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August 1, 2024 145 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:09):
Five oh five fifty five k r C, the talk station.
Happy Freddy Eve.

Speaker 2 (00:28):
Is a vacation, no ideals.

Speaker 1 (00:32):
Thanks Tally seving it all up, fertile, vast majority of Americans.
Happy Friday Eve to you, Brian Thomas right here, glad
to be and of course thanks to Joe Checker for
lining up guests today. Guests begin at seven oh five
here in the Morning Show. Doctor J. D. Harding's president
of the Cincinni Classical Academy. Excellent organization. There their mission
and their vision. You have options when it comes to education. Thankfully,

(00:55):
not as many options as you should have, but there
you go seven to five with doctor Hardy and followed
by Donovan and Neil. Americans for prosperity falling off the
fiscal cliff. That sounds rather ominous as a topic of discussion,
but we are talk about it all the time here
in the Morning show. Thirty five trillion dollars in debt
should be thirty six trillion here. By the time the
morning Show's over, Jay Carson for the Buckeye Institute joins

(01:18):
a program at eighth five. We'll talk about the CINCINNTA
union wage theft case not good and I Heeart met
the aviation expert Jay Rattloff, got a number of different
things talk about with Jay. Airlines presently winning as the
court Block's Department of Transportation rule calling for airlines to
disclose all fees up front, bloweing, hiring a new CEO.
Is that going to get them out of the hot

(01:38):
water that they find themselves in on a daily basis?
And will those astronauts be returning to planet Earth anytime soon?
And of course we always end on hub delays. Tomorrow
we're gonna hear from Senator Ran Paul and of course
tomorrow being Friday Tech Friday with Dave Hatter. Excuse me
love hearing from you. If you like to call, I
would enjoy from you. Five one, three, seven, four nine,

(02:01):
fifty five hundred, eight hundred eight two three talk found
five fifty on AT and T phone yesterday, fifty five
Caresey dot com podcast judging Intopolitano when Presidents kill fighting
topic that one. Orlando Sanza also heard from Beach my
friend from Hempstations on the status of marijuana here in
the state of Ohio and good friend of the show,
Jack added and called him the six o'clock hour to

(02:22):
comment about the Olympics. So excellent commentary is always from
Jackadiden so fifty five Cassee dot com. I don't forget
why you're there. Go ahead and download the iHeartMedia app,
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(02:43):
or the day the Morning Show's over and I go
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Because I strive to be honest with my listeners. I
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(03:04):
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(03:29):
You know, I'm not a perfect human being, never said
I was, absolutely not, but I never will lie to you.
So there you have it. That's it in a nutshell.
So thanks to the sponsors to support the program. And
if you're interested in advertising on the morning show, you
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Speaker 3 (03:44):
You.

Speaker 1 (03:44):
Got to be able to recommend your gooder service to
my mom. That's the standard. Anyhow, five on threety seven
four nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two
to three talk go pound five fifty on AT and
T phones. If you do care to comment or call in,
it'll be wonderful. Oh where do I start this morning?
How about this scariest epoch Time's reporting by Andrew Thornbrook.

(04:09):
Frightening stuff, as I see, here's a comment you're going
to be interested in hearing about. Since what is it? Iraq?
We just bombed Iraq yesterday the other day. Iran's new
Supreme leader has called for a direct attack on Israel
in response to the Israeli airstrike on Tehran which killed

(04:30):
himas political leader Ismail hanie Ye issued in order for
Iran to strike Israel directly and retaliation for the killing
in Tehran of Amasa's leader. That's the statement from the well,
the supreme leader of Iran. So you hit us, we
are going to attack you directly. It sounds like World
War three breaking out, doesn't it. Now this is Iran. Remember,

(04:53):
Iran is the ones that are supporting the terrorist organizations
Samas and Izbala who are regularly bombing Israel. So it's
a proxy war. It's kind of like you know, us
supporting the Ukrainians and bombing the Russians. Yeah, let other
people do the work for you. In this particular case,
Israel went directly at Iran and struck a target in
Iran and killing this This Israel hania Haniye whatever his name is.

(05:17):
He's dead spring, a terrorist commander from moss So Ron's
going to strike Israel directly. So now we have two,
you know, flying under color of a sovereign entity flag
armies effectively waging war against each other. So this situation

(05:39):
is spiraling out of control. I'm just making that observation.
And so with that, with that background in mind, we
have the statement just the other day that we will
support Israel, defend Israel if they're attacked by Iran. US
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said just yesterday, hours after this
terrorist leader's death quote, if Israel is attacked, we certainly

(06:02):
will help defend Israel.

Speaker 4 (06:05):
Hm.

Speaker 1 (06:06):
He was out and visit with the Philippines. You saw
us do that in April. You can expect to see
us do that again. He said. We've referring to the
prior running ballistic missiles and drone attacks that were retaliation
for the previous Israeli attack on Tehran's embassy in Damascus. Now,
we will help defend Israel. I don't know if that
means boots on the ground American forces, but we do

(06:29):
have a defense agreement with Israel, best of my knowledge.
So there's that, and then there's this going back to
Andrew Andrew Thornbrook's reporting from the Epoch Times New Congressional report.
He didn't make the facts up. He just got to
copy the report and report it on it. We apparently
lack the required capabilities to preserve our nation's strategic interest

(06:51):
and could lose in a potential war against China. Now,
I know I pivoted over against China, but Here's what
the report had to say, published July thirtieth, by the
Commission on the National Defense Strategy found the quote US
military lacks both the capabilities and the capacity required to
be confident it can deter and prevail in combat that

(07:14):
went on. This is quote from the report. The Commission
finds the US Defense Industrial base is unable to meet
the equipment, technology, and munition's needs of the United States
and its allies and partners. That's a very broad statement.
It's not related to any specific conflict with any specific nation.

(07:35):
It's just our preparedness. Vice chair for the Commission, Eric Edelman,
told the Senate Armed Service Committee on Tuesday that China's
communist regime was outpacing the United States with military development.
He said that alone could increase the likelihood of conflict
between well of China and the United States, and with

(07:56):
the likelihood of that we would lose. Quote, there's potential
for near term war and a potential that we might
lose such a conflict. We found that China is in
many ways outpacing the United States, while we still have
the strongest military in the world with the farthest global reach.
When we get to one thousand miles of China's shore,
we start to lose our military dominance and could find
ourselves on the losing end of the conflict. Talked about

(08:19):
the growing strategic partnership and here is I love this report,
the growing strategic partnerships between China, Iran, North Korea, and Russia.
They are, in the words of the report, major strategic
shift that the United States defense planners failed to fully
account for. Yeah, the enemy of my enemy is my friend.

(08:43):
You know it so long? It was for so long
the Soviet Union, when the USSR was around and China
never got along. They always viewed each other with us
just a very suspicious John desire. They didn't play well together.
They considered each other's enemies. Well, fast forward out, so
the union falls. That end up with this oligarchy situation

(09:03):
in Russia and them embracing each other, recognizing that the
interests of their countries are right parallel because they're all
against us. Hey, why don't we sit down and enjoy
together rather than fighting amongst ourselves or just being distant
from each other. We each China are on, North Korea
and Russia should get together and unify in our opposition

(09:26):
against Western powers. Welcome to the world we live in.
Edelman said that with those four authoritarian regimes working together
against us in this unprecedented way, the United States could
face global conflict that would stretch all of our national
resources thin. And I think in terms of thin we're
already there. We know the military recruiting numbers are in

(09:46):
the toilet, Thank you, DEEI and the woke military, he said,
it makes each of those countries potentially stronger militarily, economically,
and diplomatically, and potentially can weaken the tools we have
at our disposal to deal with them. We can the
tools we have at our disposal to deal with them.
Maybe that's because China manufactures so much of the stuff
that we need even to turn into our own defense capabilities.

(10:10):
All the materials that go into everything, including parenthetically the
global green revolution, right, all the rare earth minerals and
the things that go into green technology, same stuff when
it comes to the military. Didn't we learn that in
COVID We found out that, oh, hey, supply chain disruptions.
I can't get my medications. Why, well, because China makes
all of them. China's on a global lockdown, can't get

(10:36):
our personal and protective equipment, no masks. China makes all
those on and on and on and on, and don't
overlook the fact that it becomes to pharmaceuticals. China manufactures
the same pharmaceuticals that our men and women in uniform
would take if they were ill. Commission report called on
Congress and the various government departments to rewrite laws and

(10:59):
regulations remove unnecessary barriers to adopting innovation, budgeting, and procurement.
I honestly read something like that and I'm thinking, well,
what rules are on the books that prevent us from
research and development. Report also recommends the national strategy be
radically transforms, moving away from the bipolar Cold War strategic

(11:21):
model to a multi theater model that'll a coount for
the fact the United States could face armed conflicts against
multiple nation states across the globe simultaneously. Wonderful report says
time is not on our side. China is likely to
increase its hostile behavior in the coming years in an
effort to normalize unlawful behavior as it pursues establishing advantagous conditions.

(11:46):
Advantageous conditions try to get the engine going brian for
future coercion or conflict. These trends continue, the PLA will
be a peer, if not superior, military hereator to the
United States across domains, a situation the United States has
not faced since the height of the Cold War. That's

(12:07):
a quote unquote from the report also recommends a huge
increase in defense spending up to Cold War levels, assuming
the United States maintains last year's gross domestic product, which
was twenty seven trillion dollars annual defense translated to what
they say, we need one point three to four point

(12:29):
five trillion annual spending. Okay. Now, I don't know if
it's folks in the military industrial complex to win in
and created this report, but it is frightening when you
think about where we are relative to the rest of
the world in terms of being close to the brink
of war. Not gonna help me sleep at night. Five

(12:52):
eighteen fifty five kacity talk station five with Think seven
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Speaker 5 (14:09):
Com, fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio Station, the exclusive audio
home month NBC's coverage of the twenty twenty four Paris Olympics.

Speaker 1 (14:22):
HI five twenty two fifty five KR SAT talk station.
Happy Friday, Eve to you, looking forward to him and
iHeart Media Aviation expert Jay rat Lafon at eight thirty
and the other guests before that. Always enjoy talking to him,
enjoy talking to you too, and remember fifty five krsa

(14:43):
dot com for your podcast. Uh, let us see here
we do a little polling information here after Kamala Harris
is what they're calling honeymoon media coverage week, which isn't
really working out for you. John McLoughlin poll new national
survey which was concluded on the twenty ninth shows Donald
Trump leading Kamala Harris forty seven to forty five, with

(15:07):
a historic number of Americans saying the nation is on
the wrong track, wrong track in a big way. Statistics
on that are rather frightening. And get to that in
a second up two percent. That was the same as
the Biden race. Under the McLaughlin polling questions asked they
asked the same questions different polls, different times. So Donald
Trump was leading Joe Biden Kamala Harris swapped out, and

(15:28):
no change in the landscape on that. See June twenty sixth,
when President Trump had President Trump leading Kamala Harris forty
seven forty two. Harris has merely moved the Biden vote
to her column. African Americans, Trump gets twenty eight percent,
Biden sixty four, now Trump eighteen, Harris seventy four. Ten

(15:54):
percent shift on black voters Hispanics Biden got, Trump got
forty two, Biden got forty five. Among that team is
now Trump thirty seven, Harris fifty three. The broad her
got there into Harris's advantage. White voters, Trump fifty one
to Biden's forty, now Trump fifty six to Harris's thirty eight.

(16:18):
Married voters were broken out as an independent category. Trump
led Biden fifty two thirty eight. It's now fifty six
Trump Harris thirty seven. So it'slight game there for Donald Trump.
On rural voters, Trump's leader for Biden has increased fifty
two to thirty eight. Now Trump is up twenty nine points,

(16:41):
with Trump at sixty two and Harris at thirty three.
There's your rural voters. Maybe you can attribute that to JD.
Van's I don't think so. If you're throwing Robert Kennedy
Junior and the others into it, it's Trump forty two,
Harris forty one, Kennedy eight percent. Let us see here
he apparently has t Harris's taken the Democrats back from

(17:02):
Kennedy because the numbers slid away from Kennedy over to
Harris's side of the ledger. Biggest positive change for Kamala
Harris is that her net favorability actually increased by eight percent.
It was forty fifty four favorable, forty fifty four unfavorable.
Now it's minus fourteen. Her favorable and unfavor rating has
improved favorable forty five, unfavorable fifty one, a total minus six.

(17:28):
And then here's that wrong track statistic a week for
our country, seventy five percent of those polled say the
country is on the wrong track, with only eighteen percent
saying it's on the right track, an all time high
wrong track in John McLoughlin's national polling. And he has
been at this for years and years, troubling absolutely five

(17:53):
twenty six fifty five cars de Talk Station. It's just
really sad that I don't think it's going to get
any better after November, regardless of what the outcome happens
to be.

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Speaker 7 (19:24):
Com fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (19:32):
Here's your weather nine first warning weather forecasts got a
partly Sunday day with a chance of showers and storms
afternoon ninety one for the high. Showers and storms are
likely overnight with a low of seventy two eighty seven.
The high tomorrow with partly Sundays guys chances showers and
storms look chances showers and storm over Friday night, as
well as a love of seventy and yes on Saturday. The
same mostly Sunday with the chances of showers and storms
high of eighty six seventy degrees Right now, think you

(19:55):
I have KCD talk station local stories or calls. Federal
Highway Administrations and investigating allegations of racial discrimination. After a
group fought a civil rights complaint against the Brent Spence

(20:18):
Bridge project, Federal Highway Administration said plans to visit our
area in August for the site, visit, interviews with those
who may be impacted, and look at documents pertaining to
the project. After the Coalition for Transit and Sustainable Development
in Greater Cincinnati initial cap on all of that argued

(20:39):
last year in a complaint, the highway expansion will have
a greater impact on neighborhoods made up of predominantly minority
and low income families, including more congestion and air quality issues.
Matt Butler with the Davout Good Foundation, as a reported
by WCPO and thanks to the folks over there for
doing it, who's one of the coalitions signing on to
the complaint, said the main differences between West End between

(21:02):
Louisbourg and different parts of the community. Here is wealth
and power and the color of your skin. Title six
forty two USC. Two thousand and D at all at ZEC,
enacted with the Civil Rights Act in nineteen sixty four,
prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, and national
origin and programs and activities receiving federal financial assistance. And

(21:25):
since this receives federal financial assistance, they're claiming it's well,
I suppose it's racist in some way. A joint statement
from HOW Department of Transportation and KYTC speaking with Local
Channel nine again, a priority of the Brent S Benz
Bridge Quarter project is to provide an inclusive process that
enhances surrounding communities while delivering a project that will bring safer,

(21:45):
less congested travel and job opportunities to the region. We're
aware of the Title six complaint and will await Federal
Highway Administration's completion of its review process. Okay, I just
have to kind of wonder out loud if you've got
the Brent Spenz Bridge now in its current configuration, it's

(22:08):
a traffic and congestion nightmare. I don't know that you
know people sitting in traffic produce more pollution than those
that are just simply driving by. Don't have any idea,
but if it's the same overall volume of people using
the roads, you're merely moving the road a little bit
to create a new bridge, and of course the on

(22:29):
ramps and off rams that have to accommodate the new bridge.
Is anything really different? Just asking police investigating a fight
in the middle of Montgomery in parking lot missing some
crucial evidence no security footage due to a non operating
Cincinnati police camera. These fight put two people in the hospital,

(22:52):
but well revealed that we have a problem with our cameras.
Ken Cobra, president of the SINCINNTI Police Union, said failing
outdated cameras have been a growing problem. There have been
instances when police and prosecutors needed footage but did not
have it. Quote, it's incredibly important to have those cameras working.
There are certain judges and prosecutors that if you don't
have any video of certain events, they just won't prosecute them.

(23:15):
What do we do before video cameras? He said, that
can result in plea deals and charges being disodmissed. Apparently,
the last October six year old injured and hit and
run Winton Hill's corner of the Enquire immediate partner Fox
nineteen things they give each other credit cameras and license
plate readers that are in the area. We're not working
when the child was struck. Cameras near Paid Course Stadium

(23:36):
back in Jil January of last year. Not working when
Bengals running back Joe Mixon was involved in a confrontation
with a driver. I guess the stories go on and on.
City spokesman Molly Lair said more than ninety percent of
the cameras operated by the Sinsini Police Department are operation operational,
but it's not clear how many cameras the city operates
and if some of those cameras are operated by other departments.

(23:56):
Sound like a failure to communicate. Oh look. US Representative
Greg Lansman said he's aware of the problem as well
and is working to get federal funds to fix it.
So is that where we are. We are in a
position we're in order to fix ten percent of the
all of the cameras in the City of Cincinnati, we

(24:17):
have to rely on federal funds. There's not enough money
in the budget to accommodate something that's so apparently important
to law enforcement in the prosecutor's office. Yeah, we sold
the train, Joe. That's existing infrastructure we're talking about, isn't it.
Huh huh. Yeah, cameras infrastructure. Absolutely, I think under any

(24:40):
reasonable interpretation of the word infrastructure, it is part of
what the city's responsible for maintenance and upkeep. You got
to go to the federal government to get that money. Great, great, Thanks,
appreciate that. Fred needs his roads fixed. Remember that, Joe,
Fred's got potholes in his neighborhood that no one is fixing.
I'm looking at for you, Fred. He called less we

(25:02):
first time I ever heard from the guy. He just
made some great points. I got a ton of email
about him too. Anyway, stick around, I got a stack
of stupid coming up. Although I feel like I just
stepped in that five point thirty six five KC the
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Speaker 7 (26:07):
Fifty five KRC and.

Speaker 1 (26:09):
I'm gonna let you in on a wire. I've KCDE
talk station if they're gonna happy Friday Eve five one
three seven hundred and eight two three dog time five
fifty on AT and T phones and care to comment.
Moving over to the stack of stupid good Everett, Washington,
where a couple there says and Amazon delivery drivers stole
their cat yet to be returned. Ray and caer I

(26:33):
know guess what they got it on video? Shocking no one.
Ray and Karen Ishak I've been trying to track down
their thirteen year old cat named Fifi Law last scene
on video in their driveway with the Amazon delivery driver
July twenty first quote, we saw when the driver was leaving,
she was patting the cat and playing with the cat,
which is not abnormal. That's according to a statement from

(26:54):
Ray Ishak. Security cameras are motion activated. The recording timed
out though after it caught the first interaction and instant
you can see the driver paying the cat and then
both are gone from the driveway with the car driving away.
According to Ray, the driver driving away and that's not
the cat, and and there's not a cat in site.
It's pretty obvious the cat disappeared in those seconds that
were not present on the video. Fought a report with

(27:17):
the Sunhomish County Sheriff's Office. Emails between the Ishaks and
Amazon company confirmed the driver had the cat. What email
Amazon wrote the driver contacted the police department to return
the cat. Ray Eshek said that's not true. He said,
I talked to the sheriff's department again, gave them the
case number, asked if anybody brought the cat in. They

(27:37):
haven't heard from anybody. I called the ever police department
and nothing. Pressed to Amazon to share the drivers, share
the driver's city so we could check with local law enforcement,
said the company refused to provide that information. In a
different email, Amazon recommended to the family file a theft
report with the law enforcement. Making things worse. The couple
have been preparing for their son's wedding, which took place

(27:58):
the past weekend. The men family members of specially the grandkids,
were expecting to see Fifi. The emotional distress for me
having to lie and to my grandkids that the cat
is safe and fine, then watching my granddaughters cry after
they found out because they heard us talk about it.
It was a double whemmy from every single front. According
to Ray, family said they want to believe the driver

(28:18):
had good intentions, perhaps thinking the cat was astray, but
it's been made clear she is a beloved cat, and
it's clearly missed. Bring me my cat back, he said.
Here's a weird one coming from local news. Local twelve

(28:38):
reporting on this from Chechnya ruling officials hope this move
will conform Chechnya's music to the government's mentality. All music
under eighty beats per minute and above one hundred and
sixteen beats per minute has been banned. This reminds me

(29:00):
that speech from Bananas with the dictator who said, you know,
all children who are under sixteen years old are now
sixteen years old, which of course is a veiled acknowledgement
to Woody Allen's pedophilia. Chechi made this decision to move
away from foreign music, embracing the country's own art, getting

(29:22):
some backlash from even Chechenian musicians. Decision follows instructions on
the republic Culture Ministry from Chechen's leader Ramzon Kadyov to
make chechen in music conform to the Chechen mentality. That's
a statement from him that basically is an effort to
ban foreign music, which is a lot slower or alternatively

(29:45):
faster than Chechen music. Borrowing musical culture from other people
is inadmissible. He said, we must bring to the people
and the future of our children the cultural heritage of
the Chechen people. This includes the entire spectrum of more
oral and ethical standards of life for Chechens. Most modern

(30:06):
forms of music they point out from the West, including
electronic and pop, have average beath permitted higher than one
hundred and sixteen, so the Chechen folks will not be
listening to that anymore. I suppose, okay, lords and masters
making decisions, more stackers to be coming up first the
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hands with the as these certified master technicians at Foreign Exchange.
West Chester is the place to be. The foreign Exchange location.
Where I go, that's the Towersville exit off seventy five
two streets east is Kingland Drive. Take a rite and

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you are there. You can get a free learner if
you need one, though, they've got those there to Bosch
certified business and they specialize and again all European and
Asian imported cars. So stop in an experience of foreign
exchange experience and walk out with more money and the
full warranty five to one, three six, four, four, twenty six,
twenty six. Tell Austin and the crew at Foreign Exchange.
Brian said, high again five one three six, four four,

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twenty six, twenty six Online foreign X, that's foreign the
letter X dot.

Speaker 7 (31:36):
Com fifty five krc sneezing, coughing.

Speaker 1 (31:45):
Here is your weather. And again every day and overnight
includes a Chancellor showers and storms. Ninety one for the
high day with partly sunny skies overnight, seventy two Tomorrow
partly sunny otherwise with the ring. Eighty seven for the
high down to seventy overnight with some clowns, and on Saturday,
mostly sunny day otherwise eighty six for a high right
now seventy degrees hyper traffic from the UCL Tramphing Center.

Speaker 8 (32:09):
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redefines recovery to get you back to doing what you love.

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Call five one, three, four, seven, five.

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Eighty six ninety inbound seventy four is in good shape
running less than ten minutes between two seventy five at
the coal Ring split and the seventy five ramp southbound
seventy one.

Speaker 1 (32:28):
No problem at all.

Speaker 8 (32:29):
Pants fight for Chuck ingramon fifty five KRCA the talk station.

Speaker 1 (32:36):
Five fifty one fifty five car seat E talks Station
Happy Friday Eve returning to the stack is stupid. Leave
the snakes alone. I think that's what we can come
away from with this one tour. Amazing.

Speaker 6 (32:47):
Thank you.

Speaker 1 (32:48):
Joe Torrenton, Connecticut man is recovering at Hartford Hospital after
trying to move a rattlesnake from a busy road. Joey
rich it's doing Yeah, I did things because they're idiots.
Well it's not a sting ray Joe too soon never

(33:13):
Joe Richie Adella again described as an animate or spotted
a snake in the middle of the road on his
way home just wanted to help, grab his shirt from
the back seat, put it over the snake's head, and
then picked it up. That's when the snake bit him
in the hand. This guy apparently related to a woman
who was there witnessed this. Britney Hillmeyer thought he was

(33:37):
just joking around. Apparently this guy's a trickster. She said
he was getting to the point where he really couldn't talk.
This after she thought he was just kidding around, but
he really couldn't talk. You couldn't understand him. He was
like trying to talk to someone with a mouthful of marbles. Apparently,
it turned out the venom was affecting his breathing. He
was able to make it back to his car. He

(33:57):
drove himself in the near his hospital and Rington. His
respiratory system failing at the time, and he even went
into cardiac arrest. He needed bloody do gooder. Is that
what you said, Joe? This is what you get. No
good deed goes unpunished. Anti venom is what he needed,
but the short supply of the Charlotte Huggerford Hospital led

(34:19):
him to being moved to Hartford Hospital. Only two venom
mistakes live in Snakes live in the state, those being
the northern copperhead and timber rattlesnake. Department Energy and Environmental
Protection said if you encounter either species, observe it from
a distance, calmly and slowly back away and allow the
snake to go away on its own. They say that

(34:40):
bites bites from the timber snake can be fatal. The
family said he's lucky and we'll recover for at least
one week in the hospital. They've actually set up a
GoFundMe page for him. I'm not inclined to tony Well,
this sucks. Go to Charlotte, North Carolina, where dozen of
people were stranded after Donald Trump's campaign rally yesterday, and

(35:03):
Charlotte parking described at a premium. After massive crowds swarmed
the Bojangles Coliseum parking lots to hear Donald Trump's speech.
Some attendant said they spoke with a manager at a
nearby Dunkin Donuts location who told them they were allowed
to park on the property. However, when they got back
after the rally, the vehicles had been towed.

Speaker 9 (35:25):
PERI the biggest douche of the universe for the manager.

Speaker 1 (35:31):
The galaxies, there's no bigger douche statue. One attendee, you
had a cart, toad a zander so to speaking with
the news. The managers inside promised they could park here.
Some of the people even gave money to the people inside. However,
the people had their cars towed now had to pay
hundreds of dollars to the towing company to get the

(35:51):
vehicles back. Get a load of the name of this company,
gotcha towing? Isn't that like a metaphorical middle finger? And
anybody gets their car toad? Gotcha tone? They were responsible
for towing the cars. There is a sign in the
lot warning drivers about illegally parked cars being removed, the
company said. The manager of the Duncan store contacted the
towing company asking them to tow the vehicles off the property.

(36:12):
Hence Joe's award. Towing companies said the drivers would have
to pay three hundred and eighty dollars to get their
vehicles back. The other person went to confront the duck
and manager of the store. Employees locked the doors and
refused to come out. Charlotte mcklenburg police ended up responding
and shuttled some of the drivers to the towing yard

(36:33):
to get their vehicles out and of course that they
had to pay the fine. Another auto related news this one.
I saw this the other day as well. Thank you
Joe for putting in the stack of stupid where it belongs.
Ford Motor Companies put a patent application in filed under
Systems and Methods for Detecting speeding violations. Check the Patent

(36:54):
and Trademark Office anyway. It was initially filed last year.
Ford discusses in its an application using their vehicles to
monitor the speed of other vehicles. When it equipped autobile
detects a nearby vehicle is traveling over the posted speed limit,
it will use onboard cameras to capture an image of

(37:14):
the speeder. The equipped vehicle will then be able to
send the report, containing both speed data and pictures of
the speeding vehicle directly to law enforcement or roadside monitoring units.
Authorities would also receive GSP location data. Ford said in
an application that surveillance vehicles would make law enforcements job
easier because they wouldn't need to quickly identify violations and

(37:36):
engage in pursuits. Ford also added that some of the
work could be delegated as self driving vehicles, which could
also be equipped with speed detectors. Do you want this
in your car? What obligation do you have to work
for law enforcement to do law enforcement's job right without
getting compensated, of course, Joe. But then again there's the

(37:57):
legal implications that record the identity of the driver, because
when you get a remote control speed ticket, it's issued
to the vehicle based upon the license plate, not the
individual driving it, because many times they have no idea
who's behind the wheel. A solution to a problem that
doesn't exist, you'll have to pay for, I suppose, because

(38:17):
that technology costs money. Coming up on five fifty seven
fifty five carcit de talk Station plenty to talk about
the six o'clock I hope you can stick around. I'll
be right back.

Speaker 10 (38:25):
When you want to know, when you need to know,
when you have to know, you can be in the
know right here on fifty five cars Talk Station.

Speaker 1 (38:35):
It's time to take advantage of zero fifty five car
CD talk Station. Bryan Thomas welcoming phone calls if you
have something to comment about five one, three, seven, four
nine to fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two
three talk at pound five fifty If you have an
at and t Fundn't forget fifty five car se dot
com for your podcast. Jack Adman joined the program yesterday
at six o'clock offering some commentary about the Olympics. We
heard from Orlando Sanza yesterday better than Greg Landsman. Orlando

(38:58):
is one hell of a great guy, wonderful candidate. Like
to support him and remind you it's Orlandosanza dot com
for the campaign information and maybe help him out. Judge Enna,
Paula Tanom and of course, also on the program yesterday,
my friend Beach, owner of Temptations, talking about the current
navigating the current landscape of legalized marijuana here in the
state of Ohio. So that is a most sort of

(39:21):
an unfolding situation as the as our elected officials work
on rules and rags and dealing with legalized weed here
in Ohio. Ah, what is going on in the wide
wide world of sports? Well I pointed out that Iran
said it was going it was going to attack Israel
directly after Israel had attacked that terrorist on Iranian soil,

(39:44):
So we may have an all out shooting war between
nations at this point. Scary stuff that coupled with the
state in from our defense folks, that we will help
Israel defend itself should they be attacked, dragging us into
a global conflict. But then there's this I saw yesterday,
day before yesterday, I can't remember Churchy, Secretary of Janet Yellen,

(40:08):
said that we were going to have to spend three
trillion dollars annually to combat climate change. That's a global figure.
But since you know, very few countries in the world
have economies that are nearly even close to the United
States economy at twenty seven trillion dollar GDP or something
like that, they're going to look to us to pay that,

(40:29):
And I don't know where we're going to get the money,
of course, noting that fun fact about our ability to
defend ourselves checked out on an Epoch Times Andrew Thornbrook
reporting our US military is falling behind China dramatically in
our ability to defend ourselves and even prevail in at
a conflict is coming into question. And that report that

(40:49):
it was based upon the Commission on National Defense Strategy.
The fun fact that came out at the end after
all the gloom and doom about how we are unprepared
to deal with conflict, most notably anything involving China. It said,
assuming the United States maintains this twenty twenty three GDP
of guest twenty seven trillion dollars, I mean an annual

(41:09):
defense budget, but at least one point three trillion to
as much as four point five trillion. In the report,
we found that the Joint Force is at the breaking
point of maintaining readiness today. Adding more burden without adding
resources to rebuild readiness will cause it to break, all right.

(41:30):
So add that to the growing list of demands from
the American taxpayer. And the report did suggest raising taxes
for the purposes of increasing the military budget. What about
all the other budgets that are underfunded? So is to scarity, Medicare, Medicaid.
You know, we got bills to pay, we've got obligations
to keep, and you got a military defund and the're
not helping themselves any over in the military because the

(41:51):
numbers of the recruiting numbers are in the toilet thanks
to DEI and of course the woke messaging, the indoctrination
you're going to get in the United States military that
exceeds learning how to kill people and break things and
maintaining a cohesive military so all that in one big
giant pile. It comes down to money, right, allocation of
scarce resources. In this particular case, scarce resources are the

(42:13):
American taxpayer dollar. Where is the money going to go?
And what are our elected officials going to do? To
write this ship that apparently is sinking back to global warming?
So there's three trillion genny. Yllansays you need to throw
it that and thank you. Bjorn Lomboard Wall Street Journal Today, tateline,
July thirty. First. He's a president of Copenhagen Consensus of

(42:38):
Visiting Fell at Stanford University's Hooper Institution and author of
the Best Things First, the twelve Most Efficient Solutions for
the World's Poorest and our Global SDG Promises. That's the
name of the book anyway, headline polar bears, dead coral
and other climate fictions. So we all worried about global warming,
aren't we? Yeah, all we're all going to die. We

(42:59):
got us throw trillions of dollars of this situation every year.
We need to take grey gasoline cars. We need to
go with evs, which are in and of themselves polluters
of the environment. We're not going to pay attention to that.
We need to do this. We need to build more
windmills and more solar panels, and we need to support
the Chinese Communist Party in their economy. You're on lumberg rits.
Whatever happened to polar bears? There used to be all

(43:21):
climate campaigners could talk about. Now they're essentially absent from
the headlines. Over the past twenty years, climate activists have
elevated various stories of climate catastrophe, then quietly drop them
without apology when the opposing evidence becomes overwhelming. The only
constant is the scare tactics protesters used to dress up
as polar bears al gores. Two thousand and six film

(43:42):
An Innocent and Inconvenient Truth depicted it a sad cartoon
polar bear floating away to its death. I remember that
like it was yesterday. The Washington Post warned in two
thousand and four that this species could face extinction of
the World Wildlife Funds. Chief scientists claim some polar bear
populations would be unable to reproduce by twenty twelve. Then

(44:06):
in the twenty ten campaigners stopped talking about them. After
years of misrepresentation, it finally became impossible to ignore The
Mountain of evidence showing the global polar bear population has
increased substantially. Whatever negative effect climate change had was swamped
by the reduction in hunting of polar bears. The populations
risen from around twelve thousand in the nineteen sixties to
about twenty six thousand. Moving over, the same thing has

(44:30):
happened with activists outcry about Australia's Great Barrier Reef. For years,
they shouted that the reef was being killed off by
rising sea temperatures. After a hurricane extensively damaged the reef
in two thousand and nine, official Australian estimates of the
percent of the reef covered and coral reached a record low.
In twenty twelve, the media overflowed with stories about the
Green reef catastrophe, and scientists predicted the coral reef would

(44:54):
be reduced by another half by twenty twenty two. What
year is it? Joe? The Guardian even published an obituary
back in twenty fourteen. The latest official statistics show a
completely different picture. For the past three years, the Great
Barrier Reef has had more coral cover than at any
point since records began in nineteen eighty six, with twenty

(45:17):
twenty four, setting a new record. Good news gets a
fraction of the coverage that A panic Predictions did. More recently,
green campaigners were warning that the small Pacific islands would
drown as sea levels rose. In twenty nineteen, United Nations
Security General Antonio Guterrez flew all the way to Tuvalu

(45:37):
or to l Loup, don't know it's in the South Pacific.
He did that for a Time magazine cover shot, wearing
a suit, standing to his thighs and water behind the
headline quote our sinking planet close quote. The accompanying article
warned the island and others like it would be struck
by off the map would be struck off the map
entirely by rising sea levels. But about a month ago

(46:02):
New York Times finally shared what it called the surprising
climate news. Almost all atoll islands are stable or increasing
in size. Fact, scientific literature has documented this for more
than a decade. While rising sea levels do a road land,
additional sand from old coral is washed up on low

(46:24):
lying shores. Extensive studies have long shown this accrestion is
stronger than climate caused erosion, meaning that the land area
of a Tuulu and many other small islands. Is yes
increasing Today's killer heat waves now the new climate horror story.
In July, President Biden claimed that extreme heat is the

(46:45):
number one weather related killer in the United States. He
was wrong by a factor of twenty five. While extreme
heat kills nearly six thousand Americans annually, cold kills one
hundred and fifty two thousand, of which twelve thousand die
from extreme cold. Even including deaths from moderate heat, the
toll comes to less than ten thousand. Despite rising temperatures,

(47:07):
age standardize, extreme heat deaths have actually declined in the
United States by almost ten percent a decade and globally
by even more, largely because the world is growing more
prosperous that allows people to afford air conditioners and other
technology that protects them from the heat. The petrified tone
of heat wave coverage twists political ideology. Whether from heat

(47:30):
or cold, The most sensible way to save people from
temperature related deaths would be to ensure access to cheap,
reliable energy. That way, it wouldn't be only the rich
who could afford to keep safe from blistering or frigid weather. Unfortunately,
much of the climate policy makes affordable energy all the
harder to obtain. It's the antithesis of what you need.

(47:52):
Activists do the world a massive disservice by refusing to
acknowledge facts that challenge their intensely doom ridden worldview. There
is ample evidence that man made emissions cause climate cause
changes in climate, and climate economics generally finds that the
costs of these effects outweigh the benefits, but the net

(48:13):
result is nowhere near catastrophic. The cost of all the
extreme policies campaigners push for are much worse. All told,
politicians across the world are now spending more than two
trillion dollars annually, which is far more than the estimated
costs from climate change that all these policies prevent each year.

(48:33):
Scare tactics leave everyone, especially young people, distress and despond
and fear leads to poor policy choices that further frustrate
the public, and the ever changing narrative of disasters erodes
public trust. Count me among them. Telling half truth while
piously pretending to follow the science. Benefits activists, with their

(48:56):
fundraising generates clicks from media outlets, helps climate concern politicians
rally their bases, but it leaves all of us poorly
informed and worse off a.

Speaker 11 (49:10):
Man.

Speaker 1 (49:10):
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Com, fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (50:23):
I heard.

Speaker 4 (50:28):
Here.

Speaker 1 (50:29):
It is your nine first warning weather forecast. Partly Sunday
Day with the chances of showers and storms afternoon ninety
one for the high. I got a chance of those
showers and storms overnight as well, seventy two for the
low eighty seven the high tomorrow. Partly Sunday with the
chances of showers and storms. Now, the chance of showers
and storms over Friday night with a drop to seventy
and a high of eighty six on Saturday. Yes, with
mostly Sunday skies, and of course the chance of showers

(50:50):
and storms right now seventy one degrees. Time for traffic
update from the UCL Train Think Center.

Speaker 8 (50:55):
No matter the injury you see, health Orthopedic sand supports
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(51:17):
still do we okay? On the bridges into town chuck
Ingramont fifty five KR see the talk.

Speaker 1 (51:23):
Station six twenty one here for you five KCY talk
station going to head over to the phones. Love hearing
from you, so feel free to call five one three
seven four nine fifty five eight two three talk Hey Steve,
thanks for calling this morning. Happy Friday Eve to.

Speaker 4 (51:37):
You, Happy Friday Eve to you too.

Speaker 1 (51:39):
See.

Speaker 4 (51:40):
I retired from my full time job in April I
turned sixty two. I immediately started working but part time.
So I work Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday eight hour days and
I get four days off every week. And I'm just,
I mean, I can't get used to it. I've done
it now twelve thirteen weeks, and it's it's hopefully I'll

(52:00):
never lose the feeling.

Speaker 1 (52:01):
Because yeah, okay, I was going to say, do you
start feeling really great and uplifted and like a weight
off on Wednesdays since you're off for the rest of
balance of the week. You just reminded me of a
comment my dad made me. I was over visiting Missus
post retirement, and I said, Uh, what do you guys
got going on this weekend? He just kind of looked
at me. He raised his irities. What are you talking about.
We're retired. Every day's a weekend.

Speaker 4 (52:24):
So yeah, I really didn't retire. I retired from my job,
but I didn't reach. But that way, I'm collecting the
pension and stuff. I love that and I'm enjoying what
I do, so I even be you know. So yeah,
I'm okay going to work, but it's amazing having those
days off. I just wanted to make two comments. Of course,

(52:45):
you're talking about man made climate change, and they always
take off the man made part. So they talk about
climate change.

Speaker 1 (52:52):
Right, which I admit happens. The climate does change dramatically
over the over.

Speaker 4 (52:56):
Millennium, always has and always will.

Speaker 1 (52:59):
Amen.

Speaker 4 (52:59):
But you're you're saying, based on predictions of what was
going to happen, that they are somehow failing or whatever,
or their predictions were exaggerated.

Speaker 3 (53:13):
But their whole.

Speaker 4 (53:14):
Point is to secure jobs for themselves and create an
entire new industry. They're not trying to reverse what's happening.
They're just they're creating employment for themselves. So they are
being successful.

Speaker 1 (53:33):
Well, yes, I agree, it's successful. The success comes from
the fear generated by the lies, and that those that
fear generated by the lies allows them to implement extraordinarily
costly programs that I will concede create jobs in those industries,
ieed global warming prevention industry. But those are fake jobs
based on a lie, a false premise. You can take

(53:54):
all the carbon you want, or try to take all
the carbon one out of the atmosphere based upon human production,
and it's not going to do a damn thing to
impact the climate generally speaking. You know, there's been periods
of times in global history proved by ice boring samples
and geologic evidence that the world has been filled with
far more carbon dioxide. Guess what, Plants thrive, humanity continue
to evolve. Thank god the glaciers melted, otherwise we wouldn't

(54:17):
be farming corn here in the state of Ohio.

Speaker 4 (54:19):
I mean, you're yeah, you're one hundred percent correct, and
I'm just saying. You know, what they're saying they're concerned
about is not what they're concerned about. They're lining their pockets.

Speaker 1 (54:30):
Yes, absolutely, it's a lot favored.

Speaker 4 (54:33):
Is the carbon offsets the carbon scaleam that was land
that was never going to be developed. It's like, hey,
we won't develop this land that was never going to
be developed anyway economically, it's not feasible to develop it.
It's isolated, whatever it's it's mountainous, it's rocky. We can't
do anything with it. So you are allowed to dump

(54:55):
carbon in the atmosphere and they won't develop something that
was never going to be developed. It is selling indulgences.
Martin Luther wouldn't like that if he was around today,
and if I could make one of the real quick comments.
And it's just Donald Trump had had the we'll say

(55:15):
guts to show up for the National Association of Black
Journalists get together. Either Biden or Harris was supposedly supposed
to be there. They didn't show up. He's a really
nice guy until until you slap him in the face,

(55:35):
and then he slaps you back. And that's what's so
refreshing about him, is you know, the tone of the questions,
is he responds he was combative, but he was ripped
right from the very beginning. I mean, and he fights back.
And that's why Republicans like him, because we're not used

(55:56):
to that. Our people usually apologize when they haven't done
anything wrong.

Speaker 1 (56:00):
Astute observation, you're right, and he's just spoke the truth
back to her or to them. Most notably in terms
of Kamala Harris now identifying full on black as opposed
to her previous identification as an Indian American, and Donald
Trump was right on that, because as soon as the
left started unloading on Donald Trump for being racist and

(56:21):
pointing that biracial element out, there are nine gazillion Internet
search for it. Go ahead, it's still there, nine gazillion
little clips and quotes and videos of Kamala Harris identifying
herself as an Indian American did it routinely regularly. In fact,
apparently her birth certificate says she was born as Her

(56:42):
mother is a Caucasian born in India, her father is Jamaican.
That's her birth certificate. I'm staring at her right now.
So what is it in the world of identity politics?
You can find out you yourself identifying as someone as
a person of color can step in it. It's yeah,
we can go back to Barack Obama. He identified is black,
half of his parentage was white. Everybody said, fine, he's black.

(57:04):
This is Kamala Harris's own words. Donald Trump's just bringing
him out to haunt her as well. He should standing
up to the abuse of questioning during that well, I
would say, pretty important interview he had there. He was there,
Kamala Harris was invited. She took a pass. Pete, hang on,
I'd love to talk to you if you just going
to have to hold for a minute. If you don't mind,
I'll be happy to take your call immediately after we

(57:26):
come back from a quick break here where I get
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Speaker 5 (58:18):
Turn up your radio, here's a Sean handed any morning minute.

Speaker 12 (58:24):
So she supports betacare for all, no private healthcare. She
introduced that legislation, introduced legislation for the radical Green New Deal.
He very clearly says you would ban cracking and drilling,
has no restrictions on abortion.

Speaker 1 (58:40):
You just go on and on and on.

Speaker 12 (58:43):
Doesn't want us to use the term radical Islamic terrorism,
doesn't want us to use the term illegal Alia. Explain
that wants to ban and phase out all fossil fuels
and put on an EV in your driveway whether you
want one or not, and sponsored you know all of
these things and take in these positions, and now all

(59:05):
of a sudden, we're supposed to believe she's had an
election year conversion.

Speaker 5 (59:09):
Check out the Sean Hannity radio show later today right here.

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Speaker 1 (01:00:18):
Hey there folks, Amy robot them Time for the nine
first one WI. The forecast sunny day to day chances
of showers of storms afternoon ninety one for the high,
down to seventy two overnight, with more opportunities for some rain. Tomorrow,
same thing, partly sunny, chances of showers and storms eighty
seven overnight, mostly cloudy showers and storms likely seventy for

(01:00:38):
the low, and an eighty six high Saturday with comparable
weather conditions, mostly sun with the chance of showers and
storms seventy degrees Right now. Traffic time from the UCL
Tramphic Center.

Speaker 8 (01:00:49):
No matter the injury you see, health Orthophoenix and sports
Medicine redefines recovery to get you back to doing what
you love called five one, three, four, seven, five, eighty
six ninety highways continue to look good this morning, so
I found seventy five included running less than fifteen minutes
right now out of Sharonville into downtown Brewis are heading
to an accident on Hamilton Avenue at the Reagan Highway.

(01:01:11):
There are injuries, Chuck Ing Braman fifty five krs the
talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:01:17):
Six thirty two fifty five KRCD Talk Station Happy alright
AE five one thirty seven four nine fifty five hundred
eight hundred two three talking to go to the phones.
Thank you so much Pete for holding over the breake there.
Welcome to the show.

Speaker 14 (01:01:28):
Thanks Brian, thanks for taking my call in that article
by that beyond guy. I agree with everything he said
except towards the end. He kind of acknowledges that humans
emissions are contributing to the but not that much. But
the total amount of CO two in our atmosphere is
almost nothing. There's the total is only four one hundreds

(01:01:51):
of one percent. It's only went up by one point
three one hundreds of one percent. This man has been
on Earth, and of that one point three one percent,
the US is only responsible for thirteen percent of that.
And we're we're actually one of the lowest points in
CO two in Earth's history. And all the CO two

(01:02:13):
that we're admitting is actually helping everything.

Speaker 1 (01:02:16):
Plants and exactly and it's plant food.

Speaker 14 (01:02:21):
He was spot on and everything he said except for
that part he should not be well contributing to that
we do.

Speaker 1 (01:02:29):
He may have just may just give a nod to it,
just saying, you know, okay, there's there's some issues here.
Man made emissions caused climate change. It causes changes in
the climate. And his point is though it's nothing to
worry about. It is not catastrophic. It is not doing anything.
It's not killing polar bears, it's not making the sea
level rise. It's not I mean, all of the things

(01:02:51):
that have led us to this. Oh my god, we're
all gonna die, is his point. No, we're not. It's
not doing anything. So they gin up all his concern
and worry over something that is really having no impact.
And of course then moves over to the economic point
that these billions and trillions of dollars that we shovel
into the green movement aren't doing or accomplishing a damn

(01:03:13):
thing other than taking that money out of an otherwise
usable economy, making other nations wealthier, allowing them to buy
air conditioning, for example, that kind of stuff. So I
think he threw that in there just sort of as
a nod to appease the people who would otherwise just
outright reject him because he doesn't acknowledge that maybe we
have some impact on climate. The broader point cannot be ignored, though,

(01:03:35):
which is we are wasting our time, effort, and money
on these exercises. It's a stupid, pointless gesture, and that
money could be better served in other areas, like well,
growing the global economy generally speaking. But you know what
that means. That means consumption. I'm just firmly convinced that
that's at the heart of all this control of our lives,

(01:03:56):
micromanaging our lives based upon this fear that they have
created at a whole clock, so they control our level
of consumption. Six thirty five fifty five k SE detalk
stations working for him too, though, isn't it. That's a
sad thing about it. That's why I read the article
to point out the lies that we have been told
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Speaker 7 (01:05:15):
Com fifty five KRC dot com.

Speaker 1 (01:05:18):
Hihart Radio is the exclusive Vision nine first one to
Wether Forecast's going to be a partly Sunday day with
a chances of showers, and storms afternoon ninety one for
the high down to seventy two overnight files and showers
and storms likely partly Sunday Tomorrow again with chance of
showers and storms eighty seven. More showers and storms are
likely over Friday night with a drop to seventy and
on Saturday, mostly Sunday with the chance of showers and storms.
High of eighty six and seventy one degrees. Right now

(01:05:41):
in time for traffic update from the UCL Traffic Center.

Speaker 8 (01:05:45):
No matter the injury you see, health orthopedic san supports medicine, redefines, recovery,
to get your banked and doing what you love. Call
fine one three, four, seven, five eighty six ninety Highway
traffic not all that bad this morning. Just beginning to
load up northbound fourth seventy one on the bridge stopbound
seventy five, so in pretty good shape through Blackland. There's
an accident on Hamilton Avenue at the Reagan Highway. Chuck

(01:06:07):
Ingram on fifty five KRC the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:06:16):
Coming up at six forty fifty five YAR City Talk station.
A very very happy Friday Eve tu coming up aft
top of the our news.

Speaker 10 (01:06:22):
J D.

Speaker 1 (01:06:22):
Harding's president of Cincinnati Classical Academy. We're gonna talk about
the Academy's mission and vision. Opportunities in education do exist
out there, and they are alternatives to the public schools,
which you may not be happy with. I'm all about
school choice. Every day knows that Donovan and the Americans
for Prosperity topic falling off the fiscal cliff. That'll be
at seven thirty. Ominous sounding subject matter there, which is, well,

(01:06:48):
he's gonna put the flesh on the bones of that statement.
But yeah, it feels like we are falling off the
fiscal cliff even in Cincinnati. Here Jay Carson from the
buck Eye Institute about Cincinnati union wage theft case. That's
at eight oh five. And Jay Ratliff, our avation expert,
he'll be on at eight thirty, as he is every Thursday,
speaking of falling off the fiscal cliff. Since St. Mayor
I have to have purvol wants to raise the city's
earnings tax. You know, I read that local story earlier.

(01:07:15):
Problem with the Cincinnatis with our cameras, broken cameras problem
for the city. Apparently ninety percent of the Cinti City
of Sinceinnat's cameras are not working, depriving the prosecutors of
an opportunity to prosecute people who otherwise would be prosecuted
because apparently they do not go after people if there's
not video footage. That was a comment from the FOP

(01:07:37):
president who was quoted by the enquire on that one.
So we apparently don't have enough money to keep cameras fixed.
And Joe Strekker, when I was commenting on that, mentioned well,
what about the railroad sale money? Yeah, what about it?
That was for existing infrastructure. I would say the camera system, right,
that will be existing infrastructure. They predated the railroads air

(01:08:00):
go that would fall into the line of an expenditure
covered by all that money they got. But no, apparently
we don't have much money. And that was reflected Thank
you Sharon Kolich from the enquir talking and sitting down
with mayor a f tab Purval who will actually talk
to someone sometime. He said, yes, I guess it was yesterday.
Wants to raise the city's earnings tax. Now you may

(01:08:23):
recall that they did that. Cincinnati Futures Commissioned Task Force
came out with twenty five recommendations that were provided to
the city about what needs to be done in order
to right this ship. The sinking ship, I might interject,
that is the city of Cincinnati, and its a terrible
financial situation. Again, remember the railroad sale went through. The
money is in the bank, it is generating revenue as

(01:08:44):
we speak. From my understanding, I am strongly supportive of
raising the revenue to create the Cincinnati we all believe
in for the future. He said. Traditionally when we talked
about this, the city was reacting to a crisis, reacting
to deficits, suggesting maybe we're not right now. Fix Fred's roads.

(01:09:07):
We need a flag for that one. Joe Fred's out
there in the listening audience somewhere who was just disappointed
on a national level with politics and says, you know what,
I just want my roads fixed. And he's a local
government has failed him. And I'm sure you may if
you live in the city of Cincinnati be staring at
your front of your window going yep, my road looks
like that too. I'm with Fred. Fixed manam potholes. How

(01:09:27):
about fixing the cameras so the cincint Police Department can
well collect and get bad guys and successfully prosecute them. Anyway,
since they count um with Jeff Cameron one who is
on board. He's a chairman of the Equital Growth and
Housing Committee. First in the city Hall to say yay
for the recommendation on increasing the earnings tax. Is that
going to be a magnet for more people to move
in the city of Cincinnati. As Sharon points out, gee, hey,

(01:09:49):
guess what the railroad sale went through, but property tax
His property taxes have gone through the roof owners now
reeling from the increase in property taxes. Residential property values
jumped thirty or thirty two point seven percent in the city.

(01:10:09):
And of course everybody got the real tax tax and
the real estate tax bill was like, I can't pay this.
Property taxes increased from four point eight four mills to
six point one mills. That was because the City of
Cincinnati City Council raised property taxes, rolling back more than
two decades of an old promise keeping property taxes that
fund the city's operating budget add an amount that brings

(01:10:30):
in twenty nine million dollars a year. What do they do?
They raised them up to six point one mills, costing
property owners thirty nine bucks for every one hundred thousand
dollars in valuation of the home at the time, new
billage brought in roughly fifteen point four million more a year,
so they're already dealing with extra money from that. Meanwhile,
we all struggled paying our property tax bills. Now they

(01:10:52):
want to pile on and add an increase to the
earnings tax. That's what the Future's Commission recommended, raising that
tax byer point one five percent, taking from one point
eight to one point nine to five. Voters, however, will
have a say on this par of Boll says, and
I quote, I believe residents will be on would bet
on the future of this city. It requires more revenue.

(01:11:13):
Always requires more revenue, doesn't it. This is a conversation
that we have to have. He said, I'm grateful the
Futures Commission for calling out what we want to achieve
in ten years. They say this extra earnings tax money
is going to be used to, in their words, spur
economic growth and boost public safety where they're going to
fix the cameras with the earnings tax. That's just one
a number of items. But I'm really just irked about

(01:11:34):
this because Pervoll said when he was pushing the railway sale,
he pledged in his words, no new taxes and thank
you Sharon. The campaign as a whole was sold to
voters as a solution to the cities financial woes. Now

(01:11:54):
less than a year later, per of All is suggesting
higher taxes, putting an exclamation point on that one, and
share and appreciate it. Dennis, hang on, I just looked up,
saw you were there. I will take your call. It
is already six forty five, so I get to mention
Colin Electric at this moment in time. Cullen Electric. My
friends of color will take great care of you for
residential electric projects. You're in great hands. Family own operated
since nineteen ninety nine, and congratulations on twenty five years

(01:12:17):
of successful business. Been around that long because they do
a great job for you, license electricians taking care of
the work. The pricing is always right and they're very
good at customer service. So from tiny projects to big projects,
rewiring your whole home to get rid of the old
aluminum wiring or nob and tube, they do that. The
install my whole house generator, quite a project that was.
I keep reflecting back on that. I watched them, dude,
It's like, wow, that's that's an involved thing. Anyway, They've

(01:12:40):
also installed multiple can lights in our homes and installed outlets,
and like I said, any residential electric project you were
in the best of possible hands. Find them online at
Colin Electriccincinnati dot com, Cullen c U L e N
Cullen Electriccincinnati dot com. Here's the number five one three
two two seven four one one two A plus with
a BBB five one three two two seven four one
one fifty five KRC the talk station paid four by government.

(01:13:05):
Did you hear tier for the nine first one? And
weather forecast the partly seven day to day chances of
showers of storms after noon and it'll be a high
in ninety one overnight low with seventy two mostly cloudy
sky's showers and storms are likely partly sunny tomorrow with
the chance of showers and storms eighty seven. Pretty much
the same overnight with the showers, showers of storms likely
and lo of seventy. Saturday is going to be mostly

(01:13:28):
sunny day with the chances of showers and storms as well.
Sound repetitive this morning, don't I eighty six for the
higher then right now it's seventy one and ty for traffic.

Speaker 8 (01:13:37):
From the UCL Traffic Center no matter the injury, you
see HEALTHWORTHO Pedix Sans supports medicine, redefines recovery to get
your bank to doing what you love called five one, three, four, seven,
five eighty six ninety highway traffic not all that bad
this morning. Just beginning to load up northbound fourth seventy
one on the bridge southbound seventy five, so in pretty
good shape through Machlan. There's an accident on Hamilton Avenue,

(01:14:00):
Reagan Highway. Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRC the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:14:06):
It is six fifty here, fifty five KOCV talk station
looking forward to after top of then is talking with
doctor J. D. Hardings from the since that classical Academy,
Donald and Neil at seven thirty falling off the fiscal cliff,
Americans for Prosperities, Donald and Neil. That's the next hour.
In the meantime'm going to go to the phones five
and three, seven, four, nine fifty five, eight hundred eight
two three talk. Dennis was kind enough to hold. Thank
you for holding. Dennis. Welcome to the program.

Speaker 3 (01:14:26):
Hey, thank you. I'm going to digress for just an instant,
but for the fur ball. You take a man that
saves five thousand out of it. I hearn thirty five
thirty five thousand a year, he'll be a rich man.
You take a fur ball and give him three hundred
thousand a year, and he spends four hundred thousand a year, he's.

Speaker 1 (01:14:45):
Going to be broke.

Speaker 3 (01:14:46):
So anyway, don't both Democrats.

Speaker 1 (01:14:49):
Basically you haven't heard from Tom for a while. I
appreciate you throwing that in there, Dennis, And yeah, that's
a simple economic reality.

Speaker 3 (01:14:57):
Yeah, anyway, back to something more important. There's this John
Francis Klausser. He's a Nobel Prize winner in twenty twenty
two for a neat thing called quantum entanglement, which I
won't bore you with, but he's on the board of
directors for a thing called the CO two Coalition, and
that organization claims that CO two emissions associated with global

(01:15:19):
warming would be great for everything. Greenhouses supplement the atmosphere
to help their profits by better plant growth with supplementing
the air with CO two.

Speaker 1 (01:15:33):
So oh yeah, point is yeah, many greenhouses, many greenhouses
use CO two generators. I mean, the weed industry is
one that's notorious for that. The more CO two the
plants have, the more they thrive and survive. I mean
it makes perfect sense.

Speaker 3 (01:15:48):
No, yeah, propane tax sitting outside of one. You got
a burner, there's your zeal there it is to go
with it exactly. But anyway, the short story is is
that John was sailing across the pacifics to sail by himself,
and he noticed that when clouds went over his boat,
his solar panels didn't generate nearly as much electricity, you know,
dropped from one value to about forty thirty twenty percent

(01:16:11):
depending on the clouds going over. Well, as brilliant physicists
figured out, hey, the sun has a lot to do
with the global climate.

Speaker 1 (01:16:19):
Yes, no kidding.

Speaker 3 (01:16:22):
Two is four hundreds a little over four hundreds of
one percent. Water vapor in the air over top of
the belt called the equator is as high as forty
to sixty thousand parts per million, which is six percent.
So the big difference is is that you're talking about

(01:16:42):
something that's zero point zero four versus something that's one
hundred times or a thousand times greater.

Speaker 6 (01:16:50):
So this idea that CO two.

Speaker 3 (01:16:53):
Is significant in influencing global warming is nuts because there's
a thing called water vapor and clouds going overhead, and
those are the interactions with the rise of moisture making
a thunderstorm and the rain coming down and the cooling
and all the throo dynalys of that.

Speaker 6 (01:17:10):
Watch the water vapor.

Speaker 1 (01:17:12):
Well, you know what, get Dennis, I'm glad you brought
that up, because it was a week or so ago.
I saw the article. Everybody's screaming and raging, and then
again most of the most recent we need to be
we're all going to die. Alarmism springing from the temperatures
that we've been experiencing. Global temperatures seem to be up,
but historically there are counters to that point. But we
are experiencing a bit of a heat wave. That was

(01:17:32):
the tongue of volcanoes, or it was the underwater volcanoes
that blew up. I think it was about two years ago,
and they said at the time it puts so much
water vapor in the atmosphere, and water vapor apparently traps heat,
making the temperatures rise. Meaning the trillions of gallons of
additional water vapor that this volcano discharge in the air.
We're going to have some implications short term, but a

(01:17:55):
couple of years worth of implications for our global temperatures,
which they said would go up because of the water vapor.
So the alarmism may be very well generated by something
of a natural phenomenon, which is also worthy pointing out.
In terms of natural phenomenon, when volcanoes blow up, they
belch out massive quantities of CO two in the environment
as well. Wildfires do it as well. I mean, all

(01:18:16):
the efforts that we engage in these what Lumberg pointed
out were pointless exercises that don't really accomplish anything, are
wastes of money. Given that all of the quote unquote
benefits from eradicating some of the CO two in the
environment are negated by natural events which you have no
control over.

Speaker 3 (01:18:36):
There is a benefit to it. It's called a thumb
on the scales that shift away from the benefit of
the general public and a boot on our throat, strangling
us to death. And that's the whole purpose behind the
CO two and the climate change agenda.

Speaker 1 (01:18:52):
Yeah, I'm thoroughly convinced it has nothing at all to
do with the climate at all. Power control, money grab
creating of new industries, whatever the case may be. It
has nothing to do with changing the temperature of the planet.
Or reducing it or negating some sort of perceived increase
in temperature. We go through ebbs and flows, we always have,

(01:19:15):
and you're right, the sun has a lot to do
with that. J. D. Hardings, Doctor J. D. Harding's President
of the Sinsinni Classical Academy's going to join the program
at the top of the hour, News Donovan and Neil
Americans for Prosperity, falling off the fiscal cliff his topic
of conversation. That's at seven point thirty. I'll be right back.
The ever changing world.

Speaker 10 (01:19:32):
There's one constant you can depend on. Fifty five KRC,
the talk station. That's the top end, bottom of the hour,

(01:19:54):
seven oh six.

Speaker 1 (01:19:57):
On Thursday. Here if you've out KRC Detalk station, Brian
time is happy to walk in with fifty five Parsey
Morning Show from an amazing institute. It's the Cincinnati Classical
Academy and joining me this morning, Doctor J. D. Harding's
President of the Sin sant Classical Academy. Welcome, doctor. It
is a pleasure to have you on the program.

Speaker 2 (01:20:12):
Good to be bad. Thanks, Bran.

Speaker 1 (01:20:14):
I always love talking to you and it's really inspiring
what you're doing at the Sinsant Classical Academy. I will
let my listeners know they too can find out for themselves.
Since he with a Y, since heclassical dot org. That's
where you can learn about the classical education that your
children will learn at the Sinsant Classical Academy. First off, question,
I'm staring at your web page right now. The news

(01:20:34):
school with a time tested tradition we're talking about classical
education will dive into some of the details of what
that means. But doctor, it's time tested, the methodology, the
the the classical education practices that you teach children of
that since Sant Classical Academy are time tested, proven to

(01:20:56):
educate children, period full stop. I mean it works. Why
did we move away from it? I mean phonics, for example,
is just a great point. You know, you can learn
to read when you use phonics to learn to read,
and yet our children are not using phonics, and sadly
so many public schools report that they're you know, the
testing of the eighth graders reflects that a very small

(01:21:17):
percentage can even read at eighth grade level. So that's
just one of many points we can talk about this morning.
But why did we move away from what worked.

Speaker 15 (01:21:28):
That's a great question, Brian, and I can't fully answer it,
but it's been it's been progressing in that direction for
practically one hundred years now. And there's a great podcast
out there called sold a Story that documents through a
five part series, how phonics got pushed out of schools

(01:21:48):
beginning like in the nineteen seventies and really accelerating through
the eighties and nineties. There's a big battle in the
early two thousands, and yeah, phonics was completely replaced by
a method called you know, three queuing and whole language learning,
whereby essentially kids are taught just to guess at what

(01:22:09):
words are when they're reading by looking at pictures. I mean,
it's just absolutely absurd. I recommend anyone to go ahead
and read that. But you know, thankfully the or listen
to it. But thankfully, the state of Ohio last year
just passed the law requiring schools to use the traditional approach.
So going back to the method that the Hillsdale affiliated

(01:22:31):
classical schools have been using since they started phonics, sentenced
diagramming orthography, which is the science of spelling, just teaching
them actually to sound out words and understand the structure
of the language as it was intended.

Speaker 1 (01:22:49):
Well, you know, and that we have to have this
conversation as bizarre because the time tested, proving strategy or
proven teaching methodology of phonics always worked to be replaced
by the this whole language method which now we know
is time tested to not work. I mean, we have
to pass laws to put something that common sense should

(01:23:09):
have should have told us that worked in the first place.
We need to bring that back because this currently doesn't work.
So anyhow, the idea that the legislative branch of the
that Columbus had to do I had to do something
about that is preposterous. And these decisions are made on
a school board level. Correct the curriculum the children consume
in public schools, for example, isn't that governed by local
school boards primarily or not?

Speaker 3 (01:23:32):
Yep?

Speaker 2 (01:23:32):
Mostly and the state legislature.

Speaker 1 (01:23:35):
Jeez. Well, anyway, back to Cincinnati Classical Academy, Phonic's just
one of the things. But along that same lines, I
know that you teach Latin to the students at Sincant
Classical as well, and that's a component of reading and understanding.

Speaker 15 (01:23:49):
Absolutely, and that that begins in sixth grade actually starts
earlier than that, but by teaching them the word roots
creak and Latin word roots. But it begins formally in
sixth grade, seventh grade, eighth grade, ninth grade. It's required,
and they'll get through three years of Latin by the time,
you know, they finished their first year of high school,

(01:24:10):
which is really exceptional. I mean, there's just so many
incredible advantages to learning Latin. But you know, I think
the greatest one is that you're forced really have an
understanding of the structure of the English language to be
able to translate it into an inflected language like Latin
and translate the Latin back into English. You can't do

(01:24:32):
that unless you really understand grammar and parts of speech.

Speaker 1 (01:24:36):
Well in grammar and sentence structure and actual following English
language rules guidelines isn't even taught anymore. I mean, we're
all living in this text society where we abbreviate words,
we aren't required to use proper grammar, and no one
corrects children for inappropriate grammar usage. I remember being at
one of the schools there was an event that was

(01:24:57):
they borrowed one of the local K through twelve schools
or one of the middle schools to do this event
over the weekend. So I was looking at art and
drawings and work that students had done that was hanging
all over the walls, and many of the depictions, there
are many of the words that were used weren't even
grammatically correct, and yet there they hung on the wall.
There wasn't an X through with a red marker saying

(01:25:19):
wrong and correcting it. It was just up there for
all to observe. And what I was observing is, well,
children who don't understand basic tenets of grammar.

Speaker 2 (01:25:29):
Absolutely, it's all over the place.

Speaker 1 (01:25:31):
I agree with you.

Speaker 15 (01:25:32):
And you know, so many people have said, well, you
don't need to teach spelling anymore, you don't need to
teach grammar because you know, we have technology, We have autocorrect,
we have grammarly, you know, to write and correct our
sentences and word processing programs. I mean, it's just crazy
because you're depriving children of the opportunity to learn how

(01:25:56):
to think and to form good habits of attention to
detail and to and to go through the struggle of
writing a good sentence, and and and uh, you know,
we're turning back to the traditional approach. We don't use
technology in the classroom we don't use computers. We require,

(01:26:18):
you know, human intelligence to be developed rather than relying
on software.

Speaker 1 (01:26:22):
Well, and part of the knowledge and that you teach
there the idea of logic and reason. And I circled
these two words, Socratic dialogue. I loved college because and
this back when I was in college, you actually engaged
in debates and discussion and the exchange of ideas and
the breaking down of ideas. Law school was great for
the Socratic method, and I'd really enjoyed law school for

(01:26:45):
that matter, for that as well. It's just a wonderful
teaching mechanisms, the Socratic method.

Speaker 6 (01:26:51):
Yep.

Speaker 2 (01:26:52):
Absolutely. And uh you know you mentioned.

Speaker 15 (01:26:56):
Rhetoric and logic. These are real wired courses and you know,
in a in a classical curriculum. Uh so these are
not optional or elective, but you know this is core
stuff that every you know, well furnished educated mind needs
to have, uh the skills to execute well.

Speaker 1 (01:27:16):
In the other area that children seem to be suffering
these days, and the numbers prove it out, mathematics. And
I know you have a very strong emphasis at the
since Classical Academy on the better way, the classical way
to teach mathematic mathematics. Tell my listeners about that.

Speaker 15 (01:27:32):
Yeah, well that that follows the Singapore math curriculum is
what we use.

Speaker 5 (01:27:38):
Uh.

Speaker 15 (01:27:39):
You know, the country of Singapore, you know, was number
one in the world for I don't know a decade
straight in mathematics instruction. So uh, Hillsdale College uh uh
took up their approach and use uses that curriculum.

Speaker 12 (01:27:55):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (01:27:55):
And yeah, I mean our our our math and science.

Speaker 15 (01:27:58):
Some people look at uh, you know, classical liberal education
uh and think, well, it's all literature and reading. But
in fact, our our science and math scores are are
off the charts as well. In fact, in fact, our
school just just this past year and it's in its
second year, was one of the only I think there

(01:28:19):
are maybe two schools in the state of Ohio recognized
that the State Science Fair by the Ohio Academy of Science,
and when we were one of them, which was really
pretty gratifying.

Speaker 1 (01:28:30):
Yeah, in just two years, doctor, I mean, and this
irks me. You know, you you pointed the Singapore math method.
It has worked so wonderfully for the country that yes,
it's a worthy endeavor to look into it and find
out why they're so great at math. Maybe we might
want to adopt that approach. Welcome to the right way
to do things. It's like critical analysis of the of

(01:28:52):
the education landscape. Much like you teach critical analysis to
your students at the classical academy. Maybe more educators should
be involved in critical analysis of what's working and what's
not and adopt what's working like the methodology at Since
a classical academy which got you this to the state
recognition in just two years.

Speaker 2 (01:29:10):
Go yeacter pretty unbelievable, it really is.

Speaker 6 (01:29:15):
Yeah.

Speaker 15 (01:29:16):
And then in the in the first year last year,
you know, we were we were rated the number one
charter school in the state of Ohio for early literacy.
That's two hundred and fifty charter schools. We finished number
one in the state. And actually we were if you
consider all the public schools in southwest Ohio across like

(01:29:38):
ten counties, all the Greater Cincinnati area, of all the
public schools, whether charter or district, we were number four
in early literacy.

Speaker 2 (01:29:46):
That was in our first year.

Speaker 15 (01:29:48):
So even when you're talking about, you know, some of
the great public schools that we have in Indian Hill
and Wyoming or Madeira number four, and our results this
year have been even better. So, I mean, we're just
off to a lightning start and the demand for the
school and its growth has just been a really pretty

(01:30:10):
exceptional We've got We're going to be a full kindergarten
through eighth grade this year with seven hundred and fifty
kids and north to four hundred students on the wait
list to get in.

Speaker 1 (01:30:21):
See, and you anticipated where I was going. If you
build it, and you build it better, they will come
and they will stand in line and get on a
wait list to go. This is what I think is
the biggest concern for the public schools. They don't want
free choice and they don't want school choice for the students.
They don't want to have to compete with a Sincinni
classical academy because they can't. I mean, that's really what

(01:30:41):
this boils down to. And you know what, doctor Harding's
my point being, ultimately they could compete if they adopted
these teaching methodologies. That's so heartbreaking.

Speaker 2 (01:30:53):
Absolutely I agree.

Speaker 6 (01:30:55):
So what is the battle?

Speaker 2 (01:30:57):
You know a lot of people try to get on
the school boards and things.

Speaker 15 (01:31:00):
But you know, my brother was the president of the
Maryland State School Board a while ago, and he fought
that battle for ten years and he can get nowhere.
The interests are just so entrenched, the.

Speaker 1 (01:31:14):
Interests which are not the interests of the students and
interest in teaching students and educating students, but they're.

Speaker 15 (01:31:22):
The interest of the adults and of the educators and
of the publishing companies.

Speaker 2 (01:31:27):
Which you're absolutely right.

Speaker 1 (01:31:28):
Publishing companies can teach, the can print classical education materials,
they wouldn't be out of a job. I mean, this
is just crazy, and it's not in their interest because
they're demonstrably failing the country and the students. I mean,
your school is an illustration of it. You got people
standing around the block trying to apply and get in.
You know, it doesn't benefit them. Their failure hurts them

(01:31:50):
as well, because people want to flee that learning environment
because it's not one. That's what creates the demand for
educational choice. My child is in a failing school, they're
not learning anything. I want a better choice. Their failure
has facilitated your success, I.

Speaker 15 (01:32:09):
Agree, but they're not held accountable because they have monopolies
on you know, publicly funded education, and they fight like
heck to maintain those monopolies.

Speaker 1 (01:32:20):
So well, doctor Harding's I want to congratulate you for
the amazing successes since our classical academy has had just
the two short years it's been around now they are
currently is K through eight, of course of the school
year is filled seven hundred and fifty. Are you currently
taking applications for the twenty four twenty five school year
or have you already got a waitlist on that one?

Speaker 15 (01:32:41):
No, that opens up. That will open up in December
September through story next year, and next year we'll be
adding a ninth grade class and then we'll keep going
until we have our first graduating class in about five
four years from now. So, so we do have exciting
news on the campus front. You know, we went through

(01:33:05):
quite a saga trying to find a permanent location where
we could locate you know, all K through twelve grade,
thirteen hundred students.

Speaker 2 (01:33:12):
Right, and we've decided to have two campuses.

Speaker 15 (01:33:18):
We're going to be purchasing our currently leased campus and
reading for K through four, and we're going to be
purchasing and developing a nine acre property, the former Bellcan
Building and Blue Ash that's going to be home to
grades five through twelve. So and we're going to be
moving in there next summer. So we're really excited now

(01:33:40):
to know where we're going to be for the next
several decades.

Speaker 1 (01:33:45):
Amazing, amazing results, great news, fantastic, it's good for everybody.
Find out about it online. Good Since yclassical dot com,
you'll find them right there. Since I'm sorry dot org,
since you with the y Classical dot Org. Doctor Hardings,
congratulate relations on the success. Thank you for what you're
doing on behalf of the young people actually getting educations
in this classical environment. And I wish you all the

(01:34:07):
success of the world as you rapidly expand because of
your success. Thanks so much, Bryance, my pleasure. You always
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Speaker 1 (01:37:03):
Some thirty here fifty five krcite talk station, A very
happy Friday Eve to you. One hour from now. I
heard mediaviation expert Jay Rattleff after the top of the
hour news we're gonna hear from Jay Carson for the
Buckeye Institute on a since a union wage theft case
and right now the return of Donovan and Neil for
Americans for Prosperity kind of freaked me out of the
subject matter. Falling off the fiscal cliff, Donovan, that's the

(01:37:24):
reality we're living here in the United States of America.
It's thirty five trillion dollar hole in the ground with
debt service ode on that every year, and that pile
or that hole keeps getting digged deep, deeper and deeper,
meaning more and more of our precious tax dollars are
going to debt service. We are falling off a fiscal cliff.
Welcome back, Donovan, It's great.

Speaker 6 (01:37:42):
To have you on.

Speaker 11 (01:37:43):
Well, happy to be here and raise the alarm on
something that's coming down the line once we get past
the election next.

Speaker 1 (01:37:50):
Year, healthcare. So I had a lot of opportunity to
get something done. I guess I have a sorry jaded
and cynical perspective, but whether Congress will actually do anything
along the line of what you're recommending, But I guess
next year does represent a great opportunity to sort of
write the ship of financial disaster our healthcare has brought us.

Speaker 11 (01:38:09):
Yeah, well, and what's happening in twenty twenty five. I think,
you know, on your show, we're talking about what's going
on in Columbus, or we're talking about, you know, folks
getting involved in the November election. But the reality is,
regardless of who we send to Washington when the dust
settles after November fifth, there's some really serious pieces of

(01:38:32):
legislation expiring. We've hit those points, so from the Tax
Cuts and Jobs Act, where you're looking at about four
and a half trillion dollars you know, in spending our
revenue not collected or potentially collected depending on how they
go about following through with Trump's tax cuts to healthcare
like you're talking about, and a number of provisions in

(01:38:53):
the Affordable Care Act which have hit there, hit there
into life, and Congress is being lobby to continue on
let them go. There's some really furious challenges face in
our country next year that we're going to need leadership
in Washington.

Speaker 7 (01:39:07):
I'll tackle well.

Speaker 1 (01:39:09):
Looking through your list, I just I keep circling the
word during the pandemic, pandemic was a predicate for them
doing all kinds of program expansion and handing over billions
and billions of additional dollars out there that the original
legislation didn't call for. So we have the like, for example,
the Affordable Care Act Enhanced Subsidy that extended ACA to

(01:39:32):
provide tax credit subsidies and taking away the income cap
on eligibility basically it hugely expanded the program, but that
was a temporary measure. It designed to deal with the pandemic. Well,
we're out of the pandemic the economy, accord to the Democrats,
everything is swimming in the economy. Everybody's got a job,
we're all doing great. So why would these things be
extended which they're planning on doing well.

Speaker 11 (01:39:53):
You know, when anytime government gives a handout right or
or offers, you know, starts given to different groups, it's
hard to take that back, right. Everyone will say, hey, look,
well you know past this now, it's temporary, it'll last
you know, seven to ten years, and we're not coming
back Brian to ask for that again. Just give it
to us now through this crisis. Well, the reality is,

(01:40:14):
you know, these things never go away.

Speaker 15 (01:40:17):
They come back.

Speaker 11 (01:40:18):
Right, you have a you have a champion in Congress
who lobbies for them, or he's got everyone's got their
stories about how this particular subsidy or you know, tax
credit helped their family, when in reality, we need to
get serious about what all of these handouts, giveaways and
carboffs are doing. To what you pointed out. I was
at an event we were doing yesterday in Northwest Ohio.

(01:40:38):
I got the little on my phone. We get thirty
five trillion dollars. Yeah, thirty five trillion. It's insanity, and
you know it's it's it's death by a thousand cuts too, right.
There's there certainly are these larger pieces like the so
called Inflation Reduction Act or the you know, the infrastructure
bill they put out there as stimulus during COVID, but

(01:41:00):
it's also this depth by a thousand cuts approach that
you know, various pieces of legislation over the years, through
good times at bad times, crisises and slow and steady,
you get to this problem and it's coming to a
head next year.

Speaker 1 (01:41:15):
It sure is. I'm put a pause. I'll bring you back.
I'll talk about some of these other extensions and things
that don't need to be extended, would ultimately save the
American taxpayer significant amounts of money. More with Donovan Neil
from Americans for Prosperity. You can get involved AFP action
dot com as a place to do that help them
out and help yourself at the same time. Seven thirty
five one More with donov An Neil coming up. Hang

(01:41:35):
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Speaker 7 (01:42:48):
Fifty five KRC HI heard radio.

Speaker 1 (01:42:53):
Here's your nine first one and wether forecast. Every day
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ninety one for the high today, it's going to be
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(01:43:14):
Go with all those right now seventy one degrees. Time
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Chuck ingram on fifty five KRC the talk.

Speaker 1 (01:43:43):
Station seven forty here fifty about kerrsee talk station Happy
E Friday Eve. AFP Action Americans Were Prosperity afpaction dot
com help out Donovan Neil from Americans for Prosperity. We're
talking about the fiscal cliff. I'm coming. One of the
things I serve in terms of what can be done
insofar as these extensions and expansion of money under the

(01:44:05):
healthcare is the this reduction of payments from the Medicaid
DSH extender. Medicaid pays disproportionate share hospital payments to states,
and that's for the purpose of, you know, giving hospitals
money when they treat a larger than average number of
the population that does not have insurance, they're uninsured. The

(01:44:28):
Affordable Care Act includes reductions in these payments, as your
notes point out, on the correct assumption that the Affordable
Care Act reduces the numbers of insured. However, notwithstanding that
factual reality, Congress postponed this reduction each year, and the
leaders want to do it again next year. They have
an opportunity to do this. It's the right thing to do,
is cut off this money. And yet here we are

(01:44:49):
again they don't.

Speaker 11 (01:44:52):
It's eight billion dollars. I mean, it's something. It's one
of the things, you know, you you know, I was
taking a look at that this, you know, some of
our internal talking point some of them messaging and areas
we're pointing members of Congress too, in conversations our team's
having on the hill. And you know, you look at
these you try to get both sides of the argument here.
Every one of these things. The American Hospital Association is

(01:45:14):
working to extend. They want us they want to see it. Why, Brian,
Because it's money, it's free money from the federal government.
They don't want these programs to end. They lot, you know,
organizations lobby pretty Affordable Care Act. But then you know,
so that puts more money into the Hospital Association. And
then you know, on the back end, we say, well, hey,
we now we've got some trade offs, right, we don't

(01:45:35):
have as many people uninsured, we don't need to be
pumping as much money into Medicaid Medicare. But when you
go to do that lobby its, show up, show up
on the hill and say no, no, those tax dollars, right,
those taxlers, we still need those, We still need those subsidies.
You got to push that off, Push that off to
the next Congress. We don't need you to make it permanent.
Just push it off for two more years and two

(01:45:55):
more years. And that's the problem we're in, right, It's
that you know, eight million that just keeps getting pushed off.
When we talk about death by a thousand cups here, well, and.

Speaker 1 (01:46:05):
You know, it's this kind of thing. It wasn't COVID
was like yesterday in terms of time. I know, we
struggled through it. It was twenty twenty whatever, But it's
over right, And I just kind of wonder, in this
short period of time since we got COVID and we
got rid of COVID, basically a four year time frame
between then and now, what in the hell did they
know these organizations and institutions before these extensions and these

(01:46:26):
expansions do they seem to be doing? Okay, they weren't
going out of business, I mean they did without this
money previously. Why can't we go back to the way
it was? Donovan?

Speaker 11 (01:46:37):
I'm with you until we're advocating or right, we're advocating
on behalf of the taxpayer here, and we have the
American citizen in fiscal stewardship for the future of our country.
But that's not how a lot of places operate. Right
When if you're a trade association or you represent a
particular business entity or entity that benefits from being heavily

(01:46:58):
subsidized by the federal goal the taxpayers of this country,
you're noted sentivized to go to Capitol Hill and say, hey,
we just don't need that money anymore. You find new
ways to spend it. Right, it's the same thing we see.
We saw the schools and bring it to the state.
Right when Ohio enacted the lottery, the idea there was
we're going to take the lottery money and we'll fund
education with the lottery money. We have we spent less

(01:47:21):
or have we only used lottery money for education and
said no, you kept spending money. Which we can have
that conversation on another time on the Money Show. But
the point is when the government gives a handout out,
it's hard for the government to pull that hand out
back in. And that's what we're seeing here and it's
putting us on this fiscal cliff.

Speaker 6 (01:47:39):
It's precipitous fiscal cliffs.

Speaker 1 (01:47:41):
And I don't think we're.

Speaker 11 (01:47:42):
Being dramatic here in twenty twenty five, when we send
a new Congress to Washington and a new president to
the White House.

Speaker 1 (01:47:48):
Well it's it's theoretically easy to say no, Donovan. I mean,
our representatives are they're representing the people. It's the people's
taxes that they are giving out and handing out out,
and apparently they haven't gathered up ane of those tax
dollars that all of these programs have dug us into
this thirty five trillion dollar hole we're talking about. So

(01:48:08):
they owe it to us to be more responsible, rather
than owing it to some individual group or organization who
comes up there and screams at them and talks about
lobbying dollars and campaign contributions. There's the fundamental breakdown in
the system right there. Our politicians just do not have spines.

Speaker 11 (01:48:26):
It's funny to me, absolutely. And what's funny to me
is you read some history books or you know, early
American history, and you hear about these you know, congress
or leadership that was very tight with the purse you know,
they were notoriously tight with the purse. How often do
you hear that about Congress in recent history? Right, No,
nobody's saying anybody in Congress is tight with the purse.
We haven't had a president in recent years who's been

(01:48:50):
tight with the purse. And that's really what we need,
right We need to demand that accountability and in bolden
our elected officials to be tight with the purse because
we put them, We put the money in the purse,
our purse taxpayers here in America, and we need to
challenge our lawmakers to be more accountable there and when
they're when they fail to do that, Brian, because it's
an Electionay, I'm going to bring it there. We've got
a hold then accountable out the ballot box by selecting

(01:49:12):
better folks who better will represent our interests and what
our interests are. Our physical stewardship in this country.

Speaker 1 (01:49:19):
But I wish we had some fiscal stewardship. I mean,
oh my god, this is just this is one of
the biggest stresses I have is just looking at this
inability to help reign in this the reach of federal
government and the cost that it comes with. Real quick here,
my understanding is the debt limits suspension ends January first.

Speaker 11 (01:49:39):
It's part of this sprainsmanship that we've been we've been
operating under, right, Brian. They sort of kind of got
things settled the last go around. I think it's been
been pretty quiet, you know, quiet because we just agreed
we're going to spend more money. But you know, we
need Congress to get to a regular order of business
where it is creating budget bills and sending them to
the President for signature, rather than this brinksmanship and continuing

(01:50:02):
a resolution approach that has been the normal mode of
operations for years now.

Speaker 1 (01:50:10):
Political expedience brings us these continuing resolutions.

Speaker 11 (01:50:14):
A lot easier to put your head in the sand
and ignore the real problems than to dig in and
actually solve them.

Speaker 1 (01:50:21):
Sad but true got to do better job of sending
people to Washington. There's no question about it, Donovan and
Eil that you can do that by helping out. That's
AFP action dot com, right, Donovan, get.

Speaker 11 (01:50:32):
Involved with AFP actions. They're the ones working to send
better members to Congress, better folks to better folks to
the Senate. And you know what we do at AFP
and Eric's prosperity rights. We hold those folks feet to
the fire. It's not just on election day, we hold
them accountable after election day as well.

Speaker 1 (01:50:47):
Yep, you're you're you're representing our interest when you go
in and you scream at congressmen and women about changing
the fiscal dynamic and reality. So there is a group
fighting against the lobbyists who are demanding more and extensions
of all this money. It's Americans for prosperity and I
certainly appreciate you doing that throughout the year. Donovan and Neil,
You're always welcome on the program. Keep up the great work.
Until we talk, best to health to you and the

(01:51:09):
crew at AFP.

Speaker 6 (01:51:11):
We'll see you later.

Speaker 1 (01:51:12):
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Speaker 7 (01:53:05):
Fifty five krc Ron.

Speaker 1 (01:53:07):
Wilson Here, you know I've been using Acno why know
how you can support We've got people talking.

Speaker 3 (01:53:13):
The opinions of the mindleague ill on America is ridiculous.

Speaker 10 (01:53:16):
On fifty five krc D talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:53:22):
Eight oh five The fifty five KRCD talk station Happy
Friday eve looking forward to the bottom. They are as
always I heard. Mediaviation expert Jay Ratliff joins a program
on Thursdays at E thirty. In the meantime, I'm always
happy to talk to folks from the Buckeye Institute. You
can find them online at Buckeyeinstitute dot org. Join me
this morning. J Carson, senior litigator for the Buckeye Institute

(01:53:43):
with a really troubling case he's working on, and let
me start. Jay Carson, welcome back to the fifty five
KRC Morning Show to thank you and the Buckeye Institute
for doing well helping out the little guys. Really, what
this boils down to having been in litigation for sixteen
years and it's been a while, I've been eighteen years
out of practice, but still my license. I know how
expensive it is. And folks like Nicole Little John, there

(01:54:05):
is no way in God's green earth she could afford
to go out and independently hire retain counsel and fight
against her former union who continues to take money out
of her paycheck for union dues for a union that
she doesn't belong with. Jay Carson, walcome into the morning show.
It's great having you on. Thank you so happy to
be here, just you know, God bless the work you do,
because you know, let me ask you real quick, just

(01:54:27):
a parenthetical question. I know the hourly rate for lawyers
is way across the spectrum. I mean, you may hire
somebody for two hundred bucks an hour, and then there
are lawyers out there in the world that charge more
than one thousand dollars an hour. And I just want
to see, what's the largest hourly rate you've ever run
across in your in your work with the buck Antstitute
or elsewhere in your legal practice.

Speaker 6 (01:54:46):
Jay, Oh, the largest that I've run across. I guess
you know. We do run into folks more of the
big city on the coast. Yeah, who charged those nine
hundred thousand dollars an hour rates? But what we do
with buck Guy is we take these cases pro bono
pro bono, so folks who want to challenge them are

(01:55:08):
out of penning.

Speaker 1 (01:55:10):
And that's what's so damn important about the Bucker Institute
and other similar organizations who will fight the good fight
on behalf of these outrageous factual scenarios. Let's start with
the background on this. When you represent Nicole little John
my understanding is in June twenty twenty two, she quit
the afl CIO union that she belonged to. She's a
hospital employee. She notified them and they accepted her resignation,

(01:55:33):
but they keep taking dues out of her paycheck.

Speaker 6 (01:55:37):
Yeah, so what happens Actually this is this is the
second time around she has tracked their break the union.
She said, listen, no thanks, I'm this is not for
me and I don't want to pay dues anymore. And look,
you've got an absolute constitutional rate not to join a union.
Screen Court said dot decades ago.

Speaker 2 (01:56:00):
And then in twenty.

Speaker 6 (01:56:01):
Eighteen, in a case called Janis, a scrimpoint said, you
know what, and the union can't make you pay if
you're a public union member, the union can't make you
pay what they call association for these fair share fees
whatever you want to call them, which were essentially the
same thing as union do. Is what happened after Janice

(01:56:23):
was a whole lot of folks said, yeah, I've had
it with this. I don't support what the union's doing
with my money. I want to and keep this in
my own paycheck because I'm not seeing any services coming
from the union. And a case out of the Ninth
Circuit in California cannot said, well, yeah, they'll go up.

(01:56:44):
Belcal can apply if you were already out of the
union and if you never joined it in the first place.
But you know, if you signed up and signed a
contract that says I'm going to be a member for
so many years, then you have to still keep paying
even though you can quit for constitutional purposes, right the union,
I'll send you the newsletter or whatever services that we're
going to pro bucket, but you're still going to keep

(01:57:06):
paying dues. And it's like it's like the gym membership
that you can't get out of, right, Yeah, that's that's
really sort of what this is.

Speaker 1 (01:57:14):
Well, I immediately thought the word that came to my
mind is is theft? Like this, you could make an
argument to a prosecutor that this is actual theft. I mean,
you have a civil case involving this little john and
you see the American Federation of State counting in this employees.
I get that, but I mean, seriously, if they went
over and they just pulled money out of her purses
that sat on her desk, you could get them in

(01:57:36):
front of a judge on theft grounds.

Speaker 6 (01:57:39):
Well, so the tact we've taken on this right because
the federal court said, hey, this is a contract issue.
That's that's what this case out of the Ninth Circuit
said a couple of years ago. It said, look, this
is this is not about free speech anymore like Janice was.
This is just about a contract. And uh, you know,
somebody could wave their their constitutional rights through a contract.

(01:58:02):
Happens every day. But this is not a job for
the federal courts to be looking at from a First
Amendment perspective. So what we did with with miss Littlegog
case in another case in Ohio Darling that we've delt
depending before the High Supreme Court right now, as we said, okay,
then let's take a look at is this a valid contract? Right,

(01:58:23):
Let's go back to basic Ohio contract law. What's the
federal courts are saying. That's what we ought to do
and say, look, this isn't a valid contract because one
you didn't tell me what I was signing up for. Two,
I'm not getting anything in return. Three you know I
was sort of forced into this. Or there's a what's
what's called you know, un liquidated damages that are that

(01:58:44):
are unfairly unrelated to the actual damage that someone might get. Right,
So we raised all these these contractual claims and defenses.
And the first thing that had happened because of this
Darling case was so, well you got to go first
of the State Employee Relations Board.

Speaker 1 (01:59:03):
So so that's like that is that like the court
of original jurisdiction for these labor issues.

Speaker 6 (01:59:07):
Well, so this is this is and again I don't
want to get too much into the weeds, but but
there's this jurisdictional fight of so you know, federally, you
tried to bring the cases in federal court. They said, no, no,
this is state contract actor.

Speaker 1 (01:59:18):
Right.

Speaker 6 (01:59:19):
We brought a contract case in that Darnand case I mentioned,
and that court said no, no, you got to go
to this board first because it might be an unfair
labor practice. And you know, again it's not.

Speaker 2 (01:59:32):
It's contract. No, I know, it says right there, you know.

Speaker 6 (01:59:38):
And so we go to the State Employment Relations Board
and they say this is not an unfair Labor Practices Act,
which we knew all along. Uh So now we said, okay, finally,
now we're going to go to uh Common Police Court
and say please rule on this contract. And so that's
that's sort of the games that we've been playing, right,
It's kind of this whack a wall of where can

(01:59:59):
you even bring this claim?

Speaker 1 (02:00:02):
You illustrate my point at the outset wonderfully. They're trying
to wage a battle of attrition. It's like law fare.
And I've been involved in this when I practiced in Chicago,
Salt Earth litigation was bi directive. Some of the type
of litigation we practice make their lives miserable and see
if we can push them into a financial situation where
they aren't gonna want to keep throwing money at the case.

(02:00:23):
That's a fair play in litigation. It sucks, but that's
one of the reasons it's so damn expensive. That's what
they're doing them, is little John. And that's the importance
of the Buckeye Institute, because okay, we got to play
this game. You will play this game on behalf of
someone who could never afford to play it. So they
make you go through the hoop of going in front
of serb. Fine, they throw it out and say it's
not a this isn't a labor practice. It is a

(02:00:44):
contractual issue. You're kind of back to square wom when
you find your suit in Hamilton County Common Police Court.

Speaker 6 (02:00:50):
Yep, exactly. And look, the other thing that's that's troubling
about the nature of these cases and the big scheme
of things. They're kind of nickeling time, right. You know,
the total that miss little John is seeking in compensation
of money that she got to be paid back at
after she left the union, it's about two thousand bucks.

(02:01:13):
And again and for the hire a lawyer to go
after two thousand bucks, there's just no way that makes
sense economically, especially in these cases where I think the
unions tend to for the just the purpose you know,
again they're they're they're well funded, uh, and keep establishing
the principle that you know, they they're not going to
pay and you're going to be stuck in this contract

(02:01:35):
for another you know, in most cases, right, you have
this opt out date and it can be, depending on
your your collective Barney agreement, a year or a couple
of years in the future where you're still stuck paying
those dues. So I think they mostly look at, okay, look,
we'll keep everybody in it, and people aren't going to

(02:01:56):
fight this because we'll figure out what's what's the point
for a couple hundred bucks, a couple of thousand bucks
for another another year, another two years. It's not worth
you need spending the money to do it. But but
the thing is, you know, while they're doing that, they're
they're taking your money and using it for purposes that
that you don't want it used for. And that's that's
a problem under a constitution.

Speaker 1 (02:02:17):
But the consideration for the contractual relationship, she pays money
and gets union representation along with the materials and the
emails and whatever. They accepted her resignation. They didn't say, no,
you have a contract that lasts for X number of time,
we will not accept your resignation. Wait for the contract
to expire and don't renew it, and then a relationship
is over. But the if they accepted her resignation and

(02:02:40):
she's no longer in the loop anymore than the consideration
that formed the basis for the contract has disappeared exactly.

Speaker 6 (02:02:48):
Yep. That's yeah, you got it.

Speaker 2 (02:02:50):
You could you could come back to practice right today.

Speaker 6 (02:02:53):
That's exactly our argument. It's one thing if you say, okay,
you're stuck with this, but you're still going to begin
in the magazine or the benefits or whatever, you've subscribe to.
But no, in this case, you got she received the
letter from the union saying, UH, sorry to see you go.
We'll please consider coming back.

Speaker 3 (02:03:15):
Uh.

Speaker 6 (02:03:15):
And you know you can't vote in union elections and
you can't do this. You can't do this, You've lost
all these rates.

Speaker 12 (02:03:20):
UH.

Speaker 6 (02:03:21):
And in the meantime, we're going to keep collecting the money.

Speaker 1 (02:03:25):
How pervasive is that's?

Speaker 6 (02:03:26):
That's that's the thing that's just sort of ludicrous.

Speaker 1 (02:03:28):
That absolutely is How pervasive is this practice? I mean,
is it just the A f l C, I O
or other unions doing the unions doing the same thing?

Speaker 11 (02:03:37):
Are there?

Speaker 1 (02:03:38):
Is she been being treated exactly like everyone else in
her situation?

Speaker 6 (02:03:44):
I would I would tend to say, you know, it
varies from from uh union the union, I would say,
most of the union's public un Again, this this applies
just to public sector unions, right, UH have adopted these
same type practices. Now, in my experience and with the
gaming for buck Eye, we've had a number of cases
where we've been able to either before filing suit or

(02:04:06):
after filing suit, reach out to the union and they
will be reasonable and say, yeah, look, because you know
the warriors who are representing them saying the amount of
money that's that's worth a year, it's just not worth
the fight. Plus there's the chance that they might get
unfavorable precedent. Right. So we've been able to settle a
good number of these cases, but sometimes we get ones

(02:04:29):
that the union is digging its heals in and you know,
is not willing to settle. And this is one of
those cases.

Speaker 1 (02:04:38):
Well, since you're now in Hamilton County Common Police Court,
and of course they continue to fight this all the
way up potentially the High Supreme Court, where I think
think the odds, given the makeup of the court are
pretty substantial that you're going to win. Ultimately. You think
this will also settle out settle in the final analysis
or refunder money, and maybe even pay you your attorney's fees.

Speaker 6 (02:04:56):
Jay, We'll see, we'll see. My sense is on the
attorney sees this is sort of downside, right if if
we were making the constitutional claim in federal court, you know,
we would have at or a stas great rate to
claim the attorney seedes under just a plain old reach
of contract. The case you delt, you know, well, well

(02:05:20):
we'll run them up the flag fall.

Speaker 1 (02:05:22):
Got to give it a shot. Jay Garson and Jay Carson,
senior litigator with the Buck Eye Institute, help them out.
I mean, you can donate and help these wonderful organizations out.
I see it right there, red donate button on your
website Buckeyeinstitute dot org. Jay Carson, thank you on behalf
of I know Ms. Little John probably really truly appreciates
what you're doing for her, But you're doing this for
all the union members out our former union members out

(02:05:43):
there fighting this good fight and hopefully getting some established
precedent that is in favor of those who quit and
letting them keep the damn money that they're entitled to keep.
Keep it up, Jake, thanks very much for the time
you spent today bringing my listeners up to speed on
this and what you were doing at the Buckeye Institute.
Thanks for having me my pleasure, my friend eighteen fitty
five Ker City Talks Station to stick around. We've got

(02:06:03):
Jay Ratliffe coming up just a few minutes. First word
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Speaker 7 (02:07:28):
Dot net fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (02:07:33):
Here you go. We have a partly Sunday with a
chance of showers and storms. They say it'll have an
afternoon if we get them ninety one for the High.
More showers and storms likely over night down to seventy two,
another chance for those tomorrow otherwise partly sunny in eighty
seven for the High down to seventy overnight with likely
showers and storms, follow by another chance of sours and
storms on Saturday, with the mostly Sunday day otherwise, and
I have eighty six seventy four right now. Time for

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Arthur Poenix Sands Sports medicine redefines recovery to get you
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slowing traffic, and a wreck down just outside eleven and
on forty eight at Cook Chuck Ingram Month fifty five
KOs the talk station.

Speaker 1 (02:08:33):
Hey thirty one three about KR see talk station love
this time a week because get talked to. iHeartMedia aviation
expert Jay Ratlive also stock trader extraordinary. That's his business man.
He teaches people how to trade stocks and that's where
he makes the money. Jay Ratliffe, always great to have
you on my program. And I reason I mentioned the
stock thing again at the outset is because of the
FED stating yes, it looks like we might get a

(02:08:53):
rate cut in September, conveniently in advance of the November election.

Speaker 16 (02:08:58):
It's gonna be fun to watch because because Jerome Powell,
I do not believe based on his pass as the
FED chair, has been swayed one bit at all with
regards to any political pressure.

Speaker 1 (02:09:10):
From either side.

Speaker 16 (02:09:11):
And if they do drop something in September after years
of not having any interest rate cuts, if they do it,
it's gonna tick off the Republicans. If they don't do it,
it's gonna tick off the Democrats. So it's going to
be interesting to see in September how things go. But Brian,
there's a lot of real estate between now and then,
and this is this is a historical week you and

(02:09:32):
I are talking in because the Dow the to infinity
and beyond buzz light year crowd. We have seen the
doll at forty one thousand this week. We've also seen
the national debt hit thirty five trillion. I hear people
talking about the Dow, which is a couple dozen stocks,
blah blah blah. But I don't know at what point

(02:09:53):
you get worried about the debt when you're spending so
much on interest that it exceeds what you spend on
your national defense.

Speaker 6 (02:09:59):
But it's just nuts.

Speaker 16 (02:10:02):
And of course, of those two records this week, we
only seem to be talking about one, and I saw.

Speaker 1 (02:10:07):
A report this morning. I guess one of the auditing
offices in the government or whatever was doing analysis of
the status of our national defense relative to China, for example,
and this whole concept that we may be on a
multiple war front and basically said we'd lose, I mean,
we could, we could not beat China. And what their
suggestion was in this report is, brace yourself. The budget

(02:10:29):
for the defense should be between one point three trillion
to his high at four point five trillion annually. Yeah. See,
and if you're worried.

Speaker 16 (02:10:37):
About it, you're serious. If you're serious, excuse me, Brian,
about protecting our way of life and allowing our kids
and grandkids to enjoy what we've been blessed with. This
idea that we can kind of you know, pay for
programs at the expense of national defense. I'm sorry, you
just can't do it. I wish you didn't have to,
but look, this is this is how the world is.

(02:10:57):
It's always been and sadly probably always will be, and
you just have to take precautions. And sadly, appeasement and
so many other things tend to get in the way
of people who want to give everybody the benefit of
the doubt. The problem is when you do that and
you find out they're not what they're saying, there's something else,
it's too late for you to defend yourself. And yeah,
then you're the point where much of what people have

(02:11:20):
laid their life down on we just let slip through
our fingers.

Speaker 1 (02:11:23):
Yes we do. Anyhow, moving away from that gloom and doom. Oh, look,
Delta is out five hundred million dollars because of crowd
Strike five and they're going to sue CrowdStrike, which I
understand they probably have to do. Their insurance company would
insist on it because something tells me Delta has business
interruption insurance, but it probably doesn't kick in until more
than ten to twenty million dollars of losses with a
large multi billion dollar corporations self insured retention. But this

(02:11:47):
is just the tip of the iceberg for CrowdStrike, because there.

Speaker 16 (02:11:50):
Was it's unbelievable that so many industries were impacting. Of course,
Delta was the airline that was the most. And of
course you know the CEO for Delta Bash who is
here with us with calm Arat for a period of time,
who's leading Delta that he was under a lot of
pressure because the minute it hit well, he had a
prior engagement to go to the opening Olympics and the

(02:12:12):
open ceremony, so he jets off to Paris while the
whole airline's just falling apart, and the employees are like, Okay,
maybe you couldn't do anything, but at least you can
be here to be here with us, and instead he
zips off. Delta's the airline of the Olympics. I get that,
but I think I think a better leader would have said,
you know what, I'm gonna roll up my sleeves. I'm
gonna stick with my folks so that and I'll send

(02:12:34):
somebody else to take care of what I need to
be doing somewhere else. He didn't, And of course, Delta
canceled more flights in a weekend than they canceled normally
in an entire year. And I mean, Delta's gone one
hundred days in a row Brian without a single flight
cancelation before anywhere in the world, zero flight cancelations, one
hundred straight days, and then you've got a period of

(02:12:56):
four to five days where they canceled more than five
thousand flights. I mean, it was absolute chaos. And yeah,
I mean, it's going to be something they're going to
be passing on the Department of Transportations also looking into say, hey,
why other carriers had twenty two to twenty three hundred
cancelations and you guys had two plus times that you know,

(02:13:17):
why did you drop the ball as.

Speaker 6 (02:13:18):
Bad as you did?

Speaker 16 (02:13:19):
And I think that that's a legitimate question that demands answers.

Speaker 1 (02:13:22):
It is even though crowdstrikes fault, there is a legitimate
question built into that. You just pointed it out. We'll
continue with Jay Ratliffe in a moment, got quite a
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(02:14:54):
Fifty five car the talk station. I'm really excited about
more talk station. I heard mediaviation next for Jay Rale.
Real quick, Jay, I know you send me list of topics,
and I promise I'm going to get to them after
I ask another question unrelated to the topic list, because
I know you're fuck please, I expect at least one
of those. I know we talk about Boeing all the time.

(02:15:16):
We have lots of problems with the Bowing seven thirty
seven Max, the manufacturing, in production problems, et cetera, et cetera,
et cetera. We got a couple of astronauts that are
stranding and outer space.

Speaker 16 (02:15:27):
What and what's on the side of their spacecraft a
Bowing nicker? If that's not tempting fate, brother, I don't
know what it is. I would go into space any
day of the week, but if there was a Bowe
sticker on the side of that.

Speaker 2 (02:15:39):
Bad boy, I'm sorry.

Speaker 16 (02:15:40):
I don't think I could even at the lifelong bucket
item list. I couldn't do it and need the poor
people I mean, and they're trying to keep the best
face about it, But I mean, are they gonna just
they ran a series of tests this week on various
thrusters and they've got almost thirty that they were testing
to see how things were going and how much they

(02:16:01):
leaked and how much they didn't and everything else. And
it's just been nuts. I mean, I was worried about
them getting up there. I didn't for the first second
worry about them getting back. And I was kidding people saying,
you know, Life Alert makes this device that helps if
you can't get up. What about if you can't get down.
I mean, these four people have been up there for

(02:16:23):
a long period of time, and is it going to
take somebody else to go up and.

Speaker 1 (02:16:26):
Bring them back?

Speaker 6 (02:16:27):
I don't know.

Speaker 16 (02:16:28):
But if Boeing needed, all they needed was that to
go off with that hitch and they finally had their
single piece of good news for the year.

Speaker 1 (02:16:34):
Yeah, and Brian, they couldn't even do that. I know,
it's one of the reasons I bring it out. It's
like piling on, but it's all brought about by their
own wealth failures. But I mean, my understanding is that capsule,
whatever they're in has a finite life to it that
like maximum ninety days max. And they've already been up
there like sixty and to.

Speaker 16 (02:16:53):
Their credit, they're not wanting to do anything that's going
to kind of push that envelope. Much to their credit,
they're saying, look, we may be embarrassed out of our minds,
but we're going to make sure that it's exactly as
it needs to to bring these two people back. And
I'm going to celebrate that because those engineers are trying
to do everything they can. They only have so many options,
and at that point in time, then you're gonna have

(02:17:15):
to say, Okay, once we pass that shelf life, if
you will have this particular vehicle at a single time
in space, what's going to happen?

Speaker 6 (02:17:22):
I just I don't know, and it's going to be interesting.

Speaker 16 (02:17:26):
But I feel for those people, and look, I mean,
they may be having the time of their life saying cool.
It's like I've been on some of these vintage airplanes
that come in like a B twenty nine to land
and somebody's on the runway. They got to fight to
go around. It takes twenty more minutes to come back
and land. I'm loving it because it's more time in
the aircraft. Maybe they're enjoying that extra time in space.

Speaker 6 (02:17:46):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (02:17:46):
Well, they would have had to pack in a heap
load of value for me to get on that thing
to start with, and I would need massive quantities on
a daily basis. I'd be freaking out.

Speaker 16 (02:17:58):
You know, you're a bunch of profets, and look for
a lot of them. This has been a lifelong dream,
and it's you're getting it and then you're getting extra time.
It's you know, if you're wired that way, this is
something that you're up there contributing, having a good old time.
And I mean the book you can write when you
get back I survived Boeing.

Speaker 1 (02:18:15):
I think it would be a best seller, fair enough.

Speaker 10 (02:18:20):
Not me.

Speaker 1 (02:18:20):
I'm not signing up for that job. Okay, call me yellow,
call me a whim. That's okay. I can live with that.
And let's see here, airlines can chalk up a win
right now.

Speaker 16 (02:18:31):
And temporary win, I guess we could call it that.
Back in April, the Department of Transportation, after like three years,
finally decided that they were going to require airlines to
issue all the upfront disclosure fees airline fees.

Speaker 1 (02:18:46):
Back then, everything right up.

Speaker 16 (02:18:47):
Front, so that long before you got to the checkout. Now, wow,
where did all this come from? Consumers could make a
better decision, which I thought was great.

Speaker 2 (02:18:57):
And again.

Speaker 1 (02:18:59):
I've told you I don't.

Speaker 16 (02:19:01):
Like to buiden administration at all, but I love how
the Department of Transportation has gone after airlines trying to
make them do a better job in treating us better. Well,
the problem is now that we have a US appeals
court that's blocked that dot new rule on upfront disclosures.
They're saying pending a full review of the regulation. In
other words, there's a ton of airline pushback. And initially

(02:19:23):
when this came out, the airline's initial response and this
is so laughable, but it's predictable. They said, well, we
don't want to do this because we don't want to
overwhelm the consumer with too much information.

Speaker 1 (02:19:36):
It's like, come on, what make a light?

Speaker 16 (02:19:39):
I mean that just I thought, great, Yeah, that's about
my blood pressure.

Speaker 1 (02:19:43):
That's the best legal could come up with. What are
you paying these people for?

Speaker 16 (02:19:49):
But they're also saying, look, if we do this, it's
going to take millions of dollars in upgrades to our
website so that we can provide the information that's needed. Well,
I'm sorry. If that's why that's required, so be it.
So we're going to see where it goes.

Speaker 1 (02:20:02):
Brian.

Speaker 16 (02:20:03):
I hope that this continues because I like the idea
that the consumer is armed with more information. And it
bothers me big time that the airlines are pushing back
successfully and they've got this temporary and that's what it's
been called back called right now, just kind of a
temporary block as everything's kind of reviewed, and you know
they're gonna have oral arguments and all the stuff.

Speaker 4 (02:20:23):
You understand that I get lost in.

Speaker 6 (02:20:25):
So we'll see where it goes.

Speaker 16 (02:20:26):
But you've got American, Delta, United, Jet Blue, and Alaska
Airlines were among the airlines that were joined by a
trade group, Airlines for America, which is their lobbying group
big time to try to They started this process legally
in May to block these upcoming rules, and we'll see
where it goes.

Speaker 1 (02:20:42):
Well, you know, it bothers me because they have the
information in their possession, and how difficult can it possibly
be to break down the net figure into a line
items which show exactly how they arrived at that figure.
It seems like it's an obligation of the consumer, it
would be.

Speaker 16 (02:20:58):
But we're also you and I talk previously about airline
computers melting down under stress, so it's not like we're
dealing with the latest and greatest in technology here, my friend.
I mean these And the funniest part was that one
the one airline not impacted was Southwest because their computers
were nineteen ninety six. They didn't need that update, and
they're jumping around like, hey, not a single one of

(02:21:21):
our flights was impacted, walking around like George Jefferson. Yeah,
that's because you know, you got these super old computers.

Speaker 1 (02:21:27):
And we joked about that last time with the five
five and a quarter. It's floppy drives over at South left.
Ye oh, my well, I hate to part company with you,
Jay Ratliffe, but I suppose it is that time out
of topics on the list, and I know that we always.

Speaker 16 (02:21:40):
Well, I mean, you can, you can you can talk
about the bowing CEO.

Speaker 1 (02:21:42):
Real quick, oh that moment ago, but go ahead, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 16 (02:21:46):
Kelly Ordberg is the guy's name. He's landed the job
as the next CEO Boeing. I don't know if he's
been cursed or blessed, but I've been asked a lot
about what I think about this guy in Brent.

Speaker 1 (02:22:00):
I want to like him.

Speaker 16 (02:22:01):
I really like what I'm seeing here. He's got a
degree of mechanical engineering, something that the CEOs in the
past have not. They've had accountants before. This is a
guy that climbed the ranks over at Rockwell columns. He's
an aviation expert. The industry really respects this guy his
past roles. He's had such a great relationship with unions.

(02:22:25):
He walks the floor, talks.

Speaker 2 (02:22:26):
With employees, rolls up his sleeves.

Speaker 16 (02:22:28):
He's in the mix trying to find out what can happen.
And when I heard about the attorneys for the families
of the Boeing seven thirty seven Max families, the attorneys
like this guy oh on the opposition, and I'm thinking
it's great. And the best line I heard was that
this guy has the opportunity to, in essence what they're saying,

(02:22:51):
the turnaround of the century. But if he fails, he's
going to be rich.

Speaker 1 (02:22:55):
If he succeeds, he's.

Speaker 16 (02:22:56):
Going to be a legend. And Brian, I'm sorry, I'm
it's I'm fighting it, but I am cautiously optimistic.

Speaker 1 (02:23:03):
Wow, that this guy could do something. But like every.

Speaker 16 (02:23:06):
Politician that goes to d C with this idea that
they're going to change things, when you get there, sometimes
things change and we'll see if he's stronger than Boeing
or not. But when he worked it, I think it
was rockwell. He butted heads with Boeing. I just I
like so much of this because this might be the
temperament that you need. I'm just hoping he changes them

(02:23:28):
instead of them changing him.

Speaker 1 (02:23:30):
No doubt about it. Well, I won't suggest it's a
buy opportunity now at one hundred and ninety dollars a share,
but if he turns it around, I know what it
was trading at a long time ago, and it was
a lot better than it is now. Jay Ratliffe Hub
delays what's where to travel?

Speaker 16 (02:23:45):
Chicago Minneapolis could be the two hubs that could see
some impact on it off, whether the lays of an
hour or so. Rest of the country though, and in
good shape, and yeah, it's gonna be a busy day
to travel. So if you pick the day other than
those hubs, you pick a good one.

Speaker 1 (02:23:59):
To fly Burly, big time, big time always. Jay Rlive
until next Thursday. Man, best the health to you in
your better half, and have a wonderful weekend while you're
at it too. Thank you, sir, My pleasure eight fifty
to fifty five CARC the talk station. It was not
my pleasure to get a cancer diagnosed. As a matter
of fact, one of the worst days of my life.
You know, you got cancer and you're like, oh my god,
what does this mean. Your family's going to feel terribly

(02:24:21):
about it too, So what does it mean? What does
it mean? What you need are great cancer doctors. And
thank you as always to my friend Jony for saying, Brian,
just get in touch with OHC, which exactly what I did,
and I didn't even hesitate, got in touch with OHC,
and they did surround me like they will you with
the region's top cancer doctors. They will surround you with
clinical trials where the leading cutting edge treatments. You will
find they're engaged in bringing these innovative treatment options to

(02:24:43):
their payment patient because well, they got a simple approach.
Surround you with everything you need to focus on beating cancer.
So if you get the bad news, I know it's
going to be a bad day. If you've got the
bad news, there's an opportunity for a second opinion, so
either reach out to them at the outset or get
a second opinion by calling eight eight eight six four
nine forty eight hundred eighty eight six four nine forty
eight hundred. Online you'll find them at oh k dot

(02:25:06):
com fifty five KRC dot com.

Speaker 7 (02:25:09):
Your summer of saving

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