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April 24, 2024 143 mins
Brian Thomas morning show, weekdays on 55KRC!
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(00:06):
Five o four at fifty five kr C, the talk station Epy Wednesday
series. Say it was a Vacation'llcall Kenny Loggins because you're in the danger

(00:31):
zone. Yes, indeed, HappyWednesday to you. Brian Thomas right here,
glad to be I'm glad to seedress director and there where he belongs,
and looking forward to Adam Kayler joiningthe program at seven oh five for
an hour running for Hamilton Conny Commissioner. Full hour got into power use someming
are going on April twenty fifth.We'll learn about that as well with Adam
seven o five. Judge entered aPolitano at eight thirty Every Wednesday today killing
the Constitution common theme with Judge Editapolitano. Anyhow, I always enjoy hearing from

(00:56):
you as well. Five one three, seven four nine fifty five hundred,
eight hundred eight three talk go withPound five fifty if you have an AT
and T phone and check out fiftyfive care Sea dot com. Wonderful conversation
yesterday was Kentucky State Senator Shelley Funkyfoe Meyer. What an upbeat happy about
the situation going on in Kentucky.Woman, she is man, and I

(01:17):
really think wonderful things are report andI was so pleased to hear about all
the developments that are going on overin northern Kentucky and whole proud she is
the work that's done so far andjust ended their legislative session. So really
a delightful conversation with her, andhe didn't get a chance to listen to
her. She was in studio fora full hour, and I'm glad she
was able to make the trip.It's always nice having face to face conversation

(01:37):
with folks, and of course that'llbe the case with Adam in the studio
at seven oh five, five one, three, seven four nine, fifty
five hundred, eight hundred and eightytwo to three talk pound five fifty on
AT and T phones and again fiftyfive careseeat dot com wherever they're checking out
the podcast. Also Daniel Davis DeepDive on the money for Ukraine isn't going
to do any good. Bottom line, It may do good for America's arms

(02:00):
manufacturers, but in terms of helpingUkraine and whether Ukraine can actually beat Russia
at not so much, it concludesDaniel Davis. Controversial sometimes yeah, but
he also provided a wonderful springboard forus to get the message out on the
Israelis side of the page. Rabbisthat I talked to last week talking about
anti Semitism and the situation unfolding inGaza as well as well Middle East generally

(02:24):
speaking. Anyway, I welcome theopportunity for the debate, and so that's
what the morning show is all aboutfrom my perspective. And of course you
can well fuel the fire debate bycalling up. Let us see here,
what do we want to talk abouttoday? You know this, I had
brought this up previously, came outin additional reporting, and as I stand

(02:46):
and witness the fact that our Congresshas reauthorized pizitive powers seven two powers the
effort to predict crime. Your conversation, as innocuous as they may be,
We've been over this a million times. Have a conversation with someone oversees anybody

(03:07):
outside of the country. They canlisten to that, they can look into
the communication, they can monitor youractivities, they can use that mere conversation
an innocuous one. And I goback to I bought a watch one time.
I got a friend in France andthe manufacturer of the watch was Senator

(03:27):
in France, and I wanted thiswatch, and he lived in Paris,
and I called him up and said, hey, can you facilitate this purchase?
And he did. He was inthe shop. I talked to the
hymn he acted as my translator ona telephone call who and he talked to
the shop owner. So ended upnegotiating the transaction. I got my watch
and moved off with my life thatone mere conversation with a friend of mine.

(03:51):
I went to church with him growingup. He became a French citizen.
That allows the FBI, or ratherthe Department of Justice, the powers
that be the nssay to listen intoand look at my communications without a warrant.
All right, separate issue that,But what can they do with it?

(04:14):
Is it? What? I mean, what possible benefit can it be?
They don't need a warrant them tolook at my communications with other folks.
And this happens to millions and millionsof people every single day. And
I was hoping they at least wouldtake, you know, pull their their
oath to the Constitution by requiring awarrant. But the effort to add a
warrant requirement when looking at follow upcommunications in other words, other communications that

(04:36):
I might have or you might havewith others. No, they shot that
down, so they're allowed to lookinto that. And they even expanded this
we're gonna be talking about. TheJudge of Polotano at eight thirty expanded it
to include your mandated cooperation with ourlettered agencies that they come looking for you.
If you're someone who is involved withdigital communicationtions, then you must cooperate

(05:02):
with them, and you're not allowedto go out into the world and tell
the world that, hey, they'remaking me cooperate. I have to turn
over this data. I don't knowif it's throughout a criminal prosecution or what,
but it's gotten broader. What arethey doing with the data? Is
it for the purposes of predicting futurecriminal behavior? Is it so when you

(05:24):
then commit a crime, they cango back and grab this information and use
it to prosecute you. All thatcomes into play, and we can always
we can ask out loud. Imean, is it possible for them to
stay up on top of things?Is it possible for them to use this
information to prevent criminal activity? Maybethe volume of data is so overwhelming,

(05:46):
and I don't know how much artificialintelligence can help them and assist them and
their job of ferreting through and siftingthrough it all. You have to imagine
that it can to some degree lookingfor certain keywords or code words that you
might use that gesture involved in criminalactivity. But whether or not it's effective
or not, when they are facedwith the genuine reality of a crime that's

(06:09):
actually happening, they fail us.And a wonderful illustration of this is the
Biden administration's agreement to pay over onehundred and thirty eight million dollars to victims
of the convicted sex abuser and GlarryNasser. This is the doctor that was
working for the Olympics and he molestedcountless women. It's a pedophile. But

(06:32):
the reason of paying one hundred andthirty eight million dollars of your taxpayer dollars
because the FBI failed to properly investigateit when they had actual, real knowledge
and information of a crime committed.They knew about it. They acknowledged the

(06:55):
FBI's failure to properly invest properly investigatewarnings that this physician was exploiting his position
to molest young girls under the guiseof treatment. April twenty third statement the
FBI or the Department of Justice andannounced it had settled one hundred and thirty
nine civil claims arising from these allegationsof sexual abuse committed by this man,

(07:17):
who was earlier found guilty of havingabused hundreds of victims of the pretext of
performing medical treatments. The settlement onehundred and thirty eight point seven million dollars.
It could be a dollar, itcould be ten bazillion dollars. The
point was they paid because they failedto carry out an adequate investigation when they
were presented with allegations of his sexualabuse. This isn't crime prediction. This

(07:43):
is, you know, a womangoing into the FBI basically and saying this
guy molested me, and yet nothingwas done. Acting Associate Attorney General Benjamin
Miser who said in a statement,THEI failed to conduct an adequate investigation and
Aser's conduct for decades, Lawrence Nasserabused his position, betraying the trust of

(08:05):
those under his care and medical supervisionwhile skirting accountability. These allegations should have
been taken seriously from the outset,He went on. While these settlements won't
undo the harm Maasster inflicted, ourhope is that they will help give victims
of his crimes some of the criticalsupport they need to continue healing well.
Part of their mental healing is thefact that they have to deal with the

(08:28):
fact that they have their government failedthem. Law enforcement failed them. In
a case of a real allegation andmultiple allegations of abuse. They didn't do
anything a real genuine crime with realgenuine evidence probable cause at least that a
crime had been committed, probable causewhich would have supported a warrant to look

(08:50):
into this guy's activities, look throughhis cell phone, etc. Where I
believe they found proof of as sickcrimes. Nothing first report of the FBI's
Indianapolis Field office by the President ofthe us A Gymnastics in twenty fifteen,

(09:11):
field agents failed to respond quote withthe utmost seriousness and urgency that the allegations
deserved and required. So said atwenty twenty one report by the Department of
Justice Office of Inspector General that wasthe conclusions epic failure. The reports found
the two FBI officials lied during theirinterviews to cover up or minimize their errors.

(09:33):
One of the agents also made falsestatements of the media. In twenty
seventeen, twenty eighteen about how hisoffice handled the Nasser case. Agent also
violated the FBI's conflict of interest policyby discussing get a load of this a
possible job at the US Olympic Committeewhile he was involved with a Nasser investigation,
illustrating the problem when you have realpeople doing the job, you have

(09:56):
conflicts of interest. In my popup, their political ideology may enter the
equation. The guys are child molestersand want to just well cover up the
fact that this guy was molesting childrenbecause they don't find a problem with it.
I don't know. Justice Department hasacknowledged that it failed to step in
for more than a year. FBIagents in Indianapolis and Los Angeles had acknowledge

(10:18):
or had knowledge of the allegations againsthim, but apparently took no action that
according to the internal investigation. Backin twenty twenty one, FBI Director Chris
Ray spoke to survivors about his abuse. I'm sorry that so many different people
let you down over and over again, and I'm especially sorry that there were

(10:39):
people at the FBI who had theirown chance to stop this monster back in
twenty fifteen and failed. After theyfinally searched his staff investigators set in twenty
sixteen. They had found images ofchild sex abuse and followed up with federal
charges against him. Finally, whilethey had all of these sufficient information to

(11:01):
get a warrant or go after thisguy earlier on, they didn't do it.
Now here's a real case, realcrime, real probable cause, real
genuine allegations of criminal activity, andthey didn't lift a finger. And yet
there they are going after everything thatyou have, all your communications with some
foreign entity because well, we're supposedto be able to predict crime, trampling

(11:22):
on our Fourth Amendment, I mean, just destroying the Fourth Amendment in the
name of what. Do you reallytruly believe that they're going to provide us
with greater security by having access tothis information, I personally don't. So

(11:43):
the ones who we are intrusting withthese fihs of powers, these seven to
two powers to quote unquote predict crimeby spying on us without a warrant,
can't even manage to go after ademonstrable pedophile child molester with direct evidence of
his crimes resulting in you going towork today to pay taxes to pay off

(12:13):
in the form of one hundred andthirty nine million dollars settlement for their failure.
Makes you feel really good, doesn'tit? Five sixteen fifty five kros
de talk station five one three sevenfour nine fifty five hundred eight hundred two
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going to be at Sammy's Berger Bistro? Is that next week already? Wow?

(13:46):
First Wednesday of the next month,Man of time, flyes, doesn't
it? Score to the Phone's gotPete on the line, Jay, hang
on your next Pete. Welcome tothe program, Thanks for calling this morning.
Good morning, Brian. Maybe partof the reason they investigation because they
were focusing all their energy on tryingto manufacture evidence against Trump during that same

(14:07):
period that that popped in my mind. Peede or busy busy ferreting out every
man, woman and child who iseven close to the Capitol Building for the
January sixth protests of drunken fraternity brawl. Yes, you were there. We
are going to prosecute you. We'regoing to use all the resources at our
disposal to go after you for literallyno reason whatsoever. Yeah, that came
to mind, Pete. We couldprobably either are completely out of control that

(14:31):
all the alphabet guys and something.They're They're like, the d state has
truly taken over our country, andif we want to do something about it,
we're toast. Well. I tendto want to agree with you as
I look at the FTC banning noncompeteagreements, basically interrupting the contractual uh rights

(14:52):
that individuals have one of every oneout of five Americans. Just fascism.
They just deleted it. Oh youhave a contract that's got a no compete
agreement, it's gone period. Imean, that's the rule that just came
out. Where do they get thatauthority? They don't have any legal authority
to do that, and yet therethey did it. I Mean, you
can believe in or hate non competeagreements, but this FTC agency just out

(15:13):
of nowhere. Boom, they're gone. I mean what, just one more
illustration of the regulatory state getting involvedin matters dictating the terms of conditions of
our lives out here. And youcould pass legislation saying those things are unlawful.
That's what Congress is supposed to do. They're supposed to do law.
I mean again, bipartisan support forgetting rid of no compete clauses. They

(15:35):
could pass the law, and thelaw could go into effect. We could
somebody could go into court and makean argument that that law is unconstitutional.
I would see its way through theprocess. But that's the right way to
go through it, or the sakeof political expedients or expedients generally speaking,
they just issue an edict or amandate. Boom, done, it's over.
What where did that come from?Out of nowhere? From some lettered

(15:56):
agencies sphincters? The answers is whereit came from? Ah, you know,
some judge, some judge canceled thatcontract with must or Elon Musk said
they paid him too much and thatwas crazy. Everywhere did he get that
right or power to do that?Ask yourself that question all day long?
Where did that right? Power comefrom. We have a constitution. It

(16:18):
shows where the separation powers, wherethe laws are written, who's enforcing the
laws, what the executive branch poweris, what congressional power is, what
the judicial branch's power is. Letme just simply ignore it for the sake
of expedience. Is what really comesdown to, and then what you end
up with, as I illustrated withthat last story, in competence. In

(16:38):
competence, which is I think thedefault for what you get from government.
Jay, Welcome to the program,Thanks for calling this morning. Hey,
good morning, Brian. Hey,I agree with one hundred percent with everything
you're saying. And you know,I get a little power of times I
hear about people defending the FBI talkingabout how you know, we're trying to

(16:59):
just talking about the leadership because ninetynine percent of the people involved, they're
good, Well, I don't knowthat I know this. One hundred percent
of them are not needed. Ifyou go back again to the founding and
the federal government was supposed to bethe small thing. It was a thing
that the founders were so terrified ofthat they put a constitution in place to
try to keep it in that Pandora'sbox and it failed. Now, but

(17:25):
if you listen to even local newsstories, my question is do people go
to state crops anymore or local?Does local and state law enforcement have a
place anymore. I've listened to newsstories. There was one not too long
ago, but just about every newsstory anymore, But there was one where

(17:45):
there was three local schools in acounty that had a bomb threat on the
same day, and state police wereinvolved. And at the end of the
newscast, if you listen closely,most of the times you'll hear and the
FBI is involved. Why overlapping laws? You have federal laws, you have
state laws. Sometimes state laws,there are state laws on the books that

(18:07):
federal government has no law in placethat gives them criminal or authority over a
particular crime. Now, the FPIspecifically has authority over certain crimes, like,
for example, I believe bank robbery, which also could conflict with state
laws. So it's a question ofwhether it's a federal enforcement issue, a
state enforcement issue, or an overlappingauthority because there's a federal law in the
books that mirrors the state law.So that's where that distinction comes from,

(18:32):
right, Yeah, which I disagreewith and what we've done whenever that happens
is we have now given over thestate authority to the federal level whenever that
all happens. And that has beenpart of the slippery slope that we've been
on now for over one hundred years. Right. And I also heard an
interview with the state cops and likea nice enough guy, but I call

(18:53):
it in and asked that sort ofquestion. He said, no, no,
no, He said, it's reallygood when the FBI gets involved,
because we could bust somebody a badguy, and per Ohio law, we
can put him away for two years, but if the FBI says we'll handle
it from here, they can putthem away for seven years. Well,
is that not terrifying to everybody who'sa citizen of the state of Ohio that

(19:14):
at any point you're no longer aState of Ohio resident the FBI is involved.
And you know this, what ifa traffic ticket ten years from now
warrants me, you know, eithera ticket or you know, a jail
time because maybe I pulled the votinglever for the wrong person. So the
whole is anything thing what's federal infront of it? All these agencies.
This goes back to the guardian classthat was written about in that book that

(19:38):
you turned me onto the America SecondCivil War, that government is not the
individual rights are gone, and thatyou have a guardian class that's going to
govern us all and our rights comefrom them. And that's exactly where we're
at today. We have adopted thatwhole cloth. And anybody thinks we've still

(19:59):
had natural rights that ended about onehundred years ago, I believe so our
form of government, we haven't wokeup to it yet. We still say
one nation under God, indivisible.None of that's true. And all these
federal agencies, bigger they get,the smaller we get. And so it's
but and one hundred years of Republicansbalance of powers, there's a question balance

(20:22):
of powers when the last time anybody'sgot rid of the Supreme Court justice?
Tell me what the balance of poweris? Well? What is what was?
What is it that we can dowith a bad Supreme Court justice like
the timesy Brown Jackson or so tomy or what's the recourse? How how
do we how do we hold themaccountable? It doesn't exactly Well, I
know, it's always the point hasalways been it's at the ballot box.

(20:44):
But if you start talking about that, if you start talking about along the
lines of what democrats want to dois packing the court to alter the trajectory
of the court's ideology, or youknow, impeaching a justice, how can
you do that for what reason?I mean? This is the weird reality
of the law. It is subjectto various interpretations. There are a strict
constructionists, there are ideological judges,and there's everything in between. And the

(21:11):
recourse is of course making sure youvote for the right person. But once
they're there, unless they are engagedin corruption or some act that can result
in impeachment, a bad case,a poor opinion by a judge is not
justification to remove them from the bench. Your points are well taken, Jay,
I appreciate you calling. Coming upin five twenty nine fifty five K
see talk station, feel free togive you a calling. We've got more

(21:33):
to talk about, of course,got local stories coming up as well.
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(23:02):
three two four eight ninety six hundredfifty five the talk station. You've never
used up a lot of time inthis segment already. That's okay, All
is right with the world. Welcomeback, Tom, been missing you man.
Hope you're okay. Oh yeah,we just so. We just took
a long weekend. We went backout to uh Sedona again starting to be

(23:25):
our favorite hot spot. To goout to it and yeah, real,
real beautiful place and enjoy the enjoythe singer and the weather and all that
stuff. Uh And with traveling yourun into a bunch of adiots. I'm
sure you can attest to. Imean, just driving on the highways and

(23:45):
then going to airports alone is aboutall I can deal with with with people
that I just I don't know,can't follow us, I can't read signs
or something like that, can't followin simple instructions. You know, we
may all have a problem with thefederal government, and I have many problems
with the federal government, but thereare things in place, and it's very

(24:07):
simple. People. You know,you either have to take your electronics out
of the bag to go through theX ray machine or you don't. It's
really simple. Just listen to theguy standing there. Okay, it's if
he's his job. Is it getsyou through and then gets you on the
plane or all whatever? You know, it's I don't know, I don't
understand one one of the dumb thingsthat I saw over the weekend. And
I don't know if you touched onthis already. They have this thing in

(24:30):
the airport's called clear uh, andit's basically a way to get through the
TSA screen process faster, and ituses biometrics, facial recognition, stuff like
that. I personally want nothing todo with it. I don't care how
cheap you make it. I'm notdoing that. But other people might want
to do it. But apparently thestate of California is going to ban it

(24:52):
for of course, because of equity, right, because you have to pay
for that service. You've got topay ext your money in order to be
able to get through security airport securityfaster using these biometrics. And and of
course that's not fair because that discriminatesagainst people who don't have enough money to
pay for it. And I'm sittinghere thinking, go for it. If

(25:15):
you want to pay to go throughthose lines, that's less people in my
line, That makes my line thatmuch shorter, and I can get through
faster. Go ahead and waste yourmoney on that. There's people there that
are employed, they have jobs.You know it can't it's not hurting the
economy. I can't see how itis. If somebody wants to spend their
money and do that, and theywant to put their biometrics in there,

(25:37):
why why should any government agency knowYou're not allowed to do that because it's
not fair to other people. You'regetting through the lines faster than these people
are getting through the line. Whogives a crap, We're all getting on
the same plane. Plan's not leavingwithout you. Time. I'm laughing because
you know, if equity and theconcern over the poor is the issue here,

(25:59):
we're talking about airline travel here.Obviously you have a sufficient disposable income
to take a trip and fly inan airplane. Yeah, that's correct.
Can't believe focus on life's margins actuallyshowing up at cveg. Taking a trip
to Hawaii or something, right,Yeah, I mean this could be somebody
flying up to Detroit, could besomebody. It doesn't really matter. I
mean, this clear stuff is everywhere. I've been in multiple different airports over

(26:22):
the years and it's everywhere. Now, So what who cares? Why is
it the government's business to tell people, you know, they can't get up
to spend the money a certain way. It's absolutely ridiculous. And of course
California is the one to step inand save the day and protect us,
so we're not being discriminated against.That's a bunch of crap. It's a
bunch of absolute garbage. If Californiais doing it, the state of California

(26:45):
and that governor out there is doingit, it's got to be wrong.
Just the fact that they're doing it. It's wrong. It has to be
because they're dumb liberals, out ofcontrol Democrats. I mean, they have
all the control out there and it'sridiculous. No the reasons folks don't vote
Democrats. Have a great day.Great hearing from you, Tom. I'm
glad all's right in the world now, Ah feel better if I've thirty eight

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(28:57):
brdy burn them in here for helland go straight to the phones before you
to stack stupid gotta take cribbage.Mike's call my submariner friend. What's going
on today? Okay, want tobrian you. First off, I'm gonna
have to take a hiatus next week. I have some mandatory training at work,
but at least it's not dee Irelated. But I can't believe they

(29:18):
didn't have the listener lunch schedule thenerve to schedule it on May first.
There, Well, you can't handlemy action. Cribbage label, that's your
problem? Yellow comes to mind?Is that what it is? Huh?
Because it beat I be twice Igo to a cribbage training camp. I
got to get back on the women'streat I will miss seeing you at lunch.
That is that is a true statement. Yeh, sir, and please

(29:41):
pass along my best regards to AdamTaylor. We had a chance to chat
a little bit last Friday night atthe Eldest Sports Dag. He actually was
there with Bernie Moreno as well,you know, And I can't help but
think how much better off the cityin Hamilton County would have been if they
would have had been smart enough tolet Christopher smitham in a couple years ago.
And now we've got better another opportunityto put somebody that has forward thinking

(30:06):
business acumen. I know he's gotan uphill battle, but you know,
you know as well as I do, he would be perfect for that position.
Really is a good guy, andhe's honest, he's intelligent, he
wants the best for all of us. I mean absolutely, that's that's what
makes a real good candidate. Andsadly in this world, and it's notably
in Hamilton County, given the politicaldirection and the fat money that's going to

(30:26):
be behind the Democrats on this,it is truly an uphill challenge. That's
why I ask my listeners strongly encouragehim to help out at him and his
quest to become well a really decentgood, honest commissioner for the entire county.
So if I could leave Clarmont Countyfor one day and be a Hamilton
County resident, that it would havemy vote without doubt. Yeah, as
you say that everybody in Hamilton Countyis going well. If I could just

(30:48):
pick up and leave and move toClaremont County, Josh, darn it,
I'd do it well. I justI tell you what my hope in prayer
is that someday they'll move the borderbecause I'm really close to the edge of
the county. This scoot the borderover a little bit and encompass my street,
and I will be out of HamiltonCounty. So in the meantime,
we'll just see if we can't electsomebody like Adam to the position. Mike,

(31:08):
I'll miss you next Wednesday, brother, and I hope you have wonderful
training. I'm glad to here.It's not de I related. I don't
think that would settle in with youanyway. I can't tell you how many
seminars and classes I've been to whereyou know, I hear something and it
just goes in one ear and outthe other. This is what I strongly
recommend when you do the DEI trainingfive forty five fifty five gar Z de

(31:30):
Talk Station. Peter Schbiria Callowiams Sevenhills. I always say the only real estate.
Speaking of real estate, I wantto get out of Hamilton County.
I put my house for sale,and I would do that by retaining Peter
Shabria Kellowilliams seven Hill and his awesometeam with the five star experience that you're
gonna get. They are terrific atwhat they do and the programs they have
that nobody else has really make theprocess so much better and easier. And

(31:51):
you know, like guaranteed sale,you know your home will be sold by
a certain date or Peter and histeam will buy it from you at the
previously agreed upon price. That's agreat one instant offer. Don't sell your
house. Just go to Peter andsay, give me an offer, and
within forty eight hours of them seeingyour property, you'll have one. It
means you can close in as littleas three weeks from two day. If

(32:12):
you've got to get out of Dodgeor Hamilton Counties the case, maybe call
Peter cash for confidence. Use Peter'smoney to buy your next house. Putting
yourself ahead of the pack. Ifthere's a bidding war going on, Sellers
love cash offers. This might evennet you better terms of conditions. Check
it all out online seven zero eightthree thousand dot com but also happens to
be the phone over You can callthem up today five one three seven zero

(32:34):
eight three thousand, five Star Experience, Peter Shabrie, Keller Williams, seven
Hills fifty five krc the talk stationThink Identity theft won't happen to you.
Think again, there's a new victimeverything five fifty fifty five KRCD Talk Station
Wednesday. Judge Nepaulaton on Wednesday Arrowwith Adam Kaylor a better man for County

(32:57):
Commissioner that'll be at seven o'clock andthe anytimes stacker is stupid. How about
a a robotic dog flamethrower just whateveryone asks for? Hile based company sewing
the Therminator, a robotic dog withback mounted flamethrower, which flamethrower which the
company says can send streams of fireup to thirty feet with a push of

(33:19):
a button. Video shared on throwFlames facebook page shows the Etherminator walking through
a wooded area spewing flames and jumpingaround. Here's a legitimate clote from WFLA
dot com. Those worried about legalityof owning a flamethrowing robot dog and rest

(33:42):
assured. Flamethrowers are legal in fortynine states in the United States. Only
Maryland bands a device outright, thoughCalifornia doesn't require you to have a permit
to use them. According to MiamiHerald reporting, if you want your own
fire throwing flamethrowing robotic dog, goto throw flames website and shell out nine

(34:04):
thousand, four hundred and twenty dollars. What what the ever loving hell?
We have a walk away story.Joe, former pediatrician in Kentucky charge with
trying to kill her ex husband ina murder for hire plot, has pleaded
guilty in federal charges. Why areyou doing that? Well, I don't

(34:27):
know. Doctor Stephanie Russell entered aguilty plead before her trial began on Monday.
She pleaded guilty to two counts offederal indictment charging and with using a
facility in interstate commerce. Oh,there's that pesty commerce claus or causing another
person to travel interstate commerce in theattempted murder for hire of her ex husband,
as well as aiding in a beddinginterstate stalking of her ex husband during
oh it's custody litigation and answer tomy question, why are you doing that?

(34:52):
Yeah, naturally, this is whatyou want to do for your kids
anyway, during custody litigation between Decemberfirst, twenty eighteen, and August.
The twenty nineteen news release said Russell, aided by a person JS not further
identified, who traveled Louisville from Michigan, engaged in conduct that caused an attempted
or to cause her former husband's substantialemotional distress, and Russell did so with

(35:15):
the intent to harrass and intimidated.All Right, really said she encouraged this
Jays person to harass her ex husbandand provided him with a Burner phone to
use. Conduct also included visiting yourex husband's office unannounced, pretending to be
a Way three reporter, and leavingher ex husband accusatory voicemails from the phone

(35:35):
provided by Russell on her ex husbandphones, entering his garage, and leaving
a note inside the garage pretending tobe a reporter writing a derogatory story that
could involve her ex husband and byleaving flyers with her ex husband's photograph and
other personally identifying information on cars ather ex husband's office. Psycho arrested May
twenty twenty two after court record sayshe contacted a person to kill her ex

(36:00):
husband. She agreed to pay thatperson, who was actually an undercover FBI
employee, seven thousand dollars. AffiDavid said she wanted her ex husband dead
so she could regain custody of thecouple's two children. Full custody was awarded
to her ex husband in twenty twentyafter she accused him of physically and sexually
abusing the children, and judge saidshe'd found no evidence to support her claims.

(36:23):
Psycho host piece, what the hellis wrong with people just voking?
We'll end on this happy note.A transgender registered sex offender has been snapped
in a creepy mugshot after busted fortrying to take a child from a Colorado

(36:44):
elementary school. Yes, this isone of those moments when radio just doesn't
quite cover it because I'm staring atthe photograph. Solomon Gilligan Gallaghan, thirty
three, arrested after he came ontoa field where children were playing at black
Forest Hills Elementary School in a rowlast Friday. According to nine News reporting,
surveillance video captured him approaching the studentsjust moments before they scattered and started

(37:06):
screaming stranger, danger. He allegedlygrabbed hold of one of the children,
but lost his grip when he trippedon a white blanket he'd been carrying.
The nearly abductive child. Litter toldpolice that the perp had a white powder
smeared on his face and smelled ofalcohol. Gallaghan quickly fled police. I

(37:28):
know provided that Dave Chappelle routine.Joe completly checked them down on nearby Walgreens,
where he was arrested in charge ofone kind of attempted kidnapping. The
suspect also who is identified as amale in the arrest Affidavid, shared news
of his transition on Facebook in twentyeleven's quote, So I'm starting my hormone
shots and I really can't wait.I'm on my hormone pills. I've been

(37:51):
on them for almost four months.I wake up all depressed and crying,
but in the end it's going tobe totally worth it. Drugs, are
you know what IO mean. I'mreally excited. My measurements are already changing,
so I'm super thrilled. Close quoteput on Sex Offender Registry. Convicted
the same year of non consent sexualconduct. Details regarding the twenty eleven incident

(38:13):
not immediately clear. Being held ona twenty five thousand dollars bail at the
Aurora Jail. Fifty six five KRCDetalk station. Oh oh, oh oh,
New York City Mayor Adams says it'soutside agitators behind the violence. Oh,
there's a lot more to it thanthat, Mayor Adams. We got

(38:35):
that a whole bunch more to talkabout the coming hour, Pli'll feel free
to call that. I'll be rightback. You're just minutes away from refreshing
your news feed at the top ofthe hour. I have never seen anything
like this, exclusively fifty five KRCthe talk station looking for that beautiful smile
and happy Wednesday listener lunch one weekfor today, Samy Burker b strout.

(38:57):
They call that blue ash Samy's Burgerb stre though. Anyway, coming up
at the morning show one hour fromnow. Before we get to the phones,
hang on New Hampshire, Gary AdamKeller. He'll be in studio for
an hour. He is running forHamilton County Commission and a really good man.
He's also got an empower You seminarcoming up me learning about that and
getting a few details from Adam onthat. Judge Nana Paula Tano killing the
Constitution the subject matter of Today's Conversation, of Today's Conversation at eight thirty every

(39:21):
Wednesday eight thirty with a judge.And of course we're on a roll here
with the Constitution being killed literally everysingle day by our people, elected officials
who swear an oath to uphold theConstitution. It's interesting that, isn't it.
Before I get to the phones realquick here, since I didn't get
to do the stack as stupid ordidn't get far into it, let's just
do a quick headline read indulge mefor a moment. Headline. Women are

(39:46):
paying five hundred dollars to get samand sperm injected into the vaginas to boost
sex lives. New York Post exschool police officer on the run after allegedly
killing teacher x y Life at herschool, murdering girlfriend, and abducting kid.
One day he was doing court forchild rape. Indeed the biggest two

(40:09):
chove which war told be shared bythis one. A second grade teacher in
Indiana accused in a lawsuit of orchestratingand encouraging a reprehensible fight club type of
discipline in his class and filming iton his cell phone in a case that
has prompted a criminal investigation, andfinally sharing an award. Trauma surgeon accused

(40:30):
of sexual mixed misconduct and patient Californiasurgeon facing allegations of sexual misconduct on unconscious
patients, including claims that he quotechecked under the hood close quote of one
black male he was treating, accordingto lawsuits alleging racial, sexual, and

(40:51):
anti semitic atmosphere at a Los Angeleshospital. And finally, Democratic Minnesota state
senator charged with first degree burglary afterbreaking into state mother's house. There the
brief rundown of the balance of thestack of stupid New Hamshire, Gary,
Welcome to the show. In aHappy Wednesday to you, sir, Holy
cow, I'm getting stack of stupidnews all mixed up. Wait it's the

(41:14):
same thing, yes, sir,it is Larry Nasser between Larry Nasser plame
throwing the dogs and guy running aroundthe trailer park with his boyfriend or whatever
it was out in Clarmont County.I was like, holy cow, it's
a circus, I tell you itis. It is see you know,

(41:36):
and it's I always think of thesort of the side show the easter called
freak shows that you put people undera tent, people will pay five dollars
to go in and see them.You don't need to do that. Just
walk around with your eyes open onany given day, and there it is
the freak show of life in frontof your very eyes at any moment in
time. I think as societal breakdownaway from God and into hedonism and uh

(42:02):
and and selfishness, and you know, the only worship of oneself is taking
over that society is literally breaking down. I think that's an intentional part on
it is. It is intentional.Yep, you're you're, you're, you're
scratching the surface of the article Iwanted to get to after our conversation about

(42:22):
Mayor Adams and his observations. Butgo ahead, good mind stake alike there,
Brian, You got that right,brother, Okay man, you have
a nice day. Take care ofmy friend, take care of Ball's well
in New Hampshire two three talk andyeah, that does get get me to
this conversation I wanted to have aboutNew York Democratic Mayor Air Adams. He

(42:44):
said yesterday that the escalation and violencedthem from the anti Israeli protests across the
city is likely the work of,in his words, outside the agitators.
Speaking of a press conference yesterday regardingthe protests at Plumbing University in New York
University, he blamed opportunists to latchon to protests with the intent of escalating,

(43:06):
especially against police. Quote, wecan't have outside agitators come in and
be destructive to our cities. Someonewanted something to happen at the protest at
NYU. We strongly believe there arepeople who are here who latch on to
any protest to see our police officershaving bottles thrown at them chairs. People
who peacefully protest for an issue arenot throwing bottles and shoes. There are

(43:30):
people who come of nothing to dowith the issues and they want to aggravate.
I believe there is a number ofpeople who are really trying to use
this as an opportunity to cause violencein our city. Well, Mayor Adams.
That's the point. This is somethingI've been observing for a long time,
and anybody who wants to look atit, just step back from your

(43:52):
reality and stare at what's going onin the world. These divisions, these
these constant fights and arguments and heatedvirtue signals nonsensical, you know, agitation
done solely for the purpose of stirringthe potter division in this country. That's
what it's all about. There isa well concerted organizing effort, he said.

(44:20):
And what's the goal of that organizingThat's what we need to ask ourselves.
Well, let me answer that questionfor you. To divide us,
to tear at the fabric of oursociety, to ruin and eradicate anything remotely

(44:43):
close to some sense of unity thatwe previously enjoyed this country. I always
think of the flag as a symbolof freedom and freedom and minds of individuals,
as you know, the different meanings, but at least in this country,
you know, there was a timewhen we enjoyed these freedoms and liberties,
the free speech liberties, the rightto be free of you know,
unreasonable searches and seizes. We've talkedabout all the time on the program,

(45:04):
the Bill of Rights generally speaking,and while I detest the idea of burning
an American flag, it is aform of protest, and I always view
that as a way of figuring outwho the unsavory types are. It's like
the idiot in the neighborhood who fliesa Nazi flag. Are you allowed to

(45:24):
fly the Nazi flag? Yeah?Is it a good idea? No?
But at least us, at leastwe out here in the world can assess
and draw our own conclusions about thatperson's sanity because they've exercised their free speech
rights and told the world that theyare in anti Semitic Nazi. And I'm

(45:52):
worried about this summer, of course, with the presidential election coming up,
in the millions and millions of illegalimmigrants. I keep saying, they're going
to organize, They're going to seeprotests in the streets with them demanding more
and more rights. You've already startedseeing that the excuse that they're using October

(46:15):
seventh, which was the murder ofinnocent civilians, and you have a revolt
celebrating that, which of course isweird, and of course it's going to
draw all kinds of controversy. Butlook at what's going on in the streets
outside. Agitators know they're not outside, they're within the fabric of our country.
They maybe outside had been shipped intothe city of New York, mister

(46:38):
Adams, but this is part ofa concerted effort to ruin our country,
to bring it down. And Ikeep thinking, you know, and I
hate to say this outlies like ohCommas, conspiracy theorists. Now I'm just
observing reality here. Things might getso bad that it will give an excuse.
And going back to political expedience,what's the most politically expedient thing to

(46:59):
do? Declare martial law and suspendyour constitutional freedoms and liberties in the name
of what public safety, and thatcould interfere with the election? Might it?
Is it not a possibility they're tryingto use this as an opportunity to

(47:27):
cause violence in our city, Hepoints out, Yeah, they are,
maybe for the purpose of getting thepolice to overreact. That is one of
these Marxist philosophies. They were hopingthat that would happen to Vietnam protests the
nineteen sixty eight Democratic National Convention.The theory behind that is, look,
we need to show that the policeare an oppressive regime and if we just

(47:52):
go out and protest and we getthe police to react violently enough, then
the people will turn against them.It didn't work out real well. Back
in nineteen sixty eight, there wasa much more conservative mindset, much more
well belief in the police department wasdoing the right thing. So billy clubs
used on protesters was sort of viewedand embraced by a lot of folks.

(48:14):
Now I'm not that kind of guy, honestly, but it's part of the
philosophy. You got the cloud andpleven strategy that goes on here, and
this is what's unfolding before our veryeyes. And what has happened since then.
The world's a different place. We'veevolved, some may say for the
better, for the worse. Butthis anti police, with the Black Lives
Matter, they needed a pretext andGeorge Floyd provided it right or wrong,

(48:40):
and it worked. And what hadhappened across this great land of ours,
protest in the street, violence andanger bottles, throw in the police officers,
the accusations of systemic racism, theundermining of our perception that the police
department are decent people, at leastfor the most part, No one ever
believe that or one percent decent.We all know the cop who is a

(49:02):
well, fill in the blank usyour favorite FCC expletive. But beyond that,
police departments generally viewed as pretty decentfolks by the vast majority of us.
Not after the Black Lives Matter protests. They're all evil. We must
get rid of them, we mustdefund them. And what happens when you
defund the police department, law andorder just disappears. The police are afraid

(49:24):
to do their job for fear thatthey're going to be the next front page
headlines and being falsely accused of somethingthat they really didn't do, or having
what they did do lawfully appropriately followingpolicies be twisted and turned into an act
of racism or violence or what haveyou. The narrative reported to the people
because the people don't pay close attention. They got too many other things going

(49:45):
on in their lives, including bingewatching Netflix. They don't know. They
just repeat what they read in themainstream media. Who's perpetuating this nonsense?
Next thing, you know, policedepartments are underfunded. Police departments can't get
people to to or willing to dothe job. Why would I go down
that road, Why would I wantto put my life on the line,
Why would I want to even botherif I'm going to be in the next

(50:08):
face in the newspaper, just simplydoing my job. It worked. And
what do we have? Lawlessness?Absolute lawlessness, disrespect for the police department,
acts of violence every single day againstthe men and women who are trying

(50:30):
to keep our society stable. Andthat is the problem for the Marxist of
the world. A stable society,a comfortable society, is not one in
which you can achieve your revolutionary goals. A society is united under a flag
and a set of principles. Isnot how you eradicate the most successful country

(50:52):
the world has ever witnessed outside Agitator'smayor Adams. No, they're inside,
and they're everywhere. Six eighteen fiftyfive KC detalk station. USA's premium foam
is something you need. Wrote thecheck, Yeah, just the other day
for my daughter and her boyfriend's newhouse. Get that nineteen late nineteen seventies

(51:14):
home insulated. It's got our twelvein it. The free inspection. Call
USA for a free inspection. Ifyou may be under insulated, and that
is clearly under insulated that are twelve, especially as old as it is decades
old, it's deteriorated, so it'snot even our twelve anymore. The foam
goes with the old insulation into theexterior walls of their home. They're gonna
do that on Friday, So they'renever going to see an energy bill that's

(51:35):
through the roof, at least comparativelyspeaking. They're only going to enjoy comfort
and the energy savings. And Ikind of wish they had a few bills
under their belt to know how muchbenefit this is providing them, but I
was happy to do that. Ithink it's a wonderful investment for them,
and of course it makes their homemore valuable, certainly makes it more comfortable,
and they will be saving money.And a young couple with very limited
resources, they're gonna need all themoney they can they can get. You

(51:57):
remember the first time you bought ahouse, right, so do that if
you're a new home buyer. It'snot a new home because newer homes have
sufficient insulation. It's the older homesthat are the problem, and they are,
of course energy wasters. So guaranteedcomfort guaranteed savings and it's only ninety
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(52:19):
itself three eight one three six twosix five one three three eight one foam
see it online go to USA Insulationdot net fifty five krc. It certain
means flower nentation every Wednesday. Quotemake their lives miserable post quote. Continuing
the theme here, of course,making lives miserables. What the protesters that
are pro hamas, pro murderers aredoing shutting down Columbia. They're going to

(52:44):
go hybrid classes until the semester ends, which is prompting some people to suggest.
And I applaud the efforts by thosewho would sue Columbia to get their
tuition back because they had to cancelclasses and go virtual. Thanks to the
protesters, the protesters were successful inshut down Columbia Universities classes. Jewish students

(53:08):
can't safely go to class ergo wemust cancel classes, go virtual and pivving
over to climate activists. Fox Newsreporting on this one quote make their lives
miserable. It's part of the headlinethe next big protests coming this summer climate

(53:30):
defiance name of the organization calling fora historic blockade of the Congressional baseball game.
That's where the Republican Democrat Members ofCommerce Congress compete. You may have
heard of it. Remember the Republicanswere practicing one day when a gunman with
a targeted list of people to killplanned in advance, committed suicide by cop

(53:52):
at an event where he wasn't evenaware there were police. This organization we
society, humanity or careening into anabyss. The decisions we make now will
reverberate not for centuries, but formillennia. If we do not act now
boldly and swiftly, millions will diefrom storms and from starvation. So as

(54:14):
long as Congress torches our planet,we won't give them a moment of rest.
It's unconscionable that they plan games whiledestroying our prospect for a decent future.
Our entire world faces emminent catastrophe.Congress has the power to save millions,
even billions of lives. The factthat they haven't already ended fossil fuel

(54:35):
subsidies as shameful. We're shutting downthe Congressional baseball game to send a message
we will do whatever it takes toforce those in power to end fossil fuels.
Close quote, and I wrote WTFafter that WikiLeaks task force the abbreviation
draw your own conclusions and fossil fuels. Now, can you imagine the reality

(54:58):
of the world and the millions ofpeople who inevitably would die if we quit
using fossil fuels any place where thetemperature goes below freezing or way above the
tolerable temper in the summer temperature inthe summertime, sands electricity people are going
to die. You will no longerbe able to go to Kruger and buy

(55:20):
literally anything, because everything comes insome sort of petroleum product plastic. Go
ahead and try to unwring that bell. People are complaining about plastic bags in
which you put your plastic bag fullof meat, your plastic items, your
plastic wrap fill in the blank.Literally everything goes into a plastic bag.
Let's ban the plastic bag. Ina mass email, this this person,

(55:47):
this organizer said he's organizing or sayhe's organizing similar protests the congressional baseball game
two years ago. It's unconscionable tothe party play games as our prospects a
decent future slip out of our grip. No fun allowed. That's the bottom
line on this. No fun allowed. You must be miserable. And how

(56:10):
many of us walk around with thisconcept? And oh my god, what
I'm doing is just terrible. Ican't believe I'm this is bad for the
planet. This is like, uh, yeah, you got caught up in
it. They win when you getcaught up and become miserable. It's no
wonder that there's a problem psychologically withthis country, because everywhere you turn,

(56:34):
someone is telling you that something youdo or believe in is inherently wrong.
The notion that you think there's justa man and a woman biologically, you're
right. Sorry, it sucks tobe you if you believe differently, Can
you think you're something else? Absolutely? Our freedom is liberty, as incompanist
that if you want to believe you'rea girl when you're a guy, knock

(56:54):
yourself out. Don't make me buyinto it, because I don't. I
understand there may be a problem goingon in your head. I understand you
really wish you were the opposite sex. But there's nothing anybody can do about
it, including well, turning itinside out or sewing one on that is
going to change your chromosomal reality.It's just a biological fact. You can't

(57:15):
make me believe otherwise. I neverwill. I'll go to the grave believing
that the chromosome will makeup of aperson really dictates what you are. But
I also fight for your right tobelieve that you're something other than you want,
because this is America and you're entitledto that freedom. But I don't
have to buy into it. Butthere are people who are influenced by this,

(57:36):
and they end up walking around miserabbecause, oh, jezu, what's
the gender pronoun? What do theywant to be called? You're making your
life miserable because of that. Butthis sowing the seeds of division in the
email this group. We've never blockedroads, no shade to those who do.

(57:58):
We've never targeted, we've never targetedartwork. What we do, and
what we do very well, istake the fight directly to the people in
power. We make their lives miserableuntil they relent close quote exactly. The

(58:19):
question is, and the challenge toyou is will you allow them victory in
making your life miserable? Will youlet them achieve their goal and let you
walk around thinking that, well,geez, everything I do is is bad
and uh no, Leason right,score a win for them. Resist,

(58:43):
put a smile on your face.Be happy about life, Be happy that
you live in the United States ofAmerica. What's left of it before they
tear it all down in the nameof achieving their ultimate goal, which is
literally to tear it all down.Six twenty nine to fifty five Cacy the
talk station five one three, seveny two three talk calls local stories coming
up at first, though, Iwant to mention twenty two Oh, here's

(59:06):
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Sunday today sixty one down to thirtyseven over night with sapatche frost sixty three
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clouds and on Friday, partly sunnywith the chances of showers after three high
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(01:01:01):
HE talk station six thirty three.It's five kr c B talk station.
Happy Wednesday, Sammy's Burger b strowone week from today for listening lunch to
see there, Bobby, what's goingon to A Happy Wednesday? To you,

(01:01:22):
sir, Happy hump day, mybrother. I've got a question for
you. Maybe you can help uson something we'll find out. With all
your political connections, why don't wego ahead and have a trumpetth arm just
like Jerry Lewis hissed to have I'lltell you what. We could go ahead
and have seven or eight cities chimingin, have the big money board up

(01:01:45):
there, have a big trumpetth arm. Well, I suppose Donald Trump could
organize that. Question, Bobby,how are you going to arrange that?
With the networks being as woke andleftist as they are in the mainstream media.
Who do you think would host somethinglike that? If you'd probably have
to get on public access or somethingin order to carry out an event like
that, Well, maybe PBS willdo it, Yeah, in cooperation with

(01:02:08):
NPR. Yeah. Yeah, Ithink that that's the biggest challenge staring you
in the face there, Bobby isgetting people to air a trumpetvon so doesn't
stop anybody from donating. I tryto, I trust me, Bobby,
I try as often as I canto laugh. I just find it more
and more difficult these days, whichalmost is an acknowledgment that, well,

(01:02:30):
perhaps they are making inroads into mylife which they can chalk up as a
victory when I do feel badly aboutthe situation going on in the world,
but find it in your time duringthe day, just smile about something,
because there's obviously a lot to smileout and the smile out in the world.
Six thirty five. Thanks Bobby.If you I have KREC the talk
station more coming up, of coursethan I always enjoy hearing from you as

(01:02:52):
well. Get in touch with BudHerbert Motors. This is a without question,
no hesitation recommendation, which is theway it is with anybody I'm endorsing
because I know the people I endorseand I believe in them, and I
know they're gonna take good care ofyou, and I know you're gonna have
the same experience I had with butHerbert Motors, which was awesome. You
need lawn equipment, it's the time. Just call but Herbert Motors, fifth

(01:03:14):
generation family in an operator. You'llbe speaking with a Herbert family member when
you call them. They know everythingthere is to know about the world class
brands that they deal in, whichare like the John Deeres, x Mark
Steel, Honda power equipment. AndI was like to mention the Honda commercial
push more I bought from them.They told me was the last one I'd
ever have to buy. And whata great feeling that is. You know,
a few extra bucks goes a longway, and you know at my

(01:03:35):
age, knowing I'm never gonna needto buy a push more again, that's
pretty awesome. So that'd be thecase for you too, So call them
up. They'll deliver what they sellto your door. They service everything they
sell, so you can call themup for service as well. Just a
strong, strong recommendation to ignore andnever go to the box store for lawn
equipment. They have impressive product knowledgeand amazing customer service. You'll be glad

(01:03:57):
you're working with my dear friends atButt Herbert Motors. More headed to the
website Bud Herbert mootors dot com andplease, please please tell them, Brian
said, I when you call themup five one three five four one thirty
two ninety one five one three fivefour one thirty two ninety one fifty five
KRC is your child struggling? Seeyou're talking about putting a smile on my
face. A note from my dearwife. You knowing that I love you,

(01:04:23):
should make you smile. Isn't thatright? Told her she hit the
nail on the head. See,I got one thing right there. I
can hang my hat on and ifthat's that's enough to get me through the
day, right look for it searchfor it. It shouldn't be that elusive.
Uh props the philogram Mike Solin,who pays corporate taxes? Look in

(01:04:45):
the mirror, wonderful break down flyingin the face of the narrative you get
from the likes of Joe Biden thatevil corporations don't pay tax. Rh rah
rah rah rah. Are they right? And it's called for Congress to repeal
the twenty seventy tax cut and increasedcorporate tax rates. Biden asked, are
we going to continue with an economywhere the overwhelming share of the benefits go
to big corporations and the very wealthy. Representative Richard Neil, ranking Democrat of

(01:05:11):
the House Ways and Means Committee,said that extending the tax cuts would do
nothing to but fill the pockets ofventure capitalists and some business owners. President
Obama's top economist, Alan Goulsby,remember that name, said, the debates
over who pays the corporate tax arean argument about whether making corporations pay more
tax income taxes would trickle down intolower workers' wages. But they astutely point

(01:05:33):
out John Adams once said, factsor stubborn things. Seven years into the
weakest recovery in post war history isthe economy slumpwortter recession, The twenty seventeen
tax cuts, and the Trump Administration'sregulatory relief sent real median household income that's
you and me soaring by two andtwenty dollars in twenty nineteen. That's forty

(01:05:54):
nine percent higher than the previous highestamount annual gain in twenty fifteen, and
eleven even times the average percentage gainof the previous fifty years. Real median
income rose more in inflation adjusted dollarsin twenty nineteen alone than during the entire
Obama quote unquote recovery from two thousandand nine to twenty sixteen. The poverty

(01:06:15):
level plunged at the fastest rate sincenineteen sixty six, to the lowest level
since the Census Bureau started collecting thedata in nineteen fifty nine. The lowest
income quintile saw its average real incomerise by nine point four percent in twenty
nineteen, the year after the taxcuts took effect. The second quintile seven
point four middle quintile six point ninepercent, fourth quintile seven point eight percent.

(01:06:39):
Everybody gained all experienced the largest annualincome growth in more than half a
century, and the top quintile sevenpoint two percent had its second highest income
growth. The poverty rate in twentynineteen was the lowest ever recorded for every
category, including individuals, families,unmarried women, black saspannings, and children.

(01:07:00):
Since the Census Bureau doesn't count refunabletax credits as income for the recipients
or count the effect of any othertax change in the measuring household income,
none of these income gains and povertyreductions had anything to do with the increased
child tax credit. Economic growth wasalmost entirely responsible. There's still a free
country and can say whatever they wantabout the twenty seventeen tax cuts, knowing

(01:07:23):
the mainstream media will let them getaway with it, but they can't change
the facts. No federal spending ortax pology change in the past fifty years
was followed by as large an increasein real median household income or as big
a drop in the poverty rate asthe Trump tax cuts. Everyone expected the
owners of American public companies would benefit, and they did. The stock market

(01:07:44):
surge in twenty seventeen in anticipation ofthe tax cuts and in twenty eighteen and
twenty nineteen in response to them.Who owns American corporations well. According to
tax Notes, seventy two percent ofthe value of all domestically held stock is
owned by you. Pension plans,four one k's, individual retirement accounts,
and charitable organizations are held by lifeinsurance companies to fund annuities and death benefits.

(01:08:06):
Corporate tax rates, where the drivingforce behind the permanent part of the
twenty seventeen tax cuts, receive lessattention than individual income tax rates, only
because Americans don't understand that corporations don'tpay taxes. A corporate entity is a
pass through legal structure, a pieceof paper in a Delaware filing cabinet.

(01:08:27):
When the corporate tax rate increases,corporations try to pass that on to customers
consumers you to the degree that theentire cost of tax increases can't be passed
on to consumers, those costs areborn by employees and investors. Most economic
studies conclude that fifty to seventy percentof a corporate tax increase not passed onto
higher prices is born by workers,while thirty to fifty percent is born by

(01:08:50):
investors. If you consume, youpay the corporate tax. If you consume
and work for a corporation, youpay the corporate tax twice. If you
consume work and invest your retirement fundsin corporate equities, the corporate tax rate
hits you three times. Democrats callit the image of the greedy robber baron

(01:09:10):
as a personification of big corporations.But when you pull back the carton,
it isn't the wizard of the robberbaron you see, but yourself as a
consumer, worker, and pensioner.Many Americans don't pay individual income taxes,
but all Americans pay corporate taxes.In fact, a recent Treasury study confirmed
that ninety two point six million families, half of all American families, pay
more in corporate taxes than they doindividual income taxes. Unfortunately, Americans consistently

(01:09:34):
underappreciate the burden of corporate income taximposes, especially on middle and low income
Americans. Biden's proposed corporate tax increaseswould raise taxes on more low and moderate
income American families than if it raisedthe individual income tax rates. Congres should
reject mister Biden's effort to raise corporatetaxes, especially his effort to circumvent Congress

(01:09:56):
and the Constitution with the global minimumcorporate tax Congress refuses to adopt the Global
minimum corporate tax, Mister Biden wouldallow foreign countries to tax the US subsidiaries
to collect the equivalent of the Globalminimum tax on their US earnings. Congress
should pass a joint resolution rejecting theGlobal Minimum corporate tax. Further, it
should adopt legislation that mandates retaliation againstany country trying to tax American subsidiaries to

(01:10:19):
collect the corporate minimum tax on USearnings. A man underscore Biden and Congressional
Democrats claim corporations that get tax subsidiesdon't pay their fair share. But the
entire Biden program is festooned with specialinterest corporate subsidies. We should eliminate those
subsidies and use the savings to reducecorporate tax rates. Yeah, we must

(01:10:42):
never forget that the corporate tax isa tax on everything we buy, a
tax on our wages, and attax on our retirement nest eggs. By
taxing corporations, the Democrats are taxingthe American people. That is a message
that is so simple to understand andmake so much sense. As he points
out, facts are a stubborn thing. We were better off, we are

(01:11:09):
better off of the lower taxes,we have more freedom and liberty to spend
our money where we want. Wehave more money to spend where we want.
We can't have any of that,say the Democrats. They deny that
lowering taxes benefits everybody, in spiteof the facts as demonstrated by this op
ed piece Phill Grahm Mike Solin,we all got a lot more money in
our pockets six forty seven. It'salways been that way fifty five K see

(01:11:35):
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Medimaging dot com fifty five KRSU sixfifty two fifty five Kerri Steve talk station
at top of the our news.We've got Adam Kaylor at the studio running
for Hamilton County Commissioner and a betterchoice for the county. I truly believe
that he's a good man. I'mvery very intelligent. He's got to empower
you. Smon are coming up Apriltwenty fifth and he'll be talking about that.
That's Smorty Evening and hope you getto watching empower you. Seminar last
night. My understanding is regarding theborder and the impact on the migrant crisis

(01:13:05):
in affecting the black community. PastorDavid headed that one up last night,
and I got a couple of listenerschiming in saying it was outstanding. I
believe you can go to empower youAmerica dot org and you can watch a
replay of that. It's sort ofa podcast kind of thing. Little Joe
Biden is in a bit of atrouble here in the state of Ohio.
Frank LeRose pointed this out. Hewas on the program a week or so
ago talking about a higher virus code. Thirty five oh five point one zero

(01:13:28):
B one requires that the general electionballot include presidential candidates certified to this office
who were nominated by the national conventionof a political party to which delegates and
alternates were elected in this state atthe next preceding primary election. Political parties
certifying your candidates so nominated shall certifythe name of those candidates to the Secretary
of State on or before the ninetyday before the day of the general election.

(01:13:55):
In other words, ninety days,and the Democratic National Convention does not
place it take place until after thattimeframe. They're not allowed on the ballot.
The Democrat candidate is not allowed onthe ballot if it isn't submitted and
properly certified to the state in thatninety day window. And right now the
Democratic convention, it's impossible. Lorerosaid in a statement, First of all,

(01:14:16):
this law was put in place intwo thousand and nine, It's been
around for a long time. Pointedout also that it was put in place
by a Democrat. It establishes aninety day deadline, just like there's going
to be a deadline if you wantto run for township trustee or run for
kind of commissioner, you've got tofile your petitions by a day certain.
If you turn in your petitions aday late, two days late, you're
rejected. So that's what the lawsays. Government of Wine, in a

(01:14:43):
statement speaking with ten TV, quote, We've got some technicalities that are going
on, but it's going to getworked out, so no one should really
have any concern. They're going tohave a choice this November. They're going
to be able to pick one ofthese two to be our president. Thanks
of says Joe Strecker. He saidin the past, the state legislators temporarily
relaxed those standards of a convention asscheduled. After that, my hope is,

(01:15:06):
and my belief is that they'll workthis out. That they'll either get
this done with the state legislature orthey will work within their parties by laws
to get me the filing, theofficial notification that they've nominated a candidate sooner.
Well, they can't do that.The Democratic National Convention is where they

(01:15:26):
certify the official nomination. It's impossibleto sort of partially or unofficially notify it
doesn't comply with the state law.He considers the law on the books to
be a mere technicality. Isn't thatinteresting? His hope is that the legislature
will fix the problem. That isthe only place that it can happen.
And honestly, I don't have muchof a problem. If the state legislature

(01:15:47):
wants to go ahead and change thelaw or allow an exception, at least
it would go through the legislative process, it would pass, and the governor
would have to sign it into law, and it would be the law in
this particular election. But no,the laws on the books are considered by
our governor to be a mere technicalityreminds me of twenty twenty during COVID six

(01:16:09):
fifty five fifty five krc DE talkstation. Let's see what Adam Kroler has
to say at the top of theour news we have Judge of Poltono on
at eight thirty as well. Isure hope you can be around for that,
and if not, remember fifty fiveKRC dot com get the podcasts later
today. World dedess don't exactly happenon a schedule. Look the latest stump
days too at the top of everyhour fifty five krc BE talkstation. This

(01:16:31):
report is sponsored seven six at fiftyfive r c DE talk station. And
a very happy Wednesday. Tore anotherreminder one week from today Sammy's berger Bisto

(01:16:55):
for listener lunch. And another remindertoday it's Wednesday saying the obvious Judge of
Polatano eight thirty on killing the Constitution. We'll be talking about FAIZA, It's
renewal and its impact and the expansionof it. Of course that killing is
related to the Fourth Amendment right tobe free of unreasonable searches and seizures.
Regular topic with a judge of me, and I'm happy to report Adam Keaylor's

(01:17:15):
in studio. He is Canada forHamilton County Border Commissioners and we hope that
he gets elected. I know HamiltonCounty's blue. We need to keep Hamilon
County prosecuting Melissa Powers in office.She does a fantastic job. She's not
woke. She prosecutes criminals. Nowwhat the judges ultimately do with them is
the issue with the judges. Youcan't handle dealing with woke judges. We
need better judges, but you needa strong prosecutor. We don't want to

(01:17:40):
go woke here in Hamilton County,and that's why we need to vote for
Adam Keller for Hamlin County Border Commissioners, a refreshing, well and informative,
intellectual, proven business leader to bringmore business into Hamilon County. Adam,
it's always a pleasure and good tosee you back in studio. My yeah,
yeah, yeah, it's always goodto be here, Brian, one
of the best shows on radio.Wow, bless you. It's so kind
of you to say that. Nowyou're going to be speaking in a power

(01:18:02):
you seminar. Tomorrow night seven pmis when they start. Is it real
quick here? When to get thisout? Of the way. Is it
a live one. You're gonna bea two twenty five North on Boulevard.
Is this just just a seven o'clockYeah, okay, so you'll be there
to ask answer questions. So eithershow up at seven and two twenty five
North and Boulevard while you can.And I say that knowing that Dan Reaganold
has sold Frame USA. Question markremains whether the power you seminar part of

(01:18:27):
that building will remain open for itsuse. But you can always log in
online empower you America dot or justregister and watch from your own home and
see what Adam has to say andwhat you know. We should deal it
with your background, Adam, becauseyour background is really what elevates you and
qualifies you so well for Hamilton CountyCommissioner. So you've got a just an

(01:18:48):
amazing background from a business standpoint,and as young as you are too,
I mean I feel old sitting acrossfrom you. Yeah, I mean,
it's all mainly networking and getting toknow people, and you know, growing
where I did you know a littlebit my background, but most of your
listeners probably don't. But I grewup in Price Hill, bounced around.
I mean we probably moved ten fifteentimes in my life. When I was

(01:19:10):
young, my mom worked at theIrs building. We were just talking about
that over in old time. Yeah, I was talking with him off air,
and if you didn't get a chanceto listen, Wow, what an
uplifting conversation I had with the KentuckyState Senator Shelley Funky Fromeyer Just so,
I mean, one positive story afteranother, most notably focusing on northern Kentucky
and everything that's going on over there. I've always been a huge fan of

(01:19:30):
Covington. I have a dear friendwho's been redeveloping Covington since the mid eighties,
back when people thought he was crazy. But they have gorgeous housing stock.
There was so much potential, somebeautiful homes. Some of them need
a little bit of love and attention. But there's row houses. They have
massive square feet, very affordable.So he was gotting those putting apartments in
them, made a really good living. He's one responsible for rehabbing the Oddfellows

(01:19:55):
Hall there on Main Street, That'sright, I know, Yeah, yeah,
I was talking about he was responsiblein large part for the rehabilitation of
the Carnegie which is right behind mybuilding, and what a beautiful place that
is. So it's got all thisstuff going with it. And I always
looked at it at Covington relative toNewport. It's like the west side overlooking

(01:20:15):
downtown Cincinnati versus Mount Adams. It'slike, how come the west side never
blew up? It's got the samedamn zu. Yeah, And there was
just was kind of a always wasa Rundown neighborhood. Now it's catching up,
yeah, but Covington, relative tosome of the other Northern Kentucky neighborhoods
kind of struggle with the same thing. The irs building was a big It
was a switch up my mom.Yeah, my mom worked there. It
was misery and she would complain aboutit every day. I mean it was

(01:20:40):
and it was taking up so muchspace. I think there's almost thirty acres.
Yes, huge, huge. Imean there's no other development opportunity in
the country right now that is soclose to the inner core of a city
that has that much land available,right I mean, and then you do
you go across the Licking River andyou've got the ovation project going on right
now, which is working out.It looks like, I mean some expensive

(01:21:00):
condos over there. Oh yeah.I tried to call them an Airbnb and
they were like, no, we'renot doing Airbnb. So I was like,
well, I'm not spending a milliondollars in Cincinnati then, But uh,
but yeah, I mean it's it'samazing. I mean I'm in Covington
every day. I own a building, former Knights of Columbus building on Madison
Avenue. They're doing a bunch ofconstruction up and down Madison Avenue right now,

(01:21:20):
putting in those little kind of bumpout parking areas for people along the
road there. I understand they're addingstreets in that area where the irs building.
Oh, they're gonna put a wholecommunity there there. They're selling off.
I actually spoke to finance director forthe City of Covington, I think
he was at a Covington Business Councilevent, and I see this whole area

(01:21:41):
as one place. I don't youknow, I'm not weird about Oh,
I can't cross the river the ocean, right. This is one big economic
area, it is, right,And I've you know, I've got friends.
I sit on the board of theCovington Business Council, on the Marketing
committee. Uh, you know,I'm involved in that group I'm part of
the community. I purchased a buildingthere, twenty thousand square foot former Knights

(01:22:03):
Columbus building, and there was zeroactivity there. Now we have ten businesses
in that building. We have acommercial kitchen in the basement. So nobody
wanted to buy the building. Statewas selling it. I was just sitting
there doing nothing, So you know, I bought it. Said what am
I going to do with this commercialkitchen? And now one of the Kentucky
business People of the Year maybe isLiniman. She owns a company called Delice

(01:22:26):
Dish, which is a catering company. She also sub leases the space to
other kitchen people, so she leasesit for me, subleases it to them,
but she was named the Kentucky businessPerson of the Year. She continues
to get grant money to do this, and that we're working on an event
center up on the third floor sothat she can grow her business and I
can finally do something with the upstairsthat we're just using for storage right now.

(01:22:47):
Well, and that helps act asa magnet for others outside who might
be considering moving into our area.And of course Hamilton County could be a
destination for a lot of people.But we see to make life a little
bit more difficult for businesses and peopleinterested in moving in. Taxes are too
high, property taxes are the most. Notably, you know, income taxes

(01:23:08):
in the city of Cincinnati is slatedto go up if that one project's recommendations
go through, and those all actedto repel business. So you know,
I just I think about your businessbackground and what you have been able to
accomplish, and what you've done hasacted as a magnet for others. That's
what we desperately need in Hamilton Countyto be a magnet to make it a

(01:23:28):
desirous place to live. Yeah.Well, I mean they want to pander
to all of the special interest groups, the people that have you ever read
Peter Church and he created this conceptcalled the overproduction of elites. And I
believe we raised an entire generation ofpeople in America that are entitled, that

(01:23:48):
have gone to school for social sciencetype things, and the system can't consume
all these people. There's just notenough jobs for you know, kind hearted
people, right, and you're goingto's our generation that wanted to do your
studies major Yeah, another lot ofbasket weaving, and so you had a

(01:24:09):
whole bunch of people that they wentto school for BS degrees. There's actually
another book called BS Jobs. Andthe system just can't can't take on all
these people with essentially the same skills. So I think or or government ends
up forcing it upon business to expandthese areas and do something that the otherwise

(01:24:30):
wouldn't do because it doesn't advance theirpersonal interest, which is should be to
maximize shareholder value or maximize profit.That's the point of being in business.
No, it takes away from it. You must have a dei officer.
You must comply so say, withlords and masters and government, which creates
opportunities for these degrees which would otherwisego completely unused because they're pointless and worthless.
These people use emotional manipulation. Ohyeah, that's their whole thing.

(01:24:56):
And I think some of these littleentitled brats is I generally refer to a
mas poverty kind and if I wasoff air, you would understand how kind
that is comparison to how I woulddescribe them. But go ahead, But
rarely people question where this money goes. Rarely, right, And there's a
bunch of nonprofits out there. There'sgroups inside of the county, there's groups
inside of city government. There's andthey keep expanding, right, They keep

(01:25:16):
expanding the government to hire their friends. They go to school for these bs
degrees. And what happens taxpayers,Right, we're the ones who have to
take on the burden of these extraunnecessary people, and it just creates a
doom loop for your city. Andyou're seeing it now. They keep going
back to the well asking the taxpayersfor more money. They want to sell

(01:25:39):
off the parks, they want tosell off, you know, the golf
courses, Lunkin Airport, the waterdistrict, the water yeah, water,
I mean, it's just it's nutswhat they do. And they just cannot
stop spending money. And that isthe answer. If you ever run a
business, what happens when you startwhen you when you have less revenue coming

(01:26:00):
in, you have to let peoplego at some point. But instead of
doing that, they keep adding tothe government. If you're broke, why
are you creating a new organization insideof city hall under the city manager to
promote the city that's adding more peopleto a city that's you're already claiming you're
broke. It just it doesn't makesense. And that's why you need business

(01:26:23):
minded people who understand money and don'tcome from these the background of social service
minded people. There's enough of thosepeople. It's great. We know there's
a homeless problem, we know there'spoor people out there. But what you
need to do is encourage businesses togrow. We need people. The whole
reason Detroit failed. A lot ofpeople think Detroit failed because the auto industry,

(01:26:46):
right, and that's a big partof it. Right. One of
the biggest problems is black business hasmoved out of downtown Detroit. The core
of that community left, the businesspeople, that's apport everyone in that community
left. They couldn't deal with thecrime and stuff anymore. You're seeing that
in Cincinnati. You've got patterns thathappen across the country in these liberal run

(01:27:12):
cities, and for whatever reason,people don't pay attention to the signs that
happen, and then we end upwith a monopoly, which we have in
city council with nine of nine citycouncil members of Democrats. Three of three
county commissioners are Democrats, and thingsjust go through, like the rail deal,
like DEI programs, like any ofthese feel good unnecessary things, these

(01:27:38):
problems they invent, and then theysay no, no, no, We've
got a solution for that. Yeah, consumers of taxpayer dollars. That's it,
And well they provide nothing in return. Ultimately, these problems haven't been
solved. I mean, let's faceit, course I need to go back
to the Johnson administration, the GreatSociety program, which is supposed to eradicate
poverty. How well does that workout? We'll continue with Adam Kayler.

(01:28:00):
Find them online Adam Kaylor dot com. Ko E H L E R.
You can help them out with hiscampaign for kind of commission We can certainly
use a voice of logic and reasonand a business minded person as kind of
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Age Breathe Easy. A Minute ofHope is brought to you by the Linder
Center of Hope Linders Center of Hopedot org. His Brian Thomas here with
doctor Jennifer Farrell looking at buy hereCD talk station in a very very happy
Wednesday. T Adam Kailer and cityrunning for kind of commissioner Adam Kaler dot
com where you find I'm koe hl e R. Help them out.
What's need to get him elected?A smart guy business guid somebody's willing to
say no in the face of youknow the woke, you know, bleeding

(01:29:53):
heart types out in the world,which is usually how money gets wasted and
misspent. Non governmental organization is runningaround doing this, doing that, and
I know it props up their ownpersonal economy with how much ultimate good do
they do? So what you needis innovation, the development of technology.
This magnet that we're talking about tobring people and bring make them interested in

(01:30:14):
wanting to come here and showing themthe reasons why investing in or living in
Hamilton County or within the city limitsis it going to be a good thing
for them? And I got toturn to crime, and you brought up
that incident with the Saint Francis,Oh yeah church, the church down there,
they had to close it up.They people having sex on this It's
a magnet for a bunch of peoplesleeping around there, and a lot of

(01:30:35):
criminal activity and not as widely reportedthe crime in downtown Cincinnati. Given how
much there is, you get disappearancethat well, no, that's just going
on in some other city. That'sa problem for some other city. But
no, it's actually we have aproblem here as well. Yeah. I
mean I had a guy banging onmy door. We live in Mount Auburn,

(01:30:57):
kind of parallel to Vine Streets.A guy banging on my door too
in the morning, and I hadto get up and you know, get
on my ring thing and see whothe heck's and banging on my door.
Just some random guy. And thenhe sees somebody down the street, waves
and runs off, and I zoomedin and he had cash in his hand.
He was looking to buy drugs,and I think somebody probably told him,
Hey, meet me out at thishouse, right, and man Adams

(01:31:20):
galloped all the really good stuff.Yeah, they just give somebody random addresses
to meet them at, right,because they're just you know, and there's
a lot of drug activity on VineStreet. But then the next day,
my neighbor across the street calls meand he wasn't there that night, and
he was like hey man, didyou catch anything on your ring? People
were busting into the cars, soI think three cars in the street had
there. And I just had toput a plastic bag on his window yesterday

(01:31:43):
while he's waiting for a window repairpeople to show up the next day because
it was afraid it was going torange. And so I'm out there putting
a construction bag on his window tokeep the rain out. But you know,
I mean, it's just random stufflike that that happens. But speaking
specifically about the Saint Francis Church,and I went to school for the Graben
Former Arts downtown when it was onSycamore. Sure he asbessed this building before
they fixed it up. But Iwent there from eighty eight to ninety five,

(01:32:04):
so you remembered what downtown was likeeighty eight to ninety five. I'm
sure kind of a war zone itwas. The West End was really really
bad. Well, half the schoolwas from the West End. I used
to work it over the Rhine backin the early eighties at Harry's Meats and
Seafood, which is no longer there. But it was a real eye opening
experience for you know, a whiteboy from the left side, you know,

(01:32:25):
it was one of the best jobsI ever had, but it was
it was rough. It was arough neighborhood. Yeah, we used to
go to Alabama's when I was akid. Right, it's still there and
you know, awesome plays and it'sbeen around for a long time. But
you know, there's a lot ofissues going on down there. And Saint
Francis Church has always been very kindof accommodating to the people in the community.
Right, You've always had people outthere on the steps as far back

(01:32:45):
as I can remember. Right,But they finally did they had to close
their doors to these folks because thesecurity costs were around ten thousand dollars a
month is what i'd heard. Wow, how many Catholic churches do you know
they can afford to spend ten thousanddollars a month on two full time security
guards. Only those really big megachurcheshad that kind of money. For the

(01:33:05):
Gatholic churches, they spend all theirmoney on stuff like this, right,
like helping the community. So you'vegot or Vatican City, or Vatican City,
which is where I was married,believe it or not, but we've
got you know, you've got allthese people that coalesce down there, right,
And I think because of the thingsthree CDC's done, you've now compressed

(01:33:26):
all that activity kind of into smallerareas. So you have issues like there's
a lot of shootings last night.I heard I don't know, twenty gun
shots. Uh, and I don'tknow if these people have, you know,
something on their weapons or whatever tomake them shoot faster. Now,
oh blockswitch illgal. But yeah,they've got hoop pop pop pop pop pop
pop. That's how you're hearing it. And uh yeah. Somebody texted me

(01:33:48):
this morning and said, hey,man, do you hear about the shooting
in the West End. And I'mlike, well, I can hear them
all. So I was. Itwasn't surprised by it. But you've got
a lot of activity there Vina McMillanor Liberty, Liberty and Vine, and
you always have the Shell Station andplaces like that. Yeah, but that
whole area right there just open drugactivity from people that don't even live in

(01:34:09):
the community. You've got people comingdown from Avondale and from outside of the
city, you know, working downthere selling drugs. You've got people having
sex on the sidewalks, You've gothuman feces all over the place. You've
got trash everywhere. And I runthat path like I get up in the
morning. I'm practicing for the pigright now. So I leave my house,
go on Vine Street, run allthe way down Vine Street over to

(01:34:30):
Covington to my office on near MartinLuther King. So I do that probably
three times a week. And I'mrunning right down our see everything right,
And it's just like you don't evenhave to be on the street that long
to see something happen. It's Imean, it's wild. Well, let's
pause. With all that in mind, and you being so ultimately intimately familiar
with it, since you'll live there, you walk the walk, let's talk

(01:34:54):
to talk and find out what asolution might be to solve these problems,
because as of right now, itjust seems to be a problem that's well
left unresolved. Seven thirty six morewith that on Kayler, after I mentioned
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I tell you I have never seenanything like this before and after pictures from

(01:35:14):
doctor Fred Peck's just unbelievable cosmetic dentistrywork. And he's been at this for
a long long time. He's afellow, a credited fellow with the American
Academy and Cosmetic Dentistry, one ofonly three in the entire state. I
think it was the first one inthe entire state. Transformative. Absolutely.
If you're someone who doesn't like yoursmile, you're embarrassed by it. You
put your hand in front of yourmouth when you're talking. Old dental work

(01:35:34):
that doesn't match, doesn't look liketeeth. Hey, there's been a lot
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him doctor Meghan Fru who's working onher accreditation with the American Academy and Cosmetic
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(01:35:59):
There are General Dennis. I've beengoing to doctor Fredpeck for years. Great
clinic. The people there are sounbelievably nice, nice, it's always on
the cutting edge as with all things, doctor Peck has always been involved with
you get the latest treatments. That'sall there to design for your comfort and
of course good dental hygiene and dentalwork. So take care of yourself.
Get in touch with doctors Peck andFru. Tell them I said, how

(01:36:20):
do you call for an appointment?Five one three six seventy six, sixty
six, six seventy six sixty six. Learn more? Check them out online.
Go to Peck Peck, Pecksmiles dotcom, fifty five KRC dot com,
five thousand dollars. That's here yougo. You know, I first
one to want to work ass partlyclouded it mostly Sunday today going off to

(01:36:42):
sixty one, dropping at thirty sevenevery night and patchy frost as possible.
Sixty three tomorrow's high with most ofthe Sunday skies forty three of the overnight
low. And on Friday we're goingup to seventy one, partly Sunday with
a chance of showers after three fiftyone. Now type for traffic, run
the UCF Tramfhics Center. Regular screeningsare key for early cancer detection, especially
for breast, mung and colorectal cancerschedule yours now at the University of Cincinnati

(01:37:03):
Cancer Center called five one three,five eighty five. You see ce see
today South Pound seventy one break lightscontinue paying us to broken down truck at
Western Row, then slow again fieldsIrtle towards Peiffer. They're continuing to work
with an accident on South Pound sevenforty seven at to seventy five. Chuck
Ingram on fifty five KRC Lead talkStation seven forty one fifty about Kerr City

(01:37:29):
Talk Station. Brian Thomas here Powerpowerwith Adam Kahler run for Kenny Commissioner.
Always enjoy talking with Adam. He'sgot some great ideas, proven a businessman,
successful businessman, and he still committedin and weed to the city of
Cincinnati. He wants to make ita better place. And on in off
Eric keep hearing Adams comments, it'dbe easy for houd to pack up his
bag and leave. I mean,he's got that blank U money, you

(01:37:50):
know what I mean. He doesn'thave to deal with this, he doesn't
have to run for commissioner. Hedoesn't have to put up with the violence
that he talked about in the lastsegment, that he sees literally every day.
But he loves the city of Cincinnatiand Hamilton County of course county seat.
And let's off, let's offer mylisteners some suggestions on what you talked

(01:38:11):
about and as County Commission, whatyou might do to address that, for
example, crime issue and the trashand the urban decay. Well, I
think you hit on something. Ithink one of the biggest problems you've seen
this in city government in particular,is the corruption. And these people are
getting corrupted over ten grand, twentygrand. It's the jeff Pastors of the

(01:38:31):
world, all these people. Imean you have like three of them at
one time, you know, andit's Smith. I'm sorry, Christopher.
And how much of that have wenot met? Oh yeah, and how
much have we not seen? Right? I mean, these are just the
people that got caught, that's true. Oh yeah, Okay. It's like
the drugs flown across the border.Well, they'll make a big hit and
they'll find five hundred thousand fentanyl pills. But that's one shipment among the many

(01:38:56):
that have already made it through.So clearly you get the rail deal.
The rail deals what really right,I think, and just understanding that and
being deeply involved in that, andwhen you become kind of the figurehead of
a movement like that, you haveso many people that reach out to you,
that come out of the woodwork andtell you about things. And I'm
like, this place is corrupt,this is insane, and there's nobody who

(01:39:20):
has, like you said, fyou money that doesn't need their bribes.
Like, all I care about isCincinnati. All I want is Cincinnati to
do good. I went to schoolin Pittsburgh. I want to be better
than Pittsburgh at everything. Right yeah, I want to be better in Columbus
at everything. I hear them talkingup there about how everything, oh Columbus

(01:39:41):
is so good this and that we'rethe biggest city in Ohio. I want
to I want to be better thanthem at everything. And right now,
I don't see that happening in Cincinnati. Don't see that with anything that they're
doing. I don't see that atthe county. I feel like we've got
a poor leadership problem here, andwe have a monopoly. We have a
monopoly of ideas and we have amonopoly of power. Right now. You
don't have anybody to stand in theirway, and you have to have somebody

(01:40:05):
that's a conservative or at least alibertarian or something get in there and just
say, wait a minute, waita minute, why are we spending money
on these pet projects? Why arewe spending money on things that are going
to promote you politically. I don'tneed to be promoted politically. I'm good.
Me and my wife are watching showson Tuscan houses. We could buy
on twenty acres with you know,it's quiet. We got olive trees and

(01:40:28):
lemon trees and we could just godo that. Why am I here still?
You know? And it's like thisstuff bothers me. It bothers me
a lot because I can't just leaveand watch my city degrade into nothingness.
Like and I don't want to makea bunch of Democrats angry. But Democrats
have a compassion grift going on,right, Yeah, There's only so much

(01:40:49):
they can say, and they allhave to align around that compassion grift.
That's why a monopoly of like mindedDemocrats doesn't work, because nobody can stand
up and say we're not doing that, We're not doing the de opera.
Whoa, oh wait, what doyou mean we're not doing the d opera?
Don't you aligned with our values likeyou need somebody who doesn't align with

(01:41:12):
their values, who can come inthere and kind of be a jerk.
Yeah, there's an op ed pieceI read this morning about taxes and the
reality of it was who pays corporatetaxes? And I'll strongly encourage my listeners
to the extent you didn't need tohear me. Read Phil Graham and Mike
Sallin's op ed piece, who payscorporate taxes? Look in the mirror.
The facts show, you know,the Trump lowered taxes and the realities benefited

(01:41:36):
everyone in every quintile substantially. Andthe facts are, if you are a
corporation and you pay taxes, youpass those taxes down to people who buy
your goods and services. It's nothingbut a pass through. So they scream
and yell about corporateations not paying theirfair share and these evil blah blah blah
blah blah, and it's a bunchof nonsense. It is a lie in

(01:41:59):
the face of reality. And yetthey continue to parrot that and fail to
provide the facts. When they're easilycountered. And if you have a different
voice in the room, they startscreaming about we need to raise taxes on
X Y, and Z. Youcan point to the information and say,
look, no, that's wrong.This is what actually happens when you lower
taxes. These are the facts.This isn't emotion, this isn't class warfare.

(01:42:21):
And I know it's not a pageout of your playbook from Cloud Implement
or whoever you're reading. This isreal and you can benefit the lives those
that you purport to want to represent. And you're the one that's for the
poor and the down trodden. Youwant to help belong. Lower corporate business
taxes, lower the price of goodsand services, give people more money in
their pockets by not confiscating it andthrowing it at a bunch of wasteful programs

(01:42:44):
that don't do anything to benefit thatabsolutely nothing. And what do they do.
They tell people to go out andprotest their wages, ask for more
money, you need a living wage, this and that. What's happening right
now? I mean, I justsaw a video the other day. Wendy's
is shifting. Now. If youdrive up to Wendy's booth, they have
an AI asking you for your order. Now, Yeah, right, so
okay, protest wages. How doyou not know that at some point these

(01:43:09):
companies are gonna get smart and they'rejust going to hire less people. It's
happening in California. Oh huge,it's going crazy right now. You know,
the Kiosk never calls in sick,never shows up late, always tends
to work, gets the order right, or the person entering the information garbage
in, garbage out is responsible forscrewing it up if it gets screwed up,
that's right. Well, what happens. Prices wages go up at Kroger,

(01:43:30):
right, Prices then go up.Of course, then the people say,
wait a minute, prices one up, we need more money. It's
a loop. It's a cycle,right, And eventually the company is the
one that has the power to closethat cycle. They're the ones that eventually
say, guess what, guys,we're gonna put a stop to this.
We're gonna automate everything, yep,or just close the business down completely because
you can't make any money when peopleare ripping you off. That's right.

(01:43:53):
And I'm not saying that I don'twant people to have jobs like I want
people to have jobs. I wantpeople to create companies, want people to
hire people. I want to focusat the county level on organizations that we
already fund like alloy that provides thatkind of service. I want young people
in schools to realize we live inthe United States of America. People come

(01:44:15):
here to start businesses. You livehere and you don't even see the opportunities
that are available to you. It'scrazy to me. And why aren't we
You know what, Brian, WhenI grew up, we were poor.
We have a single mom. Mydad was a drug addict, alcoholic,
didn't pay child support, ran off. We never got a postcard at my
house explaining how you could start abusiness. Nobody ever told us how to

(01:44:36):
do that. I don't even knowto this day. Where do you go
to that? What resource does thecounty or the city provide that says,
hey, if you need something,go here. Do they teach that in
schools? Do they teach entrepreneurship?Are they pushing kids into the trades.
No, They're pushing them into collegeprograms to create more elites, to create

(01:44:58):
more of these people who just complainand create their own jobs in this system
that's also supported by government. It'san educational problem that we're dealing with.
Have we live in a country,the best country on earth to build a
business and to grow things, andAmerican citizens people in the City of Cincinnati

(01:45:21):
don't know how to take advantage ofthose opportunities. Let's get one more segment
with that. Adam Keyler seven fortynine fifty five KC City Talks Stations.
Speaking of college, if you're planningon going to college, at least go
to college and get a real degree. Please not one of the ones Adams
is talking about right there, butright now Emory Federal Credit Union, My
friends at Emory, and if you'replanning on going to college, your child's

(01:45:42):
planning on going to college, youneed financial help. Emory Federal Credit Union
is now accepting scholarship applications for theirmembers. Applicants must be planning to attend
a two or four year college inthe fall as a full time student,
and certain other restrictions apply, asthe case may be in all these things.
But for more information on banking withEmory, which I strongly recommend,
services there is superior and you knowyou don't have to worry about you know,
woke ideology and all that. Theydon't have time for that. They're

(01:46:04):
too busy serving their members with greatrates and all the other plans including the
scholarship opportunities. Go to EMORYFCU dotorg to learn more. Emory FCU dot
org. Now this offer for thescholarship ends April thirtieth, So act now.
NMLS number four zero one zero eightseven federally insure by NCUA, and
they aren't equal housing wonder fifty fiveKRC the talk station. Have you heard

(01:46:26):
about ovation the urban resort? AndFunday? Time for the weather cutting partly
to mostly sunny, partly cloud andmostly Sunday day to day sixty one down
to thirty seven over night, maybesome frost sixty three under mostly sunny skies
Tomorrow forty three overnight low, andthen we'll have a highest seventy one on
Friday, partly sunny with a chanceof shower shown up after three pm.
Right now fifty degrees. Time fora traffic update from the UCUT Traffic Center.

(01:46:49):
Regular screenings are key for early cancerdetection, especially for breastmong and called
the Rectal Cancer Schedule US now atthe University of Cincinnati Cancer Center called five
one three eighty five u S.See today stepbound seventy five getting heavier between
Tylersville and Union Center, then slowagain through Lackland stapthbound seventy one. That's

(01:47:10):
close to a fifteen minute delay,slowing first at Western Road thanks to a
broken down left side. Then fromField Zervi to the Reagan Highway Chuck ing
ramonnth fifty five kr SE the talkstation seven fifty three, I fift about
KRCIT talk station, have a littletime after the top of the our news
to talk, and then we getJudge n Apolitano on killing the Constitution's subject

(01:47:31):
matter of his op ed piece whichcomes out to night in which I get
a copy of early. Thankfully,we's look forward to the judge and Adam
Kayler and studio Adam Kayler dot comswhere you find him to help them out
for his kind of commissioner run.And one of the areas I mean,
we talked law enforcement just generally speaking, and of course the city is Sinceinna
we've got the cincinn Police Department,which doesn't get much love at all from
the elected officials on council and themayor, but sheriff department, you're gonna

(01:47:54):
have some measure of control over fundingin the Sheriff's department and maybe cracking down
and seeing that the bale gets fixed, the elevators work, they can communicate
with each other and maybe lure moresheriff's deputies into the POSIL. So that's
a big problem we've had. Imean, you had to defund the police
movement. You know, you havethis bail reform stuff that you know,
caused people to be out on thestreets and cause crime to go up.

(01:48:15):
And you know, it's one ofthe biggest expenses. I think it is
the biggest expense for the County Commission, is the sheriff's department. And if
you get a guy like Jim Neilback in there. I talk to Jim
all the time. I'm at allthese Republican events and we're all over the
city. Jim is at every singleevent. Yep. Jim is one of
the most dedicated people to running foroffice that I've seen. Every event he's

(01:48:38):
there. And if we get aguy like Jim Neil in there who knows
how to run a sheriff's department,who is aligned with values that I'm aligned
with, and at most I wouldsay conservative and libertarian people are aligned with,
which is use the money effectively exactly. We're giving you a huge chunk
of money use that money effectively.Don't be aligned with these woke ideologies about

(01:49:03):
you know, crime, this andthat, and feeling sorry for people and
trying to reform everybody because there's somepeople you can't reform. I mean,
I grew up in a bad neighborhood. There was just some people that you're
never gonna be able to do anythingwith. Jim understands that. Jim's been
He's got the experience, he understandsthose kind of things. You need folks
like him. You need Tom Brinkman, you need Jonathan Pearson. We need

(01:49:25):
Republicans to vote down ballot for once. Oh yeah, that's one of the
biggest problems we have. Democrats.They get that blue you know, slate
card. They go down there theyvote for every single Democrat. We do
not have that in the Republican Party. We do have the pink slate card.
Sure, but people will go inthere, they'll vote for Trump in
twenty twenty four and that'll be it, and then they'll leave. We need

(01:49:47):
to go all the way down thatslate card, make sure we're hitting all
those Republicans because we need a changein this country. Things have been going
in the wrong direction for way toolong and at the county level, if
you get me, and you geta guy like Jonathan Pearson on and you've
got jim Neal run that sheriff's department, you're gonna start seeing some changes and
we'll at least have some conservatives incharge of some sort of criminal justice type

(01:50:14):
programs. Because the city's too fargone. We're not going to be able
to do anything in the city rightnow. In the port police in the
city, I mean, they're justthe way they're treated. We at least
can do something about the Sheriff's departmentwell, and that would benefit ever runy
in the county. Well. It'salways a pleasure of having any on the
program and talking with the Adam,I wish you the best of luck,
and again I'll encourage my listeners getto your website Adam Kailer dot com ko

(01:50:35):
e h l e r's he spellslast name. Help them out. There's
a little contribute little click there.You can help out them out and maybe
we can write the ship here inHamilton County come November. Adam, until
we talk again, thanks for yourstopping in today and it's been great having
you on the program again. I'lllook forward to talking to you again real
soon. I appreciate it, Brian, stick around, folks got more to
talk about it. And again JudgeEnned of Paul Town what at eight thirty

(01:50:55):
break Back in America and we're followingYou're twenty twenty four election headquarters and this
president has to go fifty five KRCthe talk station, Bull talking anybody who
thinks of White House press secretaries tellingyou it's truth. You don't know what's
going on at all on fifty fiveKRC the talk station eight o six.

(01:51:19):
Here at fifty five KRC, DETalk Station, Ryan Thomas wishing a very
happy Wednesday, looking forward to thebottom of there with Judge Enupal Town of
killing the Constitution. FISA renewed andit's expanded, and it's expanded it kind
of an evil, nefarious way too. So we'll get the details from the
judge coming up, and I'm lookingforward to having them on to talk about

(01:51:40):
that. But the point is,you know they can listen to your communications
with foreign entities. That gives themme a right then, a right in
spite of the Constitution, a rightto then tap into your communications with others
here in the United States without awarrant, and then they've also expanded it
now the data collection component of it. So the new law requires downstream installers,

(01:52:04):
maintainers, and repairers of like,for example, fiber optics systems to
assist the FEDS for the purposes ofspying on well their own customers. And
in addition to that, they're notallowed to talk about it. It's a
prohibition on them revealing that they're helpingthe FEDS spy on you. They're not
allowed to tell you that. AndI asked him if I've read that analysis,

(01:52:26):
and I followed up with him,I said, wait a second,
this is this means we may havea future plaintiff. Now. Part of
the problem with FAZA is it's neverbeen tested in court, it's never been
subjected to a constitutional review. Youdon't know that you've been spied on.
You do not know that your civilrights have been violated by virtue of them
spying on you and your records.You can assume it's happened, as I

(01:52:47):
always use my example, my friend, my friend that I went to church
with growing up, lives in France. He's a French citizen. Now that
it was major in college, wasFrench? You married a French lady and
he's been living there for the lastcouple of decades and A communicated with him
on the telephone. I've communicated withhim on Facebook and other social media,
so I can assume that they havemy information. They've been listening to my

(01:53:09):
conversations or looking at my emails andthat kind of thing. You know.
I'm one of those people in thecamp that is like, fine, go
ahead, knock yourself out. Idon't believe in it. It is a
violation of my civil rights. AndI'll spend all of my energy fighting against
their ability to do that. Andsomeday maybe I'll be the plaintiff that has
gotten standing to go into court andchallenges. But so far, there isn't
anybody out there that has standing.This FIZA has never seen the light of

(01:53:30):
a court hearing. No one hasever been had the opportunity to go into
court and say you're violating the Constitution. But because they have extended it.
Now, if let's say you arean installer of these systems, you are
a repairer, a maintainer of afiber optic system, you have the ability
to gather data on your customers,or you do gather data and the FEDS

(01:53:54):
knock on your door and say giveme that information, which they do all
the time. We know that fromthe X file, the Twitter files that
we're released, We know about itfrom the congressional hearings on Facebook. We
know about the FBI having set upoffices and social media companies to control the
messaging, which has First Amendment implications. But if you're one of these downstream

(01:54:15):
providers and now you've been taken upin this and you're ordered to cooperate with
the FEDS, and let's say you'renot inclined to do that, and you
do tell the world about it,I mentioned to know with the ramifications of
the repercussions on that, because accordingto the law, you are not permitted
to do that. That suggests thatmaybe a crime to let the world know
that you're cooperating with the federal government. Connection with the records request sounds to

(01:54:40):
me like you might have standing ifyou go out into the world and start
telling people about it and they goafter you, They go after you to
punish you on some level. Welcometo standing. You have been individually harmed
by a statute or a bill ora piece of legislation that is unconstitutional.
You will be the lead plaintiff inthe the first case to ever test this
in court, which someone had hadthe opportunity to do that long in advance

(01:55:06):
of where we are today. Consideringagain, they just did renew it for
another couple of years, two years. Anybody have any odds being laid on
whether they renew it again two yearsdown the road. Anyway, you know,
it wasn't that long ago FBI DirectorRay been signing the alarm on the

(01:55:26):
heightened threat environment, which is whathe called it, the worst he's ever
seen. As I look back overmy career in law enforcement, I'd be
hard pressed to think of a timewhere so many threats to public safety and
national security were so elevated all atonce. And that is the case as
I sit here today. That wasprior to the passage of the ninety five
billion dollars aid package for Ukraine andIsrael and every other country under the sun.

(01:55:48):
Apparently we're aiding and we're helping.After October seventh, he went on
to say, is when we wenta whole another level, went to a
whole nother level after October seventh.Course, that was the murder of the
innocent and individuals, the non uniformcombatants attending rock concerts in Israel, the
murder of elderly, the burning aliveof people, the killing of babies and

(01:56:12):
children by terrorists, and now wehave rioting and protests in the street in
support of the very terrorists who didall the committed all those atrocities. Columbia
University engaging massive acts of anti Semitism, they had to cut shut down classes.
They virtual classes measure if your childwas going to Columbia University, especially

(01:56:33):
if they're Jewish, Apparently there's nosafe place on campus, which is why
they shut down the university. There'ssome suggestions out there that the parents or
the individuals paying tuition who went intodebt and massive debt they apparently had to
go into to go to that university, should demand their money back because Prohamas

(01:56:54):
protesters have made their lives miserable andit made it such a dangerous environment that
the officials club he said, well, I'm sorry, we're not going to
be able to have classes. FBIdirector Ray pointed out China is the biggest
threat. But I got I justI clung onto his After October seventh is

(01:57:14):
when we went to a whole notherlevel because China, while being the number
one threat, and of course cyberthreat is a huge, huge issue,
he said. You could close youreyes and pull an industry or sector out
of a hat, and chances areBeijing has targeted it. The PRC has
engaged in the largest and most sophisticatedtheft of intellectual poverty and expertise in the

(01:57:35):
history of the world, levering age'smost powerful weapons, starting with cyber.
Yeah, that's a huge problem.Their military has also grown substantially. And
this is the same speech he gavewhen he pointed out that even if the
bureau's top cyber agents and cyber intelligenceanalysts were focused solely on China and not
on ransomware, Iran or Russia,Chinese hackers would still conservatively outnumber FBI cyberpersonnel

(01:58:00):
by fifty to one at least.But then he pivoted over to border security,
a top issue of concern for himin this time that he's never seen
so many concerns. Let's not forgetit didn't take a big number of people

(01:58:20):
on nine to eleven to kill threethousand people, he pointed out. And
when you link that comment with theone about October seventh. Terrorism immediately comes
to mind, and terrorism here inthis country of ours by people who have
been put here for nefarious purposes,or who came here with nefarious intent,

(01:58:40):
who we don't know where they are, We don't know what they're up to
until such time as they decide thatthey're going to go through with whatever activity
or harm they seek to do tous. And Ray will be able to
stamp back and say, see,I told you so. I was warning
you before about the problem. Theproblem stems from an open border. The
problem lies at the feet of JoeBiden and his administration. And I just

(01:59:02):
I kind of wonders, I mean, you expect this to happen in a
presidential election year is heated and dividedas this country is already, it's only
going to get more so over theover the course of the summer, that
something bad might very well happen.Is Biden going to get the blame for
that? Just kind of ask outa loud on that one. Fentanyl's a

(01:59:27):
huge problem obviously flowing into the border, But me, it's the humanity's it's
the resources that have been soaked up. It's the schools that have been overrun.
And it is you know, themilitary age folks from the four corners
of the universe, most notably recentlythe Chinese Communist Party aged military folks coming
from China and entering our country throughthe southern border. How in the hell
did they get there? And whatare they up to? Considering China has

(01:59:51):
dedicated so much of his resources togoing after us on a day to day
basis five one, three, seven, four, nine to fifty five hundred,
eight hundred eighty two to three.Talk, Oh, Russia is doing
it too. The water systems,Yeah, and wait to hear about this
one. Hope you can stick around. It's at least for judge of Polatano

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and hope you get touch in touchwith plum typ plumbing. It's always plumbing
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(02:01:20):
five fair CD talk station if youhave having a decent Wednesday. Jud Jannapolitana
coming up next, and I heardme the aviation expert Jay rat left tomorrow.
I always enjoyed talking to Jay.I missed him having on the program
last week, but he'll be backtomorrow. Maybe we'll find out about this
Swiss air jet nearly colliding with fourplanes at John F. Kennedy Airport yesterday.

(02:01:42):
Four a bit of a communication snafffu and sadly this one happened.
Apparently a near collision at JFK tookplace just the day before two other planes
almost crashed at Ronald Rigg and WashingtonNational Airport outside DC. The planes were
cleared for takeoff on the same runnyone way at the same time. So

(02:02:02):
thank you to the astute Swiss pilot. In this particular case, the Swiss
airplane was given all clear to takeoff. The pilot, however, noticed
another plane taxing nearby and did theaboard, rejected takeoff and avoided the collision
with the other airplanes. So that'sthat's a good thing. Bad thing is

(02:02:23):
that, Well, that kind ofthing happened a couple of days in a
row, nearly and really calls intoquestion so we have the Boeing planes to
worry about, and now we haveair traffic control generally to worry about.
It's okay, I'm sure it'll allwork out. The Federal Aviation Administration set
it's launching an investigation, giving mevery little comfort anyway, something else not
giving me comfort. According to wehave the cyber attackers, we have the

(02:02:45):
Chinese Communist Party. We have allthe countries in the world who hate us,
including the Russians, going and breakinginto our systems and maybe testing the
waters for some perhaps major shutdown.And here's something that's rather frightening. We
got both Democrats and Republicans and abipartis an effort to figure out why there's
recent cyber attacks on water stricken droughtstricken areas in the Western United States.

(02:03:08):
They have asked Department of Homeland SecuritySecretary Alejando Majorcas for information and a briefing
to provide answers regarding this cyber attackthat was launched against the wall against the
water system in a place called Muleshoe, Texas. It caused I'm looking at
Fox News reporting on this. Thehack caused the small town's water system to

(02:03:30):
overflow and within two hours, centtens of thousands of gallons of water flowing
out of the town's water tower.It was one of three small towns in
Texas that were linked to a Russianhack tovist group. And the scary stuff
about this we hear about it fromDave Hatter all the time. This is

(02:03:50):
a municipal water company as opposed toyour individual business, which, of course
FBI Director Ray pointed out, Yeah, if you have a business, you
are being attacked the Chinese around attwenty four to seven. According to Mike
Ceipert, he's the city manager ofthe hail center where that attack happened in
Texas, there were about thirty seventhousand attempts in four days to log into

(02:04:17):
the city's firewall thirty seven thousand.Apparently. Ultimately, the attempted hack failed
because the city unplugged its system andoperated it manually. Move over to Muleshu,
which has a population of five thousand. The hackers actually caused the system

(02:04:38):
to overflow before it was shut downand taken over manually by the city officials.
Another group connected to these Russian hackers, the Cyber Army of Russia Reborn
Splitters, claim responsibility for that attack. According to the elected officials seeking answers
from my Orcas, water facilities continueto be central to our nation's critical infrastructure,

(02:05:00):
and our water resources faced many limitations. Should a hack similar to Texas
incident occur in Arizona or other statesthat may lack sufficient water supply, it
could disrupt operations across the region withdevastating effects. Of course, people could
very easily die. And perhaps evenmore importantly, although everybody needs water to
live more so even than food,it's more important thing to have with you.

(02:05:25):
If you are in an abandoned situationwithout resources, you better darnwell have
water. You can go many,many, many days without food. Water
not so much. But imagine whenthe electricity grid shuts down and if there
are thirty seven thousand attacks over aperiod of four days in this hail center.
Can you imagine the volume of attackson a major electrical provider, someone

(02:05:49):
who's providing electricity to multiple states,and they have they allocated sufficient resources to
fight that off, to protect thecitizens from that. I'd like to think
so, But when things like thishappen, it makes me really calling a
question whether they are whether they havetheir act together. Frightening stuff frightening ah,

(02:06:12):
and elections do have consequences. Imust point out. Let's get to
Judge Edinapolitano coming up next. Lookingforward to having another great conversation with the
judge on our constitutional liberties and freedomswhich well, in his words, are
being killed. First though, wordfor calling electric. Got your plumbing taken
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seven four one one two fifty fiveKRC out there. Time for your nine
first warning. Weather forecast partly fadingand mostly Sunday Today sixty one for the
high time to thirty seven overnight patchefrost is possible. Tomorrow's high is sixty
three with mostly sunny skies, afew clouds over at night. Tomorrow night
down to forty three, and thenFriday is going to be partly sunning,

(02:08:05):
chance of shower shows up after threepm seventy one the high End Right now,
it's fifty three hyper traffic Chuck fromthe UC how Traffic Center. Regular
screenings are key for early cancer detection, especially for breast, lung and call
the rectal cancers schedule yours now atthe University of Cincinnati Cancer Center called five
one three five eighty five U seesee seed today. Problems once again today

(02:08:28):
on northbound four seventy one. There'san accident on the bridge. Left lane's
blocked. So what was clearing outfrom Grand is now over a fifteen minute
delay into town and growing Southbound seventyfive continues to slow through Lachland. Southbound
seventy one break lights between Fields Tirdleand Red Bank coming up next. We're
gonna see if the judge can bethrown off of the air after just five

(02:08:50):
comments, like his favorite Major LeagueBaseball manager Aaron Boone did for the Yankees
earlier this week. But Aaron didn'tsay a word. Chucking Hunt fifty five
KARC the talk station twenty nine Wednesday. It is that time of the week,
one of my favorite times of theweek. Joining the fifty five Karase

(02:09:11):
mornings every Wednesday at this time,Judge and Neapolitana find him online. Judging
Freedom is the name of his show. You'll see him interview some wonderful folks.
We'll find out who's going to betalking to later at the end of
the segment, as we always do, Welcome back your honor. It's a
pleasure to have you. Thank you, Thank you, Brian, good morning.
I think Aaron Boone's the Cincinnati guy, isn't he? I think,

(02:09:31):
yeah, yes, I mean,this is what Chuck is talking about.
Is insane. Some guy in thestands shouted at the Empire, and the
Empire thought it was coming from AaronBoone, the manager, and threw him
out of the game in the firstinning. And Boone said, I didn't
say a word, and the guyin the stands identified himself, and the

(02:09:52):
Empire still threw Aaron Boone out.Now there are calls to remove the Empire.
Yeah, I would like to think, well, crazy, you do
speak, and sometimes you speak andoften speak like I do, truth to
power, which is an important thingand a sadly lacking commodity these days.
I think people are too afraid tosay what's on their mind and speak the

(02:10:13):
truth about like for example, ourConstitution being killed. Killing the Constitution Judgenna
Politanus column that comes out tonight,and it is an excellent one, and
you do discuss the renewal of Sectionseven to a FIZA and as well the
expansion of that segment. So it'sgotten worse. They promised us they would
do some reforming. They voted specificallyno to the obligation to get a warrant

(02:10:39):
when looking for our effects and papers, digital or otherwise. You ask for
that amendment. We asked for it. We were hoping for it because that's
what the Constitution calls for. Allthose chuckleheads up there's took an oath of
office to uphold the Constitution. Here, they had an opportunity to do just
that, and no, it gotshot down. They must be terrified of
something. The intelligence community must havedirt on certain members of Congress. There's

(02:11:05):
no other rational basis for their cavinglike this. How could you possibly vote
against requiring the FBI to get awarrant from a judge before they can search
a database of scooped up data byAmerica's spies. Well, the vote was
two twelve to two twelve in theHouse, and the speaker left the speaker

(02:11:28):
chair went down into the well andbroke the tie, and so that lost.
At the same time, seven outtwo has expanded. Seven out two
is the section of the FISA lawthat lets FEDS spy on foreign persons inside
the US and out of it withouta search warrant, even when they talked
to Americans. The phiz acord hasexpanded that to allow the FEDS to spy

(02:11:52):
on those Americans. So I callmy cousin in Florence, or I email
email a bookseller in London. Theycan spy on me all they want.
Under this law. They can spyin everybody with whom I communicate, including
you. They can then spy ineverybody with whom that person you communicates.
Do the math. Pretty soon you'reup to a couple one hundred million people

(02:12:16):
being spied on without a search one. Now here's where it gets worse.
The federal government can go to yourcable installer and force the cable installer to
give them access to the fiber optictraffic on that cable. And if the

(02:12:37):
installer tells his own customers that he'sbeen forced to do this, he will
be prosecuted. Wait a minute,he's going to be prosecuted for speech,
and he is forced to help thegovernment violate your right to privacy. Answer
to both questions is yes. Now, of course this hasn't happened yet.
The law was just signed into existence. As far as we know, it

(02:12:58):
hasn't. It may be happening aswe speak. Because all this happens below
the surface. You don't even knowyou're being spied on until you are uniquely
harmed. Well, and as Ipointed out in response to your wonderful column,
yessuy when you send it, doesthis not provide an excellent opportunity to
finally get someone with standing to gointo court that fiber optics installer who says

(02:13:22):
no MOS tells his client or tellsthe residential customer or whoever, listen,
the government is making me spy onyou. That subjects him to prosecution,
which he can contest by saying thisis unconstitutional in a correct call, you
got standing fire her, correct?I am waiting for a cable installer.
Yeah, just say to the Feds, hey, guys, this is not

(02:13:45):
East Germany. I'm not spying foryou. I know. I'm gonna tell
these people you asked me to spyon them. Come and get me,
and we'll have a nice argument beforea presumably fair federal judge who will tell
us that the constant means what itsays. That is, I, well,
one other, one other thing thisuh now shout not report. There's

(02:14:07):
an exception to it, and that'sif members of Congress are spied on,
then the spies must tell the Congress. Do you believe that, yes,
I actually wrote a statute and exemptedthemselves from the statute. I can't believe,

(02:14:30):
you said East Germany, and yeah, I can't believe we woke up
in East Germany one day. Aconstitution has been shredded or killed as the
as the column points out, thethe the the the process. There,
let's move back just for a moment, because I want to I want to
get this solidified in people's minds.The warrant requirement, which you and I
both know should have been easily votedon in past. It didn't. Right,

(02:14:52):
they can underfize it. Let's justassume, for the sake of this
conversation only that pizes, okay,that our talking was some foreign national makes
it acceptable for them to listen toour communication. Phase two, though,
is them listening to other communications likemy conversations with you on or off air.
And I know they can listen onair because it's public. But let's
say we're emailing back and forth.Because you talk with a foreign national,

(02:15:16):
they can look at our email exchangesand get that. If they had to
have probable cause, it would havebeen predicated on the conversations with the foreign
national. In other words, theyfound evidence that a crime, was it
being committed or what is going tobe committed? That would serve as the
basis for them to go to courtand get a warrant so they could look

(02:15:39):
at the other conversations you had.I mean, that's the predicate, the
criminal component in this There is nothingat all connected to criminal activity. Therefore
there is no basis for a warrant. Therefore there is no basis for the
surveillance. Now, when that argumentwas made by a half dozen Republicans to

(02:16:00):
Thomas Massey among them, in fact, that Thomas Massey actually got angry at
one point on the floor of thehouse, he was as brilliant and articulate
as ever. But when those argumentswere made on the floor of the House
by three or four Republicans, theywere countered by the Republican establishment who acted

(02:16:20):
as if the Constitution didn't exist,who basically said, we need to know
what Hamas is saying, what Harmasis saying. This has nothing to do
with Hamas. This has to dowith spying on innocent Americans without suspicion,
without probable cause, and without awarrant, all three of which are required

(02:16:41):
by the Fourth Amendment before they canspy on any Americans. Spy all your
want on Hamas. Don't try andscare me by telling me that Hamas is
going to come here because you can'tspy on me. That is a disconnect.
Congressman Turner, I think is fromOhio, you know. And I
started the show out this morning remindingmy listeners that the Biden administration and the

(02:17:05):
FBI has agreed to pay one hundredand thirty nine million dollars for victims of
the sexual abuse by that evil pedophileNasser who molested all those US Gymnast women
when they were teenagers. They didnot investigate an actual allegation of criminal conduct.
They were approached women told them they'vebeen molested by this guy. They

(02:17:26):
sat on it and didn't do JackSquad. So they're talking about five inspying
on this in order to predict ormake sure Hamas doesn't fill in the blank
when they've got real crimes that weend up having a taxpayer dollars to pay
off because they screwed up. Theycan't even have what's on their own plate.
Good point. So a great point, Brian. So when the New
York Times says FBI to pay onehundred and thirty seven million, the FBI

(02:17:50):
is not paying a nickel. TheAmerican taxpayers are paying one hundred and thirty
seven million, which, by theway, it comes to about a million
dollars per young thing email gymnast.What happened to them is horrible. It
is What the FBI failed to dois reprehensible. They should have been fired
and prosecuted from outfeasance in office.Let us pivot over before we part company

(02:18:15):
today, Judgeennenapolitano, Last time Ichecked, last time I checked, and
read my Constitution. We have afreedom of contract, the right to contract
free from unreasonable government regulations. Thisis protected by the due crosss cause of
the First Amendment. So how isit that the FTC can come in and
with a wave of a pen bancontractual provisions in what exists in like one
fifth of America's contracts. Now,I'm no fan of my no compete clause

(02:18:39):
in my contract with iHeartMedia, butI've got one. I signed a contract
knowing what my limitations were in termsof my if I walked out here and
left. But how is it thatFTC has the power to unilaterally eradicate a
contractual provision that exists in many employer'scontracts. They don't, And as soon

(02:19:00):
as this is challenged in a federalcourt, the FTC will lose. This
is big government run them UK.I don't like these non compete things either.
I think the free market is betteroff when we all can compete.
I have that at Newsmax. Ihad it for twenty four years at Fox.
It was never implicated because I didn'tleave and try and compete with them.

(02:19:24):
But competition improves the product, andwhen the employeerer is in fear that
the employee may leave and compete,it creates a better work environment and a
better product. However, those arenot governmental decisions to be made. The
government can't walk in and say wedon't like this contract, we're going to

(02:19:46):
abrogate it. The Constitution expressly prohibitsthat you cannot take life, liberty what
this is, or property without dueprocess of law. Okay, let's go
through due process. Well, let'ssee how you can justify this FTC.
They can't. Well, and it'sjust one more illustration of overreach. We've
seen this from the Bureau of Alcoholtobacco on firearms with their extensions of rules,

(02:20:11):
and they're magically creating a short barrelrepon out of a handgun with the
wave of a pen. There isno specific authority for the FTC to even
engage in this particular rule making activity. They don't have congressional authority. The
least they could do is go throughCongress, and if everybody in Congress hates
no compete clauses, they could passthe law endeavoring to change them. Maybe

(02:20:31):
that could be challenged in court aswell, but at least it would go
through the appropriate process. Expedience isreally the word that comes to mind anymore
with government. If it's fast,we can get it done with the wave
of a pen. We are goingto ignore the Constitution, going back to
the separation of powers in the furthererosion of urchins. As you say,
if this were Congress, after adebate, and they made this finding under

(02:20:52):
the commerce clause. That would atleast be worth debating. But this is
an appointed on account to a bowl, a non transparent bureaucrat, just saying
I don't like these contracts. Theyshould be rewritten with absolutely no authority whatsoever
to do that. Well, you'llsee the light accord at some point,
Judge Nitapoulitano, my favorite time ofthe week talking to you. I love

(02:21:15):
it, appreciate the column and ofcourse judging freedom. Who are you talking
to today? I have Phil GiraldiXCIA at three o'clock today and Aaron Mattey
brilliant gifted young journalist at four o'clock. We had a lot of our heavy
hitters up front this week, ColonelMcGregor, Scott Ritter at, Jeff Sachs.
I have Max Blumenthal and Professor Meerscheimertomorrow. But it's been a good

(02:21:41):
week for us. Oh, clearly, always interesting and very informative. I'll
encourage my listeners to check that out. Judging freedoms Are you fine? At
Facebook and online YouTube and fifty fivecaresy dot com For this podcast, it'll
be up later. Joe Strekroll putit up judge until next week. That's
to help my dear friend. Thankyou, Brian, all the best to
you and to Joe. Take carea forty or the talk station. A
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