Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, I'm Michael. I'd love to have you listen to
your morning show live. Every day We're heard on great
stations like News Talk five point fifty k FYI and
Phoenix News Radio, eleven ninety k EX in Portland and
ten ninety The Patriot in Seattle. Make us a part
of your morning routine. We'd love to have you listen live,
But in the meantime, enjoy the podcast well.
Speaker 2 (00:18):
Two three starting your morning off right, A new way
of talk, a new way of understanding because we're in
this togem.
Speaker 3 (00:29):
This is your Morning show with Michael o'deill Trump.
Speaker 4 (00:33):
President elect Donald Trump reportedly considering an executive order that
would save TikTok from a ban or sale. Milanya Trump
says no thank you to having tea with Jill, who
spoke so ill along with her husband, the president of
her husband and around the clock containment efforts continue in
southern California's crews continue to battle deadly wildfires, and not
(00:54):
so fast as Lee Corso would say. There seems to
be a hiccup in the ceasefire and hostage exchange in
the Middle East that coming from the Prime Minister's office
in Israel. My dad's biggest insult when we were growing
up was what.
Speaker 3 (01:08):
Do you know it all?
Speaker 4 (01:10):
Thank god Roy O'Neil is a know it all on
a newsday like today, because we got everything from TikTok
to the Middle East to the fires in California. Let's
start with what appears to be as last night, the
president's doing victory lapse on this accomplishment, not so fast
as we wake up this morning.
Speaker 3 (01:25):
What's the latest on this ceasefire?
Speaker 5 (01:28):
Well, right, so we got word from the Prime Minister's
office in Israel saying that accusing Hamas of already renegging
on parts of this deal, So they delayed the cabinets
vote on the agreement at least for now. It's the
Israeli cabinet will not convene until the mediators notify Israel
that Hamas has accepted all elements of the agreement. So
(01:52):
we're in a bit of a standby mode there to
see how things unfold. If they can move forward today,
it would mean the ceasefire takes effect on Sunday. It'll
start the process of releasing some of the hostages then,
and it's a three phase plan that would actually drag
out for months and.
Speaker 4 (02:10):
Just Q and a time here, I did digging. I
know you probably you're a better digger than me, but
still we don't really know what the renigging is. We
think it has something to do with hostage releases, and
even then we don't know which phase.
Speaker 5 (02:23):
Right right, They just said they accused Hamas of renegging
on parts of the agreement that was reached with mediators,
So they didn't get into many more details other than that.
Speaker 3 (02:34):
So it's a bit of a wait and see.
Speaker 5 (02:36):
But as you said, you know, President Biden made two
speeches about this last night, really President elect Trump putting
on true social saying how his mediator was also crucial
and having this plan come together. So a lot of
international pressure to get this over the finish line.
Speaker 4 (02:52):
A lot of pressure to get done with you in
one minute, So in one minute, give us an update
on the fire. I noticed some containment, maybe a three
percent containment increase in the Palace States. Fire eating is
now at forty five percent containment, but favorable weather conditions
until they get bad again late in the weekend, So
a lot of progress needs to be made in the
next seventy two hours, right exactly.
Speaker 5 (03:12):
And while we did see some of those containment numbers
improve considering that was with the increased Santa Ana wins,
so that was really quite the achievement. But now that
those winds are dying back, we're going to see a
lot more helicopters in the air, a lot more planes
in the skies. They're really going to go at it,
as you said, over these next seventy two hours through
Saturday into Sunday, because we expect the winds may return
(03:35):
late Monday Tuesday.
Speaker 3 (03:36):
Roy great reporting is always He'll be back in the
third hour to wrap things up.
Speaker 4 (03:39):
We're gonna talk about TikTok and more. You know, my
whole take on the thank you worry. My take on
the TikTok is it's kind of like the cigarette warning, right.
You know it's going to give you cancer, you know
it's going to give you heart disease. You know it's
tied to the Chinese government. Do you know they have
ill intentions and they'll be risks. But it appears as
(04:01):
we get to the finish line here, everybody kind of
likes it. We're gonna just keep smoking even though the
warning is there. I just I find that hysterical. Meanwhile,
you know, as we always remind people when we're talking
about foreign policy and military the enemy has to say too.
And TikTok is planning to shut down its app in
the US four users. Michael Kastner has more on that.
Speaker 6 (04:23):
That's according to Reuter's, that's when a federal ban on
the social media app would go into effect if the
Supreme Court doesn't move to block it. The law would
only ban new TikTok downloads from the Google or Apple
app stores, and would let existing users still have access
for some amount of time. Instead, users that open the
app come Sunday, we'll see a pop up message that
(04:45):
directs them to a website that has information about the ban.
I'm Michael Cassner.
Speaker 3 (04:50):
Do either, and.
Speaker 4 (04:52):
Feel free as listeners to chime in on the talkback line.
I don't use TikTok.
Speaker 3 (04:57):
I never have.
Speaker 4 (04:59):
I'm really not a f a social media at all,
and it's not to make some big global statement.
Speaker 3 (05:05):
It's addictive.
Speaker 4 (05:08):
There's nothing sadder to me then sitting in a restaurant
and I see a family sitting down eating and nobody's
talking to each other and they're all staring at their phones. Oh,
there is something sadder when I'm doing it. So you know,
I try to limit it all and and part of
that works against what my job is. I would benefit
(05:30):
from interacting throughout the day and staying top of mine.
Speaker 3 (05:33):
I just I don't.
Speaker 4 (05:36):
I'll do my job as long as I can do it,
and then if I can't, I'll find something else. But
I'm not going to spend my life enslaved by this phone.
So I you know, like Facebook, that kind of evolved
through the years, and I post some stories on there
and that's about it. If there's somebody in my life
(05:57):
I want to catch up with, I text her call.
I want to have a human interaction. So I will
tell you this. Nothing on Facebook draws me in. But
if I get started on those reels, oh my gosh,
and I start, you know, I'm swinging by and I
can see, oh, Ronnie Dangerfield, stop buying with Johnny Carson,
(06:18):
hit play. And then of course the algorithm knows the
things you like. And so it's just like add heaven right, sure,
fifteen seconds to a minute and a half of clips
of all things that ever interest you, and they know
what you like, just like if you start looking at cars,
it's not a coincidence. It knows you've been trying to
decide between the Lincoln SUV and the Mercedes, and that's
(06:39):
all you're going to see. And I get that addiction.
So when I looked at my daughters and I said, so,
what is the deal take that? And they tried to
explain to me, well, you know how you like reels,
it's kind of like that, only to a different audience,
like all of your reels are old people reels.
Speaker 3 (06:54):
Didn't realize she insulted me by saying that.
Speaker 7 (06:56):
Oh, they'll find your they'll find what you want on
TikTok exactly. Yeah, so everything's targeted to their age group.
And so maybe that's because I realize I'm talking out
of complete lack of credibility. I don't engage in this stuff,
so I have no idea, but I would I would
(07:17):
think like when I look at my kids and I
ask them, I don't get Instagram. It just seems like
the status update on Facebook and that's all it is.
And then it seems like TikTok is just the reels
and the clips, which for me is mostly comedians pretty revealing.
So I don't really quite get it all, but I
(07:39):
can tell you I can't find and then I wake
up this morning and Donald President, like Donald Trump is saying,
I'm going to find a way through executive order to
end this because Donald Trump wants to protect TikTok. My
kids are scared to death. That's going to go away.
You could take away any of them from me, and
I would good riddance. I'm finding that X is my
(08:04):
kryptonite and I've never never liked it at all. I
just kind of logged in one time to see what
it was all about, what all the hubbub was about.
And now it's where I go to for all of
my news. But it's ninety nine percent political. Okay, yeah,
I would think ye. I mean that's been my observation.
Speaker 4 (08:24):
Now again, I don't know if it's an algorithm's tailoring it.
Speaker 3 (08:27):
My timeline is as add as I am. Yeah, I
mean it can go well.
Speaker 4 (08:32):
But my daughter's twenty years old, goes to a university,
and she would tell you she doesn't get news from ABCNBCCBS,
Washington Post, New York Times, CNN, Foxing.
Speaker 3 (08:40):
She gets it from TikTok.
Speaker 4 (08:41):
Right, And then my one son chimes in and that's
probably why you're so misinformed. And she goes no, I'm
getting it from blank. She starts kicking out some names
and names I would tell you I trust sure.
Speaker 3 (08:55):
So all right now I'm going to cut right to
the chase. Is it possible? This is the one thing
the right has done way better than the left, and
they don't want to let it go. And I'll tell you,
in particular with young people, although I think you could
make a case of Donald Trump, I mean X was
(09:17):
a really big factor in this election and having it
not be Twitter and not silencing opposition thought and being
there by Elon Musk to protect Donald Trump, that was key.
But they have seized TikTok. They are reaching young minds
with conservative ideas through TikTok? So are we all going
to turn a blind eye to the potential danger of
(09:40):
what China could be doing with this information? Because as
a political weapon, well that's one we seized way better
than newspapers which we lost for a century, way more
than television which we lost for three quarters of a century,
and way more than anything ever on social media.
Speaker 4 (10:04):
That's the kind of rat I'm sensing in the room.
Rat you're usually a good person to bounce out. Am
I crazy?
Speaker 8 (10:15):
Now?
Speaker 3 (10:15):
You pretty even spot on Joe.
Speaker 4 (10:18):
Oh, there's Joe sounds to day has more on Joe
and Pam Bondy. I am fascinated this morning with how
different hag Set than Pambondy were, and both were extremely
effective in different ways. But Pam Bondy will I mean,
I suspect and I don't too shallow type talk, but
(10:39):
I mean this is a genuine observation. I'll bet there's
a lot of people today waking up with a crush
on Pam Bondi that he didn't have yesterday. I've been
very familiar with Pam Bondy for many, many years, and
I have always said it really is a unique weapon.
She walks into a room and based on which her
(11:01):
hair color is her beauty, the way she dresses, you
may get an image in mind careful. Between those ears
is a very remarkably intelligent person. Between those shoulders is
(11:24):
a lifetime of right priorities and character. And under those
fingernails is a vicious lion. And these you know because Red,
I wonder if I still have it.
Speaker 3 (11:39):
Red texted me yesterday. You don't mind, do you? Because
we were watching together.
Speaker 4 (11:47):
These senators don't belong in the same room as Pam Bondy,
she's above them, and I simply responded, Now, this wasn't
from what I was watching, because I was at the
nursing home and I was very distracted. But I managed
to catch a sentence or two enough to know, Oh,
she ain't playing their game, and she's not going to
just let them hang themselves. She's swinging back, and I
(12:12):
responded to him, she's classy, she's smart, she's attractive, and
she don't, as Billy Joel used to say, she don't
take any you know what from anybody, everything they despise.
And that's how it played out. If I had to
pick one clip just to tease our segment coming up
(12:33):
and Sounds of the Day, this is Senator Sheldon white House. Now,
not to pick on Sheldon, who looks old, doesn't look
very bright, seems to have you know, as all senators do.
They stay till the toe tag arrives. So I'm seeing tremors.
This could be early on set. Parkinson's who knows, you know,
this is how they do it. And I don't know
(12:56):
what he thinks he's messing with. I mean, you know,
you could speculate in his mind. Oh, here's some young blonde.
You know, Trump doesn't respect intelligent or whatever narrative idiocy
they've been believing. I was watched it was a real too,
by the way, and they were telling the story of
how kangaroos box, and you could go and volunteer to
(13:19):
box a kangaroo. And apparently a kangaroo will knock you out.
First of all, they will send you to the hospital
with a kick, but they like to punch. And so
somebody thought, what a great bar attraction, we'll have boxing
with kangaroos. And this one comedian gets into the ring,
gets knocked out in two punches.
Speaker 3 (13:38):
This guy.
Speaker 4 (13:39):
I mean, as I'm watching this, I'm thinking that stupid
real because this senator thinks he's.
Speaker 8 (13:43):
I'm a senator. I'm so pompous. Everybody in my office
tells me how great I am. I've been around here
longer than you've been alive, longer than your hairs died.
And he gets into the ring with this vicious lion.
This was in a nutshell in less than a minute.
This is how everything went yesterday with Pam Bondi and.
Speaker 3 (14:03):
I loved it.
Speaker 9 (14:04):
And it would not be appropriate for a prosecutor to
start with a name and look for a crime. It's
a prosecutor's job to start with a crime and look
for a name.
Speaker 3 (14:20):
Correct, Senator.
Speaker 10 (14:23):
I think that is the whole problem with the weaponization
that we have seen the last four years and what's
been happening to Donald Trump. They targeted Donald Trump.
Speaker 11 (14:32):
By the way.
Speaker 4 (14:32):
I got to stop it here because we're late for
the break. But the look on his face, this is
where I wish we weren't radio and we were television.
The holy you know what in his eyes? Oh my god,
I just stepped in a big pile. She's going to
turn this around and shove it right in my face.
Speaker 2 (14:50):
It's your morning show with Michael del Chno.
Speaker 4 (14:54):
Good morning, Welcome to Thursday, January sixteenth. Can't have your
morning show without your voice to dover where we go
at art.
Speaker 12 (15:01):
I just want to say, that algorithm that they use,
that TikTok is everything. Can you imagine what the Democrats
could do if they had like a George Soros type
guy that would get a hold of that algorithm. They
would be able to influence youth like they have never
have since Elon Musk took over Twitter. So yes, we
(15:24):
need to get ahold of that to keep the Chinese
from out of our business.
Speaker 3 (15:27):
And from influencing our youth. Yeah, I think everybody sees
the side of the cigarette pack in the warning. It
just seems to me from Trump to the American people
to our youth. Eh. I like it. Let's keep it
do Wames, Iowa?
Speaker 9 (15:43):
We go?
Speaker 3 (15:43):
Ames, You're on.
Speaker 13 (15:45):
Yeah, good morning, Michael.
Speaker 14 (15:46):
Did your know I'm calling from Indian Old, Iowa again
through the AIM system and the iHeart thing. Adam Schiff
was trying to have his way with Pam Bondi and
tried to embarrass her by just saying stupid things that
didn't make any sense. Nobody really cares about Liz Cheney.
I'm sure she's made a bunch of money off this
war zone somebody's been getting us involved in, and I
(16:07):
know they have Haliburton and all that stuff. Anyway, have
a good day. Pam Bondie's pretty. She's going to be
in a knockout.
Speaker 4 (16:13):
Well, she is a knockout, and she knocked out Adam
Schiff a fact. I have that clip in our Sounds
of the Day, one of many triumphant moments for Pam
Bondi in the Senate confirmation hearings, that's that more straight
ahead on your morning show, Don't Move.
Speaker 9 (16:27):
I'm a Lando mow in Smyrna, Tennessee, and my morning
show is your Morning Show with Michael Dale Journal.
Speaker 3 (16:42):
Hi, I'm Michael.
Speaker 1 (16:42):
We'd love to have you listen every weekday morning to
your morning show live, even take us along with you
on the drive to work. We can be heard on
great radio stations like one oh four nine The Patriot
in Saint Louis or Talk Radio ninety eight point three
and fifteen ten WLAC and Nashville and News Talk five
fifty k f YI in Phoenix, Arizona. Love to be
a part of your morning routine, but we're always grateful
(17:03):
you're here. Now enjoyed the podcast.
Speaker 4 (17:05):
I'm fascinated by people to get greater and greater in
life as more distance from their childhood passes. Suddenly they
were the best at basketball, the best at football. The
best fighter is the best because you can just change
anything you want and even convince yourself it was so.
I was never a fighter. I was a lover, not
(17:27):
a fighter. My brother was a fighter, appropriately named Victor
Victorious one, and we were completely different. Like when you
think of like in school, you have a squirmish with
somebody in the hallway, and see at the bike racks
three o'clock. By three o'clock at the bike racks, I
was ready to go and watch a brady bunch. I
(17:47):
wasn't mad anymore. I wasn't capable of fighting John Beezy.
I had to bite him to get them off me.
But my brother Vic would walk right up to you
and there was no pushing, no threats, boom right face
and just start wailing on you. And I remember seeing
that going, well, that's just not me. But oh, that
(18:07):
was Pam Bondy yesterday. They should have known what. She
arrived in a gangster pinstrit suit.
Speaker 3 (18:13):
She wasn't there to take any you know what, She's
gonna get smoked.
Speaker 13 (18:16):
He's got too stopped.
Speaker 15 (18:18):
I really don't know what he said at the end
of this, and I don't think he knows what he
said either.
Speaker 3 (18:26):
It's got to be a big misunderstanding. I'm going, how
do you like my God?
Speaker 4 (18:32):
Yeah, Pam Bondy is just like Kamala Harris, only completely different. Now,
I will tell you this, Pete Hegseth handled it completely different,
and it was brilliant and it worked, and it was awesome,
Pam Bondy, she arrived swinging. Take this exchange with Adam Schiff,
(18:56):
the old lightweight from the House, now fancying himself a
senator in the games he tried to play with Pam
BONDI listen the president.
Speaker 15 (19:04):
Can you tell us? Can you tell him that Donald
Trump lost the twenty twenty election?
Speaker 13 (19:10):
Can you say that?
Speaker 15 (19:11):
Do you have the independence to say that, you have
the gravitas the statue of the testa of fortitude to say,
Donald Trump, you lost the twenty twenty election?
Speaker 13 (19:20):
Can you tell us that here.
Speaker 10 (19:21):
Today, Senator, what I can tell you is I will
never play politics. You're trying to engage me in a gotcha.
Speaker 13 (19:28):
I want to question speak truth.
Speaker 15 (19:32):
Let me ask you. If you can't answer the question,
let me ask you a different What should be a
simple truth, not a hard one. Was there massive fraud
affecting the result of the twenty twenty election?
Speaker 3 (19:45):
Yes? Or no? Senator, I'm glad you asked that question.
Speaker 10 (19:48):
If you'll let me answer what I saw in Pennsylvania.
Speaker 15 (19:51):
No, I asked the simple question about massive.
Speaker 13 (19:54):
I can only tell you that I know you want
to answer a different question.
Speaker 15 (19:57):
But my question is, can you tell us whether there
was massive fraud affecting the results of the twenty twenty election.
Speaker 3 (20:04):
Yes or no?
Speaker 10 (20:06):
Tell you what I saw when I went That's that's.
Speaker 15 (20:08):
Not my question. So you can't answer that question. You
can't speak that even easy true to us, let alone
to the president. So let me ask you a different question.
It will also be important that you give good advice.
Speaker 3 (20:22):
To the president.
Speaker 15 (20:24):
Are you prepared to advise the president not to pardon
people who beat police officers?
Speaker 10 (20:30):
Senator? As I said, the pardons are at the direction
of the president, we will look and we will advise.
I will look at every case on a case Let
me finish on a case by case base goodness, and
I are violence to police office follow up with that.
Speaker 15 (20:45):
So will it be your advice to the president, mister President,
I know you said you want to issue hundreds of
pardons on day one.
Speaker 13 (20:51):
Will it be your advice to the president?
Speaker 15 (20:53):
No, mister President, I need to go over them on
a case by case basis. Do not issue blanket pardons.
Will that be advice to the president.
Speaker 10 (21:01):
Senator, I have not looked at any of those files.
If confirmed, I will look at the files and will be.
Speaker 15 (21:08):
Able to review hundreds of cases on day one.
Speaker 10 (21:11):
I will look at every file I am.
Speaker 13 (21:14):
As, so will you advise the president? Tell you the question?
Speaker 10 (21:17):
Well, my question, I would have plenty of staff. You said,
of course you want.
Speaker 13 (21:21):
You'll be able to review.
Speaker 10 (21:22):
I'm not going to miss this body, nor you.
Speaker 15 (21:27):
All right, let me ask another question. You don't want
to ask that answer?
Speaker 10 (21:30):
People will also.
Speaker 4 (21:34):
By the way, so this would all be much more entertaining.
Speaker 3 (21:37):
Do we have any holid oats?
Speaker 13 (21:40):
Yeah, for you to be.
Speaker 15 (21:41):
Able to preserve the records, the evidence of the Department.
Are you ready to commit that none of the evidence
in the January sixth investigation will be destroyed under your watch?
Speaker 10 (21:53):
Senator, I will follow the law. I will consult with
ethical officials in the department.
Speaker 15 (21:58):
Any ethical basis destroy evidence in the January six investigations.
Speaker 13 (22:03):
Then why can't you answer the question?
Speaker 15 (22:04):
Why can't you say, I commit to this committee we
will never destroy the evidence.
Speaker 13 (22:09):
In the January sixth investigation.
Speaker 15 (22:10):
Why can't you give this committee in American people that assurance?
Speaker 10 (22:14):
Are you frightened because evidence was destroyed against President Trump.
Speaker 3 (22:17):
That was false?
Speaker 15 (22:18):
Is that why I brought you a difficulty? Why are
you have difficulty answering that?
Speaker 4 (22:22):
But I got because I gotta go to this one.
This was my favorite Senator Sheldon white House. And this
guy thinks he's got her in a gotcha moment. Of course,
the gotcha goes right up in his face as he's
in a Parkinson shake.
Speaker 3 (22:33):
This was This is a Hollanoates moment, and.
Speaker 9 (22:38):
It would not be appropriate for a prosecutor to start
with a name and look for a crime. It's a
prosecutor's job to start with a crime and look for a.
Speaker 3 (22:51):
Name, correct, Senator.
Speaker 10 (22:55):
I think that is the whole problem with the weaponization
that we have seen the last four years and what's
been happening to Donald Trump. They targeted Donald Trump. They
went after him actually starting back in twenty sixteen. They
targeted his campaign. They have launched countless investigations against him.
That will not be the case if I am Attorney general.
(23:18):
I will not politicize that office. I will not target
people simply because of their political affiliation. Justice will be
administered even handedly throughout this country. Senator, We've got to
bring this country back together. We've got to move forward
or we're going to lose our country.
Speaker 3 (23:39):
Here's another spectacular moment. This is Senator Blumenthal asking BONDI
whether she can say no to unethical Trump request. Listen,
can you say no to the President of United States
when he asks you to do something unethical or illegal?
Speaker 10 (24:00):
Senator, First, I need to clarify something that you said
that I have to sit up here and say these things. No,
I don't I sit up here and speak the truth.
I'm not going to sit up here and say anything
that I need to say to get confirmed by this body.
I don't have to say anything. I will answer the
questions to the best of my ability.
Speaker 4 (24:22):
It was definitely a different you know, heg Seth kind
of put up with it and kind of like roper dope,
just let them punch themselves out and look stupid, whereas
she was far more on the offensive because I'm sure
they tell a lot of them just whether the questions
get through the process, you'll be confirmed. And she just
(24:45):
sees the moment and she turned everything around on them
and stayed on the offensive. I think she made a
lot of fans yesterday. But this is an ongoing thing,
you know, I said from the outset, you got to
read the room. America has moved on. America is very
firm in its conviction and conclusion that the last four
(25:10):
years have been a failure. The nation is heading in
the wrong direction. They're sick. It's not even just sick
of incumbency and status quo. They're sick of political games.
California is the perfect visual analogy. You want to play
(25:33):
your political games that keep you in power and keep
us broke.
Speaker 3 (25:37):
We're done.
Speaker 4 (25:40):
You want to make it us versus them partisan theater,
and we want you to solve the border. We want
you to solve the economy, solve healthcare, and they continue.
That goes back to that analogy of the Wizard of Oz.
It's one thing to have total pull the curtain. It's
another thing to have the look back, realize he's exposed,
(26:01):
and then turn around and think he can still pull
the knobs. We find out who had the quote, By
the way, it wasn't. The way we quoted him is
better than the actual quote. The quote should be this
is what the Democrat Party looks like with no propaganda
machine behind it. It actually comes from Jesse Waters, who's
kind of trying to sum up how disastrous this whole
Confirmation hearing has been. This bullying and petty, divisive, desperate,
(26:27):
hypocritical politics and how it's playing out, and how the
cabinet nominees are shining, and how poorly they're looking playing
this game.
Speaker 16 (26:38):
Listen, Schumer promised fireworks, but all of his foot soldiers
are getting out foxed. Schumer said, Republicans, we're going to
suffer brand.
Speaker 3 (26:47):
Damage after these hearings.
Speaker 16 (26:50):
We've just seen Senate Democrats embarrassed themselves one after the other.
The Democrat machine is broken. It's leaderless. The donors are discussing,
the media is collapsing, the big tech billionaires are switching sides,
and Hollywood's on fire.
Speaker 3 (27:06):
They're fighting for their lives.
Speaker 16 (27:08):
We're starting to see that without a well funded and
well oiled propaganda machine and cancel culture enforcers, the party
doesn't have the power, the discipline, or the narratives they
need to survive.
Speaker 4 (27:20):
Well, he's dead on The question is can they The
Democrat Party can't just okay, let's just lay low for
a couple of years and come back. They've got one
play a Maryland governor. The problem is what's he going
to have behind him? And if everything's going well, who's
(27:42):
going to want change?
Speaker 3 (27:43):
Now?
Speaker 4 (27:43):
You can lull people eight ten years from now into
forgetting what they once were. I mean Donald Trump left office,
the country was in one condition. A year and a
half later was in a completely different one, right back
to where it was that elected him.
Speaker 3 (28:01):
And it took America a minute to gather its feet.
This is different.
Speaker 4 (28:10):
They lost the twenty twenty four election because they didn't
control social media any longer. They have lost the narrative
from legacy media because nobody's reading, watching, or listening to it.
They're really at a moment where they have to reinvent themselves,
and I don't think they know how. After all, what
(28:33):
would they be, I said shortly after New Year's in
twenty twenty. By the end of the decade, one or
both parties will be gone. And I think I know
which one's leaving first. Forty seven minutes after the hour,
and we come back quick look at your top five
stories of the day, and then we're going to visit
(28:54):
with John Decker. The President gave his big farewell address
to a nation that had already said good rins.
Speaker 3 (29:00):
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Speaker 3 (30:40):
This is your morning show with Michael Del Chrono.
Speaker 4 (30:44):
There's just too much to do in the moment and
too much to do tomorrow for me to have the
luxury of grudges. So I've been wronged by people and
I just let it go, and they're in my rearview
mirror and I never think about them again. That's not
the case for my wife. And while I can't and
don't go there, I kind of love that she does.
I bet you Donald Trump's feeling the same way. Malania
(31:06):
Trump has declined an invitation to have traditional tea with
Joe Biden on inauguration Day. Meanwhile, President elect Trump is
reportedly considering an executive order that would save TikTok from
ban or sale. Around the clock containment continues in southern
California with more favorable weather today again and not so
fast on a piece and cease fire and hostage exchange.
(31:27):
He is rarely Prime Minister, says Hamas has backed out
of some.
Speaker 3 (31:31):
Of the agreements and the deal is not done.
Speaker 4 (31:35):
And then there was the farewell address of Joe Biden
last night to a nation statistically in polls that has
already said good riddance.
Speaker 3 (31:43):
You could make a.
Speaker 4 (31:44):
Case this speech was destined to fail before it ever began.
White House correspondent John Decker is here to analyze President
Biden's farewell address. I try to be as kind as
I can about this. I just think it's a not
a tough sell. I think it was an impossible I
don't know that I would have given one, but he did.
Speaker 3 (32:02):
What'd you think.
Speaker 11 (32:04):
I didn't think it was in the top tier of
farewell addresses that I've heard, watched and covered, and I've
covered them going all the way back to when Bill
Clinton gave his farewell address, tanning the keys to the
White House over to George W.
Speaker 3 (32:19):
Bush.
Speaker 11 (32:19):
It was all over the map, It wasn't focused, and
as you know, on top of all of that, Joe
Biden is not a good speech maker.
Speaker 5 (32:29):
So you put all that.
Speaker 11 (32:30):
Together, it was not your top tier farewell address given
by an outgoing president.
Speaker 4 (32:36):
And let me say, I appreciate your desire to be kind,
as I was trying to be kind watching it. But
it evolved so quickly into bitterness, and really the attempt
I guess to rewrite how America already firmly feels about
this presidency.
Speaker 3 (32:54):
That's just difficult to do well.
Speaker 11 (32:56):
It's difficult to do in the immediacy. What I mean
by that is presidencies are not always seen the same way.
After a president leaves office a few years later, Americans
maybe view a presidency different. I'm not saying that's going
to happen with Joe Biden, simply saying if you look
at George W. Bush and his presidency viewed a lot
(33:18):
differently now than when he left office in two thousand
and nine, and Jimmy Carter is seen differently now mostly
because of his good works after he was president. So
you can repair your image, and Joe Biden has a
lot to repair, given that his approval rating is in
the low thirties right now.
Speaker 4 (33:37):
And based on his age and condition, may not have
a lot of time to do that, all right. Closing
moments with John Decker, White House correspondent, the oligarchy. You know,
I don't wan to play talk rady with you. I
never do that. We don't do that off the air,
and we don't do that on the air, but I
would say, this is a guy that benefited from a
leftist oligarchy. He just put the medal of freedom around
George Sorows's neck. He benefited greatly from COVID and the
(34:01):
weaponization of COVID, and and a lot of Zuckerbucks and
so on. And then to go out the door and
warn of an oligarchy that is now turning another tough,
if not impossible cell.
Speaker 11 (34:14):
Yeah, that's that's a tough cell. I don't I don't know,
you know who he's appealing to when he talks about
that warning. And you know, it's different than when President
Dwight Eisenhower in his farewell dress warned about the military
industrial complex. Uh, he was going out as a president
with a high approval rating. He was going out with
(34:35):
someone who had some intimate knowledge of the military industrial victorious.
Speaker 3 (34:40):
World War and popular.
Speaker 11 (34:42):
President World War two general exactly. So to me, that
fell flat.
Speaker 3 (34:48):
You know, you may think we're nothing alike, but it's scary.
Speaker 4 (34:52):
In the five o'clock hour, I brought up Eisenhower because
at the end of the day, if I was Joe Biden,
I think, you know, not every pres and it gives
a farewell address, and this is one that probably shouldn't.
Speaker 3 (35:02):
I would have just shuffled off into the sunset.
Speaker 4 (35:04):
It's like leaving a party that nobody really wanted you
to come to, and everybody's glad you're leaving. There's really
no reason for a big, long goodbye. They tried it.
I think it failed. Probably a lot of people didn't
watch it, and there'll be a lot of talk about
the oligarchy comment and goose and gander and hypocrisy. But
all right, I just wanted to make sure I wasn't crazy.
I was trying to find something to say and I couldn't.
Speaker 3 (35:26):
We're all in this together.
Speaker 6 (35:28):
This is Your Morning Show with Michael openheld jow Now