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October 30, 2025 34 mins

A congress so dysfunctional can it ever be restored, and is socialism the new global warming religion of the left??

 

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, It's Michael.

Speaker 2 (00:00):
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Speaker 3 (00:16):
Starting your morning off right.

Speaker 4 (00:19):
A new way of talk, a new way of understanding,
because we're in this together.

Speaker 3 (00:25):
This is your Morning Show with Michael del Chrono.

Speaker 1 (00:30):
Governments still shut down at home, and the Democrats and
the Republicans are blaming each other. Meanwhile, President Trump has
headed back to Washington after announcing he's reached a one
year deal with China on critical earth minerals and even
got some tariffs all worked out and lowered for China. Meanwhile,
there are reports that Hurricane Melissa has killed over two

(00:51):
dozen people in the Caribbean. We're going to get the
very latest on that from roy O'Neil here momentarily. In
the Blue Jays, somebody just forgot to tell them they're
not supposed to beat the Dodgers, because they beat them
again last night. They're headed home to Toronto up three
games to two, winning last night six to one. In
the World Series. Roy O'Neil is, in addition to being
our Your Morning Show national correspondent, also has been following

(01:15):
hurricanes for virtually his entire life. We knew this one
was big late in the season, and it was and
the death toll has risen in Jamaica. What's the latest
on Melissa.

Speaker 5 (01:26):
Well, yeah, keep in mind, this is still a Category
two hurricane out there in the Atlantic now bearing down
on Bermuda, so we're not through with.

Speaker 1 (01:33):
Melissa just yet.

Speaker 5 (01:34):
But it did come ashore as a Cat five monster
of the storm with a direct landfall on the southwest
Jamaica in particular, and of course the storm being so powerful,
it did a lot of damage to both the south
side of the island and the north side around Montego Bay,
and that's where some of the worst damage has also
been recorded. I don't know if you've seen that surveillance

(01:55):
video released by the Prime Minister, boy, you'd be hard
pressed to find a rooftop in place anywhere in the
western half of that island. There really is a developing
housing crisis there. They're still trying to figure out exactly
what damage has been done by this monster.

Speaker 1 (02:10):
Now we think the death toll is over two dozen
in the Caribbean in general. Where were most of the fatalities.

Speaker 5 (02:17):
Yeah, I think they're at about thirty now for that number.

Speaker 1 (02:20):
We've seen a lot.

Speaker 5 (02:20):
Of deaths reported in Haiti as well as of course
in Jamaica, but they really haven't gotten any more specific
about details on those who are injured or killed.

Speaker 3 (02:30):
It's been a mad.

Speaker 5 (02:32):
Dash really to try to get help out to people
who may be in immediate danger. The Prime Minister did
say that several hospitals have been knocked offline as a
result of the storm. So still doing those assessments of
trying to figure out what infrastructure is left and operational.
There is some spotty internet service Starlink I know, has
been authorized to help out some people there who may

(02:54):
be stuck, but they're still really in this damage assessment
phase right now.

Speaker 1 (02:59):
Yeah, I asked because Jamaica was double slapped on the
front end by a Cat five and what was a
five heading towards a four by the second slap, we
had seven hundred and fifty thousand was the estimate that
had evacuated from Cuba, and then it was a Cat
three when it hit Cuba. So I mean nobody will clarify,
but my presumption is that most of the deaths are Jamaica, right,

(03:23):
That's what we think.

Speaker 5 (03:24):
But there's also been a lot of deaths in Hispaniola
as well, and some of them were before the storm,
in anticipation of it, getting ready for it. But yeah,
I don't think the numbers are going to be good,
that's for sure. But I think there's still just an
awful lot of confusion as to exactly what this storm
has done. You know, from the mountains and the landslides
and the mudslides, with a lot of washed out bridges

(03:45):
and roads, it's going to take a while to reach
everyone in need.

Speaker 1 (03:49):
And as you mentioned, not done yet. Continuing to move
in the Atlantic, where are interest rates headed? Well, we
got a corner point cut and then we kind of
got a little signal that the next one may not
come in December. Rory has more on that in our
third hour. Great reporting, Rory, thank you, as always, I
want to do something before we start with David Sanadi. David,

(04:10):
I'll make your buzzer ding ding ding ding ding ding ding.
If you can chime in, Adam, yours will be I'll
be wrong. I'll be wrong. I'll be wrong. Does anybody
know what was one year ago today? One year? It's
just this will show you how days are long, but
life is short, you know. In other words, you know,
everything feels the same, but it just seems like you

(04:31):
blink and a year has gone by. One year ago
today was the garbage truck with Donald Trump. And you
were saying the other day, how you know he needs
to give back to the McDonald's window. He needs to
get back to the garbage truck that was one year
ago today. It seems like yesterday, doesn't it.

Speaker 6 (04:49):
Well, it's interesting because what we do have as a
president who's marooned right now and a government that is
basically non functioning. We have one branch of the government
that's functioning, and that's the president trying to do what
presidential power, authority, responsibility, and constitutionality gives him in opportunities.
That's why he's not in Washington, because Mike Johnson's not

(05:10):
in Washington. There's not a function in Congress, and so
what we have is living out in real time, but
no one says it out loud. Is the end of
the dysfunctional reality of the two party system, which is
dedicated now solely to controlling power, so that you can't
do anything except you can work the edges, you can

(05:30):
work in the judiciary, you can work through presidential authority,
and the Congress basically stays home. Now, I'm against Congress
staying home to a large degree. It doesn't matter whether
they're home or not, because they don't do anything anyways.

Speaker 3 (05:44):
Right, they are the pirates who don't do anything.

Speaker 6 (05:46):
And the reason that they don't do anything is because
they set up their mechanisms for power control, and their
very rules prohibit them from being able to move based
on simple majorities. They've got to have all of these
deals cut and get through all of them, the rules
and regulations, so they're totally dysfunctional being. The problem in
America is not Donald Trump. The problem is Congress. That's

(06:07):
what was laughable.

Speaker 1 (06:07):
Chuckie Schumer gives this big speech trying to portray the
president as irresponsible. What's he doing off in China and
Asia accomplishing nothing when our government is broken at home
and the government is shut down. Of course, it's Congress's
job to fund the government. Yeah, he's working doing his job.
You're not. It's so did you get to hear any

(06:28):
of last half hour when I when I talked about
the parties and how far are Yeah, because do you
remember when we used to as Americans as far as
the functionality of a two party system that George Washington
would have never been interested in, but we call it
check and balances and we liked it. Well, we can't
go back to that. This isn't checks and balances. This

(06:50):
is opposition. This is you know, the Club of one hundred.
They're in cahoots together. But I mean this is just
complete and utter dysfunction and kind of like continuing resolutions
because even if they solved it today, they would face
another shutdown in two weeks. I mean, it's laughable. But
at some point, can this Congress ever be functional again?

Speaker 3 (07:14):
Oh? Sure?

Speaker 6 (07:14):
And the reason that it can be functional is that
it's at a tipping point right now. If there were
to be ten to fifteen newly elected members of the
House of Representatives that were free agents. Now, I don't
mean people without principles. I don't mean people operating outside
of constitutional realities. I'm talking about people that don't care

(07:35):
about what the party bosses say. I mean I listened
yet late to jd Vance yesterday when he was doing
his turning point thing last night at ed Ole, miss
and it was fascinating because a student came up and
asked him a question no one in the Meetia's.

Speaker 3 (07:49):
Got the courage to ask, evidently, is that.

Speaker 6 (07:52):
Look, Robert Massey and Kentucky, you guys have targeted him.
You've been friends with him forever. He's a genuine conservative.
What gives there? And Vance was very candid, but in
his candor he revealed that the answer is really a
tough one.

Speaker 3 (08:08):
What he basically said was, you know, you can.

Speaker 6 (08:11):
Disagree some of the time, but you can't disagree all
of the time or the party's going to take you out. Okay,
oh okay, thanks for being so honest, because that's reality.

Speaker 1 (08:26):
You know, there's a bigger picture to that too, and
that is that, you know, the whole political culture is
pick aside. You're either Denica, you're a Republican. You're either
with us or you're against this. I think that's why
I got so much backlash over Brett Behar Brett Bear
is just being a journalist and a time where journalism
is dead, and so you think that's not picking a side,
so he must be deep state. Put that in your

(08:48):
chatbot or you know your AI and watch what it
answers you. But the truth of the matter is, be
a Republican, be a democrat. You got to be one
of the other. You're a trader, You're you're something suspicion. No,
maybe you're just an American? Right, Bill? How how about well, yeah,
maybe we just need to name a party that I mean,

(09:10):
the Declaration of Independence is our intent and inspiration, and
the Constitution is our roadmap. That's me and it never changes.

Speaker 6 (09:19):
Well, and sorry to Thomas Mancy think I called him
Roberts still early in the morning. Now, this is what
you said. You spoke about being a free agent in
the last half hour. And that's what the founders were
because the ideas that made the country and that built
the constitutional Republic and the challenges of surviving in a
hostile world were sufficient. They didn't need to divide each

(09:40):
other fighting over power and money because they had to
unite to survive. Our prosperity has destroyed our intelligence.

Speaker 1 (09:50):
Davidson, CEO of the American Policy Around Table, host of
the Public Square and a senior contributor, All right, real quickly,
I asked the question. I'll ask it again I don't
think these two parties could ever function together again, short
of a world war or some kind of cataclysmic terrorist
attack that would make them let go of these petty

(10:12):
differences for a united, bigger cause.

Speaker 6 (10:16):
Well, I think, Michael, that it's just a question of
changing the players. As much as I can make the
argument and win the argument on the historical reality, the
political parties are not necessary.

Speaker 3 (10:29):
On the other hand, the right of association.

Speaker 6 (10:31):
Is a constitutionally protected right, and it is a right
given to us by God most importantly, and we're always
going to find a way to associate for convenience sake,
because it makes things easier. Okay, I get that humans
like community.

Speaker 3 (10:44):
I get that.

Speaker 6 (10:45):
The difference is when all you're pursuing is control of
the money and power, you've got the wrong people in place.
There are enough good Americans of all socio economic strata
and all. There's enough good Americans people who believe in
the core principles of America to run a functional Congress.

(11:05):
We have the wrong people there, Republicans and Democrats, and
we need to get rid of them right now.

Speaker 1 (11:11):
They're using the people as minions to serve them. They're
supposed to be the minions there serving us and representing us.
I mean, David, we're only getting it completely wrong. More
which David Sinati when you're a morning show.

Speaker 4 (11:23):
Continues, this is your morning show with Michael Deltno, you.

Speaker 1 (11:35):
Know we're talking about Massy. David Sanatti's the CEO of
the American Policy Roundtable and host of the Public Square.
I guess there's several things to redust out in this
number one. Is he the best manifestation of the Republican
Party platform for the constituency serves or even his slight
differences are good in the makeup? Or is there some

(11:57):
lines that can't be crossed within a nash Old Republican
Party that can disqualify you. I mean, that's what begs
the question, who should change the party or Massy? Because
it looks like it's not the party, it has to
be Massy, and that's why his own party is going
to turn against him. How's that different than what the
left does.

Speaker 6 (12:15):
Well, it's what the human experience is. Inside a constitutional
republic that's built with checks and balances, people have to
figure out how to get along and you have to
come to common ground. You cannot govern unless one of
the parties were to have seventy members in the Senate
and have three hundred members in the House, in which

(12:35):
case you basically be being run as a one party country.
We clearly are not a one party country. We are
a very divided country. When you take a look at
when you parse the voting results the whole way down
to precincts in congressional districts, there is a significant number
of divisions in this country, in pockets of divisions. So

(12:58):
we've got to figure out how we move forward. And
if we can't, then we don't and we live off
what we've got.

Speaker 3 (13:05):
Here to speak.

Speaker 1 (13:06):
Don't shoot the messenger, but I got to ask the
toughest question. We all know that the Democrat Party is
in a civil war. Even Andrew Cuomo knows that is
the Republican right now. Now he knows the number. Is
the Republican Party as sailing forward or are they headed
for some fights?

Speaker 6 (13:23):
Republican Party has been in a civil war for forty
years between the pragmatists and the constitutionalists.

Speaker 1 (13:29):
Sure, and how does that play out in this tricky handoff?
Because let's face it, everything the Republicans have been enjoying
for now eight years with a four year interruption, but
even within the four year interruption, so you can almost
say everything that the Republican Party has enjoyed in twelve
years really isn't red. It was Orange. It really wasn't Republican.

(13:51):
It was Maga, it was Trump. And if Trump's leaving
the stage, then what are they and will they all
fight with each other to determine what they'll be moving forward?

Speaker 6 (14:00):
Well, yeah, I mean dad's leaving the buildings, So how
are the kids going to get along? Probably not very
well given human nature. But the reality is the answer
to your question depends on how your algorithms are informing
you based on reality. Because if we build our government
from a constitutional platform from the words on the paper
in what they mean, then we have an opportunity to

(14:23):
work all this stuff out if we elect people of
goodwill who put principle over party. But if the purpose
is to execute an agenda against another side, and that's
why we take positions of power, then we are effectively
in a political civil war. It's nice of Cuomo to
wake up, would have been nice that he'd done so
in the middle of COVID, but he was busy. So

(14:44):
I mean, it depends on how well your algorithms inform you.

Speaker 1 (14:49):
By the way, in Sounds of the Day, I'll be
repeating the Steven A. Smith interview with Andrew Cuomo where
he remarkably gets things now so much so you wonder
how did he not get him when he was a
part of it, or how can you get it so
clearly and remain a Democrat that You'll have that challenge
coming up in Sounds of the Day. All right, when
we come back, this has been a remarkable week. So

(15:12):
after Gosh, we gotta go back to al Gore. So
after twenty five thirty years, if this global warming out
of control, man cause must be man solved or we're
all gonna die now suddenly the billion of billionaires Bill
Gates says global warming is not an issue. Poverty is.
So they're shifting away. The reason, we believe is because

(15:33):
they want the power. They need the power, They need
the electricity for all their AI projects. But this has
become a religion for a lot of people on the left,
and now somebody's just saying, no, it's not a god.
So what issue will be their new god? That's a
big question. So we ask a big senior contributor like
David Sanadi, you'll have the answer. Also a visit with

(15:55):
John Deck or our White House correspondent.

Speaker 4 (15:59):
This is your morning show with Michael del Chno.

Speaker 1 (16:09):
This is your morning show. I'm Michael Adam Thompson in
La run on the board for Jeffrey Red, keeping an
eye on the content, having a fantastic debate that should
have been on the air instead of whatever commercials you
heard with David Zanati. You know, it's funny to be
the third party here, just sit and listening to you
guys go back and forth, because you're basically like two

(16:29):
guys on a ship debating navigation based on currents that
don't exist anymore. Somebody needs to tell you that the
normal currents of rivers and oceans don't exist. In fact,
you're in a freaking riptide, and that riptide is algorithm
and a dysfunctional divide. And I think it makes it

(16:50):
all so difficult. David, I would throw it to you
this way and maybe read you'll glean from this. But
if people think algorithms are only at work when you're
online on your phone or your computer on social media,
you're dead wrong. And you don't know how dead wrong

(17:11):
you are. It's going to It impacts how we interact
with each other, certainly impacts how most interact with you,
even over the radio. Right.

Speaker 6 (17:19):
What's interesting, Michael, The entire Bible is driven on the
concept of revelation, which is functioning through words. When artificial
intelligence basically captures all the relevant words, and I say,
that's all the relevant works based upon the programmers and

(17:40):
the owners of AI, and then redefines reality based upon
a limited universe of words filtered through a limited universe
of instructions. In programming, there's an alteration of reality that
will inevitably follow. And so what you're saying is it
doesn't matter whether you're in the grocery store looking at
the package, the words on a package, or wherever you

(18:02):
are listening to anything, seeing anything, even in a conversation.
The idea here is to program people's minds.

Speaker 1 (18:10):
Let me, at the risk of sounding overly Christian without
somebody asking me a question. First, why did Jesus refer
to us as sheep?

Speaker 3 (18:27):
We've got to set up because a lot of.

Speaker 1 (18:29):
People think Jesus was basically saying sheep are the stupidest
animals on earth, and he's calling us stupid. But really
when you go inside, well, yeah, but really, what sheeps are,
this is what was brilliant about Christ. What sheeps really
are is not as dumb as they are conforming. They're
natural conformist, and so are we. That's why when you're

(18:53):
in New Orleans, doesn't matter how long you've lived there,
pretty soon you're gonna start calling somebody love. I still
to this day fight that. If I do, I don't
know your name, and you're a woman, I go thank
you love, And that's almost inappropriate in this culture, is
right kind of a thing. But that's very New Orleans.
And in New Orleans, you don't call you. They wouldn't
call you mister Zanani. They would call you mister Dave.
Or so why isn't we go to Chicago when we

(19:14):
start ordering a peach there? We lived there a few years,
we start talking like this because we're conformists by nature.
And pretty soon this culture will drive its language, its accent,
it's way of communicating, and style of communicating, all from
the algorithms. I already see it. You don't have honest

(19:36):
voices online anymore. You have clickbaiters. Their whole algorithm is
designed for you to fund them. Through clicks. They don't
want to have meaningful connection with you, meaningful conversation with you.
They want to do something that makes you click because
when you click, they get paid. That's pretty much how
we're going to start talking to each other. That's why

(19:57):
Jesus said, and Paul later he enforced it, don't conform
to the patterns of this world, because Paul, like Christ
knew you were a conformist and you will start being
this way. You have to be transformed. And how are
you transformed by the word of God. Getting back to
your first point, read your turn? Yeah, I know John
Decker's turn. But when we come back, and I was

(20:18):
gonna say, clickbait used to be bad. Yeah, oh yeah,
clickbait's good. But we'll pick it up from there.

Speaker 6 (20:24):
As far as Decker got on his sleep the last
three days.

Speaker 1 (20:27):
I know, poor John, well, yeah, when he's not texting me,
I think he's sleeping. White House corresponded, John Decker even
busy when the when the president's out of the country.
So Chuckie Schumer gave a speech it was laughable, basically saying,
how can the president be off in Asia creating self
created victories for himself while Our government is shut down

(20:48):
because you're not doing your job, Chuckie. And he is.
President's finally coming home from Asia. John, what's all in
his pockets? What did he accomplish? Well?

Speaker 7 (20:56):
The last item on the president's agenda was this meeting
that turned out to be ninety minutes with President she
It concluded a number of hours ago with the presidents
flying back as we speak, on Air Force one, and
the President came back to the press cabin on Air
Force one, spoke for about fifteen minutes with reporters in
the press cabin about.

Speaker 5 (21:17):
What was accomplished. What was accomplished well.

Speaker 7 (21:19):
Immediately, China will resume its purchases in large volumes of
American agriculture, including soybeans. So that's welcome news for our
farmers in the Midwest. China also pledged to the President
that it would cut down on the export of the
chemicals that are needed to manufacture fentanyl, which of course

(21:42):
kills thousands upon thousands of individuals every year here in
the US. And as a result of that pledge, the
President lowered the tariff rate on Chinese goods coming into
the United States. The tariff rate, the President said, will
now be forty seven percent, down from fifty before the
meeting took place.

Speaker 1 (22:04):
So we felt like going in yesterday, you and I
had the conversation right on the air that this was
pretty remarkably set up to see eye to eye on fentanyl,
to maybe see eye to eye on teriff rates. We
also thought they would see eye to eye and take
what was a framework and make it a reality, and
that is the sale of TikTok. And I've seen very

(22:24):
little on that. Did that come up in the ninety minutes?

Speaker 7 (22:27):
You know, it's really interesting because the issue of TikTok
may have come up, the President didn't speak about it
with reporters, and those reporters traveling with the president didn't
even raise the issue in Q and A with the president.
They could have asked him questions on any topic, including
whether or not the TikTok deal was finalized, and they
did not ask that particular question to the president.

Speaker 1 (22:48):
So I'm going to do this. I'm going to do
this so my listeners don't hate you and they hate me. John,
You could make a case that the main jewel of
this Asian trip was China, and in that jewel of China,
the President gets a solid sentinel deal. He gets a
solid temporary tariff understanding, and I say temporary, it's only

(23:10):
a year. I don't think the TikTok deal happen. And
the silence is the President's way of not acknowledging he
went to one and a half for three, not three
for three.

Speaker 7 (23:21):
Well, oh, I didn't know if that was a question. Yeah,
I mean, look, you know the President didn't mention it.

Speaker 1 (23:26):
He did mention that he.

Speaker 7 (23:27):
Brought up the war in Ukraine.

Speaker 5 (23:29):
That was a question that I.

Speaker 7 (23:30):
Had posed to the President prior to his departure for Asia,
whether he'll bring that up and pressure President Putin through
President She to come to the negotiating table to end
the war in Ukraine. The President acknowledged that it's just
a difficult, intractable situation, but he did say that President
She will work to try to bring Putin to the

(23:51):
negotiating table. One item that also did not come up,
the President said, was the issue of Taiwan, and that
the President had already indicated he did not think that
would come up during the course of their summit meeting.

Speaker 1 (24:03):
It wasn't a question. Sometimes, I know, your job is
you only get to ask questions. Sometimes we have thoughts.
It was a rhetorical question, but yeah, I wanted to
say it, so you didn't say it because I'd rather
than hate me than you. Bottom line, as president wants
to test our nukes. Quite frankly, much of our nuclear
nuclear arsenal is obsolete. I mean, we ought to be
doing more than just testing some of these. We need

(24:26):
to be restoring and revamping and modernizing. But is this
saber rattling? What is this and why not?

Speaker 5 (24:32):
What the president?

Speaker 7 (24:33):
What the President said in explaining this decision, he was
asked this question at board Air Force. One was that
our adversaries, Russia and China and for that matter, North Korea,
do continue testing their nuclear weapons arsenal. It's a regular
thing that they do. The United States, the President has said,

(24:54):
does not. And because of that, the President wants to
make certain that the US is on equal footing, that we.

Speaker 1 (25:01):
Are well prepared.

Speaker 7 (25:02):
And that's the reason that he said for announcing first
on social media this resumption of nuclear weapons testing.

Speaker 1 (25:09):
Yeah, it looks different because of everything that's happening in
the world, But this should have been done in his
first term. This should have been done by Biden all
the way back to Ray. This has been long time coming.
It's just basic common sense. You can know more about
what John's covering and everything the President accomplished on this
Asian trip. The White House Briefing Room with John Decker
his podcast it'll be up at ninth Central, No. Nine Eastern,

(25:32):
eighth Central. John is always great reporting.

Speaker 5 (25:34):
Thank you, Thank you, Michael Pabai, you got it all right.

Speaker 1 (25:38):
So back to David's an ady CEO of American Policy Roundtable,
host of the Public Square, and of course senior contributor.
I want to shift now to kind of the biggest
news of the week because for twenty five years we've
been told there's one existential threat, global warming, and we're
to blame. Now it had all been it was never

(25:59):
science to begin with, and it's been disproved by science.
But suddenly it had become the religion of the far left.
And now Bill Gates says, now not about global warming, now,
never mind, never mind, what becomes the new issue and
new religion for the left if it's not global warming,
because they'll be shopping for it. You never you don't

(26:22):
abandon God, You don't abandon a spouse without replacing them.
You're going to replace it, so who becomes the new
left false God?

Speaker 6 (26:30):
Well, permit me if I could to just tweak the
paradigm the illustration just a bit. The religion of the
left is autonomy. That you are a single functioning reality
unto yourself, and that you are accountable to no one,
but that everything is about you.

Speaker 3 (26:48):
That's the religion of the left.

Speaker 6 (26:49):
That's the premise on the basis of the godless equation
of the socialist reality or the communist reality. It doesn't
matter what time period in history we're dealing with. There's
a question of your alone in the universe or you
are not. That's the fundamental religion. Global warming was their
primary sacraments. It was their sacrament of legitimization. You could

(27:11):
not be a leftist if you did not get baptized
in the pool of global warming.

Speaker 3 (27:16):
And so here we.

Speaker 1 (27:18):
Are, I am. I would like to announce my resignation
as a host of You're a Morning Show. I'm giving
the show to David. That time. That was beautiful.

Speaker 3 (27:27):
Have I wear out that for an hour? Michael?

Speaker 1 (27:30):
That was beautiful? All right? This is the baptism of
the holding global warming go ahead.

Speaker 6 (27:36):
So, and there were three times now where the doctrines
of the left have expired in recent memory.

Speaker 3 (27:44):
COVID was a complete bust.

Speaker 1 (27:47):
Actually, I disagree with that. COVID thet they got America
to be afraid and got America to be controllable. They
got America to respond to COVID in a way they
never could get them to respond to global warming. But
it proved to be a false model in the end. Yeah,
oh yeah, okay, yeah, it trues to be false model
in the end. Biden in the White House proved to
be a false model in the end.

Speaker 6 (28:08):
And then now Bill Gates, like the grass that withers
without rain and too much sunshine, Bill Gates defined reality.
I think you just wrote a country song go ahead
as the global conflict of of all and it's global warming.
And now he just said never mind, He just said,

(28:28):
never mind. Well, how will there's aneration coming up behind us,
Michael survive if they get lied to any more sufficiently
than that?

Speaker 1 (28:37):
Well, you and I have talked about the epicenter of
American vulnerability is mistrust. We don't trust our elected officials,
we don't trust judges, we don't trust cops, we don't
trust each other. Trust is but we don't. I will never.
I said this on the air to you. I think
I almost got fired for this too. I don't think.

(28:57):
I don't think the CDC will survive, and it's current,
the CDC will never have any credibility with me ever. Again,
you can't fix it with Bobby Kennedy, or you got
to just get rid of it and start with a
new name for me to believe it. Same thing for
the National Health Organization, Same thing for doctors. I don't
think I've looked at my doctor the same Since COVID.

(29:18):
They all lost trust. And the cumulative exposure of politics
and COVID and scandals is nobody trusts anybody. We don't
trust the news, we don't trust our politicians, we don't
trust our police. Let me just say for the record,
out of all those analogies, the police are the only
ones I still trust. But go ahead. I mean, well,
it's undergirding all of our vulnerabilities mistrust.

Speaker 6 (29:37):
What's exciting about all of that is there's no news here.
There's a way that seems right into a man, but
the way they're in his death, we are incapable of
governing ourselves without external help.

Speaker 1 (29:50):
That's the whole premise of American Beyond rebuking me, what
do they go for a new sacrament?

Speaker 3 (29:58):
Oh sure, oh sure yeah?

Speaker 1 (30:00):
Or maybe like Casey Kaseum, moving up one big notch
aborstionit on demand. I mean, is that the obvious one.

Speaker 6 (30:07):
That one's always going to be there? Okay, that's a
cardinal virtue for the left. So that that that that
that will always be there. Let's see what comes now
they're all holding their breath a bit. And right now
they're just happy with the outrage and the absolute outrage
of hating Trump. That really goes a long way to
get what they want anyhow. So if they can't have

(30:27):
a new sacrament right now, they'll just up the intensity
and the discomfort.

Speaker 1 (30:30):
Well, can I get my early answer?

Speaker 3 (30:33):
Sure?

Speaker 1 (30:33):
My early answer is it'll be socialism. Well, and it'll
be it'll be the sacrament of envy anybody that has
something that belongs to you. Therefore, your grocery should be
free and they should pay for them. Your dinners should
be free and they should pay for them. Your childcare
should be free and they should pay for them. Your
rent should be free and they should pay for I
think that is the open door.

Speaker 6 (30:54):
Yeah, and I don't think there's any doubt about that,
just like.

Speaker 1 (30:56):
The far left to go from poverty to reach distribution
of wealth.

Speaker 6 (31:01):
Right, Yeah, yeah, there it is because social justice ultimately
is the way that they can play god again. See,
they got to play god with global warming. They were
in control of the universe. Now Gates saying can't get there.
Never mind. So sooner or later they will run out
of other people's money, as Margaret Thatcher said, and they'll
realize that social justice is also an impossibility because justice
begins with my neighbor, not with my government.

Speaker 1 (31:22):
What's the discussion this weekend on the Public Square? I
know it's daily, but what's the weekend one?

Speaker 6 (31:27):
We're still on the wonder of the Atlantics publication of
the ongoing Revolution, the fight over Declaration two fifty and
the response we've beginning from that's been extraordinary.

Speaker 1 (31:37):
And wasn't it encouraging to hear Bret Parri say that's
his project next year?

Speaker 3 (31:40):
Yeah? That's what.

Speaker 6 (31:42):
You know what, there are a number of people that
are waking up to the fact that we've got to
do something to basically redeclare the Declaration. So the public
Square dot com is where you find that conversation that.

Speaker 1 (31:52):
Thank you much and two hundred stations nationwide or senior
contributor David Zanatti, thank you as always. I will see
you next on a golf course.

Speaker 4 (32:01):
This is your morning show with Michael Deltona.

Speaker 1 (32:10):
It's fifty six minutes after the hour on this Thursday,
October the thirtieth Halloween tomorrow. Good morning, and thanks for
listening to your morning show. There are a lot of
ways to communicate. Using the talkback button on your iHeartRadio app,
you'll see a microphone. You don't rot on hold anymore.
In talk radio, it'll count you down. You got thirty
seconds to make a common ask a question, and take
your place at our kitchen table. The other ways, email

(32:31):
me Michael did at iHeartMedia dot com. I got this
from Randy. How is it Congress at fault? From my understanding,
it's the Senate Democrats not passing anything. Could you please
explain all right? And I'm not being insulting at all.
Congress is a term that is generically used. There are

(32:53):
two chambers in Congress. One is the House, the People's House.
That's where the House of representatives. Remember, in our founding
father's design based on population. A state could have more
representatives than another state, but all have two senators because
we are the United States, and they have equal representation.

(33:14):
So you have the lower House, the House of Representatives,
and then the Senate as one of the three branches
of government. So I think sometimes in conversation people say
a congressman that could be a senator or a representative
that's number one, number two in the House. Simple majority

(33:34):
moves the bill forward, but the filibuster in the Senate
makes it have to be sixty percent, and that's the problem.
Republicans control both the House and the Senate. That's fine
for the House. The House can get passed whatever they
want in terms of a continuing resolution. The problem is
you don't have sixty Republican senators to pass it in

(33:55):
the Senate and ratify it.

Speaker 4 (34:02):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael del Choano.
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