Episode Transcript
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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 in 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 on.
Speaker 2 (00:16):
Two three starting your morning off right.
Speaker 1 (00:21):
A new way of talk, a new way of understanding
because we're in this together. This is your morning show
with Michael O'Dell, Jordan Riise and Shine Ernie Bird gets
the worm. Sustain your blocks. We don't. We don't even
block punts around here that's blocked. See I heard it,
(00:43):
and that alone changed my trajectory right seven minutes after
the hour, Good morning America. It's Wednesday, December the eleventh
year of Our Lord, twenty twenty four on the Aaron
streaming live on your iHeartRadio app on Michael del Jordaan,
Jeffrey Lyons has the board in the controls j redd
us here. How out of touch is the Democrat Party
(01:08):
and the mayors and governors of the Democrat Party with
the rest of the country when it comes to sanctuary
cities and states? Tis the question of the hour and
the answer is profoundly very out of touch, and eleven
adult voters were asked the following question. Remember, whenever you
(01:30):
do polls, you got margin of error, you got the
sample size, you have the makeup of the sampling, ultimately
the margin of error. But it's very important to look
first at how the question is asked, and this one
is clean and clear. How important is it for Trump
to quickly find and deport a legal immigrants with criminal records? Now, again,
(01:53):
this question makes the distinction of with criminal records, so
working on lawns, opening a restaurant, stuff like that. People
aren't responding to that. But for the tens of thousands
who have come through our poorest border or purposely sent
to our poorest border and then purposely dispersed throughout our
(02:15):
country with criminal backgrounds, Now, I do want to put
this in as an asterisk. Don't forget, thanks to how
out of touch Democrat Das and so on are, we
got a lot of American citizen criminals who just walked
right out the back door and released purposely into our society.
(02:39):
So it's specifically asking how important is it for Trump
to quickly find and deport illegal immigrants with criminal records,
go find the criminals who are because they're all technically
have breached the law by being here illegally. But this
is over and above that with a criminal record. The
possible responses are, well, it's very important, first of all,
(03:03):
when you're making the distinction of here illegally with a
criminal record. By the way, Joe Burrow is the latest
athlete to have his home targeted while he's on national
TV playing sports, and we believe this is a Venezuelan
gang that is doing this. We'll have that story later
(03:23):
in our top five stories of the day. I mean,
why isn't this one hundred percent? Who wants criminals on
the streets with their daughters and sons. But the possible
responses are very important, somewhat important, not very important, not
at all important. Not sure. You ought to be slapped
(03:45):
across the face and dismissed from the survey, but there
is it not sure as well. So the national online
poll was taken November twenty seventh through November twenty ninth.
The margin of error turns out to be two point
six percent. That's a low margin of error, is no
great shock, an overwhelming nearly seven in ten Americans. Sixty
nine percent said it was either important or somewhat important,
(04:10):
And usually you combine those because the somewhat is higher
than the very not. In this case, the varies almost
two to one over somewhat very important forty one percent
somewhat important, twenty eight percent. Put them together, sixty nine
percent said very important or somewhat important. Support the illegals
with criminical criminal backgrounds immediately. Just twenty six percent said
(04:35):
it was either not very important, which was thirteen percent,
or not at all important, which was also thirteen percent.
Six percent gets slapped in the face. They weren't sure,
sixty nine percent to twenty six percent. That's how out
of touch the media the Democratic Party is, and they
wonder how they lost the popular vote in the electoral
(04:55):
College in a landslide. So is it a partisan issue?
Certainly not a legal issue that would go without saying, right,
we have laws to maintain order. You break the laws,
there should be consequences. Democrats are split fifty percent important,
(05:15):
forty four percent not important. How consumed must you be
in your immovable narrativized partisan position that forty four percent
(05:35):
if you think it's not important to get criminals off
the street. This happens when you abandoned God, the source
of When you abandon absolute truth, you have more relativism
(05:56):
than it turns to legal relativism. And that's how things
can crazy. That's how you wake up one day and oh,
you smoke cigarettes. What a loser? Oh you smoke pot cool?
Can you imagine? Oh you have sex outside of marriage. Well,
that's not fornication. Oh you have sex with other people
(06:17):
even while you're married, that's not adulter. Did you wear
a condom as long as you were protected, that's okay.
So you get these crazy realities. Now, for Republicans, ninety
percent found it important, only nine percent not important. For
independence and third party voters again along with the rest
of America, like sixty eight percent important, only twenty five
(06:38):
percent not important. So is it partisan? No, it just
seems only the Democrats have a problem with law and
order because it's under the umbrella of a narrativized, immediate
partisan platform position. And apparently they will hang on to
(06:59):
this even beyond Kamala Harris's demise to their own. Well,
if you're for deporting anybody, you must be racist, right.
Sixty three percent of Hispanics agree it's important to deport
criminal illegal aliens. Fifty three percent of African Americans agree
(07:22):
it's important to deport criminal illegal aliens. In fact, the
reverse of it is just thirty one percent of Hispanics
and thirty three percent of Black say it's not important.
It's something that has strong backing among all groups, with
no major demographic showing less than fifty percent. Wait, we
(07:47):
can get even deeper. How do you do this mass operation?
You may have to use your military. Well, then the
left that's out of touch with the American people will
tell you, well, that's using your military against American citizens. No,
we've already determined in the question these are not American citizens.
They're in the country illegally and they have a criminal record.
(08:12):
So the second question is if Donald Trump is considering
the use of US military to deport legal immigrants, do
you approve or disapprove of this plan? Those who answered
were given five responses. I approve strongly, I approve somewhat,
I disapprove strongly, I disapprove somewhat, not sure. Slap me
(08:33):
in the face. I mean seriously, Oh, I don't know.
Get out of here, Get out of here once they
get a clear majority. Overall voters approving President elect use
the military to remove these criminals, fifty five percent say
they either approved strongly, twenty nine percent somewhat. Among the
(08:55):
thirty seven who disapproved, thirteen percent disapprove only somewhat, whiley
four percent strongly disapprove. So a majority strongly approve that
plan versus disapprove it. Oh you know where I'm headed next.
Only thirty one percent of Democrats in the poll agreed
(09:16):
the idea of using the military to remove potentially dangerous illegals.
Eighty seven percent of Republicans agree and just a fifty
percent independence degree. Is it a partisan issue, No, it's
a Democrat issue and they're out of touch with the
rest of America. And if it took their numbers out,
(09:36):
these numbers would be even higher. This is the power
of narratives. And what do narratives always die of reality
or consequence when we talk about things like the death
of journalism, and it appears even journalists now know they're dead.
This second Trump victory proved they don't have any influence.
(10:01):
They knew they didn't have any ratings, and they knew
they didn't have any revenue. Now it's not come they
don't have any relevance or influence either. That's been handed
off to digital podcasting and others. But this is what's
been going on. They create narratives that create false realities
(10:24):
and they've been getting away with it. Now they can't.
Maybe America finding its way back to reality and common
sense can start solving these problems that narratives have created.
By the way the minority responds to using the military,
forty one percent of Blacks and Hispanics, the two largest
(10:46):
minority groups, approve of using the military, about forty nine
percent disapproved. For whites, sixty two approved, thirty three percent disapprove.
That's that strong narrative. This is the president is going
to use the military against the citizens and anything that
feels like that. So, even though the death of journalism
has occurred, the complete death of the narratives and the
(11:07):
influence of the narratives has not fully cleansed itself yet.
But make no mistake about it, if you're Gavin Newsom,
or you're a mayor of a major city in New
York or California or Illinois, and you play these sanctuary
city games, you're completely out of touch with the American
(11:28):
But you're in touch with your party's narrative, but you're
completely out of touch with the American people. Go figure.
They want law and order safety. Nobody wants to live
where they're not safe. Not polls of plenty, A single
(11:50):
poll with plenty to chew on. To start the day
to day, It's your Morning Show with Michael del Jno.
President Biden says the new administration is inheriting a strong economy.
He's finally appeared to brag about himself more with Mark Mayfield.
Speaker 3 (12:08):
Like most Grace economic developments, this one is neither red
nor blue in America's progress since every month's progress.
Speaker 4 (12:16):
Speaking at the Brookings Institute, Biden said his White House
put the economy through a fundamental transformation and said he
hopes President elect Trump's administration continues that progress. He acknowledged
that his term work through disruptions from the COVID nineteen
pandemic and Russia's invasion of Ukraine. However, he said, with
work from both sides of the aisle, inflation is down
to pre pandemic levels.
Speaker 1 (12:37):
I'm Mark Mayfield. Will the Supreme Court likely weaken an
important environmental law? Justice has heard a case yesterday. Brian
Shook reports.
Speaker 2 (12:44):
The majority conservative justice is implied a support limiting the
scope of which environmental impact should be considered when the
government makes decisions. Justice bred Kavanaugh said that courts have
taken an overly aggressive role in these decisions. This could
have made implications in projects involving oil and gas drilling, mining, pipelines, highways,
(13:05):
and more.
Speaker 1 (13:06):
I'm Brian Shook. It's one thing to be an Oscar
Meyer Wiener, but Anthony Wiener is the disgraced New York
City congressman planning a political comeback after more than a
decade on the sidelines. Sarah le Kessler reports.
Speaker 5 (13:19):
The sixty year old politician, who was forced to resign
from Congress in twenty eleven in due prison time after
sexting a fifteen year old girl, wants a city council seat.
Wieners filed the necessary paperwork so we can speak at
a Democratic candidates forum on Thursday, although he sang publicly
he's merely considering a run. Wiener was hoping to become
(13:41):
mayor in twenty thirteen, but that dream was shattered after
he was embroiled in another sexting scandal. If he does run.
It'll be for Carlina Rivera's seat, which he has to
give up next year because of term limits. I'm Sarah
Lee Kessler.
Speaker 1 (13:57):
The last surviving member of the Mod Squad has died.
Michael Cole had a long career as a TV actor
This's Banned over forty years, but was best known for
playing the undercover of undercover cop Pete Cochran on The
Mod Squad ran from nineteen sixty eight to nineteen seventy.
Mod Squad Bonanza and Room two twenty two might be
(14:19):
my earliest childhood television memories. Really. That, and I remember
the night my dad turned on Dick Cavitt for a
few minutes. Oh, and I remember thinking put Johnny back
on even as a young child. Dick was trying to
say something intellectual and lost me. A representative for Cole
said he died in Los Angeles on Tuesday, surrounded by
(14:40):
loved ones after living a full and vibrant life. Michael
Cole was eighty four years old. Well it seems like
a pointless chore, but a lot of us do it
every morning. Bree Tennis with a morning task that can
actually help you sleep better.
Speaker 6 (14:57):
Ay Yuga Paul shows thirty seven percent of all of
the Americans always make their bed in the morning. They
say men do it more than women. The reason we
don't is time. But the Hotel Association says if the
sheets are already on the bed, that task should take
you less than three minutes, and there are positive psychological
benefits to making your bed every day. The National Sleep
Foundation says making that bed in the morning has been
(15:19):
proven to reduce stress, increase feelings of calm, and help
you sleep better when you crawl into bed at night.
I'm bree Tennis Well.
Speaker 1 (15:25):
Joe Burrow was doing a great job racking up three
hundred and ninety yards and three touchdowns beating the Dallas
Cowboys on Monday Night football. Meanwhile, back home in Ohio,
he was getting beat.
Speaker 7 (15:37):
Borrow is the latest high profile athlete blindsided by burglary.
In October, Kansas City Chiefs teammates Patrick Mahomes and Travis
Kelcey both allegedly targeting.
Speaker 1 (15:48):
Jesse Kersh reports the fed's investigating this rash of breakings
all from the same illegal foreign gang that is in
the United States and proliferated throughout the United States.
Speaker 7 (16:00):
The NBA says the FBI connected many of the incidents
to reportedly sophisticated South American criminal games. Both the NBA
and NFL have warned players about the burglaries.
Speaker 1 (16:11):
By the way, Birthdays Today actress Rita Moreno and I
approved it with the picture, didn't I ninety three years old?
And she looks amazing? Sheems like sixty two, doesn't she.
Jermaine Jackson seventy, Motley cruz Nikki six is sixty six.
If it's your birthday, Happy birthday. Thanks for making us
a part of your big day. At your morning show.
(16:33):
Hey there, I'm Kenny Stevens in my Morning show.
Speaker 8 (16:35):
Is your Morning Show with Michael Dolgorono.
Speaker 1 (16:45):
Hey, it's Michael reminding you that your morning show can
be heard live each weekday morning five to eighth Central,
six to nine Eastern and great cities like Nashville, Tennessee,
tu Below, Mississippi, and Sacramento, California. We'd love to be
a part of your morning routine and take the drive
to work with you. Better late than ever. We're grateful
you're here now. Enjoy the podcast. Dick Van Dyke had
(17:05):
to be evacuated from his home in Malibu because of
these wildfires that was just yesterday. Twenty six year old
Ivy League graduate charge in the murder of the United
Healthcare CEO. Brian Thompson is fighting extradition back to New
York for his trial, and Caitlyn Clark is Time Magazine's
Athlete of the Year. Let me think about that for
a second. Yeah, I think Time actually got one right
(17:27):
for a change. I agree with that. I would go
with that one. Can't have your morning show without your voice.
That's where we find Renee, I believe listening to WLAC
in Nashville.
Speaker 9 (17:36):
Michael, Just so you know, White Christmas will be in
theaters next weekend through the Fathom Events.
Speaker 1 (17:43):
Check that out.
Speaker 9 (17:44):
If you want to go see White Christmas in the theaters,
have a good day.
Speaker 1 (17:48):
Well, you know, listen, I'm a very fairly humble guy.
Is she asking me how to date because I would
love to go with her to see White Christmas? Just
letting you, oh, just informing me, wouldn't that we have
I don't actually live in Nashville, live south of Nashville.
I won't give you any more coordinates other than that.
I don't know if any of the Venezuelan gang members
are listening, and if I'm playing in money Night Football.
(18:09):
They may try to rob my home. But we have
the most enchanting downtown in Franklin, Tennessee. And every year
we do Dickens Christmas, which is like stepping back into time.
It's just unbelievable. I can't imagine I would do that
White Christmas at the Franklin Theater on Main Street. Wouldn't
that be neat? Goodness? Yes, you know, because it's the
(18:30):
seventies that are iffy. Sixties and seventies can be iffy.
Movies that like Jeremiah Johnson still does well. You can
still watch Jeremiah Johnson and it's good. But there are
some movies that just don't. They don't live up if
you haven't seen him in a long time. But when
you get as old as White Christmas, they hold up.
I like the way that the voices are just like
(18:53):
edited too close together. Yeah, what are you trying to
tell me? Scram pal? Why why life? Scram Because I
said so, Dame like you would legs like that and
gams like mine. Come on, let's trip the lights. Fantastic.
But White Christmas, of course, is one of those classics.
Big John is at the sports Book early this morning
with some odds.
Speaker 10 (19:12):
Let me give you the odds on the first hundred days,
will Trump start deporting the illegals that had criminal backgrounds?
Yes minus one oh four, No plus five oh four?
Speaker 1 (19:27):
Book kid, So what does that mean when the yes
is just almost even and then the nose is real
high odds. I've never seen them get that far off.
I always have to come to you if I want to. Well,
I know, but I never seen like minus one hundred
plus four hundred because the value would been voting. No.
(19:47):
I wish Big John would give a class. Class. I
can understand what he's saying. There you go, Big John,
the garland has been late. Can you give us in
a talk back a forty second explanation of what those
odds mean for those of us that are gambling illiterates,
by the way, what's the big on that?
Speaker 5 (20:04):
And you had the same.
Speaker 1 (20:08):
Aspired to stop it.
Speaker 11 (20:11):
Don't you ever let anybody take your power from you?
Speaker 3 (20:13):
No, No, it is the motto she'd come come along.
Speaker 1 (20:21):
We're going to have a conversation with Dave Snati, our
senior contributor in the U in the third hour about
what we talked about with John Decker. Yesterday, which is
the disappearance of Joe Biden. And again, this is a
unique situation. We've never had, only one other time, and
it was so long ago, not in modern media, that
you had a president. He leaves, then he comes back.
(20:43):
So here comes Donald Trump with that uniqueness, and he
comes back a much different person, a much wiser person,
kind of forged in the persecution he has survived and
been through and what he's overcome to be president again.
But that's not even the oddest part about it. The
oddest part about it is how Joe Biden just disappeared,
and it appears Donald Trump is already running the country
(21:04):
again and he hasn't even taken a second oath of office.
It had us all singing, Dion de Mucci, anybody he
has he our old friend, Joe Biden. Can you doubt
well he surfaced yesterday to brag about his accomplishments.
Speaker 3 (21:17):
Next month, my administration will and a new administration will began.
Most economists degree the new administration is going to inherit
a fairly strong economy, at least at the moment. An
economy going through fundamental transformation has laid out a stronger foundation,
a sustainable, broad based, highly productive growth as my profound
(21:39):
hope that the new administration will preserve and build on
this progress.
Speaker 1 (21:44):
Now that's all well and good, but apparently he went
a little too long when somebody decided to just turn
him off.
Speaker 3 (21:51):
And you know, one of the things that's going on
here is I just turned off my going on.
Speaker 1 (21:58):
He grew Abilitiva's speak. I gotta hear that again. I
did a coffee through the nose.
Speaker 3 (22:03):
And you know one of the things that's going on
here is I just turned off.
Speaker 1 (22:07):
I'm gonna go out. I lost the electricity here anyway,
no joke.
Speaker 3 (22:13):
One of the things we found is that, you know,
we we invented this. I mean the computer chip size
of the tip of your little finger.
Speaker 1 (22:22):
Good ad lived there. U for the sound of the day?
Uh yeah, I'll forge that. Daniel Penny. By the way,
the exclusive interview goes to not Brett bear that Sean Hannity,
No Judge. Jenny Piro gets the exclusive interview with Daniel Penny.
(22:45):
Here's a little preview of what they talked about. He
was just threatening to kill people. Who's threatening to go
to jail forever? Go to jail for the rest of
his life.
Speaker 8 (22:58):
And now where I'm on the ground with him, I'm
on my back in a very vulnerable position.
Speaker 1 (23:04):
If I just would have let go now he turned
Why is that a vulnerable position?
Speaker 8 (23:09):
Well, you could if I just let him go, I'm
on my back now, he can just turn around and start.
Speaker 1 (23:15):
Doing what he said to me. Gill you, He later discussed,
He's not, you know, really interested in being considered a hero,
just as someone who stepped in to do what he
had to do. What in you caused you to want
to get involved?
Speaker 8 (23:34):
I mean, I'm not a confrontational person. I don't really
extend myself. I think this type of thing is very uncomfortable.
All this attention in lin mind is very uncomfortable, and
I would prefer without it. I didn't want any type
of attention or praise or and I still don't the
(23:57):
guilt I would have felt if someone did get hurt,
if he did do what he was threatening to do.
Would never be able to live with myself.
Speaker 1 (24:08):
I mean, that just says it all, doesn't it. And
doesn't that speak to the real story?
Speaker 9 (24:13):
You know?
Speaker 1 (24:13):
What is all too often common people just watch a
nut make threats and carry out those threats and if
they do anything, they just film it. That's really the
question of the day. You know, Daniel Penny did what
he felt was necessary, and he just told you, I
(24:38):
could have never lived with the guilt I would have
felt had someone been hurt and I didn't do something.
In the future, will people be more likely or less
likely to step in and do something after seeing what
he went through for stepping up and doing the right thing.
(24:58):
What does he make of well, the very lawmakers and
prosecutors that created this unsafe condition on subways and in
our cities, let alone how they went after him. What
does he make of all.
Speaker 8 (25:11):
That these public officials would do something so self serving?
But how does it serve them to hurt you?
Speaker 1 (25:24):
Just political gain?
Speaker 8 (25:26):
I mean, these are their policies that are and I
don't mean to get political.
Speaker 1 (25:30):
I don't really want.
Speaker 8 (25:32):
To make any enemies, really, although I guess I have already.
Speaker 1 (25:38):
The former marine Daniel Penny sat down with the judge
Janine Piro for the first interview since being found not
guilty in the subway choke hold case. That interview in
its entirety will lair on Fox. But Judge Janine Piro, today,
this is your morning show with Michael De Tuno fifty
minutes after the hour. Thanks you're waking up with your
(26:00):
voting show, and welcome to Wednesday, the eleventh of December
twenty twenty four if you're just waking up. The Attorney
General for New York won't drop the civil fraud case
against President elect Trump yet. Mark Mayfield fills the.
Speaker 4 (26:13):
Sin Letitia James said she is waiting for an appeals
court decision arguing presidents are not immune from civil litigation.
Trump was found guilty of inflating the value of several
properties in order to get more favorable loans and was
ordered to pay four hundred and fifty four million dollars
in fines, and appeals court has indicated it's open to
reversing the decision against Trump.
Speaker 1 (26:33):
I'm Mark Mayfield. President Biden says the new administration is
inheriting a strong economy. More with Brian Schuck.
Speaker 2 (26:39):
Speaking at the Brookings Institute, Biden said his White House
put the economy through a fundamental transformation and said he
hopes President elect Trump's administration continues that progress.
Speaker 3 (26:51):
Like most crase economic developments, this one is neither red
nor blue in America's progress, says every month's progress.
Speaker 2 (27:00):
Knowledge that his term worked through disruptions from the COVID
nineteen pandemic and Russia's invasion of Ukraine. However, he said,
with work from both sides of the aisle, inflation is
down to pre pandemic levels. I'm Brian Shook.
Speaker 9 (27:14):
Well.
Speaker 1 (27:14):
This time of year inspires both the generous and the greedy,
and California's Attorney General hopes to protect you from both.
Lisa Taylor has that story.
Speaker 5 (27:22):
Before you donate, he says, you need to research and
review a nonprofit is financial reports and make sure the
charity is listed on the Attorney General's registry.
Speaker 1 (27:31):
We want to make that work for those folks who
are thinking about other Californians want to make sure that
their donations actually get to their intended recipient.
Speaker 5 (27:38):
Ag Rob Bonta sharing these tips as he volunteers at
Shariah's Closet. It's a nonprofit that provides free emergency clothing
to families in need. He says you should ignore pressure
from telemarketers and deal directly with the charity. Watch out
for a lookalike and fake websites. You'll notice slight variations
in the web address or a very similar name. And
always protect your own identity.
Speaker 1 (27:59):
I only say, well, if you're looking for a little
extra cash this holiday season, though the odds are not good,
I don't have to be Big John to know that
the Mega Million's jackpot is rolling over once again. No
grand prize winner Tuesday Night. Next drawing will be on Friday,
now worth at least six hundred and seventy million dollars.
The odds of winning all that money not very good.
(28:20):
About one in three hundred and two million. Alcohol on
mass transit, It's going to be a no no once
again for all Santa clauses taking part in New York
City's Santa Con. Tammy Trihilo has this season's greeting.
Speaker 11 (28:33):
The annual event takes place this weekend. The Metropolitan Transportation
Authority says they want everyone to have a jolly good
time and enjoy the festivities while getting there safely. Police
presence will be increased at Penn Station and the Grand
Central Terminal to keep an eye out for those grinches
who might be breaking the rules. I'm Tammy Trihio.
Speaker 1 (28:51):
We were saying yesterday, and I remember I prefaced it
by saying, I'm not just doing talk radio here. I'm
not just being mean to be mean, I was being literal.
Kamala Harris is going around popping in on all these
holiday business Christmas parties, and then people of course are
thinking about either christ or end of the year, or
(29:13):
getting off work, or shopping for family members or holidays
with loved ones. I mean, their mind's on everything but
the election, and she pops in like they're on you know,
death Watch, suicide Watch, don't ever give up. She's giving
these like pep talk, and of course everybody's moved on
but her. It's so awkward, And so I made the statement,
(29:36):
I mean, no one is thinking about Kamala Harris. There's
not many people thinking about Joe Biden, who is president,
let alone thinking about Kamala Harris, who isn't and won't be.
And no sooner did I say that yesterday than the
Rasmussen research proved it hours later. Even though most voters
(29:57):
don't blame Kamala Harris for the Democra losing the twenty
twenty four election, they also don't think she's their best
choice in the next election. According to the latest Rasmus
reports National Survey Online, just twenty four percent of likely
US voters believe it would be better for Democrats to
have Harris as their candidate and the next election twenty
(30:19):
four percent, sixty one percent, I think they should find
another candidate. By the way, do you have the slapping
of the face sound effect? Fifteen percent said they weren't sure.
Slap harder, harder. I don't know. For some reason, the
door's funnier it is. Wait a minute, I think our
(30:45):
punt just got blocked. A minute, Wait a minute, now
won't play here we go think about that now again.
Kamala Harris is a rich history, right She ran for
president and she was the first one out in twenty twenty.
She was the Clinton apparatus candidate, and they thought they
(31:09):
had a storyline here. Of course, she went after Joe
Biden the hardest, calling him out to be a racist,
and he would have stood against her getting on a bus. Ironically,
she gets taken out by Tulsea Gabbard in a debate exchange,
(31:34):
and then Tulsea Gabbard goes out of support Donald Trump
four years later in a coalition with Robert Kennedy Junior.
I mean, you can't make this stuff up. But don't
forget Harris was the first one out out of nineteen
a complete failure. Now the only reason why she's in
the conversation is because, well, Joe Biden, who was fourth
(31:56):
in Iowa, seventh in New Hampshire. They cut a deal
after weaponizing COVID and changing election laws in South Carolina,
hid the old man in a basement. They got him
elected and it worked. Then you have the Obama apparatus
and the Clinton apparatus coming together through John Podesta, and
(32:17):
she becomes vice president. And then after Joe and they
couldn't hide his cognitive impairment any longer has to be
forced out. Who's standing there first in line, the one
that was the first out in twenty twenty, the Vice President,
Kamala Harris, and she runs this short race embarrassingly. They
tried to hide her in plain sight, the way they
(32:39):
hided Joe Biden in a basement in twenty twenty, and
it eventually blew up in their face. Of course, she
shouldn't be considered in twenty twenty eight. The only one
that is considering her in twenty twenty eight is her,
But sixty one percent of her own party think they
should find another candidate that don't gloat. We'll find another candidate,
(33:01):
the governor of Maryland. He's got a really good chance
of winning. But yes, I wasn't being mean yesterday. I
was being literal, and then the research backs me up.
No one's thinking about Kamala Harris. Somebody stops serving her
at these Christmas parties. All right, when we come back,
visit with roy O'Neil. The reaction on social media to
(33:21):
the arrest of Luigi Mangioni is being called bizarre by
some critics. I say it this way, this thanks to
high Evan. Something still doesn't add up. We're all in
this together. This is your Morning Show with Michael ndheld
Joano