Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Previously on Your Morning Show with Michael del Choano.
Speaker 2 (00:04):
I cherished these visits with David Sanati. There are two
real big issues, Pam Bondi's performance yesterday in a confirmation
hearing and Joe Biden giving a farewell address to a
country that's already said good riddance. And I think, you know,
we look back at the Jimmy Carter Malai's speech and
it brings a certain adjaa that only the Italians know
(00:25):
what I mean, but a taste in our mouth. This
this is even so much below that it was the
impossible speech of a failed president leaving one of the
one of the most amazing things that happen is they
will wake up the Bidens on Monday morning and somehow,
some way, and we all move, we know how taxing
(00:49):
moving is. They will somehow pack all his stuff up,
have it going out the back door while Donald Trump's
stuff is going in the front, you know, the other
back door, and they will make this transition of a
house into a home of a completely different person. The
only thing that would be symbolically appropriate is if by
the time that Biden's wake up, there's stuff's just down
on the front lawn.
Speaker 3 (01:09):
I mean they're just thrown out.
Speaker 2 (01:10):
God, I mean, it's been a disastrous presidency coming to
a disastrous close. And last night's farewell speech that nobody
even wanted to hear in a spirit of good riddance.
It was a failure before it began, but it did begin,
and in thirteen minutes David's and not he's here to
tell you it had some really choice words and moments.
Speaker 4 (01:29):
It's amazing, Michael, that a person who was the spurious
front for a cartel for five years finally comes out
of hiding to say goodbye. But the reality is he
never showed up in the first place. He was never here.
This is the man who campaigned from his basement, the
man who was never well enough to be president, who
(01:51):
was certainly absurdly positioned last night. And if anything, the
legacy of Joe Biden is that he diminished the integris
of the presidency, of the presidency, not just here but
across the world. America is in a much weaker position
today because of what the people behind Joe Biden did
(02:11):
to secure massive, massive amounts of money for their cartel
and perhaps try to anchor it in the illusion of
his accomplishment, not Donald Trump's a very Reaganesque moment in
eighty one.
Speaker 2 (02:24):
The hostages will be released when he takes the oath
of office, and so he's doing this big victory lap.
Ignore all my failures, because today I'm bringing you a
ceasefire in the Middle East, which no one gives him
credit for. Right after the invasion, they couldn't figure out
what side they were on. We talked for a year
about the eye problem, the Israel problem. It was destroying them.
(02:46):
They were trying to offset it with autonomy and abortion
and it just didn't play out. But it was a
disaster that they didn't want you to notice and try
to predicate it on the anchor of we solved this problem,
and then we wake up this morning and the deals off.
I mean, what a disaster. But you you nit pick
some words in this thirteen minute speech. Give us a
couple just.
Speaker 4 (03:06):
Here's a brief paragraph, and the President stated, a nation
holding the torchure the most powerful, sorry, Joe, the most
powerful idea ever in the history of the world. That
all of us, all of us are created equal, that
all of us deserve to be treated with dignity, justice,
and fairness. That democracy must defend and be defined and
(03:32):
be imposed, moved in every way possible. Wait a minute,
that democracy must be must must defend and be defined
and be imposed. How do you impose democracy that's based
on the consent of the government.
Speaker 3 (03:47):
How do you do that?
Speaker 2 (03:48):
Well, they've turned democracy onto the weapons. But just for
those that are listening that you know, and you have
been listening very long. Look, it started with Barack Obama.
Where a democracy of democracy? And I remember at first asking,
we're not We're a republic. I said that in public speaking,
and I would be shocked at how much of the
room and I'd have to remind them of the pledge
of allegiance. They go, oh, you're right, we're not a democracy.
We're a republic. And they're two different things. Your finding
(04:08):
fathers weren't interested in mob rule and a democracy, but
everybody just kind of started ignoring it, and then they shifted,
so they made you believe your republic was a democracy.
And then democracy became the Democrat party platform, and if
you opposed any of their candidates or any of their
worldviews or any of their policy views, you were an
enemy of the state. And there was nobody that was
more a signature person to single out than Donald Trump
(04:31):
in the name of America first.
Speaker 3 (04:32):
So this is a game they've been playing.
Speaker 2 (04:34):
They've turned democracy into a weapon, a weapon then only
works against their enemies.
Speaker 4 (04:38):
And they've turned our government. Instead of it being an
organic covenant among people based on human behavior and accountability,
they've turned it into quote, an institution.
Speaker 3 (04:51):
Don't dare touch the institution. Let me tell you something,
as far.
Speaker 4 (04:56):
As January sixth goes, everything about that was foolish. What
we should do is we should take the capital and
turn it into a museum and move the Congress to Missouri,
right smack in the middle of the country, and let
them get per diem expenses as a salary for attending
in office like we did back in the day when
(05:19):
Congress got started, and a stipend.
Speaker 3 (05:21):
And then let's see who really wants to serve this country.
People will say it's classic Barack Obama. It's actually classic Sololenski.
But whatever they're accusing their opponent of doing, yes, they're
confessing what they're doing. There was a lot of that
in the speed.
Speaker 4 (05:35):
We can't say that enough, Michael, We cannot say that enough.
Here's a man who a week earlier puts the Presidential
Medal of Freedom around the neck of the greatest oligarch
of the twenty first century, who's controlled the American political
process with dark money.
Speaker 3 (05:49):
And deep, deep corruption.
Speaker 4 (05:52):
He gives him the Presidential Metal Freedom, and then he
delivers the speech to beware of the industrial tech complex.
Speaker 3 (05:58):
Why because suddenly they're on to you, Joe.
Speaker 2 (06:02):
But that gets back to the brilliance of what Jesse
Waters is a doddering old man. Yeah, but there's no
there's no audience. There's just no audience for this narrative.
And we saw that in the Pam Dondie Pam Bondi
confirmation hearings as well. Nobody's thinking about Liz Cheney. Nobody
tells you where they're going. It tells you where they're going.
And I was gonna ask you the question. Look, I
(06:23):
don't think there was a time we thought, Okay, they're
gonna lay low. You even heard Obama's operative now her
name is slipping me. She was on MSNBC saying there,
this is not going to be an opposition. Uh play No,
it was the other one, Brazil, Donna Brazil. Yeah, this
is not going to be a resistance.
Speaker 3 (06:44):
Just give him the questions Donna. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (06:46):
Yeah, she's not going to be a resistance here because
there's no there's no room for that, uh, which would
suggest that there are some that might think we lay low,
we let them have their presidency, we let them have
their success, and you know, people will get lulled and
they'll forget our differences. Then we come back with somebody
like a Barack Obama could be the governor from Maryland,
(07:06):
who will say all the right things, look all the
right ways, and we can get it back. I don't
know that it's going to be that easy for them.
I don't think America is going to you know, after
the FEMA nightmare in North Carolina, the fire nightmare that's
ongoing in Los Angeles, and what we're seeing in this confirmation,
hearing what we're seeing in these polling numbers, what we
saw in the results of the election.
Speaker 3 (07:26):
No, they're at a reinvention point. And I don't know.
Speaker 2 (07:28):
My question to you would be, what could they possibly
reinvent themselves too? This is what they're rooted in. For
the last twenty years.
Speaker 4 (07:36):
They have built everything on envy and class warfare, on
tribalism and pitting people against one another. Now they're escaping,
saying beware of all the people who do that, and
they've just done it. One of the reasons I love
the conversations on the show is what we talked about
about an hour ago with Bonsen. You know, one of
the big issues it's not being discussed whatsoever, that is
organic and from the bottom up that could change everything
(07:58):
is if local governors and county commissioners and state legislators
and lawmakers decide they're going to start solving the housing crisis.
Because if people can suddenly get off of class envy
and get into the idea that I can have a
home of my own, that there's a better way to
go about this, that there is a real chance to
create wealth and personal freedom in this country, than suddenly
the Democrat Party becomes irrelevant. But they only succeed on
(08:21):
stagnation and bitterness. And that was the speech that we heard,
warning you about these terrible people and all that they're
saying to you because they're roughling the institution. In essence,
the Democrat message, the progressive messages, just go to sleep.
Speaker 3 (08:38):
We got this. Just go play your distractions.
Speaker 2 (08:41):
Two minute warning, cover the real stuff, two minute warning,
final two minutes with David Snati.
Speaker 3 (08:45):
I want to turn to Pambondi and.
Speaker 2 (08:49):
Look, I've seen a lot of really horrific things in
the last four years, a lot of very troubling things
for our time for all time, and there were moments
I thought we might be losing it forever. Nothing more
alarming than the weapon, the political partisan weaponization of our
Justice Department. So I come at this from this angle.
(09:10):
There might be no more important person if America is
awakening and seeing through this than Pam Bonding, the next
Attorney General for our time and for all time. And
she may be just the right person for this, because
the next four years will either be resurrecting or fatal.
(09:32):
Because you can be more right, the next two years
determine the next twelve. It is possible that one of
these two parties will expire within the context of the
next two years, but certainly within the next twelve.
Speaker 3 (09:43):
It's the one that fails in the next two years.
Speaker 4 (09:47):
If people just sit waiting on Pirate Radio and Trump
Incorporated to fix everything, and they don't start fixing the
stuff themselves at the bottom up, then the then the
Democrats will prevail.
Speaker 2 (09:57):
If this ends up a Trump victorious second term, America fails.
If this becomes the beginning of ushering in of an
American revolution, the Democrat Party's debt.
Speaker 4 (10:12):
And the Dark Lord will return if we don't do
what we have to do in the next two years.
Speaker 2 (10:18):
David's a regular, obviously our senior contributor. He's also the
co host of The Public Square, I Believe the Diamond Jewel,
the American Policy Roundtable, heard on two hundred stations. He
also presides over ie voters dot com and I encourage
you to listen to the Public Square or his podcast
eighteen fifty main Street. I know eighteen fifty Main Streets
on the iHeart app. I think is we're all yep, Yeah,
they're happy to be so and happy to be so.
(10:39):
So check out more. Those of you that love David
more than me, go love him at eighteen fifty main
Street dot com or at the Publicsquore dot com and
we'll talk soon.
Speaker 3 (10:46):
David, Thank you.
Speaker 1 (10:46):
Nice, miss a little, miss a lot, miss a lot,
and we'll miss you. It's your morning show with Michael
del Churno.