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September 5, 2024 33 mins
Why is all of the above so easy to ignore

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, It's Michael. Your morning show can be heard live
weekday mornings five to eight am, six to nine am
Eastern and great cities like Tampa, Florida, Youngstown, Ohio, and
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. We'd love to join you on the
Drive to work live, but we're glad you're here now.
Enjoyed the podcast.

Speaker 2 (00:15):
Well two three starting your morning off right, A new
way of taught, a new way of understanding because we're
in this spid.

Speaker 3 (00:27):
This is your morning show with Michael o'deill jorn once again.

Speaker 1 (00:32):
Here we are joining your life already in progress, and
we know you have a choice in the morning. Thank
you so much for choosing your morning show. Jeffrey Lyons
has the controls. I'm Michael del Jarno on the Aaron
streaming live on your iHeartRadio app. Seven minutes after the hour,
two students and two teachers are dead following a school
shooting in Georgia. The fourteen year old suspect in the
deadly shooting is in custody. President Biden expected to block

(00:55):
that proposed fifteen billion dollar acquisition of US Steel by
Japan's largest steelmaker, and President Trump will take an unfair
debate over no debate at all, as he had a
town hall meeting with Fox at what would have been
the first debate that Kamala Harris was not interested in joining.
The next debate less than a week away on ABC,

(01:17):
and David Sanati's joining us. You know, David, first things first,
on the school shooting, America doesn't do very good at
these all of the above approaches. We'd like to blame
it all on one thing, whether it's a gun or
it's a party. We don't want to look at evil
and does it exist, or our abandonment of God and
how it's impacted parenting and children, or the social dilemma

(01:39):
that leads to depression and loneliness, or violence in video
games or in movies or in television shows and how
that impacts young people, or how we have celebrated being
a celebration of death when it comes to unborn babies.
But the sacredness of life is being lost. And we
always want to come back to one thing, the gun
and legislation that in many cases, as the President's side

(02:03):
of yesterday, wouldn't have kept this from happening yesterday.

Speaker 4 (02:08):
Well, is that working out for us?

Speaker 5 (02:10):
Not?

Speaker 3 (02:10):
Good?

Speaker 4 (02:11):
Yeah? I mean It's unfortunate, Michael, that people who were
thoughtful are almost now incapable of thinking through one more
of these tragedies because it's the same story over and
over and over again, and it's to include this kind
of reality into our life existence as parents and grandparents

(02:34):
is traumatizing. It it's but the only answer that we
have to this is prevention, and the prevention has to
be at the place where the crime can be perpetrated,
whether it's a church or a school or a public event.
We're not going to stop the desperate corruption what's happening

(02:55):
to young people. We'd love to try, but none of
us can wave a magic wand and make all that
will go away. We have to harden the targets, and
that's the part that's difficult because we live in denial.
We just don't want to believe that the world can
impa the evil of the world can impact someone who
will then do this. It's a terrible dilemma that we're in,

(03:17):
and it's easier just to turn the page and move
on to another story. That's our problem.

Speaker 1 (03:21):
Yeah, I was sitting yesterday thinking one more year in
Nick's out, what are the kids safe in college?

Speaker 3 (03:26):
And then I had the thought you had or where
you're at.

Speaker 1 (03:30):
Oh, and then I get to relive all this with
my grandkids, you know, and that an anger at least.

Speaker 4 (03:35):
Toler Yeah, I mean the administration wanted to make the
Butler shooting a mass shooting until they were sure that
Trump actually had gotten hit. Then they couldn't escape it,
so they had to call it an assassination attempt. They
were trying to spin that into something else. But the
truth of the matter is is that it was both
and it wasn't just an assassination attempt. He kept firing.

(03:56):
How many times would he you fired? How many people
would if you wanted to kill?

Speaker 1 (04:01):
We said from the very beginning, Wow, this was either
really poor planning. And then we heard the reports of
all of a sudden, Kamala Harris was in the area,
the first lady Joe Biden was in the area. That
may have depleted the resources or was it poor planning
and the choice of putting that building in an outer perimeter,

(04:24):
then you get the poor communication and execution, if you will,
because everybody could see him crawling around, climbing up and
crawling around up there, and as local law enforcement engaged him,
he point the gun at them, but nobody could communicate
to get Trump off stage. So we said from the
very beginning this was either poor planning, lack of personnel,

(04:44):
or worse. And now it's September fifth, and all that's
left is worse. I mean, you know, from cleaning the
crime scene immediately up, that's what they did with Kennedy's limousine.
I don't know, I don't know where we end up
with this, just like you know, Donald Trump had made
America great, he had made life miserable for China, and

(05:06):
then suddenly you get a Chinese virus that's leaked. Is
that one so obvious that we can't connect the dots?
And now this one. The lawfare that didn't work, the
impeachments that didn't work, and then the execution attempt. It's
all too hard to believe that somebody would try to
pull off what they did in the Kennedy era in
today's era, where everybody has a phone and a camera.

Speaker 4 (05:31):
I mean yeah, and you can go mad watching the
footage of people pointing at someone on the building screaming
he's got a gun, and you ask yourself, these are
the same people that put a man on the moon.
You just say something doesn't add up. It is extraordinarily.
It goes beyond the word dysfunction. It actually becomes a
place where we run out of words because it just
doesn't make sense anymore.

Speaker 1 (05:53):
Donald Trump deserves an answer for what happened. Every candidate
deserves an answer for how it can't happen again. The
American deserves an answer. And I don't think we've got
answers yet. If I had one question, it would be
for all of the stuff we've described, how was he
allowed to get eight shots off before being taken out?

Speaker 3 (06:12):
I don't have an answer for that.

Speaker 4 (06:15):
I could give you's. And there are four other questions,
and I'm sure people are shouting at the radio right
now in the same way, feeling the same thing. And
here's if I might say one that perhaps exits the
question best. When is someone in the position who knows
the answers going to have the courage to stand up

(06:36):
and say, let's tell you everything. When is that going
to happen?

Speaker 1 (06:41):
Why wasn't there speculation about him and how he got
his gone? And were there any warning signs like we
would do with the school shooting. Because he didn't kill Trump?
Or because he was aimed at Trump, but.

Speaker 4 (06:52):
He killed another person and almost mortally wounded two more.
What I want to know is when are those families
going to rise up and attempt civil suits for wrongful
death and injury and forced this into a position of
legality where we have to have discovery on all these
questions in a federal court or a state court.

Speaker 3 (07:12):
You saw a video from Robert Kennedy that I had
seen before.

Speaker 1 (07:15):
I watched that particular podcast all the time, and I've
heard RFK share that story. It's very interesting if people
haven't seen the particular clip. This is RFK Junior saying
he doesn't believe sir Han Surhan killed his father. In fact,
one of the foremost autopsy doctors pretty much because they
weren't going to make the same mistakes they did with
Jack Kennedy, and so everybody observed. They brought in the

(07:38):
top autopsy people for Robert Kennedy and conclusions were made.
RFK was shot four times. One that didn't penetrate his body,
went right through the upper shoulder of his suit, and
then three others that did hit him, one probably the
most fatal, behind the ear. But these were at point
blank range, meaning they left a branded tattoo, meaning the

(08:01):
nozza was either on the clothing or right on the skin.
That would mean that OURFK was killed from behind. Sir
hand Surhan was in front of him. His two shots,
we can confirm through forensics did not hit RFK. So
why is Sir Hann Surhan in jail for killing RFK?
RFK Junior doesn't even think he did it? I mean,

(08:23):
and if that's a case from nineteen sixty eight, should
we expect many answers from twenty twenty four.

Speaker 4 (08:29):
Yeah, Michael, I can't tell you how disturbing that video was,
and that I was completely ignorant of it until I
saw it yesterday. In how RFK Junior describes the autopsy
and the bullet tracings and how many shots were fired,
what we saw was the aftermath of the chaos in
the kitchen, and that's all that anyone's ever really seen.

(08:50):
I have a lot of confidence in Bobby kenned or
Junior in regards to being a good lawyer, and so
I'm sure that he's not making up facts to satisfy
some emotional need. This is a very troubling story, and
maybe it's why one of the things that he's seeking
to do and Donald Trump is seeking to help him
is to have an investigation on both those assassinations, and

(09:12):
maybe if he does, we'll get an answer for Butler
Pennsylvania too.

Speaker 1 (09:15):
Two observations. I have that video like everything I see.
How different is the impact of Robert Kennedy Junior if
he doesn't have that voice disorder? Because he is one
of the most articulate, thoughtful, brilliant people you'll ever hear
discuss any topic, he makes it fascinating.

Speaker 3 (09:35):
Except for that disorder, we'll never know. Right.

Speaker 4 (09:40):
Another profound question America. Americans want movie stars or talk
show hosts to be their presidents, and if you don't
have a voice, it's hard for people to want to
vote for you. However, in this case, even a man
with less than half a voice is having an impact.

Speaker 1 (09:57):
David Sanatti is the CEO of the American Policy round Table.
He hosts The Public Square, which I think is the
crown jewel of their projects that's heard on two hundred
stations nationwide, including the Public Square dot com. He also
hosts eighteen fifty Main Street, which becomes very relevant for
this conversation. So we have the RFK Junior primary block,
the party blocked him, would not allow him to run.

(10:18):
I actually questioned whether or not he would have defeated
Joe Biden in a primary, but that wasn't allowed. And
if you think Donald Trump's been harassed with lawfair, nobody's
had more lawfair than RFK Junior. And this is all
in the name of Kamala Harris's freedom tour. Then voters
vote for Joe Biden, all their votes are ripped up
and thrown out in a coup and handed to Kamala Harris,

(10:38):
who has coronated as the greatest thing ever, not the
only thing worse than Joe Biden. And they all leave
their DNC in a sugar high. Not to mention two impeachments,
five years of lawfare against Donald Trump, some of which
is resurfaced again this week. What has been lost before
it even has started, and that is the process itself,

(10:59):
and with it are trust and freedom. Let's address that first.
We touched on it yesterday, but let's dust that out
more because I want to get to the potential for
a civil war depending on how this all plays out
and the outcome. And by the way, that's from both sides,
because don't forget in the shadow campaign, they were going

(11:19):
to do an insurrection and they were conditioning us for
it with Antifa and Black Lives Matter. If their shadow
campaign didn't defeat Donald Trump in twenty twenty, they were
going to do an insurrection instead.

Speaker 3 (11:31):
They were shocked when they won. It was hard for
them to call off the dogs.

Speaker 1 (11:34):
They were able to, and then they pin the insurrection
on Trump on January sixth.

Speaker 3 (11:39):
So I don't.

Speaker 1 (11:40):
Think either side, no matter what the outcome, is going
to be very satisfied. We should have a discussion about
civil war. But first things first, what about our loss
of trust and process, because that's really the precursor to it.

Speaker 4 (11:50):
Right, Well, that's the greatest danger of all is when
people no longer believe that the people in power who
are running elections are playing according to the rules, they'll
stop voting. And that's exactly what one side would like,
because they just want power based on information. They don't
want participation. And so this is the grave danger, is
that they will break the system and they'll call it

(12:12):
saving democracy. What they really mean is government by public
opinion poll. They have all the power, and every now
and then they'll ask to what you think and then
continue on in power. This is a tremendous deconstruction of
the American system of frequent elections with the founders established
a whole government accountable, and we're losing it because they're
destroying the process for convenience.

Speaker 1 (12:35):
So what do we just find out about China and
their involvement in this election process. They're just trying to
weave dissent and disenfranchisement, which is interesting, that's the same
thing we're brewing through the social dilemma. And here in America,
one side in a bubble hating the other, the other
hating the other. And by the way, for the powerful
club of one hundred as you like to call them,

(12:57):
the United States Senate, or the quite frankly, the administrative
state headed by John Podesta and George Soros. They love
that while we're fighting, they're controlling all. Isn't it funny
we're battling against China and our own government in this
cultural slash republic war.

Speaker 4 (13:15):
Well, we are definitely battling against the administrative state. And
people from the forties have been predicting this. I mean,
you don't have to be a fan of George orwell,
you can be a fan of C. S. Lewis and
read the book he wrote That Hideous Strength in nineteen
forty six, where he predicted that a technocracy would take
over free societies. That's because people in their prosperity would
get so busy enjoying their lives that they'd forget their

(13:37):
responsibility to watch out for their government. And when the
government says, you know, we got it from here, that's
when we're in trouble. And that's where we are right now. Michael.
It's a challenge a personal responsibility. It's easy to complain,
easy to protest, Guys, we do this all the time.
The question is what are we going to do something
about it? And that doing something about it is paying attention,
asking hard questions and making darn sure that you vote,

(14:01):
and don't let them discourage you to the place where
you stay home because they can't be trusted. Of course,
they can't be trusted. We've been able to be trusted.
Human beings fall down. We're falling. We fail, so we've
got to make sure we do our job.

Speaker 1 (14:14):
I will finish this segment by discrediting myself. For the
longest time, I was focused on the two bookends FDR
and the New deal and Johnson, who shouldn't have been
except for Daily Plaza and the Great Society. It was
one of the great bookends that led to an entitlement

(14:34):
versus land of opportunity. While I was doing that, you
were focused on the book ends of Woodrow Wilson and
Barack Hussein Obama. Care to explain why in like thirty
seconds and why this is so relevant?

Speaker 4 (14:46):
You were looking at the how, how the administrative state
would take over. I was looking at both the how
and the why. The why is as important as the
how and the why started with Woodrow Wilson, who said,
we have to change the basis and the platform for
the identity of this country from a God centered system
to its holy secular system. And that's called progressivism. That's

(15:07):
what Woodrow Wilson did, and that's why we are where
we are today.

Speaker 1 (15:10):
And Podessa continues that mission. It's not like the Obama
era ended and we survived it. The same person that
was behind Obama is at the Helm Well, he's even
at the Climate of course, even though he hasn't been
confirmed by the Senate to be Azar.

Speaker 3 (15:24):
You can't make all this upness, one historian and author says,
do not rule out. I mean, it's unthinkable.

Speaker 1 (15:31):
You started a website, a podcast eighteen fifty Main Street
with the assumption of we're ten years out from a
civil war.

Speaker 3 (15:38):
How do we keep it from happening?

Speaker 1 (15:39):
How would we have done it in eighteen fifty, How
must we do it in twenty twenty four?

Speaker 3 (15:43):
Is a civil war possible?

Speaker 1 (15:45):
This historian and this author says, yes, of course it's possible.

Speaker 4 (15:51):
Anything's possible because we're dealing with fallen human beings and
we all fall down. The question is where we do
to stop it from happening. And that's part of why
we keep talking every more that we can, because it's
only the truth that sets us free, and we've got
to find out what the truth is.

Speaker 1 (16:06):
David Zanati, you can hear The Public Square on two
hundred stations nationwide, including the Public Square dot Com on
demand in eighteen fifties at eighteen fifty main Street dot Com.

Speaker 3 (16:15):
Thanks so much for your time. We'll talk again soon.

Speaker 4 (16:17):
Thank you. Michael.

Speaker 3 (16:19):
This is your morning show with Michael Deltuno.

Speaker 1 (16:24):
Well, if you're just waking up things you need to
know for a President Trump questioning the fairness of ABC.
Now there's Elite Report ABC has apparently given assurances to
the Harris campaign. Our moderators could turn microphones on during
the presidential debate. If we think Trump's hanging himself, we'll
flick that mike on.

Speaker 3 (16:42):
No sweat.

Speaker 1 (16:44):
I guess an unfair debate is better than no debate
at all. President Biden expected to block that fifteen billion
dollar acquisition of US steal by Japanese's largest deal maker.
And two students and two teachers are dead following a
school shooting in George at the fourteen year old is
said custody. Royo O'Neil has more in minutes, and Aaron
rails here because well, Mama La Kamala loves to pit

(17:04):
the rich against the poor. Now she's pitting small business
against big business. The pandering continues. Good morning, Aaron, Good morning.

Speaker 6 (17:13):
Yes, that is very much how she's positioned herself, pro
small business, big bad corporate business. And what we've seen
now is her proposals in Portsmouth, New Hampshire yesterday. What
she wants to do is have a tenfold expansion of
the tax deduction for new small businesses it's currently five
thousand dollars. She wants the startup expense deduction to be

(17:33):
increased to fifty thousand dollars.

Speaker 3 (17:35):
This is a big deal.

Speaker 6 (17:37):
Also, and hold your hat, this is not a democratic position.
She wants to cut down on government bureaucracy. She wants
to make it easier for small business workers to get
occupational licenses. She wants to make it easier for small
businesses to do business and operate across state lines. And
she also wants to standardize deductions for small businesses, making

(17:59):
the rama one needs to go through with the irs easier. Basically,
greet this simpler method for claiming home office de junctions
or less detailing tracking costs, things like that.

Speaker 1 (18:10):
Well, it is fascinating how in America we love to
play this small businesses and backbone of America. Small business
is always the hero. And then of course of small
business succeeds and becomes a big business and meaning employees
even more, then suddenly they become the enemy. The critics
of this say, while this may help a lot of
people take an entrepreneurial risk and start a business and

(18:30):
also send them to selling their business sooner because of
some of the things that kick in afterwards. So I
don't know how much of this is Well, I'll ask
you how much of this falls under Well, this is
all good narrative talking points for somebody who's trying to compete,
especially on the economy, in a very close race in
swing states. But not likely to happen depending on the

(18:53):
makeup of Congress.

Speaker 6 (18:55):
Yes, not likely to happen with depending on the makeup
of Congress. And you know, we have several branches of
that's the good old thing we have here. And these
promises are just that campaign promises in many circumstances.

Speaker 3 (19:06):
Now here's the thing.

Speaker 6 (19:07):
If you make campaign promises and you don't uphold them,
you don't get a second term. We learn that with
Bush the first you know, he said, you read my lists.

Speaker 3 (19:17):
The problem we don't have an example of that since.

Speaker 1 (19:20):
I mean, we've done a lot of presidents fail us
since and get second terms.

Speaker 3 (19:25):
So I mean, it used to.

Speaker 1 (19:26):
Be you flip flop the way Kamala Harris is on
major issues that used to cost you an election.

Speaker 3 (19:32):
I'm not so certain anymore.

Speaker 6 (19:34):
No, And here's the thing I have to say about
flip flopping. And I feel very strongly about this. It's
okay to change your position on things. In fact, it's good.
You shouldn't be married to your ideas, they're just your ideas.
If better information comes along, you should change course. So
like the idea that we should hate people for flip
flopping is silly to me.

Speaker 3 (19:53):
Now, all of that said, you got to do what
you say you're going to do.

Speaker 6 (19:56):
If you really are changing course and you want a
course correct, then yeah, have to stand by it. You know,
making a promise and not keeping your word nothing drives
people more nuts, all.

Speaker 1 (20:04):
Right, So the details of this plan, will anybody dig
in deep? Because we don't dig in We didn't dig
in deep on other things that have been proposed to
understand what this really is. And I guess maybe the
debate will dust.

Speaker 3 (20:16):
It out more. I guess.

Speaker 6 (20:20):
Yes, the debate will dust it out more. If we're
talking about economists weighing in on the trickle down effect
from all of these policies, that's important. That is really important,
and that takes a little bit more time to look
through the data and then you know, run models based
on either position. So that's something that we're looking for.
And then also I want to we deserve a debate.
I want to see how quickly either side can you know,

(20:42):
back up what they're saying and not just throw mud.
And yes, there will be mud thrown for sure, but
that's so distracting from what us as voters actually.

Speaker 1 (20:51):
Need to hear well, because if you put them all together,
like how would the taxation of unrealized gains impact these policies?
And do they go together or do they fight against
each other? Nobody seems to get into the weeds of this,
and everything is spun and narrativized so much that the

(21:12):
average American doesn't get a simple explanation of what the
policy is, how it would translate to their lives, how
we would impact job hirings, and all the other things
that are so critical that we're keeping our eye on
right now. We need jobs, and we need wages, and
we need to produce things. That's the stuff that will
bring the dollar back and fight inflation down. Does this

(21:33):
do this or does this pandu to a certain voting
group at a certain time more than it really achieves
an economic outcome? That's what I hope Americans, and Americans
don't tend to dig that deep. Unfortunately, Heck, for most
Americans who are just starting to pay attention right now.

Speaker 6 (21:48):
It's so true and like listen, I think that some
of that has to do the fact that we have
to These election cycles are like too long. You know,
in other countries there like a couple of weeks. And
I think there is something about it. Deadline. I mean
you're back right, Yah.

Speaker 3 (22:03):
They never end.

Speaker 1 (22:04):
I mean, if this is over, we'll go right into
the twenty twenty six midterm and twenty twenty eight presidential campaign,
especially if Donald Trump wins because he's a one term president.

Speaker 3 (22:15):
I mean, it just it never ends.

Speaker 6 (22:18):
Yeah, it never ends, and that's not a good thing.
It's too and it's too much information. You're like, what
is nonsense? Like when it really when you need to know,
let's let's have let's have the information very very quickly,
like at the time we need to know and then
do what you say you're going to do. That would
be that would be optimal. But it's not what we have.

Speaker 1 (22:36):
Yet, all right, Kamala Harrison, our new small business plan
and the tax breaks and then some of the other
plans that will smack them with capital gains if they succeed,
one we will what one promotes their beginning, the other
promotes them selling. So I don't know how the two exist.
And if America will connect the dots. Good reporting today, Aaron,

(22:57):
We'll talk again tomorrow.

Speaker 6 (22:58):
Likewise, Michael, have a good one.

Speaker 1 (23:01):
Well, they're just waking out. Forty two minutes after the hour.
These hour the top five stories of the day. Law
enforcement is confirming four people are dead, two teachers, two students.
At least nine hospitalize after an active shooting event in
a Georgia high school.

Speaker 6 (23:16):
That's just multiple gunshots, rapid fires and like two times,
maybe like two rounds, Like I was just constant.

Speaker 1 (23:23):
It all unfolded just after classes got underway at a
high school in winder Georgia, that's about fifty miles northeast
of Atlanta. This student was inside when the gunfire erupted.

Speaker 6 (23:33):
Hard gunshots, and then my teacher chorte to get in
the corner and then they were clearing this.

Speaker 3 (23:39):
I heard like screaming. This fourteen year old tells the
Atlanta News how he was feeling when he heard the
first shots. I was like a little scared. I was
try Michelle. My friends were okay because I heard like
they got shot.

Speaker 1 (23:52):
The Georgia Bureau of Investigation Director Chris Hosey said law
enforcement's response to this shooting was nothing short of immediate
within minutes.

Speaker 5 (24:01):
Law enforcement was onsane, as well as two school resource
officers assigned here to the school who immediately encountered the
subject within just minutes of this report going out.

Speaker 1 (24:13):
A lot of damage. Only ten shots were fired in
all before the shooter was engaged, and it's rare, but
this shooter hit the ground and surrendered himself once.

Speaker 5 (24:23):
They encountered the subject. The subject immediately surrendered to these
officers and he was taken into custody.

Speaker 1 (24:30):
President Biden immediately gave his condolences to those family members
who lost loved ones by this senseless gun violence. He
called on Republicans in Congress to work with Democrats to
pass common sense gun safety legislation. Biden said actions like
banning assault weapons and high capacity magazines, requiring safe storage

(24:51):
of firearms, and enacting universal background checks will prevent more
mass shootings. Though this is a fourteen year old who
at thirteen was on the FB guys radar, was investigated
for making threats on the year, his parents were involved,
and yet it still happened. As for Donald Trump, he
couldn't have a debate on Fox News, so we had
a town hall and he addressed the shooting. Brian shook

(25:12):
As more with our road to the White House.

Speaker 7 (25:14):
Road to the White House. Twenty twenty four, Former President
Trump was back in Pennsylvania for a town hall event
with Fox News. The event, which was monitored by Sean Hannity,
saw Trump immediately get asked about the Georgia High School
shooting Wednesday.

Speaker 8 (25:29):
Well, let's say, sick and angry world for a lot
of reasons, and we're going to make it better.

Speaker 3 (25:36):
We're going to heal our world.

Speaker 7 (25:37):
It marked a busy day of campaign events across both
parties as the election draws closer. Trump's running maye jd
Vance appeared at a Turning Point action event in Arizona. Meanwhile,
Vice President Harris outlined her proposed tax deductions for small
business startups at a rally in New Hampshire. In Washington,
I'm Brian shook As for President Biden.

Speaker 1 (26:00):
His son Hunter is back in court, this time federal
tax evasion, this time Los Angeles.

Speaker 3 (26:05):
Mark Mayfield has details.

Speaker 9 (26:07):
The president's son is accused of failing to pay more
than a million dollars in federal taxes between twenty sixteen
and twenty nineteen. Biden will be in the court room
for the first day of jury' selection. Back in June,
Biden has found guilding on felony gun charges in Delaware
after he lied about his use of illicit drugs when
purchasing a firearm. It marked the first time that a
sitting US president's child.

Speaker 3 (26:27):
Was convicted of a crime.

Speaker 1 (26:28):
I'm Mark Mayfield, just beetle, just set to give a
boost to the box office. The sequel of the nineteen
eighty eight Tim Burton film is expected to make between
one hundred and one hundred and ten million dollars in
its first weekend in theaters. If it hits or surpasses
those projections, it could end up being the best September
debut ever.

Speaker 3 (26:47):
Well, today would have been Freddy Murcery's birthday. We get
News The Queen.

Speaker 1 (26:50):
Guitarist Brian May says he suffered a minor stroke last week.
He announced what he described as a health hiccup. I
would have been milking it from more than that. May
said he went to the hospital last week after he
couldn't use his arm. The Rock and Roll Hall of
Famer reassured fans he's all better now and able to
play the guitar. It's being billed as the PGA Tour

(27:11):
versus the Live Tour. PGA stars Rory McElroy and the
number one in the world Scotty Scheffler will take on
Live Tour stars Brian d. Chambeau and Brooks Kopka. It'll
all take place in Las Vegas in mid December. McElroy
said he's thrilled to partner with Scotty at an event
designed to energize fans. This is Paul David Patterson down

(27:33):
in Toledo District.

Speaker 3 (27:35):
Belize in My morning shows, Your Morning Show with Michael Dell.
Join Hunter.

Speaker 1 (27:40):
Biden's heading back to court, this time Los Angeles, this
time tax evasion. And two students and two teachers are
dead following a school shooting in Georgia. The fourteen year
old is in custody. I guess the headline of this
story is new school shooting, same old partisan political response.
Rory O'Neal is here. We always give Rory the final story,
and this one's tragic.

Speaker 3 (27:58):
Rory, Good morning.

Speaker 8 (28:00):
It is especially considering the FBI and the local sheriff
in Jackson County, Georgia, investigated this teenager in May of
last year for apparently making threats online. Maybe posting pictures
of weapons on a site about one of those gaming sites.

Speaker 3 (28:16):
We haven't gotten exact details of that.

Speaker 8 (28:18):
But they cleared him, did not file criminal charges, didn't
have enough information to bring criminal charges. An investigation or
interview of his father at the time said, yes, we've
got guns in the house for hunting, but the team
does not have access to them while unsupervised.

Speaker 3 (28:34):
So the investigation of this is still in early phases.

Speaker 1 (28:38):
We don't like, you know, to promote people's perceptions or
thought or arriving at early conclusions. But I mean, in
this particular one, it may not have been enough to
arrest him. And this is not just threats pictures and
you know, detailed threats, but it was enough to put
it on Dad's radar.

Speaker 3 (28:59):
This one's on Dad. You knew you had a troubled kid,
you knew you had guns.

Speaker 1 (29:04):
And what we don't know yet was did he go
to counseling, did he go to a psychiatrist? Were the
guns secured? Did the guns even include the AR fifteen
or were did the AR fifteen company? There's more we
don't know than do know, but early on I'm starting
to look at Dad on this.

Speaker 3 (29:19):
One, well, you know, we recently just what.

Speaker 8 (29:21):
In April of this year, those parents in Michigan got
ten years in prison for the way that they encouraged
their kid to get a handgun so which led to
a deadly school shooting. And now the parents are doing
ten years for their role in this thing. I don't
know if Georgia wants to pursue the same type of thing.
Obviously way too early to tell. With the way, if
and how the guns may have been secured in the house.

Speaker 1 (29:43):
What everyone should be frustrated with, What everyone should be
focused on is we all have kids, and we all
have grandkids, and they deserve to go to school and
be safe. Somebody has to harden this target. Somebody's got
to do something to prevent this from being as likely
to happen in the future. And it just seems like,

(30:04):
you know, every time this happens, we roll out the
same news conferences, the anchors say the same things, They
grab the same people out of the green worm green
room experts to talk, and everybody makes the same either
coverage and or political partisan response, and nobody ever connects
the dots to the all of the above or make

(30:27):
us all feel like it's any less likely to happen
in the future.

Speaker 3 (30:30):
That's what's so frustrating, the very definition of insanity, Yes
it is.

Speaker 1 (30:35):
Why is it so easy to ignore the all of
the above? You know that these video games, that these movies,
that being a culture that doesn't sanctify life or abandons
a particular god or a particular way of life and
value of life. I mean, why don't we ever address
any of those? We just go straight to the gusts
because it means we have to change not the other.

Speaker 3 (30:58):
Guy Bingo was his name? Oh all right? And then also.

Speaker 1 (31:05):
Key battleground state. NASA, we want to talk about the
detailing its plans to bring home the star Liner space.

Speaker 3 (31:12):
Where do we stand with that? We got two stranded
in space.

Speaker 8 (31:15):
Sure, and the two astronauts who came to the space
station aboard the star Liner capsule are going to look
out the window and wave as it leaves without them.
Tomorrow night, a star liner is coming home with no
one on board tomorrow night. NASA just doesn't have enough
faith in the safety of that star liner because of
the thrusters on board keep having several issues and having

(31:35):
two previous uncrued flights. So star Liner's coming home empty
tomorrow night, and then they will send up a space
X capsule at the end of the month. It will
be used to bring home these two stranded astronauts in February.
So their eight day mission turns into an eight month
one a'lah Gilligan's Island.

Speaker 3 (31:54):
This is turning into more danceletor you.

Speaker 1 (31:56):
Would think that there's like how do they plan the
resource horses at the space station. I mean that's I
know they had the oxygen capability of extra bodies, but
I mean, you know, food and so on. Is this
present any kind of a strain? That mean they were
supposed to.

Speaker 3 (32:12):
Be there eight days. Now they're gonna be their months, right? Well, no,
they brought up there. There's more than enough food.

Speaker 8 (32:18):
We've had two supply ships come up in just the
past couple of weeks, so supply ships are still coming
and going.

Speaker 3 (32:23):
Actually, they had to send up clothes. One issue is that,
you know, astronauts don't do laundry.

Speaker 8 (32:29):
Once their stuff's dirty, they just stick it in one
of those supply ships that then undocks and burns up
in the atmosphere, so they literally incinerate everything. But they
were in these unisex clothes that were just there as
a backup. But they just recently got a shipment, one
for female Sonny, one for male Butch, and you know,
now hopefully they'll be a bit more.

Speaker 3 (32:49):
Stylish and comfortable.

Speaker 1 (32:51):
If only we had Elon Musk money, Rory and I
would create the company space. Super great reporting today, We'll
talk again tomorrow, Rory.

Speaker 3 (32:58):
We're all in this again. This is your Morning Show
with Michael del johna
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