Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:08):
By Bot five.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
At the five k r C, the talk station at
the Tall.
Speaker 3 (00:28):
Vation.
Speaker 4 (00:30):
I'm the dude man, and I'm Brian Thomas and happy
to be back at work.
Speaker 1 (00:34):
I'll do my best, Folks.
Speaker 4 (00:36):
Like a bad case of RSV going through the family
and that's why I had to miss yesterday. Wow and
Knockwood and thank God. My poor wife is just cannot
stop coughing all night. I don't think she got an
hour's worth of sleep last night. So God love you, honey.
If you're feeling better today. Fortunately I've dodged that bullet
thus far. In Knockwood or do whatever I can't that
(00:59):
chinks my but I am feeling the effects of some
medication I'm on. So all the help I can get
this morning much appreciated, So feel free to call. You
can steer the direction of the conversation or leave it
up to me as I feel like the car's moving
in stereo is an appropriate theme song for my brain
right now. Anyway, thanks to Kevin Gordon for covering for
(01:22):
me yesterday. Out of an abundance of caution, I didn't
come in because I really expected that cough to kick
in in full earnest. I hope I'm just not behind
the curve and then I'm dodging the bullet. So enough
of that that what's coming up this morning? Seven oh
five Dan Regan Old, God blessed Dan Reganold for creating
empower you seminars generally speaking many years ago. Tonight he's
(01:43):
going to be talking about the well the national debt.
Main seminar is going to be a guy by a
guy named Dave Manson who's going to discuss maintaining a
good work life balance. He'll begin at seven thirty, but
Dame kicks it all off right at seven oh five
this morning and at seven pm tonight about well the
interest on the debt, among other things, and what the
(02:03):
two administrations look like in terms of their proposals. Star contrasts.
At least there is a star contrast between the Trump
proposals in terms of taxes and tariffs and Kamala Harris's proposals.
They're concerning well, getting rid of the Donald Trump tax
cuts and raising the corporate taxes, among other things. So
break down with Dan Reagan only got some sad news
(02:23):
about interest payments presently, sort of as a nice springboard
for Dan's conversation at seven oh five with us this morning,
followed by seven thirty I'm sorry, seven thirty this morning,
and we'll get by seven thirty pm seminar with Dave Manchin.
Confused with seven thirty this morning. Tom Claven's got a
new book, Bandit Heaven, the whole of the Wall Gangs
(02:45):
and the final chapter of the Wild West. We'll talk
with Tom at seven thirty about that. You can get
a copy of the book at fifty five car Sea
dot com. It's Tuesday, which means we get the inside
scoop of bright Bardon News today. Capitol Hills reporter Nick
gilbertson the latest on the election and the Deep Dive
with Daniel Davis. Another report on the couple of wars
we're going to be focusing on. Of course, you heard
(03:07):
the top of the Arnas Russia making more inroads in
Ukraine looks like a lost cost for Ukraine. I don't
mean to sound like a downer Debbie or Debbie downer
on that, but every day I wake up looks like
Russia's making further gains in Ukraine's back on its heels,
demanding NATO membership and of course more arms. I don't
see anything positive going on in so far as the
(03:29):
folks in Ukraine right now. But you can feel free
to call me correct me if you think I'm wrong.
Daniel Davis certainly will. And of course tomorrow Judge jennenal
Palaton with eight thirty five one three, seven four nine
fifty five hundred, eight hundred eighty two to three talk
go with time five fifties on AT and T phones
in case you got something to say, I would love
to hear from you. And as far as Dan's topic
(03:51):
of conversation, wasn't quite sure where I was going to
start this morning, but why not here latest Treasury report,
oh good ee. Spending and revenues for the full fiscal
year which and it's September results in a case the
deficit top one point eight trillion, the third largest in history,
eclipsed only by the COVID nineteen pandemic spending years, which,
(04:12):
of course COVID nineteen was used as a wonderful excuse
to jackob spending and well with pretty much zero accountability
or oversight as to where that money went out and
went to. Figures of late that they've got extra COVID
money still weighing around that hasn't been spent. Lots of
people receive COVID money that never should have. We're not eligible,
ergo committed crimes or felonies or otherwise obilgated to return
(04:36):
that money. How long do you think it'll take the
federal government to go after it? And do you think
they will in the first place? Sorry, I had to
get that out of my system anyway, Third highest in history.
Apparently not because the lack of revenues. Revenues up nearly
half a trillion dollars this year. Spending, However, the Biden
Harris fiscal year climbed more than ten percent increase spending
(05:01):
a six hundred and seventeen billion dollars. Whoa, And here's
where the rubber meets the road. All that additional spending
at higher interest rates now means the interest payment is
even more than we're spending on military. Interest payment's hit
eight hundred and eighty two billion dollars for the fiscal year,
(05:26):
representing sit down for this one, folks, a thirty five
percent jump from just last year and eight billion dollars
then more than we spend on national defense. Anybody feel
like this is an unsustainable thing? That this we are
on a downward spiral. Anybody out there that's in a
seeking elected office or already an elected office, ever considered
(05:49):
maybe tightening the belt a little bit, maybe not spending
so much damn money. First time in our nation's history
that interest on the debt exceeded defense spending, and it's
supposed to get bigger that gap. Government spending two hundred
billion more in interest than defense spending by calendar year
(06:11):
twenty twenty nine. By my account, that's not much. That's
not real far down the road, considering how quickly the
years passed, especially as you get older people in my
age group. You understand that, don't you. So what's the
reason for this massive run up? Well, of course Kamala
Harris and her tie breaking vote. Chaffin brags about that
which the tie breaking vote of the so called Inflation
(06:34):
Reduction Act added literally trillions and trillions of dollars in
new spending when the economy had already fully recovered from
the COVID nineteen pandemic.
Speaker 1 (06:42):
Ah.
Speaker 4 (06:45):
That sparked inflation, which drove up interest rates, meaning you
borrow at a higher interest rate, meaning the interest pay
the money paying interest goes up precipitously like it did
in this last fiscal year. So they did the numbers.
I zero had to report on this, but I think
it was a reprint from an article appearing in Issues
(07:08):
and Insights by their editorial board. Over Insights, how do
we do Abiden and Harris sort of blame for this
precipitous increase in the interest payments? Prior to taking office,
the CBO projected net interest payments for the next decade,
relying on the policies that Donald Trump had in place,
which is all they had to go on. They said,
(07:28):
had Biden not spent us into the poorhouse their words,
not mine, interest payments on the national debt this year
would have been only and stick your tongue in your
cheek when you say only two hundred and eighty four
billion dollars, I'd like to see that on your credit card.
So Harris and her tie breaking votes responsible for what
(07:49):
they ultimately calculated as a two hundred and ten percent
increase in interest costs in this year alone. So more fundamentally,
while we're trying to figure out what Kamala Harris is
running on and what she stands for, you get a
different narrative on that one depending on who in the
in the Harris campaign you're actually talking to It got
(08:11):
some sad but also at the same time comical illustrations
of that. With regard to where Harras stands on fracking, boy,
that one's all over the place. I don't eve think
her people know where she stands on that. But did
anybody ever ask her what she's going to do in
so far as dealing with this, I don't know that
anybody has. Well, she has said her values have not changed.
(08:38):
Go back and see what she ran on in twenty nineteen,
very expensive stuff. Add to that reparations and all these
new programs, plus a six thousand dollars tax credit per child,
and we could go on and on and on and
on about all the giveaways she's proposing, all of which
are yes, deficit inspiring, but no one really has checked
(09:00):
into se specifically what she plans on doing about if
you add additional dollars and how much more you're going
to be paying in interest and debt service on that.
How can we continue down this road? Miss Harris, you
want to explain that how the nation can well continue
to defend itself in the face of ever growing interest
payments which eat into literally every aspect of our spending. Now,
(09:27):
oh that's right, economically ruinous tax heights and more regulations.
That'll actually help the situation, won't it. Note that tax
revenues have increased significantly, so the whole I always like
(09:47):
to point to that when you lower the tax rate,
you tend to you as a government, take in more
revenue because the lower tax rate increases our economic activity.
More people go out and spend. Businesses hire more people,
Businesses acquire more equipment. They invest in the future of
the business by going out into the world and acquiring
(10:08):
goods and services that allow them to expand their business.
All of that economically inspiring. It's good for the economy.
Lower the taxes give us more money, and more taxes
end up flowing into government. Rapacious taxation causes belt tightening,
no investment, fewer jobs, demonstrably prove proven over and over
(10:29):
and over and over and over again. Let's try to
convince the left to that it just interferes with their
class warfare and whell their desire to regulate you into
oblivion or at least into full compliance. Five point fifteen
right now, fifty five kr CD talk station plenty more
coming up to talk about. I do have local stories
at the bottom and they are also stacking stupid at
(10:50):
five point forty, but always prefer talking to you, so
you can feel free to call. Stay right here at
fifty five kr CD Talk station. Here's your nine first
warning weather forecast see here. Mostly sunny skies today highest
seventy eight player every night down at fifty six. Tomorrow
partly cloudy with the highest seventy eight overnight clear in
(11:12):
forty four and Thursday it's going to be a sunny
day with the highest sixty seven forty seven degrees Right
now the fifty five care CB talks station. It is
five nineteen and uh Tuesday, Insight scood Tuesday. Daniel Davis
Dutie Tuesday. I'm pretty seated by that. Dan raganall at
(11:34):
seven oh five on the Oupumton National Debt and Tom
Claven with the book Bandit Heaven Hold the Wall Gangs
in the final chapter of the Wild Wild West. That'll
be at seven thirty. You can get a copy of
that fifty five Carsea dot Com. Thanks again to Kevin
Gordon for covering for me yesterday and let us see here.
Early votings really kicked in in earnest. That's some numbers. Locally,
(11:56):
I'm glad to see a lot of folks are out voting.
They've already they which surpassed a record in Georgia. Georgia,
already one point four million votes have been cast, not
quite as significant locally in terms of Butler and the
various other counties. Locally, Butler County Board of Elections said
they've been on average two thousand daily voters at the
(12:19):
Butler County Board of Elections so far twenty thousand ballots
out of two hundred and fifty five thousand people are
registered to vote. That's a significant amount. Their deputy director
there was quoted by e delegacybo speaking with Valerie Lions there,
our early voting has been very busy, and it looks
(12:39):
like our early venter numbers are really close to what
we've seen in twenty twenty, so maybe not record setting,
but on par at least Clairemont County. Let's see officials
there seeing an average of one thousand early voters daily.
They expect to see that number to increase more like
eleven hundred as the polling hours expand over the next
couple of weeks. One hundred and fifty thousand people registered
(13:00):
so far twenty one thousand and fifty absentee by mail
ballot requests as of Monday. Over to Warren County, they
said early voting numbers are holding steady. As of last night,
eighteen thousand or plus people have cast their ballots. Mail
in ballot requests down forty from twenty to twenty, but
(13:22):
they did mail out twenty five thousand I'm ahead of
the upcoming election. Nearly fourteen thousand have been returned. Finally,
over to Hamilton County, more than twenty nine thousand people
have already cast early about it's averaged three thousand per day,
So again early voting not just for Democrats anymore. And
again turning to Georgia, the numbers are off the charge
and of course one of the key battleground states. They
(13:47):
say they've been shattering turnout records since early voting began
last Tuesday. As of Monday morning, websites showed that one million,
three hundred and forty seven thousand plus ballots have been
cast in person and eighty thousand absentee ballots have been
returned and accepted, so significant numbers there obviously impactful state
(14:08):
that one and one of the key key states to
of course winning the election, and so far as our
every time I mentioned listener lunch is the day after
the elections, we're either going to be celebrating or drowning
our sorrows. And some are saying we might not even know,
(14:29):
and there is some accuracy in that. I saw this
Fox News predictor Arnin Mushkin ahead of the network's decision desk.
He suggested the other day the over under is four
days after the election for when the declaration of a
winner will actually be made. Said the race is going
(14:50):
to be too close to call for several days after
the election. The over and under Saturday, talking with Politico
on that one, which is when the call was made
last time. So he said in explaining why I think
it's going to four days. And so I think we
I think we pretty good understanding how they were going
to report in twenty twenty. What we don't know but
(15:11):
we kind of knew then was that there was going
to be an enormous skew in the vote type that
I believe that Joe Biden won every state in the
mail in vote with the exception of Alabama, and that
Trump won every state on election day, with the exception
of Vermont and maybe Connecticut, but there was a huge skew,
and I think that skew isn't is going to be
less this time. Going back to the early voting, Democrats
(15:34):
owned early voting early on, so the big push for
early voting. Obviously in an effort to even these numbers out,
Republicans get out and vote, have that vote recorded so
they don't have to twiddle our thumbs and wait around.
So I know it's going to do he said, I
know it's still going to be there, but the Republicans
are doing a much better job of encouraging people to
(15:55):
vote however they want. So obviously the race close suggests
that it's depending on a number of states like Pennsylvania
that we believe are going to be reporting in a
pattern similar to the way they reported in the past.
So the over and under Saturday, which is when the
call was made last time. So twitdle our thumbs A scoch.
We may have to probably have a pretty good idea
(16:19):
pretty good idea Listener lunch Ron's rust, it's maybe we
can continue to watch the numbers come in. Get a
couple of television sets up over it at Ron's russ
and why aren't men voting for Kamala Harris? Well, she
has an answer to that. It's misogyny. You are a misogynist,
which I think is the most preposterous thing. You know,
(16:42):
I'm fifty nine years old. I have voted for women.
I think my entire life as a voter, there have
always been women on the on the on the ballot.
And whoever thought a woman couldn't do as good of
a job as a guy under any given circumstances, depending
on the quality and the caliber or the candidate. Women
in quite all and do a much better job. The
(17:02):
idea that someone wouldn't vote for someone purely based upon
the fact that they're a different sex or that they
are a woman, when we have actual policy positions that
we can make better choices on. Speaking with Sharpton, Sharpton,
do you think some of the resistance of some men
(17:24):
black and white is misogynists? And are you proud to
see the most Americans, even being polled, have no problems
supporting a woman at all.
Speaker 1 (17:32):
That's the point. Al It's not her being a woman.
Speaker 4 (17:36):
It may have something beyond that, like things she'll actually
have control over on your specific point, I think that
you're absolutely right that there is this narrative about what
kind of support we're receiving from black men that is
just not panning out jumps increase mung The black community
(17:57):
has rung alarm bells with a Harris campaign agenda for
black men, legalizing marijuana, new loan programs, preferred banking options
for entrepreneurs, preferred apprenticeship programs, and mentor programs. That was
her answer to her flagging support among black men handouts
across the board. Many consider the whole marijuana thing being disrespectful.
(18:18):
Lots of black men have come out. If you've watched
social media on that, and I you know who gets
you know, increased in terms of views on social media
is beyond me. That's like the peace of God. But
a lot of black men not taking real kindly to
some of that things. We think we can be bought.
You think dangling marijuana in front of us, that think
it's rather insulting anyhow misogyny. Right, there's nothing to do
(18:44):
with her policies, nothing to do with how you feel
now versus well, how you felt at the end of
the Trump administration five twenty six fifty five care see
the talk station, got local stories coming up. Hoping to
stick around right here at fifty five care see the
talk station.
Speaker 1 (19:02):
VISI your nine first one.
Speaker 4 (19:03):
We the forecast going to be honestly sunny day warmer
highest seventy eight overy night clear in fifty six seventy
eight with party, cloudy skyes Tomorrow overnight low forty fourth
clear skies, and Sunday on Thursday highest sixty seven forty
six degrees. Right now, I think you've got KERCD talk
station that's five thirty and a happy Tuesday to you.
(19:25):
Five one, three, seven four nine fifty five hundred, eight
hundred and eighty two three talk found five fifty on
eighteen and t found so not a little bit sluggish.
I am, admittedly so dealing with this well. I think
I think it's RSD, But regardless, that's why I was
off yesterday and still prayers going after my wife, who
was just absolutely a mess. I don't think she slept
(19:47):
in an hour last night, coughing the entire night virtually.
I've been spared that knockwood that I continue to avoid
that downfall me. It's bad, and it is everywhere I've
talked to, so many people that are struggling with apparently
not a damn thing you can do about it either.
Over to local stories, seventy seven year old woman arrested
(20:07):
after a man was shot and killed. Happened to Westwood
last our Saturday or Sunday evening rather since I police
called to the twenty seven hundred block of East Tower
Drive off of the Queen City Avenue about ten till
eight pm. They got there, they found fifty eight year
old Arthur Osborne suffering from a gunshot wound. Police said,
since I fired, department personnel determined he was dead at
the scene. Since the police arrested seventy seven year old
(20:32):
Kathleen Geigers, he used to be in charge one count
of reckless homicide. According the documents, Geiger told police that
the shooting happened as a result of a joke. Documents
say Geigers shot Osborne one time in the Telvic region
after the pair were engaged in harmless banter when he
(20:52):
jokingly requested that she shoot him. That's a quote from
the police report. Court document say Geiger told police she
believed the gun was unloaded when she pointed at Osborne
and pulled the trigger. Judge ordered shed be held on
a ten thousand dollars bond. I could offer commentary on that,
(21:16):
but I think it kind of goes without saying. Coran
Avenue one of the main roads from Cincinna's west side,
also home to Scott hand, who was speaking with Andy
Rowan over at WCPO. We should probably be wearing vests
because this is dangerous, he said, standing out on the
sidewalk in front of his house. Cars zooming buy. This
is dangerous just to be here. Apparently, since the Department
(21:41):
of Transportation and Engineering doing some traffic counts back and
the August Division of Traffic and Engineering use cables at
the intersection of Coleraine and north of Leaper Street to
record each car's speed. W CCPA review data and August
twenty first showing of near twenty two thousand vehicles seventy
(22:03):
six percent we're going faster than the thirty five mile
per hour post of speed limit of the drivers heading
down the street southbound inclined thirty three percent traveling ten
or more miles above this league speed limit. The resident there,
mister Hann, said, the cars going down here will already
exceeding the speed limit even without using the gas cities
(22:25):
recorded data, he said, justification to what he already knew.
We started a spreadsheet and ultimately lost track and the
number of crashes that have happened after the interview was conducted.
Apparently another crash occurred between two cars. Both cars okay,
but timing couldn't have been better. So it happened just
feet from a metro bus stop across from the apartment complex.
(22:46):
The crossing path unmarked. Neighbors say they need to dodge
trafford to get to the pickup point. To help drivers
slow down, the city installed road tattoos that marked the
speed limited radar signs RDAR speed signs. He said he's
noticed a slight difference, but most people are disregarding it.
(23:07):
Different solution now in the works. Earlier this month, Mayor
aftab perval A lotted five hundred thousand dollars for speed
cushions along that stretch of the road. It's fund coming
out of these sixty five million dollars from last year's budget.
Speaker 1 (23:22):
Hey Joe, they had money left over from last year.
Speaker 5 (23:25):
How about that?
Speaker 4 (23:26):
Pur of all said Corain Avenue was a hotspot and
need of additional safety measures, and an email to WCPO
Senior Manager or planner Melissa McVeigh said a total of
sixteen of these cushions will be installed at four locations.
Each gets one set fifty two to twenty nine coal rain,
fifty eighty one coal rain corain at Rayburn, and forty
(23:47):
five to fifty coal rain construction weather dependent. Exact stretch
of Road four lane Incline, a terrain Pervoll called a
challenging part of the city's infrastructure and that we've got
to get cars to slow down there, Joe asserts, and
I think it's a legitimate assertion that after Burmol has
(24:09):
never been in that area of town before. Yeah, those things,
snowploles work on those things. It seems like a snowpub
will just like rip that off. All right, Well, that's
for them to navigate and deal with. I presume Joe
(24:31):
that they've done studies showing that snowplus can actually go.
Speaker 1 (24:33):
Over those Maybe they haven't.
Speaker 4 (24:39):
Joe is offering to do a study of that for
two million dollars plus access and use to the snowplow
equipment and a liability waiver from the City of Sinceinny
that will not hold Joe's tracker responsible for any damage
done to these speed cushions or pedestrians in the way
of Joe operating the snowplow. Five thirty six fifty five
(25:00):
detalk stations. Zimmer Heating and air Conditioning getting close to
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inspect your system, make sure everything's clean and working, and
stay ahead of any problems that are going on. And
as of right now, I still am under the impression
(25:20):
of the cool carrier comfort rebates going on. So if
your air conditioning unit and we're still using them, I
know I'm still using mine temperatures above seventy two, it's
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a go. It's go Zimmer dot com. That is go
Zimmer dot com.
Speaker 6 (26:05):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 1 (26:09):
What's the.
Speaker 4 (26:12):
Asian and I first one of a weatherboard cask got
a sunny day to day with the highest seventy eight
clear of a night fifty six party cloudy tomorrow with
the highest seventy eight clear over night forty four. Thursday's
got to be a sunny day with the highest sixty seven.
It's forty eight degrees right now. Hire for the first
traffic report of the morning from the UCL Traffic Center.
When it comes to stroke, every second counts. That's why
(26:34):
you see Comprehensive Stroke Center is your clear choice for
rapid life saving treatment.
Speaker 7 (26:39):
Learn more at uc how dot com. Highway traffic that's
not bad at all to start off your Tuesday morning,
No rex to deal with, and not even a broken
down that's causing any extra time. North Bend seventy five
doing fine out of ourline gore into downtown. That's under
seven minutes in ben seventy four wide open at coal
Ring Chuck Ingram fifty five KRC.
Speaker 1 (27:00):
The talk station.
Speaker 4 (27:04):
It's five forty if if you have care see the
talk station. Happy Tuesday. Try to make it so anyway
and call feel free five one three, seven four nine
to fifty five hundred eight hundred eight to three talk
found f my fifty if you got at and T phones.
I see Christopher Smith was on the Smith event yesterday.
I was sleeping, trying to sleep off the cold and
Kevin Gordon, thank you so much for filling in yesterday.
(27:25):
I truly appreciate it. I missed my conversations with Christopher, though,
so I miss being on the radio as well. Anyhow,
I don't ever, ever, ever regret and always miss not
doing a stack of stupid. So let's get to the
stack of stupid. Some interesting ones here two vacationing friends
coming back from Dominican Republic. They were on the beach,
(27:49):
so one of them decided to go topless and hang
out the car window. Is the other clicked video on
her mobile phone. You know the where this is going,
don't you what? Thirty five year old Natalia boro Dina
happened to be the mother of a ten year old boy,
was flaunting her body. The one that was hanging topless
(28:09):
outside of the car, hit her head on a roadside
a road sign rather and died. Idiots doing idiot things
because there idiots.
Speaker 1 (28:19):
Yeah, she was from Russia.
Speaker 4 (28:21):
Her companion, I suppose, the one driving, thirty one year
old Ivana Biorachuk, Ukrainian, the one filming her, has been
detained by a police on suspicion of drunk driving.
Speaker 1 (28:32):
We had the video.
Speaker 4 (28:33):
Natalia can be seen what they describe in a playful
mood and laughing at the camera before tragedy stroke. She
died of severe injuries.
Speaker 1 (28:46):
Her friend.
Speaker 4 (28:49):
Say what you Want said that the dead woman did
not deserve to be judged by her reckless behavior that
led to her death. She helped to help her poor
family with everything. She was hoping for a better future,
and anyone can make a mistake. Why should we judge
her by just one video? Are we all saying so? No,
this is what we describe as a cautionary tale. We
(29:10):
read about this and let people know about it, because well,
when you're thinking about doing something foolish, like this. You
might remember that Russian Natalia Borodina had her head blown up,
I guess by a roadsign because she was doing something
reckless and dangerous while her car was being operated by
someone under the influence of alcohol. Lesson to be learned,
(29:32):
well and topless. Yes, Joe, okay, all right, this sounds interesting.
Four Sri Lankan fishermen are dead. Two are critically ill
after consuming an unknown liquid from bottles they file they
(29:53):
found while out at sea. They were on a fishing
trip and they were trieved bottles around three hundred twenty
nautical miles from a town on the southern coast of
the island, Tangali. Sri Lanka Navy told reporters the fishermen
had drunk from the bottles thinking they contained alcohol. Director
(30:17):
of the Sri Lanka Defartmative Fisheries and Aquatic Resources told
several outlets that the Navy's attempting to bring them back
to shore. He reportedly said that the Navy is providing
medical attention to the metabor the fishing vessel over concerns
that there wasn't enough time to return them to land
for treatment. BBC approached the spokesman there and the Sri
(30:37):
Lankan Navy confirmed comment. National news station told He told
National news station Ada Dorana that the fishermen had distributed
some of the bottles to other crews operating in the area.
Attempts to notify those crews were being made. Authorities are
(31:00):
investigating the contents of the bottles. I don't know whether
I read about this or it was in I think
it was maybe part of a movie. Somebody was breaking
into someone's home and saw a bottle of what looked
like a three quarters full bottle of scotch and started
drinking it down. Turns out it was chemicals used to
(31:22):
process film to develop film, and that person expired again.
I can't recall that. Yeah, I know, if you ain't
sure about it, don't drink it, know what I mean.
Five forty five ifty five cares to thetalk station. That's
just crazy. Chimneycare Fireplace and Stow. Take care of your comfort,
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full of everything related to fireplaces at free standing stoves available.
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They are a huge selection of fireplace insert the accessories
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They have fireplace inserts that are also self feeding wood
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They have free standing versions of those as well. Streker's
got one of those. And it's all about safety right now.
I would argue, you've got plenty of time to take
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fire and whatever firebox you're using. So have the chimney inspected.
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So it's Chimneycare code dot com. Here's the number five
one three two four eight ninety six hundred. That's five
one three two four eight ninety six hundred fifty five
the talk station. Sometimes there's your Channel nine first Warning
(33:32):
weather forecast. Got a sunny day to the day, seventy
eight for the high overnight fifty six and clear seventy
eight with partly cloudy skies tomorrow with an overnight low
of forty four and clear sunny on Thursday, high sixty
seven forty seven.
Speaker 1 (33:44):
Right now, it's get an update on traffic.
Speaker 7 (33:48):
From the U see up Traffic Center. When it comes
to stroke, every second counts. That's why you see Comprehensive
Stroke Center is your clear choice for rapid life saving treatment.
Learn more and you see health dot com clean slate.
I'm behind ways for your Tuesday morning. No accidents to
deal with overnight work cruise. They're wrapped up and done.
Don't forget. You're down to just one way and in
each direction on Spring Grove near the Western Hills Via
(34:12):
due to a water main breakover the weekend and parcel
road collapse.
Speaker 1 (34:16):
Chuck Ingram on fifty five KR see the talk station.
Speaker 4 (34:21):
Five fifty one fifty five car see the talk station
and a happy Tuesday to you. Returning now, I am
to the stack is stupid? Woman to New York, presumed
dead after she passed out in a rubbish container after
a night out drinking and was apparently crushed to death
(34:43):
before being incinerated after the garbage man came to empty it.
Speaker 8 (34:49):
Two.
Speaker 1 (34:50):
What happens?
Speaker 4 (34:51):
My sentiments exactly Just Tracker investigators reportedly looking into the
traces of the woman's DNA and a landfill site after
the contents of the trap or the garbage men wor
incinerated at a waste disposal plan. Student Agustina Rubini Medina
had been missing in Majorca for a couple of weeks
after disappearing after a night of partying with her friends.
(35:13):
Spanish police said Thursday of the seventeenth they believed that
she died in a well in the in the bin
so dumpster basically they called a bin Laurie, but they
reportedly used her mobile phone day to reconstruct the movements,
Deputy police chief Ndo Rebelias saying quote, she was a
thin woman who had difficult to consume an alcohol, this
made worse by the medications she was taking.
Speaker 1 (35:37):
While waiting for a bus around mid nine.
Speaker 4 (35:39):
Investigators believe an item of hers fell into the garbage
bin and she got went in to retrieve it, but
then passed out from the alcohol. According to investigators and
the mobile phone data covering the to recreate what happened
when the garbage truck emptied the bin and crushed her
to death. A witness was waiting for a bus shortly
before her death and noticed her handbag placed neatly next
(36:02):
to the container, but didn't think anything out of it.
The witness was at the bus stop at about a
quarter after twelve in the morning, reportedly did not hear
her call for help or scream before the garbage man
arrived at twenty seven minutes after the hour to empty
the band.
Speaker 1 (36:17):
Investigator seven.
Speaker 4 (36:18):
The vehicle reached a waste incineration plant a little before
one o'clock in the morning. That's when the twenty four
year old woman's phone went dead. Investigators working around the
clock to find traces of her DNA among the ashes
and garbage at the landfill site.
Speaker 1 (36:35):
The investigation is ongoing.
Speaker 3 (36:39):
Well, we used to get you out and the open there.
Speaker 1 (36:41):
Wow, Joe, Well this is bizarre.
Speaker 4 (36:49):
Court to the Associated Press, the spokeswoman Elvira Biganova described
the incident that anyone could have made in the scenario.
Speaker 9 (36:59):
What is this?
Speaker 4 (37:01):
Let us find out A guy working on with explosive
chemicals at the time he was studying, was thought to
have mistaken incredibly volatile explosives for citric acid. Citric acid
this guy would regularly use to prolong the flavor of
his gum while working. This explosive powder was situated on
(37:24):
his station. Apparently looked similar to the citric acid powder,
which is in literally everything soft drinks, foods, anything that
has a sour taste to it. Anyway, the police spokesperson
as being an Ova person explained that the chemistry students
chewing gum exploded in his mouth, tearing off half of
(37:44):
his face. Yeah, she said, it blew off this guy
Lakhona's jaw and most of the lower part of his
face was left him in critical condition. In a statement,
said even some of our seasoned officers who have seen
(38:04):
a thing or two, even they were pretty badly shaken
up by what they found. During the initial investigation, officer
exam of the table where he had been working and
found approximately three and a half ounces of the explosives.
She explained that the power resembles citric acid but had
not yet been identified. Went on to sympathize with the
kid and claimed anybody could have mixed them up. Bomb
(38:25):
squad called the location determine what the substance was and
was found that it was far too volatile to even
transport Courtinokle, local news outlets Exports said this kid, who
was from the town of Caught, a top eastern Ukraine,
had dipped his gum into the powder, which was four
times more powerful than tn T.
Speaker 1 (38:44):
There it is just laying around at his workstation. Oh,
what's this?
Speaker 4 (38:50):
Mixed reports however, or whether he was in the university
or at home, and as one source claims in Russian
that his brother had found his body in his room
after hearing a loud bang within the house. HM assistant
head of the city police department, shared that he sustained
the injuries as soon as the chewing bomb hit the mouth.
(39:11):
Dean of the chemical engineering facility responded to the reports
of his death and told the outlet Local news outlet
he got an A in chemistry, but his grades and
other subjects were average. Yes, Vladimir was not a poor student,
but he never graduated from KPI. He could not defend
his diploma thesis and was expelled last year. It's a
shame he died. But they don't teach you how to
make bombs at KPI, the school where he, I guess
(39:34):
blew up. So don't teach you proper storage of volatile
explosives either, Just like why do you just take into
the piece of gum and put in his mouth. He's
on a budget fifty six fifty five car CD dog station.
We have plenty of coming up in the six o'clock hour.
I'd love to hear from you tick the burden off
my wavering, cold ridden voice. That'd be awesome five three, seven, nine,
(39:59):
fifty five hundred and eight hundred and eighty two to
three talks. Dan Reagane'll do that at seven oh five,
and so will Tom Claven with his book at seven
point thirty.
Speaker 1 (40:07):
Bandit Hate Heaven. I'll be right back after the news.
Kamala Fight. This is where you get the very latest
twenty four fifty five KRC the talk station. Let's drink keep.
Speaker 4 (40:23):
That is six six here fifty five PARISD talk Station.
My name is Ryan Thomas. Glad to be back. Thanks
Kevin Goring for coming for me yesterday. Really hopefully dodged
the bigger bullet RSV. I think is what's gone through
the family. My wife did not sleep a wink last night.
She's been coughing NonStop for the last four days and
so far knockwood multiple times. Pray to God I avoid
(40:48):
that because there is no way, there is no possible
way I could be sitting here right now if I
was played with that terrible, terrible cough. So RC is
going around and you know, tightness in the check, tickling
in the throat, the cough, the deep cough. So I
really really pray for you. You've got the symptoms. They're
not fun. Really, not a whole lot you can do
(41:09):
about it. Drink a lot of fluids, get your rest,
you know how to deal with that. But apparently there
aren't any antibiotics or anything you can take that are
going to help you avoid any of the downsides. So anyway,
this too shall pass. But appreciate Kevin Gordon covering for me.
I'll managed to stumble through this morning with any help
from you. You happy to bring provide that help. Call
me five one three, seven, four nine fifty eight two
(41:30):
three talk before we get to Bill, who is on
the line. Hang on one second, Bill, one hour for now.
Dan Reganold, he's a He's doing the first half hour
of the empower Youse seminar tonight. National debt is the
topic of conversation. He's actually going to dive into the
differences between, to the extent we know them, Kamala Harris's
proposals and Donald Trump's proposals in so far as spending
(41:50):
and tax cuts and the like. As I pointed out
this morning, interest payments are already now more than our
defense spending for the first time in history, largely to
blame the Kamala Harris Joe Biden administration. That's so called
Inflation Reduction Act, among others. Anyway, national debt the topic
(42:10):
for Dan. He'll be talking about that coming up in
an hour. Little Insight into the End seminar that's going tonight,
Empower Youamerica dot Org.
Speaker 1 (42:16):
Seven point thirty.
Speaker 4 (42:18):
We're gonna hear from Tom Claven with the book Bandit Heaven,
The Hole in the Wall, Gangs, and the final.
Speaker 1 (42:25):
Chapter of the wild West.
Speaker 4 (42:26):
Seven thirty for that, fast forward a couple hours inside
Scoop with Bright Barton News Today Capitol Hill reporter Nick
Gilbertson on the latest on the election and it being Tuesday,
Daniel Davis deep dive. We're going to get an update again,
of course on the war between Russia and Ukraine not
looking good for the Ukrainians, and of course the situation
in Israel. That's at eight thirty. Over to the phones
(42:46):
we go. Thank you for calling, Bill, Welcome to the
Morning Show. In a happy Monday I had tuesday to you.
Good morning there, cheez. How you doing been better? But
I'm small, I'm managing. I'm here and that's good enough
for me, buddy, you know, I'm It could be worse.
Speaker 10 (43:02):
Oh, yeah, and on your uh white thing, her having
the cold and cough thing. I tell you this is
an old country remedy. And then I have never had
a cold. I can't remember since I'm probably eighteen. It's onion,
white onion, eat them like an apple on a regular
(43:23):
and peppers. You'll never catch a colt and it wipes
on everything in the system. The systic, you know, the
acid in.
Speaker 5 (43:32):
The onion kills everything.
Speaker 10 (43:34):
Okay, I want to get you main point, and I
wish the best for it, and you I want to
get to my point, and uh man, we got to
get this straightened out here.
Speaker 9 (43:44):
We are not a democracy.
Speaker 10 (43:47):
We are a republic, and they're killing me. All these
people talking here like they're sitting there like they're so smart,
and you already know what they're gonna say. I mean,
truff is bad and communist hair, I call it communists hair,
which she is. I mean, they can't do no wrong.
(44:07):
But we are not a democracy. We are a republic.
And I cannot believe what I cannot. I can see
why why don't they have somebody, just one person in
all these talking heads have a rebuttal of this insanity
that they're trying to put over.
Speaker 11 (44:28):
They think they're smarter than us.
Speaker 1 (44:30):
We are a republic.
Speaker 11 (44:33):
I'm sorry, I wish the best for both of you, madam.
Speaker 10 (44:37):
I'll be quiet and thank you.
Speaker 1 (44:39):
Bill. You're right.
Speaker 4 (44:40):
I don't know about the onion remedy, but you are right.
We are a Republican. I do wish more people account
that would we would point that out, and maybe the
fact that they don't call it out and it isn't
regularly an initial rebuttal to whatever stupid point they're trying
to make, Like Donald Trump is a threat to democracy.
Speaker 1 (44:56):
Well, no he's not.
Speaker 4 (44:57):
We don't live in a democracy, so he can't be
a threat to constitutional republic. Read the documents and then
move on from there and then make whatever points they
need to be made. But you know, maybe it's a
reflection of the stupid of the American people that more
people like you don't immediately have that reaction. What do
you mean, threat to democracy? But it is all about
Trump though. See in doing that, they keep referring to
(45:20):
Trump as being a threat to democracy without even articulately
the reason why they might point to January sixth, not
a threat to even the republic, I might point out,
But they love to make a big deal about that,
and I think that was We're learning pretty much more
and more that that was an absolute setup. That is
the exact intended result that the anti Trump, the big
pro government, the lettered agencies, and those are in favor
(45:43):
of the deep state, and the perpetuation of it actually wanted.
If you leave the request for extra security, which were
denied Nancy Pelosia's sleep at the Wheel intentionally so, Donald
Trump said the National Guards should be out there in
advance of the thing that didn't happen, and then you
get a bunch of idiots, perhaps egged on by federal authorities.
More and more information coming out about that. Why were
(46:04):
all the FBI agents in there, Why were some of
them caught egging the egging on the protesters? Why was
all this advanced, you know, sort of entrapment type of
thing going on. Did they want to bring about the
drunken fraternity party that was yes, Well that's kind of
where I'm coming down on. I sound like a conspiracy theorist,
maybe just a pattern observer with nods to my friend Maureen.
(46:27):
But I had a conversation with a dear friend of
mine which will help me pivot over to this article
I have and I was speaking last week, and this
kind of maybe goes to the point about democracy threats
and we don't even live in a democracy. How smart
are you politically? And I'm talking to he is one
of my absolute dearest, longest friends. I love the guy
to death, but he has never ever paid a whole
(46:49):
lot of attention to politics. Smart guy he is, successfully
is you know, he's great on other topics and just
a whiz on other things. But having a conversation with
them that's started out this way, Brian, where do you
think is going to happen in this election? I'm like, oh, geez,
I get that question all the time. And I said,
you know, I don't know where to I don't know
(47:10):
what to think right now. I said. The world's a
crazy place. I said, but one thing I'll tell you is,
you know, I think Kamala's is an absolute idiot, and
I'm very, very afraid of her as being, you know,
of all things that stuck in my head commander in
chief of the United States military and being responsible for
foreign policy in this crazy world we find ourselves in,
(47:33):
with worlds with wars breaking out, our resources are stretched
so thin, read a real scary article about how prominent
the Chinese navy is, how their navy is bigger than ours,
and they're encircling Taiwan doing military exercises, intruding into Taiwan's
military airspace and airspace generally more and more regularly, just
(47:54):
sort of testing the boundaries of how we react. But
then again, we got carrier groups that are spread all
over the entire globe. There's concentrated in the South China
Sea and generally around Taiwan, putting a big, big advantage
point over them. So this kind of thing really concerns me.
But in the final analysis, the words came out of
his mouth. You know, I just cannot vote for Trump.
(48:18):
I said, oh, can you tell me why that is?
I just hate the man? I said, ah, you hate him?
Is there a particular policy that he has pushed that
you hate?
Speaker 12 (48:33):
Now?
Speaker 4 (48:35):
And we went into a deep dive discussion on a
whole number of topics. You know, the LGBTQ thing. He
is absolutely one hundred percent against the idea of men
participating in women's sports. He's against the whole gender pronoun
crap that has been shoved down our throat generally, you know,
against Wolk ideology, I said, and I won't say his name.
(48:57):
That's exactly what she has been pushing for years. That
is a policy that as president of the United States
of America, she will push. This will be further embedded
into America's culture if you go in her direction. Donald
Trump is at absolutely one hundred percent against it. He
doesn't believe that men should participate in women's sports. And
(49:20):
we went on ahead a number of other conversations about policy,
and I said, listen, buddy, I called him by his
real name, but again I'm leaving it off the record.
Can you name of all these reasons you really say
you dislike Donald Trump? Is there anything anything in that list,
(49:40):
long or short, that has anything to do with his
power as a president, the powers that he will have
as president, his policies, what he has done in the past,
what he promises to do in the future. The answer
absolutely no. The only reason he claims to have a
(50:01):
disdain for Donald Trump is because apparently he's just been
listening to the message races, xenophobe, homophobe, blah blah blah.
You've heard it all, evil Orange man. That's the only
thing over the multiple years Donald Trump has been a
public figure in the political realm that he has taken away.
That's how little he pays attention to politics. And so
(50:23):
when you pivot over and you stare at the Harris campaign,
and every single question is met with Donald Trump. But
Donald Trump, it's not here's what Kamala Harris proposes by
way of contrast to the policy positions of Donald Trump.
It's just an immediate pivot over too. But I'm not
Donald Trump. And I think that speaks volume, not only
(50:45):
of how indoctrinated so many American people are into this notion.
And go ahead and try to figure out all the
ways that Donald Trump's a liar or a xenophobe or
a homophobe or whatever, and you really can't come up
with anything concrete other than what the mainstream media has
told you he meant when he said like there were
good people there, that thoroughly debunked argument. Donald Trump was
(51:08):
not referring to the clan members at the rally. He
was referring to the general citizenry showing up at a
concern for their neighborhood. Not everybody there was on either
side of the evil forces. Some people there were good,
and in fact that's contextually speaking, exactly what he said.
Speaker 1 (51:24):
But no, he's been labeled with this. You know there
is a he's a pro clan guy. No he's not.
Speaker 4 (51:32):
But you see, read what the Harris campaign is saying.
Well they read what the surrogates are saying on her behalf.
Are they providing you with any substance? Are they immediately going?
But she's not Trump And when you boil it all down,
that's all she's running on because sadly, there are a
whole lot of people out there, like my dear friend,
(51:53):
who aren't paying any attention except for a couple of
memes and the drum beat SoundBite that we've been here
now for the past well eight years plus six eighteen
fifty five krs DE talk station five one three seven
four nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred eight two three
talk with pound five to fifty.
Speaker 1 (52:11):
If you have an AT and T phone and get.
Speaker 4 (52:14):
Your images at affordable imaging services, why would you go
anyplace else? Affordable imaging services. You can get an MRI,
a CT scan, a lung screening. This are only ninety
nine dollars at affordable imaging services. By the way, this
are very inexpensive ultrasound, you know ultra sounds two hundred
and fifty bucks. You can to a hospital. It's going
(52:35):
to be a couple of grand, couple thousand dollars. I
don't know what your deductible and cope is, but think
of the next calendar year when you're back to square
one with a ninety five hundred dollars out of pocket responsibility.
Do you have maybe five thousand dollars in your bank
account where you can pay for a CT scan which
is not going to be covered and t you've exhausted
that out of liability? Well, a CT scan at a
(52:55):
hospital could cost you five grand, then add extra for
the radiologist support, and add extra for the contrast. You know,
CT scan in affordable imaging services four hundred and fifty bucks.
Just a little bit more with a contrast, but that's
the only extra you'll pay for. And not all CT
scans require a contrast MRI. Same deal. Four hundred and
ninety five bucks for an MRI could be thirty five
(53:17):
hundred four thousand at the hospital, same kind of equipment,
same professional people using it, just really really low overhead.
Expect that when you go to affordable imaging you're there
because the cost is really really low and you'll save
thousands of dollars to schedule appointment and you have a
choice when it comes to your medical care. I went
to Affordable Imaging Services for my last CT scan. You
(53:38):
know what, no problems. That radiologist support was fine. It
showed what it showed sadly on my way to treatment
at this point five one three seven five three eight
thousand five one three seven, five three eight thousand. Online
it's Affordable Medimaging dot com fifty.
Speaker 1 (53:55):
Five KRC dot com.
Speaker 4 (53:57):
Hi here it is your nine first one one four
k as a sunny day for the most part, seventy
eight for the high out of fifty six overnight to
their skies party Cloudians seventy eight tomorrow with an overnight
clear forty four low and on Thursday sunny as well,
sixty seven for the high. It's forty six degrees Right now,
it's time for traffic from the.
Speaker 7 (54:15):
UCL TRAMFFHIC Center. When it comes to stroke, every second counts.
That's why you See Comprehensive Stroke Center is your clear
choice for rapid life saving treatment. Learn more at you
see Health dot com. Highway traffic continues to look good
this morning. I'm not seeing any major problems there, but
crews are working with an accident in Cleeves that has
fifty blocked off at State. In Hamilton, there's a wreck
(54:36):
on Maine at East Street. Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRC,
the talk station.
Speaker 1 (54:43):
Six fifty five KRC talk station.
Speaker 5 (54:46):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (54:46):
Further to my point on that it's Trump, Tump, tump, trimp. Trokes,
he's not Trump, She's not Trump, and not explaining what
she is. Meet the Press, NBC. Josh Shapiro, Pennsylvania Governor,
all critical state, We've learned Pennsylvania's key to winning, and
of course Kamala Harris struggling with what her position is
unfracking considering it employs thousands and thousands of Pennsylvania's Pennsylvanias
(55:08):
and billions of dollars in taxes revenue generated. Asked about
policy differences between well, Kamala Harrison President Biden, let us
see here Kristen Welker posing the question, are let us said,
BC Pole shows the more voters are concerned about vice,
that President Harris will continue Joe Biden's approach than Donald
Trump will continue his approach his from his first term,
(55:32):
pointed out shapere before asking if Harris has done enough
to distance herself from the president you know Kristen. His response,
I think what is clear that this race is not
between Kamala Harris and Joe Biden. You know where this
is going well, between Kamala Harrison and Donald Trump. But
on that there are clear contrasts. He didn't elaborate, though,
(55:52):
so she follows up, I understand what you're saying, Governor,
but POLS does show that more Americans feel as though
President Biden's policies have hurt them rather than help them.
So can you name one key policy difference between Vice
President Harris and President Biden? How would her administration look different?
(56:14):
Governor's response. You know, I've been really encouraged by the
amount of energy the Kamala Harris. Vice President Harris has
put into focusing on how she will cut taxes for
small business, the focus on childcare tax credit expansion. Can
you name one policy difference? Again, she's focusing on the
difference between Harris and Biden when Harris is on record
saying she wouldn't have changed the damn thing about Biden's policies.
(56:37):
His response, well, listen again, the contrast I am focused on,
Kristen parenthetically interject Brian Thomas, notwithstanding the question you're asking me,
the contrast I am focused on is between her and
Donald Trump, and on that I think it is clearly different. Well,
(57:00):
isn't whatever you mean by it the central focus of
the question. What is clearly different?
Speaker 9 (57:09):
What?
Speaker 4 (57:09):
Specifically? I guess we can draw the conclusion well, just
like the difference between Biden and Trump are different difference,
But just leave it floating out there exactly what the
hell is different than her and Joe Biden. I think
given all the collective responses and dodge dip, duck diving
(57:32):
and dodging the Harris campaign has been doing, nothing will
be different between Joe Biden's presidency and the Kamala Harris
vice presidency and a Kamala Harris presidency. Six twenty six
fifty five KRS detalk station looks like Bobby's on the line.
We'll get your call it a second five one, three, seven, four,
nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred eight two to three
(57:54):
talk after I mentioned Colin electric great thing to mention,
because if you have a house, you probably have some
sort of electric issue where maybe not greater improvement you
want to do, and they're the right ones to call.
Family in an operate in since nineteen ninety nine, Andrew
Collen is great team of licensed professional electricians will take
great care of you. It starts with customer service, arriving
on time and giving you a fair quote on the
(58:14):
work that needs to be done, whether it's a tiny
project or a huge one. They're great and they've done
big and small projects in my home and very happy
I am. And I always like to point out you
don't think I'd refer you to a place that I
wouldn't refer to my mom to. Mom's had the Colin
experience as well, a plus with a better business bureau.
Speaker 1 (58:32):
So whether you have a whole house rewiring job.
Speaker 4 (58:35):
Like get rid of the aluminum, the knob and tube wiring,
or just an extra outlet you need maybe in the
kitchen or someplace, Hey, folks with the right connections, that's
Cullen Electric. You can find them online Cullen CEE U,
L L E N. Colin Electric Cincinnati dot com. Schedule
the appointment right there or give them a call when
you do. Please tell them Brian said, Hi five one
three two two seven four one one two five one
(58:55):
three two two seven four one.
Speaker 1 (58:57):
One two fifty five KRC the talk station.
Speaker 5 (59:02):
Waking up on the right side.
Speaker 1 (59:05):
This is the Sean Hannity Morning Minute.
Speaker 3 (59:09):
Now they're closing argument. Donald Trump is racist.
Speaker 13 (59:11):
He's so racist that he's going to put use the
military and put journalists in jail.
Speaker 3 (59:17):
No, he's not. It's all lie. He will impose a
national sales tax if elected.
Speaker 1 (59:22):
That's a lie.
Speaker 3 (59:23):
He will use the military against American citizens.
Speaker 1 (59:27):
That's a lie.
Speaker 3 (59:28):
You know they lie that.
Speaker 13 (59:29):
Oh, Donald Trump is going to take away Social Security
and Medicare.
Speaker 1 (59:33):
They're lying.
Speaker 3 (59:34):
He's gonna support a national abortion band.
Speaker 1 (59:36):
No, he's not.
Speaker 3 (59:38):
He supports Project twenty twenty five. I do this every day.
Speaker 13 (59:43):
I've never looked at Project twenty twenty five. Donald Trump
has never looked at Project twenty twenty five.
Speaker 3 (59:50):
And he said so repeated, will from.
Speaker 1 (59:52):
Coast to coast, from sea to shining Sea. It's a
Sean Hannity show.
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Speaker 3 (01:00:59):
Rule and restrictions may apply.
Speaker 4 (01:01:01):
Seventy eight degrees clear Skys over Night, fifty six Party Colotty,
and seventy eight for the High Tomorrow with clear Skys
over Night, and I dropped to forty four Sunny on
Thursday with the highest sixty seven.
Speaker 7 (01:01:13):
It's forty six. Now let's hear about traffic from the
UCUP Trampion Center. When it comes to stroke, every second counts.
That's why you see comprehensive stroke in is your clear
choice for wrapping by saving treatment. Learn more. You see
how dot com smartlings blocked westbound two seventy five with
an accident afty you get pants loved one. So far,
I'm not seeing a huge delayed tickout pie traffic elsewhere
(01:01:36):
on the highways.
Speaker 5 (01:01:36):
Do we Okay?
Speaker 1 (01:01:37):
Cruise are also working with the wreck and.
Speaker 7 (01:01:39):
Cleaves that's on fifty at State chat Ingram on fifty
five krs the talk station.
Speaker 4 (01:01:49):
If it's about CARCD talk station, I do local stories,
but I have more callers onlines. Let's start with the callers.
Get several. Just wait, you'll get to your You'll be
next after Bobby. I got then Mike in New Hampshire, Gary, Bobby,
thanks for calling this morning.
Speaker 5 (01:02:02):
I'm glad you're not calling my brother.
Speaker 1 (01:02:05):
Oh so am, I.
Speaker 4 (01:02:08):
I feel it. It's back there. It's just keeping quiet
right now. So let's not jinx me man.
Speaker 8 (01:02:15):
Hey, since we got Liz Cheney on the campaign trailers, anyway,
we can center down to Lochlan to check about our
new invasion.
Speaker 5 (01:02:22):
We got down there.
Speaker 1 (01:02:23):
I saw that.
Speaker 4 (01:02:23):
I asked Joe Streker if you had read about that,
because I saw it was reported in bright Bark. Apparently
Lachland village has been inundated with roughly thirty five hundred
brand new immigrants from Mauritania. No idea how the Mauritanians
chose Lachland, but by word of mouth, more Mauritanians show
up in Lachland, the more they get the message out
that that's where Mauritanians are welcome. And we've got a
(01:02:46):
lot of them now.
Speaker 5 (01:02:49):
Predators pray on the week, my brother.
Speaker 4 (01:02:52):
I yeah, you can pay with the broad rush if
you want. All I know is the city of Lachland
I can't imagine can afford and manage an additional influx
of thirty five hundred people. Resources probably stretched a bit thin,
as you might imagine.
Speaker 5 (01:03:06):
Well, they must have changed the bus route.
Speaker 4 (01:03:09):
Well you think they stopped in the area that you've
been paying attention to, Bobby, Well.
Speaker 8 (01:03:15):
They just went ahead and you know they just got
another stop they got now so.
Speaker 4 (01:03:19):
You know, all right, Well it's Mauritanians in Lachland. It
was the Chinese Communist Party in what was the other
area that you have been watching?
Speaker 5 (01:03:27):
Bobby up towards Springdale and Charonville.
Speaker 4 (01:03:31):
Bring down Sharonville. All right, I let any of my
resident friends in spring Down Sharonville chime in on that topic.
Speaker 1 (01:03:36):
I know you got a sharp eye on it.
Speaker 4 (01:03:38):
Bobby, keep up the good work, my friend and faith family, Flag,
freedom and firearms. Right, Mike, Welcome to the fifty five
there sidod Morning Share. Mike, thanks for calling in this morning.
Speaker 5 (01:03:51):
Hi, Brian on you two.
Speaker 9 (01:03:54):
There's a Amish guy.
Speaker 14 (01:03:57):
He's Amish and he's out of Pennsylvania.
Speaker 9 (01:03:59):
He's more of the progressive Amish.
Speaker 14 (01:04:01):
He's got a YouTube channel. He'll tell you about different
Amish and stuff like that.
Speaker 4 (01:04:05):
He's obviously a progressive Amish if he's participating in modern
technology and has a YouTube channel. But Joe, Joe wants
to know if he's driving an evy buggy.
Speaker 14 (01:04:22):
But he's been talking about there's a there's an Amish
farmer out there. He's sold organic vegetables and stuff, and
the the government raided his farm because they didn't like
the things and they said. In the last presidential election,
fifty thousand Amish were registered to vote, and they said
they've got over two hundred and fifty thousand registered vote
(01:04:43):
now because they don't like the way.
Speaker 5 (01:04:44):
Things are going.
Speaker 1 (01:04:45):
How about that? I mean, what kind of the.
Speaker 4 (01:04:50):
Amish vote is going to bring it home for I
presume Trunk because he's obviously lower he doesn't like regulations
as much as Arris.
Speaker 1 (01:04:58):
But in the grand scheme of things, let us be serious.
Speaker 4 (01:05:00):
How much of a threat can the Homish population really
bring about to America? Based upon what they're doing on
their farms? Oh my god, they're selling raw milk. Oh,
we're all gotta die. Appreciate the call, Yes, those Amish.
God bless the Amish people and New Hampshire.
Speaker 5 (01:05:20):
Gary.
Speaker 1 (01:05:20):
Thanks for calling this morning. It's always good to hear
from you.
Speaker 5 (01:05:24):
Good morning, Brian.
Speaker 8 (01:05:25):
Hey, I just wanted to wish you well, and I
hope everything's working out for you.
Speaker 5 (01:05:31):
You're in my prayers, that's all well.
Speaker 4 (01:05:34):
I appreciate that it's working out well enough that I
was able to make it into work, because I'm telling you,
and I've been really feeling for my wife. She was
coughing literally all night. I don't know that she got
an hour's sleep last night. If that was me trust me,
I would not be here. And if my son is
any indication, he's kind of like the front end of
this RSV thing. He is still coughing regularly after three weeks,
(01:05:55):
and he's in really excellent health. So knocking the wood,
hopefully I dodge the bullet. And I don't wish this
on anyone out there, although this RSV is all over
the place. Thanks for the kind words, Gary, I really
appreciate it. Man six thirty five fifty five K see
de talk station five one thirty seven four nine fifty
five hundred, eight hundred eighty two to three talk go time,
(01:06:16):
fight fifty on eight and T phones and get in
touch with well. Of course, foreign exchange. Get your imported
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On top of it, let's kind of make a joke
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about the sales manager or the the not the sales manager,
the service manager. Dealerships it's like they're a big buffer
between you and the mechanic. And if you want to
speak with the guys working on your car at for
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(01:06:59):
wife and I am.
Speaker 1 (01:07:00):
Even my daughter.
Speaker 4 (01:07:01):
I've been going now for years and years, saving probably
thousands overall, and the multiple repairs we've had done to
our various cars, including my two hundred plus dollars savings
every single oil change under my under warranty German car. Yeah,
just keep that in mind for considering a German car.
Just letting you know I'm not unhappy with it. It's
(01:07:22):
just let me be a little bit more expensive. But
saving money is what it's all about a foreign exchange.
So go ahead and get your car in there to
that Westchester location by taking the Tylersville exit off of
Ice seventy five heading east, just a couple of the streets,
hang right on Kinglin and you are there.
Speaker 1 (01:07:39):
Bosh certified business.
Speaker 4 (01:07:40):
They are whether your cars from a traditional Asian or
European manufacturer, exotic or run of the mill. You're in
the best hands foreign axfor In the letter X dot com,
here's the number in Tel Austin and the entire crew.
Brian said, Hi five one three six four four twenty
six twenty six five one three six four four twenty
six twenty six.
Speaker 6 (01:07:58):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 1 (01:08:03):
John nine says, pardon me, today's gonna be mostly sunny.
Speaker 4 (01:08:08):
It went up to seventy eight clear skies over night
fifty six, highest seventy eh Tomorrow with partly cloudy skies
clear over night forty four, and a sunny Thursday with
the highest sixty seven forty six degrees.
Speaker 1 (01:08:18):
Now, let's see what traffic conditions are all about there.
Speaker 7 (01:08:20):
Chuck from the UCL Tramphic Center. When it comes to stroke,
every second counts. That's why you see comprehensive stroke centers
your clear choice for WRAPPID life saving treatment. Learn more
at ucehealth dot com. There's an accident at Westboud two
seventy five after the loved one. The smart lane is
currently blocked off because of it. Traffic backing up for
an over a ten minute delay. Now past love one elsewhere.
(01:08:42):
We're in a state traffics do we okay? Brews are
cleaning up a wreck on fifty ath State and Cleaves
Chuck Ingram on fifty five kr S Deep talk Station.
Speaker 4 (01:08:54):
Six forty AR fifty five cars de talk Station. Happy Tuesday, Dan,
you know old gonna be doing it in power?
Speaker 9 (01:09:01):
Are you?
Speaker 4 (01:09:01):
Seminar tonight first segment of It Anyway half hour about
the national debt, followed by a seminar from Dave Benson.
I'm discussing good work life balance and how to maintain
that power Youoamerica dot org for all the details. Tom Claveland,
this book banned It Heaven. He'll be on at seven
thirty talking about it Banned Heaven, the hole in the
Wall gangs in the final chapter of the Wild West,
(01:09:23):
without further Ado going over to the phones five one, three, seven, five,
eight hundred and eight two to three talk cribbage, Mike,
my submarine or friend. Welcome back to the show, my friend.
It's always good to hear from you.
Speaker 9 (01:09:34):
Why, sir, I hope you and the missus are feeling
better real soon.
Speaker 4 (01:09:37):
I do appreciate that. More more thoughts, and prayers over
to the wife considering her condition. Just just pray for
me to hold steady. I can manage where I am now,
but I'm telling you that cough is nightmarish.
Speaker 9 (01:09:50):
I think at Mother Nature just will provide a little
rain and just wash all this stuff that's floating around
and probably couldn't hurt.
Speaker 1 (01:09:56):
That can't hurt.
Speaker 9 (01:09:57):
Man.
Speaker 4 (01:09:57):
Someone said eat raw onions, and I don't. I'm going
to go down that road. Apparently old school remedy just
eat raw onions and.
Speaker 1 (01:10:07):
Like an apple is a hard pass on that one
as well.
Speaker 9 (01:10:13):
I'm definitely put me down for that one too.
Speaker 5 (01:10:15):
Yeah.
Speaker 9 (01:10:16):
Hey, Veterans Day is three weeks away, and I can
think of no better way if someone here in the
Greater Cincinnati area wants to thank a veteran than to
be at CBG tomorrow night. We're flying tomorrow on Wednesday.
We normally fly on Tuesday, but tomorrow is our last
honor flight of twenty twenty four and we'll be coming
back around between eight thirty and nine o'clock. So if
(01:10:38):
you want to shake the hand of eighty nine patriots
and thank them for their service, please be at CBG
and it'll be an evening you will not forget.
Speaker 4 (01:10:48):
I cannot underscore that enough, having been there myself and
gone on a couple of honor flights. It's almost, in
some sort of a weird way, it's almost the highlight
of the day because you know, you're really exhausted coming
back from it. How long is that we spend? I
mean you get there at five am, you're up on
your feet going all around the nation's capital and being
ferried around. You know, it's like a what fifteen hour
(01:11:10):
total day on your feet roughly.
Speaker 9 (01:11:13):
At a minimum, at a minimum. And most of these
gentlemen and ladies, depending upon where they're coming from, they
may be getting up about the time that year going
to work to be it's because we need them there
at five o'clock, right, so it could have to be
almost an eighteen hour day. But you talk about it
an adrenaline rush. That's it for them and for everybody
(01:11:33):
waving those red, white and blue flags. You know, it's
it's a lot of it going on with the election
going on, but a shot at patriotism and Brian, if
I may at a local speaking engagement and when we're
out fundraising, I like it to spell two miss for
our veterans. We hear a lot. Well, I wasn't overseas
or I was not in combat. If you are a
(01:11:54):
d D two fourteen alumni or any veteran, everybody paid,
you know, did something for the cause. So if you're
over sixty five, please go to our website on a
flight tri state dot org sign up. We want to
celebrate your service. Yes, well, we hear, oh, I don't
have a guardian. On average, we have about ten to
fifteen veterans who have appointed guardians. Once again, don't let
(01:12:18):
that stop you from signing up. You are to be
celebrated for your service.
Speaker 5 (01:12:22):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:12:22):
The first on or flight I went on was with
a World War two veteran and he uttered those exact
words to me, Mike, I kind of feel unworthy because
I didn't serve in combat.
Speaker 1 (01:12:30):
He was in the weather forecasting.
Speaker 5 (01:12:34):
And I say important?
Speaker 4 (01:12:35):
How important? I mean that's when D Day gets launched.
I mean, this is when whether or not combat, you
engage in combat or not. It's such an important element
to waging warfare. And you know, you're every bit is
important to COG and the machinery of World War two
and our victory there as anybody else so you weren't
on the front lines, but you know what, you probably
save thousands of lives and you know, prevented maybe perhaps
(01:12:57):
military disaster by letting people know what the weather was
going to be.
Speaker 1 (01:13:01):
You know, it's everybody counts everyone.
Speaker 4 (01:13:04):
So I'm glad you brought that up, Mike, and I
know you're going to report live from CBG, AM I right,
Can I expect a call from you, actually, not.
Speaker 9 (01:13:13):
Only at CBG, but I will be on the flight
and a support role along with two other ambassadors to
once again assist at the air both airports, on the
buses to ensure that these eighty nine veterans get the
day of their life.
Speaker 4 (01:13:26):
Well, I will welcome a phone call from you on
Thursday morning to give me an aftermath of how wonderful
the event was, because I can guarantee you with a
straight face, it will be a wonderful opportunity to be
there to bring the kids. If you've got children, it's
worth maybe them having to take a day of school
off the next day to get this dose of patriotism
(01:13:47):
and experience that no better history lesson, Amen, brother, Thank
you for your service, Mike, and I always, always your
calls are always welcome here in the morning show six
forty five if if I have care see the talk station.
Pain sucks, and we all know that really is a
bad thing, especially if you have chronic pain, and chronic
pain you've been dealing with for a long time. You
may have gone in and gotten steroid injections for the
(01:14:07):
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Maybe your doctor's talk to you about going under the ninthe,
But how about an alternative. You know there are other ways.
Your body does have a tendency to heal itself. Your
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that you know your cuts get repaired automatically by your body. Well,
it works kind of the same way. QC Kinetics is
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the place they take those healing properties and concentrate them
into the joints where that pain is, which helps heal
and restore the achy areas. Now, this treatment is available
right now here in Cincinnati through QC Kinetics, which is
the nation's leader in these regenerative techniques. The result moving
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have had incredible success, So you can finally get relief
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these treatments. You can find out by scheduling a free
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Speaker 1 (01:15:09):
Three.
Speaker 4 (01:15:10):
Ask the questions and find out if this is right
for you or maybe right for you. Five one three
eight four seven zero zero one nine five one three
eight four seven zero zero one nine. That's five one
three eight four seven zero zero one nine fifty five KRC.
Speaker 1 (01:15:25):
Are you paying too much for term life insurance? There's a.
Speaker 4 (01:15:33):
Channel nine first one on the forecast says a sunny
day for the most part of the highest seventy eight
overnight love fifty six with clear skies, uh partly cloudy
tomorrow with the highest seventy eight clear skies overnight forty
four and sunny sky's Thursday with the highest sixty seven.
Speaker 7 (01:15:48):
Forty six degrees. Right now, how about traffic conditions? Chuck
from the ucub Tramphing Center. When it comes to stroke,
every second count. So that's why uc Comprehensive Stroke Center
is your clear choice for rapid life saving. Learn more
at you see how dot com cruise will working with
an accident that blocks the smart lane that's westbound two
seventy five after you've got pants loved one. It's over
(01:16:09):
a ten minute delay in growing now from before my
loved one ramp Afterward's corner Interstate traffic that's doing fine. Elsewhere,
there's a wreck in Cleaves on fifty at State. Chuck
Ingram on fifty five KRC the talk station.
Speaker 4 (01:16:25):
It is six fifty eight fifty five air CD talk station.
Happy Tuesday. I'm gonna go over the phones five one three,
seven two three talk and quick plug for fifty five
car seed dot com. You can stream the audio, get
your podcast. I slept through it because it was sick.
But Christopher smith Man did the smith Event yesterday as
he does every Monday. Thank you to Kevin Gordon for
covering for me, and thank god I'm able to make
(01:16:46):
it to work today and blessed Cunting My blessings and
thanks for Jay calling in the program this morning.
Speaker 1 (01:16:51):
Jay, welcome to the show.
Speaker 12 (01:16:53):
Hey, good morning, Brian. Hey, uh you know my take
on this issue one is this sound like deja vous?
All over again. I remember whenever they the first time
that the outside left dark money came in to change
our constitution on abortion. I remember callers on this station
and other stations, conservative callers that apparently were confused and
(01:17:18):
calling in almost like lost children, asking tell me again
which way I should vote on this issue? What does
yes mean and what does no mean? And I think
what's going on is that the outside left dark money
sees Ohio as a soft target because we can't get
our heads straight on these constitutional issues. And I think
(01:17:43):
that there's gonna be a whole lot more dominoes fall
if we lose on this issue one, because now we
are losing the ability to have the accountability the government
hold each other accountable.
Speaker 4 (01:17:55):
Yeah, the accountability part, I think is the biggest, most
troubling aspect of it. And you know, it's the extent
you need to be convinced that this is a left
wing or right wing thing. Consider the state of Ohio
as a solid red state now, and they're not launching
these multi million dollar efforts in states that are solid
blue in spite of the fact that they have their
own issues with jerrymandering. Yeah, all the Democrats and all
(01:18:18):
the Democrat blue states like California, Jerremanda the hell out
of it to ensure that they maintain the power. Democrats
lost power.
Speaker 1 (01:18:24):
So what do they need to do.
Speaker 4 (01:18:25):
They need to re change the zoning rules and blame
jerrymandering and evil politicians. And yes, some of the litigation
that this state has been through regarding how the districts
were drawn drawn by our elected officials, who we have
the liberty to vote out of office. This takes that
and undoes the entire thing, placing this entire process in
the hand of unelected, unaccountable individuals. They claim it's bipartisan. Oh, look,
(01:18:49):
it's going to be equal numbers of Republicans and Democrats
and independents. Yeah, but go through the process and see
how those folks are selected, and then realize there's no
way in hell you'll ever be able to get them
thrown out. The only way they can get thrown out
as if well the own group of so called independent
committees votes out one of their own members and it's
never going to happen, which is never going to happen.
And then look at the money, look at who is
(01:19:11):
endorsed Issue one. If you please do me a favor
and call me up and tell me if there's one
single conservative organization out there that is behind this.
Speaker 9 (01:19:19):
They're not.
Speaker 4 (01:19:20):
It's because they know it is designed to undermine the
Republican advantage we have in this state. Redraw districts to
make them more favorable to Democrats so they can get
more Democrats elected when they're well otherwise couldn't do it.
Speaker 1 (01:19:33):
It's the motivation.
Speaker 12 (01:19:34):
Yes, And a second second, quick on their point, Brian,
is how is it that Trump is ahead by seven
but Bernie Marino is neck and neck with Sheret Brown.
Speaker 8 (01:19:44):
I am I to.
Speaker 12 (01:19:45):
Understand that people are going in Conservatives again and just
voting for president and not voting for senator, and not
understanding that you're going to hand the Senate to Truck Schumer.
So it really won't matter if Trump is in president,
is in the Oval office or not. They're going to
go to teach him and block him in every turn.
So everybody out there who's just going in and voting
(01:20:07):
for president and not voting for Bernie Marino, I mean,
I can't get my head straight on the map if
holes Trump ahead by seven and Shared Brown may get
a victory here.
Speaker 4 (01:20:17):
Well, I suppose it's the campaign of lies being waged.
You know, when you have more millions of dollars to
throw at something like shared Brown, obviously, does you get
more of the political action committees in his own campaign
spreading well misinformation about Bernie Morino and who he is
and what he's done in the past, like that whole
story he stole from his employees. The backstory on that
(01:20:39):
is not what it appears to be. But it's a
rather complicated explanation. But suffice it to say they have
twisted and turned that around to make it look like
Bernie Marine is some evil human being, when that farthest
thing from the truth could be is the case. So say,
it requires people to actually do work. It requires people
to actually look behind the veneer of mailings and campaign ads.
(01:21:00):
I mean, just the other day I stood there and
laid witness to an ad that repeatedly said Donald Trump
is you know again his favor of national abortion, which
he is on record a million times saying no, I'm not.
They keep linking him with twenty twenty five, which he
is explicitly rejected and says he doesn't even know anything about.
He's not running on this so called twenty twenty five
(01:21:21):
agenda that was completely whole cloth created by the Heritage
Foundation and some individuals with ideas about the direction of
the country. It's like, here, submit an idea and we'll
put it into one big package. It doesn't mean any
candidate has embraced it. Donald Trump has never done that.
And yet there's a Political Collection Committee just stating that
it's a matter of simple fact that he's in favor
(01:21:43):
of those two things and a whole litany of other
things that he's completely against. That will work with an
uninformed person when it comes to policies. And go back
to my one of my best friends I talked about
earlier this morning, he doesn't like Trump. He asks him why.
It's just because the narrative he's been fed for so long,
evil Orange Man. He doesn't know anything about politics. When
(01:22:05):
it comes down to policy and you start talking with
him about specific policies and where Kamalo stands and where
Donald Trump stands, he's on the favor He's on the
side of Donald Trump and every single one of them.
I went to this entire litany of things. That's someone
who doesn't pay attention but is bought into the idea
that he can't vote for Trump because he's just a
(01:22:25):
bad guy, and yet he would find himself voting with
Trump on individual policies across the board. It's a problem
we have in society, folks. Dan raganold after the top
of the ur News, we're gonna hear from David Benson
on his arm sorry, Tom Claven on his book Bandit Heaven.
That'll be at the bottom of the next hour. I
hope you can stick around.
Speaker 1 (01:22:44):
You use two November at the top end thirty past.
Speaker 15 (01:22:48):
As a voter, I want to be informed in.
Speaker 1 (01:22:50):
Up to date on everything. Fifty five KRS the talk station,
this report.
Speaker 9 (01:22:55):
Every single bit of information when you we like to
listen as a bid the Electric d five KRS.
Speaker 1 (01:23:19):
Coming up on seven six and fifty five KRC Detalk station.
A very happy Tuesday to get the.
Speaker 4 (01:23:24):
Insight with Insight Scoop with Bright bart News and are
out latest on the election from Capitol Hill reporter Nick
Gilbertson and the Daniel Davis Deep Dive at e thirty.
In the meantime, welcome back, I've been too long for talking.
On the fifty five KRC Morning show, the founder and
creator brainshout of his empower you America, Dan Regnold, Welcome back,
Dan Regnold. I start by asking you, how are you
(01:23:45):
enjoying retirement, my.
Speaker 1 (01:23:46):
Friend, I don't know.
Speaker 15 (01:23:49):
I don't I don't know if I'll ever be retired, Brian,
But thanks for asking. And it's so so so good
to talk to you. And what about those folks leaving
on that honor flight to I want to send a
shout out to them because that is such an incredibly
say program. I hope they have the times of their
lives they will.
Speaker 4 (01:24:06):
You know it's true, having been on a couple myself,
it's just it's a I don't see life altering, but
it's one of those things you'll never ever forget. How
could you forget it? It's a wonderful day, and I'm encouraged.
Like Cribbage Mike did early in the program, get to
CVG tomorrow for the welcome home ceremony. Try to get
there about eight thirty the place we've packed, and it
would be just an absolutely wonderful shot of patriotism in
(01:24:30):
the arm, send chills down your spine and may even
cause an allergy attack or two.
Speaker 1 (01:24:34):
Dan, I've seen those, I've experienced them.
Speaker 4 (01:24:37):
Anyway, perfect timing for your seminar tonight empower Youoamerica dot org.
It's a virtual class only log in from the convenience
of your own home. Just click the register button at
the bottom of the page there and there's two seminars.
Dan's gonna kick it off by having what he has
done regularly now since I think twenty fifteen, a discussion
about well, the budget. You've been covering this for a
(01:25:00):
long time. The results of our federal budget in twenty
twenty four. Timing couldn't be better, Dan, I saw that
we just passed a sad milestone. We now spend more
on debt service for our national debt than we do
on America's military.
Speaker 15 (01:25:15):
It's hard to believe. Yeah, you know, this is a
scary topic. It's perfect for Halloween, and I've been covering
it for I think this is the seventh or eighth
time I've spoken on it, and just I just do
it because it's one of those issues and you watch
the election, nobody's talking about it. Nobody, you know, it's
not one of the four things that people are talking
(01:25:37):
about that in actuality it may be it may be
the most important. And Wall Street Journalist week had a
quote that I thought was good to start off with,
which is a deficit of this magnitude is unprecedented, and
it's just hard to believe our country could be spending,
you know, just spending their way to oblivia and to
(01:26:02):
spend five trillion dollars to bring in five trillion dollars,
but to spend seven trillion and add two trillion to
our deficit, it's just hard to imagine.
Speaker 4 (01:26:12):
Yeah, the debt payments hit eight hundred and eighty two
billion dollars this most recent and fiscal year was just
closed out, which represents the court of the Treasury Department,
a thirty five percent jump in interest payments, eight billion
dollars more than we spent on national defense. And the
trajectory doesn't stop, it continues.
Speaker 1 (01:26:31):
To go up.
Speaker 15 (01:26:33):
Yeah, and for those out there who want to know
how much how much the federal government has to spend
to borrow money last year, it was in fiscal year
twenty four which just ended, they have to pay about
three point three to three percent for their debt and
that went up about three quarters of appoint and it's
going to go up more next year. And yeah, we've
(01:26:53):
just started. It's costing us more to service our debt,
and we're paying for defense. And I think back in
back in the seventeen seventy six, I think the reason
we started this government was to defend UH, to defend
our people against UH, you know, and and that was
the main thing. But now now our main thing seems
to be servicing our debt. It's going to go up
(01:27:13):
to about one point three trillion dollars next year to
service the debt. And it's it's it's on a total
path where you just kind of wonder where things are
going to go because what has what happens is there's
a term called crowding out, where that interest just crowds
out anything else that you want to you know, that
you want to do, like all these plans that Trump
(01:27:34):
and and and Harris have put forward in the In
the talk tonight, which will be the first part of
the class, I'll be I'll be talking about all those
plans that Trump has and how much they cost and
what what how he hopes to make some of that
up in revenue, and and UH and Kamala Harris too,
and and I heard you talk about Lachlan. I've got
(01:27:56):
a good story right up on top of empower Youoamerica
dot org about the lack one situation, and when I
was doing my investigation, I actually came up with, I
think the first time I've heard how much this migrant
cost is really costing us. And these are two thousand
and twenty three numbers the cost of the migrant crisis
(01:28:17):
that's been studied pretty in depth. And I'll actually have
a print out of every line on them of that
tonight that people can download if they're interested in looking
at it. Total federal expenditure sixty six billion, State in
local expenditures one hundred and fifteen million. They get thirty
billion in taxes, so it's about one hundred and fifty
(01:28:38):
billion dollars between federal and state expenditures on the migro cost.
Speaker 4 (01:28:43):
That is just insanity, and that just keeps going up.
And you talk, you are going to contrast Kama Harris
what we know about her policies anyway, and the Trump policies,
because I keep reading, you know, there's been some newsworthy
at least quasi legitimate outlets reporting the well, Trump policies
are going to put us in debt further. And that's
one of the criticisms I had about the Trump administration,
(01:29:05):
he had an opportunity to maybe pair back spending and
bring things under control. And yet, you know, his the
deficit went up, or the national debt went up sizably
under the Trump administration, not nearly as much as the
Biden administration. But we don't seem to have a party
out there that's interested in curbing spending to the point
where we bring about some sense of what reality.
Speaker 15 (01:29:26):
Yeah, and you know, like when I look at Trump's plan,
that's the one one problem that just just kind of
really surprises me about. I mean that he said that,
you know, it just doesn't matter to him really how
much our debt is and how much he spends. And
I guess that's one of the reasons I feel like
I need to keep talking about this. Yes, I look
at his kind of list of bullet points he wants
(01:29:48):
to give away, and the taxes in overtime is a
big one, that's two hundred billion. But this tax on
tips thing is really interesting that both of them want
to do because at face value, it's only thirty billion,
but in one estimate I saw said it could get
to be over one hundred billion, just because these workers
they're they're creative, Brian, as we know, and a worker
(01:30:10):
will figure out a way to change the classification of
salary into tips, and before we know it, there will
be no tax paid on any of that revenue.
Speaker 1 (01:30:19):
I agree with you.
Speaker 4 (01:30:20):
And how many IRS workers would we need to go
through every tipped worker to make sure that's being done
appropriately and within the bounds of the income tax laws.
Speaker 5 (01:30:31):
Yeah.
Speaker 15 (01:30:31):
Now, what I don't have a classification on the amount
is on Harris's kind of home care program that she's
talking about. But I loved what Trump said at the
Al Smith dinner the other night about her home care
project when he said, Hey, Kamala, you know if you
get elected, I you know, I wish you well with
(01:30:53):
this home care thing. My one suggestion is just keep Tim,
keep Doug Amhoff away.
Speaker 11 (01:30:59):
From the.
Speaker 1 (01:31:01):
Jeez. He can be humorous at times.
Speaker 11 (01:31:06):
Yeah.
Speaker 15 (01:31:06):
But for those of you who just kind of want
a cribsheet of what's going on with your your government,
join us tonight for the first uh twenty minutes or
half hour. I'll have like a nice handout you can take,
and at least, if at least, I'll have a few
ideas on things that we could do to fix the situation.
At least bring the budget into balance. Ideas that are
out there and uh, and things you can think about,
(01:31:29):
including we'll talk about something we we talked about. I
know you had on Rob Tuttle when we talked about
a constitutional convention and you know a few of the
a few of the goods and a few of the
bads of that.
Speaker 4 (01:31:41):
I understand Jack Edda and you sat down for his
podcast and talk about this very topic the other day.
Speaker 15 (01:31:46):
Yeah, yeah, it's It was always so great to talk
to Jack, and I'm glad he's kind of a regular
on your uh on your show.
Speaker 1 (01:31:54):
Now so am I now? Real quick?
Speaker 4 (01:31:56):
I have to ask one of the things that a
lot of people, I think across political spectrums are agreeing
with it. At least, if you're going to deport some
of these illegal immigrants who in our country, you're going
to at least need to deport the criminal element. And
I don't think anybody can object to that. But even
dealing with just the criminal element, the expense of going
through deportation because they're entitled to a hearing, and some
(01:32:20):
countries won't take back the folks that we want to deport.
You can't just send them into a country that didn't
come from So there is a massive expense that goes
along with this. Hiring thousands of new judges to process
these cases that are in backlog like a decade. That
alone represents a sizable increase. And of course you know
they're all going to lawyer up with these NGOs. It's
going to be a tough battle in each of these
(01:32:41):
court proceedings. I suspect that's just one more cost of government,
but it seems to be a necessary one. We're going
to have to cut someplace Dan in order to pay
for what is really necessary.
Speaker 15 (01:32:53):
And when you look at you know, one of the
things we'll talk about is the Social Security and medicare
window tonight. And when you look at those costs continuing
to go up. I think it was seven percent last year.
You know, where where's the where's that money gonna come from?
And uh, it's just uh, it's just kind of looking
at this whole debt situation, it's just kind of a
it's a Ponzi scheme, and and that's why you know,
(01:33:14):
it's it's uh, it's so scary, But I want everybody
to be aware of it, because the results if we
don't do something or just more rampant inflation and like
we've seen, which I know, I know scares everybody, and uh,
we've got to you know, I've gotta gotta gotta lift
our boots up and do something. After I talk about
the debts to night, I've got a really interesting guy
(01:33:35):
coming on the show. His name's David Bonson. He's an
investment uh runs an investment firm in California. He's written
this book called Full Time. I was interested in the
book because you know, I am kind of uh on
that retirement window. And and just he just argues, Uh,
he's got an interesting argument where where he argues that
(01:33:57):
work really is the meaning of life. And he talks
about the fact that we've got so many unhappy people
because they're just not working very much and the government
government isn't encouraging them to work, Churches, community leaders aren't
encouraging them to work, and it's just creating a whole
stream of problems which we know about from depression to
(01:34:20):
anxiety to just thirty seven million people using antidepressants. And
he creates this whole kind of God driven approach that
God created us to work and that it's the single
most important thing in our life, and that really is
work balance. And I think it'll be an interesting, interesting
(01:34:40):
guest to talk after. I hopefully don't scare everybody off
off the program.
Speaker 4 (01:34:45):
I hope not either. Yeah, work is its own reward.
I'm a firm believer in that, you know, at least
entitles you to the right to complain maybe about taxes
or government intrusion, because you're actually paying the freight for that,
and you have a right then to be a little
bit more engaged politically, or at least some incentive be
engaged a little more politically, just by virtue of work.
(01:35:06):
One more thing before we part company, Dan Ragnold again,
it's empower you America dot org register seven pms, A
star time for Dan. Tariffs. Where do you come down
on tariffs? Donald Trump said the other day in that
economic summ and he goes, he thinks tariffs, the word
tariff needs its own marketing agency because he believes it's
the greatest, you know, a word in the English language.
(01:35:26):
He's going to embrace them wholeheartedly. He's going to you know,
put a one hundred, two hundred, three hundred. He went
rambling on, Yeah, two thousand percent tariff on any vehicles
coming from Mexico that should have been made in America.
And his whole ultimate point is, well, if I do this,
then people will start building plants here because they won't
be able to compete by making them in other countries.
Many economists to the flip side say no, no, if
(01:35:48):
you impose a tariff, then the rest of the world
is going to do counter tariffs, and that'll reduce the
demand for US goods abroad. Where are you on this, Dan,
Just you know, I hate to put you on the spot,
but it's really important.
Speaker 9 (01:35:59):
To put me on this.
Speaker 15 (01:36:00):
But so I was in my first kind of gig
out of out of school. I taught economics at at
at one of the universities, and loved doing it, and
and and and I learned a lot. And what I was,
what I was always taught Brian was under no circumstance
should you ever put tariffs on anything, because that will
take away the you know that you know, we buy
(01:36:22):
stuff that other people can make more efficiently. They buy
stuff that we make more efficiently. And as soon as
you impose a tariff, it puts an artificial constraint into
that price mechanism, which you and I both know is
so important for supplying demand. But Trump is just one
of these guys who's strong enough with his whole way
he can threaten people that you know, maybe he can
(01:36:42):
pull it off. But I sure hope that we don't
see tariffs, you know, at the range she's talking And
let's hope that's just all kind of a you know,
kind of his way of of of getting you know,
getting elected and and and and doing that. But no,
I don't want a tariff on every single product that's
purchased everywhere.
Speaker 4 (01:37:02):
Well, speaking of artificial con and constraints, isn't that what
makes us lack competitiveness in the world. We have so
many constraints on the formation of business, regulation of business,
how business are operated, osha EPA, regulation, mandates litigation. I mean,
all of that doesn't exist in so many other countries
in the world. And that's why manufacturers gravitate to places
where it's like China, where they get basically free labor
(01:37:24):
and you know, unfittered access to energy powered by coal plants,
you know.
Speaker 9 (01:37:28):
What I mean.
Speaker 15 (01:37:29):
Yeah, And if he can just reduce some of that
deep state, all all those regulations, wouldn't that just be
a pleasant change.
Speaker 4 (01:37:37):
And wouldn't that provide funding for some of these other
things we're talking about, Dan Regneold tonight, empower Youoamerica dot org.
Mark it down and tune in at seven register in advance. Dan,
thank you for what you do each and every day
with the empower You summinar. It's just a great, great
series of learning opportunities for folks, and what a wide
variety of topics. It's just it's been a wonderful thing
promoting it and talking with you about it over the years.
Speaker 15 (01:37:59):
Thanks Brian break talking to you and your listeners today.
Speaker 4 (01:38:02):
It's been our collective pleasure, my friends. Seven twenty right now,
if you five care see the talk station. We're going
to have the book on bottom of the hour author
Tom Claven Bandit Heaven, the Whole, the Wall, Gangs and
the final chapter of the Wild Wild West. After I
mentioned Oto Exit od rxit dot com, noeoto exit dot
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Speaker 6 (01:39:22):
This is fifty five krc an iHeartRadio station, Cincinnati Seniors.
Speaker 1 (01:39:29):
Make the right.
Speaker 4 (01:39:34):
Here's your channel nine, first one theforecasts got a mostly
sunny day going up to seventy eight, clear skies every night,
fifty six for the low seventy eight again tomorrow with
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it's forty five degrees. Let's see what Chuck has on
traffic conditions.
Speaker 7 (01:39:51):
From the UCUP Tramphings Center. When it comes to stroke,
every second counts. That's why you see Comprehensive Stroke Center.
Here's your clear choice for wrapping U saving TREATM. Learn
more at UCE help dot com. Rex Clear westbound two
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bound seventy four backs above Montana northbound seventy five over
(01:40:13):
a ten minute delay out of Erlanger into town. Chuck
Ingram on fifty five KRC the talk station.
Speaker 4 (01:40:24):
Jish I have seven thirty here fifty five KRC DE
talk station and a very happy Tuesday to inside Scoop
with Brightbart at the top of the our news wh
hour from now Daniel Davis, Deeve Diband right now please
to Welcome back to the fifty five KRC Morning Show, The.
Speaker 1 (01:40:37):
Wild Wild West. He Knows.
Speaker 4 (01:40:38):
Tom Clay, then a number one New York Times best
selling authors, worked as a newspaper editor, magazine writer, TV
and radio commentator reporter for The New York Times. Numerous
awards he's received from the Society Professional Journalists, Marine Corps,
Heritage Foundation, National Newspaper Associations. His books including the best
selling Frontier Lawman trilogy, Wild Bill, Dodge City and Tombstone,
(01:40:59):
and Blood in Treasure, The Last Hill and Throne of
Grace with Bob Drury.
Speaker 1 (01:41:03):
His next book, talked About It.
Speaker 4 (01:41:05):
Today, Bandit Heaven, The Hole in the Wall, Gangs, and
the final Chapter of The Wild West. Welcome back to
the fifty five CASE Morning Show, Tom Clayn. It's a
pleasure to have you on.
Speaker 9 (01:41:16):
Well, thank you for having me back. I appreciate it.
Speaker 4 (01:41:17):
And the obviously the title indicates the final chapter of
the Wild West before we get into the specifics of
the Hole in the Wall Gang's plural something I did
not know. Can you set the stage for this period
in history you're talking about, because you know, I when
I think of the Wild West and you go back
in time, you know, the settlers are moving out there,
(01:41:39):
we have the incursions and interactions with the Native Americans,
and you know, the the cattle people moving in and
sheep heart all that. But I always kind of keep
in mind, or try to keep in mind, that there
is no formal local law enforcement that you did did
did you know? People really were kind of on their own,
(01:41:59):
and that people did regularly take the law into their
own hands. There was a sense of h you know,
I don't want to call it rugged individualism for for
sort of making it sound good, but uh, you know,
it wasn't like you could call nine to one one
back then.
Speaker 1 (01:42:14):
No, you couldn't.
Speaker 9 (01:42:15):
And a local law enforcement were often overwhelmed. They a
lot of times these fellows were and they were all
menu but I think you had to look far and
wide to find the female law enforcement person in the webs,
and you know, the eighteen nineties, let's say, but they
had they were poorly trained, if trained at all. They
weren't paid that much. A lot of times they were
part timers because they had to make a real living
(01:42:37):
as shopkeepers or you know, ranchers and anything like that.
So a lot of times when when there was there
was trouble, the perpetrators, the bandits got away with it.
That's partly what Bandit Heaven is about that for years
they were these hideouts that they used, a Hole.
Speaker 1 (01:42:52):
In the Wall in Wyoming.
Speaker 9 (01:42:53):
There's also a place called Robbers Rooster, another place called
Brown's Hole, and these were like safe havens for bandits.
They rob a stagecoach, Robin Train, Robert Bank and then
make their high tail their way to one of these hideouts,
and they were safe there because the long end of
the times, who were not going anywhere near that those places.
They're too there's too many bandits, they're too hard to
get to. The terrain is really rough. So that's a
(01:43:13):
lot of what the book is about about is the
banded gangs that use these hideouts, and the most famous
ones were led by Butch Cassiding and the Sundance Kid.
Speaker 4 (01:43:22):
Yeah, and you point out it's the fifty fifth anniversary
of the film Butch casting in The Sundance Kid. I've
seen it a whole bunch of times. But you know,
and this is the important thing. It's not just Butcher
casting the Sundance Kid as the Hole in the Wall gang.
This is a whole bunch of different folks that sort
of interacted with this wild bunch.
Speaker 9 (01:43:40):
Yeah, that's a really good point, because now the movie
is a really good movie. It does hold up some
people who do want to rewatch it, they'll still be
enjoy it. And you understand that it's from the director's
point of view, and the audience point of view is
you got Paul Newman, you know, Robert Redford and Katherine Ross.
You want to keep the camera on. Now, who cares
for anybody else?
Speaker 11 (01:43:58):
Right?
Speaker 9 (01:43:59):
But the fact was the real full story, which is
you know in Band in Heaven is about the gangs
were pretty well the large gangs. There were a bunch
of gangs. Their members shifted from one to the other.
But sometimes Sundance k would branch off and have his
own gang for a while, Puscasy his own gang, Kit
Curry would have his own gang, and gun Play Maxwell
with his own gang, and black Jack Catching would have
his own gang. It's amazing into not only just into
(01:44:20):
the eighteen nineties, but into the early, you know, nineteen hundreds.
So only of these gangs are still active and still
you know, driving the railroad is crazy, especially by robbing
their trains.
Speaker 4 (01:44:30):
Well, I suppose that segues into the what twenties and
depression ey gangs with tommy guns and bank robbers.
Speaker 9 (01:44:37):
And prey boy Floyd pretty Nelson exactly.
Speaker 4 (01:44:41):
You got to move on into the next century and
take yourself out of the wild West.
Speaker 1 (01:44:45):
But these guys would.
Speaker 4 (01:44:47):
They were certainly romanticized. If you look at Butchcassing the
Sundance kids, they were anti here is. You wanted to
root for him in many ways. But these were not
good people.
Speaker 5 (01:44:57):
They were not good people.
Speaker 9 (01:44:58):
One of the interesting things I found out researching but
Cassidy is though he was he was the leader of leaders.
He was like the coppo of these These were you know,
Western gangs, but he himself was not. He always avoided
violence as much as he could. He was not there.
There were some connarsive characters, the band that having Kick
Curry as one, for example, gun play Maxwell. As the
name implies, their first option was to go for their guns.
(01:45:20):
But Buts Cassidy was I was not trying to romanticize
them at all. But he he he was a criminal.
He was a crook. He robbed trains and he robbed banks.
But his last resort was any kind of violence. In fact,
he went to his whole career until twenty the very
end of his career without killing a single person.
Speaker 4 (01:45:33):
No kidding, Well, what of I love the nicknames these
guys say, as you mentioned gun play Maxwell, that tells
the story.
Speaker 1 (01:45:40):
But what of Dirty Dave rut a Ball.
Speaker 9 (01:45:44):
Yeah, you know he didn't. It wasn't that he said
bad words. That's why he called dirty Day. He was
just hygiene challenged and that's how he got That's how
he got his nickname. He he didn't see a bath.
You didn't see a bat he ever liked and uh
he was, he was so he was. He was a
state her in all wayson.
Speaker 4 (01:46:00):
One Wow, and you'll you'll meet other folks like black
Jack ketcham And mentioned Gunplay, Maxwell Tall, Texan Kilpatrick, and
George Flattenos Curry. But what they weren't just guys hanging
out with guys. Apparently a lot of women played a
part in this story that you tell in band in
Heaven as well.
Speaker 9 (01:46:19):
Yeah, I'm glad I could do that with Banded Hammer,
to include this with the women who were involved. You know,
there's there's the Bassett sisters that that you know, kind
of swaths of the wild Bunch. There's Annie Rodgers of
the kid Curry's girlfriend as the banded Queen Bell Star,
And of course there's there's Ethel Place in the movie.
They call her at a played by Katherine Ross, but
Ethel Place. It's a really interesting thing because we know
(01:46:40):
very little where she came from, and suddenly she appears
as the paramore of a sun dance kid. They eventually
got married, and so they were a husband and wife
for a while. And then she when she when she
left the story, she just disappears. She apparently went to
San Francisco and and nobody ever heard from her again.
She's one of the most interesting and intriguing and mysterious
characters in the book.
Speaker 4 (01:47:00):
Well, you do talk about law enforcement agencies and the
legendary lawmen that ultimately put a stop to this, the
Allan Pinkerton beinging of the Pinkerton Agency. Now did they
get involved? Was the federal government integral in hiring them?
Did local communities hire these folks out to do the
jobs that their local guys wouldn't do out of fear
of showing up in a place like the Hole in
(01:47:21):
the Wall and getting gunned down.
Speaker 1 (01:47:22):
How did this all come to play?
Speaker 9 (01:47:24):
Well, the Pinkerton Agency first got noticed because the Allan
Pinkerton stopped an assassination attempt on Abraham Lincoln when he
was on his way to Washington to be inaugurated as president,
and that got them pretty well known about federal government sources.
And then they're famous by the state governments. They were
usually the ones who hired the Pinkerton Agency, and it
was really like a precursor, as they pointed out and
(01:47:45):
Bad in Heaven. They were like the FBI before there
was the FBI. They were pioneering the new detecting methods.
They were tracking people down, and they're kind of they
introduced the professionalism into law enforcement that wasn't there before,
which made them more effective. As we started the discuss
these part time lawmen that were untrained and for the
most part was saying that's too dangerous of stay at home.
Speaker 4 (01:48:06):
Well, I suppose the mindset within the Pinkertons and the
others who were tracking down these guys they didn't really
probably have due process in mind. Weren't they just really
out to just gun these guys down and put an
end of their criminal behavior.
Speaker 9 (01:48:20):
You know, yes, what you said is true. There were
sometimes you know, a lot of times the one of
these dead or alive mandanates say, you know, if you
have to, if you kill them and bring them in,
it's just as good as you bring them in alive.
But every so often that there were there were criminals
who gave themselves up and smartly. And I mean there's
several characters in Banded Heaven then had a criminal career,
but they gave themselves up, spent some time in prison,
(01:48:42):
and had the rest of their life as model citizens,
which is very which is kind of unusual. But you know,
the landscape of the wild was was changing. There was
no wild was to go back to. By the early
middle of eighteen nineties, it was changing drastically well.
Speaker 4 (01:48:54):
And I'm sure folks I had never heard of Charlie
Serringo apparently refer to the cowboys active most successful of
the late century woman. How come his name's fallen below
most everyone's radar.
Speaker 9 (01:49:06):
I guess that's a really good question. I think part
of it is because there's probably never been a movie
made about him. One of the characters in the book
in my book is Tom Horne. There was a movie
made about him with Steve McQueen. He was not Charlie
Serrego is not included in the Pushcassian Sun Dance Kid movie.
He's spent thousands of miles in the saddle, going from
(01:49:26):
all over the United States to track down criminals. Very
successful and had a long career as a think of
the detective as account. He's the best selling authors too.
He wrote several books about his adventures. And that's a
really good question that I can answer, other than to
say there's never been a presentation of him on screen.
Speaker 1 (01:49:42):
Well.
Speaker 4 (01:49:42):
New York Times best selling author Tom Claven, author of
Bandit Heaven, The Hole in the Wall, Gangs in the
final chapter of The Wild Wild West. How about you
write a screenplay. Seems that you could sell that to
someone in Hollywood, make millions of dollars in retire.
Speaker 9 (01:49:55):
Yeah, that would be good. Where we're going to retire
to do?
Speaker 16 (01:49:58):
What?
Speaker 9 (01:49:58):
Write a book? There?
Speaker 4 (01:49:59):
You are, retire from your book writing and write books
in your retirement, Tom Clay, Then you always do a
fabulous job filling in all the blanks and revealing these
wonderful characters and telling America's history.
Speaker 1 (01:50:11):
I know my listener is gonna love it. It's on
my blog page.
Speaker 4 (01:50:13):
Fifty five cars dot com the link to where they
get the book, and I'll encourage them to get a copy.
Speaker 12 (01:50:18):
Tom.
Speaker 1 (01:50:18):
It's been a real pleasure having you back on. Keep
up the great work.
Speaker 9 (01:50:21):
Thank you for having me back on.
Speaker 4 (01:50:22):
I appreciate it, my pleasure. Seven forty fifty five. Care
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If you will be Jenna nine says, we have a
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I have seventy eight down to fifty six overnight skies
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Speaker 1 (01:52:45):
Chuck Ingram Month fifty five KR and Zee the talk station.
Speaker 4 (01:52:50):
Seven forty seven Here at fifty five kana C Detalk
station Happy Tuesday always made it happier inside scoop with
bright Burton News every Tuesday at eight o five. Today
no different from that. We are going to hear from
Nick gilbertson the Capitol Hill Reporter, get the latest on
the election, got some really fascinating things on following in
this goofy presidential election, and then Daniel Davis deep dive,
(01:53:13):
we'll get another update on the at least couple of
the wars raging in this world, the conflict in Israel
and the conflict in Ukraine, and the news out of
Ukraine does not sound very good for the Ukrainians. Every
single day we seems that Russia is taking over more
and more territory and I'm not quite sure if they're
in desperation mode, but it certainly doesn't give them a
competitive advantage of the training to negotiate some sort of
(01:53:34):
resolution of the conflict. Anticipate Ukraine's gonna have to give
up some land to settle that war, and they want
to be in NATO. I got to ask Daniel Davis
about that as well. I'm not sure where you stand
on that, but I'm curious to get his opinion on it.
Your phone calls are welcome to do a little time here,
and this brought a couple of times, including during my
conversation with Dan Raganeld Breidfard brought this back up to
(01:53:58):
the top a couple of days ago. Apparently Local twelve
here in Cincinnati had reported in September about the situation
unfolding in Lochland here in the Greater Cincinnati area small
village it is. During a recent interview, Lachland Village administrator
Doug Wyham Weyheimer speaking with Fox News on this one.
(01:54:19):
He reported on Saturday that Lachland has about thirty five hundred,
mostly folks from Mauritania that have just sort of, you know,
landed in Lochland. He's quoted as saying, if you look
at twenty twenty one and twenty twenty two, the United
States had seen a huge influx of immigrants from Mauritania.
Somehow a good number of them have landed in Lochland.
(01:54:42):
He was ived some concern about the two apartment complexes,
which he cited said units should be housing four individuals,
but apparently the officials have found up to twelve individuals
living inside single units, and it's pointed out that that
can cause other the problems regarding sanitation and safety. We
(01:55:02):
m are explained that, well, here's his quote. So when
you use the utilities that's backing up. We have instances
where people are going to take a shower and feces
is running out of the drains filling the bathtub as
it comes from a floor above. That's compounded probably by
(01:55:25):
the cooking methods that they use, which is a heavy
grease laden process. Close quote. Yeah, that's rather bile inspiring.
And they give credit to Local twelve for reporting about
Back in September, there are approximately three thousand so called
asylum seeking migrants, primarily from Martinia, living in Lachland. And
(01:55:46):
for his part, Waymeyer noted that officials have been meeting
with congressional leaders or have met with them state representatives
the governor's office regarding this issue. He said, and they
have essentially displaced the tax paying rent residents of these
two hundred apartment units and filled them with non tax
paying residents. We're losing about one hundred and twenty five
(01:56:08):
thousand to one hundred and fifty thousand dollars in revenue
because of that. No, add that to the growing list
of small towns in the Great United States of America
that have been overwhelmed and the resource of being overwhelmed.
I mean, it just transcends everything we can dealing with
the housing shortage in this country, dealing with well limited resources,
(01:56:30):
limited dollars, school districts, overwhelmed individuals that can't speak a
word of English, young people going to school and I
guess staring off into space because English isn't even a
secondary language for them, requiring them to go to remedial
English learning classes. We don't have that many I presume
fluent Mauritanians that can try to convey the subject matter
(01:56:51):
to the Mauritanian children. And I don't know how many
children are among the thirty five hundred plus or minus
that have descended on Lachland. Again, just one city. In
a broader equation, talk about Springfield, a city of fifty
thousand with thirty thousand new additional residents from primarily hating
(01:57:12):
not all. And it was noted, yeah, they don't have
the right to work. Is the beilble to work? So
they're not participating in the economy most of the it
says the situation and also put a financial strain in
the small village because most of the immigants are unable
to work until they're qualified for work permits. Therefore they're
not paying taxes. Question, how can they afford or are
(01:57:34):
they having their living space paid for, presumably by your
tax dollars. Seems to me that's why Donald Trump's ahead
of the polls at least as far as immigration is concerned,
not going to be easy to well evict, throw out,
otherwise remove from the United States the entire fifteen to
(01:57:54):
twenty million immigrants that have snuck into the country otherwise
been allowed to walk into our country in spite of
the fact that simple bad economic circumstances in their home
countries is not a legitimate qualifying reason to seek asylum
in the United States. That's what that hearing is all about.
But all the reporting from the border is that the
(01:58:15):
vast majority of folks will admit they're here for economic reasons.
My country sucks. There are no jobs. It's just a hellhole.
That's why I'm here. Which if you said that out
loud and immigration hearing, I suppose that would result in
your being well denied an opportunity to stay in the country.
Just one more problem, and it is just one of
many many. I got reports all over the place, more
(01:58:38):
and more bipartisan support to get a grip on this,
to start working with immigration and customs officials to get
rid of these sanctuary city ideas because it's become financially devastating.
So what Jay Scott, Jay, thanks for calling this morning,
and a happy Tuesday to you. Hey, Brian, how are
you well? No, I'm able to be here at work.
And if I had struggled with the tear rrible cough
(01:59:00):
situation that whatever's gone through our house, I wouldn't be
at work for the rest of the all the way
through the election. It's oh my god, my poor wife.
I have it right now, oh RSV. Pretty much you think, yeah.
Speaker 5 (01:59:13):
Yeah, there you have it.
Speaker 11 (01:59:15):
So Hey, A couple of things on this lock on
the situation. First off, everybody has to quit saying that
the Biden administration let this happen. They made it happen.
This was on purpose, completely, one hundred percent. They wanted this.
They couldn't have let things go the way they did
without expecting this. And I would bet if somebody did
(01:59:38):
some deep research, they'd find out that the Martinians were
flown in here rather than going across the Mexican border.
Speaker 4 (01:59:45):
And if that was that CBP one plan. If that's
the case, then they have the right to work. They
are given a work authorization.
Speaker 11 (01:59:52):
Right, which is just insane. We can't be doing that,
you know, look at what happened in Springfield. For some reason,
there's been no diligent reporting on this. Mike DeWine was
behind that one. If you look at that article from
the Inquirer in twenty nineteen where it talks about him
working with the Trump Administration for resettlement of Haitians after
(02:00:17):
a hurricane, which was a small number. He up and
volunteered Springfield to be the place for that to happen,
and he worked with local officials for that to happen,
and as soon as the border was opened up, he
jumped on the opportunity to bring all those folks in
and create that chaos that's going in Springfield. Now, somebody
(02:00:37):
needs to dig into local politicians in Lachland. There has
to be somebody that's encouraged this situation and brought it in.
Speaker 1 (02:00:47):
Isn't there a a meat processing plant there?
Speaker 12 (02:00:51):
There is?
Speaker 4 (02:00:52):
There is, okay that has been brought up in a
lot of the reporting on it that many of the
Haitian immigrants have taken employment there and maybe that's the
reason they were brought there because I guess the jobs
that Americans won't do is that one of the problems
we've got going on here people not having any children anymore.
We aren't even doing a replacement population. Yet the demand
(02:01:12):
for workers exist, you know.
Speaker 11 (02:01:16):
And I've always found out to be a little bit
of a farce as a as a topic too. When
I lived in Oregon, the Nurserymen's Association with report every
year how many native born Americans versus foreign born workers
there were working in the nurseries and planting trees out
(02:01:36):
in the fields and things like that. Seventy five American.
So there are Americans that will do the job, just
have to pay them appropriately and find the right people.
Speaker 5 (02:01:46):
That's the problem is they want.
Speaker 11 (02:01:47):
To underpay and make bigger profits, so they take advantage
of this situation. And I'm with I'm on board with
the Trump's plans. I'd love to see these folks deported.
If you came in illegally, go you don't have a
right to be here. There are too many people that
have come in here through deep process, works their butts
(02:02:09):
off to become American citizens, and that's spitting in their faces.
Speaker 4 (02:02:12):
Well, I agree with that completely. The only problem is
the logistics. We're going to have to do a sort
of step by step incremental approach, which is why now
they're sort of backing off this wholesale deportation and focusing
on at least up front rightfully, so the criminal element.
And trust me, that's going to take a long time
just to deal with the criminal element. Logistics. Oh, it's
going to be unbelievable. I appreciate the call, truly, Jay,
(02:02:35):
have a wonderful day. Seven to fifty seven Bright bart
Inside Scoop after the top of the our news plus
the Daniel Davis Deep Dive at eight thirty up right back.
Speaker 7 (02:02:43):
You use two November at the top end thirty past
work an important elections.
Speaker 1 (02:02:47):
I like to keep up with what's going on in
fifty five krs the talk station to give.
Speaker 5 (02:02:52):
America back on track. That's what this whole thing is about.
Speaker 1 (02:02:55):
The conversation. Both vote's happening here.
Speaker 12 (02:02:58):
Every vote's going to matter more than ever.
Speaker 1 (02:03:00):
Fifty five krc D Talkstation eight oh five, fifty five
krc DE Talk Station. I'm very happy.
Speaker 4 (02:03:08):
Tuesday always made it happier because this time for the
inside scoop with Breitbart News. I always start by recommending
your book mark Breitbart be R E I T B
A RT dot com.
Speaker 1 (02:03:17):
You'd be happy you did great.
Speaker 4 (02:03:19):
Reporting there and way outside the mainstream media which is
going to tell you the truth. Breitbart always speaking truth
to power and one of the persons who does that
joining the program this morning, Capitol Hill reporter Nick Gilbertson.
Great to have you on the program this morning, Nick,
to go over the well latest on the election as
we fast approach November.
Speaker 17 (02:03:35):
Hey, thanks for having me, Brian, and thanks for the
kind words about Breitbart.
Speaker 4 (02:03:39):
Always love to put in good words for Breitbart. I
regularly log into your site for in preparation for the
morning show, and there's some really interesting things there. Your
local story that on the situation going on locally here
in Lachland, Ohio, just outside of Cincinnati, about the Mauritanian
population thirty five hundred of them.
Speaker 1 (02:03:55):
Got that at Breitbart.
Speaker 4 (02:03:56):
Fortunately we had at least one local outlet mentioned that
back in September, but not a whole lot of press,
but things of that nature. So it is worthwhile my
listener friends get to Breitbart dot com. Let me just
say ask it cuding to the chase directly. I you know,
the fog, it's like the fog of war, Nick, the
fog of polling information. Yeah, I can look on one site,
you know, like if I go to a left leaning
(02:04:17):
site like Politico, uh, maybe The Hill, it'll have you know,
Kamala Harris ahead and all the swing states. And I
flip over to a Fox News poll or one of
the other sites and it'll say, you know, Donald Trump's
ahead and all the swing states. Like, what in the
hell are we supposed to believe? We can't believe our eyes?
Is there any really reliable polling data out there? I
keep hearing that internal polling data is always the most accurate,
(02:04:38):
and let except we normally normally don't even get that
it's like kept internally for reasons unknown. And how is
it that that internal polling data is allegedly so much
more accurate than anything else we read?
Speaker 1 (02:04:49):
Can you cut through this fog for us?
Speaker 17 (02:04:52):
Yeah, So a big part of is, yes, those internals,
you know, we hear all the time that they're the
most accurate and generally did the most comprehensive polls. Because
these are you know, these private campaigns and private super
PACs and such, you know, commissioning them, and they can
do they spend more money probably than these public outlets
and polling agencies, so they can get a clear snapshot
(02:05:16):
and deeper demographics, deeper dives on trends of where voters
are moving. And of course, yeah, unfortunately we don't typically
get those.
Speaker 5 (02:05:24):
We get them.
Speaker 17 (02:05:25):
Sometimes through leaks and we get the memos and the
top lines, but we don't really see that deeper data.
But what I find is fairly reliable right now is
the if you know, one single poll is just a
snapshot and things, but to really kind of look at trends,
one one source I really rely on as Real Clear
(02:05:46):
Politics Polling Average, right they aggregate all these polls and
they kind of give you a snapshot of the race,
you know, based off of that average. And right now,
last I saw yesterday Trump was up, you know, up
to a point or a point one point two percent
in every single swing state and the Real Clear Politics
polling average, So I think that gives a good snapshot
(02:06:09):
of the race in my opinion, you know, in substitute
for these deep you know, internal polls that that we
would love to get our hands on. But that's that's
kind of how I would describe describe things right now.
And I think Real Clear Politics is a great source
for for where things you know, a gauge or an
(02:06:29):
average of where things stand.
Speaker 4 (02:06:31):
Right now, all right, and over last you know, several weeks,
six weeks or so, the trend has been, at least
as I've observed it, correct me if you believe I'm wrong,
has been improving for Trump. He's advanced in mostly the
swing state but even on a national polling level, which
we always tend to discount because it includes so many
blue states and obviously you're going to get a trend
(02:06:51):
toward you know, Kamala Harrison, a blue state, but he's
even closed the gap on a national level, which to
me is I want to say, almost hard to believe.
Speaker 17 (02:07:01):
Yeah, no, it is almost hard to believe because generally,
you know, even in twenty sixteen, Trump didn't win the
win the popular vote, but he you know, he took
the electoral college and I think he got the second
most votes of all time in twenty twenty, but still
lost to Biden. Didn't win the college. But you know,
I think we're really seeing Trump really start making you know,
(02:07:23):
significant gains on the on the national top line too.
There was an Atlas polling poll, and I think they
were the most accurate. You know, I maybe fairly starting
on this. They're the most accurate pollster in twenty twenty.
They showed Trump up three on Harris I believe over
the weekend, and he was over fifty percent nationally. So
(02:07:44):
Trump's get if he can. So that means his ceiling
is above a majority of the country right now, which
is it's pretty unbelievable considering everything he's been put through
and everything that's been done to you know, drag him
down to whether it people lost, you know, and you
go back to all the various you know, Russia Gate
(02:08:05):
and everything even going back eight years. It's it's amazing
that he's, uh, he's really above fifty fifty in that
Atlas poll, which people put a lot of stock in,
and Harris is down three. That's that's horrific news for
Democrats nationally. You know, James Carvel, the rage in Cajun
who helped put Bill Clinton in the White House, and
(02:08:27):
he's revered as one of the most you know, veteran
Democrats strategists. He's even said if if Democrats are up
up one, that really means they're down to nationally. Right,
If they're up one in the national polls, that really
needs they're down too, because Trump typically under poles. So
I think this is screaming five alarm fire for Democrats
(02:08:49):
if Trump, If that poll is accurate and Trump's at fifty,
that's extremely dangerous, dangerous territory for Democrats right now.
Speaker 4 (02:08:57):
Well, and they're in dangerous territory based upon the lack
of articulation of where even Kamala Harris stands relative to
the current administration. She seems to be doing nothing but
running away from what she was previously standing on firm
ground on I'm against fracking, I'm in favor of woke ideology.
I'm in favor of transgender you know, a mixed bathrooms.
(02:09:18):
I'm in favor of men competing against women in sports.
You know, once people start paying attention to where she
truly is, it seems that's when they start moving over
and putting aside. They're built in Pavlovian hatred for evil
orange man. And I'll just let you know real quick
here I hit a conversation over the weekend. I think
this is contextually important, So bear with me. Great friend
(02:09:39):
of mine, lifelong friend, one of my very best friends.
He's pretty much apolitical, but he says, I just can't
vote for Trump, And so he started having a conversation
with him, and what it boiled down to the reason
he says he can't vote for Trump is because of
that Pavlovian evil orange man. And I said, well, wait
a second, so let's assume for the sake of discussion,
he is this goofy guy. He says what's on his mind.
He's not very residential, like blah blah blah blah blah. Fine,
(02:10:02):
you don't like him. You bought into this whole racist, homophobe,
misogynistic thing. Do you have any opinion on his policies,
what he did during his four years versus what Kamala
Harris stands on.
Speaker 1 (02:10:12):
He didn't know.
Speaker 4 (02:10:13):
He has no idea about policies. He couldn't name a
single policy that Kamala Harris. Will you know what I
pointed out to him. He's against, for example, men participating
in against women in sports. He's against the whole gender
pronoun thing.
Speaker 1 (02:10:27):
I could go on.
Speaker 4 (02:10:27):
So I said, so you're in favor of everything Trump
is campaigning on. He didn't even realize it. He just
has that I hate Trump ergo, I can't vote for him.
So I'd vote for a woman whose policies are the
exact opposite of what he really likes. That's really what
this race is all about.
Speaker 1 (02:10:43):
Isn't it.
Speaker 17 (02:10:44):
Yeah, No, that's exactly what this race is all about.
And it's so clear right now that Democrats and the
mainstream media they've given up on policy. Policy has been
They have not put any legitimate, you know, know, worthwhile
policy platforms out that would stand. And she's waffled on
(02:11:05):
so many issues. Can voters actually see her as genuine?
And to your point, but your your friend who you know,
she still supports her even though you know he aligns
with Trump on all the issues. It shows And then
you combine that with their closing argument here, which is
Trump is a horrible person. And I think it just
reads a desperation to me that they're doing that. And
(02:11:28):
we'll see how effective effective they are, you know, come
November fifth, with this closing argument. But it's it's it's
been tried.
Speaker 9 (02:11:36):
It was tried by.
Speaker 17 (02:11:37):
Hillary Clinton in twenty sixteen. Don't I don't pay it
works so well for her, So again they're trying to
make this all a referendum on Trump's character. Americans are
I don't think they. I think they more so care
about policy. But I think the media and Democrats are
you know, doing their best cloak and dagger work here
(02:11:58):
to to make this about everything else but policy and
what Americans, what would actually make Americans lives better? A
conversation about that, well.
Speaker 4 (02:12:09):
And every person who goes grocery shopping, or fills their
gas tank, or has to pay rent, or is endeavoring
to purchase a home, it's all becoming out of reach.
Inflation is a real thing, hitting the most vulnerable among us,
which typically are lower income voters. Of course, the middle
class has been wallat, but those are the folks that
the Democrats could typically count on. The Democrats haven't done
(02:12:31):
them a wits worth of service over the past several years.
In fact, our lives are collectively that much more miserable.
That's something they cannot run from because you cannot tell
people and convince people they're better off now when they're
the ones that go grocery shopping, fill their tank and.
Speaker 1 (02:12:45):
Pay their rent.
Speaker 17 (02:12:47):
No, And I'll tell you right now, Brian, that seems
to be undoing their coalition because you know, you look
for decades it was unions always supported Democrats, right, and
you know the teamsters would come out and endorse the
Democrat every election cycle. And then they released those poll
numbers that show all their members are not all of them,
(02:13:08):
but sixty percent of them are for Trump, and you know,
and they did a no on endorsement because of that.
Speaker 9 (02:13:14):
And then you look.
Speaker 17 (02:13:15):
I covered a New York Times story a couple of
months ago where they were in Philadelphia and talking to
black voters and black voters. They were saying things you
would hear the Trump rally. They were going, why are
we sending money to Ukraine when my neighborhood's in trouble.
So it's it's, you know, there's it seems that the
Democrats and the economic you know impact of these radical
(02:13:39):
spending policies this administration are actually you know, driving their
voters they've depended on so for so long away from them.
And I think right now, I think we're seeing a
realignment that that could, you know, potentially break what had
been the standard mo for American politics and the Democrat coalition.
(02:14:04):
And I think that's something that could just totally alter
the political landscape going forward from years for years to come.
Speaker 4 (02:14:11):
Well, and I just saw in bright part the today
Warner Todd Houston reporting on this one about this bipartisan group.
You got five Republicans in New York and four Democrats,
both sending a letter to Mayor atk Adams worried about
these Venezuelan street gangs taking over.
Speaker 5 (02:14:27):
And they have.
Speaker 4 (02:14:28):
And this is impacting people of all races, ethnicities, creeds.
It's hitting budgets, it's having problems in schools. And I
suppose many in lower income neighborhoods who have been overwhelmed
by this influx of illegal immigrants see them getting more
than they as constituents and US citizens are getting by
way of social benefits and others that they've devastated so
(02:14:50):
many communities with the immigrant policies. They're trying to walk
it back. I mean, they waited until the last couple
of months to do any form of crackdown on the border.
I would call that a the dollars short by far.
Speaker 9 (02:15:02):
Yeah.
Speaker 17 (02:15:03):
And then and then of course they you know, they
run around and claim the border crossings are lower than
under the Trump administration now, which is just absurd, because
they close the border for strictly political purposes, you know,
in the spring into the summer. But we were absolutely
ravaged for three years, you know, by by like literally
unlimited illegal immigration. So yeah, it's just, uh, it's absolutely
(02:15:27):
amazing and and to your point, yeah, it's and then
they get put into sanctuary cities where you know, there's
only so many resources, and it's it's it's truly amazing.
How this is affecting the Democratic Coalition. I really think
they're I really think they've hurt themselves with their own base,
with their own policies over the past past few years.
Speaker 4 (02:15:49):
Well, the finite number of dollars and seemingly unlimited demands
on government, and this has thrown a massive monkey wrench
into anyone's designs in terms of where public dollars are going,
either from the left or the right. I mean, you've
got to deal with this immigrant crisis up front, and
it's just ruining most people's neighborhood, so to the political
benefit of Republicans who promised to crack down anyhow, Tea
(02:16:12):
Lea for reading Nick before we part company here this morning.
What's your take? Where do you think, how do you
think it's going to end up? And how many days
do you think it's going to be before we have
a real, definitive declaration of a winner after election day.
Speaker 17 (02:16:27):
Well, Brian, I think it could go a couple of ways.
I think, just based off of the trends Trump's running
in now. So if he has a big night on
the East coast early right, I think if he clearly
takes North Carolina, Georgia, and Pennsylvania, and he takes everything
else he's expected to take, that puts him at two seventy.
(02:16:49):
So we could have a call by midnight if Trump
wins those three states comfortably, you know. If not, you know,
we could get a call late in the night. Or
you know, there's also the twenty twenty scenario where you know,
some states are too close to call or you know,
and it could it could be weeks before we have
a definitive you know, days or weeks before we have
(02:17:10):
a definitive winner. So I think any of those could
play out. But looking at things from you know, a
thousand feet above right now, I think things look good
for Trump. I think things look good for down ballot
Senate Republicans right now. A lot of swing state Democrats
are actually you know, Tammy Baldwin in Wisconsin and or
Bob Casey and Pennsylvania are putting out you know, ads
(02:17:32):
where they're using that they're including positive video of Trump
and you know, touting that they you know, stood up
for some you know, the end of bath, their trade
deals or whatever. So I think that shows that the
fact that they're leaning into Trump to try and help them,
you know, save their seats. Yeah, I think that, I
think that speaks to desperation, and I think it's I
(02:17:53):
think it shows that they they're internals. You know, we
we don't get to see those, but I think we
get to see some of the results. And I think
I think some of the results are being seen in
those ads. Yeah, posed up to Trump.
Speaker 4 (02:18:07):
Speak volumes Capitol Hill Report. Nick Gilbertson, It's a right
real pleasure having you on this morning for the Inside Scoop.
We'll keep pulling Upwrightbart dot com and getting some solid
information there and I look forward to another conversation with
you down the road.
Speaker 1 (02:18:19):
Keep up the great work, my friend.
Speaker 9 (02:18:22):
Thanks Brian.
Speaker 1 (02:18:22):
Great being here today, My pleasure. Folks to the ground,
and we got more to talk about. A plumbing done right.
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Tight dot com. It is a thirty fifty five KR
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Speaker 1 (02:19:36):
It's Tuesday.
Speaker 4 (02:19:37):
For regular listeners, they know it's appointment listening. It's that
time a week we do the Daniel Davis Deep Dive,
the forour d's of Daniel Davis, not the five d's
of Dodgeball. Welcome back, retired Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Davis, have
a deep dive. Let's talk about again war. It's good
to see my friend. Have you back on the program?
Speaker 5 (02:19:53):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (02:19:54):
Yeah, where'd you get talking about something happy? One of
these days, I know, I guess we gotta know what
we gotta know. Trust me, you know, and I know
you did this for a living too.
Speaker 4 (02:20:03):
But you know, I just every single day, you know,
I've got stacks of just articles after articles, I always
tell my listeners. At the end of the week, after
doing five shows four hours a day, I usually have
a rems worth of paper of articles that I didn't
get to and sadly none of which has any good information.
It's a depressing job, man.
Speaker 5 (02:20:22):
Wow.
Speaker 4 (02:20:23):
Anyway, speaking of depressing, not nearly as depressing as apparently
the Ukrainians feeling. Right now, let's start with Ukraine the
more I read, the more I read that Russia is
taking over more and more land in Ukraine. They're advancing,
not retreating. They're holding onto what they have gained. Ukrainians
obviously struggling with getting people to fight for them, people
(02:20:43):
leaving the country rather than serve. They keep asking for
more and more weapons and munitions. I know, there's kind
of a slow drag on getting that. Can we provide
them with enough that they could even defend or fight
themselves or gain back the land? That remains a big question,
And now they're pressing for NATO. Member, what's your assessment
on this one this week, Daniel, Yeah, it's.
Speaker 18 (02:21:05):
Not very good from the Ukrainian perspective, because the biggest
issue is not necessarily equipment and ammunition as it had
been for a long time, but manpower that they are
outnumbered on the front lines. In fact, Secretary of Defense
Austin is there right now, and then he just announced
a new four hundred million dollar package and they're gonna
(02:21:26):
get more ammunition and high marsh missiles and a number
of other things that they need. But there's a second
unexpected problem for some in that it's not just the
number of artillery shells, but the number of artillery tubes,
the actual cannons are starting to wear out. They're being
of course destroyed in battle, and they have a hard
(02:21:47):
time getting enough because the West doesn't have enough to
give them in the large numbers that they're needing, so
that the rate of fire continues to go down. But
the biggest issue is the manpower issue. That's why all along,
especially the southern half of the Eastern Front is showing
bigger and bigger and just sustained advances by the Russian side,
(02:22:08):
and there's nothing that the Ukraine side has tried to
do that's gonna get rid of them. And one of
the other reasons is because Russia continues, according to US intelligence,
to innovate even faster than the Ukraine side can't on
the battlefield about what works, what doesn't work. They shift
to something new, they try a new tactic, they new technology,
et cetera, and the Ukraine side just can't catch up
(02:22:29):
and they just keep getting pushing further to the west.
Speaker 4 (02:22:32):
Well, when you're outnumbered by that many men, you're talking
about soldiers versus one side versus another, I suppose it
becomes impossible to react on the fly to these various changes.
Speaker 1 (02:22:43):
The Soviet are the.
Speaker 4 (02:22:43):
Side keep saying the Soviets. I'm sorry, Daniel, I'm of
that mindset. I'm fifty nine years old. I live my
whole life fighting the Soviet Union in anyway. But the Russians,
they have that advantage of manpower, and so they have
a strategic advantage over maybe trying out different options.
Speaker 1 (02:23:00):
What can Ukraine possibly do?
Speaker 4 (02:23:02):
Is that why they want NATO membership, so that everybody
gets drawn into it, they get soldiers from all the
NATO countries.
Speaker 1 (02:23:07):
I can't see that as a viable option for us.
It's not for us.
Speaker 18 (02:23:11):
But that is one hundred percent what Zelenski wanted, which
is why his victory planned that he announced last week
centered on first, get me into NATO right now. Then
give me all your weapons and everything else so we
can shoot longer range, et cetera. But look, I think
we've talked before. Long range weapons are not going to
change the course of a war. It's going to be
just another piece added into it. But it's got to
(02:23:33):
be combined with other things or it's just not going
to have any impact. But it could have disastrous consequences
because if Russia takes that and it acts on what
they said, then they could expand the warrant here. And
that's what's got a lot of the Western people unwilling
so far, and I mean all of them to allow
their long range weapons to be used by Ukraine into Russia.
Speaker 1 (02:23:55):
And for good reason, we shouldn't do that.
Speaker 18 (02:23:56):
But there's an additional problem with the manpower on the
Ukraine side of it. Did want to mention is that
because they have so few of the Associated press reports
this morning that now then ten million people have fled
Ukraine since the war began. It's now up to that number,
and of course all the battle casualties, and now then
the people that they're recruiting, they're not recruiting, they're actually
(02:24:17):
grabbing off the streets. And when they get to the front,
the commanders, the Ukrainian commanders are complaining that maybe one
in ten actually fought. Many of the rest of them
either refused to fight or flee as soon as they
get there, or unfortunately a lot of them die within
the first few days just because of lack of knowledge
and training.
Speaker 4 (02:24:35):
It's a pretty bleak picture, I'm afraid. Yeah, warm bodies
is not just the answer to the question. He'd have
effective fighting forces. I mean, you think about you know,
one highly elite you know, like a Navy seal team
can accomplish because they are such an effective, well oiled machine.
Those are the highly aest trained fighters. But grabbing some
(02:24:56):
eighteen year old kid out of a bar and he
doesn't want to even go fight, not only are you
facing the challenge of trying to get them motivated to
do it protect your own country, damn it, but learning
how to effectively operate a fight, even as something as
simple as an AK or an M sixteen that requires training.
You can't just grab one and start shooting accurately at
(02:25:17):
a four hundred and five hundred yards You can't.
Speaker 18 (02:25:20):
And you know, there's another interesting dynamic associated with that
is that because Russia has more just raw numbers of men,
they have the luxury of actually training them up. And
I actually, for the first time on my show this
past week, got to talk to, oddly enough, a UK
volunteer who was fighting for the Russian side and was
pretty open about how they conduct their side of the fight.
(02:25:43):
And he said that he spent about four months of
different kinds of training at different locations before he even
got into combat. The first time, and the most common
comment from the Ukraine side is they get there in
a number of days in some cases, so the Russians
do have time so that when their guys get there,
they actually do have some decent training, whereas the Ukraine
(02:26:04):
side don't.
Speaker 1 (02:26:04):
And you see, every time you want to look at this,
the comparative.
Speaker 18 (02:26:07):
Analysis just goes worse and worse against the Ukraine side,
and it's there is no path to them to avoid
being defeated at this point, and I think it's going
to take something besides just a wild hope.
Speaker 1 (02:26:17):
To get into NATO.
Speaker 4 (02:26:18):
Well, and the exclamation point on all that is the
Russians do have longer range, more effective weaponry, they're sort
of keeping it on the back burner, like those supersonic
hypersonic missiles. Russia has those at their disposal, they're only
I don't know if they've necessarily used them yet, but
it seems like they're keeping their powder dry to some extent.
Speaker 18 (02:26:38):
Well, they have periodical but because they've been striking, especially
deep within Ukraine on the energy system to keep them
knocked down. But what's not been reported very much is
that there's a bit between forty and sixty long range
drones per day that are being fired throughout the Ukraine,
and their air defenses are almost incapable now, so most
of those are getting through. It just doesn't make much news,
(02:27:00):
but it continues to just degrade the ability to even
fight at the front on top of the manpower issue,
all right.
Speaker 4 (02:27:07):
And that provides a nice pivot to get back to Israel.
You and I've had this conversation before. Israel has a
finite number of anti surface to air anti missile missiles
of a variety of different types, but they're really bloody expensive.
There's a finite number of those, and seemingly an infinite
number of very inexpensive drones and rockets and all the
(02:27:27):
equipment that the various terrorist organizations have received from outside
sources like Iran. But Israel is doing a very effective
job and knocking off leadership. Only just got another guy
and apparently just launched the strike on what the banking industry.
Speaker 18 (02:27:42):
Right, Yeah, they're just to completely dismantling everything in Hesbola
that's up in Lebanon where they've been taking that out.
I'm not sure how effective it is to take out
a physical bank building, just because most transactions these days
are done electronically, right, But I mean, I guess if
that's where served, it could certainly have an issue there.
I don't have a lot of granularity on exactly what
(02:28:05):
was in those buildings that they struck, but I do
know they're going after the financial capabilities, which which is a.
Speaker 1 (02:28:10):
Pretty common thing in modern warfare to go after.
Speaker 18 (02:28:13):
But there's been a couple of strokes actually are one
today from Hesbala launching a small number of drones, two
of which one got all the way through the Israeli.
Speaker 1 (02:28:26):
Distance or air defenses.
Speaker 18 (02:28:28):
Didn't even signal any alarms, which is concerning to them
because they didn't even track it coming in and it
did land and kill a number of Israeli soldiers inside
of Israel today, So they've got to try to figure
out what's going on with their air defense shield.
Speaker 4 (02:28:42):
Well, it seems to me that flying low and quote
unquote under the radar, is that still a viable option
these days?
Speaker 18 (02:28:49):
Apparently it is, because whether it's an electronic issue or
they physically got under the radar is unknown, but it
certainly did get through.
Speaker 4 (02:28:56):
So phase next phase for Israel, do you think they're
still going to plan to launch some sort of strike
on the Iranians or where are we.
Speaker 18 (02:29:06):
In that based on that leaked intelligence that came out
in the US, a top secret document was a release.
But then even without that, you had President Biden last
Friday was pointedly asked on the tarmac I think in
Germany if he knew what Israel was going to do
and when they were going to do it.
Speaker 1 (02:29:22):
He said yes and yes. Of course he refused to
say what that was.
Speaker 18 (02:29:26):
But by all accounts, I mean, you take what was
in that intelligence information, along with what Biden said, along
with what the Israeli leaders have said, it seems only
a matter of time before something pretty major is launched
by Israel against Iran.
Speaker 1 (02:29:40):
Hmm.
Speaker 4 (02:29:41):
I guess the only thing we can do is keep
our popcorn out because the Israelis seem to me like
they're going to do what the Israelis want to do,
regardless of what Biden wants them to do.
Speaker 1 (02:29:49):
I think that's a pretty clear statement. Yeah.
Speaker 4 (02:29:51):
Daniel Davis always a pleasure. Search for him. You'll find
Daniel Davis podcast. Just search Daniel Davis Deeve Dive. Always
enjoy our conversations as sad and depressing as they made.
Got to talk about reality. Daniel, Oh, we got to
know what's really going on.
Speaker 1 (02:30:03):
I appreciate it.
Speaker 4 (02:30:04):
Amen, brother, we'll talk next week. Have a wonderful week,
my friend eight forty coming up with eighty forty one
I fifty five KR. See the talk station more to
talk about. You can feel free to call in flopen
the phone lines up five one, three, seven, four, nine,
fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eight two three Talk
town five fifty on AT and T phone day right
here at fifty five KRC the talk station one more
(02:30:24):
time for the nine first warning. Weather forecasts got a
sunny day for the most part, seventy eight for the high.
There's skuys every night down to fifty six seventy eight
with partly cloudy skies tomorrow and a clear overnight forty
four low sunny on Thursday with the I of sixty seven.
Speaker 1 (02:30:39):
Right now, it's forty six degrees. Time for final traffic.
Chuck Ingram.
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work for a couple of rex on two seventy five,
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hand side, traffic backs to the Parkway, the latest west
(02:31:06):
to seventy five after seventy five, and Sharonville backing traffic
towards Mastella chuck Ingramont fifty five KR seat the talk.
Speaker 4 (02:31:14):
Station at eight. If you have KR, see de talk station.
Regular listeners are like, wait a minute, what's this bumper music?
Where did it come from? So Joe Strecker happens to
be a closet Iron Maiden fan and apparently the original
(02:31:37):
lead singer, the guy that Bruce Dickinson took over for
that everybody knows, died So not sure if that's on
your list of Deadpool or not, but that man's passed away,
So you still got Bruce Dickinson. We need more cow bell, right,
Joe the Bruce Dickinson. Sorry, some people out there going,
(02:31:58):
what the hell is he talking about?
Speaker 1 (02:32:00):
Anyway?
Speaker 4 (02:32:01):
Five one three seven Fred two three talk. I really
really appreciate Kevin Gordon coming for me yesterday, and I'm
thanking God that I'm not struggling with the rs V
as bad as my son and my wife incessant coughing.
I felt so badly. I don't think my wife got
an hour's worth of sleep last night, coughed incessantly, and
(02:32:22):
that was my concern yesterday because she had she was
feeling really, really, a whole lot better a couple of
days ago, only to have a massive relapse the following day,
and I was afraid that was gonna happen, still could happen,
but actually able to manage this morning without coughing.
Speaker 1 (02:32:38):
Knock wood.
Speaker 4 (02:32:38):
I probably shouldn't even say it out loud, but that
RSV is nasty, and my son's cough is still he's
still got the cough, no other symptoms but the cough.
But the cough is nasty, and he's in his third
week of that, and it's everywhere this RSV and apparently
not a whole lot you can do about it other
than normal, you know, keep your fluid levels up and
drink orange juice and that kind of thing. So don't
(02:33:00):
father taking drugs. Apparently there's nothing out there that works,
at least that's the best of my knowledge basically what
I've read. I'm not a doctor, and I don't play
one on radio, but do have certainly a I can
relate to everybody who's struggling with that. So again, Kevin Gordon,
thank you very much for covering yesterday. Such see, I've
got a couple of colors coming in. First off, Kama
(02:33:21):
Harris is still doing the flip of a fracking flip flop,
and now she can just pay attention to what she's
saying and what her surrogates are saying on this one
because she's got to win Pennsylvania and she's desperately trying
to in the folks in Pennsylvania that she's not against fracking.
Her climate person, her climate engagement director, called Kamala Thorndike.
(02:33:46):
You should take a look at what Kamala has had
to say in the past. This is her, this is
Kamala Harris's climate engagement director. She's got a long history
of absolute just lam basting the oil and gas industry.
Kamala Thorndyke, she's with the ministration, she's with Kamala Harris,
(02:34:08):
she's behind the scenes. Anyone who's in the fossil fuel
sector consider putting their talents elsewhere. Stop continuing to cook
the planet. She said back in August of twenty two.
May twenty two accuse the oil and gas industry of
echo terrorism. Back in twenty one, she called on her
followers to overcome'll get a little this this crap, overcome
(02:34:30):
the individualism, white supremacy, and toxic patriarchy that oil and
gas companies weaponize. Really that's her person, her point person.
Yet she's rolled out to try to convince you that
Kamala Harris is still in favor of fracking.
Speaker 1 (02:34:50):
And how does she do that?
Speaker 4 (02:34:51):
Well, Kamala Harris is the deciding vote on the Inflation
Production Act, which is the largest green climate agenda around,
which does provide for some increa fracking. There's some mandates
in there. I think the Republicans probably forced them in there,
but in any event, it does expand some fracking. But
otherwise forget about it. If it's not in that inflation
reduction Acting specifically, then there won't be anymore desperately trying
(02:35:16):
to hide behind that while not admitting to her real goal,
which is to end fracking and our energy independence.
Speaker 1 (02:35:22):
So go to the phones.
Speaker 4 (02:35:23):
Got Drew Pappis on the phone, and Drew Pappas always
great to hear from you, sir.
Speaker 9 (02:35:28):
Good morning, Brian.
Speaker 5 (02:35:29):
That was excellent.
Speaker 9 (02:35:30):
I hope everybody looks up that you know, you're making
too much sense this morning. If you Kamala Harris, you can't.
He has to pay attention to what she said, not
the people she puts in power. You're doing an excellent
job just connecting the dots here, and I appreciate that,
and I hope everybody looks that person up. But regarding
you know, we're two weeks out tomorrow, I mean today,
(02:35:50):
two weeks from today, and to kind of put you
in a good mood and remind you of why it's
so very important to get not only yourself but everybody
you know to vote.
Speaker 5 (02:36:02):
I wanted to remind.
Speaker 9 (02:36:03):
Folks that tomorrow is the last travel on our flight
of the year. Yes, so they will be heading out tomorrow,
you know the drill. And if you wanted to just
simply get energized and recharge your batteries and feel good
and show your appreciation to those folks that have earned
(02:36:26):
you the right to vote, and then maybe you will
then use that opportunity to get everyone, not only yourself,
but everybody you know to vote, come on out to
the airport tomorrow evening around eight thirty.
Speaker 5 (02:36:40):
We returned home.
Speaker 9 (02:36:41):
Somewhere around that time. You know that it's a flexible
it's a flexible time because you know, nothing's written in
stone there. Sometimes we're waiting on people, but a thirty CBG.
Welcome these folks home and give them a rousing welcome home,
and also energize your own batteries and go into the
election season in two weeks with with with you know,
(02:37:03):
beld On and really feeling energized.
Speaker 4 (02:37:05):
You will and you know, courage My caught up earlier
to mind us he's actually going on the flight and
he said he'll provide us with an update live from
the event. But I can't thank you enough for bringing
it back up to the top because it is such
an amazing opportunity to feel really great about the country
and about those who probably served. Give them some love,
and you're going to get them right back again, and
probably we'll have a bit of an allergy outbreak. I
(02:37:26):
think that's regularly on the schedule of events at the
return ceremony. Thanks Drue, appreciate you bringing that back up CDG. Tomorrow,
you don't have to know where to go, just follow
the cars and the people. It won't be easy to
figure out.
Speaker 1 (02:37:40):
Let's end with Marty Marty final words this morning here
in the Morning Show. Thanks for calling, Brian.
Speaker 16 (02:37:46):
I think I have something to help you stop coffee.
Speaker 5 (02:37:51):
All right.
Speaker 16 (02:37:52):
My parents work from Ireland and this is what they did.
You take a call. They probably use th eggs. My
father worked for the railroads and he had big red
and blue handkerchiefs. You take one of those, you put
it under the faucet, you squeeze it out, you roll
it up to like two inches thick. You safety pin
(02:38:16):
it to your throat. Then you take another one, you
pin that over it. That one is dry. Then you
rub your chest with thick stapor rub and you get
in bed and you will not cough.
Speaker 1 (02:38:32):
No kidding.
Speaker 16 (02:38:33):
I don't know why it works, but it was mentioned
in the book Trinity. It's a novel about Ireland.
Speaker 1 (02:38:42):
Fantastic, Marty.
Speaker 4 (02:38:44):
I had someone call me with the old old world
treatment of eating raw onions, suggest you just eat them
like an apple and that would cure it. That didn't
sound real appealing to me. Your sounds a little bit
easy to accomplish, and something is not going to ruin
your breath for the day and probably won't cause indigestion.
Speaker 1 (02:38:58):
Since you mentioned it was from Ireland.
Speaker 4 (02:39:00):
I'm just a little disappointed he didn't involve whiskey, but
maybe we can add that to the equation.
Speaker 1 (02:39:06):
God bless you.
Speaker 4 (02:39:07):
I appreciate that you're so kind, and hopefully I will
avoid the cold. But maybe my wife is listening and
she'll apply that old world remedy yourself, folks, if you
can't get a chance to listen, Dan Regano, it's the
Woe Tompower you seminar tonight about the national debt. He'll
kick that off, and then you have the main summonar
by Dave Manchin, who's going to be discussing how to
make a good work life balance. Tom Claven's book is
right there. Baned it Heaven, the Hole in the Wall, Gangs,
(02:39:30):
and the final chapter of the Wild West. Some great
characters you've never heard of, a real, real, great work
of history in the American West.
Speaker 1 (02:39:37):
That book available.
Speaker 4 (02:39:38):
Fifty five care sea dot Com podcast in my conversation
with Capitol Hills News reporter Nick gilbertson his take on
the latest on the election, and of course Daniel Davis
deep dive right there. Fifty five care sea dot Com
gets your iHeart media app while you're there Tomorrow Judge,
Ennena Paulatano. Thank you Joe Strecker for all the work
you do in producing the program. Folks, I hope you
have a wonderful day. Stick around Glenbeck's coming.
Speaker 1 (02:39:59):
Right you use two November at the top end thirty pass.
Speaker 12 (02:40:03):
I like checking the nudes throughout the day.
Speaker 5 (02:40:05):
This is a big one.
Speaker 11 (02:40:06):
This means a lot.
Speaker 1 (02:40:07):
Fifty five KRC the talk station