All Episodes

October 30, 2024 155 mins
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:05):
Five o five.

Speaker 2 (00:08):
At fifty five k r C, the talk station every Wednesday.

Speaker 3 (00:16):
Some say, go me garbage I see floating down there
as your supporters.

Speaker 4 (00:31):
Keep your stupid mouth shut.

Speaker 2 (00:35):
Joe Biden stepping in it yesterday, not doing the Kamala
Harris campaign. A whole lot of good. We'll get to that.
Brian Thomas wishing you a very happy Wednesday. Glad to
see j Just Drecker and Worrey blogs. Glad to see
the wonderful wind up. Thank you again to Juderecker. Here
you get six oh five George Brunneman Restored Liberity dot Us.
We'll be talking politics and studio for an hour. We've

(00:56):
got a whole lot of things to talk about. Just
latest on the election and the rise of the nerds.
Nerds end quote, trying to turn the country at least purple.
Empower you presentation tonight. George will also be talking about
other issues beyond that. I enjoy my conversations with George.
A stute political observer. He is a big picture. With

(01:17):
Jack Avidan, It's Wednesday seven oh five with Jack Avidan,
and I always love talking to Jack as well. Three
tough issues. The subject matter of our discussion with Jack
Aviden or his commentary, depending on how you want to
look at it. Jim Neale's wunning for shriff. Vote for
Jim Neil. He's a good guy. We need some order
and some well morale boosting in the Sheriff's department. Need

(01:41):
the same thing in the insant police department too, But
that's a completely different story. Jim Neil he needs to
be elected and we need to vote for him. He's
going to explain why you should vote for him. He'll
be on at seven thirty. I like Jim. He's a solid, solid,
decent man, bliss of powers. Another wonderful, wonderful candidate. Of course,
need to keep Hamlon Kenny prosecutor someone who was at

(02:02):
least considerably tough on crime. While I look at that
guy who beat up Nancy Pelosi's husband, the guy got
life in prison for that life. Put anybody else in
that situation, substituted her husband for some regular, substitute her

(02:24):
husband for you, and some craze guy with the ball
peen hammer comes breaking through your front door and bops
you with it. What's the likelihood you would get life
in prison? He didn't die, did he? I mean, I
don't even put murderers the first degree intentional murderers in

(02:44):
prison for life. Anyway, Melissa Powers. I don't think Melissa
Powers had even done that. Maybe we can ask her
final vote push Hamlon Kenny prescut Melissa Powers on the
program at eight h five and answering the question which
we all know is never going to happen. Is she
really going to prosecute women who have abortions? I think

(03:05):
should probably laugh about that, just the suggestion anyway. Judge
Edna Poalatono tweetled it and tweetled on the subject matter
of his op ed piece. He doesn't like either of
the presidential candidates, so he's not going to vote for
either of Many explains why in his op ed piece
says he hasn't voted for a presidential candidates. It's nineteen
eighty four. Ronald Reagan earned the vote of Judge Edita Polatono,

(03:27):
and he's been, I guess, thoroughly disgusted with all the
candidates ever since that date. He will vote for down
ballot races, I understand, but we'll hear from the judge
on his points on that, one of which I disagreed with.
So comedy made about illegal immigrants and the immigrants and
the motivation for wanting mass deportation. And I never have
responded to the judge in emails to the length and breath.

(03:50):
I responded to him yesterday about that one point. It'll
be a subject matter perhaps some disagreement between us. But
you know, libertarian principles and philosophy are one thing. You
can be a philosopher and hold to your you know,
in principle in your heart, as I do near and
dear certain political political leanings. You know, there's Marxism, there's communism,

(04:11):
there's libertarian, there's you know, whatever Republicans and Democrats are.
But we tend to be more open borders type people.
But that is completely disrupted when you turn your country
into a welfare state, which by law mandates you provide
free stuff and things to every human being across as

(04:33):
the border. You go from a country where merit, hard work,
and effort are rewarded because you come here without the
dangling caret of government largess. You come here because we
live in a free country. Oh my god, there's a
free place. I can speak my mind, yes you can.
I can own property, yes you can. I can exercise

(04:56):
my religion yes, you can. We protect all that here.
All of that was the impetus and the draw for
all the people who went through Ellis Island. We didn't
have a welfare state back then. That kicked in later,
and once the welfare the state is established, it no
longer is. You're going to live, thrive and survive if

(05:16):
you come to America and engage in hard work and effort,
bring your expertise here. If you can just come here
and hook yourself up to the umbilical court of government,
kick back, put your feet up, and well live off
someone else's labor, it destroys the whole concept of a
free and open border that welcomes people who well will
engage in business, commerce and industry. So we look, I mean,

(05:39):
I'm looking forward to talking to the judge about that one.
Ed Fank. You're Ed Fink, Vietnam veteran. Ed Fank, former
financial planner, now enjoining the hell out of his retirement.
I'm jealous of Ed post pictures on Facebook all the time.
He's got this beautiful home and a pod, and his
granddaughter comes over all the time, and anyway, he's got
great stories to tell. Ed think we'll join us at

(06:00):
eight forty five talking about a Veterans Day event at
Molar High School. He is a proud Molar grad five one, three, seven,
four nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two
three talk pound five fifty on AT and T phone.
You loathe some garbage you what's worse? Calling you to

(06:21):
a deplorable or current calling you garbage? Well, the White
House is backpedaling on this one. So we got a
virtual Harris campaign call with Voto Latino. Joe Biden on
the call, of course, having a go at Donald Trump
talking about the rally in Madison Gardens, and of course
the so called comedian Tony Hinchliff. I think that's how

(06:43):
you pronounce his name. I don't care, never heard of him.
Joe Pollock from Breitbart was on yesterday. You said the
guy's kind of really funny, and he thought nobody was
supportive of the joke when it was cracked. You can't
even call it a joke. I know, it's a subjective
of the analys and what you think is funny, it isn't.
But the crowd reaction was one of uh, you know, like, oh,

(07:06):
I can't believe you did that. But of course the
mainstream media has latched onto that one singular quote floating
island of garbage close quote reference to Puerto Rico that
this Tony Inchcliff made. That's all you heard? How long
did that rally go?

Speaker 4 (07:22):
On?

Speaker 2 (07:23):
Hours? They had like dozens of speakers, noted notables, people
were actually running for office, like Biden and h and
Jade Vance and others. You have seen any quotes from them?
What you got is one singular line from a comedy
act that preceded the event. It was a warm up act.

(07:45):
So I'll pivot over to Joe Biden on this Boto
Latino Boto Latino campaign call. The only garbage I see
floating out there is his supporters, his demonization of latinas
is on consciable, and his un American.

Speaker 5 (08:02):
Huh.

Speaker 2 (08:06):
Now, the White House is trying to spin this into no, no,
Joe Biden was referring to the language. He was referring
to the comedian himself, not the Trump supporters. In fact,
the White House sent on a transcript and they added
an apostrophe to suggest Biden was only speaking about one supporter,

(08:32):
not all, the supporter being the comedian. The only garbage
I've seen floating out there is his supporter's apostrophe as
his demonization of Latinus is unconscionable and un American. Now
you can hear it, you can listen to it, you
can believe your own ears, or you can believe the
rewrite from the well the White House. And it's kind

(08:55):
of funny because when you lose CNN on a moment
like this, you probably have lost the argument. Seeing an
anchor Caitlin Collins talking with Josh Shapiro, Pennsylvania governor, about this,
Colins told Shapiro, the White House is trying to say
that what President Biden was saying, they're putting an apostrophe

(09:16):
there in supporters saying it's the singular I guess refer
to the comedian the supporters' comments. So, I mean, it's
hard to really look at that when you can listen
to it for yourself exactly. So you're now garbage. You

(09:41):
are garbage half of America. And I don't know, maybe
we can break down the definition of supporters. If you
are a reluctant Trump voter, if you are voting for
the lesser of two evils, because well, Kamala Harris is
an idiot and incapable of running this country, let alone
the American military in times of crisis in conflict. You

(10:02):
don't like Trump filling the life for reasons why, but
you do realize you had a better four years under
his administration than you have under the last well almost
four full years of Biden and Harris. You don't want
to vote for Kama Harris because she represents yet the
identical situation we have now. She can't come up with
a thing to differentiate herself. And when she's asked the
direct question, what would you have done different in the

(10:22):
past three and a half years, she said nothing. When
offered a multitude of opportunities to ask what exactly she
stands for, she provides you with nothing. When presented with
all the campaign promises and pledges and platforms that she
was running when she was trying to become president back
in twenty nineteen, when you ask her about do you

(10:45):
still support fill in the blank like open borders and
defunding the police and Black Lives Matter and all that,
She's just duck dodging, diving around. She's not saying no,
just I'm sticking with my core principles. I'm the same person.
Just I don't want to admit that I want a
ban fracking now, at least in front of the voters
in Pennsylvania. So you got all that nonsense with Harris,

(11:08):
which is driving you over to Trump. And you're one
of those people that doesn't really want to vote for Trump,
but you're going to anyway for the best interests of
the country. Generally speaking, the direction of the country you
believe is going the wrong way. At least Trump represents something,
you know, because he had four years to demonstrate how
he would run the country. Congratulations on many things, including
the piece of Cords, But you gotta hold your nose.

(11:33):
Getting back to my point, does that make you a
Trump supporter? And maybe the White House could spend it
a little differently? No, no, no, He was only referring
to the always Trump or folks out there, the people
that think he walks on water and does no wrong.
Not my problem, it's the White House's problem. But I

(11:54):
think they're that calling the half what I would argue
is half the American people garbage. Probably a bad idea
since the deplorables things didn't really work all that well
for Hillary Clinton five seventeen. Right now, feel free to
call five one, three seven, four nine fifty five hundred,
eight hundred and eighty two to three talk pound FI
fifty on AT and T phones. I hope you can
stick around Right here at fifty five k C detalk station,

(12:15):
Robinhood is introducing four. Yeah, I think that's you. It
is five twenty one and the Happy Ones with you.
If I went three seven, four nine fifty five hundred,
eight hundred eighty two three talk pound five fifty on
AT and T phones. Before I get to Deep thoughts
by Kamala Harris, you had another word, Salad. I want
to talk to Steve. Steve, thanks for calling this morning.

(12:36):
Walk in to the program.

Speaker 6 (12:38):
Hey, Brian, how are you.

Speaker 2 (12:40):
I'm doing pretty good all things considered.

Speaker 4 (12:43):
It's hey, we're praying for your medical situation there, brothers,
and we're hope for the best.

Speaker 2 (12:49):
I appreciate it. I really do means that. It really
really means the world to me when people offer me
their support and prayers.

Speaker 4 (12:57):
Hey, the reason I called was I would challenge you
and Judging Oftano to name me one election in the
history of this great country that has not been the
choice between the lesser of two evil. I'm familiar there's
only one man ever to walk this earth who was

(13:18):
sinless and did not have evil at all. So I
think it's cowardly and lack of efforts on judgment of
Polis Tana's part to say, oh, I haven't voted because
these people don't please me. There's only then does he
have the ability to criticize if he's not been a
part of this.

Speaker 2 (13:39):
I think everybody's got the ability to criticize, whether they
participate or not. Everybody's got can observe an assess policy,
apply it to one's own principles and philosophies. And you know,
I'm with you on the whole idea. You don't want
to throw out the reasonable, the good, or even the
better of the two evils in favor of the evil,
and your life vote may exactly do the exact opposite

(14:02):
of what you intend, which is secure that the evil
or the more evil person gets elected. But if you
really can abide in I don't think anybody is under
the impression that the judge is a huge Trump fan.
He just really have much good to say about him
at all over the years. But that's very choice. That's
his choice. He can do and say what he wants

(14:24):
so I have on the show. Not everybody that comes
on the show, like you know, it, gets my full
agreement or is in full agreement with my personal principles
and viewpoints. And I quite often, and hopefully as a
matter of fact, I ask out loud for folks to
disagree with me completely, to call me up and tell
me why I'm wrong. The phone doesn't always ring when
I ask for that. I often offer opportunities for Democrats

(14:46):
and other political opposition for my philosophy to join the
program to counter the points that are made by the
Republican challengers. They don't bother, they don't have any interest
in engaging in the discourse with me.

Speaker 4 (14:58):
So you know, we hired a pastor down at Calvary
Baptist Church in Covington about ten years ago or so.
And he's a great man. And if Donald Trump would
have been in the running for the pastorship, he wouldn't
have gotten a single vote of anybody down there. But
he's not running for pastor of the church.

Speaker 2 (15:18):
He's well, that's true, let me oppose this. You're okay
as a Christian, Steve, And we all know Donald Trump
has not have the greatest, most stellar reputation when it
comes to morality. But you're willing to overlook that flaw
and vote for him, right, I absolutely, So, there you go.

(15:39):
So he flies counter to your Christian principles in terms
of morality, but at least he's better than Kamala Harris.
So you vote for Trump and that maybe a little
nose holding element, but that's that's where I am.

Speaker 4 (15:50):
Every other is wasted.

Speaker 2 (15:53):
Yeah, well he didn't call looking for a big argument, Steve,
and I do appreciate the point. And thanks to again
for the offerings of prayers and support for my health.
I really truly appreciate that. Extend those to everyone with
a cancer diagnosis, because the one thing that transcends politics
and political division, cancer sucks all right, real quickly here

(16:17):
because I'm gonna get to Pete's call in the next segment.
I want to get Kamala Harris's deep thoughts for the moment.
It's a never ending stream of words salads from her,
and your brain probably will suffer from this one anyway.
She did take time to appear on the Club Shay
Shay podcast this week, hosted by Pro Football Hall of

(16:38):
famers Shannon Sharp. It took a pass on Joe Rogan,
but whatever. Sharpe was wondering how he was gonna get
through to people who accuse her of pandering, most notably
two members of the black community accuse her of pandering.
How can she make it clear what she intends to
do if she's elected? Here you go? You ready? Quote.

(17:01):
What I'm talking about doing right now is based on
longstanding work. It's not new. But as president of the
United States, part of what it of why it is important,
is it is a new approach to that job. It
is about a new way that is based on a

(17:22):
new generation of leadership, that is based on new ideas
and frankly, a different experience that brings my commitment to
the work I'm talking about into being close. Quote.

Speaker 7 (17:36):
Everyone in this room is now dumber for having listened
to it.

Speaker 2 (17:42):
That is an understatement. Five twenty six. Right now, stay
right here for your five kc DE talk station local
stories and Pete's call. Right out of the gate. I'll
be right back.

Speaker 8 (17:51):
From national campaigns Our Democracy.

Speaker 2 (17:54):
Here's forecast today mostly Sonny Breezy Anahei have eighty over
nine CLOUDI in sixty three rain moves in tomorrow afternoon
slash evening. It'll be breezy, isolated storms possible highest seventy
five for Halloween over nineteen forty seven. Rain will move
out sunny Sky's Friday with the highest sixty two right
now sixty one fifty five ker CD talk.

Speaker 1 (18:15):
Stations by thirty.

Speaker 2 (18:21):
Happy Wednesday, Restore Liberty dot Us. George Brunnman returning to
the program at six oh five. It spent an hour
in studio talking about stuff and things, election issues, turning
the country around, empower you presentation to talk about it
as well. Looking forward to that. I always as promised,
I'm gonna take Pete's call right now. Pete, thanks for
holding over the break there, Welcome to the show.

Speaker 9 (18:42):
Thanks Brian.

Speaker 6 (18:43):
Hey to jump back to the judge, I.

Speaker 10 (18:46):
Agree with that call that just prior to the break there,
you know, Beck, when Trump was getting hit with all
this law air, the Judge was kind of going along
and saying, oh yeah, wow, he's really in trouble on
this one, and it's all too and the January sixth
thing was a set up, a frame up to keep

(19:06):
him out of office permanently. But like right now, the
Democrats are on the brink of a complete takeover by
the deep state, and Donald Trump, in my opinion, is
the only human on earth capable of stopping that and
protecting all the freedoms and all the things that the
judge is adamant about.

Speaker 2 (19:29):
And to be able to pull.

Speaker 9 (19:32):
Elon Musk and Tulsey Gabbert and Bobby Kennedy Junior and
a coalition of people like that together to stop this
complete takeover is nothing short of incredible.

Speaker 4 (19:45):
And the judge should be ashamed for not voting.

Speaker 2 (19:49):
Let's not make this about the judge. He's one man.

Speaker 5 (19:53):
I'm just telling you.

Speaker 11 (19:55):
For him.

Speaker 9 (19:56):
I think he's got Trump the derangement syndrome for not voting.

Speaker 2 (20:01):
Maybe I'll ask him that. Maybe I'll ask you that directly. Yeah,
it's your opinion. We all have them. We know what
opinions are like, and everybody's got one. Thanks man, I
appreciate it, brother, appreciate the call. Uh it's a billion dollars. Yeah,
just let's get this out of the way. Pivoting over

(20:22):
the local stories for those who are interested in a
dome over paid course stadium FKA Paul Brown Stadium, which
it still should be. The price tag one billion dollars,
which uh, channeling doctor Evil on that one, and that
is in addition to the what was at one point
three billion dollars that the the Brown family wants for

(20:44):
stadium upgrades, seem to be in a state of flux
on that as to negotiate the stadium deal, Commissioner Stephanie
Summer Dumas and an Eastreehouse said, no, we will not
do a dome. It's too expensive. Quote from Treehouse for
my vantage point, we just can't afford it. I've not
heard people claim for a dome close quote. I'll give
her credit for that. Well, at least acknowledging that no,

(21:05):
we can't afford it, and not a whole lot of
a great outpouring of support for the idea of spending
a billion dollars for a dome. So how much did
it cost to determine it would be a billion dollars
for the dome? One hundred and thirty nine thousand dollars
that's how much the county spa spent for the architectural
firm of Gensler and aec comm to look at the

(21:28):
possibility of the dome. So for one hundred and forty
grand just just shy of we find out that we
can't afford a dome is anybody entering into this discussion
ever believe we could afford a dome asking for a friend.
Let's see here, five year old shot and killed. Last week,
three people, including an eleven year old, stabbed to death

(21:49):
inside the home, all within hours of one another in
the Cincinnati area. Thank you to WWT for writing this.
Aftermath of the violence community members asking what more can
be done and when the cycle of violence will end
in Cincinnati. Well, I suppose the moment parents take stocking
their children, raise them with discipline, a good education, obligations

(22:12):
to be home before midnight or you get a beating
from your father, that kind of stuff. I have to
have par balls. And the city is doing everything it
candor it is violent crime around the city, including putting
more officers on the street. Oh my god, wasn't he
a defunder kind of guy? Oh that was then stress

(22:34):
the role that parents playing keeping teenagers out of trouble, Well,
I'll give them credit for that, he said. Quote. Police
officers can't be raising kids. We can't be there at
every moment of the day all over the city. If
you're a parent, you have to know where your kids are.
You have to take responsibility for your kids' actions. We
have to collectively be able to interrupt this violence. Well stated,

(22:55):
I'll give the mayor of credit when credit is due. Or,
as Joe points out, why not pay people to not
engage in crime, which, interestingly enough, was reported What do
you say? Channel nineteen reported that part of that sixty
five million dollar windfall the extra money they just sort
of found that they didn't spend last year. It was

(23:17):
a screen shot Joe sent me from Fox nineteen saying
that there was a two hundred and seventy five thousand
dollars program to pay young people to not commit crimes. Wow,
Joe wants a slice of that action. It's probably an
age limitation, Joe, think you have living in confines of

(23:39):
the city of Cincinnati. We've gotten to that level of desperation.
That's sad. And once you start telling people they're going
to pay you to not commit crime, I'm not quite
sure that's Is that an incentive go out and do crime?
I don't know how that would work. Honestly, in practice,
we got more to talk. Oh, stack, Stack is stupid
coming up? Feel like we already in into that route.

(24:00):
I'm going to do that next day right here, fifty
five krsity de talk station. It's the market by forty
fifty five KSEY Talk station. Happy Wednesday, one week from day.
Listener lunch ron zerus the election after math, sim We're
going to have election after math. U feel free to

(24:21):
call if you'd like two five, one, three, seven, four,
nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two to
three talk found five fifty on eight and T phone
if you just call it up. If you're just tuning in.
Maureene just tuned in. She heard the tail end of
the conversation. I just had no Nepoloiton is not voting
for Kamala Harris and his op ed piece. He points
out right at the outset. He's not voting for anybody.
He hasn't voted for any presidential candidates since Ronald Reagan

(24:43):
in nineteen eighty four. His prerogative, his idea is his
thoughts in his sphincter. We knowed. Opinions and attitudes are
like we all have them. We'll talk with him at
eight thirty this morning. Over to the stack is stupid,
Texas woman facing charges in the death of her husband,
claiming the gun accidentally went off when he her husband

(25:06):
drunkenly bumped into her as she was helping him into
the house. I know it's exactly this soundight. I was
thinking about Joe mars Al Solace Zamora forty two, now
facing a murder charge, and the death of Miguel Zamora Martinez,
forty seven years old when he died bloodhed happened Saturday,

(25:27):
eleven pm Loan Rode Alona Road in Houston. Defendant's children
heard two gun shots, saw her holding the firearm near
the body. According to the court documents, that he found
his life was bodying the driveway.

Speaker 10 (25:40):
Now.

Speaker 2 (25:40):
Defendant initially said it was self defense, then pivoting told
police it was an accident. Court of the details came
out during the defendant's probable cause hearing. At that hearing,
Zamora's court appointed defense attorney said she was helping her
husband as he was and his words, drunken, trying to

(26:00):
stumble from the car to the home, and that the
gun accidentally discharged as he bumped against her closet. He
went on to say the possibility of this being an
accident is also buttressed by one of the teenage kids,
who indicated that the weapon was sort of jammed or
there paid to be some kind of malfunction with the
weapon itself. Lawyer said nobody is alleged to have seen

(26:23):
what happened, and that the couple's three teenage children who
were home at the time didn't allege they heard an argument.
Marisolzamora allegedly told police there wasn't an argument, according to lawyer.
In the news release, the Harris County Sheriff's office said
her account of how her husband suffered his injuries and
the sheriff's war did not align with the physical evidence
of the scene. Did no criminal history said to begin

(26:45):
training as a paralegal. According to her lawyer, was trying
to cling to something that legitimizes her shooting her husband
to death. Neighbors, one of which said, I just heard
a loud noise. Then the was sortest. We started hearing
screaming and crying, lying right there by the trash cans.
It was dramatic being held with the Harris kunt of
jail be bail said at one hundred thousand dollars. Online

(27:07):
records set for a next court appearing in December sixteenth. Specifically,
if you're in the area, you might want to show
up twice, you know. And it's my first reaction when
I'm helping a drunken friend into a residence out of
a car is to pull my firearm out and carry
it in a ready to fire position with my finger

(27:29):
on the trigger. That's just normal. Doesn't help when you
change your story. Go to Oregon. A police chase there
ended when a driver fleeing authorities in a stolen car
crashed into a woman driving another stolen car. Karma took
place Monday. Police responded to a report of the stolen

(27:51):
Toyota Lancas I know driving through downtown Newburgh. According to
the Newburgh Dundee Police, the pursuit ended soon, rather lasted
for several blocks until the driver crashed into the other
car near an intersection. Cops identified the driver in the
first car, a guy named Randy Lee Cooper from Portland.
After taking him into custody, the police realized the second

(28:13):
car also reported stolen in an unrelated crime several weeks prior.
Driver that car, Kristen Nicole Big, also found to be
under the influence. Cooper charged with unauthorized use of a
motor vehicle, attempting to elude police, assault, and reckless driving

(28:36):
Amen brother by forty five five K see detalk station.
Bobby's on the line. Nugget a minute, Bobby, hang on.
I want to mention ODO exit cause the well it
doesn't get rid of the stench of politics. I'm looking
forward to day when otoax product comes out with a
fifth product designed for that purpose. But in the meantime,
other than that stench, you can get rid of all
the other smells that are bothering you, plaguing you seem

(28:56):
impossible to eradicate. That's what oto egs at all about.
Oh d O r XIT no eotor exit dot com.
So where you find it. Four different products, all designed
to do one thing, and that's get rid of certain
odors mold, mildew, people oder, human oder, pets, skunk spray, uh,
nasty odors, you name it. One hundred percent satisfaction guaranteed.
Use it as directed, it will get rid of the odor.

(29:18):
Otherwise you get your money back. So no loss is
going to happen here except the loss of the odor.
And that's always what happens. They're non toxic. You don't
have to worry about rubbing them directly on your pets
or anything like that. And I have had to do that,
you know, unfortunately, but fortunately in the same time, you
don't want your dog to stink the high Heaven. But
at the same time you got oto exit to eradicate
the odor, which is exactly what I have done over
the years. O d r xit no Eodor exit dot com.

(29:42):
Order it right there before three pm. It'll be on
your front door by tomorrow. Odor Exit dot Com.

Speaker 8 (29:48):
Fifty five KRC.

Speaker 12 (29:50):
Your Halloween soundtrack starts with my forty nine big vib
KRC DE talk station Happy Wednesday five on three seven
four nine fifty five hundred eight hundred two three talk
Time five fifty on eighteen phones.

Speaker 2 (30:00):
Before I get to Bobby, I'm just gonna do a
stack of stupid story and just state reread the quote
from Kamala Harris. What I'm talking about doing right now
is based on long standing work. It's not new. But
as President of the United States, part of why it
is important is it is a new approach to that job.

(30:23):
It is about a new way that is based on
a new generation of leadership, that is based on new
ideas and frankly, a different experience that brings my commitment
to the work that I'm talking about into being. She
never does tell you what it is. She never does
explain the work that I'm talking about. You are left
completely without context. Over to the phones, Bobby, thanks for

(30:46):
holding Welcome to the program, brother.

Speaker 4 (30:49):
A simple thank you can't express our true feelings of appreciation.
You've carrying that torture, freedom, hire and bride every day.

Speaker 2 (30:57):
I sure appreciate it, Bobby. I'm glad you feel that way.
I hope others do too, Bobby, but it certainly it
warms my heart to hear you express it that way.

Speaker 4 (31:06):
Thank you, brother, Well, we appreciate it. We're like blades
of grass, my friends. So I got a question about
Cincinnati and all this violence. People have to understand, the
fifty most violent cities in the nation are run by Democrats,
forty eight of them. Every city in the and the

(31:26):
Cincinnati and every city in state Ohio are run by
Democrats mayors and city councils. I get tired of hearing
about Cincinnati metropolitan area because it lowers their numbers down.
They're in the top five most violent city in the
nation per capita.

Speaker 2 (31:45):
Fact, it is a sad state of affairs, is it
not so?

Speaker 1 (31:51):
If you?

Speaker 2 (31:51):
Is it a solution.

Speaker 4 (31:52):
You're part of the problem.

Speaker 2 (31:53):
So what do we what kind of conclusion do we draw, Bobby?
Is it that criminals and people who are not law
abiding folks vote Democrat Or is it the Democrat policies
and principles that bring about.

Speaker 4 (32:09):
Crime, policies and principles.

Speaker 2 (32:13):
That they create the crime or they create an environment
that is more welcoming for criminal behavior. I suppose defunding
the police and taking away resources from law enforcement and
having woke prosecutors and the like does present a perception
among the criminal element that they will not suffer any
consequences for their actions. So you may be stumbling upon
something right there, Bobby. God bless you, sir. Thank you

(32:35):
for the kind words of support. I truly appreciate it.
Let's see back over to the stack of stupid. We
go to Houston, Texas, where a man there is dead
after he fell off the top of an eighteen whiller
that he was dancing on while it passed under a bridge.

(32:55):
Idiots doing idiot things because they're idiots sum that up
quite nicely. Houston police say twenty five year old man
knocked off the top of the truck around eleven thirty
five in the morning on Tuesday while dancing on it
US fifty nine East tex Freeway, unbeknownst to the driver.
It's reported police say the man jumped or climbed onto
the trailer and appeared to be filming himself dancing. Of course,

(33:17):
video of the incident posted online by Grizzlies or Grizzlies
Hood News I guess credit where credits do man can
be seen ducking under one overpass before standing up again
and continuing to dance. This is like every train scene
from every movie where you have two guys on top
of a train fighting like James Bond. Someone always ends

(33:38):
up getting hit by the bridge right after falling from
the truck into oncoming traffic. The unidentified man was taken
a nearby hospital where he died from multiple blunt impact injuries,
cord to the Houston Public Media report. Houston Police said
the truck driver was evaluated after the incident and found
to be not impaired. Driver also questioned by police and

(34:00):
least without charges. Accord to Houston Police Department spokesperson, we
haven't had a case like this in quite some time. Meanwhile,
turn to New York where running around on top of
the subway system is all the rage these days, and
quite a few people have been injured as a consequence
of that. Okay Over in Florida briefly addressed this one.

(34:26):
Biologists have proven that the Burmese pythons, which are a
real problem, not native to the area, but because idiots
wanted to own their own Burmese python end up letting
them go otherwise escape, South Florida's overwhelmed with them. They've
determined that the Burmese pythons are swallowing deer and alligators whole.

(34:54):
They got a photograph of one. It is unbelievable to
behold how big the mouth can get on a Burmese
python as it's in trying to get it entired deer
carcass down its throat. And finally, scammers stole more than
twenty four tons of artisanal cheese from one of Britain's
most famous dairy companies. CNN reporting London based Niel's Yard Dairy,

(35:20):
revealed that it had been the victim of an unusual heist.
In its Instagram posts sharing what they call difficult news.
Niel's Yard Dairy has been the victim of a theft,
resulting in the loss over twenty two tons of cloth
bound cheddar companies that have been approached by fraudulent buyer
posing as a legitimate wholesale distributor from a major French reotailer.

(35:40):
The firm, which sells top quality British and Irish cheeses
around the world, only found out it had been scammed
when it was too late. The cheeses, which were sourced
from three different artisanal makers, had been handed over to
the fraudsters. Over nine hundred and fifty wheels of Hafford,
Westcombe and pitch Fork chedd were delivered before the fraud
was discovered. Despite the signific and financial blow, we have

(36:01):
honored our commitment to our small scale suppliers and paid
three artisan cheesemakers in full. Wow, it's it's yeah, it is.
It is not specific cheesemakers. You're right, Joe. His references

(36:21):
is to manufacturers of dairy products in general. Blessed are
the cheesemakers. Five fifty five fifty five KC. The talk
station Restore Liberty dot Us George Brenneman in studio after
the top of the air news. He's got a whole
hour of stuff and things talk about matters political also
we'll discuss the empower You presentation that's taking place. It
says tonight did you know there was one tonight? We're

(36:43):
gonna get the details on that from George after the news.
Then Jack Atherton at seven oh five with a big
picture sheriff hopefully again, Jim Neil, why vote for me?
He'll answer that question at seven thirty, The List of
Powers at eight oh five, and Judgmentpolaitano at eight thirty,
and our dear friend Ed Fink veteran's day of Edimble
High School. He's going to talk all about that at
the end of the eight o'clock hour. Please stick around.

(37:03):
I'll be right back after the news.

Speaker 13 (37:05):
Updates on the twenty twenty four presidential campaign.

Speaker 11 (37:08):
We have to meet this moment as if our freedoms
are at rest.

Speaker 13 (37:12):
Fifty five krs the talk station. Hey everyone, it's Jays
in studio.

Speaker 2 (37:19):
Garbage, Brian Thomas and the return of George Brenneman from
Restore Liberty dot us. Where if you don't have your
twenty twenty four slate card, do you have anyet vote?
Go ahead, click on and print it out and take
it with you so you know exactly who the good
guys are versus the bad George Brenhaman, Welcome back, my friend.
It's always great talking with you. Thanks Brian. This is
it was fun last time. I thought we gave it

(37:40):
in their shot. I agree. And you know, it's like
Kevin Congressman winstropin studio engage the get a little banter
in a open subject matter. We can kind of free
form it and we can start off by talking about nerds,
which I got a kick out of. You would suggested
a few things to speak about with me this morning,
and the latest on the election and the rise of
the new nerds nerds a quote. I'm like, huh, I

(38:02):
wonder what George is referring to on that one, So
why not start there. As it turns out, Elon Musk
is the specific guy thirteen. He is a herd. Yeah
you're a nerd. Oh god, I am.

Speaker 14 (38:13):
I'm a proud nerd from the seventies before they even
knew that's what they were going to call us, right.
But it's interesting to see his evolution since he got
involved in this. I think he finally came out in
support of Trump when Trump was shot, which kind of,
you know, pushed him out of his chair. To say, yeah,
I'm going to support this guy. And you could tell

(38:33):
what that first rally did in New Jersey. He was
just you know, coming out of his skin because he
wasn't used to being in front of a crowd like that.
But then you fast forward to Madison Square Garden and
he was having a blast.

Speaker 2 (38:45):
You could just tell, Yeah, it's funny how you characterize
that he's not used to be in front of a crowd.
I mean, I can't imagine a single human being on
the planet. He doesn't have the microscope focused on him
more than Elon Musk. So literally the world is always
eyeballing him about what he's doing, his antiques, his latest
you know what, he's what he says on X. Yeah,

(39:06):
he's got millions and millions of folks following up.

Speaker 14 (39:08):
But the thing is, I think he's what I would
call the classic engineer nerd. I mean, he is focused
on problem solving at the end of the day. And
you can tell us in some of his interviews. He'll
somebody will ask him a question out of the blue,
He'll stop, kind of look up and think a little bit.

Speaker 2 (39:24):
He's trying to solve the problem.

Speaker 14 (39:25):
I mean, I think that guy wakes up every morning
and says, Okay, what am I going to try and
do today to solve a problem. And you can see
he's really energized now on this idea of let's balance
the budget.

Speaker 2 (39:37):
You know, out of the.

Speaker 14 (39:38):
Blue, somebody says, how much you think he can cut
out a six point five?

Speaker 2 (39:40):
He was at least two U two. Wouldn't that be amazing?
It would be so unbelievably amazing the man who might
bring fiscal discipline to the Trump administration. I mean, we
know what Donald Trump spent while he was time. He
spent a time, especially that last year, with COVID. Well,
I understand COVID and COVID is largely responsible for some

(40:02):
of the problems the Biden administration, and we can't deny that.
I mean, I'm not an idiot, and I'm not going
to try to lie myself around that this is all
one hundred percent Kama Harrison, Joe Biden's problem. They did
inherit COVID, but they made it so much worse. Oh absolutely.
I mean that a lot of the financial devastation is
a consequence of lockdowns, which were unconstitutional vaccine mandates where

(40:23):
people lost their employment situation because they didn't want to
have a vaccine for religious reasons or otherwise. And those
folks are gradually winning their their lawsuits. It just takes
a while. It takes a while.

Speaker 14 (40:34):
And I was just amazed at how quickly Americans followed
all those rules. I just except I expected everybody to say,
what are you talking about, I'm not going to stay
in my house.

Speaker 2 (40:44):
Well, and I was one of the very first defenders
of a right to it's not just free speech, but
the right to peacefully assemble. In the aftermath of the
you know, COVID just first coming out, there was a
whole bunch of protesters that came out downtown and I
remember and he back battled and walked away from his
statement and regretted making it. But FOP President Dan Hills

(41:05):
is on, here go. These people are crazy and they
should be locked up or words to that effect, right,
And I was like, why the First Amendment protects the
right to assemble, That protects the right to to speak,
And it's the same thing that applied to your right
and ability to go to church, the free exercise of religion.
They interfered with all of that. Well, meanwhile, keeping the
weed stores open or you know half of the of

(41:27):
the home depots strip clubs as they were, right, Okay,
Well that made it so much worse, and that created
this divisive you know, it's almost became because of that
a political issue where you know, it turned into you
either abide and do what your lords and masters tell you,
or you fall back on your constitution, your freedoms and

(41:47):
liberties that are guaranteed, and and you try to hold
them accountable and and counter their their their ridiculous, hysterical narrative.

Speaker 14 (41:55):
And in the end, I think you have to rely
on principles, and you know, the principal free speech, the
prin freedom of religion, and you just can't let those
get stamped on. And from the point of view, what
I was saying with the Revolution of the nerd here
is people like that are just focused on solving the problem.
He has nothing to gain politically from doing this.

Speaker 2 (42:15):
Zero.

Speaker 14 (42:15):
I mean, when somebody threatened to take away his advertisers
on Twitter acts, He's like, you're gonna threaten me with buddy,
what are you talking about?

Speaker 2 (42:23):
Right?

Speaker 14 (42:23):
But I mean to have somebody like that going in
and saying, Okay, I think I can get rid of
government waste I can get rid of two trillions worth it,
and he's not going to.

Speaker 2 (42:30):
Feel good until he gets rid of four.

Speaker 14 (42:32):
I guarantee this guy is the guy that's putting rockets
up within twelve hours of landing the things.

Speaker 2 (42:38):
I mean, this guy's crazy when it comes to that.

Speaker 1 (42:41):
The other thing I like.

Speaker 14 (42:42):
To point out is we live in very, very trying
times right now. We've got a ton of problems. Think
back to the founding of the country. Who were the
people that stepped up at that time of trouble and
took the leads. George Washington was a civil engineer. Thomas
Jefferson was an inventor and a scientist. Benjamin Franklin inventor scientists.

(43:04):
These guys are used to solving problems, not reacting with emotion,
but reacting with I'm going to understand the problem. I'm
going to fix the problem. And I think that's what
we need now. That's why I love it when you
know technical people, people with actual skill sets step up.
I mean, I think everybody we're supporting on our slate
card is a businessman first politician because they had to be.

(43:25):
You know, you got the Bernie Marinos even you know,
if you look at Adam Cohlok kaylor.

Speaker 2 (43:31):
Adam is is just a business guy. He's a marketing nerd.

Speaker 14 (43:34):
I think that's the answer, is to get rid of
people like Shared Brown that have been there for fifty
years since Nixon.

Speaker 2 (43:40):
For crying out loud. Oh gosh.

Speaker 14 (43:43):
The first time I visited d C, I happened to
walk past him and he's like, you know, five foot nothing.
All I want to do is just, you know, hit
him with an elbow knock. He did the ground, but
he's just one of those guys owns the place. You know,
you're a peaceful man, George, I would have to do it.
But if you were a shot oh wow.

Speaker 2 (44:04):
Well anyhow, we got that race, of course, and I'm
you know, the other the one race that I've quit
a glombed onto, just because I have so much respect
for the man, his communication skills, his ability, his hard work,
his love of America, his love of family. Orlando Sanza,
Orlando is amazing, just a tremendous candidate versus Greg Landsman.
And I just that that that race is just even

(44:25):
close is really troubling to me. And I have no
internal polling to show one way or another how that
one's going, but such a superior candidate.

Speaker 14 (44:33):
I remember the first time I talked to him, It's like,
holy cow, your resume is just tailor made for this job.
I mean as an accountant, he's a lawyer, he's a
he's an army vet. His wife and he both went
to West Point. In the interview we did with him,
you know, when Joe was our producer at the farm there,
I interviewed his wife first, So Jessica was the first

(44:56):
person we spoke to. I've heard his story a million times.
I want you to tell his story, and it was
amazing nice.

Speaker 2 (45:01):
Way of being able to talk to just her by
framing it that way, George, I applaud your efforts in
that regard. He knows. I think his wife is absolutely gorgeous.
I give him Credit's amazing, I know, brilliant, Yes, And
to put themselves into the situation. They've got little kids,
I mean three of them, right, four four little kids.
She's at home defending that fort while he's out trying

(45:22):
to defend the country. I think that's just an amazing
lesson in his dedication to the country and to this effort.
Couldn't agree with you more on that. And you know,
I'll recommend go to Orlandosanza dot com and check it out,
and you can see pictures of him, his wife, and
his beautiful family right there. Check out his resume. I
don't think it's too late to help out. Between now

(45:43):
and the Tuesday, we still have some opportunities to support
these wonderful folks and try to get them elected. It's
gonna take some effort, but we can do it. I
don't know. We got more talk about with George. The
division of the country is just overwhelming me. And I'm
trying hard to remain positive about it.

Speaker 14 (45:58):
Too, but the anxiety is building as we get closer
to Tuesday, it really is.

Speaker 2 (46:04):
And more and more and more lettered agency. He's talking
about the aftermath of the election and the violence in
the streets and the it's.

Speaker 14 (46:12):
Just just before we came on air, there was a
talk about the concerns over the violence in the streets
and what's going to happen after the election.

Speaker 2 (46:18):
So even your news is covering it here, I know,
and certain members of the mainstream media, most of them
trying to suggest it's going to be a bunch of
right wing, racist extremists. They tend to overlook the Antifah
types and the anti Israel folks out there, and what
I believe will be the biggest contingent because if Donald
Trump wins, for example, none of you can have the

(46:41):
evil Orange man obsessed Trump anti Trump folks out there,
but they see this concept of deportation staring at him
in the face, and the idea that you have fifteen,
say twenty million folks who are not eligible to be
here illegally enter the country with the hearing date to follow.
They may become very well organized, and it would be

(47:03):
very easy to do so, given that they've been handed
a free cell phone compliments of the United States government.

Speaker 14 (47:08):
Well try cell phone, free lodging funding the whole book.

Speaker 2 (47:11):
Yeah, but you can put everybody in a hotel and
you can house everybody, But cell phones give them the
ability to easily organize. And these NGOs do not have
the United States interest at the forefront of their goals.
They have, well, maybe something against US interest, but in
the final analysis, they can easily organize very large numbers

(47:35):
along those lines alone just one of many contingencies that
are all going to be out there. More with George
Renman again, restore Liberty dot us, where you find George's information,
get some information about the upcoming election as well, and
go to Affordable Medical Imaging for your medical images. That's
what I did last CT scan, which gave me some
you know, kind of bad news, but hell, that's what
CT scans are all about, good news, bad news. You're

(47:57):
going to have to get one at some point. So
why would you go to the hot spill in pay
thousands and thousands of dollars for it? You know, these
things are outrageous in hospital imaging departments, huge huge profit
center for those very heavily expense laden hospitals. They got
to run that huge building with all the overhead and
the expenses. Well, that's why I say, exercise your choice.

(48:19):
Go to affordable Imaging Services and get your excuse me,
CT scan for four hundred and fifty bucks. Yeah, four
hundred and fifty You get a contrast be a little
bit more, but you know what, it's like a ten
percent of what a CT scan could cost you the hospital,
because they could be as much as five grand, and
you'll pay extra for the Board Certified Radiologists Report, which
your doctor must have. The image comes with the radiologists report,

(48:43):
regardless of whether you get an MRIICD scan, echo cardogramm
or ultrasound. At Affordable Imaging Services, everyone comes with the
board certified Radiologist report, which you and your doctor will
get within forty eight hours. Two hundred and fifty bucks
for an ultrasound with the report. How about that versus
two thousand at a hospital. But you get the idea,
it's your money, it's your bottom line. So Affordable Medical

(49:05):
Imaging Key Imaging Services keeping me overhead very very low,
but passing along the savings to you, same equipment, same professionals.
They've been at this for about forty years. You can
visit them online at Affordable Medimaging dot com. Affordable Medimaging
dot com. The phone over the scheduled appointment five to
one three seven five three eight thousand, five one three
seven five three eight thousand.

Speaker 8 (49:25):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio Station. What's the
Best Sex?

Speaker 2 (49:31):
Twenty one fifty five Krcity Talk Station, Our Fun Games.
George Breneman Restore Liberty dot Us. George the Nerd talking politics,
which is what he loves to talk about. Let's stay
focused on some local politics Hamilton County. I mean, you know,
last person out bring the flag when they come. But
I mean, is it too late to turn Hamilton County

(49:53):
maybe even a bit of purple rather than the full
plase kids some voice downtown.

Speaker 14 (49:58):
I mean, we have nothing at city county, so we
have nothing at the Commissioner's office currently. I think the
city's currently a lost cause. But I'm really really curious
to see what happens in the commissioner race. We've never
had someone so young and energized as Adam Taylor. Jonathan's
doing a decent John Pearson, It's going to be really

(50:18):
interesting to watch, but he makes a lot of good points.
I mean, we have no diversity of thought down there.
We have nobody looking out for the actual taxpayer. Instead,
they're just you know, how much more can we get?
We've got people talking about the property taxes and how
they're out of control. They did the reevaluations at the

(50:38):
peak of the market, so I mean, we've got all
the problems with Detroit and Portland and everybody else.

Speaker 2 (50:44):
And I understand the property taxes are out of control,
but you can't fix that within the county. No, that
one's true. Yeah, I mean that's changed. The Columbus needs
to change that. Max it out you cannot increase property
taxes beyond x percent or the lesser of or or something.
Because you know, people were caught completely off guard by
that one. And then COVID, who knew COVID would have

(51:05):
the unintended consequence of you know, people are all moving,
they're now commuter or working from home, they want bigger
houses out in the burbs or whatever. And with you know,
three percent interest rate, everybody was buying up everything. Then
you now have these institutional investors that are coming in
and snatching up every single house that goes on the market.

Speaker 14 (51:25):
Green's getting overrun with with the institutional buying. I don't
know how anybody finds a home now that they don't
rent well, And there in lies the challenge, and it's
a little disturbing. But and then interest rates go up,
and then people will not move smoove because they don't
want to sell their house and go to a higher
interest well. And the solution to that is to give
everybody twenty five thousand dollars.

Speaker 2 (51:44):
Yeah, right, that'll work. Yeah, that won't impact the price
of the house. No, no, no, not at all.

Speaker 14 (51:49):
It's just that kind of you know, nobody's paying attention
to the big picture and this incrementalism of I mean,
even you said we got to limit how much property
tax increases.

Speaker 2 (51:59):
I'm on the other page.

Speaker 14 (52:00):
I think we need to get rid of property taxes altogether, well,
or cap them at what you paid for the house.

Speaker 2 (52:05):
Well, again, looking forward to solutions if you have this
problem right now funding schools, for example, which I think
the Supreme Court twenty years ago said the current funding
model for schools is unconstitutional, and yet here we are,
as one years later, it has not changed a bit. Well,
if you're going to start over again and not use
property taxes and had a different way, a different path,

(52:25):
I would entertain anything that somebody could suggest, but just
immediately saying no more property tax right now, it doesn't
answer the broader problem of how schools get funded.

Speaker 14 (52:33):
So so we're already seeing that, we're already seeing that.
I mean, every school levee out in Colorina has failed,
every police levee, which was a shock to me. Nobody
was even fighting it, and it failed twice. Now it's
because nobody can afford it anymore. You give thirty percent
or plus more on your property taxes and then you
want to add to that. No way, So I think

(52:53):
the property tax is just got to be solved in Columbus. Yes,
it can't be solved locally, but the local ones. You know,
you can't start funding all these things that are not
government's job. Like you were just saying, paying someone to
not use a gun in a crime.

Speaker 2 (53:08):
Yeah, and that's actually has been implemented, or at least
I think it's it was passed. We were talking earlier
in the week about the sixty five million dollar windfall
or leftover money from last year's budget. It wasn't spent, like,
oh my god, we have sixty five million dollars, we
got to spend it. So apparently since they said the
counsel at least the other day, was poised to pass,
and I do believe it passed. Here's the plan. Two

(53:31):
hundred and seventy five thousand dollars of this sixty five
million toward a gun violence production program that attempts to
pull what they call and it's in quotes, thank you
to the Inquirer active firearms offenders to get them out
of street life by well paying them, providing them with travel,

(53:51):
job training, and therapy and more. Again, that's reporting from
Sharon Coolidge in the inquirre just from the other day.
So in order to qualify, you have to be a
gun offender to qualify. So here's somebody's saying it next
to terrible financial circumstances. His neighbor has been is a
convicted felon carrying a firearm under disability or something. That

(54:13):
guy's going to qualify for a handout. But because you
have not used a firearm, you're not eligible. Here where's
my gun? Six twenty six fifty five krs talk station
speaking of firearms. So I'm going to put a pro
a big plus in front of that because I love
being able to bear arms, keeping bear arms and can
concealed carry. And I go to the range all the
time because I thoroughly enjoy shooting at targets. Hey, it's

(54:35):
my thing, doesn't have to be your thing, but I
like to. But I also know how expensive ammunition is,
which is why I'm happy to recommend twenty two to
three firearms range on a round forty two between Mason
and eleven and indoor range. It's exceptional. They have membership options,
they have a massive selection of firearms as well as
ammunition with unbelievably competitive pricing. They are truly competitive, and

(54:56):
that's competitive even before the current sale that was going
on that is going on act now ten percent off
any case of MLU buy from twenty two to three.
So if they got a case a nine millimeter or
forty five or three oh eight or two two three whatever,
you're looking for ten percent off while it lasts. So
you know how ammunition prices are, so take advantage of
this already competitive ten percent off. Twenty two three dot

(55:19):
com the number twenty two fell by the word three
spelled out on a route forty two between Mason and eleven,
and again twenty two three dot com.

Speaker 8 (55:26):
Fifty five KRCUH.

Speaker 2 (55:29):
Talk to the nine first twenty one four ks. Mostly
sunny day to day, a bit breezy with a high
of eighty over night, partly fity sixty three for the
low Halloween highest seventy five. Got rains shown up in
the afternoon and evening isolated storms. Perhaps rain will roll
out over night drop it to forty seven, and on
Friday it's going to be up for sunny day with
the highest sixty two sixty degrees. Right now traffic time

(55:50):
from the UCL Tramphing Center.

Speaker 15 (55:51):
Come on the expert team and you see Health Orthopedic
SAMs Sports Medicine. No matter the injury, same day appointments
are available schedule online.

Speaker 1 (55:58):
At you see health dot com.

Speaker 15 (56:00):
Cruise are working with an accident westbound on the breaking
Highways just after Hamilton Avenue northbound seventy five. That's beginning
to get a little bit heavier through the kind approaching downtown.
There's a wreck on Millville Shandon about one nine. Chuck
Ingram on fifty five KRC the talk station.

Speaker 2 (56:18):
That's six thirty one fifty five KRC de talk station. Ay,
very happy Wednesday to you. I hope you're enjoying as
much as I am my conversation here, our collective conversation
with George brenhaman Restore Liberty dot us talking local politics,
state politics, national politics. Uh and uh. I don't know
that we can hope against hope perhaps turning Hamilton County

(56:40):
back to at least a little bit of red Ham.
I've prosecuted Melissa Powers. She's outstanding of what she does.

Speaker 14 (56:47):
Unbelievable resume, unbelievable job since she's taken over. I mean,
some of the stuff she's done is just absolutely amazing.

Speaker 2 (56:54):
Yeah, she's going to be on the program at eight
oh five. I'm happy to be hearing from it in
one hour from now. Folks, if you want to stick around,
and I hope you can. Jim Neil, who we are
here in the morning show, lease supporting for sheriff. And
I know, George, you're buying Jim mail one hundred percent.
He'll be on the program in an hour, so I'm
looking forward to hiving him on as well. But I
really worry about that Melissa Powers race because you know,
her opponent.

Speaker 14 (57:15):
Didn't even have a license last year. I didn't even
have a license to practice a license up. I don't
know stancy to do, George. I mean, I've got my
law license up for the past eighteen years. All you
got to do is get twenty four hours of cle
and you can do it online. Now he's kicked back,
and watch your program and learn a little bit and
keep your your your legal skills up to speed.

Speaker 2 (57:36):
It's so so challenging.

Speaker 14 (57:37):
Yeah, well, she's never been in a courtroom since you know,
cell phones were the size of a you know, a
lunch box, you know what.

Speaker 2 (57:44):
And that's an excellent point you brought up, because I've observed,
you know, having not practiced law though maintaining my license
for the past eighteen years. You know, it's a litigation attorney.
You know the landscape of civil litigation and how much
it's changed in the last eighteen years. Just simply the
idea of electronic discovery. You know that was a minor
component back in you know, the ancient days of twenty

(58:05):
years ago. You'd have to Oh my god, getting up
to speed on modern discovery and obligations under the and
the evolved rules. The rules of soul procedure have changed,
so has criminal law. I mean, it's not only you
just pick it up where you dropped off.

Speaker 14 (58:19):
No, and what's worse is, you know, the position of
prosecutor and shriff. Both of those are skilled positions. You know,
a trustee is basically there to give an opinion. They
don't have to have a skill set, they just have
to have an opinion. True, But a prosecutor has to
have a skill set. And Melissa versus her opponent is
just night and day. I encourage people. I saw Melissa's

(58:43):
speech and immediately afterwards, I'd really like to have a
longer discussion with you, and we did two twenty five
minute segments. Go to theresore Liberty dot Us. Look at
that podcast section on Melissa it is amazing. You can
tell halfway through. I'm just sort of shocked by her
resume and what she's accomplished. I mean, I really encourage
people to learn about her. It is amazing. And I

(59:05):
see these ads now saying she's too extreme. I'm like,
all she does is interpret the law as it was written.
She's not going out, she's not picking or changing. Yeah,
she's not picking which one she supports her doesn't support.

Speaker 2 (59:18):
How is that extreme? Well, in the notion, they're running
regular ads that she's going to prosecute women who have abortions. Now,
say what you want about abortions. I do believe we
have a constitutional amendment recently, George that was passed in
the state of Ohio.

Speaker 14 (59:32):
They're not touched. There's nothing you can do about it. Nothing,
even if you want to, you can't do anything. And
they keep bringing up because it's the only it's the
only topic on which they quote Win And I just
keep coming back to these people are crazy. At what
point is it murder? I mean, even some of them
are saying, if the baby is alive after a botched abortion,

(59:53):
you shouldn't have to save it. I'm like, wait a minute,
what is your justification for that.

Speaker 2 (59:57):
Well outside is sitting here crying citizen of the United
States of America. Even if you buy into the notion
if it haven't left, I haven't. It hasn't left the
birth canal, it hasn't been born in ergo is not
a human And I find that ridiculous, knowing that both
my children are born in eight months. But if there
was an attorney in the room that was appointed to

(01:00:17):
be guardian analytem and make a legal case on behalf
of the baby right there, the baby is a human
being and a citizen of the United States, that it
was born in the United States of America, and leaving
the birth canal is being born period. It has rights.

Speaker 14 (01:00:32):
It's indefensible that you can do it after birth. I
think it's indefensible once you can deliver it. If you
could do a c section at six months and the
baby lives, that's got to be less invasive than abortion.

Speaker 2 (01:00:43):
But see, we got caught in a trap already.

Speaker 14 (01:00:45):
That's what they're trying to do, is to get us
to talk about it so that they can act like
we're trying to take it away.

Speaker 2 (01:00:50):
We're not trying to take it away the same opinion.
I'm expressing my opinion and everybody else expressed their opinion
when they voted on that last issue one and the
right to abortion in the state. That doesn't change your
attitude about it. But it doesn't enable prosecutor powers to
go after and prosecute people for doing something that is
entirely lawful in the state of Ohio. So he's not

(01:01:12):
going to do that. I mean, it's like the same
thing on the federal level. Nothing really, I'm sorry, I'll
use the words pisses me off more than this drum
beat of a national abortion ban, a federal abortion ban,
and they every single federal race, representative, senators, and of
course the presidential race, they keep trying to make that point,

(01:01:33):
like didn't you read Dobbs, You morons. Nobody anybody who
is running for federal office who is advocating for that
hasn't read Dobbs either. It is not a power that
is retained by the federal government. Is a state issue,
period And if I was a candidate for federal level office,
I would be pointing that out regularly. Dude, why are

(01:01:55):
you even bringing that up? Didn't you read Dobbs Well.

Speaker 14 (01:02:00):
The commercials you see have no basis in truth whatsoever.
Right now, it's painful after I hate to mention, but
you know, when I ran in the primary, I was
just absolutely amazed at the lies being told.

Speaker 2 (01:02:13):
It was just crazy.

Speaker 14 (01:02:15):
I had someone come up to me at church and say,
you know, I knew they lied, but I never knew
who they were lying about before. I can't believe what
they're saying. And now you look what's going on with
the Shared Brown commercials, the ones against Melissa Powers.

Speaker 2 (01:02:28):
They're nuts. There's not a moment of truth in the
entire ad. But you know what it illustrates, there are
so many people out there that are uninformed that they
know an outright lie like that. With the exception of
folks like you and I, we dwellers, we maybe or
at least astute politically on some level, it ain't gonna
fly with us, but it's gonna fly, perhaps perfectly well,

(01:02:50):
with a bunch of low information voters. Every little bit counts,
so they're willing to take the hits for lying, But
they also know they're going to get a few votes
on that topic if they just keep saying it. Over
and over and six thirty seven coming about six thirty
eight more with George Breneman Restore Liberty dot Us is
where you find him and where you find QC kinetics.
I'll give you the numbered a minute. You might want
about that speaking them painful. You may be living with

(01:03:12):
chronic pain. So many people do, knee pain, arthritis pain,
joint pain, you know, and your hip, your knees, your shoulders,
your back, and you've probably seen the doctor, and you've
probably gotten the steroid shots and you probably realize that
they don't work. Maybe the pain medication could be addictive.
I don't know. You're wed to a pharmaceutical comedy to
deal with your knee pain and hip pain. Then there's

(01:03:33):
the surgery option, all the downtime associated with surgery, and
then does it is it really going to work? Well?
You know, there is a next step you can take,
and those are the folks a QC kinetics. The healing
properties in your body. Your body heals itself. Cut a finger,
it heals itself. You know. QC kinetics can take those
healing properties, concentrate them and put that into the joints

(01:03:54):
where you have the pain. This helps heal and restore
the achy areas treatment available right now and since that,
he threw QC Kinetics, the nation's leader in regenerative medicine.
This result allows you to move again without pain. They've
treated thousands of patients. They had great success doing it.
So finally, the relief from arthritis an injury without well
surgery and downtime and steroids and paintfills. So check it out.

(01:04:17):
If you qualify, how do you know if you're going
to qualify, well, why not schedule a freebet, a free
consultation and find out about QC Kinetics and let them
determine whether it might be helpful for you to do that.
Five one three eight four seven zero zero one nine
five one three eight four seven zero zero one nine
One more time five one three eight four seven zero

(01:04:39):
zero one.

Speaker 8 (01:04:39):
Nine fifty five KRC talk.

Speaker 2 (01:04:41):
Station, Happy Wednesday, Restore Liberty dot Us. George Brennman in studio.
He's going to be doing an empower you summinar. We'll
get to that and we save that for the tail
end of our conversation. This morning George, but off air
came up with the context of diet and talking about
my cancer and going back and forth but a lot

(01:05:03):
of information out there about the relationship between sugar and
carbohydrates which convert to sugar and having a terrible profound
impact on health. And the information that I read over
and over again regarding you know, cancer management is don't
feed your cancer. Cancer out eats more than all the
cells in your body to consume vast numbers of calories,

(01:05:25):
and it's that sugar or what has been broken down
into sugar. And the more that you got, the more
you feed your cancer cells in your in your tumors.
So basically cut it out, like ketoi ism is a
way of getting rid of the sugar. But you I
mean that led to a conversation about RFK Junior, another
one of these folks like Elon Musk. Sort of a wow,

(01:05:46):
that guy's been invited into the dream team, into the
tech right, but he is I call him a wing
nut when it comes to environmental issues, and you know,
so he says some outrageous things from time to time,
but I think he's got a really good handle on
the problems we face in America with our diet.

Speaker 14 (01:06:02):
Well, and I think he's got a really honest focus
on health and children right now, if you look thirty
five percent of children are obese. You've got sixty to
seventy five percent of adults are obese. But it all
boils down to chemistry, and they're finally starting to unravel
the why of this. But like you said, there's a
book called End of Alzheimer's. You know what, the only

(01:06:24):
drug that's been found to be effective against Alzheimer's a
twenty one day keto diet.

Speaker 2 (01:06:29):
If you get rid of.

Speaker 14 (01:06:29):
The carbs, stop the insulin, and you stop taking the
damn statins for cholesterol A yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, Alzheimer's
starts going away, Dementia starts going away. The brain is
like forty percent cholesterol. The lower you make it, the
worse your brain gets. And then you feed it with
all of that insulin, and that's what's damaging the cells

(01:06:52):
everywhere in the body, but specifically in the brain in
that case.

Speaker 2 (01:06:54):
Same with cancer, all of that.

Speaker 14 (01:06:56):
Look, so you're eating these high diets and then to
get away from the sugar, they went to high fructose corns.

Speaker 2 (01:07:03):
Hereup.

Speaker 14 (01:07:03):
Oh, that soil cannot be digested except in the liver,
which is now why you've got kids with cirrhosis. They
call it fatty liver. But it's literally the same thing
as alcohol. The fructose kills your liver, and then you
put the seed oils in there, which the body doesn't
know what the hell to do with, and so you've
got this chemical stew going in that's just making things

(01:07:25):
worse and worse and worse. We've started, like I said,
my wife and I started down this path in July.
We started with a book called Lies I taught in
medical school, Robert Lufkin, excellent book. And we've moved on
from them, the Kalian Casey means good energy book. They
all have the exact same thing that the chronic diseases

(01:07:45):
in the United States of you know, high blood pressure,
heart disease, dementia, even things like ADHD are all related
to diet and the fact that the chemicals going into
our system are just all wrong. And you think about
that and you say, Okay, that's going to be impossible
to fix. You know, I can't go no carb or

(01:08:05):
low carb. Well, the answer is why not. You can
have bacon and eggs, you can have steak, you can
have hamburger.

Speaker 2 (01:08:12):
You just don't put them on a bun.

Speaker 14 (01:08:14):
You don't You don't feed your body the worst is
by far diet and regular drinks.

Speaker 2 (01:08:21):
You know, cocing, diet, coked horrible. Put the mountain dew down,
put the mud to blanking, mountain do away, It's incredible.
Any form don't say you can drink Code red because
Zombie Land approved it. Six forty six. They got paid
for that too, I bet really, Oh you know. I mean,
if there's product marketing and have any major movie, the

(01:08:42):
product was paid for by the manufacturer of the product
to be placed in the movie, like the Apples in
Mission Impossible. You got it six forty six, fifty five
KRC Detalk Station George Renman return Restore Liberty dot us
is where you can find him at any time, and
he will be in an empower youse Sminar tonight We're
gonna get the details on that, followed by the man
the mental legend that is Jack added in the Big

(01:09:03):
Picture after the top of the hour. News first though,
Foreign Exchange had Austin in the studio talking winterizing your car,
what to look out for, what you need to do,
having to do a multipoint inspection on your car so
you are prepared for the challenges of winner. Have your
battery check, replace your windshield wipers, check your tires, a
lot of bent rims. You said that is a plague

(01:09:24):
on the automobile ownership community. I guess that's we can
blame our politicians for not fixing the roads. But regardless,
you should have all that checked out for wintertime so
you can confidently drive around. And I'm pretty I'm pleased
to announce that Foreign Exchange Congratulations will now be servicing Tesla's.
They've all been trained, so if you have a Tesla,

(01:09:44):
they're doing EV's and now at least Tesla's that they're
going to start with Tesla's and they'll expand their EV
repair at some time down the road. But you've got
an option right there with Foreign Exchange, and you will
have the same thing experience with Foreign Exchange with your
Tesla as you will with your internal combustion engine and
imported regardless of traditional import manufacturing continents, whether it's Asia
or Europe. They fix it for less as certified master

(01:10:07):
technicians working on your car. You'll leave with a full
warranty on parts and service and more money in your pocket.
He saved my family lots of money over the years,
So trust the experts. All manufacturers Foreign Cars. They can
help you out right there at Foreign Exchange and the
Tesla's five one, three, six, six twenty six. The Westchester
location is the one where you want to be. Take

(01:10:28):
the seventy five until you get to the Tylersville Eggs
that go east on Tylersville two streets hanging right on
Kinglin and you are there online. You're there at Foreign X.
That's Foreign the letter X.

Speaker 8 (01:10:37):
Dot com fifty five KRC.

Speaker 2 (01:10:40):
Are you tired of living with Chrome one? If if you
have KCD talk station, very happy Wednesday to you a
special Wednesday. Normally the empower Use seminars are on Tuesdays
and Thursdays. Tonight there's a special one. First off, you're
gonna hear from my guest instadio George Brennman, and he
is I mean, we were talking geek geeks in the administration,
maybe the Trumpet administration at the outset on this with

(01:11:01):
Elon Musk and of course you know health geek RFK
Junior there you're a total geek. I didn't realize this.
You have over a dozen patents.

Speaker 14 (01:11:10):
Up to sixteen finally, no kidding, Yeah, half of them
are in how to get lower emissions and more fuel economy.

Speaker 2 (01:11:18):
But yeah, well, I negate every effort that you have
engaged in to get great fuel economy and more mileage
on it. He's a hypermiller and I tend to be
the exact opposite of it. I don't have many hobbies,
but I love to drive, and I'm a little carefree
when it comes to trying to get good mileage. That's
an acceleration anyway. He got a consulting company working with

(01:11:41):
Fortune five hundred companies. What are gonna be talking about
Tonight's empower you America dot org. And it's both live
or virtual. You can attend in person, go to two
twenty five Northland Boulevard or virtually and empower you America
dot org. The other speaker is Carolyn Nicholson. Carolyn Nicholson
is going to be well the title very little is
been published about the contributions nurse and an esthetists made

(01:12:04):
during World War Two, so that's a real interesting topic there.
But how about you, what are you speaking about?

Speaker 14 (01:12:10):
Well, they got me pushed out of my comfort zone.
I'm gonna be talking about the role of magistrates in
the judicial system. So it's something I had to do.
The research on and I think it's one of those
things when you ask somebody out of the field to
look at it, you're hoping that you can get a
different opinion. I hate to say it, but it looks
kind of boring. It looks like it is what it is.
So a magistrate is sort of the physician's assistant for

(01:12:31):
the judge. They do the easy stuff, supposedly, and so
it's just like a physician's assistant in that you might
get somebody that's a political appointee and doesn't know what
they're doing, or you might get someone that's actually extremely
good at the job.

Speaker 2 (01:12:45):
So it's real hit or miss.

Speaker 14 (01:12:47):
It's a point and not elected, so it's a bit
of a weird thing.

Speaker 2 (01:12:50):
I worked with a whole bunch of magistrates when I
was back in my younger days, when I worked for
Judge Panioto and the Domestic Relations Court back in the eighties,
we had multiple magistrates. It's would preside over you know,
sort of contentious divorce proceedings. You know, people wasting hundreds
of dollars per hour on lawyers to fight over who
gets the basket of soap bars. I mean, people who

(01:13:11):
in divorces do the stupidest, stupidest things.

Speaker 14 (01:13:14):
I think divorce court in juvenile quarter, the two where
they really have a ton of magistrates because the high
load there, the caseload is so enormous. Oh yeah, and
like you say, it's a very both of those are
very emotional.

Speaker 2 (01:13:27):
Yep.

Speaker 14 (01:13:27):
And so most of the time you're not sorting out
the law, you're sorting out personality.

Speaker 6 (01:13:31):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:13:32):
When I was sitting magistrates courtse and you know, the
magistrates preside over the issues. They put opinion out and
it usually gets you know, approved by the judge. He
goes unless it's contested, in which case you go to
the judge and then you make the argument in front
of the judge, and the judge either adopts the magistrates
view of the situation or renders his or her own opinion.
That's fine. But the seizing anger that I witnessed, the

(01:13:53):
people that used to be in love or purported to
be right across the table from each other, you know,
and my perception is it's over all right, you're here
because you're to move away from each other, put it
down and get the process done. Do you really need
that waffle iron? Are you seriously? I mean, this is
before we had these specific rules to basically put in

(01:14:16):
a pile, cut in half and divide it up. It's
a lot easier right now in terms of division of property,
but when children are coming to the equation, that's when
things really fall off the rail.

Speaker 6 (01:14:25):
Yeah.

Speaker 14 (01:14:25):
I look at it as the magistrates are there to
try and keep the easy stuff out of the courts
or to deal with the stuff that can be take
for a long time. I think it's a decent system.
I'm concerned here in like Hamilton County. You know, when
the judges were high quality judges, I think I would
trust the magistrates they appointed. Now we've got some judges

(01:14:47):
that have never been in a courtroom. They just had
a D behind their name on the blue ballot and
got elected that way. I'm not sure I trust their judgment.
I mean, Tracy Hunter's magistrates. I'm not sure i'd want
to go in front of somebody like that. John Williams, Yeah,
I'll take that bet.

Speaker 10 (01:15:02):
So.

Speaker 14 (01:15:03):
I mean, it all depends on how they got the
job and how they approach the job. But the fact
that they're not elected means you can't do much about it.
But I think as far as the overall intent It's
a great way of handling case load. It's gonna be
interesting to see what kind of comments we get back
from the presentation tonight.

Speaker 2 (01:15:21):
Yeah. Well, I hope my listeners can tune in seven pm.
Just register ahead of time and empower you America dot
Org or his cruise on over the two twenty five
North and Boulevard the former Frame USA headquarters where they
still have the Empower Youth Seminar studio. George, it has
been awesome having you in studio. Let's do it again soon,
maybe post elections, sort of dissect after the blood pressure

(01:15:42):
comes back down, and hopefully in a calmer environment, you know,
across the country, there won't be riots, there won't be outrage,
there won't be protests in the street, there won't be countless,
countless years of litigation. I know I'm being a wild
eyed optimist, George, but we can hope.

Speaker 14 (01:16:00):
I'm on vacation on Sunday, which was we did this
like a year ago and didn't know how crazy things
were get, so I'm kind of looking forward to not
thinking about it for a while.

Speaker 2 (01:16:08):
But I'm sure it'll come through. Yeah, good luck on that.
Thanks you, Grant. My friend coming up the Big Picture
with Jack added and right after the top of the
our news, followed by Jim Neil, Why vote for Jim
Neil for sheriff? We'll find out all the reasons why.
At seven thirty break.

Speaker 13 (01:16:22):
Back updates on the twenty twenty four presidential campaigns.

Speaker 7 (01:16:26):
Do you ever hear Biden?

Speaker 5 (01:16:28):
He's a threat to democracy?

Speaker 1 (01:16:29):
Fifty five krs the talk.

Speaker 8 (01:16:31):
Station, this report.

Speaker 2 (01:16:47):
Seven oh six here at fifty buck AIRCD talk station.
It is a very happy Wednesday, and we heard from
George Brennman for a full hour. We're gonna hear from
Jim Neil the bottom there and why we should vote
for him for sheriff. Well hours come up in one
hour and all the multitude of reasons why she needs
to remain Hamilton County Prosecutor. Melissa Powers, Judge of Polaitano
at eight thirty and my dear friend Ed Fink talking

(01:17:09):
about a Veterans Day event coming up in a more high school.
Veteran he is proudly served as country in Vietnam, And
without further ado a segment. I have come to dearly
love because I always love talking to Anchorman lawyer, historian,
author Jack Addan for the Big Picture. Welcome back, Jack.
It's always great having you on the program.

Speaker 7 (01:17:28):
You are right last day. We're gonna be talking before
election day. We could hold a mirror on to Kamala
Harris and just to what she does a lot of
name calling. She's a fascist, she's hitler. Kamala Harris is
Hella from thor Ragnarrek movie I love and I would

(01:17:48):
vote for Cap Blanchhadow. She weren't from Australia. But lesson
still do something really dirty, Brian. Let's talk about issues,
and not the easy ones. Trump will secure them. He'll
cut taxes and regulations across the board, boost growth, lower prices.
All that is pretty popular. So let le's discuss three

(01:18:10):
of the more controversial Trump policies because we want every
sane person's vote. My three issues that are so controversial
are foreign policy, especially Putin and Ukraine, then Terra's and
finally not just securing the border but deporting many illegal immigrants.

(01:18:32):
My first Ukraine. Kamala Harris and especially her new best bud,
the neo Khan, Liz Cheney, both want to keep funding
the war in Ukraine. They'll keep it going, Brian, longer
than we fought in Afghanistan twenty years. They're cheered on
by defense contractors what Dwight Eisenhower called the military industrial complex,

(01:18:56):
but Ike said something else. We should remember that if
Americans elected him president, he'd quickly end a war that
he had inherited, the one in South Korea, And unlike
Richard Nixon later with Vietnam, President Eisenhower did exactly that,
and he did it quickly. Within months. General MacArthur wanted

(01:19:18):
to invade communists China. The South Koreans wanted to conquer
North Korea, but Eisenhower knew that would keep the war
going forever at the cost of countless lives. So I
forced the South and the North to compromise. He then
made South Korea one of our closest allies, and they

(01:19:38):
have enjoyed peace and prosperity for seventy years. Donald Trump
is going to inherit the Biden Harris Ukraine War, which
never would have started had Trump been elected in twenty twenty.
Like Eisenhower, Trump will quickly end the war in Ukraine,
how by threatening to bankrupt Putin with sanctions and low

(01:20:00):
energy prices, the way Trump bankrupted Iran until Biden reversed
Trump policies, and Trump will make sure that Russia and
Iran their proxies, Hesbola and Amas never invade anybody. Next
issue tariffs. The easiest to argument Brian is to note

(01:20:21):
that Kamala Harris attacks tariffs, but the Biden Harris administration
has kept those hated Trump tariffs because they work. There
are three kinds. First, reciprocal tariffs. Communist China puts a
one hundred percent tariff on American cars, So we slap
a one hundred percent tariff on cars made in China.

(01:20:43):
Does this violate free trade? As JD Vance would say?
Do you hear yourself? The next kind of tariff is
against countries that outlaw American goods. Yes, they do. When
Trump was president, Canada, Canada prohibit the imports of Wisconsin
dairy products. So Trump squeezed that milksop justin Trudeau and

(01:21:07):
Canadians are now free to lap up American milk. The
third type of tariff requires that Donald Trump, to make
it work, uses the threat of terrors as a negotiating tool.
That's how he scrapped terrible trade agreements like NAFTA and
KAFTA and replaced them with USMCA the greatest trade agreement

(01:21:30):
ever for Canada and Mexico, as well as much freer
and fairer trade agreements with Japan, South Korea, and Europe.
All this brought manufacturing jobs and revenue back to America
until Biden and Harris once again paid off their donors
and China with the Green New Deal mandates and other scams.

(01:21:56):
The last supposedly fascists. Trump policy is deporting illegals, and
this is controversial. This brings us back to Dwight Eisenhower,
the general who is not Hitler. He beat Hitler as president.
Eisenhower deported more than a million Mexicans in the summer
of nineteen fifty four. And this was before illegals could

(01:22:20):
receive welfare, cash, free cell phones, luxury hotel rooms. This
was before Fentan O'Brien, before gangs taking over apartment complexes
and trafficking women and children. Trump speaks about deporting every illegal.
Why because that's how Donald Trump talks and that's what

(01:22:40):
offends so many people. But President Donald Trump's actual record
shows that he's far more practical, far more humane. He'll
go after violent criminals and the worst of the worst offenders.
What he will not allow for any illegal is for
them to allow nonsense listens to vote in federal elections.

(01:23:03):
It's hard to believe, but the Biden Harris Justice Department
as we speak, is trying to keep Virginia from taking
self identified non citizens off of their voter rolls.

Speaker 2 (01:23:15):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (01:23:15):
Why because Kamala Harris and Barack Obama Democrats are still
trying to fundamentally transform America from a land of middle
class citizens into a wasteland of government dependence. All right,
that's a lot to discuss. But what do you say, Brian.

Speaker 2 (01:23:33):
What do I say? All right? Well, foreign policy, the
one thing that I am overly concerned about is You're right,
this unending, seemingly insurmountable challenge of well trying to stop
Russia from invading Ukraine. Russia keeps advancing. They have more
military hardware than the Ukrainians. Ukrainians go through their missile
defense systems as quickly as we hand them over thereby

(01:23:54):
depleting our standard missile supply. They can only make a
few hundred of those a year they went through. We
went through a one hundred of them just since October seventh,
dealing with the Israeli situation and the Houthi rebels. So
there's a finite supply of available weapons and it takes
a long time. They're extraordinarily expensive to manufacture, and a
seemingly unlimited supply of inexpensive bottle rockets as well as

(01:24:15):
these drones. Makes something for ten thousand dollars that can
blow up a target, we get to shoot it down
with a two million dollar rocket. The math doesn't work
on that, and they're running out of the two million
dollar rockets. So that's just what my observation is on war.
But moving over to tariffs, you mentioned reciprocal You mentioned
those that outlaw US goods, and then the threat of
tariffs as a mechanism to achieve great goals effectively use

(01:24:38):
as you note by Donald Trump previously, but do none.
This is the economic argument. The threat of tariffs has
to be backed up by the actual implementation of tariffs
if you don't get what you want, which will result in,
of course other countries putting down reciprocal tariffs in response
to the tariffs that we imposed since we didn't get
our way. That's the argument they claim makes the prices

(01:25:00):
Americans goods or what people consume here in America go up.
Trump's counter to that is, well, that'll bring manufacturing back
to the United States because we make it here. It's
not going to be tariff. But that's a long slog
bringing back the manufacturer of any given product. Hell, we
still haven't gotten silicon chip manufacturing going in our country
and it remains to be dominated by Taiwan. So that's

(01:25:22):
the economic reality. I think, how do you respond to
that counter argument? The reciprocal taxes follow. Our tariffs will
follow any tariff we impose on any given country or
any given good.

Speaker 7 (01:25:35):
We can't know until Trump goes through with the threat.
I don't mean actually imposing the tariffs, but making the threat.
What we saw in the first administration is that a
lot of people who became close advisors, Larry Cutler is
probably the best known. They were against any kind of
a center if they thought that immediately prices would rise,
and it turned out not to be the case. Trump

(01:25:58):
feels that now for many more years to come. But
right now America is in the position where other countries
have to trade with us. That sounds like a bullying
way to look at things, but he didn't really act
like a bully in the first administration. He was just
trying to make sure that when there were products that
we could manufacture in America. The best example is cars

(01:26:20):
that are made not in America but moved to Mexico.
It's what Ford was trying to do. John Deere was
trying to do that. He said, Okay, if you want
to move to Mexico just because they pay way below
minimum wage. And here you have Kamala Harris saying we
want to raise the federal minimum wage to fifteen dollars
an hour, but she's opposed to allowing manufacturers to take

(01:26:42):
jobs down to Mexico where they pay far less than that,
without benefits, without environmental controls, and all the rest. Trump says,
if you're going to do that, then we're going to
slap on a tariff. I don't think he's talking about
French wine, just because we have wine that comes out
of New York State, California, and iow in Indiana. It's
a pretty good one, I'm told, I don't think he's

(01:27:04):
talking about that. I think you say, it's kind of like,
you know, repatriating the illegal immigrants. I don't think he's
going to go to ten or twenty He says, illegal
immigrants He's going to go to the most egregious cases.

Speaker 2 (01:27:17):
Yeah, the known adjudicated, known criminals, those who have had
due process and we found to have been guilty of
committing crimes, some heinous. Yeah. I think that's a good
starting point, and that allows me to pivot over to
my final comments. He does speak in a broad brush. Man,
We're going to get rid of all of them. We're
going to deport everybody who's here illegally, And of course
that creates logistical, financial, geopolitical, and legal challenges that seem

(01:27:45):
perhaps insurmountable. Now in terms of due process, which we
have to provide in order to determine whether someone is
actually eligible here under our immigration laws. They get an
immigration here, and they've got a backlog like ten years
of those, So you can even go after criminal illegal aliens,
but they may very well enjoy some argument that they're

(01:28:05):
entitled to be here because they were what persecuted politically
or something in their home country. But you got to
start somewhere. How do we overcome the financial reality of that.
You're going to have to hire thousands of immigration judges,
presumably to get a process in any measure of short order.
The logistical challenge. The counter arguments that all the lawyers

(01:28:25):
which will come out of the woodwork will be making
on behalf of those you're seeking to deport, and then
the fundamental geopolitical reality, which is, Okay, they're being deported,
but their home country won't take them back. Where do
you send them?

Speaker 7 (01:28:38):
Well, Trump says he's going to rely on an act
from seventeen ninety seven that allows him to at the
very least deal with criminal gangs. It's even worse than that.
I mean, what are you going to do if you
have illegal immigrants all flocking as many of them have
to sanctuary cities. Trump says he's going to outlaw those

(01:28:58):
difficult to see constitute exactly how we can do that.
But as with everything else to do with elections and democracy,
the alternative is simply insupportable. So whatever he's able to
accomplish is more than Kamala Harris and her handlers would
be able to do.

Speaker 2 (01:29:15):
Exactly.

Speaker 7 (01:29:15):
By the way, I don't know if we're going to
be running out of time. So let me just mention
one other thing, and that is Trump's most far reaching policy,
which probably will also instigate some litigation. Elon and Veveik
and others will be put in charge of a new
Department of Government Efficiency that will cut or even eliminate

(01:29:36):
federal bureaucracies, maybe entire departments, and finally drain the swamp.
Can it be done? We won't know until somebody tries.

Speaker 2 (01:29:47):
That's what is the key point. You got to start somewhere.
You got to give it a try. This administration doesn't
want to and will not. At least you can count
on Trump given it a go. Jack added to my
dear friend the big Picture. I love talk. Thank you
for joining the program every Wednesday to talk about some
important things. I will look forward to next Wednesday and
another edition and a little after maybe we're going to
do an aftermath of the election evaluation. Jack, Uh, Well,

(01:30:11):
it'll be on Wednesday. I know timing is everything. Best
of luck to you and your better half, my friend,
the best of health rather and I'll look forward to
next Wednesday. Love you, brother. Seventeen fifty five. Care see
detalk station cover since he talked to John Roman yesterday. Listen,
if you are a group you are like to see.
You're the business manager, the owner. You're the one responsible
for securing medical insurance for your group. Smaller groups like

(01:30:35):
less than fifty. Do what my friend Jeff did. He
took my advice and got in touch with the team
at Cover SINCEY. His entire crew is now going to
be covered through cover SINCEY, and they're all happy about it,
and they will remain happy. I assure you that's because
they all got better medical insurance coverage, including zero dollar
deductible for a lot less money. Jeff's business's bottom line

(01:30:55):
has dramatically improved. His employees are like, there's no way
this can be true or work. No, it is, it does.
There's a better way to get medical insurance. Work with
John Roman the team at covers since he They work
for you. Hundreds of insurance companies with thousands of policies available.
Each employee may have a different form of coverage. They
do that close of an analysis. This isn't like come

(01:31:16):
in and here you're your three choices. There's a multitude
of possibilities out there, depending on where you are in life,
whether you have families. They know how to slice this
in so many different ways, the point being to get
your better medical coverage for less money. So put them
to the challenge. Even individuals, if you're out on your own.
If everyone should give them a call and ask them
and find out it's five one three eight hundred call

(01:31:37):
it's five one three eight hundred two two five five,
No obligation, Just let them figure it out for you,
and then they stay with you throughout the entire process.
Once you're insured, they handle all issues like with claims
processing and stuff. You don't have to call the insurance
company to figure out what's going on. They do it
every day online coversince he dot com is a form there.
You can start the process just by filling that out

(01:31:59):
and hitting and enter coversincy dot com.

Speaker 8 (01:32:02):
Fifty five KRC.

Speaker 2 (01:32:04):
Have you heard about this guy, Donald Rainwater?

Speaker 8 (01:32:07):
I sure have.

Speaker 2 (01:32:13):
It is seven twenty eight here fifty five kr CD
talk station, and man, I got to know pretty well
over the years. I think the world of him, and
I think he did a wonderful job. And he was
sheriff here in Hamilton County. Jim Neil who is running
for sheriff against the current incumbent, Charmage McGuffey. Welcome back Sheriff,
Jim oh former sheriff now soon to be sheriff again,

(01:32:33):
hopefully Jim Neil good to have you on the program, sir, Hey.

Speaker 6 (01:32:37):
It's good to be here.

Speaker 11 (01:32:38):
Ryan, thank you for the opportunity.

Speaker 2 (01:32:40):
Pleasure to do it. I'll recommend folks check you out online.
It vote Jim Neil an Eil vote Jim Neil dot com.
It's your website for your campaign. As we well run
out the clock here, we getting fast approaching next Tuesday.
Clearly stayed in the obvious, Jim, your final opportunity to
sway the hearts and minds of my listeners may most
of whom I'm going to support you anyway, but you've

(01:33:03):
got to differentiate yourself between the current administration and Charmaine McGuffey.
My understanding, and you can go ahead and spring from
what I have learned through little birds whispering in my
ear and speaking with people who work in the Sheriff's office.
Morale not so hot right now. And uh and it
is a failure of leadership more than anything. What's your

(01:33:23):
take on that, gym?

Speaker 11 (01:33:25):
Oh? Absolutely uh. And it starts from the top. As
you know, Sheriff McGuffey. When she was a major with
the Sheriff's office, there was an official complaint filed on
her for creating a hostile work environment and U and
that complaint was sustained. And you know what, she hasn't changed.

Speaker 12 (01:33:49):
And.

Speaker 11 (01:33:50):
She's she's a bully and she's very vindictive. And that's
that's a poor leadership quality. So it's hard to maintain
staffing levels in an environment like that. I mean, you
can recruit, but it's keeping them Ryan, it's keeping them.

(01:34:13):
And the staffing levels are definitely down in the Sheriff's
office in a lot stems from leadership. But before I
go any further, I want to remind you and everybody
else that I'm endorsed by Christopher Smitherman. She is endorsed

(01:34:34):
by George Sorrows. Can we explain the difference between she
is a political activist sheriff. I was the people sheriff.
I was focused on public safety and law enforcement, law
and order, following the rule of law. That's why I'm
sitting here talking to you, trying to get my job back,

(01:34:57):
because I wasn't willing to go down that road sell
my soul to the devil to keep a job.

Speaker 2 (01:35:04):
You know, it's an excellent observation. Law enforcement is I
should be politically neutral. I don't know how being a
Republican or Democrat, has anything to do with your focus
on keeping criminals off the streets, or arresting criminals or
chasing down bad guys. Basically enforcing the law. The laws
on the books just enforce it, so it shouldn't bear

(01:35:26):
a political stripe. You don't need to go out and
keep talking politics while you are sheriff. You just need
to create a great work environment, provide your people with
the resources they need, and encourage them to do their
job and get the bad guys. Now she has politicized it.
I don't think I've ever seen her in doing anything
other than attending like LGBTQ plus parade events and you know,

(01:35:47):
pointing out over and over and over again and leading
alf with the fact that she's the first you know,
I guess, lesbian sheriff or something. This is twenty twenty four, Jim.
No one gives a crap about your sexual identity. No
one cares who you choose to sleep with. Are you
effective at the job? Have you demonstrably proven that you

(01:36:09):
are a good person to be there right.

Speaker 6 (01:36:13):
Right?

Speaker 11 (01:36:13):
And let's equate that with quality law enforcement. I don't
see it. We have some great men and women that
work in the Sheriff's office, but it's a failure under
her leadership.

Speaker 2 (01:36:31):
How do you write the ship, Jim.

Speaker 11 (01:36:35):
Oh, effective leadership. It starts from the top. These men
and women signed up to enforce the laws, to uphold
the constitution. That's what they want to do. They don't
want to enforce political agendas. And that's what's happening in
law enforcement in Hamilton County. With the larger agencies Cincinnati,

(01:36:55):
the officers are being blocked and not allowed to do
their job. The Sheriff's office because of the leadership and
following the political agenda. They're not as effective as they
could be either. I mean, the two largest agencies in
the county are failing us because of leadership.

Speaker 6 (01:37:16):
Poor leadership.

Speaker 11 (01:37:18):
And I'm talking about and I'm talking about the sheriff,
and I'm talking about city council that leans on the
current police chief, not allowing her to do her job.
And that's why. But this is why I love the politics, Brian.
I'm going to go back to the politics. Whether I'm

(01:37:39):
a Democrat or whether I'm a Republican, that's not going
to affect how I run that office. But it gets
me into the office so I can be the people's sheriff,
not influenced by politics because I answer to no politician.
I answer to you, Brian, I answer to Joe, answer

(01:38:00):
to all of your listeners. And that's what's great about
the office of the sheriff is that if I don't
want the office to be political, it won't be political
because I do not. I'm not appointed by a politician.
I'm elected by the people, so we got to keep
it that way. But once you're elected sheriff, you've got

(01:38:21):
to keep the politics out of law enforcement. You're doom
for failure. The current administration is failing.

Speaker 2 (01:38:28):
I put an exclamation point on that for everything I've heard.
So I'll tell you what. Let's take an early break here,
I'll bring you back. I want to talk about a
couple of other hot button issues that are going on,
and one of them happens to be immigration. Lachlan, of course,
within Hamilton County. I want to get your perception of immigration,
whether it has anything to do with crime, and what
are the current statistics regarding crime. Local news keeps telling

(01:38:52):
us that there isn't and hasn't been an increase in crime.
In fact, it's dropping off. I'm a little bit skeptical
or Jada and cynical over that conclusion under the circumstances.
So we'll get Jim's take on those issues come up next. Again.
You can check them out online. It's vote Jimneil dot com.
And now I get to mention to you Jimmy Care
Fireplace in Stove. I love what they did for me.

(01:39:12):
They kept my house from burning down. And I know
that may be an overstatement, but when you have the
Jeff Keeper, the owner who's been been around since nineteen
eighty eight helping people with safety issues regarding anything that
has a firebox in, it agains. When he looks at
you and says, you know what, I wouldn't use this,
it gives you that look. I know him well enough
to know exactly that he don't use your fireplace. It

(01:39:34):
was trapping heat, it did not vent properly. It was
the builder special and then you know, modified or whatever.
But in the final analysis out it went safety critical.
I got a new insert from Jimmy Care Fireplaces. So
I'm going back quite a few years now though. I
just love it. And you know it's got a remote
control still gas that's we had before. But I can
turn it on and off with a push of a button,

(01:39:55):
raise of flame levels and the vent it has rather
a blower in it, so you know, breaths the blower
level to a higher speed gets more heat into the
room or less as the case may be. All kinds
of different lighting options, just something you can consider doing
now before the fireplace season starts. They replace the whole
lining and everything. Absolutely gorgeous from a you know, architectural standpoint. Everything,

(01:40:16):
And there's a huge selection of inserts. You don't have
to go gas like I did. You can do a
self feeding wood waste pellet stove insert or your traditional
wood burning insert. They've got them all. They also free
standing stoves and free standing wood waste pellet stoves as well,
literally everything related to chimneys and fireplaces at the Chimneycare
Fireplaces and Stove Showroom four to thirteen Wards Corner Road.
But in terms of safety, they find something wrong with

(01:40:38):
your chimney, they're gonna let you know about to fix
it for a right price, and they are truly experts
at what they do. Video camera inspection. You may have
water issues going on in there need to be swept.
Certified chimney sweeps. They have it all if you tuckpointing
cap and damper replacement. I could go on for hours.
Just go to chimneycareco dot com learn all about a
Chimneycare code dot com. Think of your safety before the
fireplace season starts, call them and schedule that appointment of

(01:41:00):
five one three two four eight ninety six hundred A
plus with a BBB five one three two four eight
ninety six hundred fifty five KRC dot com. Cheddine says,
We're gonna have a mostly sunny day to day, a
bit breezy and high of eighty overnight. Low is sixty
three with partly cloudy sky's seventy five to high tomorrow
for Halloween, though afternoon in the evening rain it's going

(01:41:24):
to be moving in with isolated storms. I hope it
doesn't ruin the trick or treating forty seven overnight with
some clouds and a sunny Friday with the highest sixty
two sixty degrees. Right now, let's get an update on
traffic Chuck from.

Speaker 15 (01:41:38):
The UCL Tranfic Center, kind of on the expert team
and you see Health Orthopedics and Sports Vedicon no matter
the injury, same day appointments are available schedule.

Speaker 1 (01:41:46):
Online and you see health dot com.

Speaker 15 (01:41:48):
Cruisi's working by the new accident at westbound two seventy
five at the northbound seventy one ramp.

Speaker 1 (01:41:53):
I'm not seeing a huge delay as of yet. They
get by.

Speaker 15 (01:41:55):
I do see breakwrights southbound seventy one above two seventy
five towards Fifer southbound seventy five. There's a recabum Union
Center backing traffic to Tylersville. Chuck Ingramont fifty five krc
the talk station.

Speaker 2 (01:42:10):
Seven forty Here fifty five KRCD talk station. A very
Happy Wednesday tou after the top of the air news
the other key to law enforcement here in Hamlin County
Prosecutor Melissa Powers joins the program to give us a
final push to put her and keep or rather keep
her in office. Judseph Paulatano at eight thirty the mean time.
Jim Neil, former sheriff soon to be hopefully again sheriff.
Vote Jimneil dot com is where you find them online.

(01:42:33):
Now the national news has stumbled upon the issue that's
going on in Lachland. And I'm not picking on Lochland.
It's just that it happens to be in the national
news within the last week, three thousand, three thousand immigrants,
both probably a mix of legal and illegal, but Mauritanians primarily.
I don't know why Mauritanians chose Lachland as their destination city,

(01:42:57):
but there they are. So the village of Lachland, a
town of thirty four hundred people, has an influx of
three thousand new arrivals. Will call them and the city
officials and the mayor is like, we can't deal with this.
It's uns literally, the word from the mayor is unsustainable.
I'm not sure if there's any connection with crime there,

(01:43:19):
But what's your connection with the illegal immigrant population, your
relationship with ICE? How you would run the sheriff's office
this time around?

Speaker 11 (01:43:26):
Jim Neil, Okay, let's start with ICE, Immigration Customs Enforcement. Yes,
as sheriff, any immigrant who is physically arrested and transported
to the Hamilton County jail, that arrest will be reported
to ICE so that they can conduct their investigation. And

(01:43:48):
one of two things is going to happen. When that
immigrant is released from jail, whether making bond or serving
thy sentence. ICE will be no notified of that release.
They're going to either interview the immigrant for additional information
for their case file, or they're going to take custody

(01:44:10):
because they have a federal court order to deport. And
quite frankly, if these immigrants are violating our laws, Brian,
they're showing signs of not being good citizens, why do
we need to keep them. Let's deport them.

Speaker 2 (01:44:27):
Well, and certainly ICE will do its job if they're
alerted to the immigrant population. Now, for her part, I
know Charmie mcguffee claims to be working with ICE. That's
her claim. I guess the Inquiry interviewed her most recently,
I guess a week or so ago. And her position,
she claims, is that she contacts ICE and has a
working relationship with him. Do you believe that to not

(01:44:50):
be the case right now?

Speaker 11 (01:44:52):
It is not the case. She's the only sheriff in
Ohio not working with ICE. She will notify them a
subsequent to release an offender. Hey, I released an immigrant
instead of notifying them giving them up to forty eight
hours to respond to the county jail to do their job.

(01:45:14):
She's not working with ICE.

Speaker 6 (01:45:16):
That's a good question. You can ask the prosecutor as well.

Speaker 11 (01:45:21):
But she's not working with Ice all right, Well, it's
not part of her party's agenda, Brian, And she's an
agenda sheriff. She's a political sheriff. She's an activist. During
twenty twenty, when I was sheriff, I would see her
out there with these the twenty twenty movements that caused

(01:45:44):
a lot of harm to our property and injuries to
a person, and we affected a number of rests. She's
been seen in those gatherings.

Speaker 2 (01:45:55):
She's an activist, no question about it from my perspective,
Just giving you an opportunities speak your case on the issue.
Now moving over to the jail as well as staffing
in the Sheriff's department. Generally speaking, I getting people to
enter the field of law enforcement as a career choice
hard enough, given the circumstances in this country with a
defund police mentality and the anti police mentality. Well, where

(01:46:19):
are we in terms of numbers of the sheriff's office
and to the extent we don't have sufficient staffing. What
does Jim Neal do to right the ship and get
folks to consider that as a career choice.

Speaker 11 (01:46:30):
Absolutely, we're going to have to hire to staff the jail.
There's no question about it. They've lost When I left
in twenty one, every floor in the county jail was
open for business. That's not the case now. So we
are going to have to hire. And I've had I

(01:46:54):
think former deputies approached me, Hey, if you get elected,
can I come back? You know? So it's very positive
the feedback that I'm getting.

Speaker 6 (01:47:04):
So hopefully with.

Speaker 11 (01:47:05):
The proper leadership, the proper placement in these divisions of
leaders it'll attract candidates. But it all starts from the top. Bryan,
and I'm going to go back to Lochland. I feel
for them. I believe when you have numbers like that,

(01:47:29):
I believe there's people behind the scenes, behind the scene
working this, the NGOs, the non government organizations, bringing these
people to these communities. Lochland, from what my understanding, is
not a sanctuary village. They missed Cincinnati by a couple.

Speaker 4 (01:47:47):
Of miles there.

Speaker 6 (01:47:47):
Brian.

Speaker 11 (01:47:48):
And who's going to pay for the services? Brian, When
you've doubled the population, you're going to need more public servant,
including law enforcement ParaMed who's going to pay for that?
Lack Porns can't afford to pay to double their their
numbers of public service, So who's going to pay for

(01:48:10):
Are the NGOs.

Speaker 4 (01:48:11):
Going to pay for.

Speaker 2 (01:48:14):
Nice one? Nice one?

Speaker 11 (01:48:16):
Well, maybe we need to go after them because apparently
they're getting financial support from bringing them here. How about
giving that finances to Lacklin so they can grow their
agencies to provide a service that is comparable to the population.

Speaker 6 (01:48:32):
Now and.

Speaker 2 (01:48:35):
Well, I just you know, the law enforcement one of
multitude of layers of problems when you double the population
of one town. The village administrator, the village administrator over
there has just said it was about one hundred and
fifty thousand dollarsand losses to the village because well, the
illegal immigrants moved in and since they don't pay taxes
and are not eligible for employee the employment the residents

(01:48:58):
are moving out. Results think and fewer tax dollars. I
suppose any very complicated problem, but fundamentally, when it comes
to law enforcement, a sheriff Neil will absolutely work with
Ice and endeavor to remove them.

Speaker 11 (01:49:12):
And I'll work with Lachlan too. I work with all
the agencies. You know that, Brian. Oh, yes, we're going
to share resources, including human resources. But I'm going to
get the ship right. I'm going to get right staff
right size the people that we need so we can
work hand in hand with the other agencies, because this

(01:49:35):
is a huge problem. Cincinnati is a sanctuary city. They
brought poison to our region and those of us who
care are going to have to band together and deal
with it well.

Speaker 2 (01:49:48):
Immigration is certainly one of the defining issues of this election.
Jim Neil, I wish you all the best, my friend.
I knew you did a great job when you were sheriff.
We had a good relationship and I enjoy your open
door policy, and of course you demonstrated the how wonderful
it is when you have a great working relationship with
multiple agencies across multiple jurisdictions. That is critical to successful

(01:50:11):
law enforcement in the region. And I know you're a huge,
huge collaboration proponent. So I wish you the best. Jim.
We'll keep my I'll keep my fingers crossed. You got
my vote, and I know you get to vote to
Christopher Smithman.

Speaker 6 (01:50:25):
Yes, thank you.

Speaker 11 (01:50:26):
Fortunately, you know it's just important to be a you know,
follow the Constitution and support that as well.

Speaker 2 (01:50:33):
Exactly you too, Man. Best of luck and God bless you.
And fortunately George Soros can't vote in Hamilton County seven nine.
W do you have care ze? They talk stage. Yeah,
I know, Joe. Yet that's the funny point. Being a
Spree of Keller Williams seven Hills and his awesome team.
Since they's number one real estate Groupree Group Kellowiams seven

(01:50:56):
Hills your five star experience of ways you need a
real auyer's agent or seller's agent, you're going down that road.
They truly, the team at Schabri Group truly brings exceptional
value for they earn their commission and with the commission
structure the way it is these days in an ears
to your benefits separating the week from the chaff. They

(01:51:17):
are the weak when it comes to Cincinnia real estate agents.
The top agents around. You'll have a wonderful experience with them.
Learn from their they'll they'll they'll keep you out of
trouble as buyers and agents. I mean I think about
buyer's agent. You know they see a house and you
might see one thing, and an experienced professional like you
get with the Sabree Group of Kelowiams seven Hills might
see some things that you do not, some pluses or

(01:51:39):
some minuses, some things you might want to factor into
the you know, decision making process, so keeping you out
of trouble and one of the programs out for there's
multiple of them, but along those lines, if you buy
a house through that process with them as your buyer's agent,
and for any reason during the first year you find
that you do not like that house, they'll sell it
to you for free. They'll sell it for free, I
mean no commission. That's it's one of the guarantees you

(01:52:01):
get from the shebre Group. Learn more. I'll go to
seven zero eight three thousand dot com. I know the
Shebri Group folks very well. They're wonderful folks. Seven zero
eight three thousand dot com. Then you can, of course
call them up. Just put a five one three in
front of it. Five one three seven zero eight three thousand,
Hey Channa nine. First Warning Weather forecast Sunday. For the

(01:52:24):
most part, today, a bit breezy. I have eighty overnight,
partly cloudie. Sixty three for the low for Halloween. Sorry,
they're calling for some afternoon evening showers maybe isolated storms.
Seventy five for the high. Overnight the rain moves out,
it'll be mostly cloudy with the lower forty seven and
sunny sky is on Friday with is sixty two sixty
degrees right now. Time for traffic update Chuck.

Speaker 15 (01:52:46):
From the UC Health Traffic Center, count on the expert
team at u see Health Orthopedic Sands Sports Medicine, No
matter the injury, same day appointments are available schedule online
at u see health dot com. Found seventy five continues
slope between Buttermilk and Town, then above seventy four to
a new accident that has the right lane blocked off
with the lateral, then the broken down on the right

(01:53:06):
near Town southbound seventy five breakwights continue to build from
above one twenty nine to a wreck above Union Center.

Speaker 1 (01:53:14):
Chuck Ingram on fifty five kr and see the talk station.

Speaker 2 (01:53:21):
Seven fifty three here fifty five KRCD talk station Hope.
We having a wonderful Wednesday and a great lineup on
the show this morning. A full hour with George Runneman
from Restored Liberty dot us and a variety of local
political issues. Big Picture with Jack average Atherton Boy. We
did some serious work with Jack on that one. Talked
about tariffs, talked about foreign policy, and talked about deportation.

(01:53:42):
Three big challenges we face as we consider whether we're
gonna vote for Kamala Harris or Donald Trump. And that'll
be the subject matter of judgment. Polatana's opinion tweedled e
and tweedled dumb. He doesn't like either of them. He's
entitled to this. I know people get angry, but yeah, honestly,
as of course, according to his op ed piece, and
we're going to talk about this day thirties we always
do with the judge. He says up front and his

(01:54:04):
ourbed piece that he hasn't voted for a presidential candidate
since nineteen eighty four Ronald Reagan. He's got his own
reasons and motivations for that. Some people say that's cowardice.
Some people say that's a waste. Some people will say
that's capitulation. Others say it's standing on principle. You know,
he disagrees adamantly and across the board with two candidates,

(01:54:24):
and he can't pick between either of them. You know,
I'm in favor of going with the better. You know,
Donald Trump has his flaws. We all know. Even the
most ardent Trump supporter realizes and has to acknowledge unless
they're in a complete state of absolute denial. That he
certainly has challenges which the left has been trying and
some large measure of success to just create this demon

(01:54:50):
out of really, in the final analysis, some kind of
minor stuff in the grand scheme of things you know
on the l like, for example, Donald Trump being this womanizer,
this misogynist. You know, just remember the landscape of articles
that you've read about the misdeeds and the abuse or

(01:55:12):
otherwise offensive conduct toward women conducted by the left. They're
seemingly more broad minded attitude when it comes to matters
sexual You know, I don't care personally your moral choices,
your ethics. Of course, I don't know why criminal conduct.

(01:55:33):
But you know, Donald Trump doesn't have a lock on
being a misogynist if you really want to categorize him
as that. But what really fundamentally does he had, what
he may have done in the past have anything to
do with the office of the president of the United
States of America. It's like going back to Bill Clinton.
Some people were so angry with him. I'm like, God,
he had sucks from the old office. He was a
little more pragmatic about that. I would have forgiven him

(01:55:55):
he had just come out and been honest about it.
God knows, given my I'm fifty nine years old. I
know so many people who've had some real marital challenges
and haven't exactly you know, followed their mayor of valves
Ialy to find out and only conclude with nothing ever happened,
that they were successful in getting past the problems and
challenges that so many married couples have came out the

(01:56:15):
other side smiling like a rose. Or alternatively, I got
lots of friends that got divorced. But that kind of
stuff goes on all the time. Look at multiple presidents
with dossiers of womanizing. It ain't a lock on the
Republican side of the ledger, although the Democrats gone onto
that and say lo ignoring their own problems and issues.

Speaker 3 (01:56:35):
The only garbage I see floating down there is just supporters.

Speaker 2 (01:56:38):
And then there's that Joe Biden literally called any supporter
of Donald Trump garbage. I thought Hillary Clinton lowered the
bar sufficiently calling you all deplorables out there, but now
your garbage interesting. I wonder if that's going to work
for them. Seven fifty six law enforcement critical Hem County

(01:57:00):
elections one of the most important, if not the If
you want to put a number on them. Melissa Powers,
Hamilton County prosecutor. Let's keep her in office. You'll join
the program after the news. Then Judge Edna Polaitano and
Ed Fink, there's a Veterans Day of animal or high school.
He will tell us all about it at the end
of the hour. I'll be right back to October.

Speaker 11 (01:57:18):
The whole assassination is sounding off so ridiculous.

Speaker 4 (01:57:22):
Kid's surreal.

Speaker 1 (01:57:23):
Fifty five krs the talks station.

Speaker 8 (01:57:26):
This report is sponsored three with you about.

Speaker 10 (01:57:28):
The state's rights issue for regarding abortion fifty five krz
the talk station.

Speaker 2 (01:57:37):
Eight six Here at fifty five KRCD Talk Station, A
very happy Wednesday to you. Bottom now, of course, judg
Enta Polaton we'll hear from Ed Fink later in the
program about the Veterans Day of animo or high school.
And right now we're going to hear from one of
the most stark contrast races that there is that we
are going to be voting on. Unless you have already voted,
it is the prosecutor here in Hamilton County. In terms

(01:57:59):
of the contrast and the vast difference in the experience
level and qualifications for this job. This is the ultimate
no brainer. At least it should be the only person
with a sufficient experience and demonstrably proven talent in the
office is my guest right now, Hamilton County Prosecutor Melissa Powers,
Welcome back to the program. It's always a pleasure speaking

(01:58:20):
with you.

Speaker 16 (01:58:22):
Good morning, Brian. Thank you so much for having me today.

Speaker 2 (01:58:25):
Love having you on the program. Powersfo prosecutor dot coms
where you find and there. I even encourage my listeners.
Last time you and I spoke, I said, go ahead,
pull up Connie Pillich's site and take a look at
what she thinks qualifies her for the vision mission or
the job, and look at your resume coupled with your
demonstrated proven abilities as Hamilton County prosecutor. This should be

(01:58:46):
I mean, there is. There shouldn't even be a choice here,
I would.

Speaker 16 (01:58:51):
Agree, Brian, there is not. This is a clear choice.
It's so easy. It's just getting the message out to
all the voters. The big difference between myself and my opponent.
I spent my career as an attorney in the courtroom,
whether a prosecutor, a civil litigator, doing defense work. Sixteen

(01:59:12):
years as a judge in adult court and juvenile court.
I've been fighting on behalf of victims. I've prosecuted murderers, rapist, burglars,
the most dangerous criminals in our county, and my opponent
has never prosecuted a single case. She hasn't been inside
a courtroom in over twenty years. She led her law
license lapse and literally has shown no interest in be

(01:59:35):
an attorney. You don't do that and not maintain your
law license. And then even since reactivating her license in
order to put her name on the ballot, she's never
handled a single case. She had two years to pick
up some cases, to get familiar again, to actually be
able to say to voters, hey, listen, I'm out here,
I'm serious about running for this position, and she hasn't

(01:59:57):
even done that their choice. It scares me that how
inexperienced she is. And then also what scares me so
much through the future of our county is that she's
aligned herself with these radical ideas from the left of
defunding the police, putting the criminal's rights in front of

(02:00:18):
you know before and that's paramount before any victims or
even the safety of the community. She is being supported
by the Working Families Party, which is basically a George Soros,
New York out of state type of this, putting money
into her campaign, and they publicly support defunding the police,

(02:00:38):
abolishing Kinish Bale, and then radically reforming our justice system.
We know those policies don't work. We've seen it across
the country where these cities have just failed, beautiful cities,
and we have gone made so much progress in Cincinnati. Plus,
this is my hometown. I love our county and our city.
That's why I'm running. I'm trying to save our county

(02:01:00):
from these radical ideas that are out there and my
opponents right along with them, and we have to fight.
We have to fight for everyone, invite for our community.

Speaker 2 (02:01:10):
Certainly, and your record demonstrates that. And I'd really like
to highlight the fact that you started the first veterans
treatment court in the state history, because I have a
really really close connection with veterans, because I have such
tremendous respect for them, But the idea that you focused
on them and the issues that they face that are
truly unique compared to the regular run of the mill

(02:01:30):
working folks out here in the world. So I salute
you for that. But also as juvenile court judge, you
did a hell of a great job with our struggling
juvenile population, and you just got this really solid record
to run on. But pivoting over to the contrast, if
George Soros is supporting Connie Pillage, that speaks volumes, because
you can tell a lot by the company you keep.

(02:01:51):
But I had a conversation earlier today Jim Neal, of
course running for sheriff against Charmonie McGuffey, and I asked
him about illegal immigration. Alackland obviously is on the radar.
It's a national story. Thirty three thousand Mauritanians have descended
on a town of thirty four hundred people. The logistics
behind that are just baffling. And I'm not pointing at

(02:02:12):
the Martinian community or those folks in Lachland as being
a criminal element, but there are immigrants, legal or otherwise.
I mean, the illegal ones is what I'm focusing on,
which who do commit crimes. Cincinnati is a sanctuary city,
and I'm just kind of curious to know what your
perception is about how the Cincinnati Police Department is in
so far as working with ice, and how the current

(02:02:34):
Hamilton County sheriff is in so far as working with
ICE and what your perception is in so far as
the Prosecutor's office working with ICE.

Speaker 16 (02:02:44):
Well, I believe all the police departments are working with ICE. However,
as she said, since it has been to our city
has been declared by the mayor sanctuary city that has
put some read box and way of working making sure
that ICE has the appropriate detainers if someone commits a crime.

(02:03:07):
Now a while back, we had some issues going on
with the Chileans coming into our city and then they
were burglarizing homes in particular neighborhoods. And then they're very difficult.
They're international, highly sophisticated organized criminal gang unit and through Chile,
because of the visa waiver, they were able easily able

(02:03:30):
to come into our country. They would fly into Miami,
rent a car, drive up and be burglarizing homes and
in affluent areas in many cities, whether it was outside
of in Nashville, Atlanta, Cincinnati, they would go up to
New York, Connecticut, Michigan, and so they're very elusive, very
difficult to catch. And I can't remember the exact number

(02:03:54):
that we were dealing with last year of homes that
were broken into. But when the police departments, other agencies,
outside agencies, neighbor agencies such as Amberley or Montgomery or
Indian Hill. These smaller agencies would apprehend. They got very
lucky through their hard work and they were able to
apprehend one of the gangs that came through here. Once

(02:04:19):
they got down to the jail, we had very low
bonds set by a I guess a liberal judge, and
then there no with no detainer to hold them, so
you didn't have that ICE detainer to hold them. And
of course they got out, they got out on ankle bracelets.
You know exactly what happened. They went ut back to
their country, so we had no opportunity to prosecute them.

(02:04:42):
It was when that happened that came to my attention.
I started working with the share of trying to convince,
you know, their policy as in effective. It wasn't working.
That took almost a year to get changed. And I'm
not quite sure that if I think at this point
she's willing to work with ICE, but for long time
it was very difficult to get that, to get her

(02:05:03):
to understand that her policy was ineffective.

Speaker 2 (02:05:07):
Well, she is supported by George Soros outside money. According
to Jim Neil so that speaks volumes in and of itself.
Prosecutor powers. There is a regular ad campaign. I mean
even I I'm so sick of hearing it that I
can almost recite it. But suggesting that you are somehow
going to prosecute women who have abortions. Now, I know

(02:05:28):
that you can have any position you want as an
individual and your status on abortions, but there are laws
on the books, and now we have a constitutional amendment
which protects women's rights along those lines. You want to
address that question head on prosecutor powers.

Speaker 16 (02:05:42):
Yes, And I've been trying to speak out and wherever
I go to make sure that people understand. First of all,
it's them as comical that she has to pivot to
these national issues in an attempt to scare our voters
or try to make voters vote for her. To make
this distinction on a I mean, it's just kind of
a playbook right out of the Democratic Party. We're talking

(02:06:04):
about local issues here.

Speaker 4 (02:06:05):
First of all, this.

Speaker 16 (02:06:06):
Abortion has absolutely nothing to do with my race. But
she's falsely claiming they'll prosecute women that will get abortions. Now,
it's a constitutional protected right. It was voted by our
in last November elections, the voters overwhelmingly past that it's
part of the Ohio Constitution. I take an oath I

(02:06:28):
have to uphold that law, the laws of the United States,
the laws of Ohio, the Constitution of the United States,
the Constitution of Ohio. So the absolute answer is, there
is no way that I'm prosecuting women if they get
a legal abortion. Secondly, this whole thing about if I

(02:06:48):
had I mean, I've been in the office roommost two years.
Not one female it's been prosecuted for an abortion. And
quite honestly, Brian, let's go back in the farther, I
don't even know. I've been doing this for thirty two years.
I've never heard of any woman in Ohio and Hamilton
County have ever been prosecuted for having an abortion ever

(02:07:10):
in my thirty two years. So to bring this up
and to run a commercial and to be going and
sending letters out to every zip code to try to
tell women that scares me. Either she doesn't know the law,
or she's intentionally misleading the public, and either way you
can't trust her. She's not telling you the truth.

Speaker 2 (02:07:31):
Well, that falls into the category you choose, or maybe
it's a combination of both nefarious or stupid. The farious
in the sense she's lying, or stupid in the sense that,
as you pointed out, doesn't understand the constitution of the
state of Ohio is ensuring abortion as right. The other
thing that you point out, and I noted that she
was calling and what is the point of this exercise

(02:07:51):
for independent audits of cases that were already reviewed and
affirmed by courts of appeals? What is that about?

Speaker 16 (02:08:00):
It makes no sense to me, because we have within
our within the justice system. Uh, and is that you
can if there's a conviction, you can appeal your case,
and that you have, you can go to the Court
of Appeals, and if you don't like that decision, you
can try to get into the higher Supreme Court. On
criminal cases, you can even go to federal court, to

(02:08:22):
the Siste sixth District in the United State Supreme Court.
This idea of auditing cases that have already been reviewed,
it makes no sense to me. It tells me she
doesn't know what the system, how the system even works.
And that's that's pretty scary. Again, there's no need for it.

(02:08:42):
I think I don't know exactly what she has in mind.
She claims this is from her military internal her military experience.
You do this internally and it doesn't make any sense
at all. Well, and it's just I think it's useless
and ridiculous.

Speaker 2 (02:08:59):
Well it was even I will articulate a reason for it.
There is a finite number of dollars in the county,
and of course engaging in that review process seems to
me it would cost a whole lot of taxpayer money
for again, any pointless gesture, I.

Speaker 16 (02:09:13):
Would agree with you. And that's one thing that I've
done throughout my thirty now going into my thirty second
year my career, is that I've always been a watchdog
for taxpayers money. I have started many programs such as
like you mentioned earlier, the Veterans Street in the court.
I did that without one dime of taxpayers money being spent.

(02:09:34):
I've started a gang unit and within internally within our office. Again,
I can do these things without taxpayers money and to
be spending money, and it seems like the other side
all they want to do is throw money, and they
think they're solving problems with money, and really often it
really produces little result.

Speaker 2 (02:09:54):
Little result, lots of money. I'll tell you what Hamlin
County Prosecuting Melissa Powers. I dearly, dearly, and hope that
we can continue to call you Hamilton County Prosecuting Melissa
Powers after next Tuesday. I'll strongly encourage my listeners to
just go ahead. If they don't believe you and don't
believe me, do the research yourself. It's prop Powers for
Prosecutor dot com. Check out the record, then you go

(02:10:15):
check County Pillach's website and you can see if you
can figure out one thing that puts her ahead of
the game when it comes to qualifications for the office.
It has been a distinct pleasure having you on my
program all these years, and I hope we continue to
do it in your role as Hamilton County Prosecuting Melissa Powers.
God bless you, keep up the great work and best
of luck as we head into Tuesday.

Speaker 16 (02:10:35):
Thank you, Brian, and I want to thank you and
your listeners for your support. I've had support from It
doesn't matter what party you're from. If you're a Republican,
a Democrat, or an independent, you're voting for your safety
when you're voting for me. I've had support throughout almost
every zip code in the county and It just chows,
and I think how important this race is to the
future of our county. So I'll continue to fight until

(02:10:59):
and hopefully win. Everyone's about and be successful on November fifth.
Thank you.

Speaker 2 (02:11:05):
I pray for that outcome. Howmon kind of prosecuted Melissa
Powers are real pleasure having you on today. It's coming
up on eight twenty. It's right now eight nineteen fifty
five Kosity Talk station, which means it's coming up on
Judge ended Apolitano, Tweedledee and Tweedledum. The Judge not a
fan of either option when it comes to the presidential race.
Dive into the details on that one coming out. Stay

(02:11:25):
right here at fifty five kr CE the talk station.

Speaker 14 (02:11:28):
This is fifty five karc an iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 8 (02:11:32):
What's the best place to reach new companies?

Speaker 2 (02:11:38):
A twenty three fifty five Karosity talk station. I am
cracking up A little brief off air comment between our
conversation between Judge to recognized since tomorrow's Halloween. He said
he always used Halloween as an opportunity to teach his
children about economics, most notably the concept of taxation. So
they their work was going out obviously collect candy and

(02:12:00):
when they return home with their bucket or bag or
whatever of candy, Joe would have n't lay it out,
and then he would proceed to take thirty or forty
percent of it. Joe stole their labor and their candy
while making a profound point about taxation. And then you know,
he could have taken seventy seventy five percent of it,

(02:12:21):
or even ninety five percent of it, because it was
that bad back in the fifties. And of course everybody
knows the Beatles song tax man. You know, it's five
percent appears too small. Be thankful, I'll take it all.
Their taxation rate was, in fact ninety five percent. What
possible incentive could there be to go to work when
the government is going to take ninety five percent of
your labor? And that's why his girls, he said, respect

(02:12:45):
money and have a profound understanding of the concept of taxation,
especially under circumstances where you have a dictatorial person in
the form of the legislative body and president deciding how
much of the candy he was going to take. I
worry about four oh one K's had a conversation with
John Roman from Cover Cincy the other day about that.

(02:13:06):
You know your four oh one k is going to
be taxed at whatever current rate it is. What will
the rate be when you start withdrawing funding funds from
your four oh one k after saving it for all
those years? Now? The world's an ever changing place. You
have no idea until that moment in time, and that
really worries me considering the money that's spent in an
ever growing, ever expanding, ever controlling federal government. And is

(02:13:32):
there either side of the political ledger that's going to
protect your rights and your interest. That'll be the subject
of my conversation with Judge Nina Polotamy, who I think
I can conclude believes both candidates are the two sides
of the same coin. We'll talk about tweetled ee and tweeled.
I'm with the judge coming up next day right here
at fifty five KRC, the talk station. There's a lot
of states in play out there. Forty percent are sent

(02:13:55):
to vote early. Harris, it looks like has lost about
fifty percent of the margin in New York that Biden
one by in twenty twenty. Clay Travis and Buck Sexton
zero percent.

Speaker 13 (02:14:05):
Fear Clay, I don't know what the point of Kamala's
campaign is other than a Democrat has to be president.
One hundred percent clear, one billion percent true. Today at
noon on fifty five KRZ, the talk station.

Speaker 17 (02:14:23):
Chatline What First Oney Weather forecasts not bad today, sunny,
sky's high of eighty with a big breeze, sixty three
overnight party, cloudy tomorrow. The rain moves in just in
time for trick or treating afternoon and evening rain, maybe
someice slated storms highest seventy five. Rain moves out over night,
dropping a forty seven and a sunny Friday with a
high of sixty two fifty nine degrees.

Speaker 2 (02:14:43):
Time for traffic. Chuck Ingram from the.

Speaker 1 (02:14:46):
UCU Tramphink Center.

Speaker 15 (02:14:48):
Count on the expert team at you see Orthopedixson Sports Medicine.
No matter the injury, same day appointments are available schedule
online at U see health dot com. Rex clear southbound
seventy five above Union Center. It's gonna take a little
bit longer to get rid of the bank cup.

Speaker 1 (02:15:02):
Which made it above one twenty nine. Add an extra.

Speaker 15 (02:15:05):
Fifteen to twenty minutes South Found seventy one between Fields
Girdle and Red Bank.

Speaker 1 (02:15:09):
North Found seventy five.

Speaker 15 (02:15:11):
Continue slow above seventy four to what's left of an
accident at the lateral. With the holiday coming up tomorrow,
I offer this public service announcement that our next guest
will be giving out not one, but two full sized
candy bars to the first five hundred kids tomorrow. Which
houses belongs to the judge. Well, that's easy. Look for

(02:15:33):
the giant inflatable ten foot constitution.

Speaker 1 (02:15:36):
In the front yard.

Speaker 15 (02:15:37):
That's right, the judge is next, Chuck Ingram on fifty
five krs the talk station.

Speaker 2 (02:15:46):
You're screwed now, Judge Navots.

Speaker 5 (02:15:49):
God right, Brian. I was terrified he was gonna give
out my address.

Speaker 2 (02:15:54):
Yeah, I go, Chuck would never do that. I was
gonna say, you live on a farm. I bet you
don't even get anbody knocking a your door. I don't
want to reveal any trade secrets.

Speaker 14 (02:16:02):
Or any day.

Speaker 5 (02:16:02):
We're so far out on the sticks. No one does that.

Speaker 18 (02:16:04):
But I have to tell you an inflatable constitution that
is very, very creative.

Speaker 2 (02:16:11):
You know, and it satisfies all of your decorating needs
for any holiday. I would say you can use that
all your life.

Speaker 5 (02:16:19):
Right, And he might even be reading my columns, Brian.

Speaker 2 (02:16:23):
Yeah, Judge the Pollatio. It is always a pleasure to
have you on the program, and I always encourage my
listeners to check out your podcast, Judging Freedom, which we'll
find out who you're going to be talking to at
the end of the segment, as we always do, and
let us launch into tweetled e and tweetled them the
subject matter of your column. I'm fortunate enough every week
to get early. It comes out tonight and I'll recommend

(02:16:43):
my listeners read it. I kind of got the impression
you were, I don't know about agitated, you were on
fire when you sat down to write this column. I
think you were overwhelmed with uh, maybe not necessarily discussed,
but it's a word that kind of comes to mind.
Not know that right or wrong on that, but that
was just the impression. I got two sides that you know.

Speaker 18 (02:17:05):
Me, You know me very well, and you have a
very good handle on what my attitude has been. And
you know I'll speak candidly with you, even though I
know there are hundreds of thousands of people listening to us.
Now it's a little I'm a little torn because I
have known Donald Trump personally since nineteen eighty six, and

(02:17:26):
it is well known that he interviewed me twice for
the Supreme Court of the United States. People would say, well,
what are you crazy? Aren't you loyal to your friends?
The guy almost put you on the Supreme Court. Yes
and yes, but you know, there's a lot of things
that he stands for which are contrary to my understanding

(02:17:50):
of the Constitution. The same thing with Kamala Harris, whom
I only met twice. I can't say that I'm friends
with Harris as I am with with him. I mean,
it's a gratifying to know on a personal basis the
former and probably future president. But I have to be

(02:18:12):
intellectually honest and faithful. As you know, I like to
say to first principles.

Speaker 2 (02:18:17):
First principles, and as I rarely respond, you know, in
an ad nauseum residi to your column. But I actually
took it upon myself to respond about the immigration component,
many many wonderful points. And you know I regularly you
and my with our libertarian and constitutionally based principles, pretty
much uniformally agree on anything but everything. But I understand

(02:18:40):
the traditional libertarian mentality when it comes to borders, and
we have the freedom as free people to travel. I
get all that, but that reality is completely undermined by
the social welfare state that we've created here. So you've
got a system of laws and rules that allow pretty
much every human being being, both citizens and non legal

(02:19:02):
and illegal, to grab a hold and take advantage of
all of the large jets of the American taxpayers, heap
down upon them by law by the federal governments, state governments,
and local governments. Quite often there are local programs that obligate,
you know, the homeless to be housed. Oh that's fine,
until you get overwhelmed with one hundred thousand or more

(02:19:22):
of them than it's like we ran out of places
to keep them. That's a taxpair burden, and that interrupts
the free flow of humanity that you and I normally
would embrace.

Speaker 18 (02:19:31):
And that welfare state is absolutely and utterly contrary to
our first principles, which is that the government can't take
money from us to give it away, can't take from
the haves to to give to the have nuts. I
think that a lot of people come here because they
want a better life, they want freedom, they want to

(02:19:53):
be able to prosper. But a lot of people, more
than in the first group, come here because they expect
free stuff from the government, and the Supreme Court in
a terrible opinion called po versus Texas, where Texas tried
to deny free education to immigrant children, Supreme Court said,

(02:20:19):
you can't do it. Whatever you provide to your children
of the people that were the children that were born there,
you have to provide to them. And then they expanded
it to food, shelter, clothing, healthcare, and education. That type
of ruling and its implementation by the Congress and by

(02:20:40):
various state legislatures is the root of the problem.

Speaker 5 (02:20:44):
Freedom to travel is not the root of the problem.

Speaker 18 (02:20:47):
Now, on this freedom to travel, there are libertarians look
at it two different ways. The natural law libertarians of
which I am one, believe that the right to travel
is a fundamental liberty.

Speaker 5 (02:21:01):
You can go wherever you want.

Speaker 18 (02:21:03):
The property rights oriented libertarians, which is most of the libertarians,
believe that the owner of property can exclude whoever he
wants from his own property, which means if the government
owns a road or a highway, it can exclude people
from that road or highway based upon standards that it establishes,

(02:21:26):
like you've got to be a citizen er, you've got
to do.

Speaker 5 (02:21:29):
This, this and this before you can commit to the country.

Speaker 18 (02:21:31):
I understand, I understand both arguments, but you are correct,
my dear friend. The root of the problem is the
American welfare state, and I I don't know how that
can possibly be undone short of the United States of
America federal government collapsing like the old Soviet Union collapsed,

(02:21:55):
which I think will happen in the lifetime of.

Speaker 5 (02:21:59):
Your grandchildren.

Speaker 2 (02:22:00):
And that's what disturbs me most about this. It is
you know, this sort of you know, we have this
bleeding heart mentality and we need to help the poor.
And you know, we can read the inscription on the
Statue of Liberty, even though it's not and has never
been a law of the land. It was a poem
or a little thing written by some independent person. But
you know this idea, oh we're compassionate. Your ancestors came here,

(02:22:22):
but you know what, yeah, mine did. And my great
great grandfather came off the boat from Ireland, went through
Ellis Island. They probably gave him a quick updown, physical
check and decided on the fly whether or not he
could come in or not, and that was it. Then
left to his own devices, he worked, got a job
on the railroad, provided for his family, and then of
course here I am, generations later, living off the wonderful

(02:22:43):
reality that I live in a free country, but that
can't survive with the massive social welfare state. That all
you need to do is look at our deficit, our
expenditures of taxpayer dollars which far exceed the mount they
take in to realize what you just said is inevitable.
It's like the slowest train coming down the tunnel. You
can see it. You know you could stop it, but

(02:23:06):
you don't lift a finger to do it.

Speaker 18 (02:23:07):
Right, But getting back if I could to my column
tweetled tweedledumb, which is meant to mock the similarities between
Vice President Harris and former President Trump on issues like
war and peace and debt and personal freedom surveillance. You know,
the Trump thing really is a head scratcher. He was

(02:23:30):
victimized so exquisitely and egregiously by FBI NSA GHQ, that's
the British spying entity surveillance, and yet he signed and
indicated he will continue to sign extensions of the legislation

(02:23:50):
that permit that to happen. So I was really saying,
there's not any difference between the two of them, other
than personality, other than emotion, other than liability. On those
key issues of war and peace, debt, they're both going
to spend trillions more than they have and surveillance. If

(02:24:14):
you want to get back to immigration, the same court
that said in the nineteen seventies you will provide the
same basic social safety net to immigrants as you do
to citizens, will say to him, there's no such thing
as mass deportation in the United States. You want to
kick somebody out, you have to have a trial. That's

(02:24:36):
an impossibility if anybody thinks there's going to be.

Speaker 5 (02:24:41):
A trial, a literal trial.

Speaker 18 (02:24:43):
For every person that they want to port. So this
is an intractable problem. The problem is intractable, and the
proposed solution is intractable as long as the welfare state
stays here.

Speaker 2 (02:24:56):
Indeed, and I understand from a due process standpoint exactly
that that's why I pointed out to you. I acknowledge
readily that mass deportation is virtually impossible from a fiscal,
a geopolitical, and a logistical springing from any of those
three issues. If a country doesn't want to take back
a guy that you say you're deporting. How you're going

(02:25:17):
to get rid of them, even if they've been through
the new process hearing, We've got ten years of backlog
of these cases that are supposed to see.

Speaker 18 (02:25:24):
Some of these people who got here illegally and whose
children were born here are so Americanized. If they were
in a room with us, you wouldn't know who they were.
You're gonna throw those people out of the country. I mean,
this is just going to cost such and you're going
to do it without a trial.

Speaker 5 (02:25:41):
This is going to cause such social turmoil.

Speaker 2 (02:25:44):
Yeah, I know the.

Speaker 5 (02:25:45):
Crowd at Madison Square Garden the other night will.

Speaker 18 (02:25:48):
Roar its approval, but I'm not so sure the rest
of the country will well.

Speaker 2 (02:25:52):
And again, walking through it, you can say it to
separate yourself from the opposition, which in this case Kamala
hair and open borders and embracing that notwithstanding the challenges
we face because of the welfare state. But to contrast, starkly,
you had a demonstrable record to sow that you limited
the number of illegal immigrants, You put policies in place

(02:26:13):
which stemmed the flow. You have a stark contrast. So
maybe as a matter of desperation, we're gonna kick them
all out comes out of your mouth, and then when
you're in office, you're like, well, maybe we can't. You
and I are pointing out that you probably you can't,
or it's going to be this decades long challenge, right right.

Speaker 5 (02:26:32):
And I get the way politics works.

Speaker 18 (02:26:35):
I mean George Orwell in nineteen eighty four pointed out
in his book nineteen eighty four pointed out the advantages
of having an enemy that everybody hates and that works
to get votes. And Trump has chosen it to be immigrants.
I'm not suggesting there's anything wrong with that. In one respect,

(02:26:56):
it's a brilliant political maneuver. Because they're in a position
to speak back, they have to rely on the sort
of bleeding heart, knee jerk lefties that want them to
command the country to defend them. Why do they want
them to command the country. They want them to vote Democrats.

Speaker 5 (02:27:15):
Yeah, yeah, it doesn't always happen. Look at the Cubans
in Florida. They became successful and they.

Speaker 2 (02:27:22):
Became Consublicans publicise.

Speaker 5 (02:27:26):
I'm generalizing, Brian.

Speaker 18 (02:27:28):
I'm trying to manifest my understanding that I have a
handle on both sides of this, and it is an
intractable problem. But the more debt the federal government accumulates,
the more foreign military basis it pays for, the more
wars it engages in, the less stable the federal government becomes.

Speaker 2 (02:27:52):
And some will argue that that is indeed the goal.
Judging Neapolitano, judging freedom your podcast and I'm listeners to
in and find it all the time. Who are you
gonna be talking to today?

Speaker 5 (02:28:02):
Well, before I tell you that, I got to ask
you a question.

Speaker 18 (02:28:04):
Will we know a week from today who the next
president will be? Will we know on Wednesday morning?

Speaker 2 (02:28:10):
Probably not not in you know, regardless of outcome, I
least hope we do. Leading through what we went through twenty.

Speaker 5 (02:28:20):
Two thousand with Bush of e.

Speaker 18 (02:28:22):
Gore and in twenty and twenty with January sixth I
have Max Blumenthal. Dennis Fritz, a very interesting guy, the
highest ranking commissioned officer in the Air Force, wrote a
book about all the lies the government told us to
trick us into Iran excuse me Afghanistan and Iraq. The

(02:28:48):
Defense Department told him not to publish it. He published
it anyway. He's coming on as well as his colleague
from the Air Force, Karen Kratkowski is one of my regulars.
I just was introduced to Dennis the other day. Charming, gregarious,
fearless guy.

Speaker 2 (02:29:05):
That's wonderful. And nobody loves someone who speaks truth to
power more than me. So I love you so much,
Judge Edita Politano, and congratulations. The Yankees at least got
the kept their foot in the door. Eleven. We're eleven
to four. Boy, they held off on pulling out the
big guns until the.

Speaker 5 (02:29:22):
Other Anthony Vulpi.

Speaker 18 (02:29:24):
This is from around here, not very far from where
I lived, and I was asleep when he hit that
grand slam. I didn't know about it until I got
up this morning. But everybody's going crazy over it.

Speaker 5 (02:29:34):
But you're right. For them to come back four games
in a row has never been done.

Speaker 18 (02:29:39):
One team came back four games in a row, but
it was in the ALC Championship.

Speaker 5 (02:29:45):
It wasn't the World Series. Red Austin Red Sox against
the Yankees.

Speaker 18 (02:29:50):
The Yankees won the first three and Boston won the
next four.

Speaker 5 (02:29:54):
I thought I was gonna die.

Speaker 2 (02:29:55):
Maybe it's time. Maybe this year is redemption time, Judge,
Editor Polatano. Bless you, Sarah. I'll look forward to next Wednesday. Alrighty,
we'll have a lot to talk about. I suppose in
the aftermath of the election.

Speaker 5 (02:30:05):
Wait, well, thank you, Brian, all the best.

Speaker 2 (02:30:07):
Love you brother, eight forty four, ifty five Krcity Talks Station.
There's an event. Ed Think's going to join the program.
I love Ed Think, great guy, former financial planner, now retired,
but still an American veteran. He wants to tell us
about a Molor High School Veterans Day event. He'll be
on next I hope you can stay right here. Fifty
five kr CD Talk Station.

Speaker 8 (02:30:23):
Fifty five KRC.

Speaker 7 (02:30:25):
This November, people of faith across Ohio can vote to
protect our faith, our free.

Speaker 2 (02:30:32):
Eight forty nine I fifty five KRSD Talk Station. A
very happy Wednesday to you, remember listener. Lunch Next Wednesday,
the aftermath day, we're going to be at Ron's rusout
further Ado. Consider him a dear friend, my former financial planner,
now enjoying retirement, but he will always be a proud
American veteran. Ed Fink, good to have you on the
program this morning, particularly given the topic we're going to

(02:30:53):
be talking about.

Speaker 6 (02:30:55):
Hey, thanks, Brian. Veterans say is rapidly approaching here and
I've been a member of the Muller High School Veterans
Day Planning Committee for a few years, and we have
a great event coming up a week from today, Wednesday,
November sixth, so a little bit before actual Veterans Day.

(02:31:16):
But the reason we're doing is to try to drive
as many veterans as possible to this affair. So it's
a week from today, eight thirty in the morning, Continental
Breakfast nine thirty program for the students in the gym,
and I want to emphasize the fact that this is
for all veterans in the area and active duty, not

(02:31:40):
just those involved with the mower community.

Speaker 2 (02:31:44):
So you'll even take Lancers over there and Adjustreckers the
whole Well, well, you talk.

Speaker 6 (02:31:49):
About Lance, talk about Lancers, Joe Strecker and company. It's
now lancers. The guy who's the real brains behind this
operation is my good friend, Vietnam combat Veteran Army Captain
Tim Wecter, who happens to be a LASAL grad. Now
he's a long time Mowler coach, but he's a LASAL guy.

(02:32:10):
So yeah, we'll take we'll take those lances over here.

Speaker 2 (02:32:13):
And of course, and of course folks who went to
elder Yeah.

Speaker 6 (02:32:18):
And the elder guy. Anybody, anybody. We've got a great
speaker this year, so I think we do every year.
John Sanchez, he's a former Navy seal. He was tun
commander of Seal Team three, did a lot of deployments
through the Middle East, you know, many of which he

(02:32:38):
probably can't even talk about. But he's a great speaker,
and he's a friend. He's a Naval Academy grad. Good guy.
I'll tell you. One of the most interesting things about
this every year for me is to see a thousand
young teenage man sitting quietly in gymnasium for an hour
or more and you can hear a drop and there.

(02:33:01):
I think they get as much out of it as
the veterans dou and you know, we're just trying to
encourage as much participation as possible.

Speaker 2 (02:33:08):
Oh, that is absolutely wonderful. That's one of the things
that I love hearing about on honor flight, when you know,
bust loads of school kids come in, our parents bring
their younger children. Yeah, and they just are in awe
the veterans and the veterans. I know, the veterans I've
talked to them about it. They're just like it is
so great when young people come up and want to
shake my hand. It's like, I can't believe it. It's
always treated like a rock star with young people, and

(02:33:29):
that's just that's just awesome.

Speaker 6 (02:33:31):
Well, you know, Brian, from many veterans is the praise
they never had coming home. You know, you think all
the time people get out of the service and there's
these parades and ticker tape parades and people are thanking them.
I'm hugging them and kissing them. No, you know, in
ninety nine point nine percent of men and women who
serve and never get that. So this is a thank

(02:33:53):
you for it. And I mentioned women by the way.
We want to emphasize the fact that certainly women veterans
are encouraged. Many times I think they cannot to come
to this type of thing because they think, oh, it's
just for the guys. But I think once again, it's
a good thing for these thousand young men to see
women veterans who have served, many of them the age

(02:34:13):
of their of their maybe their mother and grandmother, and
it's just I think it's just a great thing for
them to see and it's a good good way to
honor those women death too.

Speaker 16 (02:34:23):
Well.

Speaker 2 (02:34:24):
I think it's important to remind folks you did serve
a country probably, and of course all my listeners appreciate
your service, as we do for all veterans. But you
were in in the Vietnam conflict. I can't call it
a war, there was no war declaration, but you're in
some dicey situations over in Vietnam, including, uh, what were
you in Laos?

Speaker 16 (02:34:43):
Well?

Speaker 6 (02:34:43):
Well, well, I I going back for a second here
without getting into too much detail. I was involved in
some highly classified operations, but my orders were changed from
Vietnam and I was asked to volunteer for a unit
that went up to the DMZ in Korea because of
some classified stuff that was going on there at the time.

(02:35:04):
So I wasn't in Vietnam, and my hats off to
my brothers in arms, you know, who went through that
horrible situation over there.

Speaker 2 (02:35:12):
Amen to that. And of course the welcome home not
exactly a ticker tape parade for the Vietnam veterans.

Speaker 6 (02:35:18):
Yeah, yeah, exactly. So this event is a week from
today at Moore High School Veterans Stay Celebration. It looked
a few days early, but it starts at eight thirty
in the morning with the Continental Breakfast, and nine thirty
is the program itself.

Speaker 2 (02:35:34):
All veterans Moller High Schools a place to be Next Wednesday,
eight thirty in the morning, get a celebration, enjoy it,
and really again, just being around those young people has
got to be a reason and motivation to go by itself.
Ed Fake, thank you again for your service to our
country and your continued support of the American veteran. My brother,
You're always welcome on the program.

Brian Thomas News

Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

I’m Jay Shetty host of On Purpose the worlds #1 Mental Health podcast and I’m so grateful you found us. I started this podcast 5 years ago to invite you into conversations and workshops that are designed to help make you happier, healthier and more healed. I believe that when you (yes you) feel seen, heard and understood you’re able to deal with relationship struggles, work challenges and life’s ups and downs with more ease and grace. I interview experts, celebrities, thought leaders and athletes so that we can grow our mindset, build better habits and uncover a side of them we’ve never seen before. New episodes every Monday and Friday. Your support means the world to me and I don’t take it for granted — click the follow button and leave a review to help us spread the love with On Purpose. I can’t wait for you to listen to your first or 500th episode!

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Special Summer Offer: Exclusively on Apple Podcasts, try our Dateline Premium subscription completely free for one month! With Dateline Premium, you get every episode ad-free plus exclusive bonus content.

24/7 News: The Latest

24/7 News: The Latest

The latest news in 4 minutes updated every hour, every day.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.