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July 2, 2024 33 mins
The media turns on Biden…

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, I'm Michael del Journal and your morning show can
be heard live as it's happening five to eight am
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(00:22):
Enjoy the podcast.

Speaker 2 (00:23):
Three starting your morning off right.

Speaker 3 (00:26):
Thank you, A new way of talk, a new way
of understanding because we're in the stage.

Speaker 1 (00:34):
This is your morning show with Michael del John. Six
minutes after the hour, early bird gets the worm. Good
morning and welcome to Tuesday, July the second here of
Our Lord, twenty twenty four. This is your morning show
and I am Michael del Journal on the Aaron streaming
live on your iHeart app. Can't have your morning show

(00:54):
without your voice. So many ways to make your voice
heard at America's at your table. Simply pick up the
phone call toll free one eight hundred six eight eight
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five twenty Two, if you're listening on the iHeartRadio app,
you'll notice a little microphone that's a talkback button. No
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(01:16):
on what we're talking about, a lot of people like
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I'm so and so from such and such line or
there as well, but use the talkback button. Of course,
there's good old fashioned email. Michael diatiheartmedia dot com. We
love for this to be a conversation. And what is
the conversation about today? Well, obviously from yesterday the US

(01:36):
Supreme Court issued its landmark ruling. And then, as you know,
there's the media, whether it is formerly newspaper now online, television, radio,
to tell you what that really means, and not just
the facts, ma'am. We'll tell you what it means. What

(01:57):
to think, what to fear, what to Yeah? I love
the Washington Post this morning. Four takeaways from the Supreme
Court's Trump immunity decision. Right away in the headline, you're like,

(02:18):
is this a Trump immunity decision? I mean, it may
thwart the political plans against Trump, but it's a Supreme
Court ruling about presidential immunity. Past, present, and future. The
ruling is a win for Trump politically, yes, for a

(02:42):
few reasons, and it's likely to reverberate in the twenty
twenty four campaign and beyond. Notice the threat and beyond,
because this would be my one question for you this morning.
Do you really think it ends here? I mean, ultimately,
what is does it mean? Well, it means your lawfair

(03:03):
attempts to remove Donald Trump prior to election is failing
and has failed again. So I'd look you in the
eye this morning and say what does it mean? First
and foremost, if they're going to beat Donald Trump, it'll
have to be on election day in November. Oh, you
mean the way it should have been from the beginning. Yeah,
will it stop? Then? This is what they plan to

(03:26):
harass him with even after he wins. Notice the sub headline, Well,
the ruling is a win for Trump for a few reasons,
and it's likely to reverberate in the campaign and beyond.
So here's the Washington Post to walk you through the

(03:46):
four takeaways from the Supreme Court ruling. Well, number one,
it's a clear victory for Trump. The court ruled that
Trump is absolutely immune from prosecution for any conduct involving
his discussions with Justice Department official a significant segment of
his federal indictment. For instance, this would seem to take
off the table Trump's interactions with Justice Department official Jeffrey Clark,

(04:09):
a key figure that's been indicted in Georgia alongside of Trump.
It ruled that he has presumed immune from prosecution for
pressuring then Vice President Mike Pence to overturn the January
sixth election. It left open the possibility that Trump can

(04:30):
be prosecuted for other actions, particularly those with regard to
people outside the executive branch and in the States. It
ruled that this alleged conduct cannot be neatly categorized as
falling within a particular So we have a little bit
of the bomb left. Oh it won't nukem, but maybe

(04:52):
we could take a legout, because that's really what we're
laughably talking about here. Presidential immunity from a constitutional law standpoint,
or presidential immunity narrativize fantasy as a political weapon to
be used against a specific candidate, because they would You're

(05:16):
gonna hear tons of audio of Joe Biden describing how
Joe Biden will or you know, how Donald Trump will
take office and with this immunity will start killing off
political opponents, literally physically killing them, because in essence with

(05:37):
the Supreme Court, Upel does what has always been Even
with all the crazy talk about the Clinton's killing people,
none has ever come to light. Is this a rational
fear or just an attempt to get you to fear something?

(05:58):
You know, the old boogeyman card? Second takeaway is likely
to delay Trump beyond the twenty twenty four election. Yeah,
I'll probably get dropped. The weapon's been diffused. Liberal justices
warned of dire consequences. A king above the law by

(06:20):
keeping it the way it's always been. Yes, I guess
if you apply the Constitution to your fantasy and your narrative,
that he is the devil incarnate, the Boogeyman, the Pavatch. Yes,
it's possible he may gather up all the young children
of America and eat them in the White House. I

(06:46):
like the fourth takeaway. Well, the hits just keep coming
for a panicky Democrat, don't they. The ruling caps a
remarkable bad five day period for the Democrats. First came
Biden's all debate performance. No, I think, first came he

(07:09):
didn't even have to spend any money, expel any effort,
appear in any debates to secure the nomination. That's your first,
right one, your second was all your legal attempts have failed.
In fact, locking him up in a court throughout a

(07:29):
primary that he had already won was actually the best
level of Donald Trump. Tone of Donald Trump, optic of
Donald Trump, position of Donald Trump. And then all the
surrogates that had to come to speak for him to
get around a gag order. Well, that's just united the
party before the convention even arrived. Fawnie, the document's case

(07:55):
in Florida, All right, I'll pick it up from where
you are. First game Biden's awful debate performance. Then came
a pair of Supreme Court ruling Friday limiting government prosecutions
of the January sixth defendants, a significant pr victory for Trump,
if nothing else, and giving the right a long sought

(08:18):
tool to challenge federal agency officials. Now comes the ruling
that significantly complicates the government's case. You mean President Biden's case,
you mean the Administrative States case? Do you mean the
Democrat Party's case against Trump? Given the prospect I mean,

(08:42):
you know, Donald Trump, I'm not adding words here, wielding
executive power in more extreme ways in a second term. Well,
given that prospect, Democrats fear, it's likely that Monday's rules
will add even more urgency to eternal party debates about

(09:04):
how to proceed. In other words, do we take out Biden?
Now that's nothing. The very same Washington Post in its
immunity decision Monday, the Supreme Court emphasized the long cherished
ideal that no one in America is above the law,
not even the president. The court's descenders and a chorus

(09:31):
of critics said the majority had the undercut, elevating the
president to a king's stat and now it's king. They
warned of future presidents unbound from the rule of law.

Speaker 4 (09:46):
The dirig the American people are active or giants, hitlers.

Speaker 1 (09:56):
They warned of future president's unbound from the rule of law,
who could freely engage in criminal activity? Well, I could
think of a few that I have already, And they
pointed to the prospect of a second can't even they
can't even say it. The ink is running off the paper.
A second term of Donald Trump? You mean the man

(10:23):
whose indictment on charges related to his efforts to overturn
the twenty twenty election prompted the Supreme Court to weigh
in in the first place, our worst fears could be realized.
You're thinking, this is a newspaper that wonders why nobody
reads it anymore. This is where democracy dies in dark quote.
If a future president sitting in the Oval office were

(10:45):
to want to commit crimes up to and including subverting
an election or remaining in power against the will of
the American people. I love this argument because they said
this about Donald Trump. He'll never leave. He's not going
to leave. He's not going to any left. He left
the first time. David Becker is the executive director for

(11:13):
the Center for Election Innovation and Research. Fancy title for
just another voice on the far left extreme and you
won't believe your ears. Becker cites hypothetical examples such as
a president ordering the military to kill their political rivals.

(11:41):
Quote if the Secretary of Defense does it, and whether
it's successful or not, everyone involved in that crime could
be prosecuted except for one the person who ordered it.
So one minute left, would the Supreme Court do protected

(12:07):
the reasonable immunity for a president president for the purposes
of governing that we've always had. It may not have
upheld or put the framework perfectly in place for a
narrativized fantasy, political weapon that's been diffused by law and

(12:29):
reality but constitutionally presidential immunity, it's pretty much the same
as a political weapon diffused another narrative that dies of reality.

(12:51):
But as Herman, as hermits, one's saying second voice, same
as the foist. Never mind our see now president, never
mind our inconvenient kinds petition. We got a boogeyman, we
got a monster. We're all going to die. That's pretty
much the response. And they gather around conference tables at

(13:12):
the Washington Post and wonder why they're not relevant anymore.
This is your Morning Show with Michael del Trono, time
from your top five stories of the day, talking with
New Road. Wow, there's only one way to stop him now,
and that's at the polls.

Speaker 2 (13:33):
To americammede must decide if they want to entrust the
president once again, the presidency to Donald Trump now knowing
he'll be more embolden to do whatever he pleases whenever
he wants to do it.

Speaker 5 (13:46):
Former President Trump's partial victory in the Supreme Court over
the question of immunity has big political implications. Trump advisor
Onlena Hamma says the ruling means Trump's election interference case
has hit a roadblock.

Speaker 4 (13:58):
I don't see how this case could go forward before
the election.

Speaker 1 (14:01):
Palmer pries the Supreme Court's decision. I've argued on immunity
for President Trump, and I think they did get right
that they recognize absolute immunity exists.

Speaker 5 (14:10):
For the delay in the case will mean Trump will
be free to campaign and not behold up in a courtroom. However,
the ruling does not impact Trump's upcoming sentencing in its
New York hush money case on July eleventh. The judge
in that case could sentence Trump to prison or home confinement.
The Justice has ruled six to three on Monday handsome
immunity from prosecution.

Speaker 1 (14:28):
I'm Marknefield, So the election interference is hampered the ability
for America to have a free and fair decision an
election moves forward if that's not democracy. As for former
President Donald Trump, he's looking to have the New York
hush money case thrown out. Hours after the US Supreme

(14:51):
Court issued its landmark ruling about immunity, Trump's lawyers filed
the letter with the judge looking to set aside the
recent guilty verdict, saying was introduced that is now protected
very interesting new wrinkles to that case. The letter will
also ask that the July eleventh sentencing be delayed. Meanwhile,

(15:12):
President Biden's family is urging the president to stay in
the twenty twenty four race following his underwhelming debate performance
against Donald Trump. Michael Cassner has the very latest.

Speaker 3 (15:22):
Tiden discussed the future of his reelection bid with family
members at Camp David over the weekend. News reports say
as family implored the president to continue his campaign and
discussed whether Top AIDS should be fired. Biden's debate performance
has prompted some to call on the president to step aside.
Top Democratic lawmakers, however, are publicly rallying around the president.

(15:46):
I'm Michael Cassner.

Speaker 1 (15:47):
Hurricane Burl is now a Category five in strength after
weakening slightly as it headed towards the Caribbean. Mark Mayfield
is back to phillis.

Speaker 5 (15:55):
In according to the National Hurricane Center in Miami. Beryl
has maximum sustained wind of one hundred and sixty miles
per hour and is moving west northwest at twenty miles
per hour. Forecaster Sain Beryl is expected to remain an
extremely dangerous major hurricane as it moves through the Windward
Islands into the southeastern Caribbean, with hurricane conditions possible in
Jamaica by Wednesday.

Speaker 1 (16:16):
I'm Mark Mayfield. In sports at twenty twenty four, Summer
Olympics are coming up in less than a month. Tammy
Trehilo reports.

Speaker 6 (16:23):
The Moon Biles will become the oldest female gymnast to
represent the US at the Olympic Games since the nineteen
fifties after qualifying for her third Olympic team. She'll be
joined by Sunni Lei, Jordan Chiles, Jay Carey, and Hesli
Rivera in Paris. In other actions, Sidney McLaughlin Levon won
the four hundred meter hurdle final with a world record
setting time at the US Olympic team trials on Sunday.

Speaker 1 (16:46):
Hi, I'm Michael. We'd love to have you listen every
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(17:06):
always grateful you're here. Now, enjoy the podcast. Let's face it,
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(17:26):
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(17:50):
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All right, waking up this morning, Obviously, it's gonna be
a lot of discussion about the Supreme Court ruling on
presidential immunity. Yeah, there's the constitutional view and then there's
the political view. The political view is Donald Trump's opponents
have been using lawfair to try to keep him from

(18:10):
being on the ballot. Donald Trump is right when he
says they want to defeat me without letting the people
have a say, and they always make him out to
be a boogeyman. He won't accept the outcome of the election. Well,
quite frankly, he had a lot of questions about the
last election and he still left. So there's every reason
to believe he would leave again if he lost. This

(18:33):
is going to make it harder for him to have
to leave. That's going to make him harder to defeat,
especially with an old candidate running against him. Now that
brings up the other big story. Did Joe Biden have
a bad night because of a cold or did Joe Biden,
from his perspective, run for president and life expectancy And

(18:56):
now we're four and a half years down the road
and he's beyond life expectancy and it may be beyond
what would be beyond virtually every eighty plus ers capability. Well,
that begs up you know the question, how do we
get Joe Biden. Well, his party was going to produce

(19:17):
Bernie Sanders again in twenty sixteen. It was going to
produce Bernie Sanders in an outsider referendum election. As it
produced Donald Trump. Democrats weren't interested in that. You super
delegates rigged it and got Hillary. Four years later, the
Democrat Party voters were going to produce Bernie Sanders again.
Something had to be done, after all, Donald Trump is

(19:40):
the devil himself. So a deal was cut in South
Carolina and Joe Biden, a former vice president from much
glorious days the Obama administration who came in fourth and
Iowa seventh. In New Hampshire, by the way, he trails
in New Hampshire right now against Donald Trump. Yeah, in play,

(20:01):
and he better get there and try to defend him.
Michigan seems to be a lost cause according to the
governor there, And I got news for you. Everybody laughed
at me. New York is in play. But enough of that.
So they cut a deal with Joe Biden in South Carolina.
They weaponize COVID. They hide him in a basement. By

(20:24):
weaponizing COVID, they change election laws without going through state legislatures,
which was highly unconstitutional. But harvest the ballots win, the
swing states win the presidency. Was their plan then to
use the old man to get the White House, then
usher him out and bring who they wanted in. If
it was it failed and Biden wouldn't leave, And guess what,

(20:45):
They're in the same situation now because he won't leave again.
The difference is, in all honesty, he's a lot worse
than he was four years ago. Some of you that
are close to my age have parents in this age range.
Four years is big. The difference between a parent at

(21:09):
seventy eight and eighty two can be dramatically different, and
the difference between a president at eighty two and eighty
six or a parent at eighty two or eighty six
is dramatically different. Well, we see some of those dramatic
differences in what big picture is. The media has definitely
taken sides against this president and the shadow campaign to

(21:31):
win in twenty twenty. They said, well, the key was
we controlled the narrative, the media. We could silence any
opposing views because we controlled technocracy and social media. Then
we changed election laws and that's how we used a
shadow campaign to save democracy, which is a fancy way
of saying stole an election. And that's all in Time Magazine,

(21:53):
February fifteenth, twenty twenty one. Go read it for yourself.
Claim was a part of that. He ended up being
the cheapest staff. But now we see the media doesn't
want to play along anymore. Can't say that across the board.
Nancy Pelosi came up. A lot of Democrat Party officials
are standing by the president. The media is not, And

(22:16):
I think that's what you saw CNN orchestrate. They let
you see a side of the president they've been hiding,
and then the minute the debate was over, cut back
to the studio and have their panel of eight tell
everyone the president needs to leave. So now let's go
inside Axios, one of their big leftist publications, and see

(22:44):
for yourself how they've turned against the president the past
thirty six hours. Showcase two Joe Biden's the veteran president
rallying voters in a swing state and an eighty one
year old man struggling to string thoughts together in a debate.
Why does it matter? The public? Split screen isn't new
to many inside the White House, where top aids and

(23:08):
meticulously staged managed every aspect of how you see the president,
and overmanaged how he lives to protect you from seeing
that his sleep schedule, his orthopedic shoes, his walks to marine,
on his climbs aboard Air Force one. This is all

(23:33):
to make you not focus on his age. Internally, many
aids have seen flashes of an absent minded Biden, but
typically brush them off as ordinary brain farts, but usually
see him engaged. Thursday's debate has shattered the White House's

(23:57):
efforts to show Biden at his best, a president capable
of serving. Believe it or not, until twenty twenty nine,
you realized he'd be in office till twenty twenty nine
and be eighty six years old. Now, I remember that

(24:19):
Joe Biden at seventy eight telling corn pop stories. Compared
to the Joe Biden the debate, that's two different Joe bid.
I can't even imagine what the eighty six year old
Joe Biden projects forward to be. Axios continues. In the
debate against Donald Trump, Biden often looked lost. Remember I

(24:42):
when we talked about it the morning after, it was
an audible disaster, But it was it was an optical nightmare.
Biden often looked lost, slack jawed, delivered me and during
answers in a hoarse voice. Some campaign ads projected calm

(25:07):
Friday and frame the debate just as a bad night
and they'll recover from it. Other Biden AIDS, donors, and
senior Democrats were deeply shaken as Trump and other Republicans
questioned his fitness for office. Beyond the politics of whether
Biden can beat Trump again, the AIDS expressed new worries

(25:28):
about whether the president can carry out his duties another
four years. Remember how we talk about bias every day.
Stories we cover stories, We don't angles. We look at angles,
we don't people, we talk to people. We don't quotes
we use quotes. We don't that has This is Axios

(25:48):
telling you that has all been meticulously done to protect
the president. No longer are they willing to protect him now?
Watch who they talk to. Friday by needs some of
those concerns with a full throated campaign rally, where he
found a more comfortable setting with cheering crowd and teleprompter.

(26:11):
He also, by the way, if the president can only
perform with a teleprompter, then who's really running the country.
Whoever wrote the teleprompter, maybe that person should come out
of the closet and run for president. But this ain't
also acknowledged he done partly the night before the person

(26:39):
that I found that from bottomus as I used as
well as I used to crowd Roaring and Raleigh. But
I know how to tell the truth, I know right
from wrong, and I know how to do this job,

(27:00):
and I know how to get things done that Axios
goes into this. The time of day is important as
to which of the two bidens will appear. Isn't that frightening?
Do you think a terrorist attack will wait for the

(27:21):
right time of day? Do you think Putin will invade
at the right time of day? Do you think Radical
Islamis coming through the border will allow Biden to nap
between ten and four pm, four ten am and four
pm so they can carry out a terrorist attack. The
time of day is important as to which of the

(27:42):
two bidens appears. From ten am this is Axios, and
this is this is all anybody should be talking about today.
I mean, I get we got a landmark decision, but
this is all anybody should be talking about. From ten
to four pm. Biden is dependably engaged, and many of

(28:05):
his public events in front of the cameras are held
within those hours because you get outside that time range
and you see what you saw during the debate. Now
suddenly the media will talk to those people. Now suddenly
the media will tell those stories. Now suddenly the media
won't protect him. Remember in the shadow campaign in twenty twenty,

(28:27):
you needed the media to control the narrative. You needed
social media to block any opposing views. The media is
no longer going to cover for him now, maybe he
and his family are determined, Maybe a lot of Democrats
are will understand by him. The media is not axious,

(28:51):
lays out everything, the cameras catching first Lady Joe Biden
gingerly helping the president off stage after a debate. Okay,
so in the shadow campaign the media controlled the narrative.
Now they won't cover for him. The other aspect was
social media opposing any opposing views. Oh, but that's changed

(29:13):
with X and its new owner. That's part two of
our discovery.

Speaker 5 (29:19):
This is James from Greenwood, South Carolina, and my morning
show is your Morning Show with Michael Dozorne.

Speaker 4 (29:25):
These are your top five stories of the day. Well,
Marono Supreme Court rules for Trump.

Speaker 1 (29:38):
Biden reacts, that's today in politics.

Speaker 5 (29:41):
President and Biden says President Trump's partial victory in the
Supreme Court over immunity since a dangerous president.

Speaker 2 (29:48):
America media must decide they want to entrust the president
once again the presidency to Donald Trump, now knowing he'll
be more embolden to do whatever he chooses whenever he
he wants.

Speaker 1 (30:00):
To do it.

Speaker 5 (30:01):
In an address from the White House Monday, Biden said
that the Scotis six ' to three decision means there
are virtually no limits on presidential power. He went on
to add that voters to deserve the ability to have
an answer before election day on what took place January
twenty twenty one. Justices ruled on Monday that Trump is
shielded on some levels from criminal charges for AXI.

Speaker 1 (30:20):
He took an office.

Speaker 5 (30:21):
The decision could impact all of Trump's pending court cases
and will probably delay his federal election interference case until
after the election, and President Biden's family is urging him
to stay in the twenty twenty four race following his
shafey debate performance last week. Biden's performance has prompted some
to call on the President to step aside that's politics,
Mark Mayfield, NBC News Radio.

Speaker 1 (30:41):
Now you may ask yourself throughout the day, why aren't
we afraid of Joe Biden, who seemingly is cognitively impaired
having such powers and what he could do? I mean
the guy we saw on televisions walking around with the football.
Because these kinds of narrative political weapons only work against
Democrat opponents, not themselves. Keep your eye on the irrational fear.

(31:06):
Don't think this through too well. Meanwhile, for President Trump
and his attorneys are looking to have their New York
hush money case thrown out. Hours after the Supreme Court
issued its landmark ruling on presidential immunity, Trump's lawyers filed
the letter with the judge looking to set aside the
recent guilty verdict, saying evidence was introduced that is now protected.

(31:27):
Oh what to do with that legally? And would that
delay the sentence as well? First Lady Joe Biden isn't
giving up on her husband's run for president after his
shaky debate. She told Vogue magazine. We will not let
those ninety minutes define our four years of presidency ours.
You're just the first lady, need one of the would

(31:51):
it be joke on all of us. If Jill Biden's
really running the country, she said, Joe will always do
what's best for the country. We're not going anywhere. Therefore,
this story obviously isn't going anywhere. A number of US
military bases in Europe are on heightened alert over a
possible terrorist attack.

Speaker 3 (32:10):
Michael Kasner reports The bases include US European Command in Germany.
It's not clear what exactly caused the alert to be
raised to the second highest level. The European authorities have
been tightening security ahead of the Paris Olympics and the
ongoing European Football Championships. I'm Michael Cassner.

Speaker 1 (32:29):
Hurricane Burrel is now a Category five in the Caribbean.
Mark Mayfield's back to fill us in.

Speaker 5 (32:34):
According to the Nationial Hurricane Center in Miami, Barrel has
maximum sustained winds of one hundred and sixty miles per
hour and is moving west northwest at twenty miles per hour.
Forecaster Saint Beryl is expected to remain an extremely dangerous
major hurricane as it moves through the Windward islands into
the southeastern Caribbean, with hurricane conditions possible in Jamaica by Wednesday.

(32:55):
I'm Mark Mayfield.

Speaker 1 (32:56):
The cost of celebrating freedom is going up again this year.
More from USDA economist Megan Schweitzer. All in total, the.

Speaker 6 (33:03):
Price of our our burger rose by four cents, two
dollars and twenty two cents per burger.

Speaker 1 (33:09):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael Ndel Choano
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