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July 30, 2024 30 mins
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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 eighth 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 three starting your

(00:21):
morning off right. A new way of talk, a new
way of understanding, because we're in this together. This is
your Morning Show with Michael dell Chuano. Good morning, from
the bottom of my cup of coffee to the top
of yours. Welcome to Tuesday, July the thirtieth, twenty twenty four.
Seven minutes after the hour, Bring on John Decker A

(00:43):
little early here. John. Of course, his boycott in the
Olympics has nothing to do with the opening ceremonies. There's
not enough tennis in prime time, so he's refusing to watch.

Speaker 2 (00:53):
No.

Speaker 1 (00:53):
I wanted to share with you. Did you get to
watch any of that gymnastics last night?

Speaker 3 (00:58):
Well?

Speaker 2 (00:58):
I watched it in real time. I didn't have to
wait till last night.

Speaker 1 (01:01):
Well I did both yeah, I did both. I shouldn't have.
But for most listeners they saw in prime time. You know,
it's really a matter of perspective because the world story
is Japan, how China slipped and fell at the end,
and Japan managed to get gold from China. Of course,
here in America, we were focused on our men who
have not meddled since two thousand and eight. First of all,

(01:23):
Fred Richard doesn't sound like a household name, right, it's
going to be. He is everything Simone Biles is. He
was absolutely amazing. Paul Judah was great, Asher Hong Brody
Malone and the story of what he's overcome both in injury,
the games and losing his mother. But then we get
this little specialist, Stephan Netarosik, who is from Penn State.

(01:46):
He couldn't look more like from the movie Revenge of
the Nerds, right, He's got the big, thick glasses. But
I was just sitting there thinking all he does is
pommel horse, and that poor kid has been sitting there
all week. He's sitting there all night long waiting to
come in like wild Thing in the movie Major League
and do it. And boy, he hit it, nailed it.
I mean that performance in those final two stations and

(02:09):
they managed to get the medal. This is what the
Olympics are all about.

Speaker 2 (02:13):
And yeah, I know to me yesterday, yeah awesome, you know,
and let's see if the women can follow it up.
But with gold, you know, and they of course are
the favorites, and we've got the best women gymnasts in
the world, so well, let's keep it goal. In the
US in the medal count we have the most medals,
but Japan, as you mentioned, they actually lead in the

(02:34):
gold medal.

Speaker 1 (02:35):
In the gold. Yeah, nothing gets by you, Decker. And
by the way, may I just say too, I found,
you know, every Olympics you find out. I was talking
about this earlier in the week. When I was growing
up in the seventies, boxing was huge. I mean, that's
how we met Sugar Ray Leonard. There was no beach volleyball.
Swimming ruled and Mark Spitz and I used to love diving.

(02:56):
I don't see diving as much as I would like.
And then you know, track and field was kind of
lost on me. And then now you find new sports
that you love. Beach volleyball is huge now, but I
fell in love women's rugby, and boy do we have
a tough team. I watched them play Great Britain yesterday.

(03:16):
It's a blast. Check that out. They're gonna play New
Zealand today. That's my pick to click. You will love
women's rugby and boy are they tough. All right, let's
get to the numbers. Here's the numbers. I use this
analogy behind your back when you get on a roller
coach and there's that long going up and all you
are is anxiety and scared, and then you did that

(03:37):
little little turn and you get to a point where
you're like, Okay, well, whatever's going to happen is going
to happen now, and you just move. So that's kind
of where we're at. We're probably what ninety eight days
from the election, thirty days or so from early voting.
We're two weeks away from a DNC convention, and we
may be hours away from Kamala Harris making her VP pick.

(03:58):
And all we know is in North carol a governor
won't be one of them. That's right.

Speaker 2 (04:03):
Roy Cooper took himself out of the running last night,
and I think it had a lot to do with
North Carolina's constitution. Anytime the governor of North Carolina is
out of the state, the lieutenant governor takes over, and
the lieutenant governor is a Republican, and he didn't want
him playing mischief while he was out of the state campaigning.
So that's certainly one reason. And he was the oldest

(04:26):
and most experienced candidate that Kamala Harris was potentially considering
as her running mate, Roy Cooper sixty seven years old.
So she's got a number of choices that she is
still considering, among them Joshapiro, the governor of Pennsylvania, and
Mark Kelly, the Senator from Arizona. I put my money
on Mark Kelly. I think that's a great choice for

(04:48):
Kamala Harris because of his interesting background that he brings
to the table. Former astronaut, former fighter pilot. He's won
statewide twice in the battleground state of Arizona, and he's
married to Gabby Gifford, so that's an interesting story.

Speaker 1 (05:02):
Also that you're not gonna go with Donald Trump Junior
not getting out, you give it up on it. Uh.
You know, by the way, a week ago, I picked
Mark Kelly, so we're actually in agreement. I don't know
how that works when you and I agree I think
Jesus returns when you and I agree. No, So Shapiro,

(05:24):
that's problematic from you know, the it makes great sense
for the map, and it's all about that map Pennsylvania,
but that that's an Israel problem and a Jewish problem,
and I don't know how that would play with certain
portions of the party, Uh, especially in Michigan and Minnesota.

Speaker 2 (05:41):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (05:41):
And I guess when it when it comes to Whitmer,
we're just going to assume that two women isn't probably
very viable. And so that's kind of how I arrived
at Mark Kelly. I mean, that makes sense, and it's
a play in Arizona. R FK. You know, that's the
one that would make me go, that's a game changer.
If for somehow they were healed things with it, and
you take away that that RFK effect, especially in those

(06:06):
swing states and put him with Kamala Harris, well then
you'd have me going, oh poo poop. So as long
as it's not RFK, I think Kelly's the best choice.
What are your thoughts?

Speaker 2 (06:15):
Yeah, well, I hadn't even thought about RFK. I don't
think he's an RFKI junior. I don't think he's in
the mix.

Speaker 1 (06:21):
No, I don't either, but that's the one that would
make me go a crap.

Speaker 2 (06:25):
Yeah. I mean, look, you know I've heard Pete boutagege
the Transportation Secretary, also potentially there. He's from the Midwest.
But to me, you want someone who's won statewide, who
can bring a state to the table and put it
in play, and that's Mark Kelly. You know, he checks
so many different boxes. And you've you've seen he's excited

(06:48):
about this possibility of being a running mate, being elevated
to national stature. You know, people say, well, he's not
well known. Well, let me give you a number of
individuals who are not well known nationally when they were
chosen as running mates. Remember a guy named dan Quayle Juice,
the senator from Indiana named by George H. W. Bush

(07:09):
as his running mate. And you know, look, I think
Mike Pence was certainly known in conservative circles, but wasn't
known nationally when Donald Trump chose him most recently, So
you don't have to be I have that national stature.
But you know, I think that Mark Kelly is someone
who is well known enough to be in that final list.

(07:30):
That Kamala Harris is considering to be her running mate.

Speaker 1 (07:33):
I know you need to run, but we have twenty
seconds to go. You're the White House correspondent. You gotta
know what's the scuttle butt. What do you hear on?

Speaker 2 (07:43):
What am I hearing about running mate? Asking me?

Speaker 1 (07:46):
Yeah, I.

Speaker 2 (07:48):
Hear what you hear? They keep these things very close
to the vest. You know, I didn't hear anything as
it relates to Donald Trump's running mate. And there's a deadline.
That line is August the seventh. That's the deadline that
Kamala Harris is working with to name her running mates.
So by the next Friday, we will know who she's

(08:09):
chosen and we'll see how the rollout goes for this person.
And you know, there has to be a comfort level.
That's always the big thing with these choices. You have
to feel comfortable with the person that you're not only
going to campaign with, but if you win, you're going
to govern with.

Speaker 1 (08:23):
So I'm going to make this prediction. It's going to
be somebody that is very supportive of single women and
loves cats. Can we all agree on that?

Speaker 2 (08:31):
All right?

Speaker 1 (08:32):
John John Decker, our White House Correspondent attorney, always a
pleasure we'll talk again, hopefully tomorrow for fifteen minutes after
the hour. If you're just waking up, these are your
top five stories of the day. Biden's war on the
judicial branch of government in the name of saving democracy
on its way to nowhere is our future story in
today in politics Well.

Speaker 4 (08:53):
Speaking from the LBJ Presidential Library in Austin, Texas, Biden
called for eighteen year term limits for justices and enforceable
code of ethics. He also proposed a constitutional amendment to
limit the broad immunity granted to presidents by a recent
Supreme Court decision. Biden argued that extreme opinions from the
Supreme Court in recent years have undermined long established civil

(09:15):
rights protections. He cited the Court's decision to overturn Roe v.
Wade and grant broad immunity to presidents. I'm Mark Mayfield.

Speaker 1 (09:22):
Well, our politicians love to spend a lot of money.
That's why we're thirty five trillion dollars in debt. And
we like to spend a lot of money getting them elected,
and they've collected a lot. Brian Shook has our expensive
Road to the White House.

Speaker 5 (09:35):
Road to the White House twenty twenty four former President
Trump was in New Jersey again on Sunday for another
fundraiser as Kamala Harris hits a fundraising milestone, with the
Harris campaign claiming it raised two hundred million dollars in
the week since she became the presumptive Democratic nominee. Trump

(09:56):
was at the Jersey Shore again over the weekend for
a private fundraiser, this year time.

Speaker 3 (10:00):
She's a radical left Luda techt she has no clue.

Speaker 1 (10:04):
She's evil.

Speaker 5 (10:05):
The latest ABC IPSIS poll shows Harris's favorability rising to
forty three percent, with Trump slipping to thirty six percent
after getting a post GOP convention bump in Washington. I'm
Brian Shook.

Speaker 1 (10:20):
I remember my first starter home eighty eight thousand dollars
in a really Rockwellian type neighborhood in tels Oklahoma. And
Thenandre and I's first home in South Tulsa. I think
that one was two hundred and twenty three thousand dollars.
A typical starter home today for our children at least

(10:41):
one million dollars in two hundred and thirty seven states.
Lisa Taylor has more, and it's shocking.

Speaker 6 (10:46):
That's according to new numbers published by Real estate marketplace Zillow,
which defines a starter home as those in the lowest
third of home values in a given area. Five years ago,
only eighty seven city saw starter home prices of a
million dollars, or more more than half of the seeing
the surge or in California. New York came in second,
followed by New Jersey, Florida, and Massachusetts. I'mly sit tailor.

Speaker 1 (11:07):
Well, no one will say it to you this way,
but the truth is Joe Biden's policies drove up energy prices,
and then to try to protect his political bad decision,
he used reserves to kind of keep them down at
least into the four dollars per gallon range. Now he's
using billions of your dollars to replenish that strategic petroleum reserve.

(11:31):
And no one's telling you who he's buying it from either,
and I suspect it might even be from a few enemies.
Tammy Trolilo has more.

Speaker 7 (11:38):
The purchase of more than four point six million barrels
of crude oil is the latest as the Department of
Energy works to refill the emergency stockpile. More than one
hundred and eighty million barrels were released in twenty twenty
two in an effort to heat gas prices down after
Russia's invasion of Ukraine. As of July nineteenth, the reserve,
which is located in Louisiana, had about three hundred and

(11:59):
seventy four million barrels of oil.

Speaker 1 (12:01):
I'm tammaged for heo COVID Con. I mean, Comic Con
is over, but you may have brought home something you
didn't want to bring home. Pre Tennis says more.

Speaker 8 (12:09):
The event is playfully being called comic crud or Corona
Con because a lot of people who attended Comic Con
have now tested positive for COVID nineteen. Many attendees isolated
in expensive hotels, unable to use their non transferable event tickets.
The county says there's a fourteen percent increase in COVID
nineteen cases in San Diego right now, but event organizers

(12:31):
say there's no way to trace how many people contracted
COVID nineteen over the weekend, or if they even got
it at Comic Con. I'm pre Tennis.

Speaker 1 (12:39):
In sports, the Paris Olympics, the highlight was a bronze
by the men's gymnastics team, but in all team USA
added eight more medals, and they lead all nations with
twenty total medals, including three gold, eight silver, and nine bronze.
In baseball, Rangers, Guardians and Dbacks one that's Cardinals and
Mariners lost and the race were off birthdays. She just

(13:01):
having my baby. He probably wants to be known for
my way, right. Paul Anka eighty three years old Today,
Actor and governor Donald Schwazenegger is seventy seven. Actor Laurence
Fishburn's sixty three, and friends actress Lisa Kudro is sixty one.
And if it's your birthday, Happy birthday. We are so
glad you were born. This is your morning show with

(13:24):
Michael Deltno, we cannot have your morning show without your voice,
So you can call toll free eight hundred six eight
eight ninety five twenty two. One eight hundred six eight
eight ninety five twenty two. I know you love in
this day and age. On the iHeartRadio app, the talkback button,
there's a microphone. You press it, you can leave a message.
There's no waiting on hold. We get it instantly and

(13:44):
we can share it with the class. There's also good
old fashioned email. Michael d we spare you the spelling
of the last name Michael D at iHeartMedia dot com,
which is where Kathy writes. The news report that just
played said Biden started releasing from the oil reserves to
bring down gas prices after the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

(14:05):
But it actually started doing it in November of twenty
twenty one. The Russian invasion wasn't for months later in
February and twenty twenty two. Another media attempt to rewrite history,
writes Kathy, Well, we don't have a free press. Journalism's dead.
We have agendized, propagandized political arm of the Democrat Party. Yes,

(14:26):
they rewrite history, they rewrite reality. That's why it's turned
into a Mama La Kamala brother loves traveling Salvation show.
That's invincible. It get be beat. Oh when I mentioned
that talkback button, Where did this one come from? This
is Dave out of Phoenix. Dave in Phoenix, Arizona, listening
on k FYI, one of the greatest talk stations in America.

Speaker 3 (14:46):
He says, been listening to your show. First time I
heard you. Never heard of you before, but hey, I
really enjoy your program. I appreciate your Christian testimony so
much so I went out and bought your book.

Speaker 1 (14:58):
It's a really good book.

Speaker 3 (15:00):
Hey, I bet you could probably wish you could redo
chapter ten in that book. By the way, I don't
think you're as active now as you were back in Tulsa.

Speaker 1 (15:09):
Why is that great comments? It's always nice to hear
people that like you. Yes, you never heard of me,
As a common response, I get I never heard of you.
I stay under the radar for good reason, keeps the
death threats down. Chapter ten ten. I don't have any regrets.

(15:30):
I think my understanding of the Holy War Post nine
to eleven in two thousand and two is the same
perspective I have on it today. I thank you. I
guess if you're into the narrative of no weapons of
mass destruction and somehow George W. Bush is to blame
for everything in neoconn Republicans, that's getting very narrative ized

(15:52):
in way off topic. As far as being active, you know,
it is one of the best books that no one's read,
just as I claim most days, this is one of
the best radio shows that nobody listens to me. But no,
we were very active at a time of calling and warning.
Oklahoma was at a crossroads, and it made its choice,

(16:16):
and everything in this book warns about that choice is
now their reality. Wasn't fun to do. It was fun
to connect people to what being an American is. And
it's not a geographic location. It's a duty, a duty
of self governance and a duty of holding elected officials accountable.

(16:36):
And there is no one more powerful than we the people.
And at that time in that state, that was a
high calling and it came at a high price too,
dead animals in my yard, death threat. But then I
guess God rewarded me, rewarded me and sent me to Tennessee.
And with exception of getting actively involved in the Tea

(16:58):
Party movement, which which was American, was grassroots, was organic,
it has since been absorbed by the Republican Party. By
and large, I live in a state that doesn't have
a lot that needs to be active in changing, So

(17:20):
that's part of partly where I live. And then the
focus is more nationally. So most of my activity until
I start traveling to some of these markets is done
here on the air, and I like to think I'm
speaking the truth as much as ever and being as
active much as ever. But thanks so much for that.

Speaker 3 (17:36):
I have a question, Please just for the audience out there,
please give them the name of the book and maybe
where they can find it.

Speaker 2 (17:42):
Well.

Speaker 1 (17:42):
You know what's funny is I think the only way
you can get the book is on eBay now, and
you'll find one, and it probably will be autographed by
me to somebody else. And people are paying. I saw
somebody paying ninety nine dollars for it. I wish I
had some copies. I would give some away to our listeners.

(18:03):
But the book is called standing Up for What's Right.
The only thing left shocking in life is the truth.
And I wrote it as a morning host of eleven
seventy KFAQ in tuls Oklahoma. I think it was two
thousand and three. I wrote it in like three nights,
No kidd with my cat LEXI really and you're hutting
buttons on my keyboard as I wrote it. I just
stayed up and didn't sleep for three days and wrote it.
But it's it is good. Thank you for the compliment.

(18:25):
You know what the honor is? The honor is On
July thirtieth, twenty twenty four, every market, I Love, Memphis,
Saint Louis, Nashville, Sacramento, Washington, d C, Dallas, Texas, Tampa, Florida.
I love them all, but KFYI is the station I

(18:45):
always wanted to work for. Oh really. In fact, I
was up for a job at KFYI once. Really, and
I said, And the guy asked me, you know, do
you have any questions, any apprehensions, any concerns from your end?
And I said, yeah, I hate heat and I'm happy
on a cloudy, cool day. And I remember the guy
who was the I think, I don't know if it
was the general manager of the program director. I really

(19:06):
don't remember, but he said it was the greatest line ever. Well,
it's pretty much sunny here every single day, and and
I wonder if that's why I didn't get the job.
You listen to one of the best talk stations in
a market today, KFYI AM five fifteen News Talk five
fifty in Phoenix, Arizona. So it's my honor that you're

(19:27):
listening to me, not the other way around. All Right,
forty minutes after the hours, so we were just playing
you this montage, and the montage just shows you how
this is more than just a narrative ized momentum. This
is manipulative messaging and propaganda. What I am in awe

(19:47):
of is how they all get on the same page. Now,
what you can't see is the visual of this montage
because so many of these news anchors and reporters in
talking ads are former Democrat operatives like Jens. But really,
how do they this is? This is about fifteen different

(20:10):
networks talking heads, reporters and anchors, and they're all saying
the same thing at once to position in your mind
that JD. Vance is weird, just like they were positioning
in your mind the Jdvans hates single women and hates cats. Now,

(20:31):
just as they convince you Dan Quayle was stupid, they
want to convince you JD. Vance is weird, weird, just
playing weird, just plain weird.

Speaker 9 (20:40):
That stuff is weird. They come across weird and then
they start being weird. Yeah, they're weird, being really weird.

Speaker 1 (20:45):
It's such a weirdo.

Speaker 8 (20:47):
Trump and is weirdo running mate are weird, deeply and
profoundly weird.

Speaker 2 (20:50):
They are weird, these Republicans just being weird.

Speaker 1 (20:53):
It's just weird. It's really weird. Complican weirdness goes even deeper.

Speaker 3 (20:58):
She said a lot of things that are you're a
weird style that he brings shear policy. It's just with
the weird thing because it is a thing.

Speaker 1 (21:07):
What was weird was talking about diet mountain dew. Who
drinks die of mountain dew? Who ever seen the guy laugh?
That seems very weird.

Speaker 9 (21:15):
To me that an adult can go through six and
a half years of being in the public eye if
he has laughed it's at.

Speaker 1 (21:20):
Someone, not with someone. That that is weird behavior, weird
and cultish. These are weird people. On the other Okay,
this is propaganda and it goes on forever. Even Elon
Musk on Twitter said, come on, you can't be so
obvious with your propaganda. Now you expect this from not journalists,

(21:42):
free press. This is agendized propaganda, political arm of the
Democrat Party. Don't forget the way they got old Joe
Senile then hiding in a basement elected. They controlled the
media narrative, they silenced any opposing use because they controlled
technocracy and social media. Then they weaponized COVID, changed election

(22:05):
laws and in key swing districts and precincts of swing states,
they stole the election fair and square with mail in
voting and harvesting a ballots. That's how they did it,
and they're still doing it now. The fact that they
would do it and pivot in such a way within
days is breathtaking. How they get them all in the

(22:26):
same message at once, like this, is there some mass
email I'm not included in? And there is? That's one thing.
The fact that some of you in the right silo
are buying it, well, that's a shame on you. Now

(22:51):
there is a narrative momentum, but it's not a political rally.
Axios kind of lays out, well, she's got six to
ten days to pick a running mate, two weeks till
the convention, a month till the first mail in ballots
are mailed out. We're about ninety eight days away from

(23:13):
the election. She's certainly enjoying a massive week. Now she
has to show that she can make the momentum last.
My favorite story a brand new battleground State. Paulding shows

(23:36):
President Trump winning the crucial swing state of Pennsylvania forty
seven forty five and a head to head matchup with
Kamala Harris. Yeah, what happens when you're throwing RFK and
then they get into specific questions about Kamala Harris, were

(23:58):
you better off Undernald Trump or under Biden. Harris, the
former president Donald Trump, has a fourteen percentage point lead
fifty one to thirty seven percent in Pennsylvania. Yeah, you
have a Mama La Kamala brother loves traveling salvation show,

(24:20):
narrativised momentum, but it's not a political rally or reality
and they know it. For the working class masses though,
the economy has been one tough hill for Harris to climb,

(24:42):
and a shocking new survey from CNN almost four and
ten Americans thirty nine percent state that they worry they
cannot pay their bills. Howmember that powerre you compared to
four years ago? It's the economy, stupid. These are all
things that are still attached to her, no matter what

(25:02):
the media that no one's influenced by, no one's even
quite frankly watching or has any credibility as saying, I
know I'm out of time and I'm running late, but
this momentum that you're fearing is fake. It's narrative, it's propaganda,
and it always dies of reality, consequence and truth, unless,

(25:28):
of course, you fall for it. Hi, my name is
Bern Aaron, and my morning show is your morning show
with Michael Del Giorno. We just wrote me love the
show exclamation point. I'm a God loving, faith relying conservative,
but I'm actually considered voting for Harris and Mark Kelly

(25:50):
if it gets that looser out of the Senate representing Arizona.
That's tempting, and maybe why is quite frankly, I actually
think the Senate in the House matter more than the
White House. All Right, fifty two minutes after the hour,
eight minutes to be to work on time. We always
give the last story to Rory Rory. The more we
understand this shooter plan for about the better part of
a year, local law enforcement before the Trump assassination attempt

(26:17):
to show the officer's rate it shows improves the officers
race concerned ninety minutes before the incident took place. The
more we know, the worse it looks. And the FBI
and Secret Service are both scheduled to testify today. What's
the preview?

Speaker 10 (26:30):
Yeah, I think it's going to be the lack of
communication between the federal and local law enforcement officers. We
got some very early fingerpointing, but we've heard from Pennsylvania
officials sort of slapping back and slapping down those claims
by the Secret Service. So I think we're going to
get into more of that jurisdictional fight. And the bigger
concern is going forward. You know, look, we've got ninety

(26:52):
eight days of campaigning in front of us. We want
to make sure left or right, Democrat, Republican that those
people out there talking and the audio inst is underlined
are safe.

Speaker 1 (27:02):
All right, So this shooter was considered a person of suspicion.
He had a rangefinder, which he wasn't on a golf
course for the assumption was for shooting purposes. Then they're
following him, then they lose track of him, then he
ends up on an unprotected roof. Okay. Then we have
an incident in Nashville this past weekend, two people of

(27:24):
suspicion followed the actual president of former President Donal Trump
was delayed entering until those two people of suspicion were found.
Is that a result of the mistakes in Pennsylvania because
they shouldn't have been made? Then, I mean, this is
like protection one oh one? Isn't it a little bit?

Speaker 10 (27:41):
And we'll see if it is in response and whether
or not they have changed protocols. Apparently the first in
this most recent incident. They went through the initial screening,
not through the second screening, and they turned out not
to be a threat. But as it relates to what
happened in Pennsylvania, you know, losing him for ninety minutes,
and then what's a suspion person versus what's a threatening person?

(28:02):
And there is a distinction there in the minds of
the Secret Service anyway, and that's something that will likely
be a focus of discussion.

Speaker 1 (28:09):
When does a person cross that threshold? Your morning show
national correspondent Rory O'Neil. So we're using the old nine
to eleven, right, a failure for the different agencies to communicate,
all right, So here we go what might be because
the notion was okay, the Secret Service director, that was
a joke. First, she started talking about the pitch of

(28:30):
the roofs. That was laughable. She didn't show up for
the news conference and for political and or cover your reasons.
All right, she's gone, But we got a long way
to understanding this because the problems had to be deeper
than her, right right.

Speaker 10 (28:45):
So now you've got this acting director who was an underling,
Ronald Row he'll be testifying today and the FBI's deputy
director will be testifying today before this Joint Senate committee,
and there are a lot more of these investigations. We
got word yesterday of a House joint committee that's going
to be looking into this bipartisan so they're going to
pick apart what they can, but a lot of it

(29:06):
is going to have to do with that line of
communication from the federal down to the local level. Those
SWAT officers in Pennsylvania saying they had zero interaction with
the Secret Service going into this, and that's something I
think you're going to find when you have these rare events, rare,
these campaign events that happen very rarely in odd locations

(29:28):
compared to you know, coming to the Washington Hilton where
they go all the time and they know the routine
and how to handle it and how to go through it,
versus being in Beaver County, Pennsylvania and not interacting with
the law enforcement.

Speaker 1 (29:39):
There's frequently you know, I don't like to play the
partisan narrative game, but it was interesting when it was
the Secret Service director. You didn't see your typical political
theater where the Republicans were attacking and the Democrats or
filibustering or trying to give another side of it. No,
both were appalled at the lack of leadership.

Speaker 10 (29:59):
Both were plenty of oscars could have been given out
of that hearing.

Speaker 1 (30:04):
Well, but you know what I'm saying. And then when
it came to other testimony, then it starts getting a
little bit more political theater. Be interesting to see what
it is today with the FBI and Secret Service both
in attendance. That makes it tough. Who do we watch
the Olympics or the testimonies today? I guess we'll keep
an eye on both and get everybody up to speed
tomorrow morning. Thanks Rory, you have a great day, all right.
I don't know where the time goes. It flies, but

(30:25):
if you missed anything, just go on your iHeart app
to the podcast section and search your Morning show or
Michael del Journal will pop right up, and while you're
there hit subscribe. That way, it's waiting for you all
three hours, commercial free every morning in the podcast section
of your iHeartRadio app. We're all in this together. This
is your Morning show with Michael hild Joina
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