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July 10, 2024 • 33 mins
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(00:00):
Spreads not hiding their penn a totaldefogle, It's giving us a whole lot
to talk about. Fifty five KRCthe talk station at oh six. Here
at fifty five KRC DE Talk Station, Marion Thomas wishing you a very happy
Wednesday, inviting you to listener tolaunch be at the Turf Club today at
eleven thirty. They're opening up earlyfor us. And before I get to,

(00:23):
Sarah wolf leaves with the Who's fightinghigh taxes here in Hamilton County as
well as the state of Ohio.We'll talk with her in just a moment.
I want to open up the phoneshere. We'll take calling number six
because I've got a couple more ticketsto the Ario Speedwagon with Train Concert,
both groups going to be playing atRiverbend on Friday. We'll take calling number
six, five, one, three, seven, four nine fifty five hundred,

(00:44):
eight hundred eight two three talk poundfive fifty on AT and T phones.
Have your email with you because ifyou win these tickets, because your
caller six, you're going to getan email. Electronic tickets or digital tickets
will be emailed directly to you,so you don't have to stop by and
worry about the mail or anything.Caller six seven four nine fifty eight hundred
eight two to three talk for ArioSpeedwagon with train at Riverbag this Friday.

(01:07):
Sarah Wolf from the Hamilton County,Ohio Homeowners Facebook page. It's a private
group, but you can join ifyou were impacted by the high taxes.
Sarah, it's good to have youback on the show. Welcome, good
morning, Thanks for having me.Now the obviously we were all whacked by
the outrageous increase in our real estatetaxes. But it was I guess predicated
on the fact that everybody's house wentup in value because of COVID, the

(01:30):
shortage of houses nobody's selling. Obviously, supplying demands kicked in. So with
low supply and high demand, thatcauses prices to go up. You know,
comps in the neighborhood. Your neighborssold the house and oh my god,
my house is worth what two hundredthousand dollars more than it was last
time. And then they come andthey reassess and we all get nailed with
a huge tax bill. What canbe done about this? Sarah Wolf?

(01:56):
Well, I talked to Senator Blessingon Monday, and a pairenturrently, they
are in recess. The state isin recess until after November. They're not
going to be in legislative sessions untilNovember. Is that right? Except well
they're politicians. That sounds about right, Sarah. Yeah, So nothing got
done. They've had six months.Well they really had a year because the

(02:17):
tentative values came out a year agoand people were calling already, and then
I find out all this stuff HJAsix, everything, all these circuit breakers,
all these other things that they weresupposed to do, they didn't do
them. Okay, well, Iwas just reading the HJA six House Joint
Resolution six, which caps the increase, so nobody's caught off guard. The

(02:40):
most you can increase and subject tocertain you know, exclusions and exceptions,
it's four percent max, right,isn't that what the what HGA six says.
Yes, And it's usually going tobe it's it's it's four percent or
the rate of inflation, whichever islower. And actually Michigan does it this
way, and they're complaining right nowbecause inflation is officially a three point three

(03:02):
percent and they're used to paying likeone percent increase because inflation is usually lower.
Right, So yeah, so Idon't know. I'm pretty I'm pretty
dismayed that on that. There issomething though locally that's candidate for auditor Tom
Brinkman is proposing. I don't havethe details on it yet, but if

(03:28):
people want to get involved, thiswould reduce property taxes for city residents.
But anyone in the county can getthe signatures we're going to need, I
don't know, fifty one thousand signaturesthat'll be coming up at the end of
this month. So on my site, what it's going to be a ballid
initiative for the city for the localelection. Okay, I don't I don't

(03:52):
have the details and I don't wantto explain it wrong, but it will.
It is something that can be doneto reduce at least some of the
taxes for I think it has todo with the city millage. Okay,
I don't know. I don't wantto say it now until I have it,
but it's being right now. ButTom Brigman's putting that forth. So
Okay, within the city, Iguess they have some measure of control over

(04:15):
the city taxes. But we herein outside in Hamilton County and Warren Butler
and everyplace else in the in thestate the rules for taxation are aren't those
state wide? I mean, yourlocal auditor is going to do an assessment,
but you know, you can contestit if your house is you believe
your house has been overvalued because youhave comps in the neighborhood and things like
that. But generally speaking, isn'tthis a state level fix, which is

(04:36):
why we were talking about Joint Resolutionsix. Well, yeah, that would
have to come too. But ifwe can get anything, you know,
right now, and home owners willtake anything, I mean, it's just
so bad, even if it's justabout the levy portion or the city millage
portion or something like that, whichthe county commissioners could do the same thing

(04:56):
we ask them to do it already. They could vote to you know,
with the levees back down to thetwenty two at least the levee portion back
down to the twenty twenty two levels. It would be something to give some
sort of relief. And they don'tneed the money. Would the voters have
some say in that? I mean, because the problem is that, as
I see it, every year,you get all these different levees on it,
and oh my god, we loveour parks, we all vote for

(05:17):
the park levee. Oh my god, we love our seniors, so we
always vote for the senior levee.On and on and on. School levees
are up to and sometimes those failmiserably, but the voters always get a
say on this, and it's almostlike, well, we voted for those
taxes and majority rules, so thetaxes either went up or the levee got
shot down. But in the finalanalysis, it's the value of the home

(05:39):
which has changed over which we haveno control. People who don't pay property
taxes get to vote for them.It's representation without taxation. Thus it has
ever been taxation. Are you suggestingthat only property owners be able to vote
on this, Well, I don'tknow that that would ever happen. It's

(05:59):
right at well, that's where it'sback to where we are. But I
mean, hopefully, if we canget enough people to be aware that taxes
went up so much the county isswimming in money, maybe we can vote
some of these levees down. Ifyou care at all about these senior homeowners
and these working class homeowners and otherpeople that just can't We just can't come
up with it, Okay, it'stoo much, so the levees are gonna

(06:20):
have to fail. And I'm tellingyou we also got to vote some other
people into this county government. Ihave tried to keep my site neutral,
but the only people that are talkingto me are these Republican candidates and Tom
Brinkman. Of course Adam Taylor.Adam Taylor's actually been on our site since
the beginning. Yeah, he wastalking about he was talking about you yesterday.

(06:43):
He was on my show for afull hour yesterday. I really like
Adam. I think he's an outstandingcandidate. He's great and heart. But
Adam himself does not have a localI don't think there is a local solution
again, other than people being convincedthat they shouldn't vote money out of their
pockets by way of voting for levies. Yeah, well, we need some

(07:04):
balance. We just need some balancein our government if nothing else. And
this one party rule with the Democrats, they just circle the wagons. They
shut us out, they don't talkto us. We've been trying to get
them to meet for us with usctioners. We've been trying to get to meet
with us. I was told Ican never talk to the treasurer you know,
an elected official, and I cannever talk to them, even though

(07:25):
I represent fifteen hundred counting homeowners.You know, I'm tired of being shut
out by our government and I'm beingretaliated against. But that's another story.
I'll wait on that. But I'mlooking for a solution. Do you have
Are you offering a specific solution,like, for example, you could point
to HJ six, but our electedofficials didn't do anything about that, So

(07:47):
we need we need to be dialingup our elected officials in Columbus. Yes,
we need to talk to the governor. The governor could do an executive
order or something right now to justput everything back to the twenty twenty two
levels until they get this fixed.Yeah, that was our solution, but
they're not meeting. Well, thenwe have the fault lies in Columbus,

(08:09):
which we could go on for hourson a variety of different topics on why
the fault lies in Columbus. Youwould think that a government that is dominated
by one party, the Republican Party, who is a party of lower taxes
at least they pay lip service tothat reality, might have gotten their act
together on behalf of all the homeownersout there who can't afford to pay their
tax bill. But no, theyfailed us. So therein lies the problem.

(08:31):
I don't know why you want totalk to the Treasurer. I don't
know the treasure can do anything atall about this. Again, this looks
like a legislative fixed to me.And if you can't get your elected officials
to pass legislation fixing it, we'reall going to be screwed. Well,
I think we need to govern theworks together for the people. Well,
there's a theory and a concept.It's not well, I think we found

(08:52):
it, and now I mean we'llgo into detail. I want to get
the we had our bor hearing andI will get you the transcript, because
something weird is going on there where. I think it's retaliation on top of
everything for starting this group, forquestioning them. How dare we question the
government? Right? We can't questionthem, that's my job. There goes

(09:13):
Yeah, all right. If somebody'sretaliating against me, I don't know anything
about it. I complain about thegovernment every single day. On forbid,
God forbid. We should start talkingto each other, you know, I
organize this group and whoa, butthey don't like that that we're talking to
each other and comparing notes No,no, no, can't do that.

(09:33):
Well, I don't understand how someonetelling you you can't do it when you
can go ahead and do it andyou are doing it because I'm staring at
your Facebook page right now. HamiltonCounty, Ohio Homeowners is what you're looking
for. It is a private group. You click the join button to find
out about what Sarah is trying todo on behalf of the Hamilton County taxpayer.
Sarah, good to have you onthe program. I wish you all
the best and success in fighting foragainst rather these outrageous taxes. But then

(09:58):
again, I'm not going to bevoting for any of the levies anyway.
Take care, best to health toyou and the groove eight sixteen fifty five
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(11:03):
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home on NBC's coverage of the twentytwenty four Paris Olympics. Our Higheart Radio
Music Festival presented by Capital Water Comingback to Las Vegas. That's our KRCD

(11:26):
talk station. Happy Wednesday, Listenerto Lunch Wednesday at Turf Club. Hope
you can make it. Not ahuge place, but love that food,
Love the turf Club. The ownersare fantastic folks and burgers are done right,
best onion rings around. Opportunity forsome fellowship even if you don't come
in to eat. West Side Jim'sgoing to show up. He doesn't have
a whole lot of time, buthe's going to be there. And I'm
looking forward to my cribbage game withmy submariner friend, cribbage Mike. So

(11:50):
looking forward to that again. Eleventhirty Turf Club opening just for us.
Uh let us see here. Gotjudging of Poulatana coming up next. I
just in Pa, and I feelbadly for Sarah that that joint resolution wasn't
even taken up by our elected officials. That would have an easy solution and

(12:11):
an easy fix. And so we'vebeen let down yet again by our elected
officials in Columbus. I don't knowwhat is what the hell is going on
up there anyway. I just sawthis article and it's just from the New
Republic, which is a real leftwing rag. We all know that.
Maybe you don't, but yet itis. And there's this Holly Brewer person

(12:33):
offering her insights about and they're veryshallow. She doesn't understand the whole concept
of, you know, constitutional orjudicial activism versus conservatism. But in any
event, she believes all these decisionsfrom the Supreme Court in this term are
all unbelievably partisan and revealing of partisanship, making a case for expanding the Supreme

(12:54):
Court. And the name of thearticle, the case for expanding the Supreme
Court has never been stronger. AndI read that in light of what's going
on right now. Joe Biden failedmiserably in the debate. We all know
that, we all know he isa bumbling He is the bumbling Alzheimer's laden
ridden person that we have believed himto be, even though they aren't admitting

(13:16):
it. They kind of have tonow, right, the genies out of
the bottle, The cat's out ofthe bag. We know the media has
been covering up for him. Moreand more media people coming out and saying,
yeah, we've seen him like thata whole bunch of times over the
years. Yeah, yeah, yeah. The her tapes. They won't let
us listen to the her tapes.Why do you think they're keeping those under
wraps? Well, they've got allthese nonsensical arguments. We have a transcript.
We have her reaching a conclusion thatJoe Biden is basically what we saw

(13:41):
him to be during the debate,and therefore nobody, no jury, would
convict him in spite of the factthat he had committed crimes. He concludes
that in his report, and we'vegot the transcript. Why won't we are
why aren't we allowed to hear PresidentBiden in his two day discussion in two
day interview with Special Counsel Robert Hurt. They will not allow that to be

(14:03):
released. Executive privilege has been claimed. Hmm. Now, up until the
debate, I understand the reason whythey wouldn't want to let you have it,
even though we know what's in it, because we can read it.
It's hearing it and listening to thepauses and the mumbling and the stumbling,
which provides some context into what wewere worried about, which is the President

(14:26):
Biden's too frail to make it throughmaybe November, let alone the next four
years. Having them now would solidifythat, would it not? And if
they released them that, what doyou think the reaction from the media would
be? Well, okay, wetold you you know, we saw him
in the debate. What does thissurprise anybody that he sounds exactly like he
said out a debate in during herinterview. But they're still fighting the battle

(14:52):
and Republicans are still moving forward withlawsuits trying to get the release of the
recording. And I think it's ajustifiable request. We're talking about context and
whether this man is fit for office. This would provide some valuable context and
information, and know it wouldn't interferewith anything else, which is one of

(15:13):
the arguments they make. Releasing theaudio recordings could chill witness cooperation in the
future high profile investigations. According toAmeric Garland, really what a load of
nonsense in trying to prevent the tapefrom being released and us the voters becoming

(15:33):
more informed about the cognitive abilities ofthe President of the United States of America,
who is the Democrats nominee basically,at least effectively as of right now,
he is. I think it's avaluable information. Anyway, check it
out yourself. We're gonna hear fromJudge Editapolitano coming up next. Holes in

(15:54):
the Constitution, points out Judge ofPolaitano. Stick around for that. First
word for Suzette Low's Camp loan thatLow's Camp at cross country mortgage. Uh,
she's a cross country. That meansif you have a mortgage related issue,
you want to get some equity outof your home. You've got some
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Calls is at Low's Camp. Regardlessof which state you're in, even if
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(16:17):
The best in customer service you're evergoing to run into. She's such
a really wonderful sweet lady, gotthirty five plus years and the mortgage business
knows everything there is to know aboutit. Never charging you at junk for
your an application fee. It's alwaysgreat rates at a low cost. I
referred my daughter and her boyfriend toto Susette Low's Camp and it only took
a couple of days. They gotfinancing for their house. They're living their

(16:37):
life, they're moving on and thankyou Suze for helping them out. Very
happy with the customer service, andso will you be great rates at a
low cost five one three three onethree fifty one seventy six Go ahead and
give her a call, She'll getright back with you five one three three
one three fifty one seventy six,or shoot her an email at Suzette dot
Low's camp lo o s e Kampat CCM dot com fifty five KRC quick

(17:03):
weather if you isolated showers Aday highseventy six down to sixty four overnight eighty
five, are high tomorrow with mostlysunny skies, then sixty six overnight sunny
on Friday with a high of eightynine. Right now seventy one hyper traffic
from the UC Help Tramphy Center.The University of Cincinnati Cancer Center is opening
the most comprehensive blood center in thenation. Future of cancer is here called
five one three five eighty five Usee see see southbound seventy five getting better

(17:27):
through Westchester, but heavier through theLockland Split and an extra ten minutes north
bend seventy five to Lake. Timeshad dropped near the five minute mark between
Buttermilk and downtown. Northbound four seventyone continues to run heavy from Grand and
you're often on the break southbound seventyone to two seventy five into ken Wood,
coming up next to guests who's gettingready to head out on vacation.

(17:49):
Here's some dues and don'ts. Douse the five to four to three to
two to one packing method. Fivetops, four bottoms, three assessories,
two pairs of shoes and swimsuit.Do not yell hey, nice fanny pack.
It'll get you hit. Those areall true stories from my vacation last
week. The Judge's next chuck ingramon fifty five K or see the talk

(18:12):
station. I have a thirty oneyear forty bauck care see de talk station.
God love them. I know,I know, I can see him.
I can see them screaming nice fannypack. Anyway, Oh that's chuck
for you. Judge Imedapolitano every Wednesdayat this time with the exceptional I guess

(18:33):
is it the next two weeks?You're gonna be out of town, your
honor. I will be away forthe next two weeks, Brian, YEAHK
to you. I hope you're goingsomeplace exciting. Northern Italy Lake Como.
Oh nice. Is it gonna meetfamily or friends or is just a you
know, I've been there so manytimes. I have so many friends in
northern Italy and in the part ofSwitzerland that abuts that area that I am

(18:59):
busy about every single evening of thefifteen days that i'll be gone. So
yes, I have a lot offriends there. Do you speak Italian by
any chance? Yeah? I canget by in a taxi or a restaurant.
Well, I'm glad you mentioned therestaurant because I'm a foodie. I
love to cook. I love food. I appreciate quality food that has been

(19:22):
well prepared. And I get theimpression from all my friends who've traveled in
Europe that, for some reason,the food in Europe, most notably in
northern Italy, it's just superior inso many ways. It's everybody comes back
saying, oh my god, it'sso much more fresh, It's so much
more flavorful. You know. Ialways thought that that was just a sort
of a pr impression of Italy,but it's true. It is. Everything

(19:47):
is fresh. It's a more essentialand integral part of their day, a
proper meal. Well, enjoy that. We will miss having you on the
fifty five Morning Show and look forwardto your safe return so on behalf of
all my listeners and myself and myfamily. The best and safest of travels

(20:07):
to you and I hope you enjoyyourself moving onward. Thank you, my
friend. I'll miss you. Iwill miss you too every night. This
night midnight, the column comes outin today's column Holes in the Constitution.
And you know when I read this, I wrote Jay Edgar Hoover on the
top of my copy of the article, because he was kind of doing the
same kind of thing the NSA andthe FBI are still doing through electronic means,

(20:32):
but he was doing it through othernefarious channels back when he was the
director getting inside people's dirty laundry,building files on people, politicians, most
notably I either protect his own jobor to have the goods on others.
It's widely documented and well known tramplingon the Constitution. He was. He
had the goods on every president fromFDR to Richard Nixon. And he used

(20:56):
what, by today's standards are oldfashion almost mechanical second story ladder outside the
window break ins, like when theybroke into the office of Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist.
The FBI did this during Elsberg's trial, looking for dirt on Ellsberg from

(21:17):
his psychiatrist that resulted in the dismissalof the charges against him. Charges for
which he was obviously guilty. Jaekor Hoover never had the high tech means
that the government has today. Sowhen the government spies on all of us,
it argues that it is not violatingthe Fourth Amendment because it's not using

(21:37):
the data gathered in a criminal prosecution. That means that the government believes that
the Fourth Amendment only restrains law enforcement, and only restrains law enforcement when it
wants to use evidence in a criminalprosecution. That, of course, is
nonsense. The Fourth Amendment was writtenafter the experience of the Stamp Act.

(21:59):
The stamp Back British legislation. Parliamentarylegislation required colonists to have stamps on every
piece of paper in their home.A letter, a financial document, a
pamphlet, even a poster. You'regoing to be able to retreat. Where
did they get the stamps? Youwent to a British government office here in
the colonies and paid for the stamps. They weren't stamps like we used today.

(22:21):
It was more like an ink stainedrubber stamp with a British seal on
it. What was the purpose ofthis. It was not to raise money.
It was to give government intelligence agentsan excuse to come into your house
to look ostensibly for the stamps.What were they really looking for revolutionary and

(22:41):
subversive material. They were anticipating therevolution that was coming in seventeen seventy five.
So it is clear that the FourthAmendment was written to restrain all government
for any purposes, notwithstanding the argumentsthe government makes today. Reminds me of
many of the discussions we've had overthe years about the torture at Guantanamo Bay.

(23:04):
And you can torture somebody all daylong, but if you get information
as a consequence of torture, youare not able to bring that up in
a court of law because it wasacquired in violation of somebody's civil rights.
That same argument is what you're makinghere. If they're listening to our calls,
if they are gathering our electronic communications, which we are well aware that
they're doing, they can acquire allthe information they want. Their argument is

(23:27):
as long as they aren't bringing itto court to use against us. It's
that second follow up thing is wherewe learned that our rights have been violated.
We learned that they've been and wemoved to suppress the evidence at the
criminal trial or civil trials. Thecase may be. But your point is,

(23:47):
and the point you make in thearticle is they're saying, well,
we're not going to do that.And as long as we're not bringing this
unlawfully gathered evidence up in a courtof law and using it against you,
then we don't have to mind theFourth Amendment because they don't care the Constitution
even though they have taken an oathto uphold it. You took an oath
to uphold it when you were admittedto the bar, Sir, I've taken

(24:08):
several oaths to a bold it whenI was admitted to the bar, when
I was appointed as to the bench, when I received my lifetime tenure appointment
to the bench. It's the sameoath, it's the same Constitution, it's
the same Fourth Amendment. But sincenine to eleven and the Patriot Act,

(24:29):
probably the most unpatriotic, abominable pieceof legislation Congress passed since the Alien and
Sedition Acts of seventeen ninety six,which made it a crime ninety eight,
which made it a crime to criticizethe government. Since the Patriot Act,
a generation of federal agents have comeof age disregarding the Fourth Amendment, spying

(24:52):
and snooping first and worrying about theFourth Amendment later. The massive proliferation of
spying generated by the George W.Bush presidency picked up by every presidency since
then, even Donald Trump's. Isay even Donald Trump's, because Trump himself
was famously or infamously the object andsubject of all this spying going back to

(25:18):
twenty fifteen before he was elected president. It didn't stop his DOJ and his
NSA, and his CIA, andhis DEIA Defense Intelligence Agency that's the military,
which by the way, is prohibitedfrom spying in the US, but
does it anyway. It didn't stopany of these entities from capturing every key

(25:41):
stroke on every mobile device and everydesktop and storing it until they want to
look at it. What I guesswe always come back to what can be
done. We know what the FourthAmendment says. The Supreme Court has interpreted
it along the lines of what youare saying today, which is, doesn't
matter whether you're bringing the evidence intocourt, you cannot rifle through our effects

(26:03):
and papers or electronic communications without awarrant and probable cause, period, full
stop. But they're doing it.So what can be done? If anything,
Well, the votes have actually beenvery close, Brian. After Edward
Snowden's revelations that the government was doingthis, the Congress passed legislation that permitted

(26:26):
it. The legislation is profoundly unconstitutional, but it's there. The legislation has
a sunset every five years. Thelast time it was about the sunset,
and they extended it. They extendedit for two years. That was just
about two months ago. In theHouse of Representatives, it passed by one

(26:47):
vote. That's how close it was. It was actually a two twelve to
twelve tie. And that great defenderof civil liberties, who's the new I'm
being sarcastic, I know that.That's why I want to speak here of
the House of Representatives, who,when he was a regular congressman, voted
against this spying, but now thathe's part of the establishment. Mike Johnson

(27:07):
left the speaker's chair, came downon the well of the House to vote
to break the tie. In theSenate, it passed by just one vote.
So we really are very close tostopping this stuff as more and more
people become aware of it. That'sreally the only effective way to stop it.

(27:29):
The Feds are very adept at makingsure all this spying doesn't get before
a judge. You and I havetalked about this many many times. We
are spied on as we speak.Okay, this is public airwaves. But
let's say we have a conversation afterwardsthe FEDS have captured it. We sue
the FEDS for violating our rights.The courts are going to say, well,

(27:49):
you don't have standing the sue becausethis is a political question. Your
ox was not gored, your harmis not distinct from all others. If
it bothers everybody, then it's gotto be resolved politically. So it can
only be resolved when the Feds wantto use this information they've gotten from spying
against you in a criminal prosecution.Then they will lie and cheat about how

(28:12):
they got it, because they arenever going to sit in a witness stand
in a public courtroom and explain howall this spying works. They'd rather let
a guilty person go free than dothat. So they reverse engineer the process
to create a ploy under which theycan argue that we came upon this information

(28:34):
through lawful means, we didn't stealit from it. And they have separate
teams so that the team in thecourtroom is that's the clean team. When
they make the representation to a federaljudge. Here's how this information was come
upon. They honestly believe that's true. The dirty team, the liars,
the cheaters, the computer hackers,are the ones who actually do this.

(28:59):
And there's several teams in between,so the clean team doesn't even know who
the dirty team is. This isthe federal mentality. Uh. This is
what is used in order to dupefederal judges into allowing evidence illegally obtained to
be presented to juries. This is, of course a series of criminal acts.

(29:22):
It's lying to a federal judge.If done under oath, it's perjury.
And what do you call getting intosomebody's computer without their consent or without
a search warrant? Well, computerhacky guess which is a crime? Felony?
Five years in a federal prison.How many FBI and CIA and NSA

(29:44):
and d IA agents have been prosecutedfor this, It's an easy number to
remember. Zero. Well, thisis depressing your honor. I'm sorry.
I should be happy. I havea green shirt on the Yankees continue to
look. But I'm off to Italy. I should be happy. And since
you're off to Italy, and wealways end on the discussion about judging freedom,

(30:06):
which I encourage my listeners to lookfor online, Facebook and YouTube for
his judging freedom discussions, which arealways very enlightening and informative. Are you
still are you doing that today?You're just gonna get on there. We're
doing it this week. I willonly do it if I'm away if there's
major breaking news in my end ofthe world. But Scott Ritter was yesterday
and coming up before the week ishow Colonel Douglas McGregor Gilbert to doctor.

(30:32):
Yesterday we had Charlie Freeman, who'sthe Chrissie's a Squirrel, who's the former
UN Ambassador to Saudi Arabia, describinghow perilous Benjamin Etana, who's position us
as Prime Minister of israel Is,and how his trip to the US two

(30:53):
weeks from today is for our domesticIsraeli political purposes. Interesting, always enlightening
again judging freedom, and very quicklytoday was the original day for our roundtable
discussion the Three of Us with CongressmanMassey. Obviously, with his wife's death
and recent death and he's grieving,obviously, we had to postpone that Joe

(31:18):
wanted me to remind because some ofmy listeners were expecting that, and since
that's obviously not happening today, itwill be rescheduled at some point. I
hope, I hope we can doit in August or in September. I
don't think that will be a problem. And I trust and pray that Congressman
Massey has been able to adequately dealwith his grief by that time. So
he is truly a great man asa human being and as a member of

(31:41):
Congress, and as a lover offreedom. I pray for his wife's soul
and for his broken heart as doI thank you very much, your honor.
Safe travels, have fun on everyone'sbehalf. Looking forward to it,
of course I will. I willlove you to. Hey, brother,
stick around, folks, they alittle bit more talk about it. First,

(32:01):
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When you call plum tight plumbing atseven two seven eighty four eighty three,
that's seven two seven tight, you'regonna be happy you called them. Probably
serving the greater Cincinnati area, includingnorthern Kentucky the Dayton region, they enjoy
an A plus with a better businessfere Why because they're great at what they
do, exceptional customer service. You'llbe happy with them. They will provide

(32:22):
you with a fair and ethical pricefor any work that needs to be done
at your home from no better,how big or small. From Foss's the
toilets, leaky pipes, Maybe yougot water pressure problems going on, drain
clogged, Yeah, that happens allthe time. And of course plump type
plumbing always manages those those those jobsat a fair and ethical price. So

(32:43):
you got it all covered. Greatservice, fair and ethical pricing A plus.
They do it all. Call themtoday with confidence. Five one three
seven two seven Tight t I tE. That's eighty four eighty three.
Online you'll find them at plumb tightdot com fifty five the talk station.
The Medal of Honor is not

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