Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, It's Michael. Your morning show can be heard live
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Now enjoy the podcast two.
Speaker 2 (00:21):
Three starting your morning off right. A new way of talk,
a new way of understanding because we're interstigation. This is
your morning show with Michael del Johnny.
Speaker 1 (00:37):
I'm Muhammad Ali, always saying we all want you little
wish you'd have said something about NAT's. I still can't
get this guy. Are you at NATS hi Key? Sounds
like I'm cheering on the show, but I'm fighting for
my life in here. Seven minutes after the hour, on
the airon streaming live on your iHeartRadio app. This is
your morning show. I'm Michael del Jorno. Good morning, Lawmakers.
(01:00):
They're celebrating the release of Americans jailed in Russia, but
many are raising concerns about prison swaps in general, and
the president thereof just to prove that it's not just
a two party system, it's a two party war. Majority
Leader Chuckie Schumer introducing a bill to strip former President
Donald Trump of his immunity. At About one hundred million
of US are under a heat warning today, while the
(01:20):
National Hurricane Center keeps an eye on a storm in
the Atlantic that could become Debbie and Team USA extended
its metal lead with seven more medals on Thursday at
the Paris Olympic Capes. It seems like yesterday I was
watching Bill Maher. It was more like two and a
half weeks ago.
Speaker 3 (01:35):
Say this Harris would be the first woman president, first
black woman president, and first Asian president.
Speaker 4 (01:41):
But I don't vote for who will be the first.
Speaker 1 (01:44):
I vote for who will win.
Speaker 3 (01:47):
And for whatever reason, Harris has never been popular.
Speaker 1 (01:50):
You can count the number of.
Speaker 3 (01:51):
Delegacy won in the twenty twenty primaries on one hand,
as long as that hand has no fingers.
Speaker 1 (02:00):
Well, you know a lot's changed since then. Now, the coronation,
the Mama La Kamala wave that is overtaking the world
three hundred million dollars, It begs the question is this
a narrative illusion? This Kamala Harris wave? Or a political reality.
David Sanadi's a seat in the old the American Policy Roundtable,
a regular on the show, who's been busy out of
(02:21):
town all week. And what a week you've missed, David,
miss Alilia miss a lot right in the States of America.
Speaker 5 (02:29):
Oh, good morning.
Speaker 6 (02:30):
Yeah.
Speaker 7 (02:30):
Here's what it comes down to. It's personality or policy.
And it's crystal clear that the corporate media in America,
whether it's Comcast, Universal or ABC, Disney or the AP
have all gotten together to decide it's personality. So this
is basically a World Wrestling Federation election about two personalities.
(02:51):
Interestingly enough, both of whom are unpopular, and the questions
didn't become who can drive the other one to the bob.
Speaker 1 (03:02):
Now, they in some ways are guilty of hiding Kamala
Harris the same way they hid Joe Biden. I mean, sure,
they'll fill a rally up with people presumably paid for.
In fact, we know they're paying people on TikTok influencers
to do posts about her. So they've got all this
money and they're using it to create the illusion of
(03:22):
this wave. But sooner or later, she's got to sit
down and do an interview well, she faced tough questions
with this media. Time will tell sooner or later, she's
got a debate, sooner or later. It always has a
way of coming out the nasty side of Kamala Harris.
But you you talk about and we've said this last
half hour, if you weren't listening that, you know we
do the top five stories on the quarter hour. Well
(03:43):
that's the narrative of the news cycle, which is usually
designed to divert your attention from the real news that
they're trying to suppress. Well, and we saw that this week.
So Donald Trump agrees to go to a Black journalist
convention in Chicago. Biden's not there because he's not running.
Harris is too busy with her wave. She was going
to you know, Beyond Zoom or something, but then they
(04:04):
decided they didn't want that because they created an ambush
for Trump. They ambush him in the question. He answers
it perfectly as to why black should vote for him.
But then when they come back around, he eventually takes
the bait and really discusses accurately whether she identifies as
an Indian or a black and if she's black, now okay,
and they turn that all around to an attack on him. David,
(04:27):
you've been covering the media bias. You just brought up Comcast,
Dizney and others, because you know who really controls all
the voices in America. The pivot in the last two
weeks is beyond anything you and I have ever talked about.
Speaker 7 (04:39):
Yeah, and it depicts the disgusting reality that people feel
Michael out here on the streets and no matter where
you travel in this country. Once people get over the sheep,
each awkwardness of not even wanting to talk about it
because it's so painful, is the reality that no one
can look at.
Speaker 5 (04:57):
Since twenty twenty, using the.
Speaker 7 (05:00):
Excuse of COVID, a political cabal put together an administrative
ticket to win the White House and hid their candidate
in a basement, blaming it on a pandemic.
Speaker 5 (05:12):
Now they've hid, excuse.
Speaker 7 (05:14):
Me, a completely incapable president for four years. Now that
they've been exposed for that, they still got him in office,
completely incapable of doing his job, while his vice president
is out like a circus performer, basically saying, pay no
attention to what's actually happening in the White House and
(05:35):
to your government and your tax dollars. Just come over
here and enjoy the play acting the Hollywood show that
I'm telling you on the remaking of my image and
how I'm going to be the most popular kid on
campus and you're going to vote for me for president
while I'm covering for my boss who is completely incapable,
instead of telling you he's incapable and demanding that we
(05:58):
put competency back in the way White House, if for
nothing more than twenty four hours, because it's a dangerous
hold out there. This is an entire complete cover up.
And here's the thing about it. We shouldn't be surprised
that the political left forms is because their God is power.
What's destructive in discouraging the people is that the American media,
(06:18):
protected by the First Amendment for the purpose of telling
Americans the truth, is fully complicit and actually the driving
force of the cover up and.
Speaker 1 (06:30):
The Woodward in Bernstein big reveal here is revealing their
role in the cover up, not just the shadow campaign
of Democrat operatives, but their own. So they, along with
Kamala Harris, were telling America the president was great. He
can run circles around interns, He's working all hours a night,
a couple of whistleblowers. He's basically at ten ten am
(06:51):
to one pm President. Then the disastrous debate, then the
follow up interview with Stephanopolis and Lester Hold. Then people
got to experience what it was like if the journalists
were being journalists in the media, wasn't a part of
the cabal. You saw real journalism for the people, and
(07:11):
it chased off Joe Biden. And then in the snap
of a finger, Kamala. Harris goes from well, the only
thing worse than Joe Biden is you just heard Bill
maher mere days ago to now she's the great Messiah Kamala.
And the truth of the matter is she hasn't done.
Her record hasn't changed, her likability hasn't changed, her depth
of understanding hasn't changed. In fact, she's yet to be
(07:34):
asked a question about the border, about inflation, about interest rates.
So I guess the answer to the question is this
whole Kamala wave, it's pure narrative illusion by those who
do it the best Hollywood.
Speaker 7 (07:47):
Well, and I saw an article today talking about she's
now leading in seven polls against Trump. So of course,
you know, we're in the public policy business. So the
first thing we do is we check who's the company,
what was the grid of how they asked the questions,
who do they talk to? One of the polls said,
in a poll of oneenty twenty three American citizens.
Speaker 5 (08:05):
What.
Speaker 8 (08:06):
Not even from the state where you're registered to vote?
And they put it together in this batch of seven poles.
Why because this is what the corporate media does. The
corporate media picks winners and losers. And it used to
be Michael that they picked the winners and losers in
their second game because they wanted an exciting time, because
(08:27):
they wanted the campaigns to spend big money on their companies.
That's completely different. The companies that own the media today
are so wealthy independent of these media outlets that they
don't care if they lose money in media. This is
about controlling corporations, controlling the agenda, and controlling our government
for their future economic gain down the road.
Speaker 1 (08:50):
So Number one, when they're doing the news story Donald
Harris has raised three hundred million dollars in three weeks,
they're liking it because they know that three hundred million
dollars is going to be spent in their news, on
their websites, on their nightly News. Candis Owan did, it's around.
Speaker 7 (09:05):
Here because now it's about the corporate boardroom sitting. Yeah,
and we love boxers, male boxers punching women in the
face at the Olympics. It's about agenda. Now, these corporations
have agenda. They're happy to lose billions of dollars for
the sake of their agenda. And she is the poster
child that drives the train for their agenda.
Speaker 1 (09:23):
David's and not. He's the CEO of the American Policy Roundtable,
host of the Public Square herd on two hundred stations nationwide.
He also hosts a podcast I used to be a
part of eighteen fifty main Street. It's still going strong.
You'll find that at eighteen main Street eighteen fifty main
street dot com. Candiso Owon did something this week that
I thought was interesting. She told an old CIA story
and it was a study they did and this one innocent,
(09:43):
real person, the subject is in a room with seventeen
other people. He doesn't know it, but they're all CIA agents.
And then the experiment begins and they hold up a
card with a triangle on it and they go to
the first they go to the seventeen agents first and
leave the subject last. And they go to agent one,
what is this? He goes square down the line for
(10:03):
seventeen square square square. By the time they get to
the subject, he's thinking, well, I don't want to be
the weirdo and say triangle, even though I know it's triangle.
I'll just say square because I don't want to look nuts.
And more times than not, they say square even though
their eyes see a triangle. That's the influence of others.
So the question becomes in the death of journalism, does
media have that kind of ratings and influence? Are they
(10:28):
the seventeen CIA agents? And I think in the matrix, Yeah,
that probably plays well to the far left crowd that
only talks to the far left and reads the far left,
and watches the far left and listens to the far
left and repeats what they're saying. But how is it
playing in America Because ratings would suggest they don't have
any of any real significance, especially compared to social media,
(10:50):
and therefore no influence. So how does this narrativized ilusion
play versus reality?
Speaker 7 (10:57):
Well, this is always the trauma. It's a beautiful setup,
by the way, in the state and trauma that we
experienced Michael with a presidential election because it appears to
be a referendum on the American soul.
Speaker 5 (11:08):
Now we've been saying that for forty years.
Speaker 7 (11:09):
Joe Biden just started to say in twenty twenty because
somebody wrote it for him. But the question is what
part of the American soul are people focused on in
this election?
Speaker 5 (11:19):
People say it's the economy of the economy, economy.
Speaker 7 (11:21):
I get that, it's inflation, inflation, inflationent I get that.
But what we failed to realize is every single year
that the Democrats have been in power, and to a
lesser degree to Republicans, the power of the administrative state
has influenced people's.
Speaker 5 (11:35):
Lives to control their income.
Speaker 7 (11:37):
When Mitt Romney said forty seven percent of the people
basically show up at an election to vote their pocketbook,
with their pocketbook is intimately involved with government entitlements of
one form or another. That's a dangerous reality. So if
people are voting at forty seven percent for their pocketbook
and governments, what's putting the money in their pocket? Are
(11:57):
they going to vote for better balanced than schooly conservative government.
Are they going to vote for their interests?
Speaker 6 (12:03):
Well?
Speaker 1 (12:03):
How dearre Donald Trump. How dere Donald Trump questioned how
and this is from the White House itself, question how
Kamala Harris chooses to identify herself racially. They want Black
voters focused on that, not how their entitlements have gone
to and their resources have gone to illegal immigrants brought
into their neighborhood, or how their policies, yeah haven't. When
(12:25):
we come back, I want to, assuming we can do
another segment, I want to look over some polling numbers.
Are there any of Kamala's and we think she's got
it down to six choices for running mate that actually
pose a threat to the outcome of this election. When
we continue with David Zanati from the American Policy Roundtable
in a moment.
Speaker 2 (12:45):
This is your Morning Show with Michael del Jno.
Speaker 1 (12:49):
I'm Michael del Jorna. Well, Martha Vandella saying this, Martha
and the Vandela is about sixty years ago, long before
global warming was roumin rumored. Heat waves they happen. One
hundred million Americans are under heat warning today. Former President
Trump is sitting for victim interview with the FBI and
Chuck Schumer just to prove it's not a two party system,
but a two party war is introducing a bill to
(13:11):
strip the former president Donald Trump of immunity. David, I
want to play quick clip from you. AI is scary stuff.
AI is going to eventually lead to where you don't
know what's real. Therefore anybody can do anything because you
can't prove they really did it. You don't know fake
from reality, which is kind of what we're discussing today.
The Kamala perceived wade is it an illusion or in
a reality? Well, here's an AI commercial that was done
(13:34):
and it was retweeted by Elon Musk and thousands, if
not millions of others, which led to a Gavin Newsom threat.
But listen to the words of the AI commercial because
it really ought to be Donald Trump's commercial.
Speaker 9 (13:48):
I Kamal Harris, senior Democrat candidate for president because Joe
Biden finally exposed to simility. To me, I was selected
because I am the ultimate diversity higher. I'm both a
woman and a.
Speaker 10 (14:00):
Person of color.
Speaker 9 (14:01):
So if you've criticize anything I say, you're both sexist
and racist. I may not know the first thing about
running a country, but remember that's a good thing. If
you're a deep state puppet. I had four years under
the tutelage of the ultimate deep state puppet, a wonderful
mentor Joe Biden.
Speaker 10 (14:18):
Joe taught me rule number one, carefully hide.
Speaker 9 (14:21):
Your total in companies. I take in significant things and
I discuss them as if they're significant. And I believe
that exploring the significance of the insignificant is in itself significant.
Talking about the significance of the passage of time, right,
the significance of the passage of time.
Speaker 10 (14:40):
So when you think about it, there is great.
Speaker 9 (14:42):
Significance to the passage of time, and there is such
great significance to the past.
Speaker 1 (14:47):
You know. It's almost like what I always talk about, David,
where in the sea of voices, sea of lies and deception,
there are memes. And if every year you just did
the top memes of the year, that'd be a truthful
look at what you has happened compared to the illusion
they're trying to create. I guess artificial intelligence is going
to give us that as well. It already has in
(15:07):
Kamala Harris. But that really addresses the narrative illusion wave
versus political reality. The question is can America see through
it as clearly as Ai does.
Speaker 7 (15:18):
Well, Michael, this is it's always funny. Mean you and
I talk, the audience kind of disappears because you have
been talking about public policy for so many years together
and the things that really truly matter that are going
to outlast the next forty eight months of who gets
the job at the White House, because the truth of
the matter is everybody is pointing fingers, treating us like
(15:42):
it's the World Wrestling Federation and making it all about personality. Personality, personality.
That's a serious and sober mistake. This is about policy
and who will be pushing the buttons and making the
decisions that will steer the massive trip, multi tis trillion
dollar administrative state that does impact people's lives every day
(16:06):
at every level, starting with taking the first top dollar
out of our paycheck, every one of our paychecks. So
this is not about personalities. It's about policy. But the
corporate media wants us to look at this as if
it's nothing.
Speaker 5 (16:21):
About other than personalities.
Speaker 7 (16:23):
And this is the great challenge you have every morning,
is how do we talk about this stuff that really
matters versus the stuff of the avalanche, the wave of
the personality remakes, or the personality, finger pointing, destruction, and
it's maddening, and it's got people discussed on the ground,
people thoroughly.
Speaker 1 (16:41):
Well, it's pretty disgusting. From the air, we only we're
down to twenty seconds, all right, So she's down to
six candidates. I'll remind everybody Hillary Clinton shows Tim Kaine
of the six any that could be a game changer
on the electoral college map.
Speaker 5 (16:56):
No, they don't want a game changer.
Speaker 7 (16:58):
They want someone who disappears very quickly, just like Tim
Kaine did. Because your remember, Jack Podesta, George Sauce and
the Progressive movement control this White House. They controlled every
White House since Bill Clinton, and they will. And this
is not a conspiracy, it's in plain sight. They want
another administration that they can control.
Speaker 1 (17:16):
So right, the puppet, the puppet.
Speaker 5 (17:17):
Master hearing VP.
Speaker 1 (17:19):
The puppet master likes to keep his hand in one
puppet at a time. Hey, it's me Michael. You can
listen to your morning show live on the air or
streaming live on your iHeart app Monday through Friday from
three to six Pacific, five to eighth Central, and six
to nine Eastern on great radio stations like Talk six
fifty KSTE and Sacramento one oh four nine, The Patriot
in Saint Louis had to impact Radio one oh five
(17:40):
nine and twelve fifty w h d Z in Tampa, Florida.
Sure hope you can join us live and make us
a part of your morning routine. In the meantime, enjoy
the podcast simone Bios one gold. Soony Lee grabbed the
bronze and the women's gymnastics all around final, Katie Ledecki
became the most decorated female swimmer and Olympic history, capturing
her thirteenth medal in the four x two one hundred
(18:00):
meter freestyle relay. US men's soccer team hopes to advance
to the semi finals with a win over Morocco. Today.
The US women's basketball team now two to zero in Paris,
defeating Belgium eighty six to seventy four. Their winning streak
is now fifty seven straight Olympic games, and Team USA
extended its lead with seven more medals on Thursday in Perry.
The US now has thirty seven total medals, nine gold,
(18:22):
fifteen silver, thirteen bronze. Host France remains in second ten
back with twenty seven. China is in third. Didn't count,
but it was a win. Nonetheless, the Hall of Fame
Game last night, dub Bears twenty one to seventeen over
the Texans in Canton. The Guardians won ten to three
over the O's. That helps my Yankees, Cardinals lost five
to four to the Cubbies, and the Dbacks, Nats, Rangers, Mariners,
(18:45):
and Rays were all off thirty six minutes after the hour.
Thanks for waking up with your morning show, I am
Michael del jornon if you're just waking up the things
you need to know. We've got about one hundred million
Americans under a heatvice of some kind today, heat wave
Martha saying about it a long, long time ago. Meanwhile,
(19:06):
the National Hurricane Center keeps an eye on a storm
system in the Atlantic that could brew into Debbie and
Majority Leader Chuckie Schumer is introducing a builders trip Donald
Trump of his immunity, and lawmakers are celebrating the release
of Americans jailed in Russia, but many raising concerns about
prisoner swaps in general and the precedent it sets. That's
(19:27):
kind of setting the tone. We phrase it this way.
The things you really need to be thinking about Kamala's
wave is it a narrative illusion or a political reality.
The prison swap is that a Biden victory or Putin victory?
Is it a dangerous precedent set for political purposes in
its timing? And then the Secret Service in the FBI
(19:48):
and their response to a victim's video showing movement up
on the roof two minutes before shots were fired and
why no actions were taken. Their response we found very
interesting and men punching women in the of the Olympic Games. Yeah,
these are scary times we live in. This will add
to that fear too. Instagram and Facebook still running ads
(20:09):
for illegal drugs, months after reports that Meta is under
federal investigation. National correspondent for Your Morning show, Aaron Rayel's
back with this very troubling story. Good morning eron Good morning.
Speaker 11 (20:20):
Yes, this is really really troubling. I mean, Meta has
been in trouble for a while now and there still
is no stopping them. But what we know is that
the company that owns Facebook and Instagram has collected revenue
from ads that clearly violate their policies, the policy being
banning of illicit and recreational drugs. However, they say that
(20:42):
their system catches hundreds of thousands of ads that violate
the drug policy, but hundreds still get through. I don't know, Michael,
but this is shocking to me because you know, Meta
uses really advanced AI tools for their content moderation and
can catch a lot of stuff that is much more benign.
Speaker 1 (21:00):
But they can never They can catch us every time,
but never themselves, is what you're saying.
Speaker 12 (21:05):
That's unbelievable.
Speaker 11 (21:06):
And I've looked at a lot of these drug ads.
They're pretty explicit, like there's pictures of pill bottles or
there's you know, drugs laid out in a pan that
spell out like the name of the substance, and then
you click on it and it takes you to like
a third party platform basically a chat, whether it be
like an app like Telegram or Signal, and then there's menus,
there's pricing, there's instructions of how you place the order.
(21:29):
And what this really brings us to is a bigger
question of whether or not tech companies should be held
responsible for what third parties post on their platform.
Speaker 1 (21:41):
I have in a square with an asterisk by it
third party, because what this is kind of like plausible deniability.
So because we use you to get you into the
net with Remember what they said in the Social Dilemma documentary,
if a service is free, you're the product, all right.
(22:03):
So that's the bait and switch here. So you're the product.
That's why it's free to you. Then they take you
to this third party where they do something illegal, and
then they got plausible deniability. That's the whole thing. Now,
the other way to connect the dot and tie the
ball would be and then I suppose if that link
comes from Meta to whatever third party, does Meta get
(22:24):
a portion of the revenue. There's your tie right there.
Speaker 2 (22:28):
Oh and mind you just to put the ad up.
Speaker 11 (22:31):
They're getting ad dollars because they're getting paid by the
drug dealer to post the ad. They're making money for sure,
without question. And I think right now we're in this time.
We're seeing such an evolution with the Internet and everything else,
and I'll continue to evolve and new things will pop up.
Speaker 12 (22:46):
But what we're.
Speaker 11 (22:47):
Seeing now is it's like, oh no, not me, third party,
third party.
Speaker 10 (22:51):
I had to look at that third party.
Speaker 4 (22:52):
What a bad guy?
Speaker 11 (22:53):
And you're like, what, how is this like a remotely
acceptable excuse for terrible behavior on your platform? You need
to moderate the content of third parties. But there's actually
this section two thirty. This was a pretty big deal.
So the Supreme Court heard it back in twenty twenty three.
There's a section of the Communications Decency Act that says
(23:14):
that online platforms aren't liable for their third parties. And
then the Supreme Court pretty much left that unchanged after
they were deciding two cases that involved the law.
Speaker 1 (23:23):
This might need a revisit.
Speaker 11 (23:24):
And I understand, like, you don't want to over legislate,
but at the same time, you're like, this one seems
pretty obvious. The children are dying, right, yes, so, and
I'm not being hyperbolic.
Speaker 1 (23:34):
You know, when you're watching Major League Baseball or the NFL,
sometimes there's a call and if the call on the
field was made the other way, it would have upheld,
even though it's a completely different decision. So I think
if lawmakers changed the law, the Supreme Court would also
allow that law. Probably that has been changed as well,
But something has to be done because kids are dying,
hundreds of thousands of them. What drugs are we talking about?
Primarily all of them?
Speaker 12 (23:56):
All of them, whether you want.
Speaker 11 (23:57):
There's one ad that I saw that has the letters
DMT spelled out with like a powdery substance that is
a psychedelic drug. There are pill bottles for fentanyl, for
oxy cotton, for whatever it is your preferences, you can
find it, and you can find an ad on Facebook
or Instagram.
Speaker 1 (24:14):
So whatever you need that your doctor has stopped giving
you you can find on meta Facebook and Instagram. Frightening stuff. Well,
we'll see if Congress gets arounded this rather than community
of President Trump. Great reporting this week, Aaron, have a
great weekend. We'll talk again on Monday.
Speaker 11 (24:28):
Oh likewise, thanks Michael.
Speaker 1 (24:29):
Right, you got it forty minutes after the hour. If
you're just waking up, here are you all talk? Five
narrative news cycle stories of the day. The running mate
of Donald Trump made a run for the border. Brian
shook me all night long as our road to the
White House.
Speaker 4 (24:46):
Road to the White House. Twenty twenty four. Donald Trump's
running mate JD. Vance is touring the US Mexico border.
Vance met with law enforcement officials in Cochise County, Arizona,
Thursday and slammed what he called the Harrison Administration's open
border policies.
Speaker 13 (25:02):
Pamala Harris came into office making promises, and she kept
those promises to open the America's southern border, a stop
importations on day one, a stop construction of the border wall.
Speaker 4 (25:13):
He promised to implement the so called Remain in Mexico
policy and construction of the border wall if Trump wins
the White House in November. The Trump campaign has repeatedly
attacked Harris on immigration since she recently became the likely
Democratic nominee for president. In Washington, I'm Brian Shook. Uh
(25:33):
to Brian Shook for doing the story right. I can't
tell you how many people covering First CNN, MSNBC, Washington Post, Axios,
and other leftist media outlets that have a vice presidential
running mate at the border, the scene of the crisis,
the leak in the boat, and they're asking him questions
about Donald Trump's discussion of Kamala Harris being Indian or black.
(25:57):
That fits our narrative, right, the narrativized news illusion to
divert your attention from the real news. If America is
most concerned about the border in the economy, and you've
got a vice presidential running mate on the border, that's
the story. Brian gets it. The rest of leftist media didn't. Well,
(26:18):
not that you need more proof of this, but we
don't have a two party system. We have a two
party war, and you're caught in the middle. Set up
Majority Leader Chucky Schumer introducing a bill to strip Donald
Trump of his immunity. Mark Mayfield has the details.
Speaker 14 (26:30):
The No Kings Act would clarify that the Constitution does
not entitle presidents to immunity from prosecution for accident that
violate funeral criminal law. Despite last month's Supreme Court ruling
granting President's broad immunity. The legislation is unlikely to pass
the Senate, where it would need sixty votes to overcome
a Republican filibuster. This comes after President Biden called for
(26:52):
an overhaul of the conservative majority court that includes term
limits and an enforceable code of ethics.
Speaker 1 (26:57):
On Mark Mayfield, look, we're all thrilled that unjust jailed
prisoners in Russia. Americans are home and Donald Trump said that,
and lawmakers are celebrating the release of those jailed in Russia,
but also many are raising concerns about prison swaps in general.
Lisa Taylor has more.
Speaker 12 (27:17):
House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Michael McCall said he was
thrilled Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich and former marine
Paul Whalen and others were free, but added he's worried
the exchange for Russian prisoners could encourage future hostage taking. Meanwhile,
Republican Senator Todd Young, who sits on the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, said the exchange was not equal. Garrett Haik
has more.
Speaker 15 (27:37):
In the exchange, Russia secured the release of eight people,
the most notable the Dean Krasikoff, a Russian hitman who
was serving a life sentence in Germany for the murder
of a Chechen dissident and what prosecutor said was a
Russian state sanctioned assassination. According to a senior Administration official,
Russia would not agree to a deal that did not
involve Krassakoff.
Speaker 12 (27:56):
The Wall Street Journal says the swap was made at
a Turkish airport and reports involves multiple Russians, with Germany
and Belarus playing a part in the deal. I'mly ce tailor.
Speaker 1 (28:05):
Donald Trump says his supporters applaud the loudest whenever he
brings up that he won't allow men to play in
women's sports. While on clay and Bucks Show yesterday, Trump
said he will reverse Title nine rules that allowed trans
identifying males to compete in women's sports.
Speaker 4 (28:19):
It's ridiculous.
Speaker 1 (28:20):
The whole thing is ridiculous. The whole country is a
laughing stock.
Speaker 16 (28:24):
Our country has become a laughing stock all over the world.
Speaker 5 (28:27):
That we're going to change it.
Speaker 1 (28:30):
Yesterday was tragic. You know, if you go by social media,
and that's where I think most people are having conversations,
That's where most people are getting their information, not from
these networks. The big story wasn't the hostage exchange. Who
was an Italian boxer, Angela Carina, who had to abandon
her Olympic dream in forty six seconds quote, I'm heartbroken.
(28:52):
I went to the ring to honor my father. I
was told a lot of times that I was a warrior,
but I preferred to stop for my own safety and health.
I have never felt a punch like this. That's because
her Algerian opponent was a biological male men punching women
in the spirit of the Olympic Games. That's agenda gone mad.
Speaker 17 (29:18):
Who doesn't love Johnny Cash, especially those of us here
in Nashville. Johnny Cash is going to be honored with
a statue inside Capital Statuary Hall on September the twenty fourth.
Speaker 1 (29:30):
The eight foot statue of Cash will replace the current
statue of James Clark, a former Arkansas governor and Senator.
James is gone. Johnny's there Statuary Hall where Nick famously
threw up three times in our visit. What a great memory.
He had a virus and there was something about the
Capital that brought out the best in him and Adam
(29:50):
when we were at the White House, bled all over
Barack Obama's marble floors.
Speaker 18 (29:54):
I'm telling you it would be a great sitcoms. Secret
Service had to go upstairs into the residence. I got
to play with the Obama dog that day too. That's
a good day. We made our mark, but it was
a good day, all right.
Speaker 1 (30:07):
Well, not a lot goes Britney Spears away, but this
is gonna go her way. Universal Pictures is snapping up
the rights to Britney Spears New York Times number one
best seller The Woman and Me Wicked director John Chu
is on board to direct. She also worked on a
concert movie Justin Bieber, Never Say Never. The Pop Superstars
(30:27):
book was published in October of twenty twenty three and
sold over two and a half million copies in the
US alone, and we can only imagine what this deal
is worth. Some own Biles wins gold. She's simply the
greatest ever. Sunny Lee not far behind her grabbed bronze,
two medals and one gold in the women's all around gymnastics.
(30:48):
Katie Ledecky continued her dominance in the pool and made
Olympic history after capturing her thirteenth medal in the four
x two hundred meter freestyle relay. The United States men's
soccer looking to advance in the semi finals with a
win over Morocco. The US women, now two and zero
in the Paris Olympics, defeated Belgium eighty seven to seventy four,
extending their Olympic winning streak to fifty seven games and all.
(31:10):
The US added seven medals and increased their lead in
this Olympic Games with thirty seven ten back as the
home country France, China is in third. I'm Jeff Eddie
with Efficient Heating and Cooling. My Morning show is Your
Morning Show with Michael Bill. Jrian birthdays today, the vice
presidential running mate of Donald Trump. JD Vance forty years old,
(31:34):
SNL cast member and a poisonal friend. I opened for
her in a disastrous stand up comedy routine and I
did in a small town in Tennessee. Victoria Jackson sixty
five years old today, And if it's your birthday, Happy birthday.
So glad you were born. And thanks for waking up
with your morning show. And Nashville's home for all the
(31:58):
best talkers are right here ninety eight point three and
fifteen ten WLAC. Now it's the minutes trafficking weather together
is next from the traffic center.
Speaker 19 (32:07):
Good morning at Whitebridge Pike, the post road. We're still
working to crash here in the area. Watch out for
that traffic still building on the Interstate's Forest forty coming
into downtown from the southeast side, sixty five coming in
from the north twenty four Round Bell Road. Again, all
our usual hot spots are getting hot, so be ready
for the activity through here.
Speaker 4 (32:26):
I'm Mandy.
Speaker 19 (32:27):
Hey, You's from Talk Radio ninety eight point three and
fifteen ten WLAC with your time saver traffic.
Speaker 4 (32:33):
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Speaker 21 (32:52):
Got Talk Radio ninety eight point three at fifteen ten
WLAC forecast. Been a tough week on multiple fronts, not
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to be weary or weather weary anyway, and watch out
for some showers thunderstorms coming in this morning, probably mid
to late morning into the afternoon. Some of those storms
could be strong, potentially severe with gusty winds and maybe
(33:13):
some hail. Mid nineties will feel like one oh five,
so dangerously hot again, it's like chance of showers butterstorms
tomorrow mo nineties, maybe a storm around Sunday, mid nineties.
I mean, you're all just rachtagic with the weather channel.
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Speaker 23 (36:03):
How long will it take you to get from four
to forty to Murphreesboro time Saber traffic immediately after Fox
News on Talk Radio ninety eight point three and fifteen
ten WLAEC.
Speaker 2 (36:17):
Wait, come on showing in the conversation, It's your morning
show with Michael de Choin so many ways to communicate
with us.
Speaker 1 (36:25):
You can always call eight hundred six eight eight ninety
five twenty two one eight hundred six eight eight ninety
five twenty two. You can use the talkback button on
your iHeartRadio app. It's a little microphone. Press it leave
a message, it comes to us directly. We can share
it with the class, and there's always email michaeld at
iHeartMedia dot com. Kathy writes, it just occurred to me
that the first time Donald Trump was elected president, JD
(36:45):
Vance was too young to be eligible to run. Yes,
only forty years old today. All right, if you're just
waking up. Lawmakers are celebrating the release of Americans jailed
in Russia, but some concerned over prison swaps in general
and the precedent it sets and the dane it creates
in the future. Former President Donald Trump will be sitting
for a victim interview today with the FBI. And here's
(37:06):
some troubling news if you want to get beyond narrative
elective allusions to realities. Roy O'Neil is here. He's been
looking at unemployment trends and has the latest on which
states are showing an increase in claims. Good morning, Rory, Hey,
good morning Michael.
Speaker 24 (37:24):
You might be surprised that Massachusetts topped the jobless claims
list for the week.
Speaker 1 (37:30):
We just had a big layoff. We just had big
We just said big layoffs, fifteen percent with Intel. Would
that be in that area or that would be part
of Silicon Valley.
Speaker 24 (37:37):
Right, Well, they're still to roll those out, so but
that could be in that area that their tech corridor.
But we are seeing weakness in the tech sector in
places like Silicon Valley in California. And then up on
and around the Seattle area as well, and that's where
some of the weakness has been. I'm looking in Tennessee
right now. Thirty first for jobless claims last week, so
(37:59):
pretty good. You know, could be better, But thirty one's good.
You want a high number of this game. What about
your neck of the nape? Your nape of the neck?
Where you live? Florida, Florida? Forty second By.
Speaker 1 (38:10):
The way, that was a Caddyshack reference that I was
hoping I would get. Oklahoma another big one on our list. Well,
thirty five kind of covered California, Arizona twenty sixth last,
but not least where I may live someday the lou
Saint Louis, Missouri big mode number three not good, not good.
(38:31):
Where are those coming from?
Speaker 24 (38:33):
Yeah, well we're not seeing the specific sector information yet.
We're going to get the new jobless data for the
month coming out in just about thirty minutes, so the
monthly jobless report coming from officials a short time from
now should give us a better idea.
Speaker 1 (38:47):
But this is something we've seen ticking up.
Speaker 24 (38:49):
Pretty regularly as the effects of these interest rates really
hitting companies as they have second thoughts about investing in
new operations, new plans.
Speaker 1 (39:00):
Are really uncertainty in general, right Rory That that's always
like the killer of killers, Like companies can adjust to
whatever is real and happening, but when there's uncertainty and
they just don't know, they just can't move forward now.
And then a lot of this, you know, we're going
to get a rate cut soon, but is it September?
And can I wait yet?
Speaker 24 (39:17):
And can I go?
Speaker 5 (39:17):
Can I go?
Speaker 6 (39:18):
Can I go?
Speaker 5 (39:18):
So there's a lot of that.
Speaker 1 (39:20):
Who's going to win the election and the policies moving forward,
who's going to control Congress, and the probably there's a
lot of uncertainty in the year. I always think unemployment
is a worthless number because it doesn't take into account
those who have left the workforce, It doesn't take into
account what is now the side hustle economy, and it
doesn't take into account underemployment, which are people that are
making two hundred thousand dollars, which impects the economy much
(39:40):
differently than somebody at ten dollars an hour. But these
are troubling signs. It's about the economy. But I think
it does kind of point to the you know, intel
sector doesn't.
Speaker 24 (39:49):
It his There's a lot of it in the high
tech sector, which has been happening for a while.
Speaker 1 (39:55):
As AI is having some sort of an impact. All Right,
Rory's gonna be back next uh with an equally troubling story.
Who should Kamala Harris choose?
Speaker 2 (40:04):
We're all in this together. This is Your Morning Show
with Michael ndheld Joyo