Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, It's Michael. Your morning show can be heard on
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(00:21):
us for the podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:23):
Why not at the time?
Speaker 1 (00:25):
Two three?
Speaker 2 (00:27):
Starting your morning off right, A new way of talk,
a new way of understanding.
Speaker 1 (00:33):
Because we're in this together. This is your morning show
with Michael Bill Charm. Monday morning. It is seven minutes
after the hour. Welcome to Monday, April to fourteenth year
of Our Lord, twenty twenty five. It is the eve
of tax day, though I mean file, meaning I just relax.
(00:54):
It's done and a lot of money's gonna leave my
checking account at about twenty four hours on an auto draft.
But yeah, don't forget text days tomorrow. You've been putting
it off. It wis Constantine charge with killing his mother
and stepfather is now being accused of plotting to kill
President Trump with ties to Ukraine. At least thirty four
people are dead after a Russian ballistic missile attack Sunday
(01:15):
in Ukraine. President had his annual checkup. He is in
excellent health. The FAA says. The tour company that operated
the fatal flight that crashed into the Hudson River is
shutting down. And Rory mcle little, Rory McElroy, not Charles Schwartzel,
but McElroy making history Augusta the Masters, the impoverished son
(01:40):
of only child, lonely only child. Oh oh oh, what
a lonely boy would go on to be a protege
and golf great. He now joins an elite group, not
just those that wear the green jacket, but the others
that share a career grand slam. Seriously, in all, I mean,
(02:09):
first of all, you leave with four point four million dollars,
which I guess doesn't even nobody even brings that up.
You know, I was like, I was feeling sorry for
Justin Rose. That's twice in a Master's he's lost in
sudden death. Well, and I'm thinking, you know how buy
Brady wants a green You know what's that green jacket
two hundred and fifty bucks. If that take that four million,
get yourself something pretty. Yeah, he left with two and
(02:30):
a half million dollars playing a game I love for
the week. That's a that's a good gig. But I
get it. If you're Rory McElroy, you wake up this
morning and you're a you're in a pretty elite group.
Gene Sarazin nineteen thirty five, Ben Hogan nineteen fifty three,
Gary Player nineteen sixty five, Jack Nicholas nineteen sixty six,
(02:52):
Tiger Woods two thousand and now Roy McElroy twenty twenty
five career Grand Slam Winners' Did I miss something? Did
Jim nance? Was he choked up as he was talking
about all that yesterday at the end, Well, you know,
Jim always gets reverent when he's in Butler cabin, any
green jacket presentation with the chairman next to him, Jim
(03:15):
is always touched. But to have someone everyone wanted to win,
little Rory McElroy. Did you notice he was coming up
the eighteenth after the beautiful te shot and then the
approach hadn't happened yet. Jim was doing all the bio
he grew up a poor child in Northern Ireland. His
father only had one token that represented two weeks work.
(03:38):
The family did neat so Rory could hit thirty balls,
and Rory never resented his father for not working harder,
or his or his mother. Why she couldn't get a
side hustle, we don't know. But Rory went on to
win the Masters, but nobody. They're coming up and he's like,
all the sudden, he's halfway through the bio. Yeah, he's
doing the parents day games, those siblings, and then he
(04:02):
hits the shot in the bunker and then he misses
the short pot. Jim starts saying, and then there's Justin
Rose who's happily married. But uh, I do I hear
Jim's call? Now, In listening to Jim Nance's call, you'll
notice am Worry is lining up this big pot to
finally make history, finally do what he has spent and
(04:25):
dreamt his entire life of doing. Jim feels a need
to talk throughout the entire swing, getting every last morsel
of drama out of it. Listen, I think he long shadows.
Long shadows symbolic at this moment, symbolic of his father.
The journey has taken the gime. Couldn't earn Jim NaN's
kind of money for all this history. Look at this?
(04:48):
What have I rehearsed for? When it goes in, You're
about to hear journey Coloy Ha's his masterpiece. He has
his masterpiece. He has this green jacket and four point
four million dollar. You know, call me up, call me.
I'm bunny hungry slob, But I think I'd be on
(05:11):
the plane going, hey baby, I made four point four
I had to go through my social Security and had
it all up through the ears to get to that.
Who wasn't rooting for Rory McElroy. I mean the entire
world and you know you just look at that group,
Sarah's and Hogan player, Nicholas Tiger. Now, Rory, what more
(05:35):
can you achieve at thirty six years old? Congratulations to
Rory McElroy, your Master's champion. In sudden death eleven under
par he gets buying chestin Rose. I really thought, now
Deschambeau fell off, he had a terrible final round. Obviously.
I really thought those two going head to head and
playing together would be so focused on each other that
no one would see ludvig Olberg flying up and and
(06:00):
Oburg did for a while, but it was really justin
Rose that put you know, leader after round one, leader
after round two, terrible round three and came charging back
like Secretariat closing in a race to make it close
and send it to sudden death. It was maybe possibly,
You know, the ones with Tiger and Nicholas are so
(06:21):
special in my lifetime. Now there were Gary player Hogan
and Sarah'sen for others, but probably the best Master Sunday
of my life. It was just unbelievable. I was exhausted
when it was all said that I've started a thirty
six hour fast just to try to recover. It was
a nice moment. Yes, isn't it funny how we've all
(06:42):
struggled with fasting and praying. Prayer is like a huge
you know, we get the our father as Jesus is
teaching us how to pray, and I think he knew
what a struggle that would be. I mean, I think
there if any father listening to me right now, it's
one of your most your biggest struggles in life. You
(07:02):
might think it's this, that or that. It really is
praying with your wife, praying with your children, praying with
their family or fasting and praying. And now it's a
fad diet, so now everybody's doing it. I mean, sneak
a couple of prayers in and you'll be fasting and praying. Absolutely.
I I love days like this. I mean I would
look in the eye and I would say, everything is
(07:25):
virtually and there's nothing new. Like if I felt like
it was something you needed to know that was new,
I would tell you, but everything's just tarif taif of
tariff taif taif terif terif taif taif tterif taif taif
taiff tiff. Did I mention tariff? What about tariffs? And
if you take your mind off the tariffs, maybe Rory,
maybe this seventeen year old cuckoo, and then the arsonist
(07:46):
in Pennsylvania. That's about it. And most people in talk
radio will tell you, ah, it's a tough day to
be out there. These are the days I love. You
know what changed my life as a manager. This is
many many years ago, and I realized how much urgent
things we're keeping me from doing important things. And if
(08:10):
you just sit there and crisis manage, if you just
sit there all day putting out fires, if you just
sit there settling everybody's squabbles. Well, you'll be living in
the urgent, but you'll never step foot into the important.
In days like this give us the time where we
don't have so much to talk about that we can
(08:30):
take a deep breath talk about something important. And so
today we're going to do that. And part of it
is this fascination with Bill Maher, because there was a
time Bill Maher was so far left he was alone
an atheist leftist. I mean, I think Rachel Maddow probably
(08:55):
owns that mantle. Now. I don't know who's become Bill
Maher now that Bill Maher, But how did Bill Maher
seemingly become sensible? Part of it is the visual illusion
the left went so further crazy left than that. Yeah,
(09:16):
he comes a little back towards the right in response
to their nutsness. But then there's also the crazy right
that's gone so far right. You see, eight years ago
I felt like I was far right. I don't anymore.
Bill maherr Probably felt far left. He certainly doesn't anymore.
(09:41):
But if he were, or if in your mind he's
still left, and Donald Trump is certainly right in more
ways than one. I might add, how important is it
that these two get together and talk? How important? Could
can you imagine? And it's just an imagine. It's probably
(10:03):
not likely. But the social dilemma and the matrix is
our biggest enemy. It's our biggest threat. I think it's
a greater threat than Russia, probably a greater threat than China.
You're more likely to die from within than out now.
I think Roan Iran is the most predictable threat to
(10:27):
the world, and terrorism physically to America. But this social
dilemma and AI now coming, and the matrix that everybody
is in a matrix bubble, and the two don't even
see each other, not even live in the same reality.
(10:48):
The hatred that's building and brewing. Wouldn't it be something
of what look I love when look at Red's not
even listening. But you're like leaning in, Jeffrey, you really
enjoy this show. Don't you love this show? I appreciate
that you do that. Red poor a bourbon he was
yon I saw. Don't think I didn't see it, So
(11:08):
lean in. There's it? What if when it's all said
and done, Kid Rock orchestrates a meeting that is the
early seed in the beginning of the end of the matrix,
Kid Rock bringing America together. Can you imagine, Well, we
had Dennis Robin go to North Korea. You remember, that's crazier,
literally crazier things that have happened. Yeah, and then hopefully,
(11:31):
you know, for the history books, they take that suit
and do it in black and white. At least calm
it down a little bit.
Speaker 3 (11:36):
Never had anybody in the Oval office that looks like
they're fixing to be shy.
Speaker 1 (11:40):
I don't even think he was wearing clean underwear under
that suit. I really don't. He looked like he wasn't
wearing underwear. There is that, but I want to play
for you some of the I look the best, Bill
Maher is the entire six minutes and forty five seconds,
but there are f bombs. I can't do that. I
(12:01):
wish I could have taken the entire six minutes and
forty five seconds. He remember my analogy of when you're
just caught up in the urgent. Here's the five six
stories of the day, Tom, we didn't say anything. Look,
a slow news day is a great day to focus
on what's important. So our journey of discovery today is
I wish we could have just taken that entire six
(12:22):
minutes and cut out you. I think he said the
F for three or three times, and then he used
a slang for oral sex because Trump took him into
the it's called the Executive Office, it's off the off
the oval office, but Bill Maher has a different name
for it because of what Bill Clinton did in there.
But other than that, he wasn't vile. He just naturally
(12:43):
works in words that we don't. But I have a
couple of different examples of an essence what Bill Maher's
takeaway was from his visit to the White House, and
I think there's a takeaway for all of us if
we dare to go beyond the urgent and dell into
the important, and I hope you will.
Speaker 2 (13:02):
It's your Morning Show with Michael del Chorno.
Speaker 1 (13:06):
Time for your top five stories of the day. NAO, Well,
like Joe Biden, we get transparency, and we get physicals,
and we get the answers to the physicals. And President
Trump is an excellent health, clean bill of health. Following
his annual checkup. Mark Mayfield has the details.
Speaker 3 (13:25):
White House physician Shawn Barbabella som Trump was found to
be in excellent health and described his neurological condition as robust.
Speaker 1 (13:32):
In a memo released Sunday.
Speaker 3 (13:34):
Overall, Barbabella concluded the seventy eight year old president is
fully fit to execute the duties of his office.
Speaker 1 (13:40):
I'm Mark Meanfield. Police in Pennsylvania are searching for an
arsonist after an early morning fire at the governor's man.
Speaker 4 (13:46):
Firefighters responded to the Harrisburg residents of Governor Josh Shapiro
at about two am. The governor says his family was
home at the time, but we're able to escape unharmed.
The fire reportedly caused significant damage to part of the home,
but there were no injuries. The state police are offering
a ten thousand dollars reward for information that leads to
the arrest and conviction of the person suspected of setting
(14:08):
the fire. I'm Lisa Carton.
Speaker 1 (14:10):
Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick says the exemption of electronic devices
from recently announced tariffs will not be permanent.
Speaker 5 (14:18):
In an interview with ABC's This Week, not Nick said
wall phones, computers, and chips are exempt from these tariffs.
They won't be exempt from semiconductor tariffs that are coming soon.
Speaker 1 (14:27):
So this is not like a permanent sort of exemption.
He's just clarifying that these are not available to be
negotiated away by countries.
Speaker 5 (14:36):
Lut Nick went on to say these types of products
are vital to US national security. It's therefore a security
risk for there not to be manufactured domestically. He confirmed
that tariff's on pharmaceuticals will also be announced separately. I'm
Tammy trheo well.
Speaker 1 (14:49):
Probably the biggest story of the day, A Wisconstantine, charged
with killing his mother and stepfather living with the corpses
for weeks, is now accused of plotting to kill President Trump.
NBC's Maggie Espa as the latest one the newly unsealed
federal court documents from the FBI.
Speaker 6 (15:05):
Authorities found in the team's phone a manifesto calling for
the assassination of the President of the United States in
order to foment a political revolution and promote white supremacy.
Speaker 1 (15:16):
No details have been released on where or when Cassup
allegedly planned to target the president, and as for the
ties to Ukraine.
Speaker 6 (15:24):
The affidavit stating Cassup had paid for at least in
part a drone and explosives and was communicating with someone
with the Ukrainian number, and.
Speaker 1 (15:34):
As we've covered several times today, little Rory McElroy in
sudden death over Justin Rose, completes the career grand slam,
gets his master piece, as Jim Nance would describe, and
joins the elite group of Saracen Hogan player Nicholas Tiger,
(15:56):
now Rory McElroy. NBA season ended. We had someone as
we had some losers on the ice late and he
beat the Sabers. Ducks fell to the Abs Baseball late
night last night and you fell asleep. The Dodgers lost
to the Coupies four to two.
Speaker 4 (16:10):
Hi.
Speaker 1 (16:11):
I'm Keith Andrews and Mobile, Alabama, and my morning show
is your Morning Show with Michael del Jarno. Hi, I'm Michael,
and your morning show is heard on great radio stations
across the country like one oh five, nine twelve fifty
WHNZ and Tampa, Florida, News Radio five seventy WKBN and Youngstown,
(16:33):
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Love to have you listen to us live in the morning.
And of course we're so grateful you came for the podcast. Enjoy.
We need your help. We don't have big marketing bucks.
Tell a friend. Seriously, tell a relative if you're listening
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(16:53):
use all the help we can get. Don't forget. It
is your show and we can't have it without your voice,
and we wouldn't want to so many ways to communicate.
Make your voice heard here at this Morning's Kitchen Table.
You can do so by email Michael did at iHeartMedia
dot com. You know what's interesting about this audience? What's
that they most I would say a trend for about
(17:14):
the first twenty years. I'm watching this Blue Origin space
flight that is a that is eleven minutes. I don't
think I could handle. You don't think so? No, I
mean it's just I mean I guess it. I guess
if it's so high, it probably you know, like I'm
much better in an airplane than I am, like on
(17:37):
a balcony, but I don't know going to spaces that's high. Yeah,
that's getting on up there and then you start floating.
I don't know. But anyway, I digress. No, So, first
twenty years of talk radio, people like to call and
they'd wait on hold forever, oh, just to be heard.
(17:57):
And then we went through you know, the advent of
internet and a lot of people. I used to always
say it this way, call and then if you're one
of these people that don't you know my wife was
that way, I'll never forget. Like I'm a verbal communicator.
So we've really virtually never had a fight. I think
we've had one two maybe, okay, a lot anyway, but no.
So I could win a verbal argument with her, and
(18:20):
then I'd wake up in the morning and a letter
would be waiting, because she communicates and writing, and so
one letter and that was it. I never took advantage verbally.
She sends you a seasoned decision. It was a seasoned desist.
It's Dobby dene Well. Of course, my whole job is
to love her, care for her, cherish or lovers, christ,
love the church. I don't like failing that. But so
(18:41):
I used to always say, you know, look, if you'd
like to call, call, and you know, and if you're
more of a writer, email this show in particular, we
get very few emails, but you can email me Michael
d at iHeartMedia dot com. I get some Michael d
iHeartMedia dot com. But you guys love to talk back,
so use it. Listening on your iHeartRadio app. There's a
microphone press and it'll count you down and give you
thirty seconds to make a common ask a question. We
(19:04):
love having a lot of talkbacks. Why because it's your show.
It ought to be your voice if you're just waking
up thirty eight minutes after the hour. We have a
Wisconsin tine charge with killing his mother and father, living
with the corpses for two weeks. This is a case
of real mental illness. But now we get word maybe
even plotting to kill Donald Trump with ties to Ukraine.
(19:25):
Got to keep your eye on this story as it
continues to spin out of control. Speaking of the President,
he had his annual physical. He is in excellent health,
and history was made at Augusta. Rory McElroy gets the
master piece, the final jacket, the green jacket that's eluded
him for sixteen years, and he joins an elite group
as a career growing Grand Slam winner and making history.
(19:47):
All right, We were talking earlier about in management. For
all those of you that are listening to me that
you're a manager, think about that today when you're working.
How much are you putting out fires? How much are
you doing things on your to do list little things,
probably a lot of little things other people could be doing.
(20:07):
How much time do you spend in the world of
urgent versus the world of important? Because that can happen
in talk radio. If there's so much going on, like
elections and polls and this and that, most talk show
hosts would say, that's a great day to be on
the air. And a day like today is a nightmare.
(20:28):
There's just really nothing going on. Everything's tarif of tariff, tariff, tariff,
but nothing new, and a mentally ill teen in Wisconsin
and uh Rory McElroy. That's it. But see, I love
days like this because we can step out of the
urgent and into the important. And that brings us to
Bill Maher. Bill Maher is a fascinating conversation because in
(20:48):
Bill Maher you can see all the shifts in our culture,
all these shifts, and somebody's got to say it out loud.
And if repetition is the mother of all learning, resist
being aggravated. We were designed to be self governed in
a republic, and your founding fathers would tell you self
(21:09):
governance is impossible for immoral people. It takes a morality
to govern yourself. And then for those who can't. It
takes a government to maintain law and order. But at
our best, we'd be a nation under God, undivided, indivisible,
(21:33):
with liberty that comes from God, not man, not government,
and justice for all that's us at our best the
minute and I know wonder God was added in the
fifties in the Pledge of Allegiance, not in the origins
of our country. It was always there. The minute we
(21:57):
abandoned God, law and order began to unravel self governance
began to unravel, The republic began to unravel. I mean,
probably the most important story today comes to us from
the daily signal by way of Heritage Foundation. Young people
(22:18):
are driving an increase in faith in church attendance in
the West. We said we're going through a cultural shift,
a cultural awakening, not to be confused with a spiritual revival.
But things tend to go in fifties, and it's about
a little over fifty years ago, not much that the
(22:40):
Hippie movement began to become the Jesus movement, which led
to a spiritual revival. So the cultural awakening went into
spiritual revival. We've seen a cultural awakening and now we're
starting to see signs of a spiritual revival, and it's
coming from the youth. Telling everybody, I've been watching this generation.
(23:03):
I've been raising three of them. My house has been
filled with their friends, not an overly religious mom and
dad shoving Jesus down their throat. We were doing nothing
and watching God drawing them and them thirsty. I'm watching
this young generation has a they were born with a
(23:25):
thirst that didn't exist in our generation. We've talked about
this before. It can be a fascinating form of rebellion.
Even Look, if you're raised by a bunch of conservative
parents in the fifties, the way to rebel is grow
your hair, wear crazy clothes, use slang, smoke, drink rebel. Well,
(23:52):
when those hippies are raising you, the way to rebel
is cut your hair, go to church, dress normal. Uh No,
I'm a boy. And if you need to see there,
it is. Mom, you're into some kind of leftist freakism.
(24:14):
But I think it's something deeper than that. And it
gives me great pause, I might add, because that kind
of a generation was born with a natural thirst, quest
and desire. Tells me God's raising up a generation for
a time that's really going to need it. Just like
(24:37):
we saw the generation of the Great Depression, those children
went on deliberate the world in the greatest generation. Something's up.
So keep in mind the cultural shift that we know
is happening. Look how gradual and slowly. Because the minute
(24:57):
you abandon God, what did you abandon him for? You
don't abandon something without replacing it. If you abandon God,
you're replacing it with something. If you abandon your family,
you've replaced it with something. Could be another woman, could
be an alcohol, could be gambling, could be something, but
you're replacing it. We abandon God for moral relativism a
(25:21):
theory kind of like evolution a theory, and that theory
is whatever you think is true is true. Nothing is
absolutely true, nothing is absolutely right, nothing is absolutely wrong.
That means a philosophy if anything goes, anything goes, just
doesn't work in large numbers. Francis Schaeffer said, put two
(25:44):
people on a bridge. Now you got a problem. One
guy thinks you cross the bridge. You smile at the
person and say good afternoon. The other person believes you
don't belong on the bridge. I'm going to throw you
off of it. Now you got a problem. Especially when
culture can't go and keep that from happening. So that
(26:04):
began political correctness going down its merry way, and then
it became new tolerance in the name of tolerance meaning look,
I have a worldview that comes from Christ himself through
his living Word, governed by His Holy Spirit, through discernment
day and day out. So I'm around people all the time,
(26:25):
including myself, that fails that standard, and so I use
grace and mercy to tolerate. But I do not validate.
I don't validate sin for myself, and I don't validate
sin for others. And I'm not called to. I'm not
called to by my heavenly Father or by my founding fathers,
in the Constitution or its intent, the Declaration of Independence.
(26:48):
But I am called to be tolerant. They used tolerance
as a weapon. It's called new tolerance meaning Okay, there
is no right or wrong, there is no absolute truths.
So now you can have a penis, but you can
be a girl. Now we're going to be in the
bathroom with other girls, biological girls, or we're going to
(27:08):
be in a boxing ring or on a basketball court.
This is your Francis Shaeffer Bridge moment, Now what do
you do? And by the way, they would go one
step further and say, and if you don't not tolerate,
not even accept, if you don't validate it, you are
(27:29):
the problem. That's why I kept explaining how the Democrats
they kept shifting us, starting with Obama, we're not a republic,
We're not a republic, We're a democracy. We're a democracy.
And at first you corrected them, and then you just
let them go. Now, all of a sudden, democracy never defined,
of course, and they never defined it for you. Democracy
(27:50):
has morphed into or conflated into the Democrat Party. So
now if you oppose their worldview, their policy views, guess what,
you are an enemy of democracy. You are an enemy
of this country, all right. So that all happened gradually,
starting with abandon God, and we just go down that
political correct road right off a cliff, and then all
(28:12):
of a sudden, it just ends. Did you ever think
it would end so quickly. That's a cultural awakening, that's
a cultural shift. There's a political shift. I don't even
(28:34):
think either party's relevant anymore. One's gonna die and the
other's going to transform into something different. Why do I
bring all this up because we're gonna take a break
and we come back. I'm gonna play you a clip,
and the thesis of the clip is the monumental shift.
(28:56):
Remember when Bill Maher represented atheism and the farthest left politics.
Why is he not that anymore? Did he move to
the right or did the left move even further left
of him? Remember the spiritual story, The youth are driving
an increase of faith in church attendance. That just happened naturally.
(29:20):
As this cultural shift is happening, as this kid Rock
arranged meeting with Bill Maher and Donald Trump. And in
a day that might seem like there's not a lot
of urgent news stories, let's take advantage of this important one.
Could it be, Kid Rock, Bill Maher and Donald Trump
(29:43):
are taking the first giant leaps away from civil war
and towards unity again, just by willing to, even though
they disagree, be together, listen to each other, talk to
(30:04):
each other, maybe, just maybe, and this is scary, show
you that they could even like each other, That it
is possible to disagree with someone and still respect them,
disagree with someone and still like them. There's an old
(30:28):
Italian thing. I learned this very young so I never
I never shared with my family like things that were
going on with girlfriends, because what would happen is I'd
trash the girlfriend to them and then me and the
girlfriend would make up, but my family didn't make up
with her. There's going to be a lot of that
(30:48):
in this story too. There's going to be some people
that their initial response to this is going to be violent.
Just keep going. Something's bruin culturally, something's bruined spiritually, and
(31:09):
I'll prove it with Bill Maher.
Speaker 2 (31:11):
Next, This is Your Morning Show with Michael del Chno
roy O'Neil.
Speaker 1 (31:18):
The trial to break up Facebook starts on Monday. What
does it take and what are the issues? Rory will
have the story coming up in minutes. We've been kind
of laying out the groundwork for our journey of discovery,
which is Bill Maher's kid Rock arranged visit with Donald
Trump and he comes back to Left Pill to report
on his findings. It could be the first step towards
(31:41):
ending what I call the social dilemma and the matrix,
or at least that's the prayer. That's all coming up
in mere minutes. First, if you're just waking up, history
has been made at Augusta. Rory McElroy won the Masters
and he's become the sixth person in history to complete
the career Grand Slam. Listen to the unique company he
(32:01):
keeps now Gene Sarazen, Ben Hogan, Gary Player, Jack Nicholas,
Tiger Woods and now Rory McElroy. And leaves with about
four and a half million dollars in his pocket to
boot some money to spend on poppy. Meanwhile, the President
had his annual physical and guess what he is in
excellent health.
Speaker 3 (32:19):
White House physician Shawn barbarabelas Trump was found to be
in excellent golf and described his neurological condition as robust.
In a memo released Sunday, Overall, Barbabella concluded the seventy
eight year old president is fully fit to execute the
duties of his office.
Speaker 1 (32:34):
I'm Mark Meanfield. Why is it so important that the
be end this matrix in this social dilemma? Reasons like
this mental illness and hatred. Police in Pennsylvania have arrested
a thirty eight year old Cody Balmer for arson after
an early morning fire at the Governor's man.
Speaker 4 (32:48):
Firefighters responded to the Harrisburg residents of Governor Josh Shapiro
at about two am. The Governor says his family was
home at the time, but we're able to escape unharmed.
The fire reportedly caused significant damaged a part of the home,
but there were no injuries. The state police are offering
a ten thousand dollars reward for information that leads to
the arrest and conviction of the person suspected of setting
(33:10):
the fire.
Speaker 1 (33:10):
I'm Lisa Carton and that reward paid off eventually the
arrest of the thirty eight year old Cody Palmer and
A Wisconstantine has been charged with killing his mother and
his stepfather and living with the corpses for weeks now.
According to the FBI report released in the case, Nikita
casep was also plotting to kill the President of the
(33:32):
United States with ties to Ukraine. We'll have more on
that next half hour.
Speaker 2 (33:36):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael Ndheld Joano