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 e X 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.
Speaker 2 (00:20):
Starting your morning off right. A new way of talk,
a new way of understand different because we're in this togi.
This is your.
Speaker 3 (00:30):
Morning show with Michael o'del Truman and Antioch Nashville.
Speaker 1 (00:35):
Two teens are dead after a shooting at the high
school in the cafeteria that includes a shooter himself.
Speaker 2 (00:42):
President Trump is.
Speaker 1 (00:43):
Hining it changes coming to FEMA, and historic winter storm
has brought record breaking snowfall not just to Nolins as
we documented yesterday, but also to roy O'Neill's Florida and
moving into the Carolina. Speaking of roy o'neils, seven minutes
after the hour, thanks for waking up with your morning show.
I'm Michael del jorn. National correspondent Roory O'Neil is here.
Viruses are upon us. If you're not feeling well, you're
(01:05):
not alone. It's pretty much sweeping the nation. I just
got over mine, Rory. That means you're next. Oh great, thanks.
Speaker 4 (01:12):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (01:12):
They're calling it a quaddemic because there are four different
things out there and this is not I'm not sounding.
Speaker 2 (01:18):
An alert, I'm not flashing red. I'm just reminding you
that it's January. This is when this stuff happens.
Speaker 5 (01:25):
But the numbers are going up, and you're gonna find
the emergency rooms may be full. Trying to see your
doctor may be difficult because we've got covid RSV of course,
the flu, and this neural virus that really started to
pop up around the holidays. It's still lingering and boy,
if you get that one, god bless you.
Speaker 1 (01:44):
Well that's the four biggies. Although that isn't what they
think I had. Mine was the how do you say it,
paren parine influenza, perry influenza. I think it was, oh,
which is like an adult croup, and I had it,
my daughter had it, Nick had a version of it.
(02:05):
You know everybody's you know, biology reacts differently, but it
was nasty and it was It's every bit of three
weeks and two really bad weeks. It was, but that
wasn't you know, I said I had the flu shot.
This hasn't covered in that. So I mean, I think
there's more than just those four out there. I guess
that's my point. Well, I'm living proof there's more than that.
(02:26):
And when I got to the Vandy Klinick and I
walked in the waiting room, I looked around. I never
saw anything like they all. It was like in that
scene and outbreak, you know, where they all have the
little red nose and you're like, okay, you tested positive,
stand on the front porch, were coming to get you.
Everybody had the same cough, everybody had the same look.
Our room was filled with people what I had and
that and nobody thinks it was RSV. Nobody thought it
(02:48):
was any of those others.
Speaker 2 (02:49):
So I don't know. There might be even more than four.
Good luck, but it was nasty. Was yeah, wash your hands.
Speaker 5 (02:56):
Is the message even better than those antibacterial gel things,
soap and water, especially for stopping the neuro virus.
Speaker 2 (03:02):
Rooms to be more effective than the than the than
the jails.
Speaker 5 (03:06):
So please you know one thing we did learn during
COVID that when we were all practicing better hygiene. It
did stop the spread of flu. So try to do
what you can to take.
Speaker 2 (03:16):
Care The washing.
Speaker 1 (03:18):
The interesting one of all those, and I need to run.
But the interesting one of all those is the washing
of the hands versus sanitizers for neurovirus. And why I
don't know, but obviously washing your hands frequently and not
touching your face, that's the key this time of the year.
Speaker 5 (03:31):
I must have touched my face again. It happens this
time of the year. The numbers are and the numbers
are going up. And that's what we're saying now. Like
you said, it's starting to I don't want to say overwhelmed,
but it's certainly putting a strain on doctors' offices and
ers across the country.
Speaker 1 (03:45):
Yeah, Roy, and you'll be back next half hour with
a story that fascinates me. On we're all living paycheck
paycheck to paycheck, so where are we, you know, putting
our money? I can't wait to hear the answer for that.
That'll be the third hour.
Speaker 2 (03:57):
All right, Rory. Thanks.
Speaker 1 (03:58):
We got a couple of talkbacks I want to get too.
I think first is Sacramento, got Roger Roger.
Speaker 3 (04:05):
Marian Michael, I just wanted to comment that I do
notice that you're not quite as serious in the first hour,
and I.
Speaker 2 (04:12):
Do appreciate that.
Speaker 3 (04:14):
Being here on the West Coast, I'm not always awake
at that time, and when I am, I'm not always
with It kind of reminds me of.
Speaker 2 (04:20):
Going to church.
Speaker 3 (04:21):
You meet and greet your friends outside in the first hour.
In the second, third hour, you got to go in
and be a little more serious.
Speaker 2 (04:28):
Okay, have a good day, Thank you, Roger.
Speaker 1 (04:30):
In my defense, you started the show with the mayor
of Philadelphia misspelling Eagles. But yeah, and then Mary calls
in with that, you're clever, bet misspelling every name in
the matchups this weekend. I mean, I'm not the only
one I will say this. I used to try to
do things in the first hour because you know, passing
(04:50):
the buck rid at five am Central, when you're on
that's pretty early.
Speaker 2 (04:55):
There's not a lot of people.
Speaker 1 (04:56):
So I used to call them Platinum card listeners, named
after like the Platinum American Express, and there were things
I would do purposely just for the Platinum card listeners.
But I didn't notice till my wife said it. Apparently
for her. My studio is just off the bedroom, and
I admit that's got to be odd. You know, you're
in and out of sleep and you're hearing what we
(05:17):
do going on, especially during the commercial breaks. She's thoroughly
convinced our ratings would be much higher if we would
act like we do during the commercial breaks.
Speaker 6 (05:27):
A whole nother podcast, isn't it.
Speaker 1 (05:32):
It really probably breaks a few commandments along the way,
But yes, it would be.
Speaker 2 (05:37):
But I didn't know that.
Speaker 1 (05:38):
Like in general, it's a much different feel in the
five o'clock hour, what's kind of spilling over now into
the sixth Central.
Speaker 2 (05:45):
Seven Eastern hour. But am I really noticeably?
Speaker 6 (05:48):
Yeah, you're little diff're a lot more add when you begin,
You've got all of this stuff going on in your head,
and like when you first come on the air, sometimes
you can just kind of throw spitballs get Yeah, when
things were bad, I would tend to do that because
who I didn't want to hit you with the bad news.
Speaker 1 (06:07):
I'm never for figuring. I was very young and I
noticed this. You know, there's all those exam rooms, all
those hospital rooms, all those nursing stations, all those waiting
rooms in a hospital, and there's this one little room
it's tiny and the door's open and there's a table,
two chairs, and a box of cleanex. Took me a
(06:28):
split second to figure out what that room was. And
you don't ever want to go in that room. I've
been in that room. It's a bad room. And so
when you wake up in the morning and you've been
doing this for hours, and you're like, well, if I
was just waking up, I wouldn't.
Speaker 2 (06:41):
I don't think i'd want to know that right away.
Speaker 1 (06:43):
You feel like the You feel like the guy in
the little room with the box of cleanex. And so
I would. And that goes back to childhood. My mom
had a lot of bad things going on, and I
would try to cheer her up constantly, and I think
I have that kind of neuro association. But like today,
there's no real bad news. Everything's kind of good. Yeah,
I think I'm blaming it on you. You started with the
(07:04):
Eagles thing, and I never expected to be the mayor.
Speaker 2 (07:06):
Well, that's the funny thing.
Speaker 6 (07:07):
You can play any piece of audio for you and
it could cause you to go into a what I
refer to as a del JR.
Speaker 1 (07:13):
Hotel spin and you just you just oh, so there's
a word for it. Now that give me the other
West Coast listener. Let's hear it the other one. I
don't have another West Coast listener. That was it. We
had a female she's living on the West Coast. She
wanted to know about school shootings. Right, yeah, we just
thought we played for do we not? Here it comes again.
Speaker 7 (07:32):
I'm on the West Coast and I tuned in to
hear about any updates on the shootings that were happening
this week.
Speaker 2 (07:39):
There was a threat.
Speaker 7 (07:40):
Here in Vancouver at one of our schools yesterday. So
I was just trying to see any correlation because you're
talking about race a lot, and some of the threats
were about being hyper milinated and how fantastic it is privileged.
Speaker 1 (07:52):
Probably probably listening to us in Seattle with proximity to Vancouver.
I'm not aware that we're on in Vancouver. But then
again I find out cities were in that I wasn't
aware of all the time.
Speaker 2 (08:02):
Welcome.
Speaker 1 (08:04):
I can tell you in terms of the Antioch High
School shooter, Solomon Henderson, this is a troubled young man,
all right. So you know, just like with every shooting,
you know, you start with a lack of respect for
the sanctity of life, which I think is a spiritual issue. Look,
if you don't if you don't have a relationship with God,
(08:25):
you don't have an understanding of God.
Speaker 2 (08:27):
He's the creator, where the creation.
Speaker 1 (08:29):
He is perfect, he is holy, he is just, he
is sacred, and his creation is sacred. You know, that's
how you get so desensitized that human life is nothing,
and then you get into like you know, video games,
movies and all these other things. But somewhere pretty quickly
you get to a spiritual disorder and mental illness. These
trademarks are there for Solomon. Now he didn't have a
(08:50):
formal manifesto, but he had a manifesto style document, and
he had a pretty large footprint on social media, and
so you know a lot of classic tales. How hardened
was the target. We're going to get to that in
a second. Pretty hard I don't know, there's much more.
There were two resource officers at Anti Hock High School.
(09:12):
Now neither were in proximity to the cafeteria that could
maybe be looked at. You know, that's a pretty large
gathering at lunchtime. By the way, there's no bearing on
this story whatsever I was literally a mile away from there.
Speaker 2 (09:26):
My mom's nursing home when this happened. Oh no, kid.
Speaker 1 (09:29):
So I'm in the nursing home when Red sends the
news alert and I prayed, and of course by then
it had already been done. So we don't know if
he was targeting. I say this because the female student
is Hispanic, sixteen years old. I mean, just take a moment.
This is this stuff I don't like to do first
(09:49):
thing in the morning. I'm a father of daughters. My
daughters were sixteen four years ago. The level of pain
that I feel thinking about this, but we don't know
if he knew her.
Speaker 2 (10:02):
It sure looks like to me.
Speaker 1 (10:04):
Red correct me, because I don't like I like to
stick to the facts until we know. But it sure
looks like more like she was a target and another
male was the target. She was killed. The male target
had a shoulder wound. I don't know if there was
some kind of he liked her. There's no mention that
they were dating. But you know, so we don't know
(10:25):
if it's love triangle or if it's race related. His
manifesto reeks racially to the caller from Vancouver. They're not
calling it a manifesto, but in a manifesto style document
that was circulated online. Very troubled soul, yes, mental el
probably obsessed both with race and gender issues. So we
(10:52):
don't know if that had anything to do with the
two victims. He shot the girl first, that he shot
the boy, then he shot himself. I think he may
have thought he killed them both and then killed himself.
I mean, I'm not a detective, and my wife makes
me watch way too many datelines in forty eight hours,
but the notion that he killed the girl, then shot
(11:15):
the boy, and then shot himself, it suggests he thought
he was done. I mean, to me, there was nobody
converging he killed himself before the officers got there, So
it kind of suggested to me that maybe those were
the two targets and he was done and then he
did himself. Other than that, I don't know if it
(11:36):
answers any of your questions. I don't think we know
of any other links other than the same links.
Speaker 2 (11:42):
You know.
Speaker 1 (11:42):
There was racial slurs. He was black, killed the Hispanic.
We don't know what the other boy was to that
was wounded. He was Caucasian or Hispanic. So homophobia and
race seemed to be his hot buttons. Radicalized through mental
(12:03):
illness and social media.
Speaker 2 (12:06):
That's about it.
Speaker 1 (12:07):
He arrived at school on the bus, is believed to
have gone into the restroom where he retrieved the weapon
because they had protocols. You know, one of the things
we always we harp on is hardening the target. Hardening
the target. It was a pretty hard target. The school
used school resource officers too, had security cameras with weapon
(12:29):
detection software, security vestibules as part of the safety measures
at the school.
Speaker 2 (12:35):
So I don't know that there's a lot to do
to harden the target.
Speaker 1 (12:38):
And then when we find out somehow the weapon was
planted and he retrieved it from the bathroom, at least
that's the early reporting. So I don't know if that
matches what you're hearing all the way out in the
West Coasts. A lot of central themes to a lot
of shootings, and unfortunately the answer always is all of the bup.
Speaker 4 (12:56):
It's your Morning Show with Michael Deljoin.
Speaker 2 (13:00):
These are your top five stories of the day.
Speaker 1 (13:07):
Two students are dead and two others are injured after
a shooting at a Nashville high school on Wednesday.
Speaker 2 (13:12):
Mark Mayfield has his story. Here's Nashville Police Chief John Drake.
Speaker 8 (13:15):
This individual made his way to the cafeteria where he
ban confronted a sixteen year old have we identified as
a female Hispanic student, fired striking her.
Speaker 2 (13:30):
She is deceased.
Speaker 9 (13:32):
Chief Drake says the suspect also shot a seventeen year
old boy before killing himself. The boy suffered a grays
wound to the arm and has been released from the hospital.
A second student was injured in a fall. Drinke says
the shooter was a seventeen year old male who rode
the bus to Antioch High School by Mark Mayfield.
Speaker 1 (13:47):
The Pentagon is setting an additional fifteen hundred active duty
troops to our southern border, according to multiple reports.
Speaker 10 (13:54):
A US official confirmed the news. That's on top of
the twenty five hundred service members already the border ordered
there by the Biden administration. These additional service members will
deploy across the border by the end of the month.
Speaker 2 (14:08):
I'm Brian Schuk.
Speaker 1 (14:09):
Some federal workers are getting big news now the President
Trump is back in office. Lisa Taylor reports.
Speaker 11 (14:14):
President Trump is ordering all federal employees in diversity, equity
and inclusion roles to be placed on leave. More from
Kelly O'Donnell This.
Speaker 12 (14:21):
Is a sweeping effort to try to remake how the
federal government treats these issue of diversity, equity, and inclusion.
And so these employees whose work has been primarily focused
in these areas across the federal government will be paid
for some period of time on administrative leave, but the
work they're doing.
Speaker 11 (14:38):
And White House Press Secretary Caroline Levitt called the move
a win for Americans, calling DEI programs a scourge on society.
Speaker 2 (14:46):
I'm Lisa Taylor, who knew.
Speaker 1 (14:48):
The solution was sparkling right in front of our eyes
all along. When it comes to weight loss, Michael Kasner reports.
Speaker 13 (14:56):
The carbon dioxide in sparkling water can cause a process
that how much glucose the body uses meaning less sugar
is left behind is fat. That's according to a study
out of Japan. It also points out, however, that sparkling
water can cause or exacerbate conditions like reflux, disease or
irritable bowel syndrome.
Speaker 2 (15:16):
I'm Michael Kassner, and thank you, Michael.
Speaker 1 (15:18):
Now all of us have to go to the bathroom
are Oreo is partnering with posts Malone for a new
limited edition.
Speaker 14 (15:28):
Cookie, Salted Caramel or do you say caramel or caramel?
Speaker 2 (15:35):
I just say yum, hey, wake up.
Speaker 14 (15:40):
Hey, hey, hey anyway, mix it mixed salted caramel and
short bread flavor cream between the two Delicious signature chocolate
cookies and Gormal cookie and then stamped with nine designs
inspired by the singer.
Speaker 2 (15:59):
I know what I meeting in Oreo. I want to
see one of his tattoos.
Speaker 1 (16:03):
Birthdays today Sally Sellenberger seventy four years old, law and Orders,
Mariska Hargate is sixty one. Olympic skater Tanya Hanya Tanya
Harding is fifty three years old today. And Wendy Lyon
Yeah is twenty one and holdings my girl.
Speaker 2 (16:21):
Her official name is Wendy. You can share her other
name at a different time. Okay.
Speaker 1 (16:25):
Thanks, Happy birthday, Wendy and all of you. We're so
glad you were born. Thanks for waking up, Thanks for
giving us your husband. This is your morning show. Listen
Cory the yard Boy and My Morning show is your
morning show with my buddy Michael del Jorno.
Speaker 2 (16:47):
Hi, I'm Michael.
Speaker 1 (16:48):
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 to nine The
Patriot in Saint Louis, or Talk Radio ninety eight point
three and fifteen ten WLAC in Nashville and News Talk
five fifty k f YI Phoenix, Arizona. Love to be
a part of your morning routine, but we're always grateful
(17:08):
you're here now, enjoyed the podcast. Thanks for allowing us
to be a part of your morning routine. This is
your morning show. I'm Michael del Jonal, Jeffrey Lyons, got
the sound. Jeffrey keeping an eye on the content. We
always say we can't have your morning show without your voice,
so we play a lot of talkbacks. You don't have
to wait on hold anymore. Just on the iHeartRadio app.
You hit the microphone, make your comment, ask your question.
(17:29):
That was Mary earlier right, that was doing the Eagles stuff.
I believe show.
Speaker 2 (17:33):
Yes, Mary, She's brilliant.
Speaker 1 (17:35):
I'd like to share a couple of emails because you
can also email Michael d at iHeartMedia dot com. Renee writes,
good morning pizza boy. Read Jeffrey. Did you realize that
maryor Parker was an English teacher before she was mayor.
Oh god, this just gets worse. I'm beginning to think
maybe you're right. I think she just got a little
overly excited in the mall right stage fright.
Speaker 2 (17:57):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (17:58):
But here's how the mayor of Philadelphi led the Eagles
chant well.
Speaker 5 (18:02):
Listen, we've got to do this.
Speaker 9 (18:04):
Let me hear you all saying he hel.
Speaker 2 (18:07):
Ge me me did the cross?
Speaker 1 (18:13):
When she said al did they just repeat after her
and did somebody trying to throw an a. It sounded
like some of them went with the a, but they
were like, I'm really looking forward to that Revens Chef's game.
Speaker 2 (18:26):
That's the one that I'm good Michael. Police.
Speaker 1 (18:28):
Pray for the police, their families, and the family of
the four year old who was shot yesterday afternoon at
two a m. At two a man was walking along
Saint Clair Avenue in East Liverpool, Ohio. Someone called the
police and said this man was suicidal. The officer approached
the man and the man started shooting. He shot the
(18:48):
officer in the head. One of his bullets went through
a dentist's office nearby, and a four year old was shot.
She died at a Pittsburgh hospital. Police return fire and
shot the shooter dad the office. The officer is in
stable condition at a Pittsburgh gospel wow that was from Youngstown, Ohio. Yes,
(19:12):
by the way, we did some more digging, and I
don't know how Red feels about this. I really do
believe in the death of journalism. I believe it's been
replaced with narrative and agenda. So I don't want to
get narrativized or agendized by the Tennesseean. But they're starting
to paint a much different, longer picture, if you will,
(19:37):
about what happened. By the way, if it's three hundred pages,
I think it's safe to call that a manifesto. I
don't know about anybody else how you feel about it.
I think the other interesting part in this was how
they were trying to portray him more in a radical
(20:00):
alt right brushstroke, and I don't know that there's any
evidence of that. There are others that have been critical
saying the article pretty much tries to if he didn't
know it he was black, portray him as being white.
Speaker 2 (20:16):
I don't know about all that.
Speaker 1 (20:17):
But it's a three hundred page document and it was
posted on x along with other various sites, which I'll
get to in a minute, tennesseean's trying to portray this
is alt right paraphernalia in many of the pictures against
race mixing, taking revenge, and so on. The social media
(20:41):
accounts linked in the document are scattered across many platforms,
X kick, TikTok, the more. What's groper? I'm not familiar
with that. It's a nickname used by many white nationalist groups.
(21:03):
I don't know how we're trying to portray him as
a white nationalist when he was black.
Speaker 2 (21:06):
But anyway.
Speaker 1 (21:07):
In the same document, updated hours before the shooting, the
writer expressed dismay at having to speed up an original plan.
We don't know what caused him to speed it up.
He had an original plan, I guess, to kill at
least ten people at an elementary school. Blue Sky now
is Blue Sky the far left alternative that rose to
(21:31):
take on Musk and X X right.
Speaker 2 (21:33):
So isn't that interesting?
Speaker 1 (21:35):
On the far left version of X Wednesday, he just posted,
and this is tragic in and of itself. That you're
seventeen years old and that you would ever utter these
words today seems like a good day to die. That's
how random it is. I guess we'll do it today.
He also appeared to I didn't know this. This was
new news to me that he had begun to live
(21:57):
stream the attack on multiple platforms, including Kick. Apparently it
cuts off, but the intent was to live stream the
whole thing. Kick confirmed that the shooting was partially live
streamed on the platform and that the account was rapidly
banned and the content was removed immediately. So we're getting
(22:17):
a bigger picture with a lot of different narrative challenges,
you know, if you will, Obviously you've got a very
troubled young man. This whole involuntarily, involuntarily.
Speaker 2 (22:39):
Celibate celibate.
Speaker 1 (22:40):
Involuntary celibate would mean he was wanting to have sex,
but we know would have sex with him.
Speaker 2 (22:44):
I guess.
Speaker 1 (22:44):
So we don't know if that had any motive with
the Hispanic girl that he shot first. All we know
is he got the gun out of a bathroom, went
into the cafeteria, shot the girl first, then a boy.
They seemed to be the two targets, and then he
shot himself. And I say that because after he shot
both of them, then he finished himself off as if
(23:06):
he was done. So there was for somebody whose previous
ambition was to kill multiple people at an elementary school,
and we still don't know what rushed him into having
to do it today and today being a good day
to die, that was what he did.
Speaker 2 (23:19):
And you know, as far as the school being a
hardened target.
Speaker 1 (23:23):
At two resource officers, neither of which were near the
cafeteria at the time, they had cameras software detection for firearms,
and he left the weapon in the back. How the
weapon got in the bathroom, we don't know yet. But
he went to the bathroom, retrieved the weapon, went to
the cafeteria, shot the girl. Then the other boy who's
recovering the girl died, and then he shot himself and
he died. That's the latest we have on the shooting
(23:44):
this morning. One other story that I think is worthy
of being touched on. The statistics in polling on the
border as different ways, but percent to say that increasing
(24:06):
security at the US border should be a priority of
the federal government is fifty percent overall high and again
you throughout the middle, so high to low is fifty
percent to seventeen percent. All adults want the border secure,
whether it's a self evident truth, whether it's common sense,
whether it's learning from our mistakes. America's looking at the
(24:28):
border kind of like they do their front door, and
there's nothing hateful about locking it at night. In fact,
it's responsible to secure your home and protect your family.
Among Democrats, that number falls to twenty eight percent and
twenty seven percent low. So the Democrat Party is split
down the middle on this. Now, this is just securing
(24:48):
it as a priority, independence forty eight percent. So independence
at forty eight percent, only eighteen percent of low priority
Republicans as you can imagine, seventy eight percent high priority,
seventeen percent low priority. So is it still a partisan issue? Well, yeah,
seventy eight to twenty eight with the independence as a
(25:09):
tiebreaker at forty eight percent, and overall it's fifty percent.
And you're never looking at anything higher than seventeen percent
of America that thinks securing the border should be a
low priority, if you want to look at it politically,
Trump had the border and America read right. The Democrats
in Biden and Harris did not. Most oppose the arrest
(25:31):
of migrants at school church, not that Trump is focused
on that as a priority, but few Americans strongly opposed
to porting criminal illegals. Those who commit crimes after committing
the crime. This would be the obvious place for Donald
Trump to start. Donald Trump has the backing of the
(25:51):
American people by majority and super majority when it comes
to making a priority of securing the border and stopping
the bleeding, and then really for deporting anybody that breaks
breaks the law after breaking into the country. Eighty two
percent of all US adults favor the deportation of US
(26:15):
illegals who have been convicted of a violent crime. Only
six percent oppose. Republicans eighty nine to five. Democrats still
seventy nine percent to seven they're not even in line
with their own constituents and ignoring us and will continue
to be a big mistake. We've got a story of
(26:37):
a lawmaker in California who's going to pose any deportations.
You might want to read this research. All immigrants living
in the United States legally who have been convicted of
a violent crime, still sixty eight percent of adults say
deport them, sixteen percent they don't. All immigrants in the
United States illegally who have not been convicted of a crime,
(26:58):
now the numbers fall thirty seven percent to port them,
forty four percent don't Republicans sixty one twenty Democrats nineteen
to sixty four. So if Donald Trump begins with securing
the border, smart move as the backing of the people
those that go on to commit other violent crimes to
(27:19):
port them first, Americas behind you. I thought this was interesting.
Republicans want local police to cooperate with ICE. Overall, forty
two percent say they should always cooperate. Only eight percent
say they should never cooperate. So all of America thinks
local law enforcement should cooperate with ICE. Democrats, as you
(27:40):
can imagine, twenty five percent always cooperate, eleven percent never cooperate.
There's still out of touch with their people if they
oppose this two to one. Independents thirty seven to eleven.
Republicans obviously sixty seven to nothing. So I think everybody
gets a sense of this. Oh, Trump was right about
(28:02):
the border. It's a big reason why he got elected.
That in cost of living in the economy stupid, But
the border was huge, and America's behind him and he's
taking actions. All refugee flights into the United States have
come to a halt as President Trump has suspended the
State Department's refugee program, one of the biggest stories of
the day. He's also hinting a change is coming to FEMA,
(28:24):
and he's also going to make his first trip of
a second term of presidency. He's heading first to North Carolina,
where the hurricane failures took place, and then off to
the fires in California. And historic winter storms have brought
record breaking snowfall to Florida and it's moving towards the Carolinas.
Speaker 2 (28:41):
We'll have more on that, John Decker.
Speaker 1 (28:43):
If President Trump has his way, the auto industries transition
to electric vehicles will soon be slammed into reverse.
Speaker 2 (28:49):
How might they react to that? This is your Morning
Show with Michael Del Chrono.
Speaker 1 (28:55):
The Pentagon is setting an additional fifteen hundred active duty
troops to the Southern Order.
Speaker 2 (29:00):
Today. Brian Shook you All Morning Long has more.
Speaker 10 (29:04):
According to multiple reports, the US official confirmed the news.
That's on top of the twenty five hundred service members
already at the border ordered there by the Biden administration.
These additional service members will deploy across the border by
the end of the month. I'm Brian Shook.
Speaker 1 (29:21):
Had a few calls, one in general just a minute
ago asking if there was a father figure in that
seventeen year old Shooter's life. The answer is probably probably not.
But speaking of that, there's this Tammy Trihilo story. Children
of divorce, they're more likely to experience depression and low
self esteem.
Speaker 15 (29:39):
Now all new study shows they may also have up
to a sixty percent greater chance of having a stroke.
The study looked at adult sixty five and over, so
there's no data about children born later, when many attitudes
toward divorce changed and it became more commonplace. The link
between stroke and divorce was comparable to risk factors like
having diabetes. The researcher speculate the increase could be related
(29:59):
to increase blood pressure, sleep problems, or chronic stress. That
study was published Wednesday in the journal Plus One. I'm
Tammy Truheo.
Speaker 1 (30:07):
I've never seen an episode of The Simpsons and this
may shock people have never seen an episode of Duck Dynasty,
but it's coming back this year and and He announced
the docu series revival on Wednesday. It's going to feature
Willie and Corey Robertson and their now adult children, who
first appeared on the original show in the early mid
twenty tens. The couple compared the return to a homecoming,
(30:28):
saying they can't wait to get the cameras rolling again
on all of their new adventures or perhaps misadventures. And
Next Network gave its thumbs up for two seasons of
the reality show that will begin late this year. If
President Trump has his way, the auto industry's transition to
electric vehicles will soon slam into reverse.
Speaker 2 (30:49):
Is it reverse or neutral?
Speaker 1 (30:51):
White House correspondent John Decker joins us to explain, good morning, John.
Speaker 2 (30:55):
Hey, good morning.
Speaker 4 (30:56):
You know, if you were someone who in the past
year bought or least an electric vehicle, you likely got
a seventy five hundred dollars federal tax credit subsidy associated
with that purchase or lease that's going away. And the
big question is what impact will that have on those
(31:19):
car companies that manufacture cars and light trucks that are
electric with that subsidy, that federal subsidy going away.
Speaker 2 (31:28):
Big question.
Speaker 4 (31:28):
Elon Musk says it won't impact Tesla. He thinks that
there will still be strong demand for Tesla's without that
federal subsidy, But we'll just have to wait and see so.
Speaker 1 (31:39):
And I'm sure in your research, because you research everything
before you speak about it, you know This was a
big topic at the Detroit Auto Show. And again, you know,
like last night we had a wonderful dinner for our
anniversary at Perry's Takhoffs. I think Perry's began in Dallas
or Austin, I can't remember. Just it's hard to find
a better stake anywhere in the world.
Speaker 2 (31:58):
Congratulations, Oh, thank you very much.
Speaker 1 (32:00):
And you know, I might have considered Sperry's, especially if
they gave me an extra seventy five dollars or seven
hundred dollars if I ain't there instead, I mean, so,
I guess it's the question becomes. Look, I have a friend,
Chess corsign, who has a Tesla and loves it. I mean,
he's like, he doesn't do it for a living, but
he ought to. He literally sells Tesla's by just telling
(32:21):
all his friends about it. And great for me. I
never saw the worth of the of paying more, or
the high maintenance or the battery replacement. It just hasn't
moved me in But I think, like Donald Trump, I'm thinking,
you know what, if you want electric.
Speaker 2 (32:35):
God bless you. If you want gas, God bless you,
the government shouldn't be incentivizing so. But I mean, I
go back to my original question.
Speaker 1 (32:41):
Do you think this is fair to say slams it
in reverse or really what it does is slams it
into neutral, doesn't it.
Speaker 4 (32:48):
Well you raise a really good point, and that is
the market to determine demand, not the government. The government
should determine who buys what types of cars, whether it's
internal combusting engine or whether it's electric. If you want
to go out, I'd like you, point out, Michael, and
buy an electric vehicle. Go out and buy an electric vehicle.
(33:09):
But there shouldn't be this push by government to push
for with a certain type of vehicle. And that's what
happened during.
Speaker 2 (33:16):
The Biden administration.
Speaker 4 (33:18):
And the big question is what does this mean for
those companies that have invested a significant amount of their
R and D into electric vehicles. You know, in Europe
there are companies like Volvo, for instance, all of their vehicles,
all of their fleet in a few years will be
electric and you have to wonder is that a good
bet by that auto company, Volvo, to.
Speaker 2 (33:40):
Push in that direction.
Speaker 1 (33:42):
Add to the conversation, you know, there's been a lot
of investment in electric bus systems and they've been a
bust because of the high cost of maintenance and reliability issue.
The auto industry took its cues based on government cues
and incentives and commitment to infrastructure and made huge investments.
And I you know, I don't know if this came
up in any of your research, but you know, I
(34:03):
don't think BMW and Mercedes is feeling really good about
going off the deep end into evs.
Speaker 2 (34:08):
They lost their trunk if you will do it.
Speaker 1 (34:13):
So, you know, it's funny how you know the supply demand,
you know, and there were a lot of issues in
that with what has to happen in your garage to
provide the electricity with the extra you pay for it,
how long we just don't keep cars long enough to
get back that investment. And really, quite frankly, the global
warming fingerprint wasn't really any smaller in producing ev than
(34:34):
a lot of problems with it. But is this a
cylindro whatever it is, it's I think it's day has passed.
Speaker 4 (34:40):
Yeah, I don't know if it's a cylinder or I
don't know that when you're talking about a failure. But
having said that, you know, you know, the electric vehicle
percentage of electric vehicles as opposed to overall auto sales
in the US still very small, and you know it's
not increasing at such a rate that you, if you're
an autumn MAK, you would think to yourself, in terms
(35:02):
of planning, let's invest more in the electric and lesson
in the internal combustion. The exact opposite is that many.
Speaker 1 (35:09):
I always love our visits. John Decker, White House Correspondent. Thanks,
we'll talk again tomorrow. We're all in this together. This
is your Morning Show with Michael Enhild.
Speaker 2 (35:17):
Join now,