Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, it's Michael reminding you that your morning show can
be heard live each weekday morning five to eight Central,
six to nine Eastern and great cities like Nashville, Tennessee
two below, Mississippi, and Sacramento, California. We'd love to be
a part of your morning routine and take the drive
to work with you, but better late than never. We're
grateful you're here now. Enjoy the podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:19):
Two three, starting your morning off right.
Speaker 3 (00:23):
A new way of talk, a new way of understanding
because we're in this cage.
Speaker 4 (00:30):
This is your morning show with Michael gill Trump.
Speaker 1 (00:34):
It really is one of those days where we cannot
accept pay premiere in iHeart you're having too much fun.
Speaker 2 (00:40):
Yea. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (00:41):
There's like three or four different things going on with
the audience. One, we've got people calling in with who
they think Joe Biden will preemptively pardon. I'm gonna put Fauji,
his brother Jim, and himself at the top of the list.
But we've had p Diddy Miorcis. Some people have brought
up Daniel Penny. That's a statecase on a federal case,
so that wouldn't fall under that. I think this is
(01:03):
about his brother I mean just the Hunter Biden one
was all about his brother and him. That's why it
was dated eleven years I think. I think Fauci's in
that mix as well. But people are adding that to
the list. Then we have people calling doing the my
Morning Show is Your Morning Show line wrong. I don't
even know if they're doing it on purpose wrong or
nobody can get it straight.
Speaker 2 (01:24):
But that's been fun on purpose. They're doing it wrong
on purpose.
Speaker 1 (01:28):
Yeah, we're doing all these different lists going on, and
then in the midst of that, David Snati arrives. And
by the way, David is the one that came up
with the My Morning Show is Your Morning Show with
Michael del Trum to play on words. So, but Jeffrey
is like, you're David. He protects this copyright whatever it is.
I don't know what it falls under. It like you
(01:48):
can't imagine, because when they get it wrong, he makes
me make an example out of them on national radio.
Speaker 2 (01:55):
We don't even have a T shirt or a mug yet.
Speaker 5 (01:57):
I know.
Speaker 4 (02:00):
That's awfully kind of you, Michael to share credit on that,
because we worked a lot on the concept of this
show together and that was an honor to do.
Speaker 1 (02:08):
Yeah, but that one was a biggie. That one I loved.
I'm trying to remember. I think the name I think
was me your morning show, because I didn't want my
name in it.
Speaker 2 (02:17):
What was it like four hundred different?
Speaker 1 (02:19):
So we did everything, I mean, David and I constructed
the ten Commandments that we operate from off the air,
and we just wanted to you know, the concept being
you don't want somebody sitting here pontificating or telling you
how to think. We've got to return talk radio to
a conversation, and the ownership has to go from the
(02:40):
host back to the listeners. That's what made it great
to begin with. So yeah, we put in a lot
of hard work, but I don't the one that you know.
The talkbacks have certainly I think been the surprise blast
of all of this. I worked at a previous station
where they did text messages and that got so impersonal.
Speaker 2 (02:58):
Six two seven four.
Speaker 1 (02:59):
I just had whereas this is you in your voice
at the kitchen table with us saying who you are,
where you're from, and you get right to your question
or right to your comment or what we have found fascinating.
You're just as sick as we are, just as sarcastic
as we are. And then David chimes in, all this thought,
(03:19):
boy or just as sick and tired as weird or
just a sick and tired except for Art. I don't
let him be sick and tired. He cannot grow weird
and do it good. He has to go to school
today and change some lives. But you know, it's just
been so much fun. And then we were kicking around this,
you know, whole thing with John Decker and and and
you know, David pops in and says, yeah, like if
Trump does too much with the media, they'll turn against.
Speaker 2 (03:40):
Them because they're already against them.
Speaker 1 (03:42):
But that whole story, though, is just a matter of
the times have changed, right, nobody's watching ABC, NBCCBS.
Speaker 2 (03:48):
I mean I said this to you a long time ago.
Speaker 1 (03:49):
And you were like looking at me funny, But I said,
do you realize I had more people twenty five to
fifty four listening to me afternoons in the sixty fourth
market Telso, Oklahoma in nineteen ninety five than CNN has
watching it every night. So we have this perception that
network television is such a big deal, or cable network
(04:11):
is such a big deal. It's not anymore ten million
people are listening to Joe Rogan. You could add all
of the rest up and never get close to ten million,
So that that White House pressure room should look differently,
shouldn't it?
Speaker 6 (04:24):
Well?
Speaker 2 (04:24):
And RFK had it right.
Speaker 4 (04:26):
RFK Junior had it right when he said when he
anticipated back, I believe it might have been in April
that this would be an election where alternative media would
have a bigger impact than mainstream I did. It's hard
to say, if you know, when we get all the
numbers and quantify it all out, how you'd measure that,
but it certainly has had a larger influence than ever.
Speaker 1 (04:47):
Well, who's sitting better right now, Joe Rogan, Megan, Kelly,
Dan Bongino, Tucker Carlson.
Speaker 2 (04:54):
Or MSNBC right out of my mob or MSNBC. And
what's fascinating by this. We had a dinner last night,
we're talking about this.
Speaker 4 (05:02):
How quickly the Roberts family at Comcast, through the entire
cable news division out of the room after the election,
put him into exile and said spin this off because
now they didn't say we're selling it, but obviously they're
moving it outside the tenth because they're getting ready for
a fire sale.
Speaker 1 (05:22):
Well, we said this a long time ago. We were
just prosecuting media bias that you know, CNN had ownership,
you know, that power of being first at something, and
they really launched in the original Gulf War. And then
Fox with Roger Rails a decade and a half later
or so comes along with an alternative voice. Then MSNBC
(05:45):
got into the game, and I was like, wait a minute,
you better be careful because you have a mother network, NBC,
and you start going radical with your brand under the
name MSNBC, it's going to bring down NBC, and it did, ABC,
NBCCBS have no crediblit the MSNBCCN and I think Fox
to a varying degree, no credibility, no real ratings, no
real influence.
Speaker 2 (06:06):
That's the key.
Speaker 1 (06:07):
They've been out of ratings, out of revenue. But now somehow,
the second time Trump wins, even they realize, wait a minute,
we don't have the influence to play this narrative game
and get what we want.
Speaker 2 (06:18):
Hey, maybe we are dead and we should know.
Speaker 4 (06:22):
Yeah, there's one other point, Michael, that nobody is talking about,
and we've been talking about it, you and I together
on radio for at least ten years. And that's that
major corporations bought these significant media properties and addresses because
they wanted an area of influence into the marketplace.
Speaker 1 (06:41):
They already had universities and they could afford to go
ahead and have them as lost leaders.
Speaker 4 (06:45):
They disconnected them from market accountability. And so it doesn't matter.
I'm Comcast and I'm the biggest in the world in
regardless the passive revenue.
Speaker 2 (06:53):
It doesn't matter if we lose money on MSNBC.
Speaker 4 (06:56):
Bezos doing the same thing, even to a degree the
Facebook a strategy, But all of a sudden, Jeff Bezos
wakes up one morning and tells the people to Washington Post.
Speaker 2 (07:07):
Excuse me, you're killing me.
Speaker 4 (07:10):
You're hurting all the other things that we're doing to
the level that we don't want.
Speaker 2 (07:15):
You to keep doing what you're doing. And same thing
happened with Comcast, Universal Spin. Those people, they're killing us
back here.
Speaker 1 (07:22):
Yeah, and really the big question is all right, so
the left never could have an answer or compete with,
or neutralize or defeat the right. And talk radio tells
you something about it's a tough world due to sell.
The reason it fails. Look at the map you ever
see a map after election, You're like, oh my gosh,
(07:42):
this whole map is red except for these blue areas.
Speaker 2 (07:45):
That's why we say, if we didn't have.
Speaker 1 (07:46):
The electoral College, Chicago, New York, San Francisco, and Los
Angeles would elected every president six counties for freaking cities.
People are fleeing from an exile right now. But that's
why they couldn't compete and talk radio. Can they compete
in podcasting or does that just continue their small little
echo chamber like they're doing on cable news right now.
(08:08):
But that's the point. It's all shifted and it's all changed.
They're dead and they don't know it. I think they're
starting to know it. We've done this on eighteen fifty
Main Street. It would blow them away if I showed
you that virtually everything on terrestrial radio and television that
is out there is really almost ninety percent owned by
(08:28):
three companies.
Speaker 2 (08:30):
They're controlling it all.
Speaker 1 (08:32):
And I guess I'll add George Soros to that, who's
about to do a major takeover of a major radio corporation.
But it's all Comcast, it's all. I mean, we've done
this and documented it, and.
Speaker 2 (08:45):
We're using a book from Harvard University.
Speaker 4 (08:46):
By the way, the research we're using Hervard's research, which
is a book about three inches thick where they detail
all of this.
Speaker 2 (08:52):
It always surprises.
Speaker 4 (08:52):
People in all The single most influential media outlet in
America's Wikipedia.
Speaker 2 (08:58):
Yeah, people go there every day, then anywhere else.
Speaker 1 (09:00):
Yeah, so Wikipedia. Well, it all began at higher education.
So you would raise your kids godly. They might even
go to Catholic school or to public school, and even
public schools set the pledge of allegiance, did a morning prayer, Dad,
and you get to the university, and then they would
undercut everything that you've instilled in your children. So they
controlled higher education and the intelligentsia. Then they got nineteen
(09:23):
seventy nine control of all schools, which Trump is getting
ready to undo. Scores have gone down, education has gotten worse,
but socialization and in doctrination has been firm. So they've
been training up your children in common to hand them
off to higher ed. And then of course they own
the corporations that can control them in the workforce. Then
you add the media, which they controlled the narrative, and
(09:44):
then it all just starts falling and crumbling on them,
and it'll be very interesting to see how it plays out.
But yeah, at the end of the day, I mean,
if I just did Disney and Comcast, what would that
be seventy five percent of everything that people are listening
to and watching.
Speaker 4 (10:00):
Well, it's a it's a big number, yeah, especially when
you consider the allegiance between ABC and the Associated Press
because once you wrap the Associated pressent of this messa.
And by the way, the Associated Press was participating on
Giving Tuesday, they're out there marketing themselves as a nonprofit charity,
the Associated Press. I've been a nonprofit for a long time,
(10:20):
but to say that there are any form of a charity,
you got to be kidding me.
Speaker 1 (10:23):
Well, and it used to be that was a significant
point because oh man, we are off on a tangent,
aren't we.
Speaker 2 (10:28):
That used to be a significant point because of wires.
Speaker 1 (10:30):
So in other words, if the AP had bias, it
would go to every radio station, every television station.
Speaker 2 (10:36):
They would rip the story and read it.
Speaker 1 (10:38):
So you could control the narrative nationwide just through the
Associated Press, because that's the wire every news person was
doing their news stories from.
Speaker 2 (10:46):
I don't even know radio stations that are going to
the AP anymore.
Speaker 4 (10:48):
Though, No, it's it's and it's an it's an online dominance,
but again it's This is a fascinating study that was
broken in. I would submit to you that your Morning
show with Michael del Journo is a part of the
alternative media, even though it's delivered on a traditional legacy platform.
But because of where you're going with podcasting and because
of the connections with iHeart is such a huge podcast. Right,
(11:09):
I don't get paid a dime for this. This is
not a plug. It's just a reality. You're moving into
that transitional zone where you're able to reach out across
all the platforms.
Speaker 1 (11:20):
That's interesting you would choose the expression I'm not paid
a dime because that's exactly what Read and Jeffrey make
about a dime.
Speaker 2 (11:27):
I'm working to get there. Nch Mom, does Dad still love?
Is Dad still alive? See coming home for Christmas? It's
your morning show with Michael del Choino. Yeah, just south
of Cleveland. He love it. Yeah, I'm going to sell
you the exactly dress.
Speaker 1 (11:46):
I mean, we're entertaining America and you're taking personal calls.
Speaker 2 (11:50):
That was Christy Nome.
Speaker 1 (11:51):
I'm sending her over to shoot the dog lives next
door to go, dat making too much noise.
Speaker 2 (11:55):
He's not our way.
Speaker 1 (11:56):
After twenty four minutes, after the hour, you're just waking up.
Growing speculation about the CEO of America's largest health insurance
company and why he was murdered. Supreme Court appears very
inclined to uphold Tennessee's law to band transgender care for minors,
and President elect Donald Trump's first network interview is going
(12:16):
to be Sunday NBC and to meet the press, suffer
not by listeners. And to me, we go to Michael
in Portland.
Speaker 5 (12:22):
This is Michael in Portland. Wanted you to know that
I enjoyed Christmas in America this past weekend. I took
my father and we had a great time. I saw
you there and was too embarrassed to come up and
say hello. I did get to meet David Snati and
just what a great show. It really started the Christmas
(12:45):
season for me. God, bless you.
Speaker 1 (12:47):
Thank you. I would have been blessed had you come
and introduced yourself. I want to rebuke that if you
had NBCs me in public come up. You know, radio
is very intimate and it's invisible. You guys get to
know me. It's a thrill when I get to know you,
So don't ever miss that opportunity.
Speaker 2 (13:04):
That's robbing me of a blessing.
Speaker 1 (13:05):
But yeah, it's become a del Jarnal family tradition as well.
It gets our mind turned on the manger. I always
talk about the and it's kind of an anonymous nobody
knows who to credit it with. But there's the old
expression life is best understood looking backwards, unfortunately, must be
lived going forward, and that really applies to Christmas in America.
This year was nineteen seventy three, so it begs the question,
(13:27):
what can we understand from Christmas in nineteen seventy three
to best understand Christmas in twenty twenty four, And that's
really the goal of every Christmas in America. Brought to
life and life storytelling and some of the best musicians
and vocalists you'll ever hear in person in your life,
and this year was no exception.
Speaker 4 (13:43):
It really was terrific. David Well, thank you, Michael. It's
always privileged to have you and your family there. And
I have to tell you, I can't lost count on
how many people came up afterwards and talked about listening
to your morning show and every one of them. I said, well,
he's right there, go say hello. So I tried to
the line as long as I could around you, and yeah,
(14:03):
I don't know why people feel funny coming up to me.
Speaker 1 (14:05):
You're probably going to get hugged and feel like we've
known each other your whole life. I wouldn't know where
to begin, and you're going to start with the leader
of the band. It's probably a good place to start.
But everybody on that stage was so remarkably gifted and
talent with the multiple instruments and vocal styles as they
(14:28):
brought to life nineteen seventy three, it was I think
musically that would may have been that was just out rare.
And whoever that vocalist is from Australia, Oh my.
Speaker 4 (14:37):
Gosh, Oh my gosh, Camille French, Yeah, the French family,
what a pro, what a pro extraordinary folks. Well, it's
a privilege to do it every year, and it's going
to be a remarkable privilege if everything works out on
the technical side to bring Christmas in America to your
morning show.
Speaker 2 (14:56):
This is unfair.
Speaker 1 (14:57):
But in ten seconds, what do we learn from nineteen
seventy three that applies to twenty twenty four.
Speaker 4 (15:04):
The two cliches, one president's come and go, Congress lasts forever,
and secondly, tough times don't last.
Speaker 2 (15:13):
Tough people do.
Speaker 4 (15:14):
Because nineteen seventy three was a really tough year and
some amazing things ended up happening from people born in
nineteen seventy three and people who survived.
Speaker 2 (15:22):
And you are gonna love the three hour broadcast.
Speaker 1 (15:25):
It'll be Christmas Day and the day after Christmas, we're
gonna do nineteen twenty eight, nineteen seventy three as we
bring Christmas in America to your morning show.
Speaker 2 (15:32):
I hope you all get a chance to listen to it. David,
thank you so much.
Speaker 1 (15:35):
Oh wait a minute, yea, we still have a minute
and a half. Exactly, kill it, kill it. I don't
know why I was thinking twenty six and a half.
That's fifty six and a half.
Speaker 2 (15:44):
You give me the finger. I hit the button. That's
because the dogs stopped barking, So I appreciate it.
Speaker 1 (15:48):
Yeah, Christy, I sent Christino, You're not gonna hear that
dog ever again. That dog sleeps with the fishes, all right,
So now in a minute, in twenty five seconds. One
of the things about nineteen seventy three. I think there
is three. I want to say three things to kind
of tease and highlight. One for all of the incredible
live music, because there was great music in nineteen seventy three,
and you're going to love the journey and people like
(16:09):
Jim Croche and James Taylor and the Carpenter. It really
comes to life with great musicianship. It was actually a
recorded song from and It's a Freak. I came up
to you after the show and I said, what goes
on at Mobile University, but that talent is spectacular. And
then when you start going through the news secretariat you
(16:31):
have some funny clips. It really is, and then the
storytelling that's what really makes that's old fashioned radio right
live studio.
Speaker 4 (16:36):
I managed to get Tommy Boy into a Christmas show,
which was great and probably the funniest line in the
whole thing.
Speaker 2 (16:43):
You know you're working well when you're halfway into the
setup and the audience is laughing out loud. Yeah it
was good. Yeah, it's a great jow.
Speaker 1 (16:50):
You can hear it on demand at the public Square
dot com Christmas in America and you'll hear it here
Christmas Day in the day after Christmas. This is Andy Hickson,
normally of Nashville, now living in Detroit, Michigan, thanks to iHeartRadio.
My morning show is your morning show.
Speaker 2 (17:14):
Hey, it's me Michael.
Speaker 1 (17:15):
Your Morning show has heard live from five to eight
am Central, six to nine am Eastern, three to six
am Pacific on great radio stations like News Radio eleven
ninety k EX in Portland, News Talk five point fifty
k FYI, and Phoenix, Arizona Freedom one oh four seven
in Washington, d C. We'd love to have you join
us live in the morning, even take us along on
the drive to work, but better late than never.
Speaker 2 (17:37):
Enjoy the podcast.
Speaker 1 (17:38):
There's nothing in the Constitution or federal law that allows
anyone to revoke a presidential pardon. Once it's delivered, it's done.
I do think in research that there is a possibility.
Only I think read correct me if I'm wrong, Hunter
Biden could refuse the pardon. I think that's the only
(17:59):
way out. So, but once it's done, there's no revoking it.
There's one gray area revoking a pardon that hasn't been
formally delivered. In eighteen sixty nine, outgoing President Andrew Johnson
issued a pardon which incoming President Ulysses S. Grant tried
to revoke. A federal judge ruling on the case wrote,
the law undoubtedly is that when a pardon is complete,
(18:22):
there is no power to revoke it. So there's precedent
even along with it. No, I don't think, you know.
And by the way, it's not gonna end to that,
because after Hunter is going to be Jim, and after
Jim is going to be Joe, I'm sure Fauci's in there,
me arks.
Speaker 2 (18:36):
Then there's a lot of pardons still to come.
Speaker 1 (18:38):
And I think when you get to ones like Joe
himself pardoning himself, that one might be interesting to see
what the court does with with it. But yeah, pretty
much everybody he pardons is going to be pardoned. Now,
I would add this, you may not get that individual
(19:01):
go to jail, but you could still show what they did,
prove what they did in the court room of public opinion,
and it could send their party or their party apparatus,
or the administrative state that was never intended to be
into the jail of reality. So I think that's kind
(19:21):
of where we're headed. Growing speculation about the CEO of
America's largest health insurance company and why he was murdered.
Speaker 2 (19:28):
The bullets and the words on the bullets.
Speaker 1 (19:30):
Kind of give you the indication that this might have
been something they had to do with how much profit
the insurance company was making versus what this individual's coverage
would done. Because he wrote on the shell casings three
different words deny, defend, and depose, what does that give
(19:52):
us a clue. There's also a pretty good close up
of his face, even though you had coverage from the
nose down in a mask and a hoodie on, and he
left some DNA traces around. So there's a lot of
people that are speculating they police already know who the
shooter is, they're just trying to find him. Supreme Court
appears to be inclined to hold the Tennessee law banning
(20:12):
transgender care. There's a lot of audio we're going to
feature in Sounds of the Day on that. It's it's
very long, it's very cordy. The long and the short
of it is a narrative, a political agenda, a theory
meets the reality of facts and a courtroom, and so
(20:35):
somebody can just make up these theories. It doesn't matter
what genitalior you're born with. Inside of you, there's a
real gender and God made a mistake, or you know,
Fate made a mistake, and you're really a female even
though your body and your chromosomes are male and all
that stuff. And of course, what came up I thought
(20:55):
interesting read I don't know about you was was how
interested the Supreme Court was in the factual consumption and
conclusions in Europe, whether it's Sweden or Great Britain, you know,
everybody's coming to conclusion that this theory doesn't match up
with facts. Because the plaintiffs are basically saying, oh, like
(21:18):
with any procedure, there's going to be some that have
bad side effects, which in this case, the side effect is, oh,
after they go through their phase and they realize they
really are a boy, they look down and there's nothing
in their pants and they can't procreate and they can't
have sex. So it's irreversible, and do you really want
to do that at a minor age? And there are
(21:40):
a lot of other side effects that go along with it,
But that's what the plaintiffs are trying to say.
Speaker 2 (21:43):
Oh, there's a small number.
Speaker 1 (21:46):
I think it was Kavanaugh and they were comparing puberty
blockers with Ashburn. Yeah, I mean it was just it
was crazy. I'll give you an example. Here's a quick
little clich because.
Speaker 2 (21:55):
They have to go through puberty before they turn eighteen.
Speaker 7 (21:58):
So essentially, what this law is doing is saying we're
going to make all adolescents in the state develop the
physical secondary sex characteristics consistent with their gender.
Speaker 1 (22:06):
The secondary characteristics, in other worise, we don't want them
to get an atoms apple, and then when they try
to portray themselves as a woman, the atoms apples already developed.
Speaker 2 (22:15):
This is how Look, there wasn't much.
Speaker 1 (22:19):
Sometimes you hear plaintiffs give a pretty good argument, there
were no good arguments and the pushback from the Supreme
Court was obvious.
Speaker 7 (22:26):
That they're sex assigned at birth, even though that might
significantly worsen gender dysphoria, increase the risk of suicide, and
I think critically make it much harder to live and
be accepted in their gender identity as an adult, because
if you're requiring someone to undergo a male puberty and
they develop an atom's apple, that's going to be hard
to reverse, and they're more likely to be identified as
transgender and subject to discrimination and.
Speaker 2 (22:48):
Harassment as adults.
Speaker 7 (22:49):
So I think the relevant question is you have this
population of adolescents, and there are documented very essential benefits
for a large number of them, and maybe a small
number that will work this care, just like with any
other medical care. But for the state to come in
and just say across the board you can't have the
medication because of your verse sex.
Speaker 2 (23:08):
We don't think that's a tailored law.
Speaker 3 (23:10):
You acknowledge there is some group though, who later changes
their mind and wants to be transition.
Speaker 2 (23:17):
That doesn't defeat your case.
Speaker 3 (23:18):
I just want to make sure you acknowledge there, as
a factual matter, some group of people.
Speaker 7 (23:24):
Yes, yes, we're certainly not denying that some people might
be transition or regret this care, but all of the
available evidence shows that it's a very small number.
Speaker 3 (23:32):
Then, to pick up on the Chief Justice and Justice
Alito's questions, it's obviously evolving debate. I mean, just in
the last couple of years in Europe, big changes in
terms of how they're thinking about it, and how they're
thinking about these risks and benefits that you and I
have just been talking about, and you've been elaborating. If
(23:54):
it's evolving like that and changing and England's pulling back
and Sweden's pulling back. It strikes me as pretty heavy
yellow light, if not red light, for this court to
come in the nine of Us and to constitutionalize the
whole area when the rest of the world, or at
least the people who are the countries that have been at.
Speaker 1 (24:15):
The forefront of this are I mean you just no
matter what clip I played Alito Kavanaugh, Chief Justice, it
is just this crash of narrative, agenda, socialization theory.
Speaker 2 (24:36):
And law. In fact, it's fascinating to listen to it.
Speaker 1 (24:41):
I know it's dry, but first of all, we live
in a country where you can actually listen to a
Supreme Court hearing.
Speaker 2 (24:48):
You should miss opportunities to do that often.
Speaker 1 (24:51):
What is the case is you can tell by the
questions that are asked and the reactions to the plaintiff's
testimony the way they're leaning. And that's why every new
story you read today says Supreme Court shirt looks like
they're going to back Tennessee in the span. Why is
the fact suggest I love the way Kavanaugh said it.
Speaker 2 (25:11):
There ought to be a yellow light, if not a
red light.
Speaker 1 (25:15):
Favorite sound of the day, and I only have time
to do one I gotta do Charlemagne to God, not
because I'm loyal to I hurt my company because a
he goes, he goes down the view.
Speaker 2 (25:26):
And b destroys them in their ignorance. Listen, all of.
Speaker 8 (25:31):
The criticism is valid because you know Democrats stand on
this moral high ground all the time, and you know
they act so self righteous. The reality is he didn't
have to say anything in.
Speaker 2 (25:41):
Regards to you know, whether.
Speaker 8 (25:42):
Or not you know his son wanted to be part
and you could have said, hey, man, I'm not focused
on that right now. But since they were calling trumpet
threat at democracy, and they were saying that, you know,
nobody's above the law, but they were speaking about him,
that's what they were running on. So when he kept
saying things like, oh, you know, nobody's above the law.
Speaker 2 (25:57):
I respect you know.
Speaker 8 (25:58):
The jury's decision in regards mustn he didn't believe that,
But he didn't have to volunteer that line to begin with.
Speaker 9 (26:04):
I'm gonna stop you for a second only because you
don't know that it was a lie. We don't know
why he changed.
Speaker 8 (26:14):
I really think he just changed his mind over Thanksgiving weekend.
Speaker 9 (26:16):
All I'm going to tell you what I think I
think he changed his mind because he got sick of
watching everybody else get over And this is just my
feeling because at some point you.
Speaker 2 (26:30):
Get to the place where you just go.
Speaker 9 (26:32):
So I'm just gonna follow the straight and narrow always
because that's what's expected of Democrats.
Speaker 2 (26:38):
That's you're the.
Speaker 8 (26:41):
One got to go out there, and he's stand on
this moral high ground.
Speaker 2 (26:43):
They don't have to do it.
Speaker 9 (26:44):
Democrat, tell me what the moral high ground is.
Speaker 8 (26:47):
The moral high ground is nobody's above the law. I
respect what the jurors are saying.
Speaker 9 (26:53):
He didn't know we're mad at him because he changed
his By the wait, I'm not mad at him.
Speaker 2 (27:05):
Can't let them talk.
Speaker 1 (27:09):
When Charlotte Mee God really points out in clarity is
the narrative, there was a narrative that takes that position.
It's kind of when they create these political weapons, how
did they pull off twenty twenty. They controlled the narrative,
They controlled the media, print, radio, television, they controlled all
(27:33):
the narratives. Stay home, stay safe, that's the only way
through COVID. But what they really did was changed election
laws by weaponizing COVID and their favor and then harvested
mail in votes.
Speaker 2 (27:50):
As long as.
Speaker 1 (27:51):
Mankind lives, they're never going to be able to explain
the twenty million bump that just sits there oddly compared
to every other presidential election.
Speaker 2 (28:01):
And then in the.
Speaker 1 (28:01):
Time magazine manifesto, they tell you how they stole it.
Speaker 2 (28:06):
But it's a narrative.
Speaker 1 (28:08):
And the narrative this psycho was Donald Trump's going to
destroy democracy. Donald Trump is a dictator, a tyrant. Donald
Trump thinks he's above the law. And what Charlemage's pointing
out is, you didn't have to say anything. The reason
you did was because you were in an attacking narrative. Now,
what Charlemagne doesn't get is something we talked about months ago.
(28:31):
When Joe Biden agreed to step out of the race,
he had cut the deal.
Speaker 2 (28:36):
It was done.
Speaker 1 (28:37):
Then when Nancy Pelosi and the party they were all
negotiating with him, this was all set in stone. I'll
get out of the race. Who knows, Donal If you win,
you pardon my son. If you lose, I'm going to
pardon him and my brother and myself. And then I'm
(28:59):
sure though that are really running the presidency outside of
Joe Biden, they'll worry about the Fauci's and The Mayorcises
and others. This deal, this lie, he didn't change his
mind or it's not really an issue a lot. This
is the deal he cut when he agreed to step
out of the race, because the minute he was out
of the race, he was out of control of what
(29:21):
could happen to his son? What do narratives always die
of reality? The truth? But it is fun to watch
Charlie Meane slap around. Will you Goldberg anytime? That's worth
twenty seconds?
Speaker 2 (29:40):
Right? This is your morning show with Michael Deltno, there's
a tragic truth. By the way, I got a couple
of emails.
Speaker 1 (29:49):
I am aware I've got to tell my Harlem Globetrowder story.
Speaker 2 (29:52):
Yeah, we waited two hours.
Speaker 1 (29:54):
I don't know when to do it tomorrow at the
beginning of the show or waste the time I promised
I would do it today. It's been that way, right.
What was the author of the book We found Love
song by song An? We had that wrong by a
day to this this week? A good game tonight Packers
nine and three against the Lions eleven to one in
Detroit seven to fifteenth Central Present. Like Trump's first network interview,
(30:17):
is going to be Sunday on NBC Meet the Press.
There's a growing speculation about why the CEO of America's
largest health insurance company was murdered, and Supreme Court seems
to be leaning heavily towards upholding the Tennessee law banning
transgender care for miners. Roy o'neils joining us we did
in the first segment the ceo of the insurance company.
Speaker 2 (30:40):
I think if I'm a CEO of an airline, I
might want to be a little paranoid too.
Speaker 1 (30:45):
Because they were before Congress playing their case and defending
junk fees. Well, there's a popular topic.
Speaker 2 (30:52):
Reah right.
Speaker 6 (30:52):
About twelve billion dollars was made just in seat fees
by the airlines from twenty eighteen to twenty twenty three.
Some of these airline executives were defending the policies on
these fees, saying, hey, look, we provide a cheap seat
for someone who doesn't want to pay all the extras.
But you know, a lot of Americans are getting pretty
(31:13):
frustrated with finding the seat that costs them fifty nine dollars,
only to check out and find that that is more.
Speaker 2 (31:18):
Like two hundred and fifty nine dollars. All right, So
are are some airlines worse at this than others?
Speaker 6 (31:26):
Yeah, And what the senators were really angry about was
disclosing these fees and making sure things are known upfront.
And then you've probably seen the clip floating round of
Senator Josh Hawley confronting one airline rep because they actually
pay their employees a bonus if they spot travelers who
are trying to board planes and haven't paid the fee
(31:47):
for that carry on bag.
Speaker 2 (31:48):
So it's like putting a bounty on the hit every pass.
Speaker 1 (31:53):
Well, there's a reason I fly Southwest Airlines. The ticket
is the ticket, you get two bags. You know, there's
no nonsense, no games being played. Used to do a skit, I.
Speaker 2 (32:02):
Want my assigned seat. I hate the cattle call.
Speaker 1 (32:05):
Well no, but see there's a reverse to that, the
reverse to that. Well, actually I think they're going to that,
aren't they?
Speaker 2 (32:10):
Yeah, they are.
Speaker 6 (32:11):
And then it's that thing of twenty four hours out
before you got to have your phone out and you're
getting a thirty five to start if you're lucky.
Speaker 2 (32:17):
And then I now and they're trying.
Speaker 1 (32:19):
To know you can pay your twenty dollars and you
can get the problem is you pay your twenty dollars
and then it just puts it like eight twenty six,
you know what I mean, So it's not worth doing.
Speaker 2 (32:28):
And then what's six ft six me?
Speaker 1 (32:29):
I'm I'm willing to pay for the whatever little upgrade
I can in order to find an exit rose seed
or something. You're my worst nightmare sitting in front of
me and a bet when you reclimb, like you're like,
oh yeah, I don't only jerks recline, but I like,
you know what I used to think he just didn't
like me.
Speaker 2 (32:49):
I just think he just craddled with life. Welcome. No.
Speaker 1 (32:54):
But what I like about Southwest is I was able
to choose because if you go on first, then you
got to sit there as they're all boarding and try
not to make eye contact because you don't want them
to pick you and site next to you. But if
you go on last, at least I can pick who
I sit next to. If you choose my poisons and
middle in the back next to the bathroom. But they
are feeing us to death. And you know that's why
(33:16):
we did the skit and it was like, oh, you
want a window sea you hear the typewriter and it says.
Speaker 2 (33:20):
Ding Jing Jing. Well, everything you do to senators.
Speaker 6 (33:24):
Senators are frequent flyers, don't forget, and all their staffs
as well, so they have a personal connection.
Speaker 2 (33:29):
These airline execs get hauled up all the time.
Speaker 6 (33:31):
Anything gonna come of this, nah nah, Maybe some disclosure
of changes, but nothing good, good reporting.
Speaker 1 (33:38):
Rory, take your six foot frame to a more spacious place.
We'll talk to you tomorrow.
Speaker 2 (33:43):
We're all in this together. This is your morning show
with Michael Hill, Joe and No