Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, it's me Michael.
Speaker 2 (00:01):
Your morning show has heard live from five to eight
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(00:22):
the podcast.
Speaker 3 (00:25):
Starting your morning off right, A new way of talk,
a new way of hundreds stead because we were in
the stickifit. This is your Morning Show with Michael O'Dell charm.
Speaker 2 (00:38):
Sure, i was five out of six on wordle, but
I'm still in a good mood.
Speaker 1 (00:42):
Good morning.
Speaker 2 (00:42):
Welcome to Thursday, November the twentieth, The Out and Old
twenty twenty five. Later tomorrow Friday with forty seven Later today,
Scott Jennings from CNN out with a new book on.
Speaker 1 (00:54):
The revolution of common sense. Stick around for that.
Speaker 2 (00:57):
David Sanatti, our senior contribute to his next President Trump
has signed the bill to release the Epstein files. He's
also reportedly signed off on a Russian Ukraine peace plan,
a twenty eight point peace plan that's seven better than
the Middle East.
Speaker 1 (01:11):
Funeral services for Dick.
Speaker 2 (01:12):
Cheney today in Washington, and Lady Wilson not only hosted
the CMAS last night, she walked away with most of
the top honors, including Entertainer of the Year. Good morning,
eight minutes after the hour, Do you have enough money
for retirement? Let me think about this for a second. No,
not at all. How do I fare? National correspondent Roy
(01:34):
O'Neil is here, Yeah, good morning, Michael.
Speaker 4 (01:37):
Those numbers, of course vary from person to person exactly
how much you're going to need in retirement. And really
there's agreement that you might not want to be doing
this planning all on your own.
Speaker 1 (01:48):
It may need to seek some professional help.
Speaker 4 (01:50):
But this new report from day Force highlights the obvious,
I think in that, yeah, people with more money tend
to save more lower income people. Income people are have
been certainly struggling since the big spike in inflation during
the Biden administration, and I think that's what this report reflects,
is that people are making the choice that when times
(02:11):
are tough, the first thing to go is the retirement funding,
and that could be a big mistake long term.
Speaker 1 (02:17):
Well, that's the problem. It's not that you know.
Speaker 2 (02:20):
Two reasons we fail in life we don't know what
to do, or we fail to do what we know.
I remember being twenty six years old and the company
I worked for, New City Communications, was offering a four
to one k which we knew nothing about. A geniant
manager called me in to explain, No, you don't understand
if I'd have had this, you know, and there I
am at twenty six. But life happens, and you know,
so then you lose a job and you borrow it
(02:41):
or you cash it in. I think even there's a
lot of people that are never talked about that prioritize this,
but life happened. And then there's those that it wasn't
that they didn't prioritize it, it was just life kept happening,
you know, kids and this and that. But I don't
know that anybody can put a finger on the note.
I would think having your home pay off would be
(03:02):
as big as because I'm watching, you know, with older
a mom and a mother in law and nursing homes
and rory.
Speaker 1 (03:09):
Doesn't matter how much money you have, you get sick.
Speaker 2 (03:11):
One, the really nice one drains all your money, then
you end up in the medicaid place.
Speaker 1 (03:15):
I mean, so, I don't know.
Speaker 2 (03:17):
I don't think there's anybody, And then there's a perception
versus reality. There's nobody thinks they have enough.
Speaker 1 (03:21):
Do you have enough? I don't, right, And you know
it's a good goal.
Speaker 4 (03:25):
I think the problem is we're also telling you to
do the boring thing, right, to sit on the money
and never see it and tuck it away somewhere and
hope that twenty five years from now you can tap
into it and find suddenly.
Speaker 1 (03:37):
This big pot of gold.
Speaker 4 (03:39):
But we're actually seeing that percentage of retiring participation is
actually dropping for Gen xers and boomers, so they're the
ones doing less saving right now. And in fact it's
the millennials and the gen Zers who have been a
bit more aggressive about putting money away.
Speaker 2 (03:56):
Well you start off that way anyway. La La La
la la, Live for the day. I guess, as the
old song, is the US secretly drafting a plan to
end the war in the Ukraine. Well, it appears as
though the President is signed off on it, and it's
a twenty eight point plan. Roy'll be back to go
through the details of that and compare it to the
plan in the Middle East when we come back in
the third hour. Thanks great reporting, Rory. All right, we
(04:17):
wanted to do something different today. You can tell I'm
rushed and distracted because I want to get right to it. David,
and he's the CEO of the American Policy round Table.
He's also the host of the Public Square, heard on
two hundred stations. He's our senior contributor all this talk.
And I think today the big headline is the kind
of gave it a name. It's you know, the name
I gave it was this socialism runaway train. Well it
(04:39):
actually has a name from the left and it's called
the Mamdanni Revolution. And what you see is a bunch
of candidates coming forward for the midterm next year saying,
if Mom, Donnie can do it, I can do it.
And so there's all this talk of socialism, socialism, and
then nobody ever stops. And really they certainly didn't teach
it in school and discuss socialism.
Speaker 1 (05:00):
I wanted to do that today.
Speaker 2 (05:03):
For me, the biggest argument against socialism is it plays
against our worst nature, which is you take away all
we're somewhat of a hybrid socialist country as it is.
I mean, we're always rewarding failure and we're always penalizing success.
But socialism will all out reduce any incentive for hard
(05:26):
work and with that, any innovation. We talk about the
American dream in the pursuit of the American dream. For
the people that achieve the American dream, they never achieve
it alone. They bring hundreds and thousands of employees with them.
That's one of the keys to all of this. And
then ultimately, with socialism, you end up trusting the government,
the government that ran you thirty seven trillion dollars in
(05:48):
debt that you observed not even able to keep the
government open to handle and be the provider for your life,
which is a position that only God is entitled to
and faithful in. Dave, there's so many things about socialism.
Maybe this is why we don't talk about it. But
the best way to I sound like Tartar Carlson. There didn't,
I ha. But anyway, make a long story short. We've
(06:10):
got a lot of long, historic failed examples and current ones,
and we're role modeling it.
Speaker 1 (06:18):
Well.
Speaker 5 (06:18):
The ironies in the news today, Michael in America are extraordinary.
The fact that they're mind numbing. They hurt your head
to think about it. That you have someone who is
a Muslim, who is a devout follower of Sharia law
and all that that means in regards to the worldview
of how Muslims look at non Muslims, how Muslims look
(06:41):
at women, how muslim look at the raising of children,
and how they look at Jews and Christians. Here's this
person now as mayor of New York, claiming that he's
involved in a communist, socialist Marxist revolution. Now, those words
are all interchangeable. This is not a pejorative coming out
(07:03):
out of a silo. You can go back to the
actual writers of the Communist Manifesto and they interchange the
terms communism and socialism, so basically talking about the same thing. Now,
where's the irony. The irony is that Marx and Engels,
who wrote the Communist Manifesto, did so to establish a
(07:24):
way of life based solely upon materialism. Now that is
the antithesis of what it means to be a Muslim,
the absolute worldview antithesis. So is somebody not telling the
truth about their real agenda or is someone just that confused?
Speaker 2 (07:45):
You know, I thought of you just doing some review
of things that I knew to have a meaningful discussion,
not a talk radio narrative discussion. And ultimately, what socialism does.
This takes control of property. You would make the case,
and you did on our way to golf the other
day that ultimately that was the reason for forming a
(08:07):
federal government to protect our states, not our states rights
as in you know, the state of Tennessee or the
state of Oklahoma, your property rights. That was the number
one reason. So you talk about all these anathetical I mean,
in Islam, there is no freedom of speech, there is
no innocent ntil proof and guilty, there is no separation
of church and state, there is no equal rights. There
(08:29):
is I mean, I could go on and on. It's
so opposite of what America is. But so is socialism
right well, of.
Speaker 5 (08:37):
Course, because again what we have to understand behind these
isms and what they've been with us. You know, there's
old cartoons from the fifties and sixties, actually the forties
and fifties about the isms.
Speaker 1 (08:48):
What are the isms? Well, again, let's go back.
Speaker 5 (08:51):
First off, let's ask the question when was the communist
manifesto written? Now, this is going to mess up everybody
on rate is going to mess up your whole day.
Speaker 1 (08:57):
All right.
Speaker 5 (08:58):
What I'm doing is absolutely throwing a bomb into a
radio conversation that should never be done, but I can't resist.
This is like someone saying, Okay, do you know how
to divide fractions? Tell me the answer? What is one
half divided by two? And that immediately throws you back
into eighth grade math?
Speaker 1 (09:17):
And now you see I could go that day, but
go ahead, Oh my god, I forgot. I forgot how
to divive fractions. I'm a total moron.
Speaker 5 (09:25):
You could go relax thirty seconds on YouTube and you'll
remember it's not that complicated, right, But the point is
it's not about that test. Can you pass the test
of being able to divide fractions? Let's ask this test
multiple choice. When was the Communist Manifesto published? Now we're
talking about communism, right, Soviet unions, Stalin all right, everything
(09:49):
we've word with for lifetimes. So you think, well, it's
a communist manifesto. Let's see that nineteen seventeen is the
is the Bolshevik revolution with Lenning probably just before that,
like maybe nineteen fifteen, nineteen fourteen, or maybe a little
bit later, maybe he got started, and then they published
the big document. It was nineteen thirty or twenty or forty. No,
(10:10):
it's eighteen forty eight. Twelve years before the Civil War,
Marx and Engels wrote the Communist Manifesto. This was a
philosophical treatise on how to view the world and how
to function as humans in the world, and is built
upon a platform of radical materialism. What does radical materialism mean?
(10:32):
That means that you set up a ceiling on reality
and you say, the only thing that we can know
is that which we can experience, field, taste, touch, experiment
with in the human experience. There is nothing up there
or out there other than us and the material world. Therefore,
we must develop a worldview on how we deal with
(10:54):
the stuff of this world.
Speaker 1 (10:58):
Is that why atheists tend to gravitate towards us? Yes,
because it's it's it's practical atheism. Yes, now, it's honest atheism.
Speaker 5 (11:06):
Given credit for that, as opposed to being functional pagan
and claiming to be a Christian. At least the communist
is honest. There is no God, there is nothing else
out there. There is only the material world. Therefore, then
we add to that the Darwinian philosophy. Therefore, only the
strong survive, which is why the communist rule has always
been a rule of force. Now Mandani is on the
(11:29):
sweet side of Marxism on the way.
Speaker 2 (11:32):
In nomis actually he's playing takia, which is the ability
to lie, right.
Speaker 1 (11:39):
I think. I think, mam Donnie, what you just.
Speaker 5 (11:41):
Said there is huge, Michael, because it's a blend of
two different approaches.
Speaker 1 (11:46):
The Communists of all gives you the lie for the
furtherance of Islam.
Speaker 5 (11:50):
Then you add Sharia law, which permits you to have
the opportunity to lie for the pragmatically, for the better
good now. And and the people that are following blindly
either get it completely because they're they're they're co conspirators
in this Muslim situation, which, by the way, will get
me accused of being Islamophobic.
Speaker 1 (12:08):
No, this is America.
Speaker 5 (12:09):
You have the right to be wrong and we and
we have the responsibility to protect you.
Speaker 2 (12:14):
These these are things Wikipedia will explain to you. So
they're not that controversial. Uh, They're weaponized, but not controversial.
Speaker 1 (12:20):
No. The point I was going to make is how
did we get here now?
Speaker 6 (12:24):
Uh?
Speaker 2 (12:24):
In that you know, I think mom, Donnie is writing
socialism to get to an Islama state. I think there
are some in the Democrat Party that are writing socialism
to take over the Democrat Party. I do think we
need to understand those lanes. But why is this generation
buying it. Does this come back to lose God, lose man,
lose God, lose liberty, lose God, lose self governance, well,
(12:49):
lose the.
Speaker 1 (12:50):
Whole That's interesting.
Speaker 5 (12:53):
John Locke is viewed as one of the key philosophical
fathers of the Constitution. He wrote two treatises on civil
government and a whole lot of other magnificent things. Jenlocke
was a responsible Christian thinker, and he basically talked about
what is the responsibility of man in the natural universe.
First is to acknowledge that there's a God, and second
to acknowledge that we have a duty to that knowledge.
(13:15):
We have to respond to that. That's what he called
basic fundamental human reason, void of religion, just reality. Well,
we've lost touch with that reality. But there's a step
farther than that. There's five point eight million, six million
people roughly in New York eligible to vote. Mom Donnie
got one million votes to become the mayor. This points
(13:36):
to a the rabid division of political parties that are
now basically we're hanging ourselves with our own rope on
partisan politics. But secondly, the total skepticism that people have
towards self governance. We are so dependent upon social media,
we are so dependent upon our screens, so dependent upon
an altered state of reality, that we're basically vacating the field.
(14:00):
And people can come up with old myths that have
been completely debunked.
Speaker 2 (14:06):
Utopian myths that have been disproved. I mean, this becomes
an ignorance of a I hope that people get a
lot on the segment. You would have to have a
tremendous ignorance of God, that he exists and you're not him.
Speaker 1 (14:19):
Are you to nature? Either one or nature.
Speaker 2 (14:20):
You'd have to have a tremendous ignorance of history. You'd
have to have a tremendous ignorance of reality. We have
failed socialist countries right now. One we're probably gonn end
up in war with Zoon Venezuela. And the ultimate ignorance
would be that you don't see this isn't a final destination.
It's a bait and switch, and which you ultimately end
(14:41):
up with is totalitarianism.
Speaker 1 (14:44):
Uh uh And suffering.
Speaker 5 (14:47):
Well, what we've got is a world of distractions that
keeps five million people from understanding the crisis that New
York is in and now is about to face because
they've given up to skepticism, and their skepticism is fueled
by distraction.
Speaker 1 (15:00):
You think they're making this play too soon.
Speaker 2 (15:02):
In other words, you can get thirty five year olds
on down and have a fighting chance to get them
to buy this lie, but nobody above that. I think
I would have waited another fifteen twenty years for people
to die off before I tried to sell it. By
shooting it too early, I think they're gonna miss their
opportunity to really dupe and destroy the answer.
Speaker 1 (15:22):
To that question, York shoul differently talk about that when we.
Speaker 2 (15:24):
Come Yeah, okay, mort with David Zona in a moment. Listen,
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(15:47):
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Speaker 3 (16:45):
This is your morning show with Michael del Chrono.
Speaker 2 (16:50):
Wherever you are listening from, We're honored to serve you
and thanks for waking up with your morning show. The
President says he signed the bill to release the Jeffrey
Epstein files, Here comes the bomb?
Speaker 1 (16:58):
Is it diffused? Is it about to nate?
Speaker 2 (17:00):
Meanwhile, a twenty one point plan for peace in the
Middle East now a twenty eight point plan being proposed
for peace between Russia and Ukraine. And Lady Wilson was
not only the host of the CMA's last night, she
was the big winner, including Entertainer of the Year among
other honors. It was a big night for her. We're
talking about socialism and listen, when we come back, David's
(17:25):
going to break down the difference between New York.
Speaker 1 (17:28):
I mean, I can't believe we're naming.
Speaker 2 (17:29):
This now the mom Danni Revolution, like it's something new.
How things played with one million voters in New York
versus how it'll play nationwide in a midterm election, because
that election is coming.
Speaker 1 (17:42):
When your morning show.
Speaker 6 (17:43):
Continues, Hi, this is Jenny Bourne.
Speaker 7 (17:47):
My morning show is your morning show with Michael del Jorno.
Speaker 1 (17:56):
Hi, it's Michael.
Speaker 2 (17:57):
Your morning show can be heard live on great rate
of stations across the country like wilm and w DOV
and Wilmington and Dover, Delaware or wgst AM seven twenty
the Voice in Middle Georgia.
Speaker 1 (18:09):
We're going to need some blankets.
Speaker 2 (18:10):
News Radio six fifty k e NI, Anchorage, Alaska. We'd
love to be a part of your morning routine. Now
enjoy the podcast moronor de servi. This is your morning show.
I'm Michael del Jorna. The President says he has signed
a bill to release the Epstein files. What to expect
Pamboni to release the files within thirty days. Nobody has
an expectation of just how quickly files will be released.
(18:33):
We are getting reports that the President is going to
meet was Ourn Mam Donnie tomorrow at the Oval Office.
That much we know Trump has said, and Mom Donnie
is confirmed as to whether or not it'll be televised
for us all to see that right now is just
an unconfirmed red rumor. And we're talking about socialism, which
they're now calling the Mam Donnie Revolution. We went through
(18:57):
some of the history of socialism, this utopian notion that
has a historic and a current reality of failure, and
yet younger people are embracing it.
Speaker 1 (19:09):
David.
Speaker 2 (19:10):
We left off with Oh, also to review it reduces
incentives to work. I mean, we saw that in Seattle
fifteen dollars minimum wage, half the people who just wanted
to work half hours. They all got replaced ultimately then
by machines and kiosks. But it kills innovation. People pursuing
(19:32):
greatness in the American dream. When they achieve it, it's not
a solo achievement. They tend to create business and innovations
and markets. And that's why capitalism has always thrived over socialism.
And in the end, it seeses property, and in the
end it gives control to the government, and it ultimately
ignores God, ignores history, ignores reality, it ignores the totalitarian
(19:53):
totalitarianism that usually follows. All right, so why now in
Why New York? And what plays in New York isn't
necessari going to play nationwide or so we're hoping right.
Speaker 5 (20:03):
Well, certainly though, New York is a pretty good model
for what Francis Schaeffer predicted back in nineteen eighty four
that apathy and a personal piece would be the two
controlling values of modern culture in a completely secularist model.
You know, it would leave me the heck alone, because
(20:24):
I just want my stuff, So it's affluence and personal piece.
Speaker 1 (20:27):
I want more, but leave me alone.
Speaker 5 (20:29):
And what you have in New York is a perfect
example a million people get the mayor elected, and only
about two maybe two and a half million of the
five point eight eligible the people who could have voted, voted,
So you have basically a disinterest. It's sort of like,
leave me alone. Well, rank Share open the door too,
(20:51):
don't forget. I'm sorry, rank Share open the door, because
he would have never survived a run a.
Speaker 1 (20:56):
Rank choice voting yes in the primary process.
Speaker 5 (20:58):
That's also another methodology of total stupidity, whereby minorities can
go ahead, and I mean minority numbers, not individuals. Minority
numbers in an electoral process can ultimately win because we
just keep voting. That whole thing is just there's a
couple of things in life that are almost mathematically impossible
to get an understanding on, things like cryptocurrency and rand
(21:20):
choice voting, and there's a few others, but people keep
advertising them as if there's some great delivery.
Speaker 1 (21:25):
They knew what they were doing. They knew what they
were doing.
Speaker 5 (21:28):
Right, I mean it's like it's sort of like can
you divide a fraction? And my point on bringing that
illustration up is we've forgotten the basic rules of reality.
Now in New York, you have the highest percentage of
non American born residents of any major metropolitan area. Everyone
is equal. That doesn't make anybody bad because of where
(21:51):
they were born. This is not a question of that
sort of conversation, but it does become a question of assimilation.
In regards to self government. We have constitutional forms of
government that are built upon first principles, built upon ideas
that we discussed in this country two hundred and fifty
years ago. If you're still two hundred and fifty years
(22:11):
behind the curve when you come here and you don't
catch up quickly, and then you have the opportunity to vote, what.
Speaker 1 (22:17):
Are you going to vote for? Not even who, well,
what are you going to vote for?
Speaker 2 (22:22):
We would probably rank it that Number one was the
rank share that set this up. Number two was the
five out of six voters who didn't show up to vote,
which allowed a million to make the decision. And then, thirdly,
non assimilation that you would buy this utopian myth that
is a historic and reality proven failure. I mean, that's
how it happened, but I wouldn't call it a runaway
(22:44):
train by any stret Now, I'm not suggesting that you
know it could be that they could be some wins.
I mean, I'll bet that Seattle mayor, I'll bet you
know something in Minneapolis. But by and large, now what
they're calling a mom Danni revolution that is going.
Speaker 1 (22:58):
To snowball into the mid term. Good luck with good
luck with that.
Speaker 5 (23:03):
Well, these are and this is, these are reactionary votes.
And the question is going to become what comes next
after the reactionary part of all of this, because that
all depends that people sit back. I mean, these rules,
these rulers are going to have opportunities on how they
choose to implement their administrations. When things go badly, as
(23:24):
they always do in the laws of human nature, what
will happen next? Where will their resources be? Will they
yield to brute force? Will they rethink? Will they recalibrate?
This is this is the great nun. You've got a
thirty something year old person who's coming from another country
and now at this age is mayor of America's biggest city.
Speaker 2 (23:46):
Axios's headline was people are It's the word for urinating
that I don't like to say, but people are peed.
The Mamdani Revolution is coming for congressional democrats. Anybody who
doesn't take the dynamics seriously does so at they're er
Els is one Democrat and I think it's going to
be a bloodbath. That could be true from the standpoint
of Socialism has been in a civil war with the
(24:08):
Democrat Party and trying to take it over, and they
may achieve that. I think, as I've said, there's going
to be a big difference between the primary result and
the general election result. There could be a surge of
Socialists targeting Democrats. That's my plan in the primary. How
it does outside of New York and major urban centers,
I think remains to be seen. But they say it's
(24:30):
coming and at some point, David, that will be their brand.
I mean, there's a party brand at stake here too.
That's a whole other topic, I know.
Speaker 5 (24:40):
But to say that we live in interesting times is
just a dumb under.
Speaker 2 (24:43):
Twenty twenty six is a big question mark in terms
of I don't think we're headed to peace. I think
we're headed to war. It's a big question. And then
the battlegrounds of politics. I mean, I think twenty six
sets up the fall of both parties by the end
of the decade.
Speaker 5 (24:58):
Well, and let's jump to twenty two twenty eight because
I You know, I'm not good at predictions. You're much
better at this than I am. But here's a prediction
that the two controlling issues in twenty twenty eight are
going to be population crisis and energy. No One is
talking on a daily basis about the population crisis and
(25:21):
what it means in America in the next twenty years.
Everybody's talking about Elon Musk's latest fantasy about robots and
AI and you won't have to work anymore. Well, here's
a newsflash, Elon. And we know he knows this but
doesn't yet understand how to appropriate it into his worldview,
which is, twenty years from now, you'll have a third
(25:44):
fewer people than you get right now. So that means
you'll have a third fewer colleges and universities. You will
see the end of the fast food business because there's nobody.
Speaker 1 (25:54):
To eat there or work there.
Speaker 2 (25:55):
The first I don't think anybody sees coming. You're all
over it and your team is all over it, and
I congratulate you for that. The ladder they're starting to
see it. I'm seeing more and more rumbling on social media. Hey,
what's going on with my electric bill bills? That used
to be one hundred dollars are now suddenly two twenty
two thirty yep in some places three hundred four hundred.
(26:17):
And let me tell you something, that's nothing compared to
what's coming. And I think that will arrive next year.
You're going to start seeing up twenty five to forty
percent increase in your electric bill. Guess what you're paying
for the AI And you're going to pay even more
and more in the future. This is going to become
more and more crisis. And then you add to that
a president who really hasn't addressed the economy and in
perception is not achieved. It's the economy stupid, and no
(26:40):
one's buying the economy is better. That opens a bit
of a door for that. But I don't think if
you go pure socialism that's the ticket to getting back
control of one of the chambers or even the White
House in twenty eight.
Speaker 5 (26:55):
So I wouldn't rule it out. I mean, America is never,
you know, surprising. It's important to know that the trend
to socialism is always a reaction That's key. It's reactionary
politics because it solves nothing. All it does is absorb
power and eliminate individual rights. That's the reality of socialism
in every application. As Margaret Thatcher said, always so well,
(27:19):
it's a great idea until you run out of somebody
else's money.
Speaker 1 (27:23):
Because it's always it's always robbed.
Speaker 5 (27:25):
From the risk, give to the poor, and get rid
of anybody who gets in the way.
Speaker 2 (27:30):
Red, do you have Sherry's call? I want to end
with that, And Sherry, in Jesus name, please don't hear
me making fun of you. I promise I'm not. But
this is how I can't have a conversation with you
with the talkback, but player talkback.
Speaker 1 (27:42):
And then I want to conclude, Well.
Speaker 8 (27:44):
I've been listening to your show and I disagree about
the two thousand dollars check. Friends and myself and others
low income and working for the two thousand dollars would
be a godsend. And I'll be contacting Jonathan and encourage
others to contact him to vote in favor of the check.
Speaker 2 (28:04):
All right now, and here's my point. Number one is
not a god send at all. It's a man send.
It's a government send, and they're sending money they don't have,
and they've taken it from other people. There were people
during COVID that sure could have used six hundred dollars,
but was it worth selling their liberty? Would you pay
(28:24):
that price? Look, i'd love somebody to send me a
check today for twenty five thousand dollars. That doesn't mean
I'm entitled to it. And if the wrong person sent
it for the wrong reason and for my kids to
ultimately pay for I would turn it down. But that's
a problem, David. There's a lot of good people on
both sides. It can never pass up a free check.
But nothing's free.
Speaker 5 (28:44):
Well, I'll tell you, Michael, if the president goes this direction,
he's sending an insult to the entire world.
Speaker 1 (28:50):
We're not that stupid.
Speaker 2 (28:52):
How is it any different than Okay, your bus is free,
or you know, at least Mom Donnie promised you to
something free.
Speaker 5 (28:58):
If there is a benefit fit left over from the
terriff situation, take the victory lap all you want. Put
the money on the deficit because we owe the bill.
Take at least that off of our kids' backs and shoulders. Heavid,
thank you so much for your time. You're it's utter
for a pleasure. Welcome zccer. We'll talk about Israel tomorrow,
all right.
Speaker 2 (29:17):
Forty six minutes after the hour, listen if you want
to go back and listen again. That's two segments on
socialism versus reality and share it with friends. All right,
Still to come Scott Jennings next hour, be listening. He's
got a new book out and we look forward to
visiting with him on that and other issues and his future.
Do doctors have Black Friday sales? Well, the doctors at
(29:40):
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They go fast.
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Every one of us on this staff are going to
be stocking up at thirty percent off to replace what
our children have stolen and taken to college with them.
Visit brickhousesale dot com for thirty percent off during this
Black Friday thirty percent off sale. That's brickhouse sale dot Com.
Brickhouse sale dot com.
Speaker 3 (30:51):
It's your morning show with Michael Delchno.
Speaker 2 (30:56):
Well, the Big Stories. The President signed the bill to
release the epstein. He's also going to meet tomorrow with
Mom Donnie in the Oval Office.
Speaker 1 (31:03):
In New York. And if there's cameras and I'm watching.
Speaker 2 (31:05):
Lady Wilson had a huge night, not just as host
of the CMA, she took home the coveted entertainer of
the Year. I don't know how we're getting this in in.
Speaker 1 (31:12):
Five minutes, but guess what time it is for everybody?
Block alone?
Speaker 5 (31:16):
Look, you just got a track harder, not a suckaft,
the opportunity for a brief civics lesson.
Speaker 9 (31:21):
Sure, perhaps you'd like to be alone with a deteriorating
mental condition?
Speaker 2 (31:27):
All right, always revealing, often entertaining your sounds of the day.
This is the New York City mayor elect zoron mom
Donmi discussing.
Speaker 1 (31:36):
I believe is this MSNBC. I don't remember now MSNBC.
Thank you.
Speaker 2 (31:44):
His upcoming meeting tomorrow the Oval Office with the President.
Speaker 9 (31:47):
We did reach out to the White House and my
team reached out because of a commitment that I made
to New Yorkers that I would be willing to meet
with anyone and everyone so long as it was to
the benefit of eight and a half million people who
call the city home and their struggle to afford the
most expensive city the United States of Mayor.
Speaker 7 (32:00):
Do you think a lot of people go into meetings
with Donald Trump. I think thinking they're going to be
the one to get over on him. And I sometimes
often think, I've watched this now for ten years. They
screw up because they think he's they underestimate him.
Speaker 1 (32:17):
Like, what is your goal for a meeting with Donald Trump?
What do you want to come out of a meeting
with Donald Trump? I want to just.
Speaker 9 (32:22):
Speak plainly to the President about what it means to
actually stand up for New Yorkers and the way in
which New Yorkers are struggling to afford the city and frankly,
cost of living is something that I heard time and
time again from New Yorkers about why they voted for
Donald Trump.
Speaker 1 (32:36):
And this is something that is only.
Speaker 9 (32:37):
Continued in the last few months of this year, where
we're hearing about childcare concerns, rent concerns, kan ed concerns,
even just getting on the bus just two dollars and
ninety cents, And just to make it clear to the
President that this is what we're talking about. These are
the stakes for New Yorkers and their ability to keep
calling the city there.
Speaker 2 (32:52):
You know, the really bigger question is should it be
televised and will it be televised If you don't televise it,
which I think it shouldn't be.
Speaker 1 (32:58):
I think they should meet in price.
Speaker 2 (33:00):
And I mean, if you're really going to try to
have a meaningful conversation or develop some kind of functional
relationship or maybe even win a bit of his heart
and mind. He's already backing off on some issues. He's
sticking with the nine to one one being answered by
social workers, which is already failing and blowing up. But
he's he's flip flopped on whether or not police would
respond to domestic violence calls the money for free buses,
(33:23):
for free childcare, for government assisted grocery stores, that's got
to come from tax increases. And if that's allowed, including
the buses, which is directly under the governor transportation, well
that could be her gubernatorial demise. But my point is
you should have a meaningful conversation alone. But if you
(33:43):
do do it alone without cameras, then anybody can leave
that meeting and say what happens. So to me, the
interesting thing is will cameras be there and will we
all watch this? And can the president keep his composure?
I think if the president has cameras, he's play to
his style and persona. If he doesn't have cameras, that's
(34:04):
usually when he catches people off guard, and it's very warm,
trustworthy and effective. It's a tough one. I think it's
kind of like the Epstein file. Nothing good will come
from it. This is Jasmine Crockett and guess what now?
Long does she have advice for blue states? She's talking
in her normal voice for a change.
Speaker 10 (34:23):
I think that one of the things we've not done
a really good job of is communicating our wins.
Speaker 6 (34:29):
Right.
Speaker 10 (34:29):
So a lot of times democrats their goal, their job
is to get in there for their heads down and
make sure that they do the work. They haven't really
been going around and doing the propaganda side of things, right,
And so there are not people that realize that your
overdraft fees when they got capped at five dollars, that
was the Biden Harris administration, and ultimately it was this
(34:50):
administration that decided that they wanted to get rid of that.
So this is something for that working class person who's like, listen,
I need to overdraft so that I can get.
Speaker 1 (34:59):
To my next paycheck.
Speaker 7 (35:01):
Right.
Speaker 10 (35:01):
Well, they're saying, you know what, we want the banks
to make more money off of you. Right, Like, we've
not sat down and made sure that people understood that
the Affordable Care Act, I think people understand now, right,
But the tax subsidy that extra money are when we
look at the child tax credit, they didn't fully understand that, right.
Speaker 2 (35:17):
See, these are all wonderful messages if you're only talking
to the receiving side.
Speaker 1 (35:23):
This is what did Obama in. It's great to.
Speaker 2 (35:25):
Be a community organizer, a community agitator and pit people
against each other until you're everyone's president, because there's a
reverse side to that. Entire messaging and that is why
should I pay? Because you're bouncing checks? Why should someone
else pay your fee? Obamacare failed to ensure everyone, and
it failed to lower premiums. It's a redistribution of wealth
(35:50):
to pay people's medical bills, and now it needs to
be subsidized by taxpayers are also paying for their own insurance.
And messaging is important, candidates is important, But when you
got the wrong message, more effective messaging just gets even
more of the wrong result, especially when socialists are taking over.
(36:12):
Oh one minute to go? What am I supposed to
make the last one? How about joy read? Tell me
if you've got a coherent, truthful message here on transgenders.
Speaker 6 (36:25):
I would be disturbed. I'm telling you, I would be alarmed.
I'm alarmed enough when I see a woman with her
danglin boobies. If I saw a penis in the ladies
rocking room.
Speaker 1 (36:36):
I would freak out too.
Speaker 6 (36:39):
This is this is just I mean, this is nothing
against trans anybody. What it is saying is if I
turn around and I see a peepie a penis in
front of me inside of the room, I would probably
go to marriagement and say, wait a minute, why is
there somebody a naked man in this room because just
the world we live in, just on a safety stand.
Speaker 1 (36:59):
That's all the stuff on TV. She tells she was
normal and right.
Speaker 2 (37:02):
She even ends that statement by saying it's right there
living a failed worldview and that creates word salads. That's
your Sounds of the day.
Speaker 3 (37:12):
We're all in this together. This is your morning Show
with Michael Nil Journo