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August 27, 2024 • 149 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:05):
Five O five.

Speaker 2 (00:08):
At fifty five k rc DE talk stations Seriously happy Tuesday.

Speaker 3 (00:16):
Some say.

Speaker 4 (00:25):
A vacation, damn hot, real hot where you're born on
the sun.

Speaker 1 (00:31):
It's damn well.

Speaker 2 (00:33):
Joe Trekker's summon up the weather report for today. Thank you,
Joe Joe Trekker, Executive Reducer. My name is Brian Thomas,
host of the fifty five care S Morning Show, welcoming
you to just stick around all morning. Got some good
guests lined up today, and of course I always love
hearing from you, so you can feel free to call
it anytime, as long as the guest is not five
one three, seven four nine, fifty five hundred eight hundred
eighty two three talko with fifty on at and T Funds.

(00:55):
And never forget fifty five care sea dot com, where
you can conveniently stream the audio wherever you happen to be,
and get your iHeartMedia app which means you can stream
the RDO wherever your smartphone or smart device happens to be,
and get your weekly dose at Christopher Smitheman smither Vent.
It's right there at fifty five care seet dot com,
so enjoy that and the other features we have there

(01:16):
on the website stream all the iHeartMedia content there, so
regardless of where you are sitting. I commented about that yesterday.
I just love when I hear from listeners who are
far away. Heard from one guy from Punta Gorda to Florida,
who we were talking about the Edian fireworks. John Barrett,
CEO Western and souther One, was on yesterday, give me
us the details about that. He's always so excited about that.

(01:38):
But one listener said, I'm driving up from Punta Gorda, Florida,
just to see the Edian fireworks. So he called just
Directord to let him know about that. You are always
free to call into the morning show coming up. As
I mentioned, guests lined up, got George Brunnman. He returns
talk about a meeting with Congressman Davidson at the Farm,
which is taking place tomorrow evening. Everybody's invited the farm,
a west Side institution. Get yourself some food and some

(02:00):
beverages and kickback, and here what Congressman Davidson has to say.

Speaker 1 (02:04):
Eight oh five.

Speaker 2 (02:05):
It's the bright Part inside Scoop every Tuesday at eight
o five. Today, the tech editor Colin Maydin returns of
the program. We're going to find out what's going on
in the Telegram situation in England. That's where the founder
and owner or creator of Telegram got arrested for allegedly
terrorism and all kinds of other activities that were going
online on his social media platform. And I always point

(02:28):
to as if he has some control over the free
exchange of ideas, whether those ideas are good or bad,
they're going to be freely exchanged. I got an interesting
comment about that one here in a moment Daniel Davis
Deep Dive. As I expect we're going to hear the
latest on the situation in Israel with the launching of
attacks against the Hesbala and as well as the latest

(02:51):
on the situation going on between Ukraine and Russia. Deep
Dive with Daniel Davis every Tuesday at eight thirty. And
finally I asked the expert from HC. Doctor Matthew Burke
is going to join the program. He's a radiation oncologist,
and an interesting discussion about low dose radiation therapy for
osteo arthritis. So seems to me we're pushing away, we're

(03:14):
getting away from cancer specifically, and I'm very curious to
find out what he has to say about that. I
know ostio arthritis is a serious problem, most notably for
some of our senior friends. So we'll hear from the
doctor at eight fifty. So there you have it, fifty
five greasy morning share lineup this morning again, Thank you,
Joe Strecker. Now, got all kinds of things to talk about.

(03:35):
But since we're gonna be talking with Colin Maydin about
the situation on telegram, got an interesting story on this
and it is extremely biased. Now I think you and
I can all agree. Yes, there are right wing extremists.
There are racists out there. There are people who foster
and encourage division based upon the color of some people's skin.

(03:58):
But then again, there's also people who hate America, generally speaking,
communists versus anarchists, a whole slew of folks, including like
for example, and this is not the pick and choose,
but Antifa. They hate capitalism, Black lives matter. They're Marxists.
They're devout Marxists that read their website materials, at least
the ones before they pulled the plug on them because

(04:19):
it made them look like, oh, I don't know Marxists.
They too want to undermine the fabric of America. We
have enemies foreign and abroad who do everything they can
to stir the Potter division in our country. Stirring the
Potter division. It doesn't matter where the division comes from.
As long as we're divided, we are not a united nation.
And that is good for anybody who wants to undermine us.

Speaker 1 (04:37):
Period.

Speaker 2 (04:38):
So multitudes of individuals out in the world are world
full of what seven billion, eight billion people, all with
access to social media. Of course there are going to
be various interest groups out there. You stirring the pot
of hatred and division. So as with that, I turned
to Bloomberg very left leaning. It is far right. A

(05:00):
terogram cat chat rooms are fueling a wave of power
grid attacks. Most fundamental point on this is the power
grade attacks. Subheadline extremist community see damaging power substations as
a way to fuel unrest and ultimately overthrow the United States. Now,
if you can attack the power grade, you're interested in
overthrowing the United States. And it doesn't matter which political

(05:22):
group you come from, right wing, left wing, any wing,
you're obviously interested in undermining the United States. Fundamental bottom
line on that. So they go back to December of
twenty two December third, specifically, Michael Campbell was reporting these
that he heard some popping noises. Bottom line is a
quiet neighborhood of Carthage in North Carolina. Someone started shooting

(05:47):
at a power substation a rifle next to this guy's home,
operated by Duke Utility Corporation. Obviously, a substation converts electricity
into different voltages. It's trans into various areas. It goes
into your padmounted transformer which you probably have sitting in
somebody's front yard in your neighborhood, which steps down the
power you know, for my recollection and doing work on

(06:09):
this in litigation practice seventy two hundred down to two twenty,
which comes into your home and that step down to
one ten. You get the idea, right, So it's one
of the substations. So without a substation, your residential community
is not going to get the power to the pad
amount of transformers. So the shots hit a radiator of
the electrical transformer, and there's people in the know that

(06:31):
understood if you hit the radiator, you were going to
have problems with the transformer substation. It was going to
stop working and began dumping vast amounts of oil subsequent
investigation pointed to a local right wing group being responsible
for a wave of attacks and then planned those attacks
on the power infrastructure via communications online. Apparently, a few

(06:54):
minutes later, a security alarm went off at a Duke
Energy substation ten miles away, and the personnel responded. They
found that somebody had shot that transformer radiator as well,
and they found shellcasings on the ground of the site.
Noted someone had slashed the tires of nearby service trucks,
so it prevented the company from re routing the power

(07:16):
because the two substations got knocked down. Then the police
described it as a coordinated attack, no doubt about that. No,
I'm not arguing with their conclusions on this, and I'm
not even arguing against the fact that it was or
the conclusion that was some right winning organization. It's just
the simple fact that it can happen. Four days without power,
forty five thousand families were One woman even died her

(07:40):
oxygen machine stopped operating, and the police, the medical examiner
called it a homicide because of course, the intentional shutting
off of power resulted in the death of this woman.
So you can draw a line cleanly from point A
to point B on that if they ever find anybody,
that person will be accused of homicide negligent. Perhaps it
doesn't matter. Though people die as a consequence of power

(08:03):
going out, which is really the fundamental point here. They
call it a part of a rising trend of In
this case, they say, far right extremist targeting power infrastructure
and attempt to sow chaos. But throw in left wing
or any other wing. It's possible for any group organized
or otherwise to carry out these things with minimal coordination. Obviously,

(08:27):
if you and a buddy decide you want to take
out a power grid, you tell your buddy, Hey, on
Tuesday night at X number, at X time, we're going
to meet at that local power substation. Bring your rifle.
We're going to take out the radiators and thus take
out the power grid.

Speaker 1 (08:41):
Simple. Absolutely, they said.

Speaker 2 (08:44):
The most ambitious of these saboteurs hope to usher in
societal collapse, paving the way for the violent overthrow of
the US government. And I love this conclusion added by
the reporter over it Bloomberg. According to researchers who monitor
far right communities, I imagine there are researchers that monitor

(09:06):
far left communities coming to the same conclusion. I imagine
there are folks concerned about the wave of perhaps terrorists
entering our country through the southern border. Many got aways.
There are a number of nefarious actors in the world.
We all need to come to grips from that, regardless
of which wing they come from. They say, people who
use this terrorgram online application or program, or a social

(09:29):
media network whatever, they egg on one another. Viral means
showing a stick figure, throwing a Molotov cocktail, electrical equipment.
You can imagine. You can go on for hours about
the number of ways in which you could egg each
other on. Apparently, out there there's a two hundred and
sixty one page document titled hard Reset, which includes specific

(09:50):
directions on how to use automatic weapons. Most people who
never have access to automatic weapons given the legal controls
over them. You could use the semi automatic weapon or
even in a bolt action rifle. I suppose if you
just hitting a radiator. Anything that shoots a projectile might
work on that including They point out explosives and my
lar balloons even can be used to shut down electrical grids.

(10:14):
One document suggestion is to shoot high powered firearms at
substation transformers, which obviously has been documented before. Telegrams said
its statement it forbids explicit calls for violence. It does
what it can to remove as content like that cheap
executive offer. Pavlov Durrov, Yes, the guy that was arrested

(10:36):
in France taking it to custody in France on suspicion
of failing to take steps to prevent the criminal use
of Telegram, the social media app which apparently nine hundred
million people use every single day. Power companies reported one
hundred and eighty five physical tax and threats on grid
infrastructure and calendar year twenty twenty three alone. That's double

(10:58):
the number from twenty twenty one. According to the North
American Reliability Corps. That's an industry group monitors risk for utilities.
They say extremists plan to knock out powers at substations
near scheduled Black Lives Matter protests. Again, according to the
monitors of right wing activity, I'd like to see some
balance here because I feel pretty confident that left wing

(11:19):
activists have also done things like this. But again the
focus is on right wing extremists. But don't lose sight
of the fact of the underlying threat. Christopher Ray said
the greatest terrorism threat to the United States comes from
loan individuals and small cells to become radicalized online and
then use accessible weapons to attack soft targets. Threats against

(11:41):
critical infrastructure becoming more acute as the election approaches. According
to senior US law enforcement officials tracking this activity, strategic
blackouts could affect voting locations or impact the certification of elections.
According to one nonprofit task force, Builder in two describes
a veterans group dedicated to countering extremism. Christopher Goldsmith, the

(12:05):
founder of the group, something like a great attack before, during,
or after an election could sow an unbelievable amount of
political chaos, stating what I would call the obvious, say.
Researchers warned that online conspiracy theorists are also likely to
seize on any outages that coincide with the election to
further undercut trust in the electoral system.

Speaker 1 (12:27):
True.

Speaker 2 (12:29):
Yeah, I suppose that would, wouldn't it. We got all
these other concerns about the integrity of the election. So
we call today or yesterday about the Jerome Corsi analysis
showing that there's some sort of hidden information built into
the electoral system. Here in Ohio and otherwise and other states.
Still not clear on the total details on that, but
raised some real interesting questions week. Except for the More

(12:52):
County attack I mentioned before, FBI said two suspects hit
four substations Christmas morning in Washington State that left seven
thousand people without power. Some men plead guilty to planning
those attacks on multiple stations back in twenty twenty two.
Their goal to start a race war. Stupid goal, yeah, obviously. Anyway,
it illustrates the point, the fact that we are extremely vulnerable,

(13:16):
and our vulnerability is exacerbated in large part by the
well unknown, unflowed, unregulated flow of illegal immigrants, many of
whom from foreign countries that seek to do us harm.
Literally every country from the four corners of the globe. So,
whether it's far right, far left, anything in between, anybody
interested in disrupting our lives can make an easy go
of it. I guess my question is what are we

(13:40):
doing about it? I'm not quite sure. Cord to the reporting,
some money has been spent, it wasn't that much. I
think the federal government has allocated something on the order
of seventy million dollars to help boost the infrastructure and
our electric grid. Do you think that's quite enough? I
mean the allocated eight billion dollars to build Tesla, chart

(14:02):
the EV charging stations several years ago. So far we've
got eight last time I checked. The big election is
the first week in November five, nineteen fifty five KCD
talk station. More to talk about, plenty more. I mean,
an unbelievable amount of stuff to talk about, including people
running away from Kamala Harris and some interesting Democrats running

(14:26):
away from Kamala Harris. First though, a word for Andrew
Cullen and Colin Electric for residential electric projects called Colin.

Speaker 1 (14:33):
You can do that, and I recommend you do that.

Speaker 2 (14:35):
You'll get great electric work, great customer service, locally owned
and operated for twenty five years. Congratulations Andrew Collen on
that accomplishment. A plus with a better business bureau with
good reason. They do great work. What more can you say?
At a great price, too fair and ethical pricing. Always
the folks will take wonderful care of your home, respectful
of you and your home. And again that's where customer

(14:56):
service is important. And of course, regardless of how big
or small the wiring electric project happens to be you
were in great hands with cul and Electric. The folks
with the right connections to give them a call. It's
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five one three two two seven four one one two.
You can visit them online call or go to Cullenelectriccincinnati

(15:17):
dot com.

Speaker 4 (15:19):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 1 (15:27):
Time for the weather forecast.

Speaker 2 (15:28):
Sunny, hot, human ninety seven for the high today, down
to seventy one overnight, muggy tomorrow, partly clodded with isolated
evening storms ninety six for the high down to seventy
one over night, with muggy conditions continuing. Sunny and hot
on Thursday, slight chance of storms after two pm and
a high up ninety seven. Yeah, I'd say that's hot
seventy one right now with the bout KCD talk station. Yeah,

(15:54):
I'm considering the power may go out and all kinds
of reasons for that. And there was an interesting article
on the popularity of preparing for a terrible outcome doomsday prepping.
It's become apparently a two point four to six billion
dollar industry. Previously described as fringe. Now even Costco is
selling things like you know prep kits, oversized jars of

(16:18):
peanut butter, massive size, you know, portions, huge sellar of gold, silver, gold,
and silver bars and coins, which I always laugh at that.
I you know, in a post apocalyptic world, you can't
eat a bar of gold, and I don't know how
you trade it, But in any event, some people choose
to use stockpile gold because of course the theat currency
could very well collapse anyway. One of these prepper guys

(16:42):
points out most of the local supermarkets even carry emergency
food on the store shelves now, so it's becoming some
of the things people are thinking about more often. So
here's your list that one of the prep guys recommends,
not a comprehensive list. He's quick to point out conventional generator,
solar generator, burkie water filter, rainwater collection system if you

(17:05):
don't have a natural supply of water near your home
like a creek, large emergency medical kit, rice, pasta can soup,
canned vegetables, canned fruit, canned chicken, jars of peanut butter, salt, sugar,
powdered milk, bags of flour, yeast, lots of extra coffee.
If you drink it, I'm sorry. I laugh because I
Starbucks won't be opened.

Speaker 1 (17:26):
Folks.

Speaker 2 (17:27):
Buckets of long term storable food, Lots of extra vitamins,
lighters or matches, candles, flashlight lanterns, plenty of wood to burn,
extra blankets and sleeping bags. Ammunition coming in at number
twenty six. Ammunition extra fans if you live in a
hot climate. Fans that is, if you have a generator
to run them. Hand sanitizer, toilet paper, extra soap and shampoo,

(17:49):
extra toothpaste, razors, bottles of leach, battery powered radio, extra batteries,
solar charges, trash bags, tarps, a pocket knife, a pocket knife,
a hammer and acts, a shovel. Singular items those work
gloves plural, lots of warm socks, seeds for a garden,

(18:12):
canning jars yay, because.

Speaker 1 (18:14):
We were canning over the weekend.

Speaker 2 (18:15):
That's what my gay was for extra supplies for your pets,
a substantial supply of cash. That's a good thing. I
love this number. Forty nine Bibles for every member of
your family. There are no atheists in a fox hole.
And finally, a bug out bag for every member of
your family. So that one from the Zero Hedge, authored

(18:39):
by Michael Snyder via the Economic Collapse Blog. Speaking of
online discussion groups the Economic Collapse Blog, I'm not making
fun of the idea of prepping. I in fact have
most of the items on that list myself. The idea
is at least have a month's worth of food. But
remember when the power goes out. If it stays out,

(19:01):
you're going to run into a serious problem, very serious.

Speaker 5 (19:05):
Now.

Speaker 2 (19:05):
I'm not trying to stoke this happening. I don't want
it to happen. But even our federal government. Look at
the federal government websites in terms of what you should
be prepared for. They even recommend laying in supplies. I
think they only recommend three days worth. So you draw
your own conclusions on what is an adequate level five
twenty six coming up in five twenty seven. If you

(19:26):
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Speaker 1 (19:50):
They're non toxic and.

Speaker 2 (19:51):
Literally I have rubbed the odor exit the concentrates specifically
on my dog's head. Boh, rub it all over. The
odor disappeared. It happened to have been. I'm going back
quite quite a bit of time on that one. But man,
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(20:12):
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(20:33):
locally using the search engine on the website. They'll give
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Speaker 6 (20:40):
Com fifty five krc.

Speaker 2 (20:46):
Heriada is nine first one to forecast it's gonna be hot.
Just playing old hot and nests several days ninety seven
with sunny skies, muggy overy night, down to seventy one
ninety six tomorrow, isolated evening storms, muggy and seventy one
overnight and hot on Thursday as well, the slight chance
of storms after two pm going all the way up
to ninety seven. Right now it is I think seventy degrees.

Speaker 1 (21:07):
Here, fifty five kars de talk station by thirty one, and.

Speaker 2 (21:15):
A happy Tuesday to you're trying to make it happy anyway,
start for the subject matter, launch into the morning show there,
but man, the fool is the one who's not looking
out for his or her own best interests. So there
you have it. Let's go to Bobby and see what
he's got this morning. Bobby kind of expected I might
be hearing from you, considering I ran down the list
of things to prepare for Welcome to the morning show,
my friend boy.

Speaker 7 (21:35):
I'll tell you could read my mind.

Speaker 2 (21:37):
Yeah, I almost wrote Bobby on the top of the article.

Speaker 1 (21:42):
I was going through the list there because had you
in mind.

Speaker 8 (21:47):
I don't care much where they're categorizing the numbering of them.
But it's all this and I keep going on. I've
been number one, we're in the midst of a cultural revolution.

Speaker 7 (22:03):
Number one.

Speaker 8 (22:03):
People need to understand that anytime you're in a cultural
revolution like we are, when you have two parties that
are button heads, eventually it's going to go into a prelude,
prelude the what ever comes, and be prepared for it
mentally because you have to have the seventy two hour window.
If you're not prepared for that, you can't get prepared.

(22:27):
No gas, no food in the shelves, because everything will
be disrupted. You have to be mentally prepared. And I
guarantee you one thing. Ammunition don't need to be number
twenty three on the list.

Speaker 2 (22:48):
Oh that's hilarious. I was going to see ammunition. Where
did that one come in? I think it was actually
higher on the list than that. I'm not sure, but
it is number two twenty six, actually, yeah, twenty six
right there in the center. There were fifty total items. Yeah,
I just got to kick out a Bible for every
member of your family, as opposed to shove, as opposed

(23:12):
to a shovel for every member. Just a shovel, but
multiple Bibles, so you can draw your own conclusions as
to the priorities on the list, but pretty comprehensive list.

Speaker 8 (23:24):
And of course you need to take it. You just
need to be prepared. Yeah, man, that's the whole thing.
Everybody's different, and when the power goes out, it may
go out for a long time.

Speaker 1 (23:34):
Well, and that's why I brought up the substation point.

Speaker 2 (23:36):
Yeah, that's why I brought up the substation point because
you know, I'm I'm fearful, I think legitimately so with
the obvious anger against the United States generally fostered and
encouraged by social media generally and all the other interconnectivity
we've got these days, that it could very ease, very
easy to accomplish a simple, coordinate attack on something as

(24:02):
simple as shooting a bullet at an oil filled item
on a transformer. If that's all it takes, then you
can see how delicate things are and how easy things
can break down.

Speaker 8 (24:15):
Right your Semen transformers right now, and the banks and
everything that could be taken out in a minute. Oh,
it's so easy. You got an eighteen month lead time
on these Semen transformers.

Speaker 7 (24:27):
Think about it.

Speaker 2 (24:27):
Ooh, that's the that's the replacement times, the parts shortage,
and the supply chain issues. Oh, it's a fun fact, Bobby.
Where'd you come up with that one?

Speaker 8 (24:37):
Well, I worked, there's a semen's right here in Cincinnati.

Speaker 2 (24:40):
Okay, Well, I appreciate you doubling down on my concerns there, Bobby,
sort of kind.

Speaker 8 (24:46):
Of And it doesn't take much to do at all.
Person that has to have this old military ambo thirty
six black tips will go through the whole banks.

Speaker 2 (24:55):
Yeah, and the article, it was interesting. The article specifically
said one of the attacks was carried out, of course,
with an AR fifteen. But you know it, I know that,
you know, a you know, three Toho eight from a
bolt action rifle packs as much punch, perhaps a lot
more considering the size of the bullet than an AR fifteen.

(25:15):
So literally any firearm I think, could accomplish taking out
that substation. So it doesn't matter what kind of weapon.
There are literally tens of millions of them out there,
and in the wrong hands they can do terrible things.
In the right hands, they can be used for one's
own advantage in self defense. Bobby, you take care of
my friend five point thirty six fifty five care ceedtalk

(25:37):
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because they save me money. They'll save you money too,
compared to the dealer. Foreign Exchange will fix your car
for less money. I saw an article about insurance. Automobile
insurance rates up forty five percent. In that article they
also point out cost of car repairs up thirty percent

(25:58):
over the past several years. Thank you, thank huge four
inflation a realities of the current administration if you want
to blame them, regardless of where you place the blame.
It's expensive to fix a car, So why would you
go to the dealer where you're going to pay a
whole lot more than you would. At Foreign Exchange, you
will get a full warranty on parts and service. An
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(26:22):
manufacturer or Asian manufacturer your car comes from. They have
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So that's the bottom line, your bottom line. Foreign Exchange
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(26:44):
hanging right on Kinglin and you are there. You're there
when you go online to foreign axform the letter X
dot com. Here's the number to call for an appointment.

Speaker 1 (26:50):
Tell them.

Speaker 2 (26:51):
Brian said, Hi, please five one three six four four
twenty six, twenty six, six four four twenty six, twenty six.

Speaker 4 (26:57):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 1 (27:01):
Chickoff is almost here.

Speaker 2 (27:04):
Mostly sunny, hot, human today in ninety seven for the high,
muggy and seventy one overnight Tomorrow, isolated evening storms although
it's partly clouding. High at ninety six again, muggy over
nineteen seventy one for the low Thursday, sunny, slight chance
of storms after GPM ninety seven to high. It's sixty
nine degrees right now. It's about there, so you talk
station time for first traffic.

Speaker 9 (27:25):
From the UCL Traffic Center at the UC Gardner Neuroscience Institute,
you can access the leading brain, spine and nerve experts
right here in Cincinnati. Highway traffic not bad to start
off your Tuesday morning westbound two seventy five. That's easily
under ten minutes between Milford and Montgomery inbound. Seventy four's
problem free coming down the hill hill from north Ben

(27:46):
under a five minute run. Northbound seventy five is doing
fine at Kyle's chuck Ingram on fifty five KR.

Speaker 1 (27:53):
See the talk station.

Speaker 2 (27:56):
Five forty one Happy Tuesday five one three seven four
nine Fifi eight hundred and eighty two to three talk.

Speaker 1 (28:02):
Both time FI fifty on eight and t founds.

Speaker 2 (28:04):
Yeah, as do Bobby's coming about a three to eight.
Do you have bolt action three O eight that's going
to travel just under a three thousand feet per second
depending on the barrel length, and an AR fifteen with
a much smaller round it's a fifty five grain roughly
versus one hundred and forty seven grain much larger bullet
in a threeh eight. Uh, they travel roughly the same
speed and a little north of three thousand feet per

(28:24):
s back second, so not a whole lot of difference
in feed per second, a lot more damage with a
three TOHO eight, And again it doesn't matter whether it's
coming out of a semi automatic or a bolt action.
It only takes one round apparently, to bring down an
entire power station. Yeah, frightening stuff. Let's see what Kevin's
got this morning, Kevin, thanks for calling a very happy
Tuesday to you.

Speaker 3 (28:43):
Hey, good morning, Brian.

Speaker 8 (28:44):
On that paper list, I would have probably replaced pasta
with a couple cases of beer.

Speaker 1 (28:52):
Yeah, you know what, that's a good point. There's nothing.

Speaker 2 (28:55):
There is no reference to alcoholic beverages on this list.
In a post apocalypse, Kevin, in a post apocalyptic world,
you know, I might like a drink. You know, I
would rather have a large bottle of vodka than a
four ounces of gold in a post apocalyptic world, because

(29:18):
I can consume the vodka. It probably would mellow my
disposition given the apocalyptic scenario we're talking about here, right exactly.
You know, weed and gummies and marijuana products are also
not on the list, Kevin, So you make your road.

Speaker 1 (29:36):
List that I know.

Speaker 2 (29:38):
I'm just saying it's legal in a lot of states now,
So something else you might want to just marked out.

Speaker 1 (29:44):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (29:44):
I probably have Valume on there as well. Kevin, Thank
you very much for the chuckle. I appreciate that otis
Dak is stupid. Natalie Chova was important word a Czechoslovakian
athlete who was sightseeing at a castle, the one that

(30:05):
inspired Walt Disney's Sleeping Beauty hit film. Twenty three year
old has said to have fallen near the Neus Schwanstein
castle in Bavaria. Happened last week or so. She fell
eighty meters down the Teleberg Mountain as she tried to
take a snap for Instagram idiots doing idiot things because

(30:27):
they're idiots. She'd been standing very close to the edge
of the mountain when she slipped. Her friend said she
fell from a height of about eighty meters. We will
never find out whether she slipped or whether a piece
of the rock edge broke off taking a selfie. Local
media reported she survived the fall with life threatening injuries
before being airlifted to a hospital where she was taken
off of life support days later. Mind your p's and q's, folks,

(30:54):
she was quite the looker too. It's a shame that
we've lost her, but well learn from other's mistakes. I
suppose a forty one year old man accused of decapitating
his parents and killing their dog started to sing Tina
Turner's What's Love Got to Do with It?

Speaker 1 (31:13):
With It?

Speaker 2 (31:14):
After he was shot by an Orange County Sheriff's deputy.
Pretty much sums up the whole article. Joe Joseph Brandon
Gerdville arrested on suspicion of killing his parents, seventy seven
year old Walter Gerdville and seventy nine year old Antoinette Gerdville.
Body camera video of the incident released last week. Bloodsoe
Gerderville is shown with a metal object in his hand,

(31:34):
approaching a sheriff's deputy moments before his shot, then swearing
and singing after he's.

Speaker 1 (31:41):
On the ground. Wounded.

Speaker 2 (31:41):
Authority say that a series of disturbing events began when
Gerdville text messages text message photos of his bloodied mother
to a cousin. Relative called nine to one one to
report a possible domestic assault on the elderly. Relatives, who
lived in a mobile home community, told dispatchers her cousins
suffers from mental health issues that had a violent passed.
Another dispatcher meanwhile received a nine to one one call

(32:03):
from a maintenance worker at the same mobile home community
who reported they were being chased by a bloodied man
with a fork. Bloody Vin identified as Guardville, drove off
and the maintenance workers golf cart. Sheriff deputies arrived the
scene found a person on the ground bleeding in a
gruesome scene inside the parents' home. He reappeared later on

(32:24):
a bike pass short time later and approached the Sheriff's
Department Community Service Officer officer as she sat in her vehicle.
He then threw a shovel at the officer's vehicle and
drove off in the golf cart. Body camera footage showed
into what happened next the bloodsoak. Gerdville parked the golf
cart in the sidewalk and approached the deputy while carrying
a metal object, ignoring the deputy's orders and shouting something

(32:46):
unintelligible before the deputy fired five times. Guardville then fell
to the ground. F you, Gardville said, obviously the abbreviated
version of his words. He can be heard telling deputies
I love you and I'm sorry you're going You're gonna
have to die. While facing the grounds. He also said,
finish me off, put one in my head please. I

(33:10):
beg of you. Gerdville then broke out in the song
what's love got to do with it? What's love but
a secondhand emotion? He sang softly singing the nineteen eighty
fourteen turner hit by Get in Touch a chimney care

(33:31):
fireplace and stove. It's the perfect time of year to
take care of your safety. You're not using your fireplace
dating the obvious. It's ninety plus degrees out there. Stoves, fireplaces,
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to be inspected, including gas ones. Sometimes you know you
got a carbon monoxide problem, and I have a gas fireplace,
and my old gas fireplace was a fire hazard. How

(33:54):
did I know that you're going to burn your house down?
Was basically what I read based upon the look on
Jeff Key for his face when he inspected once. Oh
my god, He's like, I don't think you should be
using this. That was a very very strong warning to me.
Out went the old and in went the new. I
got a beautiful fireplace. Insert it's remote control. I got
a remote on it. I can adjust the flames, the

(34:14):
lights on the inside, the blower speed, so I can
get more of the heat out of that firebox into
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Speaker 6 (35:13):
Being a hero in this country takes a toll.

Speaker 1 (35:16):
In twenty twenty three, Butler County lunk hot.

Speaker 2 (35:19):
There's your weather forecast in a word, so we have
a hot andu the conditions today in ninety's gonna go
right into traffic. Seventy one overnight, muggy ninety six. Tomorrow
the icelded evening storms muggying seventy one again overnight and
on Thursday, hot sunny, chance of storms after two ninety seven,
it's sixty nine.

Speaker 1 (35:35):
Now it's time for traffic.

Speaker 9 (35:37):
From the ucup Tramping Center. Right at the UC Gardner
Neuroscience Institute, you can access the leading brain, spine and
nerve experts right here in Cincinnati. Northbound seventy five and
northbound four seventy one, both wide open coming into downtown.
I'm not seeing any problems on the highways that are
going to add extra time. Plenty of fire crews heading
to a report of a structure fire on Glendale below

(36:00):
Oak in Woodmont. Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRS the
talk station.

Speaker 2 (36:06):
Five fifty two fifty five KRRA City Talk Station Brian,
time's going back to the stack of stupid. You think
it was Friday because we end up in Florida with
a naked person. Indeed, Florida woman arrested for walking around
outside naked during a neighbor's birthday party. What Grace and
Sharp fifty six years old and no Court of the mudshock,
you don't want to see your naked charge of the

(36:28):
tion exposure. It happened Sunday on uh Fowler Avenue, Pensacola, Florida,
as the neighbor was having a birthday party. Neighbor told
deputies around seven pm, Sharp walked up naked to the
chainling fence that separates the properties, reportedly waving around plastic
doll legs.

Speaker 1 (36:45):
Why are you doing that?

Speaker 2 (36:46):
Hold on, I'll get to that, and rubbing the plastic
doll legs on her private area. Neighbor made the kids
go inside. Court of the report. When the neighbor told
Sharp she was naked, Sharp said, I know it's hot outside,

(37:11):
let's see here. Jerry in Indiana convicted a man who
was just sixteen years old when he murdered three people
while showing them how to turn a glockhandgun into a
machine gun. Candon Smith, who's now nineteen, found guilty on
three counts of murder, robbery, and dangerous possession of a
machine gun and possession of methan fatamine. Marion County prosecutors
all of a sudden the press release he killed Abdullah Mabarak seventeen,

(37:33):
Joseph Thomas, e Tina Michael James, who was twenty two.
Happened in October twenty one. Indianapolis Metropolitan Police found three men,
dad suffering from.

Speaker 1 (37:42):
I'd like this.

Speaker 2 (37:43):
Here's the quote. Officer with the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department
found three men, dad suffering from gunshot wounds in a
path filled with tall grass, and they identify the street. No,
they're not suffering anymore. If they're dead anyway.

Speaker 1 (37:58):
Sorry.

Speaker 2 (38:00):
They recovered spence shellcases at the scene. They later learned
via text messages that Smith lured the men to the
field over two nights to show them how a glock
switch works, which it's a little tiny piece and it
turns a semi automatic firearm into a machine gun. And
he said Smith used the opportunity then to murder all
three men so he can rob them. Guilty. Verdict not

(38:21):
always assured, they say. In twenty twenty two, a judge
threw out some key evidence after ruling the detectives violated
his Fourth Amendment rights during a search warrant execution guilt
was released on jail on a GPS ankle Monnor, but
found himself back in jail on his eighteenth birthday after
cops uncovered snapchat photos of Smith with a gun and drugs.

(38:44):
Yes in The remains in jail until his trial, which
began August nineteenth, lasted five days. He is now going
to be serving a long, long time in prison. Five
five fifty five care Seedy talk Station. I've got lots
to talk about coming up. I hope to hear from
you as well. Feel free to call me up five one, three, seven, four,

(39:05):
nine fifty five eight hundred eight TYO three taco with
pound five fifty on at and T phones. I'll be
right back after the news.

Speaker 5 (39:11):
Worldness don't exactly happen on a schedule.

Speaker 1 (39:14):
What the latest stump days do?

Speaker 5 (39:16):
At the top of every hour fifty five KRC talkstation,
get an e goo.

Speaker 2 (39:22):
Six Here at fifty five KRCD talk Station, Brian Thomas here,
wish you a very happy Tuesday.

Speaker 1 (39:25):
And if I didn't need to stick around all morning.

Speaker 2 (39:28):
George Venerman returns to the program tomorrow night at the Farm.
Congressman Davidson was on last week talking about this event.
Tomorrow evening they're having an event with Congressman Davidson's keynote speaker.
Get some food and fellowship and of course an interesting
conversation where you can talk to and meet Congressman Warren
Davidson George at seven thirty to talk about that. It
is Tuesday, so we get the inside scoop at Bright

(39:49):
Part News every Tuesday eight a five Today, Tech editor
Colin made in returns of the program talk about the
Telegram app, widely popular globally with nine hundred million or
so people using Telegram. Well, the creator and founder of
Telegram got arrested for alleged you know, terrorism connection with
what other people were saying on his free speech telegram app.

(40:11):
Deep Dive with Daniel Davis. Every Tuesday at eight thirty
we do a Deep Dive. Daniels gonna be talking about
the latest in the war in Israel as well as
the Ukraine Russia war. You can call phel free five one, three, seven,
four nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred eighty two to
three talko with pound five fifty on AT and T
Funds and feel free to add to the list. I
went through the Prepper list, since they're growing concerns about

(40:34):
terrorism and the noted attacks on power stations, and that
article from Bloomberg pointing out right wing extremists the ones
that did it previously. But anyone can easily disable a
power station. It only takes apparently a bullet fired from
any kind of firearm, whether or not it's an AR
fifteen or not. But the list of fifty items you need,

(40:56):
according to this prepper, Michael Snyder, who's written a book
on the subject, which includes I note at the very
tail end of it, a substantial emergency supply of cash.

Speaker 1 (41:07):
You know.

Speaker 2 (41:07):
Nowhere on the list of fifty things is the refer
Is there a reference to gold or silver? That's my
favorite kind of punching bag to think that, somehow, in
some way that having a bar of gold is going
to be valuable to you in a situation where there
is no power. You can't eat it, it's impossible to
trade it. What's the value? How are you going to

(41:28):
slice off a little bit of it and hand it
over to somebody in return for something you actually need?
Absent from the list a reference to alcohol. I mentioned
valuume and also weed, and notably, the author says your
unique circumstances will dictate what getting prepared looks like for you.

(41:51):
So what's on your short list anyway? No longer on
the list? Or folks supporting Kamala Harris, Yeah, or kind
of hit the nail on the head with his speech
announcing that he was endorsing Donald Trump. Astute political observations
by Carol Swain, formerly a Democrat, who also saw the

(42:11):
light pointing out RFK Junior's motives pointed out in his
speech announcing he was suspending his campaign. The National Democratic
Party in the nineteen sixties were perceived as being champions
of constitution and civil rights. Absolutely, that's what Kennedy said,
And they used to be. They did stand against authoritarianism,
they did stand against censorship and colonialism, imperialism, unjust wars,

(42:35):
party of labor, party of the working class today, she notes,
and it is true the Democratic Party unrecognizable from the
party of John F. Kennedy, rejecting what made its party,
you know what it was. So it's turned into a
competitive election of candidates who compete and debate each other
for its political nomination. Instead now installs hand pick candidates

(42:58):
that the media anoints. She notes, while it to christ
racism and sexism, and homophobia, Islamophobia, and other great evils
have a pattern of using members of identity groups to
help it advance its own goals, even though those goals
are often against the best interests of the American people,
including the members of the identity groups they purport to represent. Today,

(43:18):
to the Party of elitism, wealth, big money, big pharma,
judicial activism that uses law fair notice the emphasis I
put on that word to punish their political opponents, even
if it means passing laws to invent crimes that were
not recognized as crimes until the party perceives an interest
in taking down an opponent. I think that was obviously
availed reference to Donald Trump. But according to Kennedy, what

(43:43):
alarms him most is the parties, in his words, that
resorts to censorship, media control, weaponization of federal agencies. What
the US president colludes with or outright coerces media companies
to censor political speech. It's an attack on our most
sacred right of free expression. And that's the very right
upon which all of our other constitutional rights rest. Close

(44:08):
quote John F. Kennedy Junior or Robert F. Kennedy Junior,
Rather and isn't that the truth? They are the party
of lawfare and censorship. They want to stack the Supreme
Court simple majority needed to change the size of the court.
Democrats are willing to promise the moon Americans who are

(44:29):
struggling or being enticed with promises of free stuff to
solve their problems. Free housing, free healthcare, free education, free transportation,
pretty much anything they desire. Of course, if this were
to happen, she observes, America would go the way of Venezuela,
Cuba and other failed national experiences. You said, whatever rf case, future,

(44:51):
we should be grateful that there are a few Democrats
remaining with integrity, foresight, knowledge to stand up and hold
their party accountable. And I like her reference to Cuba
because it is yet another failed communist experience and one
in which you can see the writing on the wall.
You know, you're like a few steps behind Cuba in

(45:13):
the direction our country is going. Cubans have an insanely
terrible economy. And as to retirees, and I think about
both parties unwillingness to address the collapse of social security.
And that is not my conclusion, it's the conclusion of
every single person who's ever paid attention to it. They

(45:35):
have a date certain by which you know the money
coming in is going to far exceed the money going out.
If you're relying on social security, look to Cuba to
see perhaps what your future is. Ten dollars a month
in pension, along with a critical lack of basic supplies, food, power,
medical equipment, and pharmaceutical shortages have what resulted in massive

(45:58):
protests and of course caused a whole bunch of people
to flee the country. There's a report out it noted
a number of elderly dependents for every one hundred working
age adults could soon reach twenty eight with the soaring
volume of migrant outflows that began in twenty twenty two,
which exbit out of the problem they fall left here

(46:21):
in the United States, border patrol agents have apprehended nearly
four hundred and twenty five thousand illegal immigrant Cubans. That's
in fiscal year twenty two and twenty three. Nearly two
hundred thousand have been arrested in fiscal year twenty four
through July. That fiscal year I think ends at the
beginning of October, and of course that's on the heels
of massive prior large scale migrations from Cuba the United States.

(46:45):
You had the freedom flights back in the late sixties
and early seventies and the nineteen eighty Marial boatlift. Plummeting
birth rates also fueled the acceleration of the problem they
have with aging people in Cuba. Cuba has been below
oh the replacement birth rate since nineteen seventy eight. Are

(47:10):
you ready? As of nineteen eighty, Cuba's birth rate is
fourteen per thousand people. As of twenty twenty four, Cuba's
birth rate presently stands at nine babies per thousand people.

(47:32):
And again, ten dollars a month is what you get
from the government pension system in Cuba, which I think
is enough to buy you a dozen eggs per month.

Speaker 1 (47:42):
So riding on the wall there, that's what you get.

Speaker 2 (47:44):
And well look what we've got here, ceef RFK going
over the Trump side and the Democrats losing their battles
to keep opponents that the otherwise should embrace off the ballot.
Their legal campaign to disqualify rivals isn't going well. You
got trug RFK going with Trump. Independent presidential candidate Cornell

(48:07):
West is now eligible to put his name on the
Michigan ballot. According to a Michigan judge who ruled over
the weekend, the Democrats at toorney Mark Brewer, former chair
of the Michigan Democratic Party, who challenged West's eligibility because
Cornell West even makes the far left wing of the
Democrat Party look conservative. And he said he's going to

(48:27):
file an appeal for this ruling allowing Cornell West's presence
on the ballot. Oh my god, horror of horrors. Competition.
They're worried about, of course, Democrat votes being siphoned off,
so file a suit. Tell them they can't be on
the ballot. Sound familiar, Jill Starns suffering this. But yes,
she will also be on the Georgia ballot, in spite
of the Democratic Party's effort to challenge her a right

(48:50):
to be on the ballot. Hmm, it's kind of interesting.
They challenged application to use a new Georgia law allowing
a political party to get on the state ballot if
the party is on the ballot in at least twenty
other states. The Democrats argue, in trying to keep her
off the ballot in Georgia that they say her application

(49:13):
filed by the Georgia Green Party is invalid because the
Georgia brandt is not affiliated with the National Green Party,
well as the Wall Street Journal observed is not ms
Stein's name on the application evidence of an affiliation. Yes,
say that the courts in Georgia their effort to keep
her off the ballot defeated law fair.

Speaker 1 (49:37):
Against their own.

Speaker 2 (49:41):
And John Tester, described as a vulnerable Democrat Senator John
Tester won't even be making an endorsement for the presidential election.
He previously served as chair of the Democratic Senatorial Committee
Campaign Committee back in twenty fifteen through twenty seventeen, and
he led the efforts with Harrit when Harris first announcer

(50:03):
senatorial aspirations. He was all in favor when she lost
her California senator when she launched her California Senate bid,
John Tester, who will not endorse Kamala Harris for president,
was one of the players who encouraged her to run,
and in spite of that prior support, he said he
will not be making an endorsement this year's race because
two reasons. One one reason number one, I'm not endorsing

(50:27):
for president. One I'm focused on my race. Okay, you
can endorse a candidate merely by saying I endorse Kamala
Harris and then you can move on and not bring
it up anymore. How does that detract from your focus
on your own race? John Tester? Number two? Folks have

(50:48):
wanted to nationalize this race, and this isn't about national politics.
Is about it's about Montana. Huh us, John Tester? Whose
vote impacts the American people on a national level. No, no, no, no,
it's all about Montana. I don't have time to endorse

(51:12):
Kamala Harris, who I strongly endorse to be a Senator
from the state of California. Ah, how about that? Not
the only ones you can see the direction that's going
In tight races, people find Kamala Harris toxic six eighteen
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Speaker 6 (52:30):
Dot com fifty five care.

Speaker 2 (52:33):
Hot, Hot, Hot and Hot, Sunny Hot Human Today ninety
seven every night little of seventy one with muggy conditions.
You're going to get that tomorrow night as well. Prior
to that, a day which is going to be hot
ninety six for the High with isolated evening storms tomorrow.
Then you get that muggy seventy one, and then on
a Thursday, sonny with a slight chance of storms after
two pm, Hot ninety seven for the High. Right now,

(52:56):
it's sixty nine. In time for traffic.

Speaker 9 (52:59):
Trumping Center at the U See Gardner Neuroscience Institute, you
can access the leading brain, spine and nerve experts right
here in Cincinnati. Highway traffic continues to look good. Do
major problems to deal with their structure. Fires, though, seem
to be the problem of the morning. There's fire in Woodbot.
I'm Glenndale, Bobo Oak. The latest is on Meridian just

(53:20):
off of Allen Road in Westchester. Chuck Ingram on fifty
five k R and see the talk station.

Speaker 2 (53:28):
Up to six twenty three fifty five Krcity talks station
And going back to rfk's reasons for leaving the party,
you know, Pleasant colludes with or controls outright coerces media
companies the center political speech.

Speaker 1 (53:40):
Pivoting over to uh META CEO Mark Zuckerberg.

Speaker 2 (53:44):
He admitted in a letter yesterday that his company Facebook
was in fact pressured by the Biden Harris administration to
censor you, most notably regarding the COVID nineteen content that
you were interested in posting. Hmmm, this letter to the
House you do share Committee Chairman Jim Jordan of Ohio.
This a year after he provided the committee with thousands

(54:05):
of documents as part of their investigation into content moderation.
Along with the documents, Zuckerberg said the company has provided
a dozen employees to be available for transcribed interviews. They
are cooperating, and he stressed they are cooperating with the investigation. Quote,
there's a lot of talk right now how the US
government interacts with companies like Meta, and I want to

(54:26):
be clear about our position. Our platforms are for everyone.
We're about promoting speech and helping people connect in his
safe and secure way. And as part of this, we
regularly hear from government around government's plural around the world,
and others with various concerns about public discourse and public safety,
he said. Back in twenty twenty one, senior officials from

(54:47):
the Biden administration in White House repeated this is his words.
Repeatedly pressured our teams four months to censor certain COVID
nineteen content, including humor and sat hire.

Speaker 1 (55:02):
It didn't even want you joking about it. This is
how dumb they think you are.

Speaker 2 (55:08):
Ultimately, it was our decision whether or not to take
content down, and we own our decisions, including COVID nineteen
related changes we made to our enforcement in the wake
of this pressure. I believe the government pressure was wrong,
and I regret that we were not more outspoken about it.
But you didn't, and you weren't and you capitulated at
the time. Listen to this quote. I also think we

(55:29):
made some choices that here we are, with the benefit
of hindsight and new information, we wouldn't make today. You
know what that you know how I read that all
you folks out there who were drawing conclusions about the
propriety of masking, about the propriety of social distancing, about
the nonsensical lockdowns, about not being able to drink a

(55:51):
drink after ten pm, although you could still hang out
in the bar past ten pm, stuff like that. At
the time, it seemed like a legitimate point to make,
didn't it. No, No, But our lords and masters and
social media, thanks to government pressure, pulled the plug on
those comments. And we find out after the fact, with

(56:12):
the benefit of hindsight and new information that we were right.
Like I said to our teams at the time, he wrote,
I feel strong that we should not compromise our content
standards to pressure from any administration in either direction, and
we are ready to push back if something like this happens.

(56:34):
All right, So wait for the next pandemic. And I
guess they're going to let you speak your mind on
what you think is appropriate to talk about and what
you think is appropriate to maybe send a joke about.
It's amazing six twenty six fifty five krc DE talk station.
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It's coversincy dot.

Speaker 6 (58:37):
Com fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (58:41):
Waking up on the right side.

Speaker 4 (58:44):
This is the Sean Hannity Morning Minute.

Speaker 10 (58:48):
I don't think the country yet fully understands the radicalism
that is Kamala Harris. It looks like, you know, we're
hearing rumors. I don't know for sure that Kamo is
now trying to put more demands on the one debate
she's agreed to. It sounds like she's not only dodging
ducking any type of press conference, any type of interview,
Although they swear they're gonna have an interview by the

(59:09):
end of the week. What they're gonna do Rachel Maddow
into friendly territory where she's not gonna have to answer
any questions about her radicalism. You got to be you
got to be kidding me. I mean, that would not
be a real interview in any way, shape, matter of form.
She needs to be asked about every extreme radical statement

(59:29):
that she's ever.

Speaker 5 (59:30):
Made, from coast to coast, from sea to Shining Seas.

Speaker 4 (59:35):
It's a Sean Hannity show.

Speaker 10 (59:41):
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Speaker 2 (01:00:41):
Brian Thomas for the Chimney care company right mostly sunny,
hot and human today ninety seven, muggy over ninety down
to seventy one.

Speaker 1 (01:00:47):
It's going to be isolated evening storms tomorrow.

Speaker 2 (01:00:49):
Otherwise apartment fatt day with a high of ninety six
again over night, muggy and seventy one. Thursday is going
to be sunning, slight chance of storms after two pm.
High of ninety seven, sixty eight Right now in time
for traffic.

Speaker 9 (01:01:03):
From the ucaut Tramphic Center at the UC Gardner Neuroscience Institute,
you can access the leading brains find and nerve experts
right here. In Cincinnati. Highways continue to look pretty good
this morning. No major problems to deal with in the
downtown and so yet the fire cruis are busy this morning.
In wood Bond there's a fire on Gwendale Milford before
Oak and in Westchester on Meridian off of Allen Chucking

(01:01:27):
Roman fifty five krs.

Speaker 1 (01:01:29):
The talk station.

Speaker 2 (01:01:33):
SIXFI about krc DE talk station you used to regulate
social media for stupidity, here's one a thoughtless meme. This
idea that if we give the billionaires more, we'll all
have more doesn't seem to be working. We mean, get
who's giving billionaires anything. Are you referring to the amount
and level of taxation, that is, if we take less

(01:01:55):
from the billionaires and how they become billionaires. I suppose
it was based upon the something they created that we
wanted and bought and probably employ us as well. Let's
do it, Steve's gott Hey, Steve, thanks for calling this morning.
Welcome to the Morning Show.

Speaker 3 (01:02:11):
Thanks Brian.

Speaker 11 (01:02:11):
How are you doing today?

Speaker 1 (01:02:12):
I'm doing pretty good? For it Tuesday. I hope you
can say the.

Speaker 12 (01:02:14):
Same for the part I think it speaks volumes about
us as society when you're getting your medical information from
Facebook or social media and they talk about, you know,
election interference that Russia was trying to sway.

Speaker 13 (01:02:33):
Elections in twenty sixteen twenty twenty by posting things on
social media like who the heck goes to Facebook to
try to figure out who they're going to vote for
or what kind of medical care they're going to get.

Speaker 3 (01:02:45):
It just seems maybe I'm just older. That just sounds ridiculous.

Speaker 2 (01:02:48):
No, Steve, You're you're more thoughtful, logical, and reasonable than
the average person who votes. Because Taylor Swift says vote
for Phil in the blank.

Speaker 1 (01:02:58):
It's the same thing exactly.

Speaker 2 (01:02:59):
You know, if you're that shallow and thoughtless about your
own self, and if you think that somebody with an
opinion we all have them sphincters, you know, is going
to provide you with the best possible advice, and you're
not gonna go out into the world and search for
it from logical or from proper sources like, for example,
real true, genuine doctors, or medical sites, sites that have

(01:03:20):
done research, citing clinical studies, that type of thing. If
you're just gonna listen to some random dude, then you're
gonna get bad information. Or as the case of Donald Trump,
people suggested he told people to inject themselves with bleach.
If you believe that recitation from the left that Donald
Trump said that, and you inject yourself with bleach, you're

(01:03:41):
probably gonna die. But that's not what he said. But
you know it doesn't matter. Social media said he said it,
so that's all the counts.

Speaker 13 (01:03:49):
The funny thing, I know a lot of highly educated
people who believe that though.

Speaker 8 (01:03:54):
And it just it blows me away.

Speaker 2 (01:03:56):
Well, they're highly educated in some realm. I'm the first
person going to make fun of myself because I don't
know everything right you know, member of MENSA, which means
absolutely nothing. I'm highly educated in some areas, and I
know absolutely nothing about others. In the field of medicine.
I got to rely on learned professionals. I'm not going
to draw my own conclusions based upon a social media

(01:04:17):
search about what's ailing me, like my cancer. If you know,
I got hey, Brian, you have cancer. Okay, I'm going
to Facebook to figure out how to solve my lymphoma problem.

Speaker 1 (01:04:26):
And right, you know.

Speaker 2 (01:04:29):
So there are smart people in a lot of areas,
but in other areas of their world and in their brain,
they're absolute morons. Done end of discussion. That relates and
it impacts all people. I don't know anybody who's an
expert on literally everything. Smartest guy in the world I
can think of, like Elon Musk, I bet he doesn't
have a doctor or he's not a doctor, he's not

(01:04:51):
a physician. To the best of my knowledge, I imagine
he relies on learned medical professionals for that type of thing. Anyway,
Certainly appreciated Deeve, excellent observation six point thirty five fifty
five care see the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:05:03):
Feel free to call if you got a comment. Love
to hear from you.

Speaker 2 (01:05:05):
And another call you can make for mortgage related issues,
call the woman who I recommended to my daughter. And
you maybe don't know me, but that statement in and
of itself speaks volumes. You think I'm going to recommend
my daughter to someone who I do not truly believe in. Well,
I'm that way with all of my sponsors, and Suzette
Low's Camp for Mortgages is a great person to call.

(01:05:27):
She will treat you wonderfully. She's great at customer service.
You know, you know, it's like deer in the headlights
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to prepare them with the biggest financial transaction of her life.
She needs someone whose knowledgeable experience is going to get
through the whole process as quickly and painlessly as possible
with no junk fies, no application fees, great rates at
a low cost, and superior customer service. That's exactly what

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you get with Suzette Low's Camp. Prides yourself on finding
what option is best and available for you. So caller
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if it involves a mortgage, you're in the best possible hands.
What more can I say? Thirty five plus years of
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Speaker 1 (01:06:19):
Her number. She will get right back with you.

Speaker 2 (01:06:21):
You can even call her outside of business hours or
send her an email and she'll get right back with
you as well. It's five one three three one three
fifty one seventy six. Five one three three one three
fifty one seventy six. Send her an email. It's Suzette
dot Lows Camp, l s E Kamp Suset dot Low's
Camp at CCM dot com.

Speaker 4 (01:06:38):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 14 (01:06:49):
Here is your nine first warning weather forecast. Hot sums
up the next several days.

Speaker 2 (01:06:53):
Worn up this ninety seven degrees today with a lot
of humidity in sun, be clouds and a muggy over
nine seventy one partly body with isolated evening storms tomorrow
with the high in ninety.

Speaker 1 (01:07:02):
Six mirror up today tonight Tomorrow night.

Speaker 2 (01:07:05):
A few clowns. Muggy seventy one. Thursday is going to
be a sunny, hot day. Chance of storms after two pm,
they say, slight chance ninety seven to high Right now
at sixty ninety degrees.

Speaker 1 (01:07:15):
Time for Chuck with a traffic update from the UCUP
Traffic Center.

Speaker 9 (01:07:19):
At the UC Gardner Neuroscience Institute, you can access the
leading brain, spine and nerve experts right here.

Speaker 1 (01:07:25):
In Cincinnati.

Speaker 9 (01:07:26):
Highways continue to look pretty good this morning, beginning to
build southbound seventy five out of Lachland and northbound four
seventy one coming across the bridge. Still not a whole
lot of extra time needed. Fire crews on the scene
of a structure fire on Meridian just off of Allan
in Westchester. Chucking, Vermont fifty five krs. The talk station.

Speaker 2 (01:07:48):
Six forty here fifty five PERCD talks Station Brian Thomas
wishing a happy Tuesday. Remind me a listener lunch when
week from tomorrow we're going to be at we Leedham
and Brewer in St.

Speaker 1 (01:07:57):
Bernard. Great spot.

Speaker 2 (01:07:58):
You got really good food and of course the beer's wonderful.
Nothing beats the fellowship of a listener lunch. I talked
to Westside Jim Keefer yesterday about that so Weedam and
Brewery next Wednesday.

Speaker 1 (01:08:07):
I believe it's September already, is it really?

Speaker 3 (01:08:11):
Oh?

Speaker 13 (01:08:11):
My word?

Speaker 8 (01:08:13):
Wow?

Speaker 2 (01:08:13):
Time flies and again another day without Kamala Harris answering
any question.

Speaker 1 (01:08:18):
Let us see here, you know, I was.

Speaker 2 (01:08:22):
As I saw this Jacob Gershman article from the Wall
Street Journal about do Americans have a constitutional right to
an ar? Fifteen gun rights groups ask the Supreme Court
they may be chiming in on the topic whether we
are entitled to own a specific type of firearm, and
then pivot over to Germany specifically, where they're considering tougher

(01:08:45):
knife laws in the collective that represents the European Union.
It's not that easy to own an actual firearm. They
have tough laws. They are against the law to have
and possess Germany, most notably, I guess, and so rather
than if you don't have a firearm, what do you
resort to? You go around stabbing people? It's all the rage.

(01:09:05):
German Chancellor Olaf Schultz speaking to well at the scene
of a recent knife attack, where they say a suspected
Islamic terrorist from Syria described as an asylum seeker who's
suspected of killing three and injuring eight others at a
festival of diversity in Germany last Friday. Reportedly had a

(01:09:26):
deportation order last year, but the German authorities didn't remove
him from the country, so he got all stab stabby.
At the German Festival of Diversity, German chancellor promised that
something must be done, which apparently was something similar. He
said after a mass stabbing in the region carried out

(01:09:50):
earlier this year a similar mass stabbing qull we must
do everything to ensure that such things never happen in
our country. If possible, he predicted, a toughening of knife
laws might help. No more knives. Everybody gets a spork

(01:10:18):
in Germany from now on. Joe Green. Vice Chancellor Robert
Haybeck also called for tightening of knife laws, saying that
there must be there must be more weapon band zones
and stricter weapons laws.

Speaker 1 (01:10:30):
Quote.

Speaker 2 (01:10:31):
No one has to carry stabbing or cutting weapons in
public spaces in Germany. We no longer live in the
Middle Ages. To a more clear thinking person, we turned
to center right Christian Democratic Union Party member Frederick Murz,

(01:10:55):
noting the problem is not knives, but the people allowed
in the country. It's enough, he said after the terrorist
attack in Solingen, which is where the most recent knife
attack occurred, it should now be finally clear it is
not the knives that are the problem, but the people
who run around with it. In the majority of cases
these are refugees and the majority of the deeds there
were Islamic motives behind them. He asked that the country

(01:11:18):
start beginning deportations for those folks who came from Syrian Afghanistan.
Suspect now in custody. He turned himself into police a
day after the attack of the festival marking these cities
six hundred and fiftieth anniversary. According to federal prosecutors there,
they said over the weekend that this attacker shared the
radical terror ideology of the Islamic State group which he joined,

(01:11:42):
which he joined, apparently acting on those beliefs when he
stabbed his victims repeatedly from behind in the neck and
upper body. Twenty six year old has asylum application rejected
and was supposed to be deported last year to Bulgaria,
where he first entered the European Union, but that because.

Speaker 1 (01:12:00):
He disappeared for a time.

Speaker 8 (01:12:03):
So what do we do.

Speaker 1 (01:12:04):
We banned knives, band knives. You know, it's funny.

Speaker 2 (01:12:09):
We don't live in the Middle Ages here in the
United States. I carry a knife every single day, and
you know what, there is not a day that goes
by that I do not use it. Open boxes with it,
open letters with it. I cut strings and chords with it.
It's got me out of a bunch of jams, you know,
like you're looking for a tools like, oh wait a second,
I got a knife right here. Can be used for
a multitude of things, a very practical, common sense thing

(01:12:31):
to have on you, and because also could be used
as a weapon of self defense, if that ever came
to that. But it has utilitarian function. There are a
multitude of reasons to carry one. And I remember a
day when I was in the Boy Scouts, you know,
in K through twelve.

Speaker 11 (01:12:47):
I was.

Speaker 2 (01:12:48):
I quit Boy Scouts before, you know, senior in high school,
long before. But I had a boy Scout pocket knife
BSA right there on it on the emblem. And you
know what, I used it for a multipitude of logical,
rational and reasonable purposes, very utilitarian purposes. It's not the knives, folks,
It's not the gun. It's the person holding them and

(01:13:10):
their motivation six forty six fifty five KRC detalk station.
I always go back to the engagement I got with
one of my left wing socialist friends. You know something
along the lines of guitars don't kill people.

Speaker 7 (01:13:22):
Guns do.

Speaker 2 (01:13:25):
And if you do a quick Internet search on murders
with guitars, you'll find that, yes, guitars in fact can
be used to kill people and have been used to
kill people on a multitude of occasions. Maybe we should
ban guitars as well. Feel free to call. I'd love
to hear from you, but I also would enjoy you
and appreciate you calling. Plumb type plumbing. You got a house,

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you got plumbing needs, You need plumb type plumbing. They
live bottomato plumbing done right, and it is at my
house yesterday. Outstanding plumbing experiences. I always give a plumb type.
My backflow was dripping leak, actually spraying water, had a
crack and so I had to have a plumber come
out and replace that. I didn't know what the hell
was going on there, So a plus of a better

(01:14:08):
business Vierau plumb type plumbing to the rescue. I notified
them on Sunday online. I went to plumb tight dot com.
I scheduled my appointment right there, hit enter, and probably
five minutes later. It was roughly five minutes later I
got the call from plumb Tight and I said, now
in an emergency, don't worry about that. I don't need
emergency service. I have the water shut off to the backflow,
but I do need someone to come out. So they

(01:14:28):
came out yesterday, arrived on time. I got the notice
ahead of time, along with the photograph of the plumber
that was showing up. He's been to our house before.
A really nice guy, and that's what you're gonna get.
Great customer service. He fixed the job with no padaches,
no hassles. I even gave him a tip so we
could buy him and his wife a drink. Never sew
anything you do not need, and always satisfied. You're gonna
be satisfied with the work they do and the price

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will be right.

Speaker 1 (01:14:51):
So call them. You'd be glad you did.

Speaker 2 (01:14:52):
Seven two seven tight five one three, seven two, seven
eighty four eighty eighty three twenty four hour days seven
eight week emergency service again. You can schedule the appointment online.
Just go to plumtight dot com fifty five cardtox TEA.

Speaker 1 (01:15:07):
Hot, hot, hot, hot, hot Hide ninety seven. I call
that hot.

Speaker 2 (01:15:10):
That's what's going to be today for the high mostly
sunny sky is also very humid, muggy and seventy one overnight,
can of isolated evening storm Tomorrow partly cloudy day. It'll
be with a high in ninety six, muggy and seventy
one overnight again and then on Thursday ninety seven for
the high sunny, hot human this slight chances storms after
two pm.

Speaker 1 (01:15:27):
Right now sixty nine degrees. Time for a traffic updates from.

Speaker 9 (01:15:31):
The Ucuth Tramping Center. At think you'd see Gardner Neuroscience Institute,
you can access the leading brain spinding nerve experts right here.

Speaker 1 (01:15:39):
In Cincinnati.

Speaker 9 (01:15:40):
Highway traffic continues to build just a bit north found
fours seventy one across the bridge and sapbound seventy five
through block on, but neither one of those spots are
going to cross you. A whole lot of extra time
on Meridian just off of Allen Road. In Westchester, fire
crews continue to fight a structure fire. Chuck ingramont I

(01:16:00):
find KRC talk station.

Speaker 2 (01:16:09):
Six fifty two fifty five KOSV Talks stations. I mentioned
the knives. I'm getting into a back and forth with
my friend Eric. I regularly point out, or at least
I occasionally point out that twenty two to three, my
favorite gun store sells my favorite brand of knives, Microtech.
He says, I prefer my ban Tang, which I didn't

(01:16:30):
know what that was until he sent me a photograph
of it. Doesn't look like it's a really practical knife
to be carrying around, though.

Speaker 3 (01:16:35):
Eric.

Speaker 2 (01:16:35):
Anyhow, go over to Las Vegas and the remaining time
in this segment, you feel free to call I always
enjoy I'd rather talk to you if I won three
seven four nine fifty two three talk. Election officials in
Clark County, Nevada. That would be Las Vegas County Sea
Clark count of Nevada. They're now having to investigate residents

(01:16:56):
who have registered to vote citing there at strip clubs, casinos,
gas stations, and other commercial business addresses. A group called
the Public Interest Legal Foundation found out that a lot
of residents in Clark County had listed these commercial businesses
as their addresses on their voter registration and sadly, in Nevada,

(01:17:18):
election officials mail out ballots to all registered voters in
the state. So if you listed the Strip Club as
your address, the Strip Club is going to get your ballot. Obviously,
this creates major concerns for folks who were concerned about
the integrity the election. According to Breitbart's reporting, among the
seemingly faulty voter registrations listed by these lawyers for the

(01:17:39):
Public Interests Legal Foundation, registrants listed Larry Flint's Hustler Club,
A seven to eleven, Chavello's Mexican Bar and Grill, Harry
Reid International Airport, and a Minnie Martin smoke show, among others,

(01:18:00):
as the primary addresses. They asked the Clark County registrar,
Loreen and Pertilla to clean up the voter roles in
June this year. She refused, so they filed a lawsuit,
prompting her to do her job and investigate the faulty
voter registrations rather than or rather and remove them from
the voter roles. According to the president, Christian Jay Christian
Adams of this Public Interest Legal Foundation, he said because

(01:18:23):
of pills lawsuit, Clark County was forced to investigate crazy
addresses listed as residences on the voter roll, including these
strip clubs, casinos, and gas stations. Without this litigation, mail
in ballots would have gone to those addresses. If Nevada's
going to continue to run its elections by automatically mailing
a ballot at every active registered voter, it needs to
do a better job of identifying improper voter registrations.

Speaker 1 (01:18:45):
AMN.

Speaker 2 (01:18:46):
Those are not residences, they say. Faulty voter registrations have
long been an issue for Clark County. Back in twenty
twenty presidential election, this Public Interest Legal Foundation found more
than ninety two thousand mail in ballots sent to active
registered voters in Clark County ended up bouncing as undeliverable,

(01:19:08):
seven percent of the total one point two mail in
ballots that were sent out in the county. Wow, that
is a significant amount. Six fifty five ifty five krs
DE talk station. We have some time to talk after
the top of the ORO News and George Brunneman is
going to return to the program talk about the big
event tomorrow night at the West Side Institution, that is
the farm where Congressman Davison is going to be speaking.

(01:19:29):
That'll take place at seven thirty. Coming up in a
little more than an hour, Tech editor Colin Maydine for
the inside scoop of the Bright bart News about the
Telegram arrest in England and Daniel Davis Deep Dive at
eight thirty.

Speaker 1 (01:19:40):
I'll be right back.

Speaker 8 (01:19:42):
They can trumple Deck, they can change your.

Speaker 1 (01:19:44):
Cards the twenty twenty four election.

Speaker 3 (01:19:46):
It doesn't matter.

Speaker 1 (01:19:48):
This is gon on fifty five KRC, the talk station
mis report seven six yashia he eythybove cares We talk station.

Speaker 2 (01:20:10):
Happy Tuesday on Tuesdays of course, Uh aight, oh five
we hear from bart in so we hear from Breit
barb with the inside scoop is what we call it.

Speaker 1 (01:20:18):
In today.

Speaker 2 (01:20:19):
One hour from now we get Tech editor Colin made
I is going to be talking about Telegram and the
founder of Telegram being arrested for allegedly being responsible for
what other people post on the social media site Welcome
to the European Union.

Speaker 1 (01:20:31):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:20:32):
Then on the heels of the announcement from Mark Zuckerberg
and thanks to Christopher Smith and Chining on this, he
goes man, that's scary stuff. Yeah, Mark Zuckerberg, you know,
responding to the investigation by Jim Jordan, he penned a
letter that they got just yesterday pointing out that the
Biden Harris administration did censor and pressured them to censor

(01:20:55):
a lot of information, most notably surrounding COVID nineteen. I
thought it's a rather frank admission from the otherwise what
it perceived to be very left leaning Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg.
So there's a lot of talk right now about how
the US government interacts with companies like Meta, and I
want to be clear about our position.

Speaker 1 (01:21:13):
Our platforms are for everyone.

Speaker 2 (01:21:15):
We're about promoting speech and helping people connect in a
safe and secure way. As part of this, we regularly
hear from governments around the world and others with various
concerns around public discourse and public safety. He pointed out
back in twenty One's twenty twenty one senior officials from
the Biden administration, as well as others in the White
House and his words, repeatedly pressured our teams four months

(01:21:38):
to censor certain COVID nineteen content. And what just really
pisses me off, if I may be so bold, interjecting
into his quote, apologies, they were pressured to censor humor
and satire.

Speaker 1 (01:21:55):
What a sorry state of affairs.

Speaker 2 (01:21:56):
You can't even joke the babylon Bee could post something
COVID related about a mask or social distancing, and you
and I were making fun of it at the time,
and oh no, no, we can't have that. And as
it turns out, we were all right, many of us anyway,
made fun of, demeaned, dissed, and censored at the behest

(01:22:18):
of a government, our government. He said, I believe the
government pressure was wrong, and I regret that we were
not more outspoken about it. Ultimately, it was our decision
whether or not to take contact down, and we own
our decisions, including COVID nineteen related changes we made to
our enforcement in the wake of this pressure. So he

(01:22:38):
admitted they got pressured, and he admitted they conceded and
capitulated a pressure. And why would someone out there in
the world capitulate, Well, go back to the government's lettered agencies.
When they go on the attack against you because of
your affiliation to any particular mindset, you're in jeopardy. Government

(01:22:59):
are the ones that regulate Government, are the ones that
create rules that might ruin or put you out of business.
Lowest learners irs one after conservative groups and not allowing
them to form five oh, one C three's or non
not for profit corporations. Why because you're on the wrong
side of the political ledger airic holders, Justice Department and

(01:23:20):
every Justice department since then pressuring companies that they don't
like to bend to their will. Banks do not work
with firearms manufacturers, or you're going to be subject to
a bank audit. And when you hear those words, you
tend to bend to the government's will. Always remember, government

(01:23:40):
never creates rights, They can only take them away. Our
founding fathers recognize this and embodied that very concept into
the Bill of Rights. And so we hear having on
you from Zuckerberg's own lips. I also think we made
some choices that, with the benefit of hindsight and new information,
we wouldn't may today. Like I said our teams to

(01:24:03):
our teams at the time, I feel strongly that we
should not compromise our content standards to pressure from any
administration in either direction, and we're ready to push back
as something like this happens. Well, he said that to
his teams at the time, and yet in the same
letter to Jim Jordan and the folks investigating this, he
admitted that he capitulated the government. And I love that

(01:24:28):
with the benefit of hindsight comment because that really just
knocks the whole point home, doesn't it. That content that
was censored ended up being the truth and move overway
from COVID censoring content related to Hunter Biden's laptop.

Speaker 1 (01:24:48):
They did that too.

Speaker 2 (01:24:49):
He didn't bring that up in a letter. But our
government was behind organizing those fifties so called learned people
in the know people, intelligence community experts, former CIA directors.

Speaker 1 (01:25:00):
This has all the.

Speaker 2 (01:25:01):
Earmarks and hallmarks of Russian disinformation why and interestingly enough,
the FBI was pressuring, you know, in other organizations, loted
agencies within the government were pressuring social media to get
to remove that when they knew.

Speaker 1 (01:25:15):
At the time it was true. We found this out later.

Speaker 2 (01:25:20):
Zuckerberger yesterday's letter wrote about the throttling of Hunter Biden's
laptop story. He wrote that the FBI warned his company
about quote a potential Russian disinformation operation close quote regarding
the Biden family in Barissima in advance of the twenty
twenty election. Fact if checkers reviewed the story and temporarily

(01:25:44):
demoted any of your posts related to Hunter Biden's laptop
in advanced of the election, and again the FBI pressure
on Facebook to censor this content. And I'm sure that
Facebook and Meta were not the only social media companies
that they were pressuring. You know, they were in in
X before, in Twitter before it became X, and every

(01:26:05):
other social media platform out there. Hell, my understanding is
they had offices within those companies are lettered agencies controlling content.
So Hunter Biden's laptop comes out. The FBI knew at
the time it was true, it was real. They had
all kinds of corroborating evidence. Matter of fact, the Hunter
Biden laptop corroborated a bunch of evidence that they had
already independently collected when they were investigating Hunter Biden himself.

Speaker 1 (01:26:30):
It matched up.

Speaker 2 (01:26:32):
Emails to and from people on Hunter Biden's laptop. They
went to the people to and from, like, you know,
an email to X guy from Hunter Biden. They go
to X guy and say, hey, were you involved in
this communication? And that guy says, yeah, Look here, I replied,
it's right there on Hunter Biden's laptop. That's my email.
They knew it, and yet they pressured social media to

(01:26:54):
remove that content from their platform, to deprive you of
valuable information in advance of the twenty twenty election. This
is frightening stuff, he says. It has since been made
clear that the reporting was not Russian disinformation, and in retrospect,

(01:27:15):
we shouldn't have demoted this story now, he says, As
of now, we've changed our policies and practice are in
processes to make sure this doesn't happen again. For instance,
we no longer temporarily demote things in the United States
while waiting for fact checkers. So you're common about the
mask and the idea that it didn't do anything and

(01:27:35):
people were wasting their time, which turned out you were right.

Speaker 1 (01:27:39):
Lots of studies came out since then.

Speaker 2 (01:27:41):
So under the new rules and practices, at least as
Mark Zuckerberg articulated them to Congressman Jim Jordan, they will
allow that content to stay up until the fact checkers
are done. And ask yourself this question, who are the
fact checkers?

Speaker 1 (01:28:00):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (01:28:01):
Are they gonna wait for the Journal of American Medicine
and Learned scholarly treatises to come out having done research
and looking into whether or not that mask actually keeps
COVID nineteen particulate from floating out into the atmosphere. Or
are they gonna go to Snopes full display folks right

(01:28:24):
there for all to see, and let.

Speaker 1 (01:28:30):
Us see here.

Speaker 2 (01:28:30):
I tell you what, Since we're almost a time in
this segment, rather than launch into joyant hope, gonna take
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Speaker 4 (01:30:14):
This is fifty five krc AN iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 1 (01:30:18):
Hey, Gary Salvan.

Speaker 11 (01:30:19):
Here, when I look at a home, I see all
the imperfections, loose shit.

Speaker 14 (01:30:25):
Here it is a nine first warning weather forecast hot summon,
A nothing a word hot on you today in ninety
seven for the high muggy in seventy one over ninety
tomorrow partly cloudy, ice it at evening storms at a
high at ninety six, muggy and overnight lowess seventy one.

Speaker 1 (01:30:38):
And on Thursday it'll be hot and sunny. Chances of
storms come up. After two. We see a high in
in ninety seven. It's sixty eight degrees. Now time for
traffic from.

Speaker 9 (01:30:48):
The U see how Tramphings Center. I think you see
Gardner Neuroscience Institute. You can access the leading brains finding
nerve experts. Right here in Cincinnati, southbound seventy five at
an extra five, coming through Blachlan, we'stpend two. I'm seventy five.
I'm seeing some heavy traffic of twenty eight in Milford
and making your way towards Ward's corner, still looking for
the problem in between inbound seventy four breakwikes from Montana,

(01:31:10):
Chuck Ingram on fifty five KARC the talk station.

Speaker 2 (01:31:18):
Sevent nineteen, come with seven twenty fifty five KRC talk station. Yes, Rick,
you are right, Rick says from history a list of
unmoderated secret messaging platforms, the US Postal Service, the phone company,
Western Union, and cream pointed on ENCRYPTID messages are and
we're common from beginning of from the beginning of the service,

(01:31:39):
and as he concludes, according to liberal logic, all of
their officers should be imprisoned. Yeah, well, I suppose so
you can say whatever you want and stick it in
an envelope. I've pointed out many times that you can
make a phone call and say whatever the hell you want.
And of course, if you are engaged in activities that
are criminal, that could come back to haunt you down
the road. But you know, NSA maybe listen into your

(01:32:00):
real time, but absince search for it. That evidence would
not be admissible in a court of law. Then HEED
probably cause any warrant to listen to those communications unlike
apparently social media, and Marcia is right as well if
you're a little jaded and cynical that Mark Zuckerberg comments
about the way things are versus the way things have been.
Marcia pointed out to me in a quick message here
say it's no different than it was before. It actually

(01:32:21):
thinks more content is being censored. Friends are posting screenshots
daily of posts that have been removed with threats of
putting them in Facebook jail. Yes, I have many friends
who share that same experience, So at least he was
honest in his letter pointing out the history of this
and that he did succumb to government pressure and who

(01:32:43):
among us probably wouldn't under those circumstances. I mentioned others
who are a jumping ship in favor of Donald Trump
on the heels of rfk's announcement. The party that waged
continual legal warfare against both Trump and myself, he said,
ran a sham primary, he pointed out to his prime
Democrat friends. Tulsey Gabbert, she serves as the Democratic representative

(01:33:06):
for Hawaii's second Congressional District twenty thirteen to twenty twenty one,
exited the Democrat Party in twenty two because it was,
in her words, an elitist cabal of warmongers. She's now
an independent, she has been since twenty twenty two. She
too has thrown her hat into the ring with former
President Donald Trump. We as Americans must stand together to

(01:33:27):
reject this anti freedom culture of political retaliation and abuse
of power. We can't allow our country to be destroyed
by politicians who will put their own power ahead of
their interests of the American people, our freedom, and our future.
Said that in Detroit yesterday. I am proud to stand
here before you today, she said, whether you're a Democrat

(01:33:49):
or Republican or independent, if you love our country as
I do, if you cherish peace and freedom as we do,
I invite you to join me doing all that we
can to save our country and elect President Donald Jay
Trump and send him back to the White House to
do the tough work of saving our country and serving
the people. So one more, she ran for a Democrat

(01:34:10):
presidential candidate. You may recall that she also tore into
Kamala Harris back then, making fun of her for criminalizing
and jailing fifteen hundred plus people for smoking weed, and
then cackling with laughter about it when she was asked
whether she smoked weed herself, which she apparently did. I
don't know if she said anything about not inhaling, though,

(01:34:35):
thanks to Jeff who forwarded me the article I did
see about the Rivian plant that I guess dozens and
dozens of Rivian trucks caught on fire and took the
fire department, of course, hours to let them burn out,
because that's the default way of dealing with a battery
operated carfire. There obviously hell bent on getting us all
in electric vehicles, but maybe one of the components of

(01:34:58):
doing that is jacking up car and rates. WHOA accorded
data from the Bureau Labor Statistics. Since Harris and Biden
took office between January twenty one and July of this year,
car insurance has risen fifty four percent. I don't have

(01:35:21):
to check what my car insurance rate is. New car
prices up nineteen percent since they took office. Prices of
used cars and trucks jumped twenty percent over the same time.
And here's a fun fact, and I mentioned this in
context of us my speaking for foreign exchange, where you
can get your car fixed for less than the dealer
average price. Of motor vehicle maintenance and repair has gone

(01:35:44):
up thirty percent over the same time. Oh and then
there's those pesky gas prices which did well. They have
tapered off some obviously at record high under the Biden
Harris administration. And finally, inflationary related news. I thought this
was a rather interesting statistic. I saw the headline. I
had to print it out just based on the headline,

(01:36:05):
increase sausage demand could be a warring signal on the economy.
They've this has been an uptick in people buying sausage
because it's cheaper than I guess buying regular meat phrasing
than a modest growth in the dinner sausage category for

(01:36:27):
one producer, according to the Dallas Federal Reserve, Texas Manufacturing
Outlook survey which came out yesterday, which they say underscores
the trends of shoppers opting for cheaper products and pulling
back spending. All together as the cumulative effects of inflation
brought to you by the deciding votes of Kamala Harris,
infusing more than five trillion additional dollars into an already

(01:36:50):
seemingly overheated economy. Well, elections have consequences and votes have consequences.
Seven twenty five. Very here from George Bruneman.

Speaker 1 (01:36:58):
Coming up.

Speaker 2 (01:36:59):
There's a meeting tomorrow at the Farm which features Congressman
Warren Davidson. George is going to join the program to
talk about that in the next segment. In the meantime,
I get to mention Lean ARROWLLC business owners. You should
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(01:38:07):
just go there and fill out the former. Just give
Doug a call directly. That number is nine three seven
two seven one, ten ninety three. That's nine three seven
two seven one ten ninety.

Speaker 1 (01:38:16):
Three fifty five KRC dot.

Speaker 2 (01:38:19):
Comny mostly sunny, hot, and humi day today with a
high ninety seven, muggy and seventy one overnight Tomorrow, isolated
evening storms, otherwise partly cloudy all day in the high
of ninety six. Do you clouds also muggy overnight seventy
one for the low and on Thursday, sunny hot, chance
of storms after two pm ninety seven for the high

(01:38:40):
right now sixty nine degrees.

Speaker 1 (01:38:41):
Let's find out about traffic on.

Speaker 9 (01:38:43):
The uc Uptramphing Center at the UC Gardener Neuroscience Institute.
You can access the leading brains finding nerve experts right
here in Cincinnati. Whatever the problem was, westpund On two
seventy five, near Ward's Corner, it's looking better now. Just
an extra minute or two needed between Milford and Montgomery.
Step pounds seventy five continues to build. That's an extra
five in and out of Lacklund Chuck Ingram on fifty

(01:39:05):
five KRS the talk station.

Speaker 2 (01:39:09):
Seven thirty here fifty five KRCD talk station. Happy Tuesday
tomorrow of course, Judge Jennen of Politano and then one
week from tomorrow listener Lunch going to be at Whedham
Brewery and Saint Bernard. Just got confirmation from former Vice
Mayor of the City Cincinnat, Christopher Smitheman who did the
Smith event yesterday which you could find the podcast up
at fifty five krs dot com. He will be there,
so I'm looking forward to seeing him. Lots of folks

(01:39:30):
looking forward to going to the farm tomorrow night to
see Congressman Warren Davidson, the man with the details. Welcome back, George,
Brennan's always a pleasure to have you on the phone. George,
Thanks a lot, Brian, It's great to be here. And
I think the world of Congressman Warren Davidson. Just a
solid regular guy, smart, ideas, great on the issues, conservative,
fiscally responsible. He's everything we need in an elected official

(01:39:52):
in Washington, d C. So he's doing a a a
meeting tomorrow night at the Historic Farm on the West Side.

Speaker 7 (01:39:59):
Yes, is we got.

Speaker 11 (01:40:01):
He's coming in at six to do the podcast with
Joe and I and then he'll be speaking at the meeting.
The interesting thing with Warren is I just did some,
you know, further research into into his background to get
ready for this and oh my goodness, Army Ranger Notre
Dame MBA. I mean, he's got the goods does And

(01:40:23):
I like the fact that we've got businessmen stepping up
to become, you know, our representatives. I think they have
such a more practical vision of how to spend and
take care of taxpayer money than career politicians.

Speaker 7 (01:40:38):
I mean, it's amazing.

Speaker 11 (01:40:40):
You've got Trump, You've got Bernie Marinovates out there. I mean,
these guys know what they're doing. They've signed the front
of the paycheck.

Speaker 1 (01:40:50):
That's the point, you know.

Speaker 2 (01:40:51):
And I'm glad you brought up Bernie Marino because you know,
I'm shared Brown is trying to remake himself into some
sort of moderate if you listen to his Actually, we
just got I had a Shared Brown flyer yesterday.

Speaker 1 (01:41:02):
My wife saw it.

Speaker 2 (01:41:03):
I was just getting ready to throw the whole thing
in the garbage, everything in the garbage, because most everything
in the mailbox is garbage anymore. I don't even know
why we get mails of it or six days a
week but whatever.

Speaker 1 (01:41:12):
But uh, I don't know.

Speaker 2 (01:41:13):
I can't even remember what issue he was talking about.
And she was looking at a going he doesn't mention this,
he doesn't mention that it is. And I said, that's
because those are all the things where you back him
in a quarter. Because he was on the side of
all the failed policies that brought about the problems you're
talking about. How could he possibly bring those up? He's responsible.
You get a guy like Bernie Marina, oh, you know,
guy like Warren Davidson. You know, if you've been out

(01:41:34):
there in the world, you know why the government regulations, rules,
the taxation, all everything that they heat down upon businesses
by mandates and edicts, how it harms business, and how
it does not benefit society collectively. Those are the kind
of people we need it. The people have actually lived
with it and had to work through it and came

(01:41:54):
from you know, basically nothing had worked their way up.

Speaker 11 (01:41:57):
I mean, it's it's absolutely amazing, and it's interesting that
more and more the Republican Party is the party of
the workers, right. The Democrats have embraced such extreme positions
that you know, anyone who actually knows what they're trying
to do would never vote for that. Their entire you know,

(01:42:17):
modus operandi at this point is just published lies to
get elected.

Speaker 7 (01:42:21):
And then do whatever you want to do when you
get in there.

Speaker 11 (01:42:25):
It's really on display with Sharon Brown and you know,
cackling Kamala, I just they're they're running away from everything
they've ever done to pretend there's something else, and then
you know, we're supposed to be surprised when they go
back to, you know, doing what they've been doing once
they're elected. The beautiful thing about Warren is he seems

(01:42:46):
to be extremely genuine. He's very soft spoken. I've met
quite a few rangers and Navy seals, and this guy's
they've got that calm, but you know, right under the surface,
you just don't want to with these guys.

Speaker 15 (01:43:01):
They they know a hundred ways to kill you with
a toothpick, right, and he doesn't come across that way.
I mean, he's got that calm about him. And in
the last year or so he has really come out
of his Shell. I mean, I hope he's not embarrassed
by that, but I always felt like he was very quiet.

Speaker 11 (01:43:20):
You never heard about Warren. Now he's becoming a national headline.
He's he's got a conservative rating better than Jim Jordan. WHOA,
I did not know that. Yeah, it's always bout four points,
but it's better.

Speaker 1 (01:43:33):
I didn't think that was even possible, right, But I mean, he's.

Speaker 11 (01:43:38):
Coming out really strong on really complicated issues, like you know,
the central bank digital currency that will bring down our system,
and he actually understands it.

Speaker 3 (01:43:49):
You know.

Speaker 2 (01:43:50):
It's It's funny because I start, I'm glad you brought
that up because it was something that I had. I
was remissing my obligations to bring it up because I'd
actually written it down. There was an article from Bloomberg,
very very left leaning in the sense that it blames
that all of these terror actions, like for example, the
attacks on power grids. They keep pointing to right wing
extremists and right wing online organizations, and they're coordinating these

(01:44:12):
right wing attacks, et cetera. But power goes out, we
all suffer and it's easy to apparently, to knock out
a power station. They documented quite a few of these
that had happened, but there you go. You and and
one of the recommendations that I had a separate article
about all the things that you should have in terms
of preparing for when the lights go out, you know,
those evil preppers out there who are now are becoming

(01:44:32):
sort of the norm these days. And one was a
pile of cash. And right next to that, I wrote,
crypto doesn't work when the power's out. How can the
hell can you buy anything if there's no power on?

Speaker 6 (01:44:44):
Ah?

Speaker 8 (01:44:46):
Yeah, Uh.

Speaker 7 (01:44:47):
Power is one of the things that is like our
achilles here in the United States. It's our heel.

Speaker 11 (01:44:53):
We you if you had a more distributed power system,
I mean, it would have been much more, make more
if it was by neighborhood instead of an entire county
going to the exact same spot to get your power.
Anytime you have a central point like that, it's so
easy to wipe it out. And if you lose power,
well then you know, like a day later, you're going

(01:45:14):
to lose water. And once you've lose water, I mean,
nothing else matters other than getting clean water.

Speaker 2 (01:45:20):
That is true, and you need water more than you
need food. You can go quite a long time with
that food, but you can only go what a three
days I think without water.

Speaker 7 (01:45:27):
It's just dirty water is worse than none at all.

Speaker 2 (01:45:31):
Yeah, well, that's why one of the things you might
have is some tablets to you know, to to to
decontaminate any you know, water you might retrieve out of
a creek or something like that, or a filtration system
to do that. It's on the list of things you're
supposed to.

Speaker 1 (01:45:45):
Have in your home.

Speaker 11 (01:45:47):
I'm actually terrified anymore. And how quick things turn into
discussions of what do you do when you know the
stuff hits the fan? But it does feel like that,
doesn't It feels like we're on the edge of something
not good at all?

Speaker 2 (01:46:00):
Well, we I think it's there's nothing wrong with coming
with with with having that perception. It's not that we're
all living gloom and doom. But we need to think forward.
And obviously this is a very contentious selection. Many people
are talking about, oh my god, what if and fill
in the blank, what if Kamala Harris get gets elected.
Oh my god, the right ringer is going to take

(01:46:20):
it to the street. It's going to be revolution. If
Donald Trump gets elected, Oh my god, all the anti
five BLM and everybody else is going to take to
the street. That's a concern in and of itself. You
need to forward think and be a little prepared for it. George,
hold on. We didn't get to the event specifics, so
I want to hold you over. We'll have more conversation
along these lines, but I must break right now. We'll
bring back George Freneman to give you the details about
tomorrow's event seven.

Speaker 1 (01:46:40):
Thirty eight right now.

Speaker 2 (01:46:41):
If you have have Kersey talk station USA insallation, the
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(01:47:01):
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they'll give you a free attic insulation when you insulate
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Speaker 4 (01:47:55):
This is fifty five KRC, an iHeartRadio station and now
their insurance story.

Speaker 1 (01:48:03):
Another reason to go for burning right now?

Speaker 7 (01:48:05):
Oh did I say that?

Speaker 2 (01:48:07):
Here's your weather forecast. Sunny and hot today, ninety seven
for the high humid, also muggy overnight seventy one Tomorrow,
isolated evening storms. Otherwise a partly claty day with a
high on ninety six. Muggy and seventy one overnight again
and on Thursday, another sunny, hot day, although there's a
chance of storms after two pm.

Speaker 1 (01:48:23):
I had ninety seven right now seventy in time for
traffic from the UCLP Traumphic Center.

Speaker 9 (01:48:28):
At the UC Gardener Neuroscience Institute, you can access the
leading brains, fine and nerve experts right here in Cincinnati.
Sathbound seventy one loading up quickly slow from above fields
Irdle into Blue Ash. You're looking at an extra fifteen
minutes and growing same for southbound seventy five with break
lights just below Glendale Milford through Lachland northbound seventy five

(01:48:48):
heavy from Turfway into Town. Northbound four seventy one now
backs to Grand and then bound seventy four. That's heavy
from above Montana. Chuck ing Bram on fifty five KOs
the talk station.

Speaker 2 (01:49:01):
If about krec de talk station inside scoop A bright
Bart news editor Colin Manine tech editor is going to
talk about the guy that was arrested in in Europe
for just owning telegram. In the meantime, George Runaman's on
the phone. We're talking about the event and get to
the details of it tomorrow night at the farm featuring
Congressman Warren Davidson, who is a just a terrific guy.
As George was demonstrating, his background, his credentials, his ideas,

(01:49:25):
and his experience all make him a very worthy candidate
and someone who is rising in popularity as well as
gaining prominence nationally. So what what the George? What are
the details about tomorrow night? What are we going to
do with how we need to be there? What's involved?

Speaker 1 (01:49:41):
Cool?

Speaker 7 (01:49:42):
So tomorrow it's our Wednesday.

Speaker 1 (01:49:44):
Yeah, that is tomorrow.

Speaker 11 (01:49:45):
It is I Farm, which is on Anderson Ferry in
del High Maybe a little bit difficult to get to,
but it's definitely worth the visit. Doors open at five
thirty and we'll begin serving food around six, and it's
it's the farm chicken and sides and desserts and all
the stuff you're used to there. You can buy as

(01:50:06):
little as much as you want. Is great food. The
beauty now is at six o'clock. After the dinner starts.
We do the live podcast recording while you're eating, so
you can listen in yell out questions, you know, get
some additional information about born.

Speaker 1 (01:50:22):
An an interactive podcast.

Speaker 11 (01:50:25):
Yeah, it's actually worked out quite well, and you know,
having Joe there just adds another you know, not professional
it sounds when we're done, thanks to the plug for Strecker.

Speaker 2 (01:50:34):
Because Joe Strecker does podcasts as a side gig. You know,
he's got five jobs because of course he needs to
considering he needs a supplement his pay. But if you
ever want to do a podcast, just get in touch
with Joe Strecker. He's wonderful at that. Oh and very simple.
And then the meeting will start shows well, very simple

(01:50:55):
to work with, that's for sure. It's interesting.

Speaker 11 (01:51:01):
After the last meeting, we had several people come up
afterwards and say, was that Joe Striker. I hear about
him all the time, but I've never seen him before.

Speaker 1 (01:51:07):
There you have it.

Speaker 2 (01:51:08):
You can see Joe Strecker live and in person. He'll
sign autograph too.

Speaker 7 (01:51:11):
There you go.

Speaker 11 (01:51:12):
Yeah, right, So the meeting is going to focus not
just on Warren, but we've got Gabe Gardini. I think
you've talked to him before at turning point actions, Oh yeah,
he's young guy, very energetic, extremely well spoken. He's going
to be talking about how to use their app to
go door to door. We'll talk a little bit about

(01:51:33):
the Cincinnati property tax petition that's going around now, Oh,
Adam Camber will be there to talk about that.

Speaker 2 (01:51:40):
That's the one where you take six hundred million out
of the railroad fund. You put it in a fund
to generate earned money and invested money. So they helped
people deal with the property taxes that have gone up
through the room.

Speaker 11 (01:51:51):
Yes, yes, what a great idea to force him to
use the money for something people actually could use.

Speaker 2 (01:51:56):
Yeah, you know, normally I just reject something like that
out of hand, but considering that every single property owner
would benefit from it, they're not going to do a
means test on that. But it does take away the
flexibility of sin Sei City Council and I have to
have per ball to use those funds for something like
a streetcar extension. Now it's got to go directly to

(01:52:16):
the people, which is kind of a neat concept. Yeah,
what a great idea.

Speaker 11 (01:52:21):
So anyway, the focus is going to be on how
to get involved in the election, and then you know,
next month our meeting is going to be concentrating on
you know, here's the actual work. We need people to
sign up. How are you going to help you know,
how are you going to prevent you know, the fall
of the United States essentially at the national level, but
even locally we have, you know, so many important things

(01:52:42):
with the judges, Melissa Powers for problem, heuter to Neal
for sheriff. So that'll be the focus next month. But
you know, having Warren there is really interesting. And you
were the MC for his town hall he did out
in Green Townships. Yeah, and I found it extremely interesting
that he let off with discussion of the assassination attempt,

(01:53:03):
and the conclusion was basically, you know, this cannot be
just in confidence. The errors were so gross and negligence
so bad, it had to be on purpose. So we're
going to be talking to him a little bit about
that as well, because I was listening to Bongino's podcasts

(01:53:24):
on Monday and they still don't have any any reasons
whatsoever for why that whole swath of territory was left
open for a sniper to get in there and take
a shot at the president.

Speaker 7 (01:53:37):
Yeah, you know, kill somebody in the audience.

Speaker 2 (01:53:39):
And this after what was it the FBI or whoever
whatever lettered agency came out and specifically confirming that the
Iranians want to kill Trump for offing SOLEMONI I mean
and others as well. But you know they, I mean,
there is a they. They're on the record saying they
want to do it. So in a situation of all
the Iranians who hate us and all the potential terrorist
cells we've got in our country thanks to the open border,

(01:54:01):
it's certainly a legitimate concern. And you think that security
would be a hell of a lot more beefed up
than it was just based upon that alone.

Speaker 11 (01:54:09):
Well, and you can't look at that. I mean I
remember watching it in real time, and you see, you know,
the one secrets. Well, I don't think she was Secret Service.
I think she was Homeland. She couldn't even reholster her
pistol correctly. Yeah, I mean, isn't that like the first
thing you alone learn and concealed carry is how to
put it back in the in the holster.

Speaker 7 (01:54:27):
It was just an incompetence, it was.

Speaker 11 (01:54:32):
I don't know how she didn't get fired or just
quit after you know that video came out. Apparently she's
on Jade Vansa's detail.

Speaker 13 (01:54:39):
Now.

Speaker 1 (01:54:39):
Oh that's got to give him real comfort, which has.

Speaker 7 (01:54:41):
Got to be thrilling.

Speaker 11 (01:54:43):
Anyway, Tomorrow night should be extremely interesting. I encourage people
to come out. Last month, we filled the one room.
We're really hoping to break open the doors and fill
the whole place tonight tomorrow night, because I think it's
worth hearing, you know, straight from somebody that's involved in
the muck in d C. Yeah, and to get his
impression of how things are starting to look with the election.

(01:55:04):
There's so much changing there. First the you know, the
coup against Biden, and now we've got RFK Junior coming
into the Trump camp, Tulsi Garrett coming into the Trump camp.
This is this is great stuff. So it's gonna be
an interesting discussion. I encourage you to get there and
get there early. Yeah, it's been interesting the podcast. We

(01:55:26):
have the place pack now at six o'clock to listen in.
So it's been working out really great.

Speaker 2 (01:55:32):
I'm glad you're doing that podcast with some interaction from
the audience that that really gives a great opportunity for
people to ask questions on the fly and you know,
the any thing about it. Unlike Kamala Harris who keeps
hiding at you know, Warren Davidson Hill entertained question on
any subject.

Speaker 11 (01:55:46):
Oh yeah, yeah, I've always been impressed by Warren the
other guy that'll take any question is Bernie Marino. I've
seen him hit with some really crazy stuff and he'll
come back immediately with a logical, pract take a way answer.

Speaker 1 (01:56:02):
These guys are top notch.

Speaker 11 (01:56:04):
I feel we're privileged this time around to have that
kind of quality running.

Speaker 7 (01:56:08):
For some of these offices.

Speaker 2 (01:56:10):
Well, that is true, and everybody in the listening audience,
there's a part you can play. I know I have
Americans for Prosperity on all the time. Afpaction dot Com
is a way to do that. But show up at
the meeting tomorrow night and you'll get some resources and
tools to help you become engaged and help out in
any way possible, because every little bit counts, right, George Brenneman,
Absolutely AFP will be there tomorrow night as well. That's wonderful.

(01:56:32):
They are really great at helping giving people the schools,
the skills and the tool and the tools they need
to reach out to folks in a very rational, common sense,
non argumentative way. Just to get the point across. George Brenman,
thank you so much for coming on the show and
what you do for America. Generally speaking, the farmer is
the place to be tomorrow night. Joe Strekker will put
the details up at fifty five. Caresee dot comic case

(01:56:53):
you couldn't take notes while we were talking, George, we'll
talk again real soon. Take care of yourself, my brother,
Thanks brain, my pleasure.

Speaker 1 (01:57:00):
Pleasure.

Speaker 2 (01:57:00):
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Speaker 4 (01:58:03):
Chickoff is on playin Buck dot com in China.

Speaker 5 (01:58:05):
Clay Travis and Buck Sextons today at noon on fifty
five KRC the Talk Station. It's height five, fifty five
KRC d Talks Station. A very happy Tuesday to you,
made extra special every Tuesday at this time because now
is when we get the inside scoop from Breitbart News

(01:58:26):
today the return of Kalamadai and he is the tech
editor at Breitbart and bookmarket folks. I would like to
start out the segment reminding you it's b R E
I T B A R T Breitbart dot Com. Some
great reporting there and of course outside of the the
legacy media Columbada, and welcome back to the fifty five
KRC Morning Show. My friend's a pleasure to have you
on today and the timing couldn't be better, considering what
happened to paveld Durrov.

Speaker 3 (01:58:48):
Absolutely, Brian happy to be here with you.

Speaker 2 (01:58:51):
He was the founder of this apparently wildly, wildly popular
social media program. It's a platform I guess now to
a Twitter or a TikTok or something, but it's called telegram.
And he was arrested not from what he did, but
apparently what he didn't do. He allowed people to speak
their mind and engage in the free exercise of ideas,

(01:59:12):
including some kind of terrible stuff, you know, terrorism and
racism or whatever whatever. The European Union is deemed in
its infinite wisdom to be verboten. He got arrested for
it merely because he provided the platform. Are they not
aware of? Like, for example, Colin, I have to throw
this one out there. You can say whatever you want
and some whatever you want through the mail, You can

(01:59:33):
talk to and say whatever you want on a telephone,
and you can even go right now, I'm looking at
it to Amazon and get a copy of the Anarchist Cookbook, which,
according to the author I detailed advice concerning electronics, sabotage,
surveillance date on everything from bugs to scramblers. There's a
comprehensive chapter on natural, non lethal and lethal weapons, running
the gamut from cattle prodz to submachine guns to bows

(01:59:55):
and arrows. The section on explosives and booby trap arranges
from TNT to whistle traps goes on.

Speaker 8 (02:00:00):
But there it is.

Speaker 1 (02:00:02):
It's free speech. It's a published book. You can go
buy it. They're not being held accountable for that, Colin.

Speaker 3 (02:00:09):
You know, it's a great point, Brian, and it's France
looks worse and worse every day as this telegram situation unfolds.
And there's a number of reasons why. The latest is
you know, they're coming at him. One of the charges
is related to, you know, child pornography being spread on

(02:00:29):
this platform and you know, related sexual imagery. Now, the
problem with that is the greatest spreader of child pornography
and discussing sexual imagery on Earth is Mark Zuckerberg on
Instagram and Facebook. You don't see him quicking in his
boots worrying about France arresting him. So what we're seeing

(02:00:52):
here because the political prosecution, you know, being covered up
as oh it's for the children, and oh it's the
fight drugs. Is you know kind of familiar language does
in the US, we see the left saying that, you know,
this is why we got a combat free speech. To me,
what's really going on here is an extension of what

(02:01:14):
we've seen unfolding around all of Europe, like in the UK.
The problem to these powerful governments aren't the crimes being committed,
like the horrible, horrific knife murders of children. The problem
isn't that crime. The problem is people talking about that crime.
That's what England is throwing people in jail for. And

(02:01:34):
now France has thrown this guy. You know, he made
the unfortunate decision to take French citizenship, which I don't
think anyone should ever do that. I would advise against it,
just not because it's France. But in this case, you know,
this Russian born guy has his platform with a couple
of billion users, and he landed at an airport to
go to his house and he was thrown in jail.

(02:01:55):
And the reason is the government doesn't like what people
are saying to each other on his platform.

Speaker 2 (02:02:01):
But again, nothing more horrific than the exploitation of children
for any reason whatsoever.

Speaker 1 (02:02:07):
It is a crime to do that.

Speaker 2 (02:02:10):
If people are exchanging this information on this social media platform,
they are engaging in criminal activity, I will admit. But
then again, if you want child porn, I suppose you
could put in the US mail and mail it to
whoever you want to send it to. The US mail
is not going to be responsible for the content of
what's in any given envelope or container. You have committed
a crime. They could go after the people who perpetrated

(02:02:31):
these acts of horrific evil by virtue of them being
and having a presence on this particular site. It would
make their job that much easier, it seems to me, Colin.

Speaker 3 (02:02:43):
Yeah, if you want to clean up child pornography, and
I certainly do it. Yeah, But you know, it's a
major issue that we cover extensively at Bright part.

Speaker 7 (02:02:51):
It's one of the largest problems.

Speaker 3 (02:02:53):
On the Internet is grooming and child pornography and how
those crimes are facilitated by the Internet. You don't go
after the head of the platform, with the exception of
trying to force them to actually enforce rules and figure
these things out. You go after the people spreading it,
because there's people making millions of dollars, if not billions,

(02:03:16):
in facilitating these crimes. So you know that's not Francis answer.
Francis answer is we must arrest this guy and try
to shut down his platform because of these you know,
these trumped charges essentially.

Speaker 2 (02:03:30):
Well, and moving away from the obvious horrors of child
pornography over to what you pointed out is happening in England.
That is political discourse. If there are people rioting in
the streets, people are going to have comments on it.
They're either going to approve it, they're going to be
against it. They're going to point to the evil doers
and make comments about them. They're going to point to
the perpetrators of violence and say things about them, either

(02:03:53):
supportive or against them. And this is all important political discourse.
But if you utter a syllable that, for whatever reason,
in support of maybe the rioters who are upset about
the state of the immigration system, that should be supported
by government rather than going after people for their utterances.
If they want to arrest someone who's broken the law,

(02:04:13):
there they are right out in the street if they're
breaking things, arrest them for their crimes. But you can't
arrest me for having a comment in observation about those crimes.

Speaker 3 (02:04:24):
Well, Brian, you through no fault of your own because
I share it have a very American centric view of speech.
You know, what I've learned over my decade at Breitbart
from working with people in Europe is Europeans don't think
like US. Europeans don't think you have the right to

(02:04:46):
say golly, these folks should not be murdering children with
nice because they will.

Speaker 7 (02:04:50):
Throw you in jail for that.

Speaker 3 (02:04:52):
And I can tell you that some of my colleagues
in Europe are privately making plans what do I do
if I'm arrested for publishing the truth on Breitbart dot Com?
What you know, how do I get my family out
of the United Kingdom? You know, which is shocking to
us to believe, because we consider these countries, you know, essentially.

Speaker 7 (02:05:12):
Equivalent to the US.

Speaker 3 (02:05:13):
You know, we look at English culture and think it,
you know, in many ways it's very similar to us.
But they use some funny words for things, right, Like
they call potato chips crisps, and they're so silly, you know.
In fact, there's a basic difference in how we consider
free speech and associated topics. So where I'm kind of

(02:05:35):
taking conversations on this subject with with people in America,
is you need to reconsider a European vacation. You know,
the Brian Thomas's of the world, the column the Darns
of the world could get arrested if we go to Europe.
You know, I don't think that's beyond the pale, because
they really don't like the concept that you, Brian Thomas

(02:05:56):
can sit down at a microphone and speak truth that
the government doesn't like.

Speaker 1 (02:06:01):
That is so, you know, that's interesting. It's been that
way for a long time.

Speaker 2 (02:06:04):
In France. I have a longtime friend. I went to
church with him growing up, and he has been a
French citizen for decades now. He married a French girl
and he majored in France, so he's fluent in the language.
But I was speaking out against our government over the
dinner table once when he was in town, and he
looked at me. He goes, wow, he goes, you know,
you couldn't even say that kind of thing in France.

Speaker 8 (02:06:25):
What right?

Speaker 2 (02:06:27):
The first time I ever heard that, The first time
I'd ever heard that. I'm like, it's like a core
American principle is speaking out against the government and screaming
your head off what these chuckleheads are doing to us?

Speaker 3 (02:06:39):
And There's another layer there, Brian, which is their media
is even more captured by the establishment than ours. You know,
I would joke that if you turned on CNN for
a random French person, they would almost think it's scandalous
and independent media, right, because when you look at like
the AFP and lamand and these other French media sources,

(02:07:03):
English media sources, they're not going to go outside of
what the government wants. Unless it's things like we hack
the cell phones of these celebrities and look look at
the celebrity gossip there. They might have some free media,
but when it's things like you know, major world issues
and major national issues in these nations, they're marching to

(02:07:25):
the be, to the government, you know, without exception. And
that's why you know, we have many bright part readers
in Europe because we have a London team and a
focus on European affairs. And it's even shocking in our
internal messaging systems when we see messages from lawyers saying

(02:07:46):
things like don't talk about this because it's illegal. That's
not something we normally hear in America. It's kind of
contrary to our mindset. But the more I think about it, Brian,
you know, don't you think the left.

Speaker 7 (02:07:59):
Would love for that to be how it is here?

Speaker 1 (02:08:02):
You know, they love for example, well, I mean, look
what they went through. I mean, just hot news off
the press.

Speaker 2 (02:08:09):
Zuckerberg's letter to Jim Jordan acknowledging that he was pressured
by the Biden Harrison administration to suppress various topics of
conversation which ultimately turned out to be true. Things we
were saying about COVID nineteen during the time, as well
as the comments about the Hunter Biden laptop, which, oh
my god, with the benefit of hindsight, he says, we
should have allowed that, and we promised we're not going

(02:08:30):
to do that again until all the information's in and
allow you to engage in the free discourse. And we
all don't believe that as far as we could throw
Mark Zuckerberg from a mile away, but you know that's
the point being that's what our government tried to do
through internal pressure. You pointed out that, you know, Mark
Zuckerberg isn't afraid of getting locked up. Maybe that's because
he's got friends in the administration who have promised him

(02:08:51):
we will never come after you.

Speaker 1 (02:08:53):
As long as you do our will.

Speaker 3 (02:08:56):
Well. Brian it's you know, he's even deeper than friends
in the administration. She certainly has. You know, the one
of the very top executives of a Facebook is the
former Deputy Prime.

Speaker 7 (02:09:08):
Minister of the UK.

Speaker 3 (02:09:10):
You know, he's got juice with the global deep state.
He's not losing any sleep about any anything posted on
his platforms that are getting other tech CEOs arrested.

Speaker 2 (02:09:20):
Well, and Colin, do you feel that that is part
of the problem with this unregulated, unmitigated flow of illegal
immigrants into our country. As you point out, we are
one of the few, if not only, countries on the
planet that has a First Amendment that is very well protected.
We literally can say, I mean, with very little exception,
almost anything we want. We believe in the free exchange
of ideas, and we believe that the more we talk

(02:09:42):
about something, the more elevated our conversation becomes, and the more,
you know, the better our solutions become. Through conversation the
exchange of ideas. You have a bunch of people flowing
in from the four corners of the globe that have
no connection with that, and like my friend from France
can't believe that we can even say things like that
that's their mindset and that's culturally transforming.

Speaker 3 (02:10:05):
Well, that's right, and that's certainly what Europe's gone through,
and that's what we're going through. And even in different ways.
If you look at Canada, they flooded Canada with Indian
immigrants who are not you know, they don't share the
values of Canadians and they're not sort of becoming Canadians, right.
I think what you've hit on is generation after generation,

(02:10:28):
especially in this country, people do come from the four
corners of the Earth and they learn English and their
kids kind of come out as Americans, right, you know,
first and second generation Americans from wherever they came from, Ukraine, Russia, Ireland,

(02:10:49):
like my forefathers. That's how America's always worked. Now we're
seeing folks come and it's not limited to one culture,
one country. There's no incentives for that to happen. Rather,
it's almost they're almost incentivized to keep their language and
their culture and their values which are foreign on us.

Speaker 2 (02:11:11):
And of course they haven't become naturalized citizens of the
appropriate immigration process where you are taught civics and the
founding principles of our country. They don't even teach that
to our own children and our own schools these days, Colin, No.

Speaker 7 (02:11:25):
They don't.

Speaker 3 (02:11:26):
They they're learning their genders and their gender identity flags,
but not you know, the American flag and what it
stands for. So you know, what I personally worry about
is the result of what you've just described, the lack
of integration and the lack of American values. To me,

(02:11:46):
that weakens things like the First Amendment, because you have
a generation who multiple generations now who would rather you
not have the right to free speech if it is
inconvenient for them or their side. And you know, as
you know it certainly as a lawyer and as a
talk show host, the First Amendment is exactly for pizza,

(02:12:07):
that's not convenience, because no one needs to protect the
speech that everyone agrees about, right, there's no rest in
that speech.

Speaker 2 (02:12:14):
It shall be illegal for you to make an utterance
that causes somebody else cognitive dissonance, Collin.

Speaker 3 (02:12:21):
And what and tech companies like you know, Facebook being
one of the worst, have sort of taken that approach
because you know what Zuckerberg and friends do is when
Breitbart publishes articles about illegal immigration that are inconvenient and
sure facts they don't like they use their algorithms to

(02:12:44):
basically memory hold them, you know, to make it so
very few people read that.

Speaker 1 (02:12:49):
I understand that all day long, Colin.

Speaker 2 (02:12:51):
That's why you have to post things in a certain
way to remind people that there is Breitbart out there,
Breitbart dot com. If you don't put a direct link
to the Breitbart article, you maybe capture a headline or
refer people over it in an indirect way. Your content
will be seen. If you link something specifically, no one
will see it. If I say Happy Friday, which I
do every Friday on Facebook, Colin, I'll get hundreds of

(02:13:12):
people saying happy Friday to you are making nice comments.
If I were to link any article from Breitbart, I
bet no one would see it. I've done this test
on a number of different occasions and not a single chime,
not a negative comment, not a positive comment, no thumbs up,
just silence. And I'll even go back later Sai, didn't
anybody see my post? And like what post exactly?

Speaker 3 (02:13:34):
And it's designing to make you feel a little bit crazy.
It's a form of gaslighting. It is, you know, it
makes you say, gee, does no one care about this issue? No,
they're just not seeing its algorithm. Why internally we sometimes
refer to Mark Zuckerberg as the editor of the Internet
because he decides what you see off.

Speaker 2 (02:13:53):
I could laugh at it, but it's a sorry state
of affairs. But it's truth and that's what I like
talking about here on the fifty five Cases in the
Morning show. Colin and I editor at Bridebark, keep up
the great work. It's always a wonderful thing having you
on the program. My best to you and everybody else
had been on the team at bridebart have a great
day break you too, call it an eight twenty one
fifty five kre city talk station and spreading the information.
You know, you have a choice when it comes to

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Speaker 6 (02:15:21):
Fifty five KRC get Ready Advisory until Wednesday evening at
APM Air Quality Alert until Wednesday at midnight.

Speaker 1 (02:15:28):
It's going to be a hot several days.

Speaker 2 (02:15:30):
We've got ninety seven for the high today sunny sky's
over night muggy and seventy one uh let's see tomorrow
partly cloudy, isolated evening storms ninety six for the High
again another muggy night with a low of seventy one,
and on Thursday, sonny hot chance of showers after two
pm ninety seven for the High.

Speaker 1 (02:15:45):
At seventy two. Right now, in time for traffic chuck.

Speaker 9 (02:15:49):
From the UCL Traffic Center at the UC Gardner Neuroscience Institute,
you can access the leading brains, fine and nerve experts
right here in Cincinnati. Heavy tramp it continues on the
Highway this morning, especially southbound seventy one. That's over a
half hour delayed. From above Field Turtle to your pants.
The lateral northbound four seventy one is a slow go

(02:16:09):
out of Southgate northbound seventy five over a twenty minute
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five KR. See the talk station.

Speaker 2 (02:16:21):
Hey thirty here fifty five KRCD talk station Happy Wednesday
always made extra special, an alliterative segment every Wednesday at
eight thirty. The Daniel Davis Deep Dive. You can find
him online Daniel Davis Deep Dive.

Speaker 1 (02:16:34):
Search for it.

Speaker 2 (02:16:34):
You'll find his podcast and his interviews with other folks.
Of course, retired Lieutenant Curl and he knows what there
is to know about war and strategy and the like.
Welcome back, Daniel Davis. It's always a pleasure to have
you on. We've got a couple of conflicts to talk
about this morning. Hey, let's add one more.

Speaker 7 (02:16:49):
Yeah, why not?

Speaker 1 (02:16:50):
I mean it is Wednesday went on hum Day, hum Day,
maybe had another war.

Speaker 2 (02:16:54):
We could maybe the war breakout in Taiwan while we're
talking right now, Daniel Davis, and I say that really
without joke. It is a terrible situation that we're dealing
with right now with our global affairs, but we're dealing
with them nonetheless. So let us start with the latest
on what's going on with Israel. Looks like they got
a leg up on his Bala. The reporting I saw
Israel launched its attack on his Bala's missile systems and

(02:17:18):
you know, military systems about an hour before his Bala
was getting ready to launch them. I think Hisbala even
acknowledged they were going to like launch it five point
fifteen or something in the morning, and I guess the
Israeli defense forces and their intelligence got wind of it
and decided to do a peremptory strike.

Speaker 1 (02:17:37):
That's actually the claim lack a lot of these things.

Speaker 16 (02:17:39):
You got to look through some of the claims to
see what was actually happening on the ground, and certainly
in this particular case, it does appear that Israel got
the leg up on it. But it's also kind of
with the asterisk because when Israel launched this, it was
one hundred warplanes, which is typically not something you do
on a spur of the moment because it takes a

(02:18:00):
lot to get that kind of activity, coordinated, resource prepared, armed, fueled,
all that kind of stuff, but it does, You're right.
Many found it interesting to me, being one of them,
that the Hesbela didn't even try to claim that no, no, no,
that wasn't the case.

Speaker 1 (02:18:18):
They didn't get us before or whatever.

Speaker 16 (02:18:20):
So it was one of the few times of actually
admitting the truth from the Hesbula side. But it's also
important to see that probably the claim by the Israeli
they took out a thousand launchers is probably exaggerated because
it's not likely that Hesbela would have exposed that many
in this very narrow band of five kilometers north of
the border that Israel struck. It's also instructive to look

(02:18:43):
at what Hesbela did after the fact. They still launched
the largest missile and drone stock that they had done
of the war, at over three hundred that were fired.
But it's also important to point out what kind.

Speaker 1 (02:18:57):
Of rockets they fired.

Speaker 16 (02:18:58):
They fired with the Katusha rockets and a number of drones,
which are easy to knock down. The Kotucia rockets, frankly,
are probably about as accurate as bottle rockets that you
would fire and fourth of July, but they have the
Hesbalocide does some much more sophisticated rockets and rocket launchers
and missiles that can penetrate the Iron Dome, and for
whatever reason, they chose not to fire those.

Speaker 1 (02:19:19):
So net is.

Speaker 16 (02:19:21):
Both sides have basically said, Okay, we're good for now.
We don't need to escalate this further. And that's my
concern every day, is that this is going to explode
into another war. But it does ratchet it up because
the scale keeps going higher.

Speaker 2 (02:19:34):
Well, and does this not perhaps Incentivius's ball to maybe,
you know, tone it down or perhaps even enter into
some sort of negotiated peace. I know, we keep talking
about negotiated peace, whether we're here in Ukraine with Russia,
which we'll get to in a moment, but everybody, so
we need to get peace and guys, we need to
you know, you know this, this looks like you can
put a wim column check for the Israelis on it,

(02:19:56):
since they did some significant damage to their military capabilities,
but does do anything to change the longer term dynamic.

Speaker 16 (02:20:03):
Yeah, No, I think you're right on both counts. That
certainly in terms of this engagement, this tactical engagement. Definitely
on the Israeli side, they came out on top of
it because they were very effective and knocking this down
with their own assets and their own resources. Their intelligence
apparently was accurate. It was good because they did preempt
some things, but nothing it condition wise, has changed. And

(02:20:28):
understand that Hezbola has somewhere all accounts north of one
hundred and fifty thousand rockets and missiles, and even if
they had taken out a thousand, that still leaves a
whole bunch it's left. So they have a lot of capabilities.
The question is going to be what next. And to
your point there about the negotiated settlement, No, this is
just a tactical setback. I mean, they're in a conflict here,

(02:20:50):
and they're not going to give up because of one setback.

Speaker 1 (02:20:52):
They'll just be getting ready for the next one.

Speaker 2 (02:20:54):
Well, as we get ready to pivot over to the
Ukraine situation. They got one hundred, one hundred and fifty thousand,
call it to undred thousand rockets and missiles. They're still
keeping their powder dry with those. If Israel had knocked
all of those out much in the same way, if oh,
let's say Ukraine uses up all of its one hundred
and fifty five millimeters shells, there are going to be
more where that came from, right, I mean, Iran is

(02:21:15):
not going to let his balla go completely without Yeah,
that's actually what I was just about to say that,
because you can't look at the Israeli has Bola situation
without look at the Israeli Hamas situation and the Israeli
Iran situation.

Speaker 16 (02:21:29):
Because Israel, as we've talked about, it's taken a lot
of provocative actions towards Iran, you know, blowing up their
embassy compound in Syria and certainly making that assassination in Tehran,
which by the way, is the next big thing we're
waiting for because Iran reiterated yesterday that they will still
retaliate for what happened in Tehran at a time of
their choosing, which implies they're either not ready, they're trying

(02:21:50):
to coordinate more stuff.

Speaker 1 (02:21:52):
It's unclear what all's going on.

Speaker 16 (02:21:53):
The US is radic, you know, ratcheting up all of
their diplomatic power to do everything that can to get
Israel to agree to a ceasefire with Hamas, thinking that
that might take the impetus off of Iran for retaliating.
That remains to be seen, but that is the big
thing that everybody's looking for next, because if Israel does
something big, it would definitely be done in coordination with

(02:22:16):
the better stuff from Hezbelah. And there is genuinely a
military risk to Israel, so they've got to tread a
little bit careful on how they proceed forward.

Speaker 2 (02:22:25):
Well, I mean, if Iran is the head of the snake,
and the head keeps growing up, you know, the different limbs,
or keeps growing a different body, or can rearm as
the case may be. More directly to the point, this
isn't going anywhere. I mean, they're hostility is open, they
hate Israel, they hate the Jewish people collectively, they think
they're the big problem in the entire region. And it

(02:22:45):
doesn't seem to me that Iran's going to sleep at
night until Israel's wiped off the map at some point.

Speaker 16 (02:22:50):
Well, and of course, from the Irani perspective, it's the
exact mirror image of that, because they are physically getting
attacked by Israel a lot, and they fear that if
they don't do something, it's going to be them that's
wiped off the map. So their fear is actually driving us,
because I'll tell you iron definitely does not want a war,
but they fear for their own existence, and if they
keep getting attacked by Israel, they may actually launch, you know,

(02:23:12):
some kind of what they'll call a deterrent strike, which
is what they're claiming even in diplomatic diplomatic arenas here
right now. But you know, the farther this goes, the
more chance for one side overreacting or misinterpreting. And then,
of course the US has said, Israel does get into
a fight with Iran, we're definitely in. So this has
direct implications for American national security. And I assure you,

(02:23:36):
if anybody doesn't want war, it's us. And we should
be doing a lot more to making sure all the
sides tamp this down.

Speaker 2 (02:23:42):
Yeah, apologize for the interruption of the video if this
has been going on all morning, sir, so don't don't
blame yourself. It's just some kind of technical glitch we're
having here. All right, let us pivot over to Ukraine Israel.
I see that the Russians just launch another barage one
hundred and twenty seven missiles one hundred and nine Iranian design,
speaking of roan A running the din Shah head drones

(02:24:04):
into Ukraine, hitting a lot of the power systems, at
least knocking out more power. I'm actually shocked as we
sit here and talk today, Daniel Davis, that there's still
power at all in Ukraine given the Russians capabilities. Where
are we here on the heels of Ukraine entering into
Russia which we talked about last week. Yeah, yeah, listen,
it's this was This was not just the biggest missile

(02:24:28):
and drunes striking by Russia, it was also the most effective.
This when when I saw a map of where the
strikes actually took place, it was it was stunning even
for me, because almost every single oblast in the entirety
of Ukraine was hit, which means the air defense system
was almost non existed anywhere to include Kiev, and usually
Kiev has been successful at knocking down ninety or even

(02:24:51):
sometimes one hundred percent of what's struck, and almost none
of them got shot down. I actually saw some of
the drone footage, I'm sorry, not drone footage, but the
missile footage of the of some of the slower moving
warheads that came in that nothing even slowed them down.

Speaker 1 (02:25:06):
They all hit the target.

Speaker 16 (02:25:07):
And now that the energy infrastructure, especially the electricity generating
capacity is down about forty percent to about forty percent
generally speaking across and there are some sections where they're
still without power, that's going to be a major problem
number one for Ukraine's ability to generate war material, you know,
run factories, et cetera. But especially as we now we're

(02:25:28):
getting close to the cold season, there's not enough power
generation to do that. And the Ukraine authorities are already
telling their people in the cities make provisions to go
to the countryside where you can have firewood to burn,
et cetera, because they know already there's not going to
be enough and it's going to be a really bad
winner for the Ukraine side.

Speaker 2 (02:25:46):
Well, and give credit to Russia on that one, because
that in terms of advancing maybe a peace discussion, They've
just shown what they're capable of doing, and those missile
strikes apparently show what Ukraine is incapable of doing. Maybe
they're out of iron dome type weapons systems, but they're
in for a much bigger problem if Russia made a

(02:26:08):
habit of just doing exactly what they did the other day,
Like okay, we show them all we day, Let's wait
a couple of days, let's do it again. I mean,
that's going to back Ukraine in the corner. I read
somewhere that they think a million people have been killed
in this conflict so far. I know the fog of war,
going back to our earlier comments, but I mean this
just keeps getting worse.

Speaker 16 (02:26:27):
Yeah, yeah, you've got obviously, you know, truth is the
first casualty in anything. Well, both sides have a motivation
to exaggerate casualties and minimize them on their side, but
the truth is probably somewhere in between. But I think
given the amount of firepower between the two provided by
fifty nations on our side and Russia with North Korea

(02:26:48):
and Iran on its side.

Speaker 1 (02:26:49):
It's massive capacity.

Speaker 16 (02:26:51):
I think that's probably gonna be turn out to be
a good number or a pretty good ballpark figure.

Speaker 1 (02:26:55):
And it's just catastrophic.

Speaker 16 (02:26:57):
I will point out, because you mentioned it a second
ago before you get off you're about the curse incursion.
This could be turned out to be the biggest disaster
for Ukraine because they can't sustain it.

Speaker 1 (02:27:08):
I mean, it was self evotent.

Speaker 16 (02:27:09):
You can't invade a country the size of Russia with
twenty thousand people and think it's going to succeed.

Speaker 1 (02:27:13):
And since we've talked last day, have made a.

Speaker 16 (02:27:16):
Couple of incremental check games on a couple of these
little fingers you may have seen on the map. Yeah,
but they've also lost a few, so it's basically a
net netive. They're trying to hold what they have, but
their casualties keep going up by the day and it
just can't be sustained. And pretty soon I think they're
either going to have to withdraw or they may end
up being driven out.

Speaker 1 (02:27:34):
And it's it's not going to be good for the
Ukraine side.

Speaker 2 (02:27:37):
It's just terrible all around. That loss to life is
just incomprehensible Daniel Davis deep dive search form. You find
them on YouTube and elsewhere on social media. Daniel, I
love having you on the program. It's always an enjoyable exchange,
even if it is on some pretty difficult subject matter.

Speaker 1 (02:27:52):
That's why I like having you on.

Speaker 8 (02:27:53):
Brother.

Speaker 1 (02:27:53):
I have a great week.

Speaker 2 (02:27:54):
Well, brother, I appreciate it. We'll talk next to you,
say next time forty two. But you have have care
see the station.

Speaker 1 (02:28:00):
I get to mention Zimmer Zimmer Heating and air Conditioning.

Speaker 11 (02:28:02):
Re recording stopped.

Speaker 2 (02:28:04):
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(02:28:26):
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You got this heat advisory ninety top near one hundred
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(02:28:48):
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(02:29:09):
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Speaker 4 (02:29:21):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.

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