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November 1, 2024 152 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Is election day.

Speaker 2 (00:01):
You're going to hear every single bit of information.

Speaker 1 (00:03):
When you We like to listen fifty five kr S E.

Speaker 2 (00:17):
Five O five.

Speaker 1 (00:19):
At fifty five k r C the talk station Happy Fridays.

Speaker 3 (00:27):
Some say it is a vacation from this.

Speaker 1 (00:41):
Confirmation. Hold on, these are the first words that come
out of my mouth five oh five. I have exercised
my ability to speak in the morning and apologize for
the cough. Okay, now that Michael throat is cleared, Very
happy Friday to you, Brian. Tom's right here. Glad see
just trekker ery belongs and a great rundown today. We've

(01:02):
got some wonderful guests to join the show as we
wind up the final moments leading to Tuesday. Tech Front
of It Day have had are always the norm on Fridays.
They'll be on to talk about one third of the
US population's background info is now public. We have malicious
lookalike domains, and Trump, Biden and other leaders can be

(01:24):
tracked by a fitness app. I saw that story earlier
in the week. That is so strange, something to do
with like the Secret Service and they have fitness apps
and they're not supposed to use them. I guess while
they're on duty, but you know, after work is over,
they head on over to the club and turn their
fitness app on. So if you know where the Secret
Service agents are and where they're working at, you got
a pretty good good idea where Trump and Biden and

(01:45):
other leaders that are being protected by the Secret Service
happen to be. Apps are a real problem and a
lot of tech to talk about this morning. Just to
give you a quick sort of overview here at multiple
foreign adversaries targeting certain demographics, the Russians and the Iranians

(02:07):
on the opposite side of the ledger when it comes
to apparently, accordingly start security forces who they want to
have elected Iranians, I guess they're favoring Kamala Harris, the
Russians allegedly favoring Donald Trump. But in the final analysis,
they're creating fake news, fake news sites, and they are
targeting and one segment, the Spanish language speakers and in
others other minority groups including the Muslim and black populations

(02:30):
here in the United States, trying to I'll sway your right,
your opinion, Lord Almighty, if we had a measure of
common sense and we were able to you know, sort of.
I suppose exercise and measure of critical thinking when it
comes to what we're reading, and a huge measure of
skepticism about literally anything that is in front of us.

(02:50):
Maybe it wouldn't sway people, but don't know if it's
going to work or not. We do live in a
country with free speech, and free speech means you can
be a flat out lie to your face, kind of
like that Joe Biden really wasn't calling half of America garbage,
which he clearly did get to that point in a moment,
because that one still has legs on a number of levels. Also,

(03:14):
Chinese hackers apparently compromise a whole bunch of government sites
in Canada, some of which relate to information shared with
the United States government. So the People's Republic of China
hard at work. They've been at this for more than
four years, embedding themselves into the Canadian computer system. So
that was just announced, and I guess Canada is doing

(03:34):
its best to sort of patch the holes. But security
must be paramount when it comes to anything online, and
I guess our government officials are just now catching up
to that reality. China seems they've been figured out even
on a much much higher level than the Iranians and
the Russians. It's really scary what China is capable of
doing in so far as that is concerned. And another

(03:56):
reason to get the hell off. TikTok. TikTok soaks up
all all the information. It's in your phone and everyplace else.
I don't know why people use it anyhow. Adam Kaylor returns,
he'll be in house at seven oh five. Matt DeMars,
Vets and Bruce got another bus event. We'll be drinking
beer and celebrating with the US veterans. I went on
the last one. It was an awesome time. What a
great group of folks. Matt Demarus is a solid, solid

(04:19):
American and he just is trying to give back the
best he can facilitate you buying veterans beers with a
small donation. Jonathan Pierson joins the program at eight thirty,
running for Hamilton County Commissioner. He too will be in house.
So we got two of the candidates in house this morning.
That is our lineup. I always enjoy hearing from you.
Five one, three, seven, four, nine fifty five hundred eight

(04:39):
hundred eighty two to three Talk Time, Fight fifty on
at and T phones back to the garbage comment, getting
a little bit of problems the White House is maybe
he conducted did something illegal when they altered Joe Biden
President Biden's statement about the half the country being garbage.
White House officials altered the official transcript. There are rules

(05:00):
for the official transcript. Biden said, the only garbage I
see floating out there is his supporters, his his demonization
of Latinos is unconscionable. It's un American. Now, in spite
of the fact they didn't have the authority to do
at the White House Press Office added an apostrophe, so
supporters plural is now supporter as in possessive individuals support her.

(05:24):
Apostrophe e s in order to suggest something that you know,
your ears did not hear that Biden was criticizing only
the comic Tony Hinchcliffe, who probably most people hadn't heard of.
I never heard of him before. He's the one that
referred to Puerto Rico as the floating island of garbage.
But Biden's comment clearly was not directed at Tony. It

(05:48):
was directed at well, everybody else, and seriously, and I'll
get to her further and broader comments Kim Strassel. Why
on earth would anyone assume mister Biden would again show
derision for voters he's labeled semi fascist, maga extremists, and
proponents of Jim Crow two point zero. Of course, he

(06:09):
meant half of America or garbage, merely because they support
Donald Trump, or at least planning on voting them as
the voting for him as the lesser to evil. This
change was made after the Press Office conferred with the President.
This is verified by an internal email from the head
of the stenographer's office that the Associated Press got a
hold of. Authenticity of the email confirmed by multiple government

(06:35):
officials who spoke well, obviously in a condition of anonymity
so they could discuss these internal matters, but they got
the memo. The supervisor in the email called the press
office is handling of the matter quote a breach of
protocol and spoliation of transcript integrity between the stenography and
press office. There is a office of Stenography. They're charged

(06:57):
with official transcripts, and there's a process you go through,
and if the administration wants to change the transcript, it's
got to go through a certain protocol. That's not what happened.
Two persons scenography team on duty the evening Biden uttered
the garbage comment. There was a typer and a proofer.

(07:20):
They said that any edits the official transcript who had
to be approved by their supervisor, the head of the
stenographer's office. This is part of the rules. That person
happened to be unavailable. But however, because of the urgency
and the gaff that, well, you know, the reality that
was setting in within the Kamala Harris administration, well hopefully

(07:42):
administration Kamala Harris team. It's like, holy crap, did Biden
just call half of America garbage? We've got to do
something about this. Went hard at work to try to
figure a fix to it, which is how you came
up with the apostrophe s singular possessive, rather than the
broader half of America which had been and support hers.

(08:03):
White House Press Secretary Office just then went ahead and
published the altered transcript on the White House website centered
around to the press and social media quickly, and the
supervisor a little upset about that supervisor. If there is
a difference in interpretation, the Press Office may choose to

(08:23):
withhold the transcript, but cannot edit it independently. Our Stenography
Office transcript released to our district, which includes the National Archives,
is now different than the version edited and release to
the public by the Press Office staff.

Speaker 4 (08:42):
Hmm.

Speaker 1 (08:44):
These concerns by the supervisor raised apparently in an email
to the White House Communications Director a person named Ben Lebolt,
as well as Koreean Genepierre quote, regardless of urgency, it
is essential to our transcripts authenticity and legitimacy that we
adhere to consistent protocol for requesting edits approval and release.

(09:08):
So the question now remains, and some House Republicans are
talking about another investigation, launching an investigation and the fabrication
House Republican Conference could chair Woman at least Stefanic and
House Service sid Accountability Chairman James Commer accused the White
House of releasing a false Grandrip grandscript. The White House

(09:29):
staff cannot rewrite the words of the President of the
United States to be more politically on message, they wrote,
pointing out that it well may very well have been
a violation of the Presidential Records Act of nineteen seventy eight.
So and the desperation is really obvious. Again, they have

(09:50):
been insulting half of America now for years. This goes
back to Hillary Clinton calling a bunch of deplorables and
clinging to your constitutions and your firearms and your bibles,
you evil Bible thumpers. They've been attacking half of America
for years and years, insults not even veiled, not even

(10:15):
just sort of calm suggestions that maybe you're on the
wrong side of the track, you know, maintaining a sense
of well, perhaps an effort to make them more appealing
to you who reject their political ideology. At least they
could try to make a sale job to you that
you're not as bad as you come across from a
policy perspective. But now they just hang out with their

(10:36):
own kind so long they know they have the press
protection to protect them from gaffs, and well publish rewrites
support their narrative on what Joe Biden said versus what
he really didn't say, and they think everybody feels that way.
What are the conclusion can you come up with? They

(10:57):
don't hang out with you, they don't hang out with me.
They don't know how we feel, they don't know how
what we're our kitchen table dinner issues are are. They
don't have to pay our bills or deal with the
concerns over inflation. They're not the ones that struggle to
come up with enough money to fill the grocery cart
and then have enough money left over to fill the
gas tank. Some people have to make choices on which

(11:19):
road they go down in that regard, they don't get
that thinking. Nancy Pelosi during COVID lockdown, thank you Democrats
for the lockdown, and a bunch of Republicans too. Don't
drink after ten, said Mike Twine. I'm never going to
forgive him for that one. It was stupid, made him
sound stupid. It was stupid. But Nancy Pelosi is sitting
in front of a twenty five thousand dollars refrigerator freezer,

(11:43):
eating twelve dollars ice cream, telling you to just kind of,
you know, enjoy yourself while you're indoors. Hey, lockdown's no problem. Well,
it's no problem if you live in Nancy Pelosi's house.
They just don't get it. They don't connect. Elite leftist
la liberal probably you know, carrying around their you know,

(12:03):
master's degree in social work telling you how to live
your lives and then going on a long litany of insults,
including guests Jim Crow two point zero, semi fascist Nazis
and of course garbage five seventeen fifty five kr CD

(12:24):
Talk Station, Feel free to call, got a comment? Love
to hear from you. Five one three seven fifty five
hundred eight hundred eighty two to three talk call her
not stick around right here fifty five kr S the
talk station Friday, and a happy one to you, Kamala Harris,
she's gaff cast it. Let me chuck ing. Are we

(12:55):
walking into the studio here hopefully shortly to let us
all know about something really crazy going on right now.
I don't know if you've been trying, if you've tried
to cross the Daniel Carter Beard Bridge aka to Big
Mack Bridge this morning. It's shut down. A massive fire
and reports of an explosion happened as early this morning,
and according to the reporting from at least Fox nineteen,

(13:18):
I just couldn't believe this. Fire crews reported seeing concrete
falling down on the north side of the bridge and
this is their words, significant metal warping underneath the bridge
to the point where it might fail. Apparently it sounded
like a car fire or something beneath it. That just
sounds so much damage and devastation from a single car fire.

(13:41):
So I don't have more details on that now, maybe
Chuck will know, and you'll also be to give you
some guidance about, you know, the workaround. So anyhow, before
Chuck enters the studio to give us his rundown on
that one, Heckler was interrupting Kamala Harris her speech last
night in Nevada, giving her another opportunity to either show

(14:06):
she's an intellectual genius and capable of dealing with such
challenges on the fly, or the producer of more word salad.
You know the direction this one went, so Heckler, Heckler, Heckler,
the vice president, he Reno. You know what, let me
say something about this. We are here because we are

(14:29):
fighting for a democracy. Fighting for a democracy, and understand
the difference here. Understand the difference here, moving forward, moving forward,
Understand the difference here. Close quote. Everyone in this room
is now dumber for having listened to it. I I
don't have any idea what she said either fighting let's

(14:50):
just singularly, let's not repeat them as she did. Fighting
for a democracy. Understand the difference, moving forward and well
then once again, understand the difference. One more sentence following
that one. What we are looking at the let me sorry,
what we are looking at is a difference in the selection.

(15:12):
Let's move forward and see where we are because on
the issue, for example, freedom of choice, I had no idea.

Speaker 5 (15:20):
What's going on?

Speaker 1 (15:22):
Hm, okay, that's okay. She said, that's all right, that's okay.
Voices of our supporters drowning out the heckler. I guess
she was saying, hey, it's all right, let them hackle
and then this. You know what, Democracy can be complicated.
Sometimes it's okay. We're fighting for the right for people
to be heard and not jailed because they speak their mind.

(15:44):
We know what's at stake. There you go, throwing it up,
chuck ingram. How about my friend, how in the hell
did the dan Beard Bridge catch on fire? And what's
the problem here?

Speaker 2 (15:53):
Well, I think that's just a little bit.

Speaker 6 (15:56):
The fire is down below the bridge, right right, Okay,
so the bridge well not on fire. However, there is
some video of some pridge whatever is or was on
fire down below in the playground area and stuff that
the park. Yeah, it was shooting flames up and through
the bridge the photograph. I initially thought maybe it was
a car fire or something. Maybe it's an EV fire. Oh,

(16:19):
that could be a little bit of everything available. But
listen to this from Fox nineteen. They said concretes falling
down on the north side of the bridge and significant
metal warping underneath the bridge to the point where it
might fail. Well, that's heat, brother, that is serious heat.
Let's go back a couple of years to seventy five
and remember the truck fire on seventy five where it

(16:40):
was on the Brent Spence Bridge, and how it wasn't
so much the deck the truck was on. They had
to do some repairs there, but they had to do
repairs up above too because of those flames. So I'm
thinking the same thing here. This is going to be
a while before we see any traffic on four to
seventy one this morning.

Speaker 1 (16:56):
All right. And I have been on four to seventy
run a whole bunch of times, yet I never have
to travel it. So in terms of logistics for people
trying to get in and out, what are you thinking?

Speaker 6 (17:05):
Well, right now, at this moment, I was just watching
them turn people around the wrong way to take them
off the ramp to eight in Bellevue and Dave Cowens
down there like party right by Party sources where that
ramp comes off and things. So Taylor Southgate is available.
If you want to travel, you're gonna have to travel
a little bit further through Newport on the other side
of the Aquarium in order to get into downtown Sticky

(17:29):
ste It sure could be. I would not even worry
about getting on four seventy one is the biggest thing,
I think, especially if you're a big rig moving this
time in the morning. I'd take two seventy five over
to seventy five because knock on Wood right now. The
bran Spence is actually okay, and there's not even a
delay at the bridge right now, but knock on Wood,

(17:50):
and for right now I was I was hitting myself
on the forehead. You know something that we don't know? No,
no ye folding this morning. No, I know nothing of
that sort. I'm just looking for alternatives for folks, because
it's gonna be a while on southbound seventy one. I'm
seeing very little delayed because you can continue going on
the south seventy one onto Fort Washington Wade of course,

(18:13):
over to the branch spent. So the Ohio side, it
looks like that's in pretty good shape right now. But
as far as northbound four seventy one, that's backing up
a little bit because of folks turning around and going
the wrong way on the ramp.

Speaker 1 (18:25):
And it's only twenty six minutes after five, so we
got a long morning ahead of us.

Speaker 6 (18:29):
Yeah, and to think I thought we were going to
talk about what kind of candy do you have left over?

Speaker 2 (18:33):
Oh? No, one rang the door.

Speaker 1 (18:37):
One whole entire bag of Reese's cubs, not one single door. Wrong.
Well that's we usually it'll get one doorbell. But anyway,
how about it.

Speaker 6 (18:45):
When I call that snacks for the weekend, Well, that's true,
that's true.

Speaker 1 (18:49):
Did you get any uh a few?

Speaker 2 (18:51):
If you had about twenty kids?

Speaker 1 (18:52):
Oh that's about the perfect number from my mind.

Speaker 2 (18:54):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (18:55):
Anyway, Well, Chuck, thank you for the update. We'll be
listening to you all morning, and uh it'll be there,
it'll sound.

Speaker 6 (19:00):
I had to redundan because I think we're going to
be dealing with four seventy one both now, this is
both north and south found it's going to be shut
down for a while.

Speaker 1 (19:06):
Oh chuck, God, bless you, sir, Thanks for your unbelievably
wonderful and often humorous traffic reports. Jaseph Palatina loves you
five twenty seven Right now, if you five ks the
talk station stick around. Be you gonna do it? You're
doing some local stories coming up next, or your phone calls.
It's up to you. But stay right here. Fifty five KRC. Well,

(19:36):
maybe not Los Angeles, but the dan Beard Bridge.

Speaker 4 (19:55):
Behind show time for jo.

Speaker 1 (20:11):
I love that song, should be an opportunity to play it.
Tragedy about the dan Beer Bridge, which I'll be just
tuning in, is apparently I got. I think they have
the fire under control. There's mixed messages out in local
news because it's unfolding, But the dan Beer Bridge closed
because there was a fire either set below at some
explosion beneath it. I read an auto accident at one point.
I don't think that's the case. Huge fire though, so

(20:34):
much so that Fox nineteen reporting that the concrete's fallen
off the bridge and metal is warped. So weren't there
conspiracy theorists Joe that thought that the airplanes blowing up
in the building where could not melt metal? But we
have two now illustrations here in the city of Cincinnati.
We're an open fire. One on the Brent Spnz Bridge

(20:56):
and now one beneath Dan beer Bridge have warped and
melted metal. Okay, just want to make sure I'm okay.
I my facts, Joe, Thank you very much. Fact Checker
Strekker Fire seven fifty eight hundred two three talk over
to a local stories got a loaded gun found inside
a students backpack. Thise in Mount Healthy Junior Senior High
School happened yesterday. Court to the district, a lot of

(21:18):
the center was sent to family. School staff noticed what
appeared to be a vaping device being passed between two students.
Two students for the district procedure taking a secure office
where the bags were searched, and during that search, the
staff found a loaded firearm in one of the student bags.
They said no point was the weapon displayed or used
to threaten anyone. School called Mount Healthy. The police department,

(21:41):
which responded. District said the school did not go into
any sort of lockdown because the situation was contained and
it posed no active threat. District didn't say what kind
of disciplinary measures, if any, would be leveled against the
student who had the gun. They didn't mention any interaction
between the student and law enforcement, and they didn't refer
to the color, caliber, or type of firearm, or whether

(22:05):
it had a bump stock. Okay, Joe, we'll throw that
one in there too. Lakody student arrested for allegedly making
a social media post threatening the school corner of the
Butler County Sheriff's office. They say it was notified of
a school threat made on Snapchat just after midnight yesterday morning.
Posts me by a seventeen year old student who attends
Lakota East corner to the Sheriff's office. That just was

(22:27):
quote I'm shooting up the school tomorrow. Be ready close
quote all right. Liberty Township police was Chester Police Department
found the team at home, where they told officers they
posted the message but it was just a joke. Teen
arrested taking a juvenile detention center. Well, they keep referring

(22:48):
to the team both as individually, but then as they
The teen was arrested and taken to the juvenile detention
center where they were charged making terroristic threats? Is this
one of those pronoun people who wants to be referred
to as they You just think the people who wrote
it didn't really write it in the US artificial intelligence

(23:09):
Joe rather than doing their own writing exercises. Well, WCPO
gets credit for a bit at least that Felicia Jordan,
if you want to call her up and ask what
she's referring to.

Speaker 5 (23:24):
And what.

Speaker 1 (23:28):
Just as by Felicia Women arrested after police says she
fatally stabbed her mom. This happened in Middletown. The court
of the Middletown Police officers called to the fourteenth Avenue
A home around eleven thirty pm. Happened Wednesday night. When
they got there, they found seventy two year old Mini
Lewis suffering from multiple stab wounds. Lewis taking an Atria
Medical Center, where she was later pronounced dead. Police arrested

(23:50):
forty four year old Mikeisha Lattimore that would have that
was Lewis's daughter, charged with murder. Police didn't say what
may have led up to the stabbing. It's five thirty
five fifty five KR seat the talk station. Feel free
to call if you got anything to say. I'm going
to do a stack of stupid when we get back.

(24:12):
Stick around right here.

Speaker 4 (24:13):
I officially accept me you already.

Speaker 1 (24:15):
Oh, look five forty on a Friday answer of course, yes,
just Strekker insist on it. You can call it if
I've been three seven, four, nine fifty five, eight hundred
eight two three talk found five fifty on eight and
T phones fifty five car Sea dot com for podcasts Andy,
I heard Needy app yesterday Congressman Warren Davidson podcast that

(24:46):
Garrie Davis, local activists calling Shenanigans on Denise Dreehouse and
her campaign contributions received from Rumky orlandos Sonza awesome, awesome, awesome, awesome,
awesome candidate. He was on the program yesterday and Briga
McGowan energy himself. We spent an hour together in talking
energy policy and speaking of talking, I always love talking

(25:06):
with my friend Cribbage, Mike Submarine or Mike. Welcome back
to the program, My dear friends. Good to have you on.
Thank you for your service to our country.

Speaker 7 (25:15):
Thank you, Brian the good to be talking with you
at work here. I would like to thank the Artemis
people because every morning when I leave my house at
four o'clock, I missed the top of the hour news
and as I approached for seventy one off of two
seventy five. I knew it was eerily by myself even
at that hour, So luckily I got enough heads up
that I was able to shoot through and it takes

(25:36):
the tailor Southgate. But I hate to think what the
next hour or two is gonna play for the rest
of our commuter friends.

Speaker 1 (25:43):
Well, you're a military man, Charlie Fox Truts. What first
came to my mind that improvise.

Speaker 7 (25:47):
And overcome my friend?

Speaker 5 (25:48):
You know it?

Speaker 1 (25:52):
Hey?

Speaker 7 (25:52):
With Adam Cumming in story and even a family member,
I wish nothing but the luck. That's the luck next week,
I know it's an uphill battle. If I lived in
Hamilton County, he definitely would have my vote. I know
all my siblings are there in his corner. We'll be
picking up our supplies and ready to man the polls
on Tuesday. And just fired up to get this right because,
as you so aptly pointed out with this apostrophees just

(26:13):
within the last month, I mean, Kareem John Pierre has
almost been bagdad Bob for quite some time. Yeah, getting
very very troubling here with CBS editing Kamala's interview to
get to give her a better answer. We now have
the apostrophs. And then just last night the Democrats are
twisting Trump's At his last rally, he basically said I'm

(26:36):
going to protect women. I'm gonna protect women, even if
you don't even like it. They now have dropped off
I'm going to protect the women and basically putting it
on a dictatorship spin that no matter, even if you
don't even like it, this is what I'm going to do.
This is getting out of hand.

Speaker 1 (26:51):
Oh it's been out of hand. It's just getting worse.

Speaker 7 (26:54):
Yeah, it went from the only thing they got left
with seventy two hours ago.

Speaker 1 (26:57):
Yeah, there was a period of time Mike, where at
least they had had some plausible deniability that they were
in the bag for the Democrats all the time. We
could all read the obvious bias, but it wasn't so overt,
It wasn't just so absolutely just outright lies coming from
organizations who are supposed to have what we you know,
college educated trained journalists, who you know have studied the

(27:21):
appropriate journalism standard, which is to remain neutral and report facts.
None of them do it anymore. I mean, it's all
ed editorialization. And you go to read a news story,
well what happened at that rally, and they cut and
paste and twist and turn something that was a perfectly
innocuous David into something that you know that supports there.
He's a Nazi narrative or fascist narrative or whatever it's

(27:44):
it's just shameless anymore. So I think you know, in
the aftermath of this, Mike, let's say Trump wins, there's
gonna be a day of reckoning for the mainstream media
and they're gonna have to come around and change their
ways because welcome to the world of competition. Out in there.
We can find the real transcripts. We can find everything
everywhere in some unedited form, which certainly exposes the whys

(28:06):
and the spins that they're doing every single day. Yes, sir,
God bless you know.

Speaker 7 (28:11):
I had a good last night, he said. Nora Donno
and David Mirror went out last night trick or treating
as journalist.

Speaker 1 (28:19):
Who can argue that you come into You're you gonna
be at lunch next Wednesday, You bet, sir, We're there
to celebrate, I hope. So I appreciate your optimism. I
can use all the help I can get in terms
of getting me in the optimistic mode. God bless you, Mike.
I'll look forward to seeing you next Wednesday, where I
probably will again lose a cribbage. I can get a
indeed a real quick stack of stupid here. Portland man

(28:41):
allegedly kidnapped and beat up a woman, drove against traffic
and try to get away from police before being arrested.
Happened on Sunday. Then maybe we'll find out Cuero Carlos
Rufael Garcia, thirty seven charged with a second degree kidnapping,
fourth gree assault, trying to flee a police officer, driving
under the influence, reckless endangerment, and reckless drive. Police received
calls on Sunday, several of them the guy was trying

(29:04):
to carry away a half naked woman near Eye two
O five and Southeast Pala Boulevard Court. To the court record,
shirtless woman screaming and attempting to escape as the man
dragged her towards his Accura, which had stopped facing the
wrong way in the interstate off ramp. Two officers showed
up to the scene, and they heard the woman yelling,
turned on their overhead headlights, approached the car and told

(29:27):
the driver to stop. The driver Garcia ignored the instructions,
drove on to I two five, heading south in the
northbound lanes. When officers eventually stopped the car, a woman
wearing only underwear got out of the passenger seat and
jumped into the back of the police car. Officers pulled
out their guns ordered Garcia to step out of the car.
They described him as having a dazed look, and he

(29:49):
fumbled to unlock the car door. Officer smelled an overwhelmingly
strong odor of alcohol that's in the police report when
Garcia rolled down his window. Officers also said they saw
an empty bottle of beer under the driver pedals. Victim
visibly distraught, difficult to communicate, crying and clinging to the officer.
She had a cut lip, bruised cheek, and her left
eye was swollen in a right bicep bruised. In an interview,

(30:13):
the woman, with the help of a Spanish interpreter, said
that she had moved to Portland about three months earlier
after meeting Garcia online. There were a party when Garcia
got jealous of another man, they left. A woman told
detectives he punched her in the face and body while
he was driving. She tried to get out of the car,
but Garcia grabbed her to keep her from getting away. Apparently,
at one point she was able to flee. That's when

(30:34):
Garcia tore her shirt off. She ran to an ubercar
that was stopped behind him, got in. Garcia ran after her,
pulled her out, and forced her back into his car.
When police interviewed him, he told them she was the
one who started to fight. He said she grabbed He
grabbed her arm at one point when she was trying
to get out of the car because the car was
still moving, and then he pulled her from another person's

(30:56):
car because they didn't know the person. She took her
shirt off because she was hot from being drunk, his words. Obviously,
they didn't believe his side of the story. Five forty
six five kr C Detalk Station. More stupid or phone calls.
It's your choice. I'll be right back. Stay right here.

(31:18):
This is fifty five KRC, an iHeartRadio station. It's five
fifty one, fifty five KRC Detalk Station. Stay away from
the Big MacBridge is one thing we learned this morning
that fire, if you really really hot, fire to melt
the bridge and the concrete. So we'll have updates regularly

(31:38):
all morning. Back over to the stack of stupid. Go
to Manchester, New Hampshire, where a man is facing indecent
exposure charges after allegedly exposing himself two children on the
streets of Manchester, New Hampshire. Sounds I've got an award
to give out. Joe Joseph Ward, sixty years old, found
naked on the hood of a car in the area
of Elm Street and Myrtle five pm on a Monday.

(32:02):
Police to asked him what he was doing. He didn't respond,
and because children were in the area, police wrapped a
towel around him and took him into custody. He's been
charged with indecent exposure court to the police, officials say
he also had an electronic bench warrant out of another town.
Police speaking with local news there Boston twenty five, Ward
was uncooperative during his booking. He was transported to the
Hillsboro County House of Corrections. Developing story no reasons why

(32:27):
he had to explain why the hell he was naked
laying on top of a car and can share in
the award. We go to Oklahoma, Typiclarly Wellston, Oklahoma Court.
On Wednesday, jury found former Wellston high school teacher guilty
of soliciting sex from his student. Former teacher Emma Delaney
Hancock sit in court that the charges weren't true and

(32:47):
that the students lied. I guess the jury didn't buy it.
That's all I got on that one, a little sort of.
And we go over to Springfield Township here in Ohio
where a former Saint Xavier High School teacher has been
indicted for having a sexual relationship with the student the
corner Hemlin County prosecuted Melissa Powers, vote powers, she said.

(33:10):
Emily Nutley, forty two, has been indicted on six counts
of sexual battery of thirty degree filming for her relationship
with a minor. Now facing up the fifteen years in
prison that convicted on all charges, Melissa Powers, prosecutor Powers,
vote for her said. Nutley was employed at Saint Xavier
and followed twenty three as a supervisor of a program
to assist students struggling academically. The seventeen year old student

(33:31):
that she had a relationship with had been assigned to
her program. She began having contact with the student outside
of school hours, including sexually explicit text messages and nude
photographs of her herself. Okay, thanks for the evidence. We
appreciate you being a complete idiot in addition to a pervert.

Speaker 8 (33:50):
Erio the biggest douche of the universe, in all the galaxies,
there's no big aduche than you. You've reached the top,
the pinnacle of douched do good going, dues.

Speaker 4 (34:07):
Your dreams have come true.

Speaker 1 (34:11):
Evidence further suggests that one year ago, November of twenty three,
she began any physical relationship with a student, including multiple
encounters corner to Hamilt County Prosecutor Powers vote for her,
she said, Nutley in the student engaged in sexual activities
on Saint X's campus, including after hours in her office
at the school and an additional time off campus. According
to Hamilton County Prosecutor Powers vote for her in a

(34:33):
press release, when the victim attempted to stop the encounters,
Nutley continued to contact the victim via text messages. Hey
again thanks to the evidence sexual relationship brought the light
due to an internal investigation by administrators at Saint XE
Springfield Township then investigating the allegation leading to the charges.
Prosecutor's officer does not believe at this time that there
are any other victims. She called the sexual abuse absolutely

(34:56):
unacceptable and reprehensible. Quote from Hamilton County Prosecutor lists of
powers who deserves your vote. Let me be very clear,
this is a child sexual abuse. This child was the
victim of an adult predator who should never again have
a role that puts her in contact with children. She
used this child for her own sexual gratification while taking
advantage of the position she held. School said you can

(35:20):
contact child Protective Services at five one three two four
one kids or the school's president or principal if in
fact there are others out there who may have been
the victims. Are a victim, I don't get it. I
suppose if you're a teacher and you're dumb enough to
have sex with a minor, you're dumb enough to take
pictures of it and engage in text messages with it.

(35:42):
Because we all know seventeen year olds never ever, ever
tell anyone anything about what's going on behind the scenes.
Five fifty five ffty five cares to the talk station
Stick Around Tech Friday with Dave Hatter at six point thirty.
Got a lot to talk about between now and then,
and of course I'll welcome phone calls. I get care
to call, but I hope you can stick around with
me after the news. Your voice, the most important election

(36:03):
in American history, your vote.

Speaker 7 (36:05):
I can't even imagine how much worse it could be
if she has full control on.

Speaker 1 (36:08):
Fifty five krs the talk station Jurdy Election nears Ay
talk station Brian Kinmas wishing every one a very happy
Friday and reminding steer clear of the Dan Beard Bridge
aka Big Mac Bridge aka four seventy one. I just
I've been seeing the video in the fire. It was
a massive fire. I still got any insight as to

(36:31):
what you know where the fire started. I've read that
it was a car fire, where that was an accident.
I read somebody set the playground on fire beneath the bridge,
But man, if they did that, they sure were successful
in a raging inferno. So the bridge is closed. I
don't know how long. They say at least several hours,
but with the reports of concrete falling off of it
and metal warping, it may be quite some time before

(36:52):
the bridge reopened. So steer clear of that. And before
we got on into things, I'll give you the rundown
here in a moment. I'm just gonna to fulfill up
a promise to my dear friend mister humanitarian himself, Bob Wetter,
who is responsible for the Wish Tree, And we like
to promote the Wish Tree every year on the morning show.
It starts today, and the Wish Tree are the Christmas
trees that have the little ornaments, which are pieces of

(37:14):
paper that have requests from people who are struggling on
life's margins. You know, wouldn't be nice if I had,
you know, a particular toy or maybe a bag of
socks or whatever it happens to be. You grab an
ornament off of one of the wish trees wherever they
happen to be, and you can either bring it back
to the place where the tree is or the Wish
Tree folks will pick up your kind donation. But today's

(37:36):
the day it starts. And if you would like a
wish tree in your business or you have a place
that it would be you know, open and subject to
you know, foot traffic, you can get one. Just call
the Wish Tree line and someone will return your call.
So five one three eight five two eighteen ninety five
five one three eight five two eighteen ninety five. Again,

(37:58):
it's the wish tree. We'll be talking about that a
lot between now and Christmas, so keep the Christmas spirit
alive and kick things off with a positive note there.
If I recall correctly, my friend's over at Ron's Roost
have a wish tree, or at least they do usually
every year. And that's where we're going to be for
next week's listener lunch on Wednesday. Post election listener lunch
should be interesting, to say the least. Also interesting, we'll

(38:20):
fast forward one hour. Adam Kayler run for county Commissioner.
He'll be in house. He's a brilliant, brilliant guy. Matt Demaris,
mister Vets and Bruce, founder of that wonderful charity. They
got another bus tour come, but actually it's going to
be a couple of them veterans on the bus and
drinking beers. It was a hell of a good time.
I went on one before. I'm not sure if it
was the last one. Pitt was a great time. Details

(38:41):
at eight oh five with Matt and then Jonathan Pearson
is also running for Couty commissioner. He gets the eight
to thirty segment, will close out the show. He'll be
in house five one, three, seven four nine fifty five hundred,
eight hundred eighty to two to three. Talk back over
to kim Strauss I mentioned earlier I had got a
quote from her op at piece. But it's such a wonderful,
wonderful observation about where the Democrats are and this whole this,

(39:03):
this just disdain they have for anybody on the conservative
side of the ledger. Of course, they like to reduce
everybody to you know, Maga extremists, that ear Maga extremists,
you garbage, you filth, you scum, you sliine, you nazi.
And obviously that's not a great game plan. And this
is what Kimberly's point is. God bless her. She does
a wonderful job, and she's right. She Republicans lose the

(39:25):
election will be in some part due to the contempt
Donald Trump has shown his opponent. Should Democrats lose the election,
it will be a large part due to their contempt
they routinely show to tens of millions of voters. Media
doing its best to play it on. Joe Biden's casual
insulto half of America as garbage. He was misunderstood it
was a gaff. Let's meditate on Donald Trump's garbage trunk stunt.

(39:51):
Why on earth would anyone assume Biden would again show
derision for voters he's labeled semi fascist, maga extremists, and
proponents of Jim Crow two point zero. Well, of course
it wasn't a gaff. It's the latest injection of toxic
Democrat arrogance and explains the party's electoral struggles. It's of

(40:11):
a piece with the open dismissal by the media and
elites of critics as idiots, yokels, deplorables, the men accused
of toxic masculinity, women written off as handmaids, the religious fanatics,
the millions of left scorn with a long list of

(40:31):
ist and fobe words. If you don't bow the progressive dogma,
you're a fascist, sexist, racist, nationalist, insurrection is demonastic, terrorist, extremist,
far rightist, and a homophobe and a Nazi who is
bitter and clinging to a gun in religion, these labels

(40:54):
are now even being employed as an election strategy, pejoratives
to be ascribed to people based on their vote. Michelle
Obama's lecture. Obama lectures the men in our lives that
only vote for Kamala Harris will prove they take women's
health seriously.

Speaker 5 (41:10):
I e.

Speaker 1 (41:11):
Don't be a misogynist. Barack Obama explains the Black men
that a favor to vote for Kamala is evidence that
quote you're just aren't feeling the idea of having a
woman as president close quote don't be a sexist. Mark
Cuban reminds us that Donald Trump is never in the
company of strong, intelligent women, so don't be weak, dumb
gov Voting broad. The award for most reasonable ad this

(41:36):
season goes to Vote Common Good, which recruited Julia Roberts
to assist with the following ad, which consists of a
female voter arriving at the polls with her husband baseball
hat wearing a husband I might point out, as Julia's
voice explains, she's at the one place in America where
women still have the right to choose. The wife and

(41:56):
another woman secretly vote for Kamala Green, conspiratorial at each other.
On the way out, the patronizing husband gives Wifey a
hard stare and asks, did you make the right choice?
She responds, sure, did, honey? Remember what happens in the
booth stays in the booth, Julia assures the viewers vote
Harris Waltz or as progressive activists. Jess Piper tweeted to

(42:21):
white women this month, quote, I don't care what kind
of sign your husband has put in your yard or
what your pastor preaches on Sunday. You can vote your conscience.
You can vote for your children and grandchildren. No one
will know. Thanks for the stereotypes, ladies. No doubt millions
of US females, as soon as we've unchained ourselves from
the sink and reread Ephesians five twenty two, will go

(42:44):
mindlessly to vote for more inflation and border chaos and dad.
After all, we wouldn't want to check the boxes of spineless,
stupid and baby hating. But that's the joke. The contempt
isn't working. It's alienating large segments of the country, including
one key section of the Democratic coalition, the working classes,

(43:05):
migrating to the GOP as blue collar laborers wake up
to the disdaining the left has for their values and
their work. Minority voters too, are feeling and taken for granted.
On the verge of voting for Republicans at historic levels,
Americans demand more than vote for me because I self
attest to a moral superiority. That's about all the left

(43:30):
scott right now. It's because the haughty arrogance the press
protection has allowed the party to continue living in a
bubble that shields them from their failings. Look a dozen
left leading parties. A Nobel Prize winning economists just assured
us that up is down, so we're good. It also
shields them from average voters' views. One of the gentler

(43:50):
yeah telling putdowns of this election came from Tim Walls,
who pronounced, the Republicans are weird, hilarious. Want to know
what's really weird? Taxpayer funded sex change surgeries for felons,
attempts to regulate col flatulence, the expectation that fewer police
will mean less crime, the sixteen to nineteen project decriminalizing

(44:12):
border crossing, boys competing in girls' sports, the word Latin X.
Sizable majorities of Americans think all of this is the nuts,
Yet these remain staples of democratic policy and rhetoric. Progressors
are fooling themselves if they think a close election is
proof the insults are working. The independent and female voters

(44:33):
who might pull this out for Democrats aren't voting in
favor of this rhetoric or progressive policies, but rather against
a very specific and alienating individual, mister Trump. He probably
won't be on the ballot again. She sort of jokingly observes,
insults are the last refuge of fools, and there was

(44:54):
a day when politicians on both sides understood the likability
factor in elections. Hard to like a party that views
you as trash. Kim strassel Amen underscore. Read it, Send
it out to your friends. Get a copy of the
Wall Street Journal. I don't get paid to support the
Wall Street Journal, but I do support them because listen

(45:18):
to that writing. It's beautiful. Six fifteen fifty five KR
see de talk station. Feel free to call in. I
want to mention now odo exit because it's great products.
Several products actually four go to odor exit dot com
spelled od o r xit. What do you want to
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(45:39):
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rarely encounter. Yet it's great to have oto exit products
around when something like a skunk nukes your dog at
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Odor Exit dot Com fifty five KRC Hi everyone, It's

(46:42):
Jacob six twenty fifty five parrise detok station five one
three seven four nine fifty five hundred eight hundred eight
two three talk Time five fifty on AT and T
phones David and say oh yeah, as we go to
the phones. Marning's on the phone on a Maureen, how
are you this morning? Welcome to the show, Hi, Brian.

Speaker 9 (47:04):
I just wanted to touch on a couple of things
that your caller mentioned this morning. One of the things
was about the interview and how they seem to keep
harping on the footage that was taken out of a
sixteen minutes in a few with Kamala. But I didn't
know if you had a chance to listen to the
Joe Rogan interview on Friday, and Trump mentioned two things
he taught, well several things, but two of those things

(47:27):
were about that edited interview. He said, that's like the
most devastating, dangerous media in our history that did that.
And he also mentioned Kamala's cognitive He's calling for a
cognitive test for her to be done. I didn't you know,
remember the last time I called it said that one
of the October surprises would be something about some edited

(47:51):
the interview tape. Well that turned out to be that.
Now Trump is suing as of yesterday, he's suing CBS
News for ten billion dollars in damages, any stating that.

Speaker 7 (48:00):
The network.

Speaker 9 (48:02):
Their deceptive conduct for the purpose of election interference in fraud,
and it goes on and on about that. That's a
gateway plant an article from yesterday, but also the Kamala
the as far as calling for a cognitive interview, there's
a news mes article and it's by doctor Heath King
is his name, and he's a psychotherapist, and he said

(48:24):
he's not diagnosing Kamala, but he's saying that just based
on his observation of her, that she has something known
as pseudo Bulbar aspect, which is neuropsychological disorder that arises
from trauma, most often from allegian to the head, resulting
in damage of neurofiber transmission. Well, anyway, she.

Speaker 1 (48:44):
Get dropped on her head when she was a baby,
is that the Zelad explains.

Speaker 9 (48:47):
Well, apparently she was hit by a rock when she
was in fifth grade on a schoolyard quarrel and it's
in her memoir. So the theory is the possibility that
they will call for this cognitive test and that will
be the excuse to change her out during the period

(49:07):
after the turmoil after the contested election. So I'm just
putting that out there as something to keep an eye
on that she could be replaced because of her cognitive
issues well on her memoirs.

Speaker 1 (49:22):
I will not give her credit for intellect or being
quick with a coherent response during on the fly conversation,
but I mean, given her age and what she has
accomplished at least being able to navigate going to work
and holding positions and holding public office, I'm gonna go
probably with a hard no on that one. However, I

(49:45):
also observe that I don't think she has any obligation
to take a cognitive test, so she can just say
no and we'll never know. But if you're really that
cognitively challenged, you a diagnosible of a problem. It would
seem to me that that might have cropped up over
her long political career. But I don't know. Maybe it's
who you know or who you have a relationship with.
It's more fundamentally important than how well your brain functions.

(50:10):
So I appreciate the call, Maureen, as I always do,
and I prefect Joe, and thanks very much for the
regular updates and information, including as Maureen let me know
this morning, was talking about. I can't remember what I
was talking about. Oh, I was guessing about that massive
fire underneath the bridge, you know, I didn't realize there
is nowhere down there for cars to drive around. Joe's

(50:32):
been there a whole bunch of times. This playground beneath
the four to seventy one bridge, the Dan Beard Bridge,
and he said, it's all treated lumber. He said, very well,
could have caught on fire. I'm guessing arson now. But
the time, I said, an electric vehicle, because you know
how difficult those things are to put out, and how
much just raging flames they put out. And as she

(50:53):
forwarded me this link, there is a lithium battery recycling
plant in Missouri that I mean just blew up yesterday, huge,
and they've got it on video. They timing is everything
was Frederickstown, Missouri, and the video filmed by some guy
named Jacob Arms who was standing there. Smoke's coming out
of the building and all of a sudden boom, the

(51:15):
whole top of the building blows off. So it's a
recycling plant used to recycle lithium ion battery related materials
from battery manufacturers, automotive OEMs, battery dealers, recyclers and processors worldwide.
Described as one of the largest lithium ion battery processing
facilities in the world, and when you see the amount

(51:36):
of smoke and presumably toxic chemicals, they did have an
issue an evacuation order for citizens in the area. I'm
just wondering what the carbon footprint was from that wonderful
green based technology that we call lithium ion batteries. Yeah,
six twenty five fifty five krc DE Talk Station Tech
Friday with Dave Hadter coming up next after I mentioned

(51:58):
my friend John Ryan, who is Prestige Interiors, one of
the same they are so got to press THEGE one
two to three dot com and see what John's done
over the years, at least a whole bunch of the
projects he's done. I'm talking specifically. Kitchen Remodeling's his forte
his area of expertise. He's been doing kitchen remodeling for
more than thirty years a plus with the BBB, and

(52:19):
I'll give him one too, because we love what he
did with our kitchen. I think my wife said it
was fifteen years ago. The other day someone had asked
about the kid was like, no way, it has been
that long. Anyway, still loving it to this day. Everything
he did for us has just worked out to our
just ultimate satisfaction. That'd be the case with you from
initial design to final installation. You have a true partner

(52:40):
in your kitchen remodeling project. From the smallest type of
project just replacing the cabinets and or countertops, to gut
the whole thing and starting all over for better design
and storage and function, which is the route We went
with John and again love what he did, and so
will you check it out online? And pressed these one
two to three dot com then give him a call
and Tom Brian said, how would you do if you
don't mind five one three two four seven zero two

(53:02):
two nine five one three two four seven zero two
two nine fifty five the talk station six thirty on
a Friday. It is that time of week brought to
you by intrust It Currenting the Business Career. They are
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business computing needs, keeping you safe, best practices, out of

(53:23):
trouble and unringing the bell of I guess somebody hacking
into your system. Dave Hatter, thanks for your company interest it,
for all that you do, for all the businesses locally
who rely on your excellent services, and for joining the
fifty five Cassey Morning Show every week to hopefully scare
the hell out of us enough that will listen to
you and get off TikTok, among other things.

Speaker 5 (53:41):
Good to have you back, brother, always good to be here, Brian.
And yeah, hopefully people will stop using TikTok.

Speaker 1 (53:47):
And I know you saw it real quick here and
I know it's not on the list, but I got
a big kick out of this. Not a whole lot
of details other than a Russian court this previous Wednesday
hit Google with a fine, a fine of twenty twenty
decillion dollars that will be a two followed by thirty
four zeros, which amount exceeds the gross domestic product of

(54:09):
the entire planet.

Speaker 5 (54:11):
Yeah, that's quite hilarious. It'd be interesting to see how
they plan to collect on that.

Speaker 7 (54:16):
But yeah, that was funny.

Speaker 1 (54:18):
It'll start the final start doubling every day. Google does
not pay it off after the first nine months.

Speaker 5 (54:25):
Yeah, I guess if you work for Google, you should
stay out of Russia.

Speaker 1 (54:29):
Yeah, I suppose so. I guess they suspended YouTube in
Russia as well. Anyway, let us start now with one
third of the US population, and what's happened to their
information there, mister hatter.

Speaker 5 (54:42):
Yeah, this is a this is something We've talked about
many times, and it just keeps happening and it's really unfortunate.
You know. Most recently, prior to this particular story, we've
seen the National Public Data data breach, which was a
bad one because National Public Data is a background check company.
And the thing I like to try to explain to people,

(55:03):
and it's really important to understand this because when there's
when you have someone like a background check company that
has collected extremely sensitive data and lots of it about you,
places you've worked before, places you've lived before, your family
members' names, maybe phone numbers. You know, that data becomes
really powerful in the hands of bad guys because whether

(55:25):
it's there use that data to impersonate you and take out,
you know, credit in your name or whatever, or they
use that data to impersonate someone you have worked with,
like your bank or an employer or whomever. Right, they
have lots of data, so it makes it easier for
them to call you on the phone and pretend to

(55:46):
be whoever. Right, the sheriff's office, Well, okay, mister such
and such, you have this problem and we need you
to do this thing or other. And you know, when
you start asking questions they know enough about you to
convey that it's legit. It's not just some random scam.
And that's why these data breaches are really bad. And

(56:06):
so we've had another large one again, National Public Data,
which is a background check company, was breached not long ago.
Now we have mc square, which is another background check company,
with millions of records stolen again according to this article,
likely to be human error, that exposed one hundred and
six million records containing private information about US citizens. So

(56:30):
you know, that's on top of National Public Data and
other data breaches that have occurred. And it goes on
to say in this article some of the things that
it might include would be email, IP address and partial
payment information, home addresses, dates of birth, phone numbers, property records,
legal records, et cetera. So again, it gives the bad

(56:51):
guys an enormous amount of useful information to either impersonate
you or to impersonate organizations and agencies and entities that
can be used to defraud you somehow. So it's not good.
And unfortunately, Brian, as we've discussed also many times, while
these things keep happening, we can't seem to get any
kind of national privacy law if you look at IAPP,

(57:14):
that's the International Association of Privacy Professionals. They have a
map that shows you which states have privacy laws and
which states don't, and kind of where each state is
at on this. Eighteen states have a privacy law last
I checked. I'm happy to say I like to say
this all the time because it's rare. Kentucky actually beat
Ohio to something for a change. We have a data

(57:35):
privacy law that goes into effect next year. It's not perfect,
but it's a lot better than nothing I know. Ohio
has something working its way through the legislature. These things
give you some protection as a consumer. Again, they're not perfect,
and until we get to a place where most people
realize that these kind of data breaches are bad, they
affect them much more so than the companies that are breached.

(57:56):
I mean occasionally, these companies don't survive this. They just
get a black GUYE and they move on. And it's
you and I and your listeners that suffer when all
this data is leak. So we need, well I'm generally
an anti regulation guide. We need a national data privacy
law that has teeth that incentivizes people. Again, nothing's perfect.
There's no way to completely block this stuff. But when

(58:18):
you don't really have any significant consequences other than bad
will in the public, you know, are you going to
do the right things spend the money? And apparently the
answer is no, because we keep seeing these things over
and over and over again. So yeah, it's bad. And
my last point, because it will be out of time,
is if you get a letter telling you your data

(58:38):
has been breached, whether it's National public data or whomever. Right,
I've gotten several of these letters from different organizations and
have my data stolen somehow. When you get that letter,
open it, read it carefully, and take action on whatever
they tell you to do. If they offer you free
credit monitoring for a year, take it. It's crazy not to.

(58:59):
And then you know, freeze your credit, keep an eye
on your accounts.

Speaker 1 (59:03):
Definitely freeze your credit. That is so easy to do.

Speaker 5 (59:06):
It is, and it's it's free, it's easy, And I mean,
how often do you need to apply for credit?

Speaker 1 (59:10):
Exactly?

Speaker 5 (59:11):
Freeze it if you do and put it back. So yeah,
that's something everyone can do today, and I would suggest that.

Speaker 1 (59:16):
They do well. You told people to open the letter
and do whatever they said. My only concern is if
that a notice comes electronically and it is in itself
a spoof or scam, and you're signing up for credit protection,
you're giving more information.

Speaker 5 (59:30):
That is a valid point for thank you that you dave.
Don't act on anything electronic. Wait for the actual postal
mail letter. Almost always these companies will send you a
letter in the mail on printing it on paper. Now,
even that could be scammed, but that costs real money.
Right to mail out thousands of letters is quite expensive

(59:51):
versus sending phishing emails. Yeah, don't don't trust a mail
or don't trust an email. Wait for the letter and
then act.

Speaker 1 (59:59):
Go through life with a suspicious, jaded, cynical attitude. Next
time malicious lookalike domains more reasons to be jaded and cenecal. First,
foreign Exchange. You know, I to make fun of evs
all the time. I still want to own one. I
know a lot of people want them and some dear
friends who own them. And you know, EV's have to
be serviced. If you own a Tesla, foreign Exchange now
can service your testa. They've been through all the training,

(01:00:20):
so they're a Tesla service. As well as just generally
imported automobiles, which is you know that's this really stand
out because Austin has an amazing team of a SC
certified Master technicians at the Westchester location. They're great people.
Matter of fact, taking my wife's car in their next
Tuesday hit a lower spoiler get torn up on a

(01:00:43):
parking bump. That does happen, So they're going to replace
that for her. Maybe get an oil change while I'm
at it, and I'll save heap loads of money on
that one I already know. But on the service itself,
I'll save heatloads of money versus the dealer. And that's
the point of going to Foreign Exchange. Why spend money
you don't have to. They will fix it's your car.
You will leave with a full warranty on parts and service,
and also with more money in your pocket than had

(01:01:05):
you taken it to the dealer. Bottom line is your
bottom line. West just the location as I recommend, I
seventy five to the Tylersville exit east on Tylersville just
two blocks, It's basically two streets. Hang a right on Kinglin.
You're there and you'll see it when you make that turn.
Online finament Foreign X for in the letter X dot
com tell the crew. Brian said, how when you call

(01:01:25):
them up for an appointment, it's five one, five one three,
six four four twenty six twenty six. That's six four
four twenty six twenty six fifty five KRC dot com
cyber attacks and cybercrime are really on sixty one if
you five KRC decalk station. When that Tech Friday with
Dave had or interest it dot com find Dave and
the crew for your business computer needs. On over to

(01:01:46):
malicious lookalike domain. Saw an article in the Wall Street
Journal this morning about how the Chinese and Russians have
set up all kinds of fake media influence sites to
try to get the Hispanic populations, Black populations, Muslim populations
to vote the way they want. Russians apparently want Trump,
and the Irradiance apparently want Harris, and they're all creating

(01:02:07):
fake news sites. But is that what we're talking about
here when you talk about malicious lookalike domains?

Speaker 5 (01:02:12):
Well, essentially the same sort of thing. It really speaks
to spoofing. So spoofing is the idea that you're going
to create something electronic that looks legitimate but isn't. It
could be an email, it could be a voice call,
it could be a text message, it could be an
entire website. It's really easy to spoof an email and
send something to someone that appears to have come from

(01:02:35):
an email address that's legit, when in actuality it's not.
It's sadly, Brian, it's really easy to do this, and
same thing for a phone number. I mean, you can
go online right now and find websites where you can
sit down and type in a phone number that you
want a call or text to appear to come from,
and then send it such that when your phone rings
or you get a text message, it came from that number,

(01:02:58):
even though that's not the it originated from. Does that
make sense?

Speaker 1 (01:03:02):
It does, but I'm guessing that that site that lets
you do that is probably soaking up a whole bunch
of information from you by your using the site.

Speaker 5 (01:03:10):
In many cases, like you can pay for apps that
do this. I mean, you can find free sights online
that will let you do one text message or something
to try it. But my point really is it's it's
the spoofing that's easy. It's not because of the way
the Internet was originally designed and the fact that it
was designed a long time ago before people could envision
all these different usages and all these different attacks that

(01:03:33):
would be launched over it. You know, the underpinning technology
that makes this stuff work is just inherently insecure, and
you have to kind of retrofit stuff on top of it.
So the bad guys know this, and they take advantage
of this to spoof you in a variety of different
ways to create legitimacy for whatever sort of fraudulent thing
they're trying to pull, which could include like right now,

(01:03:53):
it's also really easy. You don't have to have a
lot of technical skill to do anything I just described.
You just have to know the right questions to asking
where to look. But you can also go out and
get software that will crawl the website, which basically it
just goes through the entire site, sucks down the content,
and then I can go register or look alike or
doppelganger domain. It's sometimes called typo squatting. And the easiest

(01:04:16):
way I can explain this is, you know, think about
it like this. Let's say you go to Poland when
they speak Polish, right, they don't speak English there for
the most part, and they have a different character set,
like their keyboard is different, their writing is different. Russia.
Pick any country you want where they use a language
under than English. The computer understands a different character set,
and in some cases the characters that language use look

(01:04:38):
very much like English characters. So you may have like
the cryllic letter A or I don't know what they
call it, but it looks like a lowercase A, but
it's not. It's very very similar to the naked eye.
Unless you look carefully, you will not be able to
tell the difference. The computer knows the difference. So I
register a domain and I use another character set, so

(01:05:00):
I can create something that looks just like fifty five KRC. Right,
that's probably not a great example. Let's pick something else, IBM.
So the I I replace maybe with a lowercase L
or some letter or another character set that looks like
that to the naked eye. So when I send you
a phishing email that looks like it came from IBM,

(01:05:21):
and you click the link in it that looks like
it points to IBM dot com, it doesn't. It points
to something else, but you don't see that. And that's
what this is referring to. And bad guys are setting
these up constantly. This recent study shows you know, like
five hundred major brands have these typosquad or slash lookalike
websites set up, and you know, the farious intent is

(01:05:43):
usually either one of two things. You get some kind
of phishing email or text, you click the link, you
go there and ask you to log in, so they
harvest your credentials because they know either a they're getting
your credentials for something like Microsoft, or b they know
people use the same user name and password the same
credentials across multiple sites. Or B it's got some kind
of malware. Ransomware is something keystroke lagger, it's going to

(01:06:05):
download when you visit it. So the important point, the
takeaway for this is to understand this is a thing
that anything you get electronically, whether it's an email, a
text with a link QR code that's sent to you somehow,
you know it. If you can't scan it with the
naked eye and easily tell that it's legit, you shouldn't
click on it. And because of this spoofing, you know,

(01:06:27):
that just adds to the complexity of this. So you
should always and I hate to say this, Brian, but
you know we live in a time now where you
have to be skeptical of it. Almost anything you get
electronically and you really need to verify things before you
click on them, because I mean, this study shows you
this is a very prevalent technique. New bad websites are
being set up all the time, and you know, if

(01:06:48):
you're not careful, sadly, you will get scammed.

Speaker 1 (01:06:51):
And if you're not careful, you're using a fitness app
and that will help you find out where the President
of the United States is. We'll talk about that one
next with Dave had or one more with Dave. But
first a word for my dear friend Peter Shabia Keller
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(01:07:32):
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call a Sabri group. You're gonna have a cash offer
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it program cash the keys program there you go check
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which you should five one three of course, seven zero
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Speaker 10 (01:08:07):
Thousand, fifty five KRC the talk station the Jungle will
be alive app six if you one.

Speaker 1 (01:08:15):
Wrapping up one more segment of Tech Friday with Dave Hadder,
which begins every Friday at six thirty intrust it dot
com where you find Dave and the crew before we
get to Adam Kaylor. After the top of the urndio
news will be in studio. We got one more topic,
and that would be tracking people with a fitness app.
This is kind of scary and you would have thought
they'd have seen this one coming, Dave.

Speaker 5 (01:08:36):
Yeah, Now, Brian, do you think that I would think
it's a good idea to use these apps? No, especially
if you don't understand what data they're collecting and how
their privacy policy work.

Speaker 1 (01:08:48):
Dave, I would love to have one because of the
information it would pass along to me for the little
prods to get off your butt and move around whatever.
But it's hooked up to the Internet, and its hooked
up to because people were soaking up all the data. Hell,
no period in the story.

Speaker 7 (01:09:04):
Yeah, it so.

Speaker 5 (01:09:05):
For a long time. Prior to Google acquiring them, I
had a fitbit and you know it was helpful because
I could throw it all my wrists, walk around, go
for a run, whatever. It kept track of all that
gave me all these statistics and you know, would incentivize
me to want to be more active because I could
kind of see where I'm at right and I mean,

(01:09:27):
you know me, the instant that Google bought them, I'm
like and it's kind of interesting because the fitbit I
had at the time, the glue on the band kind
of broke, like, well, I'm just not going to get
another fitbit because I'm not going to give Google that data.
And now I will tell you, you know, you're if
you have an Apple phone, it's got built in tracking
if you want to use it, so it'll keep track

(01:09:48):
of your steps and you know how many flights of
stairs did you go up and all that sort of stuff.
That data is going to Apple. Obviously I wouldn't share
it with any third party apps. So you know, I can,
I can get my step count that sort of thing
from my phone. I'm not going to go with a
third party app. And here's the problem with all of
these things, right, and this is problematic with any app

(01:10:09):
you install on your phone, any third party app, if
it's free. You have to ask yourself, well, okay, the
developers that wrote the programming for that, the infrastructure that
supports that, you think they're just giving you all that
because they're nice people, And the answer is obviously no.
You know, they have mortgages. They like to eat too,
so they got to get paid somehow, which means you

(01:10:31):
are the product, not the customer and then depending on
what they want to do with your data. And you know,
we've seen this kind of problem with Venmo before, Like
I don't use Venmo, and I would recommend that people
not use any of these payment apps, or at least
be very very careful when you do, you know, like
have a separate bank account that's connected to and only
keep a certain small amount of money in it. But anyway,

(01:10:52):
make a long story short. You know, Venmo, the default
setting originally was everything was public, so someone else could
go look at every single transaction you did. And that's
that's kind of the thing we're seeing here, right, So
when you look at this particular app, Strava, and it's
not the only one, and the angle they're shooting for
here is, okay, you've got people in secret service or
other government agencies that might be using this app that

(01:11:15):
this story came up not long a couple of years
ago around like military bass, where you have people in
the military who are using these fitness apps to help
try to stay in shape, and like you can see
where they go. So that's the problem. Depending on the
privacy settings, you could potentially be using one of these
apps and someone else could see where you're at every day.
So whether it's a stalker or a criminally a thief

(01:11:36):
of some sort, or if you're some kind of high
value target, someone that would want to kidnap you or
take you out, they could potentially access this data. So again,
I understand the value of these fitness apps to people,
but at the same time, I would strongly recommend before
you use any of these things above and beyond whatever
is native to your phone, understand how the privacy policy works,

(01:11:58):
how the privacy settings work, and what is the risk
to you and your family of this information being exposed.

Speaker 2 (01:12:04):
Amen.

Speaker 1 (01:12:05):
Again, that's why I don't have one. Dave, appreciate your advice.
I rely I rely on it throughout the week. I
knock would knock wood twice ten times. Haven't any problems
yet Now that I say that, probably happened the day.

Speaker 5 (01:12:19):
Yeah, yeah, you just cursed both I did.

Speaker 1 (01:12:21):
I did.

Speaker 5 (01:12:22):
Next, if I can just cham in one thing real
quick for anyone that lives in Fort Wright, I want
you to go out and vote to re elect all
six Incombent council members. We have a challenger, a perennial challenger,
you know, the six Incombent council members have done an
amazing job. If you live in Fort Right, Kentucky, vote
to re elect these six people. You know we've cut
top property tax rates twenty eight percent in the last

(01:12:44):
few years, thirteen percent this year alone, Brian. These people
are doing a great job. These people are doing an
amazing job. They deserve to be re elected. If you
live in Fort Right, vote for the incumbents.

Speaker 1 (01:12:54):
Well, it's your time and you use it to your advantage.
And I can't encourage people enough to listen with Dave says.
I do every week and it's worked out well for
me until next Friday, my friend. Thanks again to you
and interest it for the segment and for the information.
We'll talk next Friday. Have a great weekend and good
luck with Tuesday.

Speaker 5 (01:13:12):
Always my pleasure, Brian.

Speaker 1 (01:13:14):
Thanks thanks brother. Six fifty six. Adam Kayler running for
Camlon Hellent Nunny Commission will be in studio. We're gonna
hear from Matt Damaris at eight oh five Vets and
Bruce awesome organization. I participated in that and it is
indeed a great time. So veterans be around at eight
h five for the deats on that and then running
for Camlon Kenny Commissioner Jonathan Pearson back in studio at
eight thirty. Stick around it right back your voice, even

(01:13:36):
if they know the truth that Donald Trump's a better
pitch your vote.

Speaker 11 (01:13:40):
Who's not gonna want to handout and like.

Speaker 5 (01:13:41):
Vote for that?

Speaker 1 (01:13:42):
On fifty five KRC the talk station.

Speaker 2 (01:13:45):
This report is sponsored by medic.

Speaker 1 (01:14:02):
Tip five kir CV talk station. Very Happy Friday. So yeah,
I hope you can make it a good Friday. It's
happier for me because man, I've gotten it really well
over the past oh years. So Adam Taylor's in studios
running for Hamlem County Commissioner. You can find Adam online.
Get his website Adam koe h l e r Adam
Taylor dot com. There's all the information. A fiscally responsible
guy he is, and man with a plan on open

(01:14:24):
door policy. Could you have you back in the studio. Yeah, Brian,
thanks again, it's a pleasure. We're talking about that Brent
spent or the Dan Beard Bridge fire going on. Wow.
Yeah yeah.

Speaker 12 (01:14:33):
Now the park down there, which is a really nice
park for the kids, was there. Yeah, Now it's it's cinders.
But you've got that same problem happened on seventy five,
and I remember that being closed down for a long
time while they inspected it. And you know when that
kind of structural issues, yeah, the metal and yeah, it
gets kind of wild. So I won't be taking for
seventy one.

Speaker 1 (01:14:53):
I don't think anyone's going to be taking for seventy
one for a while. Maybe down for a long time. Again,
you got the Brent Spence illustration as a suggested guide
post on how long it could take. Anyway, he didn't
call him come in to talk about fires on bridges,
came in and talk about the commissioner's race. So how
are you feeling about it as we faster approach?

Speaker 12 (01:15:13):
I guess we could say dumpster fires, I mean the
presidential election. Yeah, but there's I'm feeling really good. I
think a lot of these Hamilton County down ballot candidates.
What happens nationally is you're going to see that reflected
in a lot of our races. And right now things
are looking really good. Atlas Intel, which was the most

(01:15:34):
accurate polster in twenty twenty, right now they have Trump
up five in Arizona, up four, North Carolina up four,
Nevada up two in Georgia up one point one in Pennsylvania,
one point two in Michigan, and just barely up point
three in Wisconsin. They are the most accurate polster. If
you go look at the chart, they were at the

(01:15:55):
top and they were more accurate by far than most
of the other posters. And then CNA comes out with
some crazy pol yesterday.

Speaker 1 (01:16:01):
Oh, I know, they've always got one or two poles
out there. They've sort of you know, flipped the narrative
on I pulled it. Of course you might deem more accurate.
So we don't trust the folks that seen in a
whole way.

Speaker 12 (01:16:12):
Even Fox, I mean Fox sometimes lean's left a little bit,
which is wild. But they you know, they've got Trump winning.
Most polls have Trump winning the popular vote, which hasn't
happened in a long time, I think since the eighties.
So if he wins the popular vote, I mean it's
gonna be a landslide.

Speaker 1 (01:16:30):
I mean most things.

Speaker 12 (01:16:30):
I mean, I see conservative, not conservative as you know
conservative politically, but conservative. Pollsters have him winning two hundred
ninety six electoral votes. And some of the more you
know right leaning or up into like the three twenties.
But I would say they average out about three twelve.
I say the consensus is about three to twelve. Wow,
I mean they can almost win in Vermont. I mean,

(01:16:52):
Virginia's in play, for God's sake. The only places I
think he's solid are, you know, the West coast. You've
got Washington, Oregon, Caln, New Mexico he's got in and
then all the states along the East coast obviously, but
I mean you've seen New Jersey early voting has been
positive for Trump, and it's it's wild. But we got

(01:17:12):
to get out and vote. We got to remember to
vote down ballot. That's one problem we've always had is
you can get Republicans out, but they'll vote for the
president and then off they go. You got to get
Melissa Powers in there. Oh, you got to get Tom
Brinkman in there. Guys, if we're going to do anything
about property taxes in this county, you got to get
Tom Brickman in there. And Tom's been busy, you know,
his wife unfortunately, you know, with her stroke and stuff.

(01:17:34):
He's had to you know, he's spent a lot of
time bringing her places. Every day, he's got to take
her somewhere. So it's been a real challenge for him
to get out there. So he needs folks like us
to get out there and talk and tell people. You know,
Tom Brikman guys well and that demonstrates good quality of character.
He knows where his priorities are, and his priorities are
to his wife and not a political campaign.

Speaker 1 (01:17:53):
And see it all the time. He's a good man. Yeah,
he is a good man. And of course I'll throw
a good word in for Jim Neal. I think he
can do them much better job as he did before
than the current sheriff McGuffey. So that's gotten very political.

Speaker 12 (01:18:06):
Well, we need Jim in there too, I mean, if
I'm going to do anything. You know, the vast majority
of the budget for him on county goes to not
just the Sheriff's department, but criminal justice in particular, like
over half of our budgets going to criminal justice. And
you could blame that on the schools. There's not much
we could do about that, you know, the pipeline to prison.
But you got to get a guy like Jim in
there who's open minded about bringing new technologies and making

(01:18:30):
the Sheriff's department more proactive versus reactive. And I think
if you could get Jim in there. I could work
with a guy like Jim. Oh yeah, because Jim, he's
westside guy. He's you know, he's not a guy who's
going to waste money. And he understands that, you know,
taxpayers don't want to be fronting all this money for
unnecessary stuff, clearly.

Speaker 1 (01:18:49):
And the other thing that it's very appealing about Jim Neil,
and he brought it up the other day when he
was here on the fifty five KC Morning Show. He's
just he's really sort of a political he knows the sheriff.
He knows the Sheriff's office is not a political entity.
And he's not going to go around attending all kinds
of crazy you know, left wing or right wing causes

(01:19:10):
or events. He's going to be busy fighting crime in
Hamilton County. That's one true.

Speaker 12 (01:19:15):
And and Jim's been around, i mean grew up around it.
You know, he's he's already done the job. And like
I said, it's wild to me. Now a lot of
your your best Democrats have become Republican. I mean, look
at this, Elon Musk, Taulsey, Gabbard, Kennedy. Now we got
a Kennedy on our side. Yeah, amazing, Jim Neil, I

(01:19:36):
mean it's it's it's wild. But the left is not
what we used what the left used to be. So
you've got a lot of the moderate Democrats moving over
to our side. And I hope guys, if you're out
there and you're a moderate Democrat or you're you're undecided,
I mean, look at the policies go down there. If
you're Christian, look at what Kamala said about you know,
Christian's not being welcome at her at her rallies.

Speaker 5 (01:19:58):
No.

Speaker 12 (01:19:59):
I mean, it's the stuff that's coming out. You know,
they're garbage people, is what Joe Biden said. I mean,
this is it's getting crazy. And you know, we're coming
down to the to the wire here, so you're in
here are a lot of crazy stuff coming out of candidates.
But it seems like the Trump campaign is winning and
they're hitting on everything in commologes keeps keep falling apart.

Speaker 1 (01:20:17):
Well, I think you just keep simply name calling. That's
all they got. They got the hate Trump, abortion and
hate Trump. That's it. And abortion isn't the federal issues.
We all know, it's already been resolved in Ohio, much
to many of my listener's chagrin. But vote everybody did,
and that was the outcome. But it's no longer a
national issue, so that shouldn't even be in the discussion
point right now for federal office. And yet they keep

(01:20:39):
bringing it up all these crazy you know, like like
I don't know anybody who's and I have a very
traditional marriage. What my wife loves her role as wife.
You know, she's a traditionalist woman. She's terrific. She works
though full time, she makes more than me. But this
idea that somehow I could control her decision making, that
men are telling the wives what they must do, and

(01:21:01):
that this this ad campaign, like for example, with a
Julia Roberts is secretly voting in favor of Kamala Harris.
Really yeah, and their husband, well, did you vote the
right way?

Speaker 3 (01:21:12):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (01:21:13):
Yeah, it'sh don't tell him, you know, Come on, man.

Speaker 12 (01:21:16):
Yeah, Julie, are you paying for the groceries? Because that's
that's what people were worried about. They're worried about kitchen
table issues. They're worried about things that are affecting them
right now. They're not worried about this theoretical stuff and
the lies the left tells us about ep topic, pregnancies
and things like that. Those those are extreme talking points
that they use, but people don't necessarily care about that

(01:21:38):
right now. Is abortion affecting your life today?

Speaker 1 (01:21:41):
No?

Speaker 12 (01:21:41):
But you know what is going up to the grocery
store and buying two bags of grocers are costing one
hundred fifty dollars?

Speaker 1 (01:21:46):
Like that's affecting me right now, you know.

Speaker 12 (01:21:48):
And you notice gas prices are coming down a little
bit right before the election, So amazing that. Yeah, but
how many years what three and a half years we've had,
you know, high gas prices that people have been dealing with.
I mean, folks are having to every day decide what
they're going to buy and what they're going to forego,
and that that's not the American way. The middle class
is getting eroded in this country. Every day. The middle

(01:22:10):
class is getting hurt. You've got the extremes now. I mean,
even the wage gap has gotten even worse, not the
male female wage gap, but the wealth gap between the
poor and the rich has expanded since Biden Harris took over.
I mean, guys, we can't do another four years this, Like,
we gotta get folks out there. You got to go
knock on doors, talk to your friends, get people out there.

(01:22:33):
There's people Andrew Pappas on the east side. You know
our boy west side, Jim Keefer, he's out there every day.
Todd Zinzer, he's out here working. You saw that thing
that Cherry Coolidge came out with, how they wasted eleven
thousand dollars on those big Biden Harris infrastructure signs. It's
just insane. And I was literally one of my clients
is a big sign maker. They do all my signs,

(01:22:54):
and I'm on the zoom call with him. Yes, Shay,
we're talking about a project. And I'm like, he hadn't
seen the article, and I'm like, you should write a
blog post about this because there's no way you guys
would have charged eleven thousand, five hundred dollars for this
kind of nonsense. What five or six signs? Yeah, eleven
thousand dollars, guys, this is your tax money. And then
the crazy thing is our mayor gets invited to the

(01:23:15):
DNC to speak. One of the city council members goes
on to hud like, are those things tied together?

Speaker 2 (01:23:22):
Are we doing?

Speaker 13 (01:23:23):
Like?

Speaker 1 (01:23:23):
Is this a quid pro quo?

Speaker 4 (01:23:24):
Now?

Speaker 12 (01:23:24):
Are we doing favors for the federal government. And I
keep saying this monopoly we have on city council and
county commission He got nine city council members guys, all Democrats.
He got three county commissioners, all Democrats. This is the
kind of stuff that happens. These are the decisions that
they make when you live under a one party monopoly.

Speaker 1 (01:23:48):
Well, continue with Adam Kaylor again. You can find online
at Adamkaylor dot com and his you know, county commissioner
issues when we're talking a little bit more broad based
politics generally speaking, but very important to do. So we
fast approach Tuesday seven sixteen right now. And a very
important thing to do is you fast approach chimney and
fireplace season. With the warmth and the awesome glow of

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it was a fire hazard. It's gas. I mean I

(01:24:31):
didn't thinking about that. I mean I don't have to
worry about creosode build up right now, but you do
have to worry about things like that. Is it flowing properly?
Do you have a potential carbon monoxide problem? Get a
carbon monoxide detector, But maybe you have water damage in there.
Gas and wood burners can all have that problem. And
a video camera inspection will take care of that. If
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That place Chimneycareco dot Com showroom located at four thirteen

(01:25:16):
Wards Corner Road. The phone number please tell them, Brian said,
Hi five one three two four eight ninety six hundred
eight plus The better business Bureau five one, three, two
four eight ninety six hundred fifty five krc Iheartradios. Here's
your channel nine first warning weather forecasts, plenty of sunshine.
Says it right there on their rundown high sixty one today,

(01:25:38):
over night little thirty five with clear sky, sixty five
under sunny skies Tomorrow overnight little forty four with a
few clouds, but sunny again on Sunday with a high
seventy two forty five degrees. Right now, it's get an
update on that fire situation.

Speaker 2 (01:25:51):
From the UCL Tramphings Center.

Speaker 6 (01:25:53):
Count on the expert team and you see Health Orthphoenix
and sports medicine no matter the injury, same day appointments available,
schedule onlineing you see dot com north as southbound four
seventy one shut down due to the fire underneath the
bridge at the park and this is now blocking northbound
fourth seventy one at two seventy five. That traffic is
very heavy. Then to the double A Highway shot ingram

(01:26:16):
on fifty five krc the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:26:20):
Seven twenty here fifty five KERCD talk station, A very
happy Friday to you, Adam Kale, run for him, An
County Commissioner in studio and he heard my conversation from
yesterday regarding the Shenanigans declaration underneath Street House and some
campaign contributions from Rumkey. That's interesting because as I understand it,
she's a Democrat and she's really out there raising three

(01:26:42):
forms of Holy hell against an East treehouse.

Speaker 13 (01:26:44):
Yeah.

Speaker 12 (01:26:45):
Yeah, And you know, I've I've I've gotten messages from
a lot of people, mostly Democrats, about issues that they've
had with candidates that they trusted to do a good
job on things like the environment.

Speaker 1 (01:26:58):
You know, typical demo crat issues.

Speaker 5 (01:27:01):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:27:02):
But again, a lot of this stuff goes back to
checks and balances. Brian.

Speaker 12 (01:27:07):
You just if you've got a monopoly, a one party
monopoly running city Council and County Commission, DC policy is
going to run Cincinnati. And this is one thing I
keep pushing on. You've got, you know, things that are
coming down from on high you know, at the DNC
that get pushed down to Cincinnati, and those things aren't
always right for Cincinnati. But when it comes to environmental issues,

(01:27:29):
I mean that's one thing Hamilton County Commission does have
some control over. And when you aren't doing what the
people who put you in power expect you to do.
Then that's a problem. And this this whole monopoly thing.
People just sleepwalk through their entire their entire term.

Speaker 1 (01:27:44):
I mean, yet no one is there in elected capacity
to call them out. Nobody. It's a protectionist environment. I'm
not calling out a fellow Democrat because I don't want
to be smirge the Democrat party name or have a
shot at my fellow Democrat. So yeah, even if they're
doing something that I don't miss really believe, and we're
just gonna let it fly into the radar, just let
it fly.

Speaker 12 (01:28:03):
And this is the problem too, because a lot of
them have their sites set on just like our County Commission.
Next thing you know, they're in DC doing things with
the Obama administration or the Harris administration or whatever. That's
what they have their sit set on. These are career
politicians a lot of times we're dealing with and some
of the people we've elected here aren't even from Cincinnati.

(01:28:25):
They're not even from the area really, So you've got
people coming in here that don't do they really care
about say to say, like, I've been here my entire life,
Yes this is I'm I will go to war for
Cincinnati running because you can't just let people walk into office.

Speaker 1 (01:28:42):
It's just not good.

Speaker 12 (01:28:42):
And when they feel like they don't have any competition,
that's when they get lazy. That's when they stop working
for the people. That's when they just collect their check
or is it over a little over one hundred thousand
dollars a year or something these county commissioners are making
And if you have you don't have to worry ever
about anyone even coming close to beating you. Then you know,
you just you don't go talk to the people, You

(01:29:04):
don't spend any money. And they were just going to
walk into office. That's one of the reasons. John Pearson
who's running against Reese, Me who's running against Streetthouse, That's
why we're spending this kind of time and this kind
of personal money to go. And I got ads running
on Facebook now, I've got ads running on another ad network.
I've got ads running on Twitter right now. I mean,
this is all mostly coming out of my pocket, thinks.

Speaker 5 (01:29:26):
You know.

Speaker 12 (01:29:26):
I've had some some donors, friends and family and some
of your listeners actually, but we're putting our money out there,
in our time out there to fight this stuff. Because
we care about Hamilton County, we care about the City
of Cincinnati, and we're sick and tired of seeing these
things like this assigned situation and this styrene leak and
all these situations that come up. That they are a

(01:29:48):
symptom of lazy management, is what that is. And if
this was a business, a lot of these people would
be fired, if this was an actual business, if this
wasn't a government type thing, management and be gone.

Speaker 1 (01:30:01):
Yeah, and you know, you and I don't want to
focus just on the City of Cincinnati since you're running
for a county wide office, but of course, the city
of Cincinnati is the you know, the hub of the
entire multi county region yere and if the city fails,
the everybody tends to fail. But in terms of you know,
in terms of one thing that comes to my mind

(01:30:21):
that the failure to keep up with the road and
infrastructure maintenance. They're so far behind. They have allocated money
every year, and every year it falls behind. They don't
even complete what their scheduled to do in the calendar year.
So the number of projects just keeps piling up and
piling up, and the number of roads that are deteriorated
to the point where you can't drive and without getting
an alignment at the end of the road. It's they're

(01:30:42):
just multiplying. That is an epic sign of incompetence infrastructure
and public safety. You bring those out and you know,
of course, low taxes, it's going to be a magnet
for every they want to move in. You don't take
care of what you got, you don't keep on the
projects you're responsible for, you just start slipping. They just
starts slipping.

Speaker 12 (01:31:00):
And I've got a friend in budgeting down at the
city and he's been in different departments, and one time
he told me that there was so the police officers
have to rotate their guns every several years.

Speaker 1 (01:31:11):
Oh yeah, yeah, have you heard about this city west
and buy back? Yeah, they got rid of that. The
city returns the used firearms to Smith and Wesson and
in return Smith gives them new ones.

Speaker 12 (01:31:23):
Half a million dollars is what we were getting from it.
But because Democrats have this thing with guns, now they
have to destroy them all. Yeah, so now we're out
five hundred thousand dollars, right.

Speaker 1 (01:31:31):
And of course that really has a profound impact on
the number of firearms.

Speaker 5 (01:31:34):
In the world.

Speaker 1 (01:31:35):
Yeah. No, they were I think Smith and Wesson.

Speaker 12 (01:31:37):
What they were doing is that we're selling them back
to police forces in Europe and different countries. But they
were going from police to other police.

Speaker 1 (01:31:46):
Yeah.

Speaker 12 (01:31:47):
So, and those are just the weird decisions that get
made across the board that are just like what are
you doing?

Speaker 1 (01:31:52):
They're symbolic and they cost the taxpayers money. And what's
up with the roads? You mentioned the roads, but it's insane?
What's going on right now? We'll Pauzilell bring out of
Killer back. It's six twenty six right now. But if
I have KC the talk station, ay great time, and anytime,
it's a great time for me to remind you that
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seven eighty four eighty three fifty five KRC. A minute

(01:33:17):
of hope is Channeline says, we've got a sunny day
in our hands. Today sixty one will be the high
drying to thirty five overnight with clear sky sunny again.
The Barns sixty five overnight down to forty four, partly
cloudy and a partly or rather a partly sunny day
on Sunday with the highest seventy two forty four degrees.
Right now, let's find out about the traffic update.

Speaker 6 (01:33:37):
Chuck from the UCLP Tramffic Center, Ken on the expert team,
and you see Health Orthopedic sand supports medicine no matter
the injury. Same day appointments are available schedule online at
do you see health dot com. Westbound two seventy five
slow from four to seventy one to the double A.
That's because northbound fourth seventy one is now shut down

(01:33:58):
at two seventy five from prom earlier. Southbound four seventy
one shutdown as well due to that fire underneath the bridge.
There's some broking down on forty two's ramp in Florence,
just south seventy five. The rampants blocked. Chuck Ingram on
fifty five krc the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:34:16):
Seven thirty to fifty five KRCD talk station. We're now
from now the other Republican running for County Commissioner, Jonathan Pearson,
joins a program at a thirty preceded by Matt Damaris,
vets Anne Bruce an opportunity for us to pay back
the American veteran and show appreciation for their service to
our country by buying them a beer. It's easy concept,
and they do a brew bus. So we're talking about

(01:34:38):
that at top of this hour. In the meantime in studio,
Adam Kaylor Adam Kaylor dot com koe h l e
R running for County Commissioner on a well really sound, contemplative,
minding the economics shop kind of platform. He wants to
ensure that we get every the value for every dollar
that's taken in. He's all about fiscal responsible ability, he's

(01:35:00):
all about open door policies. He's got some great ideas
for the county, starting with transparency. Goes back to this,
you know unit party we've got in county commissioners right now.
You don't get transparency when the whole thing's run by
one party. And I would probably say that about the
Republicans as well. We have number of illustrations Republicans not
playing nicely and that's not me and that's not what

(01:35:21):
I'm about, and I know that's not what Adam's about,
which is why I really like and trust him and
encourage you to vote for him or at least look
into him as a consideration. So, without further ado, I
know this is not a county issue, but it is
a county issue because it impacts everybody in the state
of Ohio. You and I were talking about Issue one,
and you know, by all accounts, it looks like it's
probably going to pass, and that is a terrible, terrible thing.

(01:35:43):
And I believe you had one statistic that said if
it does pass, it's going to flip four congressional seat
through that.

Speaker 12 (01:35:50):
Coming from the party here in Hamilton County. So I
was over at the East Side Republican Club speaking the
other day and I was told that it's actually from Ohio,
from this state of Ohio. This is coming down from
the state of Ohio. That it is currently the yes
votes are leading the no votes right now. So but
it's within the margin verra I mean, which is probably

(01:36:11):
a lot of times two to four points, right. So
if we don't want it to pass, which we should
not want Issue one to pass, you guys, you need
to vote no on Issue one. This is a hail
Mary by the Democrats, and not just Ohio Democrats. I'm
talking about California Democrats, New York Democrats, and Illinois chamiscracts, leftists,
Swiss leftists that are are bringing money in here and

(01:36:34):
throwing tons of money. Guys, you've got to go look
up the numbers on this money that they're they've put
into this issue one. They have lost Ohio, and they've
lost Ohio because Ohio voters are reasonable people and they
see what's going on with the Democratic Party. They see
how it's moving further and further left, and Ohio is
moved and voted more right. And this year, I mean

(01:36:57):
you you the polling is shown Republicans are up eight,
seven or eight points in Ohio already. When you look
at the polling, well in twenty twenty, they actually had
Trump only up like half a point or something in Ohio.
He end up winning Ohio by eight That's how big
the polling era was. I mean, you've got a seven
to eight point gap in the polling era in twenty twenty.

(01:37:19):
So if you apply that Trump could be up in
Ohio right now twelve to fifteen points, that would mean
they have completely lost Ohio in this issue one situation
is a hail Mary by the Democrats, and they're big
donors to have any bit of control and any hope
at controlling what happens.

Speaker 1 (01:37:35):
In Ohio, and which really really puzzles me when you
see some you know and say what you want about
them or their character or what wing within the Republican
Party they happen to be if they want Republicans to
continue to succeed and win in Ohio. Yet they're still
out there campaigning in favor of voting yes on one.
I just don't understand that at all.

Speaker 12 (01:37:56):
Well, to me, guys like this is going to be
a group of fifteen unelected people that are you know
by that are that are appointed by unelected people that
can only get rid of each other. This is adding
more bureaucracy. I mean, this is it's crazy. Guys like
you don't vote for any of these people. At least

(01:38:19):
people you vote for, you can vote them out.

Speaker 1 (01:38:21):
Exactly. We have no control over this group, and we
have the opportunity to take them to court if they
screw up a jerrymandering. This is still jerrymandering. Jerry mandering. Yeah,
it's just moving in from you know, elected officials over
to this unelected committee. Only individuals on the committee can
oust a fellow member, even for malfeasance. It's crazy. I you,
an elected official can't sue them for not doing their

(01:38:44):
job or doing their job inappropriately, which means they very
well but could become extremely political within their discussions about
jerry mandering.

Speaker 12 (01:38:52):
Yeah, and Brian's an attorney, so Brian, Brian can tell you.
I mean, I'm sure you've read through the language and
a lot of it's insanity. It's insanity, and this is
this is the most comp.

Speaker 1 (01:39:02):
Ridiculously complex process I think I've ever encountered. And I
have encountered a lot of crazy. I'm sure you have.

Speaker 12 (01:39:08):
Yeah, And I mean, guys, most of you aren't going
to read through the language the way a guy like
Brian knows how to read through the language. You'll, yeah,
you'll fall asleep exactly.

Speaker 2 (01:39:17):
Yeah.

Speaker 12 (01:39:17):
Part of being an attorney is being able to stay
awake while you're reading this stuff. But you know the
way they word things and the way when you go
to the polls or when you go and you go
to vote, You're going to read this thing and it's
going to seem super complicated. Just remember vote no, That's
all you got to do. Just go in there, vote no,
because this is insane.

Speaker 1 (01:39:36):
Guys.

Speaker 12 (01:39:36):
The last set of maps were approved by Democrats. I mean,
that's how we get them through. Yeah, it's it's not
like this wasn't a unanimously decided map. And the way
the maps get drawn up, like you kind of got
to keep each district the population, You got to think
about the culture there and all that.

Speaker 1 (01:39:54):
That's the way they have to do these maps. Now.

Speaker 12 (01:39:55):
So what's different about the way they're going to draw
these maps. Well, what's different is is you've got unelected
people doing it this time, unelected people who knows what
the Republicans that are going to get elected are those
rhino guys. I mean, if you're a hardcore Republican, you
should be concerned about the Republicans that are going to
be on that group representing you.

Speaker 1 (01:40:15):
You're like the blue twenty two. Oh yeah, like the
Blue twenty two guys. Great illustration of that one. Thanks
for me coming up with it, Adam Kahler. Don't go away.
We're going to continue here in a minute. First, a
very very strong recommendation to call fastened pro roofing for
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So if you need a new shingle roof, you're well

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covered with the Certainty land Mark Pro fifty years shingle.
But maybe you want a metal roof to substitute after
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Speaker 7 (01:41:04):
They do that.

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Maybe you need repairs on your slate, your air terra cotta,
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What's the best place to reach new customer? Time for
the nine first one weather forecast. Plenty of sunshine today,
highest sixty one, clear skuys overy night thirty five. It
will be sunny again the man with the high sixty five,

(01:42:06):
A few clouds over Saturday nine and a partly sunny
Sunday with the highest seventy two. I think it is
forty five degrees Right now, it's time for traffic.

Speaker 2 (01:42:15):
Chuck from the uc UP Tramphics Center.

Speaker 6 (01:42:18):
Count on the expert team at you See Health, Orthopedics
and Sports Medicine no matter the injury. Same day appointments
are available schedule online at you see health dot com.
North and southbound fourth seventy one shutdown. That is due
to an early morning fire underneath the bridge and they
need to do an inspection before anything can reopen. Westbound
two seventy five is heavy because that's where they're blocking

(01:42:39):
off northbound four seventy one, and that's the traffic continues
to THEAA Highway.

Speaker 2 (01:42:44):
Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRZ the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:42:50):
Seven one code UND seven forty two fifty five k
SE DE talk Station, enjoying my wide range of topic
conversation with Adam Kaylor who's running for Hamlet and County
Commissioner and the BEG Emphis. This of course all morning
throughout his campaign is he needs some diversity of opinion there.
If for no other reason, then an alternative point of
view might cause us when we read about it, to
engage in a little more discussion and debate about any

(01:43:12):
given issue. It's really critically important, and you can trust Adam.
He's not some wing nut where you know, he's actually
got this wonderful background, proven businessman. He understands things like
you know, crypto and technology. And he's used that even
in didn't you use that over some measure at this
a creative a school of creative and performing arts here

(01:43:33):
at your alma mater. Oh well, we did.

Speaker 12 (01:43:36):
I mean we've done tons of stuff, Like in twenty seventeen,
I brought the first ever crypto conference to the Midwest.
So and that was actually over at the Coming Convention
Center if you want to call that the Midwest, but
that was the that was the affordable convention center where
you'd bring it to. But we had two hundre people show.
It was two hundred bucks a ticket. Most of the
big cos in Cincinnati, Kroger, P ANDNG sent representatives there
to understand, you know what, how crypto is what a

(01:43:58):
digital dollar looks like.

Speaker 1 (01:44:00):
God forbid we ever get one of those here? Oh yeah,
I talked about that with Warren Davidson.

Speaker 12 (01:44:04):
Oh man, I'm telling you Warren Davids And one is
one of the OG's, Bernie Marino, one of the ogs.
He actually actually went to one of his blockchain conferences
up in Cleveland, was called block Land, and I wanted
to do here in Cincinnati. I want to probably bring
another one of these back, maybe next year, we'll see
how it goes. But I'm gonna call ours block toberfest.

Speaker 8 (01:44:24):
Ah.

Speaker 12 (01:44:25):
I love it, but AI blockchain, I mean you there's
a push by and I don't know what it is
on the left, but they are they are very hesitant
to adopt new technology. I mean even crypto blockchain stuff.
I mean, I was buying bitcoin was four hundred bucks,
you know, and now it's trading into a little over
seventy thousand dollars. And even though you have the evidence,
it's still like, oh, that's not good. That's not good AI.

(01:44:47):
I use AI every single day to write proposals to
change things. I mean to write copy, adjust copy. I mean,
these are technologies that could save tons of time. Think
about the county. These county workers. Every day, they do
these monotonous tasks that are boring. Why not get them
out of that kind of stuff. Incorporate something it's going

(01:45:08):
to save them time, make their jobs more efficient, and
make them happier.

Speaker 1 (01:45:12):
Well sounds like a good idea to me. So this
is the type of technology that you could bring to
Hamilton County as a commissioner. Yeah, money saving, time saving technology,
make make the workers happy.

Speaker 12 (01:45:24):
I mean my mom worked at the IRS that that
sweatshop they had over there for years. Hated it right,
pushing paper all day. I mean this was obviously the
eighties and nineties. But these government workers, I mean their jobs,
they are just the same thing over and over again.
I imagine that life coming in every single day, Like
you can't have an efficient county and you can't find

(01:45:45):
savings if your workers are miserable every day they hate
coming into their jobs.

Speaker 1 (01:45:50):
That creates great inefficiency.

Speaker 12 (01:45:51):
Great inefficiency, and we have to fix that. I bet
you if we just fix that and we have happier
workers at the county that are doing things that they
like to do that they actually they'd be doing when
they came and worked at that job, I bet you
we can find money savings just right there, all.

Speaker 1 (01:46:04):
Right, one more time with Adam Kaylergan Adam Kayler dot com.
Time to take a break at seven forty five right
now and remind you that medical imaging can in fact
be affordable. And you won't find affordability at the hospital
imaging department where they'll charge you I don't know, probably
no less than two thousand dollars for any given image,
whether it's an MRI CT scan, Echo cardigram ultra sound,

(01:46:25):
lung scoring lung screening rather cardiac scoring. All of these
images are done at Affordable Imaging Services at a mere fraction,
So an MRI at the hospital thirty five hundred dollars
separate bill for the board certified Radiologist report, which your
doctor will need. That's where the interpretation comes from. You
get a separate bill for that. So maybe you're out
of pocket four thousand dollars, or you have to pay

(01:46:47):
a sizeable fraction of that because maybe you haven't exhausted,
you're out of pocket, liability, you have a co pay,
whatever the case may be. I bet you're out of pocket.
It's going to be more expensive than the entire MRI,
which is four hundred and ninety five bucks. You need
a contrast, it's going to be a little bit more,
but everything comes with a Board Certified Radiologist Report CT
scan five grand at a hospital four p fifty. I

(01:47:08):
had my last CT scan at Affordable Imaging Services, where
the overhead is extraordinarily low. I'm not going to tell
you anything different, but it's the same equipment. It's smart
people who've been at this for like forty years doing
the imaging. Did my doctor look at the image and
say this isn't good or not understand? The radiologist sport
now it was all fine. I told her ahead of
time I wasn't going to go to the imaging department

(01:47:29):
at the hospital. She said fine, and everything turned out great,
including my bottom line, which was vastly improved over what
I would abay at the imaging department. So don't do that.
You have a choice when it comes to your medical care.
You can go to Affordable Imaging Services for your imaging
and save heap loads of money. Five one three seven,
five three eight thousand, five one three seven, five three

(01:47:49):
eight thousand and tell them, Brian said, how can you
get in touch with them? Go online? Check it all
out Affordable Medimaging dot com, fifty five KRC. Here's your
weather forecast and Channel nine sunny day to day with
the highest sixty one down to thirty five overnight clear
skies Sunday Tomorrow sixty five overnight partly thotty with a

(01:48:10):
low forty four. Sunday is going to be a partly
sunny day, said chancey Showers is on there. Seventy two
is going to be died right now, forty five degrees.
Time for a traffic update shuck from the.

Speaker 6 (01:48:22):
UC Health Traffic Center found on the expert team at
you See Health orth Phoenix. In sports medicine, No matter
the injury, same day appointments are available.

Speaker 2 (01:48:29):
Schedule online at u sehealth dot com.

Speaker 6 (01:48:32):
North and southbound four to seventy one shut down due
to problems underneath the bridge and there has to be
an inspection before any lanes can reopen. They've blocked off
northbound four seventy one at two seventy five and that
is slowing traffic over to the Double A Highway. Northbound
seventy five now up to a twenty minute delay between
Buttermilk and downtown.

Speaker 2 (01:48:52):
Schot Fingbermann fifty five krs the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:48:57):
Seven fifty here fifty five kr c detalk station grabbing
up this hour with one more saying with Adam khal Or,
a last opportunity to speak to if I've care see
morning show listeners in advance of Tuesday. And I think
he's making a good case across the board for his
understanding of matters political. Obviously, he is a broad level
of intelligence when it comes to you know, things technical

(01:49:18):
like cryptocurrency and even figured out a way that the
city of Cincinnati could make heaploads of money using their
solar panels to just mine crypto. And I thought, I
don't know that they can engage in private money making
enterprises like that, But he said, you really literally could
make money if you harness that electricity source and applied
it solely to mining crypto. And I don't want to

(01:49:41):
go down a whole road on that because to me,
that whole thing, that mining aspect, is like the peace
of God. It passes all human understanding. But you get
the last final words here, Adam. Let my listeners know
why it's important to vote for you. And maybe you
know you got a pet project you plan on kicking
off once you're elected. Let us know about it. Well.

Speaker 12 (01:49:58):
The big thing is is I'd love to audit the county.
I'd love to find out exactly where all of our
money's going. I'd love for taxpayers to be able to
go on log in see a pie chart of every
bit of tax are Say you paid you know, ten
thousand dollars in taxes last year. I want to see
a pie chart, and I want to see a breakdown
of where what every department got of my ten thousand dollars.

(01:50:20):
Then I want to be able to click into each
one of those and I want to be able to
find out what that department does. But more importantly, I
want to find out if they're hitting their goals. Do
they even have goals? Does the does the park system
have goals? Does the sheriff's department have goals? What are
your goals? Are we going to set goals that say, hey,
figure out how to save us ten percent more money

(01:50:41):
this year that we can reallocate into something else that's
going to.

Speaker 1 (01:50:46):
Right going this? I love that because going back to
your efficiency and your happy worker, you know, are more
productive kind of concept. We do have a tendency to
just say, oh, we love the parks, let's go vote
for the Levey. We don't know what's happening opening we
can see that, you know, I guess they're well maintained
or everything. But is there an easy Can you have
the same level of maintenance and upkey for less money?

(01:51:09):
Are they sure you can best the price? I know, well,
it's government, of course there is. I mean, in business
you're always trying to say happen. You have to, right
because you got to make your money as opposed to
take it from someone.

Speaker 12 (01:51:19):
Yeah, I need to hire more people, So why am
I wasting money in this category? Because more people are
going to produce more things for me. Right, So in
the county, you've got the same issue. It's it's let's
use the sign thing. For example, eleven thousand dollars for
five or six signs, and you go look at those
Chinsey signs. I mean, there's no way that should cost
eleven thousand dollars. Why is that eleven thousand dollars. Those

(01:51:42):
are the types of things that people that are in
power just kind of let it go. Well, it's a government,
just it should cost a lot of money, Like it's
crazy because you've got people grifting.

Speaker 1 (01:51:51):
Off of that. Or if I'm connected with someone in
government and I happen to be a sign maker, you know,
maybe they're gonna call me. I didn't solicit them necessary, Like, oh,
I know Brian, he makes signs. Let me just give
him a ring and see what it's gonna cost. And
in my head, I'm going, they don't care how much
it costs. It's government. They get the money from the taxpayers.
Eleven thousand, Sure you got the contract.

Speaker 12 (01:52:12):
Let's move on Brian, My four foot by foot signs
cost me sixty bucks.

Speaker 1 (01:52:17):
Sixty bucks.

Speaker 12 (01:52:18):
They're bigger than the signs that they put out there
and there in their core plast and they're not going anywhere.
He just you know, it would have been four hundred
bucks to print up.

Speaker 1 (01:52:25):
Six of those signs. But see just one small item
in a vastly larger pile of money and multiple individual
areas within the government entity that's Hamilton County, like the
parks and like the sewers, and you know, all of these.
I am certain if you did a full audit of them,
if you've had a you know, entity come out and

(01:52:47):
do a walk through of their practices and come up
with greater efficiencies. I mean, there are companies out there
that do that exact kind of thing I used to
advertise for Lean Arrow. I mean business consultants. They look
at your you know, practices, and they find areas where
you have inefficiencies, and they create new processes for them
that can be done in government. The only problem is
that usually results in, well, you know what, we really

(01:53:08):
don't need the extra ten people that we got here.
We're gonna have to let them go because they're not
doing anything. Well, that's what the government love. Well, Democrats
love bigger government because then they've got people tied their
careers are tied to voting Democrat.

Speaker 12 (01:53:21):
Yep, you have in the city, you haven't the county.
But you know, people always say, oh, well, you know,
I want to vote for the nice person. I want
to get them. No, we don't need nice people. We
need boodogs. We need people that are not afraid to
say no to some of this stuff. And right now
you got you know, you got rubber stamps.

Speaker 1 (01:53:36):
That's what we got. Well, at least as far as
we can tell, because not a whole lot of information
coming out of the Commissioner's office. No, where's your money going?

Speaker 5 (01:53:44):
Guys?

Speaker 1 (01:53:44):
Amen Adam kal Or dot com he's a good man.
I think you should vote from That's my opinion. Anyway.
I know who's getting my vote when it comes to
election day, and Adam is the man as well as
bottom of the hour next hour, Jonathan Pearson. He's running
for county commissioner. We'll hear from him in studio. Sandwiched
in between, we're gonna give some love to the American
veteran thanks to Matt Damars Vets and Bruise. We got

(01:54:06):
another bus tour coming up and more information about that.
It's an outstanding organization and Matt's a really good guy.
He'll be on after the news. I sure hope you
can stick around your voice. I drive around and talk
to a lot of people your vote.

Speaker 11 (01:54:17):
Trying to do my part to get Donald D.

Speaker 1 (01:54:19):
Trump reelected.

Speaker 10 (01:54:20):
On fifty five KRS the talk station. This weekend time
will fall back. Our clock will not change. Use updates
will still be delivered at the top of the hour
in thirty minutes past.

Speaker 1 (01:54:31):
On fifty five KRZ. Just shy of Ato six Here
fifty five ker CD talk Station. Brian Thomas having a
great Friday talking to candidates. We're gonna talk to one
more candidate, last opportunity for the election that week next
week Jonathan Pearson. He also is running for him and
county commissioner. But in the meantime, everybody listens to the

(01:54:52):
morning show regularly knows that I try to do whatever
I can for the American veterans. Since I didn't have
the spine to sign up for the American military and
myself and I appreciate the service everyone does has for
our country. It just means the world to me to
be able to spread the news about veterans, causes, veterans events,
helping veterans dealing with issues mental health and otherwise, but
also celebrating, of course the American veteran. And somebody knows

(01:55:16):
more about that than probably me in studio, Matt Tamaris,
who is responsible for the Vets and Bruce. It's an
opportunity for us to chip in a little bit of money,
buy a beer for an American veteran and also donate,
which is so cool that you've partnered with Patriots Landing.
Patriots Landing and Matt, it's great to have you back
in studio. Brother.

Speaker 13 (01:55:36):
Thanks.

Speaker 1 (01:55:38):
You raised so far about sixteen thousand dollars for Patriots Landing, right,
and you have bought, or we have collectively through our donations,
two five hundred and thirteen beers. So what you do
is you donate ten bucks to Vets and Bruce. Seven
dollars buys the beer, which is about the going rate
for your average craft beer these days. Sure, three dollars

(01:55:58):
goes to Patriot Landing.

Speaker 11 (01:56:00):
Yeah, and I think we're at about we're over three
thousand beers at this point.

Speaker 13 (01:56:04):
I haven't updated in a bunch on it.

Speaker 1 (01:56:09):
Well, you got three ten since I gave you a
donation this morning, since veterans. Ten veterans out there going
to get some love, and I love it again. Patriots
Landing is an outstanding organization. I can just do that
real quick, Patriots Landing dot org. These folks are so awesome.
They have a wood shop and they make these handmade,
handcrafted by veteran items. You know, the Patriot flag, you got,

(01:56:32):
the the nine which is an American flag that's got
nine millimeter spent casings in lieu of the stars, the
wonderful cross they have which is neat but all kinds,
And it's all started with them making the flag boxes,
which are the exclusive flag boxes used at Arlington National Cemetery.
And right on the back you'll see the name of

(01:56:53):
the veteran who crafted the box. So all of these
things are available at Patriots Landing dot org. But more fundamentally,
it's an organist station that brings veterans together. It's like
a shared space, almost like a you know, a club
or fraternity for veterans to share their experiences and maybe
get through troubled times. All while working on these projects,
people go and visit it, and I encourage everybody to

(01:57:14):
go to Patriots Landing dot orgon then schedule a visit
to go see what they're doing. They love when folks
swing by and you'll be inspired. And I know you
were inspired. You that's why you teamed up of them.

Speaker 13 (01:57:24):
Yeah.

Speaker 11 (01:57:25):
And I went to the original shop back in the
day when I first met him. I mean the new
the new facility is amazing down there.

Speaker 5 (01:57:31):
I love it.

Speaker 1 (01:57:32):
Yeah, and you help build it.

Speaker 4 (01:57:34):
I guess.

Speaker 1 (01:57:34):
Well, you know it's from the from the from the
files of every little bit counts. That's what vets and
bruises all about. Yeah, So anyway you got I went
last year on the bus tour honor bus. You were
not there. I wasn't you did not show what you
were out of town. I think you were going. You
went to a concert, didn't you.

Speaker 13 (01:57:51):
It was a family, family vacation. We went to a concert.

Speaker 5 (01:57:54):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:57:55):
I'm surprised you survived that one. Anyway, we don't need
to go to details about the concert, but uh, I'll
tell you it was a hell of a good time.

Speaker 13 (01:58:02):
Yeah, I'm glad you enjoyed it.

Speaker 1 (01:58:03):
Yeah, my son and I went in. We just it
was great. You get on the bus, you go from
brewery to brewery, and there's all kinds of fun games
that go along with this. I'm not going to reveal
anything you told me about this year's event, but let's
talk about the details on that. How many people can go?

Speaker 10 (01:58:20):
Do we?

Speaker 1 (01:58:21):
Is it still open to sign up for veterans? Can
people just show up at any one of the stops
along the way. How does it work?

Speaker 3 (01:58:26):
Right?

Speaker 11 (01:58:27):
So the bus is already full, and you know, we
have two school buses. I have to keep a couple
of seats empty in case people need to stretch out.
But I've I think we've were at like ninety or
eighty eight or ninety people this year. It's nuts, man,
And I thought, like, you know, grabbing a second bus
was going to alleviate my standby list that everybody gets on.

(01:58:47):
They're always like, hey man, I want to go put
me on a stand by list. My stand by list
is five times longer than it was last year. I'm
trying to get as many people on as I can.
But you know, it's full at this point except for
a couple of seats that I say for for maybe
a few of your listeners. But if you want to
come to the events. These are open to the public.
So I'll be posting on vetsen Brus this week the

(01:59:10):
Facebook page and the website what the schedule is going
to be. If you're if you feel like you want
to come down and see us and say hi and
take part in the Veterans Day events that the brewers
are hosting, come on through.

Speaker 13 (01:59:21):
It'll be a great time and throughout the year.

Speaker 1 (01:59:25):
Of the weeks. I mean, this isn't just a one
time event per year. You're you're buying beers for veterans
all year round. And also you you're the flag boxes,
thanks to Patriots Landing, operate as donation centers too. Yeah,
they've turned them into like piggybanks. Yeah, donation boxes can
throw money in any any bar that's assisting you. And
there are quite a few bars out there that have

(01:59:45):
the donation boxes in them. So throughout the year. So
what do you need to show up someplace and you
find out someone's a veteran and you buy them a beer,
that's it.

Speaker 11 (01:59:52):
I look for hats, you know, I'm getting pretty good
at I'm about.

Speaker 13 (01:59:57):
Fifty to fifty.

Speaker 11 (01:59:58):
I guess sometimes I go up to folks and they're like, no,
I'm not, and I just think, well, you look like
a VET, you know.

Speaker 7 (02:00:02):
What I mean?

Speaker 11 (02:00:03):
If they got a hat on or they got a
tattoo that you know says it, then I know for sure.
But yeah, I just wherever I go, man, I'm looking
for you guys. And if if I have a donation,
I'm to buy a.

Speaker 1 (02:00:13):
Beer, absolutely right. Yeah. I get a big kick out
of the A lot of seniors all wear their hat
which ship they served on. You know, I love that
because I know who they are and I can walk
up and just even casually walk them by thank you
for your service to our country. It puts a smile
on their face and it makes me feel better than
to get a little bit of love. But all right,
so let's go through the schedule, shall we, Sure, because

(02:00:36):
you're going to post it on your again. Vets and
Bruis dot com is where you can also make a donation.
You can buy a vet a beer. I'm looking at
it right now. Click on the link buy a Veta
beer and again it's only it's a mere ten dollars donation,
but feel free to go ahead and give them more.
And also, where did you hear about this list there.
You should put fifty five KC dot detalk station on

(02:00:58):
that list, Matt. Okay, next time, I up, I'm gonna
look for that. But on there, what day of the
week is it?

Speaker 11 (02:01:04):
This is, uh, next Saturday, So November ninth, Stursday is
on Monday. So we always take them out on Saturday
so they have a little time to recover.

Speaker 1 (02:01:13):
Yeah, and you get them home at a reasonable time too. U.
Let's just stay out afterwards. Yeah, No one's gonna stop
you from getting off the party bus and walking back
into the brewery and and and continuing the festivities. But
it starts at listman.

Speaker 9 (02:01:28):
Yeah.

Speaker 11 (02:01:28):
Every year, that's that's the main stop. They have the
Operation Flintlock Release. That's with the Marine Corps and you know,
I think they're raising money for toys for tots on
that one. But uh, they have the Marine Corps toast
every year. And you saw it last year.

Speaker 2 (02:01:44):
Man.

Speaker 11 (02:01:44):
It's about thirty forty five minutes and they go through
all these battles and I mean it's moving.

Speaker 1 (02:01:50):
It's a powerful days. You know, I had never heard
that before. Yeah, oh sir listening, Oh my god, this
is a thing, man.

Speaker 11 (02:01:58):
And you hear thirty forty five minutes, Like that's a
long time to sit down and talk and do toast too.

Speaker 13 (02:02:02):
But man, I was I was glued to this like
speaker the whole time.

Speaker 1 (02:02:07):
Oh yeah, it was. It was fascinating. Yeah, and you're
drinking beer anyway, so rather than talking to the bud
sitting at the table, you're listening to this wonderful toast
and yeah, you know, maybe hearing something for the first
time you hadn't heard that is for those folks that
didn't serve in the Marines anyway. But so that's taking
place at listenman, should we spend noon until one thirty?
Get on the bus and the bus then heads on

(02:02:28):
over to Fretboard in Fretboard Brewering in Blue Ash love
their beer. Said that starts at one forty five and
you're there to three fifteen. Chostracker just said he will
probably join you at Fretboard. Oh nice.

Speaker 11 (02:02:40):
Yeah, I asked him if you wanted to see it
on the bus this year. I hadn't heard from him,
but I'm glad he's gonna come out. Man, I want
him to see it. I think it's there's something in
hearing about it and some you know, seeing it It
makes a big difference.

Speaker 13 (02:02:50):
Man, it's a cool thing.

Speaker 1 (02:02:51):
Well, and you got something going on at each brewery too,
So for example, you mentioned the Marine Corps toast Listenerman
Brewery when you get to Fretboard in addition to drink beers,
which is always good, veterans drink for free. Yeah.

Speaker 13 (02:03:03):
Yeah, as long as I have donations, I'll run them out.

Speaker 1 (02:03:06):
And it got a lot and I know, so at
fret Board you're doing the saluting our Vietnam heroes a
tribute of honor. Before the show started, Matt, you had
mentioned how much you were really hoping that you get
a huge contingent of Vietnam veterans to show up, maybe
make a pit stop over at this particular brewery or

(02:03:26):
that one.

Speaker 11 (02:03:26):
Yeah, if you're around and you're a Vietnam VET or
you know, a Vietnam vet, bring them through. My dad
was a Vietnam VET, so we went to we went
to veteran events all time, and he would always be like, man,
that never happened. When we came home, you know what
I mean, He's like, look at this, and he's like
it was not like this. You know, we were getting
spat on or you know, call it all kinds of names.

(02:03:46):
So I heard that my whole life, and when Fret
Bog gave me the opportunity to create my own event,
I was like, we got to do something for them.

Speaker 13 (02:03:54):
So it's kind of honoring my dad, you know.

Speaker 5 (02:03:56):
What I mean.

Speaker 13 (02:03:56):
We're gonna we're gonna bring these guys in. We got
Craig Key from Channel nine News. He's gonna be the presenter. Awesome,
We're gonna pack that room up.

Speaker 11 (02:04:05):
We're gonna really honor these folks and just show them
some love, the love they they should have got.

Speaker 1 (02:04:11):
And of course everyone will be there primarily to see
just just Trecker. But yeah, of course, now you know
that's what was a really moving thing about the most
recent honor flight. And they're more and more Vietnam veterans
on honor flights, but this most recent one was almost
exclusively Vietnam veterans. Yeah, and from I heard a massive

(02:04:32):
allergy outbreaks during that return home ceremony at CVG, just
given the veterans of they're the welcome home that they
never got. Just like your dad, We love you guys,
and apologies on behalf of all Americans who were so
shortsighted and callous and mean as to spit upon you
because you served your country and followed your leader's orders,

(02:04:52):
as stupid as they may have been. Anyway, March first,
Brewing is the third stop, that one you're gonna You're
gonna get over there by four pm? Is that right?

Speaker 5 (02:05:00):
Uh?

Speaker 13 (02:05:00):
Yeah, that'd be.

Speaker 11 (02:05:01):
That's that's about the time we'll be rolling in, depending
on traffic and stuff. But we're doing a all branch
freedom toast down there, and that's going to be hosted
by a good friend of mine. He's been with Vets
and Bruce since the very first event he came to.
His name Sean Rohorr. He works with the Easter Seals.
He put together a toast similar to the Marine Corps

(02:05:22):
host because everyone loves it so much. But he said, hey, man,
I want to do one where we toast to all
the branches.

Speaker 1 (02:05:28):
So okay, now you already mentioned all the buses are
full except for three seats, yep, and that the expense
of the bus is coming from, you know, out of
the proceeds. But you know, you get close to the
point where you know, do I give money to Patriots
landing or do I reserve money for the third bus?
For next year so we can take the stress off
of Matt Tamaris's household budget. There is right there at

(02:05:52):
Vetsenbruce dot com a link to sponsor and honor Bus
and you can do that. It's really easy to do.
Just throw a little money at it and we'll build
up the coffers to have more honor busses for next year.
But you can also be a sponsor. You got somebody did?
Did someone sign up to be a sponsor? Again?

Speaker 13 (02:06:09):
We have tons coming in.

Speaker 11 (02:06:10):
Man, We've sold out the Level two sponsorship Level one,
it's one thousand dollars for sponsorship. We have three of
those spots left, and then we have unlimited one hundred
dollars sponsorships. So if you want to sponsor a vet,
I mean they're getting they're getting the red carpet laid
out for him. I mean we're we're gonna treat them
really well and make sure that they have an experience

(02:06:32):
that they're never gonna forget. So all the money we
collect from this sponsorship drive is just to push in
the honor bus and make sure it's it's something that
they remember forever.

Speaker 1 (02:06:43):
So do the sponsorship money also go to buy beers
or does it go to offset expenses?

Speaker 13 (02:06:48):
It goes to both.

Speaker 11 (02:06:50):
So so the one hundred bucks I gave you, I
could be a sponsor. Then you are a sponsor. I said,
you're going on the shirt. Man, Oh, you're always on
the shirt. Every time you give me money, you're listed
as a sponsor.

Speaker 5 (02:07:01):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (02:07:01):
I think that's why he makes the trip in studio
because he knows I'm a soft touch and it comes
to donating to veterans causes, and I just like the
idea that drinking beer. Yeah, we're so bill. I know
there's a million heavy problems and issues and concerns, and
oh my god, the world's falling apart all around us.
And when event like this comes up from I get

(02:07:22):
so excited because you know, first it involves veterans, and
second it's a great time. God, does anybody smile anymore?
Does anybody celebrate and get together and just not complain
and moan here I'm worrying about FCC compliance here, Matt,
I just get excited about this.

Speaker 11 (02:07:41):
On the ninth, we're gonna have two bustloads ninety people.
They're gonna be all teeth all day. I promise that
all day.

Speaker 1 (02:07:47):
If any if last year was any indication about how
much fun it is going to be, double that this year.
And the more people show up at these breweries, the
even better time it's gonna be. So you don't need
to be on the bus. Show up between noon and
one thirty. Listterman Brewery between one forty five and three fifteen,
Fretboard and Blue Ash between three thirty roughly and five
point fifteen. That's March First Brewery, March First Brewing. That's

(02:08:11):
Fountain Square.

Speaker 13 (02:08:12):
Yeah, that's that's the old rock Bottom. Oh okay, right there.

Speaker 5 (02:08:16):
All right?

Speaker 1 (02:08:17):
So you another around town.

Speaker 13 (02:08:18):
We do and you saw it last year.

Speaker 11 (02:08:20):
We have a welcoming line, so when the vets get
off the bus, the public comes out and they form
a line. They wave flags. Next year and the veterans
get to walk right through the line as they enter
the brewery. So if you if you want to get
there and be a part of that, it's special.

Speaker 1 (02:08:34):
Man, Matthew Maris, God bless you for what you're doing, man,
bringing some fun and helping veterans. That's and Bruce dot
com help out. Show up. It's gonna be great. I
am pretty certain I'm free. I'm gonna to check my
calendar to see if I can show up at one
of the one of the breweries. But yeah, man, you
can count on me if I got some free time
I schedule because I don't want to miss it. Heck yeah,

(02:08:55):
good luck folks help them out. That's and Bruce dot
com Joe put all the information of the blog page
if i've case dot com and he'll update the the
Vetsanbruis dot com page to include the full schedule. And
of course don't forget to click on the sponsorship or
buy vet beer links right there, eight twenty Right now,
fifty five k sedtalk station. Stick around bottom of the hour,
we're gonna hear from Jonathan Pearson, who's also running for

(02:09:17):
county commissioner. Good day to be on the show. Last
opportunity for folks to chime in on it, and we'll
hear from Jonathan just a few minutes. Stay right here
at fifty five Carse the talk station, fifty five KRCRE.
It is your Channel nine's first warning weather forecast. It's
gonna beautiful day to day. If i'd like low sixties temperatures,
that's we're gonna get sunny skies in sixty one for

(02:09:39):
the high thirty five overnight with clear skies sunny and
sixty five tomorrow even better then overnight down to forty
four with partly cloty skies any partly sunny. Game Day
Sunday with the highest seventy two forty four. Right now,
let's hear about Travis editions Chuck.

Speaker 6 (02:09:53):
From the UCUT Tramphing Center. Count on the expert team
at you See Health Orthopedic saands Sports Medicine. No matter
the injury, same day appointments are available schedule online at
you see how dot com. Botbound four seventy one is
blocked off in two seventy five, all due to the
problems on the bridge. All the entrance rams from Southgate
from Grand, from Memorial and Bellevue all blocked off because

(02:10:16):
of the closure. Southbound four seventy one is blocked coming
out of downtown. Chuck Abram on fifty five krc the
talk station.

Speaker 1 (02:10:26):
A twenty nine fifty five KRCD talk station, and a
very happy Friday too.

Speaker 4 (02:10:30):
You.

Speaker 1 (02:10:30):
I hope you have some good plans for the weekend.
I'm excited about that Vets and Bruce bus next Saturday.
I sure hope I can make it to one of
the bars. Anyhow, in studio, we only had a whole
hour with Adam Keayler at seven oh five. He's running
for county commissioner, and so is my next guest in studio,
Jonathan Pierson. Great to have you back. It's always good
to see you.

Speaker 7 (02:10:48):
Yeah, thank you.

Speaker 1 (02:10:48):
I appreciate the time. I appreciate you making the effort
to come in. It's much easier to have a conversation
with someone when you're staring the man in the face.
Of course, you have motivations for running er County commissioner,
and Adam express quite a few different ones, just the
whole concept of having an alternative political voice because if
you get a different point of view. Obviously it's run

(02:11:10):
by Democrats now, but we tend to have different political
philosophies Republicans and Democrats, and it seems to me that
they're getting further and further apart. But if I had
to really peg generally speaking, you know, this is not
a free pass for all people who label themselves Republicans.
But I think Republicans tend to look at politics and
budgets from a fiscal responsibility an efficiency standpoint. We want

(02:11:33):
smaller government, and the government that we have, we want
to be very efficient. That doesn't seem to be the
mindset of Democrats across the board, and Adam was pointing
that out. Listen, if I just got or a Republican
on commission, they at least have a dissenting voice, which
would raise the level of the public's awareness that an
issue is even being discussed, because right now we get nothing.

Speaker 14 (02:11:55):
No, there's no transparency that I've told every news outlet
I've talked to said, I'll come to you every Friday
and we'll talk about what went on. I love that
because it's first of all, we don't have any nuclear
secrets in this county, so there's nothing secret. That's what
I've never understood. There's nothing secret. You want to know
what the sheriff makes here it is, you want to

(02:12:16):
know what the deputies make here it is. You want
to know what the commissioners and their workers make here
it is. And I think that's been the challenge. It
was nice to see in the paper the other day
that there was a number that finally freaked out the
commissioners to say no, a billion dollars from Risdom. So
we do know that there is a number out there.
It's only a billion, but it's a starting point. Only

(02:12:38):
you know, a billion here, a billion there. Eventually we'll
talk about real.

Speaker 1 (02:12:40):
Money, Yeah, exactly, like a thirty five trillion dollars budget
or debt with a trillion dollars annual debt service.

Speaker 5 (02:12:46):
You know that.

Speaker 14 (02:12:47):
And I think that's the challenges from the Democrats standpoint.
They don't see tax dollars as the people's money. They
see the tax dollars as their money. So if you
actually say we're not going to raise the budget this year,
they call of the budget cut. And that's the difference
between a Republican and a Democrat. We don't see it
as a budget cut. What we see it is returning

(02:13:08):
money to the people, just as the tax dollars the rollback.
Why isn't that permanent? And first of all, why do
we have to put it in there to bribe you
to get in some more money to build a stadium.
That always bugged me. That was a bribe, flat out
bride it was, and unfortunately people fell for it, and
typical of vays, they didn't make once. Once a tax
is made, never comes back. Well, we've got to stop

(02:13:31):
this mentality. We're not bribing the people to make them
give us money. That seems ludicrous in the first place,
plus insulting. Let's do a right budget that people go.
I can agree with that.

Speaker 1 (02:13:42):
Yeah, and similar and I keep bringing up Adam Kaylor,
but comparable positions. You know, let's go line by line.
Let's get the taxpayer and explanation, like if they're paying
ten thousand dollars a year in taxes, let's show me
exactly what percentage is going where. And then let's look
at each individual office government of course or under the

(02:14:02):
commissioner's you know control or within their reach, and look
at each one and see, you know, the world's a
different place. And he mentioned artificial intelligence can be used
as streamline processes, you know, maybe pair back some of
the employees in the county or otherwise give them something
more fit, more, something better to do that would cheer
them up. But I know there's waste. Oh, you know

(02:14:25):
there's waste.

Speaker 2 (02:14:26):
Well, here's what I always say.

Speaker 14 (02:14:27):
If if there's a lack of transparency, you have to
question why there's I don't care who we're talking about,
you know, if there's a lack of transparency and the
communications of a parent to a child, let's even go
that mundane. But especially when you're talking to government to
the people, you have to be a little concerned when
there's a lack of transparency. You just have to be

(02:14:48):
because why, it's it's not their money, it's it's our money.
It's the people's money that people have a right to know.
And so Adam and I are in the same page.
We're on the exact same page and looking at that budget,
we're in the zac same page about letting people know
where that money's going so that there's not a question.
And our goal is to set up in such a
way that it's going to be really hard to do

(02:15:09):
something stupid with the money.

Speaker 1 (02:15:11):
I love that. I love it. And of course, with
your open door policy and your promise to the press
that you'll show up every week explaining what has gone
on the preceding week, that that is a unique idea
that has not been embraced by someone in politics before.
It just seems that no one is ever willing to
do that, or alternatively, if it is happening, there's no
local reporter there to even hear what you're saying. And

(02:15:33):
I think that may be more of a problem.

Speaker 14 (02:15:35):
It's a position that's paid well at the very least,
if you're being paid by the people, you should probably
talk to the people. What's a complicated concept, Jonathan Pearson.
If you want information about Jonathan where he stands on issues,
go to Hamilton County Republican Party dot org. And he's
got his own page right there. Jonathan Pearson, twenty twenty four.

(02:15:56):
It should be really easy to find it, or alternatively,
do what I did. Jonathan Pearson, jail jo Na Thha
and Pearson is typing that a county commissioner. It'll pop
right up on your search engine. We'll continue with Jonathan.
It's Ay thirty five. Here, stay right around at fifty
five KCD talk station fifty five car the talk station.

Speaker 1 (02:16:17):
Have you heard about this guy?

Speaker 2 (02:16:18):
Donald Rainwater.

Speaker 1 (02:16:21):
Here's your Channel nine first morning weather forecast. Had pretty
nice day to day, plenty of sun, highest sixty one,
clear of a night, down to thirty five sunny tomorrow
with the highest sixty five, get some clouds over Saturday
night and drop to forty four partly sunny day on Sunday.
Maybe a shower chance anyhow, And I have seventy two,
forty four degrees right now, let's get an update from Chuck.
What's going on brother from the.

Speaker 6 (02:16:43):
Uc UP Tramphics Center coun on the expert team at
you See Health Arthopedix Sands Sports Medicine. No matter the injury,
same day appointments are available schedule online at you seehealth
dot com. North Bound four seventy one and southbound four
seventy one are both blocked off the bridge thanks to
an overnight fire underneath the bridge. They've blocked off the
traffic on northbound four seventy one at two seventy five.

(02:17:06):
That's making for a slow go over to the Double
A Highway inbound seventy four. They just cleared their record
seventy five Chuck Ingramom fifty five krc the talk station.

Speaker 1 (02:17:18):
Hey, thirty eight fifty five KRCD Talk Station, A very
happy Friday too. You don't forget fifty five kr sea
dot com. Get your iHeart Media so you can stream
the audio and check out the podcast anytime you want.
Really valuable information from Dave Hatter This morning Tech Friday,
as is always the case, full hour with Adam Kayler
running for Commissioner. We had Matt Damaris on the vets
and Bruce Love that organization and Jonathan Pearson in studio,

(02:17:40):
he's also running for Commissioner on a solid, open door,
open book platform because he wants to know the information
and as a taxpayer, you should too, or at least
if you'll want it, you should be able to get it.
You know, you were talking about that they refuse to
provide information. They're not open with the books. Where do
the money goes? Specifically? They talk in platitudes and generalities

(02:18:02):
about where the money is being spent, but not you know, specifically.
You know, reminded me of all these House committees looking
for information, and they preside over and are responsible to
the American voter for what Department of Justice, the FBI,
any of the lettered agencies does, and those agencies basically

(02:18:23):
raise a metaphorical, if not real, middle finger to the
request for information from the people who are in charge
and responsible for looking out for us. It's kind of
a it's a uniquely bizarre, yet it widely embraced concept
that well.

Speaker 14 (02:18:39):
I think part of the problem is that we see
on the left that they're driven by emotion, and so
you speak from emotion first, and you don't always write
that stuff down at least not accurately. Let's say it
that way, you vote money the same way. You just go, ah,
let's take care of this problem without considering how much
that problem costs.

Speaker 1 (02:19:00):
And so you just say yes to these things.

Speaker 2 (02:19:02):
And then when somebody ask you, why did you do this?
How much did you spend?

Speaker 14 (02:19:06):
Honestly, I do believe there are many people on the
left who honestly can't answer that question truthfully because they
don't know.

Speaker 1 (02:19:12):
Well, you could probably say the same thing on the right,
because if we ask for it, and it's a commission
governed by all Democrats, then the right's not going to
get the information even now.

Speaker 14 (02:19:20):
Yeah, that's that's a great challenge, and that's why we're
sitting here in this kind of staring at the wall moment,
and everybody's going and then when something stupid does happen,
which we've seen of late, there's just a rewrite of
what actually happened.

Speaker 1 (02:19:34):
That and of course a lost opportunity to get ahead
of the problem, right, having an open conversation about the
best practice for solving the problem, or even identifying if
whatever it is that's brought up is a problem in
the first place. Yeah, I mean, we all love our parks.
But if they ask for a levee, is it just
simply you know, we're gonna, oh my god, if we
don't pass the levee, the parks are going to close

(02:19:55):
down at this.

Speaker 2 (02:19:55):
Way double the library levee.

Speaker 14 (02:19:57):
And they didn't even need it. Yeah, I know, but
you can get your if you work there, you can
get a sex change and for free.

Speaker 1 (02:20:03):
Now apparently so sex change Simps. There's a library where
at Sims Township on Enyard. It's in Hamilton County and
it's perfectly fine. The building is beautiful. They're going to
knock it down and build a new one and move
it back. And you know why they're knocking down a

(02:20:24):
perfectly good, beautiful building. They say there's not enough parking
right there. And I thought to myself, there is a
huge front yard. It's just like, you know, a third
acre of grass pave it. What is that going to
ruin the aesthetics of the library because you have parking
all around the library as opposed to just on the
left hand side. I just heard that yesterday. I couldn't

(02:20:46):
believe it. But that's going to be millions of dollars.

Speaker 14 (02:20:48):
But when tax dollars are involved, Unfortunately, people don't see
the number.

Speaker 2 (02:20:54):
They just see the idea and say, let's do it.

Speaker 1 (02:20:57):
All right, let's pivot over to something that is very controversial.
You'll consider we got that shaft the first time around,
the pay Corse Stadium lease and the obligations under the lease,
which is going to expire unless the Bengals exercise their
right to extend it, which they can do multiple times.
So we're either going to get a brand new lease
deal or that one's going to be extended and will

(02:21:17):
still be subject to the original terms of conditions which
obligate the taxpayers of Hamilton, KNTY to make some improvements.
Last bill I heard was one point three or two
billion dollars.

Speaker 14 (02:21:27):
One point three billion was just for the upgrades around it.
That didn't include the roof that you know.

Speaker 2 (02:21:32):
Oh, that the dome is.

Speaker 1 (02:21:34):
Is that that's gone. Yeah, that was going to be
a total and two point three billion if you put
the dome over it. So we're not getting done.

Speaker 14 (02:21:40):
But the challenge that we face in all of this
is one of those things is having some luxury apartment
our offices, so the Bengals can have their own separate
office building outside of that building.

Speaker 1 (02:21:49):
That see, and I would argue that's not part of
the stadium upgrades. That's well, you can see. There's a
lot of things I look at and go, wait a minute.

Speaker 14 (02:21:56):
Because the Bengals play ten games a year for them,
it's great for the community when they play the games
here and they come in great. But that's ten out
of three hundred and sixty five days. What's going on
with the stadium the other three hundred and fifty five days?
Why does the county not control it the other three
hundred and fifty five days. We gave away the farm

(02:22:17):
on that first lease, right, and so mine is simple.
Let's go back and remember and remind everybody that the
county owns the stadium. We call it pay Corps Bengal Stadium,
but it's the county. It's Hampling Counties Stadium. We build it,
we own it.

Speaker 1 (02:22:35):
And so I think we had to share the royalties
with the Brown family with the Paid Corps naming.

Speaker 14 (02:22:39):
We need to remember, you know whose it is, and
you know there's nothing wrong with leasing something to a
private entity. We do that in many cases. Government and
private unities do work together. But the fact that we
act as if we have no control we can't say
anything because they get to pick when the dates are
that something comes in and uses it. And so we

(02:23:00):
saw these opportunities because we can't use a stadium because
we effectively.

Speaker 1 (02:23:05):
We gave them away to the family. And I don't
understand that.

Speaker 14 (02:23:09):
I have to admit I'm I'm a little jaded by
that because I've said before without sounding wrong to a
lot of people, but not one brick at the PNG
Towers downtown was bought by the county. So I think
that we need to start to reconsider what is it
we're actually doing here. And I think that this gets
into back sports is always emotional fans. I mean, let's

(02:23:32):
be honest. As a fan, there isn't a logic while
we're a fan. This year the Bengals are not giving
us a reason to be a fan. Yet why are
people fans? It's emotional, nothing wrong with that, but we
have to stop for a moment in that emotion and
set aside lodge, you know, step into logic and go, okay,
let's look at this. Let's look at this reasonable, Let's
look at this honestly and say, okay, we're leasing this

(02:23:54):
to an NFL team, which is worth billions and we
get very little in rett turned percentage wise? What exactly
is wrong with this?

Speaker 1 (02:24:03):
Yeah, and moving away from the emotional angle of sports,
take emotion out of it and consider any project where
you're asking the taxpayers to front the bill the money
and played back then it was what twenty five years
ago was four hundred and fifty million dollars, and that
obviously today would be more like two billion or three
billion the way they're building these stadiums these days. But

(02:24:23):
if you took it outside of the realm of sports
and just say, well, we're going to spend three billion
dollars in taxpayer money on any one facility that will
only be used ten times a year, and you would
be everybody would look at you. You can act like
you were just backcrap insane. Well, pause would be one
more back with Jonathan Pearson for un Ellen County Commissioner.

(02:24:46):
It's a forty six right now, stay right here at
fifty five KRC DE talk station, fifty five KRC dot
Com eight nine fifty five r C the talk station.
Happy Friday.

Speaker 4 (02:25:03):
Gee, say it.

Speaker 1 (02:25:17):
Out loud, Joey. In spite of the chaos political division
in sanity, Yes it can be a wonderful world just
depends on where you're looking, and Vets and Bruce proved
that with Matt Damaris earlier on. We're going to have
a wonderful time next Saturday. Everybody's invited to join any
of the one of the breweries we're going to be
stopping off at, so make sure you check it all

(02:25:37):
out at five KRC dot com. And in the meantime,
we got Jonathan Pearson in house talking Hamilton Kinty issues.
So we dealt sort of kind of with the pay
Course stadium. The lease, which is I think right now
being discussed and negotiated with the current commissioner made up.

Speaker 2 (02:25:52):
Yeah it is.

Speaker 14 (02:25:53):
I mean, at least there is a level of understanding
even in the current mix of like maybe we shouldn't
be given the farm.

Speaker 4 (02:26:01):
Yeah, and.

Speaker 1 (02:26:04):
I guess the least though that limits the use and
availability of the stadium to whatever conditions in terms the
Brown family decides, back to your point on that giant
facility only be used about ten times a year. It's
the idea that it also requires these upgrades. It's like

(02:26:24):
keeping up with the Joneses. I mean, honestly, I know
Riverfront Stadium wasn't the greatest place to sit. It was cold.
I was there for the Freezer Bowl. I left it
halftime like a sane person should have. But you know
it worked. There was a football field, there were bathrooms.
Are not the nicest ones in the world, but you
know what it functioned. This is a currently functioning stadium.

(02:26:48):
I mean, I'd seen the grand scheme of things twenty
five years old. Isn't that long. Can you imagine if
we upgraded every building after twenty five years and added
all new amenities, literally every building, what the overall costs
would be. And then you have to step back as commissioner,
is it even really necessary?

Speaker 7 (02:27:05):
So?

Speaker 1 (02:27:05):
I know the contract says it is, and the contract
already says we as taxpayers have to pay for it
at least a certain percentage, But there's no is it
necessary component going on in there?

Speaker 2 (02:27:17):
Well, I think.

Speaker 14 (02:27:19):
A level of Again, this gets us back to the emotion.
In sports, we get more caught up in the emotion
than we do logic, and so we look at things
saying it has to be pretty, it has to be this,
it has to be that, And.

Speaker 1 (02:27:30):
Does the average fan give a rip about how the
locker room looks.

Speaker 14 (02:27:34):
Well, how many of us remember going to a football
game a deal at Old Nippart when you know, if
you tripped, you are four hundred steps down on field,
if you were up at the top.

Speaker 1 (02:27:43):
Especially if you were slinging that schnapps bag.

Speaker 14 (02:27:46):
You know, well you know when they charge you a
buck to get in the game and the quarter for beer. Yeah,
a lot of people had a hard time navigating steps.
I went there in the eighties, so yes.

Speaker 2 (02:27:55):
I did too, That's right.

Speaker 14 (02:27:56):
I'm laughing about it because how many of us sat
there and go, gosh, this game to be so much nicer,
if the stadium was nicer.

Speaker 1 (02:28:03):
When none of us thought that. We thought it was fun.

Speaker 4 (02:28:06):
It was.

Speaker 14 (02:28:06):
It was fun, And I think that's it's the infamous.
You know, football is made to be played in mud football,
you know, that type of mentality and a.

Speaker 1 (02:28:13):
Sort of rug it outdoors, the attitude like if you
if you go to the freezer ball you stick it
out through, you're a real man, or you sucked it
up in the name of the fans.

Speaker 14 (02:28:20):
And I was there for the whole thing. So but
I think that's the problem. We went past that nostalgic
this is fun, you know. I feel the bite of
the weather, I feel the mud in my face type
of thing too. Oh, this is a sanitized game.

Speaker 1 (02:28:33):
It's clean.

Speaker 14 (02:28:33):
We've got to have everything prim and proper. The seats
need to be sold, all the walkways need to be
perfectly this and that.

Speaker 1 (02:28:39):
The beers need to be twelve thirty dollars a pop.

Speaker 14 (02:28:41):
I think we forgot to look at it from a
logic standpoint again. You know, I know because see I
hears remind people that the commissioner's office is the most
boring important job in the county, and the boring part
is the logic side. We have to stick to logic.
There is not a motion in money, and that's the problem.
We put a motion in money and then we start
doing stupid things with it.

Speaker 1 (02:29:02):
And let's finally depart and talk a little before we depart,
rather talk about I have no idea. I haven't heard
anything written about it for a while. The whole situation
between the county and the city, in terms of the
sewer systems and the well, that cent degree and all that.
You know, we didn't have a choice.

Speaker 2 (02:29:18):
We had those systems have to be split.

Speaker 14 (02:29:21):
So Northern Kentucky's going through the same pain that we're
going through just a little less dollars, but same exact problem.

Speaker 1 (02:29:26):
And I will not argue that people's basements are being
flooded with sewage. I obviously it needs to be fixed.

Speaker 14 (02:29:32):
Yeah, well, when you have metro sewer says you know,
here's a thousand bucks, fix your basement, But they do
it to the same family ten twenty times. At a
certain point you have to say, maybe there's a problem
in the sewer system. So there was a problem in
the sewer system. The challenge is, how do you put
in a storm drain next to a sanitary's sewer system

(02:29:52):
without completely disrupting every single neighborhood involved. And so from
a practical standpoint, it's almost impossible. Yeah, from a money standpoint,
it costs a fortune, and the problem is in that fortune,
how much of that is being well managed? And I
honestly don't know those numbers to tell you how well
they are being managed. And that's one of the things
I've said, and my thing I would I would sit

(02:30:15):
down with those in the charge of this every single week.
I would talk to the subcontractors at least every week,
if not every other week. And people say, that's a
lot of work again. The commissioners are paid help well.
I wish we would remind people they're paid showing up
at a ribbon cutting and showing up an other things.
I don't care, you know, as I told tell people,

(02:30:36):
I said, I got married when I was handsome enough
to attract my wife. It doesn't matter anymore. She thinks
I'm still handsome. My kids think I am too. I
don't need to impress anybody with my good looks because
I don't have them anymore. So I can get away
with not going to ribbon cutting, but I can still
show up to talk to the contractors. And that is
what we're paid for as commissioners, is to do the job.

Speaker 1 (02:30:55):
Imagine that logic and reason and a man worth voting
for Jonathan Pierce and you got tuesday. Up until Tuesday,
you can early vote cash your vote for Jonathan and
let's have a better path any Obviously, if you and
Adam Keaylor both got elected into Hammi Candy commissioners, the
level of transparency I see, I think is guaranteed. You're
both on the same page. You're both fiscally responsible, and

(02:31:17):
you both know there's money that can be found and
saved through a thoughtful, thorough analysis. Jonathan, I wish you
the best of luck. I can't thank you enough for
showing up today and talking to my listeners about these
important matters. Folks. If you didn't get a chance to
listen tech Friday with Dave Hatter, I mentioned Adam Keayler,
who's institudo for an hour seven oh five with that
podcast fifty five Caresey dot com. That's in Bruce. You

(02:31:37):
got the the bus cruising around next Saturday. The bus
is full, but you can join the festivities at one
of the three breweries that they'll be stopping Tough in
special effort to get Vietnam veterans there. So please, if
you can participate and have a fun time doing it,
smile on your face and a beer hoisted in the
name of veterans, and of course my conversation here with

(02:31:58):
Jonathan Pearson day with the Smither event, and of course Monday. Monday, folks,
I hope you have an absolutely wonderful weekend, and don't
go away because Lundback will be right up your twenty
twenty four election headquarters.

Speaker 5 (02:32:10):
Every voter should be asking whether America can survive.

Speaker 10 (02:32:14):
Four more years of fifty five KRCD talk station.

Speaker 2 (02:32:18):
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