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May 19, 2025 9 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Check Douglass in the Power Hour on six to ten
wtv NA two one nine eight eighty six of my
number A two one wtv and Dave yost Up who
is the Ohio Attorney General, and and I guess will
remain so oh well, he's not running for governor anymore.
Still not crazy about that whole thing, but it is

(00:21):
what it is. He has issued a report on missing children.
It's the twenty twenty four Ohio Missing Children Clearinghouse Report,
which coincides with National Missing Children's Day, which is coming
up being observed on May twenty fifth. I didn't know
there was such a thing. I'm really not sure what
you're supposed to do with it, but that's the day

(00:46):
May twenty fifth. This report revealed this is Ohio. Now,
just the state of Ohio reported missing in Ohio last
year twenty one thousand, three hundred undred and forty two people,
which believe it or not, is a decrease of one

(01:06):
thousand and thirty two people in the previous year. Now,
out of these twenty one thousand, three hundred and forty
two people, sixteen thousand, four hundred four were missing children.
That is also one thousand and one fewer than there
were reported missing in twenty twenty three, so as bothersome.

(01:27):
As scary, as outrageous as those numbers are, they're actually
better by one thousand in twenty twenty four than they
were in twenty twenty three. Ninety six pointy five percent
of the reported missing children. This is where it gets good.
That means fifteen thousand, eight hundred and thirty four out

(01:49):
of the sixteen thousand, four hundred four were recovered safely
by the end of twenty twenty four. However, three children
were also found dead. Now, I don't know what the
circumstances are behind. I mean, we're tens of thousands, that's

(02:10):
a lot of kids. I don't know if it's domestic things,
you know, divorce situation, one spouse took them from the
other spouse, or whether they were you know, ran away
and hit under the neighbor's porch. I have no idea,
but as Blazer and I were just talking about tsat

(02:32):
last hour, in surveillance and facial recognition, we are under
the microscope so much that it amazes me that, for
whatever reason, that many people in the state of Ohio
could have been reported missing last year. This clearing House

(02:54):
reports a result of a collaboration between local law enforcement
agencies and National Crime Information Center, which is operated by
the Department of Justice. The NCIC maintains a database of
missing persons and criminal information based on data provided by
local law enforcement. When a child goes missing, a report
is created and entered into the NCICE database. Once found,
that case is updated and the report gets closed out.

(03:17):
So again, you know, there's still still too many children
that were not accounted for by the end of the year.
But that number is just just outrageous. And the point
of sharing this with you is, honestly because we don't
know what the circumstances were behind all of these these disappearances.

(03:37):
The point is watch your kids. Watch your kids. I
always told mine when when my kids were littalized, that
if I can't see you, you're too far away. Pretty simple.
If I can't see you, you're too far away. That's
your job as a dad, as a parent, got to

(03:57):
keep an eye on them. And kids will kids will
disappear at a heartbeat. If you turn your head, they're gone.
So keep an eye on your children. And I just
wanted to pass those numbers on maybe maybe honestly to
put a little fear into you. Don't let your kids
go running off at the store, at them all whatever

(04:20):
while you're over on one side of there on the no,
huh huh, keep an eye on your kids. And before
I get out of here tonight, I get this up.
I get a newsletter, an email newsletter from an organization
called International Living. Are you familiar with that? Are you,
Zach No, I'm not, okay, I don't know much about it.
They have what they call their postcards, which are articles

(04:42):
written by people that have actually made the transition and
are retired, some retired early to various locations around the globe,
and sometimes they there's one right now. And in order
to find out the name of this eye, I got
to subscribe to the magazine, the physical magazine, And I

(05:04):
just might do it because it's such a well written article.
But the dollar is still strong everywhere but here and
this place. In today's International Postcards, guys Living, he say,
you know, for twenty five hundred bucks a month, a

(05:24):
couple can live a life of luxury. I got a
nice twentieth floor luxury condo, two bedroom, two bath luxury condo.
I say, everything there has two bedrooms, and two bath
because it's assumed to be a retirement situation for most people.
But there's a maid's quarters because many people opt to
have and a maid full time, which is six and

(05:46):
a half days. I think that the Monday through Saturday morning.
Then they get half a day off on Saturday and Sunday.
That's the custom on this island, the where they are,
and run you about five hundred a month. Wow, they
lay out here's what I'm paying for my rent. Here's
a eight hundred and fifty five dollars for twentieth floor

(06:09):
overlooking the ocean, two bedroom, two bath luxury condo with
a doorman by the way. And I keep looking at
this stuff and reading this stuff, and I'm thinking, as
much as I absolutely totally positively be on the shadow
of any doubt, will always be an American and love
of the United States of America. Man, this stuff is tempting,

(06:30):
it really is. That's what I want to ask you.
You're not really old enough to think about retirement yet,
are you? No? Not really not at all. Do you
think if you can envision yourself in thirty years from now,
when that time, could you see yourself living someplace other
than here? Yeah, if I can move back to Canada,
I would. That's not inspiring. Canada is cold, the North.

Speaker 2 (06:52):
The island Newfoundland. I would move back if I can't
now obviously.

Speaker 1 (06:57):
Well, they have posters out on you.

Speaker 2 (06:59):
Probably we got to let that run out. Statue of
limitations on some things. No, I would move back there
just because I fell in love with the place. But
that's other than that.

Speaker 1 (07:10):
No, I don't. I haven't been enough places to know.
Some of these tropical islands are just so irresistible that
I don't.

Speaker 2 (07:17):
Like the sand.

Speaker 1 (07:18):
You don't, seriously, No, something is so wrong with you.
I don't.

Speaker 2 (07:23):
I mean, I will go swimming in the ocean for
a minute.

Speaker 1 (07:25):
Now without going through sand. You've got to go through
sand to get to an ocean, see.

Speaker 2 (07:29):
And then you have to take a shot. It's a
whole process, and gosh, I can't.

Speaker 1 (07:33):
I just don't. It's not mean. Panama was very appealing
to me. Costa Rica, not largely because of the crime
and drug cartail stuff, but Panama was very appealing to me,
and again not expensive by the standards of what I
would be paying here for far less. I just I'm
I'm really really thinking about it, and nobody. Quite frankly,

(07:56):
anytime I talk about it, nobody's stepping Oh no, you
don't want to do that. Here. There's why I'm not
getting any warnings from friends, family, or you know, Facebook,
people who warn you about everything. I'm not getting any
warnings saying don't do it. So I'm really thinking all
I basically need is a good cell phone access and

(08:17):
internet access, and everything else is negotiable from that point.
But when I was looking at Panama, one of the
things they got what they call your ex patriots, the
people who are still citizens, but they have like living
visas for these other places. Sure, so the American ets
patriot populai Setema in Panama is apparently pretty strong. And

(08:38):
you can live in the village and you know, play
on the beach and look out over the sand. But
if you you know, if you want to go up
the road twelve minutes, you can get to Waye Walmart. However,
it's the custom really is to buy from the local shops, vendors,
farmers and so forth, and get all that fresh stuff.

(08:58):
I could I'm really serious, he could see myself living
somewhere else.

Speaker 2 (09:05):
I hear this is just a tip I here Tijuana
is pretty cho no no, no, trying to help you.

Speaker 1 (09:12):
Man, You will never see my Tijuana brass down there.
I I'm just curious. Like I said, nobody is stepping
up and tell me don't do it. So I'm actually
feeling like this is probably going to be my direction.
I mean, not tomorrow or anything. I still got a
few good years left in me. But yeah, somewhere south, south,

(09:34):
south of the border, close to the equator, where it's
warm and my knees don't have to hate me. I'm
kind of liking that idea.
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