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March 16, 2026 37 mins

Sounds of the day and getting oil out of the Middle East…and whose problem it is to solve??!!

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

National Correspondent RORY O’NEILL will have the latest on what is happening with the flow of oil in the Persian Gulf and possible plans to reopen oil rigs off the California coast.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Episode Transcript

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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 in 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 two.

Speaker 2 (00:16):
Three 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.

Speaker 3 (00:30):
O'Dell charn and we cannot and we will not have
your morning show without Joe Voyce.

Speaker 4 (00:35):
Oh.

Speaker 3 (00:35):
We're a big country, but we're a cozy, little kitchen
table of family. Always use the talk back if you're
listening on the iHeartRadio app. It's a little microphone pressive.
We'll count you down three to two one. Very professional
we are. You can take as many takes as you want,
but when you finally hit send boom your question, your
comment is immediately here on your morning show. So use

(00:56):
a talk back on the iHeartRadio app. You can also
email Michael Dee at iHeart media dot com where I
got this. Dave is pulling a rory here this morning.
Jeffrey Our Good morning, Michael Jeffrey read reads outsick. Yeah,
I see Nashville's experiencing some really cold temperatures today and
getting colder by the moment, I might add, I think

(01:17):
I realized why there were so many tea times this morning,
right available. Was it forty seven degrees when you left
for work? When I got here, it was forty seven
and it's now thirty six. Yeah, here we are three
hours later and down to thirty six. All right, So listen,
you don't call from Phoenix and brag about how hot

(01:39):
it is, but he does. Well. Time to man up, boys,
No sniffling around aloud around the cold out here in Phoenix.
Of course, we're experiencing the polar opposite. We've had historic
record heat throughout February. Mark, Yes, it came our way,
and that's how we had out the thunderstorms, we add,
and that's why we're cold now. If I could I

(02:01):
trade you one one degree day for two of your
thirty degree days, Wasn't that the way it always goes? Though?
Like I'm that way, Like what you know? All summer,
all I can think of is winter, and then winter
comes and after about a couple of weeks. You're like,
summer doesn't sound so bad. Absolutely, don't. It always seem
to go that You don't know what you got till

(02:21):
it's gone. Thanks for bragging. Oh, Blake's doing the same thing.
Our record heat in March moved eastward, causing bad conditions
in your area and beyond you hear sirens and blizzards, tornadoes.
I just have to move my outdoor pickleball time too
earlier in the day. Wow, you people are cruel in Arizona.

(02:43):
This one's a little suspicious. Is rooting for Italy to
win the World Baseball Classic a bad thing? Just asking
for a friend? And it's Big John. My brother went
and saw Italy. Got money on Italy, have money on Italy.
Beware the backdoor cover, the plies on me ball cover.
Big John has three words this morning. Back door cover. Yeah,

(03:07):
my brother was. My brother was in Houston. He saw
Italy play that semi final game. And you again, you know,
all these teams are MLB stars, so I don't some
of these these guys playing for Italy weren't born in Italy.
So I mean, I guess if they can play for him,
you can root for him, right, But shockingly, the US

(03:28):
is headed to the finals. We won two to one
over the Dominican Republic last night, and tonight eight o'clock
Fox South One, you'll have Venezuela and Italy. The winner
of that plays U s A. She's gonna get smoked.
He's got to stopped.

Speaker 5 (03:42):
I really don't know what he said at the end
of this, so revealing he knows what he said.

Speaker 3 (03:46):
That stuck. It's got to be a big bitch understanding.

Speaker 6 (03:51):
I'm going, how do you like my garbage?

Speaker 3 (03:55):
I love your garbage, Tuck, often revealing it's time for
our Sounds of the day. Of course, I did find
that Do Tucker is a comedian. He likes to do Tucker.
I'm saying he's doing Tucker. I'm saying it's a good
impersonationhip Tucker. It's quite quite quite frankly, an evil one
and despicable one. Ah, but here it is, if you
want to hear it.

Speaker 7 (04:10):
His decision to go to war is just a total
betrayal of the American people. I think it's treacherous. I
think it's horrible. I think it's shameful. I think it's evil.
So you think Trump is an evil trader? By the way,
nothing against Trump completely, this war with wrong. So the
foreign nation is being motivated by Abbad Labovich, which is
a Jewish organization, and these asid of Jews are clearly
very powerful and influential, and they're controlling our government and

(04:32):
getting us.

Speaker 3 (04:33):
Into war and blaming them. And by the way, nothing
against what. But I mean, this is what they what
I think is brilliant about it. I mean it's a
decent Tucker Carlson, so is this back and forth with himself? Yeah, okay,
but but but the point is what they all do.
They're all in it for clicks. You know, at some
point you're scratching your head. You're saying, what the heck
happened to Tucker Carlson, the heck happened to candae ellwe

(04:55):
the heck happened to Ben Shapiro. All these people, well,
they're no longer on networks getting paychecks. They live in
a world of clicks, no clicks, no money. I mean,
if integrity meets clicks, you pick clicks. If truth meets clicks,

(05:19):
you pick clicks. That's a game they're playing. So if
you want to appear, you know, to the different segments,
you just play all sides. But I have always felt
like and it doesn't really matter what the distribution is,

(05:42):
whether it's radio, whether it's print, whether it's sitcom, whether
it's drama. Everything that's successful is unique, credible and based
in a key benefit. You got to be in the
right place saying the truthful thing and a way people
trust and in a style that's unique. They've lost all

(06:05):
their trust, they've lost all their uniqueness. They let the
form carry the day and it's destroyed them. And they're
not alone. It's probably what the Democrat Party is guilty of,
which is why Bill Maher addressed it.

Speaker 8 (06:18):
Democrats must recognize that Zuran mom Dannie is the future
of the party. Unfortunately it's the Republican Party. We've run
this experiment many times and the results are always obvious.

Speaker 3 (06:30):
By the way, this is a visual He's going to
show you satellite aerial views of these countries. In the
case of South Korea, vibrant lit up. In the case
of North Korea, pitchtark and so on.

Speaker 8 (06:45):
Here's capitalist South Korea at night from space. Here's socialists
in North Korea.

Speaker 3 (06:51):
Yeah.

Speaker 8 (06:52):
In nineteen ninety Venezuela was wealthier than Poland, but then
Poland finally free of so we had style economics when
all in on capitalism, and now their economy is as
big as Japan and people there have high wages, low inflation, cars, vacations, homes. Meanwhile,

(07:13):
Venezuela traded capitalism for Hugo Schevez's socialism for the twenty
first century, which turned out to be like socialism in
the last minute.

Speaker 3 (07:24):
That's what I worry about every time with Bill Maher.
Sorry about that, but he kind of walks through. In
other words, these are not new ideas. These aren't something new,
and some things fail centuries ago, last century, and this century.

(07:45):
The point that Bill Maher never really landed, and I
wished he would. It's not like you're bringing up socialism
from fifty years ago or socialism from one hundred years ago.
Socialism is failing fantastically in real time. You can look
at California and you can compare it to Florida. You

(08:11):
can look at Venezuela and compare it to these other countries.
What is the game the Democrat Party is playing? And
why don't others call it out? Did you ever think
we'd get to where Fetterman and Bill Maher left or right,

(08:36):
maybe the best voices of reason, and maybe speaking the
truth from a side that used to look crazy is
even more powerful than from the I told you so side.
And that was never more evident than the Oscars. You know,

(08:57):
when I was a little kid, the Oscars was a
big I mean, there were celebrities and stars, and there
were everyday people like us. My stars were everything. Movies
were great, movies were bigger than live movies are what
we went to talked about. I mean, what were the

(09:18):
biggest nights, World series, Grammys, Oscars. They were a big deal,
and who they were and what they said and what
they wore mattered. Now it doesn't, and they seemed to

(09:38):
be the only ones that don't realize it. I said
this earlier in the Platinum Card Hour, but I do
remember it was in the late nineties and I was
watching the Miss America pageant and it just discerningly hit me.
This is over. They don't know it. They think it's
still a big deal. This is so over. And that's

(10:04):
how I felt the last few times I had to
even try to watch the Oscars. Last night, for the
first time, I didn't even bother that's how irrelevant it is,
and it's even more fascinating that because most Americans now
think they're stars, their whole life is they're narcissistic projections
on social media. They're the big deal. Not these stars,

(10:28):
and these movies don't make it into our life. We
don't even go to the theater anymore, which is why
at some point the Golden Globes, because at least it
covers the stuff that we watch on Amazon Prime or
on Netflix. Jemmy's become more relevant. But here's what catches you.
They still do the big like. They think they're a
big deal. Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome Barbara Streissan. Then

(10:53):
the orchestra plays and they do the big grand interest.
But it's like the pageants in the nineties. It's so yesterday,
it's so over. You're the only ones that think you're
a big deal. And then their politics always speaks louder

(11:13):
than their work, and eventually that makes it impossible for
you to even enjoy their work. It's not Friday night
and we're rushing home from work, stopping at Blockbuster, getting
some Chinese to go, and watching a movie at home anymore. Heck,

(11:43):
the most profound point I could make for you is
there never will be. And it's not because it's not
Billy Crystal. We don't have any shared experiences enough to
have an evening like this, even if you tried to
make it the top ten movies of which I didn't
hear of any I never heard of any of them.

(12:04):
I didn't see any of them. You could never find
ten movies that America would have a shared experience of
believing are the best and what is the best. If

(12:27):
you can't decide what a woman is, how do you
decide what a best movie is. So take all this
with a grain of salt. But here's Conan O'Brien. I
think addressing the politics of the Oscars that is so
distasteful for the rest of the American people outside of
that room of narcissism. Straight up in the monologue, I

(12:47):
should warn you tonight could get political, okay, And if that.

Speaker 9 (12:51):
Makes you uncomfortable, there's an alternate Oscars being hosted.

Speaker 3 (12:55):
By Kid Rock.

Speaker 10 (12:57):
Yeah, it's at the David Busters down the street.

Speaker 3 (13:00):
I think you're in that after turning point in the
halftime show. Oh but it did get political. I know
you've never heard of this director, or maybe you have.
David Bornstein or his movie mister Nobody against Putin, But
here was his acceptance speech, and of course it got political.

Speaker 9 (13:20):
Mister Nobody against Putin is about how you lose your country.
From what we saw when working with this footage, it's
that you lose it through countless small little acts of
complicity when we act complicit, when a government murders people
on the streets of our major cities, when we don't.

Speaker 3 (13:40):
That's implying, of course, because two people interfering with law enforcement,
one turning a car towards an officer. The officer was
still in front of it and one was to the side.
It's all captured on film, genned up by her lesbian wife.
You run over an officer, you get shot. They're going

(14:02):
to compare that to the way you get killed in Russia,
or how about the thirty thousand in Iran. But I
believe they believe all this. That's what's pathetic. I have
a Jane fond of that's gonna make your head explode,
although sadly she kind of loses it at the end,

(14:25):
like the kind of thing I see at the nursing home.
In part two of Sounds of the Day, everybody's talking
about weight loss injections. There's a reason. I think it results.
Now it's fat and muscle, and sooner or later you
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(14:48):
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(15:10):
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(15:32):
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Speaker 2 (15:48):
This is your morning show with Michael del Chno.

Speaker 3 (15:52):
Let's finish up. We can't our sounds of the day.
This is the Hollywood director David Bornstein trying to compare
Trump to putin America to Russia because they're so similar.
All this is he went an oscar for a movie
no one saw.

Speaker 9 (16:06):
When we act complicit, when a government murders people on
the streets of our major city, leftist narrative, we don't
say anything when oligarchs take over the media and control
how we can produce it and consume it.

Speaker 3 (16:23):
By the way, what is the government done to dictate
how you go to a movie theater or how you
watch shows? Never mind, we're all scattered different streaming services. Uh,
this was Jane Fonda. You knew she'd get below.

Speaker 4 (16:44):
Let's talk about this pen Jane Vonda.

Speaker 3 (16:48):
Why we have to try?

Speaker 6 (16:49):
Yeah, the murders are gonna be bad for workers. A
lot of people are gonna lose their jobs. We're gonna
we're gonna have higher prices, We're gonna have political control.

Speaker 4 (16:59):
Over coming like that, and the days of mister Turner
creating CNN to be the news source D trusted, trusted.

Speaker 6 (17:08):
It did not take positions. It reported the news and
to see what's happening.

Speaker 3 (17:13):
And so we have to stop.

Speaker 4 (17:18):
Have you have you reached out to Ellison or Zazov?

Speaker 6 (17:23):
No, I did have many conversations with Ted Surrandos about it,
because you and I are friends.

Speaker 3 (17:29):
Well tell you something. The only person understood that interview
was Joe Biden in his present day. Hi, my name
is vern Aaron and my morning show is your Morning
Show with Michael del Jorno.

Speaker 1 (17:49):
Hey, it's me Michael. Your morning show can be heard
live five to eight am Central, six to nine Eastern
and great cities like Jackson, Mississippi, Akron, Ohio, or Columbus, Georgia.
We'd love to be a part of your morning and
we're grateful you're here. Now enjoy the podcast. This is
your morning Show. I'm Michael del Jernal.

Speaker 3 (18:05):
Redd is out sick and apparently now even Redd has
a groupie. I think This is Sherry from Bullfroud, but
she's singing to red women. They will look come man,
they will goo.

Speaker 4 (18:20):
Girl.

Speaker 3 (18:20):
When the rainwa you clean, you feel better, Red feel better? Red.
Red's out sick today, the flu. This is why we
don't all work in the same room. See, that would
be something you have to worry about. Now I don't
have to worry about catching it. I stay healthy. Roger
is listening in Sacramento, California. Has an observation on media

(18:42):
bias or is it just plane lying? Boy?

Speaker 11 (18:45):
Michael guys watched the news the other day and they
were touting, gasp, sixty five cents a gallon, which is
probably true, And then they asked a personal side, what
were you paying before we went? And iran, oh, twenty
five bucks tank, how about now fifty you're telling me
is doubled?

Speaker 3 (19:01):
Why would NBC show that? At blatant lie?

Speaker 11 (19:04):
And then every time they also show the price of gas,
they all show a gas station at town like California.

Speaker 3 (19:09):
I think it's more than biased. Why are they lying? Well,
it often is. Yeah, of course it is more than
just bias. Listen. You know sometimes it's kind of like
that acceptance speech from that one director, or you just
did a whole documentary on Russia and Putin and you
think America reminds you of that. You either didn't take

(19:30):
a very honest look at Putin or you are so
jaded in trying to make everything fit your worldview and
your agenda that naturally that's what you see. What is bias?

(19:51):
Stories you cover, stories you don't, angles, you explore, angles,
you never explore people, You talk to people you don't.
The quotes that you choose and the quotes that you
don't all woven together to sell a narrative an agenda.
And so when you go back and you look at

(20:13):
the stories they're ignoring, it's because it doesn't serve the narrative,
never mind the storytelling and the truth. I have to
fight my own bias every day. I read things the
first time, and of course I have a worldview, my agenda,

(20:39):
isn't I mean, if you do the values and the
rules for values, the beliefs of my life, it's so
far down that it's any of this political nonsense. In fact,
I only get involved in politics in so far as
it relates to I want my kids to have a
better future than me. I want them to live in

(21:04):
a republic, not a mob rule cool kids democracy that
doesn't really exist. But yeah, it's a fine line. You know,
Satan is a deceiver. He's also a distorter and an accuser.

(21:29):
I don't know what's worse, the deception the distortion. I
mean distortion I think is even more effective than flat
out deception. This is something I've wanted to play since
I first saw it. I believe that role modeling is

(21:52):
a great shortcut in life. Listen, there's two ways I
can get wisdom. I can learn it the hard way
from living, or I can roll model it. There is
actually a third. If you're a believer, you can pray
for it. Because if your eternal life is Christ's life,
it is already begun and Christ in you already as

(22:17):
the wisdom of past, present and future. So it's in there.
You just got to decrease enough and ask for it
enough to hear it. Wisdom is not the same as learning.
Learning comes from reading and studying. Wisdom comes from having lived.

(22:38):
A man who lived really right, a man who lived
really well just died in an old age, and I
happen to have his final speech, And I thought, when
I was going to share this with you. I thought, well,
the easiest thing to say is who wouldn't want to

(22:58):
hear that? Here's a man in hospice knows he's dying,
he's imparting as he departs. I mean, contrast that to
the oscars last night. These people's lives are a mess.
If anything, Pray they don't overdose. Pray they don't kill

(23:19):
themselves with anorexia or drugs or alcohol. None of them
are married to their original I mean very few of
them are married to their original. Party mean, these people
don't have any room to tell you how to live.
And they are also living a Hollywood glamour culture in

(23:40):
a post celebrity America. I mean, it's really kind of
sad to watch this. This is worthy of our time.
This is a guy that won a national championship shaped
young people, coached at the highest level, but lived at
an even higher level, and he's giving his last speech
ever and before he departs this earth in death, he

(24:07):
wants to remind us of a few things, a few
key lessons that he learned. Lou Holtz, delivering his final
speech effort, I don't know why it's not working. Do

(24:27):
you have any idea why that wouldn't be working. I
don't know why that it wouldn't be working. The enemy
could be, could be. This is so strange. I even
played it in que what oh that is so frustrating?

(24:50):
Can you find it on yours? Lou Holt's final speech effort.
I have no clue why this wouldn't be working. Is
that you're ever made?

Speaker 5 (25:01):
But it's king, I said to his third wife. I
am going to keep you a long and I won't
keep you along here today. But there are just some
things I want to share with you. You know, God
is good, God is great, and how blessed we are.
Let's count our blessings, all the things that we are

(25:22):
fortunate to be able to do. We are so lucky
in so many different ways. But I think the topic
I want to talk about here is as born with
a silver spoon in my mouth. I was born during
the Depression. My father had a third grade education. There's

(25:43):
no welfare, no foodstamps, no safety debt. There is, I say,
blessed beyond. My life is because of the things I
was taught by my family. Life is not complicated because
down tore making good choices. Whoever you are in this world,

(26:04):
good or bad because the choices you make. Choose your drugs,
drop out of school, join the gag at tattoos, from
head to bottom, you're choosing them difficult in life. Stop
blaming me. I didn't make those choices you making. Now,
how do we make good choices? Just by following three

(26:25):
simple rules? We complicate life and we don't have to.
Three simple rules are all we need. Full Number one,
do what's right. You know, there's never right time to
do the wrong thing. There's never wrong time to do
the right thing. Just stop and say what's the right
thing to do. We have too many people in this

(26:45):
world that make bad choices and blame somebody else. So
let's choose do the right thing. It's right to be honest,
right to be on time, right to be fire. Pull
Number two us do everything the very best of our building,
not anything being all American. I ain't may play the

(27:07):
NFL like Frank, but we can be the best we're
capable of being. And that's what we have to understand.
What does our capabilities with my children? Not anything being
any student, I just say, well that the best you
could need. If it wasn't, what would going to change?

(27:27):
And if it is, God being full. Number three, show
people you can, I say, show people you care. You
never going to be a bay again. They need to smile.
The kind word encouragement. We all have difficulty, we all
have challenges.

Speaker 3 (27:47):
Best part of life.

Speaker 5 (27:49):
Being able to handle it. Let's remember this. The most
important people at this summit are you.

Speaker 3 (27:58):
Do you make the.

Speaker 5 (27:59):
Difference the one for you?

Speaker 2 (28:02):
No, my neighbor is no cause.

Speaker 3 (28:04):
But we have to do what I think is beautiful
about this. I've never heard Aleuholt's speech before. I mean,
I've heard clips of him, you know, doing in studio analysis,
or old clips of him coaching, a lot of those
phrases and sayings, But I've never heard of speech, not
like when Jimmy B gave his speech before he died,
something about when people talk to you right before they die. Right,

(28:29):
all the things that fool us in life distract us
in life, they melt away. Look, if you make here
real big, having gets real small. If you make it
all about yourself, others get real small. I was shocked

(28:55):
at the similarities. I have done an entire address on
right where you're at right now. It is the sum
of all the choices you have made. Like if you're
somewhere bad and you go, Man, my life sucks. I
don't like my wife, and my kids are broughten. I've

(29:16):
lost my job. I hate what I do. You're only
condemning yourself. You got here every individual choice you made.
And by the way, if you can choice your way
into a bad place, guess what, you can choice your

(29:37):
way out of it. That's the good news. He brings
up that theme, the sacredness of others. I always call
this getting outside of ourselves. This younger generation is a
hard time getting outside of themselves. If you spend all
your life looking at yourself in the mirror, thinking about
how you look, how you feel, what you want, I'm

(29:58):
telling you you're going to be miserable. Created by a
creator to be obsessed with yourself. You were created by
a creator to serve others, to love others, to be
the solution for others, or die trying. And I love

(30:23):
the part about being positive. I mean, did you ever
think the next word out of his mind? I was
born with a silver spoon. I was born in the depression.
My father's have a job, There was no there were
no food stamps. Where's the where's the silver spoon? How

(30:45):
many times have we talked about that with David Sanaddy.
If you don't have that depression era a child, you
don't have the greatest generation to freeze the world of Hitler.
We're at our best when things are worse. That's where
the best in us is forged and created. I don't know.

(31:09):
Someone lived a good life, stayed married, raised children, reached
the highest level of his profession twice as a coach
and as an analyst. He's on hospice, he's dying of
cancer and chooses to give one last speech to say

(31:30):
goodbye and impart before he leaves this earth. And what
does he tell you do right? I don't know who
defines right anymore. And a culture of moral relativism. I
still define it through scripture. Be positive, do everything to
the best of your ability, and make it about others

(31:53):
and caring for others. I thought that was a lot
better than I don't know. Hearing from Jane Fonda last.

Speaker 6 (31:59):
Night, you know that's why Hegseth said the Secretary of Defense, Oh,
he said, we can't have CNN can't come soon enough
to be under the control of paramount, because we.

Speaker 3 (32:11):
Know that Trump wants to.

Speaker 6 (32:14):
Hurt I mean, I slept with the guy that created it.
You did, you have a personal stake in it.

Speaker 4 (32:23):
Talk about that when, like you said, when you were
here a heg Seth say something.

Speaker 3 (32:28):
I mean, there's several things here. Sometimes you see Jane
Fond on television, you go, wow, what a beautiful woman
at her age. In this particular case, you can see
her up close and you can see all the the
age and the plastic surgeries. I mean, when she went
to sniff or nose didn't even work. She loses her place.
I'm around dementia every day. I can tell you there's
some lostness beginning. But that isn't my point. I'm certainly

(32:52):
not making fun of her by any stretch. It starts
getting into outlandish crazy. I mean, I think what's getting
everybody's attention is how law she gets.

Speaker 6 (33:00):
It's I have many conversations with Ted Sarandos about it,
because you and I are friends, and this was you know, this,
this was any merger, not necessarily just the paramount merger.
But the paramount merger is really problematic because you know
they've already in order to get the permission to do

(33:20):
the merger, they had to cave to what or they
felt they had to cave to what Trump wanted, which
was fire anyway, But.

Speaker 3 (33:30):
We're gonna win. My point is you can get outraged
by these comments and debate these comments. Are you know what,
you spend your time elsewhere like hearing from people like
Lou Hols. I didn't watch the Oscars, but I caught
Lou Holtz's last speech, and I'm glad you just did.
This month and every month, we remember the more than

(33:50):
sixty seven million innocent babies whose blood had been shed
through abortion in our nation. Their absence cries out to
ears that hear it. The weight of that loss should
move everyone to rescue even more. And guess what we can.
Preborn network of clinics is on the front lines every

(34:12):
single day, rescuing babies from death and from mothers in despair.
Over four hundred thousand babies have already been saved through
the hope, compassion, and the truth of these clinics. And
it starts with a very sacred moment, a mother meeting
her baby with an ultrasound. That's the game changer. Seeing
that baby hearing its heartbeat, many most cases for the

(34:36):
first time, it doubles the chance of choosing life. And
if you're pro choice, you don't care whether they choose
life or death right, just that they have the choice.
The ultrasound is twenty eight dollars. A gift of twenty
eight dollars has a fifty to fifty chance of saving
a life that's going beyond a position and making a difference.

(34:57):
One hundred and forty dollars helps potentially rescue f babies.
And you could do that all the way up and
make the math impactful. And all gifts are tax deductible.
Give by dolling pound two fifteen using a keyword baby,
pound two fifty keyword baby, or goord to Preborn dot
com Forward slash Yms to give securely online. That's Preborn
dot Com Forward slash Yms sponsored by Preborn.

Speaker 2 (35:21):
It's your Morning show with Michael del Chorno.

Speaker 3 (35:25):
Well, it's pretty simple. We got to find a way
to get oil through that straight of horror moves and
out of the Persian golf and into our pop. Roy
O'Neil is covering that tough story, and it looks like
the President might be announcing some kind of international coalition
to help in that area.

Speaker 10 (35:40):
Rory Well certainly trying to get some countries to sign
on to sending barn navies to some of these locations
in order to protect the oil that's going through the Strait.
Germany is already a hard no. But we did hear
from the UK Prime Minister who said he's trying to
put together a team of navies that could get in

(36:00):
there and provide the protection the escorts for those ships
containing oil, natural gas and other cargo. But it's going
to take a lot. The President said on Air Force
One last night. Look, we don't really need to be
doing this at all. In terms of the US. We're
almost self sufficient when it comes to oil. We certainly
don't get any meaningful amount from Iran. So you know,

(36:21):
if these countries want to lower their own oil and
gas prices, let them protect it.

Speaker 3 (36:26):
Well, the one with the most interest is China, right,
I mean, there's eighty percent of the purchaser of that oil.
I wonder where they're at. I do love the idea
of it's the world's problem, or in that region, a
real problem needing energy. Therefore it's the world's to solve,
not just Israel and Americas. But someone's got to make
these insurance companies feel like the boats will be safe,

(36:49):
and maybe international coalition is just the way to do it.
What about reopening oil rigs off California, He asks, with
ten seconds to go. Yeah, there is a plan.

Speaker 10 (36:58):
At least the Trump White House is using the Defense
Production Act to try to reactivate three platforms off the
California Coast. California though balking at this, saying the sable
plants are polluters.

Speaker 3 (37:10):
This is probably going to court. Great reporting as always, Rory. Hey,
remember what Coach Holtz said, Go love someone more than
yourself today. Make a difference in someone's life. Cherish You'll
almost see you again in the morning.

Speaker 2 (37:21):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael Vindel Jorno
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