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September 23, 2024 • 151 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:02):
Five O five.

Speaker 2 (00:05):
A fifty five K see the talk station happen Mondays?

Speaker 1 (00:19):
Will dude may abide? I usually do not.

Speaker 2 (00:28):
Brian Thomas right here, glad to be glad to see
j Just Trecker, Orry Blong, the second producer of the program,
man looking on the rundown. I always enjoying Mondays, if
for no other reason than Christopher Smithman uh and Monday
Monday's Brian James Smith had seven thirty former vice mayor
of the City of Cincinnati, with the Smither vent. I
don't know what he's going to be venting about, but
I always enjoy hearing it. And Brian James today able
to talk about stocks poised for a September gain. One

(00:52):
in four gen zers say they will not have kids
because of finances. Of course, our popular rate is dropping,
at least in terms of traditional baby having babies, you
know the replace. We weren't even replacing our own population,
which is one of the reasons behind I think this
unregulated influx of illegal immigrants, which is starting to really

(01:14):
piss people off. Finally, chickens coming home to roost across
this country of ours, Folks paying very close attention to
the realities of the unchecked, unregulated illegal immigrant influx, including
a rather comical, yet said at the same time article
I'd probably get at least some of this later. It

(01:36):
was Fox News reporting gang members and four gang members
in Chicago talking about how this is, this is not
going to turn out. Well, the entrenched gangs in Chicago,
and trust me, they've been there a long time. You know,
my wife and I lived there between ninety and ninety eight,

(01:56):
and you know, you had the Cribs, you had the Bloods,
you had all these different groups, and they were pretty
much everywhere. Latin Kings. That was another big one, Vice Lords.
I'd forgotten about that. When gangster Disciples were big in Chicago,
and there's another group called Satan Disciples.

Speaker 1 (02:11):
I didn't recall them.

Speaker 2 (02:12):
They may have cropped up since we lived there, but
they traditionally controlled all these inner city areas and they
were a prominent threat. If you look at the crime
stats back for that windnow of time, the number of
shootings and murders was actually and that may have surpassed
it by now. I know that the urban crime rates
are up in spite of what your federal officials will
tell you. There's some better statistics and data out there

(02:33):
showing you that urban crime has gone through the roof
pretty damn significantly too. But it was really bad between
ninety and ninety eight. That was when you had the
crack cocaine epidemic and you know turf wars and the like.
But now those gangs are looking at the infiltration of
the Venezuelan gangs and are concerned about it. They're very

(02:56):
upset that the immigrant population or migrant popular, illegal or
otherwise are getting all the resources. And the folks that
have been living in that community, whether they're gang bangers
or not, have been well mistreated by comparison. And one
guy's talking about bloodshed. Guy named Mohammed Tyrone Muhammad, former

(03:18):
gang banger. He's fifty three. He just got out of
prison and I guess twenty years he served in prison
for murder. But he runs a street patrol and violence
prevention program now called x cons for Social Change Gone Straight.
He's out there in the community doing work, trying to
convince people there's a better way, I guess, he said.
Venezue of the criminal gangs flooding shelters and taking over

(03:40):
apartment buildings the last straw for struggling African American communities
saying that they are furious at seeing all this government
morning money going to what they call non citizens. Is
his quote, it's impossible to release gang members and criminals
into our country through the borders and broken walls and
infiltrate them in our country that's already impoverished and broken.

(04:02):
And I'm sure given where he lives, in his perception
and what he has seen throughout his life, he does
believe that the area is impoverished and broken.

Speaker 1 (04:11):
Probably a lot to be said about that quote.

Speaker 2 (04:15):
When the black gangs here get fed up with the
illegalities and criminal activities of these migrants or non citizens,
the city of Chicago is going to go up in
flames and there will be nothing the National Guard or
the government can do about it. When the bloodshed hits
the streets, it will be blacks against migrants.

Speaker 1 (04:37):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (04:37):
And if you've been paying any attention to this, you
know there's this whole demographic argument, and the black people
feel like they're being slighted when it comes by comparison
to the say, Latin American population, which is increasing in
our country. So throw on a whole bunch of illegal
immigrant Venezuelans and you exacerbate the problem, most notably when
those illegal immigrants have organized gang are involved in organized gangs,

(05:00):
and these gangs are quickly organizing in a bunch of
cities across this country. They come with a built in
organizational structure. You take them out of Venezuela. They're all
members of the gang in Venezuela. Not every Venezuela is
a member of the gang. All the gang members who
have come from Venezuela into our country are already interconnected.
They don't have to create and build from scratch this

(05:23):
organizational structure, and of course it's easy to communicate between
one another. This poses a threat to the already existing
organized structure of the gangs that already exist in Chicago.
Now they're disparate. They are not coordinated. You know, the
crips and the Bloods or the Satan Disciples and the
vice lords and the Black Pea Stones and gangster disciples

(05:45):
aren't working together, right. They're the ones that used to
fight each other. But you know, when I was reading this,
I thought to myself, hmm, what's happened over the past
decade relative to the United States and its allies. And
it's so you start a war in Ukraine. It's a
proxy war. The Western nations are funding it. Russia is

(06:06):
fighting against Ukrainians, and in essence, the Western nations and
they joined forces with the Iranians and the Chinese and
the North Koreans. They're all now sharing the wealth and
most importantly the weaponry. They weren't together before and now
they are even do enjoyed military exercises. So that's, you know,

(06:27):
on a global scale. You can see what our foreign
policy has created by way of pushing otherwise don't play
necessarily nicely together or you know, folks with you know,
competing interests, pushing those groups together to make a collective
force against us. That'll be the United States and our allies.

(06:49):
Now you get a bunch of Venezuelan's coming in there,
and they're all members of this one particular gang, the
Trendy Iragua Gang, and they are taking over migrant shelters
and they are engaging in a just an amazing amount
of criminal activity, including child trafficking that's intruding on the
well the trade that with the disparate gangs of Chicago

(07:10):
had a monopoly on for so long. Might that just
might Mohammed be correct in suggesting it's going to be bloodshed.
It's going to be Black gangs against Venezuelan gangs, and
the black gangs. You know, the enemy of my enemy
is my friend. They all have a collective interest in
beating back the Venezuelan gangs from taking over their neighborhood
and taking over their drug territory and everything else they're

(07:32):
involved in terms of criminal activity. This happens all the
time throughout the world's history. The enemy of my enemy
is my friend. So while you might have the Latin
Kings and the Satan Disciples not shooting each other, what
you'll have then is the Latin Kings, Satan Disciples, unified
gang collectively working to go after illegal immigrants in Chicago.

(07:56):
And do you think they'd be limited to attacking illegal
immigrants in Chicago that are merely gang members or might
that carnage go beyond? I think you know where I where.
I believe it's gonna go. Frightening stuff, right, I mean
very frightening stuff. And it's all about the Democrat policies.

(08:20):
And I just I'm just in awe of the Democrats
who are running for reelection or Kamala Harris running away
from what they expouse for so many years. Well, we've
been living through since the Obama administration, you know, with
the minor brag for Trump's four years. And now you've got,
you know, Joe Biden and his liberal leftist policies, and

(08:40):
you look out in the world and they're all hiding
from them. Kamala Harris, you can't even get her to
stick with anything. She previously would out loud regularly support
anti fracking, defund the police, you know, gang bailing out
gang members after they've been arrested. Andrew Cuomo, Democrat, former
New York Governor. Andrew after endorsing Vice President Kamala Harris

(09:05):
for president the other day, She's going to unite the Democrats.
She's going to bring new energy. Really, he followed up with,
and because the opponent is Donald Trump and we've seen
that and we're not going back there again. Therein lies
the rub He can't find anything positive to say about

(09:25):
Kamala Harris, although except for, you know, smart, qualified, going
to unite, whatever that means, and that's a wing in
a prayer, hope. And if you believe she's smart and qualified,
go ahead. I have property I want to sell you.
Then he went on to say the truth, things are

(09:46):
getting worse, not better. Huh after three and a half
plus years, things are getting worse. And that's kind of
saying the quiet part out loud now, isn't it. And
I think it's time that we take a fresh look
and a new perspective when we look at what's going on.

Speaker 1 (10:05):
Today.

Speaker 2 (10:06):
We have great political argument on the Democrats side, who
was more progressive. I don't even think they know what
the word means progressive. You cannot be a progressive if
you don't make progress. Wow, He said, the United States
is going backwards thanks to progressive policies. Quote, some people

(10:26):
think it's progressive to say defund the police. Yes, in theory,
if everybody had an education and everybody had a job,
nobody would need to commit crime. I get the theory,
but it's not that simple. And here's the knock it
out of the park grand slam. Defund the police are

(10:46):
the three dumbest words ever uttered in politics. Then he
called out the release of migrants in New York York City,
pointing out that well, we can't have one hundred thousand
migrants coming intos New York City and only New York City,

(11:09):
nowhere else in the state of New York, only New
York City, and leave it up all up to New
York City to pay for hotels, pay for healthcare over
ten billion dollars. No plan by the federal government, i e.
The Biden Harris administration, or as we now know that
the Harris Biden administration, and Biden doesn't refer to Joe
Biden first out of Jill Biden.

Speaker 1 (11:31):
I guess, no.

Speaker 2 (11:32):
Plan by the federal government, no real help from the state.
Now that is an indictment of Yes, Kamala Harris's open
borders policy, is it not. They're living the reality. We
were idiots for defunding the police. We were idiots for
embracing the whole Black Lives Matter thing. We were in
idiots for saying we're a sanctuary city. See, all of

(11:53):
that is not with the words he said. But certainly
this is an out loud in the implication of that.
But he did say some pretty powerful words out loud.
Progressive policies are bad for humanity. Five seventeen ffty five
KHCY talk station Tim and mister Tuba's on the phone too.

(12:15):
Thank you to everybody who wished me happy birthday. It
was such an awesome thing. I had a wonderful birthday weekend.

Speaker 1 (12:21):
So thanks to.

Speaker 2 (12:22):
Everybody Cover Sense, you're gonna have an awesome day when
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Sense about your medical insurance, because more than likely they're
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My friend Jeff has a small business and he has
found a new way, and he says, you know, darn it,
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The only regret you're gonna have as he didn't do
it sooner. He got in touch with the team at

(12:43):
cover since he and they did an analysis of every
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dollars with better medical insurance coverage. Again, jeez, I just
wish I'd have done this years ago. Cover since he
works with hundreds of sure insurance companies and has access
to thousands of for medical insurance policies.

Speaker 1 (13:01):
But they don't work for them. They work for you.

Speaker 2 (13:04):
You are a You're their client and they have a
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So they really do a deep dive on what you've got,
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(13:27):
They have They know more about medical insurance than anybody
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Speaker 3 (13:45):
Dot com fifty five krs.

Speaker 2 (13:48):
Five one three seven four nine fifty five hundred, eight
hundred and eight two three talk order in which they're received. Tim,
thanks for calling the Morning show. Happy Monday to you.

Speaker 4 (13:56):
Hey, right, buddy, I'm doing.

Speaker 2 (13:58):
Pretty darn well man. A great weekend. I had very
happy birthday, and I'm alive. So that's sometimes that's that's
all you get is you're alive. But I'm a little
better than that today. Thanks for asking me if you
can say the same. What's on your mind?

Speaker 5 (14:11):
Oh that's very pactic. Hey about the migrant gang stuff.

Speaker 6 (14:15):
Isn't that likeation?

Speaker 1 (14:17):
Isn't that like what gentrification?

Speaker 2 (14:25):
I never looked at it that way, Tim, but I
guess you could come up with some parallels.

Speaker 4 (14:32):
There you go.

Speaker 7 (14:33):
Thanks.

Speaker 1 (14:35):
Starting Monday off with a laugh.

Speaker 2 (14:37):
Pivoting over, mister Tuba, welcome back to the VID five
CAS morning show.

Speaker 1 (14:42):
My friend, good morning.

Speaker 5 (14:44):
Your birthday celebration continues, and here it is.

Speaker 7 (14:47):
Thank you.

Speaker 2 (15:12):
You're the best man. You are the best. Thank you
so much, mister Tube. You've been doing that for years
and years. He makes like three hundred and fifty calls
a year with his Tuba message for those celebrating a birthday.
Meet him at listener lunch, mister Tube. I hope I
see it. Anderson pubmcgirl first Wednesday of next month.

Speaker 1 (15:29):
Real quick here.

Speaker 2 (15:30):
Pivoting over, Oh, I can ask an outline question, Joe Drecker,
I'm gonna pull the room. Well, we'll we'll did he
commit suicide accidentally? Yes, they placed on suside watch, which
they and you know, I don't give a flying whatever
about did he You know, I understand he's been accused

(15:51):
of some horrific, horrific crimes, sexual exploitation and molestation, you
name it. He's getting accused of it for these parties
used to have. But he had so many, or has
had I suppose it's the operative word now past that
so many celebrities that hung out with him, and there's
pictures of him with literally everybody and his brother and
now I've read reports that everybody is wiping their social

(16:12):
media accounts. Sounds a little like Epstein, doesn't it. We
all know what happened to him. Will will he ever
see the light of trial? Will the people involved in
these exploitations people ever be implicated in this? I think
a lot of people are sweating bullets anyhow, just something

(16:35):
to consider question, Will he commit suicide or will it
look like he commits suicide? Or will all the cameras
in his prison cell be shut down mysteriously inoperative and
the prison guards fail him to do welfare checks on
him as required by the obligations of their job, only
to find him several hours later. I don't know, hung
by some toilet paper or something, just asking for a friend.

(16:59):
Local Stories coming up twenty five at five care ce
De talk Station. Awesome dentist. I love doctors Fred Peck
and doctor Megan Freu. You're in best possible hands. Everybody
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on that over the years. Dentistry is He's just always

(17:21):
at the forefront of dentistry and most notably cosmetic dentistry.
That is his true passion. And he is a Fellow
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(17:42):
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(18:03):
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dot com.

Speaker 8 (18:08):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 1 (18:12):
Are you receiving letters from the fi? Here's your nine
first forty one to forecast? Got it?

Speaker 2 (18:18):
Mostly cloudy day to day, keep your fingers scrossed or
calling for evening showers and storms.

Speaker 1 (18:22):
High of eighty see here. Overnight lowest sixty.

Speaker 2 (18:26):
Five, slight chance to rain, mostly cloudy Tomorrow, rounds of
showers and storms seventy five for the high.

Speaker 1 (18:31):
Night of sixty one with a few showers.

Speaker 2 (18:33):
And on Wednesday, cloudy day and night with the chance
of showers and thunderstorms showing up after two pm. Looking
for a highest seventy eight ten right now seventy one degrees.

Speaker 1 (18:41):
Here fifty five KRCD talk station.

Speaker 2 (18:43):
That's how it's reminding you fifty five ker Seed dot com,
Get your podcast, get your Heart media app, give a
copy of Kennatha Brahmawoods book The Multifront War. And Joe
Strecker sent me photographs of the community gun street rescue plan. Man,
they got a lot of guns, isn't they Joe. There's
some crazy guns too. Looks like some semi automatics, some
Akar style pistols, and a bunch of bunch of handguns.

(19:07):
So congratulations to the team getting those guns off the streets.
Let's go to the phones real quick. Here forget the
local stories. Mississippi James, Happy Monday to you.

Speaker 9 (19:15):
Good morning, doctor Brian.

Speaker 10 (19:18):
Man.

Speaker 9 (19:18):
You on a road this morning, and most of the
things you're saying, hey, it's true. I agree with them.

Speaker 1 (19:26):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (19:26):
Well, I lived in Chicago, so I know exactly what
it's like to be fearful. I mean, we lived out
there a Logan Square the first year we lived and
we were woken by gunfire in the alleyway behind our home.
I found shellcasings in our alleyway near our garage. A
guy got his head blown off in the alleyway. Three
blocks from my house when we lived in Oak Park, Illinois,
and the crime statistics back then were just outrageous. It

(19:49):
just it was so frequent and so often. It was
like you know, the sun coming up in the morning
and going down in the evening. You could always count
on it.

Speaker 9 (19:58):
But most of the thing you speaking of a reaction
to another picture, and it may not been the best solution,
but their reaction to a bigger picture.

Speaker 4 (20:13):
Until we get get to.

Speaker 9 (20:14):
That elephant in the room, that buffalo, that giraffe, whatever
it is, until we open it up, because you know,
we can keep on putting bad age on solution, but
until we get to the bigger problem. Most of the
things you mentioned, uh you know, Black Lives Matter and
and and uh defund the police. Those a reaction to

(20:36):
something and they was trying to be helpful. Some of
them was I never would have you know, came up
with them. But part of it, I mean, even police brutality.
Now we got admit there is a sense of police brutality.
Then when you try to react to it, sometimes that
reaction go awire. Yeah right now we're like swing that pendling.

Speaker 7 (21:01):
You're right there.

Speaker 2 (21:01):
There's always been police brutality but we live in a
ton This is the greatest thing about it. We live
in a time now where police departments and officers now
require to have bodycam on them, and they have greater reporting.
There's a greater sense of awareness that people with cell
phones are surrounding at twenty four to seven. The idea
of engaging in police brutality and thinking you're going to
be able to get away with it, I think those
days are pretty much gone. So the reaction from the

(21:24):
defund the police and the Black Lives Matter may be
a response to historic corruption in the police departments, some
of which not all, may have been a reaction to
personal experiences with you know, racist police officers or something.
But you know, fortunately we've moved forward and we are
I would argue, up until the divisions that have been
stirred by the leftists have kicked in, we live in
a far less racially divide, at least in terms of

(21:47):
you know, looking at someone based on the color of
their skin, more appreciative of content of character being the
defining value. But no, they got to go after something
that was historic, and I understand that, but you know,
it's one of those two wrongs.

Speaker 1 (21:59):
Don't make a right.

Speaker 2 (22:00):
I mean it's like reverse racism is okay because racism
existed in our country at one point, Does that make
things better?

Speaker 9 (22:09):
Reverse racism? You know that's another misnon one also reverse
and why reverse?

Speaker 2 (22:18):
Well, I guess if traditional racism in this country, I
think it defines it. I mean, it's basic elements, it's
it's it's it's too much of a boiled down thing
to say it was always whites against blacks, white oppressed blacks.
It was beyond that. You can be racist regardless of
which direction. If you were judging someone and liking them
or hating them, or reaching a conclusion about someone simply

(22:41):
based upon what they look at, you're racist. So that
street runs multiple different directions. But you can't justify, you know,
demonizing all white people because there was a point in
our nation's history when there was slavery. I mean most
I didn't own slaves, My ancestors didn't. We're a bunch
of poor Irish people for the most part, and we
got oppressed too. But you know, here we are in

(23:03):
twenty twenty four.

Speaker 4 (23:08):
That it.

Speaker 1 (23:10):
That it okay. Joe says, that's it. Uh.

Speaker 2 (23:13):
Five point thirty five five KCD talk station there's plenty
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Speaker 8 (24:31):
This is fifty five krc and iHeartRadio station forty here.

Speaker 1 (24:35):
Fifty five KRCD talk station.

Speaker 2 (24:39):
Frim Thomas here inviting you to call if you prefer
five one three seven fifty hundred, eight hundred eight two
three talk only. So take callers before I do stack
as stupid. But let's get to the stack of stupid.
US Secret Service not exactly enjoying a stellar moment in
time here, giving all the problems we've had lately, and
over the weekend, US Secret Service agent accidentally shot and

(24:59):
injured himself, expected to survive. A corner of the Secret
Service agent. The agent was on duty during the negligent
discharge while he was handling his weapon, Joey. He was
handling his weapon and he had a negligent discharge shortly
four eight pm. Let's see you here. Injuries not life threatening.

(25:19):
The officer taken to the hospital for evaluation and treatment.
No one else engined in the accident, nor the detail
has been provided. Secret service investigating eleven year old boy
reportedly dead after a subway surfing incident in New York
City courted local news.

Speaker 1 (25:38):
CBS there reported that.

Speaker 2 (25:41):
Caden Thompson riding on top of a G train when
he hit his head on a metal overhang by the
fourth Avenue station.

Speaker 1 (25:48):
Why are you doing that? God knows? He died.

Speaker 2 (25:56):
His uncle, claydon Or Christian Vegan, said that he may
have been influenced the subway surf because of videos he
was watching online showing it being done. Quote, it's really
easy to get hooked onto that stuff because once you
do it, it's all that adrenaline rush.

Speaker 1 (26:13):
Okay.

Speaker 2 (26:15):
Of course they started a GoFundMe page then follow in
the category of idiots doing idiot things because they're idiots.

Speaker 1 (26:21):
Joe, I mean, am I right on?

Speaker 11 (26:23):
That?

Speaker 1 (26:25):
Absolutely, says Jess Chucker. Thank you. I appreciate the backup.

Speaker 2 (26:29):
Go to Knoxville, Tennessee, where a woman there tried to
hire an online hitman to kill the wife of a
man she met on match dot com. What yeah, good
luck with that. Go ahead, hire a hitman online. Find
yourself in the ends of the FBI most likely court
dook even say forty eight year old Melody Sas are
paid almost ten thousand dollars using a dark website.

Speaker 1 (26:55):
Because they're idiots.

Speaker 2 (26:56):
This site is known as quote online killers Market. No
nothing suspicious there. Try to hire a hitman there dot FBI,
thank you Joe dot gov. Webside allegedly offers a hitman
for hire service, as well as hacking, kidnapping, extortion, disfigurement

(27:16):
by acid attack, and sexual violence. Sassar, under the username Cattree,
messaged the website administrator about hiring somebody to do a job,
offering nine thousand, seven undred and fifty dollars in payment
through bitcoin. She wrote, quote a east to seem random
or accident or plant drugs. Do not want a long investigation.
She recently moved in with her new husband. Subject of

(27:41):
the order, only identified as JW, lives in Prattville, Alabama,
with her husband d W, Whosasser met on match dot com.
DW said Sassar helped him with a hike along the
Appalachian Trail before moving to Alabama and where he married
his current wife. Court documents say Sasser had a left
threatening voicemails on this guy's phone, using a device to
disguise her voice. According to the filing, Sasser spoke with

(28:03):
the Online killers Market dot gov administrator over two months,
complaining about the job not getting done. I've waited for
two months in eleven days, and the job is not completed.
Two weeks ago you said it was being worked. One
will be done in a week. The job is still
not done. Does it need to be assigned to someone else?
Will it be done? What is the delay? When will
it be done? Close quote. Sassary also reportedly able to

(28:27):
track JW and DW by using a phone app Strava,
which connects to Garman sharing fitness data. She even told
the Online Killer's Market administrator when JW had gone on
a two mile walk. Ultimately, the plan unsuccessful and Sasser
was arrested at her home. Her house, law enforcement uncovered

(28:50):
a journal listing several other hitman websites, a handwritten account
of communications with the Online Killer's Market in a stack
of US currency underneath a sticky note listing a Bitcoin address.
Grand jury indicted her last June and for use of
an interesting commerce facilities in the commissioner murder for hire
last week, she entered a plea deal where she'll face

(29:12):
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Dot Com fifty five KRCI forty nine to.

Speaker 2 (30:27):
Fifty five KRCD Talk station, Happy Monday, Monday Monday, Brian
James eight oh five, preceded by Christopher Smith and at
seven thirty a thirty George Burnemann returns the program talking
about event that's coming up at the farm and Jeff
Seuss there's an empower use seminar early since e History.
We'll hear from Jeff at eight forty on that seminar.
Back through the stack of Scuba. Here's an extraordinarily stack,

(30:48):
extraordinary sack of stupid perfect perfect illustration.

Speaker 1 (30:53):
Gary Holt.

Speaker 2 (30:55):
He was regarded as a highly regarded employee to trying
a law firm called Holden Day. Wilson earned a degree
in engineering, and he specialized in building safety and compliance.
The robustness of modern building techniques was something he was
particularly fascinated by Well Financial District skyscraper where the I

(31:18):
guess their law firm is located. Built in nineteen sixty nine.
Nice view from the twenty fourth floor, I guess. In
July ninth, ninety three, the firm flew through a welcome
party for their conference room for the new intake summer interns.
So they were interested in exploring the field of law
they were studying to potentially decide on specialism for their future.

(31:41):
That was the moment he wanted to impress, and he'd
done this countless times before, throwing his full weight against
a huge window in order to demonstrate its unbreakable structural
design and safety.

Speaker 1 (31:53):
He apparently had done this before.

Speaker 2 (31:56):
Sadly, rather than the window holding up as he threw
his one hundred and sixty pound frame at the window,
the paint popped out of the frame and he felt
twenty four floors described as dying instantly after colliding with
a stone block on the pavement below.

Speaker 7 (32:11):
You ron.

Speaker 2 (32:13):
Structural engineer question about the incident speaking with the Toronto Star.
I don't know of any building code in the world
it would allow one hundred and sixty pound man to
run up against the glass window and withstand it. They
called the death accidental auto defenstration aka throwing yourself out
a window by accident, described as extremely extremely rare way

(32:34):
to die. He later won a Darwin Award for his
uh Idiots doing idiot things because they're idiots. It is
worthy of the stack of sci It's just happened in
ninety three. Oh well, better late than never. A woman
who ran over an suv Ownerwhell stealing the vehicle, turned

(32:57):
herself in toront Back in Toronto here, peel Read Police
released home surveillance footage from a September sixth afternoon incident.
A woman went to the victim's home rang the doorbell
in a town west of Toronto regarding an auto trader
advertisement in which the owner was selling a twenty twenty
two Porsche Cayenne. Hello, I'm here for the Porsche. That's

(33:19):
what was on the ring doorbell footage. Eighteen year old
Sarah Bradshaw said owner offered her a test drive. She
answered that she was waiting for her father, but she
asked if she could take a look at the vehicle.
Footage cut to a vantage point of the suv. The
victims whose faces blurred, walked around the vehicle and the
suv briefly jostled a bit. The victim appeared to check

(33:39):
the driver's side doors before crossing the rear, at which
point the engine roared and the SUV driver ran him
over by going in reverse. He did manage to stand up,
please say the woman fled. Cops released footage the video
an attempt to find the woman, who then turned her

(34:00):
off in the next day. According to the Ontario Court
of Justice in Brantham, she was held in custody pending
a bail hearing, which happened on the twentieth last Friday,
charged with dangerous operation causing bodily harm, theft of a
motor vehicle, fare to remain after an accident resulting in
bodily harm, and driving without a license do what the
hell beyond that? Officer said she'd been charged with prior

(34:23):
fraud case in the town and is wanted by other
police agencies in the Greater Toronto area involving other matters.
Police expect more arrests and charges.

Speaker 7 (34:33):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (34:36):
Yeah, I always say.

Speaker 2 (34:37):
If you're going to sell your vehicle, arranged to meet
the perspective buyer at the Sheriff's Department. Yeah, you can
do that. They don't have any problem with that. Say
we're meeting at the Sheriff's Department office on whatever street.
You don't like that, then I'm guessed it sucks to
be you got a Texas woman with three grown children
stun Christmas Eve two when the law enforcement accused her

(35:00):
of being wanted for child endangement as she disembarked from
a Royal Caribbean cruise in Florida that was meant to
celebrate her brother beating cancer for the second time. Turns out,
Jennifer Heath Box's lawsuit against Broward County said she was
the victim of mistaken identity because deputies ignored obvious discrepancies
between her information and the woman with a similar name

(35:22):
who was actually subject of the warrant. The fft year
old Jennifer Box, represented by the Institute for Justice FIOULT
suit against Broward Kenneth Broward kind of share us off
his deputies, Peter Paranza and Monica Jane, and two Corrections employees,
claiming that she was forced to stay in jail for
three days over Christmas. The guard subjected her to a
body cavity search and watched her while she showered, and

(35:45):
that she missed a chance to see her son before
he left for his three year tour with the Marines,
only to be told quote it happens close quote when
they finally let her go. They have video of the
initial encounter with law enforcement, showing her con used about
the authority's childhood dangermin rationale for stopping her as she disembarked.
While she was on the cruise and not known to her,

(36:06):
investigators believed that she was a Harris County, Texas woman
with a warrant and they were waiting for her after
her husband, Kyle Box, could be heard saying, I think
he got the wrong person. Both of them sued deputies,
alleging they said they had to verify that they had
the wrong person, but instead of doing that, authorities allegedly
ignored at least ten discrevitency, starting with the fact that

(36:28):
she had a different name from the other woman who
was not Jennifer Heath Box, who was Jennifer delk Carman Heath.

Speaker 1 (36:38):
They all said different birthdays. Wonderful. Something tells me they
might settle that one out of court.

Speaker 2 (36:44):
Coming up a five point fifty six, which means the
taxpayers of Broward County will be on the hook. I
don't know if there be any individual liability on that one.
You can always count on the taxpayers paying the paying
it off.

Speaker 1 (36:57):
Coming up. Got more to talk about in the six
o'clock hour.

Speaker 2 (36:59):
Including energy policy, which is just blowing my mind, speaking
of things that the debt left is totally wrong on.
We're gonna speak about that. I'll take your phone calls too,
and then we gonna look forward to Christopher Smithment at
seven thirty stick around the.

Speaker 1 (37:11):
World can change in just second. We'll bring you the
latest in just minutes at the top of the hour.
Fifty five KRC Talkstation. Hey everybody, this is Josh and
Chuck six six fifty five KRC Talk Station.

Speaker 2 (37:27):
Frank Comas wishing everyone to very happy Monday and a huge, huge,
huge thanks not just to my family, but I just
received so many well wishes for my birthday on Saturday
on Facebook five hundred bluzs. Was like, oh my god,
this is so overwhelming. Thank you to everyone who took
the time to wish me happy birthday. Really had an
enjoyable weekend and I uh just it just meant the

(37:49):
world to me so Anyhow, looking forward to Christopher Smithment
always means the world. We need to have Christopher Smithment
on the program for the Smith Event every Monday at
seven thirty Monday, Mondays. Brian James returns at eighth five.
Early stocks are poised for a September gain one in
four gen zers, so they will not have children because
of finances, and why buying a home will seem impossible
for this generation. I note gerdier Loin's friends in Warren County.

(38:15):
Your next got the new property assessments. They're in the mail.
You may already have it already. You're going to be
paying a lot higher in real estate taxes. Remember, Butler
Counties went up thirty seven percent, Hamilton Counties twenty eight,
Claremont Counties were up thirty. Now it's Warren County's turn.
So gird your loins, folks, Gird your loins. Five three

(38:35):
seven two three talk. George Brennan will also be on
the program at eight three to talk about an event
coming up at the farm and the empower you se
in our early since he history. Jeff Seuss joins the
program at eight forty to talk about that anyway, power
power for me and not for these is the way
I conclude this one. We have a Constellation Energy, which
is a massive energy company, announced this past Friday that

(38:58):
had entered into a deal with my Microsoft to supply
power for a data center, artificial intelligence data center from
three Mile Island. Yes, we all remember three Mile Isle,
at least most of us do. Described by Politico the
latest sign of a revival for the nuclear sector, driven

(39:20):
by the voracious energy demand from the technology industry. Yeah,
a voracious energy demand which is also being increased artificially
through regulation to force you into electric everything from your
stove to your automobile, everything in your home. You can't
heat it with gas anymore. No, no, no, it's got
to be electric. So yes, a massive strain on the
power grid, which can't even manage what we've got right now.

Speaker 1 (39:41):
So let's get nuclear.

Speaker 7 (39:43):
Hmm.

Speaker 2 (39:46):
The agreement would restart one of the two reactor plants
that was shut down. It's been shuttered since twenty nineteen.
Spokesperson for Constellation Energy, you set an email that the
company will spend one point six billion dollars of its
own money to restart the plant. It is not using
state or federal money. They will get tax cutts from

(40:08):
the Inflation Reduction Act. But he said, no, that is
not the reason we're doing this. He said, the Inflation
Reduction Act nuclear production tax credit would be available to
the plant, just as it would to any other nuclear plant.
But that's not what's driving this. The supply contract with
Microsoft is what's making this happen ie profit. Microsoft is
going to be purchasing power from Constellation's three Mile Island

(40:32):
plant to offset the energy demand that the data centers
have put on the thirteen state power grid operated by
PJ Interconnection. That's a lot of real estate that that
power grid encompass is thirteen states, and this one data
center is going to put too much, is going to
tax that too much?

Speaker 1 (40:53):
It's hard to believe.

Speaker 2 (40:56):
According to Bobby Holifi's president of Energy at Microsoft, this
agreement is a major milestone in Microsoft's efforts to help
decarbonize the grid. In support of our commitment to become
carbon negative, Microsoft continues to collaborate with energy providers to
help carbon free energy sources of obtain them rather to
help meet the grid's capacity and reliability needs. I think

(41:23):
even if you took carbon neutral out of the equation,
you still have to be firing up these nuclear plants
because of course the federal government is forcing the premature
closure of all the coal and natural gas plants and
standing in the way of building more natural gas plants.

Speaker 1 (41:36):
What are you left with nuclear?

Speaker 12 (41:38):
Right?

Speaker 2 (41:39):
Because wind and solo don't provide reliable energy. That's the
bottom line on all this.

Speaker 1 (41:46):
They say.

Speaker 2 (41:47):
This region stretches from Chicago to the mid Atlantic, and
consumer advocates for that PJN region have been warning that
the rise of data centers could present risks to customers
and the climate because tech company or well now tech
companies are eyeing direct purchases of power from large nuclear
plants in the reason, which is a smart thing to do.

(42:10):
But the problem is for me, these connect the AI
centers directly to the power plant, meaning they get theirs directly,
while we have to go through the power plan and
the appropriate measures. In others, distribution of the power goes
out equally to everybody, and when there's not enough, we
all get the rolling blackout. Well, that wouldn't happen in

(42:31):
this particular case because they would get their power directly
from a nuclear power plant. Nice to be a big
player in the business, isn't it, And apparently artificial intelligence
now increasing demand for power while baseload plants that provide
power around the clock shut down. Editorial boarder of Wall
Street turning pointing out on this same deal, but it's

(42:53):
bigger than this one deal. New data centers, they say,
are on hold because the grid can't support AI systems
with wind and solar. That's why Microsoft's entering into this deal.
Not amazing and not surprisingly. Microsoft's deal hooking it up
to three Mile Island follows Amazon's purchase of a Pennsylvania

(43:14):
data center powered by Believe This or Not and on
site two point five gigawatt nuclear plant nuclear for me
and not for the The Energy Department approved a one
and a half billion dollar on top of that, On
top of this, foregoing the Microsoft deal, the Amazon deal,
the Energy Department approved a one point five billion dollar

(43:36):
government loan guarantee to restart a closed nuclear reactor in
Michigan amid a Midwest power crunch brought to you, of course,
by I guess Greta Thunberg and al Gore, or the
people they convinced to do stupid things like slit our
throats by shutting down prematurely. The Colon Natural gas plants
before we have something that can fill the void that

(43:59):
is left. They point out, wind and solar power cannot
turn a profit running only some of the time, and
baseload power well providing coal natural gas power plants are
burdened by the costly new Environmental Protection Agency rules. Yes,
the EPA finalized its clean Power plan called two point

(44:22):
zero that will require coal and new or refurbished gas
plants to implement carbon capture technology by twenty thirty two,
which is not economically feasible. Ergo coal plants are shutting down,
threatening grid reliability. Four regional grid operators warned in a

(44:43):
friend of court briefs supporting a challenge to this EPA
Clean Power two point zero, representing twenty seven states who
are saying, whoa, whoa, whoa, this is not workable. Grid
operators that provide power to some one hundred and fifty
six million customers like you and me, in a brief
to the DC Circuit Court of Appeals that the EPA

(45:05):
compliance timelines are not workable and are dis destined to
trigger and acceleration in the pace of premature retirements of
coal gas generators, substantially straining the ability to maintain reliability
of the electric power grid, also warning about the chilling
impact that the ETA rules will have collectively that will
have on the investment required to retain and maintain existing units.

(45:29):
They're frightening people away from what works climate lobby. It's
pointed out they're claiming batteries of the answer people in
the know, not government officials and eight and and and
individual bureaucrats behind the scenes. Unelected officials writing these rules

(45:49):
point out that long duration energy storage resources are only
an innascent development and have not yet proven economically feasible
for deployment on a mass scale. In other words, you
can't run as on a battery, nor do they provide
all the necessary reliability attributes that coal and natural gas
units provide, such as something they called grid inertia. So

(46:13):
in North Dakota State analysis by the research outfit Always
on Energy Research Projects the rule will lead to blackouts
across the Midwest within eighty seven billion dollars social cost,
on top of the four hundred and forty eight billion
dollars in grid investment needed to replace shuttered coal plants.

(46:34):
Buy an EV, folks, it's AOK. You're not going to
have a problem charging it journal board ends the lights
are flickering? Is anyone at the White House home? One
more of a growing list of failures on the part
of the leftist global warming elitist idiots who think that somehow,

(46:56):
in some way, the wind and the sun are going
to be able to provide sufficient Microsoft they obviously know better,
Google knows better, Amazon knows better. Nuclear may be the
path forward. They're the only ones that are going to
be able to afford to buy and build their own
nuclear generation sources power for the but not or fire

(47:18):
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That's why you can trust the professionals at Fasten Proble
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Speaker 1 (48:39):
Fifty five car the talk station. Hey, if you're listening
to me right now, I have six twenty one.

Speaker 2 (48:46):
Here I fifty five krc DE talk station. Always welcome
calls five one, three, seven, four, nine, fifty five eight
hundred eighty three talk So guests at five kr SE
dot com. We can't listen live, or you want to
get your iHeart media so you can listen to the
podcast as well as the rest of the iHeartMedia content
wherever you happen to be with your smart device. Get
it at fifty five Caresee dot com. Stream the audio
directly from the page too, if you choose. Let's go

(49:06):
to the phones. Who what Bobby's got this morning? Bobby,
Happy Monday to you.

Speaker 6 (49:10):
Happy Monday, my brother. Just remember number sixties right around
the corner.

Speaker 1 (49:15):
Thanks, I've got It's already Monday. Man, quick piling on.

Speaker 6 (49:21):
I got one political question for you, and I know
you're a man about town and you could probably help
me out on this, but uh, what happens in Vegas
stays in Vegas. And I heard Joe heading two front
row tickets to the iHeartMedia Music Festival, and I'll just
wondering who he may be taken with him.

Speaker 1 (49:39):
You should see Joe's face right now.

Speaker 2 (49:43):
I don't remember if I want to call that look
discuss disbelieve there's a little eye rolling gun over there.
His palms of his hands over his forehead and eyes
shaking his head back and forth. Yeah, I don't think
Joe's going to be making it out of the I
Art Media Uh concert.

Speaker 6 (49:57):
I'm just wondering who the guests may be.

Speaker 2 (50:03):
Knowing that Joe's not going, who the guests that might
show up at that event. Probably the answer will be
a resounding nobody cares. Right Joe, he says, p did.
He will definitely not be there. Brother you too, man?

Speaker 1 (50:19):
You two h Kamala Harris on fracking, where is she.

Speaker 7 (50:25):
M?

Speaker 2 (50:26):
My position is that we've got to invest in diverse
sources of energy, so we reduce our reliance on foreign
oil for and oil M. We have three options. I
got a credit to Arthur Stewart writing this op ed piece.
We have three options. First, Kamala Harris is the one
who promised the ban fracking outright when she ran for
president in twenty nineteen. The second is the one who's

(50:49):
running for president now and says she's opposed to a
fracking band. The third, Kamala Harris, is Joe Biden's vice president,
spending four years being a cheerleader in She for an
administration that's tried to regulate oil and gas extraction to death,
moving toward a fracking ban in everything but name see
that's where the evil regulatory environment shows up. Oh no,

(51:11):
we haven't banfracking. We've just made it so blanking impossible
to afford me by virtue of our regulations that nobody
will invest in it. That's the Kamala Harris we're most
worried about, and he writes because she's half of a
White House with the record of attacking American energy from
every angle he points out. He says she knows exactly

(51:34):
what she's doing. Her team is calling her energy policy
strategically ambiguous, which is to say, devoid of details, a
calculated decision to make blue collar voters in Pennsylvania think
she isn't a direct threat to their livelihood. Smarter though
than her, they are. Biden turned against his narrative native
state after we elected him that he's a Pennsylvania native

(51:55):
the guy writing this part of the energy sector too.
Does anyone really think that Miss Harris a California will
stand with roustabouts and Righands and the Commonwealth come twenty
twenty five Like so many coastal laths, and missus Harris
appears to have zero knowledge that fracking is safe and
proven technology perfected over the decade, which has already helped
lower American carbon emissions. Nor does she seem to have

(52:16):
any appreciation that fracked natural gas is essential to Americans
food supply because that's how fertilizer is made. According to
March Commonwealth Foundation, full eighty two percent of Pennsylvania's are
worried that affordable energy is slipping away. Going back to
my prior point, that's because they're prematurely shutting down colon
natural gas plants before we're ready to well replace them

(52:39):
with nuclear. It's one thing to have the oil, which
we have. We have the largest, We are the largest
oil producer. Saudi Arabian Russia used to hold those titles,
but we have the resources. As Michael O'Sullivan and Real

(52:59):
cl Energy pointed out, it's one thing to have oil,
it's another to extract a transport it refine it to
usable products, and get those products of the consumer. Thanks
to the human ingenuity, we have the science and engineering
to do these things in a largely safe and responsible manner.
Accidents far less frequent than even just twenty to thirty
years ago. But even with responsible energy behavior, we face
a persistent obstacle government behavior. It's plain fact we have

(53:26):
government officials and agencies who raise themselves up as fierce
enemies of our own friend, hydrocarbon.

Speaker 1 (53:32):
That's right, built on the climate cult, you know, nefarius
and stupid.

Speaker 4 (53:42):
We have this.

Speaker 2 (53:42):
Conversation all the time. I am more and more convinced
that the nefarious have taken over and the useful idiots,
ninety percent of which don't know anything about anything, have
been convinced that, you know, we are exhaling ourselves into oblivion.
I believe that to be an outright lie brought about
by the nefarious intellectuals behind the scene. You want to

(54:03):
ruin America as a country, as a leading country. The
freedoms and liberties that we enjoy have brought made our
country the most the most successful country the world has
ever seen.

Speaker 1 (54:16):
That interferes with.

Speaker 2 (54:17):
Globalist strategies, we got starving people in Venezuela because they
went down the Marxist path. They can look at us
and go, why don't we go down that road, the
road of freedom? And we have politicians actively arguing against
our own best interests. We are in the middle of
a fighting war, maybe not with guns, but you know,
we are involved in a weird existential threat to us

(54:39):
from the four corners of the globe. We're constantly under attack.
Our grid is under attack by foreign powers, and our
grid is under attack from internal forces which are forcing
us into electric everything before we even had a grid
that we have a grid that can support it all
under the cloak of this religion. Somehow carbon is in

(55:00):
spite of the fact that it's tree food. The more
carbon dioxide we have, the greener in terms of the
image of the world, the growth of plants, the more
we have of that. It's simple science which they choose
to ignore. Six twenty seven right now mention a foreign exchange.
Internal combustion engines. We all love them, We all most

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all of us have them, and sometimes they need to
be repaired. And that's why you don't go to the deal.
You go to foreign exchange as certified master technicians will
fix your car. You'll leave with the full warranty on
parts and service. And the bottom line for Foreign Exchanges,
I always point out is your bottom line. You don't
pay as much to have your car service at Foreign
Exchange than you will at the dealer. They do have
your manufacturers technical information, they'll fix your car. You'll be

(55:43):
happy because you're leaving with more money.

Speaker 1 (55:45):
What more can you want?

Speaker 2 (55:46):
Austin and the team at Foreign Exchange Westchester location are
outstanding of customer service. And if you're worried about money,
you are in the right hands there. Take the tillers
of their legs in off of seventy five Go two street,
Hang it right on Kinglin. You're staring at it online,
you can check it out at foreign xformthletter x dot com.
Please tell him, Brian said, I when you call for
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(56:06):
four twenty six, twenty six six four four twenty six, twenty.

Speaker 1 (56:10):
Six, fifty five KRC dot com at.

Speaker 2 (56:13):
Can thirty two fifty five KIRCD talk station five one
thirty seven four nine to fifty five hundred eight hundred
eight two three talk it's in the mail.

Speaker 1 (56:19):
You may as well. You may even get it today
Warren County. Brace yourself.

Speaker 2 (56:22):
You're going to be getting your new property tax assessment.
Audo dissolves mail the letters to homeowners on Saturday. Of course,
Butler County, Hamilton County, Climont County all roughly between thirty
or twenty eight in Hamilton and thirty seven percent increase
in Butler. Warren County gets its chance now, So gird
your loins.

Speaker 1 (56:42):
Folks.

Speaker 2 (56:44):
Uh, your home value is going up next year by
thirty percent and you can expect to pay around fifteen
percent more in property tax. Accorney to Warren County Auditor
Matt Nolan, exact numbers vary by neighborhood. On average, home
values will go up by twenty seven percent, he said,
This means average increase of thirteen to fifteen percent of
property taxes, except for those living in Mason, where the

(57:05):
within the Mason City School district you know, have a
smaller increase actually seven to ten percent, and they say,
he said, rather, property taxes will see a big hike
in most of Warren County next year because of school
districts and levies.

Speaker 1 (57:23):
You voted for it.

Speaker 2 (57:26):
I'm so sorry for young people and that's actually one
of the conversations we'll have with money.

Speaker 1 (57:29):
Money's Brian James.

Speaker 2 (57:30):
One in four gen z or say they're not going
to have kids because of finances, and buying a home
seems impossible for this generation.

Speaker 1 (57:38):
West Clarmont Middle.

Speaker 2 (57:38):
School sixth grader facing charges after reportedly made comments about
shooting a teacher, corning to the Sheriff's office. Sheriff Robert
leehy Lee So the boy reportedly told students last Friday
that he planned to shoot a specific teacher, implying at
a firearm in his book bag. Students told the teacher
in question, who then notified school administrators and school resource officers.

Speaker 1 (57:58):
Deputy on site.

Speaker 2 (58:00):
Sixth grader taken out of class, school officials searched his belongings.

Speaker 1 (58:03):
Sheriff said.

Speaker 2 (58:03):
The officials concluded the boy did not have a weapon
or any weapons, and there was no active threat to
anybody in the school grounds. Detectives interviewed several students who
heard the comments and say their statements were consistent. Released
said the boy told detectives that he had made the threat,
but had no plan to carry it out and did
not have any access to weapons. Detectives also verified with

(58:25):
the boys family that he had no access to firearms
in the home. Cima County Prosecutor charged the sixth grader
with one kind of disorderly conduct in the school zone
and aggravated menacing, both described as misdemeanors. The boys of
clon in the Claremont County Juvenile Detention Center where he's
being held without bond. Detention hearing scheduled for today. Let's see.

Speaker 1 (58:49):
Uh, North College Hill.

Speaker 2 (58:51):
No one inside or outside the North College Hill Stadium
was shot or grazed by gunfire Friday night during the
North College Hill home football game against visiting Woodward, according
to a joint statement from the North College Hill Police
and the North College Hill City City School District. In
the statement, they say the police department is confirmed and
concluded that the gunshots were not in the direction of
the state, even the location of the gunshots were several

(59:12):
hundred yards away. This is unfortunate event, was an isolated
event and had nothing to do with College Hills City
Schools and or Woodward.

Speaker 1 (59:23):
People with guns doing idiot things. Six thirty five bitty
five care see the talk station, feel free to call.

Speaker 2 (59:30):
It's more to dive on into beyond that and of course,
Christopher Smith's coming up at seven thirty and another call
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Speaker 8 (01:00:30):
This is fifty five KARC and iHeartRadio station men.

Speaker 1 (01:00:37):
Closet.

Speaker 2 (01:00:38):
The cloudy day today, showers and storms showing up this
evening with a high of eighty over night slight Chanceller
angle of sixty five. Cloudy tomorrow with showers and storm
off and on. Kind of seventy five for the high.
Overnight low sixty one, maybe some showers and Wednesday chance
of showers and thunderstorm showing up after two pm. We'll
have a highest seventy eight seventy degrees. Right now, it's
time for traffic Chuck from the UCAUT Triumphings Center with

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through clinical trials and innovative treatments that give patients a
chance for better outcomes.

Speaker 13 (01:01:09):
Visit useehealth dot com. Highways not banned at all for
your Monday morning. Just beginning to see a few break
lights northbound Fourth seventy one heading into the Barrels Dear
Memorial Parkway and into downtown. A couple of extra minutes
plenty at the moment southbound seventy five.

Speaker 1 (01:01:24):
That's doing fine.

Speaker 13 (01:01:25):
Pass Glendale, Milford, chut ingramon fifty five KRE see the
talk station.

Speaker 2 (01:01:32):
Six forty fifty five krc DE talk station Happy Monday,
go free to cart other than Iran about energy. They
usually am, but in this particular hour, and you know,
going back to Kamala Harris talking about this all about strategy,
but she doesn't talk about the regulatory realities. She can
say she isn't against fracking, but the regulations in place

(01:01:55):
make it cost prohibitive. It prevents investments in the idea
of fracking. And they just recently actually there's a lawsuit
involved in this one because they have canceled yet another
pipeline that had been previously approve gas project back in
twenty seventeen, this Delphin LNG project was approved. Then the

(01:02:18):
Biden Harris administration took over and Stonewall died, and they
also issued a moratorium by new natural gas facilities. But
that moratorium kicked in after this Delphin project had already
been approved. And they say that it's in violation of
the rules because the agency has prohibited from political interference
or inappropriate influence into the design, conduct, management, evaluation, reporting

(01:02:39):
of scientific data, research and activities. The bottom line is,
you can't use politics to stop a project. It must
be based on hardcore science, and nothing scientific has changed
in connection with this facility. It's only the administration's policies
when it comes to fracking and natural gas generally speaking,
calling it suspiciously time. So they launched a lawsuit against

(01:03:01):
the Biden administration. And I understand why. The project first
approven twenty seventeen, but the issuance of the license has
stalled since then. Federal officials say they couldn't issue a
license due to changes in the companies and this is
their words, ownership, design, financing, and operations that occurred since

(01:03:22):
the license was originally approved seven years ago. Consequently, the
agency said the company must submit an updated application and
then wait for a new public comment period, and then
of course the inevitable EPA lawsuits or rather environmental lawsuits,
than go through a whole nother string of challenges because

(01:03:42):
of the new license issuance. So it's the regulatory environment
behind the scenes. She could say frack all day long,
but when you're faced with what exists by way of
regulations in the background, your words, and you're embracing of fracking,
even if it's a lie, mean absolutely nothing. Because unless
you promise and see that these rules and regulations are eradicated,

(01:04:05):
opening up a wave of opportunity for folks to actually
consider this as a viable option, then it's not gonna happen.
On Friday, the House voted twenty fifteen to one to
ninety one to overturn the EPA's vehicle emission rules. No idea,
what's going to happen in the Senate? You draw your
own conclusions. We had eight Democrats joining with Republicans and
voting this way back in March. You may recall the

(01:04:28):
Greenhouse Gash emissions or were created requirements created at a
whole cloth, which ultimately would force automobile manufacturers to sell
evs in lieu of the obviously preferred internal combustion engine.
Right now, seven point six of auto sales, or at
least last year, were evs four percent for General Motors

(01:04:50):
and Ford. Fast forward eight years from now, under the
regulations left increase ev sales by fifteen fold. And of
course these emission standards obviously worse for the US automobile manufacturers,
who all of whose jobs are in jeopardy, who sell

(01:05:10):
a lot of trucks in E and SUVs. They say
they have to effectively produce one to two electric vehicles
for every gas powered vehicle in county year twenty seven,
and then closer to four in one by calendar year
twenty thirty two. It's also noted that the electric trucks
cost a hell of a lot more to produce than

(01:05:32):
the electric sedans because they use much bigger batteries. Ford
lost forty four thousand dollars on every single EV sold
in the second quarter, which is more than even some
of its trucks retail for. So it's a terrible business
model which never would have been pursued but for the
damn regulations.

Speaker 1 (01:05:53):
Hm oh.

Speaker 2 (01:05:55):
It's also noted that our automobile manufacturers are not exactly
giddy with excitement about EV investments, and they're actually going
and backpedaling. Ford announced that they were canceling production of
their electric suv, delaying the electric pickup Stilantis.

Speaker 1 (01:06:12):
In the same week.

Speaker 2 (01:06:14):
Shutter It stopped, I guess or otherwise delayed retooling a
shuttered plant in Belvidere, Illinois that was going to be
used for EV production. They're no longer moving forward with that.
Energy Department had awarded Slantis three hundred and fifty five
million dollars in subsidies to convert the plant to make evs.
Biden was all giddy about that one too.

Speaker 1 (01:06:38):
Now they're not doing it.

Speaker 2 (01:06:40):
They wouldn't have even considered moving forward with retooling that
plant but for the three hundred and thirty five million
dollars of your labor that the federal government decided to
throw at one company, Stilantis, to produce the vehicles that
nobody wants. Velvet Air Mayor Clint Morris, stating the obvious,

(01:07:05):
he didn't think the marketplace should be determined by political
quote winners and losers close quote yep. Going back to
the reality that I guess it's aok for UH, Microsoft
and other massive data centers to have their own nuclear
power plants for production so their AI data centers can run.

(01:07:29):
You're not going to get yours six forty five fifty
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Speaker 1 (01:08:22):
Fifty five krc the talk station by texting sixty four
thousand U six fifty.

Speaker 2 (01:08:27):
Here fifty five KRCD talk station and happy Monday. Try
to make it so anyway, I'm always happy about money
because we hear from Christopher Smithman every Monday at seven thirty.
And then fast forward to eight oh five. Brian James
with some sad news. It's so sad one of four
gen z are saying they're not going to have kids
because of money. I get that on some level, But
as I pointed out before, I know the benefits of

(01:08:51):
having children so far outweigh the cost of that. It's
just it's not even there's something you should possibly consider.
And knowing what I know, doubt about being a parent.
You know, if you rewind and say, you know, Brian,
it's going to cost you three hundred dollarsand dollars to
raise a child to age eighteen, back then I would
have said, okay, fine, you know, spread out over eighteen years,
and the benefits of having children, you know, that's okay.

(01:09:16):
Just love my kid's death mean they mean the world
to me. I wish more young people cannot come to
that understanding. But that and the other sad part about it.
I just mentioned Warren County. Of the tax bills going up,
buying a home will seem impossible for the next generation,
and the wise over to one of the races of
primary importance of the entire nation. It is a national race,

(01:09:37):
Senator shared Brown. And of course we have a better
choice than Bernie Morena shared Brown's been running ads that
claim operative word to feature Republicans that are planning on
crossing the isle and voting for Shared Brown and not
Bernie Moreno. The Washington Free Beacon looked into this and
oh oh oh wait a second the ad, which features

(01:10:01):
five of the so called republicans self described saying Brown
is the best candidate. One, Dave the Ziri. He and
his wife appear in the ad, apparently outside their home.
This year's Senate election isn't about party, they say, interestingly enough,
while identifying as Republicans. According to the research done by

(01:10:22):
the Washington Free Beacon and lie, they're registered Democrats with
a long history of supporting Shared Brown and other Democrats.
Kelly VIASII has done in more than ten thousand dollars
to Shared Brown since twenty seventeen, according to public financial records.

Speaker 1 (01:10:39):
The pair also.

Speaker 2 (01:10:40):
Voted in the twenty twenty two Ohio Democratic primaries when
Brown wasn't on the ballot, but they were voting in
the Democratic primaries. Illustrating the guest they are Democrats. They
hosted a fundraiser in twenty twenty two for then Democratic
gubernatorial candidate Nan Whaley. Kelly Vasoeri for her part, an

(01:11:00):
Act Blue link on her Facebook page asking your friends
to consider donating to this historic campaign. Now, I just
wonder why actually more, you know, well, why would they
do this? I guess they think that people aren't going
to look into the claims made in these advertisements. But

(01:11:22):
are they so desperate that they have to get five
people together that they could find five Republicans who claim
they're going to be voting for Shared Brown. Maybe the
other four are I that's fine, But if you have
a relationship with this other couple and you're gonna, you know,
hold them out as sort of Republicans or registered Republicans
who have you know, flipped and gonna go full on

(01:11:44):
Shared Brown because he's better for the state, don't you
think you want to make sure that they really are
and noting that there was this long standing relationship, they
could look at their own campaign donations and see that. Now,
we better not put the vizieries in the ad because oh, look,
they're registered as Democrats and they've given to our camp
in the past. According to Washington Free Beacon reporting on it,

(01:12:08):
A spokeswoman for Shared Brown did not respond to requests
for comment ah their daughter, although she is not part
of the ad. It must be noted actually interviewed Shared
Brown for her middle school newspaper in twenty eighteen, So
ask yourself the question, how is it that a middle

(01:12:29):
schooler could have access to Shared Brown absent their parents'
connection with Shared Brown.

Speaker 1 (01:12:37):
She's now in college. Apparently.

Speaker 2 (01:12:39):
She created a website in twenty twenty to sell Ohio
inspired apparel and masks to raise funds for Joe Biden's campaign.
She wrote on Facebook, Kelly did mom the one who
claims to be a Republican in the advertisement for Shared Brown?
She created a website to sell them, and she's using

(01:12:59):
local female own business to create the products. Kroly is
donating one hundred percent of her product proceeds to the
Biden campaign in Ohio, and she's using the USPS for
all shipping to help compensate for their lack of funding.
I've seen enough, Maga hats okay, Shared You own it.

(01:13:19):
You want to answer a question as to why you
would put an actual Democrat on television claiming they are
Republicans planning on voting for you, when that is the
farthest thing apparently from the truth. Six fifty five fifty
five krsit detalk station Christopher Smithmen coming up at seven thirty.
Got more to talk about between nine and between the
top of the hour and then so or feel free
to call in. I'd love to hear from you this morning.
I'll be right back after the news.

Speaker 1 (01:13:40):
We got again another news updates. We're going to get
all the five an ear full of information at the
top of the hour and they'll break it down fast.
Fifty five krs the talk station.

Speaker 2 (01:13:51):
This report is sponsored by seven oh six fifty five
cased talks Station. Happy Monday, Thanks again to everybody for

(01:14:15):
all the wonderful birthday issues Facebook.

Speaker 1 (01:14:17):
Overwhelmed by that.

Speaker 2 (01:14:17):
It just really made me feel so so happy, even
though it wasn't feel too good about turning fifty nine
and the fifties for me. But thanks again to everybody.
Was awfully, awfully nice. They had a wonderful weekend thanks
to friends and family. Coming up bottom of ar Christopher
smithvan We're gonna hear one hour for now. Money Monday,
Brian James Stocks Boys for a September game. Wonder four
gen Zer So they won't have kids because it costs

(01:14:38):
too much money and why buying a home will seem
impossible for this generation exactly uplifting topics with Brian James.
So for the first one, George Brunnham returns as an
event at the farm we want to tell everybody about.
He'll be on at eight thirty and then we'll hear
from Jeff Suss That is Empower Youth Seminar taking place
the twenty sixth Early Cincinnati History.

Speaker 1 (01:14:56):
Empoweryoamerica dot org.

Speaker 2 (01:14:58):
Some wonderful, wonderful education opportunities and really a diverse group
of classes. Five one, three, seven, four, nine, fifty, five hundred,
eight hundred and eighty two to three Talk Time five
fifty on AT and T phones. Just started off the
program talking about Andrew Cuomo's comments and get back to
the bat in a minute, because we're trying to figure
out who Kamala Harris is and what she truly stands for.
Is spent the last hour is looking into energy policy alone,

(01:15:20):
and you know where is she on that.

Speaker 1 (01:15:23):
It's it's a tough call. Honestly.

Speaker 2 (01:15:28):
There's some new crime statistics out which support what Andrew
Cuomo was saying the other day, even though he endorsed
Kamala Harris for president. National Crime Victimization Survey just released
its new survey. They've been doing this since the Nixon administration.
One of the largest federal surveys on any topic. They
speak with two hundred and thirty thousand US residents every year,
regardless of whether they've been the victim of crimes or not.

(01:15:51):
I know you hear from the mainstream media citing FBI data,
all crime is down, crime is down, crime, and do no,
Actually it's not. When talking with individuals again, almost a
quarter million United States residents, they ask them about the
nature of the crime, whether it was reported to the police,
and the demographics of the purpse, as well as under information.
Violent crime rate in twenty twenty three nineteen percent higher

(01:16:14):
than counter year twenty nineteen, which was the last year
before the defund The police movement went all crazy. But
it's not equal distribution of that collective nineteen percent increase.
It's concentrated in urban areas. Who runs most urban areas
in this country? Right, leftists, leftists, prosecutors don't prosecute. We

(01:16:37):
have the defund the police movement. Police aren't willing to
go out and risk their lives when when they have
no respect and people will belittle them constantly. Heavy scrutinization
lacks enforcement ensues. When you don't reward the police for
their well efforts in crime fighting, send them over to
the prosecutor's office, only to be released without bail, maybe
not even prosecuted acurd to the NCBs survey, urban violent

(01:17:02):
crime rate increase forty percent between twenty nineteen and twenty
twenty three. Take out simple assaults, the urban violent crime
rate up fifty four percent, and property crime in urban environments. Apparently,
urban environments also really getting worse, rising from one hundred

(01:17:23):
and seventy six point one victims per thousand and twenty
twenty two to one hundred and ninety two point three
per thousand and twenty twenty three. Violent crime rates in
suburban and rural areas unchanged basically since twenty nineteen, So
a big difference there. Left wing cities, left wing mayors, prosecutors,

(01:17:48):
and the defund the police movement have really come home
to ruce.

Speaker 1 (01:17:51):
Governor Cuomo. He's a Democrat.

Speaker 2 (01:17:55):
You may remember former Governor Andrew Cuomo from New York
was governor between twenty eleven and tim twenty twenty one.

Speaker 1 (01:18:00):
Yeah, that guy.

Speaker 2 (01:18:02):
He was at Bedford Central Presbyterian Church in Brooklyn yesterday.
He started by endorsing Kamala Harris for president, calling her
smart and qualified. In his words, she's going to unite
the Democrats. She's going to bring a new energy. And
because the opponent is Donald Trump, and we've seen that

(01:18:23):
and we're not going to go back there again. So
his one big reason for supporting Kamala Harris, I don't
know what smart and qualified means to him. I don't
know what new energy means. It's Donald Trump's the problem
for him. And then pivoting over to Democrat policies, which
he apparently does not like. He said, Harris getting in

(01:18:44):
an office wouldn't solve all of our problems. Government isn't
working for the people on a very basic level. Quote,
things are getting worse, not better. Remember whose administration we're
currently living under, Democrat Cuomo. Things are getting worse, not better.
Maybe referring back to the crime statistic I just mentioned,
he went on, and I think it's time that we

(01:19:04):
took a fresh look and take a new perspective when
we look at what's going on. Kind of like Kamala
Harris is doing, backpedaling off what she campaigned on in
twenty nineteen, and now trying to sell herself off as
a moderate on some level, a new perspective today, he said,
we have a great political argument on the Democratic side
who is more progressive And I don't even think they

(01:19:25):
know what the word means progressive. You cannot be progressive
if you don't make progress, he said. The United States,
and his words, is going backwards thanks to the progressive policies.

Speaker 1 (01:19:41):
Quote.

Speaker 2 (01:19:41):
Some people think it's progressive to say defund the police. Yes,
in theory, if everybody had an education and everybody had
a job, nobody would need to commit a crime. I
get the theory, but it's not that simple. He said,
Defund the police are the three dumbest words ever uttered
in politics, and not Brian Thomas, the three dumbest words

(01:20:03):
ever uttered in politics. H He then pivoted over to
the terrible migrant situation going on in New York City,
which he said, we can't just have one hundred thousand
migrants coming to New York City and only New York City,
nowhere else in the state of New York, only New
York City, and leave it all up to New York
City to pay for hotels for healthcare. Over ten billion dollars,

(01:20:23):
no plan by the federal government, no real help from
the state whose federal government at least is it sort
of you know, And we're dealing with the Biden Harris administration.
We're dealing with the Biden Harris open border situation. And
here he is Democrat former Governor Cuomo complaining about the
aftermath of this open border situation. It's the federal government's policy,

(01:20:48):
the Biden administration, by waiving of the executive pen to
eradicate Donald Trump's efforts to secure the border, that brought
this about the residence of New York City. So there's
something else that's wrong with the progress of movement. I
spent the entire six o'clock hour talking about the progressives
argument about, you know, energy policy, which is insane, and they,

(01:21:11):
if you look across the board here as we approach November,
they're movingday, the Democrats, the Progressives and for the large
for the most part, it appears, are moving away from
their very own agenda. Why because it sucks. We're all
living the realities of it. The three dumbest words ever

(01:21:34):
uttered in politics, defund the police. Score on the phone
and see what William's got this morning William. Thanks for
calling this morning. I always love hearing from folks. Happy
Monday to you.

Speaker 4 (01:21:44):
Thank you, Good morning, my sands.

Speaker 2 (01:21:47):
Oh good, you're still surviving. Good, that's wonderful way. I'm
glad to hear that hate that you got it. But
you know how how much it sucks to hear those
words when I'm glad.

Speaker 1 (01:21:54):
You're doing okay.

Speaker 4 (01:21:56):
Yes, last week you were talking about what would happen
is Donald Trump was killed before the election.

Speaker 1 (01:22:05):
Yeah, someone closed that question. Yeah, I had been reading
about that.

Speaker 4 (01:22:09):
Yeah, wouldn't the key be the electoral college? I mean,
if he if he was dead when the when the
electors met, they wouldn't be bound to vote for him,
and so they could vote for you know, Ron DeSantis
or Nicky Haley or et cetera.

Speaker 2 (01:22:28):
Yeah, the Republican National Party, as I understand it from
what I read. I can't remember. It was a Bloomberg article.
It was some article by a quote unquote at least
reasonably respected news source did a legal analysis of this.
And while they really weren't quite sure what would happen
in terms of you know, the cutoff dates, like in
Ohio you have to be registered and and and the

(01:22:49):
nominee has to be identified by I don't know what
the date was, but if you've passed those dates and
early voting has already started, how do you unring the
bell on a ballot that went out somebody's name on
it who's no longer eligibly to be president. But my understanding, though,
the takeaway was that the RNC would select the replacement,
how that replacement ends up on the ballot, and the

(01:23:10):
whys and wherefores of a ballot cast for a man
who's no longer around. I really was left puzzled, as
they seem to be themselves about how how how that's
actually dealt with effectively.

Speaker 4 (01:23:22):
Yeah, well, they don't have to be on the ballot
in the electoral college. They can, you know, the the
election vote for.

Speaker 2 (01:23:28):
Oh yeah, like sort of like what they claimed Donald
Trump was trying to do substitute his electors with the
ones that Okay, yeah, yeah, that's certainly an answer.

Speaker 1 (01:23:35):
Yeah, I think that sounds logical. Yeah yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:23:38):
And if and if let's say two Republicans wanted to
be president, and you know, nobody got a majority in
electoral College, then they would have to go to the
House of Representatives.

Speaker 9 (01:23:50):
For the decision.

Speaker 2 (01:23:52):
I guess I don't think we've ever faced this before
in American history, or I probably would have run across
something doing an analysis on it. But you know, I
take all theories of this juncture. I just pray and
hope that it doesn't come.

Speaker 1 (01:24:05):
Down to that, right.

Speaker 2 (01:24:07):
I agree, Yeah, I mean really, I mean two efforts
to assassinate Donald Trump. Already it is close to the election.
Deck seems to be stacked against him right now, doesn't it.
I appreciate it. Wid It's a great conversation to have,
and I really wish I had a definitive response on
how that would all work out. But in the final analysis,

(01:24:27):
I don't want to ever see that happen, and I
certainly don't want to see it on the other side either.
There's some nutcase Republican out there who hates Kamala Aarris
for any reason whatsoever. It is not in any way,
shape or form appropriate to even consider assassinating someone. Lord Almighty,
I know we live in a crazy world, crazy times.
There's a lot of people out there that are easily influenced.

(01:24:49):
But let's not go down that road anywhere. Coble to
seven to seventeen fifty five KRCD talk station. Feel free
to offer your thoughts and comments by calling. And another
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Speaker 8 (01:26:01):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 2 (01:26:05):
The biggestation is straight to the phone before we get
to the bottom of hour and Christopher Smitheman Smith Event
five one two three tok Former Anderson Township trustee Drew Pappas.

Speaker 1 (01:26:16):
Good to hear from you, my friend. Always a pleasure.

Speaker 6 (01:26:19):
Morning, Brian.

Speaker 1 (01:26:19):
How we do it today? I'm doing pretty good under
the circumstances.

Speaker 4 (01:26:23):
I don't understand this term you use.

Speaker 10 (01:26:25):
Grain.

Speaker 4 (01:26:26):
I'm kind of confused by it.

Speaker 1 (01:26:27):
Haven't had it for so long.

Speaker 11 (01:26:30):
I welcome the coming.

Speaker 1 (01:26:31):
Rain today and tomorrow.

Speaker 6 (01:26:32):
Oh.

Speaker 10 (01:26:33):
I know.

Speaker 11 (01:26:35):
There's a lot of folks out there that rely on
it for a livelihood, that are suffering badly because of
the lack of it.

Speaker 2 (01:26:41):
Farmers, Oh my god, the corn crop. Not that you know,
I appreciate, you know, corn for what it is. But man,
if you're if you're growing corn for a living in
the area, you are really in a huge world of heard.
I don't think I probably can have to plow those
steels under.

Speaker 11 (01:26:56):
Let's not forget about them. You were mentioning the show
Brown ad with the fake Republicans claiming the Republicans, And
I'd like to remind everybody you know, not only is
that just looking right in your eye and lying, which
is typical of the Democrat senator from Ohio who's who

(01:27:17):
possessed himself as a Republican, which is why those people
said that to try to fool people. The other thing
is it's actually a violation because there is a there
was a remember when all this I approve your mess
this message tagline began to appear on political ads that
is actually to stand by your ad provision of a

(01:27:38):
Campaign Reform Act of two thousand and two. So shared
Brown knew because he, as you pointed out, had a
relationship with these people, he knew they were Democrats, yet
he approved the ad, so he stamped his signature on there.
That it's almost like an Affidavid that everything in here
is true. I don't think anything because as you all know,

(01:27:58):
Congress makes law and then.

Speaker 1 (01:28:00):
Doesn't abide by them themselves.

Speaker 11 (01:28:02):
I don't think anything will come of it, but it's
just interesting to point.

Speaker 1 (01:28:06):
Out that not only is it a lie, but it's
actually a violation of that Act.

Speaker 2 (01:28:12):
Well yeah, I mean that's to separate political action committees
from nur shenanigans. In your own personal message, which is
your approve. I get that, which is why.

Speaker 11 (01:28:20):
Right, and there's gotta be no repercussions from that. And
I you know, I did not not so your reporting today.
I didn't know the extent. I knew that there were
stories out that the guy was, you know, obviously a
Democrat just by his voting record, but I didn't know
the personal relationship that they actually had with the guy
that as you mentioned about his family. And you know,

(01:28:44):
it's just I find it funny and sad at the
same time that we have continually, at least for the
last several years, elected this Democrat who who comes back
to Ohio and pretends to be a Republican and tells
everybody how conservative he is that yet he juckyl and
Hyde relationship as soon as he leaves the confines of
the state turns into some wildbral and just absolutely is

(01:29:07):
one of the strongest, biggest Democrats up there in Congress
as far as the voting record.

Speaker 1 (01:29:12):
Goes with the Biden administration.

Speaker 11 (01:29:16):
I hope folks remember, and I hope that, which is
the reason I'm seeing.

Speaker 1 (01:29:20):
A lot more ads and a lot more mailers.

Speaker 11 (01:29:22):
I mean, the Democrats have no business mailing me pro
Democrat mailers, yet they are. So I know that race is.
I know that race is remarkably closer than people know.
And I just asked that everybody out there consider and
really think about supporting a change in DC and voting
for Bernie Marino for state Senator from Ohio.

Speaker 2 (01:29:43):
Every Senate race is so important. You know, if we
get the House and you don't get the Senate, you
got gridlock. That's the bottom line. You can have an
executive branch with a strong executive pen as long as
it's lawful, but without the Senate, you're not going to
go anywhere. It's just sad reality where we are. But
that is the republic we find ourselves in, and that's
the way it's always been. Drew Pappus, keep up the

(01:30:05):
good work, my friend. I enjoy your Facebook posts quite
often they crack me up. Become friends with them on Facebook.
Thanks brother, I have a great week seven twenty six.
If you have KCD talk station, we will be his
neck of the woods. Next actually the next listener lunch
first Wednesday of next month, the last one before the
election at Anderson Pub and Grill. So hopefully Drew can
make it to that. Stick around Smith him in next

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(01:32:17):
on Wednesday. Right now, it's seventy time for traffic.

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(01:32:42):
It's a buttermilk shot chamber month fifty five KR see
the talk station.

Speaker 2 (01:32:48):
Seven thirty seven thirty one fifty five Kerr City Talks Station.
It being Monday, is that time a week we get
to hear from Christopher Smith and former Vice mayor of
the City of Cincinnati with the segment we call the
Smither Event. Welcome about Christopher. Always a pleasure to have
you on my program.

Speaker 10 (01:33:03):
Oh, thank you so much, Brian. I hope you had
a great weekend. I am praying like Pappus is praying
for rain. You're praying for rain, and you know our
state needs rain. It's just drafts, the farmers, people's yards,
just lake levels are down. So I'm hoping to get

(01:33:23):
two or three days of some heavy rain.

Speaker 1 (01:33:26):
Yeah, we need lots of it. Yeah. I feel sorry
for the trees. Means.

Speaker 2 (01:33:29):
You can see the corn, it's just just dried up
and it's not producing at all. It all looks yellow.
I figured probably gonna have to plow it under. But
I see my own yard and I have an irrigation system,
and my trees are struggling mightily with the lack of rain.

Speaker 4 (01:33:42):
Absolutely, absolutely.

Speaker 10 (01:33:44):
Look, I want to start with making it really clear
that citizens need to register to vote. The deadline to
register to vote across our states, but you know it's
closing in and you have to do that before the
first early vote is cast in in our area. Your

(01:34:08):
address must match the Board of Elections or you'll be
voting provisionally. So if you sold your house, moved into
an apartment, you haven't updated your address, you've updated your license,
and you go and try to vote, that vote won't
be counted. So right now, get a voter registration card,
admit it to the in our area, the Hamilton County

(01:34:28):
Board of Elections in Norwood, and make sure your address
is all matched up. This is a huge election on
so many different levels in our area. We have a
Hamilton County Prosecutor's Rates, which I know you talk a
lot about, but a lot of people aren't talking about
it because we're very focused on the presidential election. But

(01:34:50):
Melissa Powers is the only standing Republican in Hamilton County.
We've got all Democrats at City Hall, we've got all
Democrats at the County Commission level, and then we've got
Melissa Powers. Look, I don't care what your affiliation is,
whether you're an independent, a Republican or a Democrat. Having

(01:35:12):
a county all one party is never good. It's not
good for any of us. But to have law and
order in our county is critical. I mean, this is
one of the most critical positions in Hamilton County and
We've seen prosecutors across the United States Roague ones bring
all kinds of frivolous lawsuits against At this time, I

(01:35:36):
would say former President Trump misusing their power. We've seen
that in New York, for example. We don't want to
see that in Hamilton County. We don't want to see
the Hamilton County Prosecutor's office politicized. So I'm supporting Melissa Powers.
She's a great person, She's doing a great job, and

(01:35:57):
I support law and order. And if you're a person
out there whoever is a victim of a crime, you're
gonna want Melissa Powers.

Speaker 4 (01:36:04):
In that seat.

Speaker 10 (01:36:04):
If you're a person who is already a victim of
some kind of crime, you appreciate having somebody like Melissa
Powers in that seat. So as we focus on the
president of true election, I want to make sure that
we focus in on some of these big races here locally.
I know we were talking about the Marino Brown race.
That's another big race. And I also want to hone

(01:36:25):
in on this sheriff race with Jim Neil. Quiet race
under the radar it feels like, but it's a big race.
I'm supporting Jim Neil in that race, and I think
others should look at making sure that our shaff is
doing not just a good job, but it's really just
focusing on the law, not politicizing at all. The Sheriff's office.

(01:36:46):
It's a very powerful office, very important office to Hamilton County.
And I'm supporting Jim Neil and those people Brian get
up under my skin who won't register to vote, who
aren't registered to vote but have an opinion about the election. Listen,
I don't want to hear it, right, So what gets
me frustrated? And I think people listening here on your

(01:37:09):
show are people who come to us and voice all
their opinions. They're all hot around the collar right, very
much into their faith. But when it comes to the election,
they say their vote doesn't count and they don't show up,
and then we have elections being lost by five hundred votes,
by twenty votes, by five votes, by one hundred votes

(01:37:30):
because people kept there behind home. I'm telling you on
November sixth, if you walk up to me and you're talking,
remember when you vote, it's a public not who you
voted for, but it's a public record. I can go
right there in Hamilton County and look and see when
was the last times you counted, When was the last
time you voted? And what elections? What party did you

(01:37:51):
vote on in a primary? Did you pull a Republican
or a Democratic primary? My point to you is, don't
sit back and talk about any of these elections if
you're not willing to get up registered to vote, and
even more so if you are a registered to voter,
to show up and vote in the election. Or November
the fifth Brian Thomas.

Speaker 2 (01:38:11):
Exclamation point, Christopher Smithman will pause, will bring Christopher back
for more of the smith event.

Speaker 1 (01:38:16):
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Speaker 8 (01:39:28):
This is fifty five KARC an iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 2 (01:39:31):
By Texteam sixty four Dom seven at the five kr
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Speaker 1 (01:39:38):
Money Monday.

Speaker 2 (01:39:39):
Brian James at the top of the Iron is in
the meantime, we're talking about Christopher Smith, and from your
vice Mayor of the City of Cincinnati, with a smither event,
Christopher or what else is on your mind, my dear friend.

Speaker 10 (01:39:48):
Look, brother, the Democrats have rolled out Hillary Clinton campaign
for the vice president for United States, for the United
States of America.

Speaker 4 (01:39:58):
I just want to remind.

Speaker 10 (01:40:01):
Citizens across this country because what she's attempting to do
is talk to white female voters.

Speaker 15 (01:40:08):
Right.

Speaker 10 (01:40:09):
She wants to push suburban white women to vote for
Kamala Harris. That's the strategy as a politician, That's what
I see. Here's the problem with Hillary Clinton. When her
husband was in the White House and women were accusing

(01:40:29):
him of sexual misconduct.

Speaker 4 (01:40:32):
Remember it was.

Speaker 10 (01:40:34):
Hillary Clinton who shut those voices down. The me Too
movement meant nothing to her when it came to her husband.
I'm talking about before Monica Lewinsky and cigars and under
the desk and what was happening with her dress when
DNA happened to get on her dress and she brought

(01:40:56):
that forward. I'm talking about all the other women that
accused Bill Clinton for his inappropriate behavior in their marriage.
And here she is damning people talking about whether it's
the former president Trump. Are trying to convince us that
she's on some high horse for women when when it

(01:41:20):
counted in her own life, she shut those women down,
She trashed them, She tried to destroy their lives, saying
that her husband wasn't involved.

Speaker 4 (01:41:32):
In that misconduct.

Speaker 10 (01:41:33):
And I just want to remind the public that that
was Hillary Crientton. So let's not get for let's not
lose our memory here and get amnesia when these politicians
are rolling out. You don't see Bill Clinton out there talking.

Speaker 1 (01:41:48):
And there's a reason, You're right.

Speaker 10 (01:41:57):
Incredibly that is so incredibly frustrating for all of us
right out here when we watched these politicians roll out
and they try to tell us, oh man, she's wonderful,
she's great, vote for this person. I'm not listening to
any of that madness, you hear me. I'm very very focused,
and I think it's a shame. Let me talk a

(01:42:18):
little bit about Oprah Winfrey and the interview with the
Vice President. Oh wow, she Oprah looked like a deer
in head. Like anybody watch the interview. Look at Oprah's face.
She could not believe some of the answers that were coming,
meaning Oprah would ask a question and not get a
career answer to say the least right. But when they

(01:42:42):
panned in on Oprah's face, her eyeballs were open and
she had to save the Vice president several times during
that interview to say, this is what you mean, this
is what you're saying. Let me clarify what I just heard.
There was no clarity, as people said it was a
word salad. You didn't quite understand what she was saying

(01:43:03):
in that interview. And I'm tired of these dog gone celebrities.
By the way, P Diddy, Sean p Diddy, a lot
of these dog on West Coast actors, actresses, politicians, preachers
are all lawyering up right now because the next Epstein

(01:43:23):
is here in jail on suicide. Watch and watch them
over the next forty days. Whether it's whether it's Steve Harvey,
whether it is Jennifer Lopez who dated him, whether it
might be Bill Clinton himself. You're going to watch a
lot of these West Coast people that are trying to
tell us in the Midwest how we should live our lives, right,

(01:43:46):
And you guys are out there talking on the West
Coast having sex with children, meaning they want to be
a star, but to be a star, you got to
have sex with me. Right, this thing looks like the
Catholic Church. Meaning what's been going on in all of
these executives who've been resigning over the last two weeks. Right,
I'm tired of here in California and New York try

(01:44:09):
to tell me in the Midwest that my culture is bad,
that there's something wrong with me. That they want the
popular vote, not the electoral vote to elect the president
because they decide they want to decide who the president
of the United States of America. Let's go ask P
Diddy in jail on Suicide Watch if I want him
endorsing anybody for president of the United States of America.

Speaker 1 (01:44:32):
Oh wow, why it's been reports this morning? I saw him.

Speaker 2 (01:44:36):
And you know, I've never cared a wit about what
some celebrities says one way or another. I'm not going
to They're not going to sway my opinion if they
want to use logic and reason, not that I am,
you know, filling the blank movie star vote for Kamala Harris.
I want to hear why. They don't even know why.
But as to the point on P did hey, a
lot of people, all these celebrities are are deleting their

(01:44:56):
social media accounts completely because obviously there's a lot of
pro P Diddy stuff going on. There are a lot
of photographs of them hanging out with him. It is
the next Jeffrey Epstein probably or Harvey Weinstein. But regardless,
they're running scared. I was joking this morning, sort of
half joking about, since P Diddy's on a suicide watch,

(01:45:17):
what are the odds that he's not around.

Speaker 1 (01:45:19):
In a week or two? Right Epstein?

Speaker 9 (01:45:22):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (01:45:22):
Yeah, the cameras don't work. They weren't doing their job.

Speaker 2 (01:45:24):
The guards weren't checking up on him like they're supposed
to with anybody on suicide watch.

Speaker 1 (01:45:28):
It was all a mystery to us. But yeah, he
ended up hanging himself.

Speaker 2 (01:45:31):
I mean, very few people believe that, or at least
there's a lot of credibility issues that go along with that.
Obviously a well connected man Epstein and a documented pedophile,
So people running scared for that, and then he dies
and seems to me no one else is running scared anymore.

Speaker 1 (01:45:46):
Maybe P Diddy's the next one.

Speaker 10 (01:45:48):
I don't know, it looks like it to me. Briant Thomas,
it looks like it to me. And I'm saying they're
out there endorsing. They're out there and making these public endorsements.
Let's see which candidates over the next forty days have
to say, no, I don't accept that endorsement, and they're
running from endorsement based on the information that's going to

(01:46:08):
come from P Diddy's house and the videos that he
has that the FBI is reviewing. Look, let me say
the last thing here. The violence that I saw in Birmingham, Alabama.
My family is from the South. Father was born and
raised in Birmingham, Ballad, Obama. My mother was born and
raised in Montgomery, Alabama, and they met at Tuskegee Institute.
Let me just say this, the violence that happened, the

(01:46:31):
mass shooting four people did? I think it's fourteen or
fifteen people shot? And the bottom line is we still
don't have the shooters. If we don't cooperate as citizens
with the police department, we're not going to be able
to solve these kinds of crimes. It doesn't have to
do with the gun. It has to do with the

(01:46:51):
person who's pulling the trigger. What we have to do
as Americans is cooperate with the police department and make
sure that he puts the people who get this under
the jail so that they never get out. And that
means you can't you can't be scared. You have to
stand up and say there is someone who came in
and shot into this area, shooting innocent people, and we

(01:47:15):
must cooperate with law enforcement. And the assassination attempts on
a former president two times, let me tell you, I
still am disgusted by listening to the democratic operatives that
continue to dehumanize this man. Whether you're voting for him
or not, we all have to be able to say

(01:47:36):
that attempted murder is bad at Putting bullets into an
election where we're supposed to be voting makes us a
third world country. Blaming him for golfing and saying there's
an AR fifteen on a fence line that just by
chance and luck and God had a secret service person

(01:47:56):
see that muscle of that gun and open fire. Not
the leading or not leading it the fifty to fifty
candidate wherever you are would be did today. The reality
of it is, I thought that everybody would have denounced
the attempted assassination of a candidate running for president of

(01:48:17):
the United States, and I continue to be disappointed and
disgusted by what I continue to see on TV. Brian Tarmas, you.

Speaker 2 (01:48:25):
Got every reason to feel that way, Christopher. I mean
gun violence, you know, without for defensive reasons. Just going
out and killing anyone randomly, arbitrary or intentionally, without proper
motive and appropriate legal allowance, like defending yourself is out
of the equation, period and the story. And it's even
more so when you're talking about major political candidates. I mean, lord,

(01:48:46):
this is the kind of thing that turns society on
top of its head, Christopher, and everyone should be, you know,
embraced around the your your point, which is this is
wrong and it cannot be defended. And you can't blame
Donald Trump or the words that pe use to justify
trying to kill someone crazy period period.

Speaker 10 (01:49:06):
And in conclusion, Brian Thomas, look, the reason they aren't
doing it, this is so sick to say it out loud,
is they believe that talking about this man being possibly asfascinated.

Speaker 4 (01:49:22):
Helps him in the election.

Speaker 10 (01:49:25):
They believe that it makes him more human or it
galvanizes people who might be supporting him. So the major
networks don't want to talk about it for political reasons,
even though the candidate on the other side that they
are not supporting is being shot at and people are

(01:49:46):
trying to kill him and the election still isn't here.
Isn't that amazing what they're playing politics with the appimpted
as fascination of a former president and.

Speaker 2 (01:49:58):
Along roads lines suggest if not outright saying that he
was responsible for it in the sense that he arranged
it for that reason alone, which is in and of
itself absolutely insane. Christopher, always enjoy your comments. I appreciate
your passion, sir.

Speaker 10 (01:50:12):
People please follow me on x at vote Smitherman and
I'm so glad that Elon Musk bought Twitter turned it
into x and free speech possibly is still alive in
this country even though Hillary Clinton doesn't want to have it.

Speaker 2 (01:50:33):
Oh you oll interject real quick, you are a Catholic
in spite of your criticism of the Catholic Church over
the child molestation issues, He's a devout Catholic. Christopher, love you, brother.
I just want to make sure you I was just
want to make sure that was clear. This wasn't a
non Catholic taking a go at the Catholic Church. Thanks man,
I love you, brother. We'll talk again soon. Speaking of

(01:50:53):
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Speaker 11 (01:51:31):
Here illegally crossing our southern It's the stuff how students
people are talking about Canning.

Speaker 4 (01:51:38):
We are Hamah.

Speaker 1 (01:51:40):
It turns my stomach and fifty five KRZ the talk station.

Speaker 2 (01:51:47):
AH six fifty five KRCD talk station. Brian Thomas welcoming
back to the fifty five KR six Morning Show. As
is tradition, it's time four Money Monday with all Worth Financials.

Speaker 1 (01:51:57):
Brian James. Welcome back, Brian, Hope you had a wonderful
weekend you two Woday.

Speaker 12 (01:52:02):
Today is the morning of the beginning of the turnaround.

Speaker 1 (01:52:05):
Mister optimist, Yes, going with it.

Speaker 12 (01:52:08):
People know me won't think that.

Speaker 2 (01:52:10):
But well you know today well and normally it's time
to be pessimistic. Given your line of work, investment guy,
you are in. September normally is a bad month for
the stock market. I understand that may not be the
case this year.

Speaker 12 (01:52:24):
Yeah, so September normally is a bit of a bumpy time,
but that is definitely not the case right around now.
There's no there are no rules of thumb, right, we
don't believe in that stuff. But there are patterns that
you can identify. Unfortunately, they're not predictable enough to be useful.
Otherwise that's all we would do. So historically, the stock mark,
the S and P five hundred has lost about negative
one point two percent. That's the average over all time.

(01:52:47):
We've got some whoppers lately, losing about five percent twenty
twenty three and about a nine percent decline in twenty
twenty two. Twenty twenty two is one of the worst
years we've had on record. We don't really think of
it that way, but it was one of the five
worst years we've ever had in particularly bad But that's
the past, Brian. So as of now, US docs are
on track to finish higher in September for the first
time in about five years, up about one percent so

(01:53:09):
far as much which on one hand, you think one
percent that's not that great, but remember that would translate
to a twelve percent annualized rate of return, which we
would of course welcome at any time all September right
exactly since twenty nineteenth. So we're looking a lot better
this month.

Speaker 2 (01:53:24):
Well, historically, is there any explanation for why September has
been such a poor performing month.

Speaker 12 (01:53:31):
It's a transition. Historically, it's a transition from the summer
economy into fall economy. Things can get just a little
bit bumpy, and I think this time around we're also
remember what's going on right now is that we have
a rate cut, which we've been anticipating a long time now.
We got a fifty basis point rate cut that will
drive us up. But normally it's just a quieter month

(01:53:52):
in terms of economic activity. And there's also some other
meetings and things that always occur in decisions that are
made around that time that they can push the market below.
But again it's nothing that you would want to hang
your hat on and mark your calendar really four day around.

Speaker 2 (01:54:05):
Well, in terms of the rate cut, you know, as
you always point out, I think everybody kind of observes,
once the rate cut comes out, or increase comes out,
as the case may be, it's already been baked into
the cake. The markets have anticipated and already reacted accordingly,
and so when it finally gets announced, it's usually like, man,
you know, that's what we expected. And by the way,
we've already factored that in over the past month or two.

Speaker 12 (01:54:26):
Right S and P and the Nasdaq what they call
the tech heavy NASDACK are both up about twenty percent
this year. And yes, that is largely an anticipation of
a shift in the overall stance of the of the
US in terms of how are we going to go
forward doing business. So this has been anticipated for a while.
That's why we didn't get a big explosion in the
stock market. It was not a surprise cut. We all

(01:54:47):
knew the rate cuts were coming. The question was simply
when the idea of it being a fifty basis point cut.
That was a little bit of a surprise, But that
speaks to, I think the economic resilience that our country has.
When was the last time you heard somebody talk about
soft landing? Right now? I don't know when we're going
to declare that we have landed. You know, we just
keep talking about it until we no longer are talking

(01:55:08):
about it. There isn't going to be a you know,
a blinking light that says we've officially we're out of
that era now.

Speaker 1 (01:55:14):
But so far, so good. Well metal with the markets
they do, but the Fed.

Speaker 2 (01:55:17):
It could it be that maybe this unusual September in
terms of gains is a revelation of an anticipation that
investors believe there's going to be another rate cut.

Speaker 12 (01:55:31):
Yeah, because we do this in patterns, right, We very
rarely just make one cut or even one hike and
then sit. It has to be a series of things.
As we you know, we don't never want to stomp
on the gas and stomp on the brake pedal. It
gives you whiplash. So yes, when we get one, there
are usually many more coming. So this is basically the
market shifting into a mode of lower interest rates, meaning

(01:55:52):
it gets easier to do business. It will get easier
for people to buy houses. That will make people more
mobile and able to take that promotion that moves them
across the country. Those kinds of things, and those sound
like one off anecdotes, but when you add it all together,
they cause massive swings in the overall economy, and that's
kind of what we're hoping for here.

Speaker 2 (01:56:10):
Well, do you think another rate cut will make things
more affordable? I just saw an article I believe it
is this morning. Interest rates, while down, some haven't really
been impacted too much by the rate cut because the
Treasury rates are still I guess what they are, and
that's independently and the Fed does correct.

Speaker 12 (01:56:28):
Yeah, so there's more at play than just what the
Federal Reserve does. The Fed does not directly dictate mortgage
rates per se. Mortgage rates usually follow the ten year
Treasury and that's a function of supply and demand. If
a lot of people are moving those types of assets around,
then that's going to have an impact on interest rates eventually.
But so one cut is not going to do it.

(01:56:48):
It's the beginning of a trend in terms of seeing
a few in a series. That's where we'll start to see.

Speaker 1 (01:56:55):
Those come down.

Speaker 2 (01:56:57):
Okay, well, what's your guess? Another rate cut? And you
think there's one coming?

Speaker 1 (01:57:01):
Actually?

Speaker 12 (01:57:01):
And if so, when, yeah, anything, I say as a
stab in the dark, But I would say yes, because again,
this isn't this is not a one time let's just
do a quick fixed here. The story really never ends.
So I would say yes. It does make a lot
of sense that we're now in a rate cutting environment.
The goal was never to permanently be at a higher
rate situation. And let's remember that the most recent high

(01:57:24):
quote unquote rates that we're talking about pale in comparison
to what high interest rates were in the early eighties.
It just never got that bad. Even a six to
seven percent warrigage. It feels painful now, and it is
painful for people, but historically that's still fairly low. We
don't want them, we want to give them back. It's
better for two to three four percent. But that's kind
of where we are now.

Speaker 2 (01:57:43):
I know we're going to be talking about this generation,
this new younger generation, may be impossible to buy a house.
They perceive it to be impossible. But can you imagine
this current generation having to deal with the realities of say,
nineteen seventy nine or nineteen eighty mortgage interest rates.

Speaker 9 (01:58:00):
Yeah.

Speaker 12 (01:58:00):
But the thing I would layer on there is the
is the folks at that time did not graduate with
ridiculous student loans like people. There's more moving parts to
this an.

Speaker 2 (01:58:08):
There really are, aren't there. Brian James will pause early
because the next two segments seem to be related. Gen
Zers say I'm not going to have kids because of money,
and of course buying the home seems like an impossibility.
More with money Monday, Brian James. We're gonna take quick
break here and I get to mention prestige and tears
because you're going to work with the John Ryan.

Speaker 1 (01:58:25):
John.

Speaker 2 (01:58:25):
Ryan's a hell of a great guy, real sweet man.
He's got such wonderful knowledge and experience when it comes
to kitchen remodeling. He's been doing kitchens for more than
thirty years, almost exclusively, and he's a real partner. You
sit down with them at the initial design phase. You
talk about what you're looking for in your kitchen. Big project,
small project. You just want to replace the cabins and countertops,
you're in the best hands. And of course, if you

(01:58:47):
want to gout the whole thing and start from scratch,
which is the direction we went with John. So very
happy that we were working with John. Just love what
he did for our kitchen. He's got ideas for design
and flow and function and storage that you might not
even have thought of. That's what thirty plus years of
doing kitchen gets with you. So work with John. You'd
be glad you called him up to talk to him
about your kitchen remodeling project. He enjoys an A plus

(01:59:08):
with a Better Business Bureau. Member of the National Kitchen
Bath Association. Prestige Interiors can be found online at Prestige
one two three dot com. Please tell John I said
hi when you give him a call. Five one three
two four seven zero two two nine five one three
two four seven zero two.

Speaker 3 (01:59:22):
Two nine fifty five krc iHeartRadio pre Team here fifty
about KERCD talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:59:29):
All our financials. Brian James won that money money thing
all right.

Speaker 2 (01:59:34):
A couple of seemingly related articles, Brian, you got one
in four millennials and gen Zer saying that we're not
going to have kids. It costs too much. I guess
the figure quoted and I've seen, you know, a little
bit higher. Two hundred and forty grand is what it
costs to raise a child from birth to age eighteen,
which is described in the article you gave me as
a twenty percent increase from twenty sixteen. Brian, I'm always

(01:59:54):
pointing out, you know, you can't put a value on
being a parent. It is such a glorious, wonderful experience.
It is personally expanding. You learn more about yourself raising
children than you ever hoped and you could imagine, and
it's just it's such a nice thing to have the
comfort of children and all the it's you know, if
you told me and when I when my kids were born,
you know, Brian, you're going to spend two hundred and

(02:00:16):
forty grand between now when they're eighteen.

Speaker 1 (02:00:17):
To raise his child.

Speaker 2 (02:00:19):
Knowing what I know now to say, yeah, bring it on.
That's broken down over eighteen years, and it's not that
bad bad given what you get on return on investment.

Speaker 1 (02:00:28):
Brian.

Speaker 12 (02:00:29):
Well, yeah, and I think, but I think we have
to look through it through a slightly different lens because
there the reality is things are different there is a
perfect storm of crazy out there that is hammering an
awful lot of people. And the people who are gonna
be able to afford it the least and can have
the least amount of things out of left field hit
them are the ones who are just getting started. So
you got to look at what, of course, where are

(02:00:51):
you going to live rent? Nowadays? You're looking at a minimum.
You and I talk about this. We've got kids in
roughly the same style or time of life. You're gonna
pay them minimum of eight nine hundred bucks a month
for just a place to rent, and you're going to
hopefully be in a career where you can move around
a little bit and continue to get the raises and
chase different opportunities. But that doesn't happen for everybody, and

(02:01:13):
it doesn't necessarily happen all that quickly. And the average
student loan nowadays is over twenty thousand dollars, and that
comes along with a three hundred dollars payment on average.

Speaker 4 (02:01:21):
Now.

Speaker 12 (02:01:22):
Of course some are more, some or less, but that's
an extra hurdle that people twenty thirty years ago didn't
quite have because the cost of that education, like we
were talking about before, was not what it is right now.
You layer on top of that inflation and just the
crazy hikes we've had and the price of everything across
the board that isn't coming back down. A lot of

(02:01:44):
that's being driven, of course by outside forces. It's just
this time of the economic cycle. But remember there's also
a lot of profits seeking enterprises that are benefiting from this.
For example, thirty years ago, you and I were not
competing and buying a house. We were not competing with
corporations who were all also buying houses to turn around
and rent. So that has reduced the supply of the

(02:02:04):
town homes and the single family the starter home. Never
really talks about starter home anymore. A lot of those
are getting picked up and shoved into portfolios that will
be filled with renters. That means there's less left over
for someone to buy a house and really put those
roots deep. So I feel for this generation it's not
an easy time to try to get it off the ground.

Speaker 2 (02:02:21):
Now, most notably in housing. I have to acknowledge and
it is kind of a strange reality that this idea
of corporations buying up massive quantities of real estate and
then you know, not flipping them, but renting them as
opposed to, you know, having individual ownership. It's a new
concept and a new I guess. I wonder how it

(02:02:41):
is that that didn't arise prior to.

Speaker 1 (02:02:44):
This moment in history.

Speaker 2 (02:02:45):
That you know, thirty years ago, there weren't corporations out there,
like real estate development trust or real estate investment trusts
or something owning all of these properties. It's just it's
a new phenomenon. And you give me a reason why
that you don't think that's happened before.

Speaker 12 (02:02:59):
You know, Honestly, I'm going to say, I think technology,
Brian plays a role in this because tracking all of
that stuff. What this is, when corporations buy up all
these properties, they have to keep track of it. There's
one person paying rent, and there's a few toilets in
that piece of property, they're going to get backed up.
Someone has to manage all of that. And so I
believe that when I think about things like exchange traded funds,

(02:03:23):
those didn't come to exist until technology could really help
build them in a moment's notice. So I think managing
the individual components of a portfolio, it's a lot easier
to do those things now than it was thirty forty
fifty years ago, and I think we had low interest
rates for an extremely long time, right, we had fifteen
years worth of historically low interest rates, and that made

(02:03:44):
it irresistible for big piles of money to invest in
the space because you can get a mortgage against a
piece of property that keeps the rates even lower than
a normal business loan, and it just became absolutely irresistible.
And it's still worth it now. They're making money not
off of the interest rates because they're higher, but just
off of the idea of inflation and the general acceptance
by the public that hey, this is just what we

(02:04:05):
pay now, so therefore it's more profitable than traditional types
of investments have been and that's the attraction.

Speaker 2 (02:04:11):
Well, and speaking of investments, just building generally speaking. And
I know there's now this push to come back to work,
which means more people are going to have to live
closer to the office the way it used to be.
So yeah, I want a place that's conveniently located relative
to downtown Cincinnati where my office is. I need to
buy within this geographic region. But with the Internet and

(02:04:31):
people working from home a lot, you would think that
that is a opportunity for building where it's less expensive
to do so out in more rural climes where people
actually seemingly have a preference to live now, given crime
rates and inner cities have gone up and some of
the destabilizing realities of living in an inner city like
infrastructure decay and things like that. You know, build a
subdivision with smaller homes out in some wide open space

(02:04:54):
where there aren't heavy building codes and regulation. That sounds
like a money making opportunity for a building company.

Speaker 12 (02:05:00):
It is, but they're selling them for market rates. So
I mean, that's happening all over Cincinnati. You can drive
around around the rim the frontier if you will, and
I'm up north and up here it's Monroe. You're starting
to see subdivisions popping up in Monroe, which is just
that much. It's just the new frontier north of Liberty Township.
So that's happening. But it's being done not for the
goal of let's provide more housing. It's being done for

(02:05:22):
the goal of, hey, this is a profitable enterprise, so
let's sell it at market rates. And currently market rates
are there what they are, It's just plain expensive for
somebody to get started, and that's what they're attracted to. Again,
we're not hearing about nonprofits coming out and building subdivisions
for this purpose of affordability. We're hearing about corporations who
are taking advantage of this strong economy. And we'll continue

(02:05:43):
to hear more of this as rates come down, as
it starts to infect mortgages. That the demand for housing.
We know the demand is there, so there's really not
much to hope for that prices are going to come
down because people are still willing to.

Speaker 1 (02:05:55):
Pay for it.

Speaker 2 (02:05:56):
Well, that's true, and I mean, I guess you can
overlook the fact that we cat I had about ten
plus million additional people over the past several years. They
have to have someplace to sleep, and you know, if
apartments are the answer to that, whether they're subsidized or not,
that's one less apartment or multiple apartments that aren't available
on a free market for lower income individuals to actually
pay rent and live.

Speaker 12 (02:06:15):
There, exactly. So it's all a big puzzle. It'll fit
together one way or another, but sometimes you got to
use a hammer to get the pieces in.

Speaker 2 (02:06:22):
We had to wait for eighteen percent mortgage rates to
go down over time, so I guess we'll have to
wait for the supply to increase to the point where
the pricing prices level off. Complex no easy solution, right, Brian.

Speaker 12 (02:06:35):
Nope. The puzzle pieces fit together, but they're not going
to fit together for this generation the same way that
they did for prior.

Speaker 10 (02:06:41):
Ah.

Speaker 2 (02:06:41):
Well, we've been through struggles and times before and everybody
seems to manage to get through, and then we reflect
back on how do we get from there? To hear
Brian James, always a pleasure. Monday Monday, every Monday at
eight o five. I wish we could talk longer. I
got a guess coming up next, and we've already exhausted
the topic, so we'll just call it a day to day.

Speaker 1 (02:06:57):
I have a wonderful week. Brian's always great talking.

Speaker 12 (02:06:58):
To you, all right, Thank you every good one.

Speaker 2 (02:07:01):
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Colin Electriccincinnati dot com fifty five KRC. This is this
simple fingers crossed for the weather, mostly cloudy data. Fingers
crosser for the evening showers and storms that Channel nine
is predicting today, eighty for the high. Maybe some rain

(02:08:05):
overnights like chance sixty five the low they say on
and off, showers and storms tomorrow, mostly cloudy skies in
I have seventy five, few showers over night sixty one
and Wednesday. Fingers crossed again, chance of showers and thunderstorms
showing up after two pm. Cloudy all day, seventy eight
for the high. Right now it's seventy two degrees high.
For a traffic update.

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Speaker 13 (02:08:35):
Northbound four seventy one continues to be a slow go
just over a twenty minute delay from two to seventy
five into town. Northbound seventy five break wide buttermilk towards
Dixie and southbound seventy five. That's a slow go out
of Wachland. There's just a bit of slow traffic left
on southbound seventy one approaching Redpank chuck Ingramont fifty five

(02:08:55):
Kerr see the talk station.

Speaker 1 (02:09:00):
Nine fifty five Carsity talk Station.

Speaker 2 (02:09:02):
We're having a really nice Monday, trying to make it
so anyway, Welcome back to the thirty five Caursity Morning Show.
George Brunhaman apparently is a big event coming up at
the farm and George is here to talk about it.
It's a restored Liberty dot Us event. Welcome back, George.
Always great to talk with you, my friend. Thanks Brian,
great to be here. So we got a couple of

(02:09:23):
things coming up this week. So Wednesday night at the
Farms are our meeting. The special guest is Jack Atherton.

Speaker 15 (02:09:30):
So we're going to discuss a little bit about the
role of media in elections and shaping public opinions. So
that should be a very industring interesting discussion.

Speaker 2 (02:09:40):
So it's a live podcast in front of the in
front of the farm audience there on Wednesday.

Speaker 1 (02:09:45):
Yes, it is.

Speaker 15 (02:09:46):
So what we've done is the doors open at five
point thirty and the dinner buffet, so pick whatever you
want to eat.

Speaker 1 (02:09:53):
It's all good stuff that starts at six.

Speaker 15 (02:09:56):
And then while you know everybody's sitting at their tables eating,
we have a live podcast that you know, Joe comes
in helps us do and it's it's been a great
way to get people involved and you get a ton
of information out there without you know, a lot of
fuss and you know, taking up a ton of times
that you're eating anyway, and then we start a meeting

(02:10:16):
at seven.

Speaker 1 (02:10:18):
The meeting, we're going to be talking about what.

Speaker 15 (02:10:20):
If scenarios, So what if Trump loses, what if Trump wins,
what if Bernie wins or loses, What if taxes continue
to go and they actually do start taxing your I RA.
So there's there's tons of stuff out there to talk about.

Speaker 10 (02:10:34):
Uh.

Speaker 15 (02:10:34):
And we're also going to ask everybody to bring their
address books and pens and some stamps.

Speaker 4 (02:10:39):
And we're going to start mailing out slate cards.

Speaker 2 (02:10:42):
Oh, that's a great idea, getting ahead of it. Early votings.
It's just fast approaching here in Ohio. And by the way,
get registered to vote. The time is running out for
you to do that. I you know, I think about
on the heels of my conversation Brian James, and you know,
millennials and young people can't afford they have children, they think,
and they can't afford a home, and that's one of

(02:11:02):
the reasons why it's too expensive they have children, on
and on on. You know, they're talking about taking more
of our tax money, or more of our earnings away
from us in terms of you know, increasing the taxes,
talk about reducing your expendable income. At a time when
housing is unaffordable and our grocery bills are going through
the roof. It just seems like a recipe for disaster.
And yet this is what the Democrats are running on

(02:11:24):
raising our collective taxes.

Speaker 15 (02:11:27):
It is and they talk about the Trump tax cut
as it only went to the rich. Well, most of
that tax cut went to everybody in the middle. It
was a phenomenal decrease in the center of the tax table.
And they never talk about that. But as soon as
that goes away, everyone's going to notice it in their paycheck.

Speaker 2 (02:11:47):
Well, and that's one of those media lies that keeps
getting perpetuated that these Trump tax cuts were just you know,
the rich. You know, I get disagreement from some people.
They talk about economics. I mean, we pay the tax.
When corporate taxes go up, you know, it impacts their
bottom line. They're going to raise their prices to cover
the additional tax revenue. I just that seems to be
just sort of logical thing to do for a corporation.

(02:12:09):
But it's going to make everything more expensive, even if
your personal tax bracket isn't directly implicated.

Speaker 7 (02:12:17):
Right.

Speaker 15 (02:12:17):
Yeah, there's so much lies going on. You know, you
watch the football games yesterday and you see lie after lie.
I mean, Kamala shared Brown. If they had to tell
the truth, it would be you know, a five second commercial.

Speaker 1 (02:12:32):
It's crazy.

Speaker 2 (02:12:33):
Well, and you can't get you can't pin Kamala Harris
down on anything because she doesn't answer any questions.

Speaker 15 (02:12:42):
Don't you wish you had a job where you could
do that? Just voted it, never really do anything. It's
absolutely bonkers. And you know, we've got relatives asking us, oh,
can you give me a favorite vote for Harris?

Speaker 1 (02:12:54):
And the comeback is like, are you out of your brain?

Speaker 4 (02:12:57):
There's no way.

Speaker 2 (02:12:59):
Well in the response again is why would I do that?
And then they say, well, because Donald Trump. And they
can't elaborate on why that will be so bad for
the country of Donald Trump's elected. And I know it
comes with some downsides, but comparatively speaking, I felt a
lot better economically and in terms of world security and
foreign affairs relations, better under the policies of Donald Trump

(02:13:19):
than I ever have felt under Joe Biden and Kamala Harris, Oh,
for sure.

Speaker 15 (02:13:25):
And this whole idea of you know, he's bringing an
assassination attempt on himself heard. I heard the conversation with
Christopher and it's like, actually, my wife and we were
in Florida, That's where we were last week, and we
were literally like two or three miles from where that happened.
Had no idea what was going on. I found out
via X because Bernie Marino had sent out a note

(02:13:47):
that he had been attacked again or potentially was. And
I mean they didn't even stop the football games to
tell you that. That's how little they regarded. Yeah, it's
it's so open and obvious. I mean, folks like you
and I pay attention all this time and you can
see it all day long. And she makes you wonder
when you see polling that shows Harris neck and neck

(02:14:08):
or even past Donald Trump and in terms of who
people plan on voting for, you just.

Speaker 1 (02:14:14):
Why, I'm just it's it's just absolutely nuts. It is.

Speaker 15 (02:14:18):
So the other event we're doing, I want to make
sure I get this in as well as the movie,
Hill Billy Elogy really gives you a lot of interesting
background information on JD. Vance and why he does some
of the things he does. So we're going to do
a showing of Hillbilly Elergy Thursday night at the Parkland
Theater over in Sailor Park. That's the same kind of schedule.

(02:14:39):
We're going to open up the pub there at five
point thirty and then you can just walk right into
the theater at seven to watch the movie. We're trying
to get JD to send us some background information that
we can share with the group. But it's very important
to understand where that man comes from and why he
does seem to have this, you know, ability to connect

(02:15:00):
with Middle America and below. I mean, he came from
nothing and made something of himself. So it's the American
dream story. And I think it's important for people to understand.
You know, in some ways JD is a better Trump
than Trump.

Speaker 2 (02:15:15):
Yeah, You're not the first person I've heard say words
along those lines, George, that is for sure. Anyway, Hill
Billy lg the Parkland Theater Thursday the twenty six at
five thirties when the pub opened seven o'clock to the
movie and then the Farm be at the Farm on Wednesday,
five thirty pm. Dinner at six here Jack Adden, he
is brilliant. Love what Jack has to say. So you

(02:15:36):
get to watch that live. Joe Strecker obviously producing that
podcast mister podcast himself. Oh and he just chimed in, George, George,
Joe will be happy to sign autographs. Another reason at
the farm, George, thank you so much for what you
do each and every day and restore Liberty dot Us
is where you find George and other things that are
going on. We'll have you back on again. I'm sure

(02:15:57):
real soon, George. Have a wonderful week and I hope
the events are both very successful.

Speaker 1 (02:16:02):
Thank you, Brian.

Speaker 2 (02:16:02):
All Right, you got options, and one of the options
is for my next guest on Thursday, Empower You Seminar
September twenty sixth early since e History. Jeff Seuss is
going to join the program coming up next to talk
about that. And first, I want to save you money.
We're talking about the economy. Everything's more expensive. You need
to find places to save money. And when a hospital
image is discussed with your doctor, and your doctor most

(02:16:23):
assuredly will want to send you to the hospital system
that owns his or her practice. That's when you realize, well,
wait a minute, I've got a choice when it comes
to my medical care. If I go to affordable imaging services,
I can save literally thousands of dollars. Every circumstance is different,
but I always like to rely on my friend Jeff's
experience where he called ahead of time to the imaging
department and found out after his insurance payment was processed,

(02:16:47):
his echo cardiogram was going to set him back personally
thirty one hundred dollars. I know, it's mind boggling. And
the echo cardogram at Affordable Imaging Services with everything included
including the board certified radiologists report is only four hundred
and ninety five dollars.

Speaker 1 (02:17:02):
That's right.

Speaker 2 (02:17:02):
No, up's no extra, same equipment to hospitals, use same
professionals operating, and you have a choice, and that kind
of savings across the board where there's an mri CT scan, ultrasound,
long screening, cardiac scoring, you can save yourselves a heapload
of real money. Affordable Medimaging dot com to learn more,
call them up and scheduled depployment. It's five one three
seven five three eight thousand. Five to one three seven,

(02:17:23):
five three eight thousand.

Speaker 8 (02:17:25):
This is fifty five krc an iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 1 (02:17:29):
By texting.

Speaker 2 (02:17:33):
It's hey forty here fifty five KRCD talk station. I
mentioned going to the break. We have choices and a
couple of choices now for the twenty six Welcome back
to the fifty five CARC morning show. Columnists and library
and at the Cincinnian inquired George jeff Cez, author of
a multitude of books we've talked about before. George has
been on the program talking about Lost Cincinnati, Hidden History
of Cincinnati, CINCINNTI, Van and Now, and Cincinnati an Illustrated Timeline.

(02:17:55):
He's also written on other topics including the Disneylands, Tomorrow Land,
the Bengals, San Francisco forty nine. He is a resident
of White Oak, since any guy he is, although he's
not originally from here, but he's doing to empower you seminar.
You can find more information to registered empower You America
dot org, a seminar on Cincinnati history. Jeff, welcome back
to the Morning Show. It's good having you back on.

(02:18:16):
Thanks for having me real quick here being a librarian
of the city. Since at Enquire they have their own
library there obviously.

Speaker 5 (02:18:25):
Well yeah, we kind of did, you know. We had
all the clips and the photos and things for you know,
references for the reporters and the copy letters and stuff.

Speaker 1 (02:18:34):
Over the years.

Speaker 5 (02:18:35):
But when we moved buildings about two years ago now,
we donated our photofiles to the public library and the
public libraries digitizing them all now and they're going to
be access to the public. Oh that's great, A good
way of the community kind of being have better access.

Speaker 1 (02:18:52):
Oh that's great. Remember having to use microfish back when
I was a little kid. Yes, yes, digitized now I
know makes it a lot easier.

Speaker 4 (02:19:03):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (02:19:03):
I can do so much research just from sitting at
home in my pajamas, So you know I can't argue
with that.

Speaker 2 (02:19:08):
Nothing wrong with working from home. Along these lines, Well, Jeff,
you're gonna do a seminar empower you America. Now, is
this going to be live at the two twenty five
North on Boulevard with log in access from home or
is this only log in?

Speaker 4 (02:19:21):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (02:19:21):
To be really honest, I'm not sure. I'm I just
show up to talk, Okay, Well, but I would assume
it's going to be as the normal access normal.

Speaker 2 (02:19:31):
I just answered my own question because the link is
on my blog page fifty five KC dot com. You
can register to attend in Perchin or registered to attend virtually.
So I guess you'll be appearing at two twenty five
North on Boulevard. O since a how far back in
time do you go? I had a historian friend, we
called him Bob from Oakley. He wrote books on the
early uh Cincinnati area history, early Ohio history. I mean

(02:19:53):
he went way way way back, like five thousand years
ago with the earliest dwellers in our area. How far
back are you going to start this presentation, Jeff, I'm.

Speaker 5 (02:20:04):
Gonna talk really more about kind of the early European
settlers to come in kind of during the seventeen sixties
seventeen seventies, just because it's more of a frame of reference.
You know, I don't really I'm not a scholar on
you know, the ancient cultures and a lot of that
stuff is still you know, we're finding new things out
every day, So I'm kind of focusing on kind of

(02:20:26):
like early America and how Cincinnati was being founded at
the same time America is starting, and all the same
forces that are going on. So you have those early
frontier settlers like Daniel Boone. You know that sometimes is
surprising to realize that Daniel Boone was a real person
and he really did stuff around here. He wasn't just
a legend, and you know, kind of the connections to

(02:20:49):
your American history of that kind of the.

Speaker 1 (02:20:52):
Revolutionary War period.

Speaker 2 (02:20:54):
Do you talk about how it was that people ended
up settling here in Cincinnati as opposed to I don't know,
Ironton or any other town along the Ohio River. I mean,
I understand the river connection makes perfect sense considering that's
how trade was conducted. But why Cincinnati, why this particular
spot on the map, Well.

Speaker 5 (02:21:13):
They had three settlements all around within a month of
each other. They were founded in seventeen eighty eight and
eighty nine. There was Columbia, there was Cincinnati, and there
was North Bend, and those were kind of the major ones,
all starting right there six seventeen eighty eight. That's also
you know, the first election and everything. You know, the
country is just starting and within a couple of years,

(02:21:33):
this whole Ohio Indiana kind of area is called the
Northwest Territory, and a lot of this was the American Territory,
and so there was a lot of tension and stuff.
So they had to build a fort, and for a
couple of different reasons, Cincinnati was the best location to
locate the fort, and that was Fort Washington. And we
still use that name for the freeway cross, can you know,

(02:21:55):
for down freeway access. And so that having Fort Washington
meant that it was also the center of the new county,
Hamilton County, and so all of the political things, the
legal things, the courthouses, everything like that becomes Cincinnati becomes
the center. And so then as that grows, especially compared

(02:22:15):
to the other settlements around, you're drawn to it because
it's got more established. So you had more and more people.
And when you're going out there, most people want to
be near other people, except Daniel Boone, who would get
tired of people and go and settle something else.

Speaker 2 (02:22:31):
That's true, that's true. They what just said, hold you over?
And I do, because what are you asking? How the
erie erie canal helps solidify Cincinnati. Also a couple other
things about this like Sims Purson. I live in Sims Township,
so my township has the name from Sims and the
Sims purchase more with Jeff Cease in a minute here.
First I got to close out. I mentioned Peter Sheba

(02:22:53):
Kellowiam seven Hells. He's an outstanding real estate agent, outstanding
human being, brilliant he is and always shapes and forms
of real estate is well, that's where he shines. He
has collected the best real estate agents from all over
the area. They now are with this pre group of
Colorwilliams seven Hills. They are superior.

Speaker 1 (02:23:08):
What they do.

Speaker 2 (02:23:09):
They offer tremendous value, which is so important. They're paying
a commission and the commission structure are now different and
it benefits you. But working with the SBRI Group will
certainly benefit you over the other guys because of the
value they add whether you're there, your buyer's agent or
seller's agent, keep you out of problems, make great recommendations.
They are the team to work with. Plus programs galore,

(02:23:29):
including the instant offer program, Love It or Leave It
and cash the Keys. You can learn more about those
programs and more about the Shabri Group by going to
the website seven zero eight three thousand dot com. That's
seven zero eight three thousand dot com. Tell them I
said hi. When you give them a call, it's five
P one three of course, seven zero eight three.

Speaker 3 (02:23:45):
Thousand fifty five KRC dot com.

Speaker 1 (02:23:53):
One more time for the weather and keep your fingers crossed.

Speaker 2 (02:23:55):
We get the rain that's in the forecast cloud these
guys Today evening showers and storms in a high at
eighty if you chance, little chance to ring with the
highest sixty five on and off. Showers and storms Tomorrow
with mostly cloudy sky seventy five for the high down
to sixty one overnight, and yes, another chance of showers
come Wednesday.

Speaker 1 (02:24:11):
Another chance of showers and storms after two pm.

Speaker 2 (02:24:14):
Cloudy day all day seventy eight for the high closing
out at seventy two.

Speaker 1 (02:24:17):
It's time for final traffic check.

Speaker 13 (02:24:19):
From the UC Health Tramphing Center with uce health, the
future of care is happening now through clinical trials and
innovative treatments that give patients a chance for better outcomes.
Visit ucehealth dot com. Southbound seventy five, continue slow through
Walkland northbound seventy five. That's a slow go buttermilk towards
Kyle's northbound fourth seventy one. That's over a fifteen minute

(02:24:41):
delay out of Southgate into town with a new accident
left shoulder above Memorial Chuck ing Ram on fifty five
KR see the talk station, Hey fifty fIF.

Speaker 2 (02:24:51):
Five KRCD talk station. Happy Monday to you. Brian twas
here with Jeff C. Stoing with presentation Thursday. Empower Youeamerica
dot orgs where you sign up with sign up and
log in from home or alternatively show up at the
power you some in our studios. Two twenty five Northland
Boulevard FKA fram USA is building jeff Erie Canal that

(02:25:11):
used to be where Central Parkway is now right.

Speaker 5 (02:25:15):
Correct, Yeah, is the Miami and Erie Canal that connected
Lake Erie to the Ohio River. And the basic idea
actually came from George Washington that he wanted the inland
waterway system to connect the Great Lakes to the rivers.
And what that really does is, or did is, you know,
you have all the goods and services going from the north,
you know, New York and all that that can reach

(02:25:36):
the Great Lakes through the Ohio River to the Mississippi
to the Gulf of Mexico. And so Cincinnati became a
key part of that whole connection. But that's really the
only good until you have railroads that kind of replace.

Speaker 1 (02:25:50):
All of that and commit do something.

Speaker 5 (02:25:54):
It's an engineering like a couple of decades.

Speaker 4 (02:25:56):
Yeah, it just it just is mind some remnants.

Speaker 2 (02:26:01):
Yeah, oh I know, and yeah it is, and all
the locks that had to be built, and I just
I imagine the tremendous labor and expense it was to
build it, and like you point out, it wasn't that far.
You fast forward and we don't need it anymore. We
got the rail system. So it's just I don't know,
when you look how long and how big it is
I mean I just kind of draw parallels. It's like
it's like building the Panama Canal and maybe even more difficult.

Speaker 1 (02:26:22):
I don't know.

Speaker 10 (02:26:25):
Did that.

Speaker 5 (02:26:25):
I mean it was quite lengthy. I mean, there was
a whole system of it. And luckily, you know, it
was helped build Cincinnati at the time, and so that's
kind of helped build it, build up what we had
in the different industries and here. So you know it's
had its use and you know since you benefited from it,
and as you mentioned, as our Central Parkway is today,

(02:26:46):
so if you kind of trace it down the fact,
if you drive down Central Parkway, there's a couple of
murals that show what the canal boats look like.

Speaker 1 (02:26:53):
So check those out.

Speaker 2 (02:26:54):
Not necessarily chicking an egg thing, but was was the
canal response before? I have a connection with us being
coming porkopolis or will we pork opolis back in those
days before the canal.

Speaker 5 (02:27:05):
It's a little bit of both, because the canals helped
be able to transport the you know, pork barrels and
things around.

Speaker 1 (02:27:14):
To different places.

Speaker 5 (02:27:15):
And what ends up ending the porkopolis, of course is
again the railroads is because you could actually take you know,
pigs and livestock out into the Great Plains and you
didn't need to be so close to the slaughterhouses and stuff.
And so that's where Chicago kind of gotten that from it.
So it was, yeah, it was kind of hand in
hand at that time, all right. Well, also about the

(02:27:39):
eighteen forties and fifties, I want.

Speaker 2 (02:27:41):
To ask you, because I live in Simms Township, the
Sims Purchase. You'll be speaking about that on Thursday.

Speaker 4 (02:27:47):
Oh, absolutely, Yeah.

Speaker 5 (02:27:48):
So the Sims purchase was John Cleeves Simms. He had
been a veteran of the Revolutionary War and they were
offered the opportunity to purchase land. And he had heard
about this area out you know where we all are now,
and he had the money and everything, and he bought
about three hundred thousand acres and is everything between the

(02:28:10):
two Miami rivers. It's mostly Hamilton, Butler and Warren County.
And then he was resell it to people. So he
sold it to the plots of land that made Cincinnati
and he settled himself in the North Bend, and so
that's where the name comes up. Interestingly enough, his daughter
married William Henry Harrison, so he was his father in law,

(02:28:32):
and so that's why William Henry Harrison ended up in
North Bend is because that's where the family was.

Speaker 1 (02:28:36):
Well there you go.

Speaker 2 (02:28:37):
Leave it to Jeff to explain where all these little
puzzle pieces fit in Jesse and I know that we
have a very close connection with the underground Railroad. We were,
like you know, we were the line between slavery and freedom,
and we have a lot of deep connection with the
underground Railroad. I presume that's something else you'ld be speaking
about on Thursday.

Speaker 5 (02:28:56):
Yeah, touch a bit on it, because that's told it
more of the later period. But it's definitely a big
setup of like you said that you had the free territories,
but concerning the free States and the Southern states that
had slavery in the Ohio River was kind of that border.
And that's why we have so many underground Railroad conductors,

(02:29:20):
these colum like Levi Coffin and John Rankin and John
Parker in this area. That's why we have the Freedom
Center here. They located at the museum in Cincinnati because
of Cincinnati's role in the underground Railroad. Indeed, that's another
big part of Sincita history all right.

Speaker 2 (02:29:35):
In terms of format, it begins at seven pm on
Thursday again two twenty five Northern Boulevard. If you want
to show up live or just log in before that,
just make sure you registered empower you America dot org.
Is there going to be any opportunity for Q and A?
Are you just going to be doing the presentation trying
to set the stage for people.

Speaker 5 (02:29:50):
I'm how sure how the system works, and so I
generally let people ask throughout and then if there's time
at the end as well. So yeah, you have questions,
can always email me or are you know I'd be
happy to help in anyway. We'll see how the system works.

Speaker 2 (02:30:06):
Historian Jeff C's on the morning show today and he'lle
you empower you seven pm on Thursday. Empower your America
dot orger to log in. Jeff, It's been a real
pleasure to having you on the program. I hope you
have a wonderful presentation on Thursday.

Speaker 5 (02:30:18):
Thanks and thank you for having me on.

Speaker 2 (02:30:20):
Anytime, my friend, anytime get another book out there, we'll
talk about it, folks. If you can get a chance
to listen a lot Christopher Smith van for the Smith Event.
That's the podcast at you five carec dot com, Money money,
Brian James stock poise for a September game, which is unusual.
And then some sad news about the current younger generation
not looking forward to having children because of the money
and buying a home seemingly in a possibility for the

(02:30:40):
generation that may be impacting people's decisions on whether they
have children or not. Got the farm event coming up.
Thanks to George Breneman for talking about that. Get all
the details on all the events in the podcast fifty
five KR see dot com away you're there, Please get
your iHeart media app. Thank you Joe Strecker, producer of
the program, for all the work you do. Tune in
tomorrow Bright Bart's Inside Scoop every Time Tuesday at eight
o five and a deep dive with Daniel Davis that

(02:31:02):
says eight thirty tomorrow. More on the rundown in your
phone calls as well Tomorrow Tuesday with the fifty five
KRC Morris.

Speaker 1 (02:31:08):
You have a great day, folks. Glenn Beck's coming right up.
In an ever changing world, there's one constant you can
depend on. Fifty five KRC the talk station at the
top end, bottom of the hour.

Speaker 3 (02:31:20):
This report is spumped

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