Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:09):
Five O five A fifty five k r C the
talk station and three huh some s well education from this?
(00:32):
No idea?
Speaker 2 (00:32):
What's on? Man?
Speaker 1 (00:33):
Neither do I? Three? I didn't watch it, Joe, Joe,
you didn't step and watch the game? Did you? No
work schedule makes that I would argue impossible, least in
my world anyway, in spite of the Bengals loss. Uh oh,
and three Happy Tuesday to you and Ryan Sims right
here glad to point you over to fifty five KRC
dot com so you can podcast when you can't listen
(00:54):
to live of course. Uh the Restore Liberty event with
Jack Adad and that's taking places. Got the details, fifty
five care Sea dot com course, Christopher Smitheman's Smither event,
and the Money Monday segment with Brian James, all there
for your enjoyment, amusement and to listen again or listen
for the first time. And you can't listen live, so
there's a lot going on over the website. Also, remember
(01:16):
and to get your iHeartMedia player there, listen to the
audio wherever you happen to be, all the iHeartMedia content
and anytime you want. So it's a convenient feature I'd
like to point out me and my wife just turns
her phone onto the kitchen, lays the phone down there
and listens to the morning show every morning while enjoying
her coffee. Good morning Paul atte Eddie, How good morning
to you two as well. I was enjoy hearing from
the listeners. If you have anything you'd like to talk about,
(01:37):
feel free to give me a call five one, three, seven,
four nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two
to three pound five fifty on your AT and T phone.
Exciting seven o'clock hour for me, I had mentioned a
couple of times regular listeners who might have heard me
make the comment about me attending the Northeast Republican Women's
event where I heard a couple of guys talk about
a highwy election integrity and what an amazing presentation was
(01:59):
Fri Yes revealing of the impossible situation, impossible to understand
situation in Columbus, considering we the more conservative side of
the Ledger control Ohio politically, the governor, House and Senate
all controlled by Republicans, and yet nothing gets done. Joining
the program at seven oh five for a full hour
in studio Marcel Stribach and Mark Pakita on Ohio election integrity,
(02:24):
and they've been working on this for a long time.
Marcel is really a brilliant guy. Twenty year retired Air
Force intelligence officer, combat veteran serve a bunch of diffent
tactical operations and leadership assignments and counter terrorism operation assessing
emerging and disruptive technologies. He then chose to apply that
(02:47):
knowledge and skill becoming a full time Ohio statewide election
legislative reform proponent and spokesperson author of Ohio Votes Count Act,
regularly talking that what he's going to be talking about
along with Mark Pakita here in Ohio on the election integrity.
Wait till you hear him. He's going to be They're
(03:07):
both going to be here for a full hour, and
the breakdown is really eye opening and puzzling considering they
have legislative solutions for easily identified problem and easily solved problems.
One hour anyway, that's seven o five eight oh five
Inside Scoop of Bright Part News, Our International editor Francis
Martel returns to talk about exploding pagers, has bal Iran
(03:28):
in Israel and the empower youth seminar should be doing
tonight Daniel Davis Deep Dive. Of course, no shock that
Daniel Davis wants to talk about the situation unfolding in
the Middle East. The war rages on, and to that
end seven fifty five eight hundred two three talk pound
five fifty on at and t phones. I got a
(03:49):
kick out of this, considering where we are in the
world as the situation in Israel it grows. Lebanon says,
five hundred people killed, sixteen hundred and fifty injured by
the Israeli bomb and it just took place. We've got
numerous targets. Look and I hate to laugh, because this
is all about death, dismemorment, and destruction. When Hasballa launched
(04:12):
four volleys of one hundred and fifty or so rockets
the other day, only one person injured of just a
few structures damaged. In response, Israel launches a counteroffensive or
and offensive of its own and blows up like nine
gajillion different things, multiple targets killed, number of prominent leaders,
wiped out some of the Habola elite guard groups. So
(04:35):
the difference in effectiveness and strategy is unfolding before our
very eyes. But pivoting over who's getting endorsement and who's not.
We have now more than seven hundred members of what
Breitbart I will acknowledge it describes pejoratively as the deep state.
At seven hundred high, medium and low ranking government officials
(04:56):
and staffers who have signed a letter endorsing drum roll, Maester,
who do you think right? Kamala Harris letter issued on
Sunday Brad Part droves parallels between this and the fifty
one former intelligence officials who claimed the Hunter Binden laptop
was Russian disinformation. Anyway, why would they support Kamala Harris, Well,
(05:17):
here's what the letter said. They claimed that Harris has,
in their words, proven she is an effective leader able
to advance americans national security interests. You know, I read
that just the flurry of activity just raging through my
brain as I stare at articles about our southern border,
(05:37):
where border agents are now finding RPGs and IEDs near
the border, where agents have been told not to let
American public know about all of the folks on the
terror watch lists that have been let into our country.
A multitude different problems there. Talking about national security interest
(05:58):
you know, the threats both foreign and abroad, and we've
got a bunch of both foreign and domestic and abroad.
Sorry for that. In the letter quote her relentless diplomacy
with allies around the globe preserved a united front in
support of Ukraine's fight against Russian aggression. She grasps the
(06:19):
reality of American military deterrence, promising to preserve them the
American military status as the most lethal force in the world. Really,
Biden Harris administration has tried to cut American military funding
every year since Joe Biden got elected. But anyway, there
was an editorial board journal. I know, I rely on
the journal, but it made some great points in the
(06:40):
breakdown and the points they make just the sub part
of the broader article. A far more dangerous world, it
is than mister Biden inherited. We have authoritarians advancing in
every part of the world Europe, Asia, Pacific, Middle East, Africa,
even in the Americas. First, the Withdrawfamask Afghanistan identified as
the single most damaging decision, which has led to cascading trouble,
(07:04):
tal Brand now controlled the country and a reimposing feudal
Islamic rule. That's great development, isn't it. The Kaliphate, a
nice little, happy settling place for all the Islamic Jihattists
and others who well want to inflict terror in the
United States and other Western companies. More damaging, they claim
the message has withdraws center our adversaries about America and
how we will retreat the credibility the US deterrence collapsed.
(07:29):
Bliden tried to please Putin, allowing him to go ahead
forward with a nord Stream I pipeline and refusing to
arm Ukraine. Putin concluded he could invade Ukraine at limited costs.
Pittot over Biden is a huge, full on supporter of
Ukraine and obviously giving missiles and all kinds of military
technology to him. This is the proxy war that we're raging.
(07:51):
A couple of hundred thousand maybe dead thirty one months later,
and he's dithering. They say. His record of the Middle
East will worse. They claim, rather than building the Abraham Accords,
he inherited. Thank you, Donald Trump for the wonderful work
you got. You did deserving absolutely of a Nobel Peace Prize,
unlike job are. Unlike Barack Obama, who gets one just
(08:13):
for well showing up in the room, he actually had
the Abraham Accords. Biden, for his part, well as alienated
Saudi Araba banning offensive weapons in the fight in the
Houthis Biden court of the mill Is in Iran to
renew the twenty fifteen nuclear chord. He refused to enforce
oil sanction, even as Iran spreads Mayhem through its proxy militias.
(08:33):
More than that, hm Amas, aided by Iran, invaded Israel
and massacre one hundred and twenty thous or twelve hundred
innocent people, leading to the situation in Gaza. What the
Goazins and the and Hamas claim is genocide. And of
(08:54):
course we now have this fighting in the north with
his Balla and all the bombing that I just mentioned earlier.
And of course the Houthis have shut down the western
commercial shipping around the Red Sea. That's great foreign policy
unfolding right there. Commerce and a lot of money and
a lot of tankers flow through that area, and they
will have driven the cost of shipping up. Add that
(09:14):
to the cost of inflation. But then there's also the
carnage and the whole concern over getting boats through that area,
ships through the area. Iran moving forward with getting its
nuclear bomb undeterred, no more sanctions, Iran moves forward and
with the health of an interesting alliance created under the
Biden Harris administration, most ominous the collaboration of menacing regional
(09:36):
powers into a new anti Western axis. Iran now supplying
missiles and drones to Moscow, which for its part, it's
possible they may be supplying nuclear information to Tehran so
it can further its development of a nuclear weapon. China
also aiding Moscow. Moscow now working with Beijing in naval maneuvers. Yeah,
(09:59):
we have the to teeming up together. North Korea also
arming Moscow being protected by China from any United Nations
sanctions that it once voted for. Pause and contemplate the
value of the United Nations amid this global turmoil. Does
the UN do anything at all other than well, work
(10:22):
against America's interest and Western interest? The answer is no.
It was a sort of a rhetorical question. The answer
is no. It's a multi billion dollar operation which I
think serves only the interest of those foreign powers to
try to stop us our progress and do anything they
can to undermine Western into interests well, also probably being
the epicenter of espionage. I think that's actually Ultimately, the
(10:44):
only reason you exists. No one wants to give up
their ability to get information from their plants and the
people within the UN who might turn over information. Venezuela
the dictator. There're still another election, exposing the administrations deal
to ease oil sanctions as naive. Mexico also in much
(11:07):
worse of a position relative to the United States and
our relations with them. Of course, Donald Trump was successful
in getting the Mexicans to keep the illegal immigrants from
crossing the border remain in Mexico. Policy was in effect,
and we had their cooperation with that. No longer, they
point out, Cuba continues to spread revolution wherever it can
(11:28):
with whatever dollars it's got left. I know they allocate
dollars to spreading revolution rather than feeding their people or
helping their intrafrastructure. But there they are. Pesky Cuba. The
point all the foregoing resulting in human suffering, human suffering
which has resulted in many people from those various countries
and others fleeing the carnage and coming to the United
(11:51):
States and well overwhelming various cities here economically and otherwise.
So there you go, seven hun members of the so
called Deep State talking about how awesome Kamala Harris has
been in her relentless diplomacy with allies and preserving a
united front, grasping the reality of American military deterrence, promising
(12:14):
to preserve the American military status is the most lethal
force in the world. I refer you back to the
foregoing current state of affairs around the globe. How was
it under Trump? How was it under how is it
under the Biden Harris administration. I think the distinctions are
quite obvious. Feel afraid to get me a called. You
can disagree if you want. That's cool. I don't care.
(12:34):
I just call it as I see it. That's the
way I'm seen it this morning. And I'm seeing affordable
imaging services today. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I saw my cancer
doctor yesterday and maybe maybe maybe, and I hope it's
not true that it could be that my lymphoma has
come back to some degree. So scheduled a CT scan,
and of course I scheduled it affordable imaging services where
(12:54):
that CT scan, with the contrast, will set me back
a whopping six hundred dollars as opposed to whatever out
of pocket liability to have at the hospital imaging department.
I've gone down that road before, and way, way, way
more out of my pocket than the sixth centerd it's
going to cost for the entire scan, the whole scan,
including a board certified radiologist. That'll take place today two pm.
I'll let you know it works, and I'm sure to
(13:15):
be fine. But they do mrict scans, echo cartograms, ultra sounds,
loung screens, and cardiac scorings for a mere fraction fraction
of the thousands and thousands of dollars that those images
would cost you at the hospital imaging department, plus the
multiple bills you get a separate bill for a radiology,
separate bill for the contrast. You see what happens here.
They make fat bank at the hospital imaging department. Well,
(13:36):
you know, I'm happy to support affordable imaging services because
they do the same thing for a fraction of the cost.
So you can get in touch with them too. You
have a choice when it comes to your medical care.
My doctor, of course, was recommending me to the hospital
imaging department, and I said, I'm going to go to
affordable imaging. She just look at me, she says, great,
no problem. Am I going to get a report? I said, absolutely,
you'll have it within forty eight hours of the scan.
(13:57):
So off to the scan. I go five one three seven,
five three eight thousand. You two have a choice five
one three seven, five three eight thousand. Learn more online.
It's affordable Medimaging dot com.
Speaker 3 (14:06):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 4 (14:10):
Hey, time for the nine first one one the four
caask rounds of rain again, rounds of rain, likely stronger
afternoon storms.
Speaker 1 (14:23):
Bring it on. Seventy eight for the hot today, isolated
showers over night, sixty five isolated showers. Tomorrow's seventy nine
isolated showers overnight, sixty chance of showers on Thursday during
the day, I have eighty one and I'll take all
the rain we can get right now, sixty eight degrees
Here fifty five Kirsty Talk station five two on on Tuesday.
(14:50):
So worried about I mentioned in passing the fact that
US border agents found RPGs and IEDs right there on
the southern border. They say it's a consequence of the
gang wars that are going on, like with the Sinaloa
cartel spilling over the border. You know that kind of
thing can come into our country. Of course, as porus
as the border is. I really truly worry about that.
(15:12):
We have these armed gangs, and of course if they
can get arms across the border, they can get fentanel
across the border. Maybe they're gonna get RPGs and IEDs
across the border, or alternatively just build them here. The
IEDs anyway, big escalation of weaponry and fighting between the cartels.
So there's that problem. But then here's the correlaiy problem.
(15:34):
I wanted to get this article in and I didn't.
I'll just use that as a pivot to do it,
because all we have here is a very very dangerous
and problematic situation, not just because the potential for crime,
not because the organized gangs who are setting up shopping
all these different cities, but the sheer number of people
that do not speak English and children who are overwhelming
(15:56):
our schools, and without an educated population, what do you
get if you can't read and you can't get a
job because you can't read. I'm not even talking about
the problems getting a job because you're here illegally. Ignore that.
Let's say we solve that problem. But if you can't read,
and you can't you know, perform basic mathematical skills, the
(16:16):
likelihood that you're gonna be able to succeed in any
given industry or profession, I would say slum to none.
At WGN News in Chicago, report of the Chicago public
school teachers working with these illegal immigrants say they were
told by school administrators to give migrant students passing grades.
(16:38):
So the teachers they spoke with in the Chicago elementary
schools say they spoke and these children spoke no English.
They say they spoke no Spanish, the teachers spoke no Spanish. Well,
the migrants students as students speak no English, and them
speaking no Spanish or fill in the blank on any
other literally, any other dialect that could be in the world,
(16:59):
since we have people from the four corners of the
globe crossing into our southern border, it could be any language,
but for in this particular analysis, it was Spanish. So
teachers don't speak Spanish, the kids don't speak English. They
pointed out, because the schools are located in predominantly black neighborhoods,
there was no English as a second language support the
curriculum didn't include that. They have no staff there to
(17:20):
deal with that situation, which apparently crops up in other
areas and other neighborhoods. Despite this, they said they were
told by school administrators to give the migrants a seventy
percent passing grade in every subject and move them on
into the next grade. Teachers said that was the case
even if the migrants students displayed severe academic deficiencies. What's
(17:44):
the point, they said an original appearance on dila GN
radio host Lisa denshow, prior to being made aware of
the investigation by the local news there, Chicago School's CEO,
doctor Pedro Martinez, initially maintained at the migrants too, were
held to the same academic standards as the students born
in Chicago. However, when confronted with the reporting my WGN,
(18:08):
the spokesperson acknowledged in a statement that the district's promotion
guidelines are quote modified to serve the specialized needs of
the English language learners. Are they learning English? Really? If
they have no English's second language programs, No, they're not
learning English. But the fundamental point is they agreed that yep,
we're passing on. You're passing them on. They do not
(18:31):
have the basic skills for whatever grade level they're in.
You're moving them on to the next higher grade level
where they fir fall further behind and just take up
space in a classroom. Can you imagine sitting in a classroom.
I always think of Chinese language because it's very difficult,
at least to me. It looks different, The language is different,
it is very complex. I do not understand the Chinese writing. Lord,
(18:52):
almighty amazing, how many hours you probably have to spend
to understand that. Bottom line is, if you PLoP me
down in a Chinese classroom, I was forced to sit
there and listen all day, what would I do? I'd
be gazing at my navel or looking around and in
a fog, nothing being accomplished, filling up time, and then
moving on to another situation the next year where I
(19:12):
spend nine months in a classroom doing the same thing.
Graduate me give me a seventy percent at the twelve
level of K through twelve. I've got a diploma. What
does it mean Nothing? I can't even read it. And
then what no job opportunity is available because my lack
of education, I am without question going to be a
(19:35):
dependent on government. They're creating a massive new dependent class
people incapable of providing for themselves here in the United
States of America, in spite of the fact that if
they had the skills necessary and the education necessary, I'm
sure they could probably live, thrive, and survive. Five twenty
seven to fifty five care ced talk station Fasten Pro Roofing,
(19:58):
the great roofers and Fast and Pro take wonderful care
of you. They're honest, and that's where it starts. I've
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amazing expertise and craftsmanship of the Fast and Pro roofers themselves,
it starts with honesty. If you don't get an honest assessment,
well you're going to be paying for something you do
not need. And there's a whole lot of roofers out
there to be happy to tell you you need a
(20:18):
new roof when you really don't. So Fast and Pro
experts aplus with a better business brier that starts with
the free inspection call will come at the appointed time.
You do the whole thing. Maybe find something up there
that you can't even see. That happens from time to time.
Ask my friend Steve. He wanted sighting work and they
inspected his roof anyway, and he had some latent problems
up there. He was really happy they found them because
(20:40):
it could have been a big headache forming a lot
more expensive down the road. Fastenproroofing dot com is where
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(21:01):
seven seven ninety four ninety five again online at fastenproroofing
dot Com. Fifty five the talk station. It's the marketers
reporting rain on and off, strong afternoons, storms possible as well.
Seventy eight for the high over nine isolated showers, sixty
five isolated showers tomorrow during the day, seventy nine. Got
(21:22):
some isolated showers Wednesday night as well at the low
of sixty and a chance of showers during the day
on Thursday, cloudy day and night. I have eighty one.
I take the rain sixty nine right now. Think about
kercity talk stations. Alright, good Bengals, huh. Statistically only six
(21:43):
teams have made it to the playoffs after starting zero
to three since the nineteen seventies, and only one team
has done so since the year two thousand. Just say it.
I don't make up the stats, I just read them.
Teenage guy to admit minuted fatally shooting a man during
a confrontation outside an independence on last August. Now we'll
(22:06):
be spending decades behind bars. Let's see we since I
inquire and Fox nineteen reporting on this one. Jackie Turner,
eighteen sentenced Monday to thirty years in prison, matching a
recommendation for prosecutors made as part of Turner's July guilty
plea to murder in Kent County Circuit Court. Turner seventeen
years old at the time. He was arrested alongside his
(22:27):
mom and older brother after a twenty three year old
Seth Burns was shot to death. Turner previously admitted in
court to it that his mom, thirty nine year old
man to Turner, drove him to the residence knowing he
was armed with a gun and that there would likely
be a fight. Thanks mom. Older brother, twenty two year
old Xavion Turner, also had a gun. According to the
(22:49):
younger Turner, Jackie Turner, did not make a statement during
the sentencing. His attorney's declined comment when I reached by
the Inquiry at the hearing. Investigator said an argument on
social media led to the real life confrontation outside the
house on Archer Court, culminating in the August twenty fifth
shooting post related to a girlfriend Amanda Turner's older son,
Savier Turner, and insults about children and parenting skills or
(23:12):
lack thereof. According to Kamwealth's attorney. Prosecutor said Amanda Turner,
who pleaded guilty last week of charges including criminal facilitation
of murder, was involved in text messages encouraging the fight.
Of course, we have doorbell camera video showing Amanda Turner,
who led her sons and two daughters, as well as
Xavion Turner's girlfriend down the street while screaming toward the
(23:33):
Archer Court home. However, they say the fight didn't happen
because the younger Turner shot burns in the tour So
after a brief exchange of words between the two groups
and Turner family fled. Savi On Turner, facing charges including murder,
expected to go on trial in November a Manada. Turner's
daughters Lakira Hughes and Cavier Turner, and Xavion Turner's girlfriend
(23:56):
Emma Ryan, each charged with rioting an awful transaction with
a minor, but of since pleaded guilty as charge and
statements written to the court. Burns family described him as
the glue that held the family together. What a screwed
up situation. Driver got a citation after Franklin Canny police
(24:16):
said she hit two students walking to class on Monday.
Students where in a marked school zone crosswalk to get
across Fourth Street. According to the Franklin Police Department, the
kids were clearly in a marked crosswalk. We had witnessed
say they saw them in the crosswalk and when they
spoke to the driver of the vehicle, she has a
small child who was in the backseat in the car
seat and the child was crying. So mom looked back
(24:38):
to tender her crying child, and unfortunately, in that period
of time the children were crossing in the sidewalk. Two
children hit. Taken to the hospital we checked out as precaution,
but expected to be okay. Thank god. Driver got a
ticket for failing to yield the right of way to
a protestrian a crosswalk said it wasn't on purpose. This
was exactly what it was and accident, according to the
(25:01):
captain from the police department. Yeah, okay, and that's why
you're not supposed to be playing around with your cell
phone when you're driving as well. Five thirty five fifty
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Speaker 3 (26:04):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 1 (26:09):
Rain on and off likely today, strong wrapper and storms
also there. Seventy eight for the high, isolated showers over
night with the lower sixty five clouds and isolated showers
tomorrow the highest seventy nine clouds of isolated showers over
night with a love sixty and yeah look Thursday clouds
chances showers during the day, eighty one for the high
sixty nine. Right now it's out for first traffic from
the UCL Traffic Center.
Speaker 5 (26:30):
With UC Health, the future of care is happening now
through clinical trials and innovative treatments and give patients a
chance for better outcomes. Visit U see health dot com.
Problems on the highways in the wet roads this morning
northbound seventy fine cruiser are working with an accident near
zer Charles, Hence the left side of a highway blocked
off slow to get by on the right.
Speaker 1 (26:49):
Also heard of a.
Speaker 5 (26:50):
Spin out northbound seventy one near the tunnel. I'm not
seeing at the way there, Chuck Kingram on fifty five
KRSC the talk station.
Speaker 1 (27:00):
Forty Happy Tuesday, Ryan Thomas getting ready to dive into
a stacking stupid. Also still inviting phone calls if you
would prefer to talk about something else five and three
seven four nine fifty five eight hundred eight two three
ton fact fifty on at and T phone oh and
three Bengals happened to be Let's start the stack of
stupid right there. Moving on, we may have an award
to give out. Youth basketball coach in Florida arrested after
(27:23):
WUTC he's sexually abused and then refused to give up
a child who was staying at his home for a sleepover.
Carl Lombardo, who's fifty eight, been accused of offering the
parents five thousand dollars for each of their children. Lombardo
arrested on charge of sex traving a child, molestation of
a child under the age of sixteen, production of child porn,
(27:44):
possession of child porn. In total charge with nine felonies
he was a volunteer basketball coach. He used the courts
at the Boys and Girls Club, was not employed by
the organization. Rest report says that deputies launch the investigation
end of August when he refused to reataur turn a
fifteen year old boy to his parents. Victim had slept
over with his siblings at Lombardo's home. Deputy said Lombardo's
(28:07):
sent a video of the victim pretending to write a
note to his mother about wanting to stay with him.
Deputy said Lombardo course the child into making the video.
Accused of offering the parents five thousand dollars each for their children.
He told them that he didn't care if they went
to the police because he works with schools and has
a spotless reputation. Deputies rescued the teenager from his home,
(28:27):
returned to his parent, returned to the parents. Several of
the siblings report Lombardo touched them inappropriately and took nude
photos of them. Detective searched two of Lombarda's cell phones,
finding multiple child porn images of a young child apparently
taken by Lombardo. He's all said images of himself cuddling
with children and pictures of their feet. Deputy used his
(28:50):
position as a coach, came the family's trust, kept the
children at his home overnight multiple times. He then molested
two children, exposed themselves, and photographed them. Book to the
Marion County Jail no bond there. Neighbors refer to him
as strange, strange you could feel a vibe from him.
(29:12):
Due to the nature of the crimes, detectives believe Lombardo
may have victimized other children, so they're seeking others out
there in the world who may have had encounters with
this pervert.
Speaker 6 (29:22):
How much for the little girl, the women? How much
for the women?
Speaker 1 (29:26):
What you're women? I want to buy your women, the.
Speaker 6 (29:29):
Little girl, your daughters, sell them to me, Sell me
your children.
Speaker 1 (29:36):
I'm sorry, I asked juf. When I saw the headline
about I'm offering five thousand dollars with the children, that
blues brothers immediately went through my mind. But we're gonna
go ahead and give him the biggest issue the universe
a ward along with this person. Thirty nine year old
male suspect dressed in women's clothes and a blonde wig
arrested for attempting to kidnap an eleven year old boy
(29:56):
Joshua Freyermouth, the police say goes by the name Vicky
a reign of the Alliance Municipal Court for attempted kidnapping.
Alliance Police reported that he tried to kidnap an eleven
year old boy from his porch in Southwebb Avenue in Alliance,
Ohio on the twenty second of this month. Police also
said that he told the child I need to talk
(30:18):
to you in a sense of urgency, allegedly utilizing a
tactic to lure the eleven year old off his property
and away from his dog. However, after the child refused
to go with him, Farirmouth ran up and forcedly attempted
to grab the eleven year old, but the child was
able to get away. Eleven year old Victam also claiming
his family dog began attacking the thirty nine year old
(30:40):
suspect as soon as he got close enough, which prompted
Farirmuth to back off. Good doggie. Fairmouth claimed in court
that he had no dog bites on him. Well, there's'll
get you out of it. Cornel Police report. The suspect
was arrested two days earlier for possessing methamphetamine paraphernalia and
obstructing official business. During the investigation, Farmouth was arrested after
(31:02):
officers discovered one point six grams of methan fhetamine in
the van's steering wheel, as well as a glass bubble
pipe holding meth that was hidden beneath the driver's seat.
Farmouth attempted to obstruct officers by lying about his activities,
changing his story multiple times, and providing mis leading information.
Reports said there's no reason to believe the defendant was
in the area looking for the children despite the arrest.
(31:22):
Later released on bond on the twenty September twentieth incident.
Back in court, Bond said at one hundred thousand dollars
for the eleven year old kidnapping effort, and he's also
been told not to have any contact with the eleven
year old victim. So double award winners.
Speaker 7 (31:41):
This point series the biggest douche of the universe, in
all the galaxies, there's no bigger douche than you. You've
reached the top, the pinnacle of Doue doom. Good goingdu
Your dreams have come true.
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on Route forty two between Mason and Lebanon.
Speaker 8 (33:18):
Fifty five KRC dot com.
Speaker 1 (33:20):
We always say roof leaks for years. Rains likely today,
strong afternoon storms. Also in the pictures seventy eight for
the high got isolated showers over night, low sixty five,
clouds Tomorrow, isolated showers seventy nine, overnight cloudy, isolated showers
in sixty and a cloudy Thursday as well, with a
chance of showers during the day and a high eighty
one sixty nine degrees.
Speaker 9 (33:40):
Now.
Speaker 1 (33:40):
Traffic time from the UCL Traffic Center with you see health.
Speaker 5 (33:44):
The future of care is happening now through frenical trials
and innovative treatments had give patients a chance for better outcomes.
Visit u sehelp dot com. What roads causing problems this morning?
Northbound seventy five there's a wreck left shoulder near one
twenty nine. Then on eastbound one twenty nine erect just
after you got passed by past four too involved on
(34:05):
eastbound two seventy five s RAM to Hamilton Avenue and
in Claremont County westbound thirty two at power Ingram Mpty
five KRC DE talk Station.
Speaker 1 (34:17):
Five fifty fifty five kr CD talk Station. A very
happy Tuesday too. You you got to be around at seven
oh five Ohio Election Integrity Conversation with Marcel, Marcell Stirbridge
and Mark Pakita Boy. They have a great breakdown of
the problems going on in the state of Ohio with
election integrity. It will be a real eye opener for you.
So if you can't listen live, remember to go to
fifty five KRC dot com and just a quick shout out.
(34:40):
Going to be at the Southwest Ohio Republican Flapjack Breakfast,
Clairemont County Republican Party hosting. It happened in this Saturday,
nine am to eleven, a ton of speakers. It's going
to be at the airport, So I hope you can
make it to that. Just go to eventwright dot com
and get your tickets. There should be a real good time.
So Claremont County Republican Party. I was at it last year.
(35:00):
It's a really really great event. The one thing I
learned though, because a lot of politicians usually have a
bunch of them there, and due to scheduling, a lot
of them are been put out on the road and
campaign for Donald Trump in addition to supporting their own campaigns.
So considering Claremont County as solid red when you're trying
to decide whether you're going to go try to win
over the hearts and minds of people or just go
(35:23):
into a safe environment and an echo chamber. You got
to make your decisions on that one. Anyway, moving back
to the stack of stupe, we've got a federal judge
ruling it will be unconstitutional for an Indiana prison. Thank
you Indiana tacks payers to deny a transgender inmate sex
reassignment surgery. This after the inmate final lawsuit against the
(35:46):
Ecrectional Facility ac LU of course representing the uh, well
go if you could see, I.
Speaker 6 (35:54):
Know what the hell.
Speaker 1 (35:56):
The mugshot is quite revealing. It's a full face, bald guy,
clearly a man. Anyway, sue the end of the Indiana
Department of Corrections last year in behalf of this transgender
inmate named Jonathan Richardson aka Autumn CORDILIONI what I know,
convicted of strangling his eleven month old stepdaughter to death
(36:21):
in two thousand and one.
Speaker 6 (36:24):
Do what the hell says?
Speaker 1 (36:26):
How says? Indian law prohibits the Department of Corrections from
using taxpayer dollars to fund sexual assignment surgeries for inmates. However,
the ACLU argued in lawsuit filed last year in August,
that the law is a violation of the Eighth Amendments
prohibit prohibition on cruel and Unusual punishment. No, the surgery
itself is cruel and unusual punishment. Surgery for Richardson, serving
(36:50):
a fifty five year prison sentence for reckless homicide, they say,
is a medical necessity. No thanks Dan from beyond the
Judge Richard Young agreed with the a c l u's
claims ruling in favor of Cordonioni last week. Quote Specifically,
(37:11):
miss Cordollioni has shown that her gendernice for you is
a serious medical need, and that despite their other treatments,
defendant has provided her to treat her grant genderness for you,
she requires gender affirming surgery to prevent a risk of
serious bodily and psychological harm. Whatever, thank you, le gender
(37:31):
affirming surgery. Let's see here you're born with an ex
and X and Y chromosome. You have twig and berries.
I think your gender is already affirmed. Just look it
down and take a look if you have any customer preferred.
I know I get harsh on this one, but this
is just absolute badcrap insanity. The Apartment of Corrections must
(37:55):
now take, in the judges word, all reasonable actions to
ensure CORDILLIONI to go sec surgery. Indiana Journey Attorney General
Todd Rokita said on the post on exit his office
is still reviewing the judge's decision, but you can undoubtedly
expect our office to appeal this decision. An Indiana inmate
convicted a murder wants our taxpayers the fund their gender
(38:17):
altering surgery. More properly stated, I've give them props for that.
Hoosiers do not want this. Original ACLU filing says this
guy was diagnosed in twenty twenty with genertus for you
and prescribed a female hormones and testosterum blockers, both of
which he has consistently taken since that time. Other accommodations
(38:37):
provided for the inmate include panties, makeup, and form fitting clothing.
Again based on the mugshot. I don't think you're gonna
want to look at this person in form fitting clothing,
just my personal subjective observation. Feel fee to draw your
own conclusions. It's a man baby, thank you. Court to
(38:58):
lawsuit quarterly. At this point, gender affirming surgery is necessary
so that her physical identity can be aligned with her
gender identity and so her gender dysphoria can be ameliorated. Really,
it's gonna work. Huh, you're pretty sure of that. Went
on to say she believes that the only remedy for
(39:19):
this persistent genditus for you is this serious harm it
causes and the serious heart harm it causes her is
to receive gender affirming surgery, specifically and archaectomy and vaginoplasty.
This person's identified a woman since age six, according to
the ACL lawsuit, and they claim in the pleadings that
(39:41):
the inmate is quote a woman trapped in a man's body.
Court documents reflect that he strangled his then wife's eleven
month year old daughter to death when she was at work.
The wife was at work one of the detectives. It
was calm and unemotional when recounting what happened. Now, let's
(40:04):
reward him. Actually, you know, like, let's just say, if
this was a sex crime. You know, chemical castration is
something that's often discussed, not nextus necessarily done. Well, if
this if someone had suggested we need to lop off
his genitals as a consequence of the crimes he committed,
they would scream bloody murder. That that would be, of
(40:26):
course cruel and unusual punishment to mutilate a person based
upon their crimes. In this case, the mutilation is a reward.
Go figure, I told you a little bit of backrap
crazy world. I know you don't need to be remind
you of that. Fifty six fifty five K Steve talk
Station plenty to talk about coming to the six o'clock hour.
Feel free to call though back after the news.
Speaker 10 (40:48):
It's the biggest news and trending news events from around
the world.
Speaker 1 (40:52):
At the top end and bottom of the allys. This
is fifty five KR scene the top. See hey, everybody,
this is and ive care see de talk station. Try
to make it a happy Tuesday. In spite of the
fact that the Bengals lost again oh and three. Fun fact,
only sixteens and made the playoffs after starting oh and three.
(41:12):
Since the seventies and only one has done so since
the year two thousand, so sorry sucks to us. I
suppose anywhow five one, three, seven, four, nine fifty eight
hundred two three talk pound five fifty on AT and
T phones if you can stick around me around the
seven o'clock hour and eye opening discussion with Marcel Sturbitch
and Mark Pakita about a high election integrity and apparently
(41:32):
there's not a whole lot of integrity at least in
certain segments. I've heard him speak at the Northeast Women's
Women Republican Club meeting that was last week. Time flies anyway,
so impressed by it. I talked to him like I
got to get you on the morning show that you
can give your presentation to my listeners. It's a real
eye opener and also really reveals the dysfunction in Columbus.
(41:53):
They've got these easy legislative fixes. The legislative drafting has
already been done. It's been put in front of everybody's
faces now, I believe for at least a year, maybe longer.
It looks like an absolute no brainer to get something done.
But for whatever reason, our elected officials and Columbus just
don't even want to consider it. So again one hour
from now and the podcast will be up at fifty
(42:14):
five care Sea dot com. If you can't listen to that,
Inside Scoop Today's Tuesday. We do it every Tuesday at
eight oh five Bright bart News Inside Scoop Today International
Editor Francis Martel returns. We're talking about the exploding pagers
Hesbala and the Iran situation in Israel and an empower
youth seminar she is doing tonight, So Francis Martell at
(42:35):
ato five. Then we get a Daniel Davis deep dive,
as we do every Tuesday at eight thirty. Daniel Davis
will also be discussing the deteriorating situation in the Middle East.
So oh and again this Saturday, marketing your calendar the
Flapjack breakfath clamat County Republican Party. Flapjack Breakfast's going to
be a great time. It's at the Clarmont County Airport.
(42:56):
Starts at nine am. Get your tickets at event bright
dot com. Folks show up to speak. I'm facilitating it,
which is a real honor and pleasure. So a keynote
speaker is Morgan or Tagas, who's the State Department spokesperson
of the Trump administration and Polaris National Security Founder. Also
(43:16):
on the list Frank Larroseby there, David Yose to be there,
Attorney General Youost, Alex Treantepilo Chayl the Ohio Republican Party,
Congressman brad Winstrip, John Houston, Lieutenant Governor, Meghan Shanahan, Daniel
Hawkins from the Supreme Court. So great opportunity to kind
of have a beautiful morning breakfast and hear from those
candidates and noted notables and help support the Claremont kind
(43:38):
of Republican Party at the same time solid red they are.
Let's keep them that way again. Feel free to call.
Now moving over, we have this new note from the gunman,
and I'm sorry I went down the conspiracy theory road.
And I know those people are going to laugh at
me for this, but always wondering and everybody's like, wait
a second, what's going on here? How did this kid geary?
Who's influencing this kid? What prompted this action? Is this
(44:01):
a lone crazed gunman or they influenced on social media?
The last time Trump almost got shot and got hit
in the ear, that guy had no social media record
or did he sketchy details on that one. But we
now know that this second idiot, Ryan Routh, said I
had been planning for months to shoot Trump and he
(44:25):
kept detailed lists of Trump's whereabouts. This is the suspicious
part about this. And he wrote a note apparently in
anticipation of his effort to assassinate Donald Trump failing, he
had this to say, Dear world, this was an assassination
attempt on Donald Trump, but I am so sorry I
failed you. I tried my best and gave it all
(44:48):
the gumption, nuck and mustard. It's up to you to
finish the job, and I will offer one hundred and
fifty grand whoever, whomever can complete the job. Well, don't
consider taking him up on his offer. The guy does
not have any assets at all, as has been reported
widely so but obviously he was out loud saying I
want to assassinate Trump and wantnybody else to do it.
The question is why he's being held on federal gun charges.
(45:13):
They did not let him out in spite of the
fact that the defense attorneys suggested that no get a
load of this assistant federal public defender who's representing this
piece of garbage and somebody's got to do it. In
arguing to let this guy out on bond, argued that
(45:34):
prosecutors had failed to show he was a danger to
the community. Noby he had dut to flee and regularly
showed up for court hearings in other prior criminal cases. Look,
he's a criminal, but he showed up in the other cases,
so he's not a flight risk. So in spite of
the fact that he tried to assassinate the prior president
and presidential candidate Donald Trump, you should let him out.
(45:57):
I thought that was a comical. You got to make
an effort if you're representing someone. Prosecutors disclosed this is
the weird part and this is where my you know,
pattern observer conspiracy theory comes in. Routh had compiled a
handwritten list of dates and places where he expected Donald
Trump to be. He had traveled to Florida, where he
(46:22):
didn't have any connection with Florida, from Greensboro, North Carolina,
more than a month before the encounter when they caught
him at the fence Line. Cell phone records they found
showed he had on multiple days traveled near the Trump
International Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Florida, as well
(46:43):
as mar Lago, the Trump residents five miles away between
August eighteenth and the day that he well was aiming
the gun at Trump September fifteenth. Think about that reconnoitering
more than a month of for the encounter, checking the
(47:03):
place out multiple days in advance of the day he
was going to try to assassinate Donald Trump. Now does
anybody else remember the widespread reporting after the incident happened
about no one knowing that Donald Trump was going to
even be playing golf that day. It was not on
his presidential schedule, described as kind of a last minute
(47:24):
decision to go and play golf. How is it that
this guy knows a month ahead of time to start
scouting out the Trump Golf Club. Hm pere to have
been in West Palm Beach for one reason, they said.
This is, according to the US Assistant District Attorney, to
kill former president of the United States of America. He
(47:45):
had no other reason to be in Florida. His criminal record,
which includes several phonies going back to his defense attorney's
efforts to try to get him out on bond, of course,
should have prevented him from being able to buy a gun.
He was not allowed to lawfully acquire a firearm. What
kind of firearm did he get doesn't really matter in
the grand scheme of things, but it was an SKS
(48:06):
rifle ty style rifle with an optic serial number scratched off,
pointing out that it makes it very difficult to quickly trace.
Quickly traced. They have apparently uncovered eight of the nine characters,
which it's you can do that. A serial number is
embedded pretty deeply in the steel, so even if you
file it off, there's still remnants of the number beneath it,
(48:27):
so they can't do that. But I keep wondering how
in the hell he knew to be there, How did
the hell did he know to set up his little
defensive perimeter with the bulletproof you know, plates inside the
vest that he hung up on the fence line in between,
which was his rifle sticking through the fence, creating a
(48:48):
you know, a place to shoot, And that he was
there twelve hours before Donald Trump set foot on the
golf course again something that no end was sho even
know about. And what were his motivations? Well, investigators found
the notebook contained dozens of pages filled with the names
(49:11):
and phone numbers pertaining to Ukraine. Notes critical of the
governments of China and Russia as well. But he had
been and it's widely known now that he was a
pro Ukraine activist. He went there after the Russian invasion
hoping to join the fight. They wouldn't take him for
whatever reason, but he remained an activist there trying to
(49:33):
drum up support and get people to enlist in the
Ukrainian military to fight against the Russians. Could it be
maybe the Ukrainians had something to do with this? I
know that again, I'm listening to myself and the words
are coming out of my mouth. But if you're looking
(49:53):
for influence, maybe, if it's not the Ukrainian government pro
Ukrainian online activists that were egging him on, he clearly
didn't even egged on too much. He went to Ukraine
in order to join the fight and recruit people. He
was all in for Ukraine against Russia. And he was
a bit batcrab crazy. He's got a criminal record, someone
who could be recruited for pro Ukrainian reasons. And then
(50:18):
go back to the political positions of Donald Trump and
Kamala Harris or the Biden administration generally, who's more in
favor of continuing to arm the Ukrainians and fight against Russia.
Obviously the Biden Harris administration, in spite of the fact
that they foot drag in terms of providing military aid,
they provide a ton of it. They out lowed actively
support Ukraine in defending itself. They seem to want to
get NATO involved. They're going to provide long range missiles
(50:40):
to Ukraine so they can be launched into the inner
areas of the inside interior of Russia. Russia's also threatened
nuclear war over that particular point, stalling the administration's decision
on long range missiles. But we needn't pay attention to
World War three breaking out. The point being, if you're
pro Ukraine and your batcrap in sane, this is the
(51:01):
perfect guy. And it could be that they facilitated him
getting a firearm when he couldn't buy one. Wawfully with
a serial number filed off, swirling with weird interesting facts.
But the biggest elephant in the room is how did
he know a month ahead of time that that's what
he should be scouting out? Someone who had no connection
(51:24):
with Florida whatsoever and knew exactly which golf course to
scope out, and of course to show up at that
golf course twelve hours ahead of time and set up
shop six sixteen fifty five KR see de talk station.
Just food for thought. You can feel free to disagree
with me or come up with some other theory. It's
all we got right in our theories. And are there
(51:46):
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Speaker 10 (53:01):
Thousand fifty five KRC the talk station iHeartRadio Brain is.
Speaker 1 (53:07):
Likely today the coming rounds, not squares I lostis rounds
of rain of aforecast. Anyway, we get stronger after in
indstorms as well. Take all the way in you get
right seventy eight degrees for the hind Today it's going
to be cloudyan isolated showers over nine sixty five body
with isolated showers tomorrow as well. Seventy nine more clouds
(53:27):
and isolated showers over Wednesday night with a low of
sixty and a cloudy day Thursday chance of showers as well.
Yay eighty one for the high on Wednesday. Right now
at sixty nine degrees here a fifty goove Kirsity talks station.
What's going on the traffic chuck Ingram from the UCLP
Traffic Center with u see health.
Speaker 5 (53:42):
The future of care is happening now through clinical trials
and innovative treatments that give patients and chance from better outcomes.
Visit u sehealth dot com. Plenty of accidents to deal
with on the wet roads this morning. The ram from
Dixie Highway in northern Kentucky to westbound two seventy five
is blocked because of a wreck northbound seven twenty one.
An accident on at two seventy five northbound seventy five.
Speaker 1 (54:04):
Crews are working with the wreck. Before the Western Ills Viaduct.
Speaker 5 (54:07):
There's an accident on west two seventy five at kelbogg
scho Ingram on fifty five KRC.
Speaker 1 (54:12):
The talk station six twenty two at fifty five kr
CD talk station A Very Happy Tuesday TEENA five one, three, seven, four, nine,
fifty five eighty two to three talk found five fifty
on AT and T phones. Don't forget get your iHeart
Media Fi fifty five KRC dot Comoric. You can also
get the podcast The Other Queer Element about this And
I don't know. I kind of wonder what the story
(54:34):
is in terms of our long term goals and strategies
relative between the conflict between Ukraine and Russia. Do we
have an endgame? I don't know what we're hoping to accomplish.
It is a proxy war that's being raided, waged, and
of course there's a finite number of Ukrainian soldiers. It's
costing literally billions and billions of dollars, and we were
exhausting our military hardware behind the scenes, which is a
(54:55):
really frightening thing considering, you know, we could end up
in a shooting war in a number of areas around
the world, given the deteriorating can situation, a situation globally.
But I go back to Joe Biden's efforts to get
rid of that Ukrainian prosecutor and of course, hunter Biden's
connection with Barissima and all that. Obviously the relationship is
(55:18):
a rather suspicious one that always leaves, you know, the
swirling question marks as whether you know, maybe Ukraine has
the goods on Joe Biden and maybe that you know,
veiled threat to let the world know exactly what happened
in the face of the allegations against Donald Trump for
doing something or claiming to do something that Joe Biden
actually did. But obviously a stronger supporter of Ukraine than Trump,
(55:42):
Trump who wants to negotiate a settlement which would obviously
require Ukraine to give up some land. I just I
can't see any any other way out of that one.
But moving back over to the release of information and
the idea that they have given us this information about
his motivations for wanting to kill the Donald Trump. Remember
the Covenant shooter, the training Covenant shooter, and the manifesto
(56:06):
that they refused to release because they, the powers that be,
were allegedly afraid it would inspire more shooting. We have
less than a week after they released the letter from
the would be assassin openly encouraging others to assassinate Donald Trump.
(56:28):
Out loud, asking others in light of his anticipated failure,
which was the point apparently of his leaving the note
asking others and offering a reward to finish the job
that he didn't do. No, that won't inspire anyone at all.
But releasing a transvestite manifesto justifying on some level the
murdering of young children, that's going to inspire more shootings. Huh,
(56:56):
unless you're completely out of your mind. And I think
everyone these school shooters has been completely out of their mind.
Who could be inspired to go murder children? And Yet,
when you move over to the theater of politics and
how vitriolic and how angry people are these days in
(57:18):
the area of politics, and a history filled with politicians
being assassinated or attempts on those powerful people, on those
powerful people's lives, I think it's probably more likely you
could encourage someone to go over the edge in terms
of a political situation than to enter a school and
(57:40):
kill innocent children. Just a thought. Six twenty five fifty
five kre CD talk station Oto Exit will not get
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you do, or at any time, other exit has a
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have a tendency to linger. Huge Indian food fan but
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I keep my oto exit there and few sprays. My
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Od O r XIT Odor exit dot com fifty five KRC.
Speaker 1 (59:08):
Are you receiving today and overcast day? Rounds of rain
likely strong afternoon storms hopefully seventy eight for the high.
Isolated showers overnight sixty five. Jora also cloudy with isolated
showers and high up seventy nine. Continuing a trend, mostly
cloudy with isolated showers overnight Wednesday low of sixty and
(59:28):
a chance of showers during the day on Thursday as well.
Clouds all day and to night eighty one to the
high on Thursday. It's sixty nine degrees. Right now, it's
time for traffic update.
Speaker 5 (59:38):
From the UCL Traffic Center with u see health the
future care is happening now through clinical trials and innovative
treatments that give patients a chance for better outcomes. Visit
ucehealth dot com. Let Jude lanes are blocked off northbound
seventy one with an accident at June seventy five, traffic
starting to back up towards Speifer. There's a wreck northbound
seventy five before the Western Hills Viaduct, right hand side
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westbound thirty two at Power four involved this time Chuck
ing Brahm fifty five KRCD talk Station.
Speaker 1 (01:00:08):
Seven thirty one. Pifty five KRCD talk Station one hour
on election integrity at the top of the next hour
seven o five with Marcel Sturvich and Mark Pakita. Fascinating conversation,
a little troubling as well, so tune in for that
or check out the podcast later in the morning. I
was a real eye open when I heard them speak
at that Northeast Women's Republic or Republican Women's meeting, so
(01:00:31):
that's why I want him on the show. And Joe
Strecker delivered over the local stories, apps and phone calls.
This is an interesting one since the police chief, Teresa
Tji sent a what they call a strong message. Fox
nineteen reporting on this, showed up at the Cincinni School
Board meeting unannounced last night. Quote mark my words, something
critical is going to happen, and then everyone's going to
(01:00:53):
be pointing the finger at the police. She was there
to voice concerns about children getting into trouble at the
Metro transit stops. She says she previously approached former CPS
superintendent Superintendent Ironetta Wright about the problem, so that she
told right at the time that if the district didn't
do anything, she'd have to go to the school board,
(01:01:14):
made good or a promise and say public school Board
president e Bolden said, I was stunned. I feel we
were ambushed because we did not know they were coming.
She told the board she wants to say public schools
to send its workers to transit stations to prevent criminal activity.
Be out there with us, see what we're seeing, See
what our officers are dealing with. Share some of your
(01:01:36):
resources to help our resources, she said. Bolton replied, no,
that's not what we do, and we're not in arm
of the police. Fiji's reported there have been ten high
pub profile violent events since the start of the school year.
Three shot fired incidents, one shooting, one gun theft in
(01:01:57):
northern Kentucky, one street robbery, two brawls I want to assault,
one incident where police had to kick kids out of
a movie theater. Said, our officers have arrested twenty since
an public school students children since January, seventy five percent
of whom they've never had never been arrested before. Diji
said the policies of this board are feeding into the problem.
(01:02:19):
Board President Bolton since she doesn't believe theiji's request for
school facility to help out at transit stops or faculty
rather to help out a transit stop is reasonable, saying
completely unacceptable. That's completely unacceptable. We will try to help.
We will try to guide our students while they're not
there so they understand the expected behaviors to young people.
(01:02:40):
We will certainly hold them accountable to the extent that
we're allowed to. But no, we're not going to put
school staff in those centers. Sounds like Chief Thiji's and
is an act of desperation right. She said that since
an a police department has spent four hundred and eighteen
thousand dollars an officer overtime just to send police to
(01:03:01):
transit station, claiming it's never been like that before. Said
youth crimes increase from sixty two total incidents in all
of calendar year twenty twenty three to seventy far so
far this year. Overall, the city is getting safer, she said,
though violence is on the rise. She said. She said,
(01:03:22):
I'm really tired of the officers who step up above
and beyond their forty hours to go in and in
essence baby sit these kids at the transit center, whether
it's Government Square, Oakley Station or one of the others.
It's not our job to go out there and be
doing this every single day. Bolton, for her part, said
criminal activity the transit stations is a problem, but feels
(01:03:44):
impugning on all of the students does nothing to help
student police relationships. What she said, teenagers are teenagers now.
There's always some group of kids with a group that
behaves particularly badly. Yes, where we are now though, is
I think people are so aware of the prevalence of guns,
(01:04:06):
the prevalence of violence that people jump to wagy big conclusions,
no idea what she's supposed to be conveying by that statement. Honestly,
THEJ said she believes that an officer may have to
face a difficult decision about whether or not to shoot
a minor if things continue. THEJ said she's not met
(01:04:26):
with a new superintendent at all, but she looks forward
to doing so sometime soon. Bolton, the board president, said
that they'll work with police and they hope to have
a meeting with the chief and city leadership to address
what's happening at the transit stations. Unruly violent children, children
that have no guidance, children that have no sense of
morals or values, children have no value of life. Children
(01:04:48):
to think that it's worthy of shooting at someone or
otherwise engaging in criminal activity because oh, I don't know,
I was disrespected or some crap like that six point
thirty six. If I have KRS DE talk station frustrating, yes,
not frustrating. Foreign exchange taking a car to foreign exchange
the right thing to do if you have an imported
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Foreign exchange is the place to go if your car's
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that's compared to the dealership. That's real money in my pocket,
and I'm not spending it at the dealership. I'm going
to Foreign Exchange where they do it's the same oil
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they have access to my manufacturer's technically, my manufacturers technical information,
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they do, and I have more money in my pocket.
I can't calculate the total because I haven't done a
cost benefit comparison for every single repair we've done we've
had on our foreign cars, but I'm thinking I'd probably
save thousands over the years because we've been going to
Foreign Exchange for a long long time. Westchester location where
Austin the team will serve you well. Tyler's the legs
at off seventy five East two Streets, hanging right on
(01:06:14):
Kinglin and you're there five one three, six, four four
twenty six, twenty six five one three six four four
twenty six twenty six. Foreign x dot Com that's foreign
the LETTERACTX dot com.
Speaker 3 (01:06:24):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 1 (01:06:28):
Attentional weather time, rain coming in around strong afternoons storms
Fingers crossed for all the above. Seventy eight for the
high and several days and nights of overcast conditions with
isolated showers. They will be tonight with the low sixty five,
(01:06:48):
tomorrow with the highest seventy nine, overnight, Wednesday with the
low of sixty and the same on Thursday with the
chance of shower showing up during the day. Eighty one
for the high end right now sixty nine.
Speaker 5 (01:06:57):
Traffic times from the U see how traffic center with
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Speaker 5 (01:07:09):
Southbound seventy one the latest accident this is it's Stewart
Triumphan is slow out of ken Wood. Let lanes blocked up,
so is the right shoulder. Left two lanes are blocked
northbound seventy one with a wreck. At two seventy five.
There's an accident northbound seventy five before the Western Hills
Viaduct and West two seventy five at Kellogg Chuck Ingram
(01:07:29):
on fifty five KR see the talk station.
Speaker 1 (01:07:33):
Sixty one five KRCD talks day. You're gonna head over
to the phones. You want to call, have a comment.
I want to hear from you. Five one, three, seven
fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two to three talk.
You gotta start with Nick Dennis hang on with take
your call next, Nick, Welcome to the program. Happy Tuesday.
Speaker 11 (01:07:49):
Hey Brian, remember a guy named ed Ekle.
Speaker 1 (01:07:53):
Now you're gonna have to refresh my recollection on that one.
I'm gonna be embarrassed here in a moment when you do.
But not not not on the top of my head.
Speaker 11 (01:08:01):
Because he started out at Bridgetown was dumb. You were
in del High, but ed Echo was a principal and
at the triple header between Bridgetown and del High, there
was an incident after school and even though it was
an after school activity on a Friday night away from school,
(01:08:21):
it was a school activity. So because it was a
school activity, the school wound up still being responsible. So
when there was a fight, the school was the one
that did the discipline their action. This goes back to
the deal where technically even CPS when they switched down
(01:08:43):
all their bussing to try and save money and play
games with Metro, that's where all this is going down. DPS.
The police chief had a legitimate argument TPS is responsible
for that kid making it from the school to the
front door.
Speaker 1 (01:08:59):
And all that little gig.
Speaker 11 (01:09:01):
Then in betweens, they really do legitimately have a responsibility.
At least that's the way it used to be. I
don't know current law. I'm not a counselor.
Speaker 1 (01:09:11):
Well, you make a really good point. I was going
to give you props. You should be a lawyer for
coming up with a theory, because you know, I can
make a counter argument though, until they're on the bus,
which would be you know, arguably, as you say, putting
them in the sort of in loco parentis position, being
the you know, responsible for the transportation. Hanging out at
the bus stop is not in and of itself a
(01:09:32):
fundamental school activity, and our counter argument could be made. However,
I do like where you're going on that, and let's
face it, you know, I think it will be a
decent gesture to the community to have some school representative
being there to check it out and help try to
ensure that they're minding their p's and q's, and of
course opening their eyes to what's going on at the
bus stop so they could help while they're at school,
(01:09:54):
talk about it and say listen, I was there, I
watch and this is the kind of conduct you're not
supposed to do and shouldn't do, and you're going to
get in trouble for doing it. Me to be instructive
for the teachers to understand that and have an awareness
of it. Just the thought. But I like where you're
coming from. Dennis. Welcome to the program. On a happy
Tuesday to you, sir.
Speaker 2 (01:10:14):
Yeah, say, in examining your question about who wants to
hurt little children, it's a dangerously significant portion of their population.
These are crazy people and various positions of no power
and extraordinary power. You remember that guy that shot up
the printing company down in Louisville, Kentucky.
Speaker 1 (01:10:34):
I don't remember his name, but I have a vague
recollection of the events.
Speaker 2 (01:10:37):
I don't want to mention. I don't want to mention
names or everything, or even the drugs that he was on.
But he was under psychiatric care. He was known about
by the police. He'd been complained about reported by the
staff at the company, and he was continued. He was
able to continue to harass and eventually shoot up the place,
killing a significant lover of people. The idiot that attacked
(01:10:58):
in the Christian school in Tennessee under medication, under medical
supervision for transitioning, also was medicaid and under control of
what you might call competent people, shot up the place,
and that manifesto was concealed from us for quite some time.
(01:11:21):
The children are under attack from people within the school
system that see them as their property and not the
under the custody of the parents and people that love
and want to protect them. Well, the children are actually
the prime target in their society to destroy our society, government, and.
Speaker 11 (01:11:41):
Country.
Speaker 2 (01:11:42):
You've got you've got all kinds of attacks going on
with the narcotics trafficking, collateral damage where a little kid
swallows some ventanyl and buys and that's not considered murder
because it's quote an accidental overdose. That's the way the
coroner's office can evade a responsibility for compelling a prosecution
(01:12:05):
for a murder. The children are subjected to drugs that
were never approofd of pediatric use, but are commonly used
by child psychologists to maintain the what you want to
call it, semblance of some stability in these children that
are injured or disturbed. But you go on to the
(01:12:27):
way children are cared for medically, and you take, for example,
a vaccine that does not have any efficacy, has only
adverse events reported, and the mechanism for destroying the part
of the brain that's less than the teaspoon and a
child is enough to permanently damage the person's ability to
(01:12:52):
relate to other people. The seat of who you are,
your cognition of yourself is just a very very tiny amount.
Even in an adult male it's not more than ten cecstory.
Speaker 1 (01:13:04):
And I can't speak to the science behind whatever drug
it is you're talking about, but what you have unfolded,
and you know, just scratch the surface of the realities
of all the pressures and the horrors that our young
people are surrounded by twenty four to seven. Whether it's
through you know, I would argue malpractice medical care, and
you know, telling a child that you know, it's okay
to believe that you're something that you're not, and then
(01:13:25):
offering surgery and medications to sort of validate that misconception
when therapy I think is the right thing to do.
You know, if you believe, if you have a twig
in berries and you believe you're a woman, then I
think counseling is in order to sort of have you
look down and rationalize and realize the reality of you
and your X and Y chromosome, you know. I mean,
(01:13:48):
it depends on which medical provider you're talking to, it prevents,
it depends on what your parents' perception is visa vi transgenderism,
and you know, whether transition is appropriate or whether maybe
you might want to go to a medical provider who
might suggest something less radical than surgery and puberty blockers.
You got social media. Moving over to the other point
you make, I mean you're surrounded by it, you know,
(01:14:10):
and it is difficult to be a child these days.
But my guess, my point earlier was, you know, in
terms of trying to recruit somebody, there are a lot
of people out there who maybe you are just right
there on the edge, would never ever consider entering a
school and gunning down young people, the most innocent among
all of us. If they want to make a political point,
(01:14:30):
they would view themselves as heroes to society. By gunning
down someone like Donald Trump, you know they're going to
be held up by half the world or half the
American population, who would say it out loud, good job,
it's justified because it supports their political effort and evil.
Orange man's bad and he's a Nazi. He's the embodiment
of Hitler. You can see how that could push someone
(01:14:52):
who otherwise would never consider doing it too into someone
who might if they got the support. Going into a
school and killing children is nonjustifiable act of backcrap, insanity
that no one could ever sort of be proud of.
It's an active desperation. It's someone who's screaming at the world.
They're so screwed up in the ad that they thought
(01:15:15):
it right to go in and murder children. I find
there'd be a huge, huge chasm of division between those
two theories. I mean, I'm just just crazy people in
the world. The question is can you get someone to
act on that? And I think it's less likely you
can get someone to act for the purpose of murdering
children then to go after some evil political figure. A
(01:15:38):
lot of people out in the world are gonna praise
you as a hero. You're never gonna hear an utterance
of someone praising who as a hero for killing a child.
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Speaker 8 (01:16:38):
Of course fifty five KRC man.
Speaker 1 (01:16:45):
Here's you're not first warning weather at forecast, So every
day and night is going to be cloudy and comes
with a chance of rain. So with that established, we've
got that going on today, stronger afternoon storms. Fact that
didn't do as well seventy eight for the high overnight
sixty five. Same thing tomorrow the highest seventy nine overnight
saying sixty and then chance showers during the day on
Thursdays well with clouds and a high eighty one sixty
(01:17:07):
nine degrees. Now time for traffic from the UCL Trampic
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The future of care is happening now through clinical trials
and innovative treatments and give patients a chance for better outcome.
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Visit useehealth dot com.
Speaker 5 (01:17:20):
Highways not good in quite a few spots thanks to
accidents like northbound seventy one first erect near Stewart, then
an accident at to seventy five let lane's block for
both southbound seventy five, an accident near the Western Hills
Viaduct northbound, and a wreck just above seventy four. Chuck
Ingram on fifty five KOs the talk station go to
(01:17:42):
A six fifty four.
Speaker 1 (01:17:43):
We'll get to the phones and ask Dinesh get straight
to the point, Danash, because I want you to get
your thoughts in. We only have a minute and a
half or so. Welcome back, Hi, Brian.
Speaker 12 (01:17:52):
Just wonder to let you know that the PERD weekend
September is going to go down in the history of
American books as the week when the independent American patriots
were finally vindicated of claiming and providing evidence of what
(01:18:13):
a fraud. And also the question why would government wanting
to be against the American citizens? And these both questions
have been answered this last week. We have now evidence
from two different sources showing that our elections records are
(01:18:35):
not accurate, and they also have the proof from the
Secutary of State's owned dominion databases showing exactly what have
been happening. So it's beyond any doubt now that they've
been correct all along. And really it is said that
(01:18:55):
the roles have reversed. The government is supposed to keep
law and order, but here the private independent citizens patriots
are the ones who have been working hard to bring
law and order and prevent voter fraud, while the government
is doing everything possible to not that happen, so it's
(01:19:15):
we have no proof that has been put out. There's
a new movie out there called Singer Prince of Fraud.
The movie. Any play can type in that Singer Prince
of Fraud movie dot com and they can go to
segment three and four. In two segments of twenty minutes each,
(01:19:37):
they will see vividly exactly what their computer systems are doing,
and how the votes are being deleted and the words
and really the results we have from twenty twenty shows
that Trump one hands down and it's amazing performance, but
(01:19:58):
the votes were totally and it's affecting every Republican candidate
who has lost their special elections in this year.
Speaker 1 (01:20:07):
All right, well, we're out of time to Nash. I
just typed it in and all the links that came
up first we're all rather old. Twenty ten. There's one
from I don't know. I'll let my listeners search for
that themselves that you can shoot me a link because
I'm not familiar with the fingerprints of Fraud movie or
information that's there, but I am familiar with The gentlemen
(01:20:28):
are going to be joined the program in the next
hour and they have some real eye opening information about
what's going on here in Ohio connection with that belief
voter registration. So stick around from Marstell Scribbach and Mark
Pakita after the news.
Speaker 10 (01:20:41):
Updates on the twenty twenty four presidential campaign.
Speaker 6 (01:20:44):
We have to meet this moment as if our freedoms.
Speaker 1 (01:20:47):
Are at risk. Fifty five JRZ the talk station.
Speaker 8 (01:20:51):
This report is.
Speaker 1 (01:21:07):
Seven six here at fifty five KRC detalk station. Great
time to be tuned to the fifty five Carsey Morning
Show that I make an argument anytimes a good time.
I was so thoroughly impressed by the gentleman in the
studio right now with me, Marcel Stribitch, and also Mark Paketa.
They did a presentation at the Northeast Women Republican Club
meeting just recently, and I was like, I got to
get these guys on the fifty five KRC Morning Show.
(01:21:29):
Let my listeners know because we're all worried about voter
integrity registering to vote, our illegal immigrants allowed to vote?
Can they register to vote and end up voting even
though they're not lawfully a lot entitled to do so.
Then on the other side, there's this whole algorithm stuff.
And I mentioned with Secretary of State Lrose. The other
day Jerry Corcy and others did some number crunching, and
so there's some some Shenanigan allegations on the integrity of
(01:21:51):
the actual voting machines and the algorithms built in there, though,
But these gentlemen have some interesting and fascinating data to
burn into your attention. And so us introduced to the
fifty five Casy or to my fifty five Cassy Morning
show audience, Mark Pikitti you may remember, and he's running
for political office, is also a very successful businessman and
an outspoken activists. You've rubbed, You've little bit rubbed a
lot of people the wrong way over the past several years.
Speaker 10 (01:22:13):
Having your mark, Yeah, I think Brian sometimes telling you
the truth and exposing people who are obfuse, skating or
just being absolutely dishonest kind.
Speaker 1 (01:22:22):
Of rubes people the wrong way. Well, it does, but
you see, you know in I'm a little ill, Libertarians
like to point out I lean conservative, my politics, discorresponsibility,
living the government, free market, I am frustrated to know
and regularly over Columbus, generally speaking, the Republicans colla House,
the Senate, and they have the governor office yet and
they refuse to address issues that are so easily resolvable
(01:22:46):
for the benefit of the constituents. In today's discussion is
one of those issues. And my listener is going to
be sad and disappointed when they find out how many
times you've talked with elected officials, including Secretary of State
Frank LeRose, about voter integrity. Also in studio, Lieutenant Colonel
retired Marcel Sturbitch. He served, Thank you for your service
to our country twenty years for American Military Air Force
(01:23:08):
Intelligence officer, combat veteran, a whole bunch of different operations
and strategic leadership assignments, but he gathered this wealth of
information about data collection and gathering. He continues after his
military service to apply his skills and knowledge, becoming a
full time Ohio statewide election legislative reform proponent. Also co
authored this bill we'll talk about today, HB four seventy
(01:23:29):
two and Center Bill two seventy four, the Ohio Votes
Count Act. He's on multiple different programs and he has
done multiple presentations along the lines of what we're going
to be talking about today. Gentlemen, it's a pleasure to
have you in so We'll start with Mark and straightforward
concise analysis and breakdown of what we're going to be
(01:23:50):
talking about the details of which Marcel will expand upon.
So have that it, Mark, Yeah.
Speaker 10 (01:23:55):
So Marcell and the team that works with him are
the data people right, pulling together the data and the evidence.
And what I've been doing is using my social media
and network platform to talk about election integrity and give
people some thought about what the theory might be about
why what you just said about Republicans in Columbus might
(01:24:19):
be true, Like what is making them do what they
do or not do what they do don't do? So
when it comes to election integrity, we have been pelting
Secretary of State Laurose with evidence of susceptibility of our
election system in Ohio to fraud, and he has ignored
(01:24:42):
or or maligned us every step of the way.
Speaker 1 (01:24:46):
And so I started thinking why is this?
Speaker 10 (01:24:49):
And I think the reason is it would be reasonable
to assume that because he has aspirations to run for
another office. He already ran for the US six and
lost to Bernie Moreno, he is probably jonesing for an
appointment to J. D.
Speaker 1 (01:25:06):
Vance's seat.
Speaker 10 (01:25:07):
When Trump and Vance take the White House and so
he doesn't want to rub anybody the wrong way.
Speaker 1 (01:25:14):
He is also.
Speaker 10 (01:25:17):
Deathly, mortally afraid of paper of lawsuits. So status quo
keeps him the safest politically, and so we're going to
make him uncomfortable. We're going to continue to make him
uncomfortable until we have election systems where it's easy to
(01:25:40):
verify voters and hard to cheat. And Marcel will talk
about this can go on in detail. He knows he
and his team know more about Ohio's election systems than
Secretary of State lauo'se and his staff do. And I
do not say that with any kind of hubris. It
is an absolute fact because we continue to ask them
(01:26:03):
questions they can answer, and in some cases they refuse
to answer because they know we have the answer, and
we're just looking for proof of the answer.
Speaker 1 (01:26:13):
Okay, and the answer, and we'll get to the question
that you're providing the answer to in a moment. But
why if we're talking about just ensuring the integrity of
the election and our will, our ability as the constituents
to believe in the outcome of the election, why would
taking steps in that direction rub anyone the wrong way?
(01:26:35):
I understand political differences mind you. But from what I heard,
it just seems so foreign a concept regarding ignoring whether
Frank Lorois wants to run for higher office or not.
And I know you even said it out loud. You
don't have a personal vendetta against Frank LeRose, do you
just want people to address this issue? But moving backward,
how could it possibly rub people the wrong way to
fix the problems we're going to talk about today?
Speaker 10 (01:26:57):
Well, I mean, I think there's evidence that it rubs
people the wrong way. When you've got certified credential poll
watchers trying to get into polls in Philadelphia and they're
being rejected by the establishment Board of Elections kind of
insiders from going into so politically, I think there's huge
(01:27:22):
risk there. I mean, we've already seen, I believe, a
suit by a league of women voters against the Licoln
County Board of Elections, Marcel. And so it may seem
like to us this is a common sense thing that
you want secure elections, but there are large factions of
(01:27:42):
certain constituencies who aren't really concerned about fair elections. They
want to win at any cost. And it's the Secretary
of State and his staff's job in the Board of
Elections job to prevent that.
Speaker 1 (01:27:56):
Now, are these the types of individuals who would scream
things like, oh, it's racist to request a photo idact? Okay,
So that seems to be coming largely from the left
wing of the political spectrum. I mean, I don't hear
any Republicans screaming about, you know, I can vote an
election day. Why do we need to have extended voting,
Why do we need to have mail in voting. I've
heard those arguments. Obviously those gone by the wayside. We
(01:28:18):
now do have early voting and the ability to do
mail in voting, But in terms of just simple requirements
like photo ID. The only people I hear screaming about that,
and it is insulting, it is to people of color,
claiming that it's impossible for people of color somehow to
secure a photo ideas a bigotry of low expectations. Yeah,
it's terrible when I hear that, and I find it
(01:28:40):
personally offensive. But this is the argument they make. So
if that's the segment that we're talking about, those who
want to make it lax easy to vote, and of course,
like with data, multiple ballot gathering and turning in multiple
ballots on behalf of other people. We want to stop
all that because it does create opportunities for fraud. Going
back to a traditional Republican stance on that, that's the
(01:29:03):
kind of thing Republicans typically try to stop from happening.
So you're saying that a large chunk or some within
the powerful within the Republican Party are against these efforts
because they don't want to draw the ire of these
groups you mentioned afraid of paper. They don't want a
lawsuit filed in spite inspite of the fact that they're
on the right side of the argument, both in principle
(01:29:25):
and legally. Yes, really, that's basically it.
Speaker 10 (01:29:30):
Holy Well, look, you just gave an example earlier that
we've got a trifecta and it's a super majority tri
effect in Ohio. We hold every office in the executive
branch elected office, we hold a supermajority in the Ohio Senate,
in the Ohio House, and we get nothing done. That's
(01:29:52):
because we have a Republican party in Ohio that is
more like the Democrat Party than they are like a
true conservative Republican party should be.
Speaker 1 (01:30:03):
That is a problem in Ohio.
Speaker 10 (01:30:05):
I mean, if you want to look at the root
cause of all of these problems. That is it We
could have had these things fixed, I mean four years ago,
because we've had this supermajority forever. It's bigger than Ron
DeSantis's supermajority in Florida. Look at what he's gotten accomplished,
and look what we've gotten accomplished.
Speaker 1 (01:30:25):
That last statement just says, just speaks volumes, I mean
absolute volumes. And I think it's at the heart of
my disgust with here, with politics here in the state
of Ahisle. More with market Pacata will hear from Marcel
Sturbage on the figures, the number crunching, and the legislative
solutions that have been floating around down there for apparently
a couple of years with no action by our elected officials.
(01:30:47):
In Columbus. First word for Prestige Interiors, John Ryan is
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(01:31:07):
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Speaker 3 (01:31:46):
This is fifty five krc an iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 1 (01:31:54):
Time for the nine first oneing by the forecast. Hey,
I got some rain on and off. Strong afternoon showers
may come in seventy for the high overnight isolated showers
with clouds sixty five. Cloudy tomorrow with isolated showers seventy
nine for the high overnight low sixty with clouds and showers.
How about that Thursday, another cloudy and potential shower day
with the high of eighty one right now sixty nine degrees.
Let's hear about traffic conditions from Chuck.
Speaker 5 (01:32:16):
From the UCL Tramping Center with uce health. The future
of care is happening down through clinical trials and innovative
treatments and give patients a chance for better outcomes. Visit
ucehealth dot com. Cruise will working with two rex northbound
seventy one. The first near Stewart, left lane's blocked off,
so is the right shoulder. Traffic backs past Red Bank.
The second hat to seventy five on northbound seventy one.
(01:32:37):
It's low left lane that's blocked southbound seventy five. They
cleared a wreck near the Western Hills Viaduct northbound seventy five.
An accident above seventy four. Chuck King Ramont fifty five KRS.
The talk station.
Speaker 1 (01:32:50):
Seven twenty here fifty five KRC detalk station Happy Tuesday
in studio talking about election integrity here in the state.
Of Ohio and frustrated. A couple of guys I have
here along with me, sharing frustration with the sort of
the political realities we deal with in Ohio and spite
of the fact that it's solid red. Marcel Strivich and
Mark Pakita talking to Ohio Election Integrity. And it's a
lot of the information we're talking about today you can
find online at Ohio the number four truth dot com
(01:33:13):
Ohio for truth. You can even listen to Marcel Strivitch's
a little link there to a podcast about how years
of making it more convenient to vote in Ohio has
been at the expense of making it hard to cheat.
And that's the subject matter we're dealing with here, election integrity.
So pivoting over to Marcel, let's talk about the projects
you've been working on. And I share your frustration, like
(01:33:33):
I said, but you've got you found problems and holes
and you have solutions. So let's deal with the problems
we're talking about here today.
Speaker 2 (01:33:41):
Yeah.
Speaker 13 (01:33:41):
Absolutely, And so you know, up at the very front
of our election system, look at it as a two
side of coin. Right on the one hand, you got
to prevent the denial of a vote. On the second part,
you got to prevent the dilution of the vote, and
finding the solutions are going to come somewhere there in
the middle, right, And that's what's imbalanced in the Ohio system.
As we have spent in anordinate amount of our political capital,
(01:34:04):
of our focus from our politicians on promoting accessibility and
convenience of election systems.
Speaker 1 (01:34:10):
Early voting, dropboxes, mail and online.
Speaker 13 (01:34:12):
Registration, exactly, we have third parties soliciting you for absentee
ballot forms all the time. Now, let's look at the
other side of that coin, which is un imbalanced in
what we're trying to add levity to. You've got only
partial photo ID. Mail in ballots don't require copy of
a photo ID. You don't have proof of citizenship verification upfront.
You don't have the ability at this point with the
(01:34:33):
Board of Elections to have your records challenged if you
identify ineligible records. And there are over two hundred and
fifty to three hundred and fifty thousand records in our
voting system that have some form of questionability or some
form of error in them, and yet our Secretary of
State's policy in Ohio is to treat any record of
status right either active or confirmation in an equal way
(01:34:57):
as equally accessing these absentee So when you combine and
aggregate those limiting factors of being able to conduct verification,
and then at the same time you afford all of
this accessibility out there, you create a system that is
in effect not easy to vote, hard to cheat, which
is what we're told, but it's hard to verify, easy
(01:35:18):
to vote, and that equals susceptibility to cheating. So how
did we get there. We got there because it's much
easier to give in to a side that threatens to
sue you every time than the constitutional and civil rights
that we deserve, which is just to verify it and
sure that every person that applies has an equal set
(01:35:39):
of review and has in the Board of Elections have
the equal data and the authority to check that out.
And what we learned in our exhaustive analysis over a
year is that the Board of Elections lack the authoritative data.
They lack laws that afford them the ability to check
the driver's license, social security information, and the non citizen.
(01:35:59):
They accept what's called statement of the truth. And what
does that mean. It's an undefined standard in criteria. So
if you look at what the entry of applications are,
and they're allowed onto the voter roles and a record
is created. How can we have confidence that all of
those records if they didn't undergo some of the most
(01:36:20):
stringent checks like you would see in the financial industry,
in the medical industry today, how could we have confidence
in that type of an election system.
Speaker 1 (01:36:28):
All right, So let's start with the process of registering
to vote. When you get a driver's license. Let's say
I am a foreign national. We'll even say I'm here
with a green card, but I'm entitled to a driver's
license under the law. I can obtain one, but that
does not afford me the right to vote. It's illegal
for someone who's not a citizen to vote in a
federal election. I go to get my driver's license, they
(01:36:48):
give me an automatic registration form. Do they have to
explain to me the criteria for eligibility? In other words,
you need to be a US citizen in order to
participate in elections in the un effect federal level. And
also here in the state of Ohio.
Speaker 13 (01:37:02):
No, there is no program of instruction, no fact sheet
for them. When they show up to Department of Job
and Family Services, and this is what we advocated for
in the lead up to our election. We wanted the
Secretary of State, who has wide latitude, to be able
to promulgate guidance to those agencies that are assisting with
voter registration, whether it's the buerau of motor vehicles, whether
it's any other agency. Right those agencies, by federal law
(01:37:25):
are required to provide their applicants voter registration applications. In
those voter registration applications are a test only, meaning they
are not proof of citizenship verification. So someone could deceive
or someone could make a mistake. And if they sign
that form, it's required to go to the Board of
Elections in the Secretary of State who process that form
(01:37:47):
as though it is considered the statement of truth. So,
in other words, what we lack. The biggest weakness in
Ohio's election systems is we lack a system that validates
the data.
Speaker 6 (01:37:57):
On the front end.
Speaker 13 (01:37:58):
We presume that the information that an applicant has put
on their information is correct.
Speaker 1 (01:38:05):
Like a sworn affi, David, you know, the subject to
penalties of perjury for lying on it.
Speaker 13 (01:38:10):
And we only go after people after they've double voted
or after you know, we do an annual audit and
they find out, okay, somebody was a non citizen. You know,
the Secretary of State said, okay, we found six hundred. Well,
let me just put this in perspective. You know how
many identity credentials have been issued for non citizens across
the state of Ohio as of April of twenty twenty four,
two hundred and thirty six thousand. Not making a claim
(01:38:32):
here that all of those in any former fashion are
on the voter rolls, but it gives you an understanding
of the pool of potential applicants that have come across
the wires. And you can't go at that starting five
months prior to an election, which is when we really
started to get serious about this. Our borders have been
open for three years. So where have the request to
(01:38:54):
the Department of Homeland Security been for three years asking hey,
I need access to this information. And we could have
long ago had a lawsuit from the Attorney General saying
give me this information.
Speaker 6 (01:39:04):
We didn't do any of this. We waited till the
very last minute.
Speaker 1 (01:39:06):
Yeah, that's where the key lies is engaging in a
process where we can communicate with the data banks of
the federal government and know whether or not someone is
a citizen, and that stumbling block is just to me
beyond comprehension. Will continue this conversation about voter integrity here
in the State of Why with Marcel Sturwitch and Mark Pakeita.
(01:39:27):
After I mentioned cover sincey and my buddy Jeff. I
keep using Jeff as an illustration, but he's one of
the greatest supporters of the sponsors on the fifty five
KRCY Morning Show, and he has been so elated and
happy over the years that he's listening to my advice.
And like many folks, Oh, I only wish I'd ha
done it sooner. And I'm talking about in this particular case,
like the insulation cover. Sincey, he is a businessman, he's
(01:39:48):
got employees and he wanted to have less expensive medical coverage,
and he did an analysis or he had cover. Since
he do an analysis, I said put cover. Since he to
the challenge, let John Rolman and the team look at
what you've got and have him come up with a
better way. Because he is your agent, he works for
you or your business. In the case of Jeff, they
look at all the different insurance companies they got access
(01:40:10):
to more than two hundred. They have thousands of medical
insurance plans, and they look at each individual employee, and
I mean seriously, every one of Mark's employees was analyzed
for where they are in their lives, whether they have
families or not, their agent and they come up with
a great package of medical insurance, saving the employees hundreds
and if not thousands of dollars, improving Mark's business bottom line,
(01:40:30):
and making everybody happy with better medical insurance dollars one
coverage in many cases for less money sounds impossible. That's
why I say, don't put it off, Jeff. His only
regret is that he didn't do it sooner, because they're happy.
People over to his company cover since he dot com
is the form you can fill out. There's no obligation
to you. Just let them find a better way cover
since he dot com or just call them up five
(01:40:51):
one three eight hundred call five one three eight hundred
two two five five.
Speaker 8 (01:40:56):
Fifty five KRC.
Speaker 1 (01:40:59):
Are you receiving letter from the IRS claiming UO back taxes?
Speaker 11 (01:41:02):
Done?
Speaker 1 (01:41:03):
Junior here to tell you a rain likely today. Strong
afternoon storms are possible. Hopefully all that shows up seventy
eight for the high overnight cloudyan, isolated showers sixty five
fouty with isolated showers tomorrow as well seventy nine. Same
thing going on overnight Wednesday with a little sixty and
another cloudy with chances showers day on Thursday eighty one
for the high End. Right now sixty nine at time
(01:41:23):
for traffic.
Speaker 5 (01:41:25):
From the U seeout tramping center with uc health. The
future of care is happening now through clinical trials and
innovative treatments that give patients chance for better outcomes.
Speaker 1 (01:41:34):
Visit useehealth dot com.
Speaker 5 (01:41:36):
The latest accident Eastpound seventy four is ramped to southbound
seventy five left ting inside. It adds to what was
already running slow from North Bend southbound seventy five break
lights in and out of Lachland. The ramp from eastbound
Reagan Highway to north seventy five is shut down due
to a wreck. Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRZ the
talk station seven thirty one Here fifty five kr CD
(01:41:59):
talk station exposing the fun and games in Shenanigans going
on the state.
Speaker 1 (01:42:04):
Of Ohio in Marcel Sturbitch and Mark Ketter, we're talking
about high election integrity where the problems are, where the
holes in the system are, where the opportunities are for
voter fraud. These gentlemen have identified them, they have legislative
solutions for them. They have been discussing this with elected officials.
Sadly they haven't had an audience yet with Secretary of
(01:42:25):
State Frank LeRose, although some of his other minions have
met with these gentlemen. But we do have proof that
what you're talking about and a document which verifies what
you're bringing up to our attention today, Marcel from the
Secretary of State's office himself.
Speaker 6 (01:42:40):
Yeah, yeah, we do.
Speaker 13 (01:42:41):
We have effectively evidence as of July, through a Board
of Elections meeting in Hamilton, of a bulk submission of
one hundred and forty three fraudulent registrations, to include names
like Henry Kissinger. And this really shook up things in Ohio,
right because up to that point, everybody was, you know,
parroting the message that you know, we are able to
(01:43:03):
assess these records in a qualifying fashion. But what we
learned is that this had been going on for long
past a year through these third party canvassing organizations across Ohio,
and these organizations have very little regulation or oversight. They
operate under their free First Amendment free speech right to
pay people to go out and identify people for petition
(01:43:26):
balloting and the registration forms. And what they were able
to do was to change people's voter records without their consent,
bring up deceased records. All this was filed formally back
in July of twenty twenty three out of Cuyahoga County.
It was only in mid August that the Secretary of
State came out after this July meeting where the Ohio
(01:43:47):
Republican Party chairman stated, right up upfront, this is outright
fraudulent behavior and someone's defrauding the registration process. And so
where do things stand now. There's a referral to violations
in twenty different counties. So the question is, you know,
what is the extent of this. We don't have an
answer going into this election. What would be better that
(01:44:09):
we had is a system where the county Board of
Elections can catch this on their own. This was caught
by a couple who had their registration information changed, and
they came to the board and asked what's going on,
and then upon further inquiry, the board here in Hamilton
County took a look at it and said, yeah, there's
something going on here. So what will likely happen is
that the canvassers are going to get obviously criminally prosecuted.
(01:44:31):
But the points that we've been making is what about
what happens to the consequences for these organizations? And there's
nothing in Ohio law that would suggest they're out of business.
They should be perhaps paying a one million dollar civil penalty,
they should be bonded. When you create real penalties and offensives,
you dissuade and you deter this type of susceptibility to fraud.
So I hope our legislators are listening to that. It's
(01:44:54):
certainly clear that the Secretary of State is now wanting
to do more with legislation.
Speaker 6 (01:44:58):
Let's talk about that.
Speaker 1 (01:44:58):
If you'd like you, we will. I'll tell you what
bo It's almost at a time in this segment I
did want to definitely get to the legislation because, as
I've been pointing out or suggesting all morning, and as
I heard from you last week, the legislation's already drafted.
It fills, it deals with the problems we're talking about
here today, and it is unoffensive to anybody who cares
about the opportunity for voter fraud. I mean, none of
(01:45:21):
this is is problematic. This isn't radical legislation you're proposing.
It's a simple legislative fix. Going back to my frustrations
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Speaker 3 (01:46:46):
This is fifty five krc an iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 1 (01:46:50):
By texting sixty four thousand. Nice forecast. If you're looking
forward to some rain, we got some possibilities today. Rounds
of rain, stronger for an in storm seventy eight. Chance
of rate, overnight overcast sixty five. The overcast day tomorrow
with an isolated shower or two seventy nine isolated showers
overnight On Wednesday, sixty and eighty one will be the high.
(01:47:11):
On Thursday, it'll be cloudy and yes, we have a
chance of showers during the day seventy degrees. Right now,
time for traffick update Chuck from you seut tramping center
with u see health.
Speaker 5 (01:47:21):
The future of care is happening now through clinical trials
and innovative treatments that give patience chance for better outcomes.
Speaker 1 (01:47:27):
Visit useehealth dot com.
Speaker 5 (01:47:29):
The latest accident eastbound seventy four is ramp to southbound
seventy five left inside. It adds to what was already
running slow from North Bend southbound seventy five break lights
in and out of Lachland. The ramp from eastbound Reagan
Highway to north seventy five is shut down due to
a wreck chucking ram on fifty five KR.
Speaker 1 (01:47:47):
See the talk station seven thirty nine if you have
KCD talk station and join my conversation here. I wish
we didn't have to have this conversation. In the State
of Ohio, Ball places Marcel Sturbage and Art Pikitia in
studia talking about high election integrity, something they have been
hard at work on to plug the holes that allow
for illegal voting here in the state of Ohio and
(01:48:10):
not getting a whole lot of traction until at least recently,
when there was at least an acknowledgment from the Secretary
of State's office that these problems actually exist, well documented,
most notably in here in Hamilton County. Henry Kissinger is
not a registered voter in Hamilton County, although he tried
to be. This is the kind of revelation which was like, no,
(01:48:30):
this does happen. Look here, we've got twenty nine illustrations
of it. Maybe there's more out there. The problem is
we don't know if there's more out there because of
this lack of connectivity with the federal government, so we
can verify citizenship, for example. But in all these NGO
organizations or otherwise political affiliated organizations that are trying to
exploit these holes in the election integrity system to their
(01:48:53):
own advantage, and of course Marcel gave us an illustration
of that. Now, with that in mind, Marcel, there are
a legislative fixes that have been floating around for a
while now for all these and as I said, or
suggested they're unoffensive to anybody who cares about it. What
are we talking about here? How long have they been
floating around? And I guess the fundamental point we'll get to,
is there anything that we can it can be done
(01:49:13):
to try to stop some of this before November?
Speaker 6 (01:49:17):
Well, yes to all of that.
Speaker 13 (01:49:18):
This election legislation has been out there since April and
in July, and it was introduced in both the House
and the Senate under HB four seven two and SB
two seven four. And so I'll just give you some
quick highlights. It was a large bill, but it intended
to address aspects of what I call our honor system.
You know, the ability of essentially the Board of Elections
(01:49:39):
to get the necessary data and authority to do proper
data validation of every application. And if you do that
and you ensure that everyone who's coming on to the
voter roles has been fully determined as eligible, then you
can have a talk in a conversation about what extent
you want to have systems that are both convenient and accessible.
The legislation itself also tackled important areas of antiquated information
(01:50:02):
systems that are associated with our voting systems. We certify
our voting systems to two thousand and five standards of security,
No joke.
Speaker 1 (01:50:10):
That's our current system.
Speaker 13 (01:50:11):
That's our current system, and that's in the entirety of
the country. For some reason, we give voting vendors the
purview to submit their own a set of testing requirements,
and it's essentially rubber stamp through the Election Assistance Commission
and our state law rubber stamps that through the Secretary
of State's Board of Voting Machine Examiners.
Speaker 1 (01:50:30):
So wait a second, I write this software for the
voting system, I check it myself, and then I sell
it to any given state, and my verification of my
own product is what's accepted as under two thousand and
five standards. Yes, we haven't changed the computer systems, and
in nature of computing has not changed at all since
(01:50:51):
two thousand and five, has it?
Speaker 6 (01:50:52):
Sure?
Speaker 14 (01:50:52):
Sure?
Speaker 6 (01:50:53):
You know on another planet.
Speaker 13 (01:50:55):
Yeah, but you know voter registration databases for example, Right,
if a change is made, you don't know what the
change was made.
Speaker 6 (01:51:00):
It just overright.
Speaker 13 (01:51:01):
So what our bill did is it brought forward the
idea of bring it blockchain, and it's an information system
functionality that's anti tamper evidence feature. And put it into
an integration of every voter registration database. There's eighty eight
of them across the state. The counties have their own
voter registration databases that feed the statewide voter registration database.
And the nice thing about that is we would have
(01:51:22):
been the first state in the country talk about gold standard.
We always hear that we would have been the first
state that would have had blockchain integration capability, and we
would have known if somebody is compromising or trying to
exploit our voter records, either system administrators or even hackers.
But we got passed on that, and we were told, well,
that's going to cost millions of dollars. That's only four
(01:51:44):
months after had been out there. But that's not true either.
So there's so many facets to four seventy two. I
don't care if we break it up into a technology upgrade. Bill,
I don't care if the Secretary of State. It looks
like he's leaning in this direction now because he sent
a letter to the Senate President and the House Speaker
in late August saying that he now wants Ohio citizen
proof of citizenship right for non citizens. Well, we had it,
(01:52:06):
and we could have had it implemented, and we could
have had it signed off, or if we had to
overwrite a veto from Governor DeWine, if it was going
to go down the path of HBO seventy three. But
we didn't do any of these things right, And now
we want to look at that maybe at the lame
duck session. Now we want to look at drop boxes.
There's so many facets of it that there was a
missed opportunity.
Speaker 6 (01:52:26):
Here is what I'm saying, Brian.
Speaker 1 (01:52:27):
I understand that completely. And going back to marx comments
about maybe the motivations behind those missed opportunities, they didn't
want to advance this because they were afraid of lawsuits
and looking bad or I'm sure in some cases allegations
of racism, right, I mean, right from the four corners
of the universe, like that's a racist idea. But I
run to make just to emphasize a point you made ourself.
(01:52:51):
When a change is made to a voters registration data,
there is no keeping of the prior information. It just
is deleted in essence and overwritten. I just want to
make sure that point is clear.
Speaker 13 (01:53:04):
That point is very clear, and you and you're hitting
on a major point right, if if you and this
is part of the reason why we have registration dates
changing now without understanding our clarity in our system, people
are getting new voter ID numbers.
Speaker 6 (01:53:18):
We're finding why is that happening?
Speaker 13 (01:53:20):
We can't know the answer to that because there's no
way to forensically review these records. Now, if you created
a blockchain system, and we're gonna hear a lot of
blockchain because if President Trump gets in and Senator Bernie
Moreno gets in, they're going to they're gonna lean very
heavy on that industry, and that has a chance to
finally transform twenty years of antiquated information systems okay, that
(01:53:42):
are present within our voter registration database. For some time
they were we were our voter registration databases to include
DC was entire voter role was compromised. And we already
know that on the dark web and other means, our
social security numbers, our driver's license information. There's there's not
a that doesn't go by where personal sensitive information is taken, like, oh,
(01:54:03):
clearly right, and so at this point we can't presume
that even the person that's going to do an online
registration is who they say they are, right, But if
you go to the Bureau of More Vehicles Brian and
you want to get your let's say tag's renewed, and
you're using their online registration system, you're getting asked questions
where did you live?
Speaker 6 (01:54:20):
You go through multi factor authentication when you register to vote.
Speaker 13 (01:54:24):
You don't have that authentication. You could be registering from Guangzhou, China.
You can have your absentee ballots set to Guangzhou, China,
even though that's not your place of residency. So there's
so much updates in upgrades that are necessary for information
systems at the heart of this right and for us
to sit there and ignore that and act like somehow
(01:54:46):
this is like a unicorn world and our election systems
and registration are gonna be fine. You know, just look
over here, everybody, look at the toaster. That's your voting machine.
Because people look at a voting machine like it's a toaster.
It's it's much more complex, exists millions of lines of
source code. It shouldn't. But like I'm telling you, the
vendors are controlling this process. And you would be very
(01:55:07):
surprised at who the software developers are. They're not American,
they're foreign. And there's nothing that restricts that, and that
was something that was attempted to be addressed within four
seventy two. No wonder why it wasn't sought after, because
as soon as industry started hearing that these were some
real reforms, all of a sudden, our Ohio Association of
Election Officials, which is the private lobbying group for a
(01:55:27):
board of elections, kind of came up and said, Oh,
we don't want to do this. It's going to cost
us one hundred and ten million or whatever number.
Speaker 1 (01:55:33):
You saw me laughing a moment ago, And that's exactly
why I was laughing. Something so fundamental as the integrity
of the vote, and they'll throw millions, if not billions
of dollars of money at just absolute nonsensical projects. The fraud,
waste and abuse that exists in every single government, from
the smallest of the largest cannot be overstated. And yet
(01:55:55):
they're not willing to spend money on this. Yeah, talk
about priorities.
Speaker 10 (01:56:00):
Let me just give you an example, right, Frank LeRose
moved two primaries a few years ago. The estimate was
that those were I think thirty million dollar moves apiece.
That's sixty million dollars right there with no product right now, miss.
Speaker 1 (01:56:18):
No new software. It was flushed down the tube.
Speaker 10 (01:56:22):
But a great but a great exclamation point when you
don't like something, if it costs anything.
Speaker 1 (01:56:28):
Will they become fiscally responsible? Seven eight one more with
Marcel and Mark on election integrity. I'm sorry, I'm laughing,
but politics can be comical for all the wrong reasons.
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Fifty five KRC.
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They come here. Well, at least they're predicting rain. TIPA
shows up Brown's rain and strong afternoon showers today seventy
eight for the high. I got some chance of rain
over night, sixty five. More rain possible on Wednesday with
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isolated showers included, and a chance of showers on Thursday
with the high of eighty one sixty eight degrees. Right now,
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Cruise continue to work with two res eastbound on the
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There's an accident now at Union Center inbound seventy four.
An accident on the ramp to southbound seventy five. Chuck
Ingram and fifty five KRS dead talk station.
Speaker 1 (01:58:39):
Seven fifty two, the five KERC talk station. Man, this
hour's gone by quickly. Marcel Stirvich and Mark Takeda in
the House talking to Ohio Election Integrity. There have very
hard efforts to get some well some corrections and get
some solution and acted here in the state of Well
how they've been at it for a long time and
finally sounds like they're at least getting some traction now.
The legislative solutions you presented all sounds sound and reasonable,
(01:59:00):
and hopefully someone will bring it up and they'll have
a vote on it. But it's not going to happen
before November. So with the all important election coming up
moments away, what can we do now? Is there anything
can be done now before November and the presidential election?
Marshall absolutely the two.
Speaker 13 (01:59:17):
There's two weeks before early voting, and we have called
for a safeguard mechanism to be initiated because of the
fact that we have the challenge of assessing for eligibility
on the front end for many of these registrants. And
what we've called for is a within the authority of
the Secretary of State to implement a system of marking
(01:59:38):
or removing voters that are ineligible from the statewide database.
And what we mean by marking is we have this
safeguard where if you don't have fully verified information on
a record. And I said, there's about two hundred and
fifty to three hundred and fifty thousand of them, and
they're being challenged by Ohioans. We're going to the Board
of Elections across all counties to include Hamilton, where there
was a challenge two weeks ago on three hundred of
(01:59:58):
these and we didn't get a good result on that.
They said they would flag some of these, but the
challenge is the Secretary of State came out for some
reason on August twenty first and basically said, do not
mark for provisional because the Secretary of State is convinced
that he cannot mark these records for provisional. Provisional means
you have to vote in person, you have to present
your photo ID, and you have to cure the information
(02:00:19):
that is in error or in questionability of your record.
So it's a reasonable approach. You're not denying someone the
right to vote. What you're doing is you're making sure
that before their vote counts, all the information has been
determined as fully as eligible. That's an equal application that
prevents mine or your vote, Brian, from being diluted. And
that's the whole point, not preventing, like I said in
(02:00:39):
the beginning our of the Hour, the denial of a vote,
or preventing the dilution of the vote, but finding the
happy medium, and law says the Secretary of State can
do this, but Secretary of State says no. So last
week he was on a radio station with Bob France
in Cleveland and he said he conceded that he would
go forward and ask the Attorney General for legal opinion.
So where is that legal opinion? Did the Secretary of
(02:01:02):
State ask for it? Did the Attorney General receive it?
As the Attorney General given him the indication that there
are no prohibitions, as the law says here in thirty
five one five in the RC, we don't know the
answer to that. But if it were to be provided
to the Secretary of State, and the Secretary of State
would willfully implement it, the county board of Elections would
immediately be able to safeguard. And what I saw yesterday
(02:01:25):
was a county It was a application itself that a
applicant said they were a non citizen, and it was
processed by a county board of election.
Speaker 1 (02:01:33):
So we already considered saying that that was an eligible
voter even though they self identified as nonsense, a.
Speaker 13 (02:01:41):
Self identified But the way Ohio law is written, they're
going to have a voter record created and then there's
going to be this confirmation process where they're going to
have a letter sent to them. The danger with that
happening in the very last month is there's not enough
time for election administrators to catch and get an answer back.
If you ignore them, you don't get taken off. So
the only solution to protect us going into November and
(02:02:04):
before the early voting begins on October eighth, is to
mark these ballots. And fortunately twenty state House representatives agree
with us, and they are sending a letter this week
that is going to go to the Secretary of State
asking the Secretary of State to abide by their law,
his lawful duties to mark these records for provisional only
voting and in the Lame Duck or whenever in the
(02:02:26):
General Assembly, they can settle this and codify for the
Secretary of State. But we need this now, no more deliberations.
Speaker 1 (02:02:32):
And your argument is it's already within his legal power
to do so, and he's just saying, I just need
the age two stampus. As you're right, I do have
the power. But that's where the delay comes in. And
we don't know if that request was even made. And
I'm sure the Attorney General would argue he's got a
lot on his plate and can't necessarily get around to
get into that one before the election. This has been
amazing information. Marcel Servis, thank you for your prior service
(02:02:54):
to our country and the American military. Continue service to
the voters in the state of Ohio and election Integrity,
same thing, Mark Kita, thank you so much for the
work you're doing. I know you get an earful all
the time. You don't make a whole lot of friends
doing this in certain circles, but I know my listening
audience appreciates it. I think the best site to refer
folks to is Ohio for Truth dot com. They have
a lot of the information you're talking about today is
(02:03:14):
at Marcel Yeah.
Speaker 13 (02:03:15):
And also right now on social media pressing upon the
Secretary of State, you can go to Cleveland Right to
Life for Ohio Advocates for Medical Freedom, their ex or
their Facebook pages. Both of them have active campaigns to
compel our representatives to make these fundamental changes to our election.
Speaker 1 (02:03:30):
And on x it's Mpakita at m Pakita where you're
constantly commenting on things and putting links up. Mark Pakita,
thank you so much to Marcell Sturvage, It's been a
real pleasure, gentlemen. Keep up the great work and hopefully
we'll see some solutions in the state of Ohio thanks
to your hard work. Thanks Sevenfty five Kresty Talk Station,
Bright Barn Inside Scoob and the Daniel Davis Deep dive
coming up. I hope you can stick around updates on
(02:03:52):
the twenty twenty four presidential campaigns.
Speaker 11 (02:03:55):
Do you have it here?
Speaker 1 (02:03:55):
Bye? He's a threat to democracy? Fifty five KRS the
talk station. This report Dave sponsored from.
Speaker 10 (02:04:04):
The voices on the trail twenty four to the voices
in town.
Speaker 1 (02:04:09):
We're your election headquarters. Fifty five KRC, the talk station
at six here fifty five krcd talk station. Happy Tuesday,
love my Tuesdays here on the fifty five Morning Show
for no other reason. Two segments, one right now, the
Breitbart Inside Scoop and we'll get the Daniel Davis deep
(02:04:31):
dive at the bottom of there. In the meantime, though,
I'm happy to welcome back to the fifty five KRC
Morning Show. Bright bartb R E I t b A
art dot com book Market International editor Francis Martel. Good
you have you back on.
Speaker 14 (02:04:40):
Francis, Thanks so much for having me.
Speaker 1 (02:04:43):
All right, let's try to make some sense out of
what's going on in the Middle East. Beginning with something
that I thought I wanted to laugh but it scared
me at the same time, just recognizing the realities of
the technology that exists today. But the idea that we
were going to assume because our preson because they haven't
taken responsibility for it. But that Israel somehow managed to
(02:05:05):
get pagers and then also walkie talkies into the hands
of members of Hezbala and then on two separate occasions,
simultaneously blew them up, killing a multitude of people and
injuring thousands, most notably members of Hezbala. How does any
I'm pulling that off? Is just genius? And then my
(02:05:26):
expectation was, well, once they do that, given that haball
will be back knocked back on their heels or severely
damaged from a hierarchy standpoint, that Israel would go in
with an offensive and try to get those terrorists out
of the area. So that seems to be the way
it unfolded. But your reaction initially to the explosive devices.
Speaker 14 (02:05:48):
Well definitely shocked. I mean, I think like every American
you know, my first reaction was from pagers were what
year is this? I know as you dive deeper into it,
there is evidence that several months ago, after the October
seventh attacks by Hamas, the leadership in Hesbala told their
officials get rid of your cell phone, get rid of
(02:06:10):
anything smart. We're going to go back to beepers because
we don't want our communications intercepted. And then they made
this large order of beepers from what they thought was
this Taiwanese company, which is one of the few companies
in the world that still makes pagers. And it turns
out that that shipment was outsourced to a very mysterious
Bulgarian supplier. And so the Taiwanese company whose brand name
(02:06:35):
is on the exploding pagers said, we didn't make these.
We just had a supplier come up to us and
say we want to pay you to use your branding
to make pagers. And so now the question is what
is this company? I think it was, I'm sorry, not Bulgarian,
Hungarian from Budapest. Who are these people? How did they
(02:06:56):
get this shipment? How did they come into contact with Hezbala?
And the walking talkies are very similar situations. The walkie
talkies that exploded the next day after the pagers had
a brand name of this company Icon, which is based
in Japan, and when the company was approached after the attacks,
they basically said, this particular model of walkie talkie, we
(02:07:17):
haven't made this in a decade, we did not make
these unless they were very old models, but you can
get cheap knockoffs on Chinese websites. Still a lot of
Chinese manufacturers who obviously have no respect for copyright just
make this walkie talkie that we don't make anymore. And
we still don't know where the has. A lot of
(02:07:37):
people bought the walkie talkies. And then there's a whole
other group of electronics that exploded that raise all sorts
of questions. There were solar panels that detonated, laptop, cell phone.
There was a store like a text store full of
computers and cell phones and all that that exploded, and
so we don't totally know for sure which of the
devices in there exploded.
Speaker 1 (02:07:58):
So there are a lot of unanswered questions, a lot
in The biggest elephant in the room for me in
terms of questions is how did they manage to just
get him in the hands of heads BALA members and
not just the general public. This wasn't like Hesbala all
walked into their version of the Best Buy or collectively
you know, went onto Amazon. I mean this was this
is a sort of a private order place that ultimately
(02:08:19):
insircuitously worked itself through somebody who put bombs in these phones,
but it was an order for his Bala. Do they
have their own account, you know what I'm saying.
Speaker 14 (02:08:29):
Yeah, Well, it seems like someone at has Balla called
the Budapest Pager company and said, we want a mass
shipment of you know, thousands of pagers. Can you do
that a bulk shipment? And they said yes. And so
the question is where did hes Bola end up contacting
this company, why did they choose this company? And what
(02:08:49):
who is that company?
Speaker 12 (02:08:50):
You know?
Speaker 14 (02:08:51):
And there's a lot of speculation that that was an
Israeli you know, as intelligence, a big company. Yeah, but
you know, Israel has not confirmed or denied they had
any involvement in this. There's no one has taken responsibility.
But there are very few actors on the world stage
that have that kind of intelligence ability and insultration ability
(02:09:11):
to pull something like this off. So if it wasn't Israel,
there it's a very short list of potential.
Speaker 1 (02:09:18):
People who did this. True. Now the justification, of course
obviously the ongoing conflict, their terrorist organization internationally labeled as such,
they run that particular area of the world. It's obviously
on Israel's northern border. And since israel I guess has
got pretty far along in its eradication of the Hamas
terrasts in Gaza, they have now turned their attention to Hisbala.
(02:09:40):
That that's the order of things presently as you see them, Francis.
Speaker 14 (02:09:45):
Yes, And it's not just that they're going terror group
by terror groups trying to eliminate them all. There is
a massive crisis in northern Israel, where there's about sixty thousand,
sixty thousand, five hundred people who have been displaced from
northern Israel. The Israeli government cannot guarantee their security on
Israeli land because hes Blah has been bombing that territory
(02:10:06):
for months and months. So it's not just about getting
rid of all of Iran's proxies, which Hamas is Hesbala is.
It's about the fact that there are tens of thousands
of Israelis who cannot return home in addition to obviously
the hostages, and so they have to prioritize, you know,
who are they keeping safe and the rest of the country.
(02:10:29):
You know, there's obviously a lot of concern with the
Hoozies and Iraqi Iranian proxies that they are shooting missiles
Israel's way. But there's a much more imminent danger in
northern Israel, where the government does not control the land anymore.
Has Bala controls that land, and that's a huge problem.
Speaker 1 (02:10:47):
It certainly is in land that was previously held by
Israel too, if I recall my history.
Speaker 14 (02:10:52):
Correctly, Yes, that's Israeli territory. Those sixty thousand people are
Israelis and they simply cannot live there because has taken
it over.
Speaker 1 (02:11:03):
And oh yeah, yeah, I was thinking eleven on generally,
because you know, at some points in global history, I
mean Israel, if you look back to what the sixty
eight war, I mean, they took over Egypt, the Sinai peninsula,
they had the goal on heights, I mean everything. It
looked like it was quadruple the size Israel was prior
to the war erupting, if I remember my wars correctly.
But in any event, we're still talking about Israel's border
(02:11:25):
against obviously a terrorist controlled sections of land. Now I
guess this is Iran's proxy war, right, I mean this
is Iran funded. The missiles are coming from Iran and
they're going I presume Iran has directed these activities or
is it your perception, Francis that these terrorist organizations are
(02:11:49):
on their own and operating on their own decision making.
Speaker 14 (02:11:52):
They are absolutely not operating on their own. This is
absolutely an Iranian proxy war. And the reason they're relying
so heavily on these proxies is that the Iranian military
is not very strong right now. And a big part
of that was that President Trump a sanctioned Iran very
heavily and its oil industry. And number two, he took
(02:12:12):
out Cassam Soleimani, who was basically the foreign terrorism chief
of the Iranian government. He reconducted an airstrike killed him
in Baghdad, and now you've put off that head. They
didn't have anyone with the same amount of diplomatic and
military talent to coordinate the kinds of terror attacks that
they want to coordinate. So now they have to rely
on Husi leadership. They have to rely on Hazbala, they
(02:12:35):
have to rely on the popular mobilization forces in Iraq,
which are now calling themselves the Islamic Resistance in Iraq,
and they have to rely on Hamath and Palestinian Islamic Jihad.
These are all groups that get Iranian money. These are
all groups whose leadership travels to Tehran regularly to meet
with Ayatola Komani and with the president. So Iran is
(02:12:58):
very clearly involved here. And I don't think that these
groups are acting in a rogue way because if they
do something that disqueezes Iran, then the money gets cut
off and they can't operate at all.
Speaker 1 (02:13:11):
Well, I suppose then without dealing with Iran, we're I guess,
I don't know. Iranians are constantly commenting. I saw the
statement from Masud Peziski, and I guess he's one of their.
He was at the United Nations General Assembly meeting. He
was there to speak. He he is speaking, I mean,
(02:13:32):
he acknowledges this is basically the proxy war. You know,
we do not wish to be the cause of instability
in Middle East, as his consequences would be irreversible. We
the Iranians. And so it's almost as if he is
substituting himself for the Huthis and the Hamas members. And
Hebala admitting that it is Iran behind all of this,
(02:13:52):
and I guess his his ultimate goal is, well, it
must be the eradication of Israel, because but for them
and their policies relatively Israel, then none of this would
be happening. I mean, this is what's so frustrating to me.
So if we're not dealing directly with the Iranians, Israel's
free to go after the people who are directly attacking
its people, the terrorist organizations. I give you October seventh,
(02:14:13):
that's them going after them. But there will always be,
and I think forever, an unlimited number of people who
hate Israel. It's baked into the equation generation after generation.
They just need someone to fund it so they can
organize their terrorist organizations or their guerrilla warfare and continue
to go after Israel. This is not going to stop
unless Iran is dealt with. Unless I've seen something wrong, No.
Speaker 14 (02:14:35):
That is absolutely true. The only thing I would add
to this is that.
Speaker 9 (02:14:39):
The other source of seemingly unlimited Jihanis that are willing
to kill to eliminate Israel is the un the un
release from works Aid Agency for.
Speaker 14 (02:14:49):
Palestinians that operates in Gaza. We know that they have
schools where they teach children to hate Jews, to hate Israel.
That martyrdom quote unquote is a good thing, And so
there is a UN agency that's also bankrolling and expanding
this genocidal hatred. So getting rid of Iran would get
(02:15:09):
rid of the vast majority of the problem. And by that,
by the way, I don't mean, you know, bomb or
regime change, just cutting off the financial backing from Iran.
Speaker 1 (02:15:20):
Which Trump did his administration with great with great effect.
I mean Trump sanctioned the hell out of the Iranians
and it seemed to work.
Speaker 14 (02:15:26):
To a large degree exactly. And that was kind of
the brilliance of the Trump administration is that previous Republican
administrations would be a problem like this and solve it
with bomb, and Trump would always go to the money.
Trump would be very quick to sanction people. The anecdote
I always bring up is when the Turkish government arrested
(02:15:46):
Pastor Andrew Brunson. He was arrested on charges of proselatizing
Christianity and insulting the president or something. It was not
even clear what they arrested him for. Trump sanctioned Turkey
to such an extent an ally that he basically tanked
the Turkish economy in one day, and in something like
a week they freed Pastor Bunton, and then problem solved.
(02:16:08):
So that's that's the kind of diplomacy that Trump brought
to the table that didn't necessarily you know, he didn't
bomb Istanbul, he just didn't buy their goods anymore. And
with Iran, it was a very similar attitude of well,
they have this oil industry that supports everything. And he
also sanctioned the other arms of Iranian financing, specifically Venezuela.
(02:16:32):
Iran refined oil in Venezuela. Iran and Hezbela have very
close relations with drug traffickers in South America, and Trump
sanctioned everybody there. He cut off the money to everybody there,
and that's money that didn't go to Iran. In contrast,
the Democrats gave Iran palates of cash and suddenly we have,
you know, the popular mobilization forces in Iraq, which did
(02:16:54):
not exist before Obama.
Speaker 1 (02:16:56):
And they're that much closer to getting a bomb. So
Francis Martel, you can see her tonight. She is going
to be appearing in Empower You seminar beginning at seven
pm empower Youamerica dot org. This is a virtual class
only she's not flying into town to be a two
twenty five Northern Boulevards, So empower you America dot org
subject matter, how might US foreign policy toward Iran change
(02:17:18):
in twenty twenty five. I guess that assumes that there's
a change in administration and it doesn't go with the
Harris administration, Francis, because I think we're going to get
a whole lot more of the same thing if we
don't elect Trump.
Speaker 14 (02:17:29):
Absolutely, and you know, we're going to talk about both.
You know what happens. What are the policies on the
table for Trump and for Harris, And we're going to
talk about Iran kind of in a much bigger picture way,
not just what is Iran's relationship to its allies in
the Middle East, but how does Iran leverage alliances in
places like South America, it's alliances with North Korea, it's
(02:17:52):
membership in bricks, how does it use this global network
to empower itself? Because a lot of mainstream media refers
to Iran as kind of this state that's just out
there on its own trying to do its thing, and
it's not. It is part of a deep and wealthy,
global anti American network. So that we're going to dive
deep into that. I'm really excited to work with the
(02:18:13):
empower you folks. They do great work, and yeah, hopefully
it's going to be a good time.
Speaker 1 (02:18:17):
I'm certain it is and very informative. Marcel. It's always
a pleasure having in the program. And I might note
that the Biden Harris foreign policy has led that rogue, independent,
isolated state Iran into the hands and arms of the Chinese,
as well as the North Koreans and the everybody else
who has an interest against the United States. It's one
of those the enemy of my enemy is my friend things,
(02:18:39):
and other global leaders look at it the same way. Marcel.
We look forward to seeing me tonight at power you
America dot org. Log in, it's a virtual thing. Just
register before seven pm. It's easy to do in a
power you America dot org. Have a wonderful day of
good luck with the speech tonight or the discussion tonight. Francis,
thanks for being on the program.
Speaker 14 (02:18:56):
Thanks so much for having me on.
Speaker 1 (02:18:57):
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Speaker 8 (02:19:53):
Two fifty five krc.
Speaker 1 (02:20:01):
Hey twenty nine here fifty five KRSE detalk station. It
is that alliterative segment of the fifty five Cars Morning Show.
Can't take credit for the name. It is Daniel Davis
Deep Dive. You can search form online the podcast Daniel
Davis Deep Dive. Good to have you back on this show.
Daniel retired Lieutenant colonel and analyst of things conflicts, mostly related.
Lately we're gonna talk about the Middle East, shocking no one.
(02:20:23):
Good to see you. Good to have you back on
the show, my friend. Always great to be here. I'm
actually looking forward to this as much as my own show.
Speaker 11 (02:20:29):
Now.
Speaker 1 (02:20:30):
I'm glad. I really have fun talking with you, and
you know, you offer a very It's a unique insight.
I think that's where the value comes from. You just
have a different way of looking things, and of course
you know the horrors and the fog of war. Difficult
to come up with solutions, but it always helps when
you have some sort of strategy or a plan if
you're getting into a conflict, which I don't know that
(02:20:50):
we have here going to Ukraine, and you know, I
just get I before we talk about the Ukrainian president
offering this sort of piece the piece through strength solution,
real quick, I just wanted to get your reaction on
what I thought. My immediate reaction was to laugh. But
the genius of being able to plant bombs inside pagers
(02:21:12):
and walkie talkies that the Hesbala people had. I mean
they the Hesbala guys are the ones that got blown up,
is it not? I mean a master work of intelligence
community to get those things in the hands of those
guys and simultaneously blow them up, which I thought, knocking
them back on their heels, which would open an opportunity
for Israel to yes go in militarily and go after
(02:21:35):
the terrorists in Lebanon, which apparently has happened.
Speaker 15 (02:21:39):
Yeah, it's in terms of just state craft and of
the intelligence ability to do that, it's it's truly an
unprecedented event. Yeah, it's never been done to that extent
because there was so much complexity and so much time
necessary to set up shell companies and to make the
recipients think that it was a trust agent and all
(02:22:00):
that kind of stuff. There are some issues around the
edge because it was not very discriminated. Some you know,
children were killed who happened to have the pagers, so
you know, it's not a clean operation, but it's it
definitely operationally significantly damaged his blows ability to communicate, and if,
(02:22:21):
as I suspect is the case, Israel's getting ready to
go in on the ground and push back.
Speaker 1 (02:22:25):
They've signaled everything to that degree.
Speaker 15 (02:22:28):
This will significantly complicate his Bill's ability to coordinate a
reaction on the ground.
Speaker 1 (02:22:34):
And you can't deny the psychological benefit it had to
have had. I mean, can you imagine that Hisbolla commanders
when that happened and what their reaction might have been.
So score one for the psyops I suppose to. But
I just I couldn't believe my eyes when I was
reading what I was reading about what happened. Both Let's
move away from Israel and Lebanon and Gaza and get
(02:22:55):
over to Ukraine where President valk Zelenski I guess has
presented some sort of peace proposal to Biden. I'm calling
it peace through strength, because that's what he's saying, strengthening
us and we can negotiate some peace. What's your take
on this one, Daniel, What are the details of this
proposal of the extent we've eate anybody knows him yet? Listen.
Speaker 15 (02:23:14):
It's bizarre, is the only word that I can come
up with, because everywhere you look, and I'm talking about
in the last twenty.
Speaker 1 (02:23:22):
Four hours, actually the last twelve hours, there.
Speaker 15 (02:23:24):
Are continuing extensive losses by the Ukraine side, especially on
the eastern front. They have taken one small village in
the course carry up in the north, but then they
are continuing to lose more ground kind of in the
neck of that penetration ip up into Russia, which now
puts their whole battle force at risk of being cut
(02:23:45):
off if they don't withdraw pretty soon. And so when
he comes in now and says, and he was asked
specifically on ABC News last night, does your plans envision negotiation,
because that's kind of what he has implied, and he
said no, does it imply in the gociation we just
want to through diplomatic means, make Putin think that he
can't win, so that he gives us what we want.
(02:24:08):
And I'm sorry, that's not how war works, that's not
how human nature works. When you're on the commanding side
and you have all of the advantages and your side
is physically winning on the battlefield, you're not going to
negotiate a bad position. And so I don't really understand
what he's thinking. The only thing that I'll say is
that maybe he's gonna ask Biden to say, hey, put
(02:24:30):
us in NATO, give us more long range weapons. So
that'll change the actual calculation. But that is never going
to happen now.
Speaker 1 (02:24:38):
And we are talking about Vladimir Putin here, right, I mean,
he's got an ego the size of the continent died.
I mean he is not going to back off on
something like that. I mean, I don't know the guy personally,
but I have observed his behavior and his conduct over
the years. If he's not happy about something, somebody dies
or he gets his way, and he is not going
to to put his tail between his legs. That's my
(02:24:58):
analysis of the guy. I'm no psychologists, and I don't
play one on radio. But going back to the long
range missiles I heard the other day, and I'm sorry
I camera call the source of my apologies, but I'll
just gauge your reaction on this because it sounds logical
coming from Vladimir Putin. He told us, do not sell
those long range missiles to Ukraine, and do not let
(02:25:19):
them hit in the interior of our country, or you,
my friend, United States, have started World War three in essence,
they have nuclear capabilities and they will be willing to
use them. Any truth to that is that anything you
heard this minus thinking this was kind of like back
channel communications. Yeah, yeah, there have been.
Speaker 15 (02:25:36):
I actually have heard some sources who claim to have
knowledge of about some of those back channels. And the
claim is that Russia's was very, very emphatic about what
they would be willing to do. They certainly wouldn't go
to nuclear weapons immediately, like if we authorize long range
missiles and they were used. And the reason, by the
way that he says this is because those missiles are
(02:25:57):
so sophisticated, both in their operation and in the targeting
mechanism that requires satellite guidance and satellite target identification, which
Ukraine doesn't have, so if it will only be at
our direct engagement, which many people in the ways have
admitted to ironically. But the bigger issue is that the
(02:26:18):
missiles are not going to change the course of the war,
even if it didn't escalate, it's not going to change
anything because there's not enough of them.
Speaker 1 (02:26:25):
We don't even have enough, as our.
Speaker 15 (02:26:26):
Secretary of Defense openly admitted, we don't have enough. But
what Russia has claimed is that if that happens, even
on the tactical you know, in conventional format with missiles,
then they will respond in kind.
Speaker 1 (02:26:40):
And we don't know for sure.
Speaker 15 (02:26:41):
What they mean, but so I think that they would
possibly strike like AMO depots in Natal countries if that happens,
And of course, now then you've got Article five implications.
And then I think that's the other reason why they
didn't mention the nuclear capacity, because if NATO things are
going to end the war, then you Russia, in their view,
will have no choice because they can't handle conventionally NATO.
(02:27:04):
Then they would use, They're willing to use tactical nuclear weapons.
And man, I'm saying, why even toy with that possibility
when there's nothing to gain even conventionally.
Speaker 1 (02:27:13):
Don't do it. Yeah, I share your concerns along those lines,
but a pivoting over the broader concerns. You just pointed out,
we don't even have enough of these missiles, and I'm
thinking along the lines for our own protection benefit or
any conflicts we might be involved with. Something I hear
and read repeatedly over and over again. It was back
when we were talking about one hundred and fifty five
(02:27:33):
millimeters shells. We're running out of those. Well, it's only
old equipment and we aren't get to yet. Fine, whatever,
we're trying to build up. Japan's army. We're trying to
build up Israel, supplying them with weapons, We're supplying Ukraine
with weapons. What about are the exhaustion of our own
defense capabilities, our own ability defend ourselves or wage war.
That is a serious concern, isn't it. Listen, it's an
(02:27:54):
even bigger than that.
Speaker 14 (02:27:54):
To me.
Speaker 15 (02:27:55):
You had Jake Sullivan about a week or so ago
in a public forum admit that we had to get
all the interceptor missiles we had offered everywhere else in
the world, everywhere else, to give them all to Ukraine.
Now you mentioned at the early part of this show
here the era Israel war. If they go in on
the ground against Hezbola, they have hundreds of thousands of
(02:28:19):
rockets and weapons, they will need even more interceptor missiles
than we have. So if we are already exhaust given
them to Ukraine, and then now here Israe's about to
need even more?
Speaker 1 (02:28:31):
Where are they coming from?
Speaker 15 (02:28:32):
And then God help us if we get into a
warning where which is what we're supposed.
Speaker 1 (02:28:36):
To have our military for to defend our interests.
Speaker 15 (02:28:39):
If we then get into a war, Brian, we don't
have any interceptors and that makes us strategically vulnerable.
Speaker 1 (02:28:46):
It's a bad move well, and knowing that Chinese are involved,
Iranians are involved, and the Russians are all involved in
these multiple conflicts, they're all helping each other, supporting each
other with supplies of weapons. It makes me want to suspect,
given the demand of our US military manufacturing capabilities, that
part of them is really engaged in a battle of
(02:29:06):
attrition to see us use up all of our military hardware,
giving them an opportunity to do all I don't know,
maybe invade Taiwan, or maybe invade some other country or
who knows.
Speaker 15 (02:29:15):
But we're in jeopardy. We don't even end this strategic
and we're sucking ourselves into that track. Yes they may
have that intention, but only because we're enabling it. That's
the maddening part to me, is that we're facilitating ourselves
getting sucked into a trap.
Speaker 1 (02:29:33):
Daniel Davis always refreshing and enlightening conversation, maybe not always uplifting,
but gotta call it like it is, man, Gotta call
like it is.
Speaker 15 (02:29:41):
Next Tuesday, we're trying to avoid the worst outcome. I
know you are, and I'm with you on that.
Speaker 1 (02:29:45):
I had enough award tune in next Tuesday for another
Daniel Davis deep dive. In the meantime, search for them online.
You'll find them. Take care of my friend. Best of
health you next time, all right, brother coming up at
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