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June 30, 2025 35 mins

Always revealing and often entertaining, it’s The Sounds of The Day! 

 

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, I'm Michael. I'd love to have you listen to
your morning show live. Every day we're heard on great
stations like News Talk five point fifty k f YI
and Phoenix News Radio eleven ninety k e X in
Portland and ten ninety The Patriot in Seattle. Make us
a part of your morning routine. We'd love to have
you listen live, but in the meantime, enjoy the podcast.

Speaker 2 (00:17):
Hey, what's going on?

Speaker 3 (00:19):
Where's boys? Two streets? Starting your morning off right?

Speaker 4 (00:26):
A new way of talk, a new way of understanding,
because we're in this together.

Speaker 3 (00:32):
This is your morning show with Michael O'Dell Charman. Just
like that, the weekends over back to rowing left right,
left right.

Speaker 1 (00:46):
I bisch we're underneath the boat rowing. Yeah, we're up
first and we're rowing.

Speaker 4 (00:52):
We're got a megaphone sitting in the back of the boat.

Speaker 1 (00:57):
And I remind everybody I can't swim. Eight minutes after
the hour, Welcome to Monday, June. That's it for June.
The year is half over.

Speaker 3 (01:05):
Right.

Speaker 1 (01:09):
Do you think it's weird that I listened to Christmas
music during the year?

Speaker 3 (01:13):
You know, have you ever done it? By the way,
before you criticize.

Speaker 4 (01:17):
This one thing that makes me think you're weird at times.
But I mean it's probably one of the things that
Darius I do.

Speaker 3 (01:23):
I drive her around.

Speaker 1 (01:24):
Well, the Sirius XM leaves the holiday they have like
three I think that they leave up all year long, really,
and so there's just something about in the middle of
the grind, the heat of summer and then you just
turn out and have holiday. But you know, prettyzum, we'll
be listening to it for real, although I'll be burnt
out halfway there. Folks, I hope you've made the most

(01:47):
of this year. The Senate will start the so called
vote rama. We know two votes are not going to
get from the Republicans, Tillis, who was announced he will
not seek reelection for the Senate in twenty twenty six.

Speaker 3 (01:58):
And Rand Paul would be the the other one.

Speaker 1 (02:01):
Do they have the votes to get this done by
the fourth of July, which is the goal the jury
is expected to get the case of Sean Diddy Comb's Boy.
We almost have to kick that around a little bit
with Rory. We've been following this from the very beginning,
and you know, you prove the guy's a pervert. You
approved he's a scumbag. We have a poll today which

(02:23):
is what are the values of Americans today? And they
break them down and prioritize them. You'll be excited to
know family top the list. We're getting close. Donald Trump
has reissued this notion that we can love our country again.
You know, everyone that was politically incorrect. How dah you

(02:43):
love this country with such a solid past. Now we're
loving family. Maybe we can get to God, which is
the center of family and the ability to have a happy, productive,
functional family. Uh, but you said kicking around qualities. I

(03:04):
mean Sean Diddy doesn't have any. He is as low
as and as debauchrous and as filthy as it gets.
But have you proved racketeering or sex trafficking? Not so
sure you have. And this is about to go to
the jury with instructions down.

Speaker 3 (03:22):
Trump will be.

Speaker 1 (03:23):
Visiting Alcatraz Alligator Alcatraz. I had a very rough flight
over the Everglades going to Palm Beach, and I thought
it would be just my luck for my plane to
go down in.

Speaker 3 (03:40):
The middle of the Everglades. Negative attitude. You don't need
to be like that at all. Can you imagine? You know,
and then you land and you survive. You're like, we
didn't blow up, we didn't catch on fire. They start
rapping on the doorp.

Speaker 4 (03:55):
Normally that what about the pythons and all the other
exotic animals.

Speaker 1 (03:58):
When you think of a worse place to be stranded,
then the the Everglade.

Speaker 3 (04:03):
I mean at least Alcatraz.

Speaker 1 (04:04):
You know, he'd get a nice cool breeze and a
little mist from the ocean, a view of the harbor.
This is nothing at Alligator Alcatraz. But the president will tour.
I can imagine the Left's gonna love this idea. Yeah,
it's put them in the middle of the evergrades Everglades.
Who's gonna escape there? And then we have this bizarre story.

(04:25):
This was clearly an ambush of two firefighters in Idaho.
Royal had the very latest down and we don't know
anything about the suspect. Jet They had to swoop in
because he started a fire, a real fire, and then
he waited for the firefighters to arrive, and then like
a sniper, just took out two of them. They eventually
got him and then they had to get his body out.
So we still don't know anything about who he is

(04:46):
or what his motive might have been.

Speaker 3 (04:47):
But isn't this frightening? Yeah, my first.

Speaker 1 (04:52):
Thought, because I'm just a citizen like you, is what
I think of. And this isn't happening everywhere by any stretch.
I live in a community just outside of Nashville. We
love our police department, We love our fire department. We
see him in, you know, at the convenience stores and around.
We swill how we've got only in Franklin we have

(05:14):
a dancing police officer.

Speaker 3 (05:16):
Did you know that? Really?

Speaker 1 (05:18):
Yes, he directs traffic and he dances while he's doing it.
He was out sundown our way to church.

Speaker 4 (05:22):
We passed him, oh, like like they've got in Chicago
and New York and all the big cities.

Speaker 3 (05:26):
He dances the whole time. And you know, it was.

Speaker 1 (05:29):
Hot Sunday morning and he's out there in full garb.
He's waving people in and he's dancing. And you know
that's how you know, we're like Grady and Doc Hollywood.
It's just, you know, but we love our police department.
We value that they put themselves between us and anything
bad that tries to come, and it doesn't come very often,

(05:50):
and when it does, it stopped. So we have a
thankful heart when we see them, not a dread, not
a hatred, and I like to think if anything ever happened,
and one time we thought it did and it was
my son. I told you that story, didn't I know.
I wake up, Andrew goes there's somebody in the house,
you know, and then I, you know, like I panic.

(06:12):
I'm not very calm, so you know, I just hop
out of bed, adrenaline rush, I go looking for my gun.
She moved it, and then she I find where she
moved it, and it's locked up and nobody knows where
the key is. I mean, this guy would have had
my whole family by the time I had gotten through
my security protocol.

Speaker 3 (06:30):
It was like another God moment at the Dil's renoel.

Speaker 1 (06:33):
Oh, I'm really I'm living with Angie Dickinson over here, policewoman.
So but she gets rid on the phone and calls
the police, and she's on the phone with them. The
next thing, I'm seeing flashlights in my backyard. I'm still
trying to figure out where the key is for the
gun's sake. So finally they're like, they would like to
enter the home, and so Andrew authorizes them to enter

(06:54):
the home. And when they enter the home, I meet
them at the back door, and that's when Nick appears up.

Speaker 3 (06:59):
On the lane. That may have been me. I was
letting the dog in and she had called the police.

Speaker 1 (07:09):
But short of that, I mean, you you know that
it should be a it's a wonderful thing to trust
your police department and know and them know that you
appreciate them.

Speaker 3 (07:20):
And then I said something.

Speaker 1 (07:22):
You know I always I always say the wrong thing,
don't I I said, guys, well, it could be worse.
It could have been somebody. At least everything's fine, and
get back to the convenience store. Oh my, I didn't
even mean it that way. I just meant, you know,
I was thinking, like, you know, where.

Speaker 3 (07:36):
We normally laugh and talk.

Speaker 1 (07:37):
We want to have something nice to say, but sometimes
right away I go to the donut. Yeah I blew it.
But anyway, it was the middle of the night and
I was shaken up. I couldn't find my gun. But anyway,
make a long story short, you have a trust and
then somebody decides to create a public dialogue that all
cops are bad and all bad guys are good. And

(07:57):
what does that lead to? Poor recruitment? These people don't
want to run into firefights and risk their lives for you.
I mean, I used to say this all the time
on the air, and I don't do it anymore, but
somebody needs to. I I was twenty six years old.

(08:19):
We had moved my grandmother back to New Orleans. And
I'm sitting I mean gagging through Lawrence Welk and Bobby
and SCM. We're doing something, and I feel the couch
kind of shaken. When I turn my grandmother's in a
full seizure and stroke like I have never seen in

(08:42):
my life. I panicked, but I got to the phone.
I dialed nine to one to one. She had just
moved in like a week earlier. I didn't know what
the address was, and I remember the lady in the
phone going, it's okay, I can see your address. I
just wanted you to say it because I was freaking out. Well,
my grandmother isn't is feet away from me dying, and
I don't know what to do. I'm telling you, they

(09:03):
got there in like thirty five seconds. It was crazy boom,
these firemen come in. When I tell you, the entire
family room was rearranged in a half a second, just
furniture thrown aside, and I watched them bring my grandmother
back to life and then go out the front door.
Do you think, at any moment the rest of my life,

(09:25):
I was going to think what I did for a
living was important, what I did for a living was
worthy of an ego. Now I've worked around people that
had one, and I'm like, you're nothing. What we do
saves no lives, And I got a priority in my head.

(09:47):
When I think of men and women in uniform, whether
they're firefighters or police officers, and they kissed their wife goodbye,
I'll see a dinner. Maybe I go to work every
day and there is an assurance I'm not going to
die because of my job. They don't at that point

(10:08):
time out. They do something that should be respected and honored.
In fact, as christ would say, there is no greater
love than that. And so when I saw America through
a narrative, try to tell everybody in the country all
cops are bad and all bad guys are good, and
then cops don't want to risk their life, and then

(10:29):
cops don't want to be cops. I started getting nervous
because we need them. Man is not inherently good, and
there's a lot of bad people up to no good
and evil and somebody's got to stop them, now, I think,
and this is why I fight for the Second Amendment.
I believe it's first and foremost my right. If my

(10:50):
wife doesn't move my gun, lock it, and lose the key,
it's my right to defend my family, my home. But
it's nice to know they're coming to And now is
this you know? Is this a random act of a
nut I pray, so I almost don't even want to
do the story to give anybody the idea, or is
somebody trying to chip away at law and order and

(11:15):
community trust?

Speaker 3 (11:17):
We don't know.

Speaker 1 (11:18):
This guy's body was yanked out just before the fire
destroyed it. We still don't even know who he is
or what his motive may have been. But this, this
is sick stuff. Set your house on fire, call brave
men and women who serve and put out fires and
save lives, and then you just take their life. A

(11:39):
cowardly ambush sniper and a betrayal of community trust. This
story just sticks out different to me. But we'll visit
with Rory about that as well as the jury deliberations.
And again, as I said, I I think you know nobody. Uh.
First of all, I don't know anybody that would want
to d Sean Ditty Combs and anybody that will want

(12:02):
to listen to his music or have anything to do
with them. You certainly revealed him for all to see
as the scum of scum. But have you proved racketeering
and sex trafficking? I don't think so. We'll see what
Rory thinks a little bit later on. Other than the
Big Show, so big we had to move sounds the
day to the Platinum Hour. John Decker's going to be here.

(12:23):
It looks like there's going to be a vote on
the Big Beautiful Bill. The question is when and will
there be any other Republicans vote against it besides Tillis
and Paul Larry Charles, who was the greatness behind Greats.
I mean, this is a guy that's worked with mel
Brooks and Jerry Seinfeld on Seinfeld and Larry David on

(12:47):
Curb Your Enthusiasm Entourage. He should be a household name,
but he's the author of comedy Samurai. He'll be joining us.
Chris Walker is going to be here. I think the
eyes the Democrats have a double eye problem. Now they
have an his real problem and an Intada problem thanks
to Zorn Mamdani Haidi her it. It's gonna join us

(13:07):
with some tips on fireworks and dogs. And I'm not
a big fan. Are you a big fan of for
the July?

Speaker 3 (13:13):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (13:14):
The day?

Speaker 3 (13:15):
Oh that's me.

Speaker 1 (13:16):
I mean, I love what the day represents, but as
far as the month, the heat, and whether it's sitting around,
I guess I used to enjoy when I was a
kid younger fireworks are bigger than life, right, and then
teen years like, there's no kids up yet, so I
can say this. We used to have bottle We could
take little pieces of metal and put them in a

(13:37):
ninety degree angle and then you put the bottle rocket
inside and light and you can aim it like a gun.
And we would have bottle rocket. It's really terrible when
I look back. It's not as bad as driving around
with the windows open smoking cigarettes as parents did do that.

Speaker 4 (13:49):
We just use trash can lids as shields and we
did shoot bottle rockets at each other.

Speaker 3 (13:54):
And you've never took.

Speaker 1 (13:57):
You never took a little piece of like I don't know,
it was like iron was rounded, but just put it
in like a ninety degree angle and then you could
slip the the the what do you call the base
of that? It was like a pit stick.

Speaker 3 (14:07):
We never wanted to mutilate each other.

Speaker 1 (14:10):
Well we did, and they used to plow up like
right in our face.

Speaker 3 (14:13):
It was fun.

Speaker 1 (14:14):
I never realized how dangerous. No, that's like playing war.
I mean you're like looking for cover. You know, you're
you're flanking. We used to take it very serious. We
did that in the in scar what was it called Scarsdale.
We used to go to my friend Scott Hayman's neighborhood.
That's how we would play. He had lots of trees
you grow up through. That was that was really we
could get lost an eye right put I have with

(14:36):
that thing. I ended up getting thyroid eye disease anyway.
Uh but what was I saying? Oh, it's just added
out a big fan of the heat. And then every
time he tried to go to like a like would
you go to downtown Nashville and watch fireworks? We should
do it right from the race.

Speaker 4 (14:49):
Well, the radio stations that I used to work for
used to put the balcony so now you couldn't get
me close to it.

Speaker 1 (14:56):
It's money, I mean we're talking millions of people go
to downtown. Yeah, can and it's hot. I used to
like to watch Yankee Doodle Dandy and then go to sleep.
It's Your Morning Show with Michael Delchono.

Speaker 3 (15:10):
This is just my lame analogy. Imagine a sports analogy.

Speaker 1 (15:14):
It's that moment in a play where a guy has
a big block and he takes out the defender and
you know your guy's gone. You know he'll take it
all the way. Now, that final big block carried out
by the Supreme Court. Now there was already off sides
because they've been using lawfair. The questions really are what

(15:39):
does it mean? It means Donald Trump's going down the
sidelines all the way for a touchdown. There's nothing stopping
him from carrying out his agenda. The other side of
the coin is what would the left do? Now? Lawfair
didn't work, he got elected. Judge is trying to block
everything didn't work. He just got the big block by
the Supreme Court. Now what do they do?

Speaker 3 (15:59):
What are these and for? I'm a and no mouths
in Smyrna, Tennessee.

Speaker 1 (16:06):
And my morning show is your Morning Show with Michael Dale. Journal.

Speaker 3 (16:16):
Hi, I'm Michael.

Speaker 1 (16:17):
We'd love to have you listen every weekday morning to
your morning show live, even take us along with you
on the drive to work. We can be heard on
great radio stations like one oh four ninth The Patriot
in Saint Louis, or Talk Radio ninety eight point three
and fifteen ten w LAC and Nashville and News Talk
five point fifty k f YI and Phoenix, Arizona. Love
to be a part of your morning routine. But we're
always grateful you're here. Now enjoyed the podcast, always revealing

(16:40):
and often entertaining. It's your spy.

Speaker 4 (16:46):
People who measured in online at the minor and puberty, bark.

Speaker 3 (16:52):
A little bit and leaning now just before it's gonna
work out.

Speaker 1 (16:59):
Okay, I just realized I had to reboot my computer,
and that's going to reboot everything that I had queued up.
Oh and now I've got to try to remember where
I'm supposed to be.

Speaker 3 (17:14):
Or did they all do that by the Democratic Party?

Speaker 2 (17:18):
Enjoining me now is zoron mom Donnie.

Speaker 1 (17:20):
Okay, Red, you have to go to our show prep
sheet and give me the two U zoron Mam Donnie
start times. We'll just do it live. Doesn't have to
be rocket science. Because when I rebooted too, I lost everything.

Speaker 4 (17:41):
I need to play your show, what well it happens?

Speaker 1 (17:49):
The first one was like nine something, wasn't it?

Speaker 3 (17:52):
Okay?

Speaker 1 (17:52):
So nine to twenty three. I'll just do this just
like you guys can see what I do with when
I'm prepping. Okay, So here is I believe the clip on.
He doesn't believe there should be any millionaires, right, A
true socialist, true communist, socialist. As the President calls him
a communist, he calls himself a democrat socialist. We always
make the distinction. He's an Islamist, and there is a difference.

(18:15):
But listen, for a self socialist. Do you think that
billionaires have a right to exist.

Speaker 5 (18:23):
I don't think that we should have billionaires because, frankly,
it is so much money in a moment of such inequality,
And ultimately, what we need more of is equality across
our city and across our state and across our country.
And I look forward to work with everyone, including billionaires,
to make a city that is fairer.

Speaker 3 (18:40):
For all of them.

Speaker 2 (18:41):
Well, let me ask you about what Donald Trump, the
President of the United States, has had to say. Is
that a lot to say about your campaign? He called
you a communist. Because he's the president, I want to
give you a chance to respond directly to him.

Speaker 3 (18:54):
How do you respond?

Speaker 2 (18:55):
Are you a communist?

Speaker 1 (18:56):
No?

Speaker 3 (18:57):
I am not.

Speaker 5 (18:57):
And I have already had to start to get used
to the fact that President will talk about how I look,
how I sound, where I'm from, who I am ultimately,
because he wants to distract from what I'm fighting for,
and I'm fighting for the very working people that he
ran a campaign to empower that he has since then betrayed.
And when we talk about my politics, you know, I
call myself a democratic socialist in many ways inspired by

(19:18):
the words of doctor King from decades ago, who said,
call it democracy or call it democratic socialism. There has
to be a better distribution of wealth for all of
God's children in this country. And as income inequality has
declined nationwide, it has increased.

Speaker 1 (19:30):
In now elected on I say they're all going to
go haywire now. Probably can't even do Sound of the
Day now. It was a real bad idea to try
to reboot and it didn't work anyway. First of all,
I do believe that God wants us to focus on
each other and helping each other. And may I add

(19:51):
I find America one of the most generous nations on earth,
primarily because we have been a nation under God. But
what I do to help others in the Kingdom of
God economy, I want to get into a lot of this,
but I tithe because even my gifting comes from Him.

(20:14):
Everything comes from Him. I want to live a kingdom
dependent life on Him. I am not big enough to
supply all my needs according to my riches on earth.
But God is big enough to supply all my needs
according to his riches and glory read I'm hearing you
or him, probably because I rebooted and it undid mutes.

(20:37):
Now what I earn and what I tithe, and then
what God continues to bless me with I continue to
pour out. So I believe individuals should live as unto God.
He is the uttermost portion of your heart and life

(20:59):
and focus and goals. And what God blesses me with
I should not hoard, and he'd stop if I did
continue to bless others.

Speaker 3 (21:10):
First of all, Martin Luther King would have nothing.

Speaker 1 (21:11):
Martin Luther King Junior would have nothing spiritually or economically
in common with an Islamist and or a socialist, that is,
a great twisting of a godly man. And this is
what people do. But this notion that what feels like
in your heart a good thing. Yeah, we should help others,

(21:35):
but there are people that take advantage of that. What
they're really selling you is envy that you drive by
and resent someone who has, knowing nothing about that person,
not knowing a talent he may have that you don't,

(21:56):
not knowing the sacrifices he made that you won't make.
There are a lot of people with more money than me.
I wouldn't live that life because at the end of
the day, I'm more interested in God. I'm more interested
in my wife, I'm more interested in my children and
my future grandchildren. I'm investing the majority of my time there.
That limits me economically. But when you pass by a

(22:18):
rich guy's house, you don't know what he was doing
in college when you were having a good time, or
the choices or sacrifices he made, or the risks he
took that you weren't willing to take.

Speaker 3 (22:28):
And that's fine.

Speaker 1 (22:31):
So somebody's trying to apply and really grossly out of context,
a virtue of caring and loving that doesn't apply to government.
Government doesn't decide who succeeds and I can steal from
to give to who doesn't have anything that we always
assume purely is just a victim. They weren't lazy, they

(22:54):
weren't out partying when you were studying. They didn't show
up late for work constantly and get fired while you
were starting businesses. So we've heard these notions before. I
don't think this guy is that clever at that. His
problem is he can't hide from the fact that he's
an Islamist. What's the second time that it starts at

(23:17):
It was later thirteen thirty eight, with his coming together
as people within defile.

Speaker 3 (23:22):
Your key to a warm perfectly.

Speaker 1 (23:23):
Here's the bottom line. This guy believes an antifad. If
you don't know what antifada is, that is the destruction
of Israel and the killing of all Jews. Although after
that comes America and all Christians. So watch when she
turns the tables to me. This was the defining moment
in the interview. And I'll explain why you can't get

(23:45):
around He's an Islamist, and Islam is a system of government.
It is a system of finance, it's a system of life.
It controls everything. You don't have freedom of speech, you
don't have right of assembly, you don't have freedom of religion.

(24:07):
There are no liberties. So it is antithetical to Judeo
Christian principles. So when this guy is forced to denounce
the antifada, he can't and he never will listen the

(24:27):
vision that binds us all together.

Speaker 2 (24:29):
I want to ask you about an issue that has
divided some New Yorkers in recent weeks. You were recently
asked about the term globalize the Intofada if it makes
you uncomfortable. In that moment, you did not condemn the phrase. Now,
just so folks understand, it's a phrase that many people
here as a call to violence against Jews. There's been
a lot of attention on this issue. So I want

(24:52):
to give you an opportunity to respond here and now,
do you condemn that phrase globalize the Inada.

Speaker 5 (24:59):
That's not laneanguage that I use. The language that I
use and the language that I will continue to use
to lead this city is that which speaks clearly to
my intent, which is an intent grounded in a belief
in universal human rights. And ultimately, that's what is the
foundation of so much of my politics, the belief that
freedom and justice and safety are things that to have
meaning have to be applied to all people, and that

(25:20):
includes Israelis and Palestinians's line, but.

Speaker 2 (25:22):
Do you actually condemn it? I think that's the question
and the outstanding issue that a number of people, both
of the Jewish faith and beyond have Do you condemn
that phase globalize the intofado which a lot of people here.

Speaker 3 (25:34):
Is a call to violence against Jews.

Speaker 5 (25:36):
I've heard from many Jewish New Yorkers who have shared
their concerns with me, especially in light of the horrific
attacks that we've saw in Washington, d c. And in
Colder in Boulder, Colorado.

Speaker 3 (25:46):
About or how about New York City at nine to eleven.

Speaker 5 (25:49):
But I digress this moment of anti Semitism in our
country and in our city, and I've heard those fears,
and I've had those conversations, and ultimately they are part
and parcel of why in my campaign and I've put
forward a commitment to increase funding for anti hate crime
programming by eight hundred percent. I don't believe that the
role of the mayor is to police speech in the manner,

(26:09):
especially of that of Donald Trump, who has put one
New Yorker in jail who has just returned to his
family Mountain Mud Khalil, for that very supposed crime of speech.

Speaker 3 (26:19):
Ultimately, what I think.

Speaker 1 (26:20):
Now, you've got to understand at NBC, they meet the press,
they got to be thinking, oh my gosh, he won't
denounce intevada.

Speaker 3 (26:26):
I've given him two chances. Do I give him a third?

Speaker 5 (26:28):
I need to show is the ability to not only
talk about something, but to tackle it, and to make
clear that there's no room for anti Semitism in the city,
and we have to root out that bigotry.

Speaker 1 (26:38):
And ultimately we do that. There's no room for anti Semitism,
but there is room for global entivada. I mean, chew
on that for a second.

Speaker 5 (26:44):
So the actions that is the mayor I will be
one that protects Jewish New Yorkers and lives up to
that commitment through the work that I do very people quickly.

Speaker 2 (26:51):
For the people who care about the language and who
feel really concerned by that phrase, why not just condemn it.

Speaker 3 (26:59):
My concern is.

Speaker 5 (27:03):
To start to walk down the line of language and
making clear what language I believe is permissible or impermissible.
Takes me into a place similar to that of the
President who is looking to do those very kinds of things,
putting people in jail for writing an op ed, putting
them in jail for protesting. Ultimately, it's not language that
I use. It's language I understand there are concerns about.

(27:23):
And what I will do is showcase my vision for
the city through my words and my actions.

Speaker 3 (27:27):
Let me ask you broadly.

Speaker 1 (27:35):
I once said on the air, and I thought I'd
be more controversial than it was, and I just asked
the question.

Speaker 3 (27:43):
And maybe that's why it.

Speaker 1 (27:43):
Wasn't How can an Islamist really take an oath of
office and serve something so anesthetical to their beliefs. Now,
another way for you to look at it. It is,
first of all, wouldn't be allowed. I'd be killed. But
if I went to Iran, not only would I not

(28:06):
be comfortable being a citizen of Iran and being forced
to practice a religion I reject. Imagine me running for
office in an Islamist theocracy and taking an oath to
everything that is anathetical to what I believe. Because I

(28:28):
don't believe that women are equal. I don't believe gay
should be allowed to live. I don't believe you should
have the right to choose any religion or no religion.
There's no forcing of that. In America, you can reject
God even though we're a nation under God. That's not

(28:49):
the case in islamis nations. How could I with a
straight face take that oath of office. There's not an
inch of my heart that doesn't defend I mean part
of me and this guy will go as far as
ignorance will allow him, but part of me gives him credit.

(29:17):
He's not going to cave. He's not going to speak
against Ntifada because that is essential to his values and beliefs.
In the same way you're never going to get me
to Budge Will. The whole resurrection story is really just symbolism. No,
I really believe Jesus Christ existed. I believe his mother

(29:38):
was Mary, his father was Joseph. I believe he was
born of a virgin Mary. I believe he lived a
perfect life, was a perfect sacrifice, died on Friday, conquered
Helen death, and rose Sunday morning. I believe it really happened,
and so did a lot of other witnesses, and so
did every person who later died for that belief. You

(30:04):
don't die for myths. You would never get me to
cave on that. There are things they won't cave on.
Now they'll disguise a lot of it as they're fighting
for you. But I guarantee you the fact that he's
an Islamist tells me you need to be converted or killed. Ultimately,

(30:29):
it's that cut and dry.

Speaker 3 (30:30):
For an is Lomist.

Speaker 1 (30:33):
You either obey the law as a slave, or you
pay a tax to Jizia, or you are killed. Do
you think he's going to cave to meet the press
on three questions about Intifada? And I get credit for
dancing around it, but I guarantee you this host probably
took clipped off or Mike and walked her stream going

(30:54):
I can't believe he will denounce it.

Speaker 3 (30:56):
To FOD.

Speaker 4 (30:59):
He's speaking out against anti Semitism, but he's four Intifada.

Speaker 1 (31:05):
Talk about a blurring of reality. I want to do
one other and I who knows where this is going
to be? Now, stop it, maf to stop it.

Speaker 3 (31:23):
No, I want this one right here, but I can't.
This is going to be all the way by the end.
I think. Let me turn all these other ones off
or he's going to drive me.

Speaker 6 (31:35):
Have a single judge to block and this one of
President Trump's lawyers told me this case, this is the
ballgame for President Trump's ejection.

Speaker 1 (31:44):
This is the main point I want to make of
the day. What happened Friday when we got off the
here with the Supreme Court. I use that analogy, that
final block that you see some defender just boom taken
out and you know instantly that running back is gone.
He's going to the House, He's going to get a touchdown.
That's what the Supreme Court did Friday. So for the

(32:05):
left that tried lawfair to stop him from getting elected failed,
For those who try to use rogue judges to block
stall everything he's trying to do, it just got knocked out.
He's going to go all the way. But watch what
she says. I want to hit on this because this
is going to be a narrative. You're gonna hear a.

Speaker 6 (32:21):
Lot of them, because we know, more than any modern
president he loves to govern through executive action.

Speaker 1 (32:27):
More than any modern president. He loves to govern through
executive action. Does anybody want to guess we could do
this long form through talkback? Who had the most executive orders?
Does anybody want to guess who had the second most
executive orders. Does anybody want to guess whether one and

(32:51):
two add up more than the next fourteen and what
party they were? Does anybody want a guess who had
more executive orders? Donald Trump or Joe Biden? Donald Trump
had a four year term, Joe Biden had a four
year term. Did one like to lead through executive order

(33:14):
more than the other?

Speaker 3 (33:17):
As suggested?

Speaker 6 (33:18):
Listen any modern president. He loves to govern through executive action,
and the majority of these have been blocked by lower
court judges, so he has not been able to follow
through the things he wanted to do on the budget,
on mass firings, on immigration.

Speaker 1 (33:33):
Yeah, I'm gonna answer that question right after the news break.
Sorry for the sound of the day. We had to
reboot everything and it reset everything. Sorry, you get to
see what I have to do all off the year
to get these all cued up.

Speaker 3 (33:46):
Hey, if.

Speaker 1 (33:48):
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Speaker 3 (35:25):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael enheld Jo Now
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