Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, gang, it's Michael. Your morning show can be heard
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This is your Morning Show with Michael, O'Dell Chorman. Thank you,
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Speaker 1 (00:37):
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dot com. Well, if you're just waking up, the president
says his administration helped prevent a nuclear conflict between India
and Pakistan. Now he's gotten the royal welcome in Saudi Arabia,
and this whole Mideast peace trip could end in Turkey
(01:21):
with a face to face with Zelenski and Vladimir Putin.
In fact, the only thing that's keeping it from being
a reality is Putin's willingness to show up. And the hostage,
who was the last remaining living hostage being held by Hamas,
has been released and his home in New Jersey. All
wonderful news if you're also just waking up. David Sanati
(01:43):
is our senior contributor. Always love our conversations with David. David,
I can tell you before the game even starts, before
we even have the coin flip, we're going to overtime.
But let's start with the one I invited you to
talk about. All right, So here's the Atlantic. And I
know what everybody's thinking, why do these two always talk
(02:04):
about the Atlantic? Well, they are the voice of the left,
and while they're struggling to find a leader and struggling
to find a message. I promise that the anointment of
a leader and the message will come from the Atlantic. Now,
they would never want you to raise your children in
biblical truth and faith, but they will lecture you on
how to raise them to not be successful, but rather kind.
(02:26):
And let me guess, David, they'll decide the definition of kind.
Speaker 3 (02:29):
Right. Did you get that article? By the way, that one.
Speaker 4 (02:33):
Was a doozy good morning, and interestingly enough that one
piqued your attention. That's one of their repeat versions, that
article from twenty nineteen, and they felt compelled to bring
it back. So this is and your attention with the
goldfish crackers. So what grabbed you about this one that
(02:53):
leapt off the page.
Speaker 1 (02:54):
Well, just in general that you know, we're going to
do something on Ai a little bit later on. Just
to give you a brief tease, I met somebody on
the golf course yesterday, Brian.
Speaker 3 (03:06):
Who's going to become a news without me? Yeah, I
cheated on you yesterday.
Speaker 1 (03:10):
I just wanted to get some contact and I only
played nine holes, but we were talking. He brought up
Ai and his son's warning about Ai, and I said, well,
you know, the social dilemma led to isolation, loneliness, and depression.
Speaker 3 (03:21):
AI is going to try to solve that.
Speaker 1 (03:23):
And and then I went into it, and then the
certain and then the survey today comes right out and
says gen z ors eighty percent of them are willing
to have a relationship with a bot, robot or artificial
intelligent bot online, and a good percentage of them would
consider marrying it. And I thought to myself, you know,
(03:46):
you lose God, you lose man, one of your famous
quotes by way of Francis Schaeffer. Boy, here it comes
right this. They're going to try to solve the abandonment
of God with a more realistic abandonment of God. That's
kind of how this article struck me, that here are
these people that are always.
Speaker 3 (04:05):
Telling you.
Speaker 1 (04:07):
How to live and how not to live. And of
course God is old fashioned. He creates nothing but division
and hatred. So let's abandon him, lose man man. And
then now let us tell you how to raise your children.
And of course we don't want successful kids, we want
controllable kids, and we want kind, but kind will be
(04:30):
defined by them. Kind will be validating what we believe
in our godless worldview and condemn you for a godly worldview.
Speaker 3 (04:40):
Will define what is kind of what I mean, just
what struck me about it?
Speaker 1 (04:44):
Every word of that long, ridiculous sermon.
Speaker 3 (04:48):
I couldn't I couldn't pick one. And it's been it's
been an interesting pilgrimage.
Speaker 4 (04:53):
Regular appreciate this over the years, me talking about the Atlantic.
It's been a long time, and I have to as
part about what we do for our job at the
American Policy Roundtable. But Michael's now reading the longest form
print articles on the planets, like bus from the Atlantic.
I've read shorter books in some of these articles, I
really have a lot of times I read them from
(05:14):
the bottom up. They're like Supreme Court decisions. You got
to start at the end and read your way backwards.
Speaker 3 (05:18):
Oh that would be.
Speaker 4 (05:19):
Interesting to do, like to know the point they're finally
going to land you at, so you don't have to
go through the endless work.
Speaker 3 (05:25):
Then you can work your way back over the next week.
Speaker 1 (05:27):
But why do we focus on the Atlantic, Because what
is in the Atlantic today will first of all, be
in your kids' university classrooms. It'll be in the New
York Times and the Washington Post, and trust me, quickly
find its way to see in an MSNBC, ABCNBCCBS sixty
minutes Meet the Press. I mean, that's where they're all
(05:47):
taking their cues from. So all you gotta do is subscribe,
and you know what they're up to.
Speaker 4 (05:52):
Trying to rule a nation is a lot of work,
and particularly when you're trying to do it by dominating
the narrative every single day. So you've got the billionaire
class now that has their pockets and Steve Jobs Widow
is one of the leading billionairesses, if you will, that
is in essence budding now funding it both with Axios
(06:15):
and The Atlantic, and so that regime sort of leads
the homework division. They're the kids that are actually doing
the hard work and then publishing the long articles. And
then you get to where everyone else divides them up.
NBC picks it up, Washington Post picks it up, New
York Times picks it up. And you don't even know this,
but by the end of the day you're getting bits
and spoon sized bites of something that yesterday was like
(06:37):
a fifty four page piece in the Atlantic. And it
just keeps going and going and going and it's all
going for direction. So every now and then they drop
back into this realm of let's talk about the kids.
Interesting you'd pick this up, Michael, because it's probably one
of the most important things that they do when they
let you know their real strategy, which is to try
(06:58):
to teach you and me how to raise our t children.
Speaker 3 (07:01):
Because you know the old saying, the hand that.
Speaker 4 (07:03):
Rocks the cradle rules the world, or the hand that
rocks the cradle also rocks.
Speaker 1 (07:09):
The world, and children are the vanguard to the future.
I mean they it's always that way. I mean, for example,
you're talking about birthdays today. Stevie Wonder's seventy five years old.
There's a lot of people that don't know who Stevie
Wonder is. We live in generational periods that go so
quickly and are accelerated so fast by modern media. So
this idea that the world is composed our population, our
(07:31):
culture is composed of three or four population groups, some
of whom don't even know each.
Speaker 3 (07:36):
Other, and they live right next door to each other.
Speaker 4 (07:39):
They have almost no shared common experiences because in the
media world, it's constantly being changed. So you have people
holding on to the black and white movie culture right
and watching old films. Then you got people like me
that still think Adam Sandler's funny, and and.
Speaker 3 (07:56):
So you've got people you get niched in where you were.
Speaker 4 (07:59):
The Atlantic is now reaching back to the whole beginning,
saying basically, teach kids to share the golfers crackers.
Speaker 3 (08:05):
It's good for them, but don't teach them to But.
Speaker 1 (08:08):
Don't we get don't we get blurred in time to
Like I think of when I was growing up, and
I'm not that old, i'd watch James Cagney movies, nor
grown up right nor grown up proudly, but i'd watch
Jimmy Cagney movies. I would watch old you know, John
Wayne movies, black and white movies.
Speaker 3 (08:30):
Ah, well, Trip the Light's fantastic.
Speaker 1 (08:31):
Gosh, he's a great gab, Well, great gabs, you know
all that stuff. And that wasn't as long ago as
some of the first Adam Sandler movies are to today.
Speaker 3 (08:41):
But that's what's so bizarre.
Speaker 1 (08:42):
It doesn't seem right right that that World War Two
was as close as nine.
Speaker 3 (08:48):
To eleven when we were kids.
Speaker 1 (08:50):
That doesn't it doesn't computer but but but the way
it translates dangerously David is is if parents today presume
that they're children's textbooks look anything like theirs did.
Speaker 3 (09:04):
Even if it was the eighties and nineties.
Speaker 1 (09:07):
Or that what's happening in the classroom is anything like
what was happening in your classroom. And let me tell
you something, the day would go back to the beatings
of the nuns to at least get the education that
he got.
Speaker 3 (09:19):
Compared to Yeah.
Speaker 1 (09:20):
So, I mean, everything's politically correct and nobody's touching your kids,
but guess what, they're indoctrinating them and not educating them.
But it's amazing to me if we were to put
on two remember when they used to do the old
coke and pepsi taste tests. I mean, that's really going back,
which which, by the way, I never bought because you know,
pepsi tasted nothing like coke. There's no way you put
(09:44):
a blind taste taste to Now you could prefer pepsi
over coke, or coke over pepsi, but there's no way
you couldn't tell the difference because you were blindfolded.
Speaker 3 (09:51):
I was never buying that.
Speaker 1 (09:52):
But can you imagine if we gave a taste test
today of a biblical exegete world view of the family
and how to train up children and put on another
plate the Atlantics worldview lost as it ghost narrativized in
(10:15):
the moment latest djure how to raise your children, how
differently they would look and effect illustration.
Speaker 3 (10:24):
Yeah, and that nobody sees that.
Speaker 1 (10:27):
And you've got to understand if the Atlantic is saying
it today in twelve chapters, the Times in sixteen minutes
will be saying it in a segment soon well.
Speaker 4 (10:36):
The Atlantic article focuses on the how, let's talk about
how to see our children become kind because we can
condition them the kindness. But the question that never raises
is why why bother? Why bother being kind? Why bother
treating your neighbor as someone that should be respected in
the same way that you'd like to be respected. Because
(10:57):
if we're going to go there, then we've got to
go back to something that's known as absolute truth. The
framers of our country called itself right. And if we
go there, then we have to acknowledge the fact that
the why is because people all share the same value,
and that value is eternal because they're created in the
image of.
Speaker 3 (11:15):
We all breathe the same ah, we all share the same. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (11:20):
But what's interesting is not only do they not tell
you why, the biblical worldview tells you what and why.
Love your neighbor as thyself, you know, love one another
as I have loved you. The Bible is always giving
you the why with the train them up in the
way they should go, and they'll never return. Even though
they'll depart the prodigal sun, they'll always come back. There
(11:40):
is a false gospel, a false worldview, and there's a
true one. The Atlantic knows they're losing, and they're trying
to regroup and secure the youth because of the vanguard
of the future.
Speaker 3 (11:56):
And without them, the Atlantic has no.
Speaker 1 (11:58):
Future because their worldview has failed and their narrative has died,
and it's died of consequence in reality.
Speaker 3 (12:04):
All right, that's them, We come back.
Speaker 1 (12:07):
Roosters are crowing everywhere over what's happening at the DNC.
Speaker 3 (12:11):
If you think the social.
Speaker 1 (12:13):
Dilemma was bad, buckle up and get your seat in
and upbreak position and get ready for ai.
Speaker 3 (12:19):
It's your morning show with Michael del Chino. Michael, it's
Woody and Arizona. Hey.
Speaker 2 (12:25):
The globist elitists that determine who gets the Nobel Peace Prize.
Will never recognize Trump or award him the Nobel Peace Price.
Doesn't matter what wonderful things he does or peace that
he brings to the Middle East. It'll be much like
his first term where they didn't award him the Nobel
(12:46):
Peace Price.
Speaker 3 (12:47):
For the Abrams Accords. They just won't do it. Two things.
Speaker 1 (12:52):
One that in the background is the birds. Yes, and
this is the show. The birds say, it's for the people. Secondly,
they're going to have a hard time ignoring him, and
they'll do so at their own peril, because if he
gets a new deal with Iran, if he settles things
between Israel and Hamas and Iran, if he settles the
Iranian Russian are Ukrainian Russian conflict, heck, he may have
(13:20):
already even stopped a nuclear conflict with Indian Pakistan.
Speaker 3 (13:24):
More with Mark Mayfield.
Speaker 5 (13:25):
Speaking from the White House Monday morning, he said he
used trade to help get the seasfire deal done, explaining
what he told the two countries.
Speaker 6 (13:32):
If you stop it, we'll do a trade. If you
don't stop it, we're not going to do any trade.
People have never really used trade the way I used it.
That I can tell you, and all of a sudden,
they said, I think we're going to stop.
Speaker 5 (13:43):
Trump said a nuclear conflict between India and Pakistan could
have led to millions being killed. The president praised Vice
President J. D. Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio
for their efforts. The seasfire announced Saturday came after days
of cross border fighting.
Speaker 1 (13:56):
I'm Markenetfield well already in America. After the US as
China tear off truce. The Dow, SMP, and Nasdaq all
closed yesterday, well above where they were on Liberation Day,
April first. Oh the art of the deal, and Asian
markets are reacting as well. Laura Westbrook reports The.
Speaker 7 (14:15):
Gains in most Asian stocks came after a carefully coordinated
joint statement where the US cut duties on Chinese products
to thirty percent from one hundred and forty five percent,
while Beijing dropped its tariff on most American goods to
ten percent from one hundred and twenty five percent for
a ninety day period. US President Donald Trump said on
(14:35):
Monday that he could speak to Chinese Presidency Jinping as
soon as the end of the week, or a Westbrook
Hong Kong.
Speaker 1 (14:41):
So, I thought we were heading into a mcsession. You
know a McDonald's recession, Now we get the announced McDonald's
planning to hire up to three hundred and seventy thousand
workers nationwide just in time for summer.
Speaker 8 (14:55):
Fast food chain announced the move at a news conference
that included the US Labors Secretary. Monday's events celebrated the
ten year anniversary of the company's Archways to Opportunity program,
which offers tuition assistance and helps employees reach their education goals.
McDonald's is known to be among President Trump's culinary favorites,
(15:16):
and the company donated a million dollars to his second
presidential inauguration. I'm Brian Show, Thank You.
Speaker 1 (15:25):
Poppy Ariata and Cynthia Rivo will perform songs from Wicked
for a live NBC special this fall. The stars of
the hit Broadway adaptation will take the stage at the
Peacock Theater in Los Angeles, California. Head of the release
of Wicked for Good Part two, director John m chu
(15:47):
said Grande and Arrivo will perform songs from the first
film and me even throw in a few from the
next film. A date for the special has not been announced.
Wicked for Good hits the theaters in November.
Speaker 5 (16:00):
This is David Peterson in Columbia, Tennessee, and my morning
show is your Morning Show with the Michael del Jarno.
Speaker 3 (16:11):
Hi, it's Michael.
Speaker 1 (16:11):
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(16:32):
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(17:14):
David Sinati is our senior contributor. He's also the CEO
of the American Powtcy Roundtable, a host of The Public Square,
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public Square dot com. And we love our weekly visits.
This kind of be an overtime round robin. There are
roosters crowing. I said the Democrats would have chosen Bernie
Sanders in twenty sixteen. He was a runaway winner in
(17:36):
the primaries until the DNC got involved and rigged it
for Hillary. He'd won and get in twenty twenty, until
the DNC got involved in South Carolina, cut a deal
and rigged it for Joe Biden. Then they let Joe
Biden get all the delegates, and then they exposed his
cognitive impairment so they could give you who they wanted
to begin with Kamala Harris, avoiding the Democrat primary voters
(17:59):
three presidential cycles in a Rome. Now the torch has
been passed from Bernie to AOC. You think I'm crazy.
AOC will be on the trajectory to get the presidential
nomination unless the DNC gets involved again. Only how do
they do it this time when they have David Hogg
as a vice chairman.
Speaker 3 (18:21):
Well, you live by the woke, you politically die by
the woke.
Speaker 1 (18:27):
Now they want to get rid of the DNC vice chair.
Democrat National Committee subcommittee on Monday recommended that the organization
invalidate one of its February vice chair votes overclaims that
it unfairly disadvantaged female candidates. No, they don't want David
Hogg paving the way for a socialist to get the nomination.
(18:49):
So here's their hero that they created. He wasn't even
in the school at the time of the shooting, and
then they make him a vice chairman. Now they've got
to undo this. I said his days are numbered, and
they appear to be numbered. This is what the DNC does.
How long before they and I think we're seeing it.
(19:09):
I can't think of any time in history, and you've
been doing this for forty years like this, the disconnect
between the constituency and the leaders of its party. I mean,
you talk about loss of trust. What does a DNC
have to do to show its voters we don't care
(19:29):
about you in the primary process, We'll pick the candidates
not you and be able to get away with it.
Speaker 3 (19:36):
Well, first thing that us do is find as voters. Well,
that's true, all right.
Speaker 4 (19:41):
And now we know that there are a lot of
them when it comes to a presidential election popularity contest.
Speaker 3 (19:47):
But now we've got to come up with the reality
of where are they on the ground.
Speaker 4 (19:51):
Both political parties are facing a tremendous amount of challenges.
Technology drives people farther and farther away from meeting together
on the ground and coordinating for strategic purposes. It's a
tough time to be building people organizations because so much
of this involves technology, which means it's very shallow. So
(20:13):
this is a problem, and Michael, it's the most fascinating
time to watch the American experience because politics is being
mugged by reality. And what you've got is dramatic disconnections
playing demographic politics and Democrat consultants are basically giving up.
(20:33):
I mean, two of the greatest Democratic consultants in the
last twenty five years, John Judas and ruy Tea, are
on the internet right now on YouTube basically saying we
were completely wrong for the last twenty five years and
have no clue what we do now. They wrote a
book called Where did all the Democrats Go? And the
(20:56):
fact is they've lost them. They can't find and it's
not just that they've lost them, they can't.
Speaker 1 (21:01):
Find much and more establishing ones like Carvell and XRO.
They're silent or fighting against this new radical young movement.
But so if you leave hag in there, you're going
to get AOC. I mean when I said five years
ago one or both parties will be gone by the
end of the decade, you had to think I was crazy.
Speaker 3 (21:21):
How's that you look now?
Speaker 4 (21:22):
I mean, oh, I didn't think you were crazy at all.
We've been basically predicting the end or a complete reconstruction
of these political parties.
Speaker 3 (21:31):
For thirty years. Yeah, they can't.
Speaker 4 (21:33):
They're totally unsustainable because they're no longer anchored on the ground.
They're all in the technology. So here's the deeper answer
to your question. Your question on the surface is exactly correct.
There's going to be a strategic problem and change. The
question is where where did the billionaires come in? Because
this is such a surface shallow game now of manipulating
(21:56):
people through technology that without billions of dollars, these folks
don't know how to get started. So the real question
is where is where are the billionaires? Where's source? Where's
poll jobs? Where's a wiss? Where are the big names
that nobody knows Saddler? Where are the names behind the
names behind Podessa and company? And who are they going
(22:20):
to land on? And right now they are being incredibly quiet.
Speaker 1 (22:24):
Yeah, I don't think they're going to and they're going
to stay quiet the last of the midterms.
Speaker 4 (22:27):
I think these other talking heads are just filling up
the space right now. It's all basically much ado about nothing.
But your prediction is correct. You're seeing where it's likely
to go.
Speaker 1 (22:36):
Well, you got to get rid of hog or otherwise
you're not going to be able to pull off the
Kamala Biden Hillary bait and switch, and that's in motion.
The other is you don't have the media in your
back pocket or technocracy in your back pocket. In fact,
they've all defected to Trump.
Speaker 3 (22:53):
Isn't so?
Speaker 1 (22:55):
Now you have Remember the old game plan was we
control the narrative through the media, then we say any
opposition because we control social media. Well now you don't
control social media, and journalism is dead. Why is it dead?
It lost all credibility. Look at this Rasmussen poll. Nearly
half of voters believe the news media is biased by
the way. Half just haven't figured it out yet because
(23:16):
trust me, it's biased in favor of Democrats, and most
Republicans think it's impossible to hate the media too much.
Forty seven percent of likely US voters said that in
terms of political coverage, most news media organizations are biased
in favor of Democrats. Well, you can look at their makeup.
I'll never forget when NPR remember when they were before
(23:37):
the congressional hearing and they were one hundred percent registered Democrats,
not a single registered Republican, and you're telling them they're
not biased. Statistically, just twenty three percent believe the media
are biased in favor of Republicans. I guess if you're
in that matrix, they could make you believe that. Forty
four percent of voters agree including twenty three percent who
(23:57):
strongly agreed with the common frequently made on social media.
No matter how much you hate the media, it's not enough.
I don't think it's a matter of hate as much
as it is a matter of lost trust, and for
good reason, right, but this is not going to be
in their arsenal, just as we saw using campuses in
(24:17):
key swing districts of king Swing States. Wasn't there for
him in the twenty due to Trump. We don't know
if that translates to post Trump. There's a lot of
things that traditionally were why the Democrats always won. There
were more of them, not so much. They had the
better ground game, not so much. They controlled the media
and social media not so much. Tell me why I
(24:41):
shouldn't be optimistic, Well, I think you have to be
optimistic because of your theory, which I think is absolutely true,
is that eventually all politics gets mugged, but gets mugged
by reality.
Speaker 4 (24:55):
It happens, it's surrounded by reality. I think that the
sentiment that you're picking up. And it's interesting because you
counterpoint this against that survey we were talking about the
seventy five percent of gen zers and bots.
Speaker 3 (25:07):
I think people have figured out.
Speaker 4 (25:08):
Now that not only are we the product of the media,
now we are their target. They also come to the
understanding that by and large, people are the enemy. What
they want is our clicks. That they want is our
credit cards. That they want is our data and information.
What they want to do is push us around to
fit into their agenda. The distension across the board, and
(25:31):
this is left and right. I don't care whether you're
on red bot state or blue bot state. When it
comes to the stuff that's coming at you. People don't
trust anything that's coming at them anymore because it's all
pre recorded, it's all prefabricated. It's all part of getting
you into their box.
Speaker 1 (25:50):
To that point you brought up those two democratic consultants.
They can't figure out how they were wrong. The one
thing they said in that seminar simpose, I guess you
would call it that was powerful is when people stopped
getting newspapers and the internet changed the technology. It became
about programming to subscribers rather than being a paper of record.
(26:17):
And that's why it's kind of like they got rid
of Rachel Maddow and they went to Jensaki. Well, now
you're going to do an establishment former White House spokesperson
even called the show the briefing.
Speaker 3 (26:29):
That's not who watches MSNBC. The crazy left watches MSNBC.
Speaker 1 (26:34):
They want the meat, they want the fire, they want
the division, they want the hate. They want you to
feed the matrix. And so the show failed miserably. I mean,
and that's bad. When you're on MSNBC with no ratings
and you lose all the ratings, that's really bad. And
it's the same thing with newspapers. Once newspapers went to
that model, well they couldn't do objective journalism and reporting.
(26:56):
They had to feed the matrix beast, which alienated them
in law, their credibility even more and really just sped
up their death more than anything. But but yeah, that's
a it's a real problem. This death of journalism is
not a victory in any way.
Speaker 4 (27:10):
No, and it points out why conversational product lines continue
to survive, talk radio being an example that podcast the
real surgery. We can yeah, we can make mistakes here.
And even though podcasting has now become this video product
that is pre recorded, you're still watching real people talking
to each other. The hunger for honest human communication. You know,
(27:33):
there's an old saying in the book ancient Book of Genesis,
it's not good for man to be alone. Now that's
a big statement people try to put you know, they
use it a lot in marriage ceremonies.
Speaker 3 (27:45):
But it's bigger than that.
Speaker 1 (27:46):
Now I would have I would have stopped after animals.
But God looked down and saw it wasn't good. So,
as Archie Bunker would say, used a piece of Adam's rib,
a cheap but.
Speaker 3 (27:56):
Cut of meat. They eat it, uh and created a hell.
Were made? All right?
Speaker 1 (28:00):
Real human interaction. David made a reference to this. I
was on a golf course with a new friend I
made Brian. We were talking about AI, and I said, watch,
this is the final straw. This, this is the bookend
piece to the loneliness created through social media. People are
having fake relationships on social media. They're projecting a life
not living it. And what are they? Lonely? Isolated, depressed?
(28:25):
Now here comes AI to solve it with guess what?
An unreal relationship? And eighty three percent of young people
born between nineteen ninety seven and twenty twelve said they
could develop a meaningful connection with a chat bot, a
robot physically or a chat bot online. You lose God,
(28:46):
you lose man. Imagine the ridiculousness of this. Imagine some
of the security challenges with this. Eighty percent said they
would consider marrying one if it was legal. A staggering
seventy five percent of gen z ers also said they
I think AI partners have the potential to fully replace
human companionship. This is sick and about to get a
(29:09):
heck of a lot sicker, And you're smiling, Well, of course.
Speaker 4 (29:12):
I am, because there will never be able to imagine,
let alone duplicate the feeling of holding your child's hand.
Nothing is that soft, nothing is that wonderful.
Speaker 1 (29:26):
And nor the free will of unconditional love, because the
bot has to love you or it is trained to.
But can you imagine how this translates in culture if
you've got a good portion of this culture living these
kinds of I don't want these kind of narcissistic, fed, sick,
untouched individuals with no human interactive experience anywhere near my daughters.
Speaker 4 (29:48):
Yeah, yeah, well, now, this is a survey that was
done between people who are right now between the ages
of thirteen and twenty eight.
Speaker 3 (29:55):
Yeah, let's hope they grow up and fast, and I'll
bet they will.
Speaker 4 (29:59):
Yeah, I really do not fear the replacement of physicality.
But what will happen is after this profit center margin
rapes through another fifteen year mini generation of people, people
will suddenly realize that the soft human touch is much
better now.
Speaker 1 (30:19):
It does beg the question if my daughters Mary Abbot,
do I still have to pay for the wedding?
Speaker 3 (30:27):
This is your morning show with Michael del Chono. Thanks
for making us a part of your morning routine.
Speaker 1 (30:34):
Well, it was no normal welcome President Trump caving off
his four day trip to the Middle East, getting a
royal welcome with the Saudi Prince meeting him right at
the steps of the plane on the tarmac. That is unusual,
and then a parade of a king treatment. The President
could end this trip Thursday in Turkey face to face
(30:55):
with Russian President Vladimir Putin and Ukrainian President Zelenski in
those peace talks as they continue. Meanwhile, the hostage, last
living remaining American hostage held by Hamas is home and
in New Jersey. The first day in the sex trafficking
trial was Sean Diddy Combs involved a jury hearing some
very graphic testimony. We expect even more graphic testimony. Today
(31:19):
it's been announced the Eagles and the Cowboys will kick
off the twenty twenty five NFL season. And if you
think life has gone by fast these first five and
a half months of the year, wait till football starts
and you blinket it's Christmas. And today we celebrate the
century old solution. Today old bread breed Tennis has more.
Speaker 9 (31:38):
National Creuton Day, celebrating the toasted bread cubes that give
a salad or soup a little extra crunch. It was
born out of necessity, giving life to leftover bread since
the fifteenth century.
Speaker 3 (31:49):
We watch out.
Speaker 9 (31:50):
Creutons are high end calories, fat and carbs, but girl
math says that all balances out if it's sent a salad.
Speaker 3 (31:57):
I'm pre Tennis.
Speaker 1 (31:58):
Hey, Global markets they soared like the US markets soared yesterday.
Are your morning show? National correspondent Rory O'Neil is here.
He's been surveying at all. What are you finding, Rory?
Speaker 3 (32:08):
Yeah?
Speaker 10 (32:08):
And also just got some good inflation data that came
out in the last twenty five minutes or so. The
annual inflation rate hit two point three percent in April,
slightly less than expected, So that's good news. Heading into
this is the Federal Reserve as a target of keeping
inflation around that two percent goal, perhaps igniting some hope
that we could see an interest rate cut later in
(32:30):
the year. So it's a it's sort of a weight
and scene number with the CPI this morning, but the
across the board, it was a pretty solid day as
the markets responded positively to news that the US and
China brokeer this ninety day deal on tariffs, but it
is a long slog in order to get to a
more permanent deal.
Speaker 1 (32:49):
Yeah, So the Dow is above where it was on
Liberation Day, April first, at forty two thousand, same for
the SA SMP at fifty eight hundred and NASTEK at
eighteen thousand. And they were acted in China as well,
they did.
Speaker 10 (33:03):
And we're seeing, you know, more optimism than perhaps a
trade deal could be announced with India very soon. We're
expecting more talks on that happening this weekend. You know,
I think we were gonna hope to have an India
deal last week, but then that little dust up with
Pakistan sort of pushed things off to the side. So
we might have some positive India trade news to add
to this in the coming days.
Speaker 3 (33:23):
You know.
Speaker 1 (33:23):
I had an email from a listener and he was like,
you know, if you break down where things stand with China,
we didn't really gain a whole lot. Well, we gained
in other areas, but in the end that was part
of a pivot, and a necessary pivot at that. But
for ninety days anyway, our long tariff nightmare seems to
be over, and the market has recreate recorrected, and McDonald's
(33:45):
is hiring. So let's end on a good note, right
at least for the day.
Speaker 10 (33:51):
Yeah, the inflation number and lower than expected, also good news.
Speaker 1 (33:54):
All great news. Ory O'Neil, thank you so much. We'll
talk again tomorrow.
Speaker 3 (33:57):
We're all in this together. This is Your Morning Show
with Michael Del Jorno.