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January 27, 2025 • 148 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:07):
Five o five fifty five KRC the talk station.

Speaker 2 (00:13):
Happy Monday, say your fire, Yes indeed, and many people
are Happy Monday to you. Brian Thomas right here, glad

(00:35):
to be good, to see Joe Streger, Worry belongs in
the executive production booth, and a nice lineup. Always look
forward to Mondays, and for no other reason. Then we
get to talk with the former Vice mayor of the
City of Cincinnati, Christopher Smith Van coming up at seven
twenty every Monday, get the smither Vent and Monday Monday
with Brian James back on the plate eight oh five
for that one. As his tradition, Trump's tax plan. We'll

(00:56):
talk homestalls apparently stalled mortgages or I guess, cooling off
the sale of homes, thirty two hour workweek question mark,
and looking at your phone at work is costing you money.

Speaker 1 (01:12):
That's with Brian James. As four topics.

Speaker 2 (01:14):
We'll hear from Buddy Levy or Levy with his book
Realm of Ice and Sky, Triumph Tragedy and History's Greatest
Arctic rec Rescue apparently an award winning author known for
books on Arctic history. This one's about the aerial exploration
to reach the Summit of the Earth. I guess I

(01:36):
don't know blimpse or something. So anyway, we'll hear from
Buddy on that. Let him explain it. It's his book.
You'll be able to get a copy that at fifty
five care se dot com, where you can also get
a well some great stuff from Patriots Landing helping out
veterans dealing with their well trials and tribulations. The beautiful
workshop and the fun things that they make for folks,

(01:56):
and the flag boxes and the new cross they've got there.
I don't know what they're going to call it, but
Jesus Cross, I believe is what it's called. But bottom
line is this. All the craft products are made by veterans,
signed by the veteran who made them, and Patriots Landings
provides this wonderful environment for veterans to hang out together commissery,

(02:17):
share their stories, get emotional support, and of course employment.

Speaker 1 (02:22):
So you're supporting a.

Speaker 2 (02:23):
Wonderful organization when you buy one of their products, and
they welcome tours and folks that stop over and say hello.
Real close to the ARC exhibit in Kentucky, Heavens Gain
Ministries providing services for families who lose their babies during pregnancy.
Really sad topic, but I'm glad they're there for those
folks out in the world that really emotionally devastated from

(02:47):
the loss of a child and needs services. And there
they are, right there Heaven's Game providing those services. Congressman
Warren Davidson doctor Congressman Davidson for a few segments. Check
out that podcast as well, and of course every Friday
Tech Fight with Dave Hatter uh and get your iHeart
media by her here at fifty five KRC dot com.
What is going on the world allway? Welcome phone calls,

(03:08):
as I always do. Feel free to call five one, three, seven,
four nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two
to three taco with pound five fifty if you have
an AT and T phone.

Speaker 1 (03:16):
Where to start?

Speaker 2 (03:16):
How about immigration, calling it shock and awe, ICE gathering
up record numbers of folks over the weekend and throughout
last week. Government Deportation Force said it made nearly one
thousand new arrests yesterday alone, four to a total about
twenty four hundred. And I must note they obviously ICE

(03:40):
knows where these folks are. The criminal illegal immigrants they're
having such great success rounding them up. Clearly they know
the location of where these folks.

Speaker 1 (03:51):
Are hanging out.

Speaker 2 (03:51):
Dozens of gang members, migrants tied to the trade, the
Aragua Gang, convicted murderers, habitual drunken drivers, drug dealers, migrants
charged with sex crimes, all among the twenty four hundred
that have been picked up so far. And they are
not done by any stretch of the imagination. ICE announced
yesterday had begun target They had begun enhanced targeted operations,

(04:16):
specifically in Chicago. In addition, the Army's wanted first Airborne
Division said it was mobilizing troops for a military police
battalion to help deal with the invasion of illegal immigrants invasions,
the word the Trump used. Pentagon officials have said the
additional military person will help the border patrol spot illegal
border for crossings. We now have military planes being used

(04:38):
to import migrants from the border directly back to their
home countries. And got a side note on that. One
Columbia talked to Big Talk, but they had to back
off and get to that. In a second, illegal border
crossings dropped thirty five percent in the first three days
of the Trump administration, compared to the last three days

(05:00):
of the Biden administration.

Speaker 1 (05:01):
Ah, how about that, it's the words getting out.

Speaker 2 (05:05):
Officials in Pema County, Arizona announced that they were shutting
down two migrant shelters because no illegal immigrants had been
caught and released into the community since Trump took office. Huh, elections,
I guess have consequences. Trump's borders are tom home and
over the weekend. Specifically, Yesterday, said that the moves are

(05:25):
designed to send a message that the Biden days of
leniency for illegal border crossing are row or quote. If
we don't show there's consequences, you're never going to fix
the border problem. ICE has been posting the numbers on
its x account. They said they made five hundred and
thirty eight arrest Thursday, five hundred and ninety three on Friday,

(05:46):
two hundred and eighty six on Saturday, and then nine
hundred and fifty six yesterday. They also logged or lodged
rather seventeen hundred and ninety seven deportation detainer quest with
other law enforcement agencies, which basically tell the law enforcement
agencies out there when one of the wanted illegal immigrants

(06:07):
is getting ready to be released from custody domestically, deportation
officers will be there to pick that person up when
they leave prison. So I say, averaged nearly six hundred
arrest a day for the four day period, ninety increase
over the pace under the Biden administration. There you have it,

(06:29):
it's working. And as for Columbia, Columbian President Gustavo Petro he, well,
you said that backpedal a little bit. He refused to
accept deportation flights from the United States after Trump was
sent them there. There's a couple of military transport planes
that were sent to Columbia. Well, Columbia said, no, you
can't land here. Well, Trump threatened tariffs and other message

(06:55):
against Columbia, which resulted in Gustavo Patros saying never mind,
never mind. White House confirmed yesterday Columbia's president had caved
in his words of the statement to all of President
Trump's terms, including the unrestricted acceptance of all illegal aliens
from Columbia returned from the United States, including on US

(07:18):
military aircraft, without limitation or delay.

Speaker 3 (07:22):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (07:23):
The statement went on to say, based on this agreement,
the fully a drafted IEEPA tariff and sanctions will be
held in reserved and not signed. Unless Columbia fails to
honor this agreement, the visa sanctions issued by the State
Department and enhanced inspections from Custom and Border Protection will
remain in effect until the first planeload of Columbian deportees

(07:46):
is successfully returned. Today's events make it clear to the
world that America is respected again. President Trump will continue
to fiercely protect our nation's sovereignty and expects all other
nations of the world to fully equip operate and accepting
deportation of their citizens illegally present in the United States.

Speaker 1 (08:06):
Just put an exclamation point on that one.

Speaker 2 (08:11):
So over the weekend, we sent two flights of Columbian
illegal aliens. Patro rejected the flights, saying that the US
cannot treat Colombian migrants as criminals. In a statement from Patro,
I deny the entry of American planes carrying Columbian migrants
into our territory. The United States must establish a protocol

(08:32):
for the dignified treatment of migrants before we receive them.

Speaker 1 (08:37):
Huh, dignified well.

Speaker 2 (08:42):
In response to that, Trump said he ordered a twenty
five percent tariff on all goods coming into the United
States from Columbia, and he said he'd raised it to
fifty percent after one week. He also ordered a travel
ban in visa revocations for all Colombian government officials, plus
allies and supporters whoops. Writing on social media, Trump says

(09:08):
Patroos denial of these flights has jeopardized the national security
and public safety of the United States. So I've directed
my administration to immediately take the following, urgent and decisive
retaliatory measures, according to Senator Marco Rubio, following President Patro's

(09:33):
refusal except two re patriation flights he had previously authorized,
Ruby immediately ordered a suspension of visas at the US
Embassy Bogatah Consular Section. State Department said Secretary of Rubio
is now authorizing travel sanctions on individuals and their families

(09:54):
who were responsible for interference of US repatriation flag and operations.
Well steps like that to get Patro to change his
mind and accept, unequal without reservation, all of Trump's demands,
and in fact, he tried to do a counter sanctions.
Yesterday afternoon, patrostered a similar threat to Trump, saying he

(10:17):
ordered his foreign trade minister to raise tariffs on import
from the US by twenty five percent. Later, he went
on a rant. He said he raised the tariffs to
fifty percent. I have informed that you imposed fifty percent
tariff on the fruits of our human labor to enter
the United States, and I do the same.

Speaker 1 (10:38):
Well until you don't, eh, you know, got it?

Speaker 2 (10:48):
You got to telegraph strength. Trump's not going to play around.
I mean, I think this is an important thing to note.
You work with us, you take your people back. They're
here illegally, they're causing a problem with our national security. Uh,
or you suffer the consequences. Who's in a better bargaining position,
Columbia or the United States. Yes, we do have the

(11:09):
world's biggest economy, So say what you want about tariffs,
but in situations like this, apparently they work. Five sixteen
fifty five KARO City talk Station. Feel free to coffee,
got something you want to talk about and I'll be
back after these brief words.

Speaker 1 (11:26):
He pardoned.

Speaker 2 (11:27):
Everybody knocking out, though other talk shows can knock at
the door, but only sean Heat to Shay have five
twenty here at fifty five kre CD talk station five one, three, seven,
four nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred eighty two to
three talk or pound five fifty on at and t pounds.
So are Trump's policies regarding uh immigration and cracking down

(11:49):
and getting rid of primarily the criminal element, sending the
criminal element back to their countries of origin are those cruel?
So Saith prominent Democrats and liberal media voices. That's reporting
from Fox News claiming the deportation campaign is an act

(12:09):
of cruelty. Someone who has very little credibility, Reverend Al Sharpton.
He's on over an MSNBC, so nobody heard him say this,
called Trump's immigration orders a civil liberties nightmare, claiming the
ICE raids were racist and give leeway for agents to

(12:33):
abuse migrants. Here's what the reverend had to say. When
you look at the fact that there's a serious element
of profiling here, I pauster a moment profiling is doing
law enforcement. As I suggested earlier, I have a pretty
solid belief that ICE knows very well where a lot
of these illegal immigrants are. You know, they were given

(12:55):
the cell phones and a tracking number and a court date,
and I think they were, you know, when they were
taken to the sanctuary cities wherever they landed in some shelter,
their names and information are noted. But in a final analysis,
you're looking for specific people. You know, one particular guy,
maybe it's a Haitian immigrant, someone who committed crime. You know,

(13:17):
he happens to be staying at this particular shelter. ICE
goes and does their law enforcement work and looks for
that particular person.

Speaker 1 (13:23):
Profiling. Yes, he is.

Speaker 2 (13:25):
The specific colors of skin, a specific country of origin,
has a name, we've got his DNA evidence or something
like that. You're profiling. You're looking for those particular people.
Of course, there's a serious element of profiling here. He
said that we're looking for people of a certain black
or brown color. When we're looking at the fact that

(13:45):
this is a president that has told law enforcement to
be tough on people who don't even put their heads
down when you're throwing them into a police fan. He's
opening the doors for police brutality. So I assume that
would go with Ice as well.

Speaker 3 (13:59):
Well.

Speaker 2 (13:59):
He can assume that all day long. But yeah, in
some cases, you will be looking for a specific black
or brown person. You might also be looking for a
specific Asian person, someone from the Chinese Communist Party who
we know is here to do us no good.

Speaker 1 (14:14):
Whatsoever.

Speaker 2 (14:15):
You don't look for white people or black people if
you're looking for an Asian CNN political combinator commentator Maria Cardona.
All of it is focused on cruelty, she said, on division,
on separating families and inflicting as much pain as possible

(14:36):
in communities across the country. Uh, national security, law enforcement.
They're picking up criminals, people with convictions, and its inflicting
as much pain as possible on communities across the country.
I hate to have to say this, but an unchecked,

(14:57):
unregulated influx of thousands of people into communities that basically
double the community's population in size overnight, that inflicts a
lot of pain on the communities themselves. The mere presence
of illegal immigrants taking resources and well valuable resources, most
notably classroom space and shelter dollars. I mean, all of

(15:19):
this inflicts pain on the communities. She happened to just
focus on the pain that the illegal immigrants are putting
on these communities once he ann political commentator named Kate Bettingfield.
I think Trump seems to be sometimes quite gleeful in
pursuing policies that are hurting young children or hurting young families.

(15:40):
What about those young children who were traffic sold basically
into slavery, were sexually abused by gangs and traffic to
perverts across this country. A lot of those still involved
in that. What about the pain that's inflicted on them?
I just have to ask out loud because you know

(16:02):
that WES view this from one just one sided lens
and fail to appreciate that you know, there's more than
one argument to be made here. We have immigration laws,
the president is enforcing them, and get a load of
this for those who do not like birthright citizenship. The
Center for Immigration Studies, described as a nonprofit research organization

(16:23):
focusing on immigration, release the report Friday. They're preliminary findings
showed that there were between two hundred and twenty five
and two hundred and fifty thousand US berths to illegal
immigrants and counter, you're twenty twenty three seven percent of
total births in the US that year, two hundred and

(16:47):
fifty thousand, they say, to put the figure in context,
those figures are greater than the total number of births
in all but two states taken individually. And they also
said that appears more children board to illegal immigrant parents
than to legal non citizens and they suggest that twenty

(17:08):
twenty four numbers will likely to be even higher given
the surge, of course of illegal immigrants into the country
of the Biden Mitigranate administration. So there's some real hard
numbers on that now. I don't think it's going to
change the situation that we see the reality of birthright citizenship.
You know, I got one court ruling already said that,
you know, Trump's order banning birthright citizenship is not constitutional,

(17:33):
and I do believe that it's going to stand, and
that's going to be the viewpoint of any other courts
that address that issue, like.

Speaker 3 (17:39):
It or not.

Speaker 2 (17:40):
Five twenty five. If five cares the detalk station, local
stories coming up. If you prefer to call, I prefer
to talk with you, So feel free to do that,
but regardlessly back after these brief words. As President Trump
takes office under the orders I sawn today.

Speaker 1 (17:54):
A flurry of executive orders are flying off his desk.

Speaker 4 (17:57):
We are establishing the External Revenue Service, says, ignating the
cartels as foreign terrorists organizable.

Speaker 5 (18:06):
Then the Green New Deal, and drill, baby, drill, keep.

Speaker 6 (18:11):
It here for the very latest.

Speaker 5 (18:13):
All of this will change starting today.

Speaker 1 (18:16):
Fifty five KRS the talk station.

Speaker 4 (18:19):
Not thinking about radio think again, because more people are
listening to the radio on iHeart today than they did five.

Speaker 2 (18:26):
Twenty nine at fifty five KRC Detalk station Monday, like
it or not. At least count talked to Christopher Smithman
in the seven o'clock hour and Brian James in the
eight o'clock hour. Talk with you if you care to
call five one, three, seven, four, nine, fifty five hundred,
eight hundred and eighty two three talk or pound five
fifty on eight and T phones. How Department of Transportation
says it haul over twenty seven truckloads of concrete from

(18:48):
Hilltop Concrete right there in near pay Corse Stadium while
it lasts over to the construction side of the Daniel
Carter Beard Bridge. First four two hundred and fifty qbic
yards of concrete. We'll take between seven and ten days
to cure, they say. After that's done, the next is
what they call a closure for according to hot Department
of Transportation, that described as bridging the gap between the

(19:10):
new deck and the existing deck of the bridge. They
said the cold weather has been challenging. The concrete requires
temperatures above forty degrees to cure so Crows crews have
used a series of forced air heaters and insulated blankets
and tarts to keep the concrete at a constant temperature.
They say the project completion is still on track to
end in March. This is creepy a former underscore City

(19:38):
Harrison Police officer facing voyeurism charges involving a minor. Miami
Tauche Police Department SAT officers arrested Eric Gregory, who's forty five,
of Milford after investigating complaining of voyeurism at a home
on Elm Street back in January twentieth. Claremont County Prosecutor's
Office is charged Gregory with two felonies alleging he filmed

(19:59):
teenagers in a bathroom. In addition to the voyeurism charge,
is also charged with tampering with evidence. Harrison Police Department
news release said they've been notified about ongoing investigation involving Gregory.
Gregory placed on paid administrative leave Harrison Police that he
resigned on Friday. Previously worked as a park ranger for
Hamilton County Park District. Also a certified Ohio peace officer.

(20:23):
Currently in the Claremont County jail with a quarter of
a million dollar bond expected to be in court January thirtieth.
If you're not doing anything, thank you, Joe.

Speaker 7 (20:33):
The biggest douche of the universe, in all the galaxies,
there's no bigger douche than you. You've reached the top,
the pinnacle of douche dom.

Speaker 1 (20:46):
Good going, Deu. Your dreams have come true.

Speaker 2 (20:53):
Well played? Oh yeah, definitely. You don't think police officers
get a pass in that, Joe. They get it worse. Yeah,
there may be that police are investigating a double shooting
took place in deer Park yesterday afternoon. An adult mijuvenile

(21:15):
currently at a nearby hospital and critical condition, according to
Deer Park Police Chief Dave Batten. Investigator said the shooting
may have taken place in a garage of the home
i BD forty block at Glenway Avenue at ten till
three in the afternoon, right before the start of the
football game. Incidentally to be a domestic related and there's
no threat to the general public. According to the Deer

(21:36):
Park Police in a press release, shooting still under investigation.
We have limited details at the moment, so I'm sure
then give credit to Fox nineteen for reporting on that one.
They'll updated when they get more details. Let's see Adams
County of a person dead after shooting occurred early Sunday
morning in Manchester. According to deputies with the Adams County

(21:58):
Sheriff's Office, forty seven year old James Land shot and
killed by forty three year old Jason Strain of Bowling Green,
Kentucky Sheriff's Office road. In a press release, deputies say
they received several reports of gunshots heard in the area
the three twelve East Seventh Street that looks like quarter
to four in the morning or a quarter to five

(22:19):
in the morning. Officers got there, they found Land suffering
from fatal injuries. Witnesses described as suspects vehicle leaving the
area where the shots were fired. Deputy said Strain had
fled the scene was believed to be heading toward Bowling Green.
State High Patrol intel traffic cameras helped locate the strains
vehicle at approximately ten to thirty in the morning. Bowling

(22:40):
Green Police Department conducted the traffic stop, took Strain into custody,
currently behind bars in the Warren County Jail facing local
charges and charges out of Adams County, Okay.

Speaker 1 (22:52):
Home of Harvest Home Fair.

Speaker 2 (22:54):
The park at thirty nine to sixty one North Bend
Road in chivi Itt honors original settlers of Chivy who
once called the land home. With more than one hundred
and sixty years of history, Harvestomfair one of the city's
largest events. The city wants to revitalize the space that
coincides with the city's push to upgrade its Harrison Avenue

(23:14):
business district less than a mile from the park, with
an effort to attract more people and young families to
the west side. City of eighty six hundred people, Revent
comes after Shiviya. It was selected as one of two
to fifty communities in Ohio to help celebrate America's two
hundred and fifty birth fiftieth Birthday on July fourth of
next year. Cities, villages, and townships and counties have the
opportunity to be highlighted on the nation's semi quin centennial

(23:39):
anniversary That's a mouthful and showcase their culture as it
relates to the American history. In addition to hold of
public hearings, Chiviot City Council allocated twenty five thousand dollars
for a contractor to devise a park renovation master plan.
The city Park Board will also work with the community
groups that determine how new amenities could benefit community events.

(24:00):
Among the recommendations and improved baseball field eliminate the former
field and implement a slightly larger one, still designed for children.
New playground for five to twelve year olds. Re located
exercise equipment, Longer fitness trail. Apparently the exercise stations are
staggered along a fitness trail. The trail will be extended
in a loop around the park. Additional length is to

(24:21):
be determined, but could be about a half a mile
to three quarters of a mile. Permanent amphitheater allowing year
round performance arts events including the use of harvest home fare,
grand promenade and pedestrian connections. The pedestrian entrance on the
north Bend road side of the park lined with trees
and lead to a new tree surrounded picnic grove. A

(24:43):
future pool and spray ground expansion, expanding the spray ground,
splash pad and pooled on the southern edge of the park.
Those they say are a long term goal, so nothing
immediate on that one. And finally, additional parking on the
western end edge of the park off Davis Avenue. So
big thing is coming to Harvest Home. Glad to hear

(25:04):
about that. I hope they have the money and I hope, uh, well,
the community approves of what they're planning. Five point thirty
five right now, fifty five cars to detalk station.

Speaker 1 (25:13):
What are just ice cold week and two weeks we've
been having.

Speaker 2 (25:16):
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(25:37):
There's a substantial likelihood that you can save more than
the cost of the insulation on a monthly basis every time. Well,
when you get your energy bill, you'll notice the definite improvement.
Energy savings are guaranteed. You could be under insulated, or
you could have no insulation in the exterior wall, so
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The phone goes with your old insulation. If there's nothing

(25:58):
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Like I always say, the ultimate no brainer pays for itself.
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(26:20):
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Speaker 5 (26:24):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station, your.

Speaker 2 (26:28):
Stupid five on him too or hear from you five
one three seven four nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred
and eight two three talk or a pound five fifty
on at and T phones. Little Miami Brewery next Wednesday,
the fifth of February, is that we're going to be
for our listener lunch.

Speaker 1 (26:43):
You can make it.

Speaker 2 (26:44):
Milford is the town. Little Miami Brewery is the venue.
We've been there several times and they always treat us nice, foods,
good and I know the fellowship will be outstanding.

Speaker 1 (26:54):
So if you're not doing anything.

Speaker 2 (26:55):
Next Wednesday, about eleven thirty noon ish, show up at
Little Miami and enjoy the the Fellowship Stack. A stupid
time got to heart for CONNECTICU where police are searching
for the suspect who opened fire at a twelve year
old who threw a snowball at a car. Perien is

(27:15):
the biggest core around this morning universe.

Speaker 7 (27:19):
In all the galaxies, there's no big adduce than you.

Speaker 2 (27:24):
Officers responded to the port of the shooting seven to
fifteen pm when they discovered the injured victim court to
the hard for Police. Juvenile victim reportedly struck several times,
suffered from non life threatening gunshot wounds, and taken to
the Connecticut Children's Medical Center. Hartford Mayor Major Police Major
Crimes and Crime Scene Division launched an investigation into the incident.

(27:50):
Lieutenant Aaron Biosper told USA Today that the incident happened
after the twelve year old threw a snowball. Court to
the local news WFSB, Connecticut, the victim was playing with
a friend who was eleven, when the vehicle circled around
and started shooting. Police were reviewing video and other leads
to aid and identifying the car and the occupants. As

(28:11):
of Friday morning, anyway, no one had been arrested in
connection with the case. Really well go to Houston. Houston
Police Officers Union had had issued statement after multiple officers

(28:34):
were caught what they described as stunt driving in the snow.
One guy posted on social media, Haymon brown, y'all look
at the HPD man. Look they're out there doing donuts.
What not eating donuts? Doing donuts? Remember it's snowed in
Houston for the first time in like forever. What everyone's

(28:57):
taking having some fun in the snow, including the cops
seen doing donuts near a church on Houston's south Side
snow covered parking lot and why not of the local
RG Global church. Second video taking across town in a
galleria area best Buy, where another marked police car is

(29:19):
seen doing donuts in the empty parking lot. Video also
appears to show another officers standing watch, so people on
social media filming this. Before he began filming, one guy
said he saw the police unit swerving around a shopping
cart drifting. Houston Police Officers Union, in the statement, said

(29:42):
cops love donuts lol. Police union, however, never addressed the
officer's conduct and it's riding. Cameras captured a closed section
South Loop near the Golf Freeway. Officers seen driving the

(30:03):
wrong way down the freeway, turning and then turning again
a total of six times. Houston Police, on their own statement, said,
the police Department is aware of two videos circulating on
social media showing Mark patrol units driving in the snow
and parking lots. We take this matter seriously and are
currently reviewing the incidents. One additional fact. Once additional facts
are gathered, appropriate steps we'll be taken to address the

(30:24):
situation internally. None of the officers have been identified publicly
at least yet. Wow, cops can have fun too, can't they?

Speaker 1 (30:39):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (30:40):
Just lighting up Francis, Amen, brother, Amen? And how about
getting rid of the pain this year?

Speaker 1 (30:48):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (30:50):
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hip pain, joint pain, arthritic pain. It started out a
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then the off joint pain started impacting everything in your life,
from walking to climbing stairs, getting in out of the car.

Speaker 1 (31:06):
All of it hurts.

Speaker 2 (31:06):
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(31:29):
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(31:51):
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Speaker 1 (32:08):
Fifty five KRC Yellow.

Speaker 2 (32:12):
Five fifty here fifty five kr C detalk station. Back
to the stacko is stupid looking forward to seven to
twenty with Christopher Smith and I hope you are as well.
Anytime you cannot listen live, feel free to head on
over to the podcast page fifty five KRC dot com,
cut and paste and send it over to your friends
if you think that's an interesting UH story that they
should hear about.

Speaker 6 (32:31):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (32:31):
Springfield. We got a Springfield, Missouri. I think police there
arrested a man accusing of robbing, shooting at, and holding
four juveniles at gunpoint. Accord to the probable cause davem In.
The group was four, was ding dong ditching in the
Edgewood Street area and approached the home occupied by forty

(32:53):
year old Melvin Rankin. I think we got another award
to attack on to the other two you gave out
this morning. Joe, one of the juveniles, rang the doorbell
twice until they heard a gun shot from the garage.
The group fled and drove away from the area before
noticing they were being followed by Rankin. Group hit a
dead end. Rankin stopped, pointed a gun at the four

(33:14):
juveniles and told them to lay on the ground. One
of the kids said they were just playing ding Dong ditch,
but Rankin demanded the and ultimately took the keys of
their vehicle and left. Monday, January twentieth, officers arrested him
during a traffic stop and conducted a search of his residence,
where they found a twelve or twenty gage shotgun in
his home, along with two handguns and a controlled substance

(33:38):
in his vehicle. Officers spoke with Rankin's significant other, who
said that when they heard the knock at the door,
they observed through a ring camera a man wearing a
mask and what they thought was a gun in his hand.
She looked at ring footage earlier later again saw that
the man was in fact wearing gloves. Rankin currently charged

(33:58):
with six felonies, including first degree robbery, two counts of
an armed criminal action, unlawful use of a weapon, unlawful
possession of a firearm. Probable Cause. Statement also notes that
rank Can have been under permanent GPS monitoring because of
a first degree statutory rape conviction and being registered as
a sex offender. Also been convicted of possession of a

(34:20):
controlled substance, breaking and entering and driving while revoked.

Speaker 7 (34:25):
You've reached the top the pinnacle of dousdom. Good going due,
Your dreams have true.

Speaker 2 (34:36):
Keep your finger on that button, Joe, keep your finger
on that button. Why it's a good question. A Sacramento
judge released Pulitzer Prize winning cartoonist Darren Bell from custody
last Thursday, head of the February fourth court date, while
prosecutors were adding more chound poor allegations to his case.

(34:58):
Forty nine year old Belt forty nine year old Bell
facing a number of conditions for release. More charges are
being filed than in an amended complaint by the Sacramento
County prosecutors, who now alleged the acclaimed cartoonists collected thousands
of explicit images of children. Was being held at the

(35:20):
Sacramento County Maine Jail in Louisville one million dollar bill
since he was arrested a week ago. Prosecutors presented three
new allegations at the hearing on Thursday. The bail hearing
before Sacramento Superior Court Judge SHAWNA.

Speaker 1 (35:33):
Franklin.

Speaker 2 (35:38):
The additional accounts two of unlawfully possessing child sex content,
third similar possession on charge on the day of his arrest.
They also argued that for a search of all of
Bell's electronic devices and a bar Bell father of four,
from any contact with miners. Deputy District attorney prosecuting the case,
Michelle Carson, alleged thousands of images, including of infants and toddlers,

(36:03):
stored on Bell's computer, as well as other images believe
creative the artificial intelligence prosecutor Carlson told Franklin that the
District Attorney's and office investigators still must pour over and
estimated two hundred thousand images. Public defender argued for his release,

(36:26):
saying as no criminal record would be monitored out of
custody in court. Also argued that with the seizure of
Bell's electronics, his wife and family have been cut off
from access to bank records, accounts, and other financial records.
Said the national and international attention that came from the
award winning, nationally syndicated cartoonist arrests eliminates him as a

(36:48):
flight risk. Detectives set a tip from the National Center
for Missing and Exploited Children that someone had uploaded eighteen
files of child sex abuse material to the Internet led
them to Bell's home. They located one hundred and thirty
four videos of child sexual abuse material, located and linked
to the same account owned and controlled by Darren Bell.

(37:13):
Cartoonists and leftist too. By by all accounts, he's a
real left wing nut job.

Speaker 1 (37:18):
So how many awards? How many?

Speaker 3 (37:21):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (37:21):
Definitely? How many wards would we give out this morning?
That four, three or four well deserved each of them.
And yes, Joe, Happy Monday. Five fifty five fifty five
KR City Talk Station. More to talk about the six
o'clock hour, and phone calls are always quite welcome, so
feel free to ring up fifty five KRC Morning Show'll
be right back.

Speaker 8 (37:41):
Your voice reshing your country for reasonable American fifty five
KRC the talk station.

Speaker 2 (37:52):
You've been here at fifty five Krcity Talk Station. Brian
Thomas wishing everyone a very happy Monday. Like it or not,
it's Monday, but it's a good time to betune at
the fifty five Casey Morning Show. Of course, I always
appreciate hearing from you. If you'd like to call, feel free.
You've got a whole hour here to talk before we
get to Christopher Smithman coming up for the next hour
at seven to twenty. Former Vice mayor of the City
of Cincinnati joins the morning show every Monday at seven

(38:14):
twenty to vent his spleeing, hence the Smith event. Monday
Monday with Brian James. Today we'll talk about Trump's tax plan,
home sales apparently staged given the mortgages are running around
seven percent, Is the thirty two hour work week going
to be a thing, And finally, looking at your phone
at work is costing you money? Brian James those topics
atgainadaight oh five. Buddy Lovey with the book Realm of

(38:36):
Ice and Sky. He'll join the program at eight forty.
Talk about that. It's about triumph tragedy in history's greatest
Arctic rescue. He's a writer about Arctic exploration, so this
is one of a series of books that he's written. Again,
that'll take place at eight forty. I remember fifty five

(38:58):
Kersey dot com. Get your I heart media and stream
the iHeartMedia content, including all the podcasts on my podcast page.
Fifty five care Sea dot com. I'll just do this
real quick. It's kind of an extension of the stack
of Stupid. Britain yesterday said it would be forcing retailers
to implement stricter age verification checks to stop children from

(39:22):
buying knives. This after a teenager admitted to killing three
young girls at a Taylor Swift theme dance event. The
stabber the killer Axel Ruda Cubana. The knife attack in
July described by as one of the most herring moments

(39:44):
in Britain's history. At least that's the conclusion of Prime
Minister Keir Starmer. They say it's triggered a public inquiry
into the failings that allowed it to happen. Hum what
could possibly did the knife get up and go start
stabbing people on its own? Maybe the failings had caused
this alex rue de Cabana's knife to spiral out of

(40:05):
control to the point where he thought it was being
an appropriate thing to kill three young girls at a
Taylor Swift dance event. They say the inquiries expected to
focus on why state institutions failed to act on warnings
about the killer before his attack, but also focusing on

(40:25):
regulations around buying knives.

Speaker 1 (40:29):
Court of the Article.

Speaker 2 (40:30):
British law requires retailers to have an age verification system
to prevent those under the age of eighteen from buying knives,
but also elements of those systems are not clearly The
Fine Interior Minister of Ed Cooper said in Parliament that
it was a disgrace at this guy, who was seventeen
at the time of the knife, had been able to
buy a knife online. So the government said yesterday would

(40:54):
now mandate that retailers check photo identification of both the
point of sale and delivery, and that deliveries can only
be accepted by a person who plays the order. According
to Cooper, it's a total disgrace how easy it is
for children to get dangerous weapons online. It's also too
easy to put in false birth dates. Parcels are often
being dropped off in a doorstop with no questions asked.

Speaker 3 (41:17):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (41:19):
Question.

Speaker 2 (41:21):
If not a knife, how about a cricket bat? Do
you think there are age restrictions on purchasing a cricket
bat in England?

Speaker 3 (41:29):
Joe?

Speaker 2 (41:30):
Because I know you can do some serious damage with
a piece of lumber like that. You can smash in
a human skull with that. You could kill someone with it.
Look it up. I guarantee you there have been instances
where that's happened. Chasing their tails, trying to ban everything
that is used in a violent attack. The problem is
the violence and the obviously mental health of folks like this.

(41:54):
Moving away now, I know Donald Trump's you know, obviously
with the Doze Department and all the efforts to save money.
Wall Street Journal had an interesting take on this, and
it is really just stunning to me how many people
rely on the social welfare safety that we have in
this country. They say, no, the press is reporting that

(42:15):
Republicans in Congress are getting nervous about spending reductions in
social programs as too politically risky.

Speaker 1 (42:23):
Oh no, we can't cut.

Speaker 2 (42:24):
That is a journal points out Republicans to realize how
much mister Biden expanded the welfare state, meaning they can
save money for taxpayers by shrinking income transfers to restore
incentives to work for the able body, while still protecting
the social safety net for those who fall into hard times.

(42:44):
National jobless rate is down to four point one percent,
off the late COVID era six point three percent that
would be at the start of the Biden president presidency,
Yet the welfare roles have not shrunk. Some eighty four
point six million individuals enrolled in Medicaid, about a quarter
of the population, a quarter of the US population. About

(43:07):
forty two point six million Americans receive food stamps. Mister Biden,
the Democrats use pandemic air as an excuse to turn
Medicaid into another entitlement from the middle class. Congress finally
entered a pandemic expansions in the spring of twenty twenty three.
Yet there are still about ten million more people on
Medicaid than before covid anneral federal and state spending on

(43:28):
the programs has grown by sixty percent. Get a load
of this figure. Annual federal and state spending is up
to nine hundred and sixty three billion dollars, which is
more than we spend on national defense. If they observe
that one of the reasons the Biden administration led Democrats
states ease eligibility verifications and use federal Medicaid funds to

(43:52):
pay for other social spending homeless housing, food, and many refrigerators.
They also let states use accounting tricks to bring more
Medicaid money out of Washington. They said, consider California, where
thirty seven percent of residents are covered by Medicaid. California

(44:14):
has extended Medicaid to undocumented immigrants and waived asset limits
for beneficiaries. Governor Newsom's budget forecasts one hundred and ninety
billion would be in Medicaid and other health spending this year,
and one hundred and nineteen of which will be picked
up by the Feds.

Speaker 1 (44:31):
In other words, you.

Speaker 2 (44:34):
Taxpayers here in the Tri State are funding their massive
Medicaid expansion, and they note that that one hundred nineteen
billion picked up by you greater than Florida's entire annual budget.
Biden officials apparently also boosted food stamp allotments and waived

(44:54):
work requirements for able bodied adults. Recent journal report the
case of an unemployed worker who were worried that accepting
a job with a smallish paycheck would end his eligibility
for food stamps and medicaid. Question how many more are
like him not working? Refusing to work because the government
benefits will be cut off doesn't understand and appreciate the

(45:17):
reward that work carries just in and of itself, work
as its own reward. Republicans have floated stifferent work requirements
for welfare programs and fixing the accounting gimmicks that states
use to scam more federal Medicaid dollars. Good ideas by
our calculation, simply returning to pre pandemic Medicaid spending levels

(45:39):
adjusted for inflation could generate more than ready for this
one point four trillion in savings over a decade.

Speaker 1 (45:47):
I call that real money and progresses.

Speaker 2 (45:51):
For their part, they claim Republicans want to take food
and healthcare away from the poor and sick. But the
reality is that Biden's welfare expansions have mostly benefited those
who can support themselves, but for any number of reasons,
choose not to. And that's the sad and pathetic part
about this, isn't it. We're not talking about someone who's
disabled cognitively or physically. We're talking about people who are

(46:16):
capable of working, and you simply choose not to. It's
too easy. Did the benefits when in total, when you
tap into the state and federal benefits you can get
I think I've read figures. It's like making forty thousand
dollars a year in a job. Oh, but you go
to go to work.

Speaker 3 (46:33):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (46:36):
Republicans need not fall into the trap of talking about
this like accountants. This is a moral issue of helping
people who really need it, but not those who don't.
They call it a philosophical dividing line between the two
parties that Republicans should stress as they pairback Biden's welfare blowout. Yeah,
keep emphasizing that these are capable folks. It would rather

(47:01):
you go to work every day and have your tax
dollars support them. Six fifteen fifty five krres to the
detalk station bill. I promise you'll be first out of
the gate. Got to take quick break here to mention
something that's affordable, and that's medical imaging. No, it's not
affordable at the hospital. It's like five thousand dollars for
a CT scan. No, you don't have to pay that.
You pay six or four hundred and fifty dollars for
a CT scan at Affordable Imaging Services. If you need

(47:23):
a contrast it's only six hundred. Compare that to five
thousand and multiple bills from the hospital. So you probably
get a separate light on them for the Board Certified
Radiologists report that is included in the low price at
Affordable Imaging Services MRIs four ninety five, six forty five.
With a contrast echo cardiogram's only four hundred ninety five bucks.
So you go to Affordable Imaging Services because you'll save

(47:45):
heap loads of money. Now you're gonna expect low overhead,
but they have the same equipment that hospitals use, run
by professionals who've been doing this for decades. Your doctor
will find the images fine, as well as the radiologist report.
I know my cancer doctor did. I'm going back again
in April from a next CT scan. I'd like to
save money. And note we're in a new calendar year
for insurance, so this is probably all coming out of
your pocket. And if you don't have insurance, UH, you

(48:09):
need affordable imaging services. To learn more, go online check
it all out at affordable medimaging dot com. You have
a choice, so call them up and schedule your image.
Five one three seven five three eight thousand and five
one three seven, five three eight thousand fifty five KRC
when the wildfires truck fifty about KRCD talk station. I
hope you're having a decent Monday, anyway, five eight hundred

(48:32):
eight two three talk to a town five fifty on
AT and T phones as promised. Bill hung over there
over the break, and we're gonna take Bill's call right now. Bill,
welcome to the morning show.

Speaker 9 (48:40):
Oh thank you there, Brian. Uh, I will make got
a couple of points. I go real quick, but uh,
and I remember when Rush Slynn Ball came on in
eighty eight. I went to Kyle see them, seeing your
dad with to see them. Uh, the announced it. I
got to meet Rush and I got to meet your following.
It changed my life.

Speaker 1 (49:01):
Oh wow, it did.

Speaker 9 (49:02):
Yes and number two. Man, I'm telling you Rush was right.
He's had a byle thinking in nineteen ninety h. The
feminization of football's gotta stop.

Speaker 6 (49:14):
Man.

Speaker 9 (49:16):
Oh man, you got all these women are running around there.

Speaker 1 (49:20):
I mean, what are you talking about.

Speaker 9 (49:23):
The feminization of football. They got all these women, you know,
doing all this man stuff their chank. Next are going
to have all the drag queens and everybody out their
little ballet dresses freaking running up and down the field.
Oh they're gonna look real pretty bent over. But man,
they got to stop this feminization of football.

Speaker 1 (49:43):
Will get give?

Speaker 6 (49:44):
I mean, don't.

Speaker 2 (49:44):
I don't even know on what level you're talking about
feminization of football. I didn't see any female, you know,
even if they identified as men football players in the
games yesterday.

Speaker 9 (49:54):
They're all over the play fair man, and what they're
giving out little water bottles and then they're all there
talking strategy.

Speaker 2 (50:03):
Oh come on, oh okay, you're talking about the color
commentators and the announcers from the field and the the
other they're.

Speaker 9 (50:10):
Pretty, they're nicely. Like I said, they're a nice looking lady,
but they're still like tollmboys in the praternal We gotta
stop it. We gotta get the man back in there.
This is a man sport.

Speaker 1 (50:21):
We gotta keep it a man sport.

Speaker 3 (50:24):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (50:25):
Believe I'll leave you to that position, Bill, because I
don't necessarily share it. I've been on this planet fifty
nine years, and I know a lot of women who
know a whole hell of a lot more about the
game of football than I do. They're fans, they follow stats,
they follow players, they follow trades, they listen. If you've
got the skill set to provide commentary, then what's wrong

(50:47):
with having a woman there. I remember when it was
you know, oh, lighten up, Joe. I remember it was controversial.
They have women reporters and the men locker room, and
and I just reminded me of a story. I went back,
going back a lot of years as my I think
my freshman year, our first year or second year of

(51:09):
law school, got an opportunity when the fifty five cars
was carrying the Bengals games back then and the bigger
sponsors would get an opportunity to go on the plane
with the Bengals. And so my dad said, Brian, do
you want to come with me? We're taking I think
it was the Oscar Meyer guys. So two guys from
Oscar Meyer, my dad and I got the little spots

(51:30):
on the seat. Flew out with the Bengals, which was
wild in and of itself. Got to spend the evening
with Dave Lapham, for example, was doing Co's color commentator
back then. We all went out to bars and partied
up the night before. Got to go to the game
in Denver. Got to be in the press box, which
was awesome. Went down to the locker room, which was
awesome after the game, and I was when I saw

(51:51):
one of the reporters. It was a woman reporters standing
there and there's I'm tad, these guys are butt naked
all over the place. And I was talking to my
dad about that. He sees Key got of strains that
women are allowed to the men's locker room. It's all
this nudity around. They said, yeah, they've been allowed to
do that for several years. So I saw this one
female reporter, she had a microphone in her hand. She

(52:13):
was interviewing one of the players, and her eyes were well,
she was fixated on one particular area of that football
player's body, and it was really obvious. You know how
like guys stare down at a woman's chest from time
to time and they get caught doing it. Yeah, she
was slightly distracted. Anyhow, I personally don't have a problem

(52:37):
with whatever California ballot initiative. They're going to leave the country,
Maybe they want to succeed from the United States, at
least that's what the ballot initiative is pushing for. Measure
makes it an them if it makes it on the
November twenty eight ballot, withold ask voters should California leave
the United States and become a free and independent country. Apparently,

(52:58):
the guidelines require fifty per center registered voters to participate
and fifty and a yes vote from fifty five percent
of voters, which would indicate a vote of no confidence
in the United States of America. Measure would further show
that the will of the people of California's become a country. Okay,
report states. According the initiative's language, it would not change

(53:20):
California's current government or relationship with the United States. However,
this is almost comical. It would create a commission to
report on California's viability as an independent country. Initiative estimates
one time election related costs. The forming of a Commission

(53:42):
on National Sovereignty and Independence would cost ten million dollars.
Estimate that operating the commission would take another two million
in annual state costs. So you're not really voting for independence,
You're voting for a research study. Now, if California does
become its own country, can we build a wall separating

(54:03):
them from us? Keep those batcrap crazy leftists from invading
our country? Just the thought six twenty five. But you
five garre Se detalk station, local stories coming up, prefer
hearing from you unless you got a thing about women
five three, seven, four, nine, fifty five hundred eight out
of eighty two to three talk. Get in touch with

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Speaker 1 (55:19):
Fifty five KRC.

Speaker 3 (55:22):
Sure up your radio.

Speaker 8 (55:24):
Here's a Sean Hanneday Morning minute.

Speaker 2 (55:27):
Five kr CD talk station Local stories. But you can
call five one three, seven four nine to fifty five
hundred eight hundred eight two three talk Incident happened this morning.
Hamlin Canny Sheriff's Office investigating a shooting reporting the Sycamore
Township this morning about the twelve forty five am nine
to one one call from a woman who set her sister,

(55:49):
twenty one years old shot and CPR was underway. Deputies
from Sycamore Township Fire Department respond to the twelve thousand
block A sixth Street. Fire crews took the woman to
be north on an ambulance. A quart of the dispatch
condition not available. It's not clear what led to the situation,
I say, or if authorities looking for a suspect, one

(56:10):
can only presume that they are. Sycamore Township fire officiers
preferred all questions of the Sheriff's office. Sheriff's office currently
had no updates, at least as the time Fox nineteen
reported this this morning two hours ago. We've got to
Adams County one person dead after shooting occurred a Sunday
morning in Manchester Court of Deputies with the Adams County
Sheriff's Office, forty seven year old James Land shot and

(56:34):
killed by forty three year old Jason Strain of Bowling Green.
Deputy said they received several reports of gunshots. Gunshots heard
in the area of three twelve East Seventh Street at
quarter to five in the morning. Police officers got there.
That's when they found Land suffering from fatal injuries. Witnesses
saw the suspects vehicle leaving the area where the shots
were fired. Strain had fled the scene and was believed

(56:57):
to be heading toward Bowling Green o High State Highway
Patrol intel traffic cameras help locate the strained vehicle, and
approximately ten thirty in the morning, Bowling Green Police Department
conducted a traffic stop took him into custody, currently behind
bars in the Warren County Jail facing local charges and
charges out of Adams County. Deer Park police investigating a

(57:19):
double shooting took place there on Sunday afternoon. An adult
the juvenile currently at a nearby hospital in critical condition,
according to Deer Park Police Chief David Batten, speaking with
Fox nineteen invest good to say the shooting may have
taken place in the garage of the home that's in
the forty one hundred block at Glenway Avenue at ten
till three in the afternoon. Police wrote in a press
release the incident is believed to be domestic related and

(57:41):
there is no threat to the general public. Details limited
the moting moment and shooting is still under investigation. And
before I get to Derek's call, we go to we
have our award winner for this morning. First one out
of three we got former City of Harrison police officer
facing voyeurism charges in vall having a minor Miami Township

(58:01):
Police Department said they arrested Eric Gregory, forty five, Milford resident,
after investigating complaint of voyeurism at a home on Elm
Street January twentieth. Claremont County Poscutor's office has charged him
with two felonies, alleging he filmed teenagers in a bathroom.
In addition to voyeurism, he's also charged with tampering with evidence.

(58:24):
Harrison Police Department news release said they have been notified
about an ongoing investigation involving Gregory. He was placed on
a paid administrative leave, and Harrison Police say he resigned
on Friday. He previously worked as a park ranger for
the Hewan County Park District, also a certified peace officer.
Currently in the Claremont County jail with a quarter of
a million dollar bond expected to appear in court this Thursday. Yep,

(58:49):
that's what happens. It's disgusting, is what it is. Derek's guy, Derek,
thanks for calling it. Happy Monday to you, mister Brian Thomas.

Speaker 6 (58:58):
Happy Monday to you, sir.

Speaker 1 (58:59):
Thank you.

Speaker 6 (59:00):
Me with the eight Sons all Eagle Scouts.

Speaker 1 (59:03):
Oh yeah, yeah, I remember.

Speaker 6 (59:07):
I have a new theme sound for Uncle Trump.

Speaker 1 (59:12):
Okay, remember remember the.

Speaker 6 (59:16):
Skin show back in the seventy eight with welcome Back Hodder?

Speaker 1 (59:20):
Of course, can you ask.

Speaker 6 (59:23):
Listen Joe Stricken to play that once for me? Sure?

Speaker 1 (59:28):
He's shaking his head, Derek. We have limitations in the
song library. What we have and don't have.

Speaker 2 (59:34):
It goes through this interesting and complex legal process, so
we need to have to have rights and approval and
all that kind of thing. And I can guarantee you
that welcome Back is not among the database songs, so
apologies can't make good on that request, Derek. But welcome Back,
I suppose is an appropriate theme song for the Trump administration.

Speaker 3 (59:55):
He said.

Speaker 2 (59:55):
You can download it off Spotify if you know it,
if you know what that means, then you can listen
to it, I suppose on your own time. Thanks for
the call, Derek, appreciate it. No Dad putting an exclamation
point on that one. I sure miss my dad, but
it does put a smile on my face. When Joe

(01:00:17):
plays that sound bite, someone.

Speaker 1 (01:00:20):
Else will put a smile on your face.

Speaker 2 (01:00:21):
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one three seven zero eight three thousand.

Speaker 5 (01:01:35):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 10 (01:01:39):
In today's Marketers Report, Havy Monday, Brian Hey, I want
to talk about uh Rfkane, his upcoming confirmation and kind
of clear keep things up that the drive by media
won't tell everybody. The guy is not against childhood vaccines.
He's against her. He's four informed consent number one for two.

(01:02:00):
The premise behind childhood vaccines is a good one. It's
just all the garbage that they put in these things
as additives to make them enhanced, like aluminum.

Speaker 3 (01:02:11):
The problem is.

Speaker 10 (01:02:13):
When that builds up, it becomes toxic, and when you're
putting these into these little people that are forming at
the speed of light, it really creates chaos.

Speaker 3 (01:02:23):
To the system. And there was actually a literature review.

Speaker 10 (01:02:27):
That came out about twelve to eighteen months ago from
the Cochrane Institute, which you'll remember from COVID. They approved
the HPV vaccine before it came out, and then they
went back and tried to figure out why all these
teams were having such issues with side effects and deaths, paralysis.

(01:02:47):
Then they found it was the build up of the aluminum.

Speaker 6 (01:02:50):
And then it became a twenty.

Speaker 10 (01:02:51):
Three page synopsis on all childhood vaccines. And I think
that's just the scourge that RFK is trying to get
out of this with his Children's Defense Network. So it's
more of an education process and take the poison them
for these things.

Speaker 2 (01:03:08):
Well, and you know, I agree with everything you're saying
in Dwayne. Is it necessary to have aluminum in these
vaccines for them to work? Is it a component of vaccine?
Based upon what you're saying, it isn't. So why is
it in there? Like why is that FD and c
red dye in everything when it's been an own carcinogen
for a while.

Speaker 1 (01:03:26):
We don't need it in there. Take it out.

Speaker 2 (01:03:29):
I get that, But this is exactly and if if
they gave us all that warning information, and they sat
down with you ahead of time and said, listen, this
vaccine while we recommend it, and it is part of
you know, my job as a doctor to recommend a
certain vaccine. It comes with risks, and identify all those
risks and balance them with the harm you're trying to
prevent by the vaccine and let the parents decide what

(01:03:51):
they want to do. I mean, that's the way it
should be. But I've never heard what you're saying before, Dwayne.
I mean I may have read in one of rfk's
you know, musings or papers or conversations, but you know,
I don't know that the doctor talked about that when
we gave our got our children vaccinated. I sure don't
remember when I got vaccinated when I was a kid,
So no, they don't.

Speaker 10 (01:04:13):
And that's one of the biggest problems. But if they
would just get that out, then I think there would
be more confidence in the vaccines and you could see much,
much less side effects. One really quick story. None of
the three of our children were vaccinated. They're into their twenties.
Our youngest ended up at a military academy, had to
get fifteen shots. Ye, he's an offensive line, eighteen years old,

(01:04:38):
three hundred pounds, fifteen shots in two months before he
reported for basic training, got sick as a dog. So
what does he think that does to a little tiny baby.

Speaker 2 (01:04:50):
Yeah, there is something to be said about that. But
you know, the more information we have, the better decisions
we can make. And you know, why would the pharmaceutical
companies keep the information from us?

Speaker 3 (01:05:01):
Right?

Speaker 10 (01:05:03):
That's the question that's been revealed since COVID. It really is.

Speaker 2 (01:05:08):
You know, I'm all in favor of the disinfecting light
of truth and exposing and allowing these research studies to
come out and provide us with the information we need
in order to make that informed consent.

Speaker 1 (01:05:18):
You talked about.

Speaker 2 (01:05:20):
Excellent observations, Dwayne appreciated, you know, And I don't see
any downside risk of RFK getting that position. I mean,
I disagree with him on a lot of policies and
a lot of positions he's taken, but none. I don't
really have a profound disagreement with anything. He's going to
have some responsibility over and no problem holding pharmaceutical companies accountable.

(01:05:45):
And you know where might we be if a guy
like RFK Junior was in charge of the ship or
of the store when the COVID nineteen vaccine got rolled out.
Apparently we didn't get the information, so we didn't exercise
an informed consent when we stood in line or were
forced to stand in line and get that JAB six

(01:06:08):
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Speaker 1 (01:07:57):
Fifty five KRC.

Speaker 2 (01:08:00):
Fifty here I fifty five kre CD talk station, Happy Monday.
Try to make it happy anyway, always put the smile
on my face on Christopher Smithaman joins a program that's
coming up at seven twenty smither vent Monday Monday with
Brian James at eight or five and Buddy Levy with
the book Realm of Ice and Sky. It's about Arctic exploration.
He'll join the program and eat forty and meantime. Over
to the phones. Brandon's joining the program right now. Brandon,

(01:08:21):
thanks for calling this morning. Happy Monday to you.

Speaker 9 (01:08:24):
Happy Monday.

Speaker 3 (01:08:25):
Grians down.

Speaker 11 (01:08:26):
Want to follow up on the caller just head about
the vaccine education. I have kids that are now having kids,
and I don't think it's more of the education because
there's a lot of resources out there to see what
these vaccines are all about.

Speaker 4 (01:08:41):
And you know the cause of the second you would
have on the children, what my children are running into.
It's more of the requirements by the pediatricians, they won't
see them unless they are being vaccinated. And also the schools,
so if you want to send your kids to schools,
they're required all of these vaccines on a schedule. And

(01:09:04):
really it's disheartening for my children that you know, want
to kind of you do the right thing by their children.

Speaker 1 (01:09:11):
Don't they have religious exemptions for vaccines in schools?

Speaker 4 (01:09:16):
They do as well, but those are it's it's not
the easiest thing to do. My my oldest child and
his wife is stay at home mom, and she'd go
homeschool her kids, but my daughter doesn't quite have that capability,
so she's kind of left up to it. And even
some of the local uh, like I believe that even

(01:09:39):
Calbary Christian maybe I think they require the vaccines. So yeah,
I've got one hundred certainly on that somebody else could
call in and follow up.

Speaker 2 (01:09:49):
But well, you know, okay, like I assume they do,
and I would think you should be able to have,
you know, like this sort of concept of informed consent
rejection of a vaccine. If you say, listen, here, I
have all the research papers or here the pharmaceutical company
who manufacture the vaccine has identified these risks, and I
do not wish to subject my child to the risks

(01:10:09):
associated with getting the shot.

Speaker 1 (01:10:11):
Ergo, we're not going to get it. That should be
enough to get you out of taking the vaccine.

Speaker 2 (01:10:15):
As someone said, well what about the health of the
other children, Well, the other children get the vaccine, they're
not going to get whatever disease it is. You're you're
you're choosing not to get a vaccine for I mean,
I take the pressure.

Speaker 4 (01:10:27):
More comes from the pediatricians. I mean they are you know,
they're getting you know, incentives for you know, having these
vaccines treated all these children. It's it's a tough fun.

Speaker 2 (01:10:40):
Yeah, And I don't get why a physician would refuse
to treat a non vaccinated child. Again, I'm assuming if
the preediatrician thinks it's a great thing to have the vaccines,
that the pediatrician him or herself would be vaccinated, and
that the vast majority of the patients going in and
out of the facility would be vaccinated, and if they
weren't vaccinated, then that was the parent's decision to not vaccinate. Ergo,

(01:11:01):
there's no risk to people who have been vaccinated, So
you know, this circuitous sort of logic and reasoning thing
you go through and you ultimately conclude, well, if you're
worried about getting measles, get the damn measles vaccine. Some
parent might not have there, might not be too concerned
about their child getting measles. They don't get it. Maybe
that child will get measles, but if you've been vaccinated,

(01:11:23):
you won't. It's actually a vaccine that works, unlike the
COVID vaccine, which didn't prevent you from well getting covid.
I'm just honestly glad Brandon that you know I got
the polio vaccine as well. I mean, that's when you
see rooms full of people in iron lungs because they
can no longer breathe on their own because of polio

(01:11:45):
and the massive amount of death that polio caused. See,
I'm happy we had a polio vaccine and basically eradicated
it from the face of the earth. Now, if it
was an mr NA polio vaccine, maybe there are arguments
to be made that you shouldn't take it. But old
school is what I got and I didn't get polio,
and I'm thankful for it. But I do agree. I

(01:12:08):
think that it's important everyone does their own research. And
I'll admit that you know that's because the physician might
not be identifying these risks associated with vaccines. But a
little bit of research on your own sort of can
reveal things that you might not be or you may
may not be told about. At least that's what RFK
is kind of pushing at this point. Get the information

(01:12:29):
out there so people can have an informed discussion with
their physician. And I can't address the problem of physicians
not wanting to treat you for not being vaccinated. That
just doesn't make any sense to me. Six fifty five
If you five Krscity talk station more to talk about
enough top of their news plus Christopher Smithman at seven twenty.

Speaker 1 (01:12:49):
I hope you can stick around. I'll be right back
your voice.

Speaker 7 (01:12:52):
Thank you for taking my call.

Speaker 5 (01:12:53):
Your country I refreshing hear it every day.

Speaker 1 (01:12:57):
Fifty five krs the talk station.

Speaker 3 (01:13:00):
This report is sponsored by.

Speaker 2 (01:13:18):
Seven oh six at least almost seven oh six here
fifty five Karski Talk station in Happy Monday coming up
to seven twenty from the Vice Mayor of the City
of SINCINNT, Christopher smith Van. Every Monday at this time
or that time for the smither event Monday. Monday fast
forward one hour. We're gonna hear from Brian James on
Trump's tax plan. Home sales apparently stalled because of the
mortgage interest rates seven percent are hovering around. There will

(01:13:40):
there be a thirty two hour work week, and uh,
looking at your phone at work, Well that's costing you money,
says Brian James. We'll get the details on that again
in an hour. And then Buddy Levy with a book,
Realm of Ice and Sky. It's about Arctic exploration. He's
a big fan of Arctic history. So we're gonna get
a history lesson from Buddy at a forty You feel
free to call. I get a little time for Christopher

(01:14:01):
Joints the program five one, three, seven, four, nine fifty
five hundred, eight hundred eighty two to three talk pound
five fifty on at and T phone. Not going to
go back over it. But big, big, big few days
with ice gathering up illegal immigrants. They are up to
a four day total of nearly twenty four hundred gang members,
migrants tied to the trendator Agua gang were picked up.

(01:14:22):
I think of fifty or so of those convicted murderers,
drunken driver, habitual drunken drivers, drug dealers, migrants charged with
sex crimes among the sweep It just seems pretty obvious
to me that Ice knows exactly where these people are.
So you might find that good news, or you might
be on the liberal media side and calling these policies cruelty.

(01:14:44):
I know where I sit on that one. Anyhow, New
sheriff in town on that new sheriff in town also
giving optimism to US manufacturers. This is a rather interesting
thing based on the fact that optimism has grown among
the US manufacturing industry. There's an SMP Global Flash US
Purchasing Manager's Index. They issued report a few days ago.

(01:15:09):
US manufacturing sector experienced growth in January for the first
time in six months. Factory output in hiring rows bully
by the largest monthly jump in optimism in more than
four years. Improvement in America's factories supported by a rebound
in new orders, increased production. New orders in the goods
producing sector rose for the first time in seven months.
Output reversed the declines recorded over the past five months.

(01:15:31):
According to report, firms expectations of output in the coming
year continue to run at a level not to surpassed
since May of twenty twenty two, buoy by optimism about
the new government's policies, encouraging firms to take on staff
at the steepest rate in nearly two and a half years.

Speaker 3 (01:15:49):
WOOH.

Speaker 2 (01:15:51):
Manufacturing confidence in January posted the biggest monthly improvements In
November of twenty twenty, SMP's Global Factory Sentiment Index to
a twenty two month high. According to the report, looser regulations,
lower taxes, heightened protectionism were all widely cited, alongside a
broader sense of improving economic conditions in the year ahead
under the new administration. That didn't take long, did it.

(01:16:15):
There is a growing sense of optimism Donald Trump's from
making good on the promises that he made on the
campaign trail, including the Department of Education, New sheriff in
Town regarding litigation against departments of Education and book bans.
Back in June of twenty three, Joe Biden announced the
appointment of a book ban Coordinator with the Office of

(01:16:39):
Civil Office for Civil Rights. The ocr tasked with informing
school districts that prohibit certain books that they could be
violating federal laws, claiming they considered certain book exclusions to
be a threat to civil rights, particularly for LGBT s
Q plus RWXYZ students and other minority communities. Fast forward

(01:17:01):
to now that Office for Civil Rights announced the dismissal
of eleven complaints related to alleged book bands and schools
and rescinded guidance that suggested removing certain books from school
libraries could violate civil rights laws. The new department leadership
and the new policy. New sheriff in town said the

(01:17:22):
decisions about school library contact should be Here's an interesting
novel philosophy made at the local level by parents and
school bards not regulated by federal civil rights offices. A
blanking men, according to the Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights,
Craig Trainer, and a statement by dismissing these complaints eliminating
the position authorities of a so called book band coordinator

(01:17:44):
of the department is beginning the process of restoring the
fundamental rights of parents to direct their children's education. Amen
The current ocr leadership determine that the issue of book
removed as a matter of primal community judgments rather than
civil rights. The new attorneys say that the books are

(01:18:05):
not being banned, and they're not Rather, the school districts,
working together with parents and community stakeholders have established common
sense processes to evaluate and remove age inappropriate materials. Now
we're talking about the school library, not libraries generally speaking.
If you want some of these untoward, unsavory, and sometimes

(01:18:28):
salacious books, go to your regular local library and check
them out, but don't expect it to be found in
the K through well probably six library, where a lot
of these books are placed. Complay alleged the districts violated
Title nine in Title six when they removed eight books.
This is one from Forsyth County School District. And get

(01:18:49):
a load of the pressure they put down on this
Forsyth school district. This is under the prior administration. Mind you,
they removed eight books containing sexually explicit material from the
school library. Despite initial calls for dismissal from ocr's Atlanta office,
the leadership in Washington over ruled the regional office and
extracted a resolution agreement, basically a settlement agreement. According to

(01:19:15):
the Department of Education, the agreement required the district to
post statements embracing diversity, equity, and inclusion, and encouraged students
to make Title nine and Title six complaints well with
a new Sheriff in Town that agreement. That settlement agreement
is now terminated along with any associated obligations. So they
get their foot in the door. They sue your school,

(01:19:38):
threaten you with all kinds of fines and complaints under
these titles, and extract concessions from you which force upon
a school district to start teaching things that otherwise wouldn't
have taught DEI and encouraging students to make more complaints.
That's just fought out, nefarious, but thankfully again new sheriff

(01:20:00):
in Town and unleash Alaska oil. This is another complete
reversal from the Biden administration. Donald Trump's executive action package
will expand fossil fuel development in Alaska January twentieth, Unleashing
Alaska's Extraordinary resource potentials. The name of the order calling

(01:20:21):
on federal agencies to expedite permitting and leasing of energy
and natural resource projects, prioritize development of Alaska's LNG potential,
expand oil and gas drilling in the nineteen point six
million acre Arctic National Wildlife Restue Refuge and also potentially
the twenty three million acre National Petroleum Reserve.

Speaker 1 (01:20:40):
I love the name of that one.

Speaker 2 (01:20:42):
We named it the National Petroleum Reserve, and yet the
Biden administration well effectively banned drilling in the National Petroleum Reserve.

Speaker 1 (01:20:51):
Makes sense out of that, if you can.

Speaker 2 (01:20:54):
Trump's action recives all regulations, orders, guidance, documents, policies. Another
similar Aid agency actions promalgated, issued or adopted between January
twentieth twenty one and January twentieth twenty five, erasing seventy
Biden era regulatory actions in Alaska alone. The rollbacks and

(01:21:15):
prioritization aim to accelerate one particular project. It's the Alaska
Gas Line Development Corporation's eight hundred and seven mile pipeline
funneling three point three billion cubic feet of gas per
day from Prudo Bay to Nikiski and the Kenai Peninsula.

(01:21:37):
Huge project. Apparently, it was initially submitted to the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission back in twenty seventeen. It got authorization
to proceed in May twenty twenty.

Speaker 1 (01:21:48):
What day is it today?

Speaker 2 (01:21:50):
Also reauthorized in the Biden administration. However, in spite of
that reauthorization, here's where rubber meets the road.

Speaker 1 (01:21:57):
Folks.

Speaker 2 (01:21:57):
Proponents maintained that seventy Biden executive orders related to asking
Alaskan energy development ended up blocking the approved project. So
the Unleashed Alaska Order from Trump chucks those regulations and
rules and elevates that project to a priority that will
be accelerated under his National Energy Emergency Declaration. So elections

(01:22:22):
have massive consequences, and this is just a stunning reversal
of the obstructionism that Biden created with his executive orders.
I guess global warming or climate change or something seven
fifteen right now if you five curious to the talk station.
Christopher Smith been up next. First, a word for the
awesome dynamic duo of dentistry doctors Fred Pack and doctor

(01:22:44):
Megan Freue. You're in the best possible hands when it
comes to dental care if you're being treated by doctor
Pack or Freu. And with doctor Pack, it's all about
cosmetic dentistry. He just absolutely is amazing and one of
the best in the world when it comes to cosmetic dentistry.
He's one of only three accredited fellows with the American
Academy and Cosmetic Dentistry in the state of Ohio. That's
rarefied air right there. When you see the before and

(01:23:05):
after pictures of the work that doctor Peck has done
over the years. It's mind blowing, it's life changing, exceptional
dentistry on your smile. So if you're someone who doesn't
like to smile, you're in the best possible hands. And
of course doctor Fru's working on accreditation with the American
Academy and.

Speaker 1 (01:23:20):
She is the best.

Speaker 2 (01:23:22):
If you don't like dentists, I love going to the dentist.
I strongly encourage you to be treated by doctor Frue
for general dentistry. Everybody loves her to death. She's the
sweetest person around. Not to discount doctor Fred Beck. He's
been my dentist now for more than a decade, the
most state of the art clinic around, and the staff
there are just absolutely wonderful. You're in the best possible hands.

Speaker 1 (01:23:43):
As I told you.

Speaker 2 (01:23:44):
To learn more, check them out online at Peck Peck,
Pecksmiles dot com, Pecksmiles dot com, and please tell Brian
said how when you called to schedule the appointment. It's
five one three six seventy six sixty six six two
one seventy six sixty six.

Speaker 5 (01:23:58):
This is fifty five kr an iHeartRadio station in.

Speaker 3 (01:24:02):
The wild.

Speaker 2 (01:24:05):
Seven nineteen fifty five KERCD talk station. Happy Monday always
made extra happy because it is that time a week
when you hear the Smither event. Former vice mayor of
the City of Sin Saint Christopher Smithman joined the program
every Monday at this time to let it out. Christopher,
Welcome back, my friend. I hope you had a wonderful weekend.

Speaker 6 (01:24:21):
I did, Brian, thanks so much for having me on.
And what a political week since the last time we spoke.
All of the executive orders that have happened, so I
think the press Corps is having a tough time keeping up. Yeah,
everything that is happening.

Speaker 2 (01:24:38):
I actually saw an article on that after four years
of Biden only sticking his head out of this, out
of his whole every I don't know, a couple of
months and only answering a smattering of questions, you got
Donald Trump basically twenty four to seven talking to reporters
and signing executive orders and getting stuff done. I mean,
the illegal immigrant crackdown just is already netting or bearing fruit,

(01:25:01):
with twenty five hundred already arrested in his first week
in office. I mean, you know, I guess demonstrable proof
that it can be done.

Speaker 3 (01:25:13):
Let's start there.

Speaker 6 (01:25:14):
Sure, I mean, we're talking about people that have come
in our country illegally, So anybody listening or fact checking Smithman,
that's what we're dealing with. We're focused on people who
are criminals.

Speaker 1 (01:25:29):
Yep.

Speaker 6 (01:25:30):
So we're talking about gang members, murderers, rapists, robbers, people
that are creating havoc in our community. What democratic mayor
wants to defend keeping a rapist in their community? Brian Thomas,
it's the most it is the most absurd thing, meaning

(01:25:53):
everybody that has been shipped off, the five hundred or
one thousand people that have been flown back to their
country where pope folk who were all criminals creating havoc
in the neighborhoods that they were living in. I don't
understand this sanctuary city. Don't keep the criminals here. It

(01:26:13):
goes back to that common sense approach that you and
I talk about, And I'm just missing why any elected
official would oppose ice removing a rapist.

Speaker 2 (01:26:26):
It boggles the mind, Christopher, It absolutely boggles the mind,
especially a child molester. You know, if somebody like you
or I was convicted of child molestation, we'd have to register,
we'd be a registered sex offender. We'd have to, you know,
report and identify our address and it will be on
databases in various states. And I really don't think that
applies to illegal immigrant child molesters, at least I don't

(01:26:49):
think it does.

Speaker 6 (01:26:49):
But he just made your neighborhood safer. He has your
community safer in the last seven days. And here's the
reality of it is you and I know that most
likely one of these criminals is going to do something right.
But those those people that were moved out were preventative,

(01:27:11):
like flossing your teeth, getting your teeth creak, meaning those
people no longer exist to prey on your daughters, are
to pray on your homes, or to pray on your
dad's or to prey on the elderly because they have
been removed from your community. I just, you know, as
I've been watching the TV, it has boggled my mind

(01:27:31):
that democrats, these are democrats who are saying you can
have sanctuary in my city, as if these are not
criminals that Ice is removing. Like that's the part that
I can't get my head wrapped around. What is it
about moving a removing a rapist or a murder And
that's on the back of lakeln Riley, meaning we know

(01:27:52):
that they've done these kinds of things. Why would a
Democrat mayor stand in the way or a Democratic governor
of removing the worst of the worst from their neighborhoods.

Speaker 2 (01:28:03):
Brian Thomas, Well, it's a groundswell of even Democrat mayors
agreeing to cooperate with Ice or at least not stand
the way. And that the reason is, I imagine, because
their own constituents want these murderers and rapists and thieves
out of their own neighborhoods. I mean, I mean the
populace Democrat, Republican, independent, communist, socialist. I don't care what

(01:28:26):
political stripe you are, do you want to be living
in around a bunch of hardened criminals and rapists. I
think most people would put aside politics and say no,
not in my neighborhood.

Speaker 3 (01:28:35):
Right.

Speaker 6 (01:28:37):
Right, meaning I want my daughter safe as she's going home,
coming home from schools. Oh yeah, And so what that
is what is blowing most Americans away who are looking
at this meaning they're trying to act as if President
Trump is separating somebody, some father from their children. Look,

(01:29:00):
the reality of it is is these are people that
were let out of some institution in their country and
they're here with a criminal record.

Speaker 3 (01:29:09):
Gang members.

Speaker 6 (01:29:10):
I don't know if you saw that there was some
gang having a party somewhere in the country, like fifty
or sixty of them, and Trump's team the I showed
up and arrested them all. They were basically saying, we're
going to have a party. All the gang members were together,
said well, we're going to arrest everybody in the whole room,
as they did.

Speaker 2 (01:29:28):
Yeah, thanks for consulting. Thank you for consolidating one location.
Made it easy for us to arrest all fifty of
you guys. Yeah, I did read about that. But yeah,
twenty five hundred in just one week, or twenty four
hundred in just one week. How they got almost a
thousand yesterday alone. No, I call that progress, Christopher, getting

(01:29:48):
the bad elements off the streets.

Speaker 6 (01:29:51):
I do too, And I guarantee you the local police
officers in those communities are safer today because of it.
That's the bottom line. And the community is safer. No
one wants to pull over somebody from a gang from
another country and they open fire on our peace officers.
So this is making everybody safer. And this notion that

(01:30:15):
ice is out grabbing dreamers. Meaning if you listen to
MSNBC or CNN, they'll make their audience believe that Ice
is pursuing somebody who is a dreamer, who's going to
work every day's been here thirty years. There's no problem
they're paying taxes. That is not what is happening. They're

(01:30:35):
going after the worst of the worst. Brian Thomas and
I applaud Ice for the work that they're doing.

Speaker 2 (01:30:41):
The agree amen to that. Well Green Christopher back for
another talk right after I mentioned Prestige Interiors. That's John Ryan.
It's his company and he will be the one helping
you improve the way well your family comes together. And
they've been doing it for more than thirty years. And
we're talking the kitchen. That's is absolutely where families come
together for all life's events big and small. The heart

(01:31:02):
of your home and kitchens require a level of customization
that can only come with time and experience and really
getting to know you the customer. And that's exactly what
John Ryan does. It works with you from the very beginning,
initial design of final installation. And he is a perfectionist
at his craft. He's been doing kitchens for more than
thirty years almost exclusively. He certainly did an amazing job

(01:31:22):
on our kitchen, and I know he'll do the same
for you. Fun guy to work with, to a really
sweet guy. To learn more about the business, visit Prestige
one two three dot com A plus with the Better
Business Bueral member the National Kitchen Bath Association. He is
Prestige one two three dot com. Give John my regards
when you call to talk to him about your kitchen
five one three two four seven zero two two nine

(01:31:42):
five one three two four seven zero two two nine.

Speaker 1 (01:31:45):
Fifty five KRC.

Speaker 2 (01:31:48):
Jennal and I says the weather will be as follows
today sunny Sky's with the high thirty eight, got a
few clouds over night down to twenty eight, sonny again
tomorrow forty four uh, partly cloudie overnight thirty two, and
partly cloudy Sky's on Wednesday with another high.

Speaker 1 (01:32:01):
Of forty four nineteen degrees. Right now, how about traffic
chuck from the UCL Traffic Center.

Speaker 12 (01:32:07):
Expect Mari and you see help, more clinical trials, more
treatment options for personal life care, more chances to get
you back to being you visit you See Health dot com.
Cruise continue to work with a wreck inbound seventy four
before you got the seventy five.

Speaker 1 (01:32:21):
There're on both shouldiers. Traffic's moving down the middle, but slowly.

Speaker 12 (01:32:25):
It's over a twenty minute delay from North Bend chuck
Ingramont fifty five KR.

Speaker 3 (01:32:29):
See the talk station.

Speaker 2 (01:32:33):
Seven thirty on a Monday, and a very happy one
to you listener. Lunch this next Wednesday. I'd rather little
Miami Brewery in Milford. Hope you can join me and
the wonderful listeners that show, but listener to lunch. Great
opportunity for some fellowship and get out of the house
and do something different for a change. Well, return back
to Christopher smithmen doing the Smither event. Christopher, go on

(01:32:53):
your rant. Let's continue.

Speaker 6 (01:32:56):
Well, brother, I just want to take a pause here
as we as we move into Black History Month to
talk about something that President Trump is doing that is
absolutely connected to Black History Month, which is the dread
Scott versus Stanford case of eighteen fifty seven. This was

(01:33:17):
a slave, dread Scott, who was traveling with a physician
who from the South then was in Saint Louis and appealed,
actually sued the United States saying, hey, I want my freedom.
I'm living somewhere where I'm not free, but I'm traveling
somewhere that I am free, and now I want to

(01:33:39):
have all the rights of an American. And from that case,
even though the Supreme Court ruled seven to two, which
was a very activist court. And I want to remind
anybody who's listening google the dread Scott versus Stanford case,
and any teacher out there who's listening, they should research
this and teach their student because it was the birth,

(01:34:03):
i would say, of the Republican Party, where Republicans were saying, listen,
I'm fighting for the freedom of slaves, where the Dixiecrats
in the South were saying they wanted the slaves. And
here you have Dred Scott case here that really, you know,
in my opinion, I think historians would agree, ultimately ended

(01:34:23):
up with Lincoln being elected President of the United States
and maybe even the wick that was lit for the
Civil War. So here was a man who stood on
his principles saying, hey, I'm down here in the South,
I'm traveling up here in the North. I want my
same rights as an American. He sued. It took eleven
or twelve years for it to get to the Supreme Court.

(01:34:44):
The reason I raised this is because as President Trump
now is pressing forward on this notion that if you
come to this country illegally and have a child, that
that child is automatically an American citizen. And some of
the discussion when this alter reaches the Supreme Court, they
will be leaning on the dread Scott case right where

(01:35:05):
you had a slave who was saying, hey, I want
my freedom. But these two things are not connected, meaning
under the Fourteenth Amendment, he was saying, I'm I'm in
I'm in the same country. I'm from here. I've lived
here my whole life. It's not like I was broad here,
I jumped over something illegally, and now just for having

(01:35:26):
a child in the United States, that child has this
American American citizenship. I'm just sharing with you. It's very
interesting how this case added most likely will be argued
at the Supreme Court that the dread Scott case will
be a centerpiece of that argument. I am inspired by
this slave dread Scott, who said I want my freedom

(01:35:47):
as an American. What a great American. A man who
was a slave who sued a country and ultimately he
did not leave, He did not live to see the
fruits of what he did. But he really a fire
Brian Thomas, Now you're a lawyer. I'm not, but I
had I had to highlight this as the president is
pressing this issue, which is directly connected to the dread

(01:36:09):
Scot case.

Speaker 2 (01:36:10):
Yeah, and my recollection, and don't hold me to it
because but just my recollection, it's been a long time
since I read the dread Scott case. The Supreme Court
determined that he was property and that by merely being
in a free state that that not that didn't negate
that doctor's proper vested property interest over a human being.
I mean, the whole concept is really is horrific in
and of itself, but that because he was deemed property

(01:36:34):
in the slave states, that it didn't negate it when
he went in through a free state. At least, that's
my recollection, a horrific outcome.

Speaker 6 (01:36:40):
You were you were, you are right? But he showed
an activist court right who were who were Dixiecrats? I mean,
the reality of it is is that so many African
Americans do not realize that the Republican Party at the
heart of it were the was the party that was
birthed and so ported the freedom of slaves. It wasn't

(01:37:03):
the Democrats, right, And so you know, we can talk
about Lyndon Johnson and what he did and kind of
the pivot after that, But the reality of this is
what I want to say to you, is that as
we go into Black History Month, let's tell the truth,
the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. So when
you walk up to a Republican who's African American, don't

(01:37:24):
turn your nose up. This is a person who understands
that their freedom came from the birth of the Republican Party.
And so many Republicans don't even know their own history.
They don't understand it and can't and cannot tell their
own story. But as I pivot in conclusion, brother, the
pardons that happened by President Biden are the greatest corruption

(01:37:48):
I've seen from a president in my lifetime. To parton
his family in the eleventh hour before the before of
now President Trump was sworn in, shows you the bedded
corruption at the highest levels of the federal government that
are that within the President of the United States with Biden,

(01:38:08):
Kim partning shift the January sixth Committee, all of it
is total corruption. And when I saw Senator Shift on
Meet the Press this weekend, justifying his pardon but damning
President Trump for partnering the January sixth as if he
cares about cops. I want to remind every police officer

(01:38:30):
that's listening to me, Look, the people that are running
their mouths and acting like they care about police officers
are the same people that were wanting to defund them
and reimagine them. So now we have people now say,
oh my goodness, I'm so concerned and I'm so blown
away that the January sixth people were pardoned and there

(01:38:50):
were police officers that were hurt coming from Shift, coming
from who these are the people that have been saying
for the last five to six years they wanted to
defend on every police station in the United States of America,
and they also wanted to reimagine it. It's amazing what
a week does.

Speaker 2 (01:39:08):
Yeah, it is true, and yeah, Trump's won aiding on
a lot of the Biden policies. And they're quick to
also forget that the leftists are the ones that are
terrorizing neighborhoods and burning buildings and throwing frozen water bottles
and fireworks of police and injuring police and I don't
recall the FBI doing a nationwide manhunt for all those

(01:39:29):
folks that were storming the streets during ANTIFA and BLM
and George Floyd protests, etc. I don't know that those
folks were ever brought to justice for the harm they
did to police officers. So there's obviously a big double
standard on display here, Christopher, No.

Speaker 6 (01:39:44):
It's it totally is. And I think this fact that
the January sixth Committee, as a fact, literally shredded, deleted
all information regarding the committee's work. Who does that? So
the current administration coming in does and even have the
information to figure out what they did. And on the
backs of it, all of them were pardoned, and including

(01:40:07):
fauci I, meaning we could go through the list of
everybody that was pardoned. But nobody who's listening to this
has heard anything like it. Where a president in the
last thirty minutes of his presidency partners his whole family
partners to January sixth partons Senator Shift and clearly this

(01:40:28):
was him. This is President Biden protecting himself. He was
worried about the money that his family had laundered and
was concerned about himself, so he was trying. He's trying
to blunt not just those who they might go after,
but it ultimately leading to the big guy. Well, people
might not know who the big guy is, but all

(01:40:48):
they have to do is read the emails and understand
who the big guy is and the partners were about
protecting his own behind.

Speaker 2 (01:40:55):
Yeah, well, my listening audience knows exactly who the big
guy is, and don't think this is over. Merely because
they were pardoned doesn't mean we can't get the truth out.
And I have every reasonab believe that's exactly what the
Republicans are going to do. They're not going to give
them a free pass, and that the pardons also remove
any of those pardon people's right to assert the Fifth
Amendment be free of punishment, so they're going to have

(01:41:18):
to testify they can't stand behind the Fifth Amendment. So
I think the truth ultimately will still come out, and
I think we're entitled to know the truth about these
shady deals, so at least history can be a judge
and maybe also revealed that maybe state laws were violated
and they could be prosecuted under state laws as opposed
to federal laws, which is the only thing the pardons
extend to.

Speaker 6 (01:41:38):
Absolutely, and I never was shocked. Again as we go
into black history, buff people fact check me that President
Biden at the time with Senator Biden did the eulogy, right,
what eulogy that President Biden do a former KKK.

Speaker 2 (01:42:02):
Membergon guy, Yeah, And I'm sitting here going is it
that so many people don't know their history?

Speaker 6 (01:42:11):
Are they not being taught it in our school? Whether
it's Dred Scott versus Sanford, or whether it is things
like Senator Biden doing the eulogy for Senator Byrd out
of West Virginia who was a KKK member. Now they said, well,
he reformed himself. But here's what I want to leave
you with. If the current president had done a eulogy

(01:42:33):
for a former KKK member, tell me what you think
mainstream media would have been saying.

Speaker 2 (01:42:38):
About him twenty four to seven, NonStop racist, racist, racist, racist.

Speaker 6 (01:42:45):
And that's the double standard that I'll leave you with
in my rant. And I tell your listening audience and
those who might just be tuning in for the first time,
if I said something that isn't true, fact check me
when I hang up. The reality of it is that
the Dixiecrats are the ones that gave my grandmother, who
was born in nineteen oh nine, born in Montgomery, Ablabama.

(01:43:09):
The Dixiecrats are the ones that gave her hell. It
was the KKK, the terrorist organization, the domestic terrorist organization
that gave her hell. I'm shocked that Senator Biden, now
former President Biden, gave the eulogy for Senator Byrd and
you never hear mainstream media saying a peep about it.

(01:43:32):
So if I'm saying something that isn't true. As we
move into Black History Month, I want to talk about
Black history, but I want to talk about all of it.
So I want to talk about Dred Scott, which ultimately,
in my opinion, gave the birth of the Republican Party,
which fought for the freedom of slaves. It wasn't the Democrats,
it was the Republicans. And I'll leave you with that thought.

Speaker 2 (01:43:55):
I appreciate your passion, Christopher Smithman, always do, and that's
why I love heaving you on the city carsee morning
Sure every Monday. I hope you have a wonderful week, Chris,
for best to health you and your family, and thank
you for saying it out loud, love hearing it.

Speaker 6 (01:44:09):
Thank you brother. People can follow me at vote Smitherman.

Speaker 2 (01:44:11):
At Vote Smithermoner, and I'm sure they will appreciate it.
Man seven forty two here fifty five krsee the talk
station joking up in the phone lines up. If you
want to call maybe comment on Christopher's comments, feel free
to do so. Five one three, seven four nine fifty
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Speaker 5 (01:45:41):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 1 (01:45:45):
Run a business and not thinking about.

Speaker 2 (01:45:51):
Seven fifty fifty five kr CB talk station for about
KRC dot com. Get Tryheartmedia while ever they can listen
to the iHeart content as say, a lot of content
right from smart device, get a copy or get an
item from Patriots Landing. Just an awesome outfit helping out
the American Veterans. I got a wood shop there and

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to the podcast and learn more about it, or head
over to Patriots Landing dot org and check out the
products that those wonderful people make. Heaven's Gained Ministries on
the program last Friday, helping women who at families generally speaking,
who lose their babies during pregnancy. Really sorry, sorry, thing
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(01:46:54):
pregnancy loss. And they help people get caskets for the tiny,
tiny infants, and also this port services. Really just a
beautiful thing that they have going on over there. Congressman
Warren Davidson was on the show last Monday as well,
and you can hear what he had to say. And also,
of course Tech Friday with Dave Hatter. Got to check
that segment out and always listen to the podcasts if

(01:47:15):
you can't listen live valuable information that can really keep
you out of problems with Dave Hatter. Another one bites
the dust, another lawsuit filed by climate activists. Yeah, climate
activists and Democrats have been trying to use the judicial
system to stop oil companies and put them out of business.
Yet another of these lawsuits has failed. A Maryland judge

(01:47:37):
dismissed two lawsuits accusing the world's largest oil and gas
company of causing climate change. Judge Stephen Platt of the
ann Arundel County District Court throughout the cases brought by
anne Arundel County and the City of Annapolis through it

(01:47:57):
out last Thursday, evening counties and cities should not seek
to use the courts to achieve climate policies such as
carbon emissions reductions. The judge added that he was persuaded
by other state courts that have similarly ruled that local
jurisdictions can't regulate global emissions. Cases of Maryland part of

(01:48:17):
a broader nationwide effort that goes back several years to
bring oil companies in before state courts, accusing them of
knowingly selling products that cause global warming and forcing them
to pay billions of dollars in damaging and damages which
would effectively put them out of business. That County and
Rundel County, Annapolis initiated this lawsuit in early twenty twenty one,

(01:48:40):
one of the first jurisdictions to actually have a case
like this. Judge plat ruling set back for activists who
saw these cases as a key part of their fight
to take down oil companies and of course, stop global warming.
Nine states, including Washington, DC, and Puerto Rico, also have

(01:49:00):
these similar litigations been pursued. Hm us Theodore Baroda's junior
lawyer for Chevron. The Court's decision joins the growing and
nearly unanimous consensus among both federal and state courts across
the country that these types of claims are precluded and
preempted by federal law and must be dismissed under clear

(01:49:23):
US Supreme Court President and Arnold County spokeswoman Rhinetia Alfonso,
in a statement, says the case was advanced at no
cost to county residents, sheer edling. The law firm get
a load of this is funded by left winging billionaire

(01:49:48):
backed nonprofits represented both Annarndo and Annapolis. The firm, which
has represented the majority of jurisdictions that have pseud oil
companies for climate damages in recent years, didn't respond for
requests for common from the Washington Free Beacon. Shocking, No
one think about this. A city is going to stop
global warming suing the oil companies out of business? Yeah,

(01:50:10):
day of these people realize that petroleum products are used
in a multitude of things that we well need to live,
thrive and survive. Plastic for example, how are you gonna
make it without oil? And since the Chinese Communist Party
is belching out along with other massive countries like India
and Turkey, belching out massive quantities of carbon dioxide and

(01:50:32):
other pollutants into the air, we also breathe in the
same air. You know, the wind blows and the world's
climate is interconnected. So the steps by you know, one
county in one state against oil companies aren't going to
change the carbon production dynamic. Plus, as I was like
to point out, it's plant food. We're trying to remove

(01:50:54):
plant food from the environment at a significant societal cost.
Thank god the judges out in the world that will
put an end to this kind of nonsense. Seven fifty
five fifty five KRCD talk Station after the top of
our news. Money Monday with Brian James on Trump's tax plans,
stalled home sales, mortgages, a little too much, thirty two
hour work week not and looking at your phone at

(01:51:16):
work costing you money. Those are the topics whore with
Brian James after the news. Hope you can stick around.

Speaker 5 (01:51:21):
Your voice, Thank you for taking my call.

Speaker 3 (01:51:24):
Your country gives us all somewhat to think about.

Speaker 1 (01:51:27):
Fifty five krcs the talk station. This report is sponsored
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Speaker 2 (01:51:33):
RAPOS gets me ready for the day at all day
involved and check in throughout the day. Fifty five krs
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talk station. Happy Monday time to learn stuff and things
about money. It is money Monday Time every Monday at

(01:51:53):
eight o five can talk to Brian James all with financially.
He's a financial planner and follows these matters very closely
because his job depends upon a whatcome back, Brian James,
Happy Monday.

Speaker 1 (01:52:01):
To you, Happy Monday, right back at you.

Speaker 13 (01:52:04):
And it is just a great time of year to
get out there and enjoy that sunny, gray weather, isn't it.

Speaker 2 (01:52:09):
Oh jeez, yeah, I'm at least we're kind of get
some sunnies guys today. It's you know, when it's been
so cold, you look outside and the sun's barrendwn and
you think, oh, it looks great out there, and you
walk out and you're hit with this arctic blast. That's
just it's so deceiving and depressed, right, I know, I know. Anyway,
moving over to I see the across the board, all

(01:52:29):
the futures are down, and some pretty significantly a couple
points down s and P five hundred, Nasdaq's down three
point seventy four futures trading And any hint or understanding
as to why that might be the case currently, Brian James.

Speaker 1 (01:52:42):
Well, I think we're we're sort of getting to the.

Speaker 13 (01:52:47):
Getting past the honeymoon stage of we've elected a business
friendly administration. We've had a little bump from that over
the past several weeks, and now we're just getting to
a point where realizing that that it's not going to
be as easy as electing somebody and then just smooths
sailing from there on out. We've got some other things
we'll talk about here this morning that are going to
be coming out just a little bit on the less

(01:53:08):
than happy side as far as business goes.

Speaker 1 (01:53:09):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:53:09):
I started out the show this morning, or at least
at some point, talking about this S and P Global
Flash Purchasing Managers Index, which reports that the optimism among
business people is really really high and they're expecting factory
output and hiring it. It actually has risen over the
past six months, and really a dramatic increase going all
the way back to May of twenty twenty two. So

(01:53:31):
I kind of thought that might be parlayed into an
increase in the stock market. But anyway, yeah, well, and
I think when things like that happen, the headline and
the article you're reading, the market reacted to that a
week or two ago, I think, so it's just now
getting written up by journalists, and so the market is
now looking at the pendulum swings back and forth. So
then market now is looking at I think things that

(01:53:53):
might be not quite so rosy out there, fair enough
and pivoting over to Donald Trump's tax plan. I saw
the tax Foundation dot org article. Some of it's good
and some of it not so good. Most notably they
don't like the idea of these tariffs and suggests that
we'll really negate any of the benefits of keeping the
tax the current tax rates in place.

Speaker 3 (01:54:14):
Yeah.

Speaker 13 (01:54:14):
So we've got an administration, of course, that wants to
stamp its put its own stamp on things, and that,
as we've seen before, that relates to the relationships we
have with other countries and the trade agreements that we
have in place, and unfortunately, we've been through it before,
so we've seen what the impact can be. But I
think the main concern right now is that there's nothing

(01:54:36):
One of the big things that Trump ran on was
the price of eggs and getting things down and making
things easier for American families and businesses and so on
and so forth. But right alongside that he was just
as vociferous about raising tariffs on companies that we do
business with to affect different things he wants from each
of these relationships. And there's really nothing about a tariff
at all that will help lower costs. You're simply increasing

(01:54:59):
the cost of supply, and you're tacking money onto the
front end of things, and that has to trickle down
ultimately to the consumer. So yeah, that's what the market
is now starting to see in terms of the impact
coming down the stream.

Speaker 2 (01:55:11):
Well, yeah, I mean to the extent they don't capitulate
to what Donald Trump wants. And I used the Colombians, yes,
the other day, their president Gustavo Patris said no, you
will not repatriate my fellow Colombians in these flights and
denied access to the country with two of these military flights,
only to turn around after Trump threatened him with sanctions.

(01:55:32):
So twenty five percent sanctions he threatened. He said, they're
going to go up to fifty percent if you don't
hurry up and start allowing these folks. And he did
change his tunes almost immediately yesterday. Yeah, and it was
pretty quiet too. He didn't really say exactly what had
changed his mind. It was just all of a sudden,
the problem went away and there was really nothing standing
in the way. So my best guess is that someone
internally got to him and said, if we stick on

(01:55:54):
this path, ultimately you're going to piss off all the
voters because You've just literally raised the cost of them
getting out of bed and trying to live their lives
on a daily basis.

Speaker 1 (01:56:02):
So that's just Columbia. We have yet to get to
the big ones.

Speaker 13 (01:56:05):
Yeah, but you know, I guess, I guess we can
declare to declare that that went went the United States way.

Speaker 2 (01:56:12):
So far, so so far well, and I think that's
an illustration of maybe they need us more than we
need them.

Speaker 1 (01:56:17):
I don't know what in that particular case. Yeah, that's it.

Speaker 13 (01:56:20):
That's why I said that's Columbia. We'll see what happens
with our other larger trading partner.

Speaker 1 (01:56:24):
Yeah, no doubt. It's most notably China.

Speaker 3 (01:56:27):
Correct.

Speaker 13 (01:56:27):
Yeah, well, we've been down that path before, so and
there's more going on with China than just a trade imbalance.
It's the way they do business that we're really trying
to adjust our relationship with them, and so we're playing
our own games with them. That's playing out as we
see in the headlines every single day with who's going
to buy TikTok?

Speaker 1 (01:56:44):
And first of all, I am not an international business
law expert.

Speaker 13 (01:56:48):
I still am fuzzy on the idea that the United
States can force TikTok to sell. I believe it's still
TikTok's option to simply not deal in the United States,
except that's going to cost an enormous amount of money.

Speaker 1 (01:56:59):
Oh, it is absolute.

Speaker 2 (01:57:00):
They're prerogative, and you know, honestly, I think the way
the law was written, in the way it was passed,
Donald Trump doesn't even have the authority to extend the
band because there is no active buyer in play. That
was a contingency for the ninety day. He had a
ninety day extension provision in that bill, So if there
was someone sitting across the table from TikTok and negotiating

(01:57:22):
at the time the band went into effect, then he
could hold it off for up to ninety days. Well,
there isn't, and there wasn't yet he still held it up.
So I mean, if they went into court and challenged
his order stopping the ban from kicking in, I think
whoever challenged it would win because there's no active buyer.

Speaker 13 (01:57:41):
Right at some point it has to be it has
to go down the way it's written in black and
white on a piece of paper, and there is no
basis for how. We can't see how this is going
to come out yet, but it's not matching up with
the way the law was written. So but that's just
an example of what we're going to the kind of
battles we're going to see over the next four years
as this kind of global business order shorts itself out
over time.

Speaker 2 (01:58:01):
What's your take on the exempting overtime pay from income taxes.
I saw that in the rundown, and I'm just scratching
my head, you know, because he wanted to exempt taxes
or rather tips from taxation, and as well not exempt
he's also exempt social Security benefits from income taxes. You know, honestly,

(01:58:23):
Brian James, I'm one of these people. There shouldn't be
any exemptions or anything. There shouldn't be any carve outs
or provisions in the tax code that manipulate our behavior.
I'm a flat tax guy. Just pay X percent and
call it a day, and don't fill out these massive
forms and have to deal with a fifteen gazillion page
income tax code. That's part of the problem of doing business.
I mean, the tax laws are almost impossible to navigate.

Speaker 13 (01:58:46):
Well, I'm getting a message here that the into it
people would like to have a word with Brian Thomas
about his opinions he's sharing on air because they really
like their turbo tax product that keeps people plenty confused
and stuck to the idea that things have to be
more complicated.

Speaker 1 (01:59:00):
Now, now I agree with you.

Speaker 13 (01:59:02):
I mean, I'm a simplification person, and at this point
things have gotten so far beyond the ability to kind
of control and predict. I would be very willing to
try an entirely new tax system just to see if
that can simplify things for people and make it more fair.
Now you asked my opinion of the idea of taxing
this and not taxing that. Those different headlines that are

(01:59:22):
that are coming down the phone. First off, we those
have to get approved, right these are these are still
political promises at this point, and I would say that
my biggest frustration with this is while the benefits to
people who are receiving those things are obvious, it doesn't
do any.

Speaker 1 (01:59:38):
Good at all.

Speaker 13 (01:59:39):
If we don't offset with the spending side of things,
and we're simply reducing the amount of income we've got
to pay our bills. That's you know, that's not going
to help in the long run. That's simply a campaign promise.
So I really want to see an adult version of
how this is all going to come out.

Speaker 2 (01:59:52):
Hey man, And look, someone wrote in big capital letters
spending because the conclusion from the tax Foundation article was
that they estimate their proposals would increase the ten year
budget deficit by three trillion dollars. And lord knows, we
don't need a bigger budget deficit. And three trillion dollars
is a lot of money last time I checked. And
anything we can do to stop that from happening should

(02:00:14):
be done. And that's where spending comes in. We can
really cut spending and curb that sizeable deficit.

Speaker 6 (02:00:21):
Right.

Speaker 13 (02:00:22):
One of the other impacts we just got done talking
about is, remember, tariffs are going to have an effect
here too. Tariffs and taxation are all somewhat hand in
hand when we're talking about making sure this country has
the ability to stay afloat. From a financial perspective, Tariffs
are going to hurt are going to hurt people at
the bottom of of the line here. And if we're again,
if we're simply running up more and more debt because

(02:00:42):
we want to be able to have the headline that
we're not taxing groups who are struggling, then we have
absolutely got to find a way to not spend those
taxes in the first place. I haven't heard a single
peep yet about the things we are not going to
do anymore to kind of save on those different items.

Speaker 2 (02:00:59):
Stop funding shrimp on treadmill research. That can be number
one and no one could argue with that. We're going
to continue with Brian James in a moment talk about
home sales. Apparently stalled mortgage is too expensive, thirty two
hour work week and looking at your phone at work
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Speaker 1 (02:02:20):
It's easy to do. Go Zimmer dot com.

Speaker 2 (02:02:23):
Fifty five KRC dot com when the wildfires eight nineteen
to fifty five krcdtalk station. It's Monday Money Monday. That's
what we're doing right now with Brian James Allworth Financial.
Uh moving over and you know everybody's looking around for
the day when mortgage rates are going to drop so
people can afford to own homes. And I guess we're
looking at what roughly seven percent current mortgage rates.

Speaker 13 (02:02:46):
Yeah, so seven percent current mortgage rates, and that's been
that way since about mid twenty three. So mortgage rates
in this recent cycle, the average peaked around seven point
eight percent in October of twenty twenty three, and we
fluctuated around that ever since then. We've right now, we're
kind of we've hit a plateau, right about seven percent
or so, is what I'm hearing, and it's having impacts on,
of course, people's decisions of whether to buy that bigger

(02:03:09):
house or move to the next neighborhood. And you know,
the things that we used to take for granted, we
had low interest rates for so long that people would
make decisions for their lives and their families without regard
for what these uncontrollable numbers.

Speaker 1 (02:03:23):
What the impact was.

Speaker 13 (02:03:24):
Now I'm hearing about people making decisions to well, we
have to stay put a few more years. We just
we can't give up this three percent four percent interest
rate on our mortgage. So I'm not going to take
this job opportunity, or We're going to stay in the
smaller house. You know, I've been doing this for thirty years,
and I have not had conversations like this because we've
been so spoiled for so many decades.

Speaker 2 (02:03:43):
Yeah, I imagine so, And you know, I'm sorry I
lived through super high mortgage rates. You know, my wife
and I bought our first home. I've pointed out before,
we got a seven to twenty three balloon and had
to do We paid three points to get it down
to eight and an eighth. So it seems to me
that the interest rate is not the thing that's the
big problem, more so than the cost of homes went

(02:04:06):
through the blanking roof. There's not an available supply of
decent homes in an affordable realm, and COVID of course
caused that as well. People were buying up real estate
left and right, and so in inventory is not sufficient
to meet demand. So I think we need more affordable
sized homes, and I think more people could still buy
in spite of the fact the interest rates currently seven percent.

Speaker 13 (02:04:28):
Right, And I think but another factor here, comparing those
two time frames too. When you bought your house, we
had just come out of you're speaking in the early
eighties there, I believe in the nineties, oh nineties, okay,
all right, so well, similar points. We had just come
out of a recession. But the eighties were fairly strong
economically speaking. And we, like you said, we didn't have

(02:04:50):
the high prices of houses that we do now, right,
and so the math the metrics are just completely different
in terms of how you're going to make that decision.
But I think I think we've just come out of
a period where again people were so spoiled. We I
think kind of became a little convinced that three percent
mortgages are normal, not the absolute bottom rate we've ever

(02:05:11):
seen in history, And I think that's causing a bit
of hesitation with people thinking we're going to get right
back down there pretty quickly, But as long as inflation
is hanging around, don't. I don't see that coming really
anytime soon, simply for the fact that we have to
keep an eye on inflation, and we've done everything we
can to get rates back down from intrates themselves back
down from the eight nine percent range speaking of the

(02:05:33):
federal reserve rates back down to the close to three
percent rate, But that still is leaving mortgages because there's
still a component of demand that drives where mortgage.

Speaker 1 (02:05:43):
Rates sit as well.

Speaker 13 (02:05:44):
So we got little ways to go there, and I
think maybe some people are hanging on a little bit
too long to the idea that it has to get
back down to three percent before I can make a
decision to affect my family.

Speaker 2 (02:05:53):
Well, do you recommend or is there a suggestion people
not pursue like an adjustable rate mortgage. I mean, if
you think the interest rates have maxed out and are
going to ultimately drop, I know that might be a
dangling care for some people to consider, but it's like me,
going with the seven twenty three, we figured the rates
would be down by the time we had to refinance
or lock it in after seven years, and of course

(02:06:15):
that's in fact what happened. So what's your thoughts on
adjustable rate mortgages?

Speaker 13 (02:06:22):
So, yeah, I mean I think they can be I think,
by the way, what you're referring to is these are
called arms, adjustable rate mortgages. There can be a five
year ARM, you can have a ten year ARM. Seven
year basically means that you lock in your rate now
and it's going to be somewhere in the ballpark of
a market rate, but it will adjust to whatever that
market rate is after that period has ended. So if
we are sitting at a period which we kind of

(02:06:44):
are right now where we feel like rates will be
lower in the future. Again, we're not talking six months
from now, we're talking several years. Armed. Yeah, then you
can benefit by putting a mortgage in place that will
drop if rates have dropped at that time. And yeah,
I'm a fan of that. It's a little bit of
a different thought process. Want anybody to do an ARM.
You know, three four years ago, we were sitting in
the opposite situation where rates were extremely low and your

(02:07:06):
adjustable rate was going to go up on you in
five years yep, And we had people kind of in
a bit of a panic making sure they got it
paid off or refinanced before that ARM came due. This
is a little bit of the opposite where it can be.
There are tools out there if you're thinking differently than
three four years ago, there are tools out there that
can help you. And I think it's a good thing
to do, as long as it works within your overall

(02:07:26):
financial plan, which sometimes has more to do than just money.

Speaker 2 (02:07:30):
Indeed, we'll pause, right and I'm bring Brian back to
talk briefly. I'm sure about the thirty two hour work week,
and then also apparently looking at your phone may cost
you opportunities at work. Don't do that one more with
Brian James. This money Monday. I'll be right back after
these brief words.

Speaker 1 (02:07:46):
Fifty five KRC the Talk Station.

Speaker 2 (02:07:50):
We'll have a sunny day to day, a high thirty
eight overnight, some clouds and a drop to twenty eight
sunny skies tomorrow with a higher forty four during the day,
partly cloudy overnight down to thirty two and on why
it's going to be partly fidy and one up to
forty four twenty degrees. Right now, time for traffic.

Speaker 12 (02:08:06):
You see up Traffic Center, expect more at you see
health more twenty court trials, more treatment options for personalized care,
more chances to get you back to being new. Visit
you see how dot Com southbound seventy five continues slow
through Bachman's inbound seventy four, but the lay times have
dropped under the ten minute mark. Now between north end
and seventy five there's a wreck. He's found two seventy

(02:08:29):
five and seventy five. Trapping slows a bit from seven
to forty seven. Chuck ing Vermont fifty five k see
the Talk station.

Speaker 2 (02:08:37):
Hey, twenty eight fifty have KRCD Talk station. Brian Thomas
and Brian James, doing Money Monday. Buddy Levy with the
book Realm of Ice and Skies up next he's into
Arctic expiration history, and that's what that's about.

Speaker 1 (02:08:49):
Brian James.

Speaker 2 (02:08:49):
Real quick before we get away from the real estate topic.
It's just I saw an article about real estate insurance
has just really gone through the roof. We apparently had
two consecutive years of double digit increases in premiums and
it just sort of it just brings into focus. Just
because you can afford the mortgage payment, you got to
remember maintenance upkeep insurance, which is a variable that it's

(02:09:12):
going to you know, maybe go through the roof.

Speaker 1 (02:09:15):
Energy bills.

Speaker 2 (02:09:15):
I mean, who knows how much the price of energy
is going to be, but you got to pay the
heating and air conditioning bill every month, keep your electricity on.
I mean, it's just so much more than I think
people perceive you as a financial planner. Is this the
type of thing you walk through you're soon to be
maybe a home purchasing clients through to analyze this and
what it's all going to cost on a monthly basis

(02:09:38):
or an annual basis.

Speaker 13 (02:09:39):
Yeah, absolutely, And I would say we also talk about
that with our current home owning clients because we're in
an environment we haven't seen before. So, you know, it's
one thing to look at what is the cost of
me living my life right now. But the whole point
of a financial plan is to have a feel for
what it's going to look like in the future. And
one of those elements is the fact that homeowners insurance
and things like that that are going to get more

(02:10:00):
and more expensive.

Speaker 1 (02:10:02):
Property tax.

Speaker 6 (02:10:04):
Oh yeah, that's.

Speaker 1 (02:10:04):
Another one, right, Hey, you got a one third increase
in your property tax? Can you manage that? Oh, it's just.

Speaker 13 (02:10:10):
It's just a spiral as the value of things go up,
right that the value of your house as a whole
has gone up, But so has the value of the
plywood and the two by fours and all the other
stuff in there. So your insurance company is looking to
ensure not what you paid for your home, they're ensuring
the replacement cost.

Speaker 1 (02:10:26):
So something happens to your house, it gets wiped off
the face of the earth.

Speaker 13 (02:10:29):
What would it cost to put that house back in place,
which is going to be a heck of a lot
more than what you actually paid for it. Therefore, that
trickles all the way down into the premium. So that's
something to pay attention to to make sure you have
a handle on what those expenses might be in the future.

Speaker 2 (02:10:41):
Hey man, one of the reasons get a financial planner,
all right. I saw Bernie Sanders proposed it, and I
think it got laughed out of the room as a suggestion.
But a couple of weeks ago, or a week or
so ago, some progressive senators were pushing for the federal
thirty two hour work week. I know there's lots of
articles around about bringing them back into the office to work,
and a lot of federal workers are really angry about

(02:11:03):
that and maybe just going to quit their jobs because
they don't want to show up to work But thirty
two hours as opposed to a full forty hour work.

Speaker 13 (02:11:10):
Week, Yeah, and I think that the important detail there.
It's a thirty two hour work week proposal, but the
important thing is without loss of pay. So, in other words,
we're going to reduce output by twenty percent, but we're
not going to reduce the income that these folks make. Now,
this is not super popular. I don't see it seeing
the light of day anytime soon. Even Elizabeth Warren came out,

(02:11:30):
who's usually relatively in line with Bernie Sanders. She came
out and thinks it's a terrible idea. She said, it's
she thought it was an insult to the work that
her staff puts in. So I don't think there's going
to be a whole lot of popular And it was
never going to see the light of day anyway, But
even among the progressive side, I don't think it's going
to be all that popular. The last thing the progressive
side can afford to do is to work less if
they truly believe the different things are trying to push more.

Speaker 2 (02:11:52):
Which was just a general reaction, like, what nerve you
have to even suggest this at this moment in time.
Pivoting over to our final topic today with Brian James.
From all words financial, looking at your phone too much
at work could cost you opportunities. Saw this Washington Post article.

Speaker 13 (02:12:09):
Yeah, this used to be a thing we worried about
with our kids, right, So now it has snuck into
the adult world, of course, and I don't think it's
gonna too much of a surprise. But about fifty eight
percent of US adults say they now realize that they
use their smartphones too much, up from thirty nine percent
in twenty fifteen and some other surveys indicate that the
people are acknowledging. About two thirds of people acknowledged that

(02:12:30):
they use their phones multiple times during the work day,
and I would have to point out, ironically, some of
them probably answered this survey that had nothing to do
with work, but it popped up while they were looking
at it. Now, I know one thing that happens, but
I do have important notifications that hit my phone as
our staff communicates with each other to help our clients
and so forth.

Speaker 1 (02:12:46):
What I have to be careful of is when that
notification hits.

Speaker 13 (02:12:49):
I know it's an important one because the way I've
set my phone up, but I have to make sure
that I ignore all the stuff that might be there
but is not important, because that's how we get sucked
into the vortex of getting distracted and I'll deal with
the issue at hand, and then oh, look, there's better
check what's coming out of Washington right now.

Speaker 1 (02:13:04):
Got to know that right at this exact moment.

Speaker 13 (02:13:07):
So it can be very tempting to especially when we're
in the news cycle that we're in now, where there's
information coming fast and furious that does have an impact
on us.

Speaker 1 (02:13:15):
But we can't do anything about.

Speaker 13 (02:13:16):
So my suggestion would be the use the built in tools.
Whether you're an Android user or an iPhone user, Android
offers something called digital well Being that will help you
manage the as often as your phone distracts you, and
will help you keep an eye on how much you're spend,
how much time you're spending. iOS has screen time apps.
All these things have built in tools to help you
keep track of it. But it's discipline. It's like anything else,

(02:13:38):
Brian Thomas. You have to pay attention. You have to
be willing to make the sacrifice. It will help you
in your career. The last thing you want to do
is have your boss catch you snoozing on your phone
or heaven forbid one of the other headlines in here,
it's now happening during job interviews.

Speaker 1 (02:13:53):
Your interview is just about over.

Speaker 13 (02:13:54):
If you're hiring manager sees you check your phone for
no good reason.

Speaker 1 (02:14:00):
At least someone would actually do that. See you know
my family.

Speaker 2 (02:14:03):
You need permission basically from my wife if you plan
on bringing your cell phone out at the dinner table,
and you better damn will have a compelling reason to
do it. It has to be extraordinarily important. Otherwise, you
keep your phone in your pocket, you don't use it
at the dinner table. And yeah, we go out to
dinner and it's just it's room full of people that
aren't talking with each other. They're staring at their cell phones.

(02:14:25):
I think we all need to engage in a sense
of self awareness. I like the idea of the app
you said that detracts the amount of time you spend
on it, because I think if people realize how much
time they spend on their phones and sort of stepped
out them out of side of themselves and looked at
themselves staring at their phone all the time, they probably
would cut down on the amount of screen time.

Speaker 3 (02:14:44):
Yeah.

Speaker 13 (02:14:44):
I think that if we use these tools for the
right purposes, you can get a better picture of how
you look from an arm's length away. You know, no
different than if I start tracking my calories with an
app on my phone, I will definitely at least acknowledge
that I.

Speaker 1 (02:14:57):
Need to be a better adult than I have to.

Speaker 2 (02:15:01):
Brian James, I appreciate our conversations every Monday Monday, Money Monday,
Money Monday with Brian James. Thank you to you and
the folks at all Worth for Nashville for loading you
out every Monday. Good to hear from you, Brian. I
hope you have a wonderful week. We'll talk next Monday.

Speaker 3 (02:15:15):
Hey, we got one.

Speaker 1 (02:15:15):
We'll talk to you in February.

Speaker 3 (02:15:16):
I take care.

Speaker 2 (02:15:17):
Buddy Levy of the book ram of Ice and Sky.
He'll be on the program next. We'll learn all about
the Arctic exploration.

Speaker 1 (02:15:23):
I'll be right back.

Speaker 5 (02:15:24):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 2 (02:15:28):
In today's Marketers Report Kate Cronin eight thirty eight, Here
fifty five KRCD talk station. Been a very happy Monday
to you. I am pleased to welcome to the fifty
five KRC Morning Show. Buddy Levey, author of more than
ten books, including a Labyrinth of Ice, The Triumphant and
Tragic Greeley Polar At Polar Expedition, and Empire of Ice
and Stone, The Disastrous and Heroic Voyage of the Karl Luke.

(02:15:52):
His book have been published in eight languages, won numerous awards.
You may have also seen him on the History Channel.
He was on History's Greatest Mysteries host by Lawrence Fishburn,
and also The Unexplained with William Shatner hosting Today we've
got a new book to talk about realm of ice
and Sky, triumph, tragedy, and history's greatest Arctic rescue. Welcome
to the fifty five Case Morning Show, Buddy Lovey. It's

(02:16:13):
a pleasure to have you.

Speaker 3 (02:16:13):
On today, Sir Bryan, great to be with you.

Speaker 1 (02:16:17):
Answer me this.

Speaker 2 (02:16:18):
This has been puzzling me for a lot of years.
And you may like, Okay, you got more you need,
you got too much time on your hands. But I've
seen a number of documentaries about polar travel North Pole,
South Pole and the period in time when these these
adventures were made, these daring trips into frozen wastelands. What
in the hell prompted people to want to seek the

(02:16:41):
poles and put their literally their lives in peril to
do it. Did they have that bad home life or something.

Speaker 8 (02:16:48):
That's a great question. Well, it was multi pronged, really.
I mean, part of it was initially discovery, trying to
find out what was there, because early expeditions we still
didn't know what was at the top and bottom of
the world. Certainly these were added to fame, fortune and immortality,

(02:17:11):
because if you were the ones who could discover make
these discoveries, then there were lucrative book tours and lecture tours,
and you would also often you know, become feted in
your own country, and so there was also a nationalistic
pride to it. I mean, many countries were buying for

(02:17:33):
the polls, so there was a lot of different reasons.
But I mean, I agree, man, these were such daunting
expeditions that it's hard to imagine now putting yourself in.

Speaker 1 (02:17:43):
Such peril, it really is.

Speaker 2 (02:17:45):
That's what's always puzzled me. Is I said, these guys
had to have hated their wives or something. I mean,
this is just that craft crazy. Anyway, it was widely
reported at least. I think you've solved the mystery on this.
Who got there first? Doctor Frederick Cook claimed to have
made it to the North Pole in nineteen o eight,
and then a year later, as I understand, Robert Perry
made the claim that he had seen the North Pole first.

(02:18:07):
But what did you uncover in Realm of Ice and Sky,
the book you've just released.

Speaker 8 (02:18:14):
Well, you know, there's been arguments about this ongoing since
the early nineteen hundreds when Cook and Perry first made
the claims, but subsequently their records were found to be
either altered or fabricated. And so when Roll Dominson the

(02:18:34):
Norwegian went over the Pole in an airship in nineteen
twenty six with the Italian hum Berto Noble, he made
what is now considered and at least I find this
to be true, the first confirmed reaching of.

Speaker 3 (02:18:52):
The North Pole.

Speaker 8 (02:18:52):
And so you know, like I said, there was fame
and immortality were involved, and egos were involved in so
there were lots of there was fabrication, and so you know,
it ended up being this kind of ongoing argument and counterclaims,

(02:19:13):
and it was national and international news for years and years.

Speaker 2 (02:19:17):
Well, these were these folks that you talk about in
the book, Roland Aminsen and Walter Wellman. They flew to
the North Pole in a blimp right airship, that's correct.

Speaker 8 (02:19:32):
And Wellman, interestingly was an American from Ohio who was
the first to try and it was really I liken
it to the first astronauts. I mean, these guys were
called aeronauts, and Wellman was trying this in craft that
were untested. In fact, nineteen oh seven nineteen oh eight

(02:19:53):
he went up there to Spalbard, this archipelago north of Norway,
halfway between Norway and North Pole, and gets in one
hundred and eighty five foot hydrogen filled dirigible or blimp
we call them now, and with a you know, a
pretty small motor on it and tries to fly a

(02:20:14):
thousand miles to the North bowle and what could possibly
go wrong?

Speaker 5 (02:20:19):
You know?

Speaker 10 (02:20:19):
Right?

Speaker 3 (02:20:20):
And so yeah, these guys were you know, Wellman was.

Speaker 8 (02:20:23):
Really really brave and he and only a couple of
other guys were getting into these craft which had, like
I say, never before even been tested. I mean there
were they had been tested in h in France and
tested in other places, but not in the Arctic. So
it was really a pioneering and courageous effort that you

(02:20:46):
just have to marvel at the courage of these men.
And you know, some claimed at the time courage and
suicidal tendency.

Speaker 1 (02:20:55):
Yeah. Really, it's the first thing that went through my mind.

Speaker 2 (02:20:58):
Untested Eric and and going into frozen wastelins, and I
presume at times the wind had to kick up pretty dramatically.
So if you just got a little tiny motor and
you're floating around and basically what is a balloon? I mean,
how do you keep yourself on course? Would be a
question I would have before I went up on the thing.

Speaker 8 (02:21:17):
Right, So you're hoping for the winds to be in
your favor, and there were, you know, lots of study
about what the winds were doing in that part of
the world at these times. But you're absolutely right. Wellman
and his crew were buffeted around and blown in circles,
and they had a number of devices that they had

(02:21:38):
used Wellman device to try to keep them on course,
including these long cables that had hooks on the ends
and weights and there were you know, being they were
a five hundred feet long, they could help keep them
tethered to the ice. But again this was all rather
rudimentary and context. You know, the Wright brothers in nineteen

(02:22:02):
oh three had only recently been testing the airplane. So
one of the things I found really intriguing about this
story was that while Wellman was trying this, the airplane
and the airship were both buying for supremacy of the skies,
and so no one really quite knew whether the airship,
dirigible blimp, whatever you want to call it, was going

(02:22:25):
to defeat the airplane, and so it was a really
open question, and that part is quite compelling.

Speaker 1 (02:22:33):
Well, in any of.

Speaker 2 (02:22:33):
These various airship of dirigible blimp trips. Did they land
once they got to what would be known as the
actual North Pole or do they just take photographs from above?

Speaker 8 (02:22:48):
Well, that's a really great question. Sometimes they landed unintentionally,
which is called crashing. But when by the time all
Amansen and Nobley into the Fray, it's about sixteen years
after Wellman and they are able to definitively photograph above

(02:23:09):
the North Pole and photograph, I mean, they fly all
the way from Spalbard north of Norway to across the
Polar Sea, across the North Pole to Teller, Alaska and
make a kind of dramatic crash landing there though they
all survive, and so, yeah, it's a good question. The
plan had been in a number of these expeditions to

(02:23:32):
try this a great question, to try to land, to
try to lower people down, either from the hovering craft
or kind of like landing on the Moon, or to
land tether there and then get out and do some
scientific study on the ice. But conditions up there were

(02:23:52):
never really conducive to making intentional landings. And so you
do have a lot of drama in this story about
crash landings.

Speaker 2 (02:24:01):
Yeah, well it was I wanted to gravitate over to
a specific illustration that what is described as the disaster
of the Italia.

Speaker 3 (02:24:09):
Right.

Speaker 8 (02:24:10):
Yeah, So, after Amunson and Nobel, this Italian airship designer
make a somewhat successful flight in twenty six for National Pride,
Nobila decides to do it with an almost exclusively Italian
crew and he makes it to the North Pole. But
on the way back it can incredibly like a kind

(02:24:33):
of hurricane and wins, and so they end up crashing
on the ice and a number of people perish. It's
very dramatic. The dirigible, you know, the control car shears
away from the bottom of this dirigible. Many men are
left on the ice and the others float away above

(02:24:56):
them and are gone into the mist. And and Noblay
and these nine other men are left on a floating
ice flow for about six weeks with no one knowing
exactly where they are. And it's really it's one of
the most dramatic rescues in archaic history.

Speaker 3 (02:25:19):
And it's just incredible.

Speaker 2 (02:25:22):
How in the hell were they found? I mean, I presume,
maybe you can correct me if I'm wrong, that they
had no way of communicating. They didn't have like two
way radios with the mainland or whatever.

Speaker 1 (02:25:32):
Did they Ah, But.

Speaker 8 (02:25:34):
They did so one of the men had the good
sense to So this is also at the time that
Marconi's wireless radio has been developed, and so one of
the men had the wherewithal to leap from the crashing
dirigible with a short wave two way. And they are,

(02:25:54):
after a great deal of travail and innovation, are able
to get communication with first of.

Speaker 3 (02:26:02):
All, with some farmer in Russia. Of all things.

Speaker 8 (02:26:05):
Here's their s OS communications and contacts the Italian government,
which sets in motion this incredible rescue operation that involves
it's a multi national rescue operation that involves Sweden, Norway, Finland,
the United States, It's Italy and and all and all

(02:26:26):
these different countries are vying to be the ones to
find Nobule and his men, including dramatically, rolled Alminson, the
greatest polar explorer of all time, who has retired at
this time, comes out of retirement, hops in an airplane
to go sweep in and save his arch nemesis Nobule.

Speaker 6 (02:26:48):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (02:26:49):
And then he ends up.

Speaker 8 (02:26:51):
It's a great, really Hollywood ending. I mean, what ends
up happening with Noble or with Aminsen.

Speaker 3 (02:26:55):
I will give that away.

Speaker 8 (02:26:57):
He flies off, you know, with a number of men
in this prototype airplane, and it's just wild what happens?

Speaker 2 (02:27:08):
Well, read all about it, I guess today, Buddy Lovey,
author of Realm of Ice and Sky, Triumph Tragedy, and
History's Greatest Arctic Rescue before We Park Company. Really, Chris,
it's been fascinating, buddy. How is it you got involved
in Arctic exploration? What drew you to it as a topic?

Speaker 8 (02:27:25):
Oh, that's a great question. I ended up going to
Greenland when I was doing a bunch of journalism in
the early two thousands, and I met a Norwegian woman
who gave me a book called The First Crossing of
Greenland by this man named free Joff Nonsen, who was
a kind of protege of Amunson's. And once I started reading, well,

(02:27:45):
first of all, once I went to Greenland, I was
so struck by the landscape, the people, the you know,
the topography, and it was just a very dangerous and
foreboding place.

Speaker 3 (02:27:57):
And then I thought, oh, man, I got.

Speaker 8 (02:28:00):
Into the started reading about these Arctic explorers and I
was just hooked.

Speaker 3 (02:28:04):
I couldn't stop. So there's my third book about the subject.

Speaker 2 (02:28:07):
Yeah, exactly. Well, and obviously a very successful author you are.
I'm sure my listeners is going to go to get
one to get a copy of ram of Ice in Sky,
which we've made it easy for them to do.

Speaker 3 (02:28:15):
Buddy.

Speaker 2 (02:28:15):
It's on my blog page fifty five KRC dot com
a link to click on to buy a copy of
the book and enjoy it. These people were absolutely crazy, Buddy,
that's all I can conclude. Absolutely crazy. But man, would
a legacy left man, Buddy, real fun. It's fun talking
to you. Thanks for spending the time my listeners of
meaning for putting this all down on paper.

Speaker 3 (02:28:34):
Hey, my pleasure, Brian really appreciate.

Speaker 2 (02:28:35):
It, My pleasure. Indeed, have a great week. It's eight
fifty one fifty five KRC. The talk stations stick around
me right back after these pree four.

Speaker 1 (02:28:42):
Fifty five KRC.

Speaker 3 (02:28:44):
Steve Vere with us

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