Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, it's me Michael. Your morning show can be heard
live daily on great radio stations like News Radio six
fifty K E n I Anchorage, Alaska, Talk Radio eleven
ninety Dallas Fort Worth, and Freedom one oh four to
seven in Washington, d C. We'd love to have you
listen live every day and make us a part of
your morning routine. But better late than never. Enjoy the podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:19):
Two three starting your morning off right, A new way
of talk, a new way of understanding.
Speaker 3 (00:27):
Because we're in this together.
Speaker 4 (00:30):
This is your Morning Show with Michael gill Charny seven
minutes after the hour. Thank you, Mike McCann. Welcome to Monday,
November the seventeenth, Dieval twenty twenty twenty five. The FAA
has lifted What was that that song? It was in
the year twenty five twenty five? Wasn't it? Oh, twenty
five twenty five not twenty twenty almost said twenty five
(00:51):
twenty five. The FAA has lifted the flight restrictions. Could
things be normal by Thanksgiving? Well, the cancelations were down
to sixty from nine hundred, so they were in the
heading in that direction the house. Well, let's do the
whole history on it. First, all the Republicans in podcast form,
whether it was Cash Patel or Dan Bongino or everybody,
(01:13):
wanted the Epstein files released. And then they get in
charge of the FBI and Donald Trump gets elected, and
then the Republicans don't want to open the file. Now
the President says he wants Republicans to release the files,
and Marjorie Taylor Green says she's received death threats on
social media after being criticized by the President. I left
Red's comment earlier from a woman who got a lot
(01:34):
of death threats from the left and never worried about him.
These are just some of the stories that were kicking around,
waking up. I think at some point it's fair, just
in the big picture to discuss, you know, whether it's
the feud with Marjorie Taylor Green or the feud that
REHDD and I are having. Red seems to think she's
the new Jasmine Crockett for the Republicans. I think she's
(01:57):
the Fetterman. Now. Suddenly the left is going to love
her and want her on everything. Why, because the enemy
of my enemy is my friend, just like you can
find Fetterman. You know, Fox can't gush enough about Fetterman,
so we could discuss all those things. The bottom line is,
is this Marjorie Taylor Green feud, the far right taking
(02:19):
stances against Israel. Are these all little rifts or chinks
in the armor? And the big picture is Democrats got
really big problems. Somebody asked earlier if the shutdown, would
the Democrats be dumb enough to do the shutdown again
in January? It's not that they would be dumb enough.
Are they still fearful enough of the socialist Islamists within
(02:41):
their party? And if they do grow a spine and
avoid the shutdown, they'll pay dearly in the midterm because
they'll be targeted in the primaries by the socialists. So
it's kind of a no win situation. And then for
the Republicans, they got to do a and off with
MAGA to keep it alive because all their great gains
(03:04):
have not been red gains, they've been orange gains. What
does that look like? And are these disagreements that we're
seeing could they possibly build and have a lasting impact
on the midterms coming up as well as the twenty
twenty eighth presidential election. David said, I used to seek
of the American policy roundtable hosts of The Public Square,
heard on two hundred stations. He's also our senior contributor.
(03:26):
What do you make of all this? Because I kind
of wake up this morning and I'll be honest with you,
I don't care I could. I don't care at all
about HEMP. I don't use that, but people do, and
a weaker HEMP product buried in this closing. You know
they're following that. I don't care about Marjorie Taylor Green.
So I'm trying to, you know, understand all this what's
real and could have an impact and then what is.
Speaker 3 (03:47):
Just political fodder. Good morning, Michael.
Speaker 2 (03:52):
I love coming on Mondays because this is where everybody
starts reality again, right.
Speaker 4 (04:00):
Too.
Speaker 2 (04:02):
We're in the grind, we're in the work that we do,
we're in our routines, and we're off the weekend. I
shouldn't say necessarily reality, because there's just as much reality
on Sunday as there is on Monday. But it's great
to be with you in the start of the week.
So thanks for the invitation. I appreciate it. You know,
(04:22):
we are in trouble as a people, and it goes
back to the introduction of Twitter. Facebook was bad really
bad because Facebook was constructed from a motive of revenge.
It's very important to understand that that Mark Zuckerberg built
Facebook in regards to societal revenge. How he would deal
(04:45):
with those girls who wouldn't date him on a college
campus began.
Speaker 3 (04:50):
That's where it began. It began in revenge, and.
Speaker 2 (04:54):
Zuckerberg's theme became move fast and break things well. Twitter,
which was not like a cute little bird chirping idea,
was probably the worst idea ever because it provokes us
to answer in haste and then now to republish it.
(05:14):
How many news stories are nothing other than Twitter feeds
or x feeds?
Speaker 4 (05:19):
Now?
Speaker 3 (05:20):
How many?
Speaker 2 (05:20):
How many reporters just go on Twitter and then make
a news story. We are in a perpetual world. If
he said, she said, he said, she said, And very
seldom is what they say well advised. Very seldom is
what they say well thought out. Very seldom is it
a Lincoln letter? You know what a Lincoln letter was?
Speaker 4 (05:38):
Right?
Speaker 2 (05:38):
He would write the letter at night, put it in
the desk, and then read it again in the morning
before he would send it.
Speaker 4 (05:44):
If everybody did that with emails, how many friendships would
still exist?
Speaker 2 (05:49):
We don't know how to talk to each other anymore.
We're nothing but emotive. I wanted to take them but
that emotion. But let's not rush over it. Let's take
them one at a time. When you talked about the.
Speaker 4 (06:01):
I see America, take immediate, immovable, formed positions, and that's
how conversations beginning in at the same time. And by
the way, and it can start on Twitter now x.
It can happen in a fight on Facebook and the
comments section. But it's starting to be the way we
(06:22):
talk to each other every day about everything that there
has to be a firm, immovable position. There's no conversation,
there's no value of that. You and I. How many
conversations I'll use us as an example have we had
where we're talking about something and you have a take,
(06:42):
I have a take, maybe have a disagreement, but it
was the journey of the conversation. The lendas somewhere better.
That's all missed. I mean, this is no small thing
you're bringing up, because it's a fascinating question. What's been
more damaging Facebook? Facebook's destroyed families, relationships, friendships, Twitter And
(07:02):
did Twitter do this? Or did Twitter becoming political? In
other words, I see the old petty fights that were
a part of being a politician in Washington that all
of us benefited from never seeing or hearing and just
tracking the votes. That's become our way of life. And
now they're all getting along, having dinner and drinks in
(07:23):
their clubs of one hundred while we're fighting to the death.
Speaker 2 (07:26):
Well, there is a remedy to this, and that's to
rediscover that there is a methodology for human communications that
actually works. I'll give you one ancient Hebrew proverb that
makes a lot of sense. A fool shows his annoyance
at once, but a wise man overlooks an insult. Boy,
those days are gone, right, Yeah. I mean, we're all
(07:47):
like little kids with play six shooters on our side,
and all we do is bang bang bang bang bang.
Speaker 3 (07:53):
That's all we do.
Speaker 2 (07:54):
And you know, words are very dangerous used in that
context because words are very power orful. As a culture,
we have lost our understanding of the value of the words.
The words matter. Everything that's communicated to us comes from
the voice inside our head. Think about that, and yes,
is off the question when do words become thoughts? And
(08:15):
when do thoughts become words? But we know one thing
for certain words in our minds, and our thoughts become actions.
Speaker 4 (08:22):
Well again, I don't want to make anybody uncomfortable, but
if you're a faith person, you're a Bible believing person,
you know the power of thoughts. You're to take everyone
captive and submit it before the obedience of God. I
think the Book of James is enough to haunt me
for a lifetime over the power of words. And I'll
tell you it all began in Genesis with God creating
the heavens and the earth with words. So words are powerful.
(08:44):
Lose God lose words. But the big go beyond the
big picture. So what you're really suggesting is there's a
much bigger problem than this soul Israel thing. There's a
much bigger problem than Marjorie Taylor Green, and that is,
I guess, rooted in human sinful nature as it was
(09:07):
birthed through Zuckerberg and then perfected through Twitter. And there's
something that has to be broken before we can fix
these individual things.
Speaker 2 (09:16):
What we're living in the practice of disrespect. We've lost
that primary word from our culture, or.
Speaker 3 (09:24):
The word respect.
Speaker 2 (09:25):
It makes sense we would lose respect because if humankind
is no more valuable than their value in the moment,
and that means I can use and dispose people like
their box of Kleenex. But if human beings have eternal
value and worth, and there is a judge of the
universe that's judging my words in the way that I
(09:46):
treat my neighbor, and the commandment love your neighbor as
you love yourself, which is a universal commandment across the board.
I mean, let's get somebody to argue and say, I
don't think that commandment should work anymore.
Speaker 3 (09:57):
I find one person who says, no, you shouldn't love
your neighbor.
Speaker 2 (10:00):
Of course, we all know that is way, or we
should be well, it starts with thoughts, and thoughts are words,
and we are training ourselves to the responsibility. I mean,
if we were parents fifty years ago, we'd be smacking
our kids silly for doing the stuff they do on
Twitter and x and Facebook and everything. Now, just so
(10:21):
you would know, full disclosure, that's why I'm not on
any of those platforms, because I have a perfect ability
to say exactly the right thing at the wrong time.
Speaker 4 (10:30):
Yeah, I no, no, But what I would say is
that beyond that, even it's trickled over. Now, this is
how we talk at the table. This is how we
all mine talk at the grocery store. I mean, it
is trickled over. It's not just a social media It's
not just a social dilemma anymore. It's a cultural dilement.
David Sanadi is joining us. Do you want to weigh in?
Like this whole to me, beyond the moral breakdown is
(10:54):
the partisan political weaponry game. Because I can see Fetterman now.
I mean, Fox can't talk about Fetterman enough, they can't
love on him enough. They can't use him as you
know what, just as Charlie Kirk became a founding father
and an original apostle by the end of the week
of his mourning, They're gonna do that with Fetterman. And
(11:17):
then now you want and I said it was going
to happen, and it started over the weekend. Marjorie Taylor
Green will be on every leftist show, every leftist news
organization will want to talk to her. They'll suddenly love
her now because she's a weapon to hurt Trump, just
like Fetterman's a weapon to hurt the Democrats and whatever
socialist morphing they're involved in. It's like the Epstein files
(11:41):
are a weapon. So once you reveal him and you
realize you know everything that's already in him and there's
nothing new in them, well they lose a weapon. That's
why the Democrats didn't want you to see him. Then
the Republicans didn't want you to see him. How much
of this is just political weaponry and we're now the
weapons used against each other.
Speaker 2 (11:58):
Well, what it really is is it's blatant adolescence. I mean,
why should we want to know what's in the Epstein
files if what is actually there is the result of
court proceedings and legal inquiries that are that are that
are sealed in regards to our practices of law, as
fast to John Dector talk about.
Speaker 4 (12:18):
I can't believe he didn't agree with me. Sealed for
good reason, David. Every one of those depositions weren't crossed, examined.
We don't know that any of those claims are true,
and they'll all be released like they're true, and that.
Speaker 2 (12:29):
We're going to Congress to say, let's break all the
rules of confidentiality that are essential in our legal system
just because we have a periode curiosity that we want
to know. Do you know how many for those people
that are moralizing you saying what's for the victims? Well,
I'm sorry, I'm pretty certain the victims know they're victims.
Speaker 4 (12:48):
I was going to say, at some point somebody needs
to say out loud, lawsuits maybe be our only hope
moving forward. How many times do you and I talk
about things and we're like, well, the only thing that's
going to stop this now is people are going to
(13:09):
have to sue. That's the only way. You're going to
just release documents politically, Okay, I hope everybody gets their
pants suit off. You know, we've talked about it with gaming. Ultimately,
the only thing that's going to save us from gaming,
save sports from gaming, our lawsuits.
Speaker 3 (13:24):
Yeah, liability lawsuits.
Speaker 4 (13:26):
And we, by the way, are recruiting lawyers.
Speaker 2 (13:28):
Who would like to be a part of a firm
to spend their lives going after the people who are
fundamentally raping human beings for profit.
Speaker 4 (13:38):
All Right, we come back. I want to talk about
Christmas in America and how we can find the manger
in the eighteen hundreds.
Speaker 2 (13:45):
That now supposed to segue into that one off of
that's last statement.
Speaker 3 (13:48):
I gotta go to work.
Speaker 4 (13:52):
David Zandadi, our senior contributor joining us on a special
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Speaker 3 (15:16):
This is your Morning Show with Michael Del Chrono.
Speaker 4 (15:21):
The FAA has lifted flight restrictions and reductions at airports.
That took effect six am Eastern this morning. So we're
looking at what was it, sixty cancelations compared to nine hundred.
Things are getting back to normal in air travel. The
House is set to vote tomorrow on the measure to
require the Department of Justice to release all of the
(15:41):
files pertaining to the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The
President says House Republicans should vote to release the Epstein files.
Why the reversal, And then a lot of talk about
Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Green. She says she's receiving death threats
because of the social media comments by the President. More
of that partisan political weaponry. You've got the right loving fetterman,
(16:05):
the left now loving Marjorie Taylor Green and David Sanati's
trying to referee all these fights with us this morning.
Something we're gonna take. When we take our break, we'll
come back and do Christmas in America eighteen thirty seven.
But real quickly, you and Red were having a conversation
and one thing I found that was really fascinating. A
(16:26):
lot of the same because there's no new sins. This
is the same stuff that was happening on forums. The
problem is now all Americans on their phones are doing
it every day with Facebook and Twitter now x right.
It's just a matter of how many are participating versus
in the past. But it's very destructive in the publicity. Sure,
(16:47):
it's the pace in the publicity.
Speaker 2 (16:48):
You can see anything at any time, and you can
have it published anywhere, and you know, it's almost time
to can reconsider the idea of dueling. In the eighteen hundreds,
there are members of Congress that were dueling to the
death for stondents made on the floor of the House
that we're insulting.
Speaker 4 (17:06):
It is. It is one of those deals that we
just can't talk enough about. I remember in the Social
Dilemma documentary they said, if it's free, you're the product. Well,
guess what outrage and hatred and you're fighting with others
is the product? Why are you allowing yourself to be
(17:28):
used this way? Missus Patrick from Christiana, Tennessee.
Speaker 5 (17:34):
My morning show is your Morning Show with Michael dill Jorno.
Speaker 1 (17:42):
Hi, I'm Michael. I'd love to have you listen to
your morning show live.
Speaker 4 (17:45):
Every day.
Speaker 1 (17:45):
We're heard on great stations like News Talk five point
fifty k FYI and Phoenix News Radio, eleven ninety k
EX in Portland and ten ninety The Patriot in Seattle.
Make us a part of your morning routine. We'd love
to have you listen live, but in the meantime, enjoy
the podcast. This is your morning show coming up.
Speaker 4 (18:02):
Several policy changes occurred from President Trump over the weekend,
from tariffs being reversed to ice now moving to the
Marjorie Taylor Green to the Epstein Files. Well, it's with
all the shift and Rory's got that story. The FAA
lifted the flight restriction order so we went from like
six to nine hundred cancelations down to sixty. Things are
getting back to normal with the government open and the
(18:23):
House set to vote. In the Epstein Files tomorrow, we're
visiting with David Sanati, And you know, one of the
things that one of my favorite things that you do
in addition to the Public Square is Christmas in America.
And it all began with this journey of moments in time,
finding the manger in different moments of time. It is
(18:44):
a great historical exercise. It is a great nostalgic exercise.
It is a great spiritual exercise. You find out things
weren't all together that much different in all of these times.
What I think the exercise does more than anything, though,
is is show people how important the past is to
(19:10):
understand today and tomorrow. And every year in some years,
you know, I stopped doing it because every year I go, oh,
this was my favorite, or this was my favorite, or
I thought, you know, I liked best years that I
was alive. But this year we're going to do eighteen
thirty seven Christmas in America. Eighteen thirty seven something you
(19:32):
can hear live at the Public Square dot Com. Recorded
on the Public Square dot Com, but you can watch
live in both Nashville and for our listeners listening in
Ohio in the Cleveland area. Why eighteen thirty seven.
Speaker 2 (19:46):
Well, eighteen thirty seven is where a great quote came
from the sixth President of the United States, John Quincy Adams,
in which he daringly linked what happened in Bethlehem and
what happened on the fourth of July. Now, I came
across this quote fifteen years ago, and it took me
a while to source it.
Speaker 3 (20:07):
We found that it was sourced to a speech that.
Speaker 2 (20:09):
He made on July fourth, eighteen thirty seven in Newburyport, Massachusetts. Well,
it was an hour and a half presentation. In reading
the entire speech in context, what we found was that
America's founding son, the guy who was in the room
from the beginning, from the first shots fired, from watching
(20:29):
his dad working on the Declaration of Independence, those ideas
on his desk in his house, This guy who served
and knew both George Washington and Abraham Lincoln think of
that span of life, this unique character in our history,
had come to a deep conclusion that there was a
link between the Judeo Christian revelation and what his dad
(20:53):
and the founders were thinking about on the first fourth
of July. And that story is absolutely fascinating, Michael. It's
such an interesting story. Not only did it take about
two feet tall stacks of research, but in getting the
notes all together, we ended up writing a book book
on the speech. We brought up a brand new book
just came out this week called An Oration, and it's
(21:14):
a fascinating conversation because in all the arguments about what
is America and the Fourth of July and Christian nationalism
and what is the role of other faiths in our culture,
all of this argument that's going on, here is the
one most qualified eyewitness and participant in the process from
the beginning through eighteen thirty seven, and he answers all
(21:36):
the questions, and he does it almost all in one speech, and.
Speaker 4 (21:39):
No one talks about it.
Speaker 2 (21:40):
So we've republished the speech, done a commentary on that
day in newbury Port with my dear friend, doctor William B.
Speaker 4 (21:47):
Allen. We wrote the book together and it's been a delight.
He was the second President's son. His one quote that
I always loved was a republic is altogether wrong for
an immoral people. What he was explaining was he'll just
drive it right off a cliff. But you know, we
talk about when Benjamin Franklin came out of Constitutional Hall
(22:09):
and said, Madam Secretary for you, we have a republic
if you can keep it. It was along those lines
that he was discussing, and it's some of the ways
in which we're losing it now. But you would probably
go on to remind everybody this may have been not
just resume, because we've had some impressive resumes. This is
the most impressive servant of a country we've ever had.
Speaker 2 (22:33):
Why do you say that, Well, because he got it
right from the start and he stayed with it his
entire lifetime. John Quincy Adams died in the House of Representatives.
He's the only president to serve in the presidency and
then come back and accept the call from his friends
and neighbors to go back and represent them in Congress,
and he did so for seventeen years. He died working
(22:56):
on the floor of the United States Congress. This man
was in service from the time he was eleven years
of age to the day that he died.
Speaker 3 (23:02):
There's nobody, I mean.
Speaker 2 (23:03):
Other than we talk about career politicians, and in so
many different spots and in so many different times now,
he never dominated one office for a lifetime.
Speaker 3 (23:14):
He moved and he moved, and he moved, and he
moved and he moved.
Speaker 2 (23:18):
So it wasn't a guy that assembled power by holding
into as you know, it wasn't part of the Club
of one hundred, though he was a member of the
United States Senate.
Speaker 3 (23:25):
For a period of time.
Speaker 4 (23:26):
So John Quincy Adams in eighteen thirty seven take us
on a journey to find the major anything we can
give away. As far as where we find it, well.
Speaker 2 (23:35):
I'll just tell you to start looking in newberry Port Message.
Speaker 3 (23:39):
That's where we started.
Speaker 2 (23:40):
And I'll tell you that for the folks that come
to visit, there are some wonderful surprises. I always encourage
people to come to this show. Now, granted it's a
small audience. We simply cannot open this up to thousands
of people, and that's why we're very careful. The only advertising,
if you would call this advertising, is the only place
we talk about this on air is either on the
public square or with you.
Speaker 4 (24:01):
Yeah itself.
Speaker 3 (24:02):
It's not enough room.
Speaker 4 (24:03):
Yeah, I you know me. I've always wanted this to
be a two month tour and go a lot of places.
But I will tell you if you're in the Cleveland
area and you're or you're in the National area, you
want to be there. There's nothing like being there live
as it's being recorded. I'm trying to remember. Was it
Garrison Keeler that used to It's this closest thing to
(24:23):
what he used to do. So it's a live like yeah.
Speaker 2 (24:26):
It's a live radio companion meets the Bob Hope Christmas
specially exactly because it's a live radio broadcast being recorded.
Speaker 4 (24:34):
But it has this is where the deck, the deck
is stacked. It has the best musicians in America today,
And I can't imagine now. You know, if it's a
year like two thousand or something or nineteen seventy three,
you know, you know the music it's it's usually most
magical when we get to a year like eighteen thirty
seven or somewhere in the past. How these most talented
(24:57):
musicians will bring the music of a that day to
life in a sound in a spectacular way like you
can't imagine today. So it's a live radio broadcast. It's
probably the best concert you'll ever go to. It probably
will be the most meaningful Christmas message you'll experience. And
it all happens either after the fact at the Public
(25:18):
Square dot com or if they would like to get
tickets in Nashville or Cleveland, how would they do it? David.
Speaker 3 (25:23):
It's real simple. Just go to the Public Square dot com.
Speaker 2 (25:26):
That's THG, the Public Square dot Com, click on Christmas
in America and you'll find the events section and it's
simple to do. You can do it online, Michael. We
do these tickets as almost giveaways. The average family of
five could get in the show for one hundred bucks.
That's it's there's no money being made off of these
programs that are all supported and underwritten by people who
(25:48):
want to get messaging out to our culture about the
wonderful reality of Christmas and what matters in our in
our cultural experience as well as our political experience as
well as our personal lives. So it's work of charity,
and get the tickets at the Public Square dot com.
Please do hurry because we have to cut the size
of the audience at a certain number for microphones and
(26:09):
and all that sort of stuff. So bring your if
you've got school age kids, bring him. It's an experience
they'll ever forget well.
Speaker 4 (26:15):
And it's a del journal tradition. That's what kicks off
the holiday season. It's always the first Sunday after Thanksgiving
here in Franklin, Tennessee National Area and also coming to
uh uh Northern Ohio as well, eighteen thirty seven Christmas
in America. Get your tickets at the Public Square dot com.
We will talk to you on your normal Wednesday.
Speaker 3 (26:33):
I assume yes, sir, and looking forward to it.
Speaker 4 (26:36):
Queue the sound, here's my band, Cue the sounds of
the day. You're going to get smoked.
Speaker 3 (26:41):
He's got to stop.
Speaker 6 (26:43):
I really don't know what he said at the end
of this, and I don't think he knows what he
said that.
Speaker 4 (26:50):
It's got to be a big misunderstanding. I'm going all right.
It sounds of the day, always revealing. How do you
like my God? I love your garbage truck, Always revealing,
often entertaining, sounds of the day. We had to break
it off in two parts. We have so many sounds. Okay,
So you know how Fox loves to talk to Fetterman. Now, well,
the left loves to talk to Marjorie Taylor Green. And
here was the setup on CNN, as she's now the
(27:12):
left's new darling.
Speaker 5 (27:13):
You posted on x that President Trump is with his comments,
fueling a quote hotbed of threats against you. Obviously, any
threats to your safety are completely unacceptable, but we have
seen these kinds of attacks or criticism from.
Speaker 4 (27:30):
By the way, has anybody seen CNN do that about
the way the left is treating Fetterman? Why is Fetterman's
life not in danger from the negative things the Democrats
are saying about him? Just Marjorie Taylor Green. By the way,
I'll remind everybody, the only one's been shot at and
hit once and not shot at the second time was
Donald Trump. But listen to this loaded question from CNN
(27:52):
to Marjorie.
Speaker 5 (27:53):
Taylor Green from the President at other people. It's not new,
and with respect, I haven't heard you speak out about
it until it was directed.
Speaker 3 (28:01):
At you, Dana.
Speaker 7 (28:06):
I think that's fair criticism, and I would like to
say humbly, I'm sorry for taking part in the toxic politics.
It's very bad for our country, and it's been something
I've thought about a lot, especially since Charlie Kirk was assassinated,
is that I'm only responsible for myself and my own
(28:30):
words and actions, and I am going, I am committed,
and I've been working on this a lot lately to
put down the knives and politics. I really just want
to see people be kind to one another, and we
need to figure out a new path forward that is
focused on the American people because as Americans, no matter
(28:51):
what side of the eye we're on, we have far
more in common than we have differences, and we need
to be able to respect each other with our disagreements.
Speaker 4 (29:03):
It really left us wondering today, is she the Jasmine
Crockett now of the Republican Party or is she the
Fetterman of the Republican Party. He'll be on our show
Friday this week. Scott Jennings had this to say, I
think Scott's a little bit like me. This is nonsense.
(29:24):
The minute it goes public, it's nonsense. These two should
have just had a private conversation. But according to Scott,
that's how it began.
Speaker 8 (29:32):
Based on what I've heard and what I know that
he didn't tell her not to run, But what she
didn't say was that he sent her a poll privately, discreetly,
and it had information in it and it showed her
down twenty points to John alsof and so in politics,
when you want to send a message to someone that
you like or that has been an ally, you don't
(29:53):
embarrass them publicly. You privately send them information and show
them what the reality is. And so I think it's
true that he didn't tell her not to run, but
it's also true that he did her a big favor,
which is to show her information that a candidacy statewide
in Georgia for her would have been a design.
Speaker 4 (30:08):
And then somehow, some way, now they're both fighting publicly
and I'm sick of it. No matter who's doing it,
I'm bored with it. James Carver was on Fox this
weekend with Kaylee Mcananny and this was a very interesting
portion of the conversation, and.
Speaker 5 (30:25):
You pose an interesting question.
Speaker 7 (30:27):
You said, there's the Ezra Kleine view where a big
ten party, we welcome everyone, and then there's the other
view that you're a democratic socialist not a democrat.
Speaker 3 (30:35):
So I'm curious where you land on that.
Speaker 6 (30:38):
Look it, we're a coalition, and a coalition always launched
as many people as it can in its coalition. But
when one part of the coalition becomes destructive to other parts,
and it's time to reconsider your relationship with him. Now
the identity left, which I'll call.
Speaker 3 (30:55):
It, or you can call it woke. I hate the
word woke for good reasons, but.
Speaker 6 (30:59):
I'm going to go into him right now. I think
we have to not just say, well, you lost. You
know you lost, so we just can't move on. We
might just have to affirmatively attack it because it was
so stupid and it was so unpopular and no one
wanted to use that kind of language, and it was
(31:19):
a giant mistake.
Speaker 3 (31:21):
That's all I can say.
Speaker 4 (31:22):
Yeah, big tent, until a tent is so divided it
can't stand. This was also this is Abby Philip describing
her job at CNN and explaining the facts to conservatives
who live in a completely different information world. Careful, this
(31:44):
is CNN describing the matrix.
Speaker 9 (31:47):
Conservatives are living in a completely different information world.
Speaker 4 (31:50):
Absolutely, is the left living in a completely different informational world?
And are you a part of that completely different informational world?
And what did you suspect when the truth was no
longer the goal and facts no longer matter and it's
all identity and moral relativism. I'm sorry, Joey, I'll let
your guest speak, and liberals.
Speaker 9 (32:12):
And breaking that down needs to be done, because when
you don't ever even hear the facts, it's hard to
even know that you're wrong.
Speaker 3 (32:23):
And that happens a lot.
Speaker 9 (32:25):
I mean, half my job sometimes is knowing what the
latest conspiracy is so that if it comes up, I'm
ready to address it, because it happens a lot where
people don't even know that what they're saying or what
they've seen and believe is not true. And so that
happens a lot, and I don't come away from that saying,
(32:48):
what's the point of this? People are just saying false things.
I think that one time that that person brings up
something that is debunked and false and I debunk it
at the table might be the very first time that,
if they wanted out there has heard an alternative pointed.
Speaker 4 (33:03):
Yeah, but do you ever debunk yourself? This? This was
just hilarious. This is a Pakistani newspaper and you know
it's giving it. It's a big, long story and it
concludes with its outlook for fiscal year twenty twenty six,
and then at the very and the very last PARAGRAPHIC says, Hey,
(33:24):
if you want, I can create an even snappier front
page style version with punchy one line stats and a
bold infographic ready layout, which of course is the dead
giveaway that they let AI print the story and they
forgot to take AI always ends with would you like
something else? Or I can and somewhere someone thinks that's
(33:46):
going to be better than the matrix us versus them
shirts and skins dilemma we created with the previous technology.
I'll remind everybody with the definition of an insanities, you
did it on the consequence.
Speaker 2 (34:03):
It's the best way to get back on your pagers,
to get.
Speaker 3 (34:05):
Up off your ass.
Speaker 8 (34:06):
I've been living renfree in that guy's head for years
and that's just a ball.
Speaker 4 (34:09):
Do you call that chicken a d They're just blowing off, Steve,
it's your Morning show with Michael Del Chorno. Ryons lost
sixteen to nine Sunday Night Football in Philadelphia to the Eagles,
So much for brotherly love and Monday Night Football finds
the Cowboys in the desert to take on the Raiders
in Las Vegas. FAA has lifted the flight restriction orders
(34:32):
at airports that took place this morning at six Eastern.
We're only expecting sixty cancelations today. That's a lot better
than six hundred nine hundred. And the House set to
vote on the Epstein files being released tomorrow. The President's
urging Republicans to release them, and Marjorie Taylor Green says
she's received death threats on social media because the President
(34:52):
criticized her. She also says she came to an epiphany
when Charlie Kirk was assassinated that we've got to stop
with all divisive rhetoric. Oh my gosh, nobody remind her
who shot Charlie Kirk and which side was causing the rhetoric.
But anyway, we saw a lot of shifts over the weekend.
Roy O'Neil is here. We only got a minute, but
(35:14):
my gosh, from ice to tariffs to the Epstein files,
A lot of shifting this weekend. Yeah, a lot of
one eighties.
Speaker 10 (35:21):
I don't know how many degrees it is all together,
but yeah, we saw some of the tariffs will be
coming down, they say, as an effort to try to
lower costs for consumers. The big switch, though, being the
Epstein File recommendation, I guess by the President telling Republicans
go ahead and go and vote for it. We've got
nothing to hide here. That's a big change of position,
especially since that really was the issue that caused the
(35:43):
biggest divide with Marjorie Taylor Green and President Trump. That
divide seemed to start when she got a book and
the shutdowns started to happen.
Speaker 4 (35:51):
And you're the You're the only one that brought that
out because I think that may have had a lot
to do with why the President shifted his opinion. Leaves
her nothing to talk about, and we got a lot
more to talk about tomorrow. Go make a difference in
someone's life, cherish your own. We'll see you right back
here tomorrow morning for the next Your Morning Show. We're
all in this together.
Speaker 3 (36:09):
This is Your Morning Show with Michael Ndel, Joan