Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, it's me Michael. Your morning show can be heard
live daily on great radio stations like News Radio six
fifty k E NI Anchorage, Alaska, Talk Radio eleven ninety
Dallas Fort Worth, and Freedom one oh four seven in Washington,
d C. We'd love to have you listen live every
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But better late than never. Enjoy the podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:20):
Starting your morning off right.
Speaker 3 (00:22):
A new way of talk, a new way of understanding,
because we're in this together.
Speaker 2 (00:29):
This is your Morning Show with Michael O'Dell Jordan.
Speaker 1 (00:33):
Good morning, seven minutes after the hour, and welcome to
a new day.
Speaker 2 (00:37):
Wednesday made the twenty first.
Speaker 1 (00:39):
You have our Lord twenty twenty five on the Aaron
streaming live on your iHeartRadio app. This is your morning show.
Happy to serve you on Michael Jeffrey's got control of
the sounds red, keeping an eye on the content and
if you're just waking up. President Trump wants the US
to have a Golden Dome defense system, much like Ronald
Reagan did. We have the No Tax on Tips Act,
(00:59):
moving from the Senate to the House. Delaware has become
the latest state to legalize assistant suicide and a spokesperson
for President Biden is saying his last known prostate cancer
screening happened a little bit over a decade ago, several
COVID tests, but apparently in his annual I wonder if
(01:20):
he's had a chest X.
Speaker 2 (01:20):
Ray in any of these. I don't know what kind of.
Speaker 1 (01:25):
Annual physicals they're giving vice presidents and presidents these days.
But that's an interesting new tidbit to the topic, if
you will. And we have been scratching our heads trying
to figure out how summer travel could possibly be affected
by the tariffs impact. Assuming you're in your car or
(01:48):
a plane. There's only one person can figure this out,
to be Roory O'Neil, our national correspondent.
Speaker 2 (01:53):
Good morning, Rory, Yeah, good morning.
Speaker 4 (01:55):
This is a wallet Hub survey that asked Americans about
tariffs and they're travel plans, which I thought was a
little bit interesting, like you saying, well.
Speaker 2 (02:03):
Wait, how does that happen?
Speaker 1 (02:05):
It's a perception more than a reality, right, Exactly forty
five percent saying that tariffs will have an impact, but
because it maybe because they're small business owners and then
the tariff might affect their business and they don't know
what things.
Speaker 4 (02:19):
Are going to be like, so I get it, but
because it was a bit vague. But the overarching theme
is beyond tariffs, most Americans are scaling back summer travel
because of well, you know, the economy has been a
little bit of a wait and see lately, right, So
it's rather than big bucket list trips, more people will
(02:40):
be taking smaller trips. In fact, the wallet hub survey
found one in five Americans are still paying off last
summer's vacation. So a lot of this also goes to
something you've talked about. A lot of us sort of
swimming in a lot of credit card debt.
Speaker 2 (02:54):
Yeah, and no need to add to that. Usually Memorial Day.
Speaker 1 (02:59):
And again it should be about those who have paid
the ultimate price for our freedom. Hopefully we never forget that.
And I encourage people to take a nice little break
outside in the morning with your cup of coffee on
a back patio or on your deck, and spend some
time in thought and prayer for all the families affected
by those who've been lost at war. But that aside,
(03:20):
it's usually been about family picnics, quick road trips in
a car.
Speaker 2 (03:25):
Kind of a thing.
Speaker 1 (03:26):
That's usually how we measure Memorial day, and gas couldn't
be cheaper right.
Speaker 2 (03:31):
Right.
Speaker 4 (03:31):
It's down about thirty five cents a gallon compared to
it was a year ago, according to Triple A. And
they have also found that we are still having big
trips a plan for the year ahead for those international travel.
But we've heard from airlines saying that domestic travel is
down this summer into the fall as well, not specifically
addressing this holiday weekend, but saying that they're seeing a
(03:54):
drop off in demand. And we know that incoming European travel,
in particular Canadian travel also down for the year ahead.
So it's a it's a mixed bag right now. But
if you're trying to go to Rome or Paris or
London this summer, you will bump into blend the have
Americans to keep your company?
Speaker 1 (04:12):
Yeah, you know you bring up that bucket list. Mine
was always it wasn't Viking, it was Canard. There's a
Canard cruise that starts in Barcelona, does all of it
Italy and ends in Athens, Greece. That's my ultimate that
or the Holy Land. My problem is radio and you
really can't do these trips, you know, for they take
(04:35):
ten days, two weeks or more, and we don't. We
just don't get two weeks off at a time. So
I'm gonna have to do this after I tell you
Americans don't. Yes, that's right, that's why in Europe they
called it. Yeah, what are the Europeans called. They don't
call it vacation. They call it to holiday holiday. Yeah,
that's why they call it holiday. But you've done so
(04:55):
many of yours? Do you have any left on your
bucket list?
Speaker 4 (05:00):
Oh? Yeah, I mean and then yeah, the bucket list
is always growing, is the problem. But the biggest one
for me was Sydney, and that was getting that off
the list.
Speaker 2 (05:08):
Was the big one. Yeah, that's a lot of flying.
Speaker 4 (05:10):
But the last, the last big one is Antarctica.
Speaker 2 (05:15):
I see, I do.
Speaker 1 (05:16):
Like I just went to Tampa and I thought it'd
be safe that it's not like Antarctica. No, no, as
what I'm saying, because you've you're in, I know you're in,
I won't say. Am I allowed to say where you're
at me?
Speaker 5 (05:28):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (05:28):
Okay, you're you're in the Orlando area, right, yeah, all right,
I'm in Tampa. I'm thinking mid May it's going to
still be nice. It was ninety four degrees with a
heat in dex of one o two every day.
Speaker 2 (05:42):
I didn't play golf.
Speaker 1 (05:43):
I survived golf mostly about ready to lose consciousness, and
of course everybody there's used to it, but I'm not.
I left sixty eight degrees. I'm dying. I don't know
how you live there, But yes, if you go to
the Arctic, take me with you that I'll do. Come
visit you anytime after April.
Speaker 2 (06:01):
Never again.
Speaker 4 (06:04):
It's been a tough few days, but that's what's what's
the duh in Florida.
Speaker 2 (06:10):
We're always going to be back.
Speaker 1 (06:11):
By the way, the third hour of the latest done
what President Trump calls a big beautiful deal. And just
to give you kind of a quick update, the no
tax for tips has left the Senate and is headed
to the House. But there's more of the big beautiful
deal than just that. Pulls up plenty this morning. I
thought all three of these kind of say the same thing,
but they're different angles. Let's start with the Harvard Harris pole.
(06:33):
When you think of all of the negative news on Trump,
because let's face it, the Democrat Party has, you know,
has Trump derangement syndrome. The entire legacy mainstream media is
Trump derangement syndrome. Everybody's got it out for Trump, So
always keep that in the back of your mind, because
(06:54):
that makes these numbers even more remarkable. But for the
first time since July of twenty twenty one, Now keep
in mind what happened in January of twenty twenty one,
Trump left, Biden entered also, and this is equal nobody
out your radio.
Speaker 2 (07:14):
We're coming out of COVID.
Speaker 1 (07:17):
But for the first time since twenty twenty one, a
majority of Americans rate the economy is strong interesting and coincidentally,
just as our we got downgraded due to our debt
our credit rating. When asked how strong do you think
the US economy is today, a majority of registered voters
polled said strong under Trump compared to week for almost
(07:38):
the entirety of the Biden administration. So kind of like
our conversation with Rory just now, I could brainstorm every
aspect of your travel, and I can't imagine what tariffs,
depending on where you're at, what it could possibly do
to make your trip more expensive. I mean, I'm down
(08:01):
to vegetables, and did that affect the entree price at
a restaurant you're at? But by pennies and I'm sure
you have saved hundreds of dollars on gas, So it's
all ridiculous. But it's perception over reality, and the perception
is Joe Biden was weak, Donald Trump is strong. The
things Joe Biden was doing was hurting the American people
(08:22):
would tell you that things Donald Trump is doing is
helping or will solve. So you're at the front end
of that perception. And fifty one percent, up five points
from April say the economy is strong forty nine percent,
down six points from April say week. For the first
time since July of twenty twenty one, over half of
(08:43):
the US voters believe the economy is strong. The other half, well,
they couldn't tell you that, after all, that would be
saying Donald Trump is better than Joe Biden, and we're
too much of a matrix to be reasonable. This one's
an Insider Advantage poll and it's a thousands voters conducted
May seventeenth through the nineteenth. Last week. The results, what
(09:06):
is your opinion of the job performance at President Trump?
His approval rating surges to fifty five percent, disapproval forty
four percent. Here's what I love about Donald Trump? No
opinion or undecided one percent. You either love him or
you hate him. And when you're down to forty four
percent disapproval, that means there's a lot of Democrats approving
(09:29):
as well. Analyst pollster Matt Towre, these results are not
a surprise. Other posters who accurately polled election cycles where
Trump's name appeared on the ballot have been showing his
approval rating moving into the fifties. And remember fifties to
new seventy. You're never going to see a president in
the seventies again. We're two divided as a nation. There's
(09:52):
a very healthy presidency and obviously a bit of a
surge after that Mid East.
Speaker 2 (10:00):
Foreign policy visit.
Speaker 1 (10:02):
This specifically is Rasmussen asking about keeping your oath, preserving, protecting,
and defending.
Speaker 2 (10:11):
How is Trump doing?
Speaker 1 (10:14):
Like every president before and President Trump took an oath
of office to preserve, protect, and defend the constitution of
the United States, how is he doing? Fifty two percent
of likely US voters give Trump a good or excellent
rating for his job in terms of preserving, protecting, and
defending the constitution. Thirty eight percent rate him as doing
a poor job and keeping his oath in comparison. In
(10:36):
May of last year, just forty four percent said Joe
Biden was doing a good or excellent job of preserving, protecting,
and defending the Constitution. All these things point to there's
this big like a cartoon dot dot dot floating in
the air or question mark above heads was Joe Biden?
Speaker 2 (11:02):
Okay?
Speaker 1 (11:05):
Like the media had some inside information that they held
from us. Everybody could see it. There's nobody that thinks
Joe Biden was running this country or was cognitively fine
for four years, or looked to be healthy or up
to the job in any way. We actually this is
(11:28):
a big surprise, a big revelation. What the journalism's dead?
That John Podesta was probably really running this country. He
was the finger behind behind the auto sign that we
haven't all just lived the movie Dave. The question is whatever?
In Dave, he fakes a stroke at a joint session
(11:50):
of Congress speech and they take him off in a
fake ambulance, with the real president finally dying and the
vice president becoming President's how that movie ends.
Speaker 2 (12:02):
In real life?
Speaker 1 (12:02):
We just move on with a new president, and for
half the country they act like they're shocked.
Speaker 2 (12:08):
No, this is the end. Of day.
Speaker 1 (12:10):
This is their way of slowly revealing to you what
they knew all along. They stole an election, they faked
the presidency, and now they want to move on without
any consequence. But look at that snapshot. Forty four percent
last May thought Joe Biden was doing a good job
of preserving, protecting, and defending the Constitution. Today it's fifty
(12:30):
two percent. Donald Trump. Compare that to what you see,
read and hear everywhere, and a media that was a
fraud while they were doing it. They're a fraud while
they're revealing it. And they have no influence whatsoever. I said,
journalism is dead.
Speaker 2 (12:51):
Now what.
Speaker 1 (12:53):
Now it's the wild wild West on steroids with AI
Truth is a heck of a lot harder to find.
I hope that's why you're listening. Eighty seven percent of
voters view the US Constitution favorably, sixty seven percent with
a very favorable impression. Fewer Democrats fifty nine percent than
(13:15):
Republicans seventy four percent, or voters not affiliated seventy percent
have a very favorable pension of the Constitution In the matrix.
The polling went ninety four percent of whites, seventy one
percent of Black, seventy seven percent of Hispanic seventy eight
percent of other minorities have favorable views of the Constitution.
(13:37):
You know, at some point moral relativism, which is rolling
into dice with eternity and playing games with God. How
much giant of a leap is it to apply moral
relativism to the Constitution. Eighty percent of Republicans, twenty nine
percent of Democrats, and fifty percent of un affiliated voters
(13:59):
give Trump a good or excellent rating on the job
in terms of preserving, protecting, defending the Constitution. Unless you
have Trump arrangement syndrome, it's obvious who wasn't really president,
who is president? And the job he's doing that Chapoll's plenty,
It's your Morning show with Michael del Chno. The fate
(14:21):
of the president so called Big Beautiful Deal still in doubt.
Speaker 6 (14:26):
Fox News reports at least one Republican Congressman, Thomas Massey
from Kentucky, is a definite no. Trump was on Capitol
Hill Tuesday in an effort to rally Republicans. The President said,
Republicans have unbelievable unity, and that was a.
Speaker 2 (14:38):
Meeting of love. Let me tell you that was love.
There was no shouting. I think it was a meeting
of love.
Speaker 6 (14:45):
The bill cleared the GOP led Budget Committee in the
House on Sunday. Gop of ballmakers are looking at changes
that could make House passage this week more difficult.
Speaker 2 (14:53):
I'm Mark Neefield.
Speaker 1 (14:54):
President Trump wants the US to have a Golden Dome
defense system up and running in three years.
Speaker 7 (15:00):
Outlined his plans for the missile defense system in an
announcement from the Oval Office, alongside Defense Secretary Pete Heg Saith.
Speaker 8 (15:07):
Once fully constructed the Golden Dome will be capable of
intercepting missiles even if they are launched from other sides
of the world, and even if they are launched from space.
Speaker 7 (15:17):
The Golden Dome is the president's vision for a cutting
edge missile shield that can protect the US from long
range strikes. Trump said the final price tag for the
system will be around one hundred and seventy five billion dollars.
Speaker 1 (15:31):
I'm Brian Schuck. It was last call for Norm. Lisa
Carton has more on the passing of George Went.
Speaker 2 (15:36):
Have anybody hey, what's happened to Norman?
Speaker 9 (15:41):
Cheerstar George Went is dead at the age of seventy six.
His family said he died in his sleep on Tuesday.
Went starred as Norm Peterson in the hit sitcom and
was nominated six straight times for Outstanding Supporting Actor in
a Comedy Series at the Emmys. After Cheers went off
the air, he was given his own SIP called The
George Wentz Show. Went also appeared in films like The
(16:03):
Little Rascals and Airplane two, the sequel.
Speaker 3 (16:06):
I'm Lisa Carton, Missus Patrick from Christiana, Tennessee. My morning
show is your Morning Show with Michael dill Jorno.
Speaker 2 (16:21):
Hi, I'm Michael.
Speaker 1 (16:22):
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 nine The Patriot
in Saint Louis, Our Talk Radio ninety eight point three
and fifteen ten WLAC and Nashville, and News Talk five
fifty k f YI in Phoenix, Arizona. Love to be
a part of your morning routine, but we're always grateful
(16:42):
you're here now. Enjoy the podcast. President Trump to meet
with the South African president today. A spokesperson for former
President Joe Biden saying his last known prostate screening was
over a decade ago.
Speaker 2 (16:55):
In twenty four twenty fourteen.
Speaker 1 (16:57):
That's not really consistent with what I would think would
be the annual examinations of a vice president and president.
Speaker 2 (17:04):
But add that to the list of Biden mysteries.
Speaker 1 (17:08):
And the Oklahoma City thunder took game one of the
Western Conference Final over the Minnesota Timberwolves.
Speaker 2 (17:12):
They lead that series one game to nothing.
Speaker 1 (17:15):
Pacers and Nickson tonight sounds of data moment, but first
the sounds of you.
Speaker 4 (17:20):
Honestly, when it comes to Joe Biden in this cancer,
who really cares?
Speaker 2 (17:26):
Seriously?
Speaker 10 (17:27):
What happened to no tips on overtime and social security?
Speaker 4 (17:32):
Is that in there too?
Speaker 11 (17:33):
Good morning, Michael, A long time ago and land far
far away. I helped develop parts of what was called
the Era system, and part of it was also to
be used eventually in the Patriots, made by the same
company that used to make calculators in the eighties. It
works pretty good in Israel. It's gonna be expensive as heck,
but it'll work in the United States.
Speaker 2 (17:53):
Also, what of the.
Speaker 5 (17:55):
Classic George plant normisms from Cheers?
Speaker 2 (17:59):
Was Hey, Norm, how's it going?
Speaker 1 (18:02):
If he said life is full of dogs?
Speaker 2 (18:04):
And I'm wearing milk bone underwear. George went the character
of norm.
Speaker 1 (18:13):
The only one that really probably is worthy of a
response is the what about the taxation on social Security?
And what was the other one? Read that he mentioned overtime?
Oh yeah, and no tax on overtime. U. They're all
a part of the budget. So basically what happened, and
(18:33):
you can read into this at their strategy so busted
out and on its own and passed and headed towards
being law, is no tax on tips. That you could
make a case that got Donald Trump Nevada and therefore
you know, the presidency, although he could have lost the
(18:54):
bat and still become president, I think, But you get
my drift. This was a very populous idea of Donald Trump.
Now it's separated out of course, moving forward, if you
try to block no tax on social Security, you're going
to alienate elderly people on fixed incomes the same way
(19:14):
you know that would have alienated you with young workers
and for overtime. But yeah, so you need the budget
to get approved, the big beautiful deal now, but the
no tax on tips up to twenty five thousand dollars
is already done all right, as we like to say,
always revealing off and entertaining.
Speaker 2 (19:34):
It's your sounds of the day.
Speaker 12 (19:39):
People who majored an online can be a minor and
puberty block a little bit.
Speaker 13 (19:46):
Any of you in the media clearly missed.
Speaker 7 (19:49):
The art of the deal.
Speaker 10 (19:50):
It's going to work out.
Speaker 1 (19:52):
I got to start with John Stewart. John started with
the montage. You know, Jake Tapper wants to be the
jolly goodfellow now.
Speaker 2 (20:03):
For all the.
Speaker 1 (20:04):
Things that they did to assist a cover up of
a fake presidency. Now they want to be the heroes
for breaking to you a fake presidency.
Speaker 2 (20:17):
He started with this montage.
Speaker 14 (20:18):
Come back with breaking news in our politics lead and
a brand new excerpt from my upcoming book with axios
is Alex Thompson.
Speaker 2 (20:24):
It's called Original Sin. I'm not sure if you've heard
of it. It's on Biden's decline. It's called Original Sin.
I'm sure you've heard.
Speaker 10 (20:29):
On May twentyth that's Tuesday, Original Sin.
Speaker 14 (20:32):
That's coming out in three weeks, on May twentieth, that's
just nineteen days away from one week and one day
coming out in just a few days, comes out Tuesday.
Speaker 2 (20:40):
You will not believe what.
Speaker 1 (20:41):
We I mean In the death of journalism. Is there
a smellier corpse than Jake Tapper?
Speaker 2 (20:46):
Is the question.
Speaker 1 (20:49):
Complicit in the cover up in the death of journalism
now trying to benefit from it with his book? Well
that had Jon Stewart and this way.
Speaker 7 (21:01):
Don't news people have to tell you what they know
when they find it out? Isn't that the difference between
news and a secret.
Speaker 2 (21:15):
Breaking news in a week?
Speaker 15 (21:21):
Now?
Speaker 1 (21:21):
I got to tell you, it's kind of like that
analogy I always use when Toto pulled the curtain revealing
the little short man, as if opposed to the image
of the giant, all powerful wizard of pause. Everybody sees
the media for the fraud they are. Jack Tapper's not
getting away with it. What he was thinking going on
(21:46):
a podcast with Megan Kelly, you know, just a trained
legalist assassin. I don't know what you thought he was
going to accomplish, but she starts ripping him on this notion.
How dare you write this book like you're you're some
big hero for for cracking the impossible code, a code
(22:10):
we could all clearly see through all along. Why are
you acting like you didn't have these contexts all throughout
his presidency? Watch his response the Biden White House did
not like me. Okay, this is I do not have
great connections with the Biden White House.
Speaker 2 (22:29):
Well, clearly a source.
Speaker 13 (22:30):
He said, you talked to over two hundred sources for
this book, so.
Speaker 2 (22:34):
And worked.
Speaker 1 (22:35):
By the way, for those of you that want to
follow along on the legal analogy, this is a deposition
gone really bad for Jake Tapper.
Speaker 2 (22:41):
Keep listening. I know.
Speaker 10 (22:43):
That's the point is that they were not being honest.
Speaker 2 (22:46):
That's how the Street Journal get it.
Speaker 13 (22:48):
In June of twenty twenty four, and Jake Tapper and
CNN couldn't find sources for this story then before he dropped.
Speaker 10 (22:54):
Out, Annie Lynsky and Shavon Hughes did an amazing job
in their reporting and and they should be heralded.
Speaker 2 (23:02):
And I heralded them.
Speaker 10 (23:03):
I had them on my show right after the debate
to talk about the great reporting to the debate.
Speaker 13 (23:09):
But you did not put them on when they published
that story, which was before the debate.
Speaker 2 (23:13):
Correct. I don't know what the booking situation was.
Speaker 1 (23:15):
If I was Jake's attorney at the deposition, I would
lean over and whisper in his ear, get the hell
out of here, like your bits are on fire.
Speaker 10 (23:24):
It wasn't because I didn't want them. I'm sure I
will Let's book. I'm sure I said let's book. That
did they?
Speaker 13 (23:30):
You You put on a Democrat and you allowed the
Democrat to ripple the report as a Rupert Murdoch sponsored
hit piece. It's just going to.
Speaker 10 (23:41):
Do it if we're going to if we're going to
do this, let's just stick to the facts here, Okay,
when there is a damnating report.
Speaker 13 (23:48):
That's what I've been doing all along. I didn't miss
the biggest story of the century when it comes to
presidential politics, and one of us did.
Speaker 2 (24:03):
Get out of her like.
Speaker 1 (24:08):
Oh, I got a pause for a second. Dear having me, father,
thank you for Megan Kelly. She was wrong on Trump,
as you know at the first debate, but she's not
now and that was just beautiful. And Father, I haven't
felt very good lately, and I'd just like to say
that really really helped me forget about illness and just
(24:29):
enjoy a good wooman.
Speaker 2 (24:31):
Thank you hard Amen, Amen, Amen, Okay.
Speaker 1 (24:38):
I don't know why the Democrats are wanting on to
die on the hill of thuggery. I mean, if you
put Garcia MS thirteen wife beater, human trafficker, drug trafficker felon,
and Marco Rubio's side by side, Who do you want
to endorse? Well, Van Holland still wants to endorse the criminals,
(25:00):
so he spends his seven minutes in a Senate Foreign
Relations Committee meeting just bashing and bashing away at Marco Rubio. Well,
no, it's Marco Ruby's time to response. He didn't even end
with a question. He ended with the statement, I regret
your vote. You watch the line of opposing party versus
pure obstruction.
Speaker 2 (25:21):
Crazy.
Speaker 1 (25:22):
Listen the other thing I could say to Senator Chris
van Holland, You're lucky you aren't on Megan Kelly's show.
Speaker 5 (25:28):
And I have to tell you directly and personally that
I regret voting for you for Secretary of State.
Speaker 15 (25:33):
I yield bet, I respond, well, first of all, your
regret for voting for me confirms I'm doing a good
job based on what I'm going That's a direct clipping statements, Secretary,
And I respond, mister Chairman.
Speaker 2 (25:44):
You mean I didn't ask Senator Please let the secretary.
Speaker 5 (25:47):
I'd be happy to, but then I can respond to
his your times up, Senator, and willfully used I might add, well,
your remarksment to not represent the view of this committee.
Speaker 2 (25:57):
Well, mister Secretary Police.
Speaker 15 (25:58):
Well i'd like to I can't respond to every thing
he said, because much of these are untrue, but I'll
go through a few. First of all, I'm actually very
proud of the work we've done with USAID. For example,
I don't regret cutting ten million dollars for male circumcisions
in Mozambique. I don't know how that makes a stronger
and more.
Speaker 2 (26:13):
Prosperous as a nation.
Speaker 15 (26:14):
I don't regret psycho social support services I raised.
Speaker 2 (26:18):
I respond, Senator, i'd ask you to suspend. You had
seven straight minutes.
Speaker 5 (26:24):
I use my time that way, mister chairman, that's my
right to please suspend that way. Secretary Review, Well, I
can go on.
Speaker 15 (26:31):
I mean, there's other things here. We spent two hundred
and twenty seven thousand dollars for Big Cat's YouTube channel
from USAID. We spent fourteen million dollars for Social cohesion
and Mali whatever the hell that means. So I can
go on and on. I got the list here, and
there's more that I didn't even bring the whole list.
In the case of El Salvador, absolutely absolutely. We deported
gang members, gang members, including the one that you had
(26:52):
a margarita with, and that guy is a human trafficker,
and that guy is a gangbanger, and that and the
evidence is going to be clear.
Speaker 6 (26:59):
In the days of.
Speaker 5 (27:02):
Rubio has the floor chairman, he can't make unsubstantiated.
Speaker 2 (27:06):
Only I can. This may have been the shining moment
for Marco Rubio.
Speaker 15 (27:13):
There is a division in our government between the federal
branch and the judicial branch.
Speaker 2 (27:17):
No judge and the judicial.
Speaker 15 (27:19):
Branch cannot tell me or the president how to conduct
foreign policy. No judge can tell me how I have
to outreach to a foreign partner, what I need to
say to them. And if I do reach to that
foreign partner and talk to them, I have under no
obligation to share that with a judiciary branch. Just like
a judge cannot order me to negotiate with a foreign
minister of Russia, they cannot order me to negotiate with
a foreign minister or the president of El Salvador. And
(27:40):
if I did negotiate with them, which we have responded
to them, and we've told them we've had communications with
the President of El Salvador, I am under no obligation
under our division of powers in this country, and to
share with the LED the judicial branch how I conducted
diplomacy of the United States. It would actually be counterproductive
if I started sharing with courts or frankly, the media
(28:01):
my conversations with foreign leaders and all of their details.
No foreign leader would talk to me again, and we
would break trust with them. So I have complied with
every court order. What I won't comply with is an
order to disclose what I'm saying and what we're talking
about with the foreign leader, because then they won't talk
to me. Diplomacy doesn't work that way.
Speaker 1 (28:18):
I don't know if they're Republicans. This is, as I
often say, some kind.
Speaker 2 (28:23):
Of a.
Speaker 1 (28:25):
Morphing of the Reagan Revolution, Tea Party movement and trump Ism.
But Marco Ruby and Jade Vans have now risen to
a level unmatched by anyone else in terms of ability, transparency,
and trust. And I'm not the only one that is
noticing this rise and this obvious potential ticket.
Speaker 2 (28:48):
For three years from now. Listen, his stock has gone up.
Speaker 4 (28:52):
I think in the present sizes he's talked about him
and inside the cabinet.
Speaker 16 (28:58):
Yeah, you know, when he was back in the floor
or a legislature. He was tagged to someone destined for,
you know, a national profile, and his presidential campaign disappointed
his supporters. But he is just one of the stars
of this administration, even if you don't agree with his
policy says, his knowledge of policy, his knowledge, his rhetoric,
his confidence, and his winning over Maga. He went a
rough spell with Mago over immigration, and now he is
(29:21):
one of the heroes of the movement. And I said
earlier today I'll say it again. I really do think JD.
Vans and Marco Rubio could end up being a preordained
ticket in twenty twenty eight, unlike we've ever seen before.
Speaker 1 (29:31):
Well, actually we have Bush Reagan. Anytime I can do,
Senator Kennedy, I like to get it in. This is
him on discussing hypocrisy, not taking a vacation with the
American media on the Biden decline.
Speaker 12 (29:51):
My biggest concern with all of this.
Speaker 2 (29:56):
Has to do with the.
Speaker 12 (29:58):
State of the meeting in America to day show, and
let me explain what I mean by that. I watched
bits and pieces of the White House Correspondence Association dinner
this year, and I listened to speaker after speaker, All
Washington reporters defend freedom of the press, and I kept
(30:23):
thinking they wouldn't have to defend it if they didn't
work so hard to undermine.
Speaker 2 (30:29):
It every day.
Speaker 12 (30:32):
The American people saw what I saw, what you saw
for years with respect to President Biden. And I'm sorry
President Biden is sick, but we all saw the same thing.
Speaker 2 (30:43):
For years.
Speaker 12 (30:44):
We saw a president who couldn't finish the sentence without
taking a nap.
Speaker 2 (30:51):
We saw a president.
Speaker 12 (30:54):
An elderly man who talked like he was from out
of space.
Speaker 1 (30:58):
No, not out of space, because they see it every
day at nursing homes. But your points well made, But
what's it really all about, Alfie, what's really under all
these layers?
Speaker 12 (31:13):
Listen, many people in the media now are reporting on
mister Tapper's book, but I haven't heard a single other
than mister Thompson, a single member of the Washington press course,
stand up and say, boy, we blew that. And that's
what I mean by squandering the American people's trust.
Speaker 2 (31:36):
Why did they do that.
Speaker 12 (31:39):
I think that they thought I don't think they were
in love with President Biden. I think they thought that
anything that hurt President Biden would help the Republicans and
would help President President Trump. And it's this persistent, this
persistence in practicing advocacy journalism that is destroying freedom of
(32:06):
the press in the First Amendment.
Speaker 1 (32:08):
So obviously, Senator Kennedy has caught up to death of journalism.
And as I always stated whenever I announced the death
of journalism, now you're in deep decomposition of journalism. It's
not a victory for the right. It's a defeat to
the republic. COVID lack of trust, medical organizations, doctors, presidencies, government,
(32:37):
state legislatures lost. Now, how do you get it back?
This fake presidency, loss of trust? How do you get
it back? I don't understand why MSNBC chose to become
the Obama Network. What did they think they were going
to do in eight years? Eventually he leaves, even this
fake Biden. Eventually he's going to leave. Now what are
(32:58):
you now? He's gone, He'll probably die from this cancer.
But your industry has no trust now moving forward, and
nobody knows how to get any of it back. And
nobody knows what it's like to live in a culture
where nobody trusts anybody, including each other.
Speaker 2 (33:16):
All right, everybody look alone.
Speaker 12 (33:18):
Look, he's just got to try harder not to shut exactly.
Speaker 2 (33:21):
The opportunity for a brief civics lesson.
Speaker 8 (33:24):
Perhaps you'd like to be alone with you, A deteriorating
mental condition, political.
Speaker 2 (33:29):
Politics, you don't know what.
Speaker 1 (33:32):
That's your Sounds of the Day for Wednesday made the
twenty first.
Speaker 2 (33:36):
This is your Morning Show with Michael Del Chrono.