Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Talk station where the spirit of America lives on every
(00:04):
every day.
Speaker 2 (00:05):
We as people can come together and debate the issues.
Speaker 1 (00:07):
Fifty five KRC the talk station five oh five fifty
about KRC bet talk station sue.
Speaker 3 (00:30):
Some vacation from listen to what the hell.
Speaker 1 (00:45):
Appropriate le time sound bit? It didn't given a moment
in time these days. Happy Wednesday, nice show lined up today.
Thank you to Joe Streker, executiveroducer. My name's Riyan Thomas
hos to a fifty five KRC morning show. You can
find me online at fifty five KRC dot com. Stream
the content live from the five caresy dot com. Get
try heart media apps. You can listen anytime to the
podcast and other iHeartMedia content at your well convenience. We
(01:08):
of course had the bright part deep dive one hour
full of voter integrity conversation here with some experts on
the problems we have in Ohio with the Hio election integrity.
Well worth listening to that and learning what the easy
fixes are. So maybe you can contact your elected officials
and tell them to get off the dive and yhow
I love hearing from you folks. Five one, three, seven,
(01:30):
four nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred eighty two to
three talk go with Pound five fifty on AT and
T phones. Coming up seven oh five speakin of the rundown,
the inaugural Jackatherden commentary. Jack's going to be regularly appearing
on the fifty five Carricday Morning Show. Love the brilliance
of Jack added, and he's a student of history, the law,
and of course the Constitution. So today he's going to
(01:51):
comment on how Europe is offering two different paths forward
for the United States voters. In November, Senator Ran Paul
fan of the Senator, he's going to be on a
seven forty talking about investigation the first Trump assassination attempt.
Government funding going to run out of October first, is
anything going to be done about that? And the Penny
(02:11):
Plan and Rains Act. We talked with them about those
before seven forty with the good Senator. Fast forward to
eight oh five, Can Cobra talking about the well FOP
President Cancober Since a police department wants to Sinni public
schools to be more responsible for the uptick and teen violence.
Of course we talked about that the other day, reaching
out to the administration the school board asking Sinceinni Public
(02:33):
school officials to get involved with the bus stops where
apparently there's a lot of violence going on and ship
him over to a metro stop. It's a metro stop,
not on the bus yet. Is there any obligation on
the part of the Cincinnai Public schools to be there,
have a presence established there? I mean my racks are
my understanding from the sin Sinnia Pools or public school
(02:54):
board was there was pushback like, hey, it's not our
job to help assist the police department, even though the
kids are the ones that are in jeopardy at those
sub bus stops. Anyhow, Judge Enninapolitano, with a brief history
of free speech in America that takes place every Wednesday
at eight thirty five, three, seven, four nine, eight hundred
eight two to three talk five fifty on AT and
(03:15):
T phones. Now we've got a local story taking top
president here. We heard the top of the air news
the styrene leak and cleaves sounds pretty bad. This is
like a Palestine situation anyway. Spokesperson for the Central Railroad
of Indiana, So the company was notified one pm yesterday
one of its tankard cars was venting styrene right there
at the intersection US fifty and Ohio I twenty eight.
(03:38):
Crews were on the scene after several hours. Officials said,
the car got separated from the rest of the train
and they got this leak stopped, but the crews are
still working on the car testing the air and there
is a local evacuation in shelter and place order that
still remains in intact. For everything I understand from the
local news reporting this morning, officials said, as far as
the timeline goes, it's not going to be short. Hamilin
(04:01):
County Emergency Management Agency said those within a half mile
radius of the rail yard at US fifty Ohio one
twenty eight and Valley Junction Road should remain out of
the area until again it all clear, which has not
been issued yet. Residents outside that half mile radius but
still within three quarters of a mile get your tape
measure out told to continue to shelter in place. So
(04:25):
following roads closed until further notice. US fifty from Lawrenceburg
Road and Whitewater Township to State Street and Cleaves, Ohio
one twenty eight at Silly Road, Kirby Road, and suspension
at the suspension bridge and Cooper Avenue at US fifty
and Cleaves props to WCPO for providing this information. Court
(04:45):
to the National Institute of Environmental Health Science, styrene is
described as colorless, flammable, and used to make plastics rubber.
It is highly volatile. According to the CDC, if you're
exposed to it, you may experience tiredness, reaction times, concentration problems,
balance issues. That is, in concentrations more than one thousand
(05:07):
times higher than levels normally found in the environment. But
I suppose there's a railcar there were filled with styringe
and it's leaking all over the place. That's certainly possible.
Hence the evacuation order. Not good news, honestly, and hopefully
keep my fingers crossed for the residents in the area.
Court to the fire chief, zero reports of injuries, but
(05:28):
if you're feeling the physical effects, get into emergency room
or call nine one one. That's what they say. Let
us see here. Three Rivers local school districts said classes
have been canceled for today, also reporting A spokesperson for
Kroger said the store near the leak is currently closed
and I imagine until the shelter and place order of
(05:51):
the evacuation order is lifted, that will probably remain the case.
And the Miami Township branch of the library is also closed.
So if there's a business in that area that rate is,
think it's safe to say it's probably closed, or you
might want to call before you go into the area. Anyway,
thoughts prayers for the residents there. I hope it's easily
cleaned up. I've gone praying that there is no explosion,
(06:13):
of course, and that they've got it things under control.
Rail Ah, moving over. I'm sorry I laughed at this,
and my first reaction is, don't we have a First
Amendment right free speech in this country? Get a load
of this law fair going on in Springfield, Ohio yesterday,
(06:37):
an immigration advocacy group Haitian Bridge Alliance, described as a
San Diego based group. Don't know where their funding comes from.
Folks found a bench memorandum in supporting Affidavid and Clark
County Municipal Cork asking a judge to charge JD. Vans
(06:57):
and Donald Trump with disrupting public services, making false alarms,
two counts of complicity, two counts of telecommunications harassment, and
aggravated menacing criminal offenses related to claims that those two
made about the city's Haitian community. Following us, the court
find probable cause for the charge and issues will issue
(07:21):
arrest warrants for Trump Advance for speaking about the twenty
thousand Haitian immigrants who recently descended upon a town of
fifty eight thousand. Can't talk about that, I guess. On
the website, the Haitian Bridge Alliance, for its part, says
that the group quote quote advocates for fair and humane
(07:44):
immigration policies and provides migrants and immigrants with humanitarian, legal
and social services, with a particular focus on black people,
the Haitian community, women, girls, the LGBTQIA plus individuals, and
survivors of torture in human rights abuses. Close quote. Group
also says that it's working to end racist border policies
(08:07):
like they remain in Mexico Policy Title forty two and
the Border to Prison and Deportation Pipeline. Those aren't racist.
The policies are in place to protect the American people
from well the evil forces that might ender our country,
regardless of their race, create color, ethnicity, or any other
damn trait a human being as if they're from abroad
(08:28):
and they're trying to get in and they're not United
States citizens. They fall under our immigration system and the
policies related to it. That the Biden administration chooses to
ignore the laws that are on the books and process
and allow every single human being into our country. That's
their problem and it remains ours because of that policy.
But if you try to crack down on it, it's
not because people are well a different color or among
(08:51):
any other of these subcategories that the Haitian Bridge line
seeks to represent. Any broader get your ven diagram at
broader category of people who are not authorized to be
in our country. Race is not factored in when looking
into those criteria that allows someone to come in or not,
(09:13):
as the case may be. Hate when people keep accusing
of racism, you know, if every single human being on
the planet with the exact same color, these policies would
still have to be in place now under Ohio. And
as far as this lawsuits concerned, fairly under high law
of private citizens seeking to cause and arrest or prosecution,
(09:36):
which is what this Haitian Bridge Alliance is trying to do,
can file an affidavit, which is what they did with
a reviewing official ie in this case, the magistrate to
have them review the facts and decide if a complaints
should be filed. It's kind of like a grand jury determination,
a probable cause of determination. Judges do that. Represented by
(10:01):
the Chandra Law Firm. They're out of Cleveland, and I'm
sure they're getting their full billable rate for the work
they're going to be doing on this lawsuit thanks to
funding by the Haitian Bridge Alliance, which again I don't
know where their funding come from, use your own imagination
on that one course. To the HbA, the Haitian community
is suffering in fear because of Trump and Vance as
(10:26):
a relentless, irresponsible false alarms and public services have been disrupted.
Trump and Vance must be held accountable to the rule
of law. Check your first amendment. Anyone else who wreaked
havoc the way they did would have been arrested by now. No, no,
that's not the case. And I love how they suggest
(10:49):
that that Vance and Trump wreaked havoc just because they
echoed a complaint that was going on around the social
media world that the Haitian community have engaged in consuming pets,
not yet confirmed by any legitimate source, but it was
widespread out on the internet, and you're not subject to
(11:09):
arrest for repeating something you read on the internet. You know,
this would, if this was successful, would preclude anyone from
talking about any problem created by the illegal immigrant or
legal immigrant community. I know that Mike Dwin suggests that
all these folks are here legally because they got in
(11:29):
through that Biden created, you know, a program to fly
people directly from their home country into the United States,
legal or illegal. Twenty thousand new people of any skin color,
or any ethnicity or religion landing in a town that's
ill equipped to manage twenty thousand brand new people are
(11:50):
a problem worthy of complaint and concerned because that is
twenty thousand people, legal or illegal, were brought into this
country by the Biden ministry, facilitated by the Biden administration. Ergo,
it is a political issue worthy of comment, even colorful comment.
This is a political discussion, and it's at the heart
(12:12):
of the First Amendment. So Magistrate Brian Thomas or Judge
Brian Thomas, and no, I'm never going to be one,
would look at it and summarily dismiss it as well
(12:33):
a lacking merit and b precluded by the First Amendment
to the United States Constitution five point seventeen five KRC
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Five twenty two Wednesday A Happy one too you five
one three seven nine fifty five hundred eight hundred eight
two three talk pound five fifty on AT and T phones. Polls,
polls everywhere. There are polls and little positive information coming
from Gallup. They have Gallup poll came out yesterday. Republicans
(14:34):
are leading in nine out of ten key issues, issues
that determine, well, who's got an advantage versus the other guy.
Gallups of the Republicans trail only on the approval of Congress,
but are quick to point out that well, voters don't
like anyone in terms of congressional approvals, so it's kind
of a throwaway point Gourd to release. By Gallup, the
(14:57):
political environment suggests the election is Trumps and Republicans to lose.
Nearly every indicator of the election context is favorable to
the Republican party, and those that aren't are essentially tied
rather than showing a Democratic advantage. Going back to the
point about congress congressional approval, Galup said this year, forty
eight percent say they are or lean Republican versus forty
(15:21):
five percent who are or lean Democrat, which they say
they have not seen a Republican advantage in decades of
Gallup surveys on that one. So a three point advantage
for the Republicans a rare thing. Court to Gallup, Republicans
previously have not had an outright advantage in party affiliation
during the third quarter of a presidential election year, and
(15:42):
they have rarely outnumbered Democrats in election and non election
years over the past three decades. How about that, Well,
glomer hope their second highly predictive measure the party voters
believe will better handle big problems. Republicans are eating Democrats
forty six to forty one percent, mostly on the view
(16:05):
that they're better suited to handle the economy. Poll finds
respondence view the Republicans as the party that will make
America prosperous fifty percent to forty four percent. Now, I
recognize these margins aren't massive, but in a divided country,
I'll take the positive news here. Republicans also help because
of the voter dissatisfaction with the Biden administration. Biden's unpopularity,
(16:28):
according to Gallup, could still affect the election to the
extent voters transfer their frustrations with the Biden administration the
Vice President Kamala Harris, who I'm quick to point out
is really the Biden administration. I mean, how could she
escape it? All this happened under her watch. She never
stuck her head up and said I disagree with what
(16:48):
the president is doing. Basically a cheerleader for all things
the Biden administration did under its watch. For her part,
forty four percent of all US adults approve of the
job she's doing, down from forty seven percent in one month.
So I guess maybe the more people are paying attention
to Kamala Harris, the more they hear her waffle on
(17:08):
her prior positions and try to backpedal on them because
her prior, out loud, adopted positions are unpopular across a
wide swath of America. Think about that, everything this woman
has stood for, she is trying to run away from.
(17:30):
Anybody out there really truly believe that she's not the
Kamala Harris that ran for president in twenty nineteen. Are
you that easily duped? Her entire career has been demonstrably
left leaning. Defund the police, fund organizations who bail out
hardcore criminals, sanctuary cities, open borders. I mean, we can
(17:55):
go agreen the green energy policies that are all struggling
with now, all her adopted out loud in favor of
raise your hand if you believe in this kind of stuff.
We got pictures of her, we've got videos of her,
we've got quotes from her, multiple news articles printing what
she is all about. And now we're getting presented with
(18:15):
this person who is completely otherworldly by comparison to the
Kamala Harris who actually answered questions so many years ago.
Give me a break, man, can't believe anybody be that's stupid?
And you know what maybe they're not. Maybe this is
just well, she's not Trump twenty What a stupid conclusion
that is. I I five krer see the talk station,
(18:38):
local stories or phone calls coming up. Either way you
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Five thirty one market on your calendar saturd I hope
to see at the Claremont County Flapjack Breakfast. It's a
political event. Claremont County Republican Party going to be enjoying
the proceeds on that they benefit the Climat County Publican Party,
our Republican Party. They're great folks. You can go to
(20:14):
GOP Claremont dot org get all the details I am
going to be facilitating. I am the mc keynote speaker,
Morgan or Tegas. You're not familiar American television commentator, financial analyst,
political advisor who served as spokesperson for the United States
Department of State between twenty nineteen and twenty twenty one
during the Trump administration. Also founder of Polaris National Security,
(20:35):
co chair of the Women's Democracy Network, International Republican Institute,
and a member of the a boarded Advisors of the
China Center at Hudson Institute. That's a background and impressive resume.
Speaker 6 (20:46):
There.
Speaker 1 (20:47):
Also going to be on the scheduled speakers. John Houston,
our Lieutenant Governor, Bernie Braino, who we want to win
for Senate Congressman Brad Winster. It's going to be going
to be there as well as Alex Treontefilo we all
know him, David Yost, the Attorney General, Supreme Court nominee,
Megan Shanahan, Daniel Hawkins also nominated for the House Supreme Court,
and Frank LeRose, our Secretary of State. So forty bucks
(21:09):
with the ticket, join us. It's going to be a
great time. Nine am. It's at the airport. Flapjack Sausage,
orange juice, coffee, mimosas and Bloody Mary's. I'll take it.
I'm gonna be there anyway, so I hope to see it.
I've got a GOP Claremont dot org. You'll be hearing
more advertisements and details on that.
Speaker 7 (21:29):
Ah.
Speaker 1 (21:29):
Anyhow, back over the local stories, of course, I mentioned
and gave you the details on the explosion over on
the west side Cleaves Styrene League. They apparently have stopped
the league no imminent threat of explosion right now, but
the evacuation order for the half mile to three quarter
mile radius is still in effect. In other local news,
hundreds of thousands of dollars of fake weight loss drugs
(21:50):
discovered by since a US Customs and Border Patrol in
conjunction with the FBA inspections they were conducting. CBB spokesperson
Stephen Bansback said sixty three shipments contained counterfeit and unapproved ozembic,
wigovie and true trillicity injections that be the weight loss
(22:13):
injections that are all the rage these days and in
short supply generally speaking, so outcome the fake ones for
the naive or stupid. Other medications they found apparently include botox,
monoxidil and reacts on drugs came from different countries China,
South Korea, India, Italy, Guatemala, United Kingdom of Canadas. According
(22:36):
to the report. Bansbox said the seas shipments was meant
for locations all over the United States, including Indiana, Mission
and Pennsylvania. QUO Counterfeit and fraudulent prescription drugs originating from
other countries and shipped into the US, particularly injectable products
that should be sterile can't present serious health ricks to
(22:57):
those who use them. The drugs have not undergone proper
a review testing and may contain unknown or dangerous ingredients
close quote. And they also may well be unsterile, which
means you could get a massive infection and die. And
there's no guarantee. The ingredients in the counterfeit drugs are
not dangerous, so they could be fentanyl, Like every single
drug sold on the street could be Mind your p's
(23:21):
and q's. If you're out on the street buying drugs,
whether they are not for intoxicating purposes, you want to
lose weight, you're going to have to go to the
real doctor and get it from a real pharmacist. I
just I struggle with the idea these days of anyone
buying something off the street. Five point thirty five forty
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place to reach them? Floudy day for the most part,
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isolated showers high up seventy seven slight chance of showers
every night with a drop of sixty seventy eight to
high tomorrow isolated showers and clouds Faday every night more
showers sixty four and a cloudy day on Friday. S
Showers are likely between two pm and then two am
on Saturday morning seventy nine for the high bed right
now check the saying sixty seven degrees time for a
(25:08):
traffic update.
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First traffic from the UCLP Traffic Center with U see
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Visit uce health dot com. Cruise are working with the wreck.
Speaker 8 (25:22):
Westbound on seventy four between Harrison Rye Boat and two
to seventy five Highway was shut down. Now traffic's getting
by single file over on the right shoulder. Fifty remains
blocked after a styrene leak yesterday and the cleanup continues.
It's blocked between Chambers and State near Cleaves in Whitewater Township,
Chucking Romund fifty five KR.
Speaker 2 (25:43):
See the talk station.
Speaker 1 (25:47):
By forty on a Wednesday, Happy Anderson Public Grill. It's
the site of the next listener lunch first week of
next month. Coming fast fast approaching, find hard to believes
how fast this summer has flown by, and every wait,
there'll be the second. It's one week from today Anderson
(26:08):
Pub and Grove, the last listener lunch before the election.
So hoping to see some of the candidates there, and
of course the fellowship in and of itself is just wonderful.
Regardless whoever, how many people show up, so marked on
your counter if you're so inclined. We usually started around
eleven thirty. There's no set specific time you've got to
show up, and I'm usually around till at least one
thirty and sometimes past that. So Anderson Pub and Girl
(26:31):
one week from today, going to the phones five one, three, seven,
four nine fifty eight hundred eight two three. Before we
get to the stack of stupid, I got talked to Kevin. Hey, Kevin,
welcome to the show, and happy Wednesday to you, sir.
Speaker 6 (26:42):
Warner.
Speaker 9 (26:42):
Brian Hey, if you remember up in Allistown, Ohio, that
real car incident, and now we have this one over
in Cleeves. I'm wondering if it's Norfolk again or cusxless time.
Speaker 1 (26:57):
I don't think so. I uh, Central Railroad of Indiana.
That's the identified the identified carrier, although there was some
discussion about who actually owned the car itself, and I
had read at least in one report that they say
it's not their car, but it's on their railroad line,
(27:19):
I suppose.
Speaker 9 (27:20):
So yeah, yeah, there's also a safety bill that's it's
hasn't passed the US Senate yet regarding rail safety.
Speaker 1 (27:31):
Well would it? Would it increase rail safety and thus
the costs for the rail companies to do business? Because
if that's the case, I know that certain rail companies
are in the bag with certain political parties because of
their money influence. Yeah, yeah, there's there's all that going on.
The lobbying, Yeah, lobbying. Hey, I always got to watch
out for that pesky lobbying standing in the way, which
(27:52):
would with what with a standing in the way of
what might be right for the American people. Yeah. I
have no other information on that of the and I
have not seen the words Norfolk Southern come up in
any reporting on that Styrene League. So God bless the
people in the Cleaves area, and I hope they get
out of trouble asap. Appreciate the call, Kevin, let's see
here local stories made it to the stack of stupid?
(28:15):
Is that what I'm looking at? Two months after the
pastor of Saint Susannah in Mason, resigned after local news
wcpo it team investigation. The Archdiocese of Cincinnati has reassigned
the pastor to several rural churches north of Dayton. Father
Barry Stexshalty announced in a message to Saint Suzanna parishioners
(28:37):
July twenty ninth, and he was stepping down after more
than five hundred people sign a petition calling for his
resignation after the ITEAM report showing he ordered the destruction
of alleged child pornography and then waited six years to
report it to police while at a different parish. Stack
(28:57):
Schulty will now minister to a luster of churches in
the northwest section of the archdiocese, near his hometown of
Minster and not far from his former church, Holy Rosary
at Saint Mary's, where he admitted ordering a deacon to
destroy a hard drive. Archdiocese posted this guy's new assignment
on its website October fourteenth. There'll be appointed parochial vicar
(29:20):
of a family of parishes which includes Holy Trinity, among others.
These are the same churches where Steck Schulte served as
prochial vicar during his first assignment back in two thousand
and nine. A spokesperson for the arch diocese did not
answer questions from local WCPO about why he was getting
a new assignment. Quote all children, and all Catholic children
(29:40):
should be protected in our communities, whether urban or rural.
That quote from Teresa Dinwhittell Herman, co founder of Ohiolans
for Child Protection. She went on to say, when the
archbishop knowingly places a cleric that violated the Child Protection
Decree at a parish, it appears as though he proclaims
to offenders, enablers and parents that job protection is largely
(30:03):
a performative endeavor. How long will Catholic parents allow this
cycle of enabling abuse and cover up to continue, she asked.
It team report focused on former priest Tony Kutcher. It
also received a stex Shialty's role and revealed rather stex
Schilty's role in delaying public knowledge of what he did.
(30:24):
Happened in her Holy Rosary Church in the rural area.
Cutcher was pastor there for several years. When stex Shalty
arrived as the new pastor back in July twenty twelve,
he and Deacon Marty Brown told police they discovered what
looked like child pornography while refurbishing an old desktop computer
that Kutcher had used from a storage rim. According to
(30:46):
Saint Mary's twenty eighteen police report, Father Barry said that
upon looking at the computer, he found two file folders,
one containing male homosexual porn, the other file containing pictures
of boys. He said he can only recall the boys
with no shirts on. I asked them if the kids
were obviously under with him saying yes, and that they
were pre teen, probably eight to ten years of age. Again,
that's in the Saint Mary's twenty eighteen police report. Stex
(31:09):
Schulty told police. According to the report, he did describe
the boys as being in provocative poses. He again said
he could not recall nudity or not, but it could
have been. Police were never able to determine if anything
illegal existed on the computer hard drive. Deacon told police
that he took the hard drive out of the computer
destroyed it with a blow torch at the request of
(31:30):
stex Schulty. That accord to the police report. Policeport also
says father Barry said at the time he did not
realize the repercussions of not revealing what they had found father.
Barry again said that he should not have destroyed the evidence. Cutcher,
for his part, was never charged with a crime. Okay
fifty two if about gercde talks Nation Jack g B
(31:51):
team made me do it. That's the defense being offered
by a master's student in business management his defense for
stalking a McDonald's employee, Farehan Ali, a student University of Stirling,
when he met a woman also at McDonald's employee while
working as a delivery driver for the fast food chain.
They have video footage showing Ali approaching the victim for
(32:13):
the first time eleven PM while she was emptying a
trash container to ask for her number. He said he
was too shy to do it in front of their colleagues.
Victim stated that she was scared when he approached her
because he said he had been watching her at work.
Ali claims that she smiled at him and added him
on Snapchat, and that night he sent her a thank
you message on the app. The victim ignored it. He
(32:37):
then texted the victim, writing quote, I would like to
take you out for a coffee sometime, no pressure, just
let me know if you're up for it. That was ignored.
He then went to the McDonald's location while the victim
was working in order to milkshake. Prosecutor asking Ali in
this stalking case if he was trying to engineer contact
with a victim, He said he cannot comment on that
because I was working that day. I just wanted to
(32:58):
buy a milkshake for myself. Fuck dad, Thank you Joe.
That night, he said, he explained the circumstances to chat
GPT For those not familiar, that's the artificial intelligence where
you plug in questions information, ask it stuff and it
will generate a response. He told the court that the
(33:19):
artificial intelligence bought told him to message the victim again,
which he did using what chat GP suggested from the text.
His message read, Hey, I hope you are well. I
understand that my messages may make you feel uncomfortable. He
then also asked to meet again Ali. Joe says, here,
(33:41):
get in my van white panel van Joel. Ali said
he didn't do anything which I needed to apologize for.
I only sent her two messages prior to this, and
this was the third message. Prosecutor minded Ali that he
did apologize or reminded Ali that he did apologize, then
asked are you saying that chat GPT told you to
(34:05):
His response, that was the message that was suggested by
chat GPT, and I thought it would be better if
I do this whatever. After the message, the victim blocked
Ali on social media. Victim Altoge alleged Ali followed her
in his vehicle. He denied that, citing and I don't
understand this insurance issues. He was found guilty of stalking
(34:31):
and apparently will be sentenced in October. Now I don't
approve of his behavior. A no is and no just
walk away, obviously, but three text messages and a couple
of encounters can get you a criminal conviction. Anyway, mind
your p's and q's. It's crazy world out there, five
(34:53):
to five fifty five GARCD talk station. Your calls are
quite welcome. We got some time in the six o'clock
hour ago. Multiple different directions, and of course, in this
crazy world we live in, there are multiple different directions
we can go. But we've got plenty to talk about
coming up, dan Am almost one hour from now seven
to five. Jack Atherton's commentary. He's going to be joining
the program regularly. How Europe is offering two different paths
forward for US voters in November Europe. That's going to
(35:17):
be interesting. I've also Senator Ran Paul at seven forty.
I hope you can stick around your campaign. Fit stop
on the road to November helps me make.
Speaker 2 (35:26):
An informed choice this November.
Speaker 1 (35:27):
Will recoll it fifty five KRC the talk station. Hey everybody,
this is Josh and Chick Ban Thomas here, wishing a
very happy Wednesday. Looking forward to one hour from now
with Jack Atherton. We're gonna do a regular segment with
Jack brilliant man. He is his study of a student
of history in the Constitution of course law. He's going
to be offering his comments about how Europe is offering
(35:50):
different paths, two different paths forward for United States voters.
A lot going on with Europe in terms of the
immigration crisis running up, and they're all sort of trying
to figure are ways to stem the flow of illegal immigrants.
European Union has been dealing with this for a long time,
and the woke realities are setting in and the citizenry
is reacting and so in fact, there was an article
(36:13):
just yesterday Europe grasps for ways to stop the migrant surge.
Government seeks to blunt the rise and anti immigrant parties
with new measures to restrict asylum claims. So we have
a parallel thing going on there. So people got outraged
over three plus years of the Biden administration's open borders policy,
cities struggling mightily, including Springfield, and so what did Biden do.
(36:36):
He offered an alternative solution, reducing the numbers but not
stopping the flow of migrants. So there's he had a
reaction to the outrage that people were expressing. So he
took steps to go back toward what Donald Trump had
in place, reinstating some of the Trump policies for the
executive Order. That's kind of what's going on in Europe,
(36:58):
the rise of anti immigrantion parties out there, the embrace
of cracking down on well wide open borders, which the
European Union always spoke proudly of. It's having a real
political impact in Europe, and I presume that's the direction
Jackson ago. We'll find out an hour follow by Senator
Ran Paul at seven forty the investigation of the first
(37:20):
Trump assassination attempt on the Plate with government funding running
out on October first on the Plate and then finally
the Penny Plan in Rainsac. We'll talk with Senator Paul
about that. At seven forty. Fast forward to eight oh five,
we've got the SINCEI Police Department, Ken Kobra fop President.
I'm looking to have the since II public schools well
be more responsible for the teen violence taking place at
the bus stops. And finally, of course, Wednesday, Judge entered
(37:42):
Apolitano a brief history of free speech in America. Listen
to lunch one week from today Anderson Pub last lunch
before the election. So I hope to see there. You
can mark it down. Let us see here assassination attempts,
since it's going to be on a topic of the
session with the senator. Copy of the hour news discussion
as well. And there's a new poll out Rasmussen Poll
(38:05):
about what you and I think about whether or not
somebody's going to try to kill Donald Trump again. And
apparently a lot of people do believe that. Rasmussen reports
in the nearly two thirds of likely voters believe there
will be more assassination attempts on Donald Trump between now.
An election day national survey taking September eighteenth to nineteen,
(38:26):
sixty five percent say it's likely there will be more
assassination attempts plural against Trump for November fifth, thirty two
percent saying very likely plus minus three percent margin of
ver taken after the Secret Service September fifteenth foiled second
(38:46):
assassination attempt on Trump. When asked whether it was more
likely that there would be assassins were motivated by rhetoric
from Trump's enemies or folks suffering from mental illness, forty
nine percent side of the rhetoric of Trump's enemies as
a motivation, thirty six percent cited mental illness, fifteen percent
(39:12):
not quite sure. Among self identified conservatives, sixty three percent
blame the rhetoric of Trump's enemies for the assassination attempt.
Fifty four percent of liberals believe that the assassins were
suffering from mental illness. And Brian Thomas goes with a
combination of the foregoing calling Trump repeatedly a Nazi and
the biggest existential threat to democracy, coupled with someone who's
(39:36):
suffering from mental illness and who has a disdain for
Trump because of the rhetoric, equals an assassin My moderate voters,
forty forty four percent blame it on rhetoric of Trump's
enemies thirty eight, mental illness eighteen not sure. Among those
who consider it very likely there'll be another assassination attemp
against Trump, sixty three percent believe people trying to assassinate
(39:59):
him were motivated motivated by rhetoric of his enemies. Majorities
in every political category. Seventy five percent of Republicans, fifty
six percent of Democrats, sixty four percent of voters unaffiliated
believe that it is at least somewhat likely that someone
will try to kill him, and it goes across ethnicity
(40:19):
to sixty four white, sixty two black, sixty seven Hispanic,
and eighty three percent of other minority voters also consider
it somewhat likely there will be another effort to kill Trump.
That's bleak right there. And apparently Trump just was recently
briefed on what they called real and specific threats from
(40:39):
Iran to assassinate him. Say that the Islamic fundamentalist regime
there also falls into the category of mental illness. That's
my perspective. Anyway, he was briefed yesterday, Trump was about
real and specific threats from Iran to assassinate him. Campaign
(41:00):
issued a statement regarding this. The Iron's aim part of
the Islamic Republic. Efforts to destabilize are destabilized and so
chaos here in the United States, and wouldn't it Can
you imagine a more destabilizing effect? Accord to the Trump spokesperson,
Intelligence officials have identified that these continued and coordinated attacks
(41:20):
have heightened in the past few months, and law enforcement
officials across all agencies are working to ensure that Trump
is protected and the election is free from interference. Make
no mistake, the campaign said, the terror regime in Iran
loves the weakness of Kamala Harrison, is terrified of the
strength and resolved to President Trump fair enough. Moving over
(41:42):
to an opinion piece by rule Mark Garrick and Ray
Takier commenting on this very topic. One's a resident scholar
of the Foundation of Defense the Democracies and Takiya a
Senior Fellow Council on Foreign Relations. They point out their
rhetorical question, well, why hasn't Iran retaliated against Israel for
the July thirty first killing of Hamas political leader Ismail
(42:04):
Hanye in Tehran? That was the big threat. They were
worried about a massive attack after he was killed. Fear
of US military power, they right has always been the
primary break on the clerical regime. The fear has been
fading where it matters most. Tehran's nuclear program rapidly advanced
over the past four years. Iran's proxies, when not ignored,
(42:26):
have been ineffectually countered. Yemen's Huthis so far have the
upper hand of the conflict with the US Navy in
the Red Sea with relatively crude Iranian supplied missiles. The
Hufies continue to curtail shipping through the Suez Canal, despite
American and European efforts to protect the sea lane, and
a Kamala Harris presidency would surely compound the errors of
(42:48):
her predecessor. They point out. The democrats approach dealing with
Tehran inextricably and counterproductively tied a US policy toward Israel Washington,
and tries to limit Israel's military action against Isvawa, the
Islamic Republicans' most republic's most feared offshoot, and stamp out
any possibility that Jerusalem will launch a military salt against
(43:10):
Iran's nuclear site. Mindset flows from a deep fear of
a US Iran confrontation and a guess by many in
Washington that Kamane hasn't yet decided to build a bomb.
Best course of action in their mind therefore, is to
maintain status quo, which the cleric finds acceptable. They conclude
(43:33):
that that guess is wrong. Iran now gains far more
than it loses by going nuclear. Indeed, Commane made a
mistake by not developing a bomb sooner. The increasing conversation
in Tayron about how easy and useful it will be
to develop a nuclear weapon is surely a byproduct of
the clerical regimes realization that Israel has significant tactical and
(43:55):
intelligence advantages see the Pager and Waukie talk explosions by
way of illustration and the power of their military. Many
of Iran's senior officials maybe within most sod's reach. I
think clearly they are, and the America's conventional capacity remains pulverizing.
In other words, where our military strength is far superior
(44:18):
to the Islamic Republics at minimum. In a right Iranian
nuclear weapon would check Israel and American aggression in the
Persian heartland. When the Islamic Republic gets the bomb, which
they say it will, unless military intervention collapse or regime
collapse occurs, war between Israel and has Bob will become
a high wire act for Jerulusalem. A Drussalom Israel attacks
(44:41):
on Islamic Revolutionary Guard, core commanders and installations in Levant
will become dicey. If Tehran threatens to extend its nuclear umbrella,
in other words, launch a bomb, America's freedom to move
against the clerical regime. Iran has repeatedly killed US servicemen
with no American reprise, and a conventional age will shrink further.
(45:03):
It's the mutual destruction argument that Iran will be able
to make if people try to defend themselves. Democrats in
the American left have achieved what Iranian revolutionaries once would
have dismissed as impossible. Tehran sees exploitable divisions between American
Israel demonstrations against the Gaza war, rising anti Israel sentiments
within the Democrat Party, overly anti Semitic language in elite
(45:27):
American circles, muddling the traditional Iranian take on America, which
is that we are both on both sides of the
political ledger friends of Israel. The opening that Barack Obama
made with his nuclear concessions, with which Kamani explored and exploited,
(45:48):
has become Democratic Party orthodoxy. Engagement with the Theocracy is
in itself a good thing, in spite of the fact
that they're busily hurrying the rushing toward a nuclear bomb.
Diplomacy surely the reason behind the Supreme Leader's apparent willingness
to restart the nuclear negotiations with Washington. He wants to
(46:09):
explore whether Biden and more importantly, Kamala Harris can be
neutralized through diplomacy. Comanian's diplomats are waiting for a President Harris.
Given Democrats believe that there is no tolerable alternative to
Iran nuclear dilemma other than diplomacy, they probably won't leave
(46:31):
the table no matter how Iran transgresses. Mister Obama watched Iran,
Russia and their Syrian allies slaughter tens of thousands of
Syrian citizens while pushing the nuclear talks forward. Iran thinks
it can count on Democrats to restrain the Israelis. They conclude.
The Isroamic Republic has exploited this its proxy war strategy brilliantly,
(46:53):
but its success is also highlighted the Theocracy's weaknesses. A
nuke would allow the Republic to on the offensive in
the Middle East with fewer concerns about blowback. In practice,
the doctrine of mutually assured destruction would work against Israel
along the Iranian theocracy. More maneuvering Room not the only
(47:15):
people concluding that the Iranians are anxious for a Kamala
Harris presidency. Going back to the Iranian threats of assassinating
Donald Trump. If they make good on that, Trump's out
of the game. Is there anyone out there who would
(47:35):
take Trump's banner and run as a Republican candidate that
could beat Kamala Harris in the waning hours basically we
had before the presidential election. That's what's brewing behind the scenes, folks,
and it's frightening stuff. Six eighteen fifty five KRC the
talk station Go Zimmer dot com. Go Zimmer dot com.
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Speaker 7 (48:42):
This is fifty five KARC and iHeartRadio station Wednesday.
Speaker 6 (48:48):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (48:48):
Corollary to that sort of commentary opinion piece about Iran
waiting for President Harris, there's another one you should read
the day if you get an opportunity. Walter Russell meads
on Biden's diplomatic magical thinking and only one parent. I
just wanted to point out one paramographic. It's all about
the failure of diplomacy. They keep trying to get around
to the table to talk about a nuclear deal. While
(49:09):
appeasing them and lifting sanctions, the sanctions actually worked, really
had a profound impact on Tehran's economy. And of course,
when their economy is being pounded by sanctions and tariffs
and isolationism thanks to US refusing and others refusing due
to sanctions and tariff's not doing business with Tehran, they
don't have money to fund at least as heavily these
(49:31):
terrorist organizations. But the Biden administration, of course, Key's going
back to the negotiation table, and no one's taking them seriously,
which is the ultimate point of Walter Russell means article.
But get a load of this. No administration in American
history has been as committed to Middle East diplomacy as
this one, Yet have an administration diplomats ever had less success.
(49:52):
Biden tried and failed to get Iran back to a
nuclear agreement with the US. He tried and failed to
get a new Israeli Palestinian dialogue on track. He tried
and failed to stop the civil war in Sudan, tried
and failed to get Saudi Arabia to open formal diplomatic
relations with Israel. He tried to settle a war and
Yemen through diplomacy. And when that failed and the Huthis
began attacking shipping in the Red Sea, the ever undaunted
(50:13):
President sought a diplomatic solution to that problem too. He
failed again. I mean, there's certain people in the world
you just can't negotiate with, Certain people in the world
that have a different position regarding power than you. Certain
people in the world who would like to keep you
the negotiation table while they busily work on finishing up
their nuclear weapons so they can engage in a peace
(50:35):
through strength argument like we keep making.
Speaker 10 (50:40):
Now.
Speaker 1 (50:40):
I've been critical of the United States in the many
administrations for launching, you know, missile attacks killing individuals and
countries with whom we have no conflict. Judge Nepolitano and
I talk about this all the time. You know, the
hypothetical suggestion of Canada decides that somebody here is a terrorist.
They identified someone that they think is evil and has
(51:02):
done bad things, so they launch a missile striker in
the United States, is that likely to happen. No, We've
got one of the biggest military on the planet. Wow, well,
soon to become second largest. But it's the military strength
that access a shield against idiots doing idiot things because
they're idiots, and our military strength is waning, and the
(51:31):
messages that we have sent to our allies, like with
the Afghanistan withdraw and other epic failures from this administration
really make them stop and pause and think, h do
I want to hitch my wagon too?
Speaker 6 (51:42):
That?
Speaker 1 (51:44):
And then your power, your ability to influence, maybe even
through diplomatic channels, disappears. Six twenty six fifty five KRC
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Speaker 2 (52:54):
KRC your morning cup of Sean.
Speaker 11 (53:00):
This is a Sean Morning minute.
Speaker 12 (53:04):
We are watching a world on the verge of imploding.
And I don't think we've been closer to World War
three or the outbreak of a World war than we
are right now. And I'm going to tell you something
why this is all happening. This is happening because Joe
Biden and Kamala Harris have failed the entire world. Their
(53:25):
weakness has allowed for these hostile regimes around the world
to take over. They're the ones that allowed the Iranian
Mullahs to get rich again. And Harris and Biden and
hopefully if she's defeated. You know, this world is a
more dangerous place than what they inherited.
Speaker 11 (53:47):
A conservative underground meets later today on the Sean Hannity Show.
Speaker 1 (53:56):
You know, we don't have to wait until November to
start taking our country back.
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Now.
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Speaker 1 (54:56):
The free Iheartradium.
Speaker 13 (55:00):
Jenline says it's gonna be mostly cloudy day to day
with isolated showers in highest seventy seven, chance of showers
over night, down to sixty isolated showers tomorrow high seventy
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likely showers on Friday between two pm and two am
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Speaker 1 (55:17):
Seventy nine to the high then right now sixty seven.
Time for a traffic update.
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From the UCL Traffic Center with U see health the
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ucehealth dot com. Westbound seventy four left lane blocked off
with an accident after Harrison right bolt.
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Traffic gets by on the right.
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Fifties blocked off through Whitewater Township thanks to the styrene
league block between Chambers and Lawrenceburg Road.
Speaker 2 (55:46):
Chuck Ingram on fifty five krzee the talk station.
Speaker 1 (55:56):
Six thirty one fifty five care see the talk station
Happy Wednesday again and then the plugg listener lunch next
Wednesday Anderson Pub and Grill, and another reminder to hope
to see you at the Clairemont County Republican Party Flapjack
event this Saturday at the Claremont County Airport beginning of
nine pm. Tickets available. I am m seeing the event.
(56:18):
Lots of folks there, including Morgan or Tegas, the keynote speaker.
She was a political advisor server to the spokesperson for
the United States Department of State under the Trump administration.
I'm a brilliant resume she's got. Also going to be there,
John Houston, Bernie Moreno, Brad Weinster Bylex Trantapilo, David Yost,
Meghan Chanahan, Daniel Hawkins, and Frank LeRose. So get yourself
some breakfast, listen to some fine speakers, and enjoy the
(56:41):
fellowship that will happen again this Saturday nine at the
Claremont County Airport. Thank you for the opportunity to facilitate
that event. Claremont County Republican Party over to the foes
that go for get the local story. Steve's on the line, Steve,
thanks for calling this morning.
Speaker 6 (56:56):
Good morning, Brian.
Speaker 10 (56:58):
Hey, I am calling in because I am kind of
disturbed at what's going on. George Soros is buying up Odyssey,
and he was green lighted by the FCC to take
over those radio stations, and I believe he will mute
conservative voices on those radio stations, which we know that's
(57:18):
a problem. But my main concern is George Soros is
responsible for buying four radio stations around Kiev in twenty fourteen,
which ultimately in my opinion, this is not the opinion
of Brian Thomas or iHeart, but a lot of people
(57:38):
do believe that combination of George Soros, Claus Schwab, the IMF,
the EU, the CIA were behind this propaganda war that
ultimately led to the kudatad that took over Ukraine and
installed EU sensitive or.
Speaker 1 (58:04):
Government European Union leading or leaning government officials, right because we.
Speaker 10 (58:10):
Know that's what they want to do. They want to
get move the Ukraine people to the native side of
the equation. So we had all these people, Joe Biden,
John McCain, Chris Murphy, investor, Jeffrey Piatt, Victoria Newland, John Terry,
Angela Merkel from Germany, the Clintons, We're all on government square,
(58:34):
whipping up the crowd which eventually led to the coup
d'ta that installed a a.
Speaker 1 (58:42):
Pro European Union government. Is what you're saying, right, we
are breaking this down that Okay, yeah, we interfere with
elections all the time. So I guess my central question
is what is the goal of getting Ukraine, you know,
to embrace the European Union or get the Ukraine into NATO.
How does that benefit George Soros or John McCain. I mean,
(59:06):
I guess it doesn't shock me at all that those individuals,
either collectively and coordinated or on an individual level, have
an opinion about Ukraine and where it should be connected to,
whether European Union or remaining on its own. They're entitled
to mouth their opinion. They're entitled to try to sway
the hearts and minds of people. I mean, that's kind
of what I do here on the Morning show. I
try to convince people that, you know, choosing your own
(59:27):
life path, making your own decisions is better than letting
the government do it. But am I swaying anyone? I
don't know. But it's my opinion. I'm entitled to it.
They're entitled to it. I guess what interest does America
have or how does this benefit the CIA or George
Soros or John McCain. You know that it was successful.
I suppose that's up to the voters and residents of
(59:49):
Ukraine to decide. We're all subject and victims of propaganda
on some level, so you know, is there.
Speaker 10 (59:55):
Absolutely do what the motive is, that's not point.
Speaker 1 (59:58):
But right now I'm happy to be I'm happy to
be surrounded by multiple different opinions. That's how I reach
my truth, logic and reason and listening to a variety
of different people spout off of their ideas about what's
a better path. Is it a better path for the
Ukraine to be part of NATO? Let's have that discussion.
(01:00:18):
Is it a better path for you Ukraine to fight
it fight its own warriors. I listen lots of topics,
lots of opinions. We all have one. We know what
opinions are like. But you've got to factor all those
into the equations and make up your own mind. If
George Soros wants to buy up radio stations, he's entitled to.
I just go back to the days of Air America.
If he wants to turn them into left wing mouthpieces,
(01:00:39):
then he's not gonna make any money off of it.
When you're a multi billionaire, maybe you don't buy things
to make money. Maybe you buy things to try to
influence people, or just shut off at least one valve
for a contrary opinion to get out there in the world.
But this is the day of the internet. He shut
off a radio station. I might agree that it would
do some harm and so people might not get the message,
(01:01:01):
but there are other outlets where you can get the message.
So you know, I know he's a boogeyman. I know
he's a left wing nut job, and I don't know
what other than power and control, which to me is
a twisted thing to actually want to embrace. If you
want to control people and you want to make their
decisions for them, and you want to, you know, take
the freedoms and liberties that we enjoy here away from people,
(01:01:24):
then I say, you've got a DSM five diagnosable problem
and you should get some therapy and help. But he's
got billions of dollars and no one's gonna stand in
his way with how he spends his money. If he
wants to buy a radio station up, I can't control that.
There's not a damn thing I can do about it.
I just hope that there's some conservative leaning individual like
(01:01:44):
the Kuk Brothers or somebody else out there that says, Haha,
he's buying radio stations, I'm gonna buy some. He's trying
to send out a liberal globalist message. I'm gonna try
to send out well a in America first kind of message.
That's what debate is all about. I don't like the
game eight anybody's efforts along those lines, because you know
(01:02:05):
you're next in line to have your message well stomped
out by some powerful individual if they can get away
with stomping out the message. Six thirty seven fifty five
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I like how great they are about letting you know
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Of course, we'll be there between eleven and one then
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plumbing job, and the price is always right. It's always
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on a Sunday, just putting in for an appointment online.
But you can call him directly, so either plump tight
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or five one three seven two seven tight. That's five
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KRC Scott from the Cleveland, Hey, very happy Wednesday to you. Yeah,
(01:03:29):
go back to Air America. I mean nobody listened to it.
I mean they went out of business and no sponsors, no, no,
listening audience. I had a Brian Thomas detractor reached out
to me the other day and just just a big
earful full of stuff and you suck and you you
know your your opinions are. I can't use the verbiage
he used, but just went on on a tear and
(01:03:51):
then you're the only reason you're on the radio is
because your dad was on the radio. Now there is
a direct connection to that. I was on the radio
with my dad multiple times, which I guess in the
minds of iHeartMedia formerly known as Clear Channel, that I
did a decent enough job they were willing to offer
me an opportunity to take over for my dad when
(01:04:11):
he retired. Now Dad told me not to take the job.
I was happily employed as a litigation attorney with Anthem,
and I didn't need this job, but it sounded like
it will be fascinating, it will be intriguing, and why
not give it a shot. Worst case scenario, I have
my law license, I'll go back to practicing law. And
that's kind of been my attitude all along since I
have maintained my law license. But this is my eighteenth
(01:04:33):
year in radio. Now. I Fete said that early on.
You know, be sure, let's find out if anybody listens.
But you know, this program's ratings actually are really not
patting myself on the back, but a lot of people
listen to the Morning Show. I mean, I think we've
been in the top ten and AMS two AM stations
in one city in the top ten. I think there's
(01:04:53):
only two cities in the entire country that have two
AMS in the top ten. The Morning Show has always
been the amount of time people listen to this program,
as indicated by the figures that have been shown me.
I'm just behind LW. So I've been able to stay
(01:05:15):
here and continue to do the morning show in spite
of the fact I did maybe get the job as
a consequence of being connected with my father. Otherwise I
wouldn't have sat down with him in the years he
was still on the radio. When Craig cop went on vacation,
that led to a chance. But do you think they
would keep me here if they were losing money, if
no one was listening? Hell no. So he can hate
(01:05:39):
my opinion, he can hate me, but you know, I
think I can at least stand on my record.
Speaker 9 (01:05:48):
Now.
Speaker 1 (01:05:48):
Pivoting over to George Soros, if he wants to buy
up conservative leaning radio stations and silence that voice and
substituted with a more liberal voice. It's been tried over
and over again. It just doesn't work. I like to
offer an independent thinking mindset on the Morning Show, and
I welcome different points of view and I factored them
(01:06:10):
into my own decision making and over my life, the
discussions that go back and forth, this open flow of
information and opinions has changed my political perception over time,
and I think I've gotten better and more informed and
I'm on a politically more stable ground than i was
compared to now than I was when I was a
(01:06:31):
younger person. That's what listening, talking, exchanging ideas can bring about.
A more enlightened opinion. Just my personal experience anyway, And
God bless each and every one of you for tuning
into the Morning Show. Means the world to me, and
I love exchanging these thoughts and ideas, which we'll do
with Jim and Bill next. You guys, don't mind holding.
(01:06:52):
I just had to get that out of my system
on the heels of that last collar. And I want
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Fast and Fast e n pro roofing dot com. Here's
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Speaker 4 (01:08:26):
Five fifty five car the talk station at Donovan's Ato
and Tire.
Speaker 1 (01:08:31):
We get it.
Speaker 2 (01:08:32):
It feels like prices everywhere going up.
Speaker 1 (01:08:34):
That's why we're doing all we can to keep prices
down when it comes to repairs and maintenance on your
seven oh six Here at fifty five KRCD talk station.
In a very happy Wednesday, extra special Wednesday, the beginning
of a new area on the fifty five KRSEE Morning show.
A regular appearance by our oh all of our dear
friend Jack Adida, and of course we all know him
(01:08:54):
from his time on local news reporting. Of course, he's
a lawyer and a legal scholar, and a historian as
student of history, and a brilliant man. Had a wonderful
commentator too, so it's going to be great having him
on the morning show on a regular basis. Welcome back,
Jack Atherton, my dear friend. It's a pleasure having you on.
Speaker 5 (01:09:12):
The beginning of a new era war, the beginning of
the end that worst decision yet no way.
Speaker 1 (01:09:21):
Listen, You've been on the program so many times over
the years. It's always a real delight for me to
get your take, in your your perspective on things, because
you and I we share a political philosophy, and we
of course believe in the God given freedoms and liberties
that are enshrined in our constitution and do everything we
can to defend them in the face of what seems
to be an all out war coming from all fronts
to take away those freedoms and liberties from us. But
(01:09:44):
as I note from your topic, European Union struggling a
little bit. I think they're now realizing much in the
same way with the Biden administration, is that wide open
borders and mass influx of illegal immigrants and other people
from other countries having a profound cultural impact on the
European Union. And of course these citizens, they are not
real happy, and so now lots of governments across Europe
(01:10:07):
are putting up new barriers to immigrants because well, the
surge in support for nationalist populist parties, a lot of
people are getting conservative minded over there, thinking about their
own best interest as opposed to the interest globally speaking.
What's your take on all this, Jack Addan, Let's put.
Speaker 5 (01:10:26):
This in perspective. The only good thing about having kids
who move far away is that it gets you out
of the house. Our older daughter is married to an Englishman.
Together they research autism and teach at a British university Plymouth.
That Plymouth, yeah, where the Mayflower made a pit stop
before the Pilgrims took off for America. So we used
(01:10:49):
all of our airline miles and got to see Gray
and Ligam. Then Amesley and I also took a side
trip to Italy and it's fascinating, Brian to contrast in
different directions Britain and Italy are now taking. Because on
November fifth, America is going to be deciding which way
we want to go. England's great days can be traced
(01:11:12):
back to Queen Elizabeth, now not the one we grew
up with, Queen Elizabeth the first. She encouraged explorers like
Sir Walter Raleigh to establish colonies in the New World,
and also colonies halfway around the world in India. That
laid the groundwork for the British Empire on which the sun,
(01:11:32):
as they say, never set. Britain became Great Britain by
milking her colonies for raw materials and requiring them to
buy British goods. That and taxes are what got the
Americans fighting a revolution. We wanted to be able to
have manufacturing of our own, at least.
Speaker 11 (01:11:49):
We did back then.
Speaker 5 (01:11:51):
Britain could afford to lose America. But by the end
of the Second World War almost all of her colonies
demanded independence, and even at home, the Brits were furious
with that, and happy elites and politicians who would drag
them into two catastrophic wars within twenty five years. After
(01:12:11):
America helped them win the Second World War and the
First for that matter too, British soldiers demanded quote a
land fit for heroes. They demanded socialism, big state ownership
of major industries and services. The result was a generation,
the next generation of what the Brits called angry young men,
(01:12:35):
who saw no productive future for themselves and who lived
off the dole garbage piled up on the streets. Strikes
paralyzed the economy, you had to wait months for medical procedures.
People from former colonies flooded into the UK with its generous,
generous welfare benefits. The Beatles and bankers were making money
(01:12:58):
they still do, but not allow of other blokes. For
one brief period in the nineteen eighties, Margaret Thatcher stood
up to socialism to her own weak as water Conservative Party,
which is kind of like our establishment, gop led by
miss McConnell, and Thatcher reversed nationalization and the exporting of
(01:13:20):
many British industries. Still, many Brits hated Maggie Thatcher, even
after she helped Ronald Reagan dismantle the Soviet Union. You
can see that all in the terrific new movie Reagan.
The British accepted their low growth, second class status, and
now the UK has just elected a far left government. Meantime,
(01:13:43):
in Italy they were taking a very different path. After
World War two, Italy was a basket case. Socialist, communist
and far right parties toppled new governments on average. Can
you believe this, Brian? Every thirteen months.
Speaker 1 (01:13:59):
They had a new government.
Speaker 5 (01:14:00):
Italy's economy was sick. Only women's shoes, sports cars and
pasta remained first rate. But Italy is now led by
a woman, not a Kamala Harris Dei figurehead. We're talking
about a strong, dynamic, principled woman named Georgia Maloney. You
(01:14:21):
may remember that she took Joe Biden by the hand
literally when he wandered off during the last g seventh summit.
Maloney's platform blends patriotism motherhood. You remember the line from
Moonstruck you are a son who does not love his mother. Well,
she does, and the Italians do. They have strong families.
And Maloney also supports capitalism, what a concept. Maloney has
(01:14:46):
brought down illegal immigration by sixty four percent. Multinational Critics
say Maloney is too protectionist, that her nationalism smacks of Mussolini,
but she is no fascist. She just says Italy should
not be run by bureaucrats in Brussels, the EU that
you were just talking about, and under Maloney Italy's tech
(01:15:08):
sector has been growing faster than America's our S and
P and with a broader range of stocks investments that
Maloney is trying to make available to more and more
average Italians. Look, we are not Italy, and we may
not like all of Maloney's policies. But the question is
this November, will America slouch back toward the Democrats' British
(01:15:33):
style big government socialism, socialism that enriches elites, including government unions,
and makes the rest of us dependent on government for handouts,
or will we choose an America first economy as supercharged
as an Italian sports car. The British had no choice
(01:15:54):
but to surrender an unjust empire. What is our excuse,
Brian for destroying the greatest, freest, most productive, generous, and
welcoming nation in the history of the world.
Speaker 1 (01:16:08):
Well, it's because we were born of original sin, Jack,
That's the reason. I mean, that's the one that the
left always defaults to. You had slavery, ergo, you were
born of original sin and you aren't worthy of existing.
Now that's obviously a cloak for Marxist ideology, you know,
And this the argument ongoing argument the class warfare that's
embedded in literally everything these days, coupled with the green movement,
(01:16:31):
which seeks to take away basically every freedom and liberty
we have in the name of reducing our exhalation. I mean,
these forces have joined together for the purposes of bringing
our country to its knees. And it's all intentional. I mean,
who cuts their own throat in the name of trying
to reduce their exhalation when their biggest fou China, Chinese
Communist Party China is producing and creating new coal fire
(01:16:55):
plans and generating more carbon than we have taken out
of the atmosphere our efforts, which have been quite successful.
That is a threat to our existence. And it seems
to be a nefarious, nefarious intent by these global leftists
to reduce America's might in the face of the rest
of the world, in the name of oh, I don't
(01:17:15):
know what equity jack.
Speaker 5 (01:17:18):
America was not born of original sin. America was not
born in sixteen nineteen. America would have been great if
we had never had something that was prevalent throughout the world,
including Great Britain slavery. It was an original sin, without question,
and it was hotly debated at the conventions that we
(01:17:40):
had at seventeen seventy six and seventeen eighty nine, and
of course we had a civil war in eighteen sixty
one to eradicate it that killed more than six hundred
thousand people. America's birth was unique in seventeen seventy six because,
unlike all the rest of the nations which had landed aristocra,
these monarchs entrenched interests. America had some people who were
(01:18:06):
somewhat better off than others, but who were dedicated to
the proposition that all men were equal before the law,
and all men should have opportunity. And soon after it
was women and gays and blacks and everybody who came
to this country equally. We were not a top down government.
We were a bottom up society. We had rights that
(01:18:29):
we conferred on us by the creator or whoever you
considered created them, a natural law. That's America. That can
still be America if we stay on the right path.
On November fifth, amen to that.
Speaker 1 (01:18:43):
You know, the other thing I observe about all this,
the clamoring to redistribute wealth and take from those evil
corporate entities, and you know, give back more to the
poor and take from these evil risks, I guess in
destroying America, which is ultimately what we'll have happened. And
once you go to full on socialism or Marxism, and
(01:19:04):
from each accordingon's ability, to each according to his need,
the creative component disappears, the willingness to work disappears. There
is no reward for extra effort. There is no reward
for creativity when the motivations for creativity are generally profit
driven or self interest driven, but which have the unbelievably
(01:19:24):
wonderful effect of creating job opportunities for a multitude of
people who, like me, don't have the knowledge or wherewithal
to create a good or service that people demand you
take it away, what would the rest of the world do,
Jack add And without the massive insane wealth of the
United States of America, which seems to be supporting the
four corners of the.
Speaker 5 (01:19:44):
Globe, government benefits are non black and white. Social security
was created in this country by Franklin Roosevelt, but it
took as a model something that they had in Germany
going back to the eighteen seventies from a guy Otto
von Bismarck, who was not known as a liberal. He
was facing revolutionary movements all around Europe, and he felt
(01:20:07):
that people should have a basic safety net, not as
conservatives say, not a hammock, but a safety net. And
it was a good thing, just as the union movement
was a good thing when it started, but sometimes got
out of hand and now works hand in glove with
Democrats who are implementing policies that actually hurt their members.
(01:20:28):
I mean, look what the auto workers are doing. They're
destroying their own industry because the people at the top
are getting paid off. Yes, America's wealth has been keeping
the world going, but the world is not going to
be remaining in lockstep. You pointed out earlier this morning
that China as soon to have the biggest military in
the world. They're going to be the strongest industrial base
(01:20:50):
as well. We've farmed out to them all of our
manufacturing base. We've given them access to rare earth minerals
that we don't use, even though we have them ourselves.
The policies are simply insane. As Donald Trump says, we
have to get back to common sense. When we say
America first, we don't mean America only. We want Georgia,
(01:21:10):
Maloney's Italy and the UK. For that matter to do
well as well. Yes, they look out for themselves. We
each look out for ourselves, just as under capitalism. Each
family in America looks out for itself. But it is
also remarkably charitable. This has always been a charitable nation,
mostly private sometimes government. If we flip it around, everybody
(01:21:34):
is going to be worse off.
Speaker 1 (01:21:36):
Hey Man, brilliance of Jack Adviden coming through this morning,
as it always comes through in the fifty five Carsey
Morning Show when he's on. Jack get it. We get
one of his books. You can get Amazon dot com
and search for Jack Adviton. He's a brilliant writer, both
fiction and nonfiction. Jack. I am looking forward to our
next regular session from this point forward. It's always a
pleasure having you on the program, and I appreciate your commentary.
Speaker 5 (01:21:58):
Yet, Waite pal May I just mentioned quickly I'm going
to be speaking tonight at to Restore Liberty dot US event.
Candidates are going to be there. It's a great chance
to meet other patriots and chaw Don. They're always delicious buffet.
It's at the Farm in Anderson Ferry. The doors open
at five point thirty. If you can't make it live,
there's going to be a Restore Liberty podcast starting around
(01:22:21):
six pm.
Speaker 1 (01:22:21):
Yeah, George Brennen was on the PERM earlier this week
prompt and are promoting that. I'm glad that you brought
that back up. That is tonight at the farm you
can eat and enjoy Jack's podcast. Joe Dreck will be
there signing autographs because he's the producer of the podcast,
the Restore Liberty dot Us. Jack. God bless you, sir.
I'll look forward to our next conversation and enjoy the
event this evening, same thing tomorrow, the highest seventy eight
(01:22:42):
and the same thing overnight sixty four. Friday showers are
likely between two pm and two am, pretty significantly likely
to fingers crossed seventy nine to the high. It is
sixty seven right now in time for traffic.
Speaker 2 (01:22:56):
From the UCF Tramphing Center.
Speaker 8 (01:22:57):
With uc Health, the future of carry has happened now
through plinical trials and innovative treatments and give patients a
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Southbound seventy five. There's an accident at Shepherd left Hay
inside the heavier traffic. It's between Evendale and through the
split down to Paddock southbound seventy one break lights from
field server towards fight for northbound four seventy one is
(01:23:20):
an extra ten minutes into town. Chuck Ingram on fifty
five KRC the talk station.
Speaker 1 (01:23:28):
Seven forty one Happy Wednesday, Extra special Happy Wednesday because
it's it's a pleasure for me to welcome back to
the ffty five KRSE Morning Show from the Commonwealth of Kentucky,
Senator Ran Paul. Senator Paul, thanks for joining the program
this morning.
Speaker 14 (01:23:41):
Good morning, Brian, thanks for having me.
Speaker 1 (01:23:44):
Multiple different assassination attempts on the on Trump and I
understand that you've been looking into the first assassination attempt
by this misguided and deceased Crooks guy. What's the update
on that one and any insight into his motivation, because
we seem to have a pretty good insight into Ryan
Ruth's motivations. But how about the first assassination attempt?
Speaker 14 (01:24:07):
Senator much less on the motivations of the first one,
other than that maybe he was more of a glory
seeker that might have been inclined to assassinate it either
by nor Trump, So I think less specific and probably
more crazy. I would say though, that what we've discovered
and looking into it, it's a tragedy of errors. I
(01:24:28):
mean not just one error, it's just human failure for
human failure, secret service failures. You know, leaving the roof unattended.
We find no excuse for that. The roof is one
hundred and thirty yards away. When you see the perspective
from people who were filming on the stage behind Donald Trump,
it looks like the stage is even closer than that.
It looks like it's forty or fifty yards away. But
(01:24:50):
the idea that that roof would be left unattended, there
wouldn't be snipers on it. We also discovered that the
Trump campaign and the Trump's Secret Service had been requesting
counter sniper for months. Butler turned out to be the
first time the counter snipers were there. And thank goodness
they were there, because a shooter would have kept shooting
if the counter snipers had not been there, it could
(01:25:10):
have taken another minute or two to neutralize the shooter.
We interviewed many, many agents, and we found that none
of them except the responsibility for being in charge. Nobody
appeared to be in charge. So you would assume that
if you're in charge of security for a big event
like that. The last thing you do is walk around
and say, there's nobody.
Speaker 1 (01:25:29):
On that roof.
Speaker 14 (01:25:29):
How much there's nobody on that roof protecting you know,
someone from crawling up there and shooting the president. And
it would have been fixed. But nobody really seemed to
be in charge. And this is a huge, huge errorm
But one of the biggest errors is they saw this
guys creep for ninety minutes. It took pictures of him.
Half the damn local police force had been told there's
(01:25:50):
a suspicious kuy out there. It was eventually radio to
the Secret Service, the head of security and you know,
the main security outpost that was supposed to be in
charge twenty seven minutes before. But nobody thought, well, here's
the guy the big backpack, big enough to fold up
AR fifteen into and then also using a rangefinder. Nobody thought, well,
(01:26:15):
maybe we should ask Donald Trump to leave the stage
until we interview this guy or apprehend this guy. Nobody
did that, but then at the last minute there still
was a chance to save people's lives. At six oh six,
the crowd is shouting man on a roof, Man on
a roof. At six oh eight, the police are shouting
man on a roof, man on a roof. The police
are actually running towards the man on the roof with
(01:26:37):
guns drawn the counter sniper season. But nobody says, well, gosh,
with all this commotion over there, maybe we should take
the president off the stage. Still, it doesn't cost anybody's
mind to take Donald Trump off the stage. And then
between six eight and six ' ten that message is
relayed to the head of security, the social security agents
(01:26:57):
supposedly in charge in the tent to control tend and
that person doesn't get President Trump off the stage. There
were several minutes that could have occurred. We could have
been brought down the shots or at six eleven. But
at six oh eight the police are running towards the stage.
Everybody knows there's a gatherer root, and nobody is saying, hey,
why don't we take the president off the stage. So
(01:27:19):
just so many errors, one after another, and just like Washington,
they're going to fix it by giving the people who
made the failure, they're going to give more money.
Speaker 1 (01:27:28):
Well, I know the question that's burning in many of
the minds of my listeners and me included. You know,
it's one thing to be negligent, and this is gross negligence.
If in fact it's gross negligence, another thing to create
an environment that will provide an opportunity for a guy
like this to shoot at the President Trump, and you
can easily then say, well, sorry, it was a tragedy,
(01:27:50):
but we just screwed up. We were just negligence. We
learned our lesson and we're going to get better. We
promised and swear to God that we're going to. Is
there a nefarious element behind all these multiple layers of
gross negligence, Senator Roan Paul, I.
Speaker 14 (01:28:04):
Don't think so. I don't have any information to say
people did this on purpose. I do know that they
diverted resources that could have been there to protect Donald
Trump to the first Ladies event in nearby Pittsburgh. And
so you know, the question is, and that's that's a
judgment call. You know, who are the greater targets, the
principals running for office or their spouses. Now I'm all
(01:28:26):
for spouses being protected, but really it's a judgment call
on who needs more. I think the person running for
office probably needs more, because more crazy people are really,
you know, wanting to kill the actual candidate than they
are wanting to kill the spouse, and so I think
that was a judgment here. But the other thing is
is take the second assassination. It doesn't take a genius
(01:28:47):
to walk the perimeter. I mean, I think anybody could
have walked the perimeter. I could have walked the perimeter
if they told it was. My job is to walk
the perimeter of the golf course to see if anybody
suspicious there and radio it in. Nobody was even doing that.
That guy was camping out there thirty days on and
off for thirty days. The day of the shooting, He's
seeing there for twelve.
Speaker 1 (01:29:05):
Hours on a day where no one had Trump playing
golf at that golf course. It wasn't on his schedule.
It was my understanding from the initial reports, an unplanned event.
So how was it that he knew to reconnoiter that
place a month in advance and to be there twelve
hours in advance of Trump t and off.
Speaker 14 (01:29:21):
I think he probably didn't know it'd be my guess.
My guess is he was there every day. Because Trump
plays a lot of golf, and he's said Marlago a lot,
and so you can get from news reports that he's
in town, and I think he was just hoping to
catch him at the golf course. But the real error
is that, I mean, how hard is it. It doesn't
take fifty people to walk the perimeter. Two or three people.
(01:29:42):
Two or three local policemen could walk the perimeter. Even
a non policeman could walk the perimeter with the radio
and say, hey, I see this guy. He's about thirty
yards from me. I'm not going to approach him, but
he looked suspicious when you come and interview him. I mean,
that's all it would take. But these are common sense
kind of things that need to be occurring, and instead
we get, oh, we just need two hundred million dollars
(01:30:04):
more and everything.
Speaker 6 (01:30:05):
Will be fine.
Speaker 14 (01:30:06):
Well, I don't think you correct human error by keeping
the same humans. I mean, if you've got human air,
you got to replace the humans.
Speaker 1 (01:30:13):
Heads after all. I see, our government funding is going
to run in October. First, continuing resolutions are discussed, and
you know I talked to Congressom Massy about this. He said,
just pass a full one year continuing resolution because that
one percent cut will kick in automatically next year. That's
a way of cutting back. Or we could adopt your
six Penny plan.
Speaker 14 (01:30:33):
Yeah, you know, I'm not for shutting the government down
because it's chaotic, but I'm also not for keeping it
open and borrowing two trillion dollars. So continuing Resolution basically
bows two trillion, and I'm just not for of that.
So I won't vote for the continuing Resolution. I will
offer an alternative. You know, we have a six trillion
dollars that we spend in government and they don't even
(01:30:53):
have a budget, you know, So i will castigate both
Republicans and Democrats for not introducing a budget this year,
and I'll introduce my own mind balance is the budget
in five years. The reason we do that is I
think you have to do it in a finite amount
of time to be believable. But also the balance Budget
Amendment of the Constitution that most Republicans have said they
support balances in five years, and so they sometimes will
(01:31:17):
pretend and say, oh, we'll do it in ten and
in years nine and ten, we'll do X, Y and Z,
and they they'll never do it. So I would say
that we have to have this discussion. I'm going to
force them to do it today. They will vote on mind,
not because they want to, but because the rules of
the Senate say, if nobody introduces a budget, it's a
privileged vote for any Senator to introduce the budget. So
(01:31:39):
I've done this probably half a dozen times or more,
and we don't win. But we separate out the men
from the boys, from the patriots from the swamp creatures,
and no Democrats will vote for it, and we'll split
the Republicans. We'll get about half the Republicans, and then
the big government Republicans will all vote against my budget.
Speaker 1 (01:32:00):
Note of it, folks, you'll see the true stripes revealed today,
Senator Ran Paul. Always a pleasure to have you on
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How can we know that our boat's even going to account?
Speaker 2 (01:33:17):
People aren't talking.
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About whenever all these illegal get to vote.
Speaker 1 (01:33:20):
Fifty five KRC the talk station, Hey five, The fifty
five KRCD talk station Happy Wednesday judging at a fill
toon about him in the hour listener launched next Wednesday.
Anderson pub and Grill. Hope to see you there right now.
Welcome back to the fifty five CARC Morning Show. It's
a pleasure to have you on FLP. President Ken cober Ken,
(01:33:40):
how you doing today?
Speaker 6 (01:33:42):
I'm doing great, Brian, How are you?
Speaker 1 (01:33:43):
I'm doing fine. Saw Teresa Dji the police chief us
badgering the Cincinnati Public schools Sincenay school Board, trying to
get them to, I guess, engage in some effort to
help deal with the rise in violence that's happening at
the Metro bus stops for the Cincinni public school children
gather to get to school. This has been a problem
for a while, hasn't it.
Speaker 7 (01:34:05):
Yeah.
Speaker 15 (01:34:05):
I mean we've had meetings going all the way back
to January with Metro, with the City Manager's office, the
Police Department, CPS, and so far your Metro has made.
Speaker 6 (01:34:17):
Significant contributions to try to make this work.
Speaker 7 (01:34:20):
They were willing to do anything for us, and since
my public schools have just sat on their hands and
done nothing.
Speaker 1 (01:34:25):
Well, I tell you to describe the regular problems or
you know, you don't have to go into each every
individual event, but it's happened so often. What types of
activities are raising concerns. Are there fistfights breaking out? Are
people bringing weapons? I mean gangs? I mean, what's what's
the breakdown here? What's the main problems?
Speaker 11 (01:34:42):
You name it, it's a gamut.
Speaker 7 (01:34:43):
You'll have forty fifty sixty kids fighting at a bus stop.
Speaker 6 (01:34:46):
You'll have kids with guns shooting at each other at
bus stops. I mean, just creating just chaos at these places.
Speaker 1 (01:34:55):
And so then the police are called, and I presume
that you did. By the time you get there, the
kids are already on the bus and gone to school,
or the activities otherwise broken up by then, how are
you responding to it without the help of the Cincinnati
Public schools?
Speaker 6 (01:35:09):
Well so, the police.
Speaker 7 (01:35:11):
Department since the first of February has paid four hundred
and eighteen thousand dollars in overtime for our Civil Disturbance
Response Team, for our SWAT response teams to be in
these areas patrolling them after school.
Speaker 1 (01:35:25):
Is this social media driven or I mean there's just
this a general societal breakdown. I mean, you know, I'm
an old guy. Now, fine, Okay, I'm fifty nine years old,
and the things are different now than when they were
when I was a kid. YadA YadA yae. I hear
that all the time, But I mean, I just kind
of wonder what is the impetus behind these fights breaking
out so regularly that this has become an issue, elevated
to the attention where they're begging the public schools to
(01:35:47):
do something about it.
Speaker 6 (01:35:49):
Well, here's the biggest problem.
Speaker 7 (01:35:51):
And I'm sure it was true when I was in
high school, as they compared to when you are as well,
as we went to our neighborhood school.
Speaker 6 (01:35:57):
So if you lived in College Hill, you went to
ak in high school. You lived over in Western Hills,
you went to West High.
Speaker 7 (01:36:03):
Now these kids can go to any schools within the city.
So what happens is we've got kids from different neighborhoods that.
Speaker 11 (01:36:10):
Don't get along.
Speaker 7 (01:36:12):
You know that we'll meet at Government Square, you know,
to use the bus service that'll be from Evanston and
Westwood Price Hill, and all of a sudden, it's just
a powder keg for violence because they don't like each
other to begin with.
Speaker 6 (01:36:25):
So now they meet in a public place, and well,
it's just a recipe for disaster.
Speaker 7 (01:36:29):
If these kids went to the schools in their own neighborhoods,
they wouldn't be having this interaction because we wouldn't have
them traveling throughout the city on buses.
Speaker 1 (01:36:37):
Okay, So it sounds to me like you have a
suggestion for a solution built in there somewhere, because I
guess I understand a Chief thej's desire to have the
public schools intervene or do something about it. But here
I am if these kids hate each other merely because
they're from different neighborhoods, I guess I'm wondering what a
teacher or an administrator of the sinceint public schools can
(01:36:59):
actually do to all that problem.
Speaker 11 (01:37:01):
Well, there's a couple of things they could do.
Speaker 7 (01:37:03):
They could go back to the neighborhoods schooling, and you know,
if you live in like I said, you live in
college till you go to Akin.
Speaker 1 (01:37:09):
But the one thing that I've.
Speaker 7 (01:37:10):
Suggested that Metro was on board for that CPS just
refused to do was if you have kids that are suspended.
Speaker 6 (01:37:16):
Why are you giving them bus passes?
Speaker 7 (01:37:19):
They have no right They're not going to school because
they're suspended, So why are you going to give them
the ability to use public transportation on the taxpayers dime
when they're suspended?
Speaker 3 (01:37:30):
Wow?
Speaker 6 (01:37:30):
And also you also, why are these kids.
Speaker 11 (01:37:32):
Having bus passed?
Speaker 7 (01:37:33):
Why are they allowed to be on these buses at
eight o'clock at night if they're not involved in extracurricter activities.
Speaker 1 (01:37:38):
Great questions.
Speaker 7 (01:37:40):
Those are two simple things that would cut down on
a lot of this nonsense because the reality is you
got two hundred kids out of it. I believe it's
thirty six thousand that go to since they public schools,
and you really have two hundred maybe three hundred bad actors,
and it's endangering these kids that are good kids that
are just trying to go to school because they get
caught up in this nonsense because of the two or
three hundred kids that likely are not going to school
(01:38:02):
anyway or they're suspended. So why are they being afforded
the opportunity to use this transportation on taxpayers dollars?
Speaker 1 (01:38:09):
Sounds to me like an effort to support the bus
system because you're telling me that the children they're instance
side public schools that are taking metro buses get an
all twenty four hour day, seven day week bus pass.
Speaker 6 (01:38:21):
I don't think it's twenty.
Speaker 7 (01:38:22):
Four hours then, and it's certainly just Monday through Friday
because you'll see that they have fewer problems on the
weekends because these kids aren't traveling throughout the city on
these buses. But I mean, there'll be times when these
kids are downtown it's past arc, you know, and many
of these kids that they run into have been suspended.
Speaker 6 (01:38:41):
Already or they're not going to school.
Speaker 7 (01:38:43):
But then that brings up a whole other issue of sin, say,
public school truancy.
Speaker 6 (01:38:46):
They don't take attendance.
Speaker 1 (01:38:48):
Yeah, well, they don't take attendance.
Speaker 6 (01:38:50):
Can't be truant if we don't know that they're are
you we don't know?
Speaker 1 (01:38:52):
Oh my god, they don't even take attendance.
Speaker 9 (01:38:55):
No.
Speaker 1 (01:38:57):
Well, the only positive thing I've finding this entire conversation
FOP president can cover is that they still suspend people
for bad activity. I thought they may have eradicated eradicated
that in the name of diversity, equity, inclusion or something
like that. Oh, you can't punish a student, it's beyond
their control. But if they are suspended, I'm with you.
The bus passes should be maybe taken away because they're
(01:39:19):
obviously proviges to go to school been taken away. But
now as for the Sinceinni public schools have these proposals
along the lines of what you're talking been presented to them.
Have they Have they provided you with a response, because
it sounds like the silence is pretty much deafening right now.
Speaker 6 (01:39:34):
It is absolutely definiting.
Speaker 7 (01:39:35):
There has been no response other than we're just not
going to do it, which is brings me to my
next point. If I've looked up the CPS board policies
under eight six zero zero point.
Speaker 6 (01:39:46):
One, it says the school board's primary concern is.
Speaker 7 (01:39:49):
The transportation of students in their safety, and then it
goes on to say that the Board of Education must
ensure that all reasonable steps are taken to ensure safety,
student safety, and supervision of students during transit to and
from school.
Speaker 11 (01:40:02):
Well, that's clearly not being done.
Speaker 6 (01:40:04):
That's their own policy that I'm reading from.
Speaker 1 (01:40:06):
Well, and I suppose their lawyers probably say, well, if
they're standing at a bus stop, they're not engaging in
during transit. Therefore, we have no obligation before they get
on the bus.
Speaker 7 (01:40:17):
Which is interesting, and I'm gonna get gonna get with
some of these city leaders because apparently the state of
Kentucky hasn't acted some legislation that says if they're at
a bus stop. That's essentially an extension of school grounds
that came straight from a that came straight from a
bus driver in Kentucky who just happened to see some
(01:40:39):
of the things that were going on and send an
email to the city saying, look, why don't you guys
do this in Ohio?
Speaker 6 (01:40:45):
This is what Kentucky does. You know it cut down
on a lot of their nonsense that was going on
at their bus stops.
Speaker 1 (01:40:51):
So does that mean that the Kentucky schools, for example,
could maybe assign a school resource officer i e. A
uniformed officer that has been a is will to show
up at these bus stops and be there while the
children are waiting for the buses.
Speaker 7 (01:41:05):
They could, But what's been suggested in the school districts
that we will not do this is have their staff there.
And the reason I say this is, you know they
they've always been critical of the police in this pipeline
from you know, school to prison. Yeah, and when you
sit on your hands as a school district to do nothing,
and the only answer is let's.
Speaker 6 (01:41:24):
Throw the police at this. That's that's only making this worse.
Speaker 7 (01:41:29):
If we can get these kids to behave themselves and
do it without police interaction.
Speaker 6 (01:41:34):
I think we're all better for that. Police and the
kids as well.
Speaker 7 (01:41:37):
Neither one of them really want to be interacting with
each other, especially in an enforcement arena.
Speaker 6 (01:41:44):
You know, they should be doing this as you.
Speaker 7 (01:41:46):
Know, mentoring the are Our Youth Services Unit is fantastic.
They do a great, great job, but even they're just
beginning to get set up with us.
Speaker 1 (01:41:56):
Well, I guess I'm just wondering if the criminal justice
system and being prosecuted and getting a record and maybe
spending time in a juvenile detention center or something is
not a sufficient to turn to stop these kids from
engaging in criminal behavior. Would the school staff being present
in any way, shape or form at the bus stops
(01:42:18):
be a sufficient to turn to these kids because you know,
I guess the threat of suspension from school. Would that
register in the hearts and minds of these kids enough
to them to stop beating each other up?
Speaker 6 (01:42:30):
Yeah, at this point, we're willing to try and Okay,
got it. What's going on right now?
Speaker 1 (01:42:36):
It was just not working clearly.
Speaker 6 (01:42:38):
Well.
Speaker 1 (01:42:39):
I like the legislative solution along the lines of what
Kentucky's doing, taking any guesswork out avoiding litigation passed the
law that says the school by the Cincinni Public School's
obligation as standing in local parentis of the over children
extends to the area around the bus stop, so our
children can be considered safe while they're there. Don't know
(01:42:59):
what repercussions might occur if they fail in that effort,
but at least it would be their legal obligation, plain
and clear. Just hate the idea of having to hold
my breath and wait for Columbus to do anything.
Speaker 7 (01:43:10):
Ken, Yeah, I know, like I said, I mean, we've
been suggesting solutions, and like I said, the biggest part
is the fact that since a public just hasn't hasn't
come to the table to try to even offer any solutions.
Speaker 6 (01:43:23):
In fact, you know, as the chief and our.
Speaker 7 (01:43:26):
Youth Services commander or Civil Disturbances Response Team commander myself
or at the school board meeting, the chief spoke and
then the president of the school board abruptly said, I'm
not going to allow any more of your entourage to speak.
Speaker 6 (01:43:41):
We're done with this section.
Speaker 7 (01:43:43):
Wow, which clearly they did not want to hear what
the police chief of the City of Cincinnati, our law
enforcement are safety.
Speaker 6 (01:43:52):
Expert, they did not want to hear what she had
to say, and that that part of it really is sad.
Speaker 1 (01:43:57):
Well sort of draws attention to the realcy that we've
got a whole lot of really, really lawless young people
in our community. Maybe they're just trying to keep the
spotlight away from that. If a child is suspended for
behavior issues in a school, does the Sinsint Public school
ever take any efforts to outreach the family members, the parents,
(01:44:19):
if there are any, the guardians of the suspended child,
to find out what's going on at home. Because you
know what, Ken, I'll tell you what. In my world,
it wasn't the threat of a criminal and involvement or
involvement with the prosecutors always of the police that kept
me out of trouble. It was the threat of my
father and mother and the repercussions I'd have at home
if I got out of line.
Speaker 11 (01:44:39):
Oh, without a doubt.
Speaker 7 (01:44:41):
I'm raising two teenage boys and they are being raised
the same way that I was, which is you're right.
Speaker 6 (01:44:47):
I was more afraid of what I was going to
get in trouble with my parents, yea was with the
school district.
Speaker 7 (01:44:52):
I just don't know that that's going on, and you
know that brings up, of course, a bigger issue is,
you know, the lack of parenting at home. He've talked
about it at the board meeting. Is we're gonna start
holding these parents accountable? Then if no one wants to
hold kids accountable, the justice system doesn't want to, the
school district doesn't want to, then I guess the answer is.
Speaker 6 (01:45:10):
We'll start holding these adults accountable for their kids' actions.
Speaker 1 (01:45:13):
Well, it's happened all over this country in terms of
children getting involved in shooting incidents. Parents are brought into
court and they're found responsible because they were negligent in
their handling and keeping the firearms at home, or they
negligently provided a young person who does not have the
lawful right to carry one with one. So it sounds
like a nice extension of that. As much as I
(01:45:33):
hate doing that, but if someone's at home not caring
about what their children are doing or where they are
at any given time a day, there's got to be
accountability somewhere, and maybe that's the way to solve society's
larger problem.
Speaker 7 (01:45:44):
Yeah, I mean, they've got to do something, Like I said,
throwing this problem at the feet of the police. It's
only going to end tragically, you know, if we don't
get these kids under control, if if everybody doesn't come
together to find these solutions.
Speaker 11 (01:45:57):
The reality is.
Speaker 7 (01:45:59):
These officers, who are very very well trained, they're very
very experienced, are going to end up encountering one of
these kids with a firearm, and we know how that
typically is going to end, and it's not going to
be well.
Speaker 6 (01:46:12):
And that's since January when this has all started.
Speaker 7 (01:46:16):
I've brought all this stuff to the forefront to try
to get solutions so we can prevent these things from happening,
and so far that just hasn't happened.
Speaker 1 (01:46:24):
Well, it would be a little more refreshing if the
school board actually seem to have some measure of concern
and some interest in helping, whatever help that might be.
I think every little bit counts, as you know, well,
God bless you and everybody else on the Cincinni Police Department.
You know my listeners and I have your backs and
do anything we can in the name of law and
order and bettering our community. And maybe the parents should
(01:46:47):
tell you a care, a little bit more about what
their children are doing and maybe engage in a pressure
campaign on the City of Cincinnati's school board to help out.
Just the thought that would be great outreach. Folks got
to get engaged. Ken, I'll tell you what. Thank you
so much for bringing this to my attention and the
listener's attention, and to the extent there's anything else for
(01:47:07):
more messaging you want to get out there, You're always
welcome here on the fifty five Carecee Morning Show. Well, thanks, Brian,
thanks for having me anytime. Ken Cober Fop President eight nineteen.
Right now fifty five k se DE Talk station. It's
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Channa nine. First warning weather forecasts mostly cloudy, isolated showers.
High at seventy seven, mostly cloudy showers sixty overnight. Tomorrow,
mostly cloudy, isolated showers seventy eight, same thing overnight down
(01:48:55):
to sixty four, and a really substantial likelihood for rain.
On Friday. It'll be cloudy day all day, but by
two pm and through two a m. Saturday, showers are
quite likely. Seventy nine for a high. Right now, it's
sixty seven. Time for Chuck Ingram with traffic or not Wow.
(01:49:22):
Usually not Chuck's fault. That's probably a system issue because
he does record the traffic. Welcome back to the fifty
five Karesse Morning Show appointment listening for so many of
my listening audience Judge Andrew Nepolitano every Wednesday with a
judge perfect timing. On your call today, your onna apologize
for Ingram not being there. Joe did talk with him
this morning, but sometimes the system just does not take
(01:49:42):
when it comes to recording the traffic.
Speaker 11 (01:49:44):
Do you want me to give you the New York
traffic instead?
Speaker 1 (01:49:49):
Would be to your listeners much of the same way
Chuck's traffic is useless for you, with the exception of
his weekly commentary. So Anyhow, I love the timing of
your column. I'm lucky enough man to get a copy
of the advance copy of this column, which comes out
at midnight tonight every week. A brief history of free
speech in America because and I love your reaction to this.
(01:50:12):
If you may give me a moment to tell you
about what happened just yesterday. There's an immigration advocacy group
called Haitian Bridge Alliance, apparently based in San Diego, and
they represent women, girls, LGBTQ, t QI, a black people
Haitian community and to end racist border policies like remain
(01:50:33):
in Mexico. Okay, that's the fundamental nature of the group.
They have submitted a petition to the Clark County Municipal Court.
That's the county in which Springfield, Ohio sitch. You may
be familiar with the Haitian immigration issue that made the news.
Speaker 11 (01:50:46):
Well you know what's coming. This is a proposed criminal
compete against Donald Trump and JD. Vance.
Speaker 14 (01:50:52):
Is that right?
Speaker 11 (01:50:53):
That is right?
Speaker 1 (01:50:55):
The Haitian community. This is the lawyer, the lawyer for
this group. The Haitian community is suffering in fear because
Trump and Vance is relentlessly responsible false alarms and public
services have been disrupted. Trump and Vance must be held
accountable to the rule of law. Anyone else who wreaked
havoc the way they would have been arrested by now.
There's nothing special about Trump and Vance that entitles them
(01:51:17):
to get away with what they've done and are doing.
They think they are above the law. They're only talking
about what these men said about the migrant situation in Springfield.
That's free speech, and that is a political issue at
the core of free speech.
Speaker 11 (01:51:34):
It is clearly a free speech If you don't like
what Trump and Vance are saying about Springfield, and a
lot of people don't, including the Republican mayor, go into
the marketplace of free speech and counter what they're saying.
I understand that Ohio has a statute whereby a private
(01:51:58):
citizen can file a criminal complaint and it is presented
to the local prosecutor, who must decide if there's probable
cause of crime. So this doesn't automatically become a criminal complaint.
Good God. If a private citizen could automatically trigger criminal prosecutions,
we'd still be trying cases from nineteen forty six. However,
(01:52:21):
this would never pass First Amendment to jurisprudence. Whatever you
think of Trump and whatever you think of what he said,
and the same for Senator Advance, their speech is absolutely protected.
I would think that whoever the lawyer is, an American lawyer,
an Ohio licensed lawyer who filed this would know that.
(01:52:46):
And I don't know if Ohio has a frivolous pleading sanction,
as New Jersey does and as the FEDS do, but
this would clearly be deemed frivolous that is so unlikely
to succeed that it is a waste of the system's
time to file it.
Speaker 1 (01:53:03):
It's a Rule eleven violation. You have to have a
judicial cause. It has to be straight It passed the
straight face test, as I used to call it when
I was practicing law. You can't just file a random
complaint just because you feel like it. There has to
be a legitimate, lawful basis to do so. And you
would think this firm would know that, and this lawyer,
Sobdah Chandra, knows that as well. But my view is
(01:53:27):
that the Clark Kenny Municipal Court judge who is going
to be presented with this, would immediately chuck it out
for the reasons that you and I are talking that
would preclude a Rule eleven violation if it moved forward.
Then I suppose the party that would have to respond
to the challenge of the legal action could then advance
that argument. So hopefully the judge puts the brakes on it.
But this is what's going on.
Speaker 11 (01:53:47):
Rule eleven is Rule eleven is only in the federal system,
and its purpose is to compensate a victim who had
to spend money on legal fees defending against a frivolous
I guess there is no victim here. Maybe the local
prosecutor would write a one page memo to the local
(01:54:08):
judge saying, you know, here's bt basic first Amendment. Lord,
send him a copy of my column.
Speaker 1 (01:54:13):
Right, That's why I said the timing was great. Beau.
Is this I just found out about this lawsuit this
morning when I was coming over the news. I'm like,
oh my god, this is in my backyard. And there's
a lawyer out there in the world that thinks that
is a crime to make an offhand comment about And
it was made in the broader context of discussing a
legitimate national political issue, which is the open borders problem
(01:54:37):
that these cities are face.
Speaker 11 (01:54:38):
Is political speech and therefore it is absolutely protected from
civil liability or criminal prosecution period. End of the story.
I'm giving a speech through a couple of thousand people
in Kingston, New York this Saturday, along with Scott Rutter,
at Gerald Slante, and Max Blum. It's a rally for peace,
(01:55:04):
and my assignment is the freedom of speech. So I
banged this out yesterday as sort of the basic outline
of what I'm going to talk about on Saturday. It's
a it's a primer, a very very very short primer
on the freedom of speech, the history of the freedom
of speech in America.
Speaker 1 (01:55:21):
Well, it's a wonderful, wonderful primer too, because you know,
some of you know, the greatest you know, presidents of
the world has ever seen, like Abraham Lincoln. He was
engaged in this. He arrested, as you point out, three
thousand journalists and newspaper publishers in the North because they
criticized his government. The oh, our own beloved Abraham Lincoln
violated the First Amendment and just stomped on it.
Speaker 11 (01:55:44):
Correct, and many of those people, you know, he not
only arrested them, he suspended the rid of habeas corpus,
meaning They couldn't even get brought before a judge to
have their incarceration justified until after the war was over
and Lincoln was dead, or was at that point they
were all freed. One case made its way to the
(01:56:04):
Supreme Court. The case is n Ray Milligan. It is
a fabulous opinion written by the Chief Justice of the Court.
Lincoln had appointed four of the nine members of the court,
and it overwhelmingly condemned what he did. There are no
he claimed he had emergency powers under the Constitution. The
(01:56:25):
opinion stands for the proposition that there are no emergency powers.
The rights guaranteed by the Constitution are guaranteed in good
times and in bad. They apply to the government and
to individual persons as well. But what triggered this was
not just my speech this weekend, and I wrote about
this either last week or the week before. What triggered
(01:56:48):
this as these prosecutions by the Biden Justice Department of
these Americans and Russians. For as Chris Array, the director
of the FBI, says, advancing Russian propaganda. Well, you can
advance any idea you want in the political environment, in
(01:57:10):
the political context in America, and the government can't evaluate
it and say this is acceptable, and this is not acceptable.
The reason we have a First Amendment is to prevent
them from doing that.
Speaker 1 (01:57:21):
Amen to that, but didn't stop President Woodrow Wilson another
thing you brought up here from and Congress from enacting
the Espionage Act in nineteen seventeen, which does exactly that.
Speaker 11 (01:57:32):
Yes, yes, And I love the tale that I told
in there. You know, Wilson is the former professor of
constitutional law and former president of Princeton University, then becomes
the governor of New Jersey for eighteen months and then
President of the United States. So while he's in the
White House, there are still students at Princeton whom he taught.
(01:57:55):
In order to taunt him, they went to the Draft
offices in Trenton, New Jersey, which is the local draft
office for Princeton, and they read subversive material aloud, and
he had them arrested because he felt it was impeding
a governmental function, which was the draft. What did they
(01:58:16):
read aloud? The Declaration of Independence. When he was challenged,
he gave a very very legalistic response. He said, read,
the First Amendment says Congress shall make no law bridging
the freedom speech. I'm not Congress, I'm the president. It
doesn't retain to me. Well, that would presume that the
(01:58:39):
president can make a law, which is what he effectively did.
And the footnote on this, he sent one federal agent
to Trenton to arrest these half dozen Princeton students. His
name was John Edgar Hoover.
Speaker 1 (01:58:53):
Oh new kidding. Yeah, Oh, my word, that is unbo believable.
Holy cow. Well. And then the other, the other story
or the other illustration or or or tale that is
woven around the First Amendment and how profoundly important they
(01:59:13):
are and how much it is protected this uh termini illo,
and the speech that he was a Roman Catholic priest,
as you point out, he was opponent of the Truman administration.
He's speaking with a crowd of almost two thousand people,
most of whom were supportives of him, but the detractors,
you know, were getting a little riotous. They stormed the stage.
They police tried to shut down his speech.
Speaker 10 (01:59:37):
And.
Speaker 1 (01:59:39):
Lo and behold, the Supreme Court said, no, you can't
do that.
Speaker 11 (01:59:43):
Then remind me, Joe when the when the crowd got routy,
the police told him to stop and leave. He said no.
The crowd trashed the place. They didn't arrest a single
person who trashed the place. They arrested the priest because
he wouldn't stop talking. Convicted and a cargo municipal court
upheld in an Illinois appellate court refused review by the
(02:00:06):
Illinois Supreme Court. US Supreme Court in a very very
famous case called termin Yellow versus Chicago, reversed the conviction
and said, the First Amendment is so important in our
culture it will even tolerate a violent audience. And there's
no such thing as the Heckler's veto, meaning just because
(02:00:28):
the audience is rowdy, that rowdiness cannot be used by
the government as an instrument to silence the speaker because
speech is paramount. Speech is paramount to safety.
Speaker 1 (02:00:41):
And this seems to have application in many state funded,
government funded universities who seem to want to stop conservative
minded speakers from uttering a syllable because the students are
going to get out of hand, the anti Jewish protesters
are going to get out of hand, the Prohamas for example,
protesters are going to get out of hand, So we'll
have none of that. It's all right there, it is.
Speaker 11 (02:01:04):
It is all right there. If you own private property,
that's been dedicated to the public use, meaning you're a
college or a university that accepts federal funds or state
funds in a state like New Jersey. I don't know
what the law is in Ohio. Then the First Amendment
applies to you. And if there is a public space,
(02:01:26):
and I'm talking about a dean's office, but if there's
a public space on the college, you can't silence students
because you don't like the content of their speech. And
if other students don't like the content of their speech,
it is your duty to protect the speaker, not to
silence the speaker, but to protect the speaker. Whether they're
pro nuts and Yahoo, pro IDF, pro hamas, whatever their
(02:01:50):
views are. The content is of no moment to the university.
They have to protect the speaker. Well, now, if it's
your backyard, if you invite me to a garden party
and I start spewing hate speak, you can throw me out.
It's your backyard. It's not dedicated to the public use.
There is no First Amendment right on private property unless
(02:02:13):
the private property has been dedicated to.
Speaker 1 (02:02:15):
The public One quick point need to make for we
part company today, Judge Innapolitano, when your company becomes so
inextricably intertwined with government that it becomes an extension of government.
Your company, as independent as it may be, like your backyard,
your company then must abide by First Amendment protections as well.
And I'm looking forward today when social media companies are
(02:02:39):
prohibited from removing content merely be based upon the viewpoint
of the speaker.
Speaker 11 (02:02:47):
That's called state action. When the private company, whether it's
Facebook or Verizon or Google, becomes so intertwined with the
government for the mutual benefit of both, than the restraints
imposed by the Bill of Rights on the government will
be imposed on the private company, the private landowner. I
(02:03:13):
think that's coming, Brian. I'm not here yet, but I
think it's coming.
Speaker 1 (02:03:16):
I do too, and I welcome that decision when it
ultimately comes. Judge, Editor Polatan, I'll always end on defending
freedom and your guests. Who's coming up?
Speaker 11 (02:03:26):
I have Colonel Douglas McGregor today at two o'clock. He's
my superstar analyzing the latest in Israel and Hesbala, but
mainly the thin ice that the government of Ukraine is
on and how old Joe and former President Zelensky's not
(02:03:48):
the president anymore. He just refuses to leave office. Are
doing everything they can to keep Zelensky above water until
November sixth.
Speaker 1 (02:03:59):
And we all know that you trainying government would more
than be happy with a Kamala Harris presidency versus Donald
Trump presidency given their comments on the situation in those countries.
Judge Edna Paula Tana Defending Freedom. Search for them online.
You'll find the podcast at Catching Judging Freedom, Judging Freedom.
I apologize, I've been getting it right. This is the
(02:04:19):
first day anyway. No chuck Ingram because Ingram's not there
to correct you. No, I know, throw me off my
ballance here until next Wednesday, my friend, God bless you, sir,
take care, Thank you, Brian, all the best and to
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