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YMS senior contributor Dave Zanotti joins us on Trump's speech and actions on day one.  As well as, the unprecedented pardons Biden made for Fauci, General Milley and his entire family.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Previously on your Morning show with Michael dil Choonho.

Speaker 2 (00:04):
I left off with David Sanati yesterday and we were saying, well,
I wonder what partons next after Fauci and Millie, I'm
thinking his brother. Well turned out it was his brother, David,
the secret partning and the more of a getaway than
a farewell from the Bidens. What a fitting end to
a dark and corrupt administration.

Speaker 3 (00:25):
And then.

Speaker 2 (00:27):
The inaugural address and then the getting right to work
with executive orders.

Speaker 3 (00:33):
But I want to start with this with you.

Speaker 2 (00:37):
This, to me is the summary of everything yesterday, let
alone everything in the inaugural address.

Speaker 4 (00:44):
Right here I stand before you now as proof that
you should never believe that something is impossible to do
in America. The impossible is what we do best in America.

Speaker 3 (00:56):
Impossible is what we do best.

Speaker 2 (00:59):
Because if you I think yesterday was just about Donald
Trump's triumph, you missed it.

Speaker 3 (01:05):
You missed the whole story. It was America's triumph.

Speaker 2 (01:08):
Everybody that risked their job to stand behind them, risk
their position in their neighborhood or with their family members,
it really was. And then I think just the overall
feeling of after four years, if really from day one
not really believing Joe Biden was running the country. I
mean the rumors from day one were Okay, they used
him to get elected. Now he's going to hand it
off to Kamala and then where is he and is

(01:30):
he doing anything? And there's no question who the President
of the United States is and that he is very
busy and he's calling the shots. It's definitely a hope
of change and a breathtaking pace of a new administration.

Speaker 5 (01:45):
Your take on yesterday, Well, there's so many observations, Michael,
that we can make. We can take a whole warning.
And some of them are nuanced, some of them are
really tiny. Some of them you're not really sure that
you saw. Some of them people didn't see, but they
actually happened, Like, for example, the portrait of Franklin Delano

(02:07):
Roosevelt was removed from over the fireplace in the Oval
Office and replaced with the portrait of George Washington.

Speaker 3 (02:14):
That's a really good move, I think. So.

Speaker 5 (02:18):
I think that's a really and that that kind of
says it all.

Speaker 3 (02:22):
David, you spent.

Speaker 2 (02:23):
All your life in government policy and history. The first
is still the best. The first may never be topped.
George Washington and for Donald Trump in his current resurrected
state and focus made that one of the first moves
pretty profound.

Speaker 3 (02:44):
Yeah, I think that was a good move. I think
he thinks it's a republic. I think he thinks it's
a republic, not a democracy.

Speaker 5 (02:51):
Well, now, since you brought that up, I think it's
very important to note. And I don't understand why in
a ceremony that is pretty important. The inaugura it's a
pretty big deal, and I'm being understated for a reason
that people don't pay closer attention to words.

Speaker 3 (03:10):
Now.

Speaker 5 (03:10):
I don't know why Senator Klobuchar was selected to do
the job that she was given, and it was done
long before the outcome, right, But that to me is
a formula for failure no matter what you have. Because
if her party had won, it would have been awkward.
Her party lost and it was even more awkward, and

(03:32):
she felt compelled to do a worldview restatement of reality
to start the event off, in which she was very
careful in her opening remarks and then everywhere else. She
was given the platform throughout the balance of the day
to make sure that she said the word democracy as
many times as she could put it into one sentence
because what she was saying was, by the way, to

(03:52):
all the progressives, we haven't given up on remaking America
into a democracy. But what was interesting is this time
the president of the United States.

Speaker 2 (04:01):
Use the word republic over and again. Let's start with
a stunning visual seeing Rfk and Telsea Gabbert, two Democratic
presidential candidates shooting the breeze behind where the president would
take the oath of office. Elon Musk jumping around, Jeff
Bezos his inappropriately dressed wife, Mark Zuckerberg checking out Jeff

(04:25):
Bezos is inappropriate life, the Apple leader, the Google leader,
but seeing that the tech titans. I mean, you know,
I kept saying, over and over again, more than just
Donald Trump won an election, and more than just Kamala
Harris and Joe Biden lost.

Speaker 3 (04:39):
I mean, think about it.

Speaker 2 (04:40):
He not only triumphantly returns to the Oval office, all
of these Cabald table players against him are now behind him.

Speaker 3 (04:49):
I mean, that visual for me was stunning.

Speaker 5 (04:52):
It's perhaps the most stunning thing that was on the
stage is that reality. In fact, I didn't know you
could put that much corporate wealth in one place at
one time. I mean, I thought the stage would tip.
I mean, these people have more cash on hand than
these terror federal governments.

Speaker 2 (05:08):
So how different can this administration be? A Donald Trump's
different I've got to go back to one clip if
I can. I don't think I think you know, because
inaugural speeches don't have those memorable lines like ask not
they had one Impossible That's what America does best. But
I want to play another clip. I'll restated for you

(05:29):
because I know you can't hear the clips, But for
everybody else, listen.

Speaker 3 (05:32):
An assassin's bullet ripped through my ear.

Speaker 4 (05:37):
But I felt then, and believe even more so now
that my life was saved for a reason.

Speaker 3 (05:43):
I was saved by God to.

Speaker 4 (05:45):
Make America great again.

Speaker 2 (05:48):
All Right, it's him talking about being saved by God
in order to make America great again. Maybe Donald Trump
one point zero was Donald Trump the savior coming to
save a broken America that he's observed for decades as
a businessman. This time he's a humble man, saved by
grace by God in order to make America great.

Speaker 3 (06:10):
That's not a subtle difference. Number one.

Speaker 2 (06:12):
Number two, the control of narrative has been destroyed from
print to radio to television and all of their worldview
and game changing. You know, where a democracy not a republic,
and democracy is democratic candidates and the Democrat platform, and
if you oppose them, you oppose democracy. We're going to

(06:33):
demonize you and you're an enemy of the state. That's
all gone, it's all been dismantled. And then those that
used to silence any opposition thought, well, they were all
standing behind him taking the oath of office. I mean,
he's different, America is different, and his enemies are different
heading into the second term.

Speaker 5 (06:50):
Yeah, that's an interesting observation, Michael. Our organization at the
American Policy Roundtable began in the state of Ohio, where
the motto is with God, all things are possible. We
had to defend that motto because it was spoken first
by Jesus Christ. We had to defend that model in
federal court, the whole way of the sixth District and
one to be able to keep a state motto like
that that that It's fascinating and we were privileged to

(07:12):
be a part of that battle. But the so I
take a little different view on that question of what
is possible and what happens in America, But the total
of the event certainly didn't leave God out of the equation.

Speaker 3 (07:28):
To be certain.

Speaker 5 (07:29):
There were five people who prayed in extraordinarily different ways,
and I thought that that was very interesting in and
of itself. I think that the music that was selected
was very unusual to have a solo piano playing. And
what people didn't know, a lot of people didn't, some didn't,
is that that little solo version that five minutes, that medley,

(07:51):
those were all hymns and they concluded with the hymn
Greatest Thy Faithfulness.

Speaker 3 (07:56):
Again subtle. That was very subtle, but it was very
real interesting.

Speaker 5 (08:01):
And then I just I've got to give you know,
I'm not a Carrie Underwood fan, but I got to
give her a lot of credit.

Speaker 3 (08:07):
Just as I said, come on, Carrie, you don't need that.

Speaker 5 (08:10):
Try all of us in the business are saying just
saying it. And she did that was courage with great melody,
with just vocal perfection, and you could see Donald Trump,
you know, go to her immediately.

Speaker 3 (08:25):
It really made the moment better. It was really cool.

Speaker 5 (08:28):
Because it was real and so you had that moment
of all of this, all these trappings and all this
history and all this significance and then you had that
totally human moment in the moment and everybody responded and
that I thought that was greatly refreshing.

Speaker 3 (08:42):
David is very encouraging. So I mean, there are things now.

Speaker 5 (08:44):
I will also tell you that Elon Musk has taken
a lot of let's go back to the techies. Elon
Musk has taken a lot of flat today because New
York Times has published his little hand to the heart
and salute to the crowd and called it a Nazi
se Kyle As has the.

Speaker 3 (09:00):
Atlantic has the Atlanta at there.

Speaker 5 (09:03):
So to be fair and balance the scales, people should
go to YouTube and replay Klovichar's remarks in when she
says the peaceful transition of power. The camera has her
and Biden and at the same time, and when she
says the peaceful transition of power, Biden snickers and makes
the sign of the cross. I don't know if you
caught that, but it happened. He's the only one who knew.

(09:26):
Of course, he had just pulled the pardon button. Yeah,
we're going to get to that. Davidson I as the
CEO of the American Policy Roundtable. He presides over eye voters.
He's also co host of the American Policy Roundtable, The
Public Square, heard on two hundred stations, and we come back.
Let's talk about those pardons and what they say, and
perhaps something we alluded to yesterday, the problem they cause
because the investigations can go on and now they can't

(09:48):
play plead the fifth.

Speaker 1 (09:49):
Miss a little, miss a lot, miss a lot, and
we'll miss you. It's your morning show with Michael del
Chuno
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