Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, it's me Michael. Your morning show can be heard
(00:01):
live five to eight am Central, six to nine Eastern
and great cities like Jackson, Mississippi, Akron, Ohio, or Columbus, Georgia.
We'd love to be a part of your morning routine
and we're grateful you're here. Now, enjoy the podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
On two three, you're starting your morning off right, a
new way of talk, a new way of understeing, because
we're in the stage.
Speaker 3 (00:26):
This is your morning show with Michael o'dill Jordan.
Speaker 4 (00:30):
Jicki Haley said, giving George Soros the Presidential Medal of
Freedom is another slap in the face of America after
reducing the sentence of murderers and hardening his son.
Speaker 5 (00:41):
Sixteen days is a long time until Inauguration Day. She
sums up the kamikazi Joe Biden presidency. Though don't we
see through that this really is an old Joe doing
all this. Whoever's been running the country is the one
that's doing this. Heading out medals of freedom to George Soros,
offshore drilling bands eleven, get more terrorist sent back to
the Middle East. But George Soros in and of himself
(01:09):
is someone you need to know everything about Arabella, all
of his vehicles that he uses, what his ultimate agenda
is as history, everything you need to know about George Soros.
Coming up in the third hour, David Sinnati will be
joining us with the American Policy Roundtable. On that John Decker,
Republican congressional leaders are mapping their legislative plan.
Speaker 3 (01:32):
That's a big story today.
Speaker 5 (01:35):
Originally Donald Trump said I want one big beautiful bill.
Now he's opening to the concept of two, not as
big beautiful deals, one deal, one topic at a time,
or one big beautiful bill.
Speaker 3 (01:48):
What will it be.
Speaker 5 (01:50):
We'll talk about that with our White House correspondent John
Decker next hour. And I would think the two other
than the moment I'm living right now. And I really
that's why it's named You're a morning show. That's where
we feature so many of your talkbacks. You're the most
entertaining part of the show to me, and I love
(02:10):
interacting with this audience probably more than anything. I said
this the other day, going back to WTIX, I think
I was still a teenager.
Speaker 3 (02:18):
I don't even think I was twenty.
Speaker 5 (02:19):
Yeah, and I was hosting the late night oldies party
And can you imagine in New Orleans doing nothing but
phones and oldies.
Speaker 3 (02:26):
How crazy that guy. Absolutely, that's a highlight.
Speaker 5 (02:28):
And another highlight was early on in my career in
Christian music radio, I used to do a word for
the Day. And I'm not suggesting I've had this urge
to do something similar to that on this show, but
something to kind of start your day with your eyes
fixed in the right direction. I can tell you this.
(02:49):
I can't insure the rest of your day goes well,
but I can't impact how your morning begins. We're going
to do our first ever installment of Word for the Day,
and it comes to us from my producer read reminding
us they're steroids, they're not chicklets, and that's our word
(03:10):
for the day.
Speaker 3 (03:11):
Do you think of smoking? I really don't know what
he said.
Speaker 6 (03:15):
At the end of this, I'm going I'm going take
why do you like my garbage?
Speaker 3 (03:27):
I love your garbage truck. I can't wait to see
you're moving truck.
Speaker 5 (03:30):
All right, So Sounds of the Day for this Tuesday,
January seventh, We've got to start with Kamala.
Speaker 3 (03:34):
Why what you all wanted to see?
Speaker 7 (03:36):
MAMAA Kamala unburdened herself from the path by reading the
election results and making.
Speaker 4 (03:43):
An officialist president of the Cynic.
Speaker 5 (03:49):
Although I would like to chime in, I said earlier, going,
we're only Richard Nixon and al Gore had gone before.
Speaker 3 (03:56):
What about herd Humphreys?
Speaker 5 (03:58):
Was he not the vice president who secured the nomination
over McCarthy and Wallace and lost to Nixon in sixty
eight and therefore he must have been around a month
later to certify the election. Do we had certified election?
We certified elections back then. So I'm going to correct this.
Mama La Kamala yesterday had to go where Richard Nixon
(04:20):
went at sixty one. Humphries had to go in January
of sixty nine, and al Gore had to go two
thousand and one, having been the loser in the race.
Speaker 3 (04:32):
Make it official. The winner the votes.
Speaker 8 (04:34):
For President of the United States are as follows.
Speaker 5 (04:38):
Donald J.
Speaker 2 (04:38):
Trump of the state of Florida has received three hundred
and twelve votes.
Speaker 3 (04:43):
Kamala D.
Speaker 7 (04:44):
Harris erupted by a pause. Let me confirm she did
not win and it was not close. Mama Comma lost
big all. I know you guys wanted to enjoy that.
Speaker 5 (04:58):
Our next sound the day comes fro James Carvell, because
it'd be one of the most fascinating things I remember
about the election cycle of twenty twenty four. The very
man who coined the phrase it's the economy stupid, forgot
it's the economy stupid, and got so focused and began
to believe the lies and narratives that he forgot the truth.
(05:22):
And he thought Kamala was going to win, and he
was wrong. And he has a message not just for himself,
I guess, but also for all Democrats out there now
Listen closely to what the lessons they've learned are. First
jets Hockey right, the first White House Press secretary for
Joe Biden, now just disguised as a television host, not
(05:48):
a political operative talking to a political operative, but a
CNN host talking to a political operative.
Speaker 3 (05:56):
Listen closely, frame cord it.
Speaker 9 (05:58):
There's three ways to lead by example, by example, and
by example. And I think people like you who have
considerable experience in this. It was a spokesperson for the
White House, you know, by doing this, or maybe somebody
like me who people say, well, that guy's kind of
been around a long time, maybe we should listen to him.
Is don't talk in that jargonistic language. If you remember
(06:20):
dead in that two campaign when I said the economy stupid,
I was talking to all of the geniuses in the campaign,
and I was telling them, who were all more educated
and smarter than I was, don't be too smart here. Okay,
let's just be authentic and to the point. So I
think people like you and I can bring this home
by example, and don't use that idiotic NPR jargon when
(06:44):
you're talking to voters.
Speaker 5 (06:46):
We've got a de academic I mean, we love.
Speaker 9 (06:49):
Academics, so we got to make it less academic.
Speaker 10 (06:51):
Less every tower I'm here rick it.
Speaker 3 (06:55):
Down. Wish you mean, but less academic.
Speaker 5 (06:57):
Well, the intelligentsia community is what indoctrinates and creates and
produces every street reporter coming right out of university of newspapers,
television stations. Eventually nightly news anchors featured national reporters. Eventually
(07:17):
white house spokespeople slash talking heads on networks. No one's
watching anymore. That used to be the old model. You
would raise your hopefully you would train your children up,
not raise them. You raise chickens, you train up children,
but you would instill values and beliefs and raise your children.
(07:38):
They would go off to college and someone would undo
all that and someone completely different would come home.
Speaker 3 (07:45):
That's all in the family days.
Speaker 5 (07:49):
Then when I was of parenting age, they began the
indoctrination K through twelve. See, these progressives literally believe your
children belong to them and they know better than you,
and so they indoctrinate these minds at the K through
twelve level, at the university level. The intelligency and the
media work hand in hand, and this is how it
(08:12):
all works.
Speaker 3 (08:14):
So they just had it handed them.
Speaker 5 (08:16):
Never mind that James Carvel can't realize he didn't even
listen to himself during the twenty twenty four cycle. It's
the economy stupid. He predicted Kamala Harris would win. Now
he's giving everybody advice, But when you listen deeply and closely,
they don't get The American people rejected their policies because
(08:37):
they died of failure and consequence. They just want to
change the way they lie to you and narrativize to you.
They don't want to change their views that have failed.
And that's why I see a lot more failure in
their future. Give you another example, Adam Scheff, who's now
a member of the United States Club of one.
Speaker 3 (08:58):
Hundred the Senate to him with Dana Bash yesterday, you.
Speaker 8 (09:02):
And others, including President Biden Vice President Harris campaigned aggressively
on the threat that you said that Donald Trump poses
to American democracy.
Speaker 3 (09:16):
And yet here you are.
Speaker 8 (09:18):
Just coming from certifying his election again. Why don't you
think the American voters heeded your call.
Speaker 11 (09:27):
It is remarkable to think that the same former president
who sat in the White House dining room as that
mayhem was being undertaken at the Capitol sat there for
hours refusing to lift a finger to put an end
to the violence.
Speaker 3 (09:42):
That he will be back sitting in that White House
dining room.
Speaker 5 (09:44):
By the way, this Ergent of Arms reports the Speaker
of the House, these threats. They were briefed on. Nancy
Pelosi was briefed on. They chose not to take actions.
This is law fair, this is partisan weaponry. This is
pure narrative. In people saw through it and rejected it,
and all of their efforts failed miserably. In fact, they
(10:06):
created the very Donald Trump two point zero that was
unbeatable and will create probably a great America and a
long term revolution. But they're still trying to play the
narrative game. And where is that narrative. Well, let's go
(10:30):
back to my old friend Harry Enton at CNN.
Speaker 3 (10:33):
He'll tell you. We'll take a look at January sixth memories.
Speaker 12 (10:36):
Take a look here, all right, January sixth is the
biggest memory of Trump's first term.
Speaker 3 (10:41):
Look at this.
Speaker 10 (10:42):
Wow, fine, that is something that is just five percent.
Speaker 12 (10:46):
I mean, most folks simply were willing to dismiss it
without much of an issue and.
Speaker 5 (10:54):
Still playing the January sixth, twenty twenty one card. Nobody's
ever cared, and they still don't care. Don't forget sounds
of the day yesterday when Harry tells you what they
did care about, and you know the guy that rolls
up his sleeves does the whole thing by the board.
Steve Kanaki, Well, he was speaking at a university in
(11:16):
New Jersey going over some key points yesterday, and the
Republicans benefited more from the gender gap than the Democrats.
Speaker 3 (11:23):
That's not by the way, that's a cockadoodle do.
Speaker 5 (11:27):
They were all in on abortion and thought that was
going to be enough. Abortion equals not only statewide referendum
votes on abortion that would draw people that while they
were voting for that, they would vote for Kamala Harris
and it didn't work. They didn't have the female gender gap. Over,
(11:48):
turns out women care about jobs too. Turns out women
care about the price of groceries too. Turns out women
care about the price of gas too. And they had
it handed to them. No, they didn't have a gender gap.
And what did I say throughout the campaign? This abortion
card isn't playing, and there is a big gender gap,
(12:09):
and it's males for Donald Trump.
Speaker 3 (12:11):
That's something we're used to saying. Now take a look
here again.
Speaker 10 (12:15):
We're talking about shifts from twenty twenty to twenty twenty four.
And this is you know, by racing ethnicity. So among
white voters, Trump won double digits both times. He actually
lost a little ground among white voters. White voters are
a little bit more than two thirds of the overall
electric you know, just around and then he gets to
(12:35):
the black vote.
Speaker 5 (12:36):
Don't forget Barack Obama. I think bo was it read
ninety six and ninety two percent of the black vote.
Speaker 3 (12:42):
Didn't he?
Speaker 5 (12:43):
And then it fell under Biden? Yeah, almost ninety seven
percent of the Black vote. So this isn't the greatest
of pictures. It goes from ninety seven percent of the
black vote to ninety two percent of the Black vote
to Biden into the eighties and now Kamala Harris to
seventy three percent.
Speaker 3 (13:03):
Sorry, I'm choking.
Speaker 5 (13:04):
And that's something we documented throughout the campaign, the loss
of primarily male, working class black vote, Hispanic vote. And
this has gone beyond just this election cycle. This is
the last five election cycles. But to show you how dramatic.
In twenty twenty, sorry, the Democrats had a thirty three
(13:28):
percent advantage with Hispanic vote. It was down to five
percent in twenty twenty. They're losing the entire Hispanic voting block.
And none of these people were listening to these narratives
of rapist January sixth, if he'd only listened to himself,
(13:48):
James Carvel, that is it was the economy.
Speaker 3 (13:51):
Stupid.
Speaker 5 (13:52):
That, my friends, is the sounds of the day unless
we're stupid.
Speaker 3 (14:01):
Stop it, don't let it.
Speaker 4 (14:07):
No, no, it is the motto keep come, come along.
Speaker 3 (14:14):
As God is my witness. I thought turkeys could fly.
Speaker 5 (14:16):
That's your Sounds of the Day for Tuesday, January the seventh.
Speaker 2 (14:19):
It's your morning show with Michael del Choo.
Speaker 3 (14:24):
If you're listening on the iHeartRadio app. A couple things
to mention.
Speaker 5 (14:26):
One, we got a new, completely new, all new and
improved iHeart Radio app and on it. It gives you the ability,
like the old fashioned radio in your car, to have
a preset. Don't forget to set your morning show is
one of your presets that we have access to the
podcast after the show or to listen live. This email
comes from Tulsa, Glahoma. I believe he beats a boy.
(14:48):
I purchased an a tc HTC vibe. Is that like
a different platform but similar to the eye thing I wore?
Speaker 3 (14:56):
Is that what the eye thing I wore? I do
not know the answer. I don't know that's the Apple
brand or not, he said.
Speaker 5 (15:02):
I purchased it about a few years ago, and with it,
I stood in front of the Mona Lisa and was surprised.
Speaker 3 (15:08):
How small it was.
Speaker 5 (15:10):
I walked the rocky road above the Terra Cotta Army.
I sat in a sale at Alcatraz WHLL. I did
that in real life, and took a guided tour of
a castle in Europe. I did it all in one night.
I highly recommend virtual reality for anyone who can afford it.
Also I think it's as important to a child as
the encyclopedia said.
Speaker 3 (15:30):
Yeah, but here's what's interesting.
Speaker 5 (15:31):
If you can watch a Major League baseball game standing
next to the first baseman, is that going to be
more fun than buying a ticket and actually going to
the game. And are we experiencing an alternate reality or
real reality? Is at another what's the distraction level? I mean,
you know, remember every time you take a step in
a new direction, you get all the intended and the
(15:53):
unintended consequences.
Speaker 3 (15:56):
But there's no question it's a game changer.
Speaker 13 (16:00):
Listen, corp of the yard Boy and My Morning show
is your morning show with my buddy Michael Del Giorno.
Speaker 1 (16:11):
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 in great cities like Nashville, Tennessee, Tupelo, Mississippi,
and Sacramento, California. We'd love to be a part of
your morning routine and take the drive to work with you,
but better late than never. We're grateful you're here. Now,
enjoy the podcast. Let's have a little one on one time,
shall we? Uh Kamikaze Joe as we call them.
Speaker 5 (16:34):
First of all, I can't say this enough, and it's
worth our time to do it every time. I do
not think that Joe Biden is just suddenly cognitively impaired.
I believe he was cognitively impaired when they hit him
in a basement.
Speaker 3 (16:52):
And ran him four years ago.
Speaker 5 (16:56):
Now the media and everybody else comes to the conclusion, well,
we don't know when it happened, but we know there
was a cover up. Can we get beyond that conversation?
Because the very media on a white horse with a
white hat, as we talked about yesterday, is not the heroes.
They were part of the cover up too. It didn't
stop them, and now they can't. You know, they get
(17:16):
these gotcha moments with all these politicians.
Speaker 3 (17:18):
Well, I thought you said he was sharp.
Speaker 5 (17:20):
Still, I thought you said you've met with him and
he's doing great, and so did you. So how do
all narratives die? Cause of death is always reality. But
the real question should be who's been running this country
(17:41):
and for how long?
Speaker 3 (17:43):
And are their decisions even legal? They weren't elected.
Speaker 5 (17:49):
That it is probably John Podesta, It could be with
George Soros by his side. I don't know. But why
isn't America asking? And maybe America will after Joe leaps.
Maybe that'll be a part of the process of undoing
some of his Kamikazi actions.
Speaker 3 (18:05):
And what are those?
Speaker 5 (18:06):
You say, Well, George Soros getting the Medal of Freedom,
to which Nikki Haley responded, giving George Soros the Presidential
Medal of Freedom is another slap in the face of America.
Speaker 3 (18:20):
Reducing the sentences for murderers, pardoning his son sixty days
is a long way to go? What is he capable
of sliding in? Next?
Speaker 5 (18:32):
Well, no, sooner did Nicki Haley get into that? And
by the way, next how we're going to visit with
David Zanatti? Everything you need to know about why this
is outrageous? Do you know how George Soros survived Hungary
during Nazi Germany? He pretended to be the Christian godchild
(18:55):
of a Christian family as he watched his family and
friends marched off to concentration camps. What has he been
up to with Arabella? What has he been up to
with this money? What is his agenda? What does his
ultimate goal for America? Well, he always puts himself first.
(19:18):
It's always about greed. But I think it's kind of
like when we study Agenda twenty one at the United Nations.
Anybody can sit in a room and come up with
an idea, Hey, what if we just had one centralized
government for the world.
Speaker 3 (19:34):
Wouldn't that be a lot safer? Well, how would we
do it?
Speaker 5 (19:39):
Well, we would have to you know, industrialize on industrialized nation,
deindustrialized industrial nations. I mean, we got to get rid
of economic superpowers, military superpowers. So we got a real
problem with China, Russia, India and the India, the US.
I mean we got to get those level. So it
was some mass gain hidden in the agenda of we
(20:00):
have to do this or the whole world's gonna die
from global warming. But what was it about redistributing of wealth?
What was it about human control? I think that's what
George Soros is really about. But let's go in depth
with David Sanati everything you know about George Soros. So
that was the first Kamakazi Joe giving George Soros a
(20:21):
Medal of Freedom and we read you the definition of
what a Medal of Freedom recipient is being honored for.
Speaker 3 (20:27):
I don't know how he fits the bill. We'll see
if David Sanatti does.
Speaker 5 (20:31):
Next up, the President decides to transfer eleven ye many detainees,
including two former bodyguards for Osama bin Laden, being held
of the US Naval base at Gitmo in Cuba. This
(20:52):
this was a step to reduce the population at the
controversial military facility, you know, kind of like, I'll progress
of DA's, just let a few low level drug offenders
out of prison, you know, for depopulation purposes. Every one
(21:13):
of these eleven in many's were captured in the aftermath
of September eleventh. Why would they capture to begin with?
Why was it important to identify who was responsible? Why
was it important to take out bin Lad the same reason?
(21:39):
These progressive das need to take another look at what
they were up to. It's about justice first for those
who lost their life. It's also about sending a clear
deterring message. But this administration doesn't care, this worldview doesn't care.
(22:06):
After the election, what are the odds any of these
individuals are gonna do anything, you know, before Joe shuffles off.
This is what they think of national security, This is
what they think of justice, This is what they think
of deterrence. How does it work for the local das?
(22:29):
They end up back on the street and commit further crimes.
Who wouldn't all know how to pronounce Lincoln'reilly's name if
they had done their job. This goes back to what
we talked about last hour with the Joe Biden at
the memorial service in New Orleans. They don't need another priest,
(22:49):
they don't need a pastor, they don't need a funeral director.
America has become professional victims. It takes one second before
we're Nolah strong. Do you really want to care about
those who lost their life that night and the prime
of their life and youth, remembering the function of the mind,
(23:14):
honor them, get you the bottom of why those barricades
were taken down. These people don't need professional mourners. They
needed leaders in office to do their job before it happened,
to prevent it from happening. They need leaders like the
American people to be victors, not victims. That's the Left
(23:40):
is always selling you compassionate professional to victim. Would And now,
in the name of under crowding, here goes eleven. You
have many detainees terrorists just released, and not only are
you not getting any kind of explanation as to why
they're being released other than overcrowding, and why do oman
(24:02):
in other areas and what are they getting in exchange?
You can't find abody in the media even covering it.
Then we get to the offshore band. Now we had
a long, in depth conversation about this earlier with our
(24:24):
national correspondent Roy O'Neil. Some of these areas, it's more narrative.
It's not really significant or relevant anyway. So it's more
physitioning than it is change. Some of it is, some
of it is spite. The question is is it reversible?
(24:46):
But this is the kamikaze Joe on his way out
the door, metals of freedom to sorrows, offshore drilling bands
get mode, detainees released his son pardon and the scariest
part of our day what might be next?
Speaker 3 (25:06):
And I wouldn't say an idiot.
Speaker 5 (25:10):
Anybody with a working mind can see something after it
happens and feel something. What we need is the practical,
genuine wisdom of people who can see these things and
do the wise, sensible actions to prevent them from happening.
(25:34):
Can't do it for the twenty new ones, but can
we do it for the next twenty? Can we honor
those twenty by making sure the next time it doesn't happen.
See that's the difference between remembering and honoring honoring acknowledges.
It was them and it could have been us, and
(25:56):
next time it might be us. What's the plan then?
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Speaker 3 (27:37):
This is your morning show with Michael del Chono.
Speaker 5 (27:41):
Good morning, Welcome to Tuesday, January seventh. Here of our
Lord twenty twenty five. The body of former President Jimmy
Carter is expected to arrive in Washington, DC today. You
will lie in state at the Capitol and then a
national remembrance ceremony is going to be coming up later
in the week. A judge is rejected President elect Trump's
effort to stop his sentencing this week. I don't think
(28:03):
he's gonna get any jail time, but the sentencing will
go off as planned. And at least four people are
dead after severe storms in the South over the weekend.
Just waking up in sports on the ice, we did
terrible Caps and the Kraken loss.
Speaker 3 (28:17):
Last night.
Speaker 5 (28:17):
In cities of your morning show interest basketball not so bad.
Detroit one, Phoenix won, LA, Memphis and Milwaukee one. I
say LA one of LA's one. Clippers lost and Portland lost.
All right, Republican congressional leaders, they're mapping out their legislative plan.
They know why they were giving control of the House,
why they were given control of the Senate, and why
Donald Trump has sent it back to the Oval Office.
(28:38):
It was a mandate election. They want that boarded secured.
They want the tax cuts made permanent. They want energy policy.
It's going to bring down the cost of energy. Now
how to do it? One big beautiful bill, two bills,
three bills, four bills, a dollar all for the deep.
John Decker, our White House correspondent, as joining us, Well,
I guess the update this morning would be the Donald
(28:59):
Trump was open to potentially two bills.
Speaker 13 (29:03):
Yeah, that's right. He said that on a huge show yesterday.
And I think the reason why he said that is
because of what John Soon, who's the leader of the Senate,
has told President elect Donald Trump, which is it's going
to be difficult to move one big bill like what
Donald Trump envisions through the Senate. May may be able
to do it in the.
Speaker 14 (29:22):
House, but you can't do it in the Senate.
Speaker 13 (29:24):
And that means that the focus initially would be on
a bill taking care of border security and energy, and
then a second bill later this year focusing on tax
policy extending those Trump tax cuts, perhaps also including those
Trump promises.
Speaker 14 (29:40):
No taxes on tips, no taxes.
Speaker 13 (29:42):
On overtime contained in that bill, and which would be
the wisest to do first.
Speaker 5 (29:50):
That's another thing they're going to have to probably decide
or are you pretty convinced that's the order they're going
to go in?
Speaker 13 (29:56):
The order that's with the order taxes takes time, and
you have some deficit hops in the Senate in particular,
who say, okay, fine, you know, I like your idea,
but as it relates to no taxes on tips and
no taxes on overtime, but how do you pay for it?
You can't just eliminate a significant portion of federal income
(30:17):
from our budget.
Speaker 3 (30:19):
Where are you cutting? Where are you cutting to pay
for that?
Speaker 13 (30:21):
And so that is going to be a problematic aspect
as it relates to that piece of legislation later this year, and.
Speaker 5 (30:28):
It would make more sense to allow DOGE to continue
to do its job and let that get up ramp.
When you start thinking of one big bill, what's problematic
is the more that's in there, the more descent there
can be. It's just harder to do. What's the last
You've been following this for a long time. I go
back to Contract to America. Maybe. I mean, it's fun.
It would be nice if you could do it under
one big bill. But you know, these things grow in
(30:50):
pages and they grow in nonsense along with it and descent.
It's just I don't know that it's a political reality anymore,
is it.
Speaker 13 (30:59):
Well, you know, when you have a majority in one
body of Congress, that's the House, you can do just
about anything you want.
Speaker 14 (31:06):
But you also keep in mind, Michael, in.
Speaker 3 (31:09):
The House, it's a.
Speaker 14 (31:10):
Very narrow majority. We saw that just last.
Speaker 3 (31:12):
Week with the vote for speaker.
Speaker 13 (31:14):
So you have one, two, three members that you know
are dissenting to something contained in one big bill that
you know makes it so difficult to move that bill forward.
So that is something that Mike Johnson, the House Speaker,
will have to contend with in those first one hundred days.
Speaker 3 (31:31):
That's when you would like to.
Speaker 13 (31:31):
See a border security bill passed the House of Representatives,
I think that will be able to pass the House,
you know, because of that simple majority, and that is
an issue that all Republicans are on board with.
Speaker 5 (31:42):
Closing moments with John Degger, White House correspondent and a
Supreme Court bar attorney joins us to understand these issues.
So one big reconciliation package is looking like two and
isn't an important John for us. You know, Donald Trump
does get a second one hundred days, which is more
than most secutive two term presidents get, but we've got
(32:02):
to be I think he needs to be reasonable in
the American people need to be reasonable about how much
he can get done in that short period of time
and breaking it in two. Securing the border and then
moving next to the economy. That's a pretty good first
one hundred days.
Speaker 13 (32:17):
Well, again, I don't think that the taxes will be
done in the first one hundred days. I think that's
the first year. Yeah, you can do the border the
first one hundred days. And certainly I think Donald Trump
first day in office is going to declare a national
emergency as it relates to border security. But you know,
the idea of passing all these things in the first year.
That's a great accomplishment. And if he can do that,
(32:38):
I think that there's much to celebrate for Donald Trump
that he was that I'll be able to do that.
Speaker 5 (32:42):
Great reporting is always thank you, John and bearing with
my calling medicine. All right, fifty six minutes after the
hour and we come back. Why is everybody so outraged
that George Soros got the Medal of Freedom? I mean,
when you read the definition of the Medal of Freedom,
what would qualify you for such honor? Does George Soros
meet that? Who is George Soros? What has this man
(33:07):
always been about? What is his ultimate agenda? What do
these these tentacles like Arabella and others?
Speaker 3 (33:15):
What are they up to?
Speaker 5 (33:18):
Well, nobody's followed Uncle George, like Dave s and Nadi
the American Policy Brown Table CEO and host of the
Public Square. He'll join us next hour to give you
everything you need to know about George Soros.
Speaker 3 (33:27):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael Ndheld, Joe and No