Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, it's me Michael. Your morning show can be heard
(00:01):
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.
Speaker 2 (00:12):
Now. Enjoy the podcast on.
Speaker 3 (00:14):
Two three, starting your morning off right.
Speaker 4 (00:19):
A new way of talk, a new way of understanding
because we're in this together.
Speaker 3 (00:26):
This is your Morning Show with Michael O'dellchoman.
Speaker 2 (00:33):
Seen our ow friend Mark Cuban. Can you tell me
where he's gone? Where has the old Mark?
Speaker 5 (00:42):
God?
Speaker 6 (00:43):
You remember Mark who said Donald Trump's afraid of strong
intelligent women.
Speaker 2 (00:47):
He is around, he won't surround himself.
Speaker 6 (00:49):
But he just put one of the strongest and smartest
and made history and made her chief of staff. Say
hello to Pat summer All's daughters, Susie Wiles.
Speaker 2 (01:00):
Do a lot of people know that it's Pat Summerw's.
Speaker 6 (01:02):
Daughter the resemblance of striking ready president like Trump makes
campaign manager Susie Wilds his White House chief of staff,
makes history first woman ever Federal Reserve is lowering the
interest rates.
Speaker 2 (01:14):
I quote a point, I'm on a roll.
Speaker 6 (01:16):
I really maybe should go throw a few lottery numbers
that they I said three twelve, they're gonna take forever,
but it's gonna be three twelve. You'll be the new
your morning show Bookie. I did say that the Senate
would be plus three.
Speaker 2 (01:30):
I was wrong.
Speaker 6 (01:31):
Down Cow's casey, Down Cow's casey.
Speaker 2 (01:34):
It's now plus four.
Speaker 5 (01:36):
Wow.
Speaker 6 (01:37):
Uh, I think there's there's some some trouble and joy fill.
Speaker 2 (01:44):
Keep me.
Speaker 6 (01:44):
I can turn to brit Hume right now. My wife
was struck by the by the the chipperness and the
spring and the step of President Biden coming out of
the Oval Office for his garden speech. He went to
a garden party. Come on, there is something you know.
I was one of the only people to say this,
(02:05):
but it just struck me. It was a very bad,
very very poor Donald Trump debate performance against Kamala Harris,
but there was one moment that struck me and I
never got beyond it. At one point, he looked right
at Kamala Harris and he can't stand you.
Speaker 2 (02:23):
And you know it.
Speaker 6 (02:24):
And I even said to my wife, you don't make
a comment like that unless and I don't mean he's
heard it. I mean I think He's had conversations with
Joe Biden about it. Don't forget the funeral where Joe
Biden and Barack Obama a standing side by side, and
(02:45):
of course the camera was so tight you could read
their lips and he's talking to Barack Obama how he
would have been better. There's no question the ambition, whether
he was of age cognitive ability to do it the
way he would have younger. The life ambition of Joe
Biden was to be president of the United States. Now,
the way he finally did it was through a shadow campaign.
(03:10):
Oh come on, man, well you know they used you
like a trojan horse, hitge in a basement. Then they
want him to shuffle off. And I sensed we remember
we waited sixty four days for his first news conference,
and I sense this guy's not This guy isn't playing
the Dave game. If you've ever seen the movie Dave,
He's not just playing and he's gonna go away when
you tell him. And he sent those signals, and I
(03:36):
thought the greatest signal was he grabbed the poison apple.
Speaker 2 (03:39):
Because if the.
Speaker 6 (03:40):
Plan was use Biden talk unity, return things to normalcy,
Grandpa transition presidency, and then we just shuffle in, Kamala,
that's the Clinton apparatus candidate. That was their way of
getting Hillary in another female body. But he handed her
the poison apple of the border. It would destroy her politically,
(04:02):
and it did. I mean, there's gotta be tension. Then
they forced Joe out, then she loses. He loves that
she lost.
Speaker 4 (04:16):
You're a line, dog faced pony soldiers.
Speaker 6 (04:18):
Oh you know it, and then promises a smooth transition
invites President Trump. I was struck by this, and I
don't think there's any getting around it. All Kamala Harris
said about Joe Biden was doctor Jill and Joe Biden.
That was It mentioned his name, and all Joe Biden
did was mentioned hers. I guess he did throw in
the and I still somebody have to explain me what
(04:39):
this is.
Speaker 2 (04:40):
He got the backbone of a ramrod.
Speaker 6 (04:42):
Yeah, I don't know what that means.
Speaker 2 (04:44):
It just goes into these tangents. Do I not know
what a ramrod is?
Speaker 6 (04:47):
Or I mean, I guess a backbone of steel is
what he's saying.
Speaker 2 (04:51):
But I mean, I don't know.
Speaker 7 (04:53):
Ramrod. Isn't it what they used to put the cannon
ball in the cannon with I'm just thinking off the
cuff right now. I'll have to reach it. We have
to look it up.
Speaker 6 (05:01):
But you know, I don't think all is going well
in Joyville and anybody that bought into the conspiracy theory
that Joe was going to step aside and let her
be president, not unless he's dead, just so that she
can make history. In fact, I've been on such a
role predicting things. May I say just for my Platinum
(05:23):
card listeners, that's what we call you early live listeners,
not those of you that are cheating in the podcast.
That we appreciate you cheating in the podcast. Thank you
so much. Telsea Gabbard will be your first female president.
Oh wow, these are things you should save on tape,
like I've asked you. You know, I don't want to brag
that I hit the Electoral College right on the head.
Speaker 2 (05:41):
Well, but you never play it for I.
Speaker 6 (05:44):
Say three twelve and then Decker says, no, Kamala Harrison
is going to win.
Speaker 2 (05:47):
With two eighty seven. I have that on tape.
Speaker 7 (05:48):
I have that one on tape, but I'm drawing down.
Speaker 2 (05:50):
Tulci Gabbard, Telca Gabbage, your first female president? All right?
Speaker 6 (05:54):
Did I mention the fed lord at quarter point hit
that on the head too.
Speaker 7 (05:58):
By the way, a Ramrod tool used to ram down
the charge of a gun that was loaded through the muzzle.
There is a word from sixteen ninety five. I know,
but what's that have to do with backbone? I want
you to know that I'd researched it for you.
Speaker 2 (06:13):
Do I have the backbone of a ramrod?
Speaker 6 (06:16):
Three people being charged in the retaliation of the death
of Liam Payne. Senate Republicans select their new leader next week.
The nominations for the sixty seventh Annual Grammy Awards will
be unveiled today. I personally do not simply care. I
have a montage of again, just kind of like we
(06:38):
did the montage of people melting down. I have all,
you know, because I think the biggest disservice is how
late night time I grew up with late night television.
I remember. I remember sitting in McDonald's in Arlington Heights, Illinois,
and sharing a parking lot with McDonald's was Burger King,
(07:00):
and we would sit and eat McDonald's and it would
be crowded, and I would look out the window at
one person at Burger King, and I'm not bashing Burger King.
I would later go on to I had my first
Burger King when.
Speaker 2 (07:13):
I was twenty.
Speaker 6 (07:15):
Hey, this flame burger tastes goods, good stuff, but at
the time I can't get a McDonald who eats a
bergan look. And of course our family was a Tonight
show with Johnny Carson family, and we would think, who's
home watching Dick have it?
Speaker 2 (07:29):
You know that kind of a thing. Then came David Letterman. Uh.
Speaker 6 (07:34):
Somewhere along the line, Late Night became like the stars
that are guests on it became all about politics from
their bubble and their worldview. You know, all these people
on their seventh marriage telling you how to be happy
and how to live and what is moral and what
is not people have dysfunctional relationships with their kids or
(07:56):
drug addictions or dying young telling you all how to live.
I mean, that was pretty laughable in and of itself.
You're a good actor, you're a good singer. Stick to that,
be happy. Anybody's interested in hearing what you have to say.
In Europe, I can tell you they still do talk
(08:16):
shows that way. In fact, the same stars that are
here being obnoxious and political when they're on in Great Britain,
those hosts are still having fun and talking about.
Speaker 2 (08:26):
Life and having a good time.
Speaker 6 (08:29):
So somewhere on the line, we lost late night television,
just like we lost nightly news, just like we lost
cable news, just like we lost everything else. So it
does deserve its own montage. If all these late night
hosts are going to be about politics, far left politics
and telling us elitely how to live and who to
(08:50):
vote for, rather than you know, make me laugh, funny man,
you know, then yeah, deserves a montage. If watching them
deal with the god they've created being defeated, we'll have
that in our Sounds of the Day, David and I's
going to be joining us, probably a pretty heavy conversation
about what we've gotten right and what hasn't even happened yet,
(09:13):
and how we keep it going right. We will also
go in pretty dive deep into Donald Trump's Latino and
youth phenomenon, and I will remind you of what I
said yesterday, as much as I predicted all of this.
The toughest question of the day is could anybody have
pulled this off? With Donald Trump? And I think you
(09:35):
know the answer. So is this a red wave or
an orange wave? I don't think this is a Republican victory.
They're going to enjoy the benefits of it. Republicans have
been predominantly failures at living what they believe. Democrats live
what they believe.
Speaker 2 (09:51):
They just don't know.
Speaker 6 (09:52):
They just live all the wrong things, and all of
their lies and all of their narratives are dying of
reality and consequenceblic have had a history of not living
their platform and living what people send them there to do,
and becoming a part of the problem. We need to
keep praying for this president, keep praying for the Senate,
keep praying for this Congress, no matter which way it goes.
And it looks like it's going to lean barely read
(10:15):
that they do what they said, because that same persecution
against Donald Trump to not elect him is going to
be there every time he follows through doing something. Let's
explore that with David Zanati. And of course it's Friday,
gotta have well not forty five. There will be no
Friday with forty five today.
Speaker 7 (10:32):
Oh man, what happened?
Speaker 6 (10:34):
It's Friday with forty seven Art.
Speaker 3 (10:37):
This is your morning show with Michael del Trono. You're
listening to your morning show belongs to you. I'm just
the humble host. Michael del Journal, Jeffrey Lyons has control
Rad's doing? Is who is it to David does a
naughty thinks you sound like because he said it Dick.
What was the guy's name, the Clinton Advisor? I remember
(11:02):
Dick Morris. He thinks you looking sound like Dick Morris.
Speaker 2 (11:05):
You do.
Speaker 6 (11:07):
We need to get audio of Dick Morris and Red
and combine it all. Right, So now I was gonna
ask you, is why do you feel need to go
three two one?
Speaker 2 (11:17):
Okay, So it's obvious.
Speaker 6 (11:19):
I'm gonna know we're coming back when I hear the
rejoining music, and it's going to be obvious when it's
time for me to talk after Mike McCann says something
I really don't need, like the big network to do
that when I filled in for Michael Savage too, and
it's kind of obvious when I talk, Well, sure, but
don't keep doing it.
Speaker 7 (11:35):
I mean to make sure, well you're sitting there and
you'll also go how much time we got?
Speaker 6 (11:39):
No, I never do that. I was choking, And let
me tell you why I was choking. I'm telling a
personal story off the air we ended. I was in
the hospital all day and night with my mom. This
is it is not a fun story. But and then
in the midst of that goofball, Jeffrey starts lining up
the talk back and I gotta tell you, you know,
(11:59):
I don't know how well.
Speaker 2 (12:00):
I did negotiating you guys, but we.
Speaker 6 (12:03):
At some point Big John's got to be on salary,
and this guy's keeping his character alive. Right, So all
of a sudden he plays this thing and I start
laughing and choking. You would think it's over for the
bookie Big John at the your morning show sportsbook. I mean,
the election's over, right. What's he going to do odds on? Now? Oh?
Speaker 2 (12:23):
Yeah, he's got odds.
Speaker 5 (12:24):
All right, let's do some betting odds on cabinet members
Toulsi plus one seventy Elon Musk plus three, twenty RSK,
Bobby plus one point thirty.
Speaker 7 (12:39):
The only thing he didn't say was book.
Speaker 2 (12:42):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (12:43):
And then I'm sending pictures of Pat summer All's daughter,
you know, the whole farce of all the nonsense. But
I mean, Mark Cuban, Donald Trump doesn't like intelligence strong women.
Oh you just surrounded himself with the strongest of them all,
Pat seller All daughter Susie Wiles. She's brilliant, and she
(13:04):
becomes the first female chief of staff in presidential history.
And I don't think he did it to send a
message to Mark Cuban. He did it because she got him,
you know, in this whole amazing and I hope it
leads you to the throne of God. I don't know
what the sovereign I mean, what Donald Trump was up
(13:25):
against came through like Shadrack, Meshack and a Bendigo combined
through a furnace to victory. Don't forget this is the
woman that was plotting and standing by his side, and
she's now about to be chief of staff. Hey said
that I got to move quickly, but she's got me
doing Pat Summer all all morning. In fact, I think
(13:45):
I said Staback Pearson touchdown Dallas, greatest announcer ever.
Speaker 2 (13:52):
Well.
Speaker 6 (13:53):
Following his victory in the presidential election, Donald Trump is
working to put together a transition team before inauguration day
on January the twentieth.
Speaker 2 (14:00):
Mayfield has more.
Speaker 8 (14:01):
He'll have to fill around four thousand government physicians, including
twelve hundred that require Senate approval. That should be easier
with the Senate now under Republican control. His transition team
is being led by friends and family, including his adult
sons Robert F. Kennedy Junior and former Democrat Telsea Goubbard.
The team's coachairs are Canter Fitzgerald, CEO Howard Ludnik, and
(14:22):
former wrestling.
Speaker 2 (14:22):
Executive Linda McMahon.
Speaker 4 (14:24):
I'm Mark Neefield.
Speaker 2 (14:25):
Well.
Speaker 6 (14:25):
I got a question yesterday in a talkback that we
never did get time to get to, and it was
asking about, well, what do you think I think he's
going to pardon his son, Hunter Biden. Well, Tammy Trehilo
has that answer.
Speaker 9 (14:35):
On Thursday, the White House Press Secretary was asked if
Hunter would be pardoned for his sentence commuted in the
wake of Donald Trump's victory. She told reporters that will
not happen. Hunter Biden was found guilty of lying about
using drugs while purchasing a gun six years ago. He's
set to be sentenced on December fourth. He could face
up to twenty five years in prison. I'm Tammy Trihio.
Speaker 6 (14:56):
And based on the Spring and his step of the
Rose Garden, I don't think he's going to be partnering
Kamala Mamala anytime soon either the Fed lowered the interest
rates by a quarter of a point. I'd have been
nice it have been half, but we'll take a quarter,
Brian Shook reports.
Speaker 10 (15:09):
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell addressed the move in a
press conference Thursday.
Speaker 11 (15:13):
We continue to be confident that with an appropriate recalibration
of our policy stance, strength in the economy and the
labor market can be maintained, with inflation moving sustainably down
to two percent.
Speaker 10 (15:25):
This follows a fifty basis points reduction earlier this fall,
the first lowering of rates in four years. It comes
on the heels of Donald Trump's election victory and positive
news that inflation is cooling.
Speaker 2 (15:37):
I'm Brian Shook. I gotta tell you I remember it.
Speaker 5 (15:45):
I don't know what.
Speaker 2 (15:46):
I was twelve when I went and saw Star Wars.
Speaker 6 (15:48):
The first one in the theater, and I don't think
i've seen one since. Just not a big fan of
sci fi and epic adventure. But a new Star Wars
trilogy is in the works. Deadline reports Because Film has
tapped Simon Kinberg to write and produce a new saga
of films. Kimber Co created the hit animated series The
Star Wars Rebels and served as a consultant on the Force.
Speaker 4 (16:12):
Awakens Breton, Franklin, Tennessee, And my morning show is your
morning show with Michael del Jorno.
Speaker 1 (16:26):
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 in 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 (16:43):
Now.
Speaker 6 (16:43):
Enjoy the podcast. So if you go to the iHeartRadio app,
there's a microphone. You press it and like Jeffrey, it'll
count you down three two, one, and the next thing
you know, bada bing bada boom, you're with us. Ask
a question, make a comment. We can share it with
the class instantly. You can always email Michael di at
iHeartMedia dot com. And it somebody was like, and it
feels good to start getting some hate email.
Speaker 2 (17:04):
And I finally got one yesterday.
Speaker 6 (17:06):
Really cool, isn't An email was actually on ax, you know,
and they were saying, you know, hi, I'm you know
playing to the listener. No, this is by design. You
got enough egos and talk radio. You deserve to wake
up in the morning and not be screamed at, not
told how to think, and have your voice heard. So
(17:26):
the very first decision I made is the name of
this show. And it's been this way my entire career.
You would never hear me say hey, welcome to the
Michael del Giordos Show. I would always come up with
some kind of name and then never say mine. But
this is a show that belongs to you, and you're
the star. My goodness, didn't our bookie prove that last
half hour? Can you believe it's a listener not him?
Speaker 10 (17:48):
What?
Speaker 4 (17:49):
Anybody there?
Speaker 6 (17:50):
Yes, we're here. I wonder if that guy ever tuned
his guitar either. So use the talk back button so
you can be a part of the show. Use the
email Michael Didi Herdmedia dot com. All right, down, Cow's casey, Down,
Cow's casey. I have to I know David was worried
about me having egg on my face. I made some
(18:11):
bold predictions and I have egg on my face. I
said Donald Trump would win with three hundred and twelve
electoral votes. I then hedged a bit on election night
with David Alone, I said, I don't know about Nevada,
but at least three oh six, and he goes Sandbagger.
But I boldly in our bat with John Decker, John
(18:32):
Decker who thought Kamala Harris was gonna win with I
think too eighty seven, and then I said, no, it's
going to be Donald Trump with three twelve. That's what
it's going to turn out to be. I did say
the Senate would be plus three, and.
Speaker 2 (18:43):
I was wrong.
Speaker 6 (18:44):
Down goes Casey. It ends up being plus four. David
Snati's joining a CEO of the American Policy Roundtable, host
of the Public Square the Crown Jewel, although the Jewel
of jewels Christmas in America is just around the corner.
We'll find the major in nineteen seventy three, David, do
you care to explain to them how significant a Casey
(19:06):
in Pennsylvania, not just for Bob but Dad and the family,
what that means.
Speaker 4 (19:12):
Yeah, I sure do. But before we go there, I
want to get in on this conversation about the critical
email you were you accused of pandering.
Speaker 6 (19:21):
Yeah, you know, like you know, I'm kissing the listeners,
you know, like I'm trying to.
Speaker 2 (19:25):
Get right right.
Speaker 4 (19:26):
Yeah, okay, well darn what a terrible thing. Tobut that's it.
Speaker 6 (19:31):
You mean, you know, like the owner of a restaurant
who cares about his customers.
Speaker 2 (19:34):
It's an awful thing.
Speaker 4 (19:35):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (19:36):
Maybe, well no, but in the US.
Speaker 6 (19:37):
But you don't play don't play dumb in the US
versus US game, US versus them game of talk radio. Uh,
you answer the problem by being the same type of problem.
And and quite frankly, for the small people that you
reach doing the wrong thing, you might find some temporary success.
Speaker 2 (19:54):
I won't.
Speaker 6 (19:55):
I'm not going to play that game. I'd rather I'd
rather fail and go away than be a part.
Speaker 4 (19:59):
Of the That is so important because in the very
name of your show, and I was there when that
decision was made, so I can I can tell anyone
that needs validation that question was more than laborious. That
took months of conversation and thought. Because if all we
(20:20):
do in communications in America is talk to the people
who want to hear what they want to hear to
hold a market share, then where's the conversation. I mean
that is You're just a narrative too, right, It's it's
a siloed game of communication for nothing but profitability. But
there's all these people out there who would rather just
(20:41):
have somebody be honest with them, even if they don't
like the consequences, because they'll come back tomorrow. Because if
you'll be honest with somebody in the good days, you'll
be honest with them in the bad days.
Speaker 6 (20:49):
Well, it's like anybody could have gone on and gloaded
after the selection, but somebody's got to look.
Speaker 4 (20:53):
We have no time for that.
Speaker 6 (20:55):
Yeah, I really appre and then somebody's got to be
honest enough. And it's funny. I didn't getny hate me
on this. In fact, there was somebody on Twitter that said,
you need to listen to this guy. He'll tell you
what you need to hear, which is kind of what
you're saying, because you know, and this is when you're
just being an honest bro. This was Donald Trump's victory,
not the Republicans. In fact, Casey goes down, uh, and
(21:16):
the Republicans gained that seat, but that's thanks to Donald
Trump and what he pulled off in Pennsylvania. But that
was an orange wave, not a red wave. And you
still haven't solved what happens after that Orange leaves in
four years.
Speaker 2 (21:28):
So every and I got news for you.
Speaker 6 (21:30):
The Blue are going to come back at you with
their their their strongest punch. All right, So this is
the roundhouse from George Foreman coming in the name.
Speaker 2 (21:40):
Of Wes more than four years.
Speaker 6 (21:41):
You better be prepared for that, which is where our
conversation is headed, because we're going to talk about how
we lived. The next four years makes the biggest difference.
Go ahead, speaking of George Forman.
Speaker 4 (21:49):
Fraser, you're talking Foruman Fraser, Right, that's what, that's what,
that's where and and and Fraser got knocked out in
the round two.
Speaker 6 (21:56):
Right, Yeah, what year? It would have been seven two
or one two three? It was seventy three Christmas in America.
Speaker 4 (22:06):
HBO's first broadcast of a boxing event.
Speaker 6 (22:10):
Down goes Fraser, Yeah, I mean down go Freight, Down
goes Fraser is was one of the iconic I mean,
do you believe in miracles? Yes, Al Michaels, down goes
Fraser because it was unthinkable.
Speaker 2 (22:24):
I mean, and everybody's feeling in mind.
Speaker 6 (22:26):
There was Muhammad Ali and Joe Fraser and then here
comes this George Foreman and down goes Fraser.
Speaker 2 (22:31):
The unthinkable of course.
Speaker 6 (22:34):
Scariest moment of my childhood was and I later when
I met Muhammad Ali Christmas, the first question I asked
him Ken Norton was the only time I was afraid
for Muhammed. And I mean I remember being a little
kid and that was my hero, and I was afraid
he was gonna get hurt, and he did.
Speaker 2 (22:47):
He got his jaw broke.
Speaker 6 (22:48):
He said that Ken Norton was the scariest person he
was ever in a ring with. But yeah, the perception
was Fraser. There was no way Fraser was going down,
goes Fraser. The perception was no way Casey's gonna lose
walk us of this family because it starts.
Speaker 2 (23:01):
With Dad, right.
Speaker 4 (23:02):
Well, yes, the senior case he was a gentleman who
was one of the last conservative Democrats anywhere near the
east coast of the United States. And it was also
pro life, and he made his career on the fact
that he was able to win statewide elections in Pennsylvania
because pro life Catholics supported him even if he was
an economic liberal. And so that was the whole distinction.
(23:25):
So son came on and took over in that same tradition,
and then continually over the years became more and more
of a radical progressive, and it was just a matter
of time before someone with enough identity, someone with enough
money and in the right time of coattails in Pennsylvania
could reawaken that sense that, gee, we didn't always used
to be this way. And in a narrow margin, to
(23:47):
be sure, but a significant margin. The Casey dynasty now ends,
all right, So a couple of a couple.
Speaker 6 (23:53):
Of quid more in the in the in the spirit
of conversation, cases yet to concede, and he pointed to
there was one hundred thousand bouous. There's not one hundred
thousand ballots anymore since he said that, more have been counted.
In fact, right now read we ran the numbers on
that he would need eighty three percent of the remaining
vote in Republican areas, So all the Democrat votes have
(24:14):
been counted. So there's a reason they finally called it,
and they were cautious in calling it. He's going to
lose and it is going to be close, relatively closer
than Donald Trump won the state, which, in the spirit
of conversation, isn't that interesting. When it came to the
abortion question, people had no problem making a statement about abortion.
(24:35):
And in many cases, even in Florida, where they didn't
reach the sixty percent threshold, they voted for something and
then something else for president. And in this case, some
people obviously went in and voted for Bob Casey for
senator and still voted for Donald Trump. And we know
that because Donald Trump carried the state greater than McCormick
carried the Senate race. But David, I'll make a statement.
(24:59):
You can just take it from there. We always underestimate
the intelligence of the American people and the truth quite frankly,
and that's why lies and narratives all die of reality.
Speaker 4 (25:10):
Well, there is a danger. There's a whole in at
least one hole, maybe a dozen, in our cultural bucket,
and perhaps the biggest one is the delusion that Joe
Biden has spun for his entire urn and campaign and candidacy.
And that's this notion that he picked up from Barack
Obama that we're a collectivist nation and that the founding
(25:32):
of America, while it's to be celebrated in paper, didn't
give us a republic but a democracy. There's a systematic
desire to change the intellectual understanding of what America is
that goes back to the beginning of the progressive movement
with Woodrow Wilson. And as that deception continues to grow
in more and more people, the basket that holds us together,
woven together based on first principles and self evident truth,
(25:55):
gets weaker and weaker, not because the truths are weaker,
but because people don't know them anymore. And that's what
really has happened in Pennsylvania, the birthplace of America, the
birthplace of Independence Hall, where it all started. And that's
why the Democrats keep going there for their big events
in their national launches of campaigns, because they want to
change the vision of the founding. They want to change
(26:18):
the way you see it. They know they can't change
what happened, but they want to change the interpretation of it,
which gives them more power in the electorate because they
make you believe that you're still doing the same thing,
but you're not. You're building an administrative state.
Speaker 2 (26:31):
David Sanaudi joining us.
Speaker 6 (26:32):
So not to mock, but if I'm going to play
the finger pointing game, do you think if Shapiro had
been on the ticket instead of Knucklehead that would have
made a difference do you think if the convention had
been in Philadelphia or Pittsburgh rather than Chicago, that would
have made a difference. If they'd have kept Biden on
the ticket Scranton, Joe, would that have made a difference.
(26:53):
I mean again, I'm not mocking the finger pointing. I
mean literally asked, of course not. I don't think it
would have been enough. But by the same token, I
don't think we should be celebrating that America has awakened.
I think it's a Donald Trump phenomenon and a left
that went way too far, way too far in wokeness,
way too far in borders being opened, way too far
in lawlessness, way too far in spending and debt and COVID.
(27:17):
I don't know that the patients healed and cured. I
think a good part of that can happen, and how
they govern with their control the next four years to
make this more of a revolution.
Speaker 4 (27:29):
Oh, this conversation's got to go on, Michael for another
eight to twelve years to begin to get the kind
of traction that impacts kids coming up in school and
conversations around the dinner table. That's why I believe in
your morning show because hopefully by God's grace, you will
be here for that duration and soul a lot of
other people in our country having the conversation about truth.
(27:50):
That's the difference. This election had a lot to do
about who was telling the truth. And we didn't have
two virtue shows in that category. Let's not you know,
we didn't have an end Jelly CAMPI no, no, no, no.
But people didn't buy into the use of the Justice Department,
not just against Donald Trump, but against.
Speaker 2 (28:07):
A lot of it.
Speaker 6 (28:08):
But what Donald Trump was up against took a gladiator,
I mean assassin bullets, court rooms, daily character assassinations and narratives.
I mean, you needed a gladiator to win that. He's
got to make sure it doesn't take an impossible David
and gladiator to win the next one. I think we're
(28:28):
on the same wave on Sorry More with David's not
and we come.
Speaker 3 (28:30):
Back It's your Morning show with Michael del Chanol.
Speaker 6 (28:35):
President like Donald Trump made history by making his campaign
manager Susie Wiles, daughter of Pat Summerle, the first female
White House Chief of staff. Fed lowered a quarter point
three people are being charged in the death of Liam Payne,
and Senate Republicans will select their new leader and they
got another seat at the table. Down goes Casey McCormick,
(28:59):
wins in Pennsylan David and not he's joining us from
the American Policy Roundtable and host of the Public Square.
And we were kicking around a lot of things. I
just wanted to go through the big picture of the
finger pointing at the White House again. This you know,
I'm gonna do it this QUI because I don't always
lot a time on him. It was the lifelong ambition
of Joe Biden to be President of the United States.
(29:21):
He only got there in a deal that was cut,
so he really didn't even earn it. They weaponized COVID,
they changed laws without going through state legislatures, used mail
in vote. I mean, there's a lot of people are
going to look at that eighty million number, eighty one
million number of Joe Biden, have no explanation for it.
It's just not going to match up with anything else
(29:42):
in history. But for whatever it was, shadow campaign, call
it what you want. They get the old man hit
in the basement, snuck in. He was fourth I think
in Iowa, seventh in New Hampshire. I think the plan
was to have him be a transition president, use him
to defeat Donald Trump, then shuffle him out the door
and give it someone else. And then Joe didn't want
to go, and then they forced him out in the
(30:03):
end and she lost.
Speaker 2 (30:04):
I mean, there's got to be obvious tension.
Speaker 6 (30:07):
But you know, I go back to Donald Trump and
the debate, a debate he did not perform well, Lynn,
But the one moment that stood out to me is
when he looked right at Kamala Arison goes and by
the way, he can't stand you, and said it in
a way as if it was Joe Biden that told
him I can't stand her, and now she doesn't want
any part of him. The only mention of him in
her speech was doctor Joe Biden and Joe, and he
(30:31):
only gave her one quick mention and a Ramrod reference
and that was it. They moved on. But he certainly
looked awful chippery yesterday. Knowing Joe Biden the way I
think we all know him. You know, they forced him
out and then they lost. I think he's probably pretty
pleased with that.
Speaker 4 (30:48):
Well. As for all of Joe Biden's career, there has
been a major significant disconnect between what he calls to
be truth of what is actual reality. He's been conflicted
for as long as I can remember hearing him in
the United States Senate because he can say one thing
to another, he can hold two completely incongruent thoughts together
(31:11):
and try to say that this is leadership. Look, he's
been confused for a long long time about the difference
between truth and reality. And it's not mental illness that
we're talking about our mental health. It's what happens when
you live in a progressive bubble and walk past the
National Archives. I was in DC a couple of months ago,
and the National Archives is still there. The Declaration, it's fading,
(31:35):
but it's still there. Yeah, it's still there. And when
Tulsa Gabbard walked on the stage of Madison Square Garden,
she stood up and quoted Obviously by memory, ap pours
a very significant portion of the Declaration of Independence. We
hold these truths to be self evident. This is a
culture that is based on a set of self evident truths.
Speaker 7 (31:55):
Ok.
Speaker 4 (31:55):
We don't hear that much self out of truth.
Speaker 6 (31:58):
And at a time when culture doesn't belie even absolute truths,
that's a big problem. There.
Speaker 4 (32:03):
You go, and when we think of the word self evident.
We have to be careful here because doctor Allen, one
of our trustees, one of the brightest political minds in
the twenty twenty first century. Doctor Allan reminded me that
the word self evident doesn't mean something from a chemistry set.
It's like, oh, these are self evident truths because we
(32:23):
you know, we've cooked them up, or everybody agrees on them.
Speaker 2 (32:26):
We just agree on a census. It's not consensus.
Speaker 4 (32:29):
No, it's not consensus. It's the fact that contained within
their very nature, they resolve themselves. These truths are truly true,
and we all know that. Now, that's a different worldview
than what Joe Biden has. That's how he can hold
these two thoughts in his brain. He can be talking
about being a wonderfully strong Catholic and that's his choice.
(32:50):
I hope that he is. Okay, but be pro abortion
and for against.
Speaker 2 (32:57):
The gay marriage or anything else that's counter to the Bible.
Speaker 4 (33:00):
How do you Because true truth isn't true truth, it's
just true if I embrace it. Well, that's the whole
nature of this thing.
Speaker 6 (33:06):
Well, let me give you a truth. The biggest rub
here is not Kamala Harris it's not even Nancy Pelosi,
who in the end betrayed him and forced him out.
The rub is Joe Biden really thinks he beat Donald
Trump and won this presidency and it's his presidency and
(33:26):
how dare anybody force me out?
Speaker 2 (33:29):
And now you're lost? Good for you.
Speaker 6 (33:31):
And of course the truth is it really wasn't something
he wanted. It was a shadow campaign that they brag about.
Speaker 3 (33:38):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael Nhild Joe and No