Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, I'm Michael del Jorno and your morning show can
be heard live as it's happening five to eight am
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(00:21):
here now. Enjoy the podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:24):
Starting your morning off right. A new way of talk,
a new way of understanding, because we're in this together.
This is your morning show with Michael deel Jordan.
Speaker 1 (00:37):
You know, the older I get, the more I realize
I'm playing password with myself. The movie with Will Ferrell
and Zach Gallivanakis was the campaign. That's how crazy this
New York mayors race is getting. You have the video
surfacing of Zoorn Mandani mocking Hanakka. You've got the picture
of him flipping off Columbus. He will not renounce and Tafada,
(01:03):
I mean, you would think he'd have a tough time
getting the Jewish and Italian vote in New York City,
a city where there's a lot of both, but he
leads by ten points thirty five percent support. In the
early polling, Cuomo's at twenty five percent, Sleeve was at
fourteen percent, and current Mayor Adams is at eleven percent.
(01:26):
Then you have the whole conversation who should leave in
order to change those numbers? And then John playing password
with myself gives me my other answer. The name of
the game of telling the person next to you from
one person to the next down the line and the
story changing by the end is called telephone. At least
(01:47):
that's what it was called where I grew up in Tennessee.
Thank you for that answer. I use that analogy over
the Declaration of Independence. We don't teach it anymore. It's
not taught, it's not read in school, it's not read
at home.
Speaker 2 (02:05):
It has been hijacked and hidden.
Speaker 1 (02:11):
And I wonder if, like the game of telephone, that's
why we look so differently two hundred and fifty years later,
a very serious conversation about the Declaration of Independence and
will it even come up in this year long celebration
of turning two hundred and fifty. After all, it is
the declaration of our birth. You think that would come
up at the celebration. We'll talk about David Snati. Talk
(02:32):
to David Snati about that in a moment. Roy O'Neil,
our national correspondent, is here.
Speaker 2 (02:35):
Rory.
Speaker 1 (02:36):
We have over one hundred and seventy people remaining missing.
That number has not risen from yesterday, but nor has
the finding picked up at all. This is probably a
number that we still expect to get worse.
Speaker 2 (02:51):
That's what we expect.
Speaker 3 (02:53):
I remember, this flooded area was filled with people vacationing.
There were RV parks and trailer parks filled to the
brim for people taking advantage of being on the river
for the Fourth of July weekend, and instead we're caught
up by this devastating flood. President Trump is expected to
tour the area tomorrow. That's still in pencil. We're waiting
(03:14):
for final guidance from the White House on that. But
you know, it's also pretty grim when you get word
from the police that all along this six county area,
people are being asked that if they see a large
debris piled don't go near it. Let the police clear
it first, just in case there may be bodies trapped underneath.
Speaker 2 (03:34):
You said something yesterday. That was really chilling.
Speaker 1 (03:36):
We have not found anyone alive since Friday, that's now
almost a week ago. This is definitely search and recovery,
and now we're looking at, you know, a week later
in terms of you know, at some point this number
of bodies, you know, they need to be found and
found quickly for not only the sake of the family,
(04:01):
disease and other things.
Speaker 2 (04:02):
So this is just terrific. All right.
Speaker 1 (04:05):
Now, let's go to the other conversation about this, and
that is the growing reports that emergency alerts could have
or should have come out sooner and right, why they didn't.
Speaker 3 (04:16):
Well, and what to do for the next time, because
now you know, when you look at the numbers, this
is flash flood alley. These flash floods happened, just not
to this scale. So you know, now as the state
is preparing to have a special legislative session. It was
already on the books, but now clearly the agenda for
the session has changed. So we'll hear obviously to what
(04:38):
possible measures could be taken. Is it better flood detection systems,
Is it better sirens and alarms that could go off?
What kind of technology can help here? Because one county.
One city can't do it on its own because you know,
Kerr County may have had a system, but then they say, well, look,
the flood started in the county next door, and if
they didn't tell us, we would never know. So you
(04:58):
sort of have to have a much more comprehensive approach
to try to do this properly.
Speaker 1 (05:03):
Rory's going to be back in the third hour. This
really hits me because I have two weaknesses, restaurants and cars,
and nothing has dramatically increased more than the price of
a meal and the price of a vehicle in the
last five to six years. Now you add to that
the Big Beautiful Bill and no tax on tips. Should
(05:24):
we be adjusting the amount we tip because don't forget,
they get twenty percent of whatever that new bill is.
So we'll talk about that with Rory and our Americans
now with the big beautiful bill, going to adjust the
amount they tip because the tips will not be taxed.
We'll do that next hour, all right. David Sinati joining us.
He's the CEO of the American Policy Roundtable, host of
(05:46):
the Public Square. He is our senior contributor, and we
get a little a bonus visit something that I know
that you're focused on at the public square as well
as all year long, and that is the Declaration of Independence.
President Trump set that tone the moment we rang in
(06:06):
the fourth of July, our two hundred and forty ninth birthday.
On July fourth, he began the movement of the year long,
really two year focus that will be on turning two
hundred and fifty, the year leading up and then the
entire year of our two hundred and fiftieth birth And
we talked in the past about we lived through the
BISONTENTI when we turned two hundred. We were very divided
(06:27):
nation then too, But comparing that to two fifty, and
then getting to that root cause, which is the document itself,
and how little we look at it and talk about it,
and the impact that that's had ignoring it.
Speaker 4 (06:40):
What would be a great poll to take, Michael and
good morning, And would be a great poll to take
to find out when is the last time that people
have read the Declaration of Independence? Or have they ever
read the Declaration? It's the most hidden of the documents,
So what's fascinating about that? I say, maybe it's not
the most hidden. I think maybe the Northwest Ordinance is
the most hidden the documents, but the Declaration would certainly
(07:01):
rank in there as ones that people just don't read,
don't talk about, and we don't teach in schools. In fact,
it took us, it's taken us years in a number
of states to actually get legislation past that we've helped
introduce or or actually work for, to get the Declaration
and the Constitution taught by mandatory state standard in the
United States of America.
Speaker 2 (07:22):
We just we don't study the founding doctation.
Speaker 1 (07:24):
If education's goal is first and foremost to prepare children
for citizenship, that's right. Secondly, prepare them for the workforce,
and thirdly prepare them for higher education ultimately for the workforce.
Speaker 2 (07:36):
How do you ignore the Declaration of it dependment?
Speaker 1 (07:40):
How do you teach any course of history, certainly American history,
and not start with the document that started at all.
Speaker 4 (07:47):
Yeah, and it's actually not difficult to understand that all
these are written in English.
Speaker 2 (07:52):
And they're what is scaring them away, this is insanity.
Speaker 4 (07:55):
Well, what scares them away is philosophy. For the last
well since nineteen hundred, we've been working very hard a
number of people in the progressive movement begun by Woodrow
Wilson have tried very hard to move America off the
base of the Founding and onto a materialist, scientific, or
secularist culture. The Declaration doesn't let us do that, because
(08:17):
God has mentioned four times in the Declaration of Independence
and in the way in which he has referenced he
is both personal, active and watching. Well, if you want
to state start a secular culture, a culture run by
public opinion polls, a culture run by the rich and powerful,
or the famous, or what you watched on television last night,
(08:38):
you don't want a document that anchors you to an
eternal source that is non changing and has a standard.
Speaker 2 (08:45):
So it's philosophical.
Speaker 1 (08:49):
The announcement made by the government from the National Archives
concerning the Declaration, do you care to share it with them?
Speaker 2 (08:57):
What they omitted? Well, it's interesting because the the.
Speaker 1 (09:02):
Just to prove that you're you're not being overly zealous
or religious or no. This is the left's worst nightmare,
this document. They want it hidden. They don't want you
reading it, they don't want you understanding it. They sure
is that don't want you living it. But in terms
of the God part is that is that the biggest
problem they have. It's probably that and a government derived
(09:26):
of the people. With the people said sent about what
I would say, But tell them what they did to
the the in the video.
Speaker 4 (09:33):
The director of the National Archives, the former director, she's
no longer there, and right now we are in an
interim period where Marco Rubio is actually heading up the
archive along with three or four other federal jobs he's
doing while they got the chairs put together. But the
former director issued a video one minute and fifty seconds
of calling for a celebration of the two hundred and
(09:55):
fiftieth anniversary.
Speaker 2 (09:56):
And in it she chose to quote a few words.
Speaker 4 (09:59):
From and says from the decoration, so we hold these
truths to be self evident, that all men are created
equal and are endowed by their creator with certain any rights. Well,
what she did was she left out the words by
their creator and just put in in both in her
reading and in the graphic, endowed with certain rights, buy
(10:19):
their create tours five syllables.
Speaker 2 (10:22):
And she's gone.
Speaker 1 (10:23):
The video remains, the audio is the same, but they
at least added creator in the visual.
Speaker 2 (10:28):
Right.
Speaker 4 (10:28):
Well, actually what they did was on the website. Now,
if you go on the website, you watch the video,
and there's other things that they have up there, but
then they do have at some point on the site
the actual direct quote, including all the words. Now, if
you or I were in a college course and we
took someone else's quote and literally ripped the guts out
of it and skipped over it, we flunk the class
(10:50):
and maybe get thrown out of school.
Speaker 2 (10:51):
Well, if you're not endowed by your creator, who are
you endowed by? It would be the.
Speaker 4 (10:55):
Question exactly the vacuum they want to create that rights
come from some were but not an eternal source. And
so that means they can come from a public opinion poll,
come for.
Speaker 2 (11:05):
The judge, they can come from a judge.
Speaker 4 (11:07):
They can come from someone in the government.
Speaker 2 (11:11):
The government gives you your rights.
Speaker 4 (11:13):
And that's a big difference, Michael, because that's the platform
that Woodrow Wilson wanted us to be on, because if
the government can give you your rights, then the government
can take them away.
Speaker 1 (11:21):
When we come back, I want to talk about four
references to God in the Declaration and the way in
which he's referenced four different natures.
Speaker 5 (11:32):
If you will, this is your Morning Show with Michael
Del Chrono.
Speaker 1 (11:38):
These are your top five stories of the Day Numerouno,
former President Biden's White House physician, not cooperating with Congress
at all.
Speaker 6 (11:46):
Doctor Kevin O'Connor did not answer any questions when he
appeared before the House Oversight Committee behind the closed doors.
He was subpoened as part of the Republican led an
investigation into Biden's mental fitness. In a statement, O'Connor's lawyer
said he asserted the physician patient privilege as well as
his right under the Fifth Amendment to the US Constitution.
Committee chairman James Comer called it unprecedented and added he
(12:08):
thinks it adds more fuel to the fire that there was.
Speaker 2 (12:11):
A cover up.
Speaker 1 (12:12):
I'm Mark Mayfield, White House chiefs of Staff Susie Wiles.
As President Trump and tech billionaire Elon Musk had a
great thing until they didn't.
Speaker 7 (12:20):
Trump and Musk engaged in a public feud last month
after the billionaire left his role at the White House
and blasted the Republican back to megabill recently signed into
law by the President. Wiles was asked how she would
describe the relationship and express that she didn't understand what
went wrong between them.
Speaker 2 (12:39):
I'm Brian Shook.
Speaker 1 (12:40):
Officials in Florida have voted to change the name of
Southern Boulevard in the area close to mar A Lago
to President Donald J.
Speaker 2 (12:48):
Trump Boulevard. Tammy Trehio has more.
Speaker 8 (12:50):
Some members of the public spoke out against the move
before Tuesday's Palm Beach County Commissioner's unanimous vote.
Speaker 9 (12:56):
Well, I heard this news of this proposed name change,
I was honestly shocked and ashamed.
Speaker 2 (13:01):
This scripter, this predator.
Speaker 9 (13:03):
Given that the current president is a convicted felon and
has contributed much divide in our country, I do not
see a purpose other than short term political momentum.
Speaker 8 (13:12):
The vote is the result of a new state law
requiring state transportation officials to put up a sign honoring
the president. The county's approval essentially means that it will
recognize the move. The Town of Palm Beach and the
City of West Palm Beach may also have to vote,
since the stretch of roadway runs through those municipalities. I'm
tammied for he O.
Speaker 1 (13:29):
In sports, Tigers fell seven to three to a very
good raised team. Guardians beat the Astros after losing ten
in a row. There's two wins in a Row against
a really good Astros club Guardians a winner four to two.
Cardinals lost eight to two to the Natz Dbacks one
eight two over the Padres. Angels outslugged the Rangers eleven
to eight. The A's lost nine to two to the Braves,
Dodgers lost three to two to the Brewers. And that
(13:51):
is your top five stories of the day. Busiting with
David Sinadi, our senior contributor, about the Declaration of Independence,
what you brought up something really huge. Woodrow Wilson, I
mean Woodrow Wilson book ended with I guess Barack Obama
and then a fake presidency and whatever, AOC and far
(14:12):
left craziness. That that is the progressive movement in and
of itself, and this document, well, it's their kryptonite.
Speaker 2 (14:20):
I think you couldn't say it any better than that.
Speaker 4 (14:22):
That's exactly right, Michael, because this document takes us back
to a worldview, and the Declaration is first the confession
of a worldview which is anchored solidly in a Judeo
Christian reality. And that's the thing these folks don't want
to work with in any way, shape or form, because
the key of progressivism is to be autonomous, autonomous from
(14:42):
any other source but the individual, whether it's God or
divine or religion or whatever. And of course the founders
watched that happen in ancient history, and they were watching
an unfold in France and the chaos that it would
then ultimately produce. They didn't want any part of that.
They were intentional, nor did they want any part but
theocracy either. Right, of course, not exactly right, And the
(15:03):
reason for that is because the concept of the theocracy
was ridiculous. The Creator is also the owner. He doesn't
need anything established on earth to increase.
Speaker 1 (15:13):
I love the way you say it. Jesus doesn't face
any elections. Yeah, yeah, he went say it every time
I did. In watching a video of a presentation you made,
I know that there were four references to God and
the Declaration of Independence, and that's significant, and they that's
why they hide the document and it's why they omitted
it in the National Archives video. But what I never
(15:35):
really connected the dots to were the four different natures
of God that are referred to the creator of the
heavens and the earth, the unique creation of mankind A
sitting watching judge. That's also not to be missed and
in the sections that they're talking about, Yes.
Speaker 4 (15:53):
And he's defined as Nature's God, as the personal creator,
he's defined as the supreme judge of the world. And
then finally divine Providence and perhaps most importantly divine providence
because they were going to need a lot of help.
Speaker 1 (16:06):
So the big question is, we're going to celebrate for
a year leading up to our two hundred and fiftieth
birthday and then the entire year of our two hundred
and fiftieth year of existence. And we're going to attempt
to do that by ignoring the document that started the
clock running.
Speaker 2 (16:20):
Yeah, the matrix hits here too.
Speaker 4 (16:24):
This is Richard from Plovilla, Georgia, and my morning show
is Your Morning Show with Michael dale Giorno.
Speaker 2 (16:36):
Hey, it's Michael.
Speaker 1 (16:37):
I'm so glad you found the podcast and don't forget
you can listen to your Morning Show live each weekday morning.
Your Morning Show can be heard in great cities like Youngstown, Ohio, Nashville, Tennessee,
Saint Louis, Sacramento, Phoenix, just to name a few. You
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Speaker 2 (16:57):
Enjoy this is your morning show.
Speaker 1 (16:59):
We're visiting with David Zonati, CEO of the American Policy Roundtable,
host of The Public Square, and our senior contributor. You know,
we're looking at this New York's race. I brought up
the movie and it is the campaign with Will Ferrell
and Zach Califanakis.
Speaker 2 (17:13):
It's a hilarious movie.
Speaker 1 (17:14):
The premise is simple, you know, how many awful things
can somebody get caught doing and still get elected. In
the case of the movie, of course, it's comedy, so
it's not rayed. Punches a dog in the face, punches
a baby in the face, sleeps with his opponent's wife,
gets caught drunk driving, and it's all captured. He steals
the cop car and tries to drive off drunk. That's
(17:35):
kind of what this New York City mayor's race is
looking like. I mean, for Zoe ron Mandani, a guy
that won't back down from entafada with the number of
Jewish voters, faked his application to college, and he was
Asian and African American. We know, I got pictures of
him flipping off a statue of Christopher Columbus. You would
(17:56):
think it'd be difficult to get an Italian American vote
and a Jewish vote in New York City, of which
there's a lot of both. Now we have these the
parody mocking Hanukkah that has surfaced, and now we're starting
to get some of his ridiculous radical papers from when
he was in college. And yet the polling suggests in
the general election for mayor of New York City he
(18:18):
leads with thirty five percent, Andrew Cuomo, the former disgrace governor,
is at twenty five percent, the Republican Sliwa is at
fourteen percent, and then the current sitting mayor, Eric Adams,
is at eleven percent. And then the question becomes, well,
who should get out of the way. I would think
you could make a case Adams getting out of the way,
(18:39):
and the more likelihood of his eleven percent added to
Cuomo being enough to steer this off or an awakening
between now and then.
Speaker 2 (18:48):
But how did we get here?
Speaker 1 (18:50):
Because that's the really fascinating part if Eric Adams, because
I and I used to compare New York City to
Chicago and New York City. The mayor got it, the
people didn't, and Chicago. The people got it and the
mayor didn't complete opposites when it came to immigration. So
Eric Adams gets it, which links him to Trump. And
(19:11):
then of course the Democrats hate him for being linked
to Trump. There's that whole chestnut. The Democrats hate Eric Adams.
They were trying to bring him down for his affiliation
with Trump. They also hate Cuomo over COVID. I don't
know how to fix this mess. I don't think I
don't think there's any stopping the most. I mean, I'm
(19:33):
gonna ask you a question in a minute about the
worst political scandal and American history. No, but I mean,
you know this would be the most. This is the
largest city in America. And I can't think, other than
Will Ferrell's character in a movie, the worse candidate that
could possibly get elected. But I don't know how to
(19:53):
stop it either.
Speaker 4 (19:57):
What can you say? It's awful. It's awful, and if
you've been to New York City lately, you know there's
a lot that is not pretty to look at.
Speaker 2 (20:08):
Okay, one of.
Speaker 4 (20:10):
The things that happens is if you continue to raise taxes.
It's both the State of New York and the City
of New York has done relentlessly. And you punish people
who are making money in a city where if you
don't make a lot of money, you're not going to sleep.
You have to find that that you're going to drive
a lot of thoughtful, thinking, responsible people out. They they're
not gonna live there anymore. So you've got mass exodus. Secondly,
(20:34):
you have chaos. This is absolute chaos. The people of
New York City who live and work and vote there
are better than this, but the political parties are not.
You have one party rule. The desire of the Democrat
machine and the progressive machine is to get one party
rule in urban centers. Well, New York is too big
(20:57):
for one party rule, and don't have a Republican candidate
that's really viable because of the dominance of single party rule.
You add all of that with the tribalism and the
dei and all of the angst and anger, and and
we might throw into that also the total disillusion, the
(21:18):
dissembling of Vertigiuliani, who used to be a heroic character
in our country, who has.
Speaker 1 (21:23):
Fallen into America's mayor, whose hair melted on television.
Speaker 2 (21:28):
A horrible disrepair. That whole thing.
Speaker 4 (21:30):
There's just been a tremendous loss of character in the city.
And so you now have vagabonds across the board. You
have a mayor that's under indictment. You have Cuomo who's
been chased by the Me Too movement and by scandal
and then the disaster he did in what he did
to people in COVID, and you've got.
Speaker 1 (21:48):
What is the far left trying to use this to leverage,
of course, because this isn't about just getting this mayor seat.
Speaker 2 (21:54):
Now.
Speaker 1 (21:54):
They certainly outplayed everybody. Eric Adams played in with Trump,
alienated himself. Cuomo botched up COVID and was disgraced, so
he played it up the way he played it up.
Speaker 2 (22:07):
And then they used you know.
Speaker 1 (22:08):
The the rank uh voting, Yeah, the rank voting to
get Zoron Mendani through the primary, which never should have happened.
Right now and only there's any stop in them Wow, chaos, kay,
And I think they will try to model this other places.
And by the way, I'm gonna flat out say it,
(22:31):
and you know you can claim I'm being a Glenn
Beck here, but I think this is things are about
to get If there is I don't know what the
grounds of the civil war will be. But I can
tell you where the battlefields are forming in a civil war,
and that's in these inner cities. And you can see
that in the mayor of Los Angeles. You can see
(22:51):
that if he's elected in New York City. We certainly
have that in Chicago.
Speaker 9 (22:56):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (22:56):
And then you have the President this week saying if
and Donnie wins, the federal government's going to take over
New York City. This is the very I see seeds
of civil war here. So I'm taking this very seriously.
This isn't a race that you should say, well, I
don't live in New York and you're an idiot if
you live there.
Speaker 10 (23:11):
No.
Speaker 1 (23:11):
I actually think the left they're playing towards insurrection, but
their endgame is still civil war. So if we don't
solve this, we don't solve the next civil war.
Speaker 4 (23:21):
In two thousand and one, radical Islamists attack New York
City as their primary goal and objective. We know what happens.
Twenty five years later, We're looking at a Shiah Muslim
who's been in this country for eight years being elected
mayor of New York City. What are the odds this
doesn't just happen casually? Oh, and by the way, he
also happens to be a declared socialist. It doesn't just happen.
(23:44):
I'm not even sure he could pass an oath of
office to uphold and defend the Constitution of the United
States and be so honestly with a light detective test
on how can you hold.
Speaker 2 (23:54):
All of it? How powerful is? How powerful is the matrix?
Speaker 1 (23:57):
Nobody is even voting thinking about the business chaos. Nobody
is even voting thinking of the rent chaos, or the
public safety and security chaos, or the bankruptcy to a
state of offering all transit for free. But imagine nine
one one, what's your emergency? There's a guy in my
(24:19):
house with a gun, and you get a social worker.
Speaker 4 (24:24):
I mean, you really need to record that calls the
way you say, it's pretty funny.
Speaker 2 (24:28):
Well yeah, and then how does that make you feel?
It would be their next question? You want me to
do the punchline?
Speaker 1 (24:33):
No, but I mean, but you would think the citizens
would vote according to that, But they're not. They're sticking
to the matrix I outlined, which is, well, Adams is
with Trump, so I'm not voting for him. Cuomo killed
our parents during COVID.
Speaker 2 (24:50):
There's a single party system. That's the primary objective.
Speaker 4 (24:53):
That's what Roy Tahara and the guys in California put
into play thirty years ago. Now to Hearra's defective back
to the American Enterprise Institute, this is the mindset that
destroyed California.
Speaker 2 (25:05):
Single party because what choices do you have?
Speaker 4 (25:08):
A Republican quote can't win because the two party systems
completely defunct, and so now you've.
Speaker 2 (25:13):
Got three bad choices. We know, you know a lot
of people aren't going to vote.
Speaker 1 (25:17):
We know the CIA was tracking Lee Harvey Oswald. We
know the FBI was tracking Lee Harvey Oswald. We know
that both knew he was in New Mexico City with
not only Cuban officials but also the man who headed
up assassinations for the Soviet Union. You know, we're not
getting any answers on JFK. We're not getting any answers
on MLK. We're not getting any answers on RFK. We're
(25:37):
not going to get any answers. It appears on Jeffrey Epstein.
But what this all amounts to is potentially the greatest
political scandal in American history.
Speaker 2 (25:49):
The government involvement.
Speaker 1 (25:53):
In the taking out of a president next to that,
or if that's not true, the biggest political scandal is
to steal an election and then fake a presidency. And
we saw in a house hearing the physician for Joe
Biden asked a very specific question, were you ever asked
(26:14):
to lie about his condition? His answer was, doctor O'Connor,
were you ever told to lie about the president's health.
Speaker 9 (26:22):
The advicey council, I must be expected, He declined to
answer based upon the physician based privilege and in reliance
somebody right under the fifth man in the Constitution.
Speaker 1 (26:30):
Joe Biden's doctor pleads the fifth on every question in
this hearing. Is this the greatest scandal in American political history?
And are we ever going to get to Are we
gonna get to the bottom of this? We haven't gotten
the bombed to any others.
Speaker 4 (26:41):
I think it certainly would contend to be the greatest
one since the televised era, since Kennedy.
Speaker 2 (26:47):
I don't think that you know that. I don't know
that we'll find a bigger one. Michael. This is when
I wish that we could.
Speaker 4 (26:52):
Compel secret Service agents to have to testify, because they
were in the room often when these decisions were made,
they heard things, they know so and if they could
plead with immunity, but I don't know that that would
ever happen, But that may be the only way we
could get to the truth is for the impartial agents
(27:14):
to tell what they saw.
Speaker 2 (27:15):
Because anyone who's got a.
Speaker 4 (27:18):
Vested interest or a loyalty to the Democrat Party or
the Biden families they're going to please.
Speaker 1 (27:23):
Would stare at the radio and say that decision to
refuse to answer is actually an answer.
Speaker 2 (27:30):
Of course, where do we go from here?
Speaker 4 (27:32):
Yeah, well, fortunately we have a constitution that protects us
all from self indictment.
Speaker 2 (27:38):
The man has the right to do that.
Speaker 4 (27:40):
He's going to have to stand before the supreme judge
of the world is the founders discussed in the Declaration
of Independence. Who is watching, and God's not fooled, and
ultimately our sins will find us out. The key is
that we never elect another auto pen David, thank you
so much for your time. I haven't done Tucker in
(28:05):
a while. I just hit the Tucker button. It must
have been great, Jeffrey, we got the Tucker response. He
must be happy. David, thank you so much for your time.
Speaker 1 (28:15):
Have a great week, Dave, we'll talk next week sooner
of conditions. Horn All right, if you're just waking up,
President Trump.
Speaker 2 (28:23):
Is in the news.
Speaker 1 (28:25):
He was attempted to be assassinated in Pennsylvania. Now six
Secret Service agents have been suspended following the attempted assassination.
Mark Mayfield has the complete story.
Speaker 6 (28:35):
According to multiple reports, the agency issued the suspensions in
the aftermath of the attempted shooting of trumpet a rally
in the city of Butler. The then presidential candidate was
left with minor injuries, while one of the attendees at
the rally was killed. The shooter, identified as Thomas Matthew Crooks,
was killed by Secret Service agents in the aftermath of
the shooting.
Speaker 2 (28:53):
Or review by the Department.
Speaker 6 (28:54):
Of Homeland Security revealed law enforcement breakdowns had left Trump
vulnerable to an attempted assassination.
Speaker 2 (29:00):
I'm Mark Mayfield.
Speaker 1 (29:01):
One in three US teenagers are now pre diabetic.
Speaker 7 (29:04):
That's according to a concerning new report from the CDC.
With pre diabetes, blood sugar levels are high, but not
high enough to be considered type two diabetes, which is
linked to heart disease and other conditions. Doctors say kids
need to eat healthier and be more active. I'm Brian Schuk.
Speaker 1 (29:23):
Did he Combs Win's a legal victory in a civil
lawsuit while awaiting sentencing for his criminal charges.
Speaker 2 (29:30):
Sara Lee Kessler has the story.
Speaker 11 (29:32):
TMZ is reporting that a judge has decided to remove
significant rape allegations from a lawsuit filed on behalf of
April Lampros. She's accused the fifty five year old music
mogul of raping her multiple times back in the nineteen nineties.
Comb's legal team is denying Lampress's claims, calling them baseless,
and has filed emotion to try to get the whole
(29:54):
lawsuit dismissed.
Speaker 2 (29:55):
I'm Sarah Lee Kessler. Two new COVID strains are going
around this summer.
Speaker 8 (30:00):
However, as South Carolina doctor says well the nimbus and
strata strains are active, he hasn't seen a major increase
in COVID cases or hospitalizations so far. Doctor Paul Richardson
also noted that the two new strains are less severe
than earlier strains, although symptoms may still be bothersome. According
to doctor Richardson, the best protection against viruses is washing
your hands frequently. I'm Tammy Trihuiou.
Speaker 2 (30:22):
It's not going to happen twice in a row.
Speaker 1 (30:24):
You can't guilt me into going to Jurassic Park and Superman,
not within seven days of each other.
Speaker 2 (30:28):
I simply will put my foot down.
Speaker 1 (30:32):
Superman is looking to fly big at the box office.
James Gunn directed film is hoping to collect about one
hundred and twenty to one hundred and thirty million dollars
domestically in its debut week. It's expected to make around
one hundred million internationally as well. Reviews have been very
positive for this movie. Eighty five percent of the critics
in Rotten Tomatoes credited as good. Superman is the first
(30:53):
film of the new DC universe, and today's cluster of
national days is sure to make anyone happy.
Speaker 12 (31:00):
Today is National Cashew Day. It's not a nut, it's
officially a seed. Then we move on to National Kitten Day.
Oh so cute and fluffy and probably some available at
an animal shelter near you. Then we press on to
the day that represents Vaka. If you like Kaka, Today
is National Pina Colada Day. White rum cream, a coconut,
(31:22):
pineapple juice. It's all you need to make it a
great day, along with a designated driver. I'm pre Tennis.
Speaker 1 (31:28):
You know you were asking the other day who would
I like to interview? I want to interview Bree Tennis.
Speaker 2 (31:33):
Can we get her on the show? Red?
Speaker 1 (31:34):
You got to find a way to get us bre Tennis.
I just think she's so delightful. With all of the
head scratching and heart wrenching things that are happening every
day in the news, I just love the way she
ends with something Yeah, lightens the mood.
Speaker 2 (31:47):
She's terre. Nobody doesn't like Bree Tennis.
Speaker 5 (31:49):
It's your morning show with Michael del Chorno.
Speaker 1 (31:54):
Over one hundred and seventy people remain unaccounted for almost
a week after the flooding in central Florida, and NASA
using some Houston area resources to assist in the search
and recovery efforts, and former President Biden's White House physician
not cooperating with Congress taking the Fifth Amendment, and President
Trump sending letters out adjusting US tariff rates on more
(32:17):
countries and more imports. The new round of tariff letters
comes after Trump again pushed back his deal deadline for countries.
White House correspondent John Decker is here with the very latest.
Rocky rode on Wall Street Monday and Tuesday, slight recovery Wednesday.
I don't know if we're dealing with uncertainty or the
certainty of uncertainty, but your news isn't going to help.
Speaker 9 (32:38):
Well, the President putting out those letters impacting seven countries,
doing that in the morning yesterday. The countries do a
minuscule amount of trade with the US. Algeria, the Philippines,
Iraq just three of those seven countries, and that's not
going to make a ghint in terms of the trade
deficit that the US has an annual basis.
Speaker 10 (33:01):
But the President in the afternoon also announced that come August.
Speaker 2 (33:04):
First, there will be increased trade tariff.
Speaker 10 (33:07):
Rate on goods coming from Brazil to fifty percent. So
that is something that Brazil says.
Speaker 9 (33:15):
They're not going to change their policies in any way.
They don't seem like they're likely to come to the
negotiating table to negotiate with the US as it relates
to a trade deal.
Speaker 1 (33:26):
So what successful trade deals do we have? I mean,
if we split this Ledger in half and on one
side we put all right, here's our victories, and I
don't know ifny of them are complete, but you know, England, China,
you know, and then what is outstanding? I mean, it
still falls heavily under uncertain, doesn't it.
Speaker 9 (33:46):
Yeah, I mean your ledger looks not very good right now.
You have China, as you mentioned, the UK and also Vietnam,
and those are all frameworks for deals. But then you
think about the amount of countries in the world. You mean,
you think about Asia, you think about South America, you
think about the European Union. No trade deals with any
(34:09):
of those countries to speak of. There's talk that maybe
they're getting near to a trade deal with the European Union.
That would certainly be a shot in the arm for
the president and may give him momentum in terms of
reaching trade deals with other countries.
Speaker 1 (34:24):
John Decker, White House Correspondent, As always, great reporting.
Speaker 5 (34:27):
We'll talk again tomorrow. We're all in this together. This
is your Morning Show with Michael nhild Jo Now