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March 13, 2025 34 mins

Once again, polls show that the Democrats are opposing American voters, not Trump!

Thursday marks five years since much of America began shutting down over what was then the new Coronavirus. How has our work and home life changed over the past five years – and are Americans now homebodies? National Correspondent RORY O’NEILL joins us in telling the story.

 

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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.

Speaker 2 (00:17):
All right, gentlemen, if you will excuse me, it's time
for an ah second privilege one, two.

Speaker 3 (00:22):
Three, starting your morning off right, A new way of talk,
a new way of understanding, because we're in this together.
This is your morning show with Michael del Jarman tripped
in space.

Speaker 1 (00:39):
Let the abstriptionitest Democrat Party. Let the day unfold as
it may. As egg prices drop. That's technically another one
pass it does now the egg price is even dropped down.
Their narrative seven minutes after the hour, Welcome to Thursday,
the thirteenth of March, here of our Lord.

Speaker 4 (00:58):
Twenty twenty five.

Speaker 1 (00:59):
Senate Minority Leader Chucky Schumer says Democrats have the needed
votes to block the Republicans spending bill if they came up,
but then we got to be against it. A federal
judge is ruling the pro Palestinian Columbian University activist will
remain in jail in Louisiana. US armed delivery to Ukraine
have now resumed after the thirty day ceasefire proposals been

(01:21):
accepted by Ukraine. So here comes the arms and two
NASA astronauts are still stuck in space.

Speaker 5 (01:29):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:31):
I'm going to preempt Rory's main story for this hour
and start right here.

Speaker 4 (01:35):
Rory, you told me it was a go well.

Speaker 6 (01:39):
Clamps sometimes they're not going to clamp or unclamp as
the case may be.

Speaker 4 (01:43):
With a hydrolatissue.

Speaker 1 (01:45):
Isn't this the same hydraulics leak we've been dealing with.

Speaker 6 (01:49):
No different company, different ship, different different This was ground.
This is a ground item, not an item on the
rocket itself. So okay, but it does reinforce the idea
there are hydraulics everywhere and they.

Speaker 4 (02:03):
All got to work at the right time.

Speaker 1 (02:05):
So I'm reading the story thoroughly, and you know, nowhere
in it does it talk about scrapped till or when
the mission may continue. Just hydraulic issue with the clamps,
and the mission was so scrubbed. So when do we
think they're going to take another shot.

Speaker 4 (02:23):
They're going to try again.

Speaker 6 (02:24):
Friday night seven oh three is a launchtime that's on
paper for now, depending on if they can get this
hydraulics issue resolved quickly enough. There's some bad weather and today,
which is why they kick the can, so won't have
a launch attempt today. If we go on this two
plus two model that we've been looking at in terms

(02:45):
of the timeline, that means that they might come start
to come home on Tuesday, butch and sunny maybe if
this thing goes off on Friday.

Speaker 4 (02:53):
But you don't write that down and ink. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (02:57):
Time's a funny thing. The younger you are, the slower
it goes. The older you are, the faster it goes.
So I suspect for our older listeners it seems like yesterday.
For our younger listeners, it seems like forever ago. But
it is kind of like nine to eleven. It is
kind of like Pearl Harbor. It is kind of like
for New Orleans people would relate to this Katrina. There's

(03:19):
pre Katrina and post Katrina. You know, there's pre nine
to eleven, post nine to eleven. It's that way five
years now since COVID and here we are.

Speaker 4 (03:27):
It's pretty crazy.

Speaker 6 (03:28):
Yeah, and there's some interesting research that finds that since
COVID that really accelerated what was already a trend of
us being homebodies. We just don't go out as much anymore.
That was something we could measure going back the last
twenty years, I decline in our time out of the house.
But then since COVID and everyone started to being able

(03:50):
to work from home, we do more of our shopping
from home.

Speaker 4 (03:54):
We don't go to the movies like we used to.

Speaker 6 (03:57):
All these different things are adding up, so we're spending
more time in the home. And then that changes the
demands that we have of our of our living space.
You know, we want more space then, right, we don't
if we're going to be here all the time, I
don't want it to be in five hundred and fifty
square feet.

Speaker 4 (04:12):
So yeah, yeah, interesting changes.

Speaker 1 (04:16):
They've changed temporarily. A lot of things changed forever. How
much time do we have? Real quick? Yeah we're good. Yeah,
someone had to cancel today, so oh good? All right,
So think about this. I have an issue with clothes.
It's kind of fifty to fifty, but they've come a
long way with making returning easy. But I'll give you

(04:36):
an example. I have a shaving mirror in my in
my bathroom. It fell and broke, which gave me seven
days of bad luck. I would have normally just run
up to home deepot and picked one out. I got
right on Amazon. It was here the next morning, you know.
I mean there's certain things like when you brought up earlier.
I think that's the I always said, COVID revealed more
than it did quite frankly about all of us, and

(04:58):
then it sped a lot of things up. I don't
know if COVID didn't happen, if I still go to
home depots. Some things have changed and changed forever. But
all the changes, if you add them up, point to
staying at home more. I mean, I think you nailed it.
I mean, that's just really And then for the longest
time we couldn't go anywhere. Then we could, and the
workers wouldn't go back, And now we've just kind of

(05:19):
settled in into a less than we used to leaving
home well right.

Speaker 6 (05:24):
And there are also technology changes as a result. You know,
I mentioned not going to the movies. I mean, whoever
dreamed twenty years ago of not going to Blockbuster on
a Friday night to pick out your movie. Right, so
now you have every movie ever made available in five
different streaming services, but that we now just click and

(05:44):
don't get off the couch. And then you could even
have dinner delivered more than ever before, so that you
just don't leave the house. And that's going to require
some long term planning changes as well. If we do
start to see more and more companies shed their office space,
well do we turn it all into residential? That's not
that's much easier said than done, right, And then how
do you redesign urban living if everyone is just at

(06:08):
home all the time.

Speaker 1 (06:08):
Well, I think that's you know we were seeing prior
to COVID, we had one or two here in my city.
You know, these concepts of your there's your neighborhood, there's
all your stores, there's all your restaurants, it's all self contained.
Even the school is there. You know that kind of
a concept work play. Yes, yeah, and then COVID happened.

(06:30):
And you know we used to do we had one
little family tradition, we'd take a family drive. I mean,
what else could you do during COVID and we go
look at at the time, the girls were I think
sophomores in high school or whatever they were, and so
we would drive by boys houses or whatever the crazy
thing was, and you know, but other than that, we
didn't do anything. And then all of a sudden, COVID
ended and I started driving around, I thought, and I
was finding these little areas. I found three of them

(06:50):
that were built, you know, self contained. One was themed
after Chicago. It happens to be a place now that
resides maybe five of our best restaurants, and of course
Saint Concept. You know, you live there, you shop there,
you play there, you getch coffee there, everything all in one.

Speaker 4 (07:04):
And I think that's perpetuated.

Speaker 1 (07:06):
But if we made a list, it would be interesting
and we'll never know. But would grub hub or I
don't want to start doing all the oub How many
people just stopped going places? Well, where are you at
right now?

Speaker 4 (07:21):
Right?

Speaker 1 (07:22):
Where am I at right now? I mean we were
how many years have you been in radio? I've been
in radio of forty two years something. It was inconceivable
before COVID you would do your show from home unless
you are Russia and baugh, you know, it's something exectional
and now it's very commonplace and working great and executing great.

(07:42):
But I don't know that we if we had to
make a list today, I don't know if we could,
and I don't think we'd have everything covered. That's how
many things have changed that we don't even think about
or perpetuate.

Speaker 6 (07:51):
But then there are also the psychological impacts of this
in terms of well, that means that we're not interacting
with people as much. I think we're more selling fish
as you can see when people are out and about
what jerks they are. And then the problem of loneliness
and isolation also pops in there as well. So there
are a lot of dominoes that can fall here as

(08:13):
a result of this, and I don't think we know
what the heck the real impact is.

Speaker 1 (08:17):
Yeah, this is the longest we've ever spent together, and
maybe I should pick out the town that mirror seven years.
But here's the final say. I was at Christmas in America.
It's a production done by the Public Square, and they're
doing the generation of the Great Depression. And I don't

(08:39):
know that I would have ever connected the dots. I
mean we would just say, well, that was a really
bad time in America. But no, it was a really
necessary time because that depression created the children that would
later liberate the world, the toughness that it would take
to liberate the world. It was the children of the
depression that fought World War two. And so there's always
like a response or a re action to these kinds

(09:01):
of things, and I wonder if that's still coming. In
other words, the most fascinating part of COVID may be
the response to COVID eventually, where we prioritize family, prioritize
real relationships, not social media relationships.

Speaker 4 (09:16):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (09:17):
It may not be written yet, but as it stands
at five years, it has certainly been one of the
more influential things in the history of the world, let
alone this country. Something we all share and it has
yet to change back that we can agree with it.

Speaker 6 (09:31):
And there was just a Gallop survey that came in
my inbox fourteen minutes ago that just started looking at
the impact on children. Most parents think their kids really
face some significant psychological sociological impacts.

Speaker 4 (09:45):
As a result.

Speaker 6 (09:46):
Half the parents said that their kid has since rebounded,
but there's about a quarter of them that are still
concerned about the long term developmental issues that COVID created.

Speaker 1 (09:58):
And what it did to the divide this country. He's
gonna be back again in the third hour he gets
the final story of the day. It'll be much shorter
than this, after all, he's already had his share.

Speaker 4 (10:07):
You're done right.

Speaker 1 (10:10):
Thirty day cease fire between Russia and Ukraine? Is it
on the horizon? More with Rory in the third hour.
All right, if you're just waking up, here's kind of
the big things we were doing. Never another one basid dust,
the tariff war and then Canada cave Ukraine US relations
will never be the same. This president is nothing but
a poot pump. Another one. Arms are reflowing.

Speaker 4 (10:30):
Thirty day.

Speaker 1 (10:31):
Thirty day cease fire is in effect, and now we're
at the table with Russia. And guess what today another
one bites the dust. Eggs are down two dollars plus
uh pulls a plenty today. There's none better than this.
And it's just another way. You know, if this was

(10:51):
the only one, that'd be one thing. It's everyone, all right.
So every time Donald Trump does something that the left,
you know, draws a line in the sand, and the
media draws a line in the sand and tries to
create a big negative narrative, you know, like making English
the official language. Well, guess what today's poll seventy three
percent of American support English as the official language. That's

(11:12):
fifty four percent strongly and only ten percent strongly disagree
with that. This is the problem. Over and over again,
we say it for the Democrats and for the death
of journalism. This is a different Donald Trump, and this
time the American people are behind him. Bush and Sunny's
still stuck in space. The New York Times following the
lead of the Washington Post when it comes to editorial, well,
we haven't seen the Democrat party pivot. We haven't seen

(11:35):
the television news media. They're just pivoting with faces and names.
But for the Washington Posts and the New York Times,
they're pivoting with their editorial sections. And that is a
sign of the times and how all this shifting and
changing could impact the midterm election. We can look at
some polls of a dying on the trans hill of

(11:58):
the left in Georgia.

Speaker 4 (11:59):
Was editor Esov who is he.

Speaker 1 (12:02):
Isn't a dead heat right now with any Republican who
would care to run.

Speaker 4 (12:06):
You're halfway home. To the United States Senate.

Speaker 1 (12:10):
Let alone, you know, grab herschel Walker or somebody with
some name that looks like low hanging fruit. And the
new Hampshire Senator Jeanie Shaheen has decided not to run.
That could be a shakeup in the midterm election that's
coming up in twenty twenty six. So a lot to
cover today, Miss alienial, miss a lot, only one chance
to live This Thursday, March thirteenth, twenty twenty five, My

(12:32):
tribute to.

Speaker 4 (12:33):
Seat Geek or whatever it's called.

Speaker 3 (12:35):
When we come back, it's your morning show with Michael
del Chano.

Speaker 1 (12:41):
Use that talkback button on your iHeartRadio app and take
your place at America's kitchen table this morning.

Speaker 4 (12:46):
There's two kinds of people.

Speaker 1 (12:47):
There's people like Red and Jeffrey who can't believe a
woman would strike another woman in the middle of a
race over the head with the Paton women. And then
there's me who's saying, I can't believe no one's done
that before.

Speaker 4 (13:03):
Yeah, I may have.

Speaker 1 (13:04):
Run track if I knew that was an option type
for your Top five Stories the Day.

Speaker 4 (13:08):
At twenty six minutes.

Speaker 1 (13:09):
After the hour numeral, Honol, the head of NATO, has
headed to Washington to day to meet with President Trump.

Speaker 4 (13:14):
Mark Mayfield reports.

Speaker 2 (13:16):
Ningto Secretary General Mark Ruta is scheduled to visit Trump
at the White House, where they're expected to talk about
a possible ceasefire between Ukraine and Russia. Rutah I said
he supports Trump's initiative to end the year's long conflict.
Earlier this week, he said he was absolutely convinced that
the US wants to bring Ukraine to this lasting piece.

Speaker 4 (13:34):
I'm Mark Meetield.

Speaker 1 (13:35):
Senate Minority Leader Chuckie Schumer says Democrats have the votes
they need to block a Republican spending bill.

Speaker 7 (13:41):
This comes as Friday's deadline to avoid a government shutdown looms.
The bill narrowly passed in the House Tuesday by a
vote of two seventeen to two thirteen. All but one
Republican supported the six month stopgap measure. While Republicans control
a slight majority in the Senate, Kentucky's Ran Paul has
made it clear he's firmly against the bill. I'm Brian Schuck.

Speaker 1 (14:04):
Spotify says it paid out a million dollars or more
in royalties last year to nearly fifteen hundred different artists.
Most of Them Country or Coldplay. If my kids had
any say in it, Tammy Trichello has more.

Speaker 5 (14:17):
The streaming service said Wednesday that eighty percent of those
didn't have a song that reached the apps daily Top
fifty chart. Instead, the artists had at least four to
five million monthly listeners or twenty to twenty five million
monthly streams. The number of art are earning more than
ten million dollars in royalties has jumped six hundred percent
since twenty seventeen. I'm Tammy Trio.

Speaker 1 (14:36):
The US Department of Education is warning dozens of colleges
about anti semitism on campus.

Speaker 4 (14:41):
Natalie Migliori has more.

Speaker 8 (14:42):
Sixty institutions are at risk of losing funding after the
Drum administration announced it's pulling four hundred million dollars in
federal grants and contracts from Columbia University.

Speaker 4 (14:52):
The warning to.

Speaker 8 (14:53):
Colleges came from the US Department of Education's Office for
Civil Rights, saying they were under investigation for allegedly failing
to take steps to protect Jewish students. It comes as
university leaders across the country have faced increased pressure to
control pro Palestinian demonstrations. Other Schools at risk of losing
funding include Harvard University, Northwestern University, University of Minnesota Twin Cities,

(15:17):
and Portland State University. I'm Natalie mgliori ABC News Radio.

Speaker 1 (15:21):
At this time tomorrow to be a total eclipse of
the Moon.

Speaker 2 (15:25):
Experts say a full moon called a blood moon will
make the Moon appear red during a total lunary eclipse
that's going to peak at two fifty five am Eastern
Friday morning. The entire eclipse will start late Thursday night,
lasting roughly six hours. It will be visible from the
Earth's western hemisphere, with prime viewing conditions across North and
South America. Spectators don't need anything special to watch the eclipse,

(15:47):
but experts warn that light, pollution and weather conditions can
impact the view, and binoculars could help.

Speaker 4 (15:53):
I'm Mark Mayfield.

Speaker 1 (15:54):
In sports, thunder a winner in Boston what eighteen one
to twelve over the Celtics, Clippers by fifteen over the
Heat grizz beat the Jazz, Suns over the Rockets, and
the Blazers lost by one to the Knicks. On the ice,
Red Wings won big seven three at home over the Sabers.

Speaker 4 (16:10):
Ducks lost three two to.

Speaker 1 (16:11):
Utah Kracking and overtime five to four over the Canadians Birthdays,
William H. Macy love his work, seventy five years old today,
former Fred PK Subin. We should have a PK subband
story later in the show.

Speaker 4 (16:24):
That'd be great.

Speaker 1 (16:25):
Yeah, And he's thirty six, and Super Bowl champion quarterback
Trent Dilfer is fifty three.

Speaker 4 (16:30):
If it's your birthday, Happy birthday. We're so glad you
were born.

Speaker 1 (16:33):
And thanks for waking up with your morning show where
seat geek is smarter than we are.

Speaker 4 (16:38):
I'll prove it. Next.

Speaker 1 (16:41):
This is Andy Hickson, formerly of Nashville, now living in Detroit, Michigan,
thanks to iHeartRadio.

Speaker 4 (16:48):
My morning show is your morning show. Hi, I'm Michael.

Speaker 1 (16:55):
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 ninth 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 and Phoenix, Arizona. Love to be
a part of your morning routine. But We're always grateful

(17:15):
you're here.

Speaker 4 (17:16):
Now.

Speaker 1 (17:16):
Enjoy the podcast on the Earn, streaming live on your
iHeartRadio app. This is your morning show, and this is
your voice. I didn't get a name for this one,
but whomever it is and wherever he is, suffer him not.

Speaker 9 (17:29):
Unto thee Elon Musk got off for one hundred thousand
dollars reward for any conviction of a person brought vandalized
in the Tesla dealership.

Speaker 4 (17:41):
I bet you they'll catch.

Speaker 9 (17:42):
Him quick, one hundred thousand dollars and make a person
narc on a friend real quick.

Speaker 1 (17:48):
A hundred thousand, I'd turn in these two from for
fifty bucks. Snitches get stitches that in my world. Oh,
I'd be one hundred thousand. Yeah, no, you would, ready,
you would toe totally nark. Well, we'll see how that
plays out. I was talking about seat geeks, so so
much for the best lead plans. The SEC Men's Tournament
is in Nashville. My son happens to be off for

(18:10):
spring break. The way things fell with local university visits
and some things I'm doing personally, we really couldn't go
anywhere for spring break. So I was going to just
PLoP myself at the Bridgetone Arena and watch some great
basketball with him. Sure, Now, the session we wanted to
go do was last night because I went to Louisiana
State University.

Speaker 4 (18:29):
LSU played last night.

Speaker 1 (18:31):
Let me rephrase that they were on the court for
two halves last night. They didn't really play one and done.
LSU lost twenty or thirty something crazy. And then Oklahoma,
which is my son's favorite school and where he may
go to college, played last night. That's not possible with
the first tip at six and the second tip off

(18:52):
being anywhere from eight thirty to quarter to nine and
ending after eleven, and then me getting home after mid night,
finally falling asleep at one. How could I get up
and do this two hours later? So we knew we
couldn't go to the session we wanted to, but we
planned to go to yesterday's session so we could sit
there during the day. So I get on seat geek

(19:13):
or whatever it is. I get my two three tickets
because Pete's going to come along with us, and the
receipt says Wednesday Session one, Bridge Jon Arena, YadA yad,
everything's fine. Then you wait for them to deliver your
tickets so, and when they deliver the tickets, they're for
today at noon, not yesterday at noon.

Speaker 4 (19:27):
Oh no.

Speaker 1 (19:29):
Then I embark on the journey of trying to get
a hold of a human being at Seat Geek to
fix this, and then you end up dealing with bots,
bots that finally convince you you're dealing with Jonathan Jonathan
who eventually hangs up on you, and then it's another
thirty six minute wait.

Speaker 4 (19:47):
I finally gave up, and we have.

Speaker 1 (19:49):
A closing today, So I thought, well, I guess Pete
and Nickel go to the game, and I just paid
for three tickets for nothing. After watching all the games
yesterday there were duds. Closing ends up being at ten.
I'm much better off going today. Seat Geek knew better.
It's kind of like you with your computer and how
we'll be talking about something and then the going out
song will like relate to it.

Speaker 4 (20:09):
We didn't plan it yet, Yeah, Seat Geek.

Speaker 1 (20:12):
Fine, intervention divinely intervened and got us better games today.
But oh you was a winner last night over Georgia Syracuse,
one of the ACC first round. I mean, my schools
are doing pretty good for you know, this is just
conference tournaments. We're not to the actual march madness yet.
All right, if you're just waking up, here are the
big stories. So Chucky Schumer's bragging, and what's Chuckie Schumer

(20:36):
bragging about?

Speaker 4 (20:37):
I think we got the votes to block the Republican
spending bill.

Speaker 1 (20:40):
In other words, I think we got the votes to
spite and obstruct the Republicans. And what is Chuckie Schumer's
biggest gribe? Doge, that's their biggest crusade right now. But
it's so out of step with the American people. Two
out of three Americans like what doche is doing are
outraged about?

Speaker 4 (21:00):
Is what Doze is revealing?

Speaker 1 (21:01):
And how long it's been happening, And isn't that just
a glimpse of everything that's been happening in the first
fifty days of this presidency. Not knowing what you stand for,
not knowing who your leaders are, what your message is,
total obstruction, not opposing party, but obstruction at any cost.

Speaker 4 (21:26):
We don't know what all they have on us.

Speaker 1 (21:28):
The problem is you're not obstructing Donald Trump, You're not
obstructing the Republican Party. You're obstructing the American people. And
now you're about to do it with a shutdown of
a government. I mean, the best way to make my
point today is to say, I wonder if tomorrow's poll
will be sixty three percent of Americans, including forty two

(21:51):
percent strongly would prefer a shutdown to the continued respecting
I mean, that's how these polls have been going. Everything
they've tried to make a controversey over, the polls suggest
just as they were out of touch with the American
people during the election cycle, they're out of touch with
them today. So Chucky's bragging that he can block the

(22:11):
spending bill. But like a parasite whose victory is it
kills the host, and you know what happens to the
parasite when the host dies. The parasite dies. What's the
endgame for the Democrats? In this cost more government jobs
than Doze was going to cost. But every day it

(22:33):
seems we have a poll that proves exactly what I'm
saying to you. How out of touch the left is,
the media is, the Democrat Party is, the intelligency at
universities is with the American people. And I don't know,

(22:54):
you know, maybe they're in a bubble and they don't
get it yet. They really need to. Maybe this would
have sold four years ago, eight years ago, twelve years ago,
But today seventy three percent of the American people favor
making English the official language. Now one of the keys
to all immigrants. We talk about illegal immigration. We haven't

(23:16):
been able to solve that, but then there's legal migration
that we were terrible at. And they'll often sell you
we're a nation of immigrants, as if one plus one
plus one plus one plus one all the way up
to twenty thirty three hundred million equals. That's not how

(23:36):
it worked, though, Yes we are, but not those that
broke in, those that came for what we stood for,
came for what this experiment provided. Independence, liberty, the ability
to work hard and have something and no one control

(23:59):
your life or limit your possibilities. But what was the apparatus?
You left your country and denounced it, came here and assimilated.
So yes, you may have come from the Bahamas, you
may have come from the Ukraine, you may have come
from wherever. But when you come here, you assimilate into

(24:20):
our worldview, government view, policy views, way of life, and
one is we have to communicate one with another. Now
it's best for them. I remember growing up. This is
going to sound really dramatic, but if I ever tried

(24:41):
to start speaking Italian, my grandmother or grandfather would hit me.
Why because they were first hand. They knew what their
parents gave up to come here, all their hopes, all
their dreams, all their plans, all their expectations. Imagine if
today you pulled a Rosie O'Donnell, and you may have

(25:06):
had to at kamala Ie, and now you're in a
strange country where no one speaks your language and you
don't speak theirs. How are you ever going to assimilate?
How are you ever going to succeed? How is your
next generation ever going to seede succeed if you don't assimilate.
And when we talk about assimilation, the very first step

(25:28):
is communication. You want to look at the educational potential
of a non English speaking student versus an English speaking
student in America, or the job potential. Michael Savage for

(25:51):
decades based this whole show on language, culture and borders. No,
I probably wouldn't have even though I filled in for
him two days a week. I probably would have said
things away he did. But he had the right battle,
and for the first time, the American people, get it.

(26:13):
Let me go through some of these numbers for you,
because they're profound. Voters overwhelmingly favored legislation to make English
the official language. That doesn't mean you hate every other
language or hate every other country or culture.

Speaker 4 (26:23):
Just means we got to talk. We gotta be a
lord of food. I gotta get on the phone to
fix my seaking tickets, and I need somebody that can
understand me. You know.

Speaker 1 (26:35):
A new national survey by Rasmussen seventy three percent of
likely US voters would support a law that made English
the official language in the United States. Just like everything else,
Donald Trump has moved forward with He moves forward with
the American people behind him, with the Democrats playing the
obstruction game, in the media, playing the demonization game. But
it's not going to work because nobody's watching the media,

(26:56):
nobody's influenced by the media, nobody cares about the media
and the Democrats, and they have lost touch with their
own voters, let alone the American people. But this ought
to knock you right on your breakfast buns. Fifty four
percent of the seventy three percent strongly supports such a law.

(27:17):
You oppose this at your own political demise. We have
another piece of research on Senator Asoff in Georgia. This
man's going to die on the transgender hill because the
American people it's a losing issue. American people don't want

(27:37):
Adams apples and boxing rings beating up girls period. I mean,
you can stand for that and have personal integrity, and
good for you, but you're not going to be a senator.
You're going to lose. And right now, the poll suggests
he would lose to anybody that just stood up and
said I'm a Republican. I could move today to Georgia
and run for Senate.

Speaker 4 (27:56):
And win.

Speaker 1 (27:59):
No much better name, and George is probably going to
rise up and defeat him. But that's fifty four percent
strongly support English as the official language. Only twenty one
percent disagree, and of that twenty one percent, only ten
strongly opposed. How many of these polls read come down
to ten to sixteen strongly opposed. That's all that's left
of the woke America. The intelligentsia, education and doctrinated far left,

(28:23):
the media far left, the Hollywood far left. They only
make They're a fringe party at best. Trump's executive order
last week declared English's official language, and it repealed an
executive order thirteen one to sixty six issued by President
Bill Clinton nearly twenty five years ago. Sixty five percent

(28:45):
of voters approve of Trump's executive order, including forty eight
percent strongly. Twenty eight disapprove eighteen strongly, four to one
on the executive order five to ones strongly approved to
disapprove on making it the law of the land now,
ninety three percent of Republicans supported. When you love to

(29:07):
do an interview today with the who are the six
or seven Republicans that oppose this? Sixty one percent of
Democrats support this, and sixty three percent of voter is
not affiliated with either parties support this. This isn't a
losing independent argument. This isn't a losing American argument. This
is a losing argument within their own party. But it

(29:29):
doesn't seem to stop them. Like a record skipping, They're
stuck in a narrative, and I think the only way
to unstick the narrative is to replace them. And that's
why I see, you know, like a weather van sees
a high pressure system pushing down in a low appreciar system.
I don't know how many Democrats are going to lose

(29:49):
in the midterm election. I don't know how it's gonna
upset the balance, but I think you're going to see
a lot of different Democrats upset different Democrats in primaries.
And if you followed what I meant by that, either way,
America is going to win because the American people have
moved on and in a government of formed by the people,

(30:10):
that's everything.

Speaker 4 (30:12):
This is your morning show with Michael del Chrono. Hey,
if you're just waking up.

Speaker 1 (30:18):
President Trump claims that there have been far more deaths
in the Russian Ukraine War than have been reported.

Speaker 4 (30:24):
Mark Mayfield has that story.

Speaker 2 (30:26):
Speaking from the White House with the Irish Prime Minister,
Trump once again said the war never would have started
if he were president the last four years and added
that Russia fears him.

Speaker 10 (30:35):
They never took anything from me. They took him from
Obama and Bush, and they took it from sleepy Joe Biden.
With Biden, they wanted to take the whole country.

Speaker 2 (30:45):
Trump added, we are getting close to peace, noting that
Ukraine has agreed to a temporary ceasefire that has yet
to be backed by Russia.

Speaker 4 (30:53):
I'm Mark Mayfield.

Speaker 1 (30:54):
Wildfires and other weather extremes are making cancer care more complicated.

Speaker 11 (30:58):
A new study published in the Journal of the National
Cancer Institute showed that patients recovering from lung cancer surgeries
within an active wildfire zone need longer hospital stays in
those in areas with no fires. The longer stays could
be attributed to the reluctance of healthcare providers to discharge
patients because of the environment, including housing or safety issues.
The studies authors emphasize that the results show that wildfires

(31:20):
pose broad threats to health beyond smoke exposure. Ily Se Tailor.

Speaker 1 (31:25):
You know, there's a lot of cast and characters in
this Trump administration, but I'm beginning to think one of
the personal favorites for most people is borders are Tom Holman,
He's warning Governor hochel Ice agents could soon flood her
state if she doesn't start cooperating on the federal immigration crackdown.

Speaker 5 (31:43):
Holman was in Albany on Wednesday, meeting with GOP lawmakers
when he issued the warning during a news conference.

Speaker 4 (31:48):
Say, sure cities.

Speaker 3 (31:49):
Won't get exactly what they don't want, more agents in
the community and more collabal risk because you have forced
us in the community, because you failed to let us.

Speaker 4 (31:57):
In the jail.

Speaker 5 (31:58):
He criticized Governor Hogel for New York's immigrant friendly policies
that had nothing but praise for New York City Mayor
Eric Adams for working with the Trump administration on rounding
up illegals who commit crimes. I'm Tammy Trihiohi.

Speaker 4 (32:12):
Detroit listeners listen on the superstation.

Speaker 1 (32:17):
Eminem is trying to bring the WNBA back to Detroit.

Speaker 4 (32:22):
The Michigan Rapper has.

Speaker 1 (32:23):
Joined a team of investors including the Pistons owner quarterback
Jared Goff, General Motors CEO Mary Barrow. They're all hoping
to bring the expansion WNBA team to Detroit.

Speaker 4 (32:35):
Now.

Speaker 1 (32:35):
The Motor City used to have one of the best
teams in the league. That Detroit Shock won three WNBA
championships two thousand and three, two thousand and six, in
two thousand and eight before moving to Tulsa in two
thousand and nine. The league says it wants to add
a sixteenth team by twenty twenty eight, and Eminem and
others in Detroit want to make sure it's there.

Speaker 4 (32:55):
Well. In basketball, big.

Speaker 1 (32:58):
Win for the Thunder around the Road in Boston over
the Celtics one eighteen one twelve Clippers by fifteen over
the heat Griz won one twenty two one fifteen over
the Jazz, Suns beat the Rockets one eleven one oh four,
and the Blazers lost to the Knicks by one. By
the way, this is the first time in my twenty
five years of marriage my wife has told me I
benched the show. I think you'd like as usually she

(33:19):
does that and it's like the Crown or Brigardton or
is something awful? And I said, well, what is it?
And she goes, it's a running point. Then I'm like
my grandmother. My grandmother always did that. Who's Stars, And
of course it's Kate Hudson, who, by the way, is start.
I don't know, she just is. She is Goldie Han

(33:39):
in nineteen seventy nine. I mean, the actions, the look,
it's it's remarkable. But it is a great cast. It
is a great show. I don't know why they just
didn't call them the Lakers. It's certainly biographical on the
Laker family ownership. But pick the click if you like basketball,
if you like Kate Hudson, if you like a really
good show on Netflix, running point, funny, funny stuff, and

(34:01):
really deep, good characters. Hockey, Red Wings one at Home,
Big seven three over the Sabers, Duck's Lost to the
Utah three two, and the crack In and Overtime five
four over the Canadians. Birthdays today William H. Macy seventy
five years old, former Nashville predator pe K Suban thirty
six years old, and Super Bowl champion quarterback Trent Dilfer

(34:23):
is fifty three. At your birthday, Happy birthday, and we're
so glad you were born.

Speaker 4 (34:26):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael ndheld Joo
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