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September 23, 2024 • 151 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Five o five.

Speaker 2 (00:07):
At fifty five k RC, the talk station every Fridays.

Speaker 1 (00:16):
Say.

Speaker 3 (00:25):
A vacation.

Speaker 1 (00:28):
There it is confirmation, it is Friday, and a happy
one to you. Brian Thomas right here Joe Strecker exactly
where he's supposed to be and always loved the fact
that Joe Trecker's producer of the fifty five Cassey Morning shows.
Coming up Thanks to Joe's Trecker on line, a lineup
of guests, including of course, Dave Hatter. Tech Friday's Dave
Hatter joins the program every Friday at six thirty. Today,

(00:49):
Dave and I will be talking about Ford seeking a patent. Now,
this is wonderful for car listening device to show advertising.
I guess that's gonna be listening to your conversations and
figuring out what you're talking about so they know what
kind of product you put in front of your face.
Some people think that the smartphones and Alexa do that. Anyway,

(01:11):
I don't own the Alexa, do own a smartphone. There's
a lot of people that talk about the Is it
a coincidence that I was talking about an RV yesterday
and the next thing you know, I start getting ads
on my smartphone and smart devices and laptops for RVs.
I has a lot of conversations with people about this
strange coincidences anyway marketing firm using your own phones microphones

(01:33):
to spy on your conversations. Topic number two and Americans
losing five point six billion dollars in cryptocurrency scams. Terrible
scryptocurrency scams going on out there. Jonathan Pearson's GOP Candida
for Commissioner running against Alisha Reze. Looking forward to having
Jonathan on the program. At seven oh five, Charles Tassel

(01:54):
returns this weekend at the annual Street Rescue event. We
learned the details on that at seven thirty, and then
at eight five Kenneth Bramowitz with a book, The Multi
Front War Defending America from Political Islam, China, Russia, pandemics
and racial strife. Wow, there's a lot there packed into
that one book title. Kenneth Abramowitz at eighth five. Always

(02:17):
love hearing from you two five, one, three, seven, four, nine,
fifty five hundred, eight hundred eighty two to three talk
go with town five to fifty on at and T
phones if you got one, uh And speaking of things technical,
according to a release from the United States and its
five Eyes allies that will be English speaking Alliance Australia, Canada,

(02:37):
New Zealand, Great Britain, US. The FBI apparently got a
court order in an effort and in fact seize control
of a network of hundreds of thousands of hacked Internet
routers and other devices. Oh look, the Chinese government link
operators were using to damage the United States and its allies.
Cording to FBI Director Christopher Ray, it's just one round

(03:03):
in a much longer fight. The Chinese government is going
to continue to target your organizations and our critical infrastructure.
Botnet is what they call it. It's a large web
of hacked devices apparently enable the Chinese hackers to do
targeted cyber attacks on US companies and government agencies. A

(03:24):
Chinese based company called Integrity Technology Group is labeled as
being responsible for controlling and managing this botnet two hundred
and sixty thousand devices across six continents order the FBI.
The device's age beyond their end of lized dates, they're
known to be more vulnerable to intrusion. Many of the

(03:45):
compromised devices and the Integrity Tech controlled botnet are likely
still supported by the respective vendors. This is what tech
Friday's Da've had to talks about all the time. You know,
you've got to keep your software updated, and at some
point many of these things become so outdated that the
manufacturers no long unger support them. In other words, hack
or holes and soft spots can be found late in

(04:06):
these devices lives by these these brilliant hackers and exploited,
and since the manufacturers aren't updating the software, those exploits
remain there. You've got the old hardware, basically, get rid
of it and get new. I suppose fifty percent of
the compromised devices are or were maybe still are in
the United States, one hundred and twenty six thousand of

(04:30):
these hacked devices here in the US alone. They say.
Hackers use various known vulnerability exploits to compromise the devices
known vulnerability exploits. That's where that patch stuff comes in.
I don't recognize the companies that manufacture these devices, not
something I own ZEXXEL fourteen q NAP, among others. According

(04:56):
to Cybersecurity News reporting on this now back in in January.
May recall this because I remember mentioning it on the program.
You may have read it elsewhere if you weren't listening
to the Morning Show the day I brought this up,
but Christoph Ray told the House Select Committee on the
Chinese Communist Party, the China hackers are positioning on American
infrastructure in preparation to wreak havoc and cause real world

(05:21):
harmed American citizens and communities if or when China decides
the time has come to strike. Does that sort of
remind you of anything that's happened recently? Oh yeah, maybe
Israeli's planning bombs in pagers and walkie talkies, waiting for
the moment to activate the explosive device when Israel presumably

(05:46):
thought it was time to act. Let's see, maybe when
they're getting ready to make an advance in the north
to go after his Balla on Lebanon. Maybe ahead of that,
what you do is you detonate the devices that you
place explosives in, and that were amazingly distributed to members
of Hesbawa. How did they manage that feat? I'm still

(06:08):
in awe and wonder over it. But look, someone decided
it was time to blow up the terrorists. Maybe maybe
the placement of the explosives in those various devices, was
in preparation to wreak havoc. As Christop Array described the

(06:29):
Chinese hackers' efforts to hack into our system, successful efforts.
It must be noted this is very, very frightening stuff
now when you consider the scope and reach of these
prior Chinese hack job operations that infiltrated America's infrastructure, most
notably the electric grid, just hiding behind the scenes, waiting

(06:54):
for the moment in time the planters, the folks that
put that hacking sawware in there to pull the trigger
metaphorically speaking, perhaps in advance of an invasion of Taiwan,
perhaps in an ad invasion of the United States, who knows,
Maybe just to mess with our collective minds. Maybe in

(07:16):
advance of a national election of massive import to the
United States in its future. Hmm, let's shut down the
electric grid so they can't vote, or so it really
freaks people out in advance of an election. Can you
imagine the chaos and havoc they will be reaked if
something like that happened, or some other election interfering operation

(07:38):
from outside, most notably I mean after the Springfield incident.
Dogs and cats aside, there are a lot of migrants there.
Trump brought that whole thing to the nation's attention, and
what happened. Foreign entities called in bomb threats. Maybe there
were just some joker, twelve year old kid from Roumania

(07:59):
sitting there in front of a computer. I don't know.
I just know that those bomb threats came from outside
the United States of America. If you believe Governor Mike DeWine.
It's easy to do anyhow. So we got that going
for us. Maybe I'll get a word or two from
Dave Hatter on that one, but it is to me

(08:23):
very frightening. Five one, three, seven, four nine, fifty five hundred,
eight hundred eight two three Talk found five fifty on
AT and T phones over at fifty five careshit dot com,
Get your podcasts. Doctor Phil Kirpan talked to Sherry Poll
on Board of Elections UH and UH. Phil Kirpen was
talking about rake cuts in the economy and some good news.

(08:49):
Speaking of rate cuts, mortgage rates drop Lois level in
more than one and a half years. Can you afford
a house on a thirty year fixed rate mortgage of
six point zero nine percent? Apparently Lois February twenty twenty
three down from six point two percent last week. It
averaged seven point one nine percent last year. That is,

(09:09):
during the same period, average rate fifteen year fixed five
point one five percent, the lowest reading since February twenty three,
down from five point twenty seven last week six and
six point five to four last year at this time
during that same period. So, I know, we had a
basis point cut of a point five the other day
of courting the FED lower the interest rate, and obviously

(09:30):
maybe that was a direct impact on this mortgage rate dropping.
But at least that is some small glimmer of good news.
But does a six point zero nine percent thirty or
fixed rate make a house affordable? Still? The loss of
supply nan out there impacting the affordability, because even if
you can get a mortgage rated three percent, can you
afford a you know, a house that was two hundred

(09:51):
and fifty thousand, you know a couple of years ago,
which is now five hundred thousand dollars simply because of
the realities of real estate, which are are obviously impacted
in many respects by the influx of ten plus million
people into our country over the last ten years. There, look,
it's all stuffed into one barrier's copy there five fifteen
fifty five kre see the talk station Chimneycare, fireplace and stove.

(10:14):
It is summertime and obviously stating the obvious, that just
emphasized the Chimneycare fireplace and stove. Folks, you should call
during the summertime because you're not using your fireplace. Have
the safety element taken care of. You know, chimneys get
obviously soot build up, creosoe build up that is flammable
over time, and it can burn your chimney lining crack

(10:35):
it And I've learned over the years it's I think
the second chimney fire that could burn your house down.
I don't know. I just don't want to fire in
my chimney and I don't want my lining crack. So
is your lining crack from a prior fire that you
wouldn't even know about. Maybe that's where chimney inspection comes in.
Maybe your swimney just needs to be swept to get
that creosoid out of there so it doesn't ever catch
on fire. That's the point of it. Also, there could

(10:56):
be a water damage problem. That's what a video camera
inspection by the Chimneycare fire places still will reveal and
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(11:17):
and family owned and operated since nineteen eighty eight. Do
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six hundred online Jimmy Kirco dot com. Fifty five car
the talk station. We're of course condolences on the loss
of your father. Five nineteen to five cair Ce De

(11:40):
talk Station. Yes it is Friday Company Rewards from Lemmy
Kimberly Strassel doing a good job of talking about the Teamsters,
Teamster's lesson for Trump, diving on into the op ed's
pretty interesting Teacher's Wednesday announcement that it would forego a

(12:01):
presidential endorsement for the first time in twenty eight years.
She called it both seismic and disingenuous. President Shohn O'Brien
undoubtedly regrets his decision to solicit the opinions of the
one point three million workers he represents, aware that a
strong Trump sentiment runs through his rank and file, O'Brien
went through the motions of conducting, in his words, the
most inclusive, democratic and transparent endorsement process in Teamster's history.

(12:27):
He ran member polling, interviewed Trump, and Harris requested speaking
splots at both conventions. She says that was a big mistake.
The idea was to give the union cover when it
did what it always does, endorse the Democrat, but the
leadership didn't count on a non ignorable result. An electronic
member poll that began in late July showed sixty percent

(12:47):
rank and file support for Trump. In a do over, frantic,
she says, barely reduced the figure fifty eight percent. Harris
didn't help, not bothering to show up for Teamster's sit
down until this past Monday. The final board vote tallied
three votes for Harris, fourteen for no endorsement. O'Brien lamely

(13:09):
blaming the press on insufficient assurances by both candidates on
the question of strikes. Whatever. Board member Gary Floyd was
honest enough to tell Politico the while he voted no
endorsement based on the membership poll, his own New York
local would endorsements Harris. He justified this by explaining that
the teamsters are not a reflection of the rest of

(13:30):
the country of what's going on, in that they are
to the left of the building trades and to the
right of everyone else. He's right that mister Trump's thumping
support among blue collar and law enforcement union members is
making the trades liberal leadership sweat. Trump is a loyal
following among trade unions, and he has since twenty sixteen.

(13:50):
Only these days it's bigger, and supporters are more frustrated
being ignored, less worried about retribution. See the breakaway Autoworkers
for Trump, which is running up its numbers holding rallies
at Big three factories in defiance of the United Autoworkers
endorsement of Miss Harris. Or listen to Bob Bartele's member
of a ten thousand strong Steamfitters Local six thirty eight

(14:11):
New York and Long Island, who went on Fox this
week to say their internal polling showed seventy percent support
for Trump, noting again Steamfitter's Local six point thirty eight
in New York. For those not in the know, New
York tends to lean a little bit blue. The interesting

(14:34):
part is why Harristeam likes to list what makes Biden
administration the most pro union in history. Carve outs for
union contractors and infrastructure projects, federal officials and agencies that
take only labor side in union elections or disputes, Hostility
to business and independent contractors, a huge union pension bailout
in twenty twenty one. In short, a narrow agenda geared

(14:57):
toward rigging the game for unions at the expense of
every else. Mister Bartle's explains that his members live beyond
that in celerity. Why the high Trump support quote, everything
that's gone on for the last four years, an open
border inflation, gas prices, oil mortgage rates, he says, adding
the crime has destroyed neighborhoods where people worked hard all

(15:19):
their life to buy their house. The group Autoworkers for
Trump I mentioned a moment ago. Founder Brian Pannabecker described
the green new scam and electric vehicle mandates that are
killing his industry praising Trump's commitment to domestic manufacturing. The
rank and file like mister Trump's promises, the tax cuts
energy production and fewer regulations his pro growth agenda. Trump

(15:46):
might want to think hard on this, she writes, as
his campaign increasingly resorts to pandering handouts to buy votes,
no taxes on overtime, no taxes on tips. The populist
whisperers are pushing him to abandon long standing free market
principles to suck up the union leaders further, including a
minimum wage increase, cracking down on job creators, throwing in
for union elections, or god forbid, backing away from right

(16:08):
to work. The lesson of Biden, Harris is that all
of a pandering in the world won't make up for
a failed broader agenda. Besides, the Geophe never has stood
a chance against Democrats in any pander war, and never will.
Blue collar workers like mister Trump before his suck ups.
They've been with him since his first term, when he

(16:30):
pursued a reaganesque agenda that brought them prosperity. They've stayed
with them despite the blatant Biden union brown nosing. That's because, shocking,
though it may be, too liberals. Millions of union members
remain red blood in Americans with a fierce belief in
capitalism and competition. Many also appreciate the longstanding GOP approach

(16:50):
to unions, which emphasizes liberty for workers, namely that union
membership and political news must be voluntary, and that unions
must be trainedansparent, and honest in their dealings. Trump has
far more to lose by abandoning core the principles, including
any success in the second term, than he does to
gain with union cow telling. That's the lesson of this

(17:14):
week's Teamsters endorsement moment. I think it's a great point.
These fellows are and women of course are on the
side of Trump because well, they go to the grocery
store every week, they have to pay their energy bill
every week. They know the Green Agenda is going to
just take the internal combustion engine out of the equation.

(17:37):
Hundreds and hundreds of thousands of jobs will disappear thanks
to the leftist Green Agenda. I mean, who would vote
against their best interests here? I'm wanna vote for Kama
Harris because I don't want a job anymore. Five twenty
six If I care, see the talk station plumb tight plumbing.
It's always plumbing done right. They lived by the motto
plumbing done right. They are excellent plumber. I can assure

(18:00):
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(18:43):
seven eighty four eighty three. That's five one three seven
two seven tight fifty five KRC dot com. In today's
Marketers report k thive to nine verse warning weather forecast
ninety three to high today with mostly sunny skies, partly
cloudy every night sixty eight ninety three tomorrow for the

(19:03):
high partly CLOUDI overnight down to sixty nine and on
Sunday mostly cloudy and a chance of showers and storms.
Hopefully it just show up on Sunday eighty five for
the high end. All right now, my temperature go sixty
six to fifty five kersee talk station five thirty on
a Friday, and a happy one to you. It's the
message from Jeff. Yes. The answer is yes, and let

(19:27):
me get it'll happen. In the next segment, Jeff wanted
to know if we were going to play John the
Fisherman Joe. I told him you can count on it anyway.
I got local stories you can feel free to call
if you'd like. Interesting conversation yesterday with the Captain in
the Israeli Defense Forces. Captain in the Captain el Kana
Cohen's got a book about October seventh, and it was

(19:48):
in lightning conversation so especially on the heels of the
explosions the Asbala's deeper's blowing up and walky Talkie's blowing up. Anyway,
I checked the podcast and get yourself a copy of
that book. This one made the national news. Here local
story Kentucky Sheriff's been charged with the murder of a

(20:09):
district court judge. Courting to Kentucky State Police almost three
o'clock in the afternoon yesterday, they received a nine to
one to one call from the Elector County Courthouse and
reference to shots being fired from inside the building. Several
law enforcement agencies and emergency medical services responded, locating district
Judge Kevin Mullins, who's fifty four with multiple gunshot wounds

(20:30):
unsuccessful life saving measures. He was pronounced dead on the
scene by the Coroner's office. Kentucky State Police puloment and
investigation includes the Electric County Sheriff Sean Mickey. Stein's forty
three shot Judge Mullins after an argument inside the courthouse.
They say Stein's taken into custody at the scene without incident.

(20:51):
He's been charged with one kind of first degree murder.
Before being appointed by Governor Steve Bisheer in two thousand
and nine. Mullins was an assistant common Wealth Attorney for
nine and a half years. As a prosecutor, he primarily
focused on drug related defenses, and as a judge, Mullins
gained attention for his efforts to treat those with drug
addictions rather than putting him in jail. Twenty ten, he
started a program allowing inmates with substance use disorders to

(21:14):
enroll an inpatient treatment as a condition of their pre
trial release. Elected as Sheriff of Electric County in twenty eighteen,
Stein re elected in twenty twenty two. A social media
post of transgender Russell Coleman announced that his office will
collaborate with the Commonwealth Attorney for the twenty seventh Judicial Circuit,
Jackie Steele, as special prosecutors in the case I The

(21:41):
why is what's missing here? You got the who, what,
the where and the when a sheriff shot a judge
in the courthouse in his chambers. We don't have any
indication as to why. Ah, Since I please say their
investigating a homicide happened last night wentin hills. They were
called a King's run court between Winest and Sdy having

(22:02):
to run seven thirty pm. There they found forty one
year old John Green, who'd been shot outside in your
parking lot between two buildings, taking a UC Medical center
where he died. They're looking for information about the shooting.
If you have any information, please call this Insane Department,
Homicide Unit or crime Stoppers three five, two thirty forty.

(22:23):
We're going to do a crimestopper bad Guy of the
Week today that'll happen later. A nineteen year old shot
while boarding a metro bus yesterday in South Cumminsville eight
thirteen pm. Police say the shooting happened at Elmore and
Beekman Streets, stepping from a fight that broke out downtown
between the suspect and the victim. They say the suspect
got on the bus and the victim was shot while

(22:44):
trying to board the bus. Since the police sergeant Mike
Miller says it all started a government square. Quote, we
often have issues down there, mostly juvenile based issues. Those
issues presented tonight. Among all those issues taking place, this
was one of them, at Lease said. The nineteen year
olds being treated for non life threatening injuries and no
one else was hurt, thankfully. Suspects still at large. I

(23:06):
imagine the police would love to hear from you if
you have any information about that. Families and students in
the Northwest Northwest Local School District got a notification. They
say it's too familiar. Hamilton County's second largest school district
canceled eight of its bus routes yesterday. Spokesman Lindsay Creasy
said the change is impact at least one route at

(23:27):
every middle and elementary school because of Thursday's delay has
to do with staffing. According to Creasy, like other districts,
we're all kind of faced with the issues of finding drivers.
In particular, the district is, in her words, desperately in
need of substitute drivers as they rely on those individuals
anytime there's a shortage. Greasey said, the district is hiring

(23:50):
drivers every day. The onboarding and training process, however, can
take six to eight weeks. In the meantime, they're continuing
to push an advertising campaign to attract drivers through physical
posters and hiring fares to social media and email campaigns. Quote,
we have a competitive wage and so we're looking at
our packages just to make sure that we're able to
draw the best drivers that are out there, she said,

(24:10):
our bus drivers are amazing. Since school being in August,
one woman quoted by local WCPO said she had to
sit in the car pickup waiting to pick up her
grandchildren so on several occasions. She said, notification about whether
a bus route is canceled usually comes around five am
via email or text messages. So it's she called it irritating.

(24:35):
It's basically flying by the seat of your pants. Anyway,
if you're looking for a job, there's an opportunity right
there five thirty five at five Krcity Talk station, an
opportunity to listen to a stack of stupid coming up.
And Jeff, I think your prayers will be granted with
the bumper music coming up. We'll see if Joe changes
his mind. But Prestige Interiors is waiting for your call.

(24:56):
That would be a call that will be picked up
by John Ryan. John Ryan and Press dejent Tiers are
one of the same. Check out his website. You can
see some before and after pictures of some of them. Anyway,
the multitude of kitchen remodeling projects he's done over his
thirty plus years doing almost exclusively kitchen remodeling. He is
your true partner in the kitchen remodeling process from the

(25:16):
start to finish. You sit down with him at the outset,
you talk about your vision for your kitchen. Maybe you
just have a simple project in mind, like just I
just want my cabinets and countertops replaced, or I've been
wanting granted countertops forever. Look at that old four mic
Its all just the countertops. He can help you with that.
But if you want to got the whole thing and
start from scratch, I am telling you he's got some
amazing ideas to remodel your kitchen for better design, flow storage.

(25:41):
He certainly did that for us. We love what John
did with our kitchen, and he is a really great
guy to work with, very very nice, sweet man. A
plus with a better business bureau at Prestes one two
three dot com five one three two four seven zero
two two nine five one three two four seven zero
two two nine fifty five KRC the tos get it,
he goes. Can always count on certain things death, death taxes.

(26:12):
John the Fisherman at five forty on a Friday, Well
State at Jes director by about three eight hundred eighty three,
talking to go to the phone before we get to
the tactics too, because John's on the line. John, Happy

(26:33):
Friday to you, Welcome to the program.

Speaker 4 (26:35):
What Happy Friday? Brian. Hey, the thing about Donald Lectric County,
my ex brother in law lives down there. He's pretty
much got us here to the ground on most sayings
that go on around down there. And he said that
the we're going around is that the judge was having

(26:58):
some kind of inner appropriate relationship with the share of
seventeen year old daughter.

Speaker 1 (27:06):
Oh. Now, that's take it for what it's but rumor. Right.
I'm not taking it as gospel. But you know what
I mean, if there's if someone wanted to make an
argument that, you know, homicide is somewhat justifiable, it's not
under these circumstances. But if you mess it around with

(27:26):
my seventeen year old daughter, oh, I can only imagine that's. Well,
let's just we'll keep that in the rumor column. But
at least it would answer the question. John.

Speaker 4 (27:36):
Yeah, well, okay, I just want to let you know
I appreciate it.

Speaker 1 (27:40):
I appreciate it. Maybe that's why they didn't report on
that salacious detail. Want to wait till it's absolutely confirmed. Wow, Okay, Okay,
maybe a jury of that sheriff's peers will go ahead
and give him a pass on it. You know, the
jury nullification argument. Yeah, he did commit a crime, No
homicide was not justifiable, but under the circum stances we're

(28:01):
gonna find them not guilty. Mother too can argue with that,
Thank you. Joe, mother of two, died in the United
Kingdom after choking during a marshmallow eating contest, which was
part of a fundraiser for our son's rugby club. What
I hate eating contest anyway, BBC reported the thirty seven
year old Natalie Bus taking part in the contest. It
happened in October last year. When she left the stage,

(28:22):
she collapsed and died, reportedly swallowing dozens of marshmallows in
sixty seconds, which of course blocked her airway. Both of
other people attending the event attempt to perform life saving measures.
Responding paramedics were not able to clear her airway. News
of the death now reservicing because officials held a pre
inquest court hearing about the death just last week, accord

(28:45):
to The Times UK BBC. In the Times UK report,
the Bus was called on stage for the marshmallow eating
competition by the DJ and children's entertainer, a person named
Christopher Gibbons inquest with a jury often called when someone's
death occurs in circumstances that could be considered suspicious and
just or have wider ramifications for the public court here
and revealed Gibbons had stopped asking guests to play the

(29:07):
marshmallow eating game at his events after she died, which,
of course makes sense. Oh it is Friday. What does
that mean? I have at least one naked guy in here.
Partially naked man found in the backyard of a home
Cornet Police naked man was accused of breaking into a

(29:29):
home shot by the Missouri homeowner. According to police, happened Tuesday,
September seventeenth, Saint Louis County and led to the rest
of a forty seven year old man. Officers said the
two homeowners were awakened in their beds with a man
standing over them naked from the waist down. One of
the homeowners grabbed a pistol, then pushed the accused the
intruder and pushed the accused intruder and ordered him to leave.

(29:55):
According to the complaint, the accused intruder said, while lunging
at the homeowner, who was brandishing a firearm quote, you'll
have to shoot me, which is exactly what the homeowner did,
fired the weapon one striking a man in the chest.
The intrudor then said, before leaving the home, quote, all right, man,

(30:17):
don't shoot me no more. I had enough. Officers said.
They found the guy in the backyard of the home
of the gunshot, wounded the chest, arrested, charged with fourth
degree assault in first degree burglary. Homeowner was within his
rights to shoot the accused intruder corner of the Saint Louis
County Prosecutor Wesley Bell, in a statement, Missouri law clearly
provides homeowners with the right to protect themselves, particularly while

(30:38):
on their property. Please said the guy entered the home
through an unlocked back door, Bond phrasing Joe Joe was
that because he was naked from the waist down. Okay,
I know, I get it unlocked back door. That's why
I called you out, Joe. Bond set at a quarter of

(31:01):
a million dollars coming up on five forty six if
you five KC detalk station more of that nonsense. After
a word for Emory Federal Credit Union, where banking is better,
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(31:23):
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n MLS number four zero one zero eight seven. Your
credit Union with the Heart since nineteen thirty nine. This
is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station. Hey everybody, this

(32:08):
is Josh and mostly Sunday Day today going up to
the ninety three Today sixty eight, overnight ninety three with
partly cloudy skyes Tomorrow overnight down is sixty nine and
a looks to cloudy Sunday, though it says it chances
showers and thunderstorms are can only pray eighty five for
the high land right now sixty four degrees. Time for
traffic from the ucl Traffic Center.

Speaker 5 (32:30):
The University of Cincinnati Cancer Center is open, the most
comprehensive blood cancer center in the nation. The future of
cancer care is here called five one three five eighty
five uc CE. See clean slate on the highways early
on this Friday morning, No recks to deal with, not
even an overnight work crew adding any extra time to
that commute. Here is a report of a wreck on
paddock at Summit Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRC Deep

(32:52):
talk station.

Speaker 1 (32:56):
Five fifty I think five. Guess you talk stations. Oh look, boy,
it's the stack of stupid God to the phones. I
got Bobby on the line. Bobby, Happy Friday to you, sir.

Speaker 6 (33:06):
Happy Friday, my brother. Please enjoy the weekend coming up?

Speaker 1 (33:10):
Certainly will it's my birthday tomorrow. I don't know if
I can enjoy it, considering it's the last year of
my fifties, which has got me kind of depressed. But
you know, I'll take it a beza alternative.

Speaker 6 (33:22):
Just look forward, my friends.

Speaker 1 (33:23):
Hopefully you got a lot more do. I hope so too.
What's under mind, Bobby.

Speaker 6 (33:29):
Since we always like to look to the future. We
got a gun show up at Hamley County excuse me,
Butler County. That's coming weekend, not this weekend, next weekend.
But I noticed when I was up there at the
Dayton show, the last one they had, they had a
lot of individuals that we're not Americans up there. They
may be legal residents, but they were not Americans. I

(33:52):
guarantee you when they had to show up there right
off thirty five here. In about three weeks, you'll see
more Haitians up there buy legal firearms that don't go
to in FFL that you could shake a stick at
their legal residents. They have it all, hire a driver's license,
and in the state of Ohio, you could transfer firearms

(34:12):
to those individuals without going to in FFIL.

Speaker 1 (34:17):
I understand. I just have to point out though, because
I'm not a broadbrushed guy, Bobby, and I know you
pay very close attention to the immigration situation. And I'm
not being critical, but I am not a person who
can look across the room and point to someone and
say that's an illegal immigrant or that's an immigrant, period,
end of story. I mean people look and all different races, creeds, ethnicities,

(34:40):
they've been born and raised here their entire lives. I mean,
look at Orlando Signs, a second generation immigrant born here legally.
To look at him. He is a person of color,
but he's a US citizen and then served as his
country proudly went to West Point. So I just got
to put that out there, Bobby, because someone's screaming at
the radio, going, oh, no, can you tell whether somebody's
an immigrant or not? Can't unless you talk to him.

(35:02):
That's all Bobby, need to make that point.

Speaker 6 (35:05):
No, I agree with you how to present my brother,
but most of you know they they don't speak English very.

Speaker 1 (35:11):
Well, all right, And you can probably safely conclude that
someone who's born and raised in the United States is
probably going to have at least a reasonable grasp on
the English language. Noting that our public schools have a
failure rate in terms of the English scoring of greater
than fifty percent for eighth graders, but at that point
will just be put aside. Bobby, God bless you, sir,

(35:32):
have a wonderful weekend. Man. Back over to the stupid
investigation underway after two bodies found inside an RV in
North Philadelphia over Saturday night last please shut up for
a cardial North Phillips Street two am, where they say
a man and a woman where found inside the RV,
man severely decomposed on the bed and the woman naked
on the steps of the RV.

Speaker 7 (35:54):
The woman.

Speaker 1 (35:56):
She also was dead. Woman pronounced dead by the medics
around two two twenty four am. Identity the man and
woman not known at this time caused death being investigated
by the homicide unit at in Philadelphia. Who may have
he have an award to give out Joe based on
the headline we have an Altuna PA man arrested after
for having nude photos of a teenager he was allegedly

(36:18):
in a relationship with that's in quotes well. The teen's
mom was charged for not stopping them. According to court documents,
Robert Lee mccack junior, twenty years old, arrested on multiple
child pornography charges along with indecent assault of someone under
the age of thirteen, unlawful contact with a minor, and
related charges for having a quote unquote relationship with a

(36:41):
teenager that started to win this punk. Molester was nineteen
and she was twelve. Teenage mom charged. A teenager's mom
charged with allegedly allowing the relationship to continue to spite
Altuna police speaking to her multiple times during the investigation
about it being highly inappropriate. Criminal complaint says police were
alerted the relationship between mcac and the teen now thirteen,

(37:04):
back in September of last year. A few weeks later,
the police said they learned that there was still a
relationship between the two, and the girl's biological father tried
to intervene. Throughout the five month investigation, the police spoke
to the team, MKHAK and the teen's mom. According to
the complaint, they noted that with any new evidence, they
spoke with the updated spoke with him updated the mom,
culminating him Acaque admitting months later that he was still

(37:26):
in this quote unquote relationship. Team was interviewed. Police said
she seemed worried about getting mcack in trouble. Said she
told him that the two were in love and wanted
the relationship. Twelve year old said the two would hold
hands and kiss, but that's all. However, however, police said
the investigation seemed to show otherwise. When they were talking

(37:47):
with the kak, he alleged that the teen would come
to his house and hang out with friends and then
ended up meeting the team meeting and they began talking
over Snapchat regularly. He said that he knew that it
was wrong, but as long as she was happy. He
went on to claim that he never touched her and
untouched her under her clothes and mentioned how she was
not at the house. She was at the house almost daily.

(38:09):
Search of his and the teens cell phone turned up
messages and texts that mostly revolved around plans to hang
out and that they loved each other, but they also
found nude photos and some of the sexual nature that
the teen allegedly admitted was her please say the teen
allegender mom had no problems with the relationship despite knowing
the age difference. Complaints that a message was seen on

(38:32):
the teen's phone during the investigation from her mom indicating
the relationship was still happening and that she was a
okay with it. Gock arrested and placed in the Blair
County Prison, bail one hundred thousand dollars. Mother arraigned on
one charge of challenge a dangerment. Released on a twenty
five thousand dollars unsecured bail award duly noted and given.

(38:56):
Since it's already five fifty six, got more to talk
about coming up Plus Tech Friday six thirty with Dave
had Or. I'll be right back.

Speaker 8 (39:01):
They can truffle back, they can change your cards.

Speaker 9 (39:04):
The twenty twenty four election, it doesn't matter. This is
on fifty five KRC the talk station.

Speaker 3 (39:12):
Hey BB.

Speaker 1 (39:29):
Six oh five, come up at six or sixty five
care City talk station. Joe told me my mom texted it.
I wanted to hear a little system of the down
big fan.

Speaker 8 (39:46):
Do you do that.

Speaker 1 (39:49):
Make me just want to keep quiet and listen to
the song, Joe, which is typically the case a bump.
The music are in the fifty five k day Morning Shore.
Thanks for the request, Mom. And it was that guy
that called about the sheriff getting a shoe ding the
judge in Kentucky, which has made national news, and he
suggested maybe there's a rumor going around that somehow, perhaps
the judge might have been involved with the sheriff's seventeen
year old daughter. Just yesterday, I saw this T shirt

(40:11):
that's for sale, and you know how there's ads on
Facebook all day, but I had to send it to
my daughter. I said, yeah, it's clickbait, but I loved
the message and I love you. Her responds, You're the best, dad,
I love you. The T shirt reads as follows, it's
in pink black lettering. I'm not a perfect daughter, but
my crazy dad loves me and that's enough. He's a

(40:32):
bit crazy and scares me sometimes, but he has a
backbone made of steel and a heart made of gold.
He loves me unconditionally, and if you mess with me,
the beast in him will awake and they'll never find
your body. It's a little parenthetical at the bottom. Yes,
he bought this T shirt for me. I can certainly

(40:53):
understand it if that was the case. Anyway, you heard it, freedom, Independence, dignity.
What the hell is Kamala Harris running on we have
No blanking idea Peggy Noon and The Wall Street Journal
referring to her as an artless dodger as opposed to
the artful dodger, A couple of great observations, the great
words salad summed up and the most recent ones from

(41:15):
Kamala Harris, thank you, Peggy Noon and Joe Biden stepped aside,
She writes, missus Harris elevated two months ago. That's enough
time at least to start making clear what she believes,
wants and means to do. She hasn't this week. She
couldn't or wouldn't. I think it's the latter answer a
single question straight. People can see it. She's an artless Dodger.

(41:37):
In her unscripted eleven minute interview with ABC Philadelphia station Tuesday,
the reporter asked meekly, quote for one or two specific
things you have in mind to get prices down. Harris's response,
you ready tell me what the hell this means? You can't? Well,
I'll just start with this. I grew up in a
middle class kid. My mother raised my sister and me

(42:00):
worked very hard. Remember the question is two specific things
you have in mind to get prices down? We're talking
about inflation, grocery bills. She was able to finally say,
with enough money to buy our first house when I
was a teenager. I grew up in a community of
hardworking people, you know, construction workers and nurses and teachers.
And I try to explain to some people who may
not have had the same experience, you know, if but

(42:21):
a lot of people who will relate to this. You know,
I grew up in a neighborhood of folks who are
very proud of their lawn, you know. And I was
raised to believe and know that all people deserve dignity,
and that we as Americans have a beautiful character. You know,
we have ambitions and aspirations and dreams, but not everyone

(42:41):
necessarily has access to the resources that can help them
fuel those dreams and ambitions. So when I talk about
building an opportunity economy, it is very much with that,
with the mind of investing in the ambitions and aspirations
and the incredible work ethic of the American people, one
or two things you'll do to bring the economy line

(43:05):
specific things. There, you have it. Everyone in this room
is now dumber for having listened to it. Oh wait
for it. S. She also had this to say, focusing
on again the aspirations and the dreams, but also just
recognizing that at this moment in time, some of the
stuff we could take for granted years ago, we can't

(43:26):
take for granted anymore. And so my approach is about
new ideas, new policies that are directed at the current moment.
And also, to be very honest with you, my focus
is very much on what we need to do over
the next ten to twenty years to catch up to
the twenty first century around again capacity, but also challenges
close quote I had no idea what's going on? Neither

(43:52):
do I. Tally Noonan referred to it as gibberish. How
do appeal to Trump voters who might be open to her?
Quote from Kamala Harris, I based on experience and a
lived experience, know in my heart, I know in my soul,
I know that the vast majority of us as Americans,

(44:12):
have so much more in common than what separates us.
And I also believe that I am accurate in knowing
that most Americans want a leader who brings us together
as Americans. Close quote You're a looney Nonan observes it's
not the answer for Canada. Trying to be forthcoming, using
her limited time in an attempt to be better understood,

(44:34):
it is the sound of someone running out the clock. Amen,
Beggy Noon, speaking of the National Association of Black Journalists,
Harris asked about increasing her support among black men. Quote
the policies and perspectives I have understands, that's her words,
understands what we must do to recognize the needs of

(44:55):
all communities, and I intend to be a president for
all people. Don't rhetorically ask why does she dodge away
from clarity? Why doesn't she take opportunities to deepen public
understanding of her thinking? Here are some guesses, what or

(45:17):
more of which may be correct. Beg you knew because
she's not that interested in policy. This would be strange
because politics is the policy business. That's what politicians make.
But she forgets her political life in California, where politics
is an offshoot of its other great industry, show business.
It is possible that she've used policy as just something

(45:38):
you have to do in advance to advance your personal
standing and enjoy being on top. It's clearly she has
memorized certain position points help small businesses that have perhaps
been urged on by her professionals who do politics for
a living. Observation number two, because she'll figure it out.
Labor specificity divides while sentence and gathers because she doesn't

(46:03):
want you to understand where she stands, because she's more
progressive than she admits, perhaps, and there's no gain in
telling you that truth, because at bottom she's a progressive.
She's as progressive rather as Joe Biden, meaning as progressive
as the traffic will bear. But that would mean she's

(46:27):
more of the same, So why talk about it. Some
supporters think she needs to be more specific, but it
isn't specificity per se. That's the glaring omission. Her problem
is not that she doesn't say she'll repeals section thirteen
C of some regulatory act. No one knows what thirteen
C is. What people want to hear and deserve to
hear is her essential meaning and purpose as a political figure.

(46:51):
It's not about data points in the arcana of government.
It's about belief and the philosophical underpinnings of that belief.
What are her thoughts right now about illegal immigration of
the border after the past three years of a historic influx.
She said the debate that she's she'd hire more border agents.
Why toward what end? In pursuit of what larger goal?

(47:14):
Great questions was the influx a good thing? Why does
it continue, does it constitute a national emergency? And if so,
why what attitude does she bring to this crucial question
failing to speak plainly and deeply about how illegal immigration
is political malpractice on a grand scale. There are other

(47:35):
large questions. What philosophical predilection does she bring to taxing,
spending regulation, to the national debt? She owes us these answers.
It is wrong that she can't or won't address them.
It is disrespectful to the electorate. And I wish the
electric would rise up personally interjecting here and scream out

(47:57):
loud Listen, man, I'm a Democrat, and why the hell
won't you explain the policy positions you're gonna bring to
the table so I, as a Democrat, can confidently vote
for you. No, that's not Brian Thomas saying he's a Democrat.
I'm speaking through the mouth of some you know, nebulous, unnamed, unknown,
hypothetical democrat out in the world. Because if I was
and someone was running for office on behalf of the

(48:18):
Republican or as a libertarian, I want to know what
the hell they're running on. It's an insult that she
doesn't let people know she's taking you for stooges. If
voters don't get a sense of her deeper reliefs, they
will think of her as a construct, something other people

(48:39):
built so they can run the country as she does
photo ops. Exactly what Joe Biden has been for the
last three and a half plus years. A puppet my
words again interjecting a puppet. We are guaranteed yet another
puppet the ruling class. Behind the scenes. We'll be telling
her what to do on the fly. We don't have
to know her goals, and we're gonna find out about

(49:01):
him later. We're gonna let the puppet masters choose the
direction of the next presidency. If she's elected, vote for
the unknown, you're gonna be in a world of hurt.
And she's a little critical of Donald Trump, referring him
to awful and the choices between empty or awful. I
don't think Trump is awful. And the only component of

(49:22):
Donald Trump that I think is awful is only in
terms of the political realities of Donald Trump being Donald
Trump and the built in anger that half of the
country has toward Evil Orange Man. If he substituted Evil
Orange Man for some other unnamed potential candidate that isn't
baked into the cake. Now they would try to bake
that into the cake regardless of what person is going
to fill that void. But there's not going to be

(49:44):
that Pavlovian response built into that. And that's the problem
that Trump has. She calls him awful, but as it
has observed, Trump was president for four years, we didn't
all explode, institutions held, the threatened constitution maintained. So maybe
that's the undecided vote because we know what to expect

(50:08):
with Donald Trump. Six sixteen, Steve, I got your calling next.
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an I sincy zero scincy dot com. Five one three
eight four five zero one five one five one three
eight four five zero one five one fifty five KRC.
We're just hours away, six twenty one at fifty five
kr C the talk station. Happy it's Friday. Yeah, this

(51:39):
aw my David five one three seven four nine fifty
five h eight hundred eight two three talk jumping over
the phone. Thank you for holding over the brake, Steve.
Welcome to the morning show.

Speaker 10 (51:47):
Yes, sir, you're not happy it's Friday. You wish it
was Monday.

Speaker 1 (51:50):
Oh, yes, Monday.

Speaker 11 (51:51):
You wish it was.

Speaker 10 (51:52):
Monday at two thirty in the morning and you were
waking up.

Speaker 1 (51:54):
Yeah, that's come to work. And I'm so excited about
turning fifty nine tomorrow. It's just like a sort of
is sounding it's my last year of the fifties. I'm
just I'm not thrill.

Speaker 10 (52:04):
Well, I'm sixty two, and I've heard of you know,
like when maybe you turn sixty you think about it,
but I never remember doing a final year countdown for
decade to get into the next decade. But whatever, I've
never got. You know, that's okay.

Speaker 1 (52:18):
We're each Yeah, it's funny because looking back, I've never
been turning it. Getting older never bothered me. The only
depressed birthday I ever had in my life that was
really really bummed about turning was when I turned twenty
because I was I was like that, you're no longer
a teenager. I was in college, I was having fun.
Every day was a party, and I'm thinking, you know,

(52:39):
the beginning of the end. You know, I'm a moment
away from having to become a responsible, employed adult. And
it really depressed me to turn twenty. So anyway, what's
on your mind? Steal?

Speaker 10 (52:49):
Well, too bad you didn't turn twenty in the twenty
first century, because then it's just you're still like a
twelve year old.

Speaker 1 (52:56):
Excellent point. Excellent point.

Speaker 10 (52:58):
So that times were different way back then, weren't they.
I mean people used to get dried their driver's license
when they were sixteen, and you know, you tried to
move out of the house and stuff. Now it's it's
now you're on your parents' insurance. What until you're fifty two?
Or what's the cutoff now? Like, whatever the cutoff is,
why not just to add thirty or forty years to it?

(53:19):
I mean, why not. It's a joke. Everything's a joke.

Speaker 1 (53:22):
I'm gonna get on my mom's medicare plan.

Speaker 10 (53:25):
Yeah, well why not bet a care for all? You know,
we'll just call it something different, you know now that okay,
that that's cool. Okay, As you know, I'll try to
squeeze this one in there. I don't know if it'll fit,
but I'll try to make it fit.

Speaker 12 (53:44):
Where it's.

Speaker 11 (53:46):
There.

Speaker 10 (53:46):
It is, okay, Well, you you you know, you're just
not your eyes aren't open. You're saying Kamala Harris didn't
answer that question. She answered that question absolutely. What are
a couple of things you're gonna to bring prices down? See,
the problem is, it's the same when you watch the debate,
when you read the transcript, Trump won the debate. When

(54:10):
you watch the debate, she won or whatever. Same with
Nixon and Kennedy. It was like it's all about appearance.
You had to watch her answer the question a couple
of things she's going to do to bring prices down?
She is a woman of color. There's two right there.
They vote for her. She's a woman of color. That's
all you gotta do is that she's answered the question.

(54:31):
She has answered the question. She's not going to make
anybody's life any better. She's a woman of color. That's
how she's going to bring prices down.

Speaker 1 (54:39):
Does that enable her to sort of lay hands on
the problem and cause it to disappear? I suppose she's mad.

Speaker 10 (54:45):
No, no, no, no, she's a Democrat. You got to
vote for her and other Democrats for the next sixty
years because every time they run, they're going to fix problems,
and they never do. And they've got a good chunk
of the population out there. Apparently not the tea seamsters
though that I know they they didn't pay off the
right people there. Somehow it got out that the rank

(55:07):
and file ain't going along with the team message there.
But you know, that's kind of funny. And again, I
think Trump wins an electoral college landslide. I worry about
a lot of things in life. I worry about things
I can I have control over. It'll disappoint me if

(55:28):
he doesn't win. But we're okay, we're taking care of
our family. We're doing good. But I honestly think he
probably doesn't win the popular vote because you know they
go up plus five million in California.

Speaker 1 (55:40):
Well yeah, yeah, they're all.

Speaker 10 (55:42):
Wasted votes essentially. But I think he I mean, I
drive around and I see, you know, and I'm in
northern Kentucky, but all I see is Trump signs everywhere,
and I can think back to twenty sixteen, and that's
what I saw. I had a good feeling about that one.
I do see some Harris Wall signs, but.

Speaker 1 (56:04):
Not merely as many, not a whole lot of them.

Speaker 10 (56:08):
In fact, you're surprised when you see one. I'm surprised.
I'm surprised that names are even spelled correctly. You think
there would be a misspelling on there or something since.

Speaker 1 (56:17):
Aro out of time. Honestly, as we part company, Steve,
I just kind of feel embarrassed for the people who
put the Harris Walls sign in their front yard. Honestly,
I think that's a reflection of their well perhaps political stupidity.
You're gonna vote for someone you don't even know what
they're running on. That's interesting. Anyway, I have a wonderful day, Steve.
Thanks for the call and stick around because tech Ford
with Dave Hadters up next lean Arrow LLC. Their business consultants.

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(57:45):
Fifty five KRC.

Speaker 5 (57:48):
Less than twenty minutes. Chuck kingrim On fifty five KRC
The talk station.

Speaker 1 (57:55):
Six one on a Friday means it's time for Tech
Friday with day have had Or brought to you by
his company Intro i T Best in the business as
the business courrier. You have a business, you have computers
you need. Dave had Or on his team at interest
i T. You can find them online at interest i
T dot com. Dave had to welcome back and thanks
as always for sponsoring this segment. It's just an awesome,
awesome time of week for me.

Speaker 7 (58:16):
Always good to be here, Brian, look forward to it
myself every week.

Speaker 1 (58:19):
I'm glad you do before we get to Ford real quick.
I just wanted to get your knee jerk reaction on
the on that the cell phone and walkie talkie bombs,
remote control explosions all timed identically. That is crazy, man.

Speaker 7 (58:33):
Yeah, it is pretty spooky, you know, Brian, When I
when I saw that story, at first, I thought, okay,
this can't be real. I know, I started looking into it,
and my next thought was, Okay, you know, would a
pager have a battery large enough to really explode? I mean,
I know, batteries catch on fire. We've seen this sort
of thing, you know it could you send some sort
of signal? I would remind folks if you look at

(58:55):
what happened with Stuck's Net and the Iranian nuclear reactors.
You know, those machines were reporting they were behaving normally
while the software inside them made them basically tear themselves apart. So,
I mean, we've already seen at least one real world
example where you know, something like this was done, and
I thought, okay, you know, could you make it overheat
and the battery explode? Yeah? Probably, but would a battery

(59:17):
have enough force? And you know, I spent eight years
in the army reserves. As a combat engineer, I've used
C four in the Army. I thought then when the
video started the perier, that okay, it's got to be
some kind of explode super planet. And you know, okay,
this the forethought it would take the ability to get
into the supply chain. Apparently now it looks like they
set up shell companies to build these things. Yeah, it's

(59:39):
completely insane, but it also points out again the fragility
of our society. How many times do you think a
product is touched before it's shipped into the United States,
you know, comes into palette disassembled. You know, there's there's
been rumors that our agencies are taking things like routers
before they're shipped countries and planning backdoors in them. So

(01:00:01):
I mean, clearly this indicates it can be done successfully.
And yeah, I thought it was pretty insane, really and
pretty scary.

Speaker 1 (01:00:08):
It is really scary. And also ford installing listening devices
is also scary.

Speaker 7 (01:00:14):
Yeah. So this report hit the news last week, and
you and I have discussed how so called smart devices
are basically privacy and security dumpster fires many times. I've
brought up on here many times I encourage people go
see for yourself. Check out the Mozilla Privacy non included
website Mozilla and the Firefox browser. People evaluate the privacy

(01:00:34):
of various products, and they did a big expose at
the end of last year about how most modern cars
from virtually every manufacturer are essentially rolling computers that are
collecting all kinds of data about you that from a
privacy standpoint, make no sense. Now we've seen ford As
file a patent actually stating in the patent that they
intend to listen to you in your car. Combine that

(01:00:56):
with data like your location and other information they would
collect from the car, and you know, send you ads
and do who knows what else. I'm not as worried
about the ads as the fact that, you know, how
many people have said, Okay, we're you know, you and
your spouse are having an argument. Let's just go for
a drive and talk it out. You know, let's calm down,
go for a drive, let's have a private conversation. Well,
you know that's out the window now. It's it's crazy,

(01:01:19):
I can tell you now. You know. Ford is kind
of responding with, well, just because we have a patent
doesn't mean we're going to do it. How to elect
to protect intellectual property. But I can tell you I
would not buy a forward as a result of this,
and I will encourage people again to look into what
your new modern car is doing and capable of from

(01:01:40):
a privacy perspective. It's not good.

Speaker 1 (01:01:42):
Well, and we'll continue this theme because apparently there's marketing
firms out there using your phone's microphone to also listen
in on you. That with Tech Friday's Dave hat or
next six point thirty five right now for you five
kc DE talk station for in exchange, get your imported
car fixed from on fifty five pairs the talk station
six forty fifty KIRCD talk station interest it dot com,

(01:02:05):
where you find Dave and the crew for all your
computer issues and needs. If you're a business and moving over,
big brother is indeed watching, and a big brother will
include marketing firms apparently using our cell phones microphones to
listen to our conversations.

Speaker 7 (01:02:19):
Dave, so, Brian, this is interesting because you and I
have had this conversation many times over the last ten years,
and I can't tell you how many times I've personally
been approached by people who say, is my cell phone
listening to me?

Speaker 1 (01:02:32):
Yeah?

Speaker 7 (01:02:32):
Now, the obvious answer is, well, yes, of course it is,
especially if you're using something like Siri, because it has
to be listening in order to respond to whatever the
activation phrase is.

Speaker 1 (01:02:42):
Right, Yeah, but you've consented to that by installing one.
To me. I never do that, but you know outlaud
or up front that it has to be listening there
it wouldn't work. And on a cell phone though.

Speaker 7 (01:02:54):
I want to be clear, I don't use that either.
I know you have tat are turned off. But then
people have said, well, how is it possible that you know,
I'm having a conversation with my spouse and then suddenly
I get ads on Facebook or something, And Facebook for
years has said we are not listening to your phone.
Now enter this article in the New York Post. Now,

(01:03:18):
and it's been widely reported on Centisen, but I first
caught this from the New York Post on X Marketing
and firm admits to using your phone to listen to
your conversations. And then when you read into it here,
Cox Media Group, the television and radio news conglomerate, admitted
in a pitch deck to investors that it's quote active
listening software unquote uses artificial intelligence to quote capture real

(01:03:39):
time intent data by listening to our conversations unquote. So
you have an organization and they list Google, out, Facebook,
and Amazon as their partners. So I you know, Brian,
you're the attorney here, but I think you could try
to make an argument that, well, our partner might be
doing this, but we're not doing this.

Speaker 1 (01:04:01):
Right knowingly facilitated.

Speaker 7 (01:04:04):
Right If they're doing it and selling you that data,
well okay, I mean again, you have some plausible notability
there one degree of separation. Why don't know how they
got me the data? They just got me the data
that it sends you to add about the thing that
you just talked about. But again, this has been reported
on widely, you know, and if you read further into it,

(01:04:25):
there was one key piece in here I wanted to quote.
So then here's a comment from Meta reminder of Meta,
parent company of Facebook, Instagram, et cetera. Meta, parent company
of Facebook and Instagram mint it was reviewing CMG to
see whether it's violating it is terms of service. Quote.
Meta does not use your phone's microphone for ads, and
we've been public about this for years. A metaspokesperson told

(01:04:46):
the post. We're reaching out to CMG to get them
to clarify their program is not based on metadata. So again,
Facebook has consistently maintained for a long time that they're
not doing this, as have most of the rest of
these companies. But now you have at least one example
of at least one company who has stated that they're
doing this very thing. So again, when you couple this

(01:05:08):
with things like what we saw with the Ford ad,
this is like right out of Orwell's wildest nightmares. Right
in nineteen eighty four, the state put in the telescreen
so it could listen to you and watch you and stuff.
For here, we are voluntarily doing this to ourselves because
you know, apparently we think convenience is more important than
privacy and security. I mean, if you think about this

(01:05:30):
for a second, if this company and other companies are
doing something like this, it's not just that, oh I said, hey, Siri,
it'd be funny to see how many of those we
just activated, Brian, It's that the thing is listening to
you all the time. You don't know what it's capturing.
You don't know who has that data, you don't know
how long they store it, you don't know who they

(01:05:51):
might be selling it to, which is why I would
strongly encourage people a get rid of any apps that
are affiliated with any kind of capability like this. It'd
be despite the fact that there is obvious convenience in it.
You know, turn it off until you need it if
you really must use it. Again, I don't use any
of these sort of listening things on my phone. The

(01:06:12):
microphone on my phone. You can go into an Apple
phone settings and dictate which apps can use the microphone. A.
I have a very small number of apps installed on
my phone, and B there's only two that can use
the microphone, the phone itself and Microsoft Teams because I
use it for work on a regular basis, right right,
So yeah, I would encourage people to turn the microphone

(01:06:33):
capability off. And then I think it'd be insightful too
for people to go see which apps have asked to
use the microphone. You know, why does your flashlight app
need to use the microphone other than to spile on
you and sell your data.

Speaker 1 (01:06:47):
It's a great question, and I know bunch of people going, Okay, well,
how do I do that?

Speaker 7 (01:06:51):
Well, you know, it's kind of very on your phone
and the specific the specific iOS, but in general, you
just have to go into the settings, go to the
microphone and settings. If you go online. Now, remember, Brian,
we want to use privacy friendly search engines like start
page or go or something. Just do a search, right,
search for how can I tell which apps are using
the microphone on my phone or disable the microphone on

(01:07:14):
my phone. There'll be plenty of reputable sites out there,
seeing that z net Tom's guide, et cetera. That'll have
step by step instruction sometimes videos. Right, was I want
to literally walk you through it?

Speaker 1 (01:07:25):
Yeah, I can say definitively without ever having a looked there.
I'm guarantee you there's a YouTube video showing you exactly
how to do what you're talking about.

Speaker 7 (01:07:32):
I guarantee there is too.

Speaker 1 (01:07:33):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (01:07:34):
But see, you know I would use rumble choke off
anything from Google, right true?

Speaker 1 (01:07:37):
Right, yeah, that's yeah.

Speaker 7 (01:07:39):
But to your point, Yeah, the good news is, you know,
when you hear some nerd like me talk about this,
there's always if you, if you know how to do
a search, always going to be resources out there that
can help you turn on a specific thing, or turn
off a specific thing, or delete a specific thing or whatever.
You know, you might have to tweak a little bit
on your search terms to get to it. But there's

(01:08:00):
so many free resources out there now that can help
you with these kinds of questions, and you know, address
these kinds of problems. You generally don't have to look
too hard.

Speaker 1 (01:08:09):
Amen. That and sound advice from Dave Hadder One more.
Apparently a lot of money being lost in cryptocurrency scams,
not surprising anybody who listens to this segment of the show.
Everyone six if you want, if anybou Carcy Detalk station
and Happy Friday talking with Dave Adder in trust it

(01:08:30):
dot com is where you find him and h Cryptocurrency
is a lucrative earth. Cryptocurrency scams is a lucrative profession
to be involved with.

Speaker 7 (01:08:38):
So, Brian, you know, crypto has gotten a lot of
press recently. Both presidential candidates have talked about it, and
I don't know if you happened to catch the headline yesterday,
but I might have been the day before.

Speaker 1 (01:08:50):
Yeah, sorry, Well Trump buying burgers with crypto.

Speaker 7 (01:08:53):
Well there was that, But Louisiana just announced that as
a state government, you can now actually pay bills in bitcoin,
which I think is interesting. So, you know, there's a
lot of naysayers out there around this sort of thing.

Speaker 1 (01:09:06):
I don't know how to calculate the value of a bitcoin.
It changes all the time.

Speaker 7 (01:09:11):
Well, that is one of the things that makes it interesting.
How do you, you know, lock in a valuate and
make the transfer at a particular time because it is,
you know, it has shown an enormous amount of volatility
over time. Yeah, that's and then there's all kinds of
wild predictions out there that you know, right, I think
bitcoin trade is trading at like sixty three thousand dollars
right now.

Speaker 1 (01:09:30):
Or yeah, not that long ago, was thirty. Prior to that,
it was fifteen. So if I got to buy something,
a little fraction of a bitcoin is going to be
worth some different amount depending on which moment in time
you engage in the transaction.

Speaker 7 (01:09:44):
This, I mean, that's true for any currency, right, But
you're right, it's super volatile. Yeah, that's one of the
things that make it risky. You know, I certainly would
not encourage anyone to go put all of their money
into bitcoin. That could be catastrophic. But you know, there
are people out there predicting because of the financial the
terrible and increasingly bad financial condition we find ourselves in

(01:10:06):
as a country that you know, it's going to go
to insane amounts, you know, as a hedge against FIA
currency and the inflation we see. But anyhow, outside of
all of that, I just I thought it's interesting now
that Louisiana is going to accept bitcoin as payment. So,
you know, for people who say it's all just bs,
you know, it's it is increasingly accepted in a variety

(01:10:27):
of legitimate ways. That said, the FBI has recently reported
on cryptocurrency scams for the year twenty twenty three, and
I like to bring this up whenever possible. The FBI
has a website called the Internet Crime Complaints Center IC
three dot gov. You can not only go there to
report any type of cyber or crime that you may

(01:10:47):
have experienced, and I encourage people to do that. You know,
if it's some low volume, low value thing, they're clearly
not going to engage on that. But by reporting these things,
you may help them become aware of a new trend
or problem that they can then warn about. Right, So
I would argue you're doing your fellow man a solid
by reporting these kinds of things. The other point about
that site is it's full of all kinds of statistics.

(01:11:11):
They do an annual report every year that shows you
what has been reported in what they're encountering out there,
and that's where this information came from. So, according to
the FBI, five point six billion dollars were lost last
year through cryptocurrency related scams, seventy thousand complaints they received
in twenty twenty three. Now, I have seen numerous FBI agents,

(01:11:34):
both online and in in person presentations that I attended, say,
you know, their belief is that most of these types
of crimes are not reported unless there's either a compliance
regulatory type of reason you must report it, or you know,
someone just feels the need to try to do a
solid for the rest of the world. So my point is,

(01:11:55):
whatever these numbers are, they're probably much lower than what's
really happening. And the point they make here, which I
think is an important point, is you know, there's a
lot of different ways you could get scammed that aren't
necessarily tied to cryptocurrency. Maybe that's just how you paid,
but scammers are often using social media and dating apps.
And I would remind folks whether it's large data breaches

(01:12:17):
like national public data, we should probably talk about that
again sometime soon more comes out around that, or it's
people putting enormous amounts of information about themselves on social
media and dating apps. Con men or conmen, right, they're
going to use the information they can find out about
you to figure out where you know, where to build
up rapport, where to create a relationship with you. Oh,

(01:12:37):
I happen to love kiss too. They're my favorite band.
Oh yeah, that's my favorite song. And next thing you know,
you think you're in a relationship, and then they point
out that then the angle because oh, by the way,
you know, I'm really doing great with cryptocurrency. I could
help you, and they'll even allow you to make a
little money at first, right to really set the hook
in there before they steal all your money. So I

(01:13:00):
would encourage folks, whether it's the FBI or the FTC,
to go read about the kinds of scams, particularly these
romance scams that are happening regularly. And then as a reminder,
if a stranger reaches out to you and suddenly you
have this amazing relationship and then they ask you to
do anything with investments, but especially cryptocurrency, run to the

(01:13:20):
nearest exit. You are being scammed.

Speaker 1 (01:13:23):
Sound exclamation point on that advice. Dave Hatter always a
pleasure to having on the program. I appreciate the information
you pass along to my listeners and me makes us
all safer out there in this dangerous place that we
call well Internet and social media, etc. Interest dot com
Get in touch with Dave and the team for your
business computer related needs until next Friday, my friend. Have

(01:13:43):
a wonderful weekend, brother, and look forward to talking with
you next week.

Speaker 9 (01:13:47):
On the way to work all day in fault check
in throughout the day.

Speaker 1 (01:13:50):
Fifty five krc D Talk Station seven. I was six

(01:14:12):
here a fifty five kre c detalk station. I'm very
happy for Friday day to you. Remember fifty five car
Sea dot com. Get your podcasts, get the books and
the authors I interview like yesterday's Captain Elkanna Cohen with
the book October seventh. He's a captain with the Israeli
Defense Force. And the conversation I' getting ready to have
right now. Jonathan Pearson. He's running for Hamilton County Commissioner

(01:14:33):
and he is running against Alisia Reith. Jonathan, Welcome to
the fifty five KRSEE morning shows. Nice to have you
on today.

Speaker 8 (01:14:40):
Well, thank you Brian.

Speaker 12 (01:14:41):
I appreciate he giving me time.

Speaker 1 (01:14:43):
Happy too, And I guess I'm a little befuddled.

Speaker 7 (01:14:47):
I don't.

Speaker 1 (01:14:48):
I can't find you anywhere online except that you are
running for Hamilton County Commissioner. The Hamilton County Republican Party
website doesn't have any profile information. I can't find a website.
Do you have a website that people can go?

Speaker 8 (01:15:00):
I don't have a website. I'll have to check with
the for the county down the vent. I am using
it through the Hamlin County Party website and that one
I need to make sure that I have that clarified.

Speaker 6 (01:15:12):
Yeah, I my.

Speaker 8 (01:15:15):
Page that I didn't get that rectified.

Speaker 1 (01:15:18):
Yeah, I just because when I click on Hamilton Kundy
Republicanparty dot org site for you, they have you listed
as an endorsed candidate. But when I click on about
the informations is candidate's qualifications for office seeking slash Background
and experience just as under development. So there's no substance
of information there. Somebody we can get some out today.
What are your qualifications for office seeking? Jonathan? Your background,

(01:15:39):
part of town you from? Why are you running for
Hamilt County Commissioner? To dive through all that today.

Speaker 8 (01:15:44):
Well, I'm from the Fairfax area. I live in Fairfax,
and you know, the short version of why I'm running is,
I'm just tired of what we're seeing. I moved here
in eighty four from Springfield, Ohio and other great city
as you can see in the current news. But I
was just tired of what's going on. We used to
be affordable.

Speaker 12 (01:16:03):
It isn't.

Speaker 8 (01:16:04):
I don't know what happened to this county. We went
from being a modest taxes, modest home prices to seven
point eight sales tax to property taxes that you and
I both know are both crazy right now. But my
background is that I had run golf courses and then
started running private estates and up an Indian Hill, we

(01:16:25):
subdivided a private estate that I worked for. Was a
property manager and became the site foreman for that. And
after we subdivided that, I became my own businessman because
I decided I wanted to run my own company and
started taking care of some of these very expensive properties.
Got to meet a lot of different people that both

(01:16:45):
famous not famous, but got used to working with a
lot of people, a lot of different things, and working
for an immense amount of moneyed property, so should I say.
And it made me understand how to manage it kind
of money, sure, and that was something that I enjoyed doing.

Speaker 1 (01:17:04):
Understood business experience is important, I believe, because yeah, it's
real world experience.

Speaker 8 (01:17:10):
The biggest thing that I was that, you know, what
I learned is how you communicate with people and get
people to understand what you're trying to do and you
understand what they try to do and you're not sitting
there arguing with them. Because that's really what started this
whole thing. Back last summer, if you remember, there was
a meeting with the Convention Center and Alicia Reese came

(01:17:33):
out saying that it was you know, racist and it was,
you know, like pac Man Jones, And I was like,
what did that have to do with anything? It was
just a racist trope that didn't need to be said.
You know, there's a lot of money on the table
to the convention Center at one hundred and twenty million.
When they were arguing that point, obviously people get a
little testy and either she doesn't know that or the

(01:17:57):
fact that she just wanted to make a racist trope,
and that offended me as a Hamlet County resident. It
offended me because I'm expecting my elected officials to just
handle the fact that when you're dealing with a lot
of money, people get a little tested. I've had that
happen in my own business, people like hey, wait a minute,
and sometimes the words they say aren't exactly kind. He

(01:18:21):
just learned to deal with it. You don't sit there
and go make a big statement and you know, Splanner
somebody else. So that was really what offended me. I thought,
we need people that can deal with that. Feels a
little bit better. But more importantly, we have some serious
negotiation dollars coming up.

Speaker 1 (01:18:39):
Yesterday and he guess the stadium deal.

Speaker 8 (01:18:42):
Well, the stadium deals. I mean you saw those numbers yesterday.
They're a little a little stiff.

Speaker 1 (01:18:49):
One point five dollars for improvements, Jonathan, you can build
a brand.

Speaker 8 (01:18:56):
That's the budget for the county. Yeah, we're taking think
about this. We say, you know what, Hamlin County, Let's
take the entire budget for our county and slap it
on one area.

Speaker 7 (01:19:12):
Owned.

Speaker 8 (01:19:14):
That sounds like a lot of money.

Speaker 1 (01:19:15):
Yeah, before I privately owned business, effectively for a.

Speaker 8 (01:19:19):
Privately owned business, because in my business, I've never had
the County buy me a single piece of equipment. They've
never bought any of my trucks, they've never bought any
of my mowers. They've never bought any of my hand tools,
none of my power tools, none of that. So based
on that logic, how much are we supposed to buy
for somebody else? Good point, that's really what the question

(01:19:43):
comes down to, you know, put some skin into games.

Speaker 1 (01:19:47):
I certainly viewed as defensive myself, But then again, I
thought the building of the stadium for half a billion
dollars was ridiculous and shouldn't have been the taxpayer expenditure either.
But when you have the threat of the Bengals pulling
the plug and leaving town, suppose it's more important to
be in NFL football town than it is to you know,
take a look at what the where the money is
going and why the taxpayers are being asked to keep it.

(01:20:08):
But that's all been done and over with water under
the bridge. But now they're asking for more and a
hell of a lot more. So that's something you're going
to have to struggle with. And so where what is
your position? Okay, Jonathan Pearson, County Commissioner, The issue comes
before you what what what's your response to this request? Recognizing,
of course than under the current lease agreement, we do

(01:20:31):
have contractual obligations, So what do you do as a commissioner?

Speaker 8 (01:20:38):
Well, as we both know that that was a horrible
deal from the beginning, So that's that's our first problem.
But you're right, we have to deal with it because
there it is. But minds simple, you know, I think
from the you know, the reality is that we started
in the hole, you know, So I'd like to see
the Brown family step up. You know, they can't claim

(01:21:00):
they're poor because they do revenue sharing and when they
bought the bingals outright from the Sawyer family, they suddenly
had two hundred million and cakes to do the deal.
So it's not like they're lacking in money. And I'm
not I'm not trying to say that we need to
sit there and just say, hey, let's oviscerate the deal

(01:21:20):
because we made it and we have to honor it.
But at the same time, I think a business needs
to step up and be that business for themselves, and
so I would like to see a lot more skin
in the game from their side, and then take an
honest look at it and see what it does. Does
it does the other things that they're talking about actually

(01:21:43):
have values to the county residents? Does it help the
downtown area those type of things. Are they public use
areas that we can all look at and go, okay,
that makes sense? Or is it strictly Bengal only oriented
stuff exactly?

Speaker 1 (01:21:59):
And that's that new corporate office facility they're building in
front of the new practice stadium that they're built, or
a practice field they're building, and to the best of
my knowledge, none of which benefits us generally speaking, unless,
of course they're going to make an argument that, well,
everybody that works there is paying tax dollars into the
kind of the coffers of the city. But I'm not
quite sure that cuts it for the rest of the
Hamilton County voters.

Speaker 8 (01:22:18):
Well, it doesn't because we lost Hilltop in the process
of putting up some big inflatable balloons so they can practice.
I mean, don't get me wrong, I'm find that the
Bengals are here. I have a problem with the fact
that we kicked out a well established business. Yeah, to
do that that did not benefit the Hamlin County residents
by getting rid of a very large employer and taxpayer.

Speaker 1 (01:22:39):
Excellent point, you know, Jonathan Pierson, I forgot about that,
but it's a great point.

Speaker 8 (01:22:44):
Let's pause from what do we make money in this county.
We don't have to keep adding taxes. Let's add businesses.

Speaker 1 (01:22:49):
Hey there's the thought, Jonathan Pierce. That hold off. We're
gonna take a break right now. We'll come back with
Jonathan running against Alisia Reese. You have choices this November.
Let's make spart ones. He has been endorsed by their
I'milton kind of Republican party. We'll get more from Jonathan
just a moment. I want to mention twenty two three
on Route forty two between Mason and eleven of my
favorite gun store. I am a customer and I have
shot in the range multiple times. Safest indoor range, cleanest

(01:23:11):
indoor range, best indoor range I've ever shot it, and
I have feeling you'll reach the same conclusion. A bunch
of membership options for the range. You just got to
walk on in and show them your card and take
your place on the range and squeeboss squeeze awesome rounds
safely with the range safety officers constantly monitoring the situation,
taking sure. But he's following the rules and mining their
p's and q so you can feel very comfortable there,

(01:23:31):
and you will. You're interested in buying a firearm for
the first time, you couldn't be in better hands. Their
staff are extraordinarily knowledgeable about the products they sell, long guns, handguns,
ammunition accessories. They literally have everything. The owners the best
people around. Wendy and Jeff. They're outstanding people and you'll
be glad you're supporting them. They're always on the right
side of everything. Wendy and Jeff. So get on interrupt.

(01:23:52):
It's out Route forty two between Mason and Lebanon. You
can find them online. Learn all about the store and
what they have to offer you. And it's a lot.
It's twenty two three dot com the number twenty two
five of the word three spelled out twenty two to
three dot com fifty five KRC. We're just ours. Here's
your Channa nine weather forecasts. It's going to be a
sunny day and a hot day going up in ninety three.
Overnight lowes sixty eight with some clowns, partly cloudy. Tomorrow

(01:24:15):
hot again ninety three overnight lows sixty nine with clouds
and a cloudy Sunday, maybe some showers and thunderstorms. There's
a chance. Keep our fingers crossed eighty five for a
high on Sunday. It's sixty three right now, in time
for a traffic updates from the UCL.

Speaker 5 (01:24:29):
Traffic Center of the University of Cincinnati Cancer Center is open.
The most comprehensive blood cancer center in the nation. The
future of cancer care is here called five one three,
five eighty five U SECZ notth bend four seventy one
that is loading up way too fast into the barrels
for it to just be the construction. I'm checking to
see if there's an accident between Grand and Memorial southbound

(01:24:52):
seventy five. I'm seeing a few break lights approaching the
Brands Fence Bridge in ben seventy four. Still okay, chuck
ingramout fifty five KRC the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:25:03):
Seven twenty here for the five Kereseity talk Station Bryan
Thomas talking with Jonathan Parson, running for Hamilton County Commissioner
against Alisia Reese. All right, Jonathan, here's a quick question
for you. Started off and ask you know why you're running.
Everything's gotten to damn expensive in Hamilton County. No one
can deny that. It's obviously a problem that's pervasive in
our country. But when you look at the surrounding counties
and you look at where people choose to do business,

(01:25:26):
they tend to lean more Butler Warren in Claremont than
Hamilton anymore. How do you level the playing field, how
do you make Hamilton as attractive as apparently Butler Warren
in Claremont County seem to be. And what do you
think their draw is over Hamilton County.

Speaker 8 (01:25:40):
Well, the one thing that we've got to do is,
as you know, in the Commission's office, we can't change
the tax laws, right, but there's nothing like a bully
pulpit they get the conversation started. I mean, I'll use
the sales tax alone. We added that stupid twenty eight
percent for the buses, and you know they're also full.

(01:26:01):
When you drive around town, you see the bus is
completely full being used and everything else. Because obviously that
money was needed, not to mention they got a sixty
two million dollar grant from the government last year too,
on top of that tax, if you didn't know that,
And so we have all this extra sales tax that's
going in there, and it makes people think geez, my

(01:26:24):
product's going to be that much more expensive if I
sell it within my area. Here's a crazy thing about
sales tax. I can go to Claremont County buy all
money new appliances for my kitchen, and the money I'll
save on sales tax will deliver them to my house.
That's just stupid. We need to start reconsidering certain things.
Hamlin County has a lot of very nice residents, so

(01:26:45):
they vote yes on too many things. And that's the challenge.
We've got to get people to rethink they're taxing themselves.
As for the appropriation are the moneys for the property
taxes that can be done by having a county auditor.
Tom Brinkman is running for that that actually looks at
the true value of homes instead of saying what's the maximum.

(01:27:07):
We can run this too. I know there's a constitutional
reality that we have to evaluate homes, but the Constitution
of Ohio does not mandate that you maximize every single
penny and start squeezing people out. And that is one
of the big things that I think people find is
that just the tax structure alone is a little tough.

(01:27:28):
When you have your home in a community and suddenly
your taxes are up an extra thousand dollars, That doesn't
mean they didn't go up in Warren County in Butler County,
but not to the same proportions. Because per land value,
Hamlet County does have expensive land comparatively, and so the
property taxes can be a little bit higher. But we
don't need to start taxing to that extreme. And I

(01:27:52):
say that with great understanding because I live in the
Marrimount School District, which is one of the highest tax
areas in the region.

Speaker 7 (01:28:00):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:28:00):
Yeah, and so.

Speaker 8 (01:28:01):
Believe me, my tax bill tells me you live in
the Marimount School District. And I think that those are
the things that we can work on from the bully
pulp that, so to speak. There the practical matter is
first and foremost. Just because a dollar comes to the
door doesn't mean we need to spend it, and we
don't need to, you know, look at everything and say, oh,

(01:28:22):
that's a good project, do this, lit'st do that, and
those type of things. The first thing that Adam and
I would like to do is to take a look
at that budget and say what's redundant, get rid of
those immediately. What do we not need to spend money
on or are we spending too much money on? Actually
look at the budget instead of just saying, oh, the
administrator said this is okay, and not actually look at it.

(01:28:43):
I mean, that's what the commissioners are elected for, to
actually look at the budget. I'm not convicted that that's happening,
that there's a true understanding what they're looking at.

Speaker 1 (01:28:53):
Well, the silence think that the silence from the Commissioner's
office generally speaking is deafening. I rarely read anything about
what the commissioners are doing and how they're approaching things.
And there's a lot coming up, like again going back
to the stadium deal, the least needs to be renegotiated.
This one point twenty five billion dollar request for improvements
needs to be dealt with. And I know the sheriff's

(01:29:15):
departments down on numbers that has to be dealt with.
I just don't hear anything about where they are on
any given issue.

Speaker 8 (01:29:20):
In the sheriff's office. Look at the sheriff's office, the
largest single budget the commissioners deal with. Yeah, and we
have a sheriff that I'm not sure if she knows
what she's doing because she has her car stole and
a gun that is in her car. You would think
that the commissioners would have something to say about that,
since they're the one that appropriate the money too, the

(01:29:41):
sheriff's department. Nope, not a word from them. And then
other things are gone. They're closing part of the jail
because they just don't have enough deputies.

Speaker 10 (01:29:48):
They're leaving.

Speaker 8 (01:29:51):
The sheriff's office. And this is something that they should
concern the commissioners, not just the sheriff, but should concern
the commissioners along with all county residents. This is an
issue that we don't talk about. Mine is complete transparency.
You want to walk through the building or walk into
my office and take a look at what the deputies make,
I'll show you. I won't show you what individual deputies make,

(01:30:12):
but I'll show you what the overall budget for all
the deputies is. I have no problem as an elected official.
You want to know exactly, to the opinion, what I make.
Here's what I make transparency, and you know, I'm happy
to stay in front of a camera or stand with
you know, sit down with you once a week just
to let people know what's going on. It's their money,
it's not my money. To go oh good, I have

(01:30:33):
a new money in my checking account. That's not the
way the game's played, and I think people forget that.
As elected officials, we see that, especially unfortunately in the
Democratic side, more than we do the Republican side. But
I think that that's the great danger that we're seeing
right now, is those type of things make people not
desires to be here. What happens is more and more

(01:30:53):
businesses slowly pull out, and as those businesses pull out,
people pull out. The more people you have in this
fair county, and the more businesses you have in this county.
By giving a reasonable tax structure, suddenly we don't need
new taxes. We just need more people and more businesses
were actually making more taxes than we need.

Speaker 1 (01:31:14):
Sounds so simple to do, Jonathan Pearson.

Speaker 8 (01:31:17):
It is that that's how you work in your own home.
You're saying, hey, I don't need a brand new car
this year.

Speaker 1 (01:31:22):
Right right now, I'm with you. Yes, if we ran
the government like we run our households, generally speaking, we
would all be in a much better place. Jonathan Pearson.
As soon as you get the website up, or you
get more information, get it over to the Hamilton County site.
So people know where to connect with you and learn more.
You're welcome here on the fifty five Cars in the
Morning show. I like what you're saying, Jonathan, and I'll
look forward to talking with you again, and if you

(01:31:42):
get elected, I will take you up on the opportunity
to speak with you on a regular basis about county
issues since no one seems to be doing it. Good
luck to both having me to do so. Good luck
to you and Adam Taylor. Thanks listeners for tuning in
and on that. And Jonathan will talk again soon. I'm
sure have a great weekend seven to twenty six. Right now,
fifty five Car City Talks we're gonna learn about from
Charles Tawseli returns to talk about the annual street rescue event.

(01:32:04):
Let's get those illegal guns off the street. I have
no problem with that, and of course have a strong
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like I've never had it inspected. Think about my friend

(01:32:26):
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have them replace the siding on his home. They did
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a clean bill of health, that's peace of mind in
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Com fifty five car the talk station to those supporting recovery.

Speaker 7 (01:33:29):
Here's your nine.

Speaker 1 (01:33:29):
First one weather forecast ninety three is gonna be our
high today aby sunny sky is partly cloudy over night
down to sixty eight ninety three. Again tomorrow with partley
cloudy sky, clouds over night down to sixty nine eighty
five high Sunday, mostly cloudy and a chance and hopefully
it comes true showers and thunderstorms. It's sixty four degrees
right now. How about a traffic update.

Speaker 5 (01:33:50):
From the UCUP Traffic Center of the University of Cincinnami
Cancer Center. It's open, the most comprehensive blood cancer center
in the nation. The future of cancer care is here
called five one, three, five eighty five. You see seed
on found four to seventy one. It's crawling out of
Southgate to an accident at Memorial, heading into the barrels.
Only one lane gets by on the right southbound seventy five.

(01:34:11):
It's the right lane that's blocked off at Mitchell and
the exit ramp to Mitchell that traffic is thinning out
to get by, you can still exit.

Speaker 1 (01:34:21):
Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRC The talk Station five
KRC Talk Station, Happy Friday, Welcome back to the fifty
five CARRIC Morning Show. The man who created the Street
Rescue Stolen Gun Recovery event, Charles Tassel. It's good to
have you on the program. We got another event coming up,
and wow, couldn't it come at a better time giving

(01:34:41):
these recent gun store robberies that are happening all over.

Speaker 12 (01:34:45):
Absolutely, thank you, Brian, happy to know it's You're exactly right,
and that's exactly why we're doing it. Well.

Speaker 1 (01:34:54):
Remind my listeners the point of this, you aren't an
anti gun organization necessarily. You're in partnership the Baptist Ministries
Association and the Progressive Baptist Church. The point of this
is that they that the guns out on the street
are quite often like a lending library. From the way
you've described it before, there's like a gun, it's in
a hidden location, and the gangsters or the bad guys

(01:35:15):
or whoever knows where it is, uses the gun on
a temporary basis and then puts it back. So that's
what we need to get rid of the illegal guns
that are on the street.

Speaker 12 (01:35:25):
And we call them community guns.

Speaker 1 (01:35:26):
Community guns.

Speaker 7 (01:35:27):
That's it.

Speaker 12 (01:35:28):
That's it. And you know, if somebody gets frissed and
they have a gun on them, they go to jail.
So the bad guys, it took them two seconds to
figure that out. So they just hide the gun around
the community and they know where they're at. And the
problem is people in the community know where they're at,
but there's kind of a little trust factor of hey,
let me go pick up this sketchy gun and bring

(01:35:49):
it to a police officer or you know, then your
fingerprints are on and everything else. So we set this
up as a no questions asked opportunity to bring these
bring these weapons in. Some as we have you know,
young ladies who have an ex boyfriend who's moved on,
who's left something behind, and they're like, I don't know
anything about this, I don't want it, I don't want

(01:36:09):
it around me, I don'tanner around my kids. So they'll
they'll turn it in as well. And the whole point
is is reduction of gun violence. And it's not against guns,
it's gun violence and really focusing on that piece of it,
and that really kind of comes to the critical next
step here, which is with these thefts that have occurred.

(01:36:31):
There are over one hundred guns at the streets. These
are new guns. A lot of them have been sold
from what I'm hearing, very cheaply quickly. These these young
teenagers did this and they're on the streets and people
first thought, oh, I'm geting a deal on a gun
whatever they and now they're realizing, oh, I've got solen merchandise.

Speaker 3 (01:36:52):
Huh.

Speaker 12 (01:36:53):
They know, they know the serial numbers. So now I'm
sitting on a fourth degree felony because I have possession
of this thing.

Speaker 1 (01:37:01):
Yeah, so this is this is a way.

Speaker 12 (01:37:05):
And we're hearing from you know, we partner with gil
Mallery a long time ago on this, and then the
Baptist ministers they're hearing about this as well, and they're saying, look,
we've got to get these outportunities. There are people who
have suddenly realized I'm you know, unbeknownst to me, I'm
now in possession of stolen merchandise. I want the opportunity
to get rid of it. So this is no questions

(01:37:26):
asked atf Police that now we're doing this. They're like,
get the guns out of there, get those illegal guns back.
We need to get them back to the rightful owners.

Speaker 1 (01:37:35):
Indeed, well, it's highly unlikely that I suppose a person
who actually went and stole commit the committed the crime
and stole those weapons will be turning it in. They're
more likely to sell it. As you point out the
recipient of the gun. Maybe in your home. You could
be a homeowner. You have a son or even daughter.
I suppose that got one of these guns. Maybe you
know about it. You want to get rid of it.

(01:37:56):
You don't want your child to be in trouble, but
you know you don't want them to have a firearm either.
That be a great thing, I guess, Charles. I'm worried
about folks who don't have any familiarity with a handgun.
And I'm thinking of handguns now, of course, but it
could be a long gun too. But they don't want
to even touch it. Maybe they don't know how to
load or unload it. They're afraid what about the status
of the gun as loaded or unloaded. For those complete

(01:38:18):
novices out there that know about where one of these
might be.

Speaker 12 (01:38:23):
Well, a couple of things one. We're happy to come
pick it up, call us, we can address that side
of it. We've done that a number of times. They've
gone to folks's house. They not probab will take care
of it. Safety is the first priority, as with any weapon,
Safety is as the first priority. But then the next
step is this isn't really folks who you know, the

(01:38:44):
kids who did the thefts, they're already in jail. This
is about one hundred plus guns that hit the street
because of their thefts, and people who unknowingly ended up
in the situation where they're like, I'm sitting on an
illegal or you know, only weapon. How do I get
rid of this? How do I become legal again? And

(01:39:04):
that's really what we're focused on this time. Now we're
open to any community guns being brought in anytime, but
really this is kind of a pressure relief style for
the community to go let's let's go legal. Let's get
these ones that we're stolen, get them turned in, and
let's sake it, we get Yeah, this group of kids
that live on store cars drove them into gun stores.

(01:39:28):
You know, they've got enough issues on their own. We
don't need to add to it. By putting a bunch
of more people in jail and adding a bunch more
fourth degree felonies out there on people.

Speaker 1 (01:39:37):
Yes, I'd rather have the gun off the street. That's
what the police are in accord with this. It's better
to get the gun off the street than to chase
down a felony four conviction. I completely agree with you
on that. Now, what what what time is the event?
Where is it taking place? And uh and and and
is there a website where we can get the words
spread out so I can put that on my blog page.

Speaker 12 (01:39:59):
Yeah, so facebook site which is Street Rescue. Since since
the Street Rescue, we've got that posted up there. But
it's six thirteen Prospect Place, which is Progressive Baptist Church
in Cincinnati. And it's it's right in writing area, right
down for Reading Road, Avondale. It's from ten am until
one pm against Progressive Baptist Church or Progressive Missionary Baptist

(01:40:24):
Church as they call it, six thirteen Prospect Place. And
that's Saturday morning. You know, no questions asked, there's no cameras,
there's no there's no gotches. Pastor Larry Holly is there
and the Bachel's ministers have spoken on this and are
in unison on support of this, and this is the
first time we've really partnered with them on this. And

(01:40:46):
I will mention you mentioned about gun safety going on.
We actually do provide gun safety training as well, one
and certificates of people. You know, if somebody wants to
get trained and says, you know, I've got something I
get rid of, but I also want to learn how
to do it handles correctly, properly. Absolutely, we fully support that.

Speaker 1 (01:41:03):
That's great. That is great because there are certainly a
lot of legitimate reasons people might want a firearm to
use for their own personal self defense, their home defense.
And so that is gun safety is of paramount importance
in my life as well. All right, so get my
listeners real quick here, Charles Tassel, and I can't thank
you enough for doing this is such an important event.
What have your numbers reflected over the years, How many

(01:41:24):
guns have you gotten off the street through these street
rescue programs.

Speaker 12 (01:41:29):
Well, we've done over one hundred guns that come in
over the years, and I don't even know how much
ammunition if we've literally you know, you get partial boxes
of ammunition that somebody has found. Like I said in
a mailbox, a house that's been vacant and open, and
those are brought in. Brian, I will always remember the

(01:41:50):
first time we held and there's a gentleman walking down
the street with a shotgun on his shoulder in over
the Rhine, and I'm like, oh, this is really happening. Okay,
And you know this was found between two walls right
inside this right inside the stake and building. Okay, not
a problem. And you know, no questions asked. We take
those in. And we've had a variety of types of weapons,

(01:42:12):
everything from you know, baby guns that had the little
orange kIPS removed. Yeah, and I've had moms very concerned
that you know, their their childhood, you know, snuck a
gun in the house and all that too. You know,
some larger weapons that were loaded and you know stashed
behind garbage scans kind of thing. So it's been We've
seen all kinds of things come in and really it

(01:42:36):
doesn't matter what it is. Bottom have. You know, sometimes
they get serial numbers, they are scrubbed off them or
ground off them. That's very common, no questions asked, bring
it in, We'll take care of it. And like you know,
when the serial numbers are off of it. Those have
to be.

Speaker 1 (01:42:49):
Destroyed absolutely, and one could only imagine the lives that
have been saved by the hundred or so guns you've
already gotten off the street. So wonderful idea of the
concept is great. Nobody knows that in questions, just get
it out, get it off the street. Show up between
ten am and one pm, six thirteen Prospect Places, Saturday. Charles,
thank you. You're always welcome on the morning. Should to

(01:43:09):
talk about this anytime it comes up. Anytime you're doing
it again, just get in touch with Joe and we'll
talk about it and spread the word.

Speaker 12 (01:43:16):
I really appreciate you guys.

Speaker 1 (01:43:17):
Thank you very much, my pleasure. Keep up the great work.
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(01:44:19):
The number of course is five to one three seven
zero eight three thousand, fifty five KRC dot com. Do
you have an idea for an event? Is your nine
first warning weather forecast could be a hot one today,
ninety three for the high or sunny skies, clouds rolling
overnight will drop to sixty eight clouds tomorrow in Park
ninety three for the high again. Overnight low is sixty nine.
Clouds remain and a mostly cloudy Sunday, but it does come.

(01:44:40):
Keep your fingers crossed with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms eighty five the high end sixty four. Now time
for traffic from the UCF Traffic Center.

Speaker 5 (01:44:48):
The University of Cincinnenti Cancer Center is open, the most
comprehensive blood cancer center in the nation.

Speaker 1 (01:44:53):
The future of cancer care is here.

Speaker 5 (01:44:55):
Call five one, three, five eight five U see see
see northbound fourth seventy one cruise continue to work with
an accident at Memorial. Everything but the far right hand
side is balked off single file to get five back into.

Speaker 1 (01:45:07):
Southgate for an extra half hour.

Speaker 5 (01:45:09):
Inbound seventy four now slows from Montana and southbound seventy
five heavy through Walkman Chuck Ingram on fifty five krs
the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:45:20):
Fifty five car ce these talk station speaking of bad
guys with guns. It is that time of week where
character So is a crime stopper, bad guy of the week.
Welcome back to the fifty five CARSS Morning Show from
the Cincini Police Department and God bless each and every
one of them. Officer Lisa Baker with a crime stopper.
Bad guy. Who are we looking for? Lisa? Happy Friday?

Speaker 13 (01:45:38):
By the way, Happy Friday. This is a bad guy,
Samuel ilm Jordan. Third, he's wanted for two. He's wanted
in a triple shoot. Yeah, two council felonious assault and
one count of felony murder. This happened at the office
bar in Coleraine Township. Samuel elm Jordan is a black male.

(01:45:58):
He's forty two years old, five nine, two hundred and
thirty six pounds. He frequents co Rand Township, but his
last known address was on Bronson Street in Dayton, Ohio.

Speaker 1 (01:46:08):
We got to get the guns off the street for
the bad guys. We got to get the bad guys
with the guns off the street. If we have a
tip that might lead police to find Samuel M Jordan.
The third, what are we going to do? Lisa Baker?

Speaker 13 (01:46:17):
Give crime stoppers a call five one, three, three, five
two thirty forty.

Speaker 1 (01:46:22):
Your remain anonymous. If you tip leads owners to be
doing society a huge favor and you will be eligible
for a cash reward. We got a picture up on
my blog page, Lisa. I have a wonderful weekend, and
thanks for again for all that you and the Cincinni
Police Department do for our community each and every day.
Some fifty one fifty five ks to the talk station.
Over at the blog page and podcast page. You can
also get a copy of the book. The author I

(01:46:42):
interviewed yesterday. He's with the Israeli Defense Forces and he
commented on these. Of course, October seventh is the subject
of his book. As a matter of fact, the name
of his book Captain Elkanna aka Kuno Cohen. Interesting conversation
about the Israelis are going through right now. Let us
see here real quick and going to the border, because

(01:47:03):
of course we all know that's one of the biggest
issues coming into November. And we have no idea where
Kamala Harris is. Even though she was, the borders aren't
and although she tries to duck and dodge her way
out of that title that she held, we I know
what happened under her watch, but it's actually worse. Ex
San Diego Director San Diego Sector Chief Agent Aaron Heike,
speaking with members of the House Homeland Over the Security

(01:47:26):
Committee on Wednesday this week, talked about the cover up
that was going on and he was forced to engage in.
He repeatedly tried to They repeatedly tried to get into
quiet the border wide crisis by shielding information from the
press as well as concealing the reality of the dangerous
migrants with terror ties who were coming across the border.

(01:47:47):
Speaking of the panel, I had to release illegal aliens
by the hundreds each day into the communities who could
not support them. To quiet the problem. Two flights a
week were provided from San Diego to Texas. These flights
simply brought aliens that would have been released into San
Diego over to Texas. He pointed out that each flight

(01:48:08):
costs approximately one hundred and fifty thousand dollars and the
point of it, he said, this was the administration's way
of trying to quiet the border wide crisis. In other words,
the realities of people living on the border and the
border towns were becoming widespread. Oh my god, how in
the hell is it that they can handle this mass
flow of immigrants into the community. They had no place

(01:48:28):
to shelter them. Cages. Remember Donald Trump's evil Donald Trump cages.
Oh my god, children are in cages. Well, they couldn't
have that optic floating around, now, could they. So what
do they do? Fly him in the neighborhood near you?
He pointed out also the they were barred from discussing
what he described as an alarming spike in border crossings
by special interest aliens. They call them sias. Those folks

(01:48:53):
you qualify it with as an SIA if you're suspected
opposing national security concerns based on the country of or in,
or because you have ties to a terror group. Agent
Hake said the San Diego sector averaged ten to fifteen
of these SIA arrests per year, but that rose to

(01:49:15):
over one hundred. Sia's encounter year twenty twenty two went
over well over that in twenty twenty three. He said.
Even more than that registered this year, and he pointed
out emphasizing these are only the ones we caught, noting
that there are more than one point seven million known
gotaways and that doesn't include the list of unknown got aways.

(01:49:37):
He said, at the time, I was told that I
could not release any information on the increase on sia's
or mention any of the arrests. The administration was trying
to convince the public that there was no threat at
the border. In other words, they lied to us by
covering up information. As I stare at about four dozen

(01:49:59):
articles relating to the foot dragging and ongoing refusal to
cooperate with the investigations into the attempted assassination of Donald Trump,
our own lettered agencies have been given requests for information
by the Oversight committee looking into this. Even Democrats, some
of them, are screaming about, wait a minute, what in
the hell is going on here? Give us our damn
information stonewalling. Well, it is an election here, isn't it,

(01:50:25):
And like Kamala Harris, just give us a word sound
tell us we're working on it. Tell us it's not
possible for us to Can you get this request on
on an expedited basis, We've got other things going on here,
and keep the information. It'll come out eventually, I feel
confident about that. But keep the information out of the
public hands until we get past November. That's really the
reality of I think what I'm seeing right here before

(01:50:46):
my very eyes. Draw your own conclusions. I am jaded
and cinecal when it comes to analyzing these things. Seven
fifty five fifty five krc DE Talk Station Kenneth and
Brahmowitz the book The Multifront War Defending America from Political Islam, China, Russia,
pandemics and racial strife, all in one book. The author
will join the program after the top of the our news.

(01:51:07):
I sure hope you can stick around for that.

Speaker 9 (01:51:09):
The twenty twenty four election Vice President Kamala Harris.

Speaker 7 (01:51:14):
I'm clapping.

Speaker 10 (01:51:15):
You don't have to.

Speaker 1 (01:51:16):
On fifty five krs. This report is sponsored by lows
Load's your morning News. Gets me ready for the day
and all day involved and check in throughout the day
fifty five krs. The talk station is eight o five
here fifty five KRCD talk Station. Very Happy Friday to you.

(01:51:37):
Always love talking to book authors, especially when they have
the subject matter as revealed on the title of this
book by my next guest, Kenneth the Brahma Witz, The
Multi Front War Defending America from Political Islam, China, Russia,
pandemics and racial strife. There is a lot to unpack there,
but of course that's what we're facing right now. An
extensive and highly successful background in healthcare. He's currently managing

(01:51:58):
general partner and co founder of Vengi and Capital, which
is a four hundred and fifty million dollar worldwide healthcare
venture capital fund. Also a staunch supporter and contribute to
various organizations fighting to preserve liberty and protect Israel in
America from political Islam and the radical left. Also, you
probably heard him speak. He's chairman of Citizens for National Security,
was a Florida based grassroots security advocacy organization. He gives

(01:52:20):
one hundred speeches per year over the past five years.
Welcome to the Morning Show, kenneth O Brahma Woods to
talk about your book, The Multi Front War.

Speaker 11 (01:52:28):
Great, thank you very much for having me.

Speaker 1 (01:52:30):
There's a lot of unpacker on your background too, very
impressive and I just want to spend more time on
the book than talking about what your successful career is
all about. But what prompted you to get engaged in
and want to write this particular book. I think I
can draw my own conclusions on that, but this is
I mean, I'll talk about a disparate group of dangers
we're facing, as revealed in your title.

Speaker 11 (01:52:51):
Well, I'm a.

Speaker 12 (01:52:54):
Business analyst in the healthcare field for the last forty
five years, and I worked six stays a week on
healthcare until.

Speaker 7 (01:53:02):
Nine to eleven.

Speaker 11 (01:53:03):
When nine to eleven occurred, we were all shocked, and
I said to myself, I have to do something as
an individual, and so I started devoting one day a
week of my sixth to national security. Now twenty five
years later, I spend three days a week on national
security three days a week on healthcare. But it's the
same type of analysis. I look at the whole healthcare

(01:53:25):
field on the business side, and I look at all
issues involving national security on my public service side, and
so I do the two simultaneously. It's a little bit
of a trick, but I enjoy doing everything that I do.

Speaker 1 (01:53:40):
I think the public is generally either lacking an awareness
or chooses not to stay informed on the threats that
we face. But something we talk about all the time
on the fifty five case of the Morning Show, most
notably every Friday, do we do it a show called
tech Friday with our Dave Hatter as a computer expert.
We are constantly under attack. Come from a computer hack
the Iranians. That's what broke into the Trump campaign and

(01:54:03):
stole their information and tried to hand it over to
the Biden campaign. We have the most recent announcement by
FBI Director Ray about the China embedding hundreds of thousands
of Internet routers, and and and they're linked to all
of our government link operations, and just one more in
a long list of attacks. It's global. We're getting from

(01:54:25):
all sides. Is there anything we can really legitimately do
about this other than sort of I guess maintain heavy
computer security.

Speaker 11 (01:54:33):
Well, everything's interrelated with everything. So there's three groups of
bad guys who have declared war in America. Americans don't
know that, but trust me, we're in worlds with now
and we're fighting for our lives.

Speaker 7 (01:54:49):
So the.

Speaker 11 (01:54:51):
Three enemies I call COODE the Reds, the Greens, the
Blues the reds of the communists, that's China, Russia, North Korea.
The Greens are the inflements run in Qatar financing the
Mods and Brotherhood. And the blues color coded blue for
the United Nations color that's the the UN World Economic
Forum and the drug cartels. Those three color coded groups

(01:55:13):
of what I call criminal organizations or dictatorships have declared
war on the democracies. So I call it World three.
But it's different from World War one and two. World
for one and two were kinetic wars that means things
blow up and the war was over there. World War three,
to quote the Beatles, is here, there and everywhere. So
just because the map says that China's over there in irons,

(01:55:36):
you know, over there some other place, doesn't mean they're
not here. So the outside enemies are attacking us inside,
not really physically. That they use seven different techniques to
destroy our culture. They use physical war like World War two,
they use a cultural war.

Speaker 12 (01:55:57):
That's words, use.

Speaker 11 (01:56:00):
Chemical, biological war, economic war, legal, demographic, and cyber. So
if you look at three bad guys or groups of
bad guys and they use the seventh forms for warfare,
and you're multiply three times seven, we're actually fighting twenty
one mini wars in World War three. And that's why
it's so confusing.

Speaker 1 (01:56:21):
Well, I've linked the division in this country, and you
named quite a few of them, like, for example, the
cultural war. I always feel that that is being waged
by outside forces. They can fund organizations that sow the
seeds of division, they can get them out in the
street by paying them do so, and they attack what
has been what our social norms are I mean, the
idea that we're supposed to call a singular human being

(01:56:42):
by a pronoun they, to me, is a psychological problem.
You should seek counseling if you think you're a multiple entity,
because they suggest more than one thing. It's them, it's people,
it's multiples. So I mean that and of itself turns
society on its head, and we're struggling with having to
deal with this. I can't imagine a majority of Americans
are even close to anything, but a very small fraction

(01:57:05):
of the country really truly believes that's a good thing.
And yet we are inundata with that message and told
that no, no, no, you must do it.

Speaker 11 (01:57:13):
Yeah, you're getting to a very important point. Every time
there's something nonsensical going on in society, which is like
every hour, by the way, every time any of your listeners,
anytime I hear something that's nonsense, I say, wait a minute.
Americans are too smart to have created this nonsense. Which

(01:57:33):
of our foreign enemies, reds, Greens, and blues created this
nonsense and then injected it into our society through their
agents direct or indirect to create chaos in the country.
So you just picked one of many, many, many issues
that's creating chaos. But it's not American chaos. It's not
American induced chaos. It's foreign induced chaos that's been injected

(01:57:59):
into our society and we're suffering from this onslaught of
a nonsense, purposely nonsensical ideas from our foreign enemies.

Speaker 1 (01:58:09):
Well, I have to throw into the category also when
you mentioned green, now that you're gonna talk about the
wok ideology, that is, this whole idea that climate change
is somehow man made and we need to do everything
we can do eliminate carbon dioxide, which is plant food
from our world. We are exhaling every single day. So
I guess we're the problem. But that has directly impacted

(01:58:29):
the security the United States of America. We don't have
our own fuel sources. We won't drill, we won't be prepared,
we've drained the strategic petroylum oil reserve, all in the
name of what green. I think this is a war
that's being waged on us to keep us weak because
we can't generate our own power.

Speaker 11 (01:58:46):
So here's another good example. So when something nonsensical like
that happens, I say to myself and whose interest is
it of our foreign enemies to inject this nonsense into
our society and outlome Russia. Now, by the way, I
have no proof of this, Okay, I don't have foreign
agents working for myself. I just say to myself, Russia

(01:59:07):
wants to weaken our energy creation ability. They want to
get the price of oil and natural gas up so
that they can sell it at a higher price around
the world. So I say to myself, climate change. The
Russian KGB now called FSB fingerprints are.

Speaker 12 (01:59:24):
All over the place.

Speaker 11 (01:59:25):
And and so that's another good example of what I
would call a foreign induced idea to destroy America.

Speaker 1 (01:59:32):
Well, that also directly correlates with the idea and the
concept of maybe a physical war. China also benefits from
our weakness along those lines, and by by you know,
forcing us and and and and inducing us into these
crazy ideas and concepts. They benefit because they don't play
the same game. They still burn coil, they still consume

(01:59:52):
they still burn coal, they still consume vast quantities of oil,
They pollute more than anybody else, along with India. But
that they have an advantage by pushing the this agenda
behind the scenes, because it weakens us.

Speaker 11 (02:00:04):
That's right. Yeah, we're supposed to reduce our emissions, which
we were doing, by the way, at a very nice rate.
Whereas they're producing all the carbon emissions they can, they're
ignoring all the rules of the game. But I'll give
you another example. You had talked about the military DEI diversity,
equity inclusion. That's racist nonsense to get us to destroy

(02:00:26):
our meritocracy. People should get promoted because they deserve to
be promoted because they did a good job.

Speaker 12 (02:00:32):
I don't care what flavor of person you are.

Speaker 11 (02:00:34):
Has nothing to do with anything. Questions can you do
the job, and can you do the job better than somebody?
And we need a promotion, and you're getting the promotion
because of your abilities. So they're purposely injected. The Chinese
purposely injected DEI nonsense into our military so that our
military doesn't promote the best people, and we have a

(02:00:55):
we're moving to a mediocracy instead of a meritocracy in
our military. So again I look at Russian and Chinese
cutar prints all over the place.

Speaker 1 (02:01:07):
Well, and there's also the other area of the war demographic,
and I turned to our well borders collectively because they're
all wide open. This has dramatically changed the landscape of
the American population. And we can use Springfield, Ohio as
an example. We have a population of fifty eight thousand
getting twenty thousand Haitian immigrants over a very short period

(02:01:27):
of time. I do not have any concept of how
any community can manage that.

Speaker 11 (02:01:33):
Okay, this is another foreign induced nonsensical idea. Basically, all
of our enemies, the reds, of the Greens and the Blues,
injecting this nonsense into the Democrat Party so that they
have open borders, so that our enemies can invade the
country and then destroy our culture and then destroy us. Basically,

(02:01:55):
so another example of a foreign induced idea adopted by
the Democrat already to destroy the country.

Speaker 1 (02:02:01):
A guest today, Kenathy Brahma Wiz, author of the Multi
Front War, Defending America for Political Islam, trying Russia, pandemics,
and racial strife. All Right, we've identified a handful of
We could probably go on for hours and hours, sir,
but what can we do about it? You know, the
Republicans may try to, you know, plug up the border

(02:02:22):
holes and put up a wall and stop the influx
of humanity. That's a goal that can be accomplished, but
it's only one solution. We need a lot more. So
what are your recommendations for us, the American people?

Speaker 11 (02:02:35):
Well, remember I said we're fighting twenty one mini wars
in World War Three. Remember three bad guys, Red, Green,
and Blue, and seven forms of warfare. In other words,
mult supply three times seven. There's twenty one mini wars,
so we need twenty one mini strategies. It's not complicated
for each of the twenty one many wars. There is

(02:02:55):
a logical strategy that can be implemented in one month
to to act each of the twenty one fronts or
many fronts that we have. But you need management. You need,
as we say in business, you need adult supervision. Right now,
we have a country run by children and we need
to bring in the adults.

Speaker 1 (02:03:15):
Well, you can call. I didn't call and talk to
you looking for an argument. Clearly, I guess. The other
component of the physical war part is if you look
at the situation between Russia and Ukraine, it is pushing
these otherwise separate entities China, Russia and North Korea Iran.
They are being pushed together to join, in essence, joined

(02:03:36):
forces that didn't this relationship didn't exist, or at least
wasn't a very strong one prior to these situation deteriorating
in the Middle East. But it's growing and they're getting
closer and closer together. That's a very big concern for me.

Speaker 11 (02:03:49):
Yes, and we're fighting three physical wars simultaneously. We don't
know that, but we are. So we're helping US support
Ukraine fight Russia. We're helping us support Israel fighter run
all of its proxy of five hundred thousand worldwide terraces.
And we're we're helping Taiwan not fight, but almost fight China.

(02:04:09):
So we're we're fighting. That's on the kinetic side. We're
fighting three uh two major wars and one incipient war,
and so you need more. We need more bombs, we
need we need more soldiers, we need more everything to
fight on the physical front while we're simultaneously fighting on
all the other.

Speaker 12 (02:04:30):
Fronts with other forms.

Speaker 1 (02:04:32):
I guess they're gonna have to get rid of the
de I in America's military because that is a huge
impediment to a voluntary military. And we all know the
numbers of recruits are down, and they're way down, and
we can't fight a physical war without soldiers.

Speaker 10 (02:04:46):
You got it.

Speaker 11 (02:04:47):
That's exactly true.

Speaker 1 (02:04:48):
That's a quick fix too, isn't it, Matthew Kenneth. Anyway,
your book is.

Speaker 11 (02:04:57):
As complicated as everything is. There's quick fixes for each
of the twenty one challenges that we have, and it's
all in my book The Multifront War, where I monitored
all of these different challenges and came up to solutions
for all of them real quick.

Speaker 1 (02:05:14):
Here, you just prompted me to think of something else
to ask you before we part company here today, Kenneth,
do you many elected officials are against any of the
reforms that you suggest, like, for example, closing the border?
Are they are they in league with either? Are they
nefarious or stupid? Maybe that's a better way of phrasing
the question.

Speaker 11 (02:05:34):
By the way, I ask myself the same thing. When
you have a public official that does something dumb, I say,
are they doing this because they're dumb and naive? Or
are they doing it because they're smart and evil? So
it's a combination of the two. But in general, for
our political enemies, roughly half the country, ten percent of

(02:05:56):
them are smart and evil, ninety percent are stupid and
useful idiots.

Speaker 1 (02:06:01):
Yes, I knew that was coming useful idiots concept widely
known to my listening audience. Kenneth A. Rama. WIT's wonderful
talking with you. Thanks for writing the book, which my
listeners can get on my blog pages a link right there,
The Multifront War Defending America from Political Islam, China, Russia,
pandemics and racial strife. Kenneth Ramowitz, it's been a pleasure
speaking with you today. Keep up the great work, my friend.

Speaker 11 (02:06:22):
Thank you very much in mishall. Also look at my website.
Oh yeah, yeah, the West dot Com dot com. I
write an article every two weeks. As soon as they
say sign up, they get the article as a public service.

Speaker 1 (02:06:33):
I'm remissing some my obligation as a host because I'm
staring at the page as we were talking. So yes,
savethe West dot Com. I hope we get to talk again. Kennethy,
It's been really a pleasure today.

Speaker 11 (02:06:45):
Whenever you want nice talking to you today, take.

Speaker 1 (02:06:47):
Care a twenty right now, think about kc Detalk station.
Phone lines open if you care to call make a comment.
I'd love to hear from We've got a lot of
topics to get through between now and the end of
the show. But first of course a word for Colin Electric.
My friend Andrew Cullen has got a fantastic it's the
team of electricians. You'll be impressed. I have been many
many projects Color Electrics done for me over the years,
or my wife and me, and they always do great

(02:07:08):
electric work. The price is always right. They're very very
great at customer service, very respectful of your home. Project
will be done like a well oil machine, and they
will leave you with a ten year wiring warranty on
anything they're doing for you, from the smallest project to
the largest, anything in between. Cullen are the folks with
the right connections. So call Colin Electric at five one
three two two seven four one one two five one

(02:07:30):
three two two seven four one one two A plus
with a better business bureau Online. You'll find them at
Cullen c U L E N. Colin Electric Cincinnati dot
com fifty five KRC. We're just hours away from our
twenty twenty four.

Speaker 6 (02:07:43):
I heard.

Speaker 1 (02:07:45):
Time for a nine first on the Forecast's gonna be
hot today, sunny skies ninety three for the high. Overnight
low is sixty eight, partly cloudy skies and'll be partly
cloud tomorrow as well. Ninety three again overnight sixty nine
clouds and a cloudy Sunday, but it comes along with
a hopeful chance of shower and thunderstorms. Meet that rain
will be high eighty five. Then right now it's sixty five.
Time for traffic from the U see how traffic center.

Speaker 5 (02:08:06):
The University of Cincinnati Cancer Center has up been the
most comprehensive blood cancer center in the nation.

Speaker 1 (02:08:12):
The future of cancer care is here called five one three,
five eighty five.

Speaker 5 (02:08:16):
U see su see sapbound seventy one slow from the
later up to an accident near taff where the right
plane is blocked off and if the late times have
dropped of it that they gave you back that right
center lane rex clear northbound fourth seventy one up Memorials.

Speaker 1 (02:08:31):
The traffic still heaving into town.

Speaker 5 (02:08:33):
There's an accident on fifth and Broadway camber in fifty
five krze the talk station.

Speaker 1 (02:08:40):
Hey twenty eight fifty five Karosene he talk station. Hope
you're having a great day. Hope you have a great
weekend too. I'm celebrating my fifty ninth birthday. At the
end of my fifties is fast approaching, and it's gotta
cut me down just a little bit. But you know,
BEATSAPA beats the alternative, I presume. Over to the phones,

(02:09:01):
we go five on three, seven, eight hundred and eighty
two to three. Talk were well, get the local stories
and talk to Sue. Sue, thanks for calling this morning.

Speaker 14 (02:09:09):
Well, good morning, happy Friday.

Speaker 1 (02:09:11):
Right back at you.

Speaker 14 (02:09:13):
So I am a veteran. My husband's a veteran, my niece,
my nephew, my brother. We have a lot of veterans
in my family and some active duty still. And in
light of Kamala's comment at the debate about no active
duty serving in war zones and Tim Walls's bs about

(02:09:37):
serving in a forward area, I drive past this sign
every day in Oxford and it's a vets for Harris
in their yard. And I mean most of the time, yes, everyone,
they're signs. It's okay, But I swear I want to
get out of my car and go up there and
pound them over the.

Speaker 11 (02:09:57):
Head with it and say how could you?

Speaker 12 (02:09:58):
I know, I know, what is why with you?

Speaker 7 (02:10:02):
Why?

Speaker 3 (02:10:03):
Well?

Speaker 1 (02:10:03):
You know the quick answer to the pops into my
head is, you know, thank God for you serving our country,
and thanks for them for serving our country, assuming they
actually did but just because you served our country doesn't
mean you're smart. You pay attention, you understand how point
A gets the point being on forward, and that you know,
voting for Kamala Harris is not in your best interest
for a number of reasons, not the least of which

(02:10:25):
is certainly not going to benefit America's military. You know,
I mean, they are ignorant people everywhere, and I don't
know how else to address that, but it seems so
contradictory for an American veteran to be a Democrat. They're
not in favor of freedoms. They want to curtail them.
They want to regulate us out of existence. They're causing
our energy prices to go up, and just go on
for hours and hours and hours about how harmful they are,

(02:10:47):
and of course that was the subject matter the author's book.
I just got done talking with Sue. You know, it's.

Speaker 14 (02:10:53):
Man, it's frustrating. I tell you, I actually live in Indiana,
and I work and do a lot of my things
in Oxford and everywhere I go outside of this bubble,
it's nothing but Trump advance. But you come into Oxford
and it's just a haven.

Speaker 1 (02:11:12):
Well it is a college community too, we all know
how those young people tend to lean from the left.
He who is not from a youth from the left
as a youth is not has no heart. He who's
not from the right as an adult has no brain.
Old adage. It's solid as it was one hundred and
fifty two hundred years ago.

Speaker 14 (02:11:28):
So it's just a scary thing about education though it is.

Speaker 1 (02:11:33):
So just to counter it just a little bit, try
living in Chicago for eight years like I did. You
want to feel like a fish out of water on
island in your own community.

Speaker 12 (02:11:43):
It's you can a military base up there too, then
you know what.

Speaker 1 (02:11:49):
I'm talking about.

Speaker 11 (02:11:50):
I do.

Speaker 1 (02:11:51):
God bless you and thank you and every member of
your family and everybody else who served our country. It
means the world to me that you did that. So
appreciate you. Tell Colin in this morning as well. Folks
you want to call in, you can't seven four nine
fifty five hundred, eight hundred eight two three talk pound
five fifty on AT and T Funds. Interesting story this
one out of Kentucky. They have a sheriff that's been
charged with murder. This made national news. Charged with the

(02:12:12):
murder of a local district court judge. Kentucky State Police
reported at about three o'clock yesterday afternoon got a nine
to one one call from the Letcher County Courthouse regarding
shots being fired from inside the building. Law enforcement agencies
and emergency services showed up and they located District Judge
Kevin Mullins, who underscore was fifty four and multiple gunshot

(02:12:34):
wounds and obviously life saving measures were unsuccessful. Give when
I phrase that so? Uh? Mullins was pronounced dead on
the scene by the Electric County Corner's Office. Kentucky State
Police's plminary investigation indicates that Elector County Sheriff Sean Mickey
Steins shot Mullins following an argument inside the courthouse. Stein's

(02:12:55):
taken the custody at the scene and without incident. It's
been charged with one kind of first degree murder. Wow
Stein's elected sheriff Elector County in twenty eighteen, re elected
in twenty twenty two. Attorney General Russell Coleman announced that
his office will collaborate with a Commonwealth's Attorney for the
twenty seventh Judicial Circuit, Jackie Steele, as a special prosecutor

(02:13:16):
in the case. Call or called me this morning because
they don't explain why or what argument led to this,
and there's a rumor around that town that this is
the suggestion from the listener. I'm just telling you what
I was told he heard because he's his I guess
brother's friends with someone in the courthouse or maybe even
the sheriff. The sheriff was a little upset about his

(02:13:40):
seventeen year old daughter maybe having a relationship with the
late judge, in which case I think I might understand
that on some level, but don't take the law in
your own hands like that. And I'm sure the sheriff
knows it. Maybe a little bit emotional though, since I
Metro Area, this is rather interesting coming from the Cincinna

(02:14:00):
acquires Randy Tucker Sin say Metro Era could add more
than six hundred thousand new residents over the next twenty
five years, but the area will have to see a
sharp uptick in ready immigration and more young college educated
workers deciding to stay put to achieve that, what he
calls lofty goal. Court to the sincin a USA Regional

(02:14:21):
Chambers twenty twenty four State of the Region report released
earlier this week. The report, for the first time, they
say for forecast population growth by the county in the
fifteen county metro area, outlining the macroeconomic trends driving or
undermining the projections following under three scenario baseline baseline projection

(02:14:41):
showing the population growth by county understatus quo conditions, They
have a low growth projection the negative implications for regulatory
land use, trade, immigration, and other policies, and then a
high growth which projection showing what each county's future might
look like under policies that encourage immigration, tourism, and higher
quality of life for residents und that forecast. The high
growth forecast, the region as a whole would add six

(02:15:03):
hundred and twelve thousand new residents by twenty fifty, with
Hamilton County leading the way with a game of one
hundred and forty three thousand. Warren and Butler would see
the next biggest gains one hundred and thirty eight thousand
plus and one hundred and sixteen almost one hundred and
seventeen thousand, respectively, the other baseline projection than low growth
projections as well. The Chamber report shows the most Cincinnati

(02:15:26):
area immigrants are from number one India, sixteen thousand, Mexico,
ten thousand, five hundred China and just under ten thousand.
Guatemala had almost six thousand, Philippines at about four thirty
four hundred, Vietnam thirty two hundred, Canada thirty one hundred,
United Kingdom twenty six hundred, Bootan twenty four hundred, in

(02:15:48):
Japan twenty two hundred. So just going back to my
conversation earlier this morning with Jonathan Pearson running for a
county commissioner against the leisurees. Of course Hamilton Countanese become
a more welcoming environment for businesses generally, and there are
ways to go about that. We need to lower the
cost of doing business in Hamilton County eight thirty six.
If you have CACD talk station, feel free to call.

(02:16:10):
Otherwise I'll go a different direction. I don't know which
direction yet. I'll figure that out in a moment. Because
first I want to mention my friend Suzette Low's Camp.
You want somebody that knows mortgages like the back of
her hand, that's Suseette Lows Camp. She's been in the
mortgage business more than thirty five years. One time I
say that I can't believe because I know Suseette really well,
she just doesn't. She can't be old enough to have
thirty five years experience. What I do know if that's Susette,

(02:16:33):
is that she's with Cross Country Mortgage, which means any
state in the Union. She can help you get a
mortgage or deal with mortgage related issues like you know,
getting equity out of your home, first time buyer issues
like my daughter. She worked with Suzette my daughter. It
got financing and locked in that whole situation. I think
it was like just two days. She's very efficient at
what she does. She never charges a junk fear and
application fee. It's always great rates at the low cost.

(02:16:55):
And I will tell you there's not a possibility that
someone in the mortgage business could be better at customer Sorry,
you can call her right now. She'll get back with
you very quickly. She's great about that. Five one three
three one three fifty one seventy six five one three
three one three fifty one seventy six. Shoot her emails
should get right back on that as well. She's that
dot Low's camp. Los Ekamp is that dot Low's camp

(02:17:15):
at CCM dot com. Fifty five KRC your idea for
first forty one to four cast says hot.

Speaker 7 (02:17:22):
That's about what it says.

Speaker 1 (02:17:23):
Literally ninety three degrees under sunny skies. That's hot to
me anyway. Overnight low sixty eight with some clouds, ninety
three with partly cloudy skies. Tomorrow down to sixty nine
overnight clouds and a mostly cloudy Sunday. Fingers crossed for
the possible showers and thunderstorms. High eighty five. Then right
now it's sixty five. Hyper Traffic from the UCL Tranfic Center.

Speaker 5 (02:17:42):
The University of Cincinnati Cancer Center is open, the most
comprehensive blood cancer center in the nation. The future of
cancer cares here called five one three five eighty five
u SECC.

Speaker 1 (02:17:52):
Cruise continue to work with the recks.

Speaker 5 (02:17:54):
I've found seventy one near tamp Traffic heavy from the
lateral over a fifteen minute delay. North four seventy one
continues to improve after problems earlier at Memorial. That's a
wreck downtown at Fifth and Broadway. Chuck Ingram on fifty
five k see the talk station.

Speaker 1 (02:18:12):
It's eight forty here, fifty five krc DE talk station. Friday.
I dearly love Fridays. I do love when people call
it too. We're going to go straight to the phones.
I got Jim on the line with a comment, Jim,
thanks for calling this morning, and happy Friday to.

Speaker 15 (02:18:26):
You here, Moring Grin, Happy Friday, thanks brother. I I
just can't believe that people Hamilton County and the idiots
that they elected are that's stupid to spend twice as
much on upgrades to this stupid stadium as they paid
for the thing in the first place.

Speaker 7 (02:18:43):
I think.

Speaker 12 (02:18:44):
I think Mike Brown and all his people.

Speaker 15 (02:18:47):
Ought to be running around town in stocking mass because
there are a bunch of fees.

Speaker 12 (02:18:52):
There's no way that there's no way that people should
be paying for this crap quid.

Speaker 1 (02:18:56):
Pulling your punches, Jim, tell us how you really feel.
I'm with you, brother, I am with you all day
long on that I looked at when I first saw
the report on this upgrade. We're talking upgrades here, people,
one point two five billion with a bee that we
are going to be on the hook for probably half
of at least, I mean, under the terms of conditions
of the original lease agreement, which is still operating, we

(02:19:19):
could even be on the hook for more than that.
Although I understand the Brown family realizes it's a big
ask for the taxpayers under these difficult, troubled economic times
we find ourselves in to have them us pay all
that money for the upgrades. And what are you getting
a new business office and an upgrade to the practice field.

(02:19:39):
I mean, is that even part of the statement. I
talked about that with Jason Williams the other day, the
sports writer for the SINS. I inquire, and you know,
Jason's like, wait a second, We're supposed to pay for
stadium upgrades, not the practice field and building a new
office building for the Brown family and the people who
run the Bengals. I mean, come on, anyway, Jim, thank
you for setting me off. I'm with you all day
long on that. It's terrible ask. Couldn't come in a

(02:20:03):
worse time. All struggling mightily with our finances. Eddie how
provided to me an opportunity talking about stupid and the
things that cost a lot of money. Get a load
of this, and everybody knows I'm no ev fan.

Speaker 7 (02:20:16):
I am.

Speaker 1 (02:20:17):
I never want to own one, and the only way
I'll ever own one unless they regulate the internal combustion
engine out of existence by criminalizing the ownership of it,
and which they may very well do someday. But EV's
obviously come with consequences. One of the things we learned
about EV's is they are actually big polluters. Why well,
because they go through tires a lot more quickly than
a regular car. The weight of the EV, the amount

(02:20:40):
of torque, which is amazing. I will give props all
day long for the performance of EV vehicles in terms
of zero to sixty and the amount of torque they
they unleash because it's instantaneous. It's that, you know, the
torque is what's that you know, the bottom of the
the bottom of the seat field where you shoved back
into the into the driver's seat. Because of the acceleration, well,

(02:21:00):
causes the tires to burn up a lot more quickly,
which is more pollution. And of course tires last time
I checked, made out of petroleum products. But it goes
beyond that. It goes beyond the pollution and the tearing
up of the globe to extract the necessary minerals that
go to the batteries, the manufacturing process which belches out

(02:21:22):
all kinds of pollution, the shipping costs which belch out
all kinds of pollution.

Speaker 3 (02:21:26):
We go on and on and on and on.

Speaker 7 (02:21:27):
And on.

Speaker 1 (02:21:29):
I find out there's a new study out because they
weighed so much. Researchers from the University's University of let
Us see here Nebraska, Lincoln. They have a Midwest roadside
safety facility there. There's a problem in a study sponsored
by the US Army Engineer Research and Development Center, done

(02:21:49):
by this the department of the university. They conducted what
they're calling a first of its kind crash test of
an Evy pickup into a guardrail, you know this concrete
guardrails that divide the highways. Those test used a seven
forty eight Rivian R one T truck that's a twenty

(02:22:10):
twenty two calendar year truck model year that they drove
into a barrier, those common barriers we all drive by
at a speed of sixty miles per hour, which of
course is a natural highway speed. They show the ev
completely blasting through the guard rail and launching over the
concrete wall, sending chunks of it flying cord to the report.

(02:22:35):
R one t's immense weight largely attributed to its one
hundred and thirty five kilowatt battery pack, which brings the
vehicles way to a ton more two thousand pounds more
than f ford F one fifty super cab cord to
one of the study directors, there is some urgency to

(02:22:55):
address this issue as the percentage of evs on the
road increase, of the proportion of runoff road crash involving
evs will increase in well increase as well. Even though
the impact of the concrete block did bring the pickup
truck to a halt, it was only after several of
the five thousand pound barriers were pushed back ten feet,

(02:23:15):
which is fifty percent more than a average truck would
have done it. They said the safety barriers and guardrails
are typically used testing the vehicles weigh themselves between twenty
four hundred and five thousand pounds, of course, significantly lighter
than EV's which weigh twenty percent to fifty percent more
than gas powered cars. And they pointed out that EV
runoff road rates or is just as average as the

(02:23:37):
regular car. So the more evs on the road, the
more of these situations we're going to have out there
unfolding on our roads, obviously presenting a massive danger. So
they conclude, quote it's going to be necessary to re
examine the designs of roadside barriers even beyond evs. It's
a critical and timely need. So add that to the

(02:23:58):
list of stuff and things we need to do in
orduke we'll reach zero exhalation, which is a lie in
and of itself, given the manufacturing process of the electric vehicles.
Also note a growing number of those vehicles being made
in China, where they don't have any pollution restrictions. So
while we cut our throats and try to not exhale,
they're busily producing more carbon than we take out of

(02:24:19):
the environment following these crazy regulations. What is the point
of this exercise? Maybe I'll go back to Kenneth the
Brahmowitz book and his point that man, maybe ten percent
of our elected officials are actually in bed with our
enemies the multi front war defending America from political Islam, China, Russia, pandemics,
and racial strife. One of the weapons those groups use

(02:24:40):
against US is having us chase our tail to achieve
zero emissions. Ten percent of our elected officials are in
league with those folks. The other ninety percent who push
for this he described as I would useful idiots eight
forty seven to fifty five KRC the talk station. Jeff,
Now I'm going to mention you because Jeff took my
advice and he reached out to COVER since he Jeff

(02:25:02):
is a business owner. And he sent me an email
the other day because Cover, since he did a complete
analysis of each one of his employees and he has
found out that he is going to save a heap
load of money. And he wrote me yesterday said, I
feel kind of bad that I never investigated the Cover
since the earlier I could have saved my employees some
serious money even earlier, had I gotten off my bottom

(02:25:25):
and got this rolling a long time ago. He finally
did it. He made the call to Cover since he
and now he is a happy man saving thousands and
thousands of dollars. He's going to have infinitely happier employees
because they're going to have better medical insurance for less money.
That's what Covers since he is all about. They work
with hundreds of insurance companies thousands of policies. They create
a package of insurance policies that cover things like, you know,

(02:25:48):
dollar one coverage for your regular visits to the doctor
and things one hundred percent coverage for hospital visits, emergency serves.
All that it's an individual analysis. They take the time
to work with every single employee, and you're all going
to be happy. Initiate the conversation. It doesn't cost you
anything and there's no obligation to talk to them.

Speaker 7 (02:26:04):
It's five.

Speaker 1 (02:26:04):
It's five one three eight hundred two two five five
five one three eight hundred call learn more about cover
Sincy and fill out the form online to get the
process started. It's Coversinc. Dot Com. Fifty five KRC Men.
If you're suffering from a rectitle dysfunction or pe proactive
Men's Medical Center, We'll get your sex life back.

Speaker 7 (02:26:24):
In just.

Speaker 1 (02:26:28):
Eight fifty one fifty five KR detalk station, Happy Friday jokes,
geez rest, clue phonec wonderful world in the If you

(02:26:53):
have a wonderful weekend and I can over to fifty
five KRC dot com or get your iHeart Medium stick
benstream the audio wherever you happen to be. Tech Friday
with Dave Hatter. This morning, Ford seeking the patent listening
devices for inside their cars so they are listening to
you while you're driving around for the purposes of feeding
you ads. Dave, I'm never going to buy a Ford

(02:27:15):
marketing firm, apparently using your cell phone microphone to spin.
In your conversation, you had some great recommendations how to
protect yourself from doing that. Basically, don't allow your apps
to have permission to use your microphone. If they don't
have permission to use your microphone, apparently they can't use it.
And on one of the breaks. Since then, I found
out how to do that on my phone. If you
go to settings and then you look at your applications,

(02:27:38):
each application will be listed there. Click on any given
app and then they'll tell you where your permissions are,
what permissions that app has. And because I've taken Dave
Hatter's advice and I have very few apps in my phone.
None of them with the exception of one which I
allow it to have because I need it to for function,
none of them have permission to use my microphone. So
there's a little helpful hint from Dave Hatter. We also
talked about cryptocurrent and see scams and yes they're out there.

(02:28:02):
So podcast that Jonathan Pearson was on. He's a candidate
for commissioner here in Hamilton County runn up against Alesia Reese.
Sounds like a good guy. I know he's got the
Republican Party endorsement. So here what Jonathan had to say,
and of course Charles tasseled with the gun buy back
this weekend. It's taking place on Saturday, and it's an
important event. If you know where one of those community
guns is what they call them are those are the

(02:28:24):
ones that they share. You know, the bad guys get
a hold of a gun, they hide at someplace, they
use it, they put it back in the place so
everybody else in the community can use it. If you
know where one of those is, great opportunity to turn
that firearm in, or any other firearm or ammunition you've got.
They'll take it all. That's what it's all about. Just
get them off the street and you don't have to
worry about it. No information we've taken down. You'll basically

(02:28:46):
remain anonymous. Nobody's gonna charge you with bringing in a
stolen firearm. And it's really important timing for this one.
As Charles pointed out, there was those gun store break
ins and more than one hundred guns were stolen. Now
the youth it was a bunch of youths stole the guns.
They were arrested, but apparently they sold them or got
rid of them before they were arrested. So there's one

(02:29:08):
hundred didittional guns out in the world, and many of them,
apparently I guess, had their serial numbers filed off. I
don't know, the point being it's Saturday between ten am
and one pm. Prospect Place, six thirteen Prospect Place in Cincinnati.
The details are on my blog page for Drivecarresey dot
com and get yourself a copy of Kenneth Abramowitz's book,
The Multifront War Defending America from Political Islam, China, Russia,

(02:29:30):
Pandemic's racial strife and also Votes Smart Again.

Speaker 7 (02:29:36):
You know this.

Speaker 1 (02:29:37):
Kenneth concludes that I have for years. There are elected
officials that have no interest in preserving the freedoms and
liberties we have here in the United States of America.
Those are the nefarious actors that are out there. But
as he pointed out, those nefarious actors exist outside the
United States. They are everywhere our foes loves during the
pot of division along multiple lines, and he did a

(02:29:59):
great job of break done the three primary foes as
well as these seven different battles that are currently being waged,
and only one category is a physical war battle. The
balance of them are in other areas like cultural divisions
and sewing them to deceive the division across all wines,
and a lot of our elected officials embrace the division

(02:30:19):
that those crazy ideas bring about. Those are either nefarious
people or stupid people. Anyway, the books right there, fifty
five KC dot com get try I hurt me the
app while you're over there, and you can listen wherever
you happen to be at any time of day. I
hope you have a wonderful weekend. I am celebrating my
birthday tomorrow. I'm not happy about turning forty of fifty nine,
but next year's probably gonna be worse. Oh well, time

(02:30:42):
marches on. Joe Track, our executi producer of the program,
thank you very much for everything you do for the
fifty five KRC Morning Show. Really appreciate you and couldn't
do the show without you, as everybody knows. I hope
you have a wonderful day, wonderful weekends. Stick around Glenbex
coming right up here about it. The United States will
not be today.

Speaker 7 (02:31:00):
Hey, migrants camp.

Speaker 9 (02:31:01):
Get the latest at the top of the hour fifty
five krs the talk station.

Speaker 1 (02:31:06):
This report

Brian Thomas News

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