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November 6, 2025 37 mins

Will AI power the next election? It’s the coming battle nobody sees between Silicon Valley and Main Street. We continue our AI journey of discovery with senior contributor David Zanotti. 

President Trump is urging Senate Republicans to “nuke” the filibuster to end the record-setting federal shutdown. National Correspondent RORY O’NEILL will break down the political stakes, what this means for Senate power dynamics, and how it could reshape next year’s mid-term elections. 

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, it's Michael reminding you that your morning show can
be heard live each weekday morning five to eighth Central,
six to nine Eastern and great cities like Nashville, Tennessee
two below, Mississippi and Sacramento, California. We'd love to be
a part of your morning routine and take the drive
to work with you, but better late than never. We're
grateful you're here.

Speaker 2 (00:17):
Now. Enjoy the podcast two.

Speaker 3 (00:19):
Three starting your morning off right.

Speaker 2 (00:23):
A new way of talk, a new way of understanding,
because we're in this together. This is your morning show
with Michael o'bill Jordan. Hey, Michael, this is Michael from
leven In, Ohio.

Speaker 1 (00:37):
I believe Spreme Court will go five four or Trump.

Speaker 2 (00:41):
I think he has a better duck feeling than you.
Your morning show is my morning show with Michael Bell Journy.
I'll tell you I get no respect. Seven minutes after
the hour, can you believe it's Thursday already? Welcome to Thursday, November,
the sixth year of our Lord, twenty twenty five. We're
all in this together. This is our day, this is
your morning show, and thanks for joining us. The Supreme

(01:02):
Court is now weighing the legality of President Trump's tariffs.
It's all in their hands based on the questions yesterday.
There's any number of Pandora's boxes that are going to
be opened by this decision, I want to say, more
than anything else, no matter how they rule, it was
such a respectful, thoughtful, thorough job by the Supreme Court

(01:26):
on a very difficult case. No matter which way they rule.
At least twelve people now are dead in that ups
plane crash in Louisville. Fifteen now injured. Probably the most
heartbreaking moment is when the mirror said there's five people
we're still unaccounted for that we're just hoping aren't where
they were supposed to be, because if they were, its
remains that will be recovered. Leaders of five Central Asian

(01:49):
nations will be meeting with the President at the White House.
There is a big announcement coming at eleven thirty. Our
best guests from our your morning show team, and we're
really good guessers, is this is going to be the
announcement of oz and Mogovia and other injectable weight loss
drugs at a much reduced rate. We're talking one hundred,
one hundred and fifty versus one thousand dollars a month.

(02:10):
In that announcement will be a Bob Dylan getting a
big award. He's in a very unique group of individuals
including Aretha Franklin and Ringo Starr getting the Berkeley College
of Music of Boston's honorary Doctorate of Music degree. And
we do have Thursday Night football tonight, that right is
going a mile high to take on Denver the Broncos.
This is a great game. Thirty years ago tonight not

(02:31):
so great. And David Sanati, of course, is the CEO
of the American Policy Roundtable, host of the Public Square,
heard on two hundred stations, and he's also our senior contributor,
and he joins us today. We're going to do part
two of our Journey of Discovery on Ai. But first
he has a pop quiz for me. You know I
excel at pop quizzes. Yes, yes, you do. Good morning, Michael.

(02:52):
I know what to bring up my grades at the
Dallas Theological Seminary and brag where I'm still sitting with.

Speaker 3 (02:58):
A GPA of one hundred. But go ahead, pop quiz.
Is your is your last assignment done? That's the good.

Speaker 2 (03:05):
Well, according to the last email I received, no they're
waiting on it. Go ahead, maybe not.

Speaker 3 (03:11):
I I was golfing with a friend, a charismatic newcomer, young,
cheerful versus a cranky nativist. Hmm, which magazine would describe
the New York Bears race in that fashion? A charismatic newcomer, young,

(03:34):
cheerful immigrant versus a cranky nativist.

Speaker 2 (03:37):
I'm going to go with the Atlantic bingo. There you
go on hundred. Please could you please send an email
to my professor at the Dallas Theological Seminary that I
was busy taking your pop quiz.

Speaker 3 (03:49):
And while there's no mention of socialism, communism, or anything else,
this is the example of how the AI driven silo
based world in aables people to get away with completely
presenting one side of a story, period, end of conversation,
because they're not even aware that there is.

Speaker 2 (04:09):
Another side of the story.

Speaker 3 (04:10):
The headline of the article at the LAG is the
anti Mega majority re emerges. The anti Mega majority re emerges.
Now that's the presumption that the majority of Americans, at
least fifty one percent nationwide hate MAGA.

Speaker 2 (04:27):
A long time ago, when I had a different shift,
I was up in the middle of the night and
I couldn't sleep. Oh, creative of you. Try not to
break any commandments here. And I'm up and it's like
three o'clock in the morning, and I'm watching History of
the World Part one mel Brooks, and I mean, you know,

(04:49):
I start laughing so uncontrollably at some of the scenes
that are so hilarious that I'm now wide awake. Anyway,
flash forward later in the morning, after I got off
the air, my dad called and he said, oh, because
I remember when I was watching, thinking to myself, I
bet I'm the only one up watching this right now.
I mean, who's really up at three o'clock in the

(05:09):
morning watching History of the World Part one on this
obscure channel. And then my dad called, Oh, tell you.
I was up in the middle and not I could sleep,
got up, had to go to the bathroom, and then
I was wide awake. I started watching History of the
World Part one. I said, Dad, oh, man that I
was watching that. Do you know, David, you were reading
that last night? I was reading that last night. At

(05:30):
eight fifteen pm. They sent it to me in an
email thanks to a subscription you paid for for me.
I got to get this aggravation this godja, I have.

Speaker 3 (05:40):
The November print edition is well available for you now
in the car. I bought every one at the Burns
and Nobles that were there. We've probably not purchased thirty
copies to give away to people, but.

Speaker 2 (05:49):
The thought crossed my mind. And they do this on purpose,
you know, they the length of these stories are so long.
But I could I actually contemplated starting the show today
just reading it. I mean, I don't like to do
reading for the blind. That's a lazy talk show host.
But I mean, every line, every word so chosen. And

(06:09):
this is the narrative of tomorrow because they're speaking to
the universities, they're speaking to the network and the corporate
owners of networks. This is the set narrative to come.
There's an old song by the Imperials, and and again
I think it's a little bit about one of my
favorite stories in the Bible, where Jesus is sleeping as
they're crossing the sea and the storm kicks up. I

(06:32):
don't think he would have minded them waking him up.
Had they woke them up and said, you know, Rabbi, Rabbi,
there's a bad storm. Could you just calm this and
then go back to sleep? You know, but they didn't
do that. Yeah, they thought we were all going to die.
And Jesus was appalled at their faith, their lack of faith,
you know, the kind of lack of faith you and
I have every day as I'm worrying about money today

(06:52):
and food today. So but the imperials do this song.
There's a storm on the horizon, Let the wind blow,
there's thunder in the distance, Let the wind blow. In
other words, we talk about we want to know God, Well,
do you want to know him? And do you really

(07:13):
want to know him in that power of his resurrection?
Because if you do, you've got a fellowship and his sufferings,
and you've got to go through the storms. The storms
are what shape you for tomorrow. But it's a great,
great song with a great, great meaning of its own.
I often use it when I hear it in my
head when I see something coming. I don't know what

(07:33):
it is. I can't tell you or predict what it is,
but there's a storm on the horizon and there's something
really bad coming. And while everyone was focused on him
being a socialist, and today they're going to focus on
the president referring to mom Donnie as a communist never
mind that is he an Islamist, or even more over
than that are Islamists watching and emboldened and prepared to act.

(07:58):
It is breathtaking to me that not a single news source,
including The Atlantic, covered anything about the thousands that gathered
in Times Square in worship of Allah and in clear
threat to America. Now put yourself in their position. You're
a political Islamist. You're here to populate, to infiltrate, to agitate,

(08:21):
and then you win the mayor's office in the largest
city as a professed Islamist and socialist. You're in bolden.
You think this is the time for fighting. This is
when you leave house of worship and enter house of war.
Something bad's brewing. And when you miss reality, you certainly
miss tomorrow. But I'm telling you the Atlantic and others

(08:44):
are going to make this narrative that this is the future.
This is zeal, this is passion, this is extraordinary youth,
this is democracy, and we're all missing the boat because
we're old guard. Maga that yeah, and your game of narrative.

Speaker 3 (09:01):
This, this may cost some consternation across your your blessed
listening audience, because I really appreciate the folks. A lot
of the folks who listen to you listen to us
on the public square. I mean, these people are friends,
these are allies, These are thoughtful people, and I appreciate it.

Speaker 2 (09:16):
Well, that's because I'm the King of Ohio and you
originated in Ohio. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (09:20):
All they talk about San Youngstown every day.

Speaker 2 (09:23):
I was just there a couple of weeks ago.

Speaker 3 (09:25):
The thought here is, first off, MEGA is a very
loosely knit construction of thoughts and ideas. There is no
book of MEGA, there is no code of MEGA, there
is no doctrine of MEGA. The Republican Party platform is
not the reality of MEGA.

Speaker 2 (09:42):
They might suggest Project twenty twenty five, but go ahead, Yeah.

Speaker 3 (09:46):
And Heritage Organism, Heritage found As you would reject.

Speaker 2 (09:50):
That out of hand because they would compleat.

Speaker 3 (09:52):
They would also and I'm not suggesting that people need
to distance themselves from MEGA to get acceptability from the
other side. You've made a point very clear on this broadcast,
and you are right. We are now so siloed and
so dictated to by algorithms that you can't even get
honest thought out in the media. On the left or

(10:15):
the right, for example, try to find a story on
the Supreme Court oral arguments that you and John Decker
just spoke about a few minutes ago. Try and find
it on Fox News right now. I've scrolled down twenty
thirty stories deep. There's no story on it. It's like
top five in the Associated Press.

Speaker 2 (10:33):
Why is that?

Speaker 3 (10:34):
Because it's silos the stories. What do you say? Stories
you cover, stories you don't. Pictures you use, Pictures you don't.
People you talk to, people you don't.

Speaker 2 (10:44):
We are so.

Speaker 3 (10:45):
Siloed that people don't realize they are being mentally manipulated.
They are being propagandaized, and good people who have good
ideas are not able to even hear words that stretch
their things. In a situation like the Atlantic, they this
is this is this guy, like he's the return of
the Easter Bunny.

Speaker 4 (11:06):
I mean, what is what is this guy that they've
still looked in the mayor? This is the city that was
bombed by his Allies airplanes into the Twin Towers, and
now they're celebrating Islam as as as the platform for
America's mayor.

Speaker 2 (11:19):
And celebrating in the Yeah, how did that work out
for London? You can't make this up. I had uh,
I don't remember who did. Shannon Gregory had a disabled
friend who makes these flags out of wood. They're absolutely breathtaking.
I mean, the workmanship is incredible. Maybe I'll take a
picture and posted on Facebook. I mean, it's wood and

(11:41):
it's gorgeous, but it almost really looks like a flag.
And they surprised me for my birthday. And so he asked, Andrea,
you know what's Michael's favorite John F. Kennedy quote? And
it sits Literally I can touch it. It's fine. It's
like three feet away from me. You know how I
love Kennedy, But look at this quote. Too often we

(12:02):
enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought.
Is there any better quote to describe? You know, often
I struggle to find thing. The only thing left shocking
in life is the truth. So much information, so little understanding.
That's why I was so impressed with the Supreme Court yesterday. Listen,

(12:23):
this is a mess. This is a mess, no matter
how they rule. But they were so respectful, so thoughtful,
so thorough. I mean, I was really genuinely impressed. We
live in a culture in silos where there is no
reality anymore. Everybody's got a firm, immovable position with very
little to no understanding. There's no respect for debate or

(12:45):
thoughtful conversation or disagreement. And yet here's the Supreme Court.
And then I come on and I go, I don't
see how this passes. And then there's a whole other
avalanche of unintended consequences if they uphold this ruling of
the terrorifts away, but that whole section with Amy Colemy
Barrett on the refund or you know, if they sue

(13:08):
for reimbursement, and that whole mess. And she finally goes, well,
this is just a mess, and it really is a
mess no matter how they rule.

Speaker 3 (13:16):
Well, and it may be Michael, that the mess is
what causes them to basically say, we will not engage
in being the final arbiter here. We are suggesting that
the federal court does not have standing on this because
it's a fight between Congress and the president.

Speaker 2 (13:35):
Now they won't use that term, Roberts is.

Speaker 3 (13:37):
More creative than that, but they'll basically say this is
a political fight. And the judicial system was not constructed
for political fights. It was for genuine the resolution of
genuine legal conflicts in that regard, and so this is
a political fight. The Congress has got to figure it
out between the Congress.

Speaker 2 (13:56):
And that would be a very but that would be
a very protective political movement by Roberts, too, right, because.

Speaker 3 (14:02):
If they well Roberts actually believes that stuff. Yeah, he
actually believes that.

Speaker 2 (14:07):
I mean he's but he would be if they if
they uphold this as attacks, where does that lead they're
ruling out Obamacare?

Speaker 3 (14:15):
Yeah, and I'm not sure you're not the only guy
asking that question this morning, because that's really the question.
I remember when Roberts did that, and I remember where
I was the minute I heard it, and I was
I just I couldn't couldn't believe it.

Speaker 2 (14:25):
Well, you can't. You can't possibly make the case this
is emergency. You can't ignore the fact that it's attacks.
And if you do, then we go back to Obamacare,
which I said earlier. Wouldn't that have been a brilliant strategy,
because you know, if this gets upheld, the president wasted
the better part of a year on this issue, the
better part of Roberts.

Speaker 3 (14:43):
Yeah, if it comes out of Roberts vote, now now
you know what, they'll let's go back to that. No,
I think you'll see a very Lincoln esque report a
return by by Trump in this regardless, he'll basically defy
the court now. He'll just begin to move immediately to
find additional ways to go through it. He'll claim additional
authority in other places who go back to previous decisions

(15:04):
that he's made. He will defy the court and keep
everything going exactly as it is now. He may do
it through a different legal authority and change the paperwork.
I don't think he will submit to that court decision,
nor do I think he's obligated by law from doing so,
because there is a fair legal argument that says it's
not the Supreme Court's decision to decide when the president

(15:25):
can declare an emergency. That's between the President and the Congress,
not the Court.

Speaker 2 (15:33):
I mean, fascinating moment and how that will play into
the I really think socialism work same moment. Excuse me?
Did I mention Fox News hasn't covered the story yet.
It's a big deal. That's a big deal. No, but
I mean, the referendum against capitalism for socialism is definitely

(15:53):
going to be a key narrative of the midterm election.
And if this this terriff issues hanging like a dangling
participle you can expect it to be a big issue
as well. More with David Sinati, we would come back.
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(17:29):
it's me Michael.

Speaker 1 (17:29):
Your Morning Show is heard live from five to eight
am Central, six to nine am Eastern, three to six
am Pacific on great radio stations like News Radio eleven
ninety k EX in Portland, News Talk five point fifty
k f YI and Phoenix, Arizona, and Freedom one oh
four seven in Washington, d C. We'd love to have
you join us live in the morning, even take us
along on the drive to work, but better late than never.

(17:51):
Enjoy the podcast.

Speaker 2 (17:52):
This is your Morning Show on Michael del Jorno, Jeffrey's
got the sound Red and David just to talk to
my ear off. During the break, we'll see if we
can make sense of everything they talked about. In a moment,
we have the Supreme Court wing the legality of the
President's tariffs. What will be that uncertain future. It's all
in the Supreme Court's hands. The depth holes up to

(18:13):
twelve now in Louisville, with fifteen recovering or still fighting
for their life in hospitals and five being searched for
in Louisville. And we're gonna get a big announcement at
eleven thirty. Our best guess is this is the reduced
cost of things like gozempic and mogo via weight loss injectables.
But we'll have more on that later overtime with David Sanati.

(18:34):
All Right, you guys are having a long conversation. I'm
going to try to just because I want to get
to the AI Part two. The New York City Mom
Donnie story. Is it a socialist story or an Islamist story?
Is it assimilation issue and a lack of participation issue

(18:55):
or a new surge of socialism not just within the
Democrat Party but within America. That's creative everything you guys
were talking about. Great question.

Speaker 3 (19:06):
Let me let me kind of put one more sort of.
Is it the example of the intentional application of a
strategy of the Democrats in this country to a mass
large amounts of non American born residents into major cities
and disgruntled communities into major cities and then basically put

(19:29):
an invisible fence around the city so that they will
stay there as voting blocks, so they can convert the
cities into engines by which that amalgamation of voters holds
the rest of state's hostage, like Chicago Land, like New
York City.

Speaker 2 (19:47):
Is that that's question? That was a rhetorical question, if
not state like Columbus. But here's what what what everybody
should be noticing how different his tone was the moment
he won, and what everybody's ignoring on the street. I mean,
I played this clip earlier, but for people that are
kind of just joining us, everybody has been focusing on

(20:08):
whether or not he's a socialist, and there is a
socialist movement in the Democrat Party that certainly focused on that.
We saw that with AOC's comments, Bernie Sanders comments. But
the part that everybody is missing is the Islamist part,
and not just whether or not Momdannia is an Islamist,
but how islamis view his victory. This was Time Square,

(20:30):
tens of thousands of Muslims in Times Square, and nobody's
covering the story. And this is what they're saying.

Speaker 5 (20:37):
Done hiding We're done. We're done being portured and hurt
and judged. This is the correct religion. This is the
religion that all of humanity.

Speaker 6 (20:49):
Needs to be a part of Islam, and we will
not stop until it enters every home.

Speaker 2 (20:55):
So I want you to repeat after me.

Speaker 6 (20:57):
I want to hear it in every single this It
should tremble. Brooklyn shil heard the proction, heart Queen, should
hear it say it as as the oma depends on this,
My brothers.

Speaker 2 (21:10):
And sisters, nailah lalah halala.

Speaker 6 (21:18):
There is no god worthy of worship except Allah, the
God of Jesus, the God of Moses, the God of Abraham,
and the God of the last and final Prophet more
Hamman salalah.

Speaker 2 (21:34):
He So, how will the Democrats react? How will the
Republicans react? How will the president react? Let me just
added that how are Islamis going to react to a
city did they attacked twenty five years ago, electing a
self proclaimed Islamist mayor. They're acting as if the country

(21:55):
has turned Islamis. It's going to be very emboldening. And
they go from house of worship to how si war.
It's usually very violent. So there are stories in this
I just think we're talking about potentially all the wrong ones,
or maybe it's all the above. I don't know, but
that lack of assimilation. I promise you this islamis They're
not here to be one of many. Just like they're

(22:17):
not satisfied having just a portion of Israel, They're not
going to be satisfied with just having New York City.

Speaker 3 (22:22):
Go ahead, Oh, Michael, you certainly sound like an islamophobe,
and I guess because I'm on your program with you,
I must be the same. So congratulations, Read and Jeffrey,
you've now all been You have a new T shirt
coming as an islamophobe.

Speaker 2 (22:37):
However, was that Islamic speaker in islamophobe? Because I'm just
saying what he said.

Speaker 3 (22:42):
Let's turn let's turn the T shirt inside out.

Speaker 2 (22:47):
If a group of.

Speaker 3 (22:50):
Came forward after electing one of their candidates and declared
that this is the new Christian theocratic era, the Christian nationalist,
Antikristian nationless wing of the Atlantic and every other media
outlet would be with This story would be everywhere about
the takeover of Christian nationalism and the demise of the
American Republic, which, of course, in and of itself is

(23:11):
all tortured logic.

Speaker 2 (23:12):
But that's where they be.

Speaker 3 (23:13):
But when it comes to the Islamic community, there is
dead silence.

Speaker 2 (23:18):
Why is that they're filled with rhetorical questions today? Yes, okay,
Gilded age, Gilded age? All right? So AI is here?
I don't think anybody understands it is? Thank you? Is
this Y two K brewing? Is this the dot com
bubble brewing? Is this something unique in of itself? Is

(23:42):
it a tool?

Speaker 6 (23:43):
Is it?

Speaker 2 (23:43):
Is it a threat to our economy and our future?
Is the coming battle that no one sees Silicon Valley
versus Main Street? I don't know. There are so many
battles brewing for twenty twenty six. This is going to
be twenty four hour news wark coverage. Well, it'll hit
the street.

Speaker 3 (24:03):
In regards to energy prices, and that's why if the
current administration doesn't figure out how to unleash energy prices
and reduce them dramatically through the free markets, they've got
a big problem.

Speaker 2 (24:14):
And they don't have any time left.

Speaker 3 (24:16):
If they're not on it today, they've got a big problem.

Speaker 2 (24:19):
But when it comes to Agi, the reason.

Speaker 3 (24:21):
We call it the gilded age is because it reminds us,
so clearly of the time when the Vanderbilts ruled the
railroads and the Rockefellers ruled all of the oil energy, fuel, oil, kerosene.
So when you went to your home, if you didn't
want candlelight, you got a kerostine lamp. Well yet b

(24:41):
and you turned kerosine lamps all over the well. If
you didn't play ball with the Vanderbilts and the Rockefellers,
you didn't get any oil.

Speaker 2 (24:49):
You were in the darkness. You were in candlelight.

Speaker 3 (24:51):
We are at a position where AI is sucking so
much energy off our grid that we face serious problems
in that regard going forward.

Speaker 2 (25:01):
So rewind rewind for a second back to the president's
inauguration and all the big tech leaders are standing there,
and everybody thought, well, what a great story this is.
After all, the narrative journalism is dead. They can't control
the narrative, they can't silence opposing views because but no,
they were in line for their electricity and if you

(25:24):
get it to them, you're going to end up in
the dark. But the bigger question is impact on the economy,
and is our economy strong enough to survive?

Speaker 3 (25:32):
So listen, So you've got a massive amount of power
being concentrated.

Speaker 2 (25:37):
Again.

Speaker 3 (25:38):
Now it's one thing to go on this on the
tech side with the people made gates in Zuckerberg and
and and Bezos and all of them.

Speaker 2 (25:46):
The richest people that our country has ever seen. We
made them.

Speaker 3 (25:49):
They're all still well within years of living, so they
have more money than you can possibly imagine. So if
combined they lose a trillion dollars combined, and they still
got plenty of money. So they have the ability to
play with this and see where it's going. They have
the ability to create a scenario and a narrative and

(26:10):
then back it up by their silos to manipulate the
markets and get all the wannabes who could never be
as rich as them to think, well, this is our
second or third wave. This is where we can catch
our piece of the massive wealth they And I'm telling
you right now, I'm not.

Speaker 2 (26:26):
A stock advisor, don't take my advice.

Speaker 3 (26:28):
But if theoretically someone decided they were going to short
AI might not be a bad idea because we.

Speaker 2 (26:35):
Can't even define what it is.

Speaker 3 (26:38):
Example, what's the difference between GAI and agi? Two different words,
two different sets of terms, two acronyms GAI and AGI.
GAI is generative artificial intelligence. AGI is artificial general intelligence.

(26:58):
Are they two different things?

Speaker 2 (27:00):
You bet? You rhy Now we have I was just
going to ask you. Is it as simple as one
is designed to think better than any human instantly and
the other is designed to think on its own very close.

Speaker 3 (27:12):
That's really smart because you did better than about thirty
other research articles I've been on a right that is
a very good analysis. In other words, right now what
we have is generative AI. That means, congratulations, you can
have a car that drives itself. We used to call
that a robot, but now we'll call it AI. So
it's the ability to get machines to think or close

(27:36):
or image or parallel human thinking. Now, when we get
into artificial general intelligence, there's no limits.

Speaker 2 (27:44):
Now we're in the matrix. When you go to AGI.

Speaker 3 (27:48):
Now it's the matrix and you have software programming controlling
reality and humans fitting into it. And that's ultimately where
people want to go. Will they ever get there?

Speaker 2 (27:56):
We don't know. People need to watch the movie The Matrix.
I don't think that we're going to all be technically batteries,
you know, thinking we're living a reality that we're not.
But I do think we're going to valitionally go along
with I mean, we see this with all our FID
and other technologies. We get sucked in by the conveniences.
But there's something different brewing in this culture thanks to

(28:18):
the social dilemma where we don't really value human connection.
And so that goes back to that light bulb moment
I had at the Apple Store when they put those
goggles on me, and I thought, there's a lot of
people that won't play this game anymore. Well, they won't
be able to keep up with the Joneses and have
a big home. A bigger home than a bigger home
than a bigger home, than a boat, than a bigger boat,
than a bigger boat. You just sit in a ten

(28:41):
by ten room like a hen, you know, in a
poultry farm and just have this alternate reality, and we're
fine with that. I see people every day on Facebook
getting up, getting dialed up to do a video that
nobody's really watching or nobody really cares about. And you
were doing that when you could have been doing what
with your kids, what with your husband? Or I forgot

(29:02):
you're not with your husband anymore because you became a narcissist.
So I don't know if they're playing to that, but
the reality is they're going to sell you job, job jobs.
But you did something off there that was a great
analogy the way the casinos used to play that Tulsa.
You're listening, you know, all the great jobs building these
casinos in this arena and so on. Yeah, that's good
for about a year. Then once it's built, there are

(29:24):
no jobs. And that's how it's going to be building
all these AI farms.

Speaker 3 (29:29):
Well, and you also get a great definition of where
we're ultimately going with artificial general intelligence, and that is
a creating an alternate reality in totality for people, an
alternate reality created by the towers of artificial intelligence. And
people can now pick their reality, live in their own reality,

(29:51):
and live completely.

Speaker 2 (29:52):
You know, like the way you look, change your picture,
you know, like the way you look to the public.
They'll recreate your website. Yeah, it's a check out. It's
the ultimate, you know. Nineteen sixty eight again, they were
checking out with psychedelic drugs. We're going to check out
with psychedelic reality. I mean, that's basically what's happening. But
I think probably the and I'm not a fearmonger. I

(30:13):
will tell you this. We seem to be full steam
ahead in a direction completely uncertain that even the creators
can't answer the question what is it? They can't what
could possibly go wrong? That's part two of AI the
Gilded Age, where you're listening to me right now using electricity,

(30:36):
But I don't know how you're going to do. You're
a morning show by candlelight. David is always great, and
I know the Public Square is doing a big, long,
one hour presentation on this this weekend. You can hear
the Public Square on two hundred stations nationwide or on
demand at the Public Square dot com. And David we
value as a senior contributor. We were all over the
road today. But there's just too much going on. History

(30:58):
shows that every market fails. Eventually, it falls, every currency collapses,
and today the dollar is shrinking. We're trillions in national debt.
We have record high markets defying gravity. But stocks can't
go up forever, can they? Meanwhile, groceries, housing, transportation costs,
they're all rising, and your dollars buying less every day.

(31:21):
So if and when the crash hits, your stocks won't
save you dollars won't either. The one thing will gold.
Gold has always survived. That's why central banks are buying
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one thirty seven hundred.

Speaker 1 (32:10):
It's your Morning show with Michael del Chno.

Speaker 2 (32:15):
Today went by so fast I may have to listen
to the podcast to catch up, and I performed it.
When you and Zanadi get together, man, you hurt my brain.
Good morning. Fifty four minutes after the hour, the Supreme
Court is now winging the legality of President Trump's tariffs,
and if it gets upheld and shot down. Then what
at least twelve people are now dead fifteen injured in

(32:36):
that ups plane crash. As NTSP has recovered the black boxes,
we'll learn more about the cause of that tragic event.
Federal officials are announcing cutbacks and the number of flights
in the US ten percent at the forty largest airports.
That's ten percent at hubs and connecting flights. This is
more of government shutdown chaos. Bob Dylan awarded the honorary

(32:59):
Doctor of Music degree from Berkeley College in Boston. He's
in a pretty small, rare group of influential artists and
today and you learn something every day with pre Tennis,
there was actually a chef named Nacho. Today we celebrated
dish that eighty one percent of us love.

Speaker 7 (33:16):
Today is National Nacho Day chips with gooey cheese and
anything else you want piled on top. 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,

(33:37):
look for a deal and dig in sherry not required.

Speaker 2 (33:41):
I'm pre tennis tonight in sports Monday Thursday Night football,
the Raiders a mile high taking on the Broncos. Like
I said earlier, a great game twenty years ago. Blues
got roughed up, mugged in DC by the cap six
to one, and the Sharks beat the crack In six
to one. On the hardwood. Pistons one, Caps one by eleven.
Grizz lost Lakers by two over the Spurs under the
thunderlust the first game of the season. They're now eight

(34:02):
and one, losing by two to the Blazers, and the
Kings beat the Warriors one twenty one one sixteen. All right,
President Trump urging Senate Republicans to nuke the Philipbuster in
order to end this record long shutdown. Rory O'Neil is
following the possibilities of this story. What are the odds?
Rory not good.

Speaker 8 (34:24):
Senator John Thune, the Republican majority leader, has already said
he's against it, and it's a long list of Republican
Senators saying, sorry, mister President, I'm not going to get
on board. The philibuster is what makes the Senate. The Senate,
it's the whole idea of protecting that minority opinion. And look,
especially those long standing Republicans down with leadership roles, they've

(34:46):
been the minority. They've relied on the philibuster to protect
their interest in the past. They say that, Look, long term,
the philibuster is good for the Senate, and they want
to keep it. They understand the short term sugar high
that comes, just like all that trick or treat candy,
comes with a lot of regrets soon after.

Speaker 2 (35:05):
There's so many storylines that are kind of developing for
next year's midterm election, the referendum of socialism against capitalism.
Potentially this whole tariff issue if it looms thanks to
the Supreme Court, and maybe even this right, this will
become a storyline of the midterms. But never underestimate that
club of one hundred. They're always loyal to themselves first.

Speaker 8 (35:27):
Absolutely, And you know, this could be something you try
to argue out there. But I think that the lesson
from Tuesday should be just keep talking economic issues and
pocketbook issues because that's really what's driving voters here. I
think if you try to do a political campaign based
on whether or not Democrats win back the Senate.

Speaker 2 (35:45):
I think you're going to lose a lot of people
in that one one minute ago twenty seconds on each
death toll almost doubled in Louisville. What are we learning
in terms of evidence from this crash?

Speaker 8 (35:55):
Yeah, twelve people now confirmed dead, a number that's expected
to climb as there are still some people who are
reported missing from that area. Remember there were just three
crew members on board, so the fatalities are from those
on the ground in those businesses, in that commercial industrial
kind of area where the plane came down at the
end of the runway. That left engine clearly came off

(36:16):
the plane. Question is why was it the mounting? Did
something happened in the engine that caused it to explode
to come off. That's what the NTSB is trying to
get to the bottom of.

Speaker 2 (36:25):
And usually the air traffic disruption is what solves these
government shutdowns. Now, the announcement of ten percent cuts in
flights at forty airports, they're the largest in the hubs.
Something's coming to a head soon. We'll be here to
follow it. Rory, great reporting as always. Hey, here's the
one thing you're in control of. One chance to live
this Thursteen November sixth, twenty twenty five. Go make a

(36:47):
difference in someone's life, cherish your own, and we'll see
you tomorrow on your morning show. We're all in this together.
This is your Morning Show with Michael Ndheld, journo

Speaker 1 (37:00):
The
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