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April 11, 2025 33 mins

Polls a plenty, everything the President is proposing Americans support, unless you tell them it’s Trump!

Millions will rush to file their taxes this weekend. What about an extension? National Correspondent RORY O’NEILL will tell listeners how they can put off the inevitable – even if briefly. 

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, it's Michael. Your morning show can be heard live
each weekday morning on great stations like thirteen sixty The
Patriot in San Diego, News Talk, one oh six point
three and AM eighteen eighty WM e q oh Claire
Wisconsin and one oh four nine The Patriot and Saint Louis, Missouri.
Would love to be a part of your morning routine.
But so glad you're here now. Enjoyed the podcast.

Speaker 2 (00:18):
Good Morning Americans, It's Friday two three.

Speaker 3 (00:24):
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 O'Dell Chruman.

Speaker 1 (00:38):
How we got a Master's Friday? Justin Rose leads seven
hunderd parr after the first round of the Masters in
augusta Masters Friday, we got palm. Sunday, everybody will be
racing to work on their taxes. Who procrastinated because that's
coming up on Tuesday. Supreme Court has ruled that the
Trump administration must facilitate the release of a Maryland man

(00:59):
wrongly de bording to a prison in l Salvador. RFK
Junior is laser focused on determining the cause of autism
and doing so by September, and we were just watching
off the air the horrific sites of the helicopter crash
into the Hudson River that took six lives, a family
of five from Spain, including the pilot, and the craft

(01:22):
clearly fell apart. It had no rotary blades when it
just plummeted into the Hudson River, all six being killed.
Sad way to start the weekend, all right, eight minutes
after the hour, Good morning and welcome to your Friday,
April eleventh, twenty twenty five, on the air and streaming
live on your iHeart app. I'm Michael del jorno. Roy
O'Neil is covering the millions who will be busy working

(01:43):
on their taxes, are filing extensions this weekend. Two things
are what was the old expression the two inevitable things,
death and taxes. Well, taxes are up next. Well, death
taxes and Tuesday. Those are the things to remember.

Speaker 4 (02:00):
If you owe money, you've got to pay the money
on Tuesday. If you have a refund coming, you can
file an extension and you can file until October fifteenth.
But if you owe money, you have got to at
least guests or estimate how much you owe and get
that submitted by Tuesday. You two can also have that
extension through October. But the money is due Tuesday. I

(02:22):
said that three times. Is the message out there. It's
due Tuesday.

Speaker 1 (02:26):
So you say the money is due Tuesday, right, Rory, Tuesday, Tuesday.

Speaker 4 (02:30):
I will gladly pay you tuesday for that hamburger today.

Speaker 1 (02:34):
Anyone remember Papa? That was an omen.

Speaker 4 (02:37):
So far, the IRS has received about ninety million tax returns.
About sixty eight million of those have already gotten their
refunds paid, so the money's getting out there. Average refunds
are about thirty two hundred dollars, so that's really not
a good thing. You should not give Uncle Sam your
money free for a year, but better or refund than.

Speaker 1 (02:56):
Owing, I suppose. Well, I can tell you I paid
through the throughout the year end still owed a little
more off my nose. I'm all filed, e filed, and
prepared for the electronic draft of my checking account on
the fifteenth, So I'm all set. But it is amazing
how fast April comes around, hunt right, it sure is.

Speaker 4 (03:17):
And you know this used to be such a day too.
Write the line that we would do radio remotes at
the post office, your long lines that would show up,
and now it's just click click whatever.

Speaker 1 (03:27):
That was it. Well, when I think of I never
did my tax before Turbo tax, I never did my
taxes on my own. So my early thoughts are decades
of paying accountants a lot of money. I have a
great attorney and a great CPA that does our entire
family's taxes, and she's she's just the best I've ever

(03:47):
had and the most affordable I've ever had. But the
days of you know, doing it yourself like Turbo tax
made it pretty simple. That's when you realize, man, our
CPAs have really been I mean, I printed out the
same reports that used to print out. I invoiced my
wife non monetarily, and you know all that stuff. But yeah,
the days of when we used to sit down, do

(04:08):
our taxes, put them in an envelope and mail them.
That's all changed so much with e filing.

Speaker 4 (04:13):
Yeah, and just one quick note, all those services are great,
but you also can file for free through THEIRS dot
gov website. They do link you to some free file
services that are out there. It's all the same computer
program stuff, but the IRS has links for free file
out there and look for a standard return that can
save you seventy five to one hundred and fifty bucks
if you want to do it that way. So I'll

(04:34):
do it through THEIRS dot gov website though, to make sure.

Speaker 1 (04:37):
Rory O'Neil he'll be back at the third hour Congress
looking at a plan to possibly get rid of daylight
savings time. Oh, that old chestnut will kick that around
in a couple of hours. Yeah, busy show. Today we
have Jaredillion's going to be joining us. It's been a
wild week, to say the least on Wall Street. Bonson
nailed it yesterday right. He anticipated that there would be

(04:58):
a lot of people would take the big Wednesday and
sell off on Thursday, and so the market was down
again yesterday. So it's been a crazy ride this week,
you know, driven by the tariff conversations and the tariff policies.
Does President Trump care about the markets? What should you
do to protect your investments? Jered Dillion is going to

(05:21):
be joining us next hour. John Decker has the latest
on the President. We had a cabinet meeting Aestuday, which
has filled up our sounds of the day. I'll just
say it this way and I'm not implying. The last
place I worked didn't even have department at meetings, so us.
I mean, that's as bad as it gets. But as

(05:43):
somebody that was in management for a long time, you
know when you're in a good operation, when you're sitting
at your department head meeting, When you sit there and
one by one each department is reporting and discussing, you
can tell that there's sense of urgency, that they're on
the case, that they're making progress, that they're doing not

(06:05):
just the urgent, but moving forward and the important. I mean,
you can just tell anybody out there listening right now
that's ever been in a department head that was weak,
you remember what those meetings were like, and in the
department that was strong, what those meetings were like. Read
you got a census. When you're watching this, I mean,

(06:26):
everybody that speaks in this department head we could put
in sounds of the day. I mean, everybody's up to
something really urgent, really important, making progress. You can tell
they know what they're talking about, that they're actually leading
what their department is doing. It's very impressive. And I'm
not just kissing up to the Trump administration. It's just
very impressive, and then the fact that they do it

(06:48):
transparent for all of us to see. I think today
I pulled out RFK Junior and Telsea Gabbard, and when
I did, I wasn't even thinking two former Democrat presidential
candidates sitting at a Republican cabinet meeting and both are
doing just incredible things on things that you really wanted done.

(07:14):
So we'll feature that in our Sounds of the Day.
But a big cabinet meeting yesterday, we do a polls
of plenty today Rasmussen looking at the approval of shutting
down the Department of Education. I guess it's what the
poll reveals about those responding that makes the pole worthless.

(07:36):
I mean, if you're going to have a discussion about
the Department of Education, I would think first and foremost
on your mind is does it need to do we
need a federal Department of Education to oversee state Department
of Educations, let alone county and school districts, let alone

(07:56):
schools and teachers and administration. And if so, how can
you prove that to me? Since nineteen seventy nine? What
are the great improvements in test scores since nineteen seventy
nine to even make such a case to ask such
a question. Well, in this particular case, the poll did

(08:17):
a really good job of telling you, well, fifty one
percent support the president and its abolishment, forty seven percent disapprove.
And when you do the strongly approve and strongly disapprove,
it's almost dead even at thirty eight thirty seven percent.
But then the next question is disqualify those answers, because
if you don't know that our kids are less prepared,

(08:41):
not more prepared since seventy nine for higher education, less prepared,
not more prepared for the workforce since nineteen seventy nine,
and less prepared and not more prepared for citizenry than
since nineteen seventy nine, what did you pay for? And
of course any kind of study, you'll arrive quickly at

(09:06):
a lot of socialization, a lot of indoctrination, and tons
of administration and bureaucracy. If if you're sitting around with
friends and you're talking about dismantling the Department of Education
inside the Beltway, and they act like that's something radical, unthinkable,

(09:30):
they probably don't even know it wasn't created until nineteen
seventy nine, And primarily Wikipedia that you're get to mix
bag most Some will tell you Jimmy Carter did it
simply to get union support to win swing states to
win the presidency. Others will tell you the government was
trying to help some failing schools, and they were doing

(09:54):
programs and money, and then nobody was really assigned to
keep track of it. But even what it was he
needed to be, compared to what it is bloated into
is unrecognizable. So I don't even know if the polls
worth covering as much as the topic, but we'll do that.
In our polls of plenty support for the president's tax proposals.

(10:16):
What's interesting about that, I support them, going back to
John F. Kennedy and throw a little bit of W
and a lot of Ronald Reagan along the way, because
it works. Money that is taxed is out of the economy,

(10:37):
money that is untaxed is in the economy. Now, the
question is do you believe that who it morally belongs to,
and do you trust how they'll spend it? And I
don't know on a balance sheet, what would have made
you for a second think you should trust bureaucracy in
the federal government more than the American people now I

(11:00):
can tell you in nineteen sixty, and he was a Democrat,
John F. Kennedy said, the money was morally yours. You work,
you earn it, it's yours, not the governments, and the
governments to decide how much you get to keep it
is morally wrong to be taxing at this rate. That
was number one. Number two, he said, we trust the

(11:21):
American people and how they'll spend it. You'll pay your
debts and then you'll buy stuff. And as you buy stuff,
businesses grow, and his businesses grow, they hire more, and
as they hire more more tax payers burdened less is
the most effective way to fund government. That was proven
by Kennedy after his death. That was proven by Reagan,

(11:42):
it was proven by Bush. Unfortunately, in the case of
George W. Bush, he continued to outspend the revenue. He
would tell you to fight a holy global war against
an access of evil. But we go inside these numbers,
and again the discussion of the question and the reality

(12:10):
of the topic far outshines the results. But the American
peace again, you know, when we look at what Donald
Trump was so controversial in his first term, and I
would always kind of take the conversation to Okay, So
you think Donald Trump is outrageous, tell me one thing

(12:32):
Donald Trump did in his first term that wasn't in
the Republican Party platform. Today we'll prove in our sounds
of to day. Tell me something Donald Trump is doing
today that you think is so outrageous that the Democrats
weren't proposing in the past. So is Donald Trump crazy?
Is Donald Trump different? Or has the Democrat Party abandoned

(12:54):
a rational space. We'll see that throughout our stories as
a theme today. And then first Bill Maher. Now, the
latest is the Michigan governor visits with the President and Gretchen.
It's like, man, I'm all for what the President's doing.

(13:15):
I mean, we do need to build things, we do
need to manufacture things. We do need to have a
fair playing field with the world when it comes to commerce.
While the Democrats are aiding or now, how dare you
support anything like even breathing? If Donald Trump is supporting
the same thing? And throughout the day only because really,
today's the only thing I can do it. I'll be

(13:37):
shifting back and forth to the azaleas in bloom Augusta,
the Masters Round one justin Rose with the green jacket
be far off one of the lower opening rounds and
Masters History seven under par. Some of your favorites that
aren't far behind My pick Scotty Scheffler four under par,

(14:00):
Bryce and de Chambeau three under par. How about my
old roommate from Houston, Freddie Couples. People don't know that,
but Jim Nansen Freddie Couples were roommates at the University
of Houston. Jim played on the Cougar basketball team, Freddy
on the golf team. Two handsome smooth men. Oh, you

(14:20):
can only imagine the amount of dating in that door. Wow.
Freddie Couples at sixty five one under par. He does
that all the time. And then because he's sixty five
years old, he'll.

Speaker 5 (14:31):
Run out of guests by Saturday morning.

Speaker 1 (14:34):
Anyway, that's your Master's Update.

Speaker 3 (14:36):
It's Your Morning Show with Michael del Johno.

Speaker 1 (14:40):
Speaker Mike Johnson says the House and Senate will continue
to work over the weeks for President Trump's budget plan.
Mark Mayfield has more The.

Speaker 6 (14:47):
House narrowly passed a revised blueprint for the budget on
Thursday morning.

Speaker 4 (14:51):
We have a responsibility to get our country back on
a sound fiscal trajectory.

Speaker 6 (14:55):
Afterward, Johnson said committees from both chambers would be working
collaboratively over the two week to find more savings. The
House approved plan would raise the debt limit, cut taxes,
and increased spinning on defense and immigration enforcement. House Minority
Leader Hakim Jeffries voiced his opposition to the budget resolution,
calling it a disgrace.

Speaker 1 (15:13):
I'm mark nephew. A family of five, including three children
and a pilot, all six are dead after a tour
helicopter broke apart in midair and fell into the Hudson River.

Speaker 7 (15:23):
A family from Spain was saw on the BILL two
O six chopper along with the pilot from New York
helicopter to view sites along the Hudson when the choppers
started falling apart.

Speaker 1 (15:33):
So I just walk in.

Speaker 4 (15:34):
I heard like a weird noise, and when I looked up,
I just saw it falling from the sky and I
just saw a big splash in the river.

Speaker 7 (15:40):
Dozens of first responders, including divers and scuba teams, were
in the cold, murky water within minutes, but NYPD Commissioner
Jessica Tish said the pilot and passengers could not be saved.

Speaker 6 (15:52):
Four victims were pronounced dead unseen and two more were
removed to local area.

Speaker 8 (15:58):
Hospitals, were sadly both succumbs to their injuries.

Speaker 7 (16:02):
I'm Sarah Lee Kessler.

Speaker 9 (16:06):
Hey, this is John Watson. My morning show is your
Morning Show with Michael Del Giorno.

Speaker 1 (16:14):
Hey, gang, it's Michael. Your Morning Show can be heard
live each weekday morning on great radio stations like k
EIB and Los Angeles, WFDF nine ten AM Detroit, Michigan,
the Superstation, and the Rock Up Talk sixteen hundred AM
KIVA and Albuquerque, New Mexico. We'd love to have you
listen live every morning. But glad you're here now for
the podcast. Enjoy. Put those slippers out, shuffle into the kitchen,

(16:36):
grab yourself a cup of coffee. You've already missed one
of Jeffrey's mistakes. You don't want to miss the next. Seriously,
I just have to do this. What idiot is running
the show? You deign this thing. Robert F. Kennedy Junior
says he's putting together a team that will determine the
cause of autism. And by September, six people are debt

(17:00):
after a helicopter crash into the Hudson River. It was
a family of five from Spain, including three children. And
what will this tost the stocks do? Who knows? Futures
are up in pre market trading after a very negative
close yesterday. We'll have more on that pulls up plenty
of time, all right. This one comes from ras Musin

(17:20):
and it involves the Department of Education. Should we shut
down the federal Department of Education that began in nineteen
seventy nine? And why did it begin in nineteen seventy nine?
That's a mixed bag. Some will tell you it was
just Jimmy Carter trying to garner the support and the

(17:41):
endorsement of teachers' unions across the country, but specifically in
swing states in order to defeat Gerald Ford, and it worked.
Others will tell you we had the federal government overseeing
some funds and programs, isolated programs, and because that money
was going out and no one was really filing, we

(18:02):
just needed to put together a little Department of Education
to oversee tho those projects. But that's nothing compared to
what it has bloated and become. And then the other
most relevant question is is it working? Are we smarter
today because of it since nineteen seventy nine, or do

(18:23):
the test score show we're less smart? Are kids more
prepared for higher education? Or if we had to dumb
down higher education and increase remedial programs. Those numbers kind
of speak for themselves and they can't be narrativized, and

(18:44):
because of that, they're usually ignored. So having said all that,
what's the poll say. Fifty one percent of the American
people say shut it down? Now that's a neuro majority
in support of President Trump. But again, it is another
thing that Donald Trump is doing that the left, the
legacy media and everybody is pitching a fit about, but

(19:08):
the American people are behind it. That speaks to the
analogy I always use, what did Donald Trump do in
the first term that wasn't in the Republican Party platform? Nothing?
So why was he so outrageous for doing it and
not just saying it? I can give you a great

(19:29):
example of that. It's coming up later in our Sounds
of the Day, but I'll give you a sneak. Listen.
Here's Hillary Clinton over a decade ago on the campaign trail.
This is Hillary Rodham, Democrat Clinton. Listen.

Speaker 10 (19:45):
So, I think we got to have tough conditions, tell
people to come out of the shadows, if they've committed
a crime to port them, no questions asked, they're gone.
If they if they've been working in our law abiding,
we should say, here are the conditions for you staying.
You have to pay a stiff fine because you came
here illegally. You have to pay back taxes, and you

(20:08):
have to try to learn English, and you have to
wait in line.

Speaker 1 (20:14):
So is Donald Trump a dictator, a hitler, something unique,
something outrageous, or did they change? Fifty one percent of

(20:36):
likely US voters approve of the executive order Trump has
signed last a month, including thirty seven percent who strongly approve.
You know how we play this game and polls, all
that matters is strongly approved and strongly disapproved. That's where
you understand where America really lies. And in this narrative

(20:58):
and with the parties and one party going so far
left it's off the board, but so partisanly different. Does
it shock you? Thirty seven percent strongly approve, thirty five
percent strongly disapprove. But what is any to have to
do with the reality as this department made our kids smarter,

(21:19):
more prepared for higher education, more prepared to be citizens,
or not? The Department of Education was created nineteen seventy
nine under Jimmy Carter. Forty one percent believe the Department
has made American schools better. That is not an opinion.
There's a factual way of proving that, and they're not

(21:40):
and the scores are way down. But for the purposes
of this, forty one percent say schools are better because
of federal bureaucracy and mandates. Forty one percent think it's
made schools worse, dead even, and then to make matters worse,
there's thirteen percenters said didn't make much difference at all,

(22:02):
So then what the heck are we paying for? Opinions
about the Federal Department of Education are largely divided along
party lines. That doesn't shock you, does it. Sixty two
percent of Democrats think the Department has made American schools better.
Fifty seven percent of Republicans believe it has made schools worse.

(22:22):
Shouldn't be a partisan issue, should be a test score issue,
but I digress. Among votes not affiliated by either party,
you know the tie breaker. Thirty three percent say it's
made schools better, forty four percent say it's made schools worse.
The only thing propping up the bureaucracy and the continuation

(22:45):
of a failed federal Department of Education is a partisan
Democrat party who by and large probably likes the control,
the socialization, and the indoctrination portions. That does fit their
agenda quite quite well, though it too has proven to
be a failure. Seventy eight percent of Republicans approve of

(23:06):
Trump's executive order to begin shutting down the Department of Education.
Seventy three percent of Democrats disapprove. These numbers would have
held up all while George W. Bush was president, certainly
while Ronald Reagan was president and H. W. Bush after him.

(23:30):
The difference is this President's doing something about it. You
probably wonder where it falls racially. Fifty percent of Whites,
forty four percent of black, sixty six percent of Hispanics,
and forty nine percent of other minorities at least somewhat
approve of Trump's executive order. How do government employees feel?
This would be the big dismount. I presume government employees

(23:53):
fifty five percent are more likely than private sector workers
at thirty percent thirty eight percent, or entrepreneur at thirty
nine percent or retirees at forty one percent to believe
the Department of Education has made schools better. So who's
for this? Those with a social agenda, those with a

(24:13):
big government view or employed by the big government. That's it.
This could become, or is becoming right before your eyes,
the most consequential presidency since Abraham Lincoln. And there's not
a single thing yet that Donald Trump is doing that

(24:36):
he doesn't have at least the majority of America supporting.
That's an only thing left shocking in life is the truth?
Isn't it compared to what we've been living? You plenty
of the day, all right if you're just waking up.
Over three hundred student visas are being revoked by the
Trump administration as it cracks down on immigration. Mark Mayfield

(24:58):
has all the details.

Speaker 6 (25:00):
Of state Marco Rubio says, it's a privilege to go
to school in the US.

Speaker 8 (25:03):
If you come to this country as a student, we
expect you to go to class and study and get
a degree. If you come here to like vandalize a library,
take over a campus, and do all kinds of crazy things,
you know, we're going to.

Speaker 1 (25:13):
Get rid of these people.

Speaker 6 (25:14):
Some international students have seen their visas taken away for
allegedly supporting terrorist organizations. Others have had theirs reportedly revoked
for things like traffic lanilations. It comes as colleges watch
immigration databases to see if students are still allowed to
be in the US. Last month, Rubio said a couple
of hundred visas were revoked and more would be happening
every day.

Speaker 1 (25:33):
On Mark Mayfield Well. The search for survivors has ended
after this week's tragic roof collapse at a nightclub, and
the Dominican Republic IRIS, butser has more.

Speaker 9 (25:42):
Breaking into tiers at times. The head of the Dominican
Republic's Emergency Operations Center said Thursday would be the last
day of rescue and recovery efforts. At the jet Set
nightclub in the capital Santo Domingo. In the early hours
of Tuesday morning, Jetset roof collapsed.

Speaker 1 (26:01):
With hundreds inside.

Speaker 9 (26:02):
The death toll has now risen to at least two
hundred and twenty one people, including two former Major League
Baseball players, a local governor, and marangue artist Ruby Perez,
who was performing at the time.

Speaker 1 (26:16):
Iras Meitzer. San Francisco Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Junior,
is claiming new research efforts will discover the cause of
autism and by September.

Speaker 11 (26:25):
The Secretary of Health and Human Services made the comment. Thursday,
at a White House Cabinet meeting, Kennedy told President Trump quote,
We've launched a massive testing and research effort that's going
to involve hundreds of scientists from around the world. Kennedy
has reportedly hired a long time figure in the anti
vaccine movement to lead the research effort. Multiple studies have
found no link between autism and vaccines. I'm Tammy Trhio Well.

Speaker 1 (26:48):
President Trump put a ninety day pause in effect, and
the European unions are pausing their countermeasures against the US
tariffs for ninety days as well.

Speaker 2 (26:56):
It comes down to President Trump announced a ninety day
pause yesterday on some tariffs. Yesterday the EU voted in
favor of a package that was meant to respond to
US tariffs on steel and aluminum that were put in
place last month. EUS retaliatory tariffs were meant to go
into effect on April fifteenth. European Commissioned President Ursula vonder

(27:16):
Land said they want to give negotiations with the US
a chance. I'm Michael Kassner in.

Speaker 1 (27:22):
Sports Pistons beat the nixt one, fifteen to one. Oh
six Calves lost to the Basers and the grizz lost
to the Wolves. A ice red Wings lost four to
one to the Panthers. Preds with a shootout win four
to three in Houston, actually in Utah, forgive me. Caps
wanted to shoot out five to four over the Canes

(27:43):
and the Kings easy over the Ducks six to one.
Major League Baseball only two games of your morning show interest.
The Rays shelled the Angels eleven to one. Are shelled
by the Angels eleven to one. Now I've had two mistakes.
See that's what I get for joking around over you
making a mistake. I don't know what you were doing
that music. I'm not ready for Okay, here we go.
Raise shell the eleven one by the Angels. Guardians won

(28:06):
six one over the White Sox.

Speaker 5 (28:07):
And the Azaleas in full bloom for Round one of
the house that Bobby Jones built Augusta National and the
Masters justin Rose.

Speaker 1 (28:21):
Seven under par. Your first round leader heading into round
two today, Scotti Scheffler three back at four under par.
D Chambeau is at three under par. How about Jim
Nantz's old roommate Freddie Couples at sixty five years old,

(28:41):
one under par after the first round, and the Masters.
I know a lot of you're wondering, are how did
Charl Schwartzel. Charl Schwartzel? Why would I bring up Charl Schwartzel.
It's my favorite Jim Nance name to say. Charyl Schortzel
two over par, Lefty Phil Mickelson three speed, and Thomas
at one over par, and everybody is rooting for little

(29:05):
Rory McElroy trying to complete the Grand Slam. Rory got
off to a blistering four hunderd par after the front
nine and round one at Augusta, only to have a
couple of double bogies bite him on the back nine.
And then there's me at the bridge in Franklin. If
I didn't play the first hole and the eighteenth hole,

(29:27):
I would have shot a mere seven over par. But
unfortunately I did play the first in the eighteenth with
a double bogie in a triple bogey, respectively, and unfortunately
I shot an eighty five, nowhere near what Freddy did.
The old roommate from Houston, sixty five years old and

(29:47):
one under par. Round two of the Master is getting underway.
And mere minutes as the sun rises on Augusta.

Speaker 3 (29:57):
This is Your Morning Show with Michael Del Trono.

Speaker 1 (30:01):
Supreme Court has ruled that the Trump administration must facilitate
the release of a Maryland man wrongly deported to a
prison at al Salvador RFK Junior says he's got a
site set on the cause of autism and hopes to
get the answers by September. And six people are dead,
a family of five from Spain, including three children, and
the helicopter pilot and the crash in the Hudson River.
I'm talking about poles of plenty and I just enough

(30:23):
time to get this in the best part about this
poll is another one of those or the things that
Donald Trump is proposing, the things that Congress is going
to be working hard on in a big, beautiful deal. Well,
you know the Democrats are going to pose it because
of Donald Trump. You know the legacy media is going
to oppose it because of Donald Trump. And you know Democrats,

(30:45):
especially in the East, are going to pose it because
they got Trump arrangement syndrome, if not must arrangement syndrome.
But how do they actually feel about the taxes and
where Georgia has become quite the swing state right. Eighty
five percent support for unpaid caregiver tax support, seventy three

(31:06):
percent support for no federal taxes on Social Security. Sixty
nine percent of responded said they favored no taxes on tips.
Sixty six percent said they favored a car Loan interest
tax deduction. Sixty two percent said they favored no federal
taxes on overtime sixty In other words, every tax cut

(31:29):
that Trump has proposed, every tax cut that the House
and the Senate is going to be fighting for, are
I mean overwhelming. I can't even remember the last thing
they got eighty five percent support, let alone sixty one
to seventy three percent. So if the left, if the

(31:49):
media continue to rail against these, they're railing against things
that people support. North Carolin, another swing state, eighty five
percent for unpaid care tax giving, it's almost the same number,
sixty seven percent for no federal taxes on Social Security,
sixty seven percent for no tax on tip, sixty three
percent for car Loan interest tax eductions. Go to Minnesota,

(32:12):
which is developing into a swing state, same thing, eighty
one percent unpaid taxgiver, seventy six so security no tax
on tips sixty three percent in New Hampshire, eighty eight
percent unpaid care tax giving, sixty seven percent for SO Security,
fifty seven percent for no taxips Maine. So down the line,

(32:34):
what this sets up is a darned if they do,
darned if they don't. Narrative wise, they could oppose it
all they want, but the people actually support it. So
if you succeed and block it, presumably they'd be held
to pay.

Speaker 3 (32:47):
We're all in this together. This is Your Morning Show
with Michael nhild Joano
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