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November 11, 2025 35 mins

Things are not moving towards peace, but escalation with Russia and Ukraine….and in the Pacific!  Colonel Steven Bucci joins us to break down the fighting around the world.

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

Would you take medical advice from your computer? More and more people are saying they feel more warmth from AI-generated medical responses than from actual doctors. National Correspondent RORY O’NEILL will have the story.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, it's me Michael.

Speaker 2 (00:00):
Your morning show can be heard live five to eight
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Speaker 1 (00:12):
Now. Enjoy the podcast.

Speaker 3 (00:14):
Two three starting your morning off right. A new way
of talk, a new way of understanding.

Speaker 4 (00:22):
Because we're in this together.

Speaker 1 (00:25):
This is your.

Speaker 3 (00:27):
Morning show with Michael O'Dell charm.

Speaker 5 (00:30):
Hey, my kids, Jimmy suits, tacky veteran's sake.

Speaker 6 (00:33):
Thank you for the sure you brother, God bless.

Speaker 1 (00:36):
Have a great day.

Speaker 7 (00:37):
Michael Patrick O'Leary here, proud veteran of four tours in
Vietnam and sort of in support of mac Vi sad.
Your story about Steve was very, very touching and good home.

Speaker 1 (00:48):
Thank you, Michael, Good.

Speaker 8 (00:49):
Marta, Michael Trekor Ross here checking Ian. Unfortunately I was
unable to serve due to some seriously poor life choices
when I was younger, but I am truly thankful for
all the veterans who served and gave their lives to
make disparatry.

Speaker 1 (01:05):
As great as it.

Speaker 9 (01:06):
He is.

Speaker 8 (01:07):
God bless America. God bless your veterans who defended it.

Speaker 10 (01:11):
I love you, Jock great right, Ah, I love you guys.
You're the greatest. Michael Patrick, thank you so much for tours.

Speaker 11 (01:17):
Wow.

Speaker 10 (01:18):
Thank you for your service to my family and to
our country. God bless all you veterans today. On this
your day, Veterans Day, twenty twenty five, eight minutes after
the hour, Good morning, Welcome to Veterans Day, Tuesday, November
the eleventh, twenty twenty five. I'll remind you we're all
in this together, and we're all sorting through the news
for understanding together. The Senate voted Monday night to end

(01:39):
the record breaking government shutdown, and all the knives are
out for the Democrats by the Socialists.

Speaker 1 (01:45):
More on that and sounds of the day.

Speaker 10 (01:47):
Probably the bigger than a giraffe. And I think you
know what precedes that goes to Bernie Sanders, who's now
lecturing Democrats on what they believe and what their party
should stand for. He's not a Democrat, he's a socialist independent.
How does he get away with this rebranding. We also

(02:08):
have the Speaker assuring everyone that the House is ready
to finish the job and get this to the President
by Wednesday evening, and the President is certainly ready to sign.
Now that doesn't mean we don't have some of the
impacts and effects of the shutdown. We go to six
percent flight cutbacks today. Now remember that six percent at

(02:29):
the forty busiest airports or hubs.

Speaker 1 (02:32):
So at the.

Speaker 10 (02:33):
Beginning of the morning we were looking at five hundred
and forty one delays and one one hundred and fifty
seven canceled flights. Things can't get restored for travelers quick enough.
And Secretary of warpete Hegseth says the US carried out
two more strikes on alleged drug boats over the weekend,
and last night it was cold, wasn't very high scoring,

(02:54):
but the Eagles improved to seven and three, winning ten
to seven over the Packers on Monday night football. All right,
we want to visit with Colonel Stephen Bouchi, twofold one.
I would love to get the momentum of peace back.
Things are not moving in a peaceful direction. Escalation with
Russia and Ukraine heavy bombing over the weekend, targeting both

(03:16):
countries energy grids, and then of course these bombings of
cartel boats in the Pacific Stephen Bouchie joins us to
break down fighting around the world.

Speaker 5 (03:28):
Good morning, colonel, good morning, thank you for having me
on the show.

Speaker 10 (03:32):
I guess I left one out right. Hamas still not
playing well with others in the sand. I'm not really
sure where Palestinians returning home want to see the future
of Palestine. So that isn't going very well at a
time where we have the new Rasmussen poll saying well
Republicans give them good grades on foreign policy, but Democrats
would like the president to focus more at home. I'm

(03:53):
not so certain the job is done on the foreign
policy front. Is it just me or things aren't going well?

Speaker 4 (04:00):
No, it's not done.

Speaker 5 (04:01):
And you know, trust be told, any of us who
expect it to be done is where that's a fool's
Errand this stuff is never finished. It's a continuing effort
to mitigate the threats, to adjust our positions, to keep
us as safe as possible, and to pursue our interests.

(04:21):
It doesn't go away. You know, this is no None
of these conflicts are going to end up on the
deck of an American battleship. Sign in a paper and
then everybody's fine.

Speaker 4 (04:33):
This is it's not.

Speaker 5 (04:34):
That kind of world anymore, Michael, I wish it was not.
So we do need to continue to focus on those
foreign conflicts.

Speaker 4 (04:45):
They are in our interests.

Speaker 5 (04:47):
To get them down to the lowest level possible if
and if we can make.

Speaker 4 (04:51):
Them go away even better.

Speaker 5 (04:54):
But America can also do more than one thing at
a time, so it's not an either role. America does
need to focus on our domestic issues, and the government
shutdown is a prime example of that.

Speaker 4 (05:08):
Something that is normally.

Speaker 5 (05:09):
A couple of day political theater events, this time was
nearly two months long, with a lot of people going
short of food, short of pay, and now affecting our
entire transportation system going into one of the busiest times
of the entire year. A lot of people are affected

(05:31):
by these things. While our politicians posture in front of
each other like you know, dogs at the dog park,
it's just we've got to get that right. But at
the same time, we got to keep focused on all
of these very deadly and very dangerous.

Speaker 4 (05:50):
Conflicts around the world.

Speaker 10 (05:52):
Yeah, I think you know, you first thing you learn
in work college, right, enemy has a say, and certainly
Russia has to say. You can you know, kind of
like Afghanistan. I don't think this is going well for them.
I don't see a path to victory and control over Ukraine.

Speaker 1 (06:10):
The tightening of.

Speaker 10 (06:13):
You know, all of the sanctions has just made it
tougher on them economically. It's not going well on the battlefield.
And yet Putin is willing to continue to fight. And
I remember talking with Lieutenant Colonel James Carafano and he said,
you know, he's got one of two choices, take the
off ramp and come to the table, or fight another year. Well,
now it's been a year and we're heading into another year.

(06:34):
How long is this guy going to be willing to
fight in a war that isn't seemingly going anywhere other
than constant death.

Speaker 1 (06:41):
Well, he's got.

Speaker 5 (06:42):
A lot of citizens that he can force to participate
in this crazy exercise. He's gotten a lot of military hardware.
He's down to the stuff that's not very good. Frankly,
I mean when you're borrowing equipment from North Korea and
borrowing troops.

Speaker 4 (07:03):
Yeah, yeah, uh, you know so uh.

Speaker 5 (07:05):
But Putin is one of those guys where he's gonna
know we're gonna win no matter what, no matter what
it takes, we're going to stay in there and win,
even if it.

Speaker 4 (07:14):
Destroys his own country. Uh, because he's not feeling the
the the pain.

Speaker 5 (07:21):
I mean, look, the dirty secret of sanctions is that
they never affect the people at the top right away.
They affect all of the citizens right away, and then eventually,
you know, the idea is that there's enough pain and
comfort at the citizen level that they then put some

(07:43):
uh influence on their leaders to change. That's really hard
to do it when you're in a regime and a
country like Russia where they don't care what the people
in the street think. So we're still doing it. They're
trying to get to the money, which is you know,
a big part of what may influence at least to

(08:05):
oligarchs and the people closer to Putin. But it's not
an easy lift. Sanctions don't change things overnight, sometimes even
in the same year. So we got to stick with
that part, find other ways to cause more diplomatic and
economic discomfort.

Speaker 4 (08:24):
On Russia because we want to go fight them.

Speaker 10 (08:28):
I mean, that's that's not I don't think that's well,
you just you just you just led to my next question,
and that is a very few wars and the way
they begin and with the same players is when they
begin or in the same places. One thing that was
always troubling for me was the introduction of North Korea
to this alliance, which we know exists along with Iran
and along with with China to some degree. But China

(08:49):
wouldn't be betting their economic future on this.

Speaker 1 (08:52):
Uh.

Speaker 10 (08:53):
There has to be an effort to keep this from escalating, right,
And are we doing good on that front?

Speaker 5 (09:00):
I think we're doing better on that front than the
stop and the whole thing, but still not not as
well as we would like. You know, Look, North Korea
sending troops to help Russia that that is not a
big deal. I mean, it's an embarrassment for Russia, frankly. Uh,
But it's not like North Korea is some sort of

(09:21):
honest to goodness military power. They're they're elite troops that
they're sending are getting stacked up like cordwood because they're
not elite. They're they're just rum dumb conscripts that get
a monochrome of training and a little bit more food
than the average North Korean citizen.

Speaker 1 (09:43):
And by the way, that's not that's not hyperbole.

Speaker 10 (09:46):
Most of them and you serve in the military, you
starved to death or try.

Speaker 1 (09:50):
To get out.

Speaker 5 (09:50):
Yeah, and and they you know that the North Korean
Army is about eight or nine inches shorter than the
South kore An army, you know, statistically all because of nutrition.

Speaker 4 (10:05):
They're not a good military.

Speaker 5 (10:08):
They may have some equipment, but again, you know, you
think about their missiles. Everybody wrings their hands about that.
But you know, their missiles hit the targets they shoot
at all.

Speaker 4 (10:18):
Time, the Pacific Ocean.

Speaker 5 (10:20):
Uh, you know, that's what they shoot at, and that's
what they hit. We have no idea whatsoever when the
North Koreans could really hit anything.

Speaker 10 (10:31):
Well, but yeah, but Stephen, they are going further and
they you know, farther and a little more accurate, it
would appear. I mean, it's something to keep your eye on, Stephen.
Butchie colonel joining us, all right, what about these Let's
go to South Common taking out these boats. I mean,
we've often called it a war on drugs. Now it
seems to be literally a war on drugs. Give us

(10:54):
the lay of the land on this in terms of
escalation or is this is this the new Just take
out the boats on their way.

Speaker 1 (11:01):
That's how we'll destroy it.

Speaker 4 (11:02):
You know, I'm not sure yet.

Speaker 5 (11:05):
I'm not a lawyer, so I can't give you a
finding on the legality of what we're doing. I know
there is some debate among lawyers, uh, everywhere on the
political spectrum that yeah, I'm not really sure this is
really fitting our legal.

Speaker 4 (11:23):
Requirements or not. Uh. You know, they're kind of using
the model of these guys who are like pirates.

Speaker 5 (11:29):
And you know, for a couple of hundred years, if
pirates attack you, you could just smack them. They don't
have to have a trial or anything. You can just
take them out. Uh, you can even capture them and
execute them under the piracy.

Speaker 4 (11:44):
Kind of mode. But a lot of the lawyers are
not sure that really fits.

Speaker 5 (11:49):
They think we at least need an authorization for the
use of military force, and you know that the Trump
administrations and no we don't. So that remains to be
sorted out. But I have to tell you seventy percent
of the American people, which means that's not.

Speaker 4 (12:07):
Just Trump supporters.

Speaker 5 (12:09):
I think it's a perfectly fine idea that if these
jerks are coming to our country with boat loads of drugs,
we should just kill them.

Speaker 10 (12:19):
Am I The only vis Colonel am I the only
one though, that worries were just one wrong shot away
from killing a commercial boat with innocent people on board,
that that'll really make it muddy waters.

Speaker 5 (12:30):
It would, and that has always been the big concern.
You know, we've talked about this kind of stuff in
the military before, however, that these drug runners have been
stupid enough to stop using normal shipping to do this
and now use tailor built vessels for this purpose. None

(12:53):
of these ones that they've shot, you know, are cabin
cruisers or somebody's two masted you know, pleasure schooner. They
are all custom built semi submersibles, submersibles and special speed
boats that are designed and built for absolutely no other

(13:13):
purpose than to move drugs. None of these are fishing boats.
None of them are pleasure craft. So that right now,
thank you bad guys. You've made it a little simpler
to target them because we know what they look like.
We're tracing them when they leave their ports now using

(13:33):
the surveillance techniques we have, so there's.

Speaker 4 (13:37):
Way less chance of that. There's still a chance of it.

Speaker 5 (13:40):
And we need to be real cautious about it, but
for the most part that's not as big a concern
as it used to.

Speaker 10 (13:46):
Be Veterans Day. Commander of the third Battalion, fifth Special Forces,
you led deployments to East Africa, South Asia, the Persian Gulf,
including Operation Desert Thunder in ninety eight in response to
the threats of Saddam Hussein. You're a seasoned leader in
the eighty second Airborne three decades of service to our country.
On this Veteran's Day, Stephen Bouchie, thank you for a

(14:09):
lifetime of service to our nation or forever in your debt,
I love you, my friend it thank.

Speaker 4 (14:15):
You very much. Brother.

Speaker 5 (14:16):
It has always been the pleasure and honor of a
lifetime to serve this country and its people.

Speaker 10 (14:22):
And you're still serving the your morning show audience in
one hundred and seven markets. Thanks for filling in for
the lieutenant Colonel. God bless you on this Veterans date.

Speaker 3 (14:31):
This is your Morning show with Michael del Chrono.

Speaker 12 (14:35):
On this vote, the eyes are sixty, the nays are forty.

Speaker 1 (14:39):
The bill as amended is passed.

Speaker 10 (14:42):
And with that, the Senate voted Monday night and the
record breaking government shutdown things ready to reopen.

Speaker 11 (14:49):
The final vote was sixty to forty, with all Republicans
except Rand Paul of Kentucky supporting the bill. The legislation
now heads to the House, which could vote as soon
as Wednesday to approve the package and to President Trump,
announced to his support for the bipartisan agreement earlier in
the day. Senate approval follow a lengthy series of votes
rejecting various amendments before consolidating the deal into a single package.

(15:11):
The bill includes a many of US of three full
year appropriations measures, including full funding VERSUSNAP and if it's
through next September, and keeps most of the government running
on a short term basis through January thirtieth. I'm Markneyfield.

Speaker 10 (15:22):
Once the House gets a done tomorrow, the President is
more than ready to sign this bill quickly and get
the government reopened.

Speaker 13 (15:28):
Speaking to reporters at the White House, Trump City approves
of the deals struck between Republicans and a handful of Democrats.

Speaker 1 (15:34):
The deal is very good.

Speaker 14 (15:35):
We're not going to be giving one and a half
trillion dollars to people that came in from jails and
from you know, the gangs and drug dealers and all
of these others.

Speaker 13 (15:45):
The agreement has been passed by the Senate. Now it
goes to the House and then to the President for
his signature. I'm Tammy trhio Well.

Speaker 10 (15:52):
Kiss guitarist Ace Fraley's cause of death is being revealed
as blunt trauma injuries to the head from a fall.
That's according to the Morris County, New Jersey, Medical Examiner's Office,
which also ruled out death, ruled that the death was
an accident. The seventy year old founder of legendary rock
band Kiss died on October sixteenth. He apparently suffered a

(16:13):
minor fall in his studio a month prior. In sports,
Last Night Monday Night Football, Eagles improved a seven and
three with a ten to seven squeaker over the pack
in at lambeau Field and the pres last six to
three on the ice at Madison Square guard to the Rangers.

Speaker 3 (16:31):
Missus Patrick from Christiana, Tennessee. My morning show is your
Morning show with Michael dill Jorno.

Speaker 2 (16:44):
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, Tupelo, Mississippi,
at Sacramento, California. We'd love to be a part of
your morning routine and take the drive to work with
you than ever. We're grateful you're here now. Enjoy the podcast.

Speaker 10 (17:03):
Obviously, the Senate voted last night to end the record
breaking shutdown. Speaker Johnson says the House is ready to
finish the job, and the President's certainly ready to sign it.
This government will be reopened probably early evening tomorrow, but
there's still a lot to sort through.

Speaker 1 (17:19):
I'll give you an example.

Speaker 10 (17:20):
Flight reductions increase to six percent today at four am,
and I'm sure it's gotten worse. There were five hundred
and forty one delays reported and one one and fifty
seven flight cancellations. It's going to take a while, but
can we get this all smoothed out and everybody back
to work and everybody in the air safely by holiday

(17:42):
travel time will tell this was a great story. Governor
Hokel of New York the headline of the New York Times,
Hochel raises doubts about Mom Donnie's free bus proposal. There's
a lot that Mom Donnie has proposed that simply can't
be done, and he certainly can't raise taxes to pay
for it without the Governor's approval.

Speaker 1 (18:04):
But in the.

Speaker 10 (18:05):
Case of transit that falls under the governor, never mind
funding or raising taxes to pay for it. She can
shut this down. And already is speaking of Mom Donnie.
There is a lefty gen Z. I don't know how
you get left to man, Donnie, but a lefty gen

(18:25):
Z New York City councilman, do.

Speaker 1 (18:27):
I say, CHIUSI? Is that it?

Speaker 10 (18:30):
Chius I believe I'm saying it right. He's gearing up
for a primary challenge against Takim Jeffries, and you have
Mom Donnie saying, ah, stand down, stand down, we don't
need you know, and this guy's like, no, we got
to strike while the iron sickles hot. It's a great,
great story because obviously if he took down Jakim Jeffries,

(18:51):
that might make him the number one socialist in America
and not Mom Donnie. Then there's the big breakup at
the BBC. Their Director General Tim Daviy, their CEO of
News Operations Deborah Turnus, both resigning in shame after it
was discovered they edit a video, uh to make the
president appear on January sixth as telling people to go

(19:13):
down and insurrect and break the law.

Speaker 6 (19:15):
Uh.

Speaker 10 (19:16):
You know, Donald Trump has gotten sixteen million dollars suing
CBS a paramount. He's gotten fifteen million suing Stepanophilis and ABC.
He's gotten i think at least five million from CNN.
He's wanting this sounds like a doctor evil one billion
dollars from the BBCING for everybody block them out.

Speaker 6 (19:37):
Look, he's just got to try harder, not for Saw
to have the opportunity for a brief civics lesson.

Speaker 14 (19:42):
Sure, perhaps you'd like to be alone with you Heatherly
deteriorating mental condition with p politics.

Speaker 10 (19:51):
Yeah, there's a lot to talk about obviously, you know.
For for the BBC, see, it really becomes an embarrassment.
And the edit job, just so you know, ends up
being roughly fifty five minutes into the speech. So they

(20:15):
take the beginning of what Trump said and then they
edit it with fifty five minutes later to create the
appearance that Donald Trump has called on these people to
go and wreak havoc at the Capitol, which simply didn't happen.

(20:37):
I'm trying to find it. Hang on a second, I
forgot we played it earlier, just a little quick, don't
leave me, But I played it earlier, and then I
forgot to recue it.

Speaker 1 (20:49):
And here's how it sounds.

Speaker 10 (20:51):
So now keep in mind, the first clip I'm going
to play you is as it really happened. And this
all comes from the BBC's Pat Show, which found the memo,
then shows you the case of the added and all
these years later it outs and leads to these resignations
at the BBC. So here's the beginning, and this is

(21:13):
how the BBC aired the President on January sixth.

Speaker 14 (21:17):
We're going to walk down to the Capitol and I'll
be there with you, and we fight.

Speaker 1 (21:24):
We fight like hell, and if you don't fight like hell,
you're not going to have a country anymore.

Speaker 10 (21:29):
We're gonna walk down Now that'd be pretty outrageous, right,
but you gotta fast forward fifty five minutes. They take
the original statement and then slap it to the end,
not how it happened, in really to.

Speaker 14 (21:42):
The Capitol, and we're gonna cheer on our brave senators
and congressmen and women from the past four or fifty
five minutes, and we fight.

Speaker 13 (21:58):
We fight like hell, and if you don't fight like hell, you're.

Speaker 1 (22:01):
Not going to have a country anymore.

Speaker 14 (22:03):
So we're going to go down to the capital and
I'll be there with you and we fight.

Speaker 10 (22:10):
We fight like hell, that's a big difference. We're going
to go down to the Capitol and share on our
representatives too.

Speaker 1 (22:18):
We're going to go down and fight. Fight, fight. Well,
it led their two heads resigning. It may lead to
a billion dollar lawsuit.

Speaker 10 (22:27):
This one I love because you know, you got two
kinds of Democrats today. One that's explaining why this just
didn't work. This shutdown was hurting our people, it was
aiding the president and he called our bluff. It wasn't working.
And then you have those that saying you didn't do enough.

(22:48):
This is why we need more socialists next year in
the midterm election. So it's excuse time. Now here's Tim Kaine.
Tim Kaine's interesting because he seemingly was more focused on
Virginia than he was the government job. His job as
a senator to fund the government, and he admits it,

(23:10):
but he also talks about why he arrived at the compromise.

Speaker 15 (23:12):
Now we've got robust snap funding and a guaranteed vote,
not a guaranteed outcome, but a guaranteed vote on ACA
tax credits. But I engaged on the issue that I've
been talking about for a month on the Florida Senator Thoon,
Katie Britt, Lindsey Graham, James Langford, anybody who had listened
to me on the Republican side, I've said what I
need In Virginia, with three hundred and twenty thousand federal

(23:35):
employees who live in households that probably encompass nearly six
hundred and fifty or seven hundred thousand residents in my state,
I need a moratorium on mischief. My Virginians have been
suffering under this administration. The shutdown started on January twenty.
I need a moratorium on the punishing of the federal workforce.

Speaker 1 (23:56):
That's what I need.

Speaker 10 (23:57):
So for Tim Kaine, it's all about government workers, not
American citizens, not even their premiums. And that's the only
victory they have. And that's only after he pays attention,
once he gets by his governor, lieutenant governor.

Speaker 1 (24:11):
And attorney general race.

Speaker 10 (24:15):
Pretty revealing, Independent Maine Senator Angus King told MSNBC why
he felt it was important to finally end the shutdown.

Speaker 6 (24:23):
Nobody else is so standing up to Donald Trump didn't work.
It actually gave him more power and then Secondly, and
I've been a big support of the ACA, the idea
of forcing the Republicans to the table to negotiate on
that issue by virtue of a shutdown didn't work. It's
now the longest shutdown in American history, and there was

(24:45):
no prospect that it was going to work. I've talked
to a lot of my Republican colleagues. The chances of
negotiating a settlement in the midst of the shutdown were zero.
As of last night, we now have a guaranteed vote
on a bill on the AC subsidies.

Speaker 10 (25:01):
Well, so the subsidies which were doubled by Biden were
approved with an expiration date. Does anybody think we have
a COVID crisis medically in America today? So on what
grounds would you continue to extend this? Only the grounds
of hiding the failures of the Affordable Care Act that

(25:21):
is anything but affordable. I can't remember who it was,
somebody gave the quote of somebody's insurance was going to
go up from forty dollars a month to twenty four.

Speaker 1 (25:30):
Hundred dollars a month, And I'm thinking to myself.

Speaker 10 (25:33):
Do you know what he's really admitting that American taxpayers
were subsidizing this individual to the tune of twenty four
hundred dollars a month. That's all it is. The subsidies
are paying the premium. Otherwise they wouldn't participate. Why Because
Obamacare didn't ensure everyone, It didn't lower premiums, it increased them.

(25:53):
And the more healthy young people choose to not participate
unless you buy it for them. The actuaries get there
thrown off. All that's left are the older and the sicker,
and the premiums rise. This crisis is the failure of
the Affordable Care Act in Obamacare, not Republicans refusing to
extend taxpayers paying for it. Not to mention some of

(26:15):
them are illegal. Here's Brett Hume's take on the lessons
learned from the shutdown.

Speaker 12 (26:21):
Well, this was this whole shutdown was a fool's air.
And from the start this strategy has been tried a
number of times before, where you try to use the
government shutdown and the pressure to get the government reopened
as a lever to get something done you couldn't get
done by the normal process because you didn't have the votes.
It has never worked, It was never going to work,

(26:42):
and you know the Democrats. Yes, there was some polling
that indicated that the Democrats were less We're getting less
of the blame than the Republicans. But remember this, key
elements in the Democratic Party, American Associated, the American Federation,
government employees, the Teams's Union, the Airline Workers Union, pilots Union,
and all they were all urging that the Republicans measure,

(27:06):
a temporary measure, be passed. And of course, as the
air traffic situation began to get worse and the deprivation
of snap benefits set in, it became absolutely untenable, which
when you think about it, it really was from the start.

Speaker 10 (27:22):
So never works, always comes down to one's travels disrupted
at ends. But what Britt was trying to explain there is,
you don't like the big beautiful bill, get control of
the House in the Senate when the presidential election in
twenty twenty eight, or get a majority vote on these
specific issues.

Speaker 1 (27:41):
You don't hold the American people host it.

Speaker 10 (27:43):
Nobody thought the shutdown was going to go indefinitely, so
it was always a matter of time.

Speaker 1 (27:47):
And right a forty days it fails.

Speaker 10 (27:52):
This is my favorite sound of the day from the
standpoint of who dropped dead and made Bernie Sanders a
He's not a Democrat, he's a socialist and he runs
as an independent. And now he's telling everybody what the beliefs, priorities,

(28:13):
and values of the Democrat Party should be moving forward.
I don't know, why don't we go to one hundred
and seven of my markets and ask all my competitors
what this show should be.

Speaker 9 (28:23):
Look what you got right now. Chuck Schumer is part
of the establishment, and I'm sorry to say that many
people in the Democrat Caucus a part of it. I
would say we have eight or nine out of forty
seven people who I would consider to be progressives. So
you can argue, and I can make the case that
Chuck Schumer has done a lot of bad things, but
I think getting rid of him, who's going to replace them?

Speaker 1 (28:45):
Who is going to replace them?

Speaker 9 (28:46):
The issue right now is doing primaries, getting people involved
in the political process who are going to create a
government and an economy that works for everybody with the
guts to take on the oligous well.

Speaker 10 (28:58):
The the truth of the matter is if the socialists
in the Democrat Party take over, they probably want Bernie
to take his place.

Speaker 1 (29:10):
They'd even be.

Speaker 10 (29:11):
Dumb enough to choose a non Democrat to be the
leader of the Democrat Party in an outside takeover.

Speaker 1 (29:19):
Here he is chatting with CNN.

Speaker 9 (29:21):
Schumer and I have very fundamental disagreements about where the
Democratic Party should be.

Speaker 10 (29:27):
You and Schumer have fundamental disagreements about where the Democrat
Party should be. He's a Democrat, you're a socialist. He's
a Democrat, you're an independent. I got news for you, Bernie.
Republicans have a fundamental different view of where the Democrat

(29:48):
Party should be too. But no one's walking around pretending
to be one. That'll be next Bernie's gonna start giving
critiques to the Republican Party. Listen, is this is breathtaking,
And you've got understand who dropped dead and made this
guy a Democrat?

Speaker 9 (30:06):
And I am strongly supporting candidates for the Senate who
are not part of the Democratic establisher or believe in medicapital,
who are prepared to take on the big money in
trust and fight for working people. All right, I have
a very different vision of where the Democratic Party if
you go, if you were steps out, who is going
to take his place? The truth is progressives in the
Senate right now are a I think they're about eight.

Speaker 1 (30:28):
Or nine of us. We are pretty much of an
eight or nine of us. Are they independent too, I
don't think so.

Speaker 10 (30:41):
Look at how conflated this is so now a progressive
could be an Islamist, could be a socialist, could be
a communist, could be a progressive and a socialist independent.
They're all one and the same. I warned this coming

(31:01):
that the left will try to make the narrative you
got to let the socialists take over the party. Do
you see how the establishment Democrats wouldn't fight Trump.

Speaker 1 (31:11):
We will.

Speaker 10 (31:15):
That's going to be their mantra as the socialists move
forward in their civil war to take over the party. Now,
I always use this analogy because I don't have to
be a great predictor of the future. If a parasite,
and that's what these are. In the case of Bernie,

(31:37):
he's not even a Democrat. With all this WI, what
do you got a mouse in your pocket? What's this WII?
Remember the Socialist Justice Democrats were first and foremost targeting Democrats.
They wanted to take over the Democrat Party, then get
rid of the electoral college, then dismantle the Republic. For

(31:57):
Moberal socialism, This divide and conquer. It's his pure moral
class warfare. But if a parasite defeats the host and
the host dies, the parasite dies with it. That's the

(32:18):
part of the game I don't get And guess what,
I don't think they get it either.

Speaker 9 (32:26):
People who majored in online activision with a minor and
puberty board.

Speaker 4 (32:31):
They're going a little bit.

Speaker 2 (32:32):
Any of you in.

Speaker 1 (32:33):
The media clearly missed the art of the deal going
to work out. Yeah, wait, that's what we're all hoping for.

Speaker 3 (32:39):
It's your Morning Show with Michael del Journo.

Speaker 10 (32:44):
Today is Veterans Day, the day we set aside down
are the millions who have worn the United States Armed
Forces uniforms for all of you who served our country
on behalf of our families and a grateful nation. We
are forever in your debt. Thank you so much for
your service. We honor you today. The Senate voted last
night to end the record breaking government shutdown, and delays
and cancelations are piling up at airports as we go

(33:06):
to six percent cutbacks. But remember that six percent at
the forty busiest airports and or the hubs. That makes
a total for today of at least fifty seven canceled
flights and the Eagles approved to seven and three, winning
ten to seven over the Pack last night on Monday
Night Football. Well, I love this question. Would you take
medical advice from your computer? I'm guessing most of you

(33:28):
already do. I know I do by way of my wife.
More and more people are saying they feel more warmth
from AI generated medical responses than from their actual doctors.
Our national correspondent Roy O'Neil is here with their results.

Speaker 1 (33:44):
Well, I'm not exactly shocked. Well, and this is on
text to text, all right.

Speaker 16 (33:49):
We're not comparing that phase to phase doctor's visit, where
you can look the doctor in the eye and have
your questions answer. We're talking when you're emailing or text
messaging your doctor when they can aired what was done
by a doctor versus the interaction that was done by
chat GPT four. In particular, people found that the chat
GPT was warmer, more understanding, more more considerate of patient concerns,

(34:14):
more empathetic overall. Now, look, that may reflect the fact
that the doctor is busy, doesn't really put the extra
thought into the email or message, and the fact that
the chat GPT can do it in a fraction of
a second compared to what may take the doctor some
time with some typos.

Speaker 1 (34:31):
So it's just interesting to see.

Speaker 16 (34:32):
That in many cases the chat GPT might give a
little bit better advice, at least deliver the message with
a softer blow.

Speaker 10 (34:42):
I think I'm gonna stick with doctor Bobby White, but
we all see our doctors walking around with their laptops,
the amount of documentation. They're very busy, and that does
seem to be less time with us.

Speaker 1 (34:53):
We'll see all.

Speaker 10 (34:54):
Right, Roy, great reporting as always. Listen, one chance to
live today. Thank a veteran, buy him a coffee, Have
a great day. We'll see you in the morning for
the next Yeal Morning Show.

Speaker 3 (35:03):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael del Joan No
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