Thanks for bringing us along with you. Supreme
Court now wing the legality of President Trump's tariffs. The
death toll has risen to twelve in Louisville, fifteen injured,

(16:51):
five still being searched for after the ups plane crash
in Louisville two days ago. The leaders of five Central
Asian nations are going to be meeting with the President today.
Big John had asked the question earlier that there's a
major announcement coming from the White House around eleven thirty.
We believe that has to do with lower cost for
wagovi and ozembic and other weight loss drugs. But we'll

(17:14):
ask John Decker about that as well. Bob Dylan is
awarded the Honorary Doctor of music degree from Berkeley College
of Music in Boston, a very high honor. We do
have Thursday Night football tonight, the Ratus a mile high
taking on the Broncos. Speaking of Big John, he called
just moments ago. I don't know if anybody else is
noticing this. This guy is not so warm and friendly

(17:35):
to me anymore. I missed one lunch and I'm sent
some passive aggression.

Speaker 5 (17:39):
So Jonathan Curley is leaning towards the administration winning on
this one. I think he has a better gut feeling
than you, Bookie. See how violent he's getting because I
missed a lunch.

Speaker 1 (17:55):
Listen, go for it. Jonathan Turley is leaning and one direction.
I guess when you just lean, you can't be wrong.
Listening to the justices, you can usually learn a lot
from the questions they're asking. And when Amy call me,
Barrett got to the point where we talk about, okay,
if we allow this and people start suing in order
to get refunds or reimbursements, how does that work?

Speaker 5 (18:18):
I mean it almost right.

Speaker 1 (18:19):
I don't know how you would say it, but it
almost It was like, no matter how we rule, a
Pandora's box is being opened and it's a nightmare, which
one do we want to open to? Which when Amy
call me, Barrett finally just goes, well, this is a mess.
She really kind of sum because they're darned if they do,
and darned if they don't. It's a mess if they
uphold it, and then what becomes of all these deals.

(18:42):
It's a mess if if they strike down and allow
the tariffs to continue and the chaos of reimbursements. So
your gut was five to four, either four or against.
My gut was, I just don't see how those questions
in that courtroom yesterday add up to the Trump's tariffs remaining.

Speaker 5 (19:06):
It just didn't. I didn't see any window for that.

Speaker 1 (19:09):
I think you probably got Alito, Thomas, and Cavanaugh. You know,
the three liberal judges are against it. I mean, at
some point you need Amy, Kobe, Barrett. And then the
big question is, you know, Gorsic, gorsicch But and if
they do, if they do strike this, uphold it and

(19:31):
strike down the tariffs, what does that do to the
Obamacare previous rulings? Because if this is a tax, Obamacare
has to be a tax. It's it's a Pandora's box,
no matter which one is open. But we'll get more
from John Decker here in just a few moments. The
only other big story today there was the big interview
with Trump and Brettbear. It was kind of a a

(19:56):
sot A straw moment, if you will. I've been dying
to work in.

Speaker 5 (20:00):
So strong for about seven days.

Speaker 1 (20:05):
He's a strong woman, you know. And there's the president,
you know. And now one of the conversations is is
he a communist? The President keeps referring to him as
a communist, And of course, you know, the real story
was the difference in tone in mom Donnie from candidate
to victor, and his waging of war and his taunting

(20:25):
of Trump to get through to get to any of us,
you have to get through all of us. I mean,
he more or less was declaring he's mayor of America,
not just mayor of New York. And so the President
sets him straight and says, listen, you're gonna need me. Uh,
there's not a lot. Look, mam, Donnie's gonna need the governor,
hocal and the President if he's going to come through

(20:47):
with any of his pandering. All right, So now again
I don't know about what Big John thinks of this,
but a Supreme Court bar attorney and a White House
correspondent of eight presidents sees is now here who spent
the day in the courtroom.

Speaker 5 (21:04):
Redd and I were listening.

Speaker 1 (21:05):
It sure sounded like, first of all, a very respectful, thoughtful,
dutiful Supreme Court hearing a very big case. But John,
we talk about this often. Their questions tell us a lot,
and the consistent questions were basically, this is a mess,
as Amy Comby Barritt said, whether you uphold it or

(21:26):
strike it down, because if you strike it down, what
becomes of all the terriffs? If you uphold it, what
becomes I mean, it's a mess. This one's not easy.
What did you hear?

Speaker 5 (21:35):
Well? What I heard?

Speaker 6 (21:36):
I was in the Supreme Court yesterday for nearly three
hours of oral arguments. I saw the Treasury Secretary a
few feet away from me, and the Commerce Secretary and
the US Trade representative. They realize how important this cake
is to President Trump and to the Trump administration. What
I heard was even from conservative justices, of a lot

(21:57):
ofkepticism concerning the action that the press that it has taken,
invoking a nineteen seventy seven law, the International Emergency Economic
powers act to impose tariffs on every one of America's
trading partners, and those conservative justices, in their skepticism, declared,
I don't think the president can do that. You need Congress.

(22:18):
You need Congress to levy those taxes. The president cannot
unilaterally do that.

Speaker 1 (22:23):
Okay, So first order of businesses, you got to win
the argument that this is an emergency, and nobody could
really state a case of emergency. Then the next order
of businesses? Is it a tax? And if it's a tax,
who can impose it? By the way, this one's interesting
because if they rule it's a tax and it's not
an emergency and we're going to uphold this, the president

(22:45):
can't enact these, well, then you go to Congress and
I don't know if they have the votes in the
Senate to get it done.

Speaker 5 (22:50):
But if you.

Speaker 1 (22:51):
Don't and you allow it, well, then what do you
do with the Obamacare that was once ruled not a tax?

Speaker 5 (22:56):
If this is a tax? Obamacare was? I mean this
everywhere I.

Speaker 1 (23:00):
Look, there's like a Pandora's box getting ready to be open.

Speaker 6 (23:03):
Well as it relates to what the Plan B is,
and you just suggest to what Plan B is, and
I suggested that actually to the President a few weeks
ago in the Oval office. The President said he doesn't
believe the votes are there. The sixty votes are necessary
to procedurally move that kind of legislation through the Senate. However,
remember there's a thing called reconciliation, and I think the

(23:24):
votes would be there with the President twisting some arm
to get his tariffs through Congress through reconciliation. We'll just
have to wait and see what the plan B is
if it's a big if. But you know, if the
Supreme Court rules against the President on this particular case,
we're likely to get a decision from the Supreme Court
by the end of this year, by the end of December.

Speaker 5 (23:46):
What did you find the most fascinating.

Speaker 1 (23:47):
I think, for Red and I, our money was on
when we got to refunds and reimbursements and counter suits
and how that would all be handled.

Speaker 5 (23:57):
But again, I come.

Speaker 1 (23:58):
Back to a time where nobody can disagree and debate
and argue in America. The Supreme Court was so respectful,
so thoughtful, so thorough, so functional.

Speaker 5 (24:10):
I was very impressed.

Speaker 6 (24:11):
Well, I'm always impressed when I'm in there, and I
was impressed with the lawyers arguing for both sides, and
also with the ninjustices the thoughtful questions that they asked.
One of the questions was posed by Neil Gorsuch, who
was the first justice named to the US Supreme Court
by Donald Trump in his first term, and he asked
the Solicitor General, who's representing President Trump, could a president

(24:34):
impose fifty percent tariff on countries that manufacture gas powered
automobiles and on auto parts?

Speaker 5 (24:44):
And he acknowledged.

Speaker 6 (24:45):
Yet, So that's the political aspect of things if you
have a democratic president. A democratic president could use tariffs
in ways that Republicans certainly would not like. So that's
nothing that I think also weighs in on the decision
that the Supreme Court justices will make.

Speaker 1 (25:01):
So Red's got at five to four, but he doesn't
know which way. What were you sensing?

Speaker 6 (25:07):
Oh, I think it's at least six to three against
the president, maybe even seven too, but at least six
to three against the president. Will have to wait and see,
you know, I mean, I always get a good feel
being in the Supreme Court. You know, I've been in
the Supreme Court so many times, countless times. As you know, Michael,
I was even in the Supreme Court for Bush v.
Gore back in December of two thousand. That decided the presidency.

(25:28):
And you get a cent sometimes being in there with
the questions being posed, which way a case is going
to go?

Speaker 5 (25:34):
That's the way I think this case is going to go.

Speaker 1 (25:36):
Do we if let's say they can't get it through
the Senate, which I don't think the votes are there,
agree with the president and this gets upheld?

Speaker 5 (25:43):
What becomes of all these deals? What a mess? And
not to mention a wasted year, well, it becomes a mess.

Speaker 6 (25:51):
But you know, look, there are some options that the
president has to impose some terants, certainly tariffs on imported steel,
imported aluminum, imported copper automobiles, all within.

Speaker 5 (26:03):
The purview of the president.

Speaker 6 (26:04):
This decision by the Supreme Court would not impact those
tariffs at all.

Speaker 1 (26:08):
All right, John Decker, if you want to hear more
his the White House Briefing Room with John Decker, A
podcast comes out nine eastern eighth Central, not that far
off this morning. And when you find it, by the way,
in your iHeart app go ahead and give it a
preset that way, it's a push away every morning, John Decker,
thank you as always.

Speaker 5 (26:25):
I never played this ever, but if you play the lottery.

Speaker 1 (26:29):
Both Powerball and Mega Million's jackpots are sky high.

Speaker 5 (26:34):
Right now.

Speaker 7 (26:34):
There was no grand prize winner and Wednesday night's Powerball drawing,
so that jumps to four hundred and sixty seven million
dollars with a cash option of nearly two hundred and
twenty one million. And then there's Mega Millions with an
estimated eight hundred and forty three million dollars.

Speaker 5 (26:49):
Up for grams in the next drawing on Friday. I'm
Mark Neefield.

Speaker 1 (26:52):
The leaders from five Central Asian nations will be meeting
with President Trump today in Washington, DC. Tammy Trehillo is
covering that story.

Speaker 5 (27:00):
Plus one.

Speaker 4 (27:00):
Meeting will primarily focus on critical minerals the US needs.
Other topics of discussion will include technology transfers and expanded
cultural and educational exchanges. The meeting comes just after Trump
secured a minerals deal with Chinese leader jishen Ping in
late October. I'm Tammy Trihio.

Speaker 1 (27:17):
Well, you know how the President felt about Mom Donnie's win.
He also is voicing his disapproval of the results in
the New Jersey governor's race. On Tuesday night, Sarah Lee
Kessler has more.

Speaker 9 (27:26):
Speaking with Fox News post election, Trump had this to say.

Speaker 10 (27:29):
I thought that New Jersey would do better.

Speaker 9 (27:31):
The President unhappy the GOP candidate he endorsed, Jack Chittarelli
felt to Democrat Mikey Sheryl by double digits. The congresswoman's
big victory amid massive turnout help put Passaic, Marris Gluster,
Atlantic and Coverlent Counties back in the win column for Democrats.
All five voted for President Trump in twenty twenty four,

(27:52):
I'm Sarah Lee.

Speaker 1 (27:53):
Kessler, the great bomb Villain and Canada doctorate degree to
his resume. The singer has been awarded an honorary Doctor
of Music degree from Berkeley College of Music in Boston.
The distinction recognizes the musician's lifetime of songwriting to change
the sounded scope of modern music. Dylan called the honor

(28:14):
a pleasant surprise and thanked the college for giving him
this prestigious sounder. Berkeley, by the way, previously had given
honorary doctorates of music to artists like Joni Mitchell, Ringo Starr,
and Aretha Franklin.

Speaker 5 (28:26):
Yeah, pretty good company.

Speaker 1 (28:28):
And finally, scientists are reporting the biggest black hole flare
ever recorded.

Speaker 7 (28:32):
According to a new study, the black hole flair was
first detected in twenty eighteen from ten billion light years
away by astronomers using the Zuicky transient facility, who discovered
the flair erupting. According to the study, the super massive
black hole violently gobbled up an enormous star, producing a
cosmic outburst with the light.

Speaker 5 (28:50):
Of ten trillion suns.

Speaker 7 (28:52):
Researchers say the flair has been steadily fainting overtime, but
likely will continue to be observable with ground based telescopes
for a few years.

Speaker 2 (29:00):
Mark me feel it's your morning show with Michael del Journo.

Speaker 8 (29:05):
Hey, Mikey, mister Joey an, you're gonna have a couple
four free Baby's gonna.

Speaker 1 (29:13):
Cost you about thirty dollars in New York.

Speaker 5 (29:15):
When man Dummy gets done, it's gonna be worse than that.

Speaker 1 (29:18):
The unionized Starbucks baristas are planning what they hope to
be the biggest strike ever. Hang on to that cost prediction.
I think I have a better gut on that than you, Joey.

Speaker 5 (29:30):
I'm kiddy.

Speaker 3 (29:34):
Who made an activision with a minor and puberty bark.

Speaker 5 (29:38):
They're getting a little bit any of you in the
media clearly missed the art of the deal. It's gonna
work out all right. Time for the sounds of the day.

Speaker 1 (29:46):
The President had a soda strong moment with Brett Bear
on Fox News and responded to Mom Donnie's tone change.

Speaker 5 (29:54):
Sorry about that double click.

Speaker 7 (29:55):
You know.

Speaker 10 (29:56):
I'm so torn because I would like to see the
new do well, because.

Speaker 2 (30:01):
I love New York.

Speaker 5 (30:01):
I really love New York.

Speaker 10 (30:03):
When I left New York for Washington, New York was
doing really well, but there were some bad signs. The
bad sign was a guy named the Blasio. So the
signs of the Blasio. That was the beginning, and it
was bad. This one we're gonna look for a thousand years,
communism has not worked. To just the communism or the

(30:23):
concept of communism has not worked.

Speaker 5 (30:26):
I tend to doubt it's gonna work this time.

Speaker 1 (30:29):
You know, it's interesting everybody's wanting to make a big
deal out of the fact that the President used the
word communism versus socialist, while we all ignore Islamist. Here's
Mom Donnie speaking in his victory speech. Tell me if
he's talking to all New Yorkers and any Americans.

Speaker 5 (30:47):
Thank you to those so.

Speaker 13 (30:49):
Often forgotten by the politics of our city.

Speaker 5 (30:52):
Who made this movement their own. I speak of.

Speaker 13 (30:56):
Yemeny bodega owners, in Mexican ub LLAUS, Senegalese taxi drivers,
and who's beck nurses, Trinidadian line coox and Ethiopian aunties.

Speaker 5 (31:15):
Yes, aunties. Listen.

Speaker 1 (31:17):
When this is all said and done, whether led by
Mam Donnie or observed by other Islamists, this is going
to have very little to do with New York and
far more to do with America and the divisions.

Speaker 5 (31:37):
You know.

Speaker 1 (31:37):
This goes back to Obama, who thought he could run
a presidency like a community organizer. The problem is, the
minute you're elected, you're everybody's president. The minute Mamdanni was elected,
he's everybody's mayor. But this is not a mayor that's
interested in serving everybody. We'll see how that plays out.
More importantly, we need to see what they redefine as

(32:00):
law and order and fair and just listen to the
answer to this question.

Speaker 14 (32:06):
My message to ICE agents and to everyone across this
city is that everyone will be held to the same standard.

Speaker 5 (32:14):
Of the law.

Speaker 1 (32:16):
Oh so, if they came into the country illegally, you
will lawfully prosecute them and return them to their country
of origin.

Speaker 5 (32:24):
No, that's not what he means.

Speaker 14 (32:25):
You violate the law, you must be held account. And
there is sadly a sense that is growing across this
country that certain people are allowed to violate that law,
whether they be the president or whether they be the
agents themselves. And what the orders are looking for as
an era of consistency, an era of clarity, and era
of conviction, and that is when we will deliver them.
And I am looking forward to having conversations with Mayor

(32:50):
Adams and his administration about the work of the transition
to ensure that the handover is a seamless one and
then it is one that benefits the shared.

Speaker 5 (32:59):
Work we all have.

Speaker 1 (33:00):
I think society's on as obvious all right again, no
matter what he does, whether he's an Islamist or not,
and I believe he is a political Islamist. Islamist are
watching and they've already responded, We're.

Speaker 10 (33:13):
Done hiding, We're done, We're done being tortured and hurt
and judged.

Speaker 5 (33:20):
This is the correct religion. This is the religion that
all of human.

Speaker 1 (33:24):
In need needs to be a part of Islam, and
we will not stop until it enters every home so
I want you to repeat after me.

Speaker 13 (33:33):
I want to hear it in every single district. It
should Tremble, Brooklyn should hear it.

Speaker 5 (33:39):
Promption hear it.

Speaker 2 (33:40):
We're all in this together. This is Your Morning Show
with Michael ndel Joo
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