Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:12):
Five oh five.
Speaker 2 (00:29):
Don't vote Democrat.
Speaker 1 (00:30):
There's Tom.
Speaker 3 (00:31):
Haven't heard from Tom in a while, but I know
he's out there someplace. Don't vote Democrat. H Well, the
campaign of joy, joy, joy, joy, Joy, the flavor of
the moment, the sound by of the moment.
Speaker 1 (00:42):
And are you buying it? I can.
Speaker 3 (00:43):
I have to ask you a question, and that that
is the Democrats the fault. Now everybody's using the word
that the memo has gone out joy, it's the campaign
of joy. I don't know what the hell that's supposed
to mean. Are you joyful in your life? Just ask
yourself that question. You consider'elf a happy person, there's a
joy in your life. Where does that joy come from?
Speaker 1 (01:05):
Family?
Speaker 3 (01:05):
Friends, maybe your hobbies, your interests. Maybe you get joy
out of your work. A lot of people do, some
people don't.
Speaker 1 (01:12):
I know that.
Speaker 3 (01:15):
You get joy from a politician. Can a politician bring
you joy? It's a legitimate question to ask yourself. And
if you're looking if you have no joy in your
life and if you're looking to a politician to provide it,
I think you're in a desperate, desperate place. Yeah, it's
my initial reaction, but we'll have a lot to talk
(01:36):
about this morning, and I always enjoy talking with you.
Before you give me the rundown, give me the phone
number five one, three, seven, four nine fifty five hundred,
eight hundred and eighty two to three talk get pound
five fifty if you have an AT and T phone
and on the rundown. Thank you, Just Director executive producer
of the fifty five Charasee Morning Show for lining up
Kurt Couchman, Senior policy fellow on fiscal Responsibility Americans for Prosperity.
Sub it in for Donovan and I know today he's
(01:57):
going to be talking about biden Inflation. Bidenflation hair. She
used to embrace it and say she was all with it. Well,
they're reimagining her in front of our very eyes and
hoping you buy into the reimagination. Eight oh five with
Mel Kay, host of The Melky Show, to be talking
about the third day the Joyfest going on in Chicago.
He's got a book, Americans Anonymous, Restoring Power to the People,
(02:20):
which is the exact opposite direction the Democrats want to go.
They want to restore more power to Washington, DC so
they can micromanage your lives. Jay Ratliffe, I heard me
aviation expert. We have some folks that refuse to leave
an American Airlines jet. The man was bleeding from a
hair transplant. What lost scissors forced an airport terminal would
(02:43):
be evacuated, impacting hundreds of flights and of course sub delays.
And also an update on why can you only take
a couple of ounces of liquid? That rules still in place?
Get hit him with that one. I'm sure he'll be
prepared to feel that, even though it's not on Jay
Ratliff's list. Anyway, before we talk about the Joyfest, before
(03:04):
we talk about, you know, the reimagining of Kamala Harris
and all that, I just want to put this blows
my mind. My mouth just literally fell open as I
was reading this Fox News reporting described as first on Fox,
so we'll give them credit for it. This is the
direction the Biden administration is taking our country. This is
(03:26):
Kamala Harris as part of the Biden administration and the
direction she's taking in your country. This is the taking
over our government by the nutcases who believe in DEEI
and believe that it is important to adopt and embrace
and bring and unfold in every single corner of the government.
(03:48):
We go to the Department of Energy where the Obama
or the Obama ministry. Yep, pretty much right, Freudian slipped there.
The Biden administration recently hired at the Nuclear security wing
of the Department of Energy. Sniehan Nare that's her name,
(04:10):
then appointed the Special Assistant at the National Nuclear Security
Administration disappointment in February of this year. Nara apparently believes
in eradicating the purported white supremacy her words in the
nuclear field, specifically the nuclear field. Right this in mind,
as well as quote queering nuclear weapons close quote queering
(04:34):
nuclear weapons as part of the diversity, equity and inclusion
that she has been pushing, which she believes is essential
to deterring threats to nuclear energy facilities in the United
States of America. Got to clear up the nuclear weapons,
I honestly when I read them, like what quote she
wrote this last year.
Speaker 1 (04:53):
Quote.
Speaker 3 (04:55):
Finally, queer theory informs the struggle for nuclear justice and disarmament.
Queer theory helps to shift the perception of nuclear weapons
as instruments for security by telling the hidden stories of displacement, illness,
and trauma caused by their production and testing. Now I
(05:19):
try to absorb this. It's it's difficult because this is
of course left wing Ivy League university speak, I presume.
She argues, the DEI more broadly, is quote essential for
creating effective nuclear policy, diversity, equit, inclusion, necessary essential. Rather
(05:46):
to our nuclear policy. We're talking about bombs here, folks.
The idea of deterrence. You know, you got a bomb,
I got a bomb. We're both not going to use
the bomb because we'll end the world. This is always,
you know, it's worked so far, with the exception of
the United States of America, nobody's dropped the nuclear bomb
in spite of the fact that they're all over the globe.
The idea of nuclear deterrence mutual threat.
Speaker 4 (06:09):
Now.
Speaker 3 (06:09):
Before she joined the administration in February of this year,
she worked at a place called the Stimson Institute, which
has received apparently hundreds of thousands of dollars from the
Soros Open Society Foundation and millions from something called the
Embassy of the Stata Cutter. That's an interesting connection, isn't it.
She believes without the DEI agenda, a workforce of a
(06:32):
nuclear security facility is at risk for becoming insider threats.
The workforce is at risk. By understanding DEI as a
set of values critical to security. Well, see, you know
you spring from a proposition like that. An erroneous proposition
(06:56):
serving as a platform for you to show your DEI
in places where it doesn't belong doesn't make any sense.
By understanding the EI as a set of values critical
to security and therefore as an element of an effective
nuclear security culture, stakeholders can explore how DEI can contribute
to stronger security at nuclear facilities. H Collectively, she went on,
(07:20):
these principles of DEI can work to mitigate counterproductive work
behavior and prevent disgruntled employees from becoming insider threats. Anyway,
there's DEI agenda envisioned expanding America's deep secrets to people
with foreign connections. Maybe those individuals were discouraged from applying
(07:45):
on the issue of race. Now here's where it takes
a turn of why I wanted to bring this up.
Here's what she had to say. The US government reports
show that qualified applicants, again, these are people are going
to have their fingers on the button. I presume folks
working in sensitive nuclear facilities, Folks maybe having access to
important high levels secrets, scientific and otherwise, all right, you
(08:11):
got to have some high level concern over folks that
might be working in these environments, wouldn't you agree? Generally speaking,
US government reports so the qualified applicants with foreign ties
have been discouraged from applying to sensitive national security positions
and faced barriers to obstaining and obtaining a security clearance.
(08:32):
This is in part due to the preconceived confirmation biases
held by investigators about certain racial or ethnic groups.
Speaker 1 (08:41):
Oh do you see what you did right there.
Speaker 3 (08:43):
No, we're not talking about racial ethnic groups, you crazy
and batcrap insane woman. We're talking about people with ties
to foreign governments that may be opposed to the United
states best interest. It is not the color of their skin,
it's not their race, their ethnicity. It is their political
(09:04):
belief system that we're worried about. That's why we worry
about foreigners having access to or sensitive secrets. What foreign
country are they connected to? Is it an ally? If
it's an ally, and they don't have any preconceived biases
against the United States or its interest, I don't care
what color of their skin is, and I don't think
anybody in the hiring process does either. Maybe on a
(09:25):
background check. You find out that that tie is to
a foreign country. Oh, I don't know, maybe Syria or Iran,
or North Korea or China or Russia, then as well
go ahead. We got a whole lot of enemies in
the world, a whole bunch of different political structures that
are polar opposite to the American interests which used to
be about freedom and liberty and everything. And I know
(09:46):
we've far moved away from that, but that's supposed to
be the point. Considerable progress has been made in advancing
in the nuclear field, but the largest obstacle remains and
ensuring that nuclear security practitioners understand how DEI can serve
as a tool to strengthen nuclear security. Greater focus on
(10:10):
the intersections between nuclear security and DEI is essential. Somebody
wrote wtf after that statement. Probably someone who doesn't understand
what the hell she's talking about. Oh, that's right, that
was me. In so far as race bias is concerned,
(10:30):
this insane woman's belief is that white people at nuclear
facilities don't have the ability to properly evaluate threads from
people of the same racial group, notably radical white supremacists. Well,
you know what, I'm a white guy I hate radical
white supremacist. I think they're a problem, and I don't
(10:51):
think it's a huge one. But you know, if you
admit that you're a clan member, I think you are crazy.
If I'm in a room with someone who's espousing anti
black sentiment, someone who's pro clan, I think I can
spot it out and I might want to report that
person in my superior in the same way that I
(11:11):
would report someone to my superior who is espousing, well,
perhaps anti Semitic comments or making statements that are pro
terrorist organization. Maybe that's red flag about security. I think
the people in the American military can be obtrained to
observe that and point it out. She is insulting white people.
(11:35):
She is a racist when she says white people are
incapable of exercising that judgment. Diversifying the perspectives included in
nuclear security decision making can expand the definition of who
or what constitutes a threat for nuclear security, which you know,
(11:58):
I would think maybe involvement with foreign governments or people
who are non citizens and people have no connection with
the United States and its principles, they are the ones
that might represent a threat. The notion of threat and
security are defined by the dominant culture, which inherently sidelines
(12:19):
now marginalized groups. Really well, the dominant culture at one
point in this country and ignoring our somewhat racist foundations,
which I get. But in so far as the American
military culture is concerned, the dominant ideology should be the
security of the United States of America from threats both
(12:39):
domestic and foreign, which is one of the reasons why
you want to vet people who might be working with
sensitive nuclear materials and sensitive nuclear secrets.
Speaker 1 (12:51):
See, this is crazy. This is what we get.
Speaker 3 (12:56):
You think there's a difficult time of recruiting in the
American miliity, I mean, I'm sorry the difficulty we're having
recruiting young people in the America's military, aside from the
fact that apparently we're all of poor health, morbidly obese,
and incapable of doing the bare minimum to even get
in the American military, if you got someone who actually
wants to sign up, getting people to actually sign up,
there was a lot a lot of that was based
(13:16):
on pride of country. A lot of it was based
on freedoms and liberties and democracy and democratic principles. I
want to join my America's military because I love my country,
I'll fight for its values. That is supposed to be
the dominant culture in America's military. Now it's become this
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(13:57):
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Speaker 5 (15:00):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 1 (15:04):
You an idea for it?
Speaker 3 (15:11):
Here's your nine first one and weather forecast to day
sunny skies seventy nine for the high overnight low of
fifty four with clear skys tomorrow mostly Sunnay eighty six
overnight down to sixty with claire skies Saturday, mostly sunny
day ninety back up to kind of standard operating procedure
for the month of August. Let us see right now
(15:32):
it is fifty two or fifty five Kosity talk station
campaign theme songy.
Speaker 6 (15:41):
Joy Joy Happy.
Speaker 5 (15:44):
George Joy Happy.
Speaker 7 (15:48):
Joy Joy, Happy George Joy Hapy happy happy happy happy
happy happy happy happy George.
Speaker 3 (15:55):
Georgia one more time in earnest happy happy joy joy. Yeah,
it's a team of the Democratic Convention. Just I just
keep going back strength through joy.
Speaker 1 (16:14):
I'm sorry, folks, I wake up in a day when
the you know, I just I get this sense that
we've just completely lost lost all control and all track
with our of ourselves, us job growth.
Speaker 3 (16:28):
Oh whoops, Sorry, we overreported the jobs by eight hundred
and eighteen thousand dollars. Got our revisions from the beer
of Labor Statistics. Sorry, whoop's math was wrong, largest downward
revision since two thousand and nine and appoints to the
labor market losing steam earlier than thought. Obviously he's going
to well, it certainly is going to result in the
Fed maybe adjusting interest rates. So exhil over that and
(16:50):
watched the mortgage interest rate drop a little bit. Turning
to President Biden's Secretary of Commas, Jenior Rialmando. Hey, she's
on ABC News and they asked her about that, I
am curious as to your thoughts today about your labor,
saying that more than eight hundred thousand fewer jobs actually created.
Initially reported that question asked by a news correspondent, Kaya Whitworth,
(17:13):
and they also rolled equipment clip with Donald Trump mentioning
that in his rally yesterday, the administration patted the numbers
with an extra Listen to this one, eight hundred and
eighteen thousand jobs that didn't exist, Trump said, So they
say they existed, and they never did exist. They built
them up so they could say, what a wonderful job
they're doing. So they roll that clip and here you go. No,
(17:37):
in response to the question when I hear that refer
to the Donald Trump clip, first of all, I don't
believe it because I never and I underscored and circled
that word, never heard Donald Trump say anything truthful close quote.
That's her start off. This is the did talking point,
(18:01):
the delusion that they operated. Even she believes that Donald
Trump has never uttered a truth in his life, or
she hasn't been listening to what he said. Because even
in the most hate of the most anti Trump person
on the planet would have to admit at some point
that now he has actually told the truth a few times.
But that's where she springs from, and then it's I'm
(18:23):
not in Whitworth said, well, wait a second, you know
we am ignoring the Trump video that we just played
in the SoundBite from the rally. He said, well, it's
from the Bureau of Labor, meaning the reality that eight
hundred and eighteen thousand jobs were lost that didn't exist.
It's from the Bureau of Labor. Her response, I'm not
familiar with that. Okay, that's the person in charge, folks,
(18:45):
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Report five thirty one on a Friday. Even a happy
one to you. Just Treker put an earworm in my
head yesterday My buddy Jeff said that now he's got
an earworm with a happy, Happy Joy Joy song from
Ren and Stimpy. There, Joe, so you ruined it. I
think that song is hilarious. Actually, I was a big
(20:08):
Ren and Stimpy fan. So anyway, it's a Democrat campaign
theme song for the DNC, so they're stuck with it. Sorry, Jeff.
Over the local Stories, you can feel free to call
if you'd like to. I'd love to hear from him.
If you got someone on your mind. But anyway over
to thanks you to Fox nineteen credit where credit's due
for local reporting. Price Still homeowner speaking out if for
a man allegedly broke into his home over the weekend.
(20:30):
Gavin Robinson showed up at home and someday he was
greeted by a thirty four year old Andre Jones, who
was allegedly in his home while his two year old
daughter and girlfriend rob stares just. Robins said his family
had seen Jones around Price so before and they even
helped him when he was in need. Robinson, speaking with
Fox nineteen, he knew where we lived, so he would
(20:51):
come up knock on the door. If he needed something
to eat, you know, a burger or anything. We'd give
him a few bucks so he could eat for the night.
Court to court document, Jones got into Robinson's homes through
a very small bathroom window on the second floor. According
to the father, creepy get a load of this. He
was definitely watching us. I don't think that this was
any just jump into an ordeal. I think there might
(21:13):
have been some help behind it. Incident made it tougher
knowing that they had helped him in the past when
he needed he said, makes you a little angry and upset.
I mean, I'm a person where I believe in doing
the bigger thing, even when it sets you back, is
always the right choice. It's a very Christian attitude. He's
got there to ensure Jones didn't have a weapon on him.
(21:35):
Robinson tackled him and kept him there until the police
showed up. Suspect currently behind bars facing three charges obstruction
official business, possession of drugs, and burglary.
Speaker 1 (21:48):
Go to Loveland, My little Loveland.
Speaker 3 (21:51):
Woman doing her nails accidentally started a fire, displacing dozens
of residents from a multi story condo building overnight. This
cord of Loveland sims fire arm and flames broke out
of midnight inside a woman's second floor unit of the
Carrington Crossings after she used a burning tool on her
fingernails and something began to melt. According to the fire chief,
(22:13):
she caught the overflow in a container, though she had
it under control, but it got so hot it caught
fire and ignited, going up the wall of the condo,
over the firewalls separating her unit from the others, and
then into the attic portion of the second floor. Collapsed
into the first floor early yesterday, displacing residents in total
of twenty four units. Spokesman for the American Red Cross
(22:33):
speaking with Fox nineteen so theres assisting thirty eight displaced people. Thankfully,
no injuries were reported. Damn adjustment has not yet been released.
What in the hell doing fingernails.
Speaker 1 (22:46):
All right? Whatever? Uh?
Speaker 3 (22:49):
Middletown man has been arrested a connection with investigation into
the discovery of a woman's body in an alley trash can.
Fifty nine year old Perry Hart charged with aggravated murder.
According to the Middle Time Police Department, is best part
of the investigation that started when this woman's body was
found in the alley in the back of the Centennial
Street in Yankee Road July first. That was the area
where the a missing woman, thirty five year old Asia Sloan,
(23:12):
had been known to last to last be staying. When
the badly decomposed body was discovered, Court documents stated the
woman's skull had two bullet holes. During an interview with police,
Heart admitted that Sloan was shot by another individual. Middletown
police said Wednesday they're investigating a second subject. Fifty nine
year old told police he dragged the wounded Sloan as
(23:33):
she moaned in pain down some steps he went on.
According to court records, he said he pointed the gun
at her head, closed his eyes, and fired one shot,
striking her. Sloane stopped moaning after the gun shot, indicating
she had died. According to court records, Hard peered in
court yesterday. Judge said his bond at one million dollars
(23:56):
five thirty five five k citytalxtation more to talk about
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Speaker 5 (25:08):
Fifty five krc I at.
Speaker 1 (25:10):
Forty year fifty goot KCP talk station. Happy Friday Eve.
Speaker 3 (25:18):
And thanks to the listener for to this one who
now landed on the top of the stack is stupid.
I can't believe this flew underneath Joe Strecker's radar and
my radar. Ohio woman arrested after she allegedly killed a
cat and began eating it in front of her neighbors.
(25:41):
You heard that correctly, twenty seven year old Alexis. There's
no flag for us, thankfully. Let's hope this doesn't catch on.
Joe Alexis tell youa Farah twenty seven, charged with injuring animals,
prohibitions concerning companion animals, and disorderly conduct. She reportedly stomped
on the cats at Joe, I think we can cue
a the war to give out this morning, stomped on
(26:02):
the cat's head to kill the animal before eating it
in a residential area in front of multiple people at
a housing complex in Canton, Ohio, taking it to custody
Friday night, eleven pm. Initial bond set at one hundred
thousand dollars during arraignment, which is more than she would
have been had a bond if she had actually killed
a real human being, stomped on a cat's head and
(26:25):
ate it.
Speaker 8 (26:27):
Perio is the biggest douche of the universe, in all
the galaxies.
Speaker 1 (26:34):
There's no bigger douche than you. You've reached the top
the pinnacle of douche Dum. Good going, Douce. Your dreams
have come true. We've got to North Carolina.
Speaker 3 (26:51):
We have two women behind bars for after telling law
enforcement that severe injuries and trauma that were inflicted on
two toddlers were caused by evil ghosts or other paranormal activity.
Speaker 1 (27:04):
No thank you, dad.
Speaker 3 (27:05):
Emily Marie Edwards, who's twenty five. Her mom Sherry Jean Edwards,
fifty four, accused two counts each of felony chow to
be used causing serious bodily injury, according to the Kataba
County jail records. They were arrested by the Newton Police
Department after being indicted over allegations going back to December
of last year. Court to the police chief, the basic
response reality was nightmares. They had heard the kids yelling,
(27:26):
and they'd go over there and they'd see injuries to
the kids. So they're saying there's spirits that were in
the house at the time that caused these injuries. That's correct,
job spewet Wolvado, deaving do. Copies of the indictments and
obtained by local news ledge to the woman evidence a
reckless disregard for life and inflicted serious bottle injury on
(27:48):
the two children. Law enforcement said the one year old
and two year old suffered burns, bike marks, broken bones.
They tested positive for the presence of fentanyl toddler's injuries
incurred an apartment in Newton, a small town northwest of Charlotte.
Police alleged a third of dollgar, identified as a man,
(28:10):
also responsible for the abuse. He died last year. Women
are the mother and grandmother the two victims in the case.
A question by police, they not only blamed evil spirits,
but they also said they used a Ouiji board in
order to conjure spirits.
Speaker 1 (28:24):
Okay, yeah, right.
Speaker 3 (28:27):
Law enforcement in the hand alleged the two demon haunted
defendants of very culpability for the toddler's extensive injuries. They
alleged the children had bruising in damage to their skin,
which they both failed to report. Neighbors spoke with local
news there rejected the haunted apartment claim, saying I think
that's crazy. Yeah, I would join in that easily assessment.
Speaker 1 (28:45):
Right there.
Speaker 3 (28:47):
Both the mother and grandmother detained on a quarter of
a million dollar bond. Ghosts, I personally don't believe in them.
Speaker 1 (29:02):
Arizona truck driver gotta be spending the next two decades
plus in jail for killing five people in a crash
in a highway caused by his using TikTok while behind
the wheel. What does Dave Hadder say?
Speaker 4 (29:16):
What?
Speaker 3 (29:17):
Get the hell off TikTok? Most notably if you're behind
the wheel.
Speaker 1 (29:19):
Of your car.
Speaker 3 (29:20):
January twelfth, last year, Danny Glenn Tyner tenor thirty eight
was not paying attention to the road when he was
driving down Ien and Chandler, Arizona, instead watching short form
video content on TikTok. His semi truck hurled through a
construction zone speeds clearly capped at fifty five, going thirteen
(29:42):
over the speed limit, resulting in the death of five
people in the six vehicle collision that he caused. He
was recently sentenced to four and a half years in
prison for each corresponding count of negligent homicide, one for
every person killed. Sentences to be conservad consecutively rago the
(30:04):
twenty two plus year prison sentence twenty two and a
half years stint of Grand Canyon State Department of Corrections. Jeez,
you know when you're driving down the road and you
got your cell phone in your hand and you're tempted
to look at that text message. I recall I recall
a time when my friends and I were I think
(30:26):
we were skipping swim practice on a joy ride paying
attention going down Knee Road out of nowhere. I can
still see it to this day. Out of nowhere, this
tiny toddler, probably about eighteen months maybe two at best,
comes walking right out in the middle of Knee Road.
(30:47):
You couldn't see him one moment the next to him,
and he's out in the middle, almost in front of
my friend's car. My friend locked it brakes up and
yanked the steering wheel over. If he didn't have his
eyes on the road, that get to be dead. It
just takes a fraction of a second. You're not paying attention.
And I suppose that goes with fiddling with your radio too. Anyway,
five forty five, he's got to live with that. Well,
(31:09):
first twenty two and a half years, it'd be living
the reality of that. Why he's locked up in jail.
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the talk station for.
Speaker 5 (32:32):
Decades, the.
Speaker 1 (32:35):
Nine on the podcast Sonny and seventy nine for the
high Today over night clear fifty four Tomorrow Sunday in
eighty six, overnight clear at sixty Saturday mostly Sunda day
with a high on ninety fifty three.
Speaker 9 (32:45):
Right now it's time for traffic from the UCL Tramphic
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Speaker 1 (33:15):
Chuck Ingram. I'm fifty five KRSNE the talk station if
if you want pfty five KRCD talk station.
Speaker 3 (33:24):
Very happy Friday Eve to you, looking forward to the
Senior policy Phlloe and fiscal responsibility for Americans for Prosperities.
Kurt Couchman joining the program at seven thirty to talk
about Biden Inflation is a funny meme circulated July of
this year.
Speaker 1 (33:39):
July Love this July of twenty twenty four.
Speaker 3 (33:45):
The economy is great under Biden, said, so many of
the talking heads about the Biden economy. Bidenomics is great,
Everything's great. August of twenty twenty four. Kamala Harris is
going to fix the economy. I thought that was a
very important meme because we're talking about fixing the economy.
She was talking about price fixing, dealing with your inflationary realities.
(34:07):
They're talking about salute maybe. I mean, they're vague about
it and they haven't released anything platform wise, but they're
talking about things that need to be fixed. Fixed because
for the last three and a half years we've been
under Bidenomics and the Biden economy and the inflationary realities
of pumping in literally trillions and trillions of additional dollars
into the US economy boom. You're going to buy into that? Seriously,
(34:30):
the woman on who's watch all of this has happened?
You are going to trust to what fix it? If
they were great, then there wouldn't be anything to fix. Bobby,
Welcome to the program. Happy Friday Eve.
Speaker 10 (34:42):
Well, thank you, my brother. Good to speak with you
today and thanks for taking my call again.
Speaker 1 (34:47):
Happy to what's on your mind today?
Speaker 11 (34:49):
Well?
Speaker 10 (34:50):
They I got a couple questions. Congress and Massey and
Jordan have done an excellent job on this impeachment inquiry
and they got it wrapped up the first day of
the DUS Convention. I wonder if we we'll make a
move on it on Biden's sometime between now and there.
Speaker 1 (35:07):
I don't know. I'm I think I'm over speculating at
this point. I was wrong.
Speaker 3 (35:14):
Listen, I'm a guy who said Biden would be gone
last year, which you know, if the Democrats were smarter,
they would have gone through a regular process of vetting
process and come up with something who's slightly more palatable
than the current coup ata winner.
Speaker 1 (35:27):
But who am I? No one listens to me along
those lines. We know what a predictions they're like.
Speaker 10 (35:34):
Since they're done with the impeachment inquiry, and I knew
it's taken some time here in the last six months.
My main question is where is the five hundred dollars
reward for the individual put that ied at the DNC headquarters.
We worked on that thing for months upon months, looking
into that individual that did it. I just wanted up
(35:56):
the reward still there? Okay, it went from a hundred,
it went from one hundred thousand to five hundred thousand dollars.
Congress and Massy was in charge of it, and we
haven't heard each thing about it. I already know a
lot about it. You just want to know if Kamala
Harris was there at the DNC forty eight hours before
(36:17):
the woman put it there. There's a late woman that
did it. Yeah, and we tracked her down by our shoes.
Speaker 3 (36:27):
Okay, you're talking circrals around me. I honestly, Bobby, no
idea what you're talking about. Sorry, I can't stay up
on everything, and this one is just I guess out
of my element. I have my apologies to you for
not being up to speed and not being able to
respond to that. I'll take you to your word, though.
Let us see here one more in the stack of
(36:48):
two before we move on to the break and come
back after the top of our news. Go to Topeka, Kansas,
where a mom who's two years this is insane. Two
year old son fatally shot his four year old sister.
The mother has been sentenced to life in prison. Mary Blair,
twenty four, will not be eligible for parole till she
serves twenty five years under the sentence imposed in Topeka.
(37:11):
According to the local news there, they found her guilty
and may have aggravated child on nagement first agree murder
in the commission of a felony. She testified at her
trial that she removed a loaded nine million inter handgun
from her diaper bag and placed it on the couch
next to her in October while she was home with
her four year old daughter and her two year old son.
Said she planned to go get food with her family
(37:32):
was making sure she had everything she needed in the bag.
She then the child then distracted her by asking her
to shoot a cell phone video of them together. District
attorney there old jurors that the gun sat on the
couch at least twelve minutes before Blair's son, who's about
to turn three, picked it up and shot his sister.
She said no reasonable person would have let a gun
(37:53):
sit there that, along with a small child presence. Court
record show. She complained in a handwritten motion that her
trial attorney discouraged from taking a plea and that would
resulted in her being sent to ten years and three
months in prison. Yeah, you're gonna own a firearm, you
damn well better be responsible with it. Coming up in
five fifty six. If you five care see the talk station,
feel free to call. I got plenty to talk about
(38:14):
coming up in the next hour. I hope you can
stick around.
Speaker 1 (38:18):
History as it happens.
Speaker 12 (38:20):
If you want to make America great again.
Speaker 4 (38:23):
Trump and it's away at the top of the hour
fifty five kres the talk station.
Speaker 1 (38:28):
And that's what it's about. Joy.
Speaker 3 (38:32):
It's like start of the morning show an hour at
last hour. If you are looking for a politician to
provide you with joy, I don't know, maybe more. I'm
thinking more along the lines of getting some psychological level
with the Lindar Center of Hope. Because you've got problems
in your world. Government, provide joy, Joy Joy Joy Joy.
That's all you heard. But if you're not going to
provide anybody with policy points, you're not going to talk
(38:53):
about policy and you're not gonna give us solutions to
the problems that we were facing right now, problems that
we've only been facing over the past several years, brought
about by, Yes, the Biden administration's policies. You got to
fix what you started. You started it, now you are
gonna fix it. You think I'm gonna trust you to
do that? Huh, God Almighty, we find ourselves. I cannot
(39:16):
believe we're actually engaged in this political process right now.
Kurt Kausman's going to join the program coming up in
seven thirty, senior policy fellow on fiscal responsibility in Americans
for Prosperity. He's summoned in for Donalvan and today he'll
be talking about, oh a problem Biden inflation hosted the
Melka Show. Of course, that will be Malkay. He's joining
the program at eight five. She rather sorry, Joe, I'm
(39:38):
not familiar with the Melka podcast. So you know how
many podcasts are there out there?
Speaker 11 (39:44):
A lot?
Speaker 3 (39:50):
Apologies to Malka. Just add that one to the list
of the ones I've never heard of. That's okay, Apparently
a noted notable in the area of podcasts. You've been
talking about Day three of the Democrat National Conventions and
also the book Americans Anonymous restoring power to the people
that I am looking forward to Jay rat Leff. Always
loved talking to Jay. Closing out Friday Eve on a
(40:10):
very positive note. Got a couple of funny stories to
talk about with Jay. Sad, pathetic, but still funny. That'll
be at eight thirty and you can call and love
to hear from you if you choose to call five
point three, seven four nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred
and eighty two to three Talk time five fifty on
AT and T phones. Okay, Day thirty two, Day thirty
(40:31):
two of Kamala Harris hiding in a hole and not
providing us with campaign platforms. Don't have any idea other
than the occasional slip of the tongue saying the quiet
part out loud, like cat taxing, unrealized capital gains, price fixing,
and then it's, oh, no, we really didn't mean that.
Speaker 1 (40:50):
Yeah, you're gonna get a lot of that.
Speaker 3 (40:53):
But like this observation from the journal, ms Harris is
no longer the vice president who failed to secure the
border how they say she'll be tough on illegal migration.
No longer the vice president who said Bidenomics is working
while inflation jumped to a forty year high. She's now
the candidate who's going to reduce your family's feel bill
by price gouging, going after your grocer for those evil
(41:16):
grocery stores having to deal with supply chain issues and
inflation themselves and only having like a maximum two percent
margin to start with price gouging. No longer the candidate
of twenty twenty who questioned the need for cash bail
and blame police for urban violence. Now the tough prosecutor
who was the California Attorney general who dared to investigate Exxon.
Speaker 1 (41:40):
Exceon.
Speaker 3 (41:42):
No longer the presidential candidate of twenty nineteen who wanted
a banfracking, endorse medicare for all, questions whether the current
Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency should even exist. Now she's changed.
She hadn't said why she's changed her policy points on
all these and other areas, because no one asks her.
(42:05):
We haven't even got verification and confirmation that she's actually
changed on these What we have our surrogates coming out
here with, you know, fluffy sound bites of nothingness suggesting
that she's changed her mind on these various policies that
would well undermine her run for presidency if she were
to cling to them as she has for so many years,
(42:28):
hasn't done an interview since her elevation is nominee, hasn't
asked answered any hard questions. She's been relying on prescripted,
teleprompter provided scripts. The least known presidential nominee of modern times.
The journal asks what does she really believe? What does
(42:52):
she really believe? As we hit again day thirty two
of not holding any press conferences. Hell, even some of
the most ardent porters are asking her where in the
hell she is The Washington Post find a more left
leaning of newspaper that's out there referring to Donald Trump.
At least he has taken questions, they said. The Post
(43:17):
even said she should be accounting for her numerous policy
shifts or a parent seeming policy shifts. Again, I'll go
to that this is not policy shifts that she has uttered.
These are ones that have come out of her campaign.
The fracking, border security, private health. It's on and on
and on and on and on. Jim Acosta, liberal CNN anchor,
(43:39):
would it kill you guys to do one? Referring to
a press conference, Would it kill you guys to do one?
Speaker 1 (43:48):
What it hell?
Speaker 3 (43:49):
Would it kill you guys to answer one? Let me
ask a straightforward question on policy. Let me get a
straightforward answer from you would kill you to do that? Man,
They're not going to do that, at least not as
long as they can. As long as they can, they're
gonna hold out. But step back from this and look
at where we are. We have someone who doesn't articulate
(44:09):
anything by way of platform, wants to be the most
important prominent politician on the planet, the most powerful individual.
You're gonna put the foreign affairs in her hands while
the world burns, mostly brought about by the Biden Administration's
administration's feckless foreign policy of appeasement, most notably to the Iranians.
Look at how much cash they have. Look at all
(44:31):
the sanctions that we're lifting to the Biden administration, what
do they do. Yeah, they facilitate Hamas killing Israelis. They
provide drones to the Russians. They're busily and very close
to by all accounts, obtaining an actual working nuclear weapon.
That's just one element of foreign policy. Where is Kamala
(44:54):
Harris on foreign policy? If you know, please, dear God,
call me up. I want to know where she is.
I don't know what source you got that gives you
an indication of where she is on foreign policy. Five one, three, seven, eight,
two to three talk go with count pound five fifty
on AT and T Fund. So funny lines from Trump.
(45:17):
He got the message? By the way, do I still
have to stick to policy? Funny line from Trump yesterday.
Let's see what Steve's got this morning. Hey Steve, thanks
for calling. Welcome to the fifty five CARC Morning Show.
Speaker 11 (45:30):
Now, in my defense, I called before you said call
me up and explain her foreign policy vision because I
refuse to step into that because she doesn't know what
it is. So I don't know what her policy is
since she doesn't know what it is.
Speaker 1 (45:45):
Yeah, it was a rhetorical one.
Speaker 3 (45:47):
It was a rhetorical request to call in because I
know there's no one in my listening audience who knows
what it is, because no human being on the planet
knows where she is on foreign policy.
Speaker 1 (45:55):
Anyway, Well, I think she will lick.
Speaker 11 (45:58):
Her finger and put it up in the air and
see which way the wind is blowing, and that's that's
going to be her foreign policy. But a couple of
neat things, and I'm kind of curious what you think
about this. First of all, the media can only cover
for her for so long and appear and they also
appear to be a little bit perturbed. I mean, they've
still got her back, and they'll still have her back.
(46:20):
But I called you last week and when you when
you apply for a job, you have to interview for
your job. You have to say, this is what I
can do for the company, this is what you know
I mean, And she's not doing any it's a joke,
but a couple of curiosities here. This is nothing but
a positive. I think it's going to happen. I think
(46:40):
r FK Junior will endorse Trump tomorrow in Arizona. They
both have a rally in or Trump has a rally
there and RFK Junior is going to be there, even
if that gets him a couple of percent, you know,
or just you know, you know, you put the Kennedy
name there, and yeah, you give them a token cause
in the cabinet. I'll give Obama credit for this. He
(47:03):
might be the first one that started putting somebody from
a different political party, you know, in your cabinet, and
it's usually a lesser position, and you pick you pick
a ride, but whatever, that's not a bad thing. Another
interesting thing is Elon Musk one of the smartest people around.
He's like, you know, I mean, we've got a few
(47:25):
of them out there, Jeff Bezos and Bill Gates to
a lesser to you know, maybe his whatever, but there
are some great thinkers out there that just have such
an impact on society with what they do. And he
is all in for Trump and wants to I wouldn't
say serve in the cabinet, but he's like, what can
I do. I'm willing to help. I'm you know, I mean,
(47:47):
you imagine him getting in there and streamlining the government.
But what do you think about RFK Junior and Elon
Musk possibly working with Trump?
Speaker 3 (47:57):
I have no problem with it. RFK Junior to me
a bit of a loose cannon, and he is. He's
one of those global warming, climate change kind of guys.
So to me, that being on his resume is always
concerning because I think this is just the biggest scam
ever perpetrated on humanity, this whole idea that we need
to do carbon offsets and zero emissions, and you know,
(48:17):
it's plant food for God's sake, and we've known by
history and documented evidence that the planet's carbon dioxide level
has fluctuated dramatically over the years, and oh my god,
the world continues to spend and evolve. I think we
can manage it with a little more carbon in the atmosphere.
So he's one of those guys. Eh, He's got some
other good things about him. I have no problem with
some of his platform positions, but that's the one that
(48:39):
that sticks in my crawl. But yeah, like you pointed out,
Democrats can grab a rhino or two and then call
their administration bipartisan. Look, I reached across the d grab
one of the other guys and have them served. You know,
I'd say Kennedy's running more as an independent, freethinking kind
of guy, not a party affiliated guy necessarily, because he's
got positions that are some Republican leaning, some Democrat leaning.
(49:01):
But yeah, I'm sure that you could find a place
for him. It'll be solid a point for the for
the Trump campaign, because you're gonna get the at least
some of the Kennedy supporters on board. Ne Or Kennedy
is not a flaming communist like Kamala Harris and and
and and Timmy so and ins far as Musk is concerned,
(49:21):
that's a no brainer. If Musk wants to join the
administration in some capacity, I've seen him floated around as
maybe heading up NASA. He'd be great on economics. There's
a multitude of places that you could utilize Trump's ginor
or a Musk's ginormous brain and tap into that for
the good of America. And say what you want about
Elon Musk, he does have his own quirky nature. He
(49:43):
is just unbelievably brilliant, unbelievably brilliant. He's one of those
guys that I'm not I pointed this out yesterday. You know,
thank God for Elon Musk and folks of his ilk,
even if they're on the other side of the political ledger.
Like Gates, they built massive empires. They employ thousands and
(50:04):
thousands of people. They make tons of money, not only
for the individuals working, but also if if tax dollars
infused into government, if you think that's a great thing,
welcome to the reality a very successful person building giant
empires and doing good for the entire world by virtue
of that building of a giant empire. Yes, let's tap
into that genius. Let's use it to our advantage. That
(50:27):
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Com fifty five KRC dot com Today.
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Here it is your nine first warning one.
Speaker 3 (51:35):
The forecast is going to have a sunny day seventy
nine For the high Clear's guys every night fifty.
Speaker 1 (51:40):
Four to the low.
Speaker 3 (51:41):
Eighty six are high tomorrow, mostly sunny, clearer every night
down to sixty and a mostly sunny Saturday going up
to ninety fifty two degrees.
Speaker 1 (51:48):
Right now, it's time for a traffic update.
Speaker 9 (51:50):
Chuck Kinglum from the UCUP Tramphics Center with uc health.
The future of care is happening now through clinical trials
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Visit uce health dot com. Highways are doing fine early
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through downtown in Bund seventy four. That's wide open past
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The talk station.
Speaker 3 (52:21):
It's six twenty three here on Friday, e fifty five
KRCD talk station online fifty five car See dot com.
Encourage you to stop over get your podcasts when you
can't listen to Judge out of Politana Live or you
missed my conversation with Josh Bernstein. He's got a great
book out Preserving Liberty, Bold and Brave solutions to save
America and create permanent freedom. So he identifies problems and
(52:41):
offers solutions. It was rather interesting tax proposal as a
mechanism to get rid of the whole idea of class
envying class warfare. But just one of the multitude of proposals.
You get the book at fifty five KRC dot com,
where you can also get your iHeartMedia app so you
can stream the audio where we happen.
Speaker 1 (52:56):
To be uh.
Speaker 2 (52:57):
Just a.
Speaker 3 (53:00):
Great zinger from Trump, A worthy one too, dis reflects
the bias of the media and just wonderfully and a
very very brief summarye So former President Trump that is
speeching hol Michigan. Afterwards, a reporter asked him to respond
to attacks from Kamala Harris regarding Trump's visit there. Reporter
(53:21):
asked Trump to respond to Kamala Harris's campaign attacking him
for being in Howell, Michigan, pointing it to being linked
to white supremacy, which I was not aware of. I
guess there's a connection between Hawl Michigan and the Ku
Klux Klan for some reason. Donald Trump responds to the
(53:42):
reporter who is here in twenty twenty one. Here's the
back and forth. Kamala attacked you for being in hal
Michigan because it was associated with white supremacy. Trump, who
was here in twenty twenty one, the reporter Joe Biden, Trump,
thank you. Of course, you know Dan well that Joe
(54:02):
Biden was not questioned about how being associated at some
point in its history with the Klan. If it was,
nobody would ask Biden a question like that. But you know,
old white guy and now we have old white guy.
Two sets of standards in terms of how questions are asked.
But excellent, excellent response from Donald Trump six twenty five
at five KCD talk station Emery Get in touch with
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Lender fifty five KRC the talk station. Turn up your radio.
Speaker 13 (55:19):
Here's a Sean Hannity Morning minutes.
Speaker 8 (55:23):
To me, this is the most simple thing imaginable, voting integrity.
Why would any one major political party not want proof
of citizenship because you need proof of citizenship for everything.
Speaker 1 (55:35):
Else in life.
Speaker 8 (55:36):
Think about this, right, I mean if you have a
passport in your travel, okay, you need to show that
you are a US citizen. To get that passport, you
need something else called the legal driver's license. You know,
only a couple of states allow illegal immigrants to get
legal driver's licenses. One of them would be the state
of Minnesota where Tim Walls, the VP candidate for the
(55:57):
Democrats are And does that all also allow them perhaps.
Speaker 5 (56:01):
To maybe use that voter that as ID to go and.
Speaker 1 (56:05):
Register the vote. I don't know, but proof of citizenship
it's simple.
Speaker 8 (56:09):
Check out the Sean Hannity radio show later today right here. Hey,
protect your home and family. Now, it's a responsibility you
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Speaker 3 (57:34):
Weather time, we have a nice day to day, clear, sunny, dry,
seventy nine to the high. It's gonna be clear of
nine fifty four. Eighty six are high tomorrow with mostly
sunny skies, low humidity too. I might point out overnight
time to sixty with clear skies and a mostly sunny
Saturday high of ninety fifty two degrees Right Now it's
time for traffic update from.
Speaker 1 (57:53):
The UCL Tramfhic Center with uc Health.
Speaker 9 (57:55):
The future of care is happening now through clinical trials
and innovative treatments. I give patient some chance for better outcomes.
Visit uc health dot com. Highway traffic in pretty good shape,
with one exception that's an accident northbound seventy five in
the lock and split left lane is currently blocked off.
That traffic now backing up past the Reagan Highway and growing.
(58:17):
Chuck Ingram on fifty five krs the talk station.
Speaker 3 (58:22):
It is six twenty nine here tick about KRCD talk
station Happy Friday, Eve five one three, seven, four nine
fifty five hundred eight hundred eight two three talkin five
fifty on.
Speaker 1 (58:31):
Eighth andg funds. Oh, look, I have to have purval.
He made it to the Democratic National Convention.
Speaker 3 (58:37):
I don't know that the uttered the word joy though
he missed out on his opportunity to UH to keep
the talking point alive. Anyway, he did speak in support
of Kamala Harris not chocking anyone at the DNC yesterday.
Took the stage about seven pm to discuss the current
administration's work to address the Brent Spnce Bridge, calling out
former Donald Trump for not working on it during his office.
(58:58):
I need to just observe in front of what I
have to have. Par of Ball said yesterday that the
power of the purse rests in Congress, and we can
go all the way to Barack Obama, who also campaigns,
standing in front of the Brent Spenz Bridge promising to
fix it and it never happened. We can go back
years and years politicians of all stripes stand in front
of the Brent Spenz Bridge. I guess it's a project
(59:19):
that it had bipartisan support for a long time, since
both Democrats and Republicans promised to get it done. Anyway,
Provall said, for years politicians came through my city and
promised to fix the Brent Spenz Bridge, which connects Ohio
to Kentucky. Donald Trump was one of them. He did
what they all do, press conference here, photo op there,
but nothing changed until Kamala Harris and Joe Biden. I
(59:44):
guess they laid hands on it. Anyway.
Speaker 1 (59:48):
Some are suggesting that this is phase one of.
Speaker 3 (59:53):
Mayor have to have par of All's inevitable assent to
some political career. Washington, DC based got to Middletown where
a man has been arrested in connection with an investigation
into the discovery of a woman's body in an alley
trash can. Fifty nine year old Perry Hart's been charged
with aggravated murder. According to Middletown Police Department, this part
(01:00:14):
of an investigation had started when this woman's body found
in an alley in the back of Centennial Street January
July first. Rather, body in the area where a missing woman,
thirty five year old Asia Sloane, had been known to
be last staying, according to a detective in the court documents,
when the badly decomposed body discovered. Court documents state of
(01:00:34):
the woman's skull had two bullet holes. Now, during an
interview with police, this Hart guy admitted that Sloane was
shot by another individual. Middletown police they're investigating that second suspect.
Hard To have told police he dragged a wounded Sloan
as she moaned in pain down some step steps, and
(01:00:54):
he then pointed the gun at her head, closed his
eyes and fired one shot her, which stopped the moaning.
Obviously because she died. He appeared in court yesterday. Judge
said his bond at one million dollars. This is just bizarre.
I'm sorry I did the story. I had a love
(01:01:16):
one thanks to Fox nineteen reporting. I still am scratching
my head over it. They see a woman doing her
nails accidentally started a fire, displacing dozens from a multi
story condo cord of loves Loveland, Sims Fire Department. Flames
broke out around midnight inside a second floor unit at
Carrington Crossings. After this woman used a burning tool on
(01:01:38):
her fingernails. They say something began to melt. This is
the fire chiefs speaking of Fox nineteen. They described that
she caught the overflow this melting whatever was melting in
a container and thought she had it under control, but
it got so hot that it caught fire. Ignited, then
went up the wall for condo, over the firewall, separating
her unit from the others, and then on into the
(01:01:58):
attic second story up in the second story floor collapsed
onto the first floor early yesterday morning, displacing the residents
of twenty four units. American Red Crosses are helping thirty
eight displace people. No injuries were reported, thankfully, no damage
estimate has been released yet. I'm a burning tool on
your fingernails that Okay, no good deed goes unpunished, and
(01:02:26):
we got a Price sal homeowners. Homeowner speaking out after
a guy walked into or broken who was home over
the weekend. Gavin Robinson is the homeowner got home Sunday
greeted by a thirty four year old Andre Jones, who
was in his home while his two year old daughter
and girlfriend were rough stairs. The family knows this Jones guy,
They've seen him around price So before, and they have
helped him when he was in need. According to the homeowner,
(01:02:48):
this Gavin Robinson, he said he knew where we lived,
so he would come up knock on our door, and
if he needed something to eat, you know, a burger
or anything, we'd give him a few bucks so he
could eat for the night. Don't think he was using
the money to eat though. According to court documents, Jones
got into Robinson's home through a very small window on
the second floor, and this homeowner said he was definitely
(01:03:09):
watching us. I don't think that this was just any
jump into an ordeal. I think there might have even
been someone to help behind it.
Speaker 1 (01:03:16):
Anyway.
Speaker 3 (01:03:17):
That bothers them tremendously, knowing that they've helped this guy.
He specifically said, it makes you a little angry and upset,
but I'm a person where I believe in doing the
bigger thing, even when it sets you back, is always
the right choice and real good samarony is. Anyway, Robinson
ended up tackling this guy and kept him there till
(01:03:38):
police arrive because he didn't know whether Jones had a
weapon on him or not. Anyway, very bullsy'd move on that.
One suspect currently behind bars facing three charges obstruction of
official business, possession of drugs, a previous charge in burglary,
which is the possession of drugs count is where I
noted that, well, if you're giving someone money, usually panhandlers
in the street, most of the agent sees that help
(01:04:00):
the homeless, say don't give them money, they're only going
to use it to buy drugs. Give them information on
the nearest homeless shelter or assistance program. Now you draw
your own conclusions on that, but that's always been my default.
Just say no to handing out money to random people
on the street who may be struggling with a drug addiction.
Six thirty five fifty five KRC Detalkstation Odor Exit works
(01:04:24):
on any odor situation. You got accept the stench of politics,
as I jokingly like to say, but it does work.
These products are wonderful getting rid of even skunk spray.
So you've got a mold, mildew, smoke odor, kitchen odor problem,
pat odors, human odors, any surface. You've got the right products.
When you go to odo exit od O, r xit
dot com, no E, find the product you need.
Speaker 1 (01:04:46):
It's easy to do that.
Speaker 3 (01:04:46):
Have any questions as a toll free number, like if
you try it once and it doesn't work, call the number.
If you use it as directed, they will give you
one hundred percent of your money back because it's guarantee
need to work, and it does. I've used the multitudes
of smells over the years. Lots of listeners have gotten
back when he said, I can't believe it, but yes,
(01:05:06):
it did work. Notably I'm the skunk smell, which means
one hundred percent confirmation that these products are powerful plus
a non toxic. You can rub that odor exit concentrate,
for example, right on your dog. That's up to do
that several times over the years. By it locally. There's
a search engine at the website, or order it online
if you do that before three o'clock in the afternoon.
Speaker 1 (01:05:24):
You'll have it tomorrow. Odorrexit dot com.
Speaker 5 (01:05:29):
Fifty five KRC.
Speaker 1 (01:05:31):
Hey Gary, someone here, here's your nine first one to
weather forecast.
Speaker 3 (01:05:37):
We got a sunny day in our hands to day
with the highest seventy nine overnight it's gott to be
clear dropping to fifty four or sun tomorrow with the
high of eighty six. Clear skies again over nineteen to
sixty and a sunny Saturday with a high of ninety
fifty three degrees. Right now, let's hear about traffic conditions
from Chuck Ingram.
Speaker 9 (01:05:52):
From the UCF Traumphings Center with U see help. The
future of care is happening now through clinical trials and
innovative treatments that give pay sense a chance for better outcomes.
Visit ucehelp dot com. Highways not bad at all, with
one exception. That's northbound seventy five where trampig is a
slow go from just above down Street to an accident
(01:06:13):
in the lock one split. Let lane's block. Chuck Ingram
on fifty five KRC the talk station.
Speaker 3 (01:06:21):
Six forty here fifty five KRCD talk station, A very
happy Friday, E to you, Kurt Katzman, Senior policy fellow
on fiscal Responsibility for Americans for Prosperity. He's going to
join the program after at seven thirty and in sitting
in for Donovan and Ida AFP's Donovan and Neil talking
about Biden inflation with Kurt. That'll be at seven thirty.
And got more guests in the eight o'clock hour. And
of course you can feel free to call love hearing
(01:06:42):
from the listeners and you try to make some sense
of this one for me if you can. Michelle Obama
Mike was speaking of the crowd at the convention. I
don't know that she mentioned the word joy, but that
seemed to be the theme of last night's convention. But
in any event, it was noted and I saw this
reporting and thanks to Fox News for reporting, But this
(01:07:04):
was reported elsewhere as well. She was speaking, and she
started out her speech talking about it. Hey, last time
I was in Chicago was to memorialize her mother, the
woman quote who showed me the meaning of hard work
and humility, indecency, who set my moral compass high and
showed me the power of my own voice. Fine, hard work,
(01:07:25):
hard work, I circled hard work, she said. She and
my father didn't aspire to be wealthy. In fact, they
were suspicious of folks who took more than they needed,
notice my emphasis on the word took. They understood that
it wasn't enough for their kids to thrive if everyone
else around us was drowning. So my mother volunteered at
(01:07:48):
the local school. You see, those values have been passed
on through the family farms and factory towns, through tree
lined streets and crowded tenements, through prayer groups and National
Guard units and social studies classrooms. Those of the values
my mother poured into me until her very last breath.
Hard work, hard work, and of course, you know you
(01:08:13):
don't want to take more than you need. Right well,
reflecting back of the show Obama's career, I find it
really hard to leave because the minute she said that,
of course, social media blows up with the wit whoa
wait a minute, responses Obama's net worth apparently seventy million
(01:08:36):
dollars owners of four luxurious properties. You got a Washington,
DC home that they paid eight point one million for.
Check Martha's vineyard home. Right down the street from Joe
Strecker is Martha's vineyard place. Joe, do you ever run
into the Obamas when you're at Martha's Vineyard join your
multimillion dollar home.
Speaker 1 (01:08:54):
Only you only go in the summertime. That's right.
Speaker 3 (01:08:56):
And man, they've been really working on the campaign here,
so it's not likely you're going to run into them.
The Martha's Vineyard home eleven point seven five million dollars.
They have a Hawaiian beachfront home they bought for eight
point seven million dollars. And let's not forget the Chicago
house they got for one point sixty five million.
Speaker 1 (01:09:17):
Huh. How many homes does somebody need?
Speaker 3 (01:09:24):
I know that's an individual choice, and I'm not here
to tell you that there should be a government edict
or mandate saying that now you shouldn't have four homes
each in excess of multiple millions of dollars. Joe, can
I pull the room? Do we have a homeless problem
in this country? Haven't you heard that from the Democrats?
Haven't you heard requests from Democrats in various Blue cities
(01:09:45):
saying people need to open their homes up to help
us deal with this outrageous overflow of illegal immigrants come
into our country. It's not their fault. They're fleeing oppression.
They're fleeing economic hardships. We need to help them. Yeah,
every day. Huh has anybody read a report that the
Obamas are opening any one of their four homes too
(01:10:06):
to help thee with the homeless problem, because you know,
let's face at Martha's Vineyard, that's not that far away
from New York City, right, They got a real problem there.
We know Chicago has a problem. I bet they got
room in that one point sixty five million.
Speaker 1 (01:10:22):
And then had two kids.
Speaker 3 (01:10:25):
And I think they're like college age, aren't they, or
are maybe even older than that. Anyway, most people they
would have as a family unit would be four. I'm
not sorting of the square footage of any one of
these four houses, most notably a house worth eleven and
a half eleven point seventy five million in Martha's Vineyard.
I don't know how big that is. Maybe that's only
a handy fixer upper in Martha's Vineyard. I don't imagine
(01:10:50):
it is, and I imagine it's probably got more than, oh,
I don't know, twelve hundred square feet, which is the
size of the house my wife in rural Novella, Pennsylvania,
grew up in with four kids, but I'm guessing probably
more than four bedrooms.
Speaker 1 (01:11:13):
Taking. And then I go back to that word took,
suspicious of folks who took more than they needed. So
what do we learn here?
Speaker 3 (01:11:22):
Don't take things right, earn them through hard work and
decent ethics.
Speaker 1 (01:11:31):
Hard work.
Speaker 3 (01:11:32):
So next time the Democrats are proposing, let's say, welfare
programs that don't require some education or work requirement, with
work that they're able to do, education opportunities that any
individual could pursue and work hard to overcome the challenges
that they are currently facing, then that will be a
good thing. But if they don't require any effort to
(01:11:55):
get a free government handout, then aren't they taking something
without maybe being accountable for it, without showing some measure
of responsibility, at least trying to get some skills or
taking that job opportunity that actually exists and can be
fulfilled by them in return for getting a handout from
the government.
Speaker 1 (01:12:16):
Hard work.
Speaker 3 (01:12:18):
All right, let's take those words to the bank, and
let's see if the Obamas open their homes up to
help those around them who are drowning.
Speaker 1 (01:12:26):
Six forty six.
Speaker 3 (01:12:26):
If you I have Kirsty talk station, Oh, apparently wearing
a three thousand dollars pant suit, well, lecturing you and
me about the morality of wealth. That's just shameless, man.
You know the reminder of his Nancy Pelosi eating twelve
dollars a pint ice cream in front of her twenty
five thousand dollars refrigerator freezer during the middle of COVID
(01:12:50):
locked in and COVID nineteen lockdowns and just saying, Oh,
here's what I do to pass the time. Yeah, in
a kitchen that's bigger than most people's apartments. Huh, what
happened after the French Revolution, Joe, didn't they go after
(01:13:11):
all the aristocracy?
Speaker 11 (01:13:13):
Uh?
Speaker 3 (01:13:15):
Okay, six forty seven pf you go Kcity doc station.
But careful what you wish for. Folks, call an electric
call Color. You can confidently call Colin. They're gonna do
a great job for your residential electric work, is what
they do. They've been for twenty five years. Andrew Cullen,
he's a great guy who's a similar fantastic team of
electricians locally on and operator since nineteen ninety nine. And
they've certainly pride themselves and are justifiable in doing that
(01:13:36):
on their honest reputation doing all facets of residential work.
Residential work from simple outlet install can lights which it
did for me, oh and outlets as well my bathroom project.
They did a lot of wiring on that. Hey, wire
up your media room, get some LED lighting solutions. Rewire
your whole home if you've got nob and two wiring
or aluminum wiring. Any job big and smaller A plus
with a better business baraw you get a ten year
(01:13:58):
wiring warranty on everything they do for use, so you
can call them with confidence, knowing full well you're gonna
get great customer service at a great price. Colin spelled
c U L L E N online. It's Colin Electriccincinnati
dot com.
Speaker 1 (01:14:08):
Here's that number.
Speaker 3 (01:14:09):
Please tell them, Brian said, Hi, would you five one
three two two seven four one one two five one
three two two seven four one one two fifty five
KRC between the lines. Time now for the nine first
warning weather forecast. We're gonna be a sunny day today
with the highest seventy nine overnight. It's gonna get down
(01:14:30):
to fifty fourth clear sky tomorrow, mostly sunny day with
low humidity thankfully high eighty six clear of night down
to sixty and a sunny Saturday ninetythentity the high. Let's
hope the low humidity stays true for that day as well.
Right now fifty two in time for traffic update from the.
Speaker 1 (01:14:47):
UCL Traffic Center with UC health.
Speaker 9 (01:14:49):
The future of care is happening now through clinical trials
and innovative treatments said give patients and chance for better outcomes.
Visit ucehealth dot com. Getting reports of a new accident
Anderson Township. It's westbound two seventy five near five mile.
I'm not seeing a huge delay as of yet. They
cleared the wreck northbound seventy five in the Lochlan's Spit.
(01:15:10):
Better traffic from Galbret king Ramont fifty five krs the
talk station.
Speaker 1 (01:15:18):
Six.
Speaker 3 (01:15:18):
If you want a fifty five KRCD talk station, Brian
Thomas here wish you a very happy Friday, even inviting
me to call for care by one three seven, two
to three talk. They're looking further into this. Trump would
be murderer had a real low profile on social media,
as we all have learned so far. However, according to
(01:15:40):
Representative Mike Wallace, who's a Republican out of Florida, retired
Green Beret he's been appointed to a thirteen member House
bipartisan task force to investigate this attempted assassination, and the
reporter asked him yesterday if he had learned anything during
the investigation about the encrypted messages on the shooter's cell phone.
As it turns out, he did and was communicating using
(01:16:02):
encrypting encrypted messages on multiple platforms, platforms based in Belgium,
New Zealand and Germany. Refering to the accounts held by
this crooks would be assassed. And we still haven't learned
a lot. We haven't learned that, not much about the
overseas accounts. We don't know that, we don't know what
(01:16:23):
they were in if I get this correctly, Belgian, New Zealand,
and Germany. He said, why does a nineteen year old
kid who is a healthcare aid need encrypted platforms not
even based in the United States, but based abroad where
most terrorist organizations know it is harder for our law
enforcement to get into. That's a question I've had since
day one. And he went on to lament that the
(01:16:44):
FBI and Secret Service have not provided them anything and
saying that they're not going to provide anything until they
complete their investigation. Which could take months. Walt said they
need to be releasing information as they come across it
because this wasn't an isolated incident. Threats are continually Iranian threats.
(01:17:05):
You can pivot over. There's a Walid Faras has been
following the Iranian threats the Islamic regime. He says he
is trying to assassinate Donald Trump before election day. According
to him, the Eye Toolds and allies in their terror
groups openly claim on social media and in private conversations
that Trump will not be a word because they believe
he won't be alive on election day. Is Trump's team
(01:17:27):
a term rather jud too an end? The regime supreme
leader Ali Kamani said publicly Trump was in his agencies,
in his agency's crosshairs, his words promising and again in
his words revenge on the orderer and killer of Costum Solamani.
That's the terrorist mastermind. Whatever the Donald Trump sent a
drone strike on. It was just last year that the
(01:17:51):
IRGC commander said, we are seeking to Allah willing kill
Trump and former Secretary of State Mike pompeii h Of course, recently,
the Justice Department, in court filings pointed out that a
Pakistani man with ties to Iran travel in New York
City to lead an effort to assassinate Trump that was
(01:18:12):
in that was going to take place in late August
or September one that they well stopped from happening. US
law enforcement also pointed out that a Trump campaign has
been targeted by the regime with cyber attacks, and they
have confirmed that the Iranians are the ones that broke
into the Trump campaign materials. So we have this growing
threat and many people wondering how in the hell this
(01:18:35):
crooks guy got it in his head to try to
squeeze off around and kill Donald Trump. Well, the dots
slowly be connected. I can't draw a conclusion yet, but
it could be. With social media having the influence it
has on young, twisted people with unstable wives, it could
(01:18:56):
very well be that through one of these encrypted accounts
wait for it, keep your popcorn out. Ultimately they will
be decrypted and we will find out, hopefully what this
guy was all about, or maybe they'll pull a Warren
commission on US six fifty five fifty five KRC the
talk station More to talk about up top of their news,
followed by Kurt Coutchman at seven thirty senior policy fellow
on fiscal responsibility for Americans for Prosperity. We'll be talking
(01:19:18):
with him about Biden inflation. That's at the bottom of
the next hour. I hope you can stick around history
as it happens.
Speaker 5 (01:19:25):
Anything stop Donald Trump.
Speaker 4 (01:19:27):
Nothing minutes away at the top of the hour fifty
five KRC the talk station.
Speaker 1 (01:19:33):
This report day sponsored by.
Speaker 6 (01:19:37):
Joy Joe Joye.
Speaker 1 (01:19:56):
Last night's d NC.
Speaker 3 (01:20:00):
So no I did not watch it, but from all accounts,
I wish I had a dollar for every time they
said the word Joy yesterday.
Speaker 1 (01:20:14):
Seven o six.
Speaker 7 (01:20:15):
Here.
Speaker 3 (01:20:15):
If you about tennessee the talk station a very happy
Friday to you. Feel free to call in love to
hear from you. Maybe your respond to the well with
the messaging Joy is the message. And as I've been
pointing out all morning, if you have to rely on
a politician in Washington, d C. For Joy, I think
you are in a struggled existence and maybe need some
psychological counseling. I do speak for Linder Center of Hope.
(01:20:37):
They offer wonderful counseling services there. You obviously a very
sad person, and if you think you can get joy
from an elected official, you got a bridge, I want
to say, or at least I want to be able
to point out the sort of the sad, pathetic reality
of the life you're living right now. Politicians do not
bring joy unless they stay the hell out of your life.
(01:20:58):
I'd be rather joyful if they just decided that they
would leave us alone and allow us to make decisions
and you know, run our businesses as we see fit,
and buy the cards that we see fit. Maybe buy
the appliances that we see fit, you know that kind
of thing. Maybe go to the school to send our
children to the school that we see fit, school choice.
That'd be a nice thing. Hopefully I would get some
(01:21:20):
joy out of that. I don't know, but it would
come from them not bothering me or leaving me alone. So,
for everything that we know about this campaign and what
we know about Kamala Harris's pass and where she will
send this country down the road, if she would ever
utter a syllable about her campaign and her pledges and
her promises and her commitments and her ideas and her strategies,
(01:21:40):
I suspect that if given a record, we're going to
be going on the same path we got under Biden.
The exact same path we got unto Obama, except maybe
on steroids. That would not bring me joy, and I
don't think it will bring you joy either. Five one
three seven two three talk pound FI fifty on eight
T and T phone. Another day, another day goes by
(01:22:02):
that we don't have any information. This is day thirty two,
Day thirty two. Although if you listen to some of
the left wing commentators, they're like, well, screw you. She
doesn't need to talk to anybody. Former Bill Clinton ade
Paul mcgala said on CNN yesterday, who cares? When talking
about why she hasn't done any interviews with media?
Speaker 1 (01:22:24):
Who cares?
Speaker 11 (01:22:26):
I do?
Speaker 3 (01:22:29):
And in fact I think the rioters at the DNC
probably care as well. What's her position relative to Israel Palestine?
Has she told you about that one?
Speaker 14 (01:22:37):
Yet?
Speaker 1 (01:22:39):
Who cares? They care?
Speaker 3 (01:22:42):
They're not necessarily on my side of the political edgem.
They're not necessarily advocating or fighting for or rioting in
the street for something I'm necessarily concerned about in my world,
But they care. Former Obama administration ambassador Russell Michael mcaon
fall had this to say, if a press conference helps
(01:23:03):
her win, she should do it.
Speaker 1 (01:23:06):
If not.
Speaker 3 (01:23:07):
She shouldn't do it. It's just that simple. She has
no moral obligation to talk to the press. Tone it down, folks, Seriously,
this is the attitude, this is the belief system. And
actually he said the quiet part out loud, now, didn't
he They're taking you for granted, and they're just assuming
that you're stupid and read into what he said. If
(01:23:34):
it helps her, she should do it. Don't you think
this strategy is behind the scenes, the Obama folks that
are working to elevate Kamala Harrison to something or trying
to convince you that something that she is not.
Speaker 1 (01:23:44):
Didn't you think they know that?
Speaker 3 (01:23:46):
It's one of the reasons we're on day thirty two
is the election fast approaches and early voting begins to
what the second week in September. I mean, that's like tomorrow, folks,
almost in real time. If it would help her, she
would have been out there doing it already. I think
that's an acknowledgement that she can't do a press conference.
(01:24:08):
What happened when we got one question asked by one
reporter and we caught her in an off moment where
she was willing to answer her question, asked her about inflation,
and she comes back with price fixing. Now they've been
doing their best to walk that one back. It was
widely ridiculed. Every economist on the planet pointed to all
the historic illustrations of how price fixing doesn't work and
(01:24:29):
makes things a lot worse for the people who do it,
even including Richard Nixon, who learned a very hard heart
and tough lesson after he engaged in price fixing.
Speaker 1 (01:24:42):
Whoops.
Speaker 3 (01:24:43):
So I think he's right if a press conference conference
helps her do it, but if not, don't do it.
So you know, day thirty two of not doing it,
and it was it's obviously noted. I'm I give promise,
and it's new Buster's Tim Grant, So you know it's
going to be, you know, a conservative viewpoint, but it's
(01:25:04):
a valid viewpoint. He says he should absolutely hold a
press conference. Of course, he said, one would expect when
she names her vice president pick. But we can't expect
her to break from Biden's at serial at avoidance of
press conferences. Since the twenty twenty campaign, he writes, we
have witnessed the bizarre spectacle of Donald Trump granting wide
access to networks that suggest he's a fascist as well
(01:25:26):
as well as a racist, the misogynists, etcetera, etcetera. You know,
evil orange man stuff. These are all the left wing
outlets of Donald Trump has been willing to go on
and answer their very biased questions. Meanwhile, Biden Harris won't
grant interviews to media outlets that gurgle all over them
and their historic compl in her historic accomplishments. Either they
think the press can never be servile enough, or they're
(01:25:51):
projecting a complete lack of confidence in their efforts to
put complete sentences together, which makes me want to think
back to that CNN fater's observation about well, you know,
if it's going to help her, do it. If it's not,
don't do it. So anyways, jump over the phones. I
got Drew Pappas on the line. Mister Pappis, welcome in
the morning show. Always a pleasure to hear from you.
Speaker 2 (01:26:13):
I have to thank you this morning.
Speaker 13 (01:26:15):
The visual of the Happy, Happy, Joy Joy song from
Renn and Stampy just absolutely put a smile on my face.
Speaker 1 (01:26:24):
I thought it mean too, like look at this the
first thing I saw all these headlines with joy, Bill
Clinton see you with joy. It's like red and Stimpy.
I mean, unless you're not.
Speaker 13 (01:26:34):
I mean, if you're not a fiado of Chelastic Rent
and Stampy, you should be because it is clearly one
of the best cartoons ever heard all but.
Speaker 3 (01:26:43):
All the time, only only out done by I would
argue South Park, maybe Archer, but Red and Stimpy.
Speaker 13 (01:26:50):
Yes, yes, yes, yes, listen I found it. Did you
find it a bit ironical? Or I don't know what
the word, but the circle of life really closed for me? Well,
it will close finally when she accepts the nomination. But
Bill Clinton giving his endorsement or his blessing to Kamala Harris,
(01:27:13):
and I was sitting there struggling to think of, well,
what do they have in common? And then I was like, oh, yeah,
I mean the only thing that would make this better
and more complete is if somehow they altered you know,
Monica Lewinsky's blue dress. And she walked out there and
accept the nomination in the blue dressed.
Speaker 14 (01:27:37):
Yeah, that's go clean it.
Speaker 13 (01:27:40):
Yeah, I mean, I was like, I mean, it's like
it's like they pretend like, oh, none of that ever happened,
you know. I find it hilarious the Democrats and and
with the word joy maybe that was maybe that was
Willie Brown's.
Speaker 2 (01:27:55):
Pet name for her, I'm not sure, but or maybe
it was their safe But see, at.
Speaker 1 (01:28:01):
The end of the day, I didn't think I would
be laughing today.
Speaker 13 (01:28:12):
But I mean, at the end of the day, the
Democrat Party is just so completely devoid of any sense
of decency or morality. And I'm not saying, go get
me wrong, I'm not saying that all Democrats are bad
all Republicans are good.
Speaker 2 (01:28:28):
I'm not it.
Speaker 1 (01:28:28):
That's not it.
Speaker 13 (01:28:29):
But had you been in that, had anyone with any
modicum of decency been in that situation been Bill Clinton
been a Democrat party, don't you think you would have
avoided any and all possible references to that incident because
but they're like, it never happened, Oh, that never happened
because we're Democrats and we're above all that.
Speaker 1 (01:28:50):
So he apologized.
Speaker 2 (01:28:51):
I don't think he did, but you know he never
did that.
Speaker 1 (01:28:54):
Well he did do that.
Speaker 13 (01:28:55):
I mean, it's it's just puzzling to me how they
put it for a Democrat and the Democrat Party is
reality is whatever they believe it to be or want
it to be, not the reality of the facts or
the history or anything else. And it just drives me
insane because they hold the Republican Party everybody else or
anybody against the Democrats. It's not a Democrat. They hold
(01:29:18):
them as well as the media. It's just such a
high standard. Well you one time you drove by a
store that you know sold white supremacists.
Speaker 10 (01:29:27):
Why did you drive on that street?
Speaker 1 (01:29:29):
Did you not know that that was there? Yeah?
Speaker 13 (01:29:31):
And I mean and and I loved how Donald Trump
owned the media's question to him in Michigan like a boss.
I mean, he just reaches to ask the reporter, I
know who brought up a stupid question.
Speaker 1 (01:29:46):
Here's the question, who was here?
Speaker 15 (01:29:48):
Right?
Speaker 3 (01:29:49):
He will attack you for being in whole Michigan howl
Michigan because it's associated with white supremacy. That was the
statement from the reporter. Wasn't even a question. Trump's response,
who is here? In twenty twenty one, the reporter's response,
Joe Biden drop?
Speaker 1 (01:30:03):
Thank you? And he just and he just.
Speaker 2 (01:30:04):
Smiled and walked away. And that's how you have to
do it.
Speaker 3 (01:30:07):
That's a mic drop. I gotta give him credit. That
was an absolute drop the microphone.
Speaker 13 (01:30:11):
Should have put on the dark sunglasses and just walked
away like a boss, So thank you for making me
laugh this morning. I will be having the Ren and
Stimpy Happy Happy Joy Joy song in my head all day.
Speaker 1 (01:30:25):
Yes, and do you remember who sang it?
Speaker 2 (01:30:28):
Oh god, the group no.
Speaker 1 (01:30:30):
No, no, no no, the character who sang the happy
Happy Joy song.
Speaker 16 (01:30:34):
Yeah, it was what it was.
Speaker 13 (01:30:37):
I gotta think now because there were specially he had
the he had that device on his head.
Speaker 3 (01:30:42):
And you're thinking that, you're thinking of of Stimpy, I
believe or Wren would. I was get the two mixed up.
You know, the old Burl Eys like guy.
Speaker 13 (01:30:50):
That is old guy, Yeah, the old the old crazy
old man in the in the hat or the like
the hillbilly looking guy.
Speaker 1 (01:30:56):
Yeah that guy. Yes, that was Stinky Wizzleteats.
Speaker 17 (01:31:00):
Think it.
Speaker 1 (01:31:03):
Stinky wizzle Teats, thank you again?
Speaker 14 (01:31:06):
Ye?
Speaker 13 (01:31:06):
Or you know now I'm thinking of baber Fever that
one episode when they had beaber Fever drank out of
the Oh god, people.
Speaker 3 (01:31:13):
Are no, they needed well, they want to check it out.
You've never seen Run and Simpy. Just go ahead and
go to first season episode six. I looked it up
because I couldn't remember Stinky wizzle Teat's name and I
was just burning in the back of my head. So
there as satisfied my curiosity and of course made Drew
Pappus and me laugh today, laugh along with us if
you possibly can, Drew, have a great day, my friend.
(01:31:36):
Thanks for calling in and I enjoyed the smile. Seven
to seventeen, Jay and Steve, you guys are next. Hang
on one moment, if you don't mind, I want to
mention real quick here a way of you guys and
everybody else in the listening audience potentially saying every single month,
maybe five hundred one thousand dollars on your medical insurance
premium and getting better medical coverage.
Speaker 1 (01:31:54):
That is the point of cover. Sincy.
Speaker 3 (01:31:56):
You have brokers out there in the world at Cover
sincey they will work for you. You they're your second
fiduciary obligation, so they're working for you with access to
a couple one hundred or so different insurance companies and
thousands of medical policies. Yes, there are that many options
in the world, and Cover since he has access to
all of them, which means they look at you individually
(01:32:16):
and put together a package of insurance that provides you
with extra better coverage like dollar one coverage or you know,
the types of things you do all the time, like checkups,
for example, for less money, and it is amazing how
they accomplish this. So what I say is, look, there's
no obligation to you. All you can do is call
them and initiate the conversation. Talk to any one of
the team members that cover, since any one of them
(01:32:38):
can hand you. A lot of people call in and say, no,
I got to talk to John Roman. He's a great guy,
and maybe you will. But they have a huge team
there that'll help you out even after you get the
medical insurance, like you get a claim problem. I love
this element. You know, who wants to spend like two
hours on the phone on hold with an insurance company
try to talk about a document that you may not
even understand. Yeah, that explanation of benefits?
Speaker 1 (01:32:59):
Well why was this? No, you don't have to do that.
Speaker 3 (01:33:01):
You got a problem with anything in terms of coverage,
you call it John and the team at Covers. Since
he let them handle it. That's what they do, and
they will continue to do that throughout your period of
dealing with them, and you're gonna have better coverage at
lower rates. So there's nothing down about this at all.
It's worth the phone call again to obligation, just a
little bit of time five one three eight hundred two
two five five five one three eight hundred call online.
(01:33:23):
You learn more about the place at the website, and
there's a form on the website where you can get
the conversation started to see if they can do this
for you. It's coversincy dot com.
Speaker 5 (01:33:32):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 1 (01:33:37):
Sunny, dry and highest seventy nine to day, says Channel
nine overy ninth ten to fifty four with clear skies,
sunny tomorrow, eighty six low humidity. They point out sixty
over night with clear skies and a mostly sunny Saturday
going up to ninety though fifty three. Right now, time
for traffic updates.
Speaker 9 (01:33:53):
Probably u sel triumphingg Center with uc health the future
of carry is happening now through clinical trial, saying innovative
treatments that give pace and it's a chance for better outcomes.
Speaker 1 (01:34:04):
Visit uc health dot com.
Speaker 9 (01:34:06):
Chris continue to work with the broken down semis blocking
the left lane northbound seventy fives ramp to westbound two
seventy five above Sharon Bill southbound seventy five continues to build.
That's an extra three to four minutes right now through
the Lockman Split northbound four seventy one beginning to fill
in just a bit into town.
Speaker 1 (01:34:24):
Chuck Ingram on hundred fifty five krs. The talk station
CO sevent twenty three ship straight to the Phones's got
a couple of dollars online and see what we get
both in.
Speaker 3 (01:34:33):
Let's start with Jay has been on hold. Thank you
Jay for calling this morning.
Speaker 18 (01:34:37):
Hey, good morning, Brian.
Speaker 11 (01:34:38):
Hey.
Speaker 19 (01:34:39):
I think the left is not dumb.
Speaker 18 (01:34:41):
I think they're smart, and they're recognizing that their side
no longer cares about policy or direction or where the.
Speaker 2 (01:34:51):
Country is heading.
Speaker 18 (01:34:53):
Rushland Boss said probably twenty five years ago that we
would someday reach a tipping point in this country where
over half the electorate will only vote based on what
you're going to give me his rush used to say
it like that. And I think we're there, and I
think they understand that they can only hurt themselves by
(01:35:13):
putting her out there. And it really didn't start with her.
If you back up, there was a time Hillary it
started with Hillary Clinton. Hillary Clinton disappeared during the whenever
she was running against Trump. It didn't hurt her at all.
Speaker 9 (01:35:26):
She almost won.
Speaker 18 (01:35:28):
Joe Biden disappeared when he ran against Trump and won,
And I know that there were some shenanigans alert going
off there, and I believe that there were some things
going on. Nonetheless, four years later he's in the White House.
Speaker 10 (01:35:41):
So I think they are.
Speaker 18 (01:35:43):
I think they're extremely bright and intelligent and evil to
know that it doesn't matter you don't put people out
on the stage. Because they've also lost the press. It's
no longer nineteen seventy five with Walter Cronkite. The right
wing press is getting bigger and getting better. And so
I think it's a brilliant strategic political Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:36:06):
I just cut to the chase so I can get
Jay's called real quick here. You're right, I'm not accusing
them of being ignorant. They are smart. They have an
understanding of the reality that you talk about, that of
our collective stupidity to believe that we can actually get
free stuff from the government from now until the end
of time. Look at where this has brought us in
terms of our deficit. Look at where they do the
(01:36:28):
obligations of our spending programs are it's an unsustainable thing.
But see they know that we're dumb enough to believe
that it can continue forever. So yeah, they are smart.
We are the dumb ones. Let's see you get Jay
real quick here, Jay, thanks for Steve rather Steve, thanks
for calling this morning.
Speaker 1 (01:36:43):
Welcome to the show.
Speaker 14 (01:36:45):
Good morning, Brian. Hey, I'd like to lay out my
theory as to where the joy came from.
Speaker 1 (01:36:50):
All right, very quickly, go ahead, Okay, real.
Speaker 14 (01:36:53):
Quick, and I'm in the nineteen thirty nineteen thirty.
Speaker 3 (01:36:59):
Three Subbala, the Nazi strength through Joy campaign.
Speaker 14 (01:37:04):
Yeah, he had the program called dirsh craft craft dirst Fruity,
which translates to strength through Joy, which was horribly successful
and firing up the German people, believed to lead to the.
Speaker 10 (01:37:21):
Rise of the Third Reich.
Speaker 1 (01:37:23):
Yeah.
Speaker 14 (01:37:24):
And remember our good friend Timmy was a social studies teacher,
so he maybe was aware of this and is using that.
Speaker 2 (01:37:36):
Strength through joy to lead to the rise.
Speaker 1 (01:37:39):
Of his party.
Speaker 3 (01:37:41):
You don't know, don't know, but it wouldn't surprise me. Look,
it was tried, It worked for the Nazis. It helped
them in nineteen thirty three become in and get get
get obviously power over Germany and convince the people that
they were the right way to go and look what
that got us. Yeah, exactly, good point. Draw your own
conclusions for both craft dish freude. We're gonna hear from
(01:38:05):
Kurt Couchman, senior policy fellow for Fiscal Responsibility Americans for
Prosperity will be doing an analysis of Biden inflation Kurt
on next if you can stick around for that. Quick
word here for Suzette Low's Camp a woman that you
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Speaker 5 (01:39:20):
Com, fifty five KRC.
Speaker 1 (01:39:23):
Here's your nine first one of weather forecast nights day
to day. Sunday sky's in a highest seventy nine down
to fifty four overnight Tomorrow, low humidity with mostly sun
at I have eighty six clear every night down to sixty.
Saturday will be sunny as well to high in ninety
right now fifty three in time for a traffic update.
Chuck Ingram from the U see how Trampic Center with
uce Health.
Speaker 9 (01:39:41):
The future of care is happening now through clinical trials
and innovative treatments that give patient it's a chance for
better outcomes. Visit uc health dot com problems inbound seventy four.
There's an accident before you got the seventy five The
what two wings are currently blocked off? Now single file
to get buy on the right traffic up towards North
Bend quickly Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRC the talk station.
Speaker 3 (01:40:07):
Seven thirty one if yourbop CAARCD talk station. Very happy
for Thursday Friday Eve. Oh, he's excited about Friday, so
let's call it Friday Eve. And happy to have and
a joyous occasion. Happy, happy, joy Joy. Welcome Kurt Kautzman.
He's a senior policy fellow on the Fiscal Responsibility for
Americans for Prosperity. Taking Donovan and Neil spot for a moment.
That's okay, Welcome to the program. Kurt's a real pleasure
(01:40:28):
to have you on. Thanks for all the Americans for
Prosperity is doing well.
Speaker 2 (01:40:31):
Thanks so much. It's great morning to be joining you today.
Speaker 3 (01:40:34):
I will recommend my listeners get on over to afpaction
dot com.
Speaker 1 (01:40:38):
Sign up help out.
Speaker 3 (01:40:39):
They'll teach you how to door knock, talk to people, interact,
and obviously here in the state of Ohio, sell Bernie
Morino because Shared Brown, we know, votes with the Biden
administration ninety what is it, ninety eight percent of the
time or something like that. It's almost lockstep. They're trying
to reimagine. Shared Brown is some sort of moderate centrist.
If you watch the television commercials and ad Campaigan, geez,
(01:41:00):
he comes across almost as a Republican. We know different
than that, don't we, Kurt, Well, we certainly do. I've
been watching him for a long time.
Speaker 2 (01:41:08):
I mean, he was a House member before he was
a senator, and I remember even in those days, he would,
you know, play the moderate, the populace, but then he
would always vote for whatever it was that Nancy Pelosi
or Chuck Schumer or Harry Reid before Schumer put in
front of him. He's a loyal soldier for progressive causes,
he always has been, but he doesn't want to be
seen that way.
Speaker 3 (01:41:28):
Well, that's how we need to help and support Bernie Morena.
Proven businessman, He's obviously got some skill set. We were
talking earlier in the program about whether Elon Musk might
end up in Trump's cabinet, and what a great idea
that would be. The man's proven genius. He's obviously made
products and goods and he's created things that people want
to buy. And he's a great businessman, obviously given the
wealth he's accumulated.
Speaker 1 (01:41:48):
He's interactive, he's smart.
Speaker 3 (01:41:50):
I mean, we could go on and on and on
all the reasons why he could benefit us, right, same
thing with Bernie Morena. You know, he's he a businessman,
someone with skill sets. He knows then how to navigate
the challenges and quite often the roadblocks and speed bumps
placed in front of us by government.
Speaker 1 (01:42:07):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:42:07):
Absolutely, it's important to be able to understand those things.
I will say, however, that I think Elon is doing
such amazing things for our future world that he's trying
to create and imagine that I wouldn't want to distract
him from that. With government service, there are actually a
lot of good, principled people that are able to serve
in those roles. And the other thing is the DC
(01:42:31):
is like it's weird little bubble, and understanding like how
stuff works here is really critical to having success. It
just takes time to figure out, like how to deal
with the bureaucracy, how Congress really works. And so you know,
in the case of the Senate, you have a little
more time, but in cabinet agency you got to be
able to hit the ground running immediately. So we want
(01:42:52):
people with lots of different perspectives to bring to bear
on the problems facing us. But it's important that they
get educated as quickly as possible about how to be motive.
Speaker 3 (01:43:01):
Okay, and you know, you just kind of made a
really excellent point. You got to it takes a while
a long time to figure out how to navigate the
bureaucratic realities of Washington, DC. See, you just you put
your finger right on the problem. Should it be that difficult?
I mean, if you want to start a business or
I was looking at that. Oh gosh, it's a there
(01:43:21):
was an Wall Street Journal article, and I know we're
going to talk about Biden inflation here. I apologize for
going on this tangent. But Wall Street Journal article just
yesterday about the need for this critical element that is
in like three hundred different weapons systems, and the only
people in the world that mine in are China at
sixty percent and like tazik Stan in Russia or Tazik stands. Anyway,
(01:43:42):
we have it here in the United States, and there's
a mining company that's trying to extract this. We have
a massive, massive quantity of this out I believe it
was in Idaho. They've been trying to get a mine
there for the last ten years, fifty different permits and
things that they need to go through, and then at
every turn they're met by an environmental channel in a lawsuit,
someone trying to put the brakes on them mining this
(01:44:04):
very critical thing that we need for our national defense.
There's the reality of living in an overly regulated environment.
Speaker 2 (01:44:11):
Oh, no question, one hundred percent agree. We've got tons
of different materials that are available in this country. Alaska's
rich with them, Idaho, New Mexico, Colorado, all across the country.
I'm from northern Pennsylvania. We've got the Marcella shale. At
least we're able to produce it up there, unlike across
the border in New York. So we need to be
able to produce things. And by the way, Americans produce
(01:44:33):
these materials with much lower environmental impact than China, than Russia,
than Kazakhstan, because we have the best technologies in the world.
So we're shooting ourselves in the foot from an environmental perspective,
let alone from an economic one by not allowing these
things to be produced domestically.
Speaker 3 (01:44:51):
Yes, indeed, we're also putting ourselves at a major security
risk because China just announced that they're no longer going
to be selling us that critical ingredient any longer. It's
frightening situation. We've set it up for ourselves. This way
we're gonna bring back. Take a quick break here, we're
gonna continue this conversation. We'll talk Biden nomics with Kurt Kaouchman.
It was a great thing not that long ago. Now
Kamala Harris is running to fix it. Pretty strange. Seven
(01:45:12):
thirty six, Right now after five Kirsty Talk Station an
opportunity to mention twenty two to three greatest indoor range
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(01:45:34):
talking about. They have a gunsmith in store, and you
know it's Shooting Sports Month. Shooting Sports Month is August
and it is a sport. I engage in that sport.
Speaker 1 (01:45:43):
But in honor of.
Speaker 3 (01:45:44):
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on their indoor range, head on over to twenty two
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Shoot for the first time. You get an opportunity to
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Just one way.
Speaker 3 (01:46:01):
They're celebrating a Shooting Sports Month. August twenty two to three. Online,
it's twenty two three dot com, the number twenty two
fall by the word three spelled out dot com fifty
five KRC Steve Perrin's coordinatre. It is rather report Today's
sunny and seventy nine drive clear of night, low of
(01:46:22):
fifty four. Tomorrow loves humidity with sunny skies in high
of eighty six, clear ofver night sixty and Saturday is
going to be a sunny day as well, high of
ninety Right now fifty three let's hear about traffic.
Speaker 1 (01:46:32):
From the UCL Tramphic Center with uce health.
Speaker 9 (01:46:35):
The future of care is happening now through clinical trials
and innovative treatments and give patient's a chance for better outcomes.
Visit ucehealth dot com. Cruiser're working with an accident inbound
seventy four. Before you got the seventy five left lanes block,
they gave you back to the center lane. Fire truck
left the scene. That traffic is backing up close to
North Bend. Southbound seventy one. Cruise are working with an
(01:46:57):
accident that started off in the center lane. Is now
over on the right shoulder just before Feifer. The traffic
getting heavy from Field Zertle Chuck Ingram on fifty five
KRC the talk station.
Speaker 3 (01:47:09):
Seven forty here if you have KCD talk station Ryan
Timma swish you need Happy Friday Eve and enjoying my conversation.
We're gonna dive on into Bidenomics with Kurt Coutsman and
has to be senior policy fellow on fiscal responsibility for
Americans for prosperity, help out get to America afpaction dot com.
All right, Kurt, Bidenomics or biden Inflation is a consequence
(01:47:30):
of Bidenomics. Bidenomics was awesome not that long ago, so say,
at the Biden administration, until they realized that we were smarter.
We you can't deny what we pay at the grocery store.
We can't deny the price of housing has gone through
the roof. Inflation is at a forty year high. You
can't hide from that. You can't you know, talk your
way out of that reality. So they quit using the
(01:47:52):
word bidnomics in a positive way. Now, Kamala Harris is
running on promises to fix the problems that well they created, right.
Speaker 2 (01:48:00):
They expanded on the pre existing problems and made them
a lot worse than they needed to be. I mean,
the price of housing, healthcare, education, transportation, so many other
things were too high before this administration, and they've gone
up so much more. They've had an aggressive spending and
borrowing agenda. That's what gave us the inflation because they
forced the Fed to monetize the debt. The Fed increased
(01:48:23):
the money supply way faster than the economy was growing.
And so that difference, that delta between the money supply
growth and the actual growth in the economy that gave
us inflation, and this time it was driven almost entirely,
if not entirely, by the massive increase in debt because
the Federal Reserve was concerned that others wouldn't buy it,
and so they felt like they had to. And it's
(01:48:46):
not just the fiscal side of things, although that's what
I specialized in. It's also the regulatory side. I mean
the amount of bureaucracy that it takes to get anything done.
I mean, you mentioned the mining out west, so much
of that is on bureaus and management land. And one
little glimmer of hope is that the state of Utah
two days ago suit the federal government to claim it's
(01:49:09):
bl the BLM land within its borders and you know,
try to get title for it. If that were to happen,
I don't know all the ins and outs of all
the regulations that would fall away, but my sense is
that it would give the people of Utah the ability
to actually manage that land in an appropriate way. So
just a little glimmer of hope, but that Bidenomics' bureaucracy unleashed,
(01:49:33):
and so I think that's an important thing for folks
to understand.
Speaker 3 (01:49:36):
You know, and they're trying to suggest that, you know,
they're the party of freedoms and all that, and I
just I hear that again. It's like you're trying to
convince me that weren't a great place economically with the
inflation and the prices of things. You can't sell me
on that nonsense. You know, you are literally the party
that takes away freedoms and liberties. That's what they are
all about. It's undeniable. You step back from the landscape
(01:49:59):
of the regulats or environment we're in, look at every
single regulation. Does it expand our opportunities? Does it create
some flexibility for businesses? The answer is absolutely no. It
drives up the cost of everything. You think of that
mining company had to go through a dozen of lawsuits,
maybe more, and the money they spend on lawyers alone.
You tell me that doesn't have a practical impact on
(01:50:21):
their business model and their ability to make profits and
provide jobs and pull this vitally important element out of
the ground. I mean, it's just layer upon layer upon layer.
Speaker 2 (01:50:32):
Absolutely, But who does it benefit? And that's the key question,
right And when it comes to those sorts of things,
it's trial lawyers because there's the sue and settle practice
or yes, the activistcrupts will sue and then they'll get
a settlement out of EPA or BLM or whatever, and
then that'll be the new policy. And as part of
that they get a cash payment that basically covers all
(01:50:53):
their costs. So it's a preview while they're advancing their
ideological agenda. The bureaucrats, the the civil service, and the
federal employee, you know, the public unions are contributors, major
contributors to Democratic party politics, and then environmentalists of course,
(01:51:14):
the Green New Deal stuff has been layered into everything
that was passed when Democrats had control of everything last Congress.
I mean people talk about the inflation so called Inflation
Reduction Act, which was really Capentry two point zero indeed,
but it was part of American Rescue Plan Act, which
actually kicked off inflation. It was part of the Chips
and Science Act, it was part of the appropriations, it
(01:51:34):
was part of everything that they did. It's been layered
in and they've done a bunch of stuff through regulations
as well.
Speaker 1 (01:51:39):
Well.
Speaker 3 (01:51:39):
And doesn't that present a golden opportunity for our adversaries
to perhaps fund litigation if they see that we are
going to engage in and open up some way to
allow us to extract a vitally important just going back
to that illustration, a vitally important resource for our weapons systems.
They benefit by funding environmental grooves to go in and
(01:52:00):
try to throw a roadblock in front of that and
continue to do that so they can continually derive us.
This is a wonderful opportunity for our adversaries.
Speaker 1 (01:52:09):
Oh, the rabbit hole.
Speaker 2 (01:52:10):
Goes so much deeper. I was in a foreign policy
job two jobs ago, kind of my weird four way
out of budget and domestic policy. But boy, like the
amount that foreign governments fund so called nonpartisan think tanks
in DC is amazing. Yeah, and there isn't required disclosure
for this sort of thing. So whether it's foreign policy
(01:52:30):
or the environmental litigation that we're talking about now, or
so many other things. Like, I think that rabbit hole
just goes so deep. We don't even know, And I'm
not sure what the remedy is there. Maybe it's just
that Congress needs to be more assertive, Congress needs to
work better so that it can blow off the nonsense
and actually serve the American people. That's probably the best
approach to it. But foreign money is like a real
(01:52:53):
you know, influence all throughout the government.
Speaker 3 (01:52:55):
Operations, especially if you're on the side of the adversaries.
You want to undermine our ECONO and defense. Might there
are a lot of people within our own government who
have that feeling, who have bought into this socialist left
wing mentality that America is evil and needs to be
dealt with, and one of the ways of dealing with
them is to pull the economic rug out from under us.
Speaker 2 (01:53:18):
Yeah, and there's attempts to do that. I mean, the
US dollar has been the principal reserve currency for to
support global trade for a long long time, I guess
since maybe before World War two even or certainly since then.
And China and Russia they've formed what's called the Shanghai Pact,
and it's a big chunk of Asian countries that are
(01:53:40):
part of this. Now it's kind of a loose economic
and currency union. They're trying to develop alternatives to the
dollar for international trade, and they are succeeding to a
limited degree within that sphere. Fortunately, there's a lot more
activity economically outside of that region than there.
Speaker 1 (01:53:56):
Is within it.
Speaker 3 (01:53:57):
Well, almost rhetorical question Kurt catrin S policy fell on
fiscal responsibility. How what would be one of the mechanisms
to go about undermining US as having the default currency,
the global currency? Might it be to rack up thirty
six trillion dollars in debt and counting to the point
where we're not going to be able to pay the
debt service on it?
Speaker 1 (01:54:18):
Question?
Speaker 2 (01:54:20):
I mean, certainly that gives major foreign holders of US
debt more leverage over US. I mean, China's got its
own debt problems, but I also own I think last
time I checked it was about eight hundred billion dollars
of US set. Now, if we were to get into
some sort of sticky situation where our economy was doing poorly,
then they might have enough leverage to dump some of
(01:54:41):
that and hurt us a lot more than it hurts them.
But we're not in that place right now. We need
to make sure that we get our house in order
so that we can never end up in that place.
Speaker 1 (01:54:50):
Isn't that a point of fiscal responsibility?
Speaker 3 (01:54:52):
Kurt Gotchman from economic growth and economic growth, heaven forbid,
we get that.
Speaker 1 (01:54:58):
Hey, it's been great having in the program.
Speaker 3 (01:55:00):
Keep up the great work at Americans for prosperity and
again for my listeners to help out, and you should.
It's AFP action dot com. Kurt Ill look forward to
having you back on the program real soon. Best of
health sounds good. Thanks for having me, Brian, Always a
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Speaker 5 (01:56:45):
Ninety five fifty five KRC.
Speaker 1 (01:56:49):
Life can be unpredictable, but your safe group.
Speaker 3 (01:56:55):
Time for a nine first warning weather forecast beautiful day
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Visit uce health dot com.
Speaker 9 (01:57:25):
They cleared the wreck in Bund seventy four, left lane
open again near seventy five, but traffic is a slowgo
from north Bend southbound seventy one. There's a wreck over
on the right shoulder above Feifer that traffic backs to
Fields Eirdle. Southbound seventy five continues to build out of
Evendale and northbound seventy five is running an extra fifteen
minutes from turf Way. Chuck, Ingram on fifty five krs
(01:57:47):
the talk station seven point fifty three here fifty five
kr C the talk station. Hope you are having a
reasonably happy joyous if I can use that word stinky
quizzle teaites, happy, heppy joy, we would have some fun
(01:58:09):
this morning with the red and stant be happy happy
joy JOYSNG. After the word was used repeatedly so often
last night that it just became mind numbing. And anybody
watched Bill Clinton, I just observed I heard him. Boy,
that guy sounds like he's aged. I guess he has time.
March is on, doesn't it anyway? Joy the flavor of
the moment, since they don't want to talk about policy,
(01:58:30):
and again this is day is thirty two without any
press interaction with Kamala Harris, and they will continue to
hide the ball as long as they can because I
guess they've concluded it's one of the callers in the
last hour I mentioned, or earlier in this hour. They're
smart about this. The longer they keep mom on the topic,
the less they're going to be held accountable for the
thoughts and ideas that might be maybe going through Kamala
(01:58:53):
Harris's head or the ideas that have been pre printed
and programmed into her head by her well puppet masters.
And if we accept that that's the scary thing for me,
we might accept that that there are enough people out
there that they have instilled trumped arrangements syndrome in so
many people that people would be willing to just really,
(01:59:15):
I mean, this is like a literal dice roll. You know,
when you roll the dice, you never know what you're
gonna get. There's oh, there's you know, obviously it's impossible.
Now that's exactly what we're doing. We got a we
have a record. We know that she's afar left in
the Democrat Party. We know what she has supported him
in favor of before. Is she really really no longer
(01:59:35):
the candidate of twenty twenty who questioned the need for
cash bell and was for defunding the police.
Speaker 3 (01:59:41):
Is she not that person anymore? She says she did well,
They say on her behalf her people that she's no
longer the candidate in twenty nineteen who wanted a band
fracking in endorsed medicare for all.
Speaker 1 (01:59:54):
Do you think that's where she is.
Speaker 3 (01:59:57):
As a voter If you don't get anything from her
by way of platform policies or even you know, how
do you plan on managing the deficit ignoring the inflation
that we have to deal with.
Speaker 1 (02:00:08):
We can't continue down this road, can we? President Harris
or would be President Harris? Do you think we can?
And if you don't, then what are you going to
do to stop the hemorrhaging of dollars? Nothing?
Speaker 3 (02:00:22):
Would you vote for a candidate that hasn't articulated a
vision for the future at all? Simply because on the
other side, you've been convinced that Donald Trump is the
embodiment of Satan himself. So going back to the point
the color made and the exclamation point I put on it, Yeah,
they're smart because I think they know there are enough
(02:00:45):
people in the United States of America that would in
fact vote for the completely unknown, having fully baked into
the cake that Trump is in fact the embodiment of Satan.
In other words, they know we're still stupid collectively seven
fifty six. If you out care, see the talk station
someone who is definitely not stupid, Mel Kay. She's hosting
(02:01:09):
wildly popular podcast like more than five hundred thousand subscribers.
Speaker 1 (02:01:13):
It's also an author.
Speaker 3 (02:01:13):
We're going to talk to her about the Kent Convention,
but also her book Americans Anonymous, Restoring Power to the People,
One Citizen at a Time.
Speaker 1 (02:01:21):
She'll be on right after the news your campaign fitstop
on the road to November.
Speaker 5 (02:01:26):
It's a circus.
Speaker 4 (02:01:27):
There's always something new happening. Fifty five cars he the
talk station.
Speaker 6 (02:01:33):
Hey Joy Joy Happy Happy Joy Joy Happy.
Speaker 7 (02:01:37):
Joy Joy Happy happy happy joy Joy Happy happy joy
Joy hat by happy happy happy happy happy Happy joey.
Speaker 6 (02:01:48):
Joy Joe.
Speaker 10 (02:01:52):
Chish.
Speaker 3 (02:01:52):
I have eight oh six here if you about care
City talk Station Happy Friday Eve well, no mel kay,
no idea where she is?
Speaker 1 (02:01:59):
Joe tried four time, couldn't reach her.
Speaker 3 (02:02:00):
And that is how a guest does not fulfill her
commitments to the fifty five careasy morning.
Speaker 1 (02:02:04):
So I hope she's all right.
Speaker 3 (02:02:05):
It's easy to draw that conclusion forgot didn't write it down,
don't know. I was interested in talking to her better books,
Americans Anonymous, Restoring Power to the People, One Citizen at
a Time. Perhaps we will save that discussion for another day,
Meaning you can call in. I'd love to hear from you.
Five one three, seven four nine fifty five eight hundred
eight two three talk Yeah, We've been playing rend and
Stimpy's Happy, Happy, Joy Joy all morning. I think immediately
(02:02:27):
came to mind when I read all the news reports
of that word being used ad nauseum last night. They're
trying to convince you that you can get joy from politics.
I've been observing all morning. If you're looking to a
politician to obtain or achieve joy in your life, I
think you're looking in the wrong direction. Anyway, feel free
(02:02:50):
to call it in don't forget if you five caursy
dot comutruy podcasts over there and check out the information
that's available, including of course, my conversation yes say, with
Andrew Napolitano coming up by on the RJ Ratlift. We've
got some funny stories, aviation related funny stories to go
over with Jay, and we'll talk, of course, and get
our hub delays as we close out that morning segment
(02:03:10):
every Thursday with iHeartMedia expert Jay Ratlift without further ado.
I think it's pretty damn funny. I mentioned earlier the zinger,
the mic drop zinger that Trump laid out reck and
this is just I repeat this because it just illustrates
what he has to deal with that of course, nobody
(02:03:30):
on the left ever has to deal with you. Go
back as far as you want as long since the
media has been in the tank with the leftists of
the country. And why they do that, I do not know.
It's like cutting your own throat anyhow, because news is
based on profit. Profit comes from ad revenue. AD revenue
comes from sponsors who are willing to support your programming.
(02:03:52):
And if you are advocating really basically the end of capitalism,
that's not really good for the people who are sponsoring
your programs. I just got to throw that in there. Anyway,
we all know they're in the tank for this current administration.
They're in the tank for Harris. They're giving her a
free pass. Nobody's asking her questions, and even the mainstream,
you know, legacy media as they like to call it
these days, are starting to grumble some that she's not
(02:04:13):
answering questions. But why should she answer questions? What's the point?
But this reporter asked Donald Trump and just basically makes
a statement, which is a true statement. It wasn't in
the form of a question, but it gave Trump an
excellent opportunity to crack this slow moving softball out of
the park. The reporter says, Kamala attacked you for being
(02:04:33):
in Howell, Michigan because it's associated with white supremacy. Now
I just have to take the reporter at their word.
I know there's an article out there somewhere that explains
how Howell, Michigan became associated with white supremacy.
Speaker 1 (02:04:45):
Maybe it was the base of a plan. I don't know. Anyway,
After that statement, Trump looks at and says, who is here?
Speaker 3 (02:04:51):
In twenty twenty one? The reporter's immediate response, Joe Biden.
Trump says thank you and drops the microphone speaking. But
they are having a go at Trump. They are trying
to get him. They're trying to bait him. The question
is does he bite and does he take the bait?
(02:05:12):
So yesterday he's in North Carolina, if I recall correctly,
And what are the Trump supporters at the rally in
North Carolina yesterday?
Speaker 1 (02:05:24):
Did you see Barack? Who seen Obama? Last night?
Speaker 3 (02:05:26):
This guy asked he was taking shots at you, at
your president, you president, and so was Michelle and they
did you know Barack Obama made the subtle reference to
the size of Donald Trump's genitalia relative to the size
of the crowds. You know, it's like one of those
small genital sort of you know, what are you trying
to to make up for? What are you overcompensating for?
(02:05:49):
Why do you keep bringing up crowd sizes? Do you
have something to hide? It was that point that that
the Obama went really low on, and of course Michelle
had her opportunities to have a go at Trump and
a lot of other ones. I mean, they bring his
name up more than they talk about literally anything. I
think the only thing that outweighed Donald Trump's name coming
up was the use of joy anyway, Donald Trump, did
(02:06:17):
you see Barack obam and Barack Husain Obama last night?
Speaker 1 (02:06:20):
He said.
Speaker 3 (02:06:22):
It was unpresidential and anyone with this and he obviously
has gotten the word. You know, I've even brought it
up here one commentator or another is Trump stay on message.
Trump's stay on message. You win if you stay on message.
And of course, the only way Harris can compete with
him staying on message pointing out the inflation problems, the
(02:06:43):
border problems, the world in crisis, is to not say
anything at all. And they want Trump to come out
and glued like he was earlier on in his political
career and have to respond to everything that's negative said
about him. And we're all saying, don't do that. State
of policy. State of policy, said Trump. Donald Trump speaking
to the crowd. You know, they always say, sir, please
stick to policy, don't get personal. And yet they're getting
(02:07:09):
personal all night long, these people. And he said, he asked,
sort of rhetorically, do I still have to stick to policy?
They're coting, they're getting close to pushing that right button.
Stay on message, don and another point that is well taken,
a well made and you can't deny it. He throws
(02:07:29):
himself into the lions den. He will go on any outlet,
He will speak to any crowd. Donald Trump will at
least he has the Huevos to do that. At least
he is out there trying to answer the questions the
American people have, like what are you gonna do for me?
Out there answering the question, you know, with in an
(02:07:49):
ability to refer back to his policies, are you better
off now than you were four years ago? Kamala Harris
is running to fix the problem of inflation with that
crap and seeing ideas like probably fixing I'll acknowledge, but
she knows it's a problem.
Speaker 1 (02:08:04):
She agrees it's a problem. She'll say it. Oh h
on who's watching this happen?
Speaker 3 (02:08:08):
And as we talked about in the last segment with
Kirk Kouchman, it's your monetary polity, it's your fiscal policy
that brought us to this sorry state. It's your unbelievably
over overly burdened some regulatory environment that brought up the
sorry state. You're the problem. You're the problem, Bill Wick,
(02:08:31):
Welcome to the Morning Show. Thanks for calling this morning.
In a happy Friday eve to you.
Speaker 15 (02:08:36):
Yes, according to Air Force Magazine, a third of all
of our planes are down awaiting parts and maintenance, and
I think that probably rings true of just about all
of our war machines. And in the Democratic National Convention,
Having not watched it, I can safely say that they
didn't mention any.
Speaker 14 (02:08:55):
Money being spent.
Speaker 1 (02:08:56):
Forty CeNSE oh never.
Speaker 15 (02:08:57):
However, however, I do remember Kamala Harrison an interview saying
that everybody needs to be woke, and so maybe they
will spend millions of dollars on our military getting woke.
Speaker 3 (02:09:12):
Well they may. I know that they're they're queering the
nuclear program. I read that article this morning the five
o'clock hour. Yes, they actually believe queer theory is necessary
inso far is our nuclear defense is concerned. I can
see I'll dig that article back out because my jaw
literally fell open as I was reading this. You got
this absolutely backcrap insaying, woke person who believes in whatever
(02:09:37):
the hell queer theory is, and that's an important component
of our nuclear defense. Queer theory queering up our nukes.
Speaker 1 (02:09:47):
I am not making that up. Troy. Welcome to the program.
In a very happy Friday, Eve you. Thanks for calling.
Speaker 17 (02:09:54):
Hi, Good morning, Brian. I wanted to call in this
morning and one I'm going to become a dad today,
so an well wishes from the fifty five KRC family
much appreciated.
Speaker 19 (02:10:07):
I really enjoy your alls program. I live in Louisville.
Is this as your first it's my first? That's awesome, man,
you are going to love it. It's you know, there
are trials and tribulations. Every parent will tell you that,
but what a wonderful, wonderful experience. It is just not
only to have your own offspring and to watch them
grow up, and you will be amazed what that child
(02:10:29):
will teach you about yourself.
Speaker 17 (02:10:33):
Thank you, Thank you very much, Brian. And I just
want to say to any young person out there, I'm
thirty five, I just you know, it's what type of
world do you want your children to grow up in?
That's ultimately what I think about, you know, with schooling
and you know, Department of Education and all the hands
(02:10:53):
in other than the people at home.
Speaker 1 (02:10:55):
And I think that's what's.
Speaker 17 (02:10:56):
Most important in My wife and I talk about it often.
So thank you all for all you all do.
Speaker 1 (02:11:01):
And have a great day, bro, Thank you man. That
was a really great call. Troy.
Speaker 3 (02:11:05):
I wish you all the best of luck and enjoy parenthood.
And I guarantee you Troy, Troy, are you still there?
Hold on real quick. Did you decide?
Speaker 1 (02:11:13):
Did you decide to have a child because you were
going to get a tax credit?
Speaker 17 (02:11:18):
You know, it never crossed my mind. I grew up
in a neighborhood where it did cross to a lot
of people's mind. But I'm no longer in that neighborhood
and I don't have any plans of going back.
Speaker 3 (02:11:29):
Excellent, Thank you, Troy, and good God bless you, sir. Prayers,
thoughts and love to Troy and his wife on the
bundle of joy arriving today. I hope that baby is
born very healthy and very happy. Eight fifteen right now,
if you have k site talks days, I found that
article Biden Harris Department of Energy officials call for queering
nuclear weapons as part of a radical DEI agenda. Welcome
to the American military. Yes, they will spend money on
(02:11:50):
the military, but it won't be for weapons systems. It'll
be for crap like this. I can give you the
details coming back or call. I'll talk about something else
that if you bring it up. Coming up at eight
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Speaker 1 (02:13:02):
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I hate the fact that the oil change costs that much,
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Eight twenty at two five K see talkstation bottom of
the hour with iHeartMedia aviation expert Jay Ratliffe. Yeah, going
back to defensemanning and you know the other thing I
will observe. I don't know that anybody has a clue
on where Kamala Harris's foreign policy wise. You got the
world on fire right now?
Speaker 1 (02:13:52):
Where is she?
Speaker 3 (02:13:54):
Where does she stand? Did you just pick any conflict,
any hotspot in the world? Where does she stand? Is
she in favor of continuing to fund Ukraine with weapons
and maybe boots on the ground. Is she in favor
of a two state solution? Is she cottoning up to
the pro Hamas Palestinian protesters that are rioting in the
streets of Chicago? And parenthetically, I guess putting bugs in
(02:14:15):
the food being served to the delegates at the DNC.
You don't know, nobody knows she wasn't in charge of
foreign policy in the Biden administration. She was in charge
of the border, I might quickly remind folks, So there
you go. But in so far as the Biden Administration's
foreign policy and their stance for America's military, there's not
(02:14:37):
a human being in my listening audience. It doesn't realize
that this diversity equity inclusion stuff, this woke philosophy is
being taught and part of the culture of the American military.
Now it's embedded in every the four corners of the military,
as illustrated by this February twenty twenty four appointment. What
(02:14:58):
you're just learning about Sneehan Naire is her name. Biden
administration announced that she had been appointed as special assistant
at the National Nuclear Security Administration. She thinks that white
supremacy has invaded the four corners in the American military,
and she's interested in queering nuclear weapons as part of
(02:15:21):
her views on diversity, equity inclusion. Get a load of
these quotes, and they're not going to make much sense
to you. And this is the kind of thing that
your children be taught if you go to a four
year lift liberal arts college. Finally, queer theory informs the
struggle for nuclear justice and disarmament. Queer theory helps to
shift the perception of nuclear weapons as instruments for security
(02:15:43):
by telling the hidden stories of displacement, illness, and trauma
caused by their production and testing. DEI, she argues, is
essential for creating effective nuclear policy. Go ahead and see
how that that one fits into your mind. She previously
received hundreds of thousands of dollars or rather the Stimson
(02:16:06):
Institute where she previously worked, hundred of thousand dollars from
Soros's Open Society Foundation, and millions from the state of
cutter And according to Fox News Insight on this, she
believes that the DEI agenda the workforce of a nuclear
secure security facility is at risk for becoming well insider
(02:16:27):
threats like white supremacy by understanding DEI as a set
of values critical to security and just I mean, when
I read this before, it's like, who WHOA She's springing
from an erroneous proposition. Do you believe the DEI is
critical to national security, diversity, equity, inclusion. You know, it's
(02:16:48):
critical national security. People who care about our country and
care about its borders and care about threats both domestic
and foreign that will be a critical component of serving
in America's military.
Speaker 1 (02:17:00):
Anyway.
Speaker 3 (02:17:00):
By understanding DEI as a set of values critical to security,
and therefore as an element of an effective nuclear security culture,
stakeholders can explore how DEI can contribute to stronger security
at nuclear facilities. Her DEI agenda envisions expanding America's deep secrets, yes,
(02:17:22):
the nuclear secrets that you would be well privy to
at a nuclear facility. She wants to extend it to
even people with foreign connections. She claims that individuals with
foreign connections were discouraged from applying because, she says race. Now,
this is the preposterous reality you think you're face when
(02:17:44):
you're dealing with a leftist who wants to tell you
that the entire world is perpetually broken and racist. If
you are worried about national security threats both foreign and domestic,
and you are concerned about the country, our values and
our principles, the constitution of the United States of America,
and our own individual security and not getting into a
war or defending us from threats like war, does that
(02:18:07):
have anything to do with the color of a person's skin.
Does that have anything with the race. No, if you
want to work in a nuclear facility, they're gonna vet you.
They're gonna look at your background, and they're gonna see
if you have any connections to foreign governments, which maybe
well or may have rather contrary interest two hours, because
you could represent a threat to security. That's not because
of the color of your skin. Woman, It's because of
(02:18:30):
your political beliefs and philosophies and the idea that you
may working with nuclear weapons and nuclear secrets do something
to undermine the United States of America.
Speaker 1 (02:18:42):
That's the point.
Speaker 15 (02:18:43):
Man.
Speaker 3 (02:18:45):
Oh no, but it's race that does it. You frighten
people away that have foreign connections. We want them working
around these nuclear weapons and nuclear secrets.
Speaker 1 (02:18:56):
It goes on and on.
Speaker 3 (02:18:57):
You should read the article for yourself. I mean, it's
a fall up into I just stared in disbelief. But
then again, this is twenty twenty four. This is the
crap that's being taught in colleges. This is what they
are moving toward. More and more every day, not more guns,
not more bombs, not more military preparedness like in being
able to fight in the field, kill people, break things,
(02:19:18):
upholding the constitution and defending us from threats, both domestic
and foreign. No, it's about well, what color your skin is,
not whether you care about America, just making sure we
check all the right box and have X number percentage
of people in any given race or belief systems with
access to nuclear weapons. Great A twenty six fifty five
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Speaker 17 (02:20:58):
Today fifty five karc dot com Another insurance story from
talk station.
Speaker 1 (02:21:08):
A thirty KRCD talk station. Happy Friday Eve made always
that much happier because at this point we get to
talk to I heard media aviation expert Jay Ratliff, who
joins the program every Thursday at this time, Jay Ratlift,
my friend, welcome back to the morning show. It's always
a pleasure having you on.
Speaker 16 (02:21:25):
Hey, Happy Friday Eve. It's a pleasure to be here.
Speaker 3 (02:21:27):
Well, and I read your posts from a few days
ago on the morning show. I believe it was yesterday,
and what a beautiful post it was, and you recounted
your life having lived at the travel lodge over the
Dayton International Airport for what ten years while you were
honing your skills as a trader, perfecting your trade strategy,
which is what you do for a living now and
(02:21:48):
you have all these students who learn how to trade
stocks based upon your strategy, and you've been wildly successful.
But it came as a consequence of hard work. And
I used your post as a springboard to point that out. Yeah,
you struggled, you suffered, you had your bad days, but
you worked your butt off and you transformed your life
from living in a at a travel lodge to well
(02:22:11):
a wildly successful, beautiful environment you're living in now. I
love the pictures you send from your place down in
at the Southern Command. But it was the point was
hard work paid off, And that was the point of
your post.
Speaker 16 (02:22:23):
And it could have been hard work may not have
paid off. But you know when you when you recognize,
as idea, you have one life to live. And I've
lost so many of my friends at such an early age.
It's a further reminder that, look, you're here for one shot,
make the most of it. And when I see people
that have dreams that really could contribute to our world,
and they back off because either they don't want it
(02:22:44):
bad enough or they listen to other people who say
it can't be done. Yeah, I'm thinking a lot of
the problems if you listed them all one to a bazillion,
a lot of those problems can be solved if people
would follow their dreams. And you know, if it's if
it's if it's somebody that creates a micros off Bill Gates,
if it's somebody that creates a vaccine, if it's somebody
that serves as a missionary, and app whatever it is,
(02:23:06):
if we could contribute what we're passionate about. My I mean,
I watch people drive to work, Brian, and you do
all the time, the frowns going, the smiles coming back.
They they live for that precious couple days off and
then live for retirement. Where you what average retirement you
seven years you're dead. It just yeah, So I choose
to take a slightly different outlook on things and appreciate
(02:23:28):
every day that I've been given. And yeah, I'm just
glad I was given today. And yeah, my students continue
to do well, and I'm very proud of them, and
I try to encourage them to give back as well,
because if you're going to start generating a lot of money,
that's okay, but don't lose sight of the fact that
you know you can be a blessing to other people
and do it. Whatever it is that you are passionate about,
(02:23:48):
use what you've been given to try to affect the
lives positively of other people.
Speaker 1 (02:23:52):
And that will bring you, Oh Dari use the word joy, yes.
Speaker 16 (02:23:57):
Real joy, and it's you don't sit around complaining. I
have such hatred for a political opponent that it defines
your existence. And I've told so many of my friends
that are so anti Trump. I'm like, I get it,
but don't allow him to control that man controls eighty
percent of your life and it's just your blood pressure
goes up. There's no way you should ever allow something
(02:24:18):
like that to happen. But when your life is defined
by hate or by you know, being that miserable, I
just I don't get it because I'm thinking, there's such
a beautiful alternative to get away from that and turn
to what you do. And I love my sister, but
my sister is kind of along the line of you know,
she hates Trump. She any times something comes up, I've
(02:24:40):
got to hear about it, and I'm like, I get it,
I get it, I get it. And if you try
to point something out on the other side, then it
becomes name calling and you never can have a conversation
on facts because that's where it kind of goes out
the window. And that's why when I heard Harris's speech
here recently about all the economic points without any specifics. A,
it sounded if you read the transcript it was a
Republican and B you look at the specifics, which she's
(02:25:03):
not going to give until after she's elected. And it's
clear that, just like every other politician, sadly, sometimes from
both sides of the aisle, they're just thrown out sand
sound bites hoping that this dry by generation of social
media buys the headlines and votes for her.
Speaker 1 (02:25:19):
Amen. That's why I like talking to you, Jay Ratlift.
Speaker 3 (02:25:22):
You're uplifting, you got a great story, a great message,
You're hopeful, you're proud of what you got. You're happily
contently married to a beautiful woman who is your better
than half. All things right and you like to point
that out, and you try to remind yourself of that
every single day. You know, there's beautiful things going on.
Speaker 16 (02:25:36):
So get the motel room key from the travel logy.
I have it with me everywhere I go, so I
refuse to forget where I came from.
Speaker 3 (02:25:42):
Brother, Good for you. I appreciate your message. I just
had to bring that up. We'll dive into aviation issues
coming up next. Has some funny stories to go over with.
Jay eight thirty five. You've got KCD talk station, matches.
Speaker 9 (02:25:53):
For an accident and you're the new Richmond exit on
west to seventy five no delay southbound seventy one slows
from field turtle off and onto red tank. Chuck Ingram
on fifty five KRSC the talk station.
Speaker 10 (02:26:06):
Keep your stupid mouth shut, Joy, Ay.
Speaker 1 (02:26:11):
Forty fifty five KRSC talk station and the man the meth.
Speaker 3 (02:26:13):
The legend is I heard media aviation expert Jay rattle,
if it doesn't mind a curveball every once in a while,
Transportation and Security Mission has this three to one rule
that's in place, and Jay, I'm sure you know about this,
limiting the amount of liquid you can bring onto a
plane to three point four ounces. I saw this swall
Street Journal article by Jacob Passey which pointed out that
they're bringing out CT scanners and using the CT scanners
(02:26:36):
that allows them to determine whether any given liquid is
a danger or not. So if you have shampoo in
a bottle and it's more than three point four ounces,
the machine would say, not a problem, go ahead. It's
not explosive, So that's fine. But the efficiency and effectiveness
of government is in full demonstration here. According to the Journal,
(02:26:56):
they calculate they'll need twenty two hundred CTEAM Scheme machines
to reach full operational capacity at all our airports here,
but they've only deployed about forty percent of them. They
have the funding, I guess, and it won't They won't
reach their goal until twenty forty.
Speaker 16 (02:27:12):
Two, sixteen years. Yeah, and by then the technology will
be outdated and want to do it all over again. Yes,
it's a lot like the puffer machines. You remember we
had those for a period of time. They were about
one hundred and sixty five thousand dollars a pop. The
usement nuclear power plants and things. You'd step in them
and they'd have that little puffet of air that would
go by, and it was for explosive trace residue, where
(02:27:34):
they were trying to see if any of your clothing
skin had come in contact with any explosive residue and
it would flag and then you'd be subjected to secondary security.
The problem was the failure rate on them was so high.
It was like people go through them and fail, rescan fail,
and then it was like, well, why do we even
have them. So they took all those things out eventually
(02:27:56):
and came in with the full body imaging scanners, which
I like because of the fact that they will detect
powder or liquid explosives that might be strapped to someone's body.
The magnetometers we walk through obviously we're designed simply for metal.
So the full body imaging scanners are the next best thing,
and certainly we want to speed up the security process.
And Brian, the technology down the road has us walking
(02:28:18):
through a hallway with our luggage and we would be
screened the entire way on both sides. So then after
we get to the end of the hallway, if there's
anything that we're carrying that is unquestionable, they simply pull
us off to the side and scan things and everybody
else keeps walking because we recognize that aviation is what
it is, the economic engine that helps drive this country.
(02:28:41):
So everything we can do to make things safe and
certainly easier is going to be something that we're looking at.
That's why a lot of airlines around the world are
going to facial recognition technology. While we'll see it at
the TSA checkpoints, we'll see it at the gate area.
In fact, that it will lead eventually to passengers boarding
themselves with no gate agent. That's the dream, because you
(02:29:03):
save money if you're an airline, if you don't have
to pay those people, I think you've got to have
somebody there. But they will have nearby customer service desks
to help people that might service eight or ten gates.
So we're moving in that direction, and as far as
technology will allow us, and as far as the consumer
will allow it, we're going to continue to move in
that direction.
Speaker 3 (02:29:22):
Fair enough, and I'm glad technology can advance like this,
but it's just twenty forty two to unroll technology that
we've got already, and I appreciate that that technology also
will get uh.
Speaker 16 (02:29:32):
If by giving us a phone that's going to take
sixteen years to develop that yeah, would be outdated after
year eight months or something else. So you hit it
perfectly when you started government led project, and sadly this
is where it goes.
Speaker 3 (02:29:46):
I'm sure the CT scan manufacturer probably has a close
relationship with somebody in government.
Speaker 1 (02:29:51):
What do you think on that? I would say.
Speaker 16 (02:29:53):
Probably both sides, absolutely, and real.
Speaker 3 (02:29:56):
Quick for we're going to take another break and get
to the other topics because they're funny. Can you just
explain to me how do they come up with three
point four ounces? Is that connected with anything that makes sense?
Speaker 16 (02:30:07):
I well, what you look at is the amount of
explosives that would be needed for it to represent a
threat aero dynamically to the structure of the aircraft. So
but the problem is if you have minimal traits of
like ten people carrying it, well, then you've got a
lot more of what you need. So it's I hate
to say we're managing the perception of safety, but sadly
(02:30:28):
many times that's exactly what we're doing. And you know,
it's like before nine eleven we did screen check bags
because people thought we screen checked bags, and the thought
was is going to be too time consuming, too expensive?
No way people would put up with it, you'd have
to check in five hours before. I mean all these things.
And of course after the attacks of nine to eleven
we did shift then, thankfully to screening every bag. But Brian,
(02:30:51):
you know before nine eleven, fifty terrorists could have checked
in with fifty bags not even gotten on the plane
prior to the positive passenger bag match program we had,
and fifty airplanes would have came crashing out of the
sky with no terrace on board, simply because we were
not screening check bags at the time. So it forced
us through nine to eleven to take that step. Otherwise
I don't think they ever would have because after the
(02:31:13):
bombing of pan In one h three over lockerby Scotland,
it was a decision all those years before we need
to start screening check bags. They still chose not to
do it and ask those three idiotic questions every time
we checked in as the way to address the threat,
which again was a joke.
Speaker 1 (02:31:30):
Let's bring it right back.
Speaker 3 (02:31:31):
We got some funny ones, including a man bleeding from
a hair transplant and lost scissors forcing a flight to
return to the gate. Though first butt herb Remoters family
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but Herber voters. I had a wonderful contrast. Is why
I'm so happy to be able to recommend but Herbert
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went to the box store thinking it was going to
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(02:32:14):
loading and unloading and putting it together. Never ever going
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(02:32:37):
You know Bud Herbert's old model. The most expensive tool
you'll ever buy is a cheap one.
Speaker 1 (02:32:40):
And don't you know it.
Speaker 3 (02:32:41):
When I talked to Bud Herbert, I ended up with
a Honda commercial grade push mower. Talks costs me a
little bit more than the lower quality models, but the
last mower I will ever buy. So say it the
Herbert family and I take confidence in that, and they
service what they sell. I've had them over to my
house to service it as well, getting the blade sharp
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Speaker 5 (02:33:09):
Dot Com fifty five KRC.
Speaker 1 (02:33:12):
Home Valus in City or skin rounding up with Jay
ray Leff. I love holding them over for the entire
half hour. Yeah you're stuck with me, brother.
Speaker 16 (02:33:19):
No problem.
Speaker 1 (02:33:20):
We got a bleeding hair transplant guy. You can't get
on a plane after that huh.
Speaker 14 (02:33:25):
No.
Speaker 16 (02:33:25):
It was an American Airlines flight. I think eighteen fifty
eight was a flight number, to be boringly specific, and
they were flying from Miami to Las Vegas. And apparently
the man had just had a hair transplant surgery, and
as it happens, it bleeds a little bit at the
scalp after the procedure the day of and I think
the day after, so he bores the flight and his
(02:33:46):
forehead starts to bleed a little bit. They flight attendants
asked the had advantage or something he could cover it
up with, giving him the opportunity to do so. He said,
I don't have anything. I'm fine, I'll be fine, don't
need anything. And they said, no, there's a problem because
we can't have someone that has blood hazardous material my word,
not theirs, bleeding from their forehead. So they told him
(02:34:06):
that they since he didn't have anything to cover it
up with, that he and his companion they would both
have to deplane and catch a later flight. And he refused.
He's in Miami, Florida, says I'm not gonna do it.
If I'm not flying, nobody is well, okay, now everybody
off the plane is removed. We do that now, because
you don't want to have another doctor dragging down the
(02:34:26):
aisle video. So they get all the passengers off first.
Then the police are summoned, and the police remove the
two and arrest them and away they go. But it
was simply it's a hazardous material. It's the same way
if you have a first responder that shows up somebody
is bleeding, they take precautions, and it's the same thing
with a flight crew. You simply can't have it.
Speaker 15 (02:34:44):
Now.
Speaker 16 (02:34:45):
Had the gate agent notice this, the gate agent probably
would have approached the individual saying, look, I've noticed this.
You're not gonna be allowed to board in this condition.
Is there anything that you can do, because if not,
we're going to have to accommodate you on a later flight.
Never lying that individual get on the airplane. But the
gate areas are so chaotic, the staff is so overworked.
I'm sure they got there at the last second. They're
(02:35:06):
concentrating on the line of people that have already formed,
and you know, they should have stopped the boarding process
and had the guy stepped to the side, but they
did not, and the flight attendants were forced to deal
with it.
Speaker 1 (02:35:17):
Wow, okay, and even more bizarre lost scissors.
Speaker 16 (02:35:23):
Yep, this happened. It happened in Japan, and you've got
You've got the gift shops in the terminal, and one
of the gift shops noticed their scissors had gone missing.
Now you're in the sterile area of an airport. Everybody's
been screened. Everybody's about to board airplanes. They contact the
airport police.
Speaker 10 (02:35:42):
We don't know what to do.
Speaker 16 (02:35:43):
Police say, okay, we stop everything. Nobody boards any plane,
no plane leaves. We've got to get everybody out of
the sterile area back on the other side of security.
Step one, Step two, we've got to do a hard
target search to the entire terminal, seeing if the hit
scissors were stolen and placed somewhere under a seat trap, can, bathroom,
everywhere has to be checked because the thought is somebody
(02:36:05):
could have got them, hit them, been rescreened, get back
on the other side, and then retrieve those scissors that
they hid and board a plane and do something bad.
So they go through this process of getting everybody out,
They do the search, they rescreen everybody. Thirty one flights
are canceled, two hundred and ten flights are delayed. Before
everybody's allowed to finally leave, and the PS well and
(02:36:25):
all of that was the proper security protocol. Bryan. It's
a lot like if you and I are working at
the TSA checkpoint and somebody rushes by and is not
screened and goes into a terminal. As long as we
can keep an eye on that individual to make sure
that they did not interact with any person or did
not hide something somewhere. In other words, they were under
constant supervision. Once they're apprehended, you can remove them and
(02:36:47):
nothing happens. But the moment they disappear and you can't
account for where they were at or who they may
have interacted with, you've got to take the step of okay,
we've got to get everybody out, We've got to search
the terminal, have to re screen everybody, and everything comes
to a screeching halt. Now the kicker here is the
gift store that started all this found the scissors the
(02:37:09):
next day. Oh that's where I put them. It's all
for nothing. I know if that person is still employed
or not. But yes, I'm sure people are not too
happy to hear the PS on that particular story.
Speaker 1 (02:37:22):
After going through all of that, do the math on
how much money it costs collectively for every person delayed travel.
You know, planes being held up, YadA, YadA, YadA. It's
amazing lost scissors all right day.
Speaker 16 (02:37:35):
We're not making it up. I'm gonna get emails. We
are not google it. It's on the internet, which means
it has to be true.
Speaker 1 (02:37:41):
That's what Abraham Lincoln always said, this part company as
we always doing hub delays. Jay Rattlive.
Speaker 16 (02:37:47):
I knew that Abraham didn't anything about the internet, but Joe,
if you.
Speaker 1 (02:37:51):
Read it on the internet, it's true quote for.
Speaker 16 (02:37:55):
Abraham Lincoln exactly. I love that the minimal issues, Brian,
we might see issues in Seattle and Tampa. I don't
think anything untill later today, and I don't think the
delay is going to be more than thirty minutes, so
it's not even worth mentioning. So if you pick today,
you pick probably the best day of the week to travel.
Speaker 1 (02:38:09):
Yeah, good news from Jay Ratliff. Always wonderful thing to
part company on. Good news.
Speaker 3 (02:38:13):
Jay, until next week, take care of my friend. God
bless you and keep up the positive attitude because it
does rub off when you post about it.
Speaker 16 (02:38:21):
It's exactly what you're doing. So you keep up the
good work brother.
Speaker 1 (02:38:24):
Thanks man.
Speaker 3 (02:38:24):
We'll talk eight fifty six to fifty five Krcity talk
station talk we did. Kurt Kastum was on at seven thirty.
Senior policy fellow