Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
According to you man, is it gonna be beautiful this week?
(00:04):
Mostly Sonny Sonny, Sonny Sonny. There the next four days. Yeah,
there's gonna be some Hayes in the air, but it
is mostly upstate. I don't think and leave a talk
back if you've been affected by this, But I haven't
really seen the hayes that we've seen before over New
York City or northern New Jersey. Mostly it's just been
(00:25):
gorgeous in the Big Three. Donald Trump says he is
considering getting directly involved in the New York mayor's race
to stop Zorin Mom Donnie from becoming mayor. This according
to The New York Times, whatever Donald.
Speaker 2 (00:41):
Trump seeks to do to influence the outcome of this election,
I have more faith in New Yorkers themselves. What they
want is someone who can stand up to an authoritarian
administration and to the billionaires that gave us that administration.
Speaker 1 (00:54):
Political commentator Laura Curran will be here at eight oh
five to talk about the new twist in the mayor.
President Trump has told European leaders that he is going
to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin and Ukrainian President
Vladimir Zelinski about a ceasefire as early as next week,
(01:16):
and we haven't determined where.
Speaker 3 (01:18):
But we had some very good talks with President Putin
today and there's a very good chance that we could
be ending these ending the round, ending the end of
that road. Bed road was long and continues to be long.
But there's a good chance that there will be a
meeting very soon.
Speaker 1 (01:36):
White House Correspondent John Decker. We'll be here with more
on that meeting at seven o five. A shocking mass
shooting at Fort Stewart Army Base in Savannah, Georgia.
Speaker 4 (01:47):
An active duty soldier assigned to Fort Stewart, Georgia, shot
and wounded five of his fellow soldiers here on Fort Stewart. Thankfully,
all are unstable condition and all are expected recover.
Speaker 1 (02:01):
The shooter is in custody right now. He has been
identified as twenty five year old Sergeant Cornelius Radford. Lieutenant
General Richard Newton will be with us at eight thirty
five to talk about that shooting and a possible motive.
Attorney General Pam Bondi put out a list of sanctuary cities,
including New York and in New Jersey, Newark, Patterson and
(02:23):
Jersey City with a threat of legal action for impeding
ICE officers, which by the way, is a crime.
Speaker 5 (02:30):
It would much rather have sanctuary policies that make their
communities less safe. It's not right, it's not what the
American people voted for, and it's not going to keep
the American citizen safe.
Speaker 1 (02:41):
That's ICE director Todd lyons. A push to ban horse
draw and carriages in the city is really picking up steam.
After another horse, this one named Lucy, dies on the
streets of Manhattan, and Republican mayoral candidate Curtis Leewa is
joining the movement.
Speaker 6 (02:57):
We're all from different political backgrounds.
Speaker 4 (02:59):
Is independence of Democrats as Republicans.
Speaker 1 (03:02):
There maybe even be people heal don't even vote.
Speaker 6 (03:05):
One thing that brings us together is the humanity of
protecting God's creatures.
Speaker 7 (03:10):
These horses from fer the home.
Speaker 1 (03:13):
You probably know this. Curtis is not only on the
Republican line as the Republican candidate, but they also he
is the candidate on the protect Animals independent line. The
Pride of West Milford, New Jersey and Hofstra University, Jen
Powell will make Major League Baseball history when she becomes
(03:35):
the first woman Major League Baseball umpire on Saturday.
Speaker 8 (03:41):
Once I started umpiring, I was like, this is for
me and I can't explains in my DNA.
Speaker 1 (03:46):
And what a night on Broadway. There was a huge
block party outside the theater in Hamilton. The one of
a kind musical that reinvigorated broad Way celebrated its ten
year anniversary with its creator Lynwell, Marianne Lynwell, Marianda Lynwel
(04:09):
Miranda joined the cast for a perfect song to celebrate
the occasion was up on that stage and outside they
had to close off the street for an enormous block party.
A huge celebration on Broadway. And man, how important was
that play to Broadway. It brought it back and it
(04:29):
still keeps packing houses. Let's talk about the mayor's race
for a second.
Speaker 6 (04:34):
Now.
Speaker 1 (04:34):
We all know that Donald Trump does not like Zurin Mamdani.
He thinks he'll be awful for the city of New York.
And since he's a New Yorker, he really pays attention
to New York politics and all New York issues. But
he has come out time and time and time again
and said how bad Zurin Mamdani is going to be
(04:57):
for the City of New York and has come out
and called him a communist.
Speaker 9 (05:01):
He's a communist. Okay, this is not a socialist man,
This is a communist.
Speaker 1 (05:05):
If you look at any.
Speaker 9 (05:06):
Of his policies and go back six months, you don't
have to go back further than that. So they want
to put a communist in New York. Now, the good
news is we have a lot of power over that
because we're the ones with the money. We send the money,
we don't send the money.
Speaker 7 (05:20):
It's up to the White House. A lot of power
in the White House.
Speaker 2 (05:23):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (05:23):
So he's been threatening funds if Zori Mom Donnie gets elected.
But he's been doing more than that, according to the
New York Times. According to the New York Times, he's
been making phone calls and trying to broker one candidate,
and he's trying to figure out who that one candidate is.
Everybody else to drop out and have one candidate taken
on Zora and Mom Donnie for a better chance to
(05:45):
beat him. He has had conversations, according to The New
York Times, with Mark Penn, who I play sound from
Mark Penn on this show a lot of times. He
was a pollster who worked for Bill and Hillary Clinton.
He also talked with Andrew Stein, a former New York
City Council president who is a decade's long friend of
(06:05):
Donald Trump, and he's been looking at polling to decide
who would be the best candidate, and he's come up
with Andrew Cuomo and he has had converse. They haven't
always got along, Andrew Cuomo and Donald Trump, but according
to The New York Times, he's had conversations with Cuomo
about trying to broker a deal to get Eric Adams
(06:25):
out of the race. And I'm sure Donald Trump's going
to offer him a job to get him out of
the race. And I don't know what he's going to
do about Curtis Leewa, because Curtis Leba doesn't seem interested
in any of this. And we're going to I'll play
for you what he had to say about it in
a second. But the one thing that everybody can agree about. Oh,
by the way, Trump and Cuomo have both denied that
(06:47):
they made a phone call. The New York Times quotes
three sources, but both Cuomo and Trump. Cuomo put out
a statement he didn't talk, but he put out a
statement saying no, that that phone call never happened. But
he does agree that Zori Mamdani shouldn't be mayor of
New York. And he says a lot of people feel
(07:08):
the same way.
Speaker 8 (07:09):
Everyone is petrified about electing a socialist who's anti police,
who they feel will bankrupt New York City.
Speaker 6 (07:18):
Right.
Speaker 8 (07:19):
If you're anti business, what makes you think the businesses
are going to come here, let alone stay here. If
you're anti police, what makes me think that you're going
to make the city safer? If anything is going to
get more dangerous?
Speaker 6 (07:32):
Right?
Speaker 1 (07:32):
I think most sane people, including sane Democrats, agree, Zorin
Mamdani would be a disasters. He's the grand liar. He
promises the world everybody gets a car, everybody gets healthcare,
everybody gets free buses, everybody gets to go to a
grocery store where they charge you next to nothing because
(07:53):
they're run by the state with really absolutely no plan
to pay for it. I mean, he keeps saying is
going to raise taxes. He doesn't have that power, He
can't do it. So it's all a mirage. But this
New York Times article is maybe the best thing that
happened to Zorin Mam Donnie, and he knows it.
Speaker 2 (08:12):
Whatever Donald Trump seeks to do to influence the outcome
of this election. I have more faith in New Yorkers themselves.
What they want is someone who can stand up to
an authoritarian administration and to the billionaires that gave us
that administration.
Speaker 1 (08:26):
The reason Eric Adams is doing so poorly in the
polls is because of his affiliation with Donald Trump. The
last thing Cuomo wants right now is an affiliation with
Donald Trump, because in this city, unlike the rest of
the country, in this city, Donald Trump is not somebody
you want to have advertised as being a partner. This
(08:50):
is a great opportunity for Momdonni to use the President
as a boogeyman, or in Albatroz, to put around the
neck of former Governor Cuomo. That's our good friend J. C. Poloncle.
Probably the best advice yesterday when this story first broke,
came from the Republican candidate Curtis Slee with.
Speaker 3 (09:10):
There's no doubt he talks often with Eric Adams, he
talks often with Cuomo, who he's known that families have
known one another.
Speaker 7 (09:17):
He doesn't talk to me.
Speaker 6 (09:19):
So I've advised the president publicly be like Switzerland, stay
out of this race.
Speaker 1 (09:24):
Right. That's the best advice. Let these guys work it
out now. I'm sure he's going to come in here
and wait. Over the next few months, Eric Adams is
going to get offered a big job by the Trump
administration and maybe he'll leave. Maybe he'll leave and somebody
else will step in. But it is it is political
poison in New York City if you're a Democrat to
(09:47):
have Donald Trump fighting for you. And that's why the
New York Times put this out, and that's why Andrew
Cuomo said, what are you talking about? No, no, no, no, no,
I'd love to hear what you have to say about this.
You go to the iHeartRadio app and leave us a
talk back. You could win limited edition MENSI in the
Morning t shirt, which is going to be awarded to
our favorite talkback of the morning. Fro Yo is making
(10:08):
a big comeback. But is it good for you? And
does that even matter? And what is fro Yo? We'll
discuss next plus tickets to see the Who at a
twenty five. Well we all remember that one teacher, don't we,
The one teacher who made a difference, who believed in us,
or challenged us or just made learning fun. Well, now
is your chance to say thank you to them in
(10:30):
a big way. With iHeartRadio's Thank a Teacher powered by
Donor's Choice, you can nominate an outstanding public school teacher
who has gone above and beyond for their students for
a chance to win five thousand dollars to stock their
classroom with whatever they want. Teachers like our teacher of
the Day today, Shaan Starr, who teaches at Hunter's Point
(10:53):
Elementary School in Long Island City. When students have trouble
in the classroom and they need sensory breaks, mister Starr
created a sensory gym for them to use. Help us
say thank you to educators just like Sean for shaping
our future by nominating your favorite teacher now at iHeartRadio
(11:15):
dot com slash teachers. All right, let's get started with
our first competitor for the Talkback of the Morning. If
you want to get involved and send us a talkback,
you'll automatically be in the running for the MENTI in
the Morning t shirt awarded daily to our favorite message
the talk Back of the Morning, and don't forget the
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(11:38):
crane radio. See Crane radios deliver the reception and clarity
you deserve. I just got another one. I just got
another one and hooked it up at home, and it
is incredible. You can play with the treble and the bass,
and you can make the audio exactly the way you like.
It is the clearest radio I have ever had. Sea
(12:00):
Crane Radio. That's what you get if you win talk
Back of the Week. But first you have to win
talk Back of the Morning. And here is our first contest,
and he wants to talk about zurin Mom Donnie's plan
to put government run grocery stores in New York.
Speaker 6 (12:17):
How is this guy gonna get government run grocery stores
in the city of New York. I mean, what brands
are they going to be carrying in these government run
grocery stores. I don't think Kellogg's or Nobisco is going
to be carrying their products at these stores. Everything in
there is going to be no frills brands.
Speaker 1 (12:40):
Oh no, don't you understand. We're talking about fantasy Land here.
So fantasy Land, all the top brands will be there.
They're gonna sell champagne and serve it at the door.
It's going to be Don Perignon and some of the
finest chocolate in the world. Is going to be served
a dive a chocolate. It's all a fantasy. It's never
gonna happen. None of this stuff that he says is
(13:01):
gonna happen is gonna happen. But it's a great point
you brought up. Yeah, he The only way they could
possibly make it happen is that they make it like
the Dollar store. That's the only way that's gonna happen. Hey,
do you Jacqueline and Christopher? Christopher? I called you? Does
your mom call your Christopher or your parents call you Christopher?
Speaker 7 (13:20):
Sometimes?
Speaker 1 (13:21):
Yeah, when you're in trouble.
Speaker 7 (13:22):
Yeah, good thing.
Speaker 1 (13:24):
Chris Schweitzer is in today for Natalie Vodka. Natalie gets
some much needed time off. Do either of you eat
frozen yogurt?
Speaker 10 (13:34):
Sometimes?
Speaker 7 (13:35):
I have? You do? I don't often know. I don't
know if I have any frozen yggurt places around me.
Speaker 6 (13:40):
Though.
Speaker 7 (13:41):
It's funny a lot.
Speaker 1 (13:42):
No, it's funny how it goes in and out, you know,
in and out of favor because it got a bad
rap there for a while when people were saying it's
not healthy for you. You know what, here's ice cream,
But most desserts aren't going to be really healthy for you,
but apparently it's making a big comeback. This is an
article written by Rachel Sugar from New York Magazine, who
(14:05):
says there's an ebb and flow to what they call froyo.
There's an ebb and flow that sometimes it's very popular,
sometimes it goes down, but right now it's the hottest
it's been in a long time.
Speaker 11 (14:18):
Playful, it's nostalgic. I really do think it has this
kind of winking. Obviously it's not a health food, but
it's like you don't have to feel bad about it.
Speaker 1 (14:32):
That's Rachel Sugar, the one that wrote They who wrote
the New York Magazine article. And look, there's a place
called the Butterfield Market. It's on the Upper East Side,
and if you've ever driven by there, there's a long
line all the time for the froyo. And this year
they say they're making fifteen to eighteen percent of their profit.
And it's a supermarket. They're making their profit from the froyo.
(14:55):
And the people that go there, as Rachel Sugar just
said a second ago, they know it's not a health food.
Speaker 12 (15:02):
I don't feel guilty.
Speaker 13 (15:04):
I mean the thing with this, it tricks your mind
into thinking because it says yoga that it's healthy.
Speaker 8 (15:12):
We all know it's not.
Speaker 12 (15:14):
So that's a good part.
Speaker 1 (15:15):
That's a good part. She likes that she can pretend
it's healthy.
Speaker 7 (15:20):
Yeah, it's healthy for the mine, not for the body.
Speaker 1 (15:23):
That's right. Her name's Arlene. We didn't get her last name,
but it was on a story done by Fox five,
and Kevin Green did a tremendous job with her, and
at the very end I understand why he used the
SoundBite from Arlene because it is just perfect.
Speaker 12 (15:38):
We all do this, just like diet soda that is
more unhealthy Dandyville soda, but it tricks the mine.
Speaker 1 (15:47):
I like that.
Speaker 14 (15:48):
I like it.
Speaker 2 (15:48):
I like that.
Speaker 7 (15:51):
I like that too.
Speaker 1 (15:52):
I drink diet soda. Is it more unhealthy for you
than regular soda?
Speaker 7 (15:56):
Some people say that, but I think they're just I
don't know. They don't they don't want to commit to
the diet soda. I'm a diet soda guy too, so
not I could never do.
Speaker 1 (16:06):
It, and because of what's in it, because you're worried
about it.
Speaker 12 (16:09):
I just I don't really like soda to begin with,
but I'm going to have it. I'm not going down.
Speaker 7 (16:13):
That is definitely the healthiest, Jacqueline, shouldn't drink, shouldn't drink
soda at all, But I like it too much. I
like the fizz, and you know the fizz.
Speaker 1 (16:22):
I've tried to give it up a few times. I have,
and I've been addicted since I was a kid. I can't.
Speaker 7 (16:27):
No, I can stick with absinthe.
Speaker 1 (16:30):
What do you drink?
Speaker 12 (16:31):
I said, I'm just going to stick with absinthe. I'm
just kidding.
Speaker 7 (16:35):
I just need to.
Speaker 12 (16:36):
I just wanted to perk us up today.
Speaker 1 (16:38):
Well, thanks did a good job too, Arlen did a
good job of Thanks a lot, Jacqueline. How about the
news at six thirty with Jacqueline.
Speaker 7 (16:49):
Carl all right, Larry.
Speaker 12 (16:50):
Massive tariffs are now in effect in poor Taxes will
reach levels not seen in the country for almost one
hundred years, with over sixty countries and European Union facing
rates of fifteen percent of more. A wide variety of
products will be hit, ranging from applying to his cars,
food and furniture, and Suffa County police say there are
no signs of Islands in that mystery death at a
(17:12):
Ritzy Long Island yacht club.
Speaker 10 (17:14):
Homicide detectives say there are waiting autopsy results that will
determine the cause of Martha Nolano Slatterer's untimely death and
how she died. The thirty three year old Irish born
fashion designer was found unconscious early Tuesday on a boat
at the Montaukue Yacht Club. Police say good Samaritans tried
to revive her, but to no avail. Nolano Slatterer lived
(17:36):
in Manhattan, but spent summers working in the Hamptons, and
had just opened a pop up store at the yacht
club to sell her high end brands East by East.
Sarah Lee Kessler wr News.
Speaker 12 (17:49):
So what would you do if someone owed you money
and would in pay? In Salisbury, Maryland, a gal named
Janice One has been hit with a wealth of charges
after allegedly setting fire to a man's home over a
seven dollars debt. According to the Office of State Fire Marshal,
Janice reportedly knew the homeowner for several years. She went
(18:11):
to the house to demand that seven bucks she said
was owed to her. An argument ensued, and reports say
only just left and returned with a bottle of gasoline,
which she poured on the home's front door, lit it,
and then just pedaled away. In a bicycle. Would you
say this was an overreaction, because I bet anyone who
owes Janice so much as a stick of gum will
be lined up at her door to.
Speaker 1 (18:33):
Return it promptly. Is Janet in jail?
Speaker 12 (18:36):
Janie? They don't say, They don't even name the homeowner.
But it's just the fire marshal just put out a
story that this woman wanted to set her seven dollars back,
and when she didn't get it, she set the guy's
the door of his house on fire and just pedaled
away in her bicycle.
Speaker 1 (18:52):
Yeah. I don't think that people that owe her money
have to worry too much.
Speaker 6 (18:57):
Now.
Speaker 1 (18:57):
I think she's going to be put away for a
long time. Thanks, thanks a lot, Jacqueline. Carl Trump targets
several local cities, including New York and Newark because of
their sanctuary city policies. We'll tell you what he has
planned for cities on his sanctuary city hit list next. Hey,
you know what I got? I just got my second
(19:18):
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hundred five two two eight eight sixty three, or visit
them online at scrane dot com that cc r an
E dot com. There is reason the crime is down
across the country because of what ICE has been doing.
Three hundred thousand people now taken off the streets, almost
(20:45):
eighty percent of them are criminals. It's been amazing what
the Trump administration has done. It is just amazing, and
this is what he promised, this is what people voted for,
and he's coming through on it and the city it
is incredible to look at. There are some pockets, some
cities that still have high crime rates, and they are
(21:07):
cities like Memphis, Tennessee is having a horrible crime spree
right now. They are cities that ICE hasn't focused on yet.
Same with Saint Louis, Missouri. I mean, in New York,
we've had less shootings this year than in history, and
it's because so many criminals were taken off the streets.
(21:30):
And the fact that anybody is still fighting this when
the evidence is right there that sanctuary cities make cities unsafe,
that ICE has to work around sanctuary cities, and how
much safer could they make these cities if ICE didn't
have to go to such lengths to pick up the
(21:52):
bad guys, if they could just pick them up at
the prisons, no fuss, no mess, it would even we
go quicker and the world would be a safer place.
Speaker 14 (22:04):
The whole purpose of these sanctuary city policies is to
thwart ICE, to shield and harbor illegal aliens from being
detected by ICE. So that's a criminal a vihilation, and
once those investigations get started, not only is there criminal
liability for those being investigated possibly, but it will also
deter other sanctuary cities.
Speaker 1 (22:24):
Right, she phrased it purpoctly. That's Jonathan Fayhe is former
deputy director of Homeland Security, and what he just laid
out is what pam Bondy saw. And Pambondy put out
a target list of thirty five sanctuary cities and states
across the country, including New York City including Newark, including
(22:48):
Jersey City including Patterson, including the whole state of New York,
including the entire state of Connecticut. For some reason, they
left the state of New Jersey off the list, and
I don't know the reason for that, but all across
the country, the warning is we may come after you
with lawsuits. We may come after you and individual politicians
(23:11):
with criminal charges because you are impeding ice officers, and
Tom Homan is all aboard.
Speaker 15 (23:17):
We're putting them on notice. Either you help us, either
you help us enforce law. And I'm not even saying
being an immigration officer, I'm saying, notify us, honor entertainers
when a public safety threat, illegal aliens in your jail.
Work with us, give us access to the jail, let
us arrest the public safety threat, and the safety and
security of a jail, which is safer for everybody's, safer
(23:40):
for the community, safer for the agents, safer for.
Speaker 1 (23:42):
The alien right. That's what they harp on more than
anything else. But he's saying what he started to say
is if you don't help us, if you don't help us,
you could be civilly liable and you could be criminally
liable and pam. But they've had enough of this. It's
been proven time and time and time again that sanctuary
(24:02):
cities do not work. Everything they said they were going
to do, the entire reason they had sanctuary cities, and
this started in mass I mean it was the first city.
Was way before that in Berkeley, but in mass when
everybody decided to do it was doing the first Trump administration.
And it's all just anti Trump. Every stupid policy, every
(24:26):
ridiculous policy we have to live with under the Democrats
starts with being anti Trump. Everything they do, he forces
them to make horrible decisions. Think about just over the
last few months, all of the horrible decisions that the
Democrats have made that where they've embarrassed themselves just because
(24:49):
they wanted to be against Trump, I mean against these
tariffs we were lied to. When is it going to
be horrible? When's the horrible stuff going to start? Because
right now all I see is win if win after
win after win, and deal after deal, and the tariffs
becoming fairer, and more people opening companies here on issue
after issue after issue, Doge, they were out in the streets.
(25:12):
They were screaming, they're taking people's jobs, they're taking people's livelihoods.
And then they looked at the polls and they would Oh,
people thought government was too bloated. I guess we look silly. Well,
the stupidest one was when they were deporting people and
you had Democratic senators and congressmen flying down to El
(25:34):
Salvador to have Margarita's with the guy who was a
sex trafficker, a human trafficker, and was accused of domestic violence. Yeah,
that's the guy. That's the guy you want to put
your arm around. There's no question that sanctuary cities just
make cities more dangerous. And the Trump policies and our
(25:59):
borders are Tom Homan are making cities safer.
Speaker 15 (26:02):
Despite what most of media is saying, the vast majority
of people ICE rests every day are criminal aliens, public
safety trusts, and national security trusts. I looked at the
number just this morning, about seventy percent everybody ICE is
arresting is a criminal. They're taking them off the street,
every criminal aland they take off the street makes us
country safe again.
Speaker 6 (26:22):
Right.
Speaker 1 (26:23):
The reason now that was eighty percent last week, The
reason it's going down to seventy percent is because now
anybody that already has a court issued warrant for their
arrest because they overstayed their visa. He's including now on
the people that are going to be deported because they
already had due process. That doesn't matter. You don't have
(26:45):
to go to court for them. They've already had due process. Boom,
you're out of the country. And so but they're not
considered these violent criminals, and they're not considered in the
statistics for the seventy percent even though they have it's
a civil violation and that even they've overstayed their welcome.
Todd Lyons is the new the acting ICE director.
Speaker 5 (27:08):
It would much rather have sanctuary policies that make their
communities less safe. It's not right, it's not what the
American people voted for, and it's not going to keep
the American citizens safe.
Speaker 1 (27:19):
And that may be the most important point is the
American people voted for this. This is exactly what the
American people want, and they don't want sanctuary cities. They're
extremely unpopular. It was a stupid idea from the beginning,
and it never did what it was supposed to do.
(27:39):
There was no protection in sanctuary cities. Do you know
how many people who were here across the border, were
here illegally died because of the sanctuary city policies. You
know how difficult, what a difficult time they had, and
they're still being arrested. It's just that it's more difficult
now to arrest them, that's all. And what happened to
(28:02):
the rest of the society. Crime rate went up. Money
had to go to them and rather than go to
people who were here citizens. For a long time, talk
to people in the black community about how upset they
are that all this money that could help their community
rebuild is going now to people who are here illegally,
(28:24):
non citizens. It never made any sense. So thank god
that the Trump administration in Pambondi is finally going after
these sanctuary cities and threatening them with legal action. This
should have happened a long time ago, because sanctuary cities
have been a stain on America. It was the worst
(28:45):
of ideas. And I really believe some of the Democrats doubt,
deep down in their heart know this. They just can't
admit they were wrong because they have caused so much
havoc in this country, have caused so much pain, They've
caused so much suffering with these sanctuary cities. In order
(29:06):
to protect people who are non citizens, they went ahead
and hurt everybody else American citizens. And that's why they
don't want to change it, because this will be a
stain on the Democratic Party for a long time. But
what they don't realize is it doesn't matter either way.
(29:27):
It's going to be a stain. Let's keep talking about
Donald Trump and Donald Trump's tariffs, you know, the ones,
the tariffs that were going to wrect the economy. Now
they're predicted to bring in hundreds of billions, even trillions
of dollars to America. And that's not all We'll talk
about it. Next. Our iHeartRadio Music Festival is back September
(29:48):
nineteenth and twentieth at T Mobile Arena in Las Vegas,
two nights, one stage live performances by Ed Sheer and
Brian Adams, John Fogerty, Mariah Carey, Sammy Hagar and Moore.
But while the world is listening on iHeart, you could
be there and watch it live. Listen for three chances
every weekday to win tickets plus airfare plus the hotel
(30:12):
plus one thousand dollars in cash. Your next chance to
win is at nine a m. Doesn't the Democratic Party
get tired of just being plain wrong? It must be
tough being on the other side, you know, when somebody's
actually doing something, having to be the ones that say, well,
that's not gonna work. That's gonna be horrible. But the reaction,
(30:33):
the overreaction to these tariffs was incredible, was way overboard.
Remember Chuck Schumer coming out and saying it's gonna decimate
the economy. Oh wait till you see prices. Inflation's gonna
be sky high. Well, it already was sky high just
(30:53):
a couple of years ago. It was at a forty
year high, the highest it's been since Jimmy Carter. It's
not gonna go and it really hasn't ticked up that much.
It's still under three percent still on the twos, which
is where kind of you want it to be. And
many of the tariffs have already taken place. But all
(31:13):
these deals have been struck that are going to bring
in hundreds of billions of dollars to our economy, and
they just look silly. Time and time again, they look silly.
But this is the worst one because the tariffs were
used for a couple of reasons. First, there is just
the of fairness, first of all, because we were getting
(31:36):
ripped off all around the world. But also it's going
to bring in a lot of money just on the
tariffs alone, just in tax money. They're talking about a
trillion dollars possibly in just two years. But that's only
part of it. Because the tariffs were used to make
(31:56):
other companies in other countries moved back to America or
moved to America in the first place. Some of them
are Japanese companies, some of them Chinese. Are going to
put a factory here. I mean, there are so many
companies around the world that are figuring it out. You
know what, It's going to be a whole lot cheaper
if we just build a factory in the United States.
(32:17):
So right now there's a factory boom going on across
America and it's simply because of the tariffs. And there
was a big, huge announcement, maybe the biggest of all
the announcements since the AI hub, both in Pittsburgh and
the one out west. This is huge.
Speaker 3 (32:39):
This is a significant step toward the ultimate goal of
ensuring that iPhone sold in the United States of America
also are made in America.
Speaker 1 (32:48):
Right So Trump has been furious about this from the beginning.
Trump has been furious that the iPhone that you have,
most of its parts, including all the chips, come from China.
And so he said, I'm going to impose a twenty
five percent tariff specifically on apple products because you need
to make that here.
Speaker 13 (33:09):
And it worked, and I'm very proud to say that
today we're committing an additional one hundred billion to the
United States, bringing our total US investment to six hundred billion.
Over the next four years.
Speaker 1 (33:22):
There's going to be Apple factories going up across the country.
And that is along with all the automakers that are coming,
the automaker parts, the steel factories. AI. We're talking trillions
of dollars into the US economy. You know what that's
going to do. It's going to pay down the debt.
Speaker 3 (33:41):
But there are a lot of factories and a lot
of plants that are either under construction or soon we'll
be starting construction. So can't tell you exactly when, but
I want to be around in about a year from
now and two years from now, because we're going to
see an explosion I think like this country has never
seen before.
Speaker 1 (34:00):
And that's all happening right now. It's all happening right now.
They're building all these plants right now, which is why
Trump said, wait a second, these job numbers can't be right.
Do you know how many construction jobs there are going
on right now and high tech jobs that have moved
to this country. These job numbers just can't be right.
But we are going to have an economic boom in
(34:22):
about a year, maybe two years, as Donald Trump said,
it depends on how long it takes to build these factories.
Speaker 10 (34:28):
So what the.
Speaker 16 (34:28):
President President Trump is doing is leveling the playing field
on behalf of American workers, on behalf of American businesses.
The tariffs will help pay for the tax cuts and
the big beautiful bill. The tariffs will help debt reduction.
Speaker 1 (34:46):
So there we go, Donald Trump playing chess while everybody
else is playing checkers. There were Democrats just didn't understand
what was going on, Well now they do. Real exciting
news today Donald Trump will have face to face talks
with Vladimir Putin. Is this the beginning of the end
of the Ukraine War. We'll talk to correspond to John
(35:09):
Dekker about it next coming up after the seven o'clock
News