Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, It's Michael. Your morning show can be heard live
weekday mornings five to eight am, six to nine am
Eastern and great cities like Tampa, Florida, Youngstown, Ohio, and
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. We'd love to join you on the
drive to work live, but we're glad you're here now.
Enjoyed the podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:15):
Two three starting your morning off right.
Speaker 3 (00:20):
A new way of talk, a new way of understanding
because we're in this together. This is your morning show
with Michael o'deill joining ah.
Speaker 1 (00:32):
Pass any cemetery on your way to work today and
it'll remind you you're alive.
Speaker 4 (00:37):
You have the gift of this day.
Speaker 1 (00:38):
Welcome to Thursday, October thirtieth, twenty twenty five, and let's
understand it together. We're all in it together, and let's
make the most of it together.
Speaker 4 (00:47):
Good morning.
Speaker 1 (00:47):
At seven after the hour, the President's on his way
back to Washington from Asia and his pockets are full. Meanwhile,
members of the US House Armed Services Committee are urging
Boeing to take an offer, to make an offer, if
nothing else, that they'll take to employees for a fair contract.
(01:09):
Why President just once sold a bunch of planes. We
can't have any strikes at home and the people that
make those planes and Melissa. The death tolls now up
well over two dozen. We don't even know where most
of the fatalities are as Hurricane Melissa pounded Jamaica, then
onto Cuba, and then onto the Virgin Islands. And the
Blue Jay shocked a lot of people last night, winning
Game five of the World Series six to one over
(01:32):
the Dodgers.
Speaker 4 (01:32):
They head home to Toronto up three games to two.
Speaker 1 (01:34):
Can't have your morning show without your voice to the
talk backline, we go.
Speaker 5 (01:38):
And Big John, I can tell you right now, Zanati's
out of his mind. Cold Republican Party at civil war
with each other. We finally got a leader that's leading
us to the Promised Land.
Speaker 1 (01:51):
I may share that optimism with you, but I have
to disagree with your assessment of all Davidsonati's quote was
the Republican Party they've been in a civil war for
forty years. Did you forget the twenty sixteen primary. Do
(02:15):
you remember when Megan, Kelly and Fox were against Trump?
Do you remember when there were eighteen others that made
him out to be an idiot, a moron, an unseerious candidate,
and one that must never be elected. You're just buying
everything's rosy. You don't think there's anything on the horizon.
(02:38):
The party has always had factions. Donald Trump is just
the latest America First MAGA faction. But the evangelical Conservative
Republicans they didn't go away. Have you been following any
of the fights over Turning Point online? Anytime you have
billions of dollars and you're gonna have fighting the establishment
(03:04):
Republican Party it still exists, and you don't think after
Trump's gone they're gonna want to take their party back. Now,
the Tea Party movement within the Republican Party that's been
absorbed by the establishment Republican Party, and shame on the
Tea Party for allowing it. Libertarians, neo cons, they all
still exist. Trump defeated them and they had to play along.
(03:30):
But once he's gone, if he thinks he's just gonna
hand it to Marco or hand it to JD and
not get a fight from the rest of the party,
remember that I'm not criticizing you, Big John. You know
I love you. Hang on to that thought and let
me know if you feel that way. As we headed
to twenty twenty eight, all right, Lucky for you. Our
(03:51):
economist is also a theologian, so we can talk both
issues with the same guy. David Bonnson is with a
Bonson Financial Group. I first saw him on Fox Business.
I consider him one of the finest money wiz is
in America today. And David, let's start with the FED cut.
It was kind of, I don't know, like an insult
(04:11):
meant as a compliment. So it's a quarter point I
don't know if the market was expecting more, but it
got a quarter point cut and the uncertainty of maybe
maybe not a cut in December.
Speaker 4 (04:21):
What do you make of that?
Speaker 6 (04:23):
Well, it was definitely J Powell poking the bear a
little bit. Again. I think the president deserves it. I
think his behavior has been outrageous when it comes to
the FED. I think he's set a precedent for future
Democrat leaders to do things that now Republicans won't have
any mortal authority to say, you're not supposed to be
(04:43):
doing that. And I think the Republicans who are sitting
around condoning what the President's done should be ashamed of themselves.
But then for J. Powell to go say what he said,
for the reasons he said it, I thought were pretty silly.
It's certainly the to say, you don't go admit that
you've already made your mind up two months before a meeting,
(05:06):
you wote meeting and treat if it's real meeting. And
so that is a great thing to say, except for
the fact that he wasn't saying it as a reminder
of basic ad process. He was saying it to basically
poke at the president.
Speaker 1 (05:25):
He doesn't want the president heading into the holidays with
all victories.
Speaker 4 (05:29):
He wants some uncertainty.
Speaker 1 (05:30):
He wanted to give him the quarter cut that they
need to give, and then also hurt the president personally.
I mean, it was just obvious, I think to everybody,
as obvious as it is he's.
Speaker 4 (05:39):
Going next year.
Speaker 6 (05:42):
I agree with that. I think that the problem is
that was only necessary because of the fact that someone
has now put a president out there that you're supposed
to announce and advance what you're going to do for
months down the line. And I think that the pale
is is an institutionalist who believes the Fed's supposed to
(06:03):
have some credibility in financial markets, and for financial markets
to price in two months ahead of time, a one
hundred percent chance of a right set, which is what
they had done. That that's not great either. So there's
really just no winners in this whole thing. And it
was surprising though, and I'm not very often surprised by
(06:25):
anything gum Runner does.
Speaker 4 (06:27):
I thought you might be.
Speaker 1 (06:28):
You know, we always talk about these, you know, how
the market is going to react, and yesterday was flat
to down. Basically at these volumes, it's basically flat.
Speaker 6 (06:39):
But so how much of this was It was down
four hundred points from its high though, so it wasn't
a big deal. But it was flat on the day,
but it had been up four hundred points, so the
inter day move was something. But again that you're right,
it isn't a big deal in the brand scheme of things.
Speaker 4 (06:58):
Mortgage rates kind of come down.
Speaker 1 (07:00):
I mean, you know, the president, there's a big lofty
discussion about you know, the president really only had about
a year, which is why he's worked so hard and
got so much done. Because the outcome of the midterms
is going to pretty much be the end. And so
some people would say, well, you only got two years now,
he really only had one because he's going to be
in full campaign mode in year two, so he couldn't
get to everything, and one thing he hasn't gotten to
(07:22):
is really rolling up his sleeves and solving the mortgage crisis.
And but it's ticking in the right direction.
Speaker 4 (07:28):
Right.
Speaker 6 (07:29):
Well, I mean mortgage rate. I don't know what's the
president is supposed to do about mortgage rates? Is that?
Is that a new thing Republicans want, Is the president
of the United States being in charge of mortgage rates? Well?
Speaker 1 (07:39):
No, I mean all he could do was improve the
economy to the point where interest rates would naturally you know. Yeah,
I mean this goes back to a conversation.
Speaker 6 (07:48):
Down when the economy has improved, that's I guess what
I would.
Speaker 1 (07:52):
Know, it goes the opposite way. So yeah, I don't know,
but I mean that's what everybody is saying. But you've
already taught me that we don't necessarily want to root
form orgage rates to.
Speaker 4 (08:00):
Go real low. That's not necessarily a good thing.
Speaker 6 (08:03):
Yeah, I think you want to root for interest rates,
which is different than mortgage rates, to be at a
natural place where where buyers and sellers find equilibrium and
borrowers and lenders find the healthy place.
Speaker 4 (08:17):
And we think that's what we think that would be
three and a half four percent dish.
Speaker 6 (08:21):
Eventually for a ten year yield on the bond, what
people would pay, what the government would pay to borrow
money for ten years is going to reflect nominal GDP growth,
what you think the economy will grow. And so if
inflation is going to be two and real growth is
going to be three, then you'd want five percent. And
(08:44):
that's what we had throughout the Reagan and Quinton years.
Right we haven't had it since the financial crisis. We're
not going to have it again, and with the massive
amount of government spending, it's I don't believe we're going
to see it again in my lifetime. But terms of
where we are right now, you have a ten year
at four percent with inflation at about two to two
(09:06):
and a half, so you're expecting real growth of one
and a half percent. So the reason you could get
interest rates lower is if real growth goes down. That's
the opposite of what President Trump promised.
Speaker 4 (09:20):
Yeah, and it's doing supposedly.
Speaker 6 (09:24):
Real I mean real growth. You know, inflation is higher
right now than it was for the last six months
of Biden, and real growth expectations are declining. What President
Trump could do is surprise people with higher real growth
than expected. But so you don't get real growth from
announcing trade deals. You get real growth when stuff actually happens.
(09:45):
And none of it is happening.
Speaker 1 (09:47):
Yeah, but it presumably will. I mean, in other words,
the fruits of today's labors will be felt.
Speaker 4 (09:55):
You're two, you're three, right.
Speaker 7 (09:57):
I don't know.
Speaker 6 (09:58):
I don't know what those neighbors are. All I know
is we keep we keep pardoning criminals, and and I
don't see I don't see real stuff happening. But you're right.
There have been big announcements, but they're what they call
frameworks of deals, Michael, and the framework of a deal
is not a deal. And so I'm hopeful some of
these things will come together. I think that the deal
with Japan has some stuff in it. I liked a lot,
(10:21):
but we don't have a final deal with China. The
deal we do have with China is going to really
upset people in Magna because it's going to be more
trade with China, not less. But the deal with India
isn't done, the deal with Brazil isn't done. The deal
with the European Union and the UK are done, and
they don't they don't amount the stuff that's going to
push the economy higher. But you know, the big tax
(10:44):
bill did give the tax benefits to companies to to
do capital expenditures.
Speaker 4 (10:50):
I love that.
Speaker 6 (10:51):
So there's there's things out there. But no, I'm not
predicting a big economic boom next year. I think that
there's a real mixed bag. And you got basse upon
thousands of small businesses that are getting stammered by Kim.
Speaker 1 (11:06):
Yeah, tariffs, and nobody's really addressing tax rates. All right,
let's go to yesterday. Rasmussen did a report. I'm gonna
do the report in like ten seconds, and then I
want to talk to the theological mind, to the big picture.
The report basically shows that seventy percent of American adults
say marriage is important in terms of personal happiness, forty
(11:28):
six percent of those saying very important. Fifty four percent
of Americans believe we'd be a better country if more
people had traditional families. When you talk about specifically children
in parenthood, it's even higher. Seventy six percent consider being
a parent more important in terms of their personal happiness,
including fifty five who say very important. Bottom line is
(11:50):
the whole thing translates by partisan lines. So when you
get to marriage or children, and again children is even higher,
presumably because marriage, which is can fail and parenthood continues.
But you're looking at seventy six percent of Republicans say
it's important. Thirty nine percent of Democrats say it's important.
The Left has always been at war, it seems, with
(12:13):
God and faith and family. So that whole movement to
destroy the family and whatever that was necessary for their agenda.
It seems to have been very effective among Democrats, but
not among America in total, and especially those on the right.
Speaker 4 (12:29):
I don't care about either.
Speaker 1 (12:31):
I want to talk to the theologian David Bonson in
God's Plan for the family. What is it about marriage
and parenting that is always more important than anything else
we accomplish in.
Speaker 6 (12:43):
Life because it was our created design. And so much
like what I wrote in my initial book that you
first brought me on to talk about on work, that
God created mankind to work, and he created mankind to
be in union with a vice partner and to have
(13:03):
children together, build a family together, and out of that
union build civilization. So family became the building block for civilization.
Speaker 1 (13:14):
So family, but so family becomes the house. You know,
it's either a house under God or not. And there's
a structure to that family that makes up the neighborhood,
that makes up the municipality or the community that makes
up the state, that makes up the United States, that makes.
Speaker 4 (13:31):
Up all the way to civilization. Right, it works its
way up.
Speaker 1 (13:35):
So if you if you have an unhealthy family and reproduction,
you're in trouble, aren't you.
Speaker 6 (13:41):
Yes, the three dates the West. This has been true
since the beginning of time, that family is the building block.
And so out of this high regard for family, you
get the various core foundational things that build economic growth,
that build creative you know, novelty in the society, that
(14:02):
also just give meaning to our lives via healthy relationships.
And very unhappy societies, which we've seen in let's say,
certain Western European areas, are ones in which that low
regard for family takes hold. And I understand the desire
(14:23):
to make it a partisan thing that Democrats are anti
family and Republicans are pro family. It just isn't totally true.
What you actually see in the data, not how they talk,
by the way, but how they live, is that very liberal,
affluent cities have very high pro family standards and very
poor conservative cities have low pro family standards. This was
(14:48):
the great takeaway that changed a lot of my understanding
in a book called Becoming a Part by Charles Murray
that came out twelve years ago. You basically have a
lot of liberal God hate readers who live like they
love family. Divorce is low, you know, if they get
married and have kids. And then there are a lot
(15:09):
of communities that would vote more Republican but have data
that is really quite poor. And so I think it's
similar to you see Barnet statistics say no. You quoted
Rapsmussen about the divorce rates in the church. They're not
as bad in the church as they are outside the church,
(15:30):
but they're not good. And so I think overall the
takeaway is that if there's anything that's a non partisan issue,
it is a regard and love for family. This is
a deeply theological issue. But that your point is the
most important one, Michael. It's pro cyclical. When there are
healthy families, there will be healthy jobs. And when there
(15:51):
are healthy jobs, there can be healthy families. And because
you and I are both males, I can limit my
comment here about being a man because I'm an expert in.
Speaker 5 (16:01):
Being male.
Speaker 6 (16:03):
Men that are marriable are employable, and men that are
employable are marriable.
Speaker 1 (16:09):
I'm out of time, and I want to go another
freaking hour with you.
Speaker 4 (16:12):
Okay, here's the beautiful part.
Speaker 1 (16:14):
There's also the cultural influence, which is, you know, the
left is sold, you know, a bill of goods like
we had the whole Riley Gains thing with aoc about
get a real job that you should be defined as
your womanhood, or your sexuality or your career. Let me
tell you something, I don't ever identify myself as a
radio host.
Speaker 4 (16:32):
I am a child of God.
Speaker 1 (16:34):
I am the head of my household where I am
in a covenant relationship with my wife, where we serve
God together and ultimately spend most of our time serving
our children. And that's why I work to pay for
that covenant family bond that we have. I'm not defined
by anything other than those things. And there might be
some confusion in that. But if there was a plan
(16:54):
to destroy the family in America, it's not dead yet.
That's the bottom line of the study. And that's a
good thing. It's not as good as it needs to be, right.
Speaker 6 (17:02):
Yes, And we have to understand that these things follow
a pattern. And if people believe that we will maintain
our family while also abandoning God, we are that is wrong.
Then of family follows a define of God. In America
is doing its best to become a more secular society.
Speaker 3 (17:25):
This is Your Morning Show with Michael del Trono.
Speaker 1 (17:34):
Members of the House Armed Services Committee are urging Boeing
to offer striking employees a fair contract. They don't want
this strike pressing forward. And Hurricane Melissa has killed over
two dozen people in the Caribbean and is still out there.
Speaker 4 (17:47):
Blue Jays are.
Speaker 1 (17:48):
Headed home to Toronto up three games to two in
the World Series. They won last night two in a
row in Los Angeles, six to one, and that's got
Adam bummed out. Anyway, I predicted the Dodgers would win
in four and sweep. We've all underestimated the Blue Jays.
They're just one of those teams that played their best
(18:10):
baseball when they needed to the most. Now the Dodgers
are forced to win two straight. Big stories that we
covered today. Yesterday we had Biden's doctor it came to
the surface, refusing to give a cognitive test to the President.
So everybody telling you that he's been tested and he
was fine. Was clearly a lie. He was never tested
by the doctor. This was a fake presidency hidden. It's
(18:31):
one of the greatest American political scandals in history, and
we don't even.
Speaker 4 (18:36):
Know the breadth and the width of it yet.
Speaker 1 (18:39):
Now today we have new documents that reveal the FBI
may have investigated more than one hundred and sixty Republicans.
You know, we're talking with David Snadi about the lack
of trust? Can we trust our government agencies? What the heck?
Who was president? And what the heck was going on
for four years? And what were they up to? We
did this early in the five o'clock hour. But Mom,
(19:00):
Donnie's mother, an old interview has surfaced bragging that her
son is not an American at all?
Speaker 4 (19:08):
Is he in Islamist?
Speaker 1 (19:09):
Well, his kids would, his parents would tell you he
certainly never assimilated and they certainly never assimilated in America. Meanwhile,
a videotape of his father, a professor at Columbia University,
expousing how Lincoln really inspired Hitler and Lincoln created the
first genocide? So how far could the apple fall from
(19:30):
the tree? And that leads us into our sounds of
the day and leads us into Governor Cuomo was Stephen A.
Speaker 4 (19:36):
Smith.
Speaker 1 (19:36):
This is Mustia Radio waiting on the consequence, It's.
Speaker 6 (19:41):
The best way to get back on your fat is
to get.
Speaker 4 (19:44):
Up off your arm.
Speaker 1 (19:44):
I've been living rent free in that guy's head for years,
and that's just a bull.
Speaker 8 (19:48):
Do you call that chicken a add They're just blowing
off Steve Well, let's start first with mom Donnie's father,
a professor ripping on wine, getting ripped online for his.
Speaker 4 (20:05):
Comparison of Hitler to Abraham Lincoln.
Speaker 9 (20:09):
Listen, the American Indian and the African American each has
a different significance for our contemporary era. The American Indians
were the people on that land when the settlers conquered it.
(20:35):
First is try to eliminate as many Indians as possible.
This was the first recorded genocide in modern history. Then,
with the Civil War, Abraham Lincoln generalized the solution of reservations.
(20:55):
They herded American Indians into separate territories for the Nazis.
For the Nazis. This was the inspiration Hitler realized two things.
One that genocide was doable. It is possible to do genocide.
(21:18):
That's what Hitler realized second thing Hitler realized is that
you don't have to have a common citizenship. You can
differentiate between people. The Nuremberg laws were patterned after American laws.
Speaker 1 (21:36):
This is obviously revised view of history and anti American
view of history. And the most obvious observation is this
is a professor at Columbia University shaping the minds of
future children, future adults.
Speaker 4 (21:51):
Two.
Speaker 1 (21:54):
There are genetic things that make me like my father.
There are influential things growing up in a home with
my father that make us very much alike. Now that
ends for me. A lot of the things that I
would have maybe been just like my father, I'm not
because of where faith led me at an earlier age.
(22:16):
But it begs the question how far did the apple
fall from the tree? You have the mother bragging how
they never assimilated, bragging about her son who's about to
be the mayor of the largest city in America. He's
not American. He never assimilated. He became a citizen, but
he did not assimilate. With a ten point lead and
(22:39):
one week to go. Meanwhile, Governor Cuomo was on was
Stephen a Smith. This sound is going to make you
wonder how could a guy get everything so right and
having not gotten it earlier, how could he under stand
(23:00):
everything that's happening and still want to be a part
of this party.
Speaker 4 (23:07):
You're about to hear Governor Cuomo sound like you're listening
to me.
Speaker 10 (23:10):
Listen, they're socialist Bernie Sanders, aoc et cetera. That far
left is having a war with the moderate mainstream Democrats.
Speaker 4 (23:20):
I'm now a moderate.
Speaker 10 (23:21):
All my life I was a crazy liberal son of
a crazy liberal, but the world shifted so fast that
now I'm a moderate. Okay, So it's the far left
versus the moderate. A lot of the mainstream Democrats.
Speaker 11 (23:34):
Are afraid of the left, so they think they're going
to make peace by endorsing Zoran and they're going to
buy peace with the far left.
Speaker 10 (23:45):
I have news for them. The far left is never,
never going to declare peace. They're going to come for
power and they're going to come to kill them.
Speaker 1 (23:53):
But come to kill them. I mean, that makes a question,
how could you get what's happening within your own party
but not get Islam and the threat of Islam. But
there's his take on is this party? I mean, because
this is not the party of John F.
Speaker 4 (24:14):
Kennedy. This isn't even the party of Jimmy Carter or
Bill Clinton.
Speaker 1 (24:17):
It's certainly not even the party of Barack Obama, though
I think it was Barack was kind of directing us.
I presume Barack Obama is very happy with what Mom
Donnie's father is saying, very happy with what Mom Donnie
the candidate represents, but has the party because it's clearly
(24:41):
not a progressive party anymore. It is a regressive party.
And what is it becoming or what's inside of it
that they're so afraid of. Bottom line, Mom Donnie wins,
that's the end of the Democrat Party.
Speaker 4 (24:59):
Here's more with Governor h Cuomo, with Stevenson.
Speaker 10 (25:01):
Cucuomo, I am saying, I am not going there. That
is not my father's Democratic Party. It's not my Democratic Party.
It's not Bill Clinton's Democratic Party. It's not Barack Obama's
Democratic Party.
Speaker 12 (25:15):
This is a socialist party. It would be the death,
it would be the.
Speaker 4 (25:21):
Death of the Democratic Party.
Speaker 10 (25:23):
The Republicans are licking their lips hoping this kid, Mom
Donnie wins because they can pick them up and carry
them around the country and say here's the Democratic Party.
Thirty four year old never had a job once the
decriminalized prostitution. Doesn't like the police, defund the police abolished Jazz.
Speaker 1 (25:44):
I don't want to remind Andrew Clomo or any of
you listening this, but in the twenty twenty presidential primary,
the Democrat Party was very anti police. They made George
Floyd a martyr and a hero and every cop a killer.
(26:08):
His party, all factions of his party have brought this
moment to be Now, what does this moment create And
the real question are they dead anyway? I mean we're
already seeing at least Stephonic now leading in the governor's
race poll. Why because A Hocus a flaw candidate, and
B she's been siding with Mom Donnie. I think whether
(26:30):
Mom Donnie wins or loses, he's already branded the party
in a very destructive way, as if the shutdown hasn't
done the same. This is Jake Tapper with the New
Mexico Representative Melanie Stansberry. Here's two liberals that can't see
eyed eye on.
Speaker 13 (26:50):
The shutt The Democratic senators from New Mexico, your home state,
vote to open the government so that these snap funds
are not at risk.
Speaker 14 (27:00):
The administration is choosing to starve American children with money
that they already have appropriate.
Speaker 4 (27:12):
The White House.
Speaker 12 (27:14):
This is a choice by the White House.
Speaker 13 (27:17):
This is also this is also a choice by Senate
Democrats to not volk to open the government.
Speaker 6 (27:23):
Yes, it is.
Speaker 13 (27:24):
I understand why they're doing it. They're doing it because
they want Medicaid funds restored. They're doing it because they
want Obamacare premiums to be extended past the end.
Speaker 4 (27:33):
Of the year. I understand the reason.
Speaker 12 (27:35):
I let me just be clear.
Speaker 14 (27:37):
The money for contingency plans is sitting there. That is
why the states are suing the White Houses withholding.
Speaker 4 (27:43):
Funds from worth of staff funds.
Speaker 6 (27:46):
Yeah.
Speaker 14 (27:46):
Yeah, well you may not be a big deal to you,
but it is a big deal to me.
Speaker 1 (27:50):
The grandparents, they can't even convince their own side of
their narrative. And that's what sent John Thune is dealing with,
which is probably why he went on this tirade.
Speaker 7 (28:04):
And the senator from New Mexico is absolutely right. Snaff
recipients shouldn't go without food.
Speaker 12 (28:11):
People shouldn't be getting.
Speaker 4 (28:12):
Paid in this country.
Speaker 7 (28:15):
And we've tried to do that thirteen times. You voted
no thirteen times. This isn't a political game. These are
real people's lives that we're talking about, and you all
just figured out twenty nine days in that oh there
might be some consequences. There are people who run out
(28:35):
of money. Yeah, we're twenty nine days in and they've
done their best to make sure that a lot of
these programs are funded. But at some point the government
runs out of money. Thirteen times people over here voted
a fund snap. Thirteen times they voted the fund with
(28:58):
I ain't going back.
Speaker 1 (29:04):
Here's a sensible conversation with Senator Peter Welsh, who, according
to the NBC thinks, as a sensible guy, it doesn't
end sensibly.
Speaker 4 (29:14):
This is not the way to do it.
Speaker 15 (29:16):
As far as Obamacare, you probably realize a lot of
these premium increases are just built into Obamacare. The expiration
of the pandemic subsidies is only a very small part
of the increases. So that discussion has to be made.
It has to be had about fixes to Obamacare so
it doesn't keep spiraling the cost, don't keep spiling. But
(29:39):
you know you're not going to do that before we
reopen the government.
Speaker 4 (29:43):
It's not going to happen. It's going to have to
happen afterwards.
Speaker 15 (29:46):
Are you ready to vote with the Republicans to reopen
the government at this point as a reasonable Democrat, maybe
others would follow you. You know, I'm not there yet.
Speaker 12 (29:58):
I'm not there yet.
Speaker 1 (30:00):
Everybody thinks the drama next year is going to be
who gets control of the House in the Senate. I
think the drama may be who gets control of the
Democrat Party and the primaries leading up to the mid
term general election.
Speaker 6 (30:15):
You did it.
Speaker 4 (30:15):
I'm waiting at the consequences.
Speaker 16 (30:16):
This is the best way to get back on your fats,
to get up.
Speaker 17 (30:19):
Off your eye.
Speaker 4 (30:19):
I've been living rent free in that guy's head for
years and that's just a boat.
Speaker 8 (30:23):
You cool that chicken a d They're just blowing off, Steve.
Speaker 1 (30:27):
And that's your Sounds of the day for this Thursday,
October the thirtieth.
Speaker 3 (30:32):
This is your morning show with Michael Deltono.
Speaker 4 (30:41):
This is your morning show.
Speaker 1 (30:43):
Have to have your voice to ames iowall we go
in the talk back line.
Speaker 12 (30:46):
Good morning, mister Delder Jorno.
Speaker 16 (30:48):
Democated Party seems to be like twelve blind men that
encounter an elephant for the first time, but the first
thing they remember is an older guy named Biden, who
seemed to have been the best president in the world world.
But the twelve people are the twelve men. The twelve
blind men cannot recognize an elephant because each part they're
looking at it's just what they know of that one part.
Speaker 12 (31:09):
They're lost. They have nothing to do. Even gasm Newsom
is lying about Biden.
Speaker 4 (31:14):
So yeah, it's a mess.
Speaker 1 (31:17):
I think we ought to be prayerful the Republicans don't
find themselves in something scandily, scandalous and messy next year.
Speaker 4 (31:25):
Dan's and Daytona. Hey, Mike, this is Dan from Daytona.
Speaker 2 (31:29):
I want to disagree with your previous guests and your
belief that we need all new people up in Washington
for the parties to get along. I don't think light
can ever be with darkness, and with the things that
they believe and the things that they've tried to retain power,
putting people in jail and so forth. Transgenderism, I don't
think it'll ever happen.
Speaker 1 (31:48):
I think what you're kind of expressing is that we
don't need the Republican Party to come to the left.
We don't need the Democrat Party to come to the right,
or the both to compromise and meet in the middle.
We need both parties to come back to being statesmen
and come back to America. I don't know if that's coming.
I'm with you. I don't think these two will ever
(32:09):
be functional again. But then again, I see one or
both parties gone by the end of the decade, and
I'm very aware we're halfway through the decade.
Speaker 4 (32:16):
Finally to Nashville.
Speaker 3 (32:18):
It's beginning to look good lot luck Halloween.
Speaker 4 (32:22):
You good.
Speaker 1 (32:26):
I don't know I by anybody else, but I want
whatever he's drinking. All right, interest rates we're cut by
a quarter, but the Fed chair also signaled there may
not be a cut coming in December. So a little
teeny gift and a little I don't know, a little
bit of coal in your trick or treat bag as well.
(32:47):
Roy O'Neal or your morning show National correspondence here with
the very latest.
Speaker 4 (32:50):
What do you make of yesterday? Rory?
Speaker 6 (32:52):
Yeah, it's more like raisins in your trick or treat right,
I'm just.
Speaker 12 (32:55):
Raisin box off.
Speaker 17 (32:59):
Look, I think, and Powell said, part of the reason
there may slow the rate cuts is because they don't
know what's going on with the government shutdown. There isn't
good data on inflation, there isn't good data on the
jobs numbers. And he thinks that, as he described it,
when you're driving in the fog, you take your foot
off the gas, and that may be the decision about December.
You've had two rate cuts in a row. Now, I
(33:19):
think everyone figured that it was a good chance of
a rate cut again in December, but Powell signaling yesterday,
maybe not, because we're not sure what's going on. Meanwhile,
we're seeing headlines like Amazon cutting fourteen thousand jobs, UPS
cutting forty thousand jobs, GN cutting thousands, So you know
they're trying to figure out exactly what the economy.
Speaker 4 (33:40):
Is like, and they're driving in the dark.
Speaker 1 (33:42):
It's an uncertain read, So why not have an uncertain
future in prediction? All right, let's go to Melissa, because
this death toll well over two dozen, and they're saying
in the Caribbean. But the presumption is the worst of
the storm and the worst of the damage was Jamaica.
How many of these DeSUS were Jamaica versus Cuba, which
(34:03):
really evacuated well, and by then it was a Cat three,
So it's majority these deests have to be Jamaica.
Speaker 17 (34:09):
I would think Haiti actually for the numbers that we have,
that majority of those are coming out of Haiti, where remember,
this was a relatively compact wind field for the hurricane
force wind, but huge when it came to tropical storms
for size, and it just sat there doing all that
raining on places like Haiti, which is where we've seen
(34:29):
the bulk of the casualties. Sadly, we still don't have
a whole lot of hard data coming out of Jamaica
because they're still in search and rescue mode right now.
But hopefully now that the sun's up again, we'll get
a little bit more solid information about what they're going
to need. Clearly though, from the videos we've seen, there's
going to be a long term housing crisis all across
Jamaica with so much destruction, particularly on the western half.
Speaker 4 (34:52):
Great reporting today, Rory, as always, we'll talk again tomorrow.
Speaker 1 (34:55):
Ar that does it one chance to live this Thursday's
October thirtieth, twenty twenty five. Make a difference in someone's
life today that's within your control. Make sure you cherish yours.
We'll see you all back here tomorrow morning on your
morning show.
Speaker 3 (35:13):
We're all in this together. This is Your Morning Show
with Michael Ndel Joan Now