Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, It's Michael.
Speaker 2 (00:01):
Your morning show airs live five to eight am Central
six to nine Eastern in great cities like Memphis, Tennessee, Telsa, Oklahoma, Sacramento, California.
We'd love to be a part of your morning routine,
but we're happier here now. Enjoy the podcast.
Speaker 3 (00:15):
Two three, starting your morning off right.
Speaker 1 (00:20):
A new way of talk, a new way of understanding,
because we're in this together. This is your morning show
with Michael del jem. Thank you Mike mccadd who, by
the way, called my brother yesterday.
Speaker 2 (00:34):
Oh did you your brother was defaming you a national radio.
I'm telling the story about you three stooges taken a
ride at Arlington.
Speaker 1 (00:45):
Night's true.
Speaker 2 (00:46):
Only Mike McCann can leave like a five minute and
twenty six second voicemail. There ought to be like a
keyword at the end, you know, and I'm very sure
you listen to the whole thing, he says, grease the peace.
Speaker 1 (00:57):
Why did you feel a need to say smile and
be nice? Well, I mean, I'm just encouraging you smile,
be nice. You know, I am harmy's self.
Speaker 2 (01:06):
Listen, Look, I understand we're describing that. You know what
show here tell I have a quiet confidence about me
in a God who has been the same yesterday, today
and forever and will guide us through this if we'll
get tired of ourselves. No, I'm always in a good mood.
And it's Friday, and you want to play your little
crazy guy from Cleveland like you like to do on Friday.
Speaker 1 (01:27):
Look for him here. Oh, here you go, that's Friday.
My dad used to always go Friday. Oh.
Speaker 2 (01:34):
Just listen to the word Friday. Even the words sounds good. Yeah,
I cannot relate to that anymore. We've talked about this
before and it sounds so cheesy, But I spent seventeen
years working in a job I hated. Now really the extreme,
(01:55):
I'm working for the greatest people in a job I
love with people is so happy.
Speaker 1 (02:00):
I mean, I'm like disgusting. Well, I just don't want
you to fall back into old habits. You know, I'm
not at all be friendly engage the audience. I mean
I'm a little frustrated.
Speaker 2 (02:11):
Okay, So Israel is doing its job and protecting its people.
You know, it is so easy that it's kind of
a theme for today's show. It's so easy to fall
into these narratives I mean, we talk about narratives and
not news all the time. Journalism is dead. You don't
have news. You have narratives, especially on social media. And
then what do you have not news consumers, not student citizens,
(02:35):
You have narrative repeaters.
Speaker 1 (02:37):
Quite frankly, we have an attention.
Speaker 2 (02:39):
Span of about fifteen seconds thanks to social media training
us with reels and TikTok and other things. Nobody really
wants to go any deeper than that. We form immediate,
immovable positions based on narrative cues. If you think politicians
are sickening with their talking points over and over again,
(03:00):
I got.
Speaker 1 (03:01):
News for you.
Speaker 2 (03:01):
There's some people who talk radio that nauseate me with
their talking plights over and over again. And I might
be nauseating you right now with my time. No, because
journalism is dead. We just have narratives. News consumption is dead.
We just have narrative repeaters. Everybody's picked aside. It's us
versus them, and they're throwing at you what they're throwing
(03:22):
at you today, and you're thrown at them what you're throwing.
But nobody even takes time to understand these issues. We
got a great example of that. I understand that The
focus right now is on the race for the presidency.
But what's underneath that fear, that anger, or that urgency
or that emotion, your belief in the presidency that if
(03:48):
it doesn't go your way, life as you know, it
heads extremely the wrong direction. And there's somebody probably shutting
at the radio right now. Yeah, see twelve in the
last sixteen years, and I get it. Leadership has consequences
in our time, not for all time. By and large.
(04:09):
Where's your faith? And people always gonna comfort me talk
about faith, don't even think about God. I love when
people say, you know, faith isn't important. You practice faith
every day. The question is what are you having faith in?
I got news for you. We get on two lane
highways going fifty five miles an hour. There's cars coming
(04:30):
at us, usually sixty to seventy miles an hour in
the opposite direction, in a day where somebody could be
doing makeup on their phone, changing their music, texting.
Speaker 1 (04:44):
Who knows? I mean, you want to talk about the
ultimate faith? How do you know.
Speaker 2 (04:48):
What's something that other car is doing coming at you?
In this day and age, we practice faith all day long.
Faith the sun will come up. Faith is unmos set faith,
these walls will hold up and the ceiling won't cave in.
(05:10):
I'm just suggesting, do we have too much of an
obsession and too much faith given to a presidency, a
presidency with a term limit versus a God who is
the same today, yesterday, and forever, who never fails, who's
(05:30):
always faithful, who always finds a way. So from time
to time I may do things to encourage you to
see beyond the presidency.
Speaker 1 (05:42):
That doesn't mean I don't think this election is important.
Let me tell you what I'm what I'm sharing.
Speaker 2 (05:47):
So I get this email, and I love my listeners,
and I care about what they're feeling and what they
think they heard. That's important to me. This isn't a
bash or a defense of myself in any way. This
is an opportunity for all of us to have a conversation.
So I will do what she'll state, So you know it.
At the end of the show, Rory and I were
(06:09):
riffing into a conversation. In essence, there are three branches
of government. They're really not equal. In fact, if you
go back to the Constitution, not our culture today, but
the Constitution, the context of it is.
Speaker 1 (06:27):
Legislative branch is the most powerful.
Speaker 2 (06:29):
The executive executes the judicial just make sure nobody oversteps
their bounds. Now today we have no use for God,
so sometimes the Supreme Court becomes like God. So I'm
trying to have a conversation, and there are layers of
dysfunction that if every time I bring it up, I
have to go through those layers, or we're never going
to get onto any conversation. But presuming that we are
(06:52):
still a constitutional republic, and that's a big presumption, Presuming
the Supreme Court is using the text and the text
of the founding documents, Presuming quite frankly, that the legislative
branch is doing its job and is making laws. Nobody
(07:14):
failed you more in COVID than your state legislatures and
your governors. Nobody fails you day in and day out
more than our legislative branch.
Speaker 1 (07:27):
Senate.
Speaker 2 (07:27):
The Senate thinks it's a club of one hundred that's
really running the country. I don't even know if any
senators I can speak for one of mine even really
thinks about the state and its rights that they represent.
And our members of Congress running around trying to get
on talking head television shows with young girls chasing them
(07:48):
and their big egos.
Speaker 1 (07:50):
Are they really making laws?
Speaker 2 (07:56):
The most damning thing I can say about this legislature
and the most especially in light of what we've tried
to make the presidency. There's not many vetos, is there.
They don't produce anything. So I understand we got dysfunction
on every layer. But if you held a gun to
(08:18):
my head and said, Michael Trump wins, but the Democrats
get controlled the Senate in the House, or Michael Kamala wins,
but the Republicans get control of the Senate in the House.
Speaker 1 (08:31):
Pick one.
Speaker 2 (08:34):
I'm going to take control of the Senate in the house.
She can't get anything done. She can vetos some stuff
that can be overridden. So that was kind of the conversation,
and then Rory took her to another level, which is
smart to do.
Speaker 1 (08:52):
By the way, all the people, we don't even know
how many of you can name.
Speaker 2 (08:57):
Your state representative or your state senate, how many know
your school board, how many can name anybody on the
zoning Commission? These are and Rory was making the way,
these are things that are really affecting your life. Nobody
was saying this presidential election is not important. It's giving context,
(09:18):
so you only get to Terry's comment. I'm an avid listener,
and I hope you still are, and hope this clears
it up. And I hope you're listening right now. If not,
I hope you're listening to the podcast. I'm an avid
listener of your morning show and I enjoy your commentary. However,
your segment with Rory O'Neil this morning was incredibly disappointing
to hear. You applied to a voice message left by
(09:40):
one listener. Yeah, it was a listener who is deathly afraid,
as if somewhere in the Book of Revelations, when Kamada
it becometh president, life as you know it is over,
you know. And I was just trying to give her
some confidence. There's something even above the presidency. We are
(10:03):
not to live in fear, and we're not. She expressed
her confusion and concern over what would happen if one
or the other presidential candidate were to be voted into office.
Your reply to that listener was that they should not worry.
You followed that up by saying the president is not
(10:25):
substantial to the safety of the American people. That I
never said that it won't matter which of the two
cat No, what I was saying was no matter who wins. Listen,
I gotta share one story because we don't have only
so much time in this opening my lugue. I'll never
forget when Bill Clinton got elected, I was scared, Are
(10:48):
you kidding me? This philandering young wind bag is the president?
Speaker 1 (10:52):
Oh? My.
Speaker 2 (10:53):
Then I had a buddy of mine, who was a
salesman at the radio station at the time, called me up.
I'm getting him a truck to would come with me.
I said, where you're going, I'm going on to the
Arkansas state line. I'm gonna take go to the bathroom
on Arkansas soil. No, that's okay, I'll pass all right. Frankly,
I give my eye tooth for Bill Glinton today compared
(11:15):
to what we're dealing with.
Speaker 1 (11:20):
But it was fine. Eight years of Barack Obama was
expensive and divisive. Fine.
Speaker 2 (11:31):
It's just a matter of how dune we want to
be and how much we want to pay for our stupidity.
I do believe that the difference and foreign policy and
national security priority is very.
Speaker 1 (11:49):
Troubling to me. So I get that fear.
Speaker 2 (11:52):
I didn't think it was a good time to push
somebody on the ledge, completely off the ledge.
Speaker 1 (11:57):
There's a lot writing on this.
Speaker 2 (12:00):
Would be very wise for this country to elect Donald
Trump over platitudes, puppet and word salads, especially when you're
playing with the border, and especially when you're playing with
world war in the Middle East. I get all that,
(12:21):
she concludes. I want to give her her fair shake. Michael,
the president is significant not only to the American people
but to the world stage. Especially on the world stage,
a weak president portrayous weakness to the world. Yeah, we've
been livinged. We lived at eight years with Barack Obama,
lived at four years with Jimmy Carter. We've lived at
four years with whatever is running the White House right now.
(12:42):
And you'd live with more and more. The world would
be more dangerous. But under this simple constitutional understanding, we
have three branches of government, judicial, legislative, and executive. Only
in modern America have we made presidency a king. And
in some cases it feels too much like me, like
(13:05):
a king of kings, and they're not presidents come and go.
The true king is where he's always been and where
he'll be until the end of time. I'm just trying
to give some perspective. Of course, I think this selection
is important, of course, and I'm transparent.
Speaker 1 (13:26):
I don't need to be, but I am. I'm overwhelmingly.
Speaker 2 (13:31):
Ecstatically and enthusiastically and wishfully.
Speaker 1 (13:35):
I am voting for Donald Trump.
Speaker 2 (13:42):
But I don't buy into if Kamala Harris wins, that's
it for America. Now, I think you've crossed over the
line into narrative, and some would even say hysterias. I'm
just trying to give some balance. Nobody's saying it's not important,
suggesting it shouldn't be. We're all your faith and your
(14:03):
obsession lies. Having said that, I feel good about Donald
Trump winning this election. I kind of feel good about
keeping control of the House and maybe even gaining control
of the Senate. But it may not go that way,
and what it does, I refuse to lose all hope.
(14:30):
But I'm with you. I can see. I'm not blind.
I realize we're not one nation under God, indivisible with
liberty and justice for all.
Speaker 1 (14:44):
Just trying to get back to that this is your
Morning Show with Michael del Chrona.
Speaker 2 (14:51):
I started to make the point earlier that we don't
really have news anymore. We have narratives, and narrative repeating.
But if we had real study and real underst how
much do you know about Hesbelah, how much you know
about Lebanon?
Speaker 1 (15:05):
How much you know about Iran?
Speaker 2 (15:08):
Any narrative talking point can tell you, Oh, baby Danya,
who's just out of control.
Speaker 1 (15:13):
He's trying to start World War three to hang on
his power. Boy, are you.
Speaker 2 (15:18):
Missing the real story here of how rooted Hesbela is
in Lebanon, how rooted Hamas is in the Palestinian territory,
how all ties are to Iran, how Iran is the
most dangerous and predictable threat to the world and to peace.
(15:40):
That's the story buried in this Yesterday strikes ahead of
Hesbelah's threats or to take out their ability to carry
out their threats missile sites. But for the walkie talkies
and the pagers, that's the lesson of how entrenched it
is in culture. There are soldiers walking around everywhere, and they're.
Speaker 1 (16:02):
Not in uniform.
Speaker 2 (16:05):
Somehow Israel brilliantly found a way to target them, but
very little civilian casual and I'll mentioned yesterday's bombings targeted bondings,
no civilian casualties, but took a lot of their offensive
abilities away. Israel prosecuting its war, protecting its people after
(16:28):
and being invaded. Our president, who's allowing an invasion at
the border, is scared to death and saying this looks
like escalation. Somebody find diplomatic peace. The election's forty seven
days away. The polls between Harris and Trump are deadlock.
Trump was talking to Jewish voters about the importance of Israel.
Oprah was hosting the word Salad Queen Mama La Kamala
(16:51):
with all the Hollywood stars.
Speaker 1 (16:53):
Boy, that says a lot, doesn't it.
Speaker 2 (17:00):
I'll start with I've never seen anybody run for president
who's only running harder away from the media. Most people
running for president can't get enough media opportunities.
Speaker 1 (17:16):
Because this is an interview process, and.
Speaker 2 (17:17):
The more exposure and the more exposure to the actual voter,
the better the chance of winning the vote.
Speaker 1 (17:24):
But that isn't what's happening.
Speaker 2 (17:26):
We got Joe Biden a Podesta puppet by hiding him
in a basement during COVID. We're trying to get Kamala
Harris another puppet by hiding her in plain sight. This
is from the New York Post. Kamala Harris is giving
the press and Americans the silent treatment. The vice president
is on track to grant the fewest interviews of any
(17:49):
major political presidential nominee ever, and it's not just because
she entered the race historically late. Since President Biden ended
his real life action bid on July twenty first, his
fifty nine year old number two has given just.
Speaker 1 (18:04):
Six sit downs.
Speaker 2 (18:09):
And we waited what thirty three days for the first,
leaving both her allies and her critics certainly wanting more.
This sounds biased and critical, but unfortunately it's accurate. Harris
(18:31):
has scrupulously picked her spots, opting for relatively friendly environments,
like an August twenty ninth interview with CNN's Dana Bash
where she even got to bring her you know, emotional
support pet with her her running mate Tim Walls. She
(18:51):
also sat down with Philadelphia ABC station, Spanish language radio
host and a panel at a gathered National Association of
Black Journalist and we showed you how differently they treated
her from Donald Trump. And then yesterday in a staged
(19:12):
live stream event with Oprah Winfrey and a handful of
Hollywood stars popping in. And even in these staged environments,
did you get any specifics or did you get more
(19:33):
platitudes and more word salads?
Speaker 4 (19:37):
You really would love to know what your plan is
to help lower the cost of living.
Speaker 3 (19:42):
Yeah, first of all, thank you both for being here,
and yours is a story I hear around the country
as a travel and in terms of both rightly having
the right to have aspiration and dreams and ambitions for
(20:03):
your family and working hard and finding that the American
dream is for this generation and so many recently, far
more elusive than it's been, and we need to deal
with that.
Speaker 2 (20:17):
Well, I think the real question is why haven't you
and the President dealt with that? In fact, if you
can't prove you're a major policy departure from your predecessors,
you have controlled the White House twelve of the last
sixteen years. To ask your question of how you're going
to deal with it, and you just answered the importance
(20:39):
of her question. That's not the answer. I've seen better
answers and beauty patches. Yes, we all know world peace
would be wonderful. Can you do one thing to help
make it more peaceful? So that's the economy one thing
(21:00):
thing people are voting about. Number two would be the
border crisis, a crisis. She's the czar over and her
and Joe Biden's administration created This question actually took my
breath away because you're asking a woman who created the
problem how to solve it. And this particular guy, I
(21:20):
don't think it's in this clip. He basically says, when
you're president, and she laughs and says, oh, you're confident, Well,
you will be president when you're a president. You're talking
to the border czar who presided over the fifteen million
invasion failure, and you're asking her what she's gonna do
(21:42):
when she's president. I mean, the question alone takes your
breath away. Let Alone, with Oprah by her side the stage,
Holly would answer all.
Speaker 1 (21:50):
The specific steps to strengthening the border.
Speaker 3 (21:53):
So it's a wonderful and important question. I you know
my background as a procedent a prosecutor, and I was
also the elected attorney general for two terms of a
border state. So this is not a theoretical issue for me.
This is something I've actually worked on. I have prosecuted
(22:13):
transnational criminal organizations for the trafficking of guns, drugs, and
human beings. I take very seriously the importance of having
a secure border and ensuring the safety of the American people.
Speaker 2 (22:31):
Are you noticeding a pattern person asks important question, you
just talk about how important question is because you don't
have an answer, and in that case, you're actually the
creator of the problem. This one probably falls under word
salad because I can't even figure out where she was headed.
Speaker 3 (22:47):
We can and must come together as Americans understanding they
have so much more in common than what separates us.
Let's come together with the character that we are so
proud of about who we are, which is we are
an optimistic people.
Speaker 2 (23:08):
If you saw the face, I mean, this is like
it's like I'm watching Maya Rudolph on Saturday Night Live
doing a spoof, just a wandering platitude with the faces and.
Speaker 1 (23:23):
Oprah looking just I mean, I've seen this movie before,
at least the last time they did it. You know
you had Barack Obama was good.
Speaker 3 (23:37):
At it, which is we are an optimistic people. We
are an optimistic people. Americans by character are people who
have dreams and ambitions and aspirations. We believe in what
is possible, we believe in what can be, and we
(24:01):
believe in fighting for that. That's how that's how we
came into being because the people before us understood that
one of the greatest expressions for the love of our country,
one of the greatest expressions of patriotism is to fight
(24:22):
for the ideals of who we are, which includes freedom.
Speaker 2 (24:29):
I gotta tell you there was several times. And you know,
Oprah is a sucker for any soup for the soul
kind of a thing. And even Oprah's looking and you can.
Speaker 1 (24:40):
Just set your eyes. Oh we got than a positive note.
Speaker 2 (24:48):
I know she goes from time to time, but Oprah
looked terrific yesterday.
Speaker 1 (24:54):
Hi, my name is vern Aaron and my morning show
is your morning show? Michael del Jorno fifty one minutes
after the hour, just waking up. Well, you all know
that Kamala was hanging out with Oprah.
Speaker 2 (25:08):
The Hollywood stars giving word salads and platitudes. Donald Trump
was addressing Jewish voters Brian Shook as I rode to
the White House.
Speaker 5 (25:17):
Road to the White House twenty twenty four. Former President
Trump gave remarks that the Israeli American Council's National Summit
in Washington, d C.
Speaker 2 (25:26):
On Thursday, more than any people on earth, Israel has
to defeat her.
Speaker 1 (25:32):
I really believe that is a disaster for Israel.
Speaker 5 (25:36):
Trump spoke on what may happen for Israel if Kamala
Harris was elected, while also promising to reinstate his travel ban.
He went on to add that the upcoming election is
the most important election in the history of Israel. The
Fighting Anti Semitism in America event also featured Miriam Addelson,
the widow of longtime GOP donor Sheldon Adelson, and other
(25:59):
Jewish leaders in Washington. I'm Brian Shook.
Speaker 2 (26:03):
Well, we got forty seven days till the big election,
and polls show it's a dead heat. Harris and former
President Donald Trump deadlocked less than seven weeks before the
presidential election, according to a survey by The New York Times,
the Philadelphia Choir and the Siana College poll both are
tied at forty seven percent. Meanwhile, the Postmaster General is
rejecting any claims that they can't handle all the mail
(26:25):
in votes.
Speaker 6 (26:26):
The American public will become increasingly along if there is
ongoing dialogue that continues to question the reliability of the
Postal Service for the upcoming elections. Let me be clear,
the Polsal Service is ready to deliver the nation's mail
in balance.
Speaker 2 (26:40):
Cancer deests in the us. Here's some good news and
we need some this morning. On the decline, Tammy Trehila reports, that's.
Speaker 7 (26:46):
According to our report released by the American Association for
Cancer Research, which found that the cancer death rate went
down by thirty three percent between nineteen ninety one and
twenty twenty one. The cancer death rate for children in
adolescents is also dropped by twenty five four percent in
the past two decades. To report cited early detection, lower
smoking rates, and improvements in treatment is reasons for the decline,
(27:08):
but the authors warned that alcohol is still a lesser
known risk factor and excessive levels of consumption can increase
the risk of certain types of cancer, including breast cancer
and liver cancer. I'm Tammy Truhio.
Speaker 1 (27:20):
Funny they left out obesity and its ties to cancer.
Speaker 2 (27:23):
Well, if you fell asleep, you're not the only one
last night watching Thursday night football.
Speaker 1 (27:26):
So did the Patriots. Jets won twenty four to three.
Speaker 2 (27:28):
And it looks like President Biden's student loan forgiveness plan
hit another roadblock. What is this the fifth Aaron Rayel
roadblock for this?
Speaker 4 (27:37):
Yeah, it's not going to happen, man, This just.
Speaker 1 (27:41):
Didn't From Aaron Rayel. It's not going to happen, man.
Speaker 4 (27:45):
I mean, it's no. So this is just the latest setback.
It happened on Wednesday, temporary restraining order extended another fourteen days.
US District Judge Randall Hall. He said that he wants
to block this. So this is Biden's like big thing.
The administration wanted to forgive student loans, that they wanted
to do it for a lot of people. Actually four groups,
(28:06):
and those four groups were those who owed more than
they originally took out, those who have been in repayment
for decades already, those with low financial value of their
actual loan, like their their degree, and those who qualify
for loan forgiveness under the existing program. But Republicans didn't
like it. There was a lawsuit that came. It was
filed by seven GOP states earlier this month Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Missouri,
(28:29):
North Dakota, and Ohio and yeah, basically long story shorts.
They accused Biden of trying to secretly implement the plan
and the final rule of the program before it was
issued in October, and that would violate the rules. I
don't know why he made this big announcement sometimes. I mean,
I do know why he was.
Speaker 8 (28:47):
Run for president exactly exactly, but you're like, don't do that,
Like you might actually get your signature legislation passed if
you stop bugging everybody and firing up your opponents.
Speaker 2 (28:59):
What two in and of itself, Yes, that that's been dropped.
I mean, well, first of all, he's in the backseat
of a you know, he's in a trunk of a car.
They just whisked him off. But notice not a peep
about student loans and pandry from Kamala Harris. In fact,
the patterings turned to money down for first time buyers,
which you do nothing, fifty thousand dollars for new businesses,
(29:21):
which obviously wouldn't need fifty thousand dollars for five or
six years. So but they've dropped this completely. Well, I
think they could read the writing on the wall. Supreme
Court wasn't going to allow it, let alone Congress, and
then ultimately it ultimately dies by the American people.
Speaker 4 (29:36):
I'm glad that you bring that up, because the Supreme
Court they struck down this like widescale attempt. It was
in juneo twenty twenty three, and it was a six
to three vote that was split ideologically along party lines,
like the liberal justices voted to uphold the program and
not so much. And here's the thing, I get why
he's doing it. Three and four federal student loan holders
were expecting to benefit from this. They're probably going to
(29:56):
vote for you again. But that's a bad reason to
do anything. I I just I don't think that's again,
that's politics that it's like Opress yuckiest.
Speaker 2 (30:05):
Wow, there's a lot of pandering going on. Still, they've
just changed subjects. But yeah, that's what And then what
the American people don't realize is they're paying for all
of it. They get the power, you get the bill
because the government doesn't have any money, it takes yours
and then it creates more expense for you in creating debt.
Speaker 1 (30:22):
But all right, well this is isn't this over anyway?
Speaker 4 (30:27):
I mean, I mean kind of yeah, Like this is
why I'm like, it's not going to happen. They're just
going to keep extending this ruling out and then we
have an election in like less than two months. So
I no, I don't see this really ever coming to pouition.
He tried. And also I like, listen, the idea that
we have too much student loan debt and they were
probably never going to get out from underneath it without
some credit right downs is probably true, but that doesn't
(30:50):
mean this is the way to go about it.
Speaker 2 (30:52):
Well, yeah, and even if you're if you're stalling to
see how the election goes, and if you get control
of the House and the Senate, you still got the
Supreme Court problem.
Speaker 4 (31:01):
So I don't, yeah, exactly exactly this is which is
why they're like, no, what let's go with housing that
seems has a lot of issues.
Speaker 2 (31:10):
Which is a little Herman Hermits as well. A little
second verse same as the first. Aaron's going to be
back next hour. We're gonna talk a little bit about
interest rates. This week had a great influence on the market,
probably foolishly, but it did yesterday. Yep, we'll go through
the reaction to the interest rates. I know Joe Biden
was happy about that as well. More with Aaron Rail
coming up next hour. Thanks good reporting, Eric.
Speaker 1 (31:30):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael nheld Chowno