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July 17, 2024 • 162 mins
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(00:06):
Five o five now, thank you'I k r C the talk station Wednesday.

(00:29):
I'm the dude, man, youmay be. I'm Brian Thomas,
not the dude. Joe Strecker,executive producer and a liner upper of guests
on the program. Thank you JoeStrecker for getting Dave Williams Taxpayer Protection Alliance
on the program. This morning atseven oh five, Dave Williams will offer
his thoughts on the Trump attempted assassination. Of course, everybody gets off for
their opinion on that, including you. You can call in talk about it.

(00:52):
Man. I'm telling you, ifyou're a fan of memes, you
are just a feasting Over the lastcouple of days, I regularly joke about
my retired military psyops friend who's mistermeme task. I woke up this morning
I had thirty two messages from himon my phone. All of them are

(01:14):
memes, Andy Man lighting up allright. Some of them are pretty catchy,
like, for example, I answerthis question for me, what are
the memes involved the identification of thewould be well assassin of Donald Trump?
The murderer, This Thomas Crooks guy. They said right out of the gate,

(01:36):
do you remember and It's just sortof a passed by me. I
wasn't even giving it much thought.But how did they identify him? Didn't
they say they used a DNA becausehe didn't have any identification on him?
Today that he was gunned down bythe Secret Service? How did that work?

(01:59):
Do they have a database of everybody? If he had no criminal record
and no, he was not knownto the authorities, how is it they
were to identify him so quickly.I just I don't know. Maybe it
was a facial imaging software or something. I don't know. Just throwing out
one more thing, the swirling numberof questions we've got about this debacle that
happened on Saturday. Anyway, gradingthe GOP party platform, we'll talk about

(02:22):
that with Dave Williams. And regulatoryoverreach of course great in the GOP Party
platform. When you talk about thetax payer protection lines, we're talking about
spending money. Are there going tobe cuts to you know, government generally
speaking, or we're going to pairback the bloated reality that we're living with
in government. It seems an idealtime to do it, since a lot
of people are jaded and cynical,they have no longer faith and trust in
their lords and masters. There's quitea few articles about that we're losing faith

(02:46):
in America's institutions, and part ofme weeps and over that because the institutions
have failed us. But part ofme, the libertarian to me, thinks,
well, great, the people arewaking up to the reality that the
government is not a solution to yourproblems. It's they're incapable of dealing with

(03:07):
the day to day issues of anygiven family or person. And when they
try this whole giant, one sizefits all, which is always what government
gives you, it becomes an epicfailure. And usually so bloated of these
programs and so monstrous in size thatof course fraud, waste, and abuse
creep into every aspect of every programinvolving the allocation of federal dollars. Anyhow,

(03:30):
so, maybe moment of clarity herefor the United States. Come to
a moment of maybe libertarian awakening.Don't rely on the federal government. Leave
the government out of your lives,and life tends to be better. We
make better decisions on our own whenwe are not impacted by the efforts of
government to sway that decision making.Congressman Warren Davidson. They'll be on at

(03:52):
seven thirty on the program live fromMilwaukee as Congressman Davidson is at the RNC.
And I guess yesterday was safety makingAmerica Safe Again, which got quite
a few articles to talk about involvingthat Congressman Warren Davidson will get him for
a few segments again beginning to getseven to thirty, followed by in studio
Congressman brad Winstrop enjoying the presence ofCongressman Winster. Well we can before he

(04:15):
moves on to the next phase ofhis life. All right, here's one
for you, going back to thewould be assassination of Donald Trump, US
authorities obtained intelligence recently from a humansource regarding a plot by Iran to try

(04:38):
to assassinate Donald Trump, which ledto the Secret Service increasing security around former
President Trump, according to multiple peoplebriefed on the matter speaking with CNNs and
reporting on this. Thank you EvanPerez and Zachary Cohen and Natasha Bertrand and
Nakaylie Attwood and Kristen Holmes. Everybody'son this article now right out of the

(05:01):
gate, they point out, andno indication that Thomas Crooks was involved with
Iranians. We've got no indication hewas involved with anybody up to this point.
Go ahead, be skeptical, jadenencinical about your authorities providing you with
all the information that they have answeringthe questions that they may have the answer
to. Yeah, I get that, But as of right now, no
indication, no social media presence,no comments, no communications. We've got

(05:25):
this twenty year old kid with virtuallyno social media presence. Is that even
possible anyway? The Iranians. So, the existence and the intelligence threat from
a hostile foreign intelligence sadents, he'sraising new questions about the security lapses at
the Saturday rally in Butler, Pennsylvaniaexactly. US national security threat officials said

(05:50):
Secret Service and the Trump campaign weremade aware of the threat before Saturday's rally.
Okay, you already have a justshall we say Donald Trump is at
least polarizing? Can we at leastagree upon that he sort of gets people

(06:12):
all ginned up. There are alot of people who have a profound hatred
for him. We've been down thatroad multiple times over the past couple of
days after the weekend shooting. Becauseof course, revisiting all of the requests
from the left that people eliminate DonaldTrump in one way, shape or form,
whether it be shooting, stabbing,beheading, etc. So we've got
all that, we have a divisivepolitical campaign going on, we've got the

(06:35):
whole Democrat Party just falling a partof the seams, a lot of all
to a lot of chaos in theworld. And the Iranians who are our
enemies and have a grudge against DonaldTrump and stated out loud grudge against Donald
Trump because he blew up Hassam Solamani, commander of the Iranian military's Revolutionary Guard

(06:56):
while he was president, and hewent out and just and gloated about it.
The Iranians have been interviewed about this. One spokesman said, you know,
speaking with CNN referencing the Solmoni assassination, these accusations regarding the assassination,
this rumor going around that a humanintelligence source alerted the Secret Service to this

(07:17):
mission, this assassination applout of DonaldTrump. The Permanent Mission of the Islamic
Republic of Araan to the United Nationsdenied this Iranian plot to assassinate Trump.
But these accusations are unsubstantiated and malicious. From the perspective of the Islamic Republic
of Iran, Trump is a criminalwho must be prosecuted and punished in a

(07:40):
court of law for ordering the assassinationof General Solomoni. Iran has chosen a
legal path to bring him justice,not just possum. He goes over that
multiple times. We're going to gethim in a court of law. We're
going to get him in a courtof law. Okay, go ahead and
just let that stew in your head. How in the hell do the Iranians
think they're going to get him ina court of law? And do you
really think the Iranians are all aboutlaw and order? They have a justifiable

(08:01):
basis to want to go after Trump. They're angry over Solomoni's death. They
have a motive. Unlike this ThomasCrook's guy. We don't know what the
motive is. The Ridians have themotive and the desire to do it.
Now, we have this warning goingto the US Secret Service in advance of
the rally over the weekend. TheCircuit Services is aware of it, the

(08:22):
official told CNN's Secret Service learned ofthe increased threat from this threat stream.
NSC directly contacted the US Secret Serviceat a senior level to be absolutely sure
they continue to track the latest reporting. US Secret Service shared this information with
the detail lead, and the Trumpcampaign was made aware of an evolving threat.

(08:43):
In response to the increased threat,Secret Service surged resources and assets for
the protection of former President Trump.All of this was in advance of Saturday.
Trump campaign threat's part said, wedon't comment on Trump's security detail and
when we asked about the Iranian threatand whether they were made aware of it
to see if you could confirm thisindependent source, Anthony Gogliami, agency spokesperson

(09:13):
said yesterday, the Secret Service andother agencies are constantly receiving new political threat
information or taking action to adjust resourcesas needed. We cannot comment any specific
threat stream or any or than tosay that the Secret Service takes threats seriously
and responds accordingly. All right,is that what Saturday was, in the

(09:37):
midst of all this domestic hatred andbile and volatility and societal chaos and breakdown,
you got enough of a problem withthat, then you got the Iranians
out there, and lord knows,I mean, we have a lot of
enemies in the world. Elon Muskcame out the other day. He said,
Hell, I get death threats allthe time. Can you imagine being

(09:58):
president of the United States of Americawhere this threat exists constantly? Ji Jinping,
Kim Jong own, Vladimir putin theyour audience generally the hell you could
say the Venezuelans. For God's sake, everybody's got some sort of vested interest
in wanting to take a guy out, whether they actually make take steps forward

(10:18):
to do it or not, thisis a massive problem. You are a
person walking around all the time withthe target on your back, and then
you look at what unfolded on Saturday, and we got the director of the
US Secret Service now saying that theydidn't have somebody on that roof where Thomas
Crooks was very capable and able tosqueeze off a couple of eight rounds.

(10:41):
I believe because the roof was toosloped, it represented a safety issue for
the US Secret Service. Like aquarter of the memes my friend Andy had
in my inbox this morning were imagesof Secret Services agent snipers perched on various
sloped roof hoofs, slopes that arefar more dramatic than the one that he

(11:03):
creased off the shots from She saidthat with a straight face, a slope
roof. The building in particular hasa slope roof at its highest point,
and so you know there's a safetyfactor that will be considered there that we

(11:24):
wouldn't want to put somebody up ona sloped roof, and so you know,
the decision was made to secure thebuilding from inside. US Secret Service
Director Kimberlee Cheatle speaking with ABC Newstaking comfort in that. And then there's

(11:46):
this viral video going around. You'veprobably seen it, the timeline with all
the people, all the video ofthe people in the crowd screaming and pointing
up at Thomas Crook's up on theroof while President Trump it is split screen
of it. This has been viewedlike millions and millions of times, showing
the real, real lifetimeline of allthe opportunity people. I mean, people

(12:09):
were screaming around. Look he's upthere, he's up there. Lord,
she's talking about police while Trump's talking. On the other side of the split
screen, you can see an unfold. It's really amazing. Two full minutes
go by where people are aware ofThomas Crooks being on the roof, trying

(12:31):
to alert law enforcement to it slopeproof. We don't want to put anybody
up there, they might fall off. Five three seven hundred eight two three
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dot com, fifty five krc thetalks station five twenty two. But you
have have RCD talk station in avery very very very happy Wednesday to you.
No judgment of Polotana today. He'straveling in northern Italy, so safe
travels to the judge. But it'sgonna be nice having Congressman Brad Weinstrip and
studio in the eight o'clock hour forthe full hour. Lots to go over

(14:31):
with the Congressman. Uh, letus see here who's going to replace JD
Vance in the US Senate? Theswirling question first person I saw even though
Pine on this vvank ramas swimming,which would be awesome as far as I'm
concerned, although I was hoping Ramaswimmingmight get a cabinet position in the Trump
administration if Trump is elected. Hisresponse, my top objective is how we
actually revived this country. That's whyI ran for president last year. I

(14:54):
think jd is going to make fora outstanding vice president. The top judg
job first is get him and PresidentTrump elected. That's what my focus is.
That being said, if I wasasked to serve, referring to the
question about whether he would take theSenate seat if appointed, I would strongly
consider it. Absolutely. Running forSenate isn't something I thought I was going

(15:16):
to be doing. But in themoment we're in, I'm called to do
what I think will allow me tohave the maximal impact on saving the country.
And again with that, I go, how about a cabinet position?
Other names swirling around? Let ussee here Matt Dolan. They claim he's

(15:37):
the most obvious pick. Many doanyway, So I'm governor door stolen in
the US Senate Republican primary, butBernie Moraino, of course won. Jane
Timkin described as a Trump alley Heran a twenty twenty two currently RNC Committee
woman for Ohio. She didn't respondto comment when asked by I guess WCPO
is reporting on this Vva Grahma swimming. Who I mentioned, Frank Rose,

(16:02):
Bernie Marino if he loses, ifhe loses in twenty twenty four, Jim
Jordan, Dave Joyce and sort ofalso rans in the in the mixed Congressman
Mike Carrey, and Warren Davidson.So I'll ask maybe we can ask Warren
Davidson if he was asked to serveas Senate, if he would do that,

(16:22):
Joe, And because he's going tobe on the show coming up at
seven thirty anyway, I don't knowif you've got any favorite in there.
I of course am a Viva GrammaSwimming fan. And if he isn't in
the cabinet, I wouldn't mind SenatorRama Swimmy. I think he's an outstanding
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(17:51):
krc Hey five twenty nine and ahalfy Wednesday Listener launched Jim and Jack's first
Wednesday of next Hope to see you. There should be a good time.
Christopher Smithvent's home away from home,So maybe we'll see Christopher at that one.
Over the phones we go five onethree two three talk before we get
the local stories. Got Dave onthe phone, Dave, welcome back,

(18:11):
Happy Wednesday, Good morning. Acouple of quick things on all of these
deep baked people who the same lineupof stupid cars that we've had all along.
We need to get rid of themand get some new blood in.
But there's one more thing I learnedrecently. This is this was not caught

(18:33):
on the video from the shooting.And that's because they only want to play
what they want you to see,and that is this before President Trump jump
back up as he's down on thefloor, he realizes what happened. He
says, it's totally a flashboon,come out and flight like a mine.
There's an article swirling around the internetabout I guess an the AP photographer whoever

(18:56):
took the picture that iconic picture,which does I will admit, look stage
but you know they've interviewed the photographertook the picture with the flag behind Donald
Trump. Very patriotic, of course, Donald Trump with his fist pumped in
the air and being defiant. It'san iconic image. And that's how it's
being described an effort to try tosuppress it, because it's just by showing

(19:18):
that image it's free of publicity forDonald Trump and his campaign. So we
can't have that. So don't lookat it. Whatever you do, don't
look at it because it might benefitTrump. Appreciate the call. Appreciate the
call. It is just a fleshwound, and you're right. Oh.
The more comical element of this isthis already's pointing to the Secret Service agent,
the sort of stubby woman Secret Serviceagent who was incapable of holstering her

(19:42):
firearm, her side arm, andher actions during the they're in the unfolding
post assassination efforts. It's an embarrassment. They're calling her the dei hire.
Anyway, seven year old boys diedafter he was shot on Tuesday at corner

(20:03):
Police Springfield Townships. Where it happened. Hamilton County Coroner's Office was called to
the scene. Please say they're investigatingthe shooting as accidental, though they did
not say who they believed pulled thetrigger, please said. Somebody to home
in Arvin Avenue in Springfield Township callednine to one to one for help about
a quarter after two yesterday afternoon,boy pronounced dead at the scene, despite
life saving efforts by paramedics and officerscorn in the Springfield Township police polaced the

(20:29):
scene said there were other children insidethe home when the seven year old was
fatally shot. Haven't released details onhow this shout was shot or by whom,
they did not say. They didsay, however, they are not
quote seeking any outstanding individuals in connectionwith this investigation. Close quote makes some
sense out of that. Two peopleinjured in a three car crash up in

(20:52):
in West Price Sill yesterday near theintersection of West eighth and Rosemont about ten
pm. Two people were injured,one seriously, both taken to UC Medical
Center. Officers say one vehicle crossedthe center line, and yes, speed
was a factor. Both streets closedby the officers investigated the crash. I
suppose they'll be interested in hearing fromyou if you have any information on that.

(21:14):
One Hamilton County juvenile court Judge KerrieBloom sentenced the last two teens involved
in the Wyoming High school locker roomattack July sixteenth, Tuesday. They call
it an emotional day. Fox nineteenreporting as the victim's father spoke about his
son's love for baseball, which hasnow vanished since the attack. Before the

(21:36):
first teen sentencing, he apologized tothe victim, who was also in the
court room. Of the family toldthe victim he did not try to be
cool and that he experienced a similarincident. Don't know what that means.
February of the teen admitted to amisdemeanor hazing charge and a felony abduction charged.
Since the probation until he's twenty oneyears old, has to abide by

(21:56):
rules, including not allowed to havecontact with the victim and required to complete
a sexual offender treatment program. Hisparents are also required to be more involved
in his social life. Second teenoriginally supposed to go for trial for several
charges, including one kind of adduction, one of hazing, one kind of
gross sexual imposition, and two countsof kidnapping. Says, he ended up

(22:18):
taking a plea deal, admitted toa misdemeanor hazing charge and fell in the
abduction charge. The other four chargesdismissed. Judge Bloom sentenced him to probation
until he's twenty one, with thesame similar conditions. Thirteen involved sentenced back
in April to indefinite probation, requiredto visit a therapist who offers a sex
education program. He took a pleadeal admitting to one kund of abduction,

(22:41):
hazing, and felonious assault. Incidentoriginally reported as a sexual assault accorded Wyoming
police, happened in the locker roomafter baseball practice April of last year.
Prosecutor said the boys, who werefifteen at the time, dragged the victim
into the locker room four times hetried to escape. Victim was then quote

(23:03):
violated to close quote when he couldno longer escape. A courted prior coverage
from Fox nineteen, the boys werefacing some serious charges, including rape and
gross sexual imposition. All three expelledfrom Wyoming High School as a consequence.
Jeez Mike Moroski, described as alongtime education advocate, has stepped down from

(23:26):
the Cincinnai Public Schools Board of Education. Happened Monday night, described as in
an effort to focus on his workat the Human Services Chamber of Hamilton County,
where he is the executive director.Morowski and his statement said, this
has been a very difficult decision forme to make, and I've I've been
considering for some time, but it'sthe right one for my family and for
me personally. He declined to giveinterviews with the press, including The Inquirer,

(23:52):
who apparently reached out to him forcomment join the board in twenty eighteen.
Joe, I asked when I foundabout this. I was told by
my little bird friend of course,west Side, Jim Keefer. He sent
me a text yesterday saying, MikeMorowski quit. My initial response is,
what is this like one of therats from a sinking ship? He tended
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The number is easy to remember.Five one three seven two seven tight five
one three seven, two seven eightyfour eighty three fifty five krc's here with
a open invitation to call five onethree seven four nine fifty five hundred eight
hundred eight two three talk. Itis time for the stack of stupid.
But I prefer the calls, andthat's what we're going to do right now.
Take Wes's call. Wes, Welcometo the fifty five Carsey Morning.

(25:33):
Sure thanks for calling this morning.Hello Brian, how you doing this morning?
As well as can be expected ona Wednesday, my friend? In
the five o'clock hours, So I'mstill waking up, I hear you.
I just had a a comment,uh, in regards to the shooting.
There was some time ago that Ieven hate to mention this name, but

(25:56):
WHOOPI Goldberg made a comment in regardsto the scary black rice ie the AR
fifteen, that you know, youreally can't use it for a hunting because
you know, if you shot adeer, would that the deer would just
explode. So someone needs to askher why Trump still has an ear.

(26:21):
I forgot that she said that.Yeah, oh yes she did. People's
ignorance on firearms just unfold anytime somethinglike this happens. And yes, as
you would expect, the President hasalready started talking about banning AR fifteen's yet
again. So yeah, yeah,because of course you can't use them for
anything practical whatsoever scendiary rounds in yourair fifteen anyhow, all over to this

(26:47):
stack is stupid. Nice segue there, my friend, Have a good day,
Wes. A mother is suspecting thedeath of her foster child. This
is from northwest in now in policecustody at least as a Sunday night.
Jennifer Lee Wilson, forty eight yearsold, apprehended Saturday evening in New Buffalo
Township, Michigan. According to theSheriff's office, a warrant had been issued

(27:11):
for her over this past Monday fromPorter County, Indiana Superior Court. Her
foster son, ten year old DakotaLevi Stevens, died in April. Please
said he'd run away to a neighbor'shouse in unincorporated Valpraso, but Wilson brought
him back home. She's accused oflying on his mid section for about five

(27:36):
minutes, later telling police that hehad been acting up. Tarw oh just
wait, Joe, wait for theway in, Wilson said. She then
asked Dakota if he was ready toget up, asking him quote are you
faking close? Quote court of theAffidavid. She rolled him over, saw

(27:56):
that his eyelids were pale, startedbegetting CPR and called nine. Forta County
Sheriff's detectives tried to resuscitate Dakota butcould not. Died in a local hospital
two days later. Fun Facts Dakotafour feet ten ninety pounds. His mom,

(28:18):
Jennifer Lee Wilson four feet eleven,three hundred and forty pounds. What
you heard it? Charged with areckless homicide. Would you see? That's
like a bowling ball Joe four eleven, three forty Probably we're trying to envision

(28:41):
it. There's no photograph in thearticle, so we got to go with
that. Let us see here anothertragic one forty four year old woman in
Arkansas now'll be spending few years behindbars for killing her son fatally shooting the
twenty seven year old man in thechess last year during an argument over a

(29:04):
stuck lawnmower. Away. Sixteenth CircuitCourt judged Tim Weaver order the ordered Tabitha
Lynn Tabler to serve three years inthe state correctional facility of She pleaded guilty
to one kind of manslaughter in theslaying of Brandon Crisco, a court to
the Court records. People are alsogiven an additional suspended sentence of seven years.

(29:26):
Should she fail to comply with theconditions of her release, the court
may require her to serve those yearsin prison. Pebler initially charged with second
agree murder and employing a firearm inthe commission of a felony regarding her son's
death. In exchange repleading guilty tomanslaughter, they dismissed the remaining charges she
was facing probable cause. Affidavid saysdeputies for the Fulton County Sheriff's Office May
thirty, first, twenty three,showed up in the residence of the one

(29:48):
undlock of Stonewater Road after people arecalled nine one one, telling emergency dispatchers
that she had shot her son herwords. Deputies in the scenes said a
scene mirandized her before taking your infor an interview. She told detective she
was outside mowing the lawn on herriding mower when it got stuck. She
went in to get her son.People said her son was upset at having

(30:11):
to help her get the mower unstuck. Short while later, she told police
she got the mower stuck again andasked her son to help. This time,
she said Crisco her son called hera b word and then shoved her
off of the mower. Affi Davidgoes on to state people have said she
went to the car approximately two hundredand fifty yards away, got her pistol
out of the console in the car. People have said that she took a

(30:34):
short took the short weight to thevehicle, and that her son had taken
the long way. People who saidher son was still coming after her and
she fired several warning shots. Shesaid that she then moved towards her son
and fired a shot Adam. Shesaid she was not meaning to kill him,
She just wanted to scare him andstop Chris goos Over. The gunshot
wounded the upperleft side of his chest. The bullet passed through his body.

(30:55):
Multiple shelcations retrieved from the area.Best Gidder said the evidence gathered from the
scene indicated that after grabbing her firearm, people are moved eighteen feet toward Crisco,
firing around then she then moved anadditional fifty two feet toward her son,
firing the fatal shot when he wasless than twenty feet away. She
was ordered to beg in serving herprison sentence Monday by forty six fifty five

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your hand and you can get outa die within less than three weeks from

(32:00):
today. More programs to offer.The five star experience is what you're going
to get. And Peter and histeam, as I always state, and
I mean it with absolute sincerity,because I would never a lot of my
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ones I'd rely on seven zero eightthree thousand dot com. That's the website
and phone numbers seven zero eight threethousand. Just put a five to one

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three in front of it. Givethem a call five one three seven zero
eight three thousand. Fifty five KRCthe Medal of Honor is the highest military
year. It's got our showers andstorms today with mostly cloudy skies in a
high of eighty three, partly cloudyand dry overnight sixty two. Tomorrow's high
seventy nine with mostly sunny skies downto fifty eight overnight just a few clouds,

(32:42):
and on Friday, a sunny daywith the high of eighty two.
Right now seventy four. Time fortraffic from the UCLP Traffic Center from every
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Highways doing just fine early on thisWednesday morning with no recks to worry about.
Eastbound two seventy five is wide open. Pants Flinton westbound doing fine past

(33:07):
Lapland seeck Ingram on fifty five KRCDeep Talk station. But if if you
want to think about KRCD Talk stationgoing to head straight to the phones.
Jay was kind of up the holdover the break. You can feel free
to call two five one three twothree talk Jay. Thanks for holding.
Welcome on the show. Hey,thanks Brian. Hey, could you and

(33:27):
I'm sorry if I missed it,but could you tell us what the process
is to replace JD Vance in theSenate. I believe that lies in the
hands of the governor. Oh boy, well, if there's if there's two
things that Ohio grows very well,it's corn and rhinos. So yeah,

(33:50):
go after you know, k sikand the whine and Portman. And I
know I kicked the hornets nest yesterdaywith JD Vance. Uh, but I'm
going to say it's probably going tobe Matt Dolan when it should be Warren
Davison or Jim Jordan. And it'sa shame that we voters don't get a
chance to, uh to weigh inon that. And you would comment on
JD you on it. Just contactthe Governor's office. I mean, you

(34:15):
know whether or not they listen toanybody. I mean, if the weight
of the weight of the public,you know, were to contact the governor's
office. It may have some swayor influence over him. I don't know.
You mean, like when he shutdown the bars kind of you listen
to the story input on that,or when you have raised the GASA ten
cent a gallon one week after hewas in office. But anyway, hey,

(34:37):
back to jd Uh. You knowa really good comments yesterday after I
had talked about how disappointed I was, and a caller that called in and
said, hey, Ronald Reagan changedhis mind. Great counterpoint. But let
me ask you in the in thelistening audience, one question. If you
think back to twenty sixteen, canyou think of anybody else that you know

(35:00):
personally or celebrity, anybody who saidthat they were thinking about back in Hillary
instead of backing Trump. Because Ican't think of anybody other than jd.
Vance. It wasn't that he justdid not like Trump. It was he
was getting ready to back Hillary andwent on the record of saying that.
So folks, forgive me for skepticism, but we've been burned too many times

(35:22):
with unvetted candidates and people who whenhe said it, I believe them.
So if we want to say thathe can change well. Then, you
know, here's what I would say. If people can change that much,
then Trump should have just picked Hillaryto be his VP. She would have
called him everything that JD's telling him. JD went into Trump's camp after Trump

(35:45):
was elected and had all the powerand influence that JD so badly needed to
further his career. Just something tothink about, folks. It's done,
It's done well. And that wasgoing to be my point. You know,
I personally believe JD has changed hisposture obviously towards Trump. He's rehabilitated
himself. He got Trump's endorsement,got elected based on with the assistance of
Trump on the endorsement, and he'sthe guy, and we're gonna have to

(36:07):
wait and see him find out.I mean, as vice president, he
will be given responsibilities, you know, like all vice presidents are. You
know, you're going to take overyou know, childhood education, You're gonna
be responsible for the board or whatever. And we'll get to view and lay
witness to what actually he does ordoes not do, and can hold him
accountable or praise him as the casemay be. So let's finds wait and

(36:28):
find out. You know, itis certainly possible that his tune is completely
and radically changed. I do notdeny that possibility exists, and I sure
don't believe he really truly meant whenhe said when he said he would vote
Hillary over Donald Trump. I mean, the differences between the two politically and
in terms of a platform and policycould not have been more stark of a
contrast. More than that, Morethan that, Hillary is absolutely obviously corrupt.

(36:52):
I have no idea what Jad wasthinking in terms of his political future
at the time he made those statements. Lord knows, you know, kind
of just a name floating around,a man like with an opinion like we
all have. So I'm sure heregrets making those statements, of course,
given where he is right now.But again, we're going to have to

(37:13):
live with him. He is theman. So I think it's probably best
we support the team as we moveforward to November and let the Democrats bring
up all this which they already aredoing. I mean, they're taking the
lion share laboring or on bringing thepoints that you are making to everyone's attention
across the four corners of social media, and as little time as I spent
on social media, it's out therein spades five to five to five kc

(37:37):
DE talk station plenty coming up attop of the our news, Rent control,
Supreme Court changes coming from the Bidenadministration. They guess they have to
try to implement policies to buy votesahead of November. Is it going to
work? I think it's a littlelate in the game. Personally, feel
free to call love to hear fromit right back after the news. You

(38:00):
it's what motivates your vote. TheDemocrats now and they were the racist back
then. Fifty five krs the talkstation six fifty five kr CD talk station
by Thomas here, wishing you avery happy Wednesday, and invitation to stick
around all morning. I always enjoyhearing f him. You got a couple
of callers online then to get tothose just in a minute. One hour
from Aunt Dave Williams returns and thetax Payer Protection Alliance will get his thoughts

(38:22):
on the Trump shooting, but alsograding the GOP party platform from his tax
Payer Protection Alliance standpoint and regulatory overreach, which of course we've got Congressman Warren
Davidson at seven point thirty, lookingforward to hearing from him live from Milwaukee.
And then at eight oh five CongressmanBrad Winster will be in studio for
a full hour, which I lovehaving him in studio, and I like

(38:44):
everybody in the studio when I'm doingan interview. It's nice to talk to
somebody face to face. So keepthat in mind if you get a spot
to come on the Morning Show.If you ever want to do that,
for whatever reason, you got towork it through Joe Strecker. He is
exclusively responsible for as the executive producerof the programing guests up here in the
fifty five care Scene, Morning Storiesand Move Around Itself. I went three
seven four nine fifty five hundred,eight hundred and eight two three talk was

(39:07):
sayee Jim, I mentioned earlier inthe program, Jim good to always hear
from brother. I did hear that, Brian, and thank you a little
tweet tweet Huh that's you. Letme know. Morowski quit Yeah, well,
uh he should have never started.My opinion, but that's okay.
Yeah, I have nothing against MikeMorowski personally. It's just he's an avowed

(39:30):
socialist. I mean, how canI possibly agree with someone who subscribes to
the tenets of national socialism. Yeah, I'm a mining personally, I'm I'm
consider him an acquaintance friend conn ofthan Yeah, mister last night, I
know it's one of the things whereyou don't want to drive from Loveling the
price old Chili. But we hadour little like listener e being I guess

(39:53):
and mister Strucker showed up with hislily daughter and her boyfriend. Oh,
Joe made it. Huh that's good. Yeah, it was a fun time
in a Joseph Joseph Freeman. He'sallowed to get out and about. Now,
what a beautiful thing that is.Yeah, he was staying away from
the women, though, I needto get him get together, get closer

(40:14):
to the women. You know,was it? It was a good turnout
at the chili at the Prisal Chilithough. Yeah, it was a free
cony night. You know, well, if it's free, the Republicans show
up, you know, that's afree food, free food. It is
the West Side, I think,you know, just being on the West
Side, when you have an opportunityto save money and yet dying comfortable,

(40:35):
you're going to do that. Yeah, that's for our club and we give
away. This is the fifth annual. In the summer we shut down,
so we have our free cony nightwhere we give away as many cones as
you want to want to eat fromPricial Chili and it's a good turnout.
I mean, we provided this alittle thank you to our club members and
friends. Do you get the temperatureof the water in terms of how people

(40:58):
feel about jd Vance and on theTrump ticket, Well, people were asking
me yes, and I was gettingtheir opinions. If I had to do
a percent each thing, I wouldsay maybe seventy five to eighty percent.
People have questions. Now, mostof these people are pretty astute with the
politics, and they were just questioningwhy he didn't take somebody like Scott or.

(41:22):
I know v Beck would have nevermade it because he's this two dag
on young, but I wish hewould have. I mean, he's well,
yeah, jd Vance is thirty nine. Well, I know, but
there's a big difference between the twofive million dollars. But I wanted to
chime in on your last caller.The procedure on replacing, I believe,

(41:45):
is that our wonderful governor he appointsa replacement until a special election. One
of those I guess five to twentymillion dollar elections, whatever they are and
when that comes up, then thatperson will replace JD. Vance fair enough

(42:07):
so that I think that's the ladderor whatever you want to say. Like
I said, the governor will appointsomebody, and hopefully it's one of the
ones that he mentioned, because Ireally like Davidson or Jim Jordan a lot.
Yeah, yeah, the boy andRamaswamy's name came up to in terms
of that though this short list wasDolwan Timkin, Ramaswammy, Lrose Marino.

(42:31):
If he loses Jim Jordan, DaveJoyce, and then of course he also
ran category that's where others, atleast as the WCPO analysis, we include
Warren Davidson, so there are otherpossibilities as well. But yeah, they
say, while Vance is running,he does not need to step down from

(42:52):
his seat. But if he wins, that's when the government needs to appoint
the replacement. I mean, inmy opinion, instead of spend that money
and haven't trust any governor, notjust the Wine or anybody else, you
just take the replacement and put himin there. I mean a whole special
election and put everybody through that,and a special election is ridiculously high on

(43:12):
money. Just use the replacement untilthe regular election. That's just my opinion
the placeholder exactly. Yep, Wellthat that is an option. So do
you trust Governor to Wine is goingto put somebody in there that would satisfy
your arsenal political interest? I knowthe caller and the last dollar does not
believe that's going to happen at all. Well, the Wine, like like

(43:36):
everything else, goes by donors forthe number one on the on the list,
and then he goes by the upperups, the harrumps in the party.
So do I think he will inthis in this one, Yes,
because he will be basically opinionated andtold who to put in there, and
I think it'll be one of theones that were mentioned honestly. Yeah.

(43:58):
Well again he's pretty close to themall bones. Okay, well our popcorn
is out, you know, Ithink any of them would be better than
of course Shared Brown. Yeah.A good morning, PT Jim, take
care of yourself and congratulations on thesuccessful event. Let's see what Joe's got
this morning. Joe, thanks forcalling the Morning Show. Happy Wednesday,

(44:19):
t you sir, Thank you,Brian, good morning. In reference to
your caller a couple back talking aboutJD Vance's opposition to Trump at one point,
and now he's the VP on theticket, if memory serves me,
correct, when Kamala Harris ran Ortried to run in twenty twenty for the

(44:40):
presidency and she got zero traction,didn't she rip into Biden, callowing him
a racist, misogynist, all thiskind of stuff. Yeah, what's what's
the double standard here? I mean, politics makes for strange bedfellow, it
does. Yeah, I agree.And in any given moment in time,
someone who is, you know ofa politician type personality, usually self serving,

(45:06):
malignant narcissists, do whatever they cando to better their own personal best
interests. They're going to say whateverthey need to say at that moment in
time to elevate themselves over whoever itis they need to be elevated over.
And it may be the wrong thingdown the road to have said, but
at the moment, it seemed likethe right thing. And that's all I
can say. Maybe JD Vance's youknow, that was that was operating along
those lines and thought it was appropriatetime to say that. But I mean,

(45:29):
more fundamentally, Joe, am Iwrong in remembering that it wasn't Donald
Trump a Democrat? At one point, I think, yes, okay,
well and apolitical at best. DonaldTrump has always been about Donald Trump.
What's in Donald Trump's best interest iswhat Donald Trump always gravitated toward, whether
it was Republicans, Democrats embracing unionsor not as the case maybe you know,

(45:52):
I mean as a business person,that is, you know, the
fools, the one that's not lookingout for their own best interest. That
was Donald Trump the whole time.But other a political throughout his life.
And of course, you know,you can look at Donald Trump and break
down his character and break down hisyou know, morals and ethics, and
you know, most within the RepublicanParty tend to take a you know,
a lofty moral tone when they talkabout people, most notably the evangelical wing

(46:15):
of the Republican Party, the religiousamong the Republican Party, but tend to
give Donald Trump a huge pass onall those issues. They don't even talk
about it. I'm not suggesting thatit's important. I you know, honestly,
listen, I'm an open minded guy. And if Donald Trump can get
away with you know, having youknow, affairs on the side and you
know, being a celebrity guy,like a lot of people do taking advantage

(46:36):
of his celebrity position for the purposesof, you know, grabbing women.
Listen, who who am I toto be the moral judge of that person?
I wouldn't want anybody judging my moralcharacter. I'm the one responsible for
my actions. I look at myselfin the mirror every morning. But in
the final analysis, that has nothingto do with his ability to lead.
You may draw conclusions about his personalityor his character, But in the final

(46:58):
analysis, who's got the best partpolicies, He's got the best plans.
We got four years where Trump demonstratedthat he is far better at running the
country than Biden could ever hope tobe. We were at a better position
four years ago. His border wasfar more secure. We could go on
and on. He engaged in greatforeign relations. He deserved a Nobel Prize
for his work in the Middle East, for God's sake, all of which
was ignored. So everybody's got characterflaws, everybody's got problems. Just depends

(47:22):
on where you want to point andwhere you want to look. This is
politics, right, Appreciate the callJoe, the opportunity to vent my spleen,
and feel free to call and disagreeif you choose to. That is
aoka here in the morning show fiveone, three, seven, four,
nine, fifty five eight two tothree talk podcast fifty five car seed dot
com, and I try encourage youto get the iHeart Media. Where're over

(47:42):
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no nothing, so that foam wentin there. They insulated the attic for
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(48:46):
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and iHeart Radio Station, the exclusiveaudio home of NBC's coverage of the twenty
twenty four Paris Olympics. The DwireCompany USU nine first one to weather forecast.

(49:15):
Let us see here scattered showers andstorms, mostly clouds. I have
eighty three to day down to sixtytwo overnight to be dry, just partly
cloudy. Tomorrow mostly sun and Ihave seventy nine, few clouds overnight down
to fifty eight and on Friday,a sunny day with a high of eighty
two seventy four degrees. Right nowtime for a traffic update from the u
SEE Health Traffic Center. From everydays to the most complex conditions. Do

(49:37):
you see health backneckins Pine center redefinessome possibilities for every patient. Learn more
at youseehealth dot com. Broken downjust clearing out of the way on southbound
seventy five lane is now open againcoming through Blackland northbound seventy five at northbound
four seventy one. I'm not seeingany major problems coming into downtown as of

(49:58):
yet. Chuck Ingram on Good KaraSeed the talk station KRC Detalk Station A
little on in an hour now.Congressman Warren Davidson why from Milwaukee. He's
at the convention. He's gonna beon at seven thirty pre seeded by Dave
Williams and the Taxpayer Protection Alliance,who has gone through the GOP party platform

(50:21):
and given it a grade. SoDave will give us his analysis on that
tax Protecting taxpayers back dot org iswhere you find Dave and the crew there.
I always appreciate him coming on theprogram, and of course love when
Congressman Brad winsterup comes in the program. He'll be in studio at eighth five
and we'll talk for the full hour. Yeah. On my blog page Bits
about KSE dot Com. I interviewedthe author just the other day, Matthew

(50:42):
Lohmeyer, retired Lieutenant Colonel Matthew Lomyer, on his book Irresistible Revolution, Marxism's
goal of conquest and the unmaking ofthe American Military. That was a disturbing
discussion I had within the information heputs forth in this book is shocking.
He does a great job of explainingwhy our voluntary military numbers are down and

(51:04):
have been down. Of course,it's all about diversity, equity, inclusion,
morale through the toilet down to thetoilet, because of course they'll promote
and elevate people who are not qualified. Merit no longer has a place in
terms of promotions in favor of youknow, getting this optic. You know,
like you choose your vice presidential Canadabecause she fills in certain check marks.
Huh, identity politics. Well,that's what's going on in the military.

(51:28):
So get a copy of Very IrresistibleRevolution. I have an illustration of
that. Saw this reporting just theother day, College Fix reporting the US
Army based training presentation describe two prolife organizations as terrorist groups trading material part

(51:49):
of the anti terrorism brief at FortLiberty formerly known as Fort Bragg in North
Carolina. According to independent journalist SamSchumet, who reported this and had the
screenshots of the materials on his xplatform, Court of the photo slide show
shown to soldiers described two pro lifeorganizations you may have heard of, a
National Right to Life and Operation Rescue, describing them as in their words,

(52:10):
terrorist groups. Slide show showed animage of specialty pro life license plates.
Those are available in many states.You may have one. Those proceeds fund
pregnancy support services for families in need. That's according to Choose Life America,
the organization that promotes those specialty plates. However, the slides suggested the specialty

(52:32):
plates are something soldiers should watch foras a potential sign of a terrorist court
to the reporting, soldiers who attendedthe presentation said the slide was shown right
after another one about isis not mentionedAntifa, which you know immediately comes to

(52:54):
mind when you think of terrorist groupsor would be terrorist groups. Antiphile right
up there. They hate America oftheir Marxists. They burn buildings, they
break things, they attack police officers, They occupy public spaces. I mean,
come on. Fort Liberty did confirmthe veracity of the slide in a
statement on social media late on lastThursday, say that the slide will not

(53:14):
be used any longer. Does thatgive you comfort? A quote local garrison
employee close quote created the presentation quoteto trained soldiers manning access control points at
Fort Liberty. According to the statementquote, after conducting a commander's inquiry,
we determined that the slides presented onsocial media were not vetted by the appropriate

(53:36):
approval authorities and do not reflect theviews of the eighteenth Airborne Corps at Fort
Liberty, the US Army, orthe Department of Defense. Court to the
military based statement, all future trainingproducts will be reviewed to ensure that they
align with the current DoD Anti Terrorismguidance. Okay National right to life quote.

(54:00):
The Biden administration promotes the depths ofpreborn babies and advocates for unlimited abortion,
but peaceful pro life Americans are labeledterrorists. It's amazing what you can
get in front of the American militaryand by way of training exercises, unvetted,
unapproved, yet read irresistible revolution,and you find out this is just

(54:21):
a small, tiny, teeny weenylittle marginal or fractional slice of the indoctrination
materials that are going on in Americanmilitary terrorists organization. You evil pro lifers
out there, six twenty five.Jeff, I'll take your contiment if you
don't mind holding for a minute.I saw the amount of time, and
I want to mention Chimneycare Fireplace andstoff because the summertime is, of course

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two four eight ninety six hundred fiftyfive KRC your morning cup of Sean.
This is a Shawnnity Morning minute.US authority obtained intelligence from a human source
in recent weeks about a plot byIran to assassinate Donald Trump that led the

(56:07):
Secret Service to increasing security around theformer president in recent weeks. Now there's
no indication that the assassin or wouldbe assassin who attempted to kill the former
president was connected to the plot.We don't know. There's no evidence at
this point the existence of the intelligencethreat from one of our top geopolitical foes,
number one state sponsor of terrorism.What part of one hundred and thirty

(56:30):
yards away on a roof did theynot get? Just put snipers on that
building from every angle, So ifanyone dares to try and get on that
roof, you're going to stop themright there in their traps. A Conservative
Underground meets later today on the SeanHannity Show. Hey, ready to give

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Hell Up Channel nine says scatter showersand storms today, cloudy for the
most part all day and I haveeighty three partly cloudy overnight, dry sixty

(58:00):
two for the low seventy nine orhigh. Tomorrow mostly sunny fifty eight overnight
with just a few clouds and onFriday a sunny day with high of eighty
two seventy four degrees. Right now, let's get an update on traffic edition
from the UCE Health Traffic Center fromevery day as to the most complex conditions.
So you see health Backneckhams Pine Centerredefines some possibilities for every patient.

(58:20):
Learn more at u sehealth dot com. Broken down just clearing out of the
way on southbound seventy five. Letlane is now open again. Coming through
Blackland northbound seventy five at northbound fourseventy one I'm not seeing any major problems
coming into downtown as of yet.Chuck ingramon fifty five Kara Seed the talk
station six twenty nine Fast Approach insix thirty year. If you have kr

(58:50):
CE talk station, what are fromnow? Connersman Warren Davidson from the RNC.
Dave Williams precedes him at seven ohfive Textpayer Protect Lines and right now
I'm going to go to the phonestwo three talk and here from Jeff.
Jeff, welcome to the show,and a very happy Wednesday to you.
Good morning, sir. I havea primary source regarding really the stupidity of

(59:16):
this DEI stuff. Regarding the airForce. I know two people that were
crew chiefs. You know what acrew chief is? A loose idea,
yeah, loose idea, but notspecifically. I couldn't write a definition down
for you, sir. They're theguys that sign off on the airplane and

(59:36):
look at the pilot and go,hey this this this airplane's ready to go.
Oh okay, okay there they areresponsible for the entire airplane. So
they are in terms of safety everythingon the plane. It's the buck stops
with the crew chief, that's right. They have to sign off on it.
Okay, something goes wrong, theycould, they could have big problems.

(01:00:00):
And as you know, everything greats, especially when you're applying the g
forces and all the stuff that firesdo F fifteens well, anyway, imagine
an eight eighteen year old kid goingright on active duty out of high school
and joining the Air Force and learninghow to be a crew chief. You

(01:00:21):
have to pass all the tests,all the airplanes in order to get your
certification. Then you go to schoolall the time. I mean you're constantly
in school. It's and when you'renot working, you're in school. If
you're playing your cards right. Tomake a long story short, both of
these people were just it just gotto the point they're discussed. They said,

(01:00:45):
the hell with this. We don'tneed this. This is not why
I joined the Air Force. Sothey said, the heck with it.
Well, guess what happens. There'sa bidding war for them. They start
out one year old kid, startout over one hundred thousand dollars a year

(01:01:06):
with benefits in the private sector.You may yeah, yeah of them,
but let me ask you a qualifyingquestion. I think I know where you're
going on this. They got fedup with you didn't specifically say why they
got fed up and pursued the privatesector where they found obviously very lucrative opportunities.
Was it the DEI stuff DEI stuff? One of them said, the

(01:01:29):
heck with it, but I'm stillgoing to go reserve. This one's my
son, and I go wt hm. Well, it's troubling, but it's
a common thing going on in theAmerican military, isn't it, Jeff,
isn't that what we're talking about?I mean, that's that seems to be
the exact point of Lieutenant Colonel MatthewLohmeyer's book, Irresistible Revolution. You can't

(01:01:51):
keep good people in the military,and you can't attract good people in the
military who were interested in protecting,serving, and defending our country from domestic
and foreign threats if you're going tobe just simply sending them to an indoctrination
camp to learn about LGBTQ and allthe differences and things that divide us.
You can't have a cohesive military whenyou speak of division and you allocate people

(01:02:14):
into certain boxes based upon which boxesthey check on some given graph, and
elevate people because look, oh mygod, we don't have a person who
fits this particular number of checkboxes ina higher position. We need to find
someone who does meet these specific criteriaand elevate them regardless of whether they're capable
of operating as a crew chief ornot. Frightening stuff. Yeah, that's

(01:02:37):
the point of the book. Iencourage everybody get it with firty five carecee
dot com and get a copy ofthat book. It has been out for
a few years. And check outthe reviews and there's got like three thousand
and five star reviews. Metro BusDriverques are causing a crash to kill the
pedestrian and Hyde Park pleaded guilty yesterday. Dion Willis, forty seven, plead
guilty to one kind of hicular manslaughterand the crash that killed eighty seven year

(01:02:58):
old Beverly Kenney, retire gifted educationteacher from Princeton Schools. Originally, Willis
facing five counts of hicular homicide.Corner to the court records, His family
attorney, Kayla King, released hisstatement regarding Wilson's plea, which I will
not read. Crash report says Williswas driving a metro bus January eleventh,
when he turned on to Duck CreekRoad from Dana Avenue, hitting Kenny,

(01:03:21):
who was crossing the street in amarked crosswalk. Corner's office confirmed that she
died in the scene corner prior coveragefrom Fox nineteen, who reported on this,
Willis's license was suspended when the crashhappened. He was not criminally charged
until four months later. Metro haspreviously stated they did not know his license
was suspended. City of Cincinnati reaffirmedthat statement in court yesterday morning. Sentencing

(01:03:42):
schedule for August twenty ninth. Maximumone hundred and eighty days in jail and
one thousand dollars fine with a licensesuspension from up to five years. That's
the max. It's amazing that it'dbe the max for actually killing somebody.
And let us see here. Crashin West Price Hill happened yesterday. Two
people were injured through car crash happeningat the intersection of West eighth and Rosemont
Avenue ten pm. Two people wereinjured, once seriously, according to police,

(01:04:06):
both taking a UC medical center.Officers say one vehicle crossed the center
line and speed was also a factor. Both streets were closed while officers investigated
the crash. In like all things, I'm sure they would love to hear
from this inst Police Department if youhave any information about that crash six thirty
five. If you have care,see the talk station Emery Federal Credit Union.

(01:04:26):
I love Emory and I love thefact that they're very charitable folks over
at Emory Federal Credit Union and theydo a golf outing every year, and
I've had the pleasure of participating inas in sort of like an mc capacity
for the Emory Federal Credit Union GolfOuting, which benefits of since Aint Children's
Hospital, since a Children's Hospital CharitableCare Fund. So by playing golf at

(01:04:47):
the eighteenth annual Charity Golf Scramble,you will be benefiting this wonderful charity and
you'll have a great time playing atfour Bridges Country Club. Takes place August
twelfth. Everybody's inviting. That's Monday, August twelfth. All you need to
do is get the event information onlineat EMORYFCU dot org where you can sign
up. So fun filled day ofgolf, opportunity to support a worthy cause
for the community, and you're playinggolf with a whole bunch of really terrific

(01:05:09):
people. I will be there tosend you off if you're there at the
golf outing. So check it outonline again Emory FCU dot org to register
online fifty five k get into summerwith a here it is your nine first
wenty weather forecast. Stop bad.We get some rain today, scattered showers
and storms, clouds all day,high of eighty three, clearing up over

(01:05:31):
nineteen, a few clouds sixty twofor the low. Seventy nine at are
mostly sunny skies Tomorrow down to fiftyeight overnight with just a few clouds and
a sunny Friday with a high ofeighty two seventy four degrees. Right now,
time for traffic chuck from the UCUTTramphic Center from every day as to
the most complex conditions, so yousee Health Backneck and Spine Center where hedefines
some possibilities for every patient. Learnmore at uc health dot com. North

(01:05:56):
Bend seventy five. Do we okaythrough the cut? Beginning to build just
a bit there northbound four seventy one. That's a slow go coming across the
bridge with that left vane blocked offwith the barrels, I'm guess also hearing
dispatches for an accident northbound seventy fivenear Glendale Milford right shoulder ingram on fifty
five KRZ the talk station sixty herefifty five KRSD talk station, a reminder

(01:06:21):
head on over fifty five kr SEdot com and reminding about the Irresistible Revolution
book Marxism Goal Conquest in the Unmakingof America's Military. That's right there.
Easily acquired copy of that, didit? He dive with Daniel Davis breaking
down the Trump assassination attempt. Youcan get the podcast if you have kr
SEA dot com. Of course,my conversation with Steve Gooden as well.

(01:06:44):
Steve provided a wonderful, as healways does, legal analysis of that most
recent opinion in which the lawsuit againstDonald Trump was chucked out on the grounds
that the special Council role well wasnot constitutional. Will they start over again,
back to the Justice Department and we'llsee if that happens or not.
Certainly nothing is going to happen beforeNovember. It just it just becomes an

(01:07:04):
illegal impossibility. So the Democrats aren'tgoing to get another label to put upon
Donald Trump, so you can runaround to call him a convicted fellon all
day long. I don't think reallyanybody cares about that. Under the circumstances
of the lawfair that was waged againstthem. Uh, moving over to more
dee, I woke and and andcraziness. I got to go to California

(01:07:26):
on this one, because again,I don't think that you know, the
idea of school choice, or thatparents should have some involvement in their child
and their children's lives is bears apolitical stripe. I don't know. I
mean, I think that's one ofthe reasons that Democrats are not doing very
well in terms of policy. Yes, they've got Joe Biden as a real
problem as the figurehead of their oftheir of their their party, and of

(01:07:51):
course a huge problem with Kamala Harris. I mean, you don't have to
rehash all the reasons and the problemsthey're facing as far as the representatives are
concerned. But it's their policy thatI think the American people are really fed
up with, most notably keeping parentsout of their children's lives. California is
a just a poster child for that. Democratic Governor Gavin Newsom signed the first

(01:08:13):
in the nation law Monday banning schooldistricts from requiring staff to disclose a student's
gender identity or sexual orientation to anyother person about the child's without the child's
permission, meaning parents. It alsorequires the state Department of Education to develop
resources for families of LGBTQ plus studentsin grade seven through high school. So

(01:08:40):
merely by virtue of the fact thatyou've got an LGBTQ plus child in your
home, you're going to get extraresources. Why for what? You know?
I guess in terms of educating aperson, How is that child any
different from anybody else they're not?Look, two and two is four.
Does it matter matter whether you fallon this this this lettered spectrum anywhere?

(01:09:02):
Does it matter whether you're a traditionalcisgender human being or you have sexual proclivities
towards someone else? No, twoplus two is four. Period, end
of story, full stop. That'sthe bottom line. How to read phonics,
you know, show them some phonics, Teach him how to articulate words
and the syllables and and learn toread. Does it matter what sexuality you

(01:09:23):
are when you're learning to read?No, it doesn't. Would it be
an important thing to know as aparent if your child is identifying as someone
that they're not at school? Mightyou want to have some involvement in that
discussion? Even if you believe inthe notion that your child can change his
or her gender to another one.Might you want to have a conversation with

(01:09:44):
your child if the in system beingreferred to as they or them even though
they're a singular human being, andyou could have an easy education conversation about
the definition of they, which ismore than one? And how them looking
at MIRR while you're having a conversation, do you see more than one person
there? Yeah, that will bea conversation I certainly would have with my
child or any any human being whoasked me to refer to them as they

(01:10:08):
or them. I'm an outspoken criticwhen it comes to the bastardization of the
English language. Now, proponents ofthis band say it's going to help protect
transgender and gender non conforming students wholive in unwelcoming households. Well unwelcoming are
the parents not entitled to their ownthoughts, comments, opinions, particularly when

(01:10:32):
it comes to the raising of theirchildren. They don't belong to the school
district, children don't belong to thestate. Parents have wide birth when it
comes to teaching their children. Somepeople are atheists and they think that they
did parents who teach their children religiousconcepts are crazy. Then they'll go all

(01:10:55):
day long about it. People whohave religious affiliations think that atheists are crazy
and that they have a responsibility tobring their children up and fulfill the promises
at baptism. Right, the schooldistrict might be standing in the way of
the fulfillment of that promise to Godthat belongs to you, that does not

(01:11:18):
belong to the school district. Butthe school district here is taking that opportunity
away from you by instructing schools thatthey, under no circumstances can compel staff
to talk about this with their parents. Jonathan Keller, council President for California
Family Counsel on the other side ofthe argument, this bill undermines their fundamental

(01:11:39):
and places boys and girls in potentialjeopardy. Moms and dads have both a
constitutional and divine mandate to guide toprotect their kids, and this bill egregiously
violates this sacred trust. Yeah,of course, it's bill cropped up after
some school districts in California amazing whenwe passed policies that required the parents be

(01:12:00):
notified of a child, notified ifa child request a change of their gender
identification. But no, no,no, the Democrats can't have that.
They cannot allow and will not allowa difference of opinion on something so fundamental
as the education of your children.Is that a winning argument for Democrats?
And I imagine there are many people. I have to imagine there are people

(01:12:23):
within this lettered group of organ thislettered group of people, gays, lesbians,
bisexuals, transgenders, queers, andwhoever the plus are or the A
plus plus or whatever, that whileembracing the notion that their child can change
their gender identity, would want toknow about it if they did, helping
them guide them through the process.Right six forty six. If you have

(01:12:46):
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(01:13:54):
com. Or you can give Douga calm Please tell Doug Brian said,
it is great guy. His numberis nine three seven two ninety three.
That's nine three seven two seven ninetythree fifty five car the Talk Station.
In this week's casee the Talk Stationand Happy Wednesday, Dave Williams, the
Taxpayer Text Alliance. After the topof the R News felt like congress from

(01:14:15):
Warren Davidson from the r NC andbrad Winstroup and Studio for a full hour
at eight oh five. IM sureyou heard the top of the R News.
I got five police officers from Columbus, Ohio, which I thought was
rather interesting. Columbus Ohio volunteer policeofficers in Milwaukee for the convention they shot
and killed an armed man yesterday afternoonUH just about a mile west of the

(01:14:39):
convention downtown Milwaukee. According to Milwaukeepolici speaking with News, Jeffrey Norman is
his name, said, this obviouslyreally heightened security there. We had just
tens of thousands of police officers showup in Milwaukee to help with the UH,
with the security, most notably afterSaturday's attempted assassination in Donald Trump and

(01:14:59):
no, no Milwaukee police officers wereinvolved in this. They got thirteen Columbus
police officers there. We're in thearea for a briefing. That's when they
saw an altercation between a couple ofpeople, one of whom was holding a
knife in each hand. Officers orderedthe man to drop the knives. He
did not, suddenly charging at theother individual and resulting in them opening fire.

(01:15:24):
Body camera still frames released yesterday bythe Columbus Police show the man still
armed with the knives lunging toward anotherman at the time he was shot.
Two knives were recovered at the scene, and of course Chief Norman defending his
officers' actions. Someone's life's in danger. These officers, who are not from

(01:15:46):
this area, took it upon themselvesto act to save somebody's life today exactly
deadly force is called for when someoneis using deadly force. Multiple witness talking
with the local news there Milwaukee journalsand said that the man who died at
the scene was well known. Heapparently lived in a tempant tent encampment and

(01:16:06):
oddly went by the nickname Jehovah,which can get you stoned, right,
Joe Jehovah had people with Monty Python'slife of Brian got my joke on that
one. And alternatively, we hadanother incident. It happened on Monday.
A man armed with an AK fortyseven pistol wearing a ski mask arrested on

(01:16:28):
Monday just blocks from the RNC forumin Milwaukee. Homeland Security investigator said Capitol
police were conducting surveillance near the RNCperimeter. They noted a suspicious man approaching,
wearing a ski mask and carrying atactical bag, inside of which police
found a gun and a full magazine, noting his intentions were unclear. Milwaukee

(01:16:51):
police confirmed the incident, saying thetwenty one year old man was arrested at
one pm on Monday in a twelvehundred block in North eleventh man did not
have a concealed weapon license in Wisconsinor any other state for that matter.
They stay charges are pending reviewed bythe Milwaukee County District Attorney's office. So,

(01:17:12):
uh, craziness still going on inour world. It happens every single
day. Just fortunately in neither incidentwas we're innocent people harmed. Underscore the
word innocent on that. Let ussee here. And finally, and maybe
I'm gonna run this by taxpayer protectionallians Dave Williams. Joe Biden is now

(01:17:34):
proposing a nationwide rent control wanting tocap rent at five percent a year.
Rolled this out yesterday, the rentcontrol plan, just in ahead of November,
trying to buy votes for people.And there are a lot of people
who are struggling with eviction. Thena whole bunch of articles about it,
most notably in the Since I BelieveNo It's Channel nine to WCPO reporting since

(01:17:56):
an eviction filings one hundred, onehundred and seven percent above the pre COVID
average, and couple that with aWall Street Journal article I saw and there
was a breakdown on multiple cities thatwas done. Evictions surge in Man's cities
in the American sun Belt, amongothers. Eviction filings in a lot of
cities up thirty five percent or morecompared with the pre pandemic levels. Part

(01:18:20):
of the problem, of course,increasing rents. People struggling can't make it.
So here comes Joe Biden. He'sgoing to solve everybody's problems by capping
it at five percent. Now,he doesn't do phase two, which is
the response now and in time inour life when we need more housing out
there. Capping rents is a disincentiveto invest in housing or otherwise construct housing.

(01:18:43):
So it's the antithesis of what weneed, you know, I mean,
if price fixing worked, you'd haveit across the board. It doesn't.
It results in well shortages in amassive way, which has an inflationary
effect. Oddly enough, sixty sixKRCD talk station, we'll hear from Dave
Williams Money Matters after the top ofthe UR News Taxpayer protect lines Dave Williams,

(01:19:05):
followed by Congressman Warren Davidson at seventhirty. I'll be right back.
I don't care about anybody else.It's what motivates your vote. There's me
for burdens, and they're trying todestroy or fifty five KRC, the talk
station seven six here at pitty fivekrcit talks station. By the time,

(01:19:38):
I was wishing you a very happyWednesday and welcoming back, always enjoying my
conversations with taxpayer Protection lines. DaveWilliams, Dave, welcome back, my
friend. It's great, have agreat pleasure having you on the program.
Good morning, Brian. And Iwas talking to Joe right before we go.
I came on the air and hementioned there's no streetcar news, and
I got to tell you, I'ma little concerned about that because when it's

(01:20:00):
really quiet, you know something isgoing to happen, right, you know,
it's almost too quiet the call beforethe storm. Wow, Well,
they're gonna have the real hat trickto figure out where they're gonna where they're
gonna come up with the money forany extension of the streetcar from where it
is right now, considering how expensiveit is to maintain it upkeep. But
it's free, Dave, it's free. Well, it's free. It doesn't

(01:20:23):
cost anything for the street car exceptfor that pesky five million dollars a month
in maintenance and debt service. Anyhow, Yeah, we've got a bit of
a financial problem going on here inthe City of Cincinnati. So any talks
swirling around streetcar expansion are quickly metwith the overwhelming fiscal reality that we're facing
here as a city. You know, it's amazing what happens once those COVID

(01:20:46):
funds runs out, isn't it.Wow, you're not kidding. I mean,
we're seeing that all across the country, you know, with schools and
everywhere else, you know, becausethey had this huge infusion of cash,
Like Baltimore City had this huge,huge infusion of cash and it is gone,
absolutely gone. And what they've doneis that they've extended themselves and they've
created new programs. Yes, andthey've hired people, and they're saying,

(01:21:10):
wait, this money has gone andwe're got to pay for it now.
So yeah, this is incredible.That reminds me of got to go back
to the Clinton ages, you know, hire We're responsible for hiring one hundred
thousand new police officers. Well,all that was was a one time infusion
of cash solely for the purpose ofhiring police officers, but then you're left
with the tab of keeping them employedand salaried after the initial infusion of cash,

(01:21:31):
and people forget about the tail expenditurewhen they're doing stuff like that.
Yeah, and the stimulus program,remember when they you know, all these
projects across the country, Well,guess what, once they're built, you
have to maintain them and keep themup so they don't Yeah, Dave,
come on, look at the roadsin the city of Cincinnati when you're here
next time. Now, just becauseyou built a road forty years ago doesn't

(01:21:53):
mean you have to fix it.Sucks to be you. Yeah, we
got potholes. Don't worry about it. These things take care of themselves.
Incredible, that's the world we findourselves in. Anyway, get your reaction
from the Saturday shooting. I knowthis number one on the topic list.
This morning I found it. It'salmost as if it's hard to believe.

(01:22:16):
You wake up and another day hasdawned and you find out that the screw
up was even worse. Like everysingle day he find some new tidbit of
information like how in God's name couldthat it possibly happen? And I read
about this the Secret Service receiving somewhat was described as some pretty solid intelligence
human intelligence about an Iranian plot toassassinate Trump that they knew about in advance

(01:22:39):
of the shooting. They claimed thatthey had beefed up resources and assets prior
to Saturday on behalf of the Trumpadministration and Donald Trump generally speaking. But
what in the hell? I'm sorry, the slope of the roof was just
a little too much for Secret Servicesafety. That's the response we give from
the Director of the Secret Service.I mean, my god, they're standing

(01:22:59):
on a building that they had abigger slope than the roof that she was
talking about. Social media is awashwith photographs of Secret Servant agents with high
powered rifles perch the top, multipleslope roofs, much more of a slope
than that one that was left unattended. This is insanity. Dave Brian sick
to my stomach, you know,when I heard what happened on Saturday night,

(01:23:23):
sick to my stomach, and Ihave been ever since. And then,
like you said, these details thatare coming out is that, well,
this building was outside the perimeter ofthe safety zone. It was like
a security zone, what I mean. So that's all it takes is to
and then the slope of the roof. I mean, there's a failure here

(01:23:43):
at the highest level and it hasn'tbeen addressed. And we've just heard lip
service, right has this been lipservice as to you know, the things
that have gone wrong? People wantaccountability, and this is where it starts.
I mean, if you can't beaccountable for the president almost being killed,
where will you have the account ofability in government? And that's why
it's critical that these questions are askedand there's answers, and people need to

(01:24:05):
be fired. There needs to beyou know, people need to lose their
jobs over what happened on Saturday.And this is we see this in the
government all the time. When thereare failures, people aren't held accountable for
the failures without question. And youknow, I mean to pick on the
Biden administration because you know, alladministrations are guilty of this to some degree,

(01:24:26):
but Lord Almighty Biden administration has hadsome absolutely epic failures and not as
single head has rolled. I meanwith the exception of voluntary I mean leaving
people believing voluntary, like Jen Sackeybecause she got a better job and didn't
want to hang out being the WhiteHouse Press secretary, because that was a
train wreck. You know, peoplewho screw up or let go. I
mean my Orcas, he was incharge of the border. What happened.

(01:24:48):
Well, we don't have one.He's still around, right, yeah.
Yeah, And you know, thishappens at every agency, whether it's you
know, transferred to Pete Budagetz,you know, falling down the line.
You have these massive failures of leadership. And you know, and again you
talk about, you know, thebuying administration. It happens in every administration,

(01:25:11):
but this seems so much more amplifiedin the past three and a half
four years. Yeah. And mymilitary friends, and we heard from one
of them just the other day talkingabout being held accountable. You know,
the buck stops with the director ofthe Secret Service, Agent Kim Cheatle.
If this, if she was ina military role, he insisted that she

(01:25:32):
would be fired promptly. She wouldbe removed from that position. It is
her responsibility. Even though maybe shedidn't have her finger directly on where people
were going to be set up orwhere people were posted. The buck stops
at her desk. And this wassuch a colossal failure. I mean,
when your best response to not havingsomeone assigned to the rooftop one hundred and

(01:25:54):
thirty feet our yards away is thatit had too much of a slope,
so we put people inside the buildingto make sure everything was safe. I
mean, that's that's all you've gotto go on. I'm sorry, You're
you're done. You gotta be,you gotta I voluntarily stepped down if I
was her out of embarrassment. Imean, I couldn't imagine, you know,
being in that job and that happeningand not stepping down and then,

(01:26:16):
like you said, not just leavingout of sheer embarrassment. And you know,
listen, she may leave and probablyget a huge pension, right,
I mean, oh yeah, we'llprobably so, you know. But again,
what are we going to learn fromthis? And whenever something goes wrong?
You know, my question is mydad always taught you know, taught
me. This is like what's learnedfrom it? And how do you fix
it? And I want to seehow they fix this and how they move

(01:26:39):
forward. Well, I know manypeople my listening audience, and almost got
my foot in the water on thiswhen we just have lost so much faith
in government, our institutions generally speaking, and the idea that we're actually going
to get a straight answer from anyonein government, most notably under this administration.
Nobody's expecting to find out any thing, you know. I mean we

(01:27:00):
still they do it all the time, don't they. You know, Like
for example, I just moving overaway from something criminal. Well, I
guess it was criminal contextually speaking,Robert Hirst report. We aren't allowed to
hear the audio of that. Wehave a transcript of something. There's no
national security interest here, there's nofuture prosecutorial risk here. There's nothing by

(01:27:20):
way of excuse or explanation for usnot being allowed to have that audio.
And yet the people who demand it, our elected officials, who are responsible
for our government voting on our behalfand getting and engaging in oversight and looking
into these things, have been toldbasically, screw you, You're not going
to get it. I mean,this happens all the time. It boils

(01:27:44):
down to, Brian, is thatthe government is making decisions for us and
saying that you don't need this informationthat you know, we are going to
take care of you. We thegovernment are going to take care of you.
No, we're going to take careof ourselves. And the more information
the better. And you know we'vetalked about this numerous times. Is you
know, accountability starts with transparency,and right now, the American public deserves

(01:28:08):
transparency and what's happened well, Andthe more we learn, the less likely
it is we're going to rely onour elected officials and whether and trust them,
which you know, maybe a welcomechange. If more people lose faith
in government as a solution to theirproblems, maybe we'd quit turning to government
as for the solution for our problemsbecause they clearly aren't good at solving our

(01:28:29):
problems. And I think that messagereally is resonating with people, is that
people just want to be left alone, right that they want to live their
lives, make their own financial decisions, not their financial decisions coming out of
a government agency like the irs.They want to make their own decisions in
life, whether it's personal or financial. Amen to that. It's like the

(01:28:53):
libertarian to me coming out and justsmiling at the notion that we might have
more people joining in that concept.Dave Williams taxpayer text lines you find them
online at Protecting Taxpayers dot org aworthy bookmark for you, and we're going
to talk about it because Dave's goingto give us a grade on the GOP
party platform when we return seven tofifteen. Right now, doctor Fredpeck,
doctor Megan Freu. Meghan Fru ison maternity lea, but she is part

(01:29:15):
of the dynamic duo of cosmetic dentistrythat is Pack and Freu. Outstanding general
dentistry is what you get at theclinic. It's amazing. They're always,
always, always on the on thecutting edge of dentistry, all for your
health and comfort. You know,I love going to the dentist. I
know a lot of people that don't. But if you're one of those folks
to fall in the category of ooh, I hate going to the dentists,
well, go to doctor Fredpeck's clinicGuided biofilm Therapy. First clinic in Ohio

(01:29:39):
to use it. It is somuch more gentle than the noisy scraapy dental
instruments. That may be one ofthe reasons you don't like going to the
dentist. So they've got that,They've got it all there and the wonderful
staff. It's welcoming environment. It'sa comfortable environment. And let me move
over to well doctor Fred Peck andhis amazing it's just an uncanny gifted ability

(01:30:00):
to transform people's lives with cosmetic dentistry. He has always been a fan of
cosmetic dentistry. It's his passion andhe's a fellow with the American Academy and
Cosmetic Dentistry, one of only threein the state of Ohio. Amazing transformative
cosmetic dentistry. Got any issues withyour smile? Doctor Fred Peck is the
man you need to speak with,and of course doctor Freu working on her
accreditation five one three six two oneseventy six sixty six. Please tell hi,

(01:30:25):
Brian said high five one three sixtwo one seventy six sixty six.
Visit them online. Learn more atpeck pec, KPEX smiles dot com,
fifty five KRC dot com. Ourhigheart radio music. Because the storms high
eighty three every night, partly cloudy, sixty two, sunny for the most
part, seventy nine Tomorrow, afew clouds over Thursday night fifty eight for
the low and on Friday is goingto be a sunny day with a high

(01:30:45):
of eighty two. Seventy four outof time for traffic from the UCI Tramphic
Center from every day eights to themost complex conditions. So you see help
Bankneck and Spine Center redefines some possibilitiesfor every patient. Learn more, and
you see health dot com add anextra ten minutes, and that is growing.
The late time is growing from beforeGrand on northbound Forest seventy one into

(01:31:09):
downtown southbound seventy five. Still doingokay through Macklin. I have a report
of an accident on seven forty sevenbelow Malhauser chucking from a fifty five krz
he talks station seventeen fifty five KRCITtalkstation Brian Thomas, w Dave Williams and
the Taxpayer Protection Alliance again online ata Protecting Taxpayers dot Org. The good,

(01:31:30):
the bad, and the ugly theygraded the twenty twenty four GOP platform.
I'm inclined to move forward to thebad and the ugly, Dave.
I mean, I see the goodwe can all agree on, you know,
slashing wastefle government spending, making thepermanent the Trump tax cuts, helping
the auto industry by reversing the ridiculousvehicle emissions rules, universal school choice,

(01:31:51):
getting rid of the Partner of Education. All good, demonstrably, so we
can go on all day about howgreat they are what is the bad and
what is the ugly that you figureout here, Dave, Yeah, and
Brian, what we're doing here iswe're calling balls and strikes. Right.
We look at we look at thepolicy platform, and we go, Okay,
what is good for consumers and taxpayers? What's bad? And we're being

(01:32:13):
honest brokers here, and we're goingto do the same thing for the Democrats.
Probably a lot more bad and notfor the Democrats, but balls and
strikes. Yeah, And you knowthis is something that's going to see him
counterintuitive, and that's eliminating taxes ontips for the restaurant and hospitality workers.
And I'll tell you why we considerthis bad is that we want lower taxes

(01:32:33):
for everybody. Amen. And Iknow this is a very popular thing to
talk about the why are we treatingone class better than another of worker?
I think that, you know,our tax burden is still way too high
on everybody. So we would hopethat the GOP would embrace extending the tax

(01:32:53):
cuts from twenty seventeen, and Ithink they will. And yeah, I
guess it was yesterday President Trump saidthat he wants to reduce the corporate tax
from twenty one percent to fifteen percent, which I mean, that's amazing because
businesses can hire, they can investback into their business. So that's what
we want, is deeper tax reform. So that's yeah, point and point

(01:33:14):
well taken day that always needs tobe made any talking about corporate taxes because
those evil corporations don't pay their fairshare. We pay the corporate taxes.
We are the ones that buy theirgoods and services and those taxes are passed
along as part of doing business tothe consumer. So lowering corporate taxes ultimately
lowers the price of goods and servicesfor Americans absolutely. And we know one

(01:33:34):
of the things that they're talking aboutis protecting Social Security and Medicare. But
they say, the Republicans say,and the Platform says it's not going to
be done through raising the retirement ageor cuts. Well, how are you
going to do this? I mean, you can't just say something and make
it happen. There has to bea plan. And again I appreciate that

(01:33:54):
they're talking about this, but there'sno depth to it. And they took
two of the options off the tablethat probably need to be on the table.
And guess what, if we don'tdo something, there will be cuts
to Social Security. If nothing isdone, there will be cuts. So
there needs to be a deeper discussion. And I hope this week there is
a deeper discussion on Social Security andMedicare. And yes, I know I'm

(01:34:15):
dreaming. I know. For themto talk about entitlement reform during any convention
is not going to happen. Yeah, not in advance of November. However,
Dave, don't you think they're keepingtheir powder dry on that topic so
it can become a topic or conversationif and when Trump is elected. I
hope so, I really hope so, because we have done polling and it

(01:34:38):
showed that people want to have thediscussion. I think is what. Seventy
percent of the people said, yes, well, something needs to be done.
I mean, so it's not it'sthe third rail, but it isn't
anymore because people understand just how direthe situation is. Existential threat, Dave
Williams. Existential threat and to manyAmericans, you know, personal lives too,

(01:34:59):
because they've you know, grown upbelieving they're going to be able to
rely on Social Security. If youdon't fix it, then it isn't going
to be there for folks, allright, What else is bad and or
ugly. Dave oh terriffs, doublingand tripling down on tariffs, and why
this is so bad as consumers willpay for these tariffs. Businesses don't pay
taxes. Consumers pay the taxes andhigher prices, and the same thing with

(01:35:21):
tariffs. When you increase the costof anything, it goes directly to the
consumers. And I don't know whythe Republicans continue to embrace tariffs and raising
the price. And well, it'sChina, isn't isn't the simple word China?
In response to that, it isChina, But there's also terroriffs coming
out of the EU and products comingout of the European Union, so it's

(01:35:44):
not just China, and it's acrossthe board. And guess what, there's
certain things we are just not manufacturingin this country and it would take us
ten fifteen years to have a manufacturingline on these things, so you know,
we don't have that option. Butthat's what they're trying to do,
is trying to bring more business backinto the US. And what's interesting is
the Republicans understand this with oil,right as we are building a very healthy

(01:36:10):
we're trying to build a pipeline fromCanada, that Keystone Exel pipeline, which
would reduce prices. But that's bringingoil from Canada. I mean that is
something that we you know, weneed. It's it's really interesting to see
the diconomy here. That's true,and I will recommend my listeners head on
over to Protecting tax payerspot dot organd check out the entire grading the twenty
twenty four GOP platform analysis by Daveand the crew at the tax Payer Protection

(01:36:34):
Alliance. Dave, I wish wehad more time. I've got Congressman Warren
Davidson coming to the next segment livefrom the RNC, so we will part
company today. I'll look forward tohaving you back on the program and as
always, keep up the great workat the tax Payer Protection Alliance. My
friend. Thanks Brian stayhole. Sotry exactly seven five. Congressman Davidson up

(01:36:54):
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you love what you do, thankyou for everything you do. I love
what you guys do for us.You never work a day in your life.
Hey, I love the fact youcall these crazy people out. First
of all, I want to say, my love show, We're happy.
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(01:38:21):
to be an American. Fifty fiveKRS the TOM Station, it'sday extra special
Wednesday, considering that we have joinedthe fifty five KERC Morning Show. Now
the return of Congressman Warren Davidson,followed by Congressman Brad Winsor for a full
hour in studio after the top ofthe hour, Welcome back Congressman Warren Davidson,
live from the RNC Milwaukee. Hey, it's an honor to join you,

(01:38:42):
Brian, thanks for having me onthis morning. A real pleasure to
have you on. And first off, I just want to get an atmosphere
check. I talked to Claire Corkran, commissioner from Claremont County. Claire Corkran,
who I know, you know,and she sounds oh my god,
last couple days she's been on theprogram, just so excited. The atmosphere
everyone's positive. The reaction to JD. Vans has so far been pretty strong
and positive. I wanted to getyour reaction on the mood of the convention,

(01:39:04):
and you're also reaction to Trump's selectionof JD. Vans given the huge
bench, very qualified, qualified folksthat could have been vice his vice presidential
selection. Congressman. Yeah, Imean, look, it's a it's a
great week. It's celebratory, andespecially so because frankly, Donald Trump narrowly

(01:39:26):
missed being assassinated. I mean,it's just unbelievable the number of failures that
that happened are alleged to have happenedas failures. I mean, at this
point, I think it takes morefaith believe there was negligence than MAOIs.
Oh yeah, yeah, you're you'rein my listening audience territory on that one.

(01:39:47):
I have so many people believing thisis in some way intentional, intentional.
That's how much faith we've lost inour government at this point, that
our secret service charged with protecting notonly just the present the Vice President United
States and other noted notables, butalso the candidate Donald Trump, former President
of the United States of America.He's got Secret Service protection all the time,

(01:40:08):
that they could fail so epically justautomatically in these troubled times we live
in, raise concerns that well,they wanted it to happen, well something
I don't know. I don't knowhow far it goes, but you know,
not securing that building and looking atthe things around that, it's just
it's just inconceivable to me that ittakes just so much extreme negligence to add

(01:40:32):
it up that you start going,well, what would other explanations be?
And you know, we'll follow thefacts where they are. But you know,
obviously the number one person to blameis the shooter, but the security
failure should have prevented that, frankly, and you could go on all day.
So there's just a lot of conversationabout that, and frankly, just
an amazing relief and then a celebrationlike, okay, well we're still on

(01:40:56):
track. Things are going well.President Trump couldn't have responded in a more
inspiring way that, you know,boldly comes back up right away, fight
fight, fight, and it's like, yeah, that's the mood here.
We're going to fight and you know, using our system, not with the
way that they tried to take outTrump, but you know, we're going
to get out the vote, We'regoing to work at every level. We're

(01:41:17):
gonna win these races, and we'regonna put Donald Trump back in the White
House and give them the kinds ofmajorities that we can get things done with.
And so, you know, Ithink jd. Vance is the right
guy to do that for a coupleof reasons. One, you know,
it sends a clear signal that thisis a not about one campaign, It's

(01:41:39):
about a movement that is going totake a long time. So you go
to one of the youngest guys thatPresident Trump was considering. And I think
the other thing that sends is here'ssomebody who changed their mind about Donald Trump
and you know, didn't start outliking Donald Trump and took a look at
the results and took a look ateverything else and said I can get behind
that. I believe in that that'sexactly what we need for our country.

(01:42:01):
And I think the other thing thatsays is Donald Trump's a guy that doesn't
hold a grudge. They did tryto describe him as this monster, demon
guy. No one believed that abouthim before and now you know, before
he ran for office, and despiteall of the billion of dollars of media
and earned media and everything else theyspent trying to assassinate Donald Trump's character in

(01:42:25):
the press. You look at JD. Vance's pick and go, well,
he doesn't hold a grudge there.He got over things and now JD.
Vance is his VP pick. Well, and you have addressed and I think
in a very positive little very positiveand I'll say spin, not to be
pejorative about it, but a positivespin on a message that some of my
listeners are concerned about, which ishe did have some pretty you know,

(01:42:47):
terrible things to say about but DonaldTrump, going back to twenty sixteen.
But you know, on the heelsof comments like that, I had a
listener call in and remind everybody,and I thought it was a wonderful point.
Ronald Reagan was a Democrat for mostof his political life before he ended
up becoming the best Republican president around. And I have noted and noted this
morning as well. Donald Trump hasn'talways been a Republican, you know.

(01:43:08):
I mean, people are willing toforgive someone if it's in their own best
interest, and I think it hasthe time to forgive JD. Evans for
a few comments he made back intwenty sixteen. Well, if Donald Trump
can forgive him. Yeah, Idon't know why somebody else would hold a
drudge. Excellent point in Congressman Davidson. We're gonna pause right, No,
we'll bring Congressman Davidson back for afew more thoughts about the convention, what's
coming up on the plate today,and the make America Safe Again, which

(01:43:30):
I think is a very very positivemessage for America that the Republicans are on
the winning side of More with CongressmanDavidson. It's seven thirty five right now
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(01:45:05):
today eighty three for the high,mostly clouds overnight, though dry out drop
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(01:45:48):
KRC the talk station seven nine fiftyfive KERCD talk station Brian Thomas with Congressman
Warren Davidson talking from the RNC.Congressman Davidson, I have to ask you
because there I've circled your name inthe article. Jade Vance now vice presidential
choice, of course. If theTrump team wins, he's going to be

(01:46:09):
vice president of the United States ofAmerica, opening up a Senate seat.
Lots of names swirling around and ohlook Warren Davidson, one of the names
in local news. Would you takethat job if you were asked? Warren
Davidson, Well, that's a differentway to phrase the question. Anything.
A lot depends on the outcome ofthis election, and you know, I'm
honored. I've got a lot ofthings out there in a decision matrix that

(01:46:30):
we continue to refine and take alook at owner about November fifth or sixth
and see what I Am going todo next or continue doing as we do
it. But right now, I'mfocused on this election. I'm on the
ballot trying to get re elected toanother term and the House of Representatives and
be able to get out there anddo the things that are going to make

(01:46:51):
us a restore government small enough tofit within the Constitution, which says we
got our work cut out for us. Wonderful, wonderful political response, Congressman
david And we got your back herein the morning show. Congressman, you
are going to get re elected.I know your constituents, they're wonderful people,
and they know you do a fantasticjob. And I think it's right
that your name is on this list, whether or not you actually get tapped

(01:47:12):
for the Senate spot or not.We know your politics, and you have
a demonstrably wonderful record in that regard. Onto the convention. What's the topic
today? I guess yesterday was makeAmerica safe again. Republicans are definitely on
the right side of law enforcement aswe approach November. Yeah. Look,
you know, it was really cool. We're at the convention and I'm walking
out one of the access points atthe end of the evening last night and

(01:47:34):
there's Cincinnati Police. I'm like,I got Cincinnati Police up here protecting this
place. It was really cool.So, you know, you're pulling departments
from all over, but it wasespecially cool to see Cincinnati Police Department up
here and doing a great job.And so, yeah, it's an amazing
effort. Securities tight up here,But you know, the problem is it's

(01:47:56):
not always tight everywhere around the country. And while you even have good police
departments, sometimes they're being told toeffectively stand down and they don't feel like
they can do their jobs. You'vegot great cops essentially just you know,
biden their time to retire because thejob has become unbearably miserable for lots of
people. And then, on theother hand, I see some of these

(01:48:17):
young guys that are still you know, one or two years in the forest.
They have always wanted to be acop. They still go out there
and do it, and you know, they get frustrated when they find a
case, they find the bad guys, and then they send them to judges.
And at the most basic level,you know, you look at a
society, don't hurt people, don'ttake their stuff. Society could exist just
fine if people could get along withthat. And so you get judges that

(01:48:41):
try to make it right when somebodydoes hurt someone else or take their stuff,
and we are seeing that fail overand over again in Hamilton County.
It's disappointing. Good news in ButlerCounty, just up the road. That
rarely happens. What nice, niceshot coongs of Davidson. But it's accurate,
it's so true. And that's avery very profound reminder. Gop judges

(01:49:01):
dot com for the Hamilton County voterswho got to remember to vote the down
ballot races, most notably the judicialraces, because we do need tough on
crime judges along with Hamilton County ProsecuteMelissa Powers. She needs to be re
elected, so we can fulfill thisthis criminal justice leg that's so important,
the deterrence leg. If you commitcrime, if you are violent and evil
to your fellow man, you aregoing to suffer consequences. That's the detern

(01:49:25):
element of the criminal justice system,and it's the one that really works.
They have really kicked that leg out, and people realize they're not going to
face any penalties if they go aroundand commit vile behavior, and it just
creates this vicious cycle that can befixed if we just pay attention when we
vote. Yeah, look, youcan see that in probably one of the
most visible cases was in New YorkCity, where the city was so terrible.

(01:49:48):
Turists would come and go, oh, yeah, here's where all the
counterfeit goods are, and here's whereall the drugs are, and here's where
all the sex stuff is. Andpeople would come to town knowing this,
and you're like, well, iftourists can them to town and know this,
surely the police know it. Andthe answer, of course they do.
They tolerated, and you know,you get a lot of times what
you tolerate. You saw in NewYork City when Mayor Ruby Giuliani was there,

(01:50:11):
they started changing the approach and theresults changed, and the same thing
can happen Cincinnati. We make ita place where people want to go out
at night. They can bring theirfamilies, come down and watch the Reds
bill on a winning streak, andcome back and watch the Bengals, you
know, get past the NFL refsand defeat the Chiefs and go to the
super Bowl and win. At thistime, go out and watch out c

(01:50:31):
Cincinnati, stay in first place,see some of our great restaurants and be
out downtown. Things will be great. And a lot of the districts you
can do that, and you cando that in Cincinnati at times. But
there are times where people feel unsafeand that just shouldn't continue to exist.
And if we do what you said, Gop Judges dot com elects umless of
Powers and others. You know,that's the path that you go on.

(01:50:53):
It's a choice, it really is. What's the subject matter of today's convention?
I think there seems to be atheme going on on a daily basis
there. Yeah, you know,Brian, I apologize, I don't have
today's tam yet. We get readyto go to the breakfast after this,
we'll go there. We'll get thelittle rally and check out check out the
theme. But you know, Ithought we had some great speeches last night.

(01:51:14):
I thought that Governor DeSantis did anice job. I thought Ben Carson
did a nice job. There wasa mom whose son was killed in Afghanistan.
Yeah, you know, just tragiccases where you know, people are
being killed by drugs that are poisonedwith Sentinel, and they're doing a great
job of highlighting there's real consequences forthese failed policies that Joe Biden has presided

(01:51:36):
over. Anybody speaking directly to theborder issue, because clearly the border is
part of the reason we have adrug problem in this country. Yeah,
I mean, that'll definitely be oneof the prominent things. And who knows,
there maybe even some charts that President'sTrump didn't quite get through on Saturday,
you look at illegal immigration. Everyonetold Joe Biden this was going to

(01:51:58):
be the result if if you keptthese policies or implemented them, and you
delete the policies that were working underPresident Trump. And so they didn't change
these policies despite the implications of them. They put the policies in place that
they put in because of the implications. And now when we're trying to make
sure that no illegals vote in ourelections. No Dimmer, Well, okay,

(01:52:20):
five Democrats voted with us to say, yeah, you should have to
prove that you're a citizen when youregister to vote. And part of why
that's so important is, you know, so many states, including Ohio,
you have motor voter laws, andso when someone goes into the Bureau motor
vehicles, they can get a licenseor whatever, but they're automatically being registered
to vote. In our state.Our Secretary of State, Frank LeRose will

(01:52:42):
go through and say, yeah,this person's legit, this person's not,
and follow up to be able tosay, yeah, we either add this
person to the voter registration or wedon't. But in states like California and
New York, Illinois wherever, they'renot doing that work. And you know
the answer is, oh, well, you know non to be a citizen
to vote in a federal election anyway. But you've got in California things saying,

(01:53:04):
well, if you're not a citizen, you can't vote in federal elections.
Would you like us to send youa local ballot or yeah, whatever,
So they get ballot harvesting and everyother thing, there's no really enforcement
mechanism, and so we're trying toget that done ahead of this election.
There's so many layers to this,Brian. I mean, HUD supposed to

(01:53:25):
provide housing for people that run intoa time of need housing and urban development
program. They're out there trying toput ballot drop boxes and do election registration
stuff. There are no dollars appropriatedto HUD to do election activities. I
wonder why Democrats are trying to useHUT for this purpose. And you mentioned
enforcement mechanism. Think about this onthe heels of our most moments ago conversation

(01:53:49):
about them not prosecuting criminals who commitheinous crimes. What's the likelihood they're actually
going to go after someone and prosecutethem for casting an illegal vote. Well,
and the other part is the harmis already there. Yes, the
election is over deposited. You can'tfind which ballot that was and say you

(01:54:12):
know, because you don't you havesome ananimity after the fact on the vote.
So that has to be done onfriend. And yeah, look,
our state has voter ID. It'shard for me to understand states that don't
have voter ID. I don't evenknow how you can say you had it
on a selection if you came andtell me who voted. Excellent point.
As always with Congressman Warren Davidson,it's actually the today is make America strong

(01:54:35):
again. According to my Executi producerJoe Strecker, who is an internet research
guru guy, and he found theanswer to the question. So make America
strong again, congress war and Davidson'sthe man to do that. Keep up
the great work, Congressman. Thanksfor the time he spent with my listeners
of me today, and save travelson your way back and enjoy the balance
of the convention. We got ourfingers crossed out here. Yeah, we'll

(01:54:56):
do Thanks Brian, God bless youand all your listeners, and you sir
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(01:57:18):
Thank you Rick for the email referringto Secret Service. I had comment
about the slope of that roof wherethat murderer was perched. Rick says,
well, we're gonna have to redoa couple of battles from World War two
point due Hawk at Normandy and MountSurabaci and Ewojima, both of which had
excessively unsafe slopes. Thank you,Rick, Let's go to the phones.

(01:57:42):
Drew Pappus, Welcome back, myfriend from the RNC. Good morning,
Brian. I'm drinking. How's it, well, it's only Wednesday. I'm
so tired. It's twenty four toseven up. There isn't it with events
and activities, you feel like hehad any rest at all? You do
not, And I don't know,you know, for people that don't understand

(01:58:04):
you and Joe's schedule with your alternate, you know, working evenings or working
mornings very early, and your yourlifestyle obviously is different. I don't respond
well to sleep deprivation most people.Most people refer to me sometimes as quite
bearish. And the fact that Ilike to hibernate and sleep and if I

(01:58:25):
don't, and if you wake meup from a sleep, it's not a
good thing. But that's I'll tellyou Wednesday is breaking here at the r
NC. Yesterday which was supposed tobe a down you know kind of au
oh, I don't know, alull day maybe after the initial opening on
Monday did not turn out to be. It was a full day and and

(01:58:46):
with we had great speakers. Ihope people were able to catch it on
TV. We had very dynamic speakersat the convention. I'd like to you
know, I know that a lotof people today or h and rightly so,
questioning or at least looking at theSecret Service protection for the President during

(01:59:08):
that horrific event in Pennsylvania. Butthe security here is just so well done
and I'd like to just tip myhat. I mean, it's it's so
comforting and so amazing to see policeofficers from all over the United States working
this event. You have, youknow, in their home uniforms, not

(01:59:30):
in some unifying uniform and I haveto say thank you to them because they're
taking time. Obviously, yes theyare getting paid, but they're away from
their loved ones and they're here ina strange city, staying at you know,
whatever accommodations that have been arranged,and they're they're keeping us safe and
they're doing all the delegates safe andall of the attendees safe, and it

(01:59:53):
is, it is, it is. You feel the electricity building because obviously
tonight Cincinnati owned JD Vance is goingto speak at the convention, and it's
another full day here in Wisconsin,and I'm really looking forward to it,
and I just people people have asked, you know, what's it like?

(02:00:15):
And you got to remember, youhave a lot of speakers there that are
all very state centric, and someonesaid, well, you know, how's
the applause? And you know,obviously when you're at the thing, you're
listening their speaker after speaker after speaker. When when you have a senator or
a candidate from wherever, maybe theother states aren't as interested. So it's
very state centric then. But thethe the electricity is simply palpable and as

(02:00:40):
tired as I am and as draggingas I am. As soon as as
soon as the events start, whichthey'll start here. We begin officially here
at eight and then go all dayand then you know, whatever time you
choose to go to sleep, andusually you're not able to attempt that anywhere
close to midnight. So it's fantasticand it's such an honor to be here,

(02:01:02):
and I have to say, Ijust hope folks realize how just electric
it is and how exciting it isfor the future of our country. Here.
I hope that energy continues through Novemberand that people don't get overly optimistic,
maintain that sense of concern for thecountry. Vote in November for of
course, the Trump Vans ticket.And I can't thank you enough for your

(02:01:23):
praise of law enforcement. And it'soutstanding that you called in and did that
today. Good luck, extra cupof coffee, Drew, I think is
an order and I'll look forward tomaybe hearing from you again before you leave
the R and C Convention. Safetravels, my friend, have a wonderful
day, and tell everybody up therewe said Hi Congressman Brad Weinstrip in studio.
I'm staring at him. He'll bejoining us for the whole next hour.
Seven fifty seven Right now, fiftyfive KRC DE talk station, You're

(02:01:45):
just minutes away from refreshing your newsfeed at the top of the hour.
I have never seen anything like thisexclusively fifty five KARC the talk station.
This report is for twenty twenty fourelection headquarters, Country's just falling apart,
and we need a major change.Fifty five KRZ the talk station eight five

(02:02:09):
Here at fifty five KRCD talk station, happy as I can be. Got
it one full hour in studio Congressand brad Winstrip. Congresson Winstrip, not
at the RNC. He is here. He's got more important things to do.
I'm just kidding. I know you'vegot a whole lot on your plate.
We have so much to talk aboutthis morning, including what you have
been doing in lieu of going tothe convention. And you've got a lot

(02:02:29):
of great work to let my listenersknow about today. But to start off,
as you suggested, you might wantto hit the ground running with the
attempted assassination of Donald Trump over theweekend and the cold. I mean,
every morning I wake up to somethingthat makes it look even worse than the
day before by way of failure ofthe US United States Secret Service. Oh,
the roof had too much of aslope, Congressman, That's why no

(02:02:50):
one was perched up there? Areyou kidding me? Welcome back to my
friend. It's always good to seeyou. Well, it's good to see
you, Brian. It's always goodto be here. Yeah, I've spent
the last couple of days in DC. I've got this Pandemic Commission, if
you will, the Pandemic Committee thatI chair, and we've got to get
our report done by the end ofthe year. And so I was up

(02:03:10):
there with staff putting everything together.We've had so many letters and transcribed interviews,
hearings, and it's on everything todo with the pandemic. So we're
pulling that together and we can talkabout that more late later in the show
if you want to. Yeah,and fair enough, that was what our
plan was. But again, you'rethe one that wanted to start off with

(02:03:30):
comments about the endeavor that crazy Kidsthe murderer is efforts to kill Trump.
Yeah, I thought, I'm eagerto talk about this situation. One.
We obviously need investigation. I'm anintelligence committee. I tried to give as
much information as I can. Wedon't really have oversight over the Secret Service,
but at the same time, we'regetting information about how our agencies responded

(02:03:56):
in the preparation for it. Itdoesn't make sense to me, Brian,
I'm military. I was at aplace where we were attacked three four times
a week, and there was alot of sniper fire going on in our
region while I was in Iraq,and so you're always looking to where the
possible sites could could be. Youknow, you should be able to stand
where the president is going to bestanding and take a look around and say

(02:04:19):
that's a potential site. That's apotential site. The slope of the roof.
You know, you it's comical.I mean, if it wasn't so
sad and pathetic apathetic, we wouldall it would be like a joke like
she was. She was saying thatas a joke, but she wasn't right.
And why don't we then why don'tyou have a drone over? I
mean, if something so impossible toposition someone there wasn't the kid did it?

(02:04:42):
Yeah, exactly was able to squeezeoff around and almost ended Donald Trump's
life and did end the life ofthat very brave firefighter who tried to was
there just to save his family.When you read the accounts of that,
it's heartbreaking. What I have beentold is a local policeman went up on
the ladder yep, and so youmay have heard too, but he had
to duck because the I took ayou know, aim at him. And
it's just his head exposed at thatpoint, so I can understand that,

(02:05:05):
But why not a more robust response, you know, once that was seen,
I don't know. But then Iguess he turned and fired on Trump
right away. Maybe that helped saveTrump's life because he didn't have time to
maybe aim as well as he wouldhave liked to have aimed. I don't
know. Trump turned his head justat the right moment. And tell me,
if you watch that, it's undeniablethat he just just the moment he

(02:05:27):
turned his head to look at thatthat that prompter, that's when that shot
rang out and hit him in theear. Because I mean, you've seen
the graphic. If he had hadhis head in the position it was in
before, the backside of his headwouldn't be there anymore, it wouldn't be
It would have been an incredibly ugly, ugly seeing. I do want to
give credit to the to the firefighterwho you know, protected his child.

(02:05:49):
And the way the family has responded. You know, the daughter said,
you know, I had the bestdad in the world, and you know,
the wife said he'd do it allover again. I mean, pretty
impressive to help pressive display of heroism. I mean, rightfully so Trump gets
credit for standing in defiance after beingshot when he still could have been under

(02:06:10):
under fire. I mean, theydidn't have that situation secured yet, they
didn't know if there were more shootersout there. And maybe some people could
say it was a dumb thing forhim to stand up, but it was
a defiant, very brave act.One could say was uplifting for the crowd.
It was a symbol of, youknow, his strength. But then
you've got the firefighter who literally losthis life doing exactly what the Secret Service

(02:06:30):
is paid to do in defense ofthe president, or, as this case
is, the former president, andthe president has recognized that, oh heroism
of those that took a hit throughall of this, and they're true patriots
in my mind for sure. Butyou know, it's like a lot of
things. I had one interview like, you know, well, what do
we do now? This is likeright afterwards, I said, we drive

(02:06:53):
on. I said at the baseballshooting, yeah, you know, we
got together right after that and said, I'll be darned if we're going to
be deterred and not play that game. We're playing that game, right,
And that's what most Americans would do. Most Americans would do. And that's
been the history of America. Wedon't. We take a hit, we
get back up, and we're notgoing to let evil people dominate us.

(02:07:15):
Yeah. I had one listener,this was day before yesterday, call in
and say, these people should allbe in like popemobiles, you know,
behind bulletproof glass and you know,always surrounding. It's like, no,
that is not what you do inresponse. You don't cower and capitulate to
this. You stand up in defianceto it. You prove them that you're
stronger, you're a better person thanthem by not surrounding yourself with bulletproof glass.

(02:07:38):
Twenty four to seventy What kind oflife would that be? Anyway?
You don't want to give them thatsatisfy? No, absolutely not, absolutely
not. Well, I just thiscall for unity when you hear it from
the Democrats, and you know,I know Republicans are guilty of divisive comments
and statements as well, but it'ssort of when you look look at the

(02:08:00):
political landscape and the goals of thefar left, which is taken over the
Democrat Party, their goal is division. I mean it's to divide the country
on any possible lines, sexuality lines, school choice lines pro or against police,
racial lines, DEI dividing people upinto little you know, checkboxes and

(02:08:22):
marks, division division divisions. Soto hear a call for unity, especially
from anybody on that sort of AlexandriaCasio Cortez part of the camp, is
just nonsensical considering it flies in theface of what they're looking for, which
is to divide us all. Yeah, there really does seem to be the
goal of so many. And look, there's a lot of Democrats I work
with, especially when we're talking abouthealth and military and veterans and things like

(02:08:45):
that. We can get a lotdone in those areas, and then just
some common sense things I think.You know, it's easy sometimes to get
Democrats on board with some of yourbills because they're American bills. Now they
are part of servative values, butI sell them as this is good for
America and here's why. And youcan get some people on board. That's

(02:09:07):
a unifying message. And we don'tsee that from the left very often,
not the ones you see on TV. Yeah, and you know, I
got to asked one time, youknow, how do we calm down some
of the chaos? And I said, well, and this was with someone
in the media, and I said, well, it would be nice if
the media paid more attention to thosethat actually get things done than those that

(02:09:28):
never get anything done but do alot of talking and spend a lot of
time in front of the camera.Yeah, squeaky wheel gets agrees, especially
in media. The more batcrap andsaying your comments or viewpoint, it's more
likely it is. It's going tobe broadcast over and over again. I
think you're going to get more interviews. Yeah, And but I will say
this, you know, yeah,we got people on our side with a
lot of rhetoric. It's usually notviolent in nature. No, it's not.

(02:09:52):
Theirs is violent in nature. Youknow, you saw get in their
face. You've seen this for years. Go ahead, get out there,
get it in their face, Goto their homes, interrupt them at dinner
exactly. You know, go bringa weapon to the home of a Supreme
Court justice. I mean, theseare the things you see happening. And
you take a young, impressionable kidtwenty years old if what he's hearing is

(02:10:16):
that Donald Trump is a person who'sa dictator. Donald Trump is going to
end democracy, and you may beeven getting that in school today that's the
problem. And so what they're nottalking about in school is what's really missing.
You know. Do you look ata person's presidency in school and can
you teach kids that, you knowwhat, President Trump quit sending money to

(02:10:39):
Iran, leading sponsor of terror inthe world. President Trump took out Sulimani,
who's responsible for killing so many Americans, especially during our war in Iraq
I saw a firsthand. Do theysay that President Trump stood up to President
ch and put economic pressure on him. They say that the leader of North

(02:11:03):
Korea quit firing missiles under President Trump'sleadership. Do they point out that Putin
didn't go into to Ukraine under PresidentTrump, but he did under Obama and
Biden or his Nobel Peace Prize worthyefforts in the Middle East? You got
it? That's next don my left, see, and that's the one to
me that stands out more than anything. You know, Barack Obama gets elected

(02:11:26):
and he's given the Nobel Peace Prizefor what for being elected? For being
elected? And Donald Trump actually sowedthe seeds of peace between previously in essence
warring countries and solidified some stability forIsrael. Nobody gives it. Nobody even
mentions that one monumental achievement in thehistory of negotiating peace in the Middle East.

(02:11:46):
Well, I got another one,the USMCA, the United States Mecvolcano
Agreement. Not only was it bipartisan, it had union support. Yeah,
so you tell me who's the uniter. Tell me who can actually bring everyone
together and to the table. Butbut but but but evil orange man races
xenophobe, homophobe, misogynists. Butbut but but let's pause from it.

(02:12:09):
We'll bring Congressman once you back.He's got some things to talk about,
the China information, looking into theCOVID. We're going to talk about DEI
in medical school, but maybe evenmore broadly than that, among other conversation
topics with Congressman brad Winstrip. First, perfect timing, considering we're just talking
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one of the many classes they offerat twenty two three, located on Route
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(02:13:39):
those special talkstation. Happy Wednesday toyou of course, always happy when Congressman
went brad winstups in studio for afull hour, and that's what we're doing
right now with Congress and Winstrip.Got to get your thoughts in comments about
JD. Vance. Of course,local boy made it big. He's now
the vice presidential choice for Donald Trump, which surprised a lot of my listeners.
I got to be honest with you, Congressman, because, of course,
some of the comments he said aboutTrump going back quite a few years

(02:14:01):
twenty sixteen. You know Nazi andyou know city'd rather vote for Hillary Clinton
or something along those lines. Clearlyhe has made amends with Donald Trump since
Trump selected him, and an amazingopportunity. What a backbench. We laugh
at the Democrats and their struggles tofind anyone who could substitute Joe Biden out
He had probably six really solid potentialsfor vice presidential choice and went with JD.

(02:14:26):
Van's what's your reaction to that?Well, I think it's a good
choice. I like j D.JD impressed me before I ever met him,
when I read his book He'll BillyElgy and got to know about his
life, and then I met hima few times, and then it was
obvious he wanted to get involved withpolitics, and he did, and when
he ran for Senate, I wrotea piece about why I was for him

(02:14:48):
and why I thought he can bringso much to the table. You know,
at a young age of thirty nine, he's got a lot of depth
and breath to him and the capabilityof being compassed and understanding from just about
any walk of life. Here's aguy who went from abject poverty, domestic
violence, addiction in the family raisedby his grandmother to Wall Street. He

(02:15:11):
went from welfare to Wall Street.I mean, with a stop in the
military in between, with the deploymentand then law school. He used as
GI Bill the way you're supposed toto advance yourself. Your military service is
patriotic, but it also comes witha benefit that you've earned. And he's
just done all of these things.Those are life experiences. And look,

(02:15:35):
and I've said about going into office, is do something else first before you
go to office, exactly. Andhere's someone who has but he's done a
lot by thirty nine years old.Look, I joined the military at thirty
nine and just started my twenty fiveyear career in the military then, So
it's pretty impressive. What he hasdone, and I think he can reach

(02:15:56):
out to multiple generations because of hisas experiences and multiple walks of life.
Well, and you're right, Imean solid Who can criticize someone who volunteered
and served in the America's military honorably, who demonstrated business acumen and was in
fact successful, and again coming fromthat terrible life that so many will use

(02:16:18):
as an excuse to stay in thesame spot. Oh, I grew up
in a terrible family and my momwas a drug addict and Helen, Hell,
am I supposed to advance in theworld when you know I've I've been
dealt this terrible hands. Now here'sCinderella story right there. As you off
air, you commented on it.That's really what jad Evans is and a

(02:16:39):
great learning opportunity for people who thinkthey can't get out from under the weight
of that situation. Yeah, exactly. And you know, we have safety
nets in our country, and I'mglad that we do. I'm glad to
live in a country with safety nets. But they're not supposed to be a
hammock, as was one said,Right, And you know Democrats talk a
lot about we got to tax therich more, but they don't really talk
about any success in lifting people upout of poverty with these programs. And

(02:17:03):
that's what we've been trying to changeas Republicans all along. Yes, let's
help people in need. Any oneof us could be in poverty someday,
but let's make it a path tosomething better. Well, that's that welfare
work for welfare program. You know, you have to engage in some effort
merely asking you to participate in theworkforce for a while in order to justify

(02:17:24):
the benefits. Hell, you couldparlay that into a full time, full
paying job which you give you betterbenefits and give you some honor and dignity
rather than being stuck with the ubilical court of work and hit the Democrats.
No, no, we can't havethat. That's right. And Jadvance
understands how that can happen. Youknow, he didn't get where he got
by winning a lottery ticket. No, he actually worked his way out of

(02:17:45):
there. He saw an opportunity fora better life. And I think that
that's a great example. And youknow, you talk about you know,
he said things about Donald Trump.Look, I've had the experience, you
know, sometimes in my medical practice, but definitely within politics where I may
have thought one thing about somebody untilI got to know them. And that's

(02:18:07):
the key. And I try inWashington to not negotiate and do things through
the press, because then you neverget to know the person that may be
getting in the way of what you'retrying to accomplish. Reach out to them,
get to know them. And Ithink that's what happened with jd.
Vance. They got to know eachother and realized, hmm, maybe it's

(02:18:28):
not what I thought. And alsoI think he probably had a chance to
take a look at the policies thatDonald Trump put in place that were working
and making America better. Right.And remember when the most of these comments
that people referred to happened was twentysixteen, before he had time to prove
himself. And Donald Trump did notcome into that role with a clean slate.
I mean, he was open tocriticism from Republicans and Democrats for a

(02:18:50):
variety of different things, one ofwhich is Donald Trump really wasn't a Republican.
He was a Donald trumpion, right, right, That's what his life
has always been based on. Butafter four years, he demonstrated that he
moved away from it's all about meto It's all about America, and I
think that's what appeals most to peopleabout Trump. Well, he certainly isn't

(02:19:11):
in this for him. No,I No, it is life. And
those are the better people in publicservice that I see are those that don't
need to be there. I saythat always about Congress. If Congress is
the best job you could possibly everhave, you probably shouldn't be there.
Bous We'll bring Congress with Winster back. We got a few more segments before

(02:19:33):
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five KRC the talk station Marion Thomaswishing a happy Wednesday and turning back to

(02:21:39):
Congressman brad Winstrop is in studio forthe full hour, talking about a variety
of different topics. Of course,we talked about the assassination attempt, got
JD. Vans out of the wayin terms of you you're astute observations on
him. And now we pivot overto Congressman brad Winstroup. What are you
working on? Working on a lotof things, which is while I'm not

(02:22:00):
at the convention because there's the NDAAcome up, and I'm working on some
amendments that I think are going tobe very helpful to military medicine, and
not only that, but better forour troops and some things that are not
only better for our troops but forour for our civilians, which are pretty
interesting and but one of them thatI want to talk about, especially for

(02:22:22):
our local audience, is an amendmentthat would provide a starting point a trial
to have a working relationship between themilitary, between military medicine and civil civilian
medicine. And so in particular,we want to start with Wright Patterson Air
Force Base and their military assets thereand the University of Cincinnati a Level one

(02:22:46):
trauma center. But it's not justtrauma, it's an operation for basically what
end goal or what endo okay.So, if we were in a situation
where you know, are wounded orare ill if you think about bioweapons,
which COVID made us keenly aware of, if you think about those things,
you could have so many casualties thatthe military medical system has overwhelmed. So

(02:23:09):
how can we tie our casualties inwith a civilian center? And you see
has already engaged so much with themilitary, it's a great place to start
this kind of trial. And thenvice versa. I for our country is
under attack and we have some morecasualties or more illness than we can handle.
Can we engage directly with our militaryhealthcare system? Okay, well you're

(02:23:31):
forward thinking on that, But whatfrightens me about this is you're talking about
right Patterson Air Force Base, Universityof Cincinnati. And I understand, you
know, you see trauma center,they see this kind of thing all the
time, but these are domestic locations. These are here. Are you suggesting
that we may be facing a situationwhere we have a whole bunch of casualties

(02:23:54):
civilian or military on our own soil. Well, if you you know,
you don't necessarily have to say thatCOVID was a bio weapon, but it
showed what a bioweapon can do,and certainly that was on our own soil,
and so you have to be preparedfor that. But on the other
front, you know, our casualtiesdon't always stay in theater, right,

(02:24:16):
No, we evacuate them. Andso if we're doing evacuations of you know,
thousands of troops, Okay, whereare we going to put them?
All? Our military treatment facilities aren'tprepared for that large of a number.
So let's be prepared. Let's notfind ourselves in a situation like we did
with COVID not prepared for a pandemic. Let's be prepared for a larger scale

(02:24:41):
problem. Well, since thankfully thewars and conflicts we've been engageding have thus
far not been on our soil otherthan our American military history, we understand
that revolutionary warcutch sector. But youknow wounded in the Middle East, wounded
that I mean typically aren't they takento hospitals, say in your up for
example, closer venue, closer pointof caring for them, Right, so

(02:25:05):
we have cooperation agreements with them.That's part of the step by step process.
Well, let me let me tellyou we have a good evacuation system.
We may need to make sure thatit's enhanced for large numbers. So,
for example, in Iraq, wewould get we would get wounded.
We would stabilize them as soon aswe could travel, have them travel,

(02:25:26):
We'd put them on a bird.They'd go to bogram which then put them
that was that was rotary wing.Then we get them on fixed wing.
After they're more stabilized at bogram,then they go off to lonstool and then
from lawn stool to Walter Reid placelike that. Sure, and this all
happens within twenty four hours. SometimesBrian so And and the SEACAT system Critical

(02:25:48):
Care Transport Team System which they dosome of that training in a simulator at
UC and I've been there for it. It's a flying ICU and and it's
a pretty impressive system. And sowe have that system in place. You
know, you want to get himout of theater if their life is threatened,

(02:26:09):
and get him home because part ofyour recovery sometimes is very much helped
if your family can be around them. Yeah, I would imagine congresson winsrip
and thanks for putting in the contextof something that I wasn't thinking of,
which is of course like a pandemic. Well, pause will bring it back,
and I will ask him with theNDAA because I know he's outspoken on
his anti DEI in medical school.Are we going to get rid of DEI

(02:26:31):
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hi, when you do please fiveone three two four seven zero two
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one of the best ways to findHere's a Wrother forecast. Scatter showers of
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(02:27:39):
night, it's going to be alow of fifty eight with a few clowns
and a sunny Friday with a highof eighty two seventy six. Now time
for traffic. Chuck from the UCLTraffic Center from every day aches to the
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(02:28:00):
can you to see slow traffic northpound fourth seventy one from Grand into town
and extra five there northbound seventy fiveis an extra five out of Erlinger into
the cut in southbound two seventy fiveslow go from the Lawrenceburg Ramp onto the
Carrol Cropper thanks to the inspection.Chuck Ingram on fifty five care see the
talk station eight forty fifty five kerrse the talks station Congressman Brad weinster fin

(02:28:24):
Studio going through the issues, andwe certainly won't have time to get through
all of them, but two segmentshere beginning with this one real quick here,
I don't want to focus too longon it, but on the heels
of my conversation with retired Lieutenant ColonelMatthew Lohmeyer the other day on his book
irresistible revolution, Marxism, goal ofconquest, and unmaking of the American military.
Uh. Just a really eye openingbook and the problems within the American

(02:28:48):
military along these DEI lines. It'sruining recruiting, it's ruining morale, elevating
people who are not qualified to higherpositions because they fill in the appropriate checkmarks
on the deiboxes. This is destroyingour fighting power and our ability to recruit
more people. Can you have inthe d NDAA a removal of any funding
whatsoever or a prohibition on teaching DEIor otherwise relying on DEI principles in America's

(02:29:13):
military And so we have done that. We have done that. That is
in the current form of the NDAA, which is moving forward. Did I
Senate have a comparable provision in ourversion. That's what we're working, Okay,
and then you know the presidents signit, and we've done efforts like
this before the president has signed.The problem is they keep doing it and
we're catching them. Just recently,somebody sent me a photo that they took

(02:29:39):
or anything they had. They hadthings like national right to life as well.
I read that this morning is aterrorist organizers. I saw the PowerPoint
slide on the wall. Now FortLiberty, what was Fort Bragg? I
mean, they just do it anyway. So you know, I immediately got
in touch with Personnel Chair of ArmedServices CAN and we're calling them in it.

(02:30:01):
It's got to stop, and therehas to be consequences to the people
that to continue to do these things. And that goes across the board,
Brian. You know, used tobe the military was the agency that where
unethical was unlawful, and they don'tmess around, and in the other agencies
they do whatever they darn well please. Because the military has criminal liability called

(02:30:22):
the uc MJ Uniform Code of Military. The other agencies don't have that.
We put that in PISA reform.There's now criminal liability if you violate the
standards of what should be happening.Uh So what we did, something like
crossfire hurricane can never happen again.And if it does, somebody's going to
jail and and and certainly losing theirjob rather than just walking off and being

(02:30:43):
hired by CNN. So that's thething. So we're in that vein so
d E I D I has nowgone into the medical schools, and so
doctor Murphy and I doctor Winstrop.You know, we have a bill that
no more funding for medical schools thatdo d e I. They're having people
take an oath to this stuff,and they're putting people in medical schools that

(02:31:03):
aren't prepared. Look, I amall for creating opportunity for people that don't
normally have it. That's why I'mfor school choice. I knew in second
grade I wanted to be a doctor, so I went to schools that would
prepare me for that type of curriculum. But a lot of people don't have
that opportunity because they don't have achoice on where they can go to school,
and they end up going to schoolsthat don't prepare them for it.
You can't turn twenty one and say, well your grades aren't very good and

(02:31:26):
this and that, but because ofwho you are and what you look like,
we're going to put you into medicalschool. That's what's being done.
Yeah, and UCLA finally, theprofessors are speaking up there and they're basically
saying, we can't train these people, we can't teach them. They're not
capable, they're not they shouldn't behere. The schools have gone to pass
fail, they've gone to many havegone to pass fail, you know,

(02:31:48):
so you can just get everyone,well they passed, Yeah, they passed.
But you know, I was aresidency director when you're and I know
with my residency they told us,you know, we've looked at your grades,
we looked at your board scores,we've looked at your recommendations. Now
we want to know if you're ahard worker or not. So in other
words, you eliminated a lot ofpeople based on the academic part and didactic

(02:32:11):
part and everything else. But noware you capable of working hard? And
do you have the skills to say, be a surgeon and do this and
that. That's what we're looking forin residency. You do a pass fail
system for as a residency director,you're in the dark. You are in
the dark about who you may wantto recruit for your program. That's frightening,

(02:32:31):
isn't it? Though? And youknow what, I never in my
career, and I could name severalpeople of color, etc. Women that
are the most outstanding people in theirspecialty and in their career, and you
never tell them. Did anyone doubtBen Carson's capabilities as a pediatric neurosurgeon.
No, But isn't that what's goingto happen. Are people going to want

(02:32:54):
to know, well, is thisa DEI doctor or are you really good?
And so we did a press conferencewith this bill, and you know,
we doctor Murphy and I were beingchallenged and we had several doctors out
there in the press conference. Wewere being challenged on it. He said,
well, the numbers of certain groups, you know, all this identity
politics, number of certain groups aren'trepresented very well in medicine. And you

(02:33:16):
know, I said to one guy, I said, you don't insist on
on on this in in sports,you don't? You know, I got
it. I kind of got intoit with EMMITTT. Smith on one thing
when he was asking what I'm doingfor DEI for Intel in Ohio, and
I said, I'm going to makesure my district people know there's job opportunities
there and made the most meritorious,best candidate get the job. Yeah,

(02:33:39):
and you know, prepare yourself forit. You know, it's like,
but hey, did you do thatfor your offensive line? Are you kidding
me? You know his action waswell, that's just sports, right.
No, that wasn't EMMITTT. Smithhimself, but that was another guy where
I brought that up the guy whowas at the press conference, and I
said, well, we have whatabout in sports? Because that's you sports.

(02:34:00):
I said, yeah, the other'slife and death. That's why are
you kidding me? You know?If the absolute best person you know,
you know, I tell you Iwouldn't be able to pick a DEI higher
in medicine. And you know,if they're standing in the line. Although
if my never met him before,doctor demands that I refer to them by
the gender pronouns day or them,I know I've got a DEI hire in

(02:34:20):
front of Yeah, oh yeah,exactly. Well, I'll tell you during
that press conference it was great.I don't know if you know Burgess Owens.
He's a congressman from Utah. BurgessOwens grew up in the segregated South.
He was one of the first toget a football scholarship to a major
college. He has a Super Bowlring with it with the Raiders. He
wrote that he wrote a book calledLiberalism, or How to Turn Good Men

(02:34:43):
into weenies, whiners and Whimps,and he handed it to this guy and
his elitism. Because of course thisguy said, well, my father's a
doctor. Oh yeah, you've gotan end, you know, I'm sure
you can find the care that youneed. Uh, you know because of
your connections through your father. Theaverage person out there on this threat,
especially from like rural and underserved communities, good luck with that duck with whoever

(02:35:07):
they're in front of. Yeah,no choice and no knowledge in the matter.
That's possible. In congressom back onemore segment with brad Winstrip after I
mentioned Fast and Pro Roofing ultimate roofingcompany. Fast and Pro because they're honest
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KRC. I want to learn howto do finally good weather scatter showers and
storms today with a high of eightythree. Then if things get better overnight,
dry, cooler sixty two, apleasant sunny day Tomorrow seventy nine down

(02:36:37):
to fifty eight with just a fewclouds. Thursday night Friday a sunny day
as well, with the high ofeighty two closing out at seventy six degrees.
Time for final traffic check from theu s up tramphingk Center from every
day HS to the most complex conditions. So you see help BACKNICK and Spine
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(02:37:01):
Batavia. It's a little bit furtherin than Bower, which is the first
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Traffic from southbound seventy five continues slowthrough block one. Chuck Ingram on fifty
five krc the talk station, Heyfifty one, fik about KRCD talk station
Brian Thomas closing up the hour ofcommressom Brad, when's your bread? Earlier

(02:37:22):
you mentioned the coordinated efforts of theNDAA to get the hospital, the private
hospital systems and the military hospital systemscoordinating so in case we have a mass
casualty event, which in which youinterjected, or like a COVID kind of
thing, And I was like,wow, okay, but you mentioned like
a biological weapon. Is you know, if you look at COVID as a
biological weapon, what kind of goodis it to have a weapon that literally

(02:37:46):
kills your own population, which ofcourse happened with China. We had this
conversation off air and you mentioned avery frightening, frightening thing as we segue
into your cutting off funding. Yeah, and I'm not saying that this particular
You know, COVID nineteen was abiological weapon. If they have a biological
weapons program in China. We've knownthis for years. They've talked about it

(02:38:09):
openly, and they talk about usingcoronaviruses. But there's other things too.
The more they have, like dataon people in general all around the world,
gathering it unfortunately through things like twentythree and meter which the NA they
get your DNA, so they maybe able to potentially craft something that could

(02:38:31):
then just target certain DNA. Right, So you could create something theoretically anyway
that will target non Asian people,right. This would be the concern,
right, that this is something you'recapable of doing. Look, gain of
function research is risky. Doctor Fauci'seven said that as far back as twenty

(02:38:54):
twelve, but he thought it wasworth it. Personally, I think we
don't need to do that enough thatwe can do with AI. If you
want to look at existing viruses andtry to predict what they may become and
how they could possibly become infectious tohumans. We can do that through AI.
We really can modeling absolutely, andwe know what components of the virus

(02:39:16):
make it more infectious to humans,so you know we can do that,
and we're doing I'm all for surveillanceof things that could be a potential pandemic
or just even local illness, butto create something dangerous like that is very
concerning. And the Chinese are lookingat those types of technologies right and we
were hoping to fund this on topof it. So not only are we

(02:39:39):
sending him money, but they arein the United States with companies that are
doing things that harbor our personal healthinformation, not necessarily our name, they
don't even have to have that,but they're getting our health information and what
we're made of, if you will. And that's concerned. And I have

(02:40:00):
a bill. It's a bipartisan bill. It came out of the China Commission,
which Mike Gallagher was chairing. Heleft Congress and I took over the
bill and it's with another Democrat,roj Chris Morthy, who's on Intelligence Committee
with me. He understands these dangersand so we have a bill that will

(02:40:22):
that will target these Chinese companies inthe United States that they are not getting
any kind of funding from the UnitedStates of America. And ultimately we need
to do like what we've done withTikTok Is You've got if you want to
have this company here, you're goingto have to sell it and to an
American interest because we can't have theCCP gaining all this information on us.

(02:40:46):
And those are the steps we haveto take. Quite honestly, Brian,
we're a good ten years behind onthis, and the sooner we do this
the better. Well that's true soberingassessment, but it's the reality we were
living with today and thankfully people likeCongressman Winstrip trying to take care and keep
us safe out there. It's gonnauphill battle. Congressman Winstrip, Glad we

(02:41:07):
had these times together. I'm goingto miss having them after you retire.
I know I'm wishing the best ofluck when you in your future endeavors.
But we've got several months before thatkicks in, and I know I'm going
to have you back. At leastI hope to have you back on in
the Morning show between now and then. We'll do that, and maybe afterwards
too, we'll see. Oh Idon't know what I'll be doing next.
Hell, they could hire you atCNN or Fox or something as a as

(02:41:28):
a political consultant. So you willcontinue to carry that that that weight with
you, or that this street credwith you even after you're out of office.
So yes, I'll try to bein the fight. We'll do that,
and I hope you are. Weneed more people like you in that
fight. Eight fifty five folks,have a wonderful day. If you didn't
get a chance to listen live,that's textpayer protection lines Dave Williams on earlier
about the GOP party platform, amongother topics. Congressman Warren Davidson for a

(02:41:52):
couple of segments reporting live from theRNC, and of course the full hour
of Congressman Winster here in studio fiftyfive cares. Thanks as always the Joe
Strekker, producer of the program,for all that you do. Tune in
tomorrow for Jay Ratliff, iHeart mediaaviation expert, and everybody else we got
on the lineup. Have a greatday, folks. Glenbeck's coming right up.
So sick world events don't exactly happenon a schedule. What the latest

(02:42:16):
jump dates do at the top ofevery hour fifty five KRC talkstation

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