Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:09):
Fibo five at fifty five k r C the talk station.
Happy Tuesday.
Speaker 2 (00:24):
We will.
Speaker 3 (00:29):
Vacation and that's the way.
Speaker 4 (00:33):
The news going. Indeed, it is Happy Tuesday to you
Brian Thomas right here. Good to see Joe Jreker Roy
blogs in the executive producer booth. And a good lineup today.
Thank you just Trekker for the guest we've got coming
up this morning. Seven o five Todd Zenzer returns. Former
Inspector General. Todd Zenzer is kind of op ed submitted
to the Inquirer. Multiple Inspectors General, new Inspectors General, and
(00:56):
DOGE should collaborate, says Todd Zenzer, all in an effort
to well cut back the outrageous spending going on in
the federal government. One of the big this is the
primary problem with our federal deficit over spending. We can
keep our taxes low. We just need to curve back
the amount of money that the federal government spends every year.
It can be done. The book Shiloh Creed h Plunged, throwing,
(01:25):
first installment in the Three Worlds Christian sci fi series.
We'll be talking with the author Shiloh Creed with the
book Plunged at seven thirty Christian sci fi series. That's wild.
We'll have to learn about that one together. I never
know who I'm going to be talking to until I
get in the studio in the morning. Sometimes I get
(01:47):
a curve ball. I'm gonna call out one a curveball
this morning. But we learned together. So seven thirty with
Shiloh Creed and the book Plunged. Eight oh five. It
is Tuesday, so we get the inside scoop of bright
Bart News every Tuesday at five. Today, Deputy plit letter
Bradley Jay returned to the program talking about Trump's remarkable
first week and it is quite remarkable flurry of executive
(02:07):
orders and actually a profound impact, most notably in the
area of illegal immigration crackdown, and got some fun figures
on that. It's an amazing reality when you see what
Trump's been able to accomplish and the administration has been
able to accomplish in just a short period of time
compared to what Biden allowed to happen on his watch
(02:31):
over his four years in office. On the border, and
we witnessed chaos on the border, just unimaginable, day after
day after day, thousands and thousands of illegal immigrants welcomed
into our country into the Biden administration, even though it
was well the illegal entry millions and millions of illegal
(02:55):
immigrants in our country under Biden's watch, when he could
have easily stopped from happening by just simply doing what
Donald Trump did. We all lay witness to the fact
that Donald or that Joe Biden undid what Trump had
put in place in terms of border security, and immediately,
almost like a light switched on, the hordes of folks
(03:20):
from the four corners of the world arrived at the
southern border, and Biden encouraged it. His administration actually encouraged it,
telegraphed out to the world that this was happening. I mean,
you know, the Internet's connected us all up. Everybody in
the four corners of the globe can see at real time. Oh, look,
(03:40):
the border's open. Look at the crowds of people flowing
on in. Look at the large est being bestowed upon
a bunch of folks who really have no legal right
to be in the country.
Speaker 5 (03:51):
Hmm.
Speaker 4 (03:54):
And I mean, I say this and it seems so
bloody obvious. And it's been widely reported that many countries
emptied out their prisons and sent them to the southern border.
What an easy fix one. You know, you you damage
the United States, You make it a less safe place
(04:15):
to be, a more dangerous place to be for the citizenry.
Get them all in a panic, which is you know,
serves the interest of a you know, division in our
in our country to their interest, which is of course
anesthetical to you know, the United States interest. But that
(04:37):
they free themselves from the burden of having to deal
with those prisoners in their own prison. What an easy solution.
And of course that happened coordinated with with with drug
cartels and gangs who made billions of dollars ferrying illegal
immigrants into our country. I mean, it's a massive organized
crime reality that was created on the Biden administration didn't
(05:00):
lift a finger to do anything about it. I mean,
just look at the blue cities. The citizen re angry
at the elected officials for allowing this to happen. Resources
soaked up by illegal immigrants in their communities. Children not
getting an education that they need, not that they were
getting one in public schools anyway. That problem has been
going on for decades. But you know, you exacerbate the
(05:23):
problem by flooding it with a bunch of illegal immigrants
into the school rooms that can't even speak English, housing, food, shelter.
Speaker 5 (05:31):
I mean it.
Speaker 4 (05:33):
I mean, I know my listeners know exactly what I'm
talking about. But the stark contrast between this current administration,
what they've been able to accomplish in a very short
period of time, and what the Biden administration allowed to happen.
I'm surprised that, you know, well, maybe people are angry,
(05:59):
Maybe people are reflecting upon the damage that the Biden
administration did. I would like to hope, so, I really would.
Maybe we've learned a lesson. Let's not go down that
road again. Anyhow, remarkable first week going off with Bradley
j coming up with eight oh five, and then finally
No Act. Finally Daniel Davis deep dive to let us
(06:21):
on the Russian Ukraine situation not looking good for Ukraine.
And finally we get our cervical caarness a cancer awareness
month expert from OHC my cancer doctors that'll take place
at eight fifty So Cervical cancer Awareness Month. Let us
(06:42):
see here. Oh yeah, and on the border, why not
start here? Stark contrast. Absolutely less than six hundred people
crossed illegally into the United States from Mexico. On Sunday,
not a single one of the nine sectors received more
than two hundred crossings, and the number of daily encounters
only reached five hundred and eighty two. In total context,
(07:08):
del Rio sector would sustain over four thousand crossings per
day at the height of the border crisis in December
of twenty twenty three, sixty recorded crossings sixty on Sunday.
The daily number of border encounters during the final days
(07:29):
of the Biden White House between twelve hundred and fourteen
hundred a day. Again, less than six hundred people on Sunday.
I'd say that's a profound, stark contrast. It's pretty amazing.
And the balance that they've struck, and this is a
(07:50):
brilliant balance. It's being struck by the Biden administration. Who
are they going after? This is something Christopher Smithman spoke
to the other day very passionately. So criminals, criminals, and
this by going after criminals, which everybody wants out of
their neighborhoods. They're unpopular migrants, you know, they don't have
(08:14):
the You can show crying women and children outside of
schools and churches about worrying about being deported, and you
might pull on the heartstrings of people who you know
could gravitate toward an anti deportation mindset. But by focusing
on criminals and showing the gang members, the rapists, the
murderers being rounded up, and Ice knows where they are.
(08:37):
I mean, this is just so apparent they know where
they are. Mean. Tom Homman even said it out loud.
This won't be neighborhood sweeps. This is a targeted enforcement operation.
We know exactly who we're going to arrest before we
leave office. Every arrest we make has been approved by
a supervisor. This is a quote from Tom Oman, borders are.
(09:00):
I know exactly who we're looking for. We have a
pretty good idea where we're going to find them, and
they got to get approval to do it. So it's
going to be a well, well planned, humane operation. It's
a careful, gradual deportation strategy, which is designed specifically to
offset the Democrats' effort to paint well Trump's repatriations is
(09:26):
cruel and counterproductive. That's a smart way of going about it,
because you can't defend a child molestor rapist, whether he's
a US citizen or someone is in our country illegally. Oh, look,
we can get rid of him. Huh, he's in our
country illegally. This is a rapist. Round him up, send
(09:49):
him on. And it's widely reported and it has because
you can observe it with your own eyes. You don't
see a whole lot of protesters in and I'll admit
there have been some protests, but it's muffled what was
expected to be a widespread backlash. Even I was talking
about it this way, if Trump gets re elected, you
(10:10):
know there's gonna be violence in the street. All the
illegal immigrants are going to organize and they're going to
go on public display and march and shout and cheer
and demand rights and whatever. A tremendous backlash is what
I expected. But again, by focusing solely on the most
nefarious and evil folks within the illegal immigrant population, you
(10:33):
can stave off that kind of criticism. And it's worked
so far, so true. I mean just one area, and
I know Trump issued an executive or getting rid of
DEI in the military and banning racial gender ideology, and
it had a profound impact over the VA, which is
not going to be saving a tremendous amount of money.
I can get to the details on that, but what's
(10:54):
the VA there for right for veterans and their families
to help them with their needs health and otherwise. What
in the hell does DEI have to do with fulfilling
that goal and that that mission statement? Zero nothing NAA
And yet millions and millions of dollars in resources funneled
over within the VIA to D for DEI programs. How
(11:16):
did that happen in the first place? Why did it happen?
Five one, three, seven, four nine fifty eight hundred eight
two three dog pound five fifty on AT and T funds.
It's more figures on that coming up. A lot to
talk about this morning, but I welcome your phone calls.
Steer the conversation as you see fit. It's five sixteen
right now, fifty five KOCD talk station.
Speaker 5 (11:37):
There's the story.
Speaker 6 (11:38):
You see these wildfires, devastating scenes from California.
Speaker 7 (11:42):
Then there's the real story, what is happening in California
On the Glenn Beck program, they were not prepared what
they've done by shifting funds away from fires to equal
opportunity for lesbian lizard cults.
Speaker 5 (12:00):
Weekdays at nine all of.
Speaker 7 (12:01):
Your priorities were nonsense. On fifty five KRC, the talk station.
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Win the Wild, Channel nine first one of what the
Poecana says today is going to be mostly Sunday day
and one only up to forty two, light southwest winds overnight,
partly cloudy skies, gusty winds and a low of thirty
one sunny skies Tomorrow, breezy afternoon forty five for the
(12:29):
high down to twenty six overnight, partly cloudy skies. Thursday
is going to be a partly cloudy start of the day.
Showers and rain will show up in the evening, and
we'll go all the way up to forty seven degrees
Right now thirty three degrees here at fifty five k
R seedy talk station.
Speaker 5 (12:45):
Happy Tuesday. Go to fifty five perosee dot com.
Speaker 4 (12:48):
Get a copy of a Realm of Ice and Sky
Buddy Lovey's book but Arctic Exploration in blimps Man. There's
some crazy, stupid, crazy people that did Arctic exploration back
in the early nineteen hundreds, just joking with them. What
drives the human being to want to risk, literally risk
their life and limb to go to a sub zero
(13:09):
frozen tundra. I sucked, like you really have to hate
your home life to back up and do that. Shackleford
and all this guy's like why okay uh? And cannibalism
was mentioned in the notes on that one because one
of the blimps crashed and they were stuck on an
ice sheet. This is exactly why smart and sane people
(13:31):
don't do stuff like that. Money money with Brian James,
Christopher Smitham and the Smith Event. It's all there fifty
five krcy dot com on the podcast page. Recommend you
check that out. Five one, three, seven, four nine, fifty
five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two to three Talk
con Fi fifty on AT and T phones. Welcome back
to the fifty five Cassy Morning Show, my friend, Mississippi James.
Good to hear from you this morning.
Speaker 8 (13:50):
Good morning, doctor Bryan. The lection is old. Trump is
in there and he's upsetting a whole bunch of apple carts.
Speaker 5 (14:00):
Yes, sir, you know, hey, dependam has began to swing.
I think it's swung. I love you.
Speaker 4 (14:07):
I love your observations along those lines, because yes, the
pendulum does swing back and forth. We get Republican administrations.
We get Democrat administrations, we get divided House and Senate,
we get you know, full on Republican senator Democrats.
Speaker 5 (14:20):
And I don't know, do we.
Speaker 4 (14:22):
I guess I'm wondering if we ever learn anything from
these exercises, James. But yes, the pendulum has swung in
the opposite direction one hundred and eighty degrees.
Speaker 8 (14:31):
Well, those of us that stayed balanced in the middle,
you know, we see it go back and forth, and
that's where your sanity is in the middle. Stand balance.
But now I have a question for you, going back
and at one time I was speaking of some things
Trump had lied about doing the campaign, and you asked
(14:52):
me what had he lied about? And I said, I'd
get you a list on things that he lied.
Speaker 4 (14:58):
Okay, and he's in there, the election is over.
Speaker 8 (15:01):
Do I still need to get you that list?
Speaker 4 (15:03):
Yeah?
Speaker 8 (15:05):
Why is it?
Speaker 5 (15:07):
Because?
Speaker 4 (15:08):
I mean, you know that many times Trump has been
accused of multiple things that simply were not true. So
in order to dispel those myths and maybe you know,
erased them from the mindset of people who disagree with Trump,
his policies, his principles based upon you know, the racist, homophobe, xenophobe, rapist, whatever,
(15:29):
you want to call Donald Trump is among the litany
of myth perpetuated about him. Maybe dispel some of those
if if we can do that, but it's not fundamental,
it's not necessary, James. You don't have to provide me
with a list. But I think there were more lies
spun and perpetuated by mainstream media about Trump than actual,
you know, lies you can definitively share, say that he
(15:52):
engaged in or or spoke.
Speaker 8 (15:56):
Now you used to say you was a retired recovering lawyer. Yeah,
but actually you became a litigant for Trump and you
knocked down everything that came out of gifts.
Speaker 4 (16:09):
Well, yeah, you did a good job. Well I appreciate that.
And this is you know, you're talking to a guy
who is not an always Trumper guy. I mean I
pointed out his flaws and his and his problems, and
I lamented many times. Gee, if is anybody but Trump,
we wouldn't be struggling with this. Because I was really
worried that Kamala Harris is going to get elected. So
(16:30):
I had to become a profound Trump supporter because I thought,
you know, I really was concerned about our country and
the future of our country. If we had President Kamala
Harris Grave concerned over that, James. So, I'm not an
always Trump guy, and I do disagree with some of
the way he delivers messages and some of his attitudes.
(16:51):
But look, I'll take you know, in spite of that
and his problems and the issues that I've had with
him over the years, he's delivering on what he promised,
and what he promised is something that I embrace.
Speaker 8 (17:02):
I understand, I understand, But sometime you get out of balance,
you know. Now that's just like, uh, I go here.
Did you hear about one of the people that he
pardoned just got killed in indianimal Yeah?
Speaker 2 (17:15):
Yeah, yeah, he was up there.
Speaker 8 (17:17):
Yeah. So now when they say each case should be
looked up on as individual about him doing in which
that's his way. He got the choice, you know, And
they need to look into president pardons in the future
because they have so much power. Yeah, but that's just
one of them things. So we'll see where we go
(17:38):
with this, and hey, let's try to stay in the middle.
And I think people can have civility. We in the middle,
and we can move this world. And if we're ever
going to upright this ship, you know, like I said,
he's upsetting a whole bunch of applecarts. Yeah, so we
go from there. Okay, have a good day, games.
Speaker 4 (17:59):
You appreciate it.
Speaker 2 (18:00):
Man.
Speaker 5 (18:00):
Best of your wife.
Speaker 4 (18:01):
Tell her we said I five twenty five here fifty
five k see talk stations the ground, local stories or
more phone calls. Cant care to call?
Speaker 5 (18:07):
Feel free.
Speaker 4 (18:08):
That's what the show's all about, exchange of ideas. I'll
be right back after these words.
Speaker 5 (18:13):
Glenn back. Hopefully it dawned on you.
Speaker 3 (18:16):
Holy cow, this is a completely different Trump administration helping
you see. Clearly he's putting the fun back in fundamentally.
When things get Donald Trump messy, eviscerated them. I think
he just stuck a knife in their belly and took
their guts out, and it was like, look at these
are stinky, gutsy rubbing their nose in it. Evisceerate all
(18:38):
of the policies and just speak the truth. Week days
at nine on fifty five KRC talk station.
Speaker 5 (18:45):
Run a bit mostly sunny day to day.
Speaker 4 (18:48):
It's a little slight southwest winds high forty two down
to thirty one overnight with partly cloudy skies and gusty
wins sonny tomorrow, breezy afternoon with high forty five over night,
partly cloudie. In twenty six, man, we get a start
of partly cloudy skies on thursdayers and rain shower and
rain shows up in the evening at some point. Let's
(19:09):
see a high forty seven thirty three degrees right now.
THO give about terse talk stations. It is five twenty nine,
it is Tuesday, and a very happy one ticket. Yeah,
if you hadn't seen the story that Mississippi James was
talking about got in Indiana, man, we can call throw
this in the local stories and the details are kind
of sketchy. One of the J six folks that was
(19:34):
pardoned by Donald Trump fatally shot while allegedly resisting arrest.
Preliminary investigation says that Matthew Huddle pulled over by Jasper
County Sheriff's deputy for a traffic stop. This according the
Indiana State Police Criminal Investigations Division Post, during a stop,
the officer attempted to arrest this guy when he began
to resist. According to police, altercation took place between Huddling
(19:57):
and the officer, resulting in the officer shooting. It's noted
that Huddle was in possession of a firearm at the
time of the traffic stop. I don't know. It didn't
say illegally or unlawfully possessing a firearm. Of course, it's Indiana.
You have a very strong constitutional Second Amendment rights in Indiana.
So statement from Jasper County Sheriff Patrick Williamson said the
(20:18):
officer involved is currently on paid leave. He said, for
full transparency, I requested the Indiana State Police investigate this
officer involved shooting. Officer that is involved been placed on
paid administrative leave standard protocol, and condolences to the family
of the deceased, saying any loss of life is traumatic
to those who were close to mister Huddle. So they
(20:40):
say further details will come out later, but that's about
all we got. He'd previously been sentenced to six months
in federal prison in twelve months on supervised release, according
to federal records, but he again got a pardon from Trump.
So let the conspiracy theories rumble on that one, and
I'm sure they are or will anyway over to more
(21:03):
local stories, not that Indiana's not considered local. Thirty eight
year old man arrested after he climbed under the brent
Spence Bridge after a police pursuit, shutting down the bridge
for several hours. Great thanks coming to police State officers
Let's find out together. Officers received information that a car
connected to a burglary suspect was heading northbound I seventy
(21:26):
five near Eye two seventy five. Officers tried to stop
the car, but the suspect fled from the scene. According
to police, the suspect lost control of the car, crashing
into two other vehicles on the northbound deck of the
brent Spence Bridge about four forty five pm yesterday, just
in time for rush hour. Man got out of his car,
climbed over the side of the bridge and hid in
(21:48):
the support beams underneath. Again for several hours, north bout
lanes were shut down his police searched for the suspect
since they and erling Er Police assisted as well as
the Northern Kentucky Drug Strike Task Force. Eventually, southbound lanes
were also closed as officials were able to secure the
suspect and work on getting him down. Police actually used
(22:10):
drones and rescue boats to locate this guy. Eventually surrendered
and was taken into custody by the Covington Police Carter
Kaufman was one of the many who was struck. Stuck
in the backup talking to WCPO, who reported on this
one on his way home from work when he hit
the traffic. It's about to be the fourth hour, left
(22:30):
work at four thirty pm and it's almost seven point fifty,
so yeah, it's been pretty rough, he said. It's usually
like a thirty minute drive. Forty minutes with traffic within
a span of two hours. He said he moved about
one thousand feet. Finally able to get moving around eight pm.
Geez suspect Joshua D. Baker taking to Saint Elizabeth, Covington
(22:53):
before being taken to the Kenton County Jail charged with
first degree fleeing, third degree fleeing, first degree, wanting in angerment,
first degree criminal mischief, carjacking, and driving on the suspended license.
Please said. Baker had four outstanding warrants at the time
of the pursuit, scheduled to be in court this morning.
If you're not doing anything, please, said A woman in
a passenger seat of the car was taking to saintes
(23:14):
Covington by ambulance with minor injuries. Residents and business owners
in Cincinnati can now register their security cameras to help
police with criminal investigations. Register your ring, Brenda or donas
Fox nineteen reporting. Thank you, Brenda, there's Dad from beyond.
(23:38):
Since I Police unveiled a new platform, not As Connects
Cincinnati cloud based real time crime center that combines various
public safety technologies in one platform. You too can build
the big brother infrastructure. Voluntary program makes it easier for investigators,
collect evidence quicker and helps officers respond to better active situations.
(24:00):
There you go, since they Police. Lieutenant Jennifer Mitch. Being
a homicide investigator for eleven of my twenty eight years,
I spent a lot of time going door to door
and looking at poles, looking at buildings, looking for cameras.
One of the reasons police department is launching this program,
Lieutenant Mitch said, it's a virtual real time crime center
where residents can register their cameras, which will allow us
(24:22):
to canvass the area virtually when crimes or traffic accidents happen.
Please say, registering your camera does not allow police to
access your live video stream. Whatever I was waiting for,
That's actually what I was thinking. We got a mind
meld going on this morning, Joe and I. But access
(24:46):
to your live video stream is an option depending on
which preferences you select. Police department encourages residents to local
business owners to consider upgrading the video systems with live
video feeds. There you go by installing small all core device.
Residents can and business owners can share live footage.
Speaker 6 (25:04):
There.
Speaker 4 (25:04):
It is with the department during emergencies, which can help
improve response times. Live feed can be turned on only
when needed through a smartphone app or a manual button.
And it's important for security Jada and cynical as Joe Strecker.
Since I police chief three so Thiji said, building a
strong partnership between our community and law enforcement essential to
(25:24):
maintaining public safety. This platform enhances our ability to keep
Cincinnati safe, and we encourage all security camera owners to
join this effort.
Speaker 2 (25:34):
No.
Speaker 4 (25:35):
Covington Police, they have a similar program been around since
twenty seventeen. Public concerns about potential misuse, though, have limited participation,
according to a department spokesperson, Yeah, the general public not
real wild about sharing well their cameras with big Brother,
and I can understand that. You're right, Joe pointed out.
(25:56):
The obvious governments are never hacked either. Five thirty five
fifty five K CED talk station stack. Oh stupid coming up.
Alternatively phone calls, that is your choice, but I do
have a good stack is stupid. I think they're always good.
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Speaker 9 (27:30):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 5 (27:36):
Time for the weather.
Speaker 4 (27:36):
Ten and nine says today will be mostly sunny, little
late southwest winds, high A forty two, gusty wins every night,
partly cladisky is in low of thirty one. Tomorrow mostly sunny,
breezy afternoon forty five for the high, partly claudia every
night down a twenty six. Thursday's going to be partly
cloudy's start of the day with showers and rain showing
up in the evening. High a forty seven thirty five.
(27:57):
Right now, if you give out KERCV talk station first
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health dot com. Highway traffic in decent shape this morning.
No bridge closers to deal with, and not even a
delayed pants. Those that are being worked on north southbound
(28:21):
two seventy five doing fine out of Lawrenceburg. Chuck Ingram
on fifty five kre see the talk station.
Speaker 4 (28:30):
Five forty one, Happy Tuesday if I've won three seven
fifty five hundred eight hundred eight two three talk found
five fifty on AT and T fund. Before I get
to the stack of suplet see what Pat's goott this morning. Pat,
Welcome to the morning show.
Speaker 10 (28:42):
Oh, good morning, Brian. We're praying for everybody. Last night
my brother watches ABC and CBS whoever, and they got
a whole new crew during the evening news now, and
I just wondered if I think it might be that
Laura O'donald one whatever station it is, but they're all
(29:06):
gone now. They got these two guys. So I just
wondered if the Dems are trying to redo everything, and
maybe they can get these two guys to get everybody
believe in whatever.
Speaker 8 (29:18):
The heck they say.
Speaker 10 (29:19):
But I don't pay a whole lot of attention because
I'm more into the AM radio and.
Speaker 8 (29:27):
Joe Conshid and.
Speaker 10 (29:31):
Sarah Carter and the one little girl that's here in Cincinnati.
I can't think that she's an investigative reporter. Oh I
wish I could think of her name right now. But anyway,
you talk to her a lot. So I'm hoping that
she's going to be doing more investigation on Connie Pillage
(29:55):
because I was devastated with the loss we had. So
but anyway, sweetheart, pray for the children. I know they
found some of them. They're more or less working in
some of these factories or whatever meat places. But take
care and I'll talk with you later.
Speaker 4 (30:15):
Thank you, Pat appreciate that I think you're referring to
Sharon Coolidge And editorial opinion from Jostrekker is the likelihood
of her investigating Gunning Pick like just slim to none, okay.
And as so far as media shakeups, it's going on
all over the place, stacking the bodies up at various
(30:36):
left wing media outlets. Yes, the recipe for ratings is
a failed model, so maybe they're all moving out there
and trying something different over the stack of stupid Georgia.
Mann has been trying to get a refund for months.
He says he ordered a drill from a site called
Ali Express. Instead of a drill, he received a printed
(30:57):
photo of a drill. Mister Franklin and Savannah decided his
time for some new tools logged on to Ali Express
or to the drill among other items, so he didn't
get what he paid for. He said, they sent me
this a picture is what they sent me. So printed
picture the drill he ordered was all he got. I
paid twenty two hours and forty seven cents for a
pressure washer and this is what I got. It's a screw.
(31:23):
He's been going back and forth with this organization since
he ordered the items in November. Still hasn't received a refund.
Local News and Savannah reached out to Ali Express found
the company as a subsidiary of Ali Baba, referred to
often as the Amazon of China. US trade representatives added
Ali Express to the list of notorious markets for counterfeiting
(31:45):
and privacy back in twenty twenty one. Website has a
D rating from the Better Business Bureau. State of Georgia's
Consumer Protection Division received three complaints against against the company
in twenty twenty four. One of the people complaining said
they never received the IT and purchased another out Over
four hundred dollars of the item sent was fake tracking
number never delivered. Shoppers said they tried to get their
(32:08):
money back in multiple instances. None of them did until
they reported their stores to the CPD. He said he's
tried to get his money from all the express They
tried to get a charge back from his bank without
any success. He said he's only spent about forty dollars,
but wants others to take a lesson from his story.
Don't do that by forty five five care ce the
(32:30):
talk station. Instead of don't do that, definitely do this.
And that's called USA Insulation. For a free inspection, any
free quote to insulate your home, you'll save money on
your energy bill. And that to me is just that
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on your energy bill. Energy bills that just keep going
up and up and up, achieve instant instant the day
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they install the insulation, instant improved comfort in your home noticeably.
So one thing you certainly notice right out of the
gate is gear home is going to be quieter. So
if you've got traffic out in your front area or
something like that, you're going to notice a much quieter home.
But the comfort, even distribution of your conditioned air, and
of course saving money. Mid seventies is kind of the
(33:13):
cutoff dates, so you either have under insulated situations and
homes built and shortly after the mid seventies. My daughter's house,
I like to use that as an illustration R twelve
in the wall, and that deteriorates over the years, so
not even getting R twelve. We bought the phone for
them as a house swarming gift, and they are enjoying
the comfort, and they have commented multiple times about the
comfort that the foam has provided for them. Same thing
(33:34):
for you. You'd be comfortable, you'll save money. You get
a twelve hundred dollars energy tax credit next year when
you're doing your taxes, and it's only ninety nine dollars
a month interest free. You might realize that much and
perhaps even more in your monthly energy savings. So call
them up again. It's a free inspection to see if
you're under insulated. It's a free quote if you need it.
(33:55):
Five one three three eight one three six two six
five one three three eight one FOAM learn more online,
check out the website US Insulation dot net.
Speaker 9 (34:02):
Fifty five KRC.
Speaker 5 (34:04):
If you're living.
Speaker 4 (34:08):
Time for the Channel nine weather which says today it's
going to be mostly sunny, a little light winds and
a high forty two dusty wins overnight, partly cloudie in
thirty one sunny tomorrow for the most part, forty five
for the high, down to twenty six overnight with partly
cloudy skies and a partly cloudy start of Thursday, with
showers and rain showing up in the evening at some
point forty seven high then thirty four Right now in
(34:30):
time for traffic friendly.
Speaker 5 (34:32):
You see how traffic center expect more and you see
how more clinical trials, more treatment options for personalized care,
more chances to get you back to being. You visit
uce healp dot com. Highway traffic in decent shape and
start up your Tuesday morning. No bridge closures to deal
with north and southbound seventy five doing just fine across
(34:52):
the brand's fence right now with no delays. Chuck ingram
Mount fifty five KRC. The talk station.
Speaker 4 (35:00):
Five fifty to fifty five kers talk station Happy Tuesday,
back to the stack. Oh stupid.
Speaker 3 (35:10):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (35:10):
Kathleen and Maureene Degan, siblings, arrested for allegedly battering each
other at a Catholic church where their ninety five year
old father's funeral had just been held. Why are you
doing that? We'll find out together. Sibling fight, accorded to police,
prompted by the eulogy delivered by Kathleen Degan, sixty six
(35:31):
years old, of the services for their dad, doctor Arthur Deagan,
courting the rest Affidavid. Kathleen's eulogy did not include a
mention of her sister, Marine's twenty four year old daughter,
which upset the younger woman and triggered a verbal argument
between Kathleen and her niece. Investigators charge aimmen brother charge
(35:53):
at Marine. Sixty year old Marine walked over to Kathleen
and purposely chest bumped her, then grabbed her sister's hair
and pulled it backwards more. Maen responded by throwing strikes
at Kathleen's face. Not clear whether she used an open
or closed hand I material from my perspective. All captured
on close circuit TV. This resulted in Kathleen's arrest for
(36:17):
misdemeanor battery. Marine charged with felony battery because the victim
is over the age of sixty five.
Speaker 5 (36:24):
Idiots doing idiot things, because there it is.
Speaker 4 (36:27):
Yes, indeed, held overnight in the county jail, was it
worth it? They were released from custody on their own recognizance.
Judge ordered the women not to have any contact with
each other. What a great way to remember your father.
Dispute over cold French fries at Wendy's in Kentucky resulted
in exchange of gunfire between a male patron and a
female restaurant employee who was shot in the bottom. What
(36:53):
courted police Manja James Wooten, who's twenty five, and two associates.
Associates engaged in a verbal altercation of the drive through
window with Twineshia Coleman, a twenty six year old Wendy's worker, over.
Speaker 5 (37:09):
The cold French fries as a tradition.
Speaker 4 (37:12):
James Wooten and his co defendant subsequently entered the Louisiana,
Louisville Eatery I apologized, where he allegedly produced a firearm
and fired a shot. Coleman returned fire. Then the defendant
began to fire multiple rounds. One of which struck the
victim in the buttdox. Day after the incident, second woman
contacted police reported that she had been shot. Woman reportedly
(37:32):
admitted that she had been with James Wooten at Wendy's
when he shot her. Charged with felony assault. James Wouten
turn himself into police on Friday afternoon, being held in
the Louisville Metro Metro Department of Corrections. Coleman, the Wendy's worker,
facing serious problems over her own at the time of
the shooting. Coleman was on probation in connection with a
conviction on felony theft and gun charges, was legally barred
(37:56):
from possessing a gun. Coleman pleaded guilty in twenty twenty
two to possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.
As the consequence of the Wendy's incidents, Coleman has again
been charged with being a felon in possession of a firearm,
a felony for which she is scheduled to be a
raigned on February fourth. There's nothing good in that. Here's
(38:21):
a creepy one. Carleton, Texas. People in neighborhood frightened by
a man wearing a Satanic mesk mask rather carrying a
sign depicting the apocalypse. Stranger captured on a family's doorbell
and driveway cameras on Saturday night, drawing concern from the residents.
(38:41):
Neighbors in the community left wondering if it was a
prank or prophecy Gloria John's it's the first time we've
had anything like this in this neighborhood. Unknown man wearing
the Unsettling mask holding a sign which read Revelation twenty
verse one through fifteen, which depicts the apocalypse in Christianity,
an eternal judgment where followers ascend to heaven and the
condemned are thrown into a lake of fire. Man who
(39:06):
can argue with that man did not just approach the
front door of the family's home. He also walked behind
the home and stood in front of a drive away camera.
Home owners fought a police report after the incident said
they have lived at their home for decades and didn't
know what the person or what didn't know the person
or what the message meant. Carroton Police, for their parts,
(39:26):
said that person had not committed a crime for them
to be considered trespassing. They would have had to bypass
a barrier like a fence, ignore verbal warnings, or stay
on the property after being told to leave. Police also
said they're monitoring this situation to ensure public safety. Yeah,
a little creepy. That H five and five with five
(39:49):
k C detalk station is the climate religion over Oh.
I can only hope so interesting observations from Barton Swam,
one of the op contributors over the journal, and I
can pray that he's right. I think he actually is
onto something. We'll dive into that a whole lot more
coming up in the six o'clock hour. But I also
welcome your phone call, so feel free to call at
(40:10):
five one, three, seven, four nine fifty five hundred, eight
hundred eighty two three talk pound five fifty on your
AT and T phones. Oh, by the way, anniversary of
the Challenger explosion. Remember that like it was yesterday. I
was in college nineteen eighty six. Wow, passage of time.
Stick around. You're right back covering.
Speaker 5 (40:28):
Trump's first one hundred days.
Speaker 11 (40:30):
Every day we stand on the verge of the four
greatest years in American history.
Speaker 7 (40:35):
Fifty five tRCD talk station run a business and not
thinking about podcasting think again.
Speaker 4 (40:43):
At six oh five, Right now fifty five rc DE
talk station, Bryan Thomas wishing every one a very happy Tuesday.
Excuse me, Inviting phone calls is always five one, three, seven, four, nine,
fifty five hundred, eight hundred eighty two to three talk
and pound five fifty on AT and T phone. Fast
forward one hour. Todd Zenzer, former Inspector General for the
United States, returns in studio. He submitted an op ed
(41:04):
to The inquir which was published New Inspectors General and
DOGE should collaborate. Todds is just a brilliant, brilliant guy.
So it's a fortunate thing that you and I have
him to talk to and get some great information from him.
So we'll do that. At seven oh five, followed by
Shiloh Creed with the book Plunged, described as the thrilling
first installment in three worlds Christian sci fi series, vivid,
(41:28):
gripping and remarkable. Say some So I'm just wondering together
with you how you could have a well Christian sci
fi series. That's what Shiloh cree to be talking about
at seven thirty. Fast forward to eight oh five inside
scoop of bright Bart News, the return of Deputy Political
Letter Bradley j who were talking about Trump's first week
in office, and Daniel Davis Deep five and a deep dive.
(41:50):
At eight thirty we'll get the latest on the Russia
Ukraine war and finally we're gonna learn about cervical cancer.
It is Cervical Cancer Awareness Month. My friends from OHC
will be talking about that at eight fifty. So there's
your lineup and it's a good one. Thanks as always
the Jukes Trecker for putting that together. And I meantime,
(42:10):
I don't know how you react to a global warming
alarmists when they predict the number of deaths that will
happen from climate change. But there's a group out there
called the Environmental and Health Modeling Lab at the London
School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Yeah, immediately raised eyebrow
(42:32):
of skepticism on something coming out of that operation, but
they specifically stated that Barcelona is projected to suffer are
you ready two hundred and forty six thousand and eighty
two heat related death by the end of the century,
(42:54):
Not eighty three, not two hundred and forty six eighty one,
but two thousand and four two hundred and forty six
eighty two. By the end of the century, Rome and
Naples projected to experience one hundred and forty seven thousand,
seven hundred and thirty eight climate related deaths. And that
would be Rome Naples one hundred and forty seven, two
(43:14):
hundred and forty eight climate related deaths over the same period. Okay, now,
I think you go to the details of this study,
but the specificity of those numbers immediately causes me a
reaction of jaded skepticism and cynicism, which leads me over
to Barton Sway and his op ed piece why climate
change ideology is Dying Great Observations, and I can only
(43:38):
hope Barton is onto something in his observation. Specifically, momentous
social movements begin to die the moment adherents figure out
their leaders don't believe what they say. Level Protestantisms long
decline started in the nineteen fifties when congregants began to
wonder if their ministers still believe the old creeds they didn't.
Communism dies wherever it's tried, because sooner or later the
(44:00):
proletariat realized their self appointed champions aren't particularly interested in equality.
Many sects and cults dwindle the moment their supposedly aesthetic
leaders are revealed to be libertines. Something similar is happening
to climate ideology. For three decades, were me included, you
were labeled a crank, a climate denier, someone who pig
(44:23):
heavily rejects so called settled science if you didn't embrace
the belief that life on Earth faces imminente extinction from
global warming and later climate change. The possibility that an
entire academic discipline, climate science could have gone badly amiss
by groupthink and self flattery wasn't thought possible in many quarters.
(44:44):
This orthodoxy still reigns unquestioned. That climate ideology was alarmist
and in no ways settled should have been obvious from
many ways it was. The conclusions of genuine scientific inquiry
rarely reinforced the social and political biases of power brokers
and influencers. But climate science, like some of this softer
(45:06):
social sciences, did exactly that. It purported to discover foreboding
trends in unscrutable data and assured us that the only
way to arrest them was to do what Americans liberal
cultural elite wanted to do. Anyway, that is a mass
political and economic power in the hands of credentialed technocrats,
supposedly for the good of all. The ordinary person, though
(45:28):
lacking familiarity with the latest peer reviewed science, wasn't wrong
to regard the whole business with skepticism, suspicions further aroused
by contemplating the sheer immensity of the data, all correctly
interpreted required to confirm the conclusions asserted by climate science
and its media champions. Were scientists really so confident they
(45:52):
understood what was happening with sunbeams in the upper atmosphere?
That they knew how to gauge accurately the temperature of
roughly two hundred million square miles of the Earth's surface,
or that they knew how to compare present day temperatures
with those that obtained fifty, one hundred, one thousand, or
five thousand years ago. Are more important still, that they
(46:14):
knew what political and economic measures would mitigate the theoretical
apocalypse they inferred from these mountains of data. Even if
aggregate global temperatures are warming, the question is whether this
will lead to civilizational cataclysm unless humans radically rearrange how
they live. Many capable interpreters of the evidence think the
(46:36):
answer is no. But what is finally convinced ordinary people
that the doomsayers are wrong isn't any interpretation of climate figures.
It's the palpable sense that very few of the doom
sayers believe what they say. Why aren't the moguls and
corporate executives who claim to be unnerved by the prediction
(46:58):
of climate science giving up their car been heavy lifestyles
and living in caves or at least it's simpler dwellings
than a mansion. It progressive VIPs and media, politics and
entertainment believes sea levels are already to rise precipitously. Why
do they keep buying properties in Martha's Venues, Vineyard, bar, Harbor, Provincetown,
(47:18):
Santa Monica, and Malibu. The climate lobby can wave aside
these questions if the wishes, but appeals to reports and
studies weigh little against the appearance of insincerity. If activists
predicting global mayhem really believe what they predict, they would
favor an instant transition to zero mission nuclear power, but
(47:40):
they mostly don't. Every September, the transnational elite gather at
a UN General Assembly to denounce America for its favor
to limit carbon emissions and clog the streets of Manhattan
for a week with their privately chartered oversized SUVs. Disdain
for climate alarmism has gone mainstream. Dream last year, the
liberal comedian Bill meher Marr delivered a monologue on his
(48:04):
television show in which he blistered celebrities who insist on
the need to reduce our carbon footprint, bud zip around
the globe and private jets. It's a masterpiece of political
invective and has been viewed online by millions. I don't
call any of this hypocrisy because that term properly refers
to the difference between private behavior and public words, and
(48:24):
in the case of climate alarmism, there is no attempt
to hide the behavior or to make it match the words.
So for instance, the Defense Innovation Board, a group sponsored
by the Pentagon and chaired by former New York Mayor
Michael Bloomberg, issued two studies this month recommending the reconstitution
and strengthening of America's defense industrial base. The reports have merit,
(48:51):
but following all the recommendations would require the procurement of
a vast array of manufactured materials produced with natural gas, petrochemicals,
and coal. Meanwhile, mister Bloomberg oversees two nonprofit organizations, Beyond
Coal and Beyond Petrochemicals, whose stated aim is to end
(49:12):
the country's use of natural gas, petrochemicals, and coil coal.
Mister Bloomberg isn't embarrassed by the contradiction. He hasn't tried
to explain it, except indirectly in a vaguely worded Washington
Post op ed co authored with David ah Berger. Quote,
the technology needed to make today's advanced military supplies, they write,
(49:33):
relies on computer chips more than blast furnaces, and on
research labs more than assembly lines. Sure, but it does
rely on blast furnaces and power stations of the sort
mister Bloomberg's activist groups want to shut down, which will
make any thinking person wonder if he believes the catastrophism
emitted by his nonprofits. Climate skeptics groused about these and
(49:58):
many similar contradictions for two generations, to little effect on
the consensus that ruled unquestioned in boardrooms, universities and government agencies.
Then Los Angeles burst into flames. California has been run
for many years by people who believe or say they believe,
the climate change is an immediate threat to civilization. Yet,
(50:19):
now as thousands of homes are destroyed by fires spread
by a seasonal win so historically predictable, it has a name.
State and local officials, with the endorsement of a cheerleading media,
blame climate change. These same officials have told us for
decade that they accept the direst prediction of climate activists,
(50:39):
but they have done little to counter what they now
purport to be the effects of climate change. Mayork Karen
Bass's twenty twenty four to twenty five budget proposed a
two point seventy percent cut to the Los Angeles Fire Department,
madely in areas of new equipment purchases, and although the
department's total budget later increased as a result of salary negotiations,
(51:00):
it's pretty obvious that the dangers of wildfires, supposedly the
outcome of climate change, weren't foremost on city leader's mind.
California has for several years under invested in land management,
which might have inhibited the fires from spreading, and water storage,
which would have enabled firefighters to put out more fires.
(51:22):
Climate catastrophism has begun to die the victim of its apostles. Unbelief. Yep,
you just got to step back from this nonsense and
take a little bitty look at it. It's very obvious
Barton Swain hit the nail on the head on that one.
Thank you Barton for that six sixteen Right now fifty
(51:47):
five k SE detalk station. Feel free to call five
point three seven four nine fifty five eight hundred eight
two to three talk. Another number you should call as
the number to Foreign Exchange get your traditionally imported foreign
car fixed with a full warranty on parts and service,
and not spending as much money as you'd spend at
the dealer to get it done. Yes, that's what foreign
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service there is phenomenal. The Westchester location is what I'm
speaking to because that's where I've always gone foreign x
dot com online for in the letter X dot com.
But the Westchester location is that Tyler'sville legs it off
of I seventy five. Just head east on Tylersville to
take a ride on the second street that'd be Kinglin
Drive and it will be right in front of you.
They are factory trained as certified mechanics that will be
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They have data access the manufacturers technical information. They literally
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So call Austin and the crew. Here's the number. Five
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Five one three six four four twenty six twenty six.
Visit them online again at foreign x.
Speaker 9 (52:58):
Dot com five KRC.
Speaker 5 (53:01):
When the wildfires truck lop.
Speaker 4 (53:05):
UH Channel nine says, Today is going to be mostly
sunny day, some light winds with a high forty two,
overnight gusty winds, low thirty one, partly clotty. Mostly Sunday
Tomorrow breezy afternoon and a high forty five, partly cloudy
every night twenty six and Thursday is going to start
out partly cloudy, but showers and rain are apparently going
to show up at the evening at some point. Thursday's
high forty seven. It's thirty three right now, in time.
(53:27):
First traffic update from the UC Health Traffic Center.
Speaker 5 (53:30):
Expect more had UC help, more clinical trials, more treatment
options for personalized care, more chances to get you back
to being you. Visit uc help dot com. Highway traffic
continues to look good this morning, no accidents to deal with,
no delay and says of yet in Bend seventy four
under five minutes north bend of the seventy five are
(53:52):
chuck Ingramont fifty five KRC NEED talk station.
Speaker 4 (53:57):
At six twenty one, fifty five KRC DE talk station.
Happy Tuesday. Was it a Krushev, former Soviet Union ruler
Cruise Shiv who said we will destroy you from within?
It was one of the Soviet leaders. They feel what's
going on right now? Yeah, we've been invaded by this
insane climate ideology, which ultimately, I mean, look at Germany.
It's a great illustration. Germany, the powerhouse of the European Union,
(54:20):
just completely shut off all of its energy production beyond
windmills and solar panels, and they can't survive. You want
to undermine capitalism, take away the energy. That's all there
is to it. See what Mike's got this morning. Mike,
Thanks for calling the morning show. Good to hear from you, Hi, Ryan, talk.
Speaker 12 (54:42):
About the California of fires when Trump was out there
meeting with the mayor and I guess city council members,
but their time, it could be someonem are saying eighteen
months before people can get back in to get permits.
They're staying there to make sure.
Speaker 4 (54:59):
The toxins in there.
Speaker 12 (55:01):
That's stuff burnt to the ground. There's not gonna be
toxins left.
Speaker 5 (55:07):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (55:08):
Trump Trump waving all the federal permitting requirements so people
can get their homes rebuilt.
Speaker 12 (55:15):
Right, she said a week. He's like, that's too long.
Speaker 2 (55:18):
What was that.
Speaker 12 (55:20):
She said, if we can get permits in a week.
He's like, wow, that's too long.
Speaker 2 (55:24):
Right.
Speaker 4 (55:25):
And he did get her to open up the neighborhoods
so people could go and take a look at their
well now burned down structures and maybe see if there's
any other belongings left.
Speaker 5 (55:34):
Yeah, And then and then one.
Speaker 12 (55:36):
Guy from the city, we need to make sure we
have things ready next time and kept like like water.
Speaker 5 (55:44):
Yeah. He troll them.
Speaker 4 (55:49):
Yeah, they're like straight men setting up a comedian for
the delivery of the line. But they made it so
easy on Trump, and you know, it's just look at
the reality. It's like the art points out, like so
many people have noted screaming and yelling and spending billions
and billions of dollars because, oh my god, our carbon
dioxide output needs to be curbed dramatically, Oh my god.
(56:12):
And you know global warming. Look what's happening. The climate's changing.
All the forests are all dried up, and the heat
is increasing. Well, you know that is a problem. Allegedly
that's going to happen. This this this outcome of climate change,
the sea levels rising or whatever, one hundred and two hundred,
three hundred years. Hence, hell, we've already passed up all
the deadline dates that al Gore was screaming about two
(56:33):
decades ago.
Speaker 5 (56:34):
Nothing happened. Meantime.
Speaker 4 (56:38):
Again, even if you believe in this climate change stuff,
real time, the effects of it are creating inherently dangerous situations.
I just I always joke about that that bad religion song.
It's from what the the nineties or something. It literally
is talking about the exact conditions which resulted in the
(57:00):
wildfires in California. This isn't the first time it's happened,
did they do anything to stop it. No, your elected
officials failed you again. And one of the reasons they
failed you, which is so almost it's almost comical, if
it wasn't so tragic. They got programs in place to
clear out brush and all these flammable materials to make
(57:21):
the wildfires less likely or easy to spread. And when
they go to try to accomplish one of those projects,
some environmental group comes in citing some California environmental statute
and stops the project from moving forward. Again.
Speaker 5 (57:37):
I go back to we will destroy you from within.
Speaker 4 (57:41):
It worked, So I'm going on real time right now,
still in Los Angeles, six twenty five, Right now, I
fifty five care see de talk station. Phone calls are
quite welcome. I'll get the local stories in little phone calls.
But first the word for my friend Peter Shabriekelorwilliams seven Hills,
the finest group of real estate agents ever assembled. They
(58:02):
provide true value to you. Peter Shabrin's team of the
Shabi Group of Keller Williams. No, it is a competitive
market out there and they want to help ensure that
you land your dream home. And as a buyer with
the Shabri Group, you can use them as buyer agent
or sellers agent. Qualified clients can leverage the cash to
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there's no waiting. You walk in with a bag of cash.
Effectively in the day, the deal's done. That's what essentially
Peter Shabrin the group can do for you. That's the
kind of five star experience in service you can expect
and will receive from the Sabri Group. To reach them
one of several different ways seven zero eight three thousand
(58:47):
dot com. That also happens to be the phone number
of fort A five one three in front of it
seven zero eight three thousand dot com or call five
one three seven zero eight three thousand. It's late in
the day. You don't remember that Shabrie is spelled c
Cha b ri il. So search Chabri Group in your
search engine and you will immediately find it and you'll
be glad you did. They're great folks, and please give
them my regards when you reach out to them.
Speaker 9 (59:10):
Fifty five KRC.
Speaker 5 (59:12):
Waking Up.
Speaker 4 (59:19):
Channel nine says today we have a sunny day, light
winds high forty two. It's gonna be gusty, wins overnight,
partly cloudy skies that are dropped to thirty one forty
five to high tomorrow with mostly sunny skies overnight, partly cloudie.
In twenty six and on Thursdays start out partly cloudy.
Rain and showers arrive in the evening at some point
high forty seven thirty two.
Speaker 5 (59:39):
Right now, time for traffic from the Uccale Traffic Centator.
Expect more and you see health morelnyful trials, more treatment
options for personal about its care, more chances to get
you back to being you visit U see help dot com.
Highway traffic not all that bad to deal with so
far this morning north to satbound seventy five doing on
(01:00:00):
the Brand Spence out Bend two seventy five. That's beginning
to slow a bit into the construction at the Carroll
Cropper branch. Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRC the talk station.
Speaker 4 (01:00:12):
Six point thirty here but about KERCD talk station Brian
Thomas wishing everyone a happy Tuesday. Looking forward the top
of the hour because after the news, Todd Zen's or
former Inspector General. We'll be talking about the op ed
PC submit of the inquire multiple Inspectors General working with
Doughes to cut back the insanity that is government spending.
Great idea great concept and of course one of the
(01:00:33):
pledges from Donald Trump in this administration. One can only
hope because after the first four years of the Trump president,
of the first Trump presidency, we had a massive increase
in the federal deficit. So I'm praying that that will
not be the case this time around. Local stories, I'd
start with a local, loocal thing. I love Greaters ice cream.
(01:00:54):
I love the Greaters family. I love the fact that
they help out the Cure Starts Now, which is an
effort to find a cure for peace theatric brain cancer
among other cancers, and they always, you know, great sponsors
for that event. And of course their ice cream. The
awesomeness of their ice cream, I think is it's legendary.
I just I don't get this Skyline chili ice cream.
(01:01:17):
It's funny because I saw Alex Chreantophilo finally tried it.
He said his wife made him try it, and he
gave it two thumbs up. Cinnamon spiced ice cream with
oyster crackers. I was reluctant. Don't be It's so damn good.
Now let me stick with the the lane is blueberry
pie or the raspberry chocolate chip anyhow. Warren County Sheriff's
(01:01:42):
off He's issued a warning yesterday about an uptick in
vehicle thefts in the area. Lieutenant Brian Payne, post commander
of the Deerfield Office, said crime while driven by the
use of new technologies that helped suspected criminal organizations bypass
key fob security systems. In one use, it's report of
the thieves use a key programmer to plug directly into
(01:02:05):
a vehicle and generate a keyfob that mimics and the
signals sent by the branded keys. Those signals allow them
to start the car and drive it with the car
thinking that a legitimate key is inside court. Lieutenant pain
We've gotten some videos recently with people carrying these scanners
in their hands, which has helped us kind of identify
this trend. Sheriff's Office said the recent thefts don't target
(01:02:27):
any specific vehicle make or model, and unlike recent spikes
and auto thefts, stems specifically from Kias and Hyundai's Sheriff's
office said these people suspected the community of the thefts
are known to carry weapons. Anyone's seeing anything suspicious to
call nine to one one and not confront them. The
Sheriff's office said, according to pain, if they see something specific,
call right away. That way we can get on top
(01:02:49):
of it. And that's our best tool right now. Because
they can steal these cars so fast with these programmers,
and these subjects are known to be armed. Now, it's
been courage is residents to make sure they remove all
key fobs from their vehicles and avoid storing the keys
or fobs near the front door. Sheriff's office also said
that due to the second type of technology, it allows
these to boost the signal of your key. Boost the
(01:03:12):
signal your key emits to reach out to receiver near
your car. That receiver then communicates the signal to your
car as if the key is sitting in your home,
we're in the thief's pocket. The car will read it,
unlock it and allow them to drive away. Oh joy
Joy of Joys. Paints of the criminals work in groups
and activities could be tracked to groups they've monitored operating
in Cincinnati. The Great and Greater Dayton area. They also
(01:03:36):
suggest residents hide an independent tracking device somewhere inside the vehicle,
monitor home cameras and surveillance systems, and call the police
immediately if something strange is captured. He said videos submitted
the office have allowed them and other law enforcement agencies
to track different groups. Jeez, wheez get Dave had to
(01:03:56):
talk about that and if there's a way to prevent
that from happening. Arrest made in connection with the threat
to shut down Northwest Local School District last Wednesday, Coraing
Police Department announced yesterday January twenty second, the school district
announced the schools will be closed following reports of a threat.
Police stated at the bomb thread of an emailed to
the school staff and began an investigation, which led to
(01:04:16):
the arrest of a ninth grader from Coleraine High School.
Officers say convinced the ninth grader convinced two other juveniles
out of state to send the threats via email. Ninth
grader taken into custody by Coal Ring police and taking
to the Hamilton County Juvenile Court Youth Center, charged with
inducing panic, which is a second degree felony, fourth degree
(01:04:37):
felony swatting, fourth degree misdemeanor telecommunications harassment. School District didn't
initially specify the nature of the threat sent to staff
to protect the integrity of the investigation and at the
request of the Coleraine Township Police. Investigation is ongoing. If
you have any information, please contact the Coal Ring Police
(01:04:58):
at five poet three three time two one twenty six
seventy seven six point.
Speaker 5 (01:05:04):
Thirty five right now.
Speaker 4 (01:05:04):
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That's seven seven four ninety four ninety five.
Speaker 9 (01:06:43):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.
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Run a business and not thinking about radio. Think again,
Jennine says, Today.
Speaker 4 (01:06:55):
We have a mostly sunny day with a high forty two,
little windy out there, gusty wins, partly cloudy skies and
are dropped to thirty one forty five. Tomorrow's high mostly sunny, skies,
breezy afternoon, partly claudia over nine down to twenty six,
and a partly cloudy start of Thursday. Showers and rain
later in the day in the evening sometime forty seven
for the high Right now thirty two.
Speaker 5 (01:07:15):
In time for traffic from the UCE How Traffic Center,
expect more you see help, more clinical trials, more treatment
options for personalized care, more chances to get you back
to being you visit u see health dot com. Highway
traffic doing fine this morning. Beginning to load up southbound
two seventy five between the Lawrence Perg Ramp and the
(01:07:36):
Carroll Cropper Bridge southbound seventy five not a problem at all.
Approaching the Brands Fence northbound looks good too. Chuck Ingram
on fifty five kr see the talk station takes forty
fifty five krs DE talk station you can call.
Speaker 4 (01:07:53):
Well to hear from you got something on your mind
five one three, seven four nine fifty five hundred eight
hundred eight two three talk fifty five kr SA dot
com for the podcast when you can't us alive too,
for example, Christopher Smithman in the Monday Morning smith Event
right there at fifty five kre seed dot com. Coming
up off top of the ar again, Todd Zenzer, former
Inspector General, on Inspector General's working with doge paaraback government spending.
(01:08:13):
Shilloh Creed the book Plunged. I'm puzzled by it. It's
a Christian sci fi series and thanks to Eric for
forwarding me some other Christian sci fi series book. I'm
not a sci fi guy, so I'm just sort of
got a big question Mark's floating around anyway. That's why
we get to talk to Shiloh Creed. That'll be at
seven thirty Bright Bart Inside Scoop. At eight to five,
(01:08:35):
we'll talk about Trump's remarkable first week and Daniel Davis
deep dive with the latest on Russia and Ukraine at
eight thirty.
Speaker 5 (01:08:42):
Anyhow, it's over.
Speaker 4 (01:08:43):
In the military, Trump signed the executive order banning, well,
what do you call radical gender ideology DEI and everything
related to it from all branches of the US military
two separate executive orders, both of them titled Prioritizing Military
Excellence and Ready and Restoring America's Fighting Force. They say
(01:09:07):
they should be implemented by the Defense Secretary of Peak
Hegseth and the Secretary of Homeland Security within thirty days.
Under the Restoring America Fighting Force, Trump state's DEI programs
have undermined leadership, merit and unity, cohesion, eroding lethality and
force readiness. Also violated America's conscience by engaging an invidious
(01:09:31):
race and sex discrimination quote No individual or group within
our armed forces should be preferred or disadvantaged on the
basis of sex, race, ethnicity, color, or creed. That's in
the order also includes an internal review conducted by HEXATH
within ninety days to document all instances of discrimination or
promotion based on race or sex. Also includes a banning
(01:09:55):
of all quote un American, divisive, discriminatory, racial extremists, and
irrational theories from being taught in the armed forces and
educational institutions operated or controlled by the military. Those theories
include gender ideology, divisive concepts surrounding race or sex, stereotyping
or scapegoating, and the idea that America's founding documents are
(01:10:16):
racist or sexist. Huh and pause for a moment. I
don't know where you are on these particular topics. But
what is the American military there for to fight and win?
A cohesive fighting force, not an indoctrination camp. I mean, really,
(01:10:37):
the American military became an extension of the American K
through twelve education system in the college education, which has
been overrun by a bunch of woke, ideological leftists. It's
like a continuing education program. You can't get away from
this woke ideology. But what is the point. Why did
our military adopt these policies? Mean, I'm going back to
(01:10:57):
we will destroy you from within. If you want to
hear road the effectiveness of your fighting force. If you
want to create a bunch of woke ideologues rather than
training the people how to kill people and break things,
well this is the direction you go. It weakens amer
American military force. It also weakens the desire of young
patriotic folks who otherwise want to serve their country because
(01:11:19):
they believe in their country, they're willing to make the sacrifice,
enter into the realm of the unknown, signing up for
a life that they have no control over, but for
the purposes of upholding the institutions that made America great.
If you let them know in advance, you're gonna be
(01:11:40):
subjected a bunch of dei policies and a bunch of
things that don't relate to merit that they're going to
hire and fire people based on whether or not they're
transgender or fill in some check mark on a woke
idea logue box list, talk about reducing the desire to
want to join America's fighting force.
Speaker 5 (01:12:00):
Why am I doing this?
Speaker 4 (01:12:02):
I don't believe in this stuff. This is wholly inconsistent
with my belief system that it's wholly inconsistent with the
American what made America really truly outstanding in the world,
and it worked apparently, the volunteer military fighting force. We
(01:12:26):
need people who are patriots to serve and protect and
if you look at the recruiting numbers, and I know
I'm just speaking something that everybody might listen to audience
is painfully aware of Recruiting numbers are down precipitously. They're
(01:12:46):
having a difficult time getting people who can actually join
the military. In addition to the other problems, I mean,
you've got obesity as a problem. The the health and
welfare of our young people who would otherwise might qualify
to serve in America's military care meet the minimum standards.
Minimum standards have been eroded under DEEI policies. I think
(01:13:06):
Pete Heggs that's going to have a field day clean
the things up, and I think he's going to do
a great job returning the America America's military to what
its purpose is. Kill people, break things, protect us from
threats both foreign and domestic. A well oiled fighting machine
is what we need. Sixty five afty five cash to
the detox station. Oh, I see Keith on the line. Keith,
(01:13:26):
I will be happy to take your call. After these
brief words. You'll be first out of the gate. Got
other callers calling in. I welcome those. And I just
saw doctor fred Pack yesterday. I had a little chip
in my tooth and had his appointment lined up. It's
a cosmetic issue in doctor Fred Pack, what a great guy.
Just your tongue and you rub on it and it's
(01:13:47):
like it's it's rough, and it drives you crazy.
Speaker 5 (01:13:49):
Well no longer.
Speaker 4 (01:13:50):
He did a great job fixing a little bonding agent
and a little bit of work and boom, I'm done.
I'm good and I'd love seeing doctor Fred Pack. He's
a genius in the area of cosmetic dentistry. You're not
going to find a better dentist. He is well known
and highly acclaimed because of his brilliant work and life
changing impact is smile makeovers. So if you're not happy
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with your smile for whatever reason, you're in the best
possible hands. He's a fellow with the American Academy of
Cosmetic Dentistry and want them. Only a handful in the country,
only three of them in the entire state of Ohio.
Also doctor Megan Frew. If you don't like the dentist,
you want doctor Meghan Frew as you're a dentist. Everybody
loves her and with good reason when you meet her,
and she's just so charming and friendly and you know,
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easy on the eyes, if I can say so myself.
But you're in the best possible hands in terms of
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And the staff are just they're just so nice and
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(01:14:56):
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Speaker 7 (01:15:16):
Fifty five the talk station Your Hands were Coming Jenna
nine First one.
Speaker 4 (01:15:22):
Weather forecast sunny skies today with a little wind in
high of forty two Gussie wins overnight, partly cloudie in
thirty one. Sunny skies tomorrow h forty five for the high.
Partly cloudie every night. Twenty six Thursday, partly cloudy started
the day with showers and rain showing up in the
evening at some point forty seven high then right now
thirty one and time for traffic.
Speaker 5 (01:15:42):
From the UCLF Traffic Center. Expect more and U see help,
More clinical trials, more treatment options for personalized care, more
chances to get you bank to being you visit uc
health dot com. Highway traffic that's not too terribly bad
so far this morning, South Bend two seventy five the heaviest.
And that's those testament onto the KAO of Crawford Bridge
(01:16:03):
from the Lawrence Burg Ramp. Chuck Ingram on fifty five
krc DE talk station.
Speaker 4 (01:16:09):
Sixth if you want, if you about KRCD talk station, Yeah,
Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev, we will take America without firing
a shot.
Speaker 5 (01:16:19):
We will bury you.
Speaker 4 (01:16:20):
We can't expect the American people to jump from capitalism
to communism, but we can assist their elected leaders in
giving them small doses of socialism until they awaken one
day to find that they have communism. We do not
have to invade the United States. We will destroy you
from within. Doesn't it feel like that's exactly what's been
going on? And the we in that particular case was
(01:16:41):
the Soviet Union, of course, but the collective, we global Marxists.
We're getting it from the four corners of the globe,
fueled of course by Internet and the ability to manipulate
the hearts and minds of people who are well blind
to the realities of communism and socialism. Keith, thank you
for holding over the break. Welcome to the program.
Speaker 13 (01:17:00):
Yeah, good morning, Brian. So that comment about these cars
getting stolen, Yeah, so I work at a I work
at a dealership and within the past few weeks, I've
probably gotten about three or four phone calls about this
exact situation where, yeah, where people are actually seeing them
(01:17:20):
on their security cameras and they're just saying they.
Speaker 14 (01:17:24):
Have like an iPhone or tablet, whatever the case may be,
and they're asking them what they can do. And really
the only thing that I think Dave actually mentioned this
a week or two.
Speaker 8 (01:17:37):
Ago, those Faraday bags. Yeah yeah, and that's really the
only thing that I can suggest to them.
Speaker 4 (01:17:43):
Is that's a great idea, Keith. You put your fob
in a Faraday bag. That's so if they have one
of those amplifier units from inside your house, they it'll
have no impact whatsoever. But the more frightening element on
that story to me, Keith, was that they had these
portable units that can just create a new key fob
by logging into your car. Essentially, it's like a second
avenue to do. It makes me wonder what the insurance
(01:18:05):
rates are gonna, you know, explode and go through the
roof if they have a you know, widespread outlet or
or or widespread use in one of these devices. But
outstanding suggestion, Keith. I do appreciate you calling and mentioning
that put it in a Faraday bag when you're when
you when you go home, wherever your keys happen to lay.
You can get one of those on Amazon for just
like five bucks or something. Corey, welcome to the program
(01:18:26):
and to Happy you Tuesday.
Speaker 11 (01:18:27):
To you, well, I'm Brian. That was just a comment
you talked about communism't coming in. It even starts at
the local level. We got to stop voting these rhinos
in the office like Mitch McConnell and Kentucky. He'll be
lucky to finish his term in the Senate at this time,
and guess who gets to appoint a new senator? The
Democrat that was voted in by Kentucky and extremely red state.
(01:18:50):
They voted Andy Basheer. Which that's my big fear is
something will happen to Mitch McConnell right now, or he'll
either step down just to hurt Trump and allow another
Democrat to take over his seat.
Speaker 5 (01:19:01):
Wow, right said the same thing.
Speaker 11 (01:19:03):
It starts at local level, just like we got Mike
Dwine here in Ohio.
Speaker 4 (01:19:06):
Yeah, what is the deal with Mitch McConnell anyway, What
the hell is wrong with him?
Speaker 11 (01:19:12):
I believe he's like any other politician. He's got rich
his whole life off of being a politician, and he
don't want to lose that gravy tree.
Speaker 4 (01:19:19):
Yeah I suppose so, But I mean he's he's Joe knows.
You know the answer, Joe, the biggest douche chevy universe
in all the galaxies.
Speaker 5 (01:19:32):
There's no bigger dudes that you.
Speaker 4 (01:19:36):
You've reached the top the pinnacle and douche good going, dude,
your dreams have.
Speaker 5 (01:19:45):
Thank you, Joe Strecker. If Senator McConnell, minority leader in
the Senate, is the majority leader in the Senate, expect
no change.
Speaker 4 (01:19:55):
Put an exclamation point on it with a quote from
Judge Enita Poulitano.
Speaker 13 (01:19:59):
Thank you, lad, a Democrat wearing a Republican suit.
Speaker 4 (01:20:05):
You got a great collection of soundbites in there from
over the years. Joe, thank you so much for putting
smile on my face and probably made a few of
my listeners crack up on that one too.
Speaker 5 (01:20:14):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:20:15):
Anyhow, Todd Zenzer after the top of the our news.
Former inspector General. He is, and he's a very informed
and brilliant man. We're gonna get the benefits of his insight.
After the top of the our News. Then interesting book
It'll be plunged, Christian sci fi series by author Shiloh
Creed'll join the program at seven thirty. Stick around right.
Speaker 5 (01:20:35):
Back, covering Trump's first one hundred days. Every day, America's
deadline is over fifty five care see the talk station.
This report is sponsored by puretalk dot com. It's time
to ditch big Wireless. Pure Talk gives you.
Speaker 4 (01:21:07):
Seven oh five here at fifty five krc DE talk station.
Happy Tuesday, one time's right here. Glad to be hosted
fifty five Cassey Mornings. So, especially when a guy like
Todd Zinser is in studio, talk about what's going on
in Washington, d C. Spent a lot of time there
because Todd was an inspector general. He was in DC
for thirty one years conducting audits and investigations of federal officials,
(01:21:28):
programs and operations. And he penned an op ed piece
to the Cincinni Inquirer of the new igs and DOGE
should collaborate Todd. It's always great to have you in studio,
my friend. Thank you, Brian, Good morning, Good morning. Let's
start with, you know, ten thousand foot view. What do
before we get to the idea of Donald Trump firing them,
(01:21:49):
what do inspector generals do? What are they tasked with?
What are their day to day responsibilities?
Speaker 8 (01:21:54):
Right?
Speaker 15 (01:21:54):
The Inspectors General are based on a nineteen seventy eight
law called the IG Act of nineteen seventy eight. It's
been amended a couple of times, but it basically puts
inspectors general in each of the department or cabinet departments
and numerous other agencies. And it basically has two sides.
(01:22:14):
They have an investigative side and they have an audit side.
An audit is very expansive. It's it security audits, contract audits,
grant audits, financial statement audits, they do the whole thing,
and on investigations. They do investigations of fraud against the government,
criminal cases, and they also do administrative cases involving misconduct
(01:22:38):
and other rule violations and things like that. They operate
a hotline for fraud, waste and abuse reports, and they
have a dual reporting requirement. They report to both the
Secretary of the Department and they have a reporting obligation
to Congress. So they're like stuck in the middle. And
in years past they've been described is straddling a barbed
(01:23:01):
wire fence. So there are I think right now seventy
four Inspectors General. Back in nineteen seventy eight, I think
it started with a dozen, and it's just expanded. And
there are igs that are appointed by the president, and
there are igs that are appointed by the head of
their independent agency. So the igs that Trump removed, it's
(01:23:26):
called removal in the federal government, not firing. But the
ones that he removed are all from most For the
most part, they're from the cabinet departments. There's only two
cabinet departments that were not affected. Two igs and cabinet
departments that were not affected. One was Justice Michael Horowitz.
And the other was the IG at the Department of
(01:23:47):
Homeland Security, who is currently doing cases or investigations of
the Secret Service and what happened with the assassination attempts.
So those are the only two. All the other IGS
removed came from cabinet departments. There are a couple of agencies,
like the IG for Afghan reconstruction, I guess was removed
(01:24:08):
for some reason.
Speaker 5 (01:24:09):
He was actually a good IG.
Speaker 15 (01:24:12):
But the focus is on the departments.
Speaker 4 (01:24:16):
Now this I guess when I consider, and you know,
pick a department, and I don't think you can find
a single department in the federal government that hasn't been
accused of or allowed fraud, waste, and abuse to occur
under its watch. I mean Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security, the
PPP loan program. We go down the entire list of
(01:24:37):
any government program. People are constantly committing acts of fraud
and billions and billions of dollars could be saved if
that was ferreted out. So that that has happened and
continues to happen over I would argue decades that failure
lies in the in the lapse of the IGS.
Speaker 5 (01:24:56):
Then well to a certain extent, it does.
Speaker 7 (01:24:58):
They have to.
Speaker 15 (01:24:59):
I mean they have to have a good program in
place to identify the risks in the department. They look
at programs and say, what are the risks in these
departments that is going to be defrauded and they're supposed
to identify that and report those. And the fact is
that the programs are set up in such a way
that they're easy to defraud. Yeah, and there's not a
(01:25:19):
whole lot the IG can do across the board like that,
But if they have a case, or if they have
an audit that they perform, they're gonna they're going to
make a recommendation for improvements. And they're not the most
well funded agencies in the federal government.
Speaker 5 (01:25:33):
I can tell you that.
Speaker 4 (01:25:34):
Well, I can understand that, but I mean therein lies
the challenge. If billions of dollars are being misspent or stolen,
I can make the argument then it will be a
great allocation of resources to improve the funding to allow
the its to actually be able to do their job
and ferret out this waste and abuse and fraud.
Speaker 5 (01:25:54):
Right, and not to be too cynical, but like I'll
go ahead.
Speaker 15 (01:25:58):
There's been there's been special Inspector General set up for
various reasons, like pandemic relief, the Recovery Act. They set
up special igs to focus on those areas. And when
they do that, Congress is able to say, well, we
put an IG in place, so we have fixed that problem.
The IG's on the case, when it's really kind of
(01:26:19):
just window dressing in a lot of cases. Oh exactly,
they put an IG in place, but they don't give
the IG all the resources he or she needs, or.
Speaker 4 (01:26:27):
As you put it out a moment ago, Congress is
the ones who is the one who created the program
or passed the law that's being followed in its implementation.
But the law itself has so many giant holes in
it that allow this easy fraud to occur. They don't
go back and fix the problem that they started with this,
you know, a poorly written law.
Speaker 5 (01:26:48):
Right, like the pandemic relief program, like the p PPP.
Speaker 15 (01:26:53):
The pandemic relief has been defrauded by hundreds of billions
of dollars. Yeah, so in situations like that, there are
some things the IGS can do, but not much really.
Speaker 4 (01:27:07):
Oh all right, well, sorry conclusion on that from Todd Zenzer,
But he was in this role, and he knows what
he's talking about. Is there any argument that these now
fired igs can make that they're allowed to keep their job?
I know there's been a tradition of presidents keeping in place,
(01:27:28):
and this is the subject matter of your op ed
p's new IG's and doges should collaborate. Obviously, Donald Trump's
wants is a new sheriff in town. He wants his
own people there, people who are aligned with his message
about ferreting out fraudwayte and abuse, and cutting the size
and the scope of government. So I get his motivation,
But do they have any claim to the job that
they have been removed from?
Speaker 8 (01:27:47):
Right?
Speaker 15 (01:27:48):
Well, back in two thousand and eight, Congress was trying
to put some kind of protection in place for the igs,
and the original idea was to establish some kind of
cause standard for igs that they couldn't be fired at will.
The president would have to establish some cause to fire them. Well,
(01:28:10):
that never happened, and instead, Oh, they compromised and put
this reporting requirement in place that the president had to
give Congress thirty days.
Speaker 5 (01:28:19):
Notice why, I don't really know.
Speaker 15 (01:28:22):
I never understood what was supposed to happen in those
thirty days, except maybe give the IG a couple more
paychecks or give Congress time to build a big frenzy
around it. But it really has no purpose. And I
think that Trump ignored that requirement on purpose, on purpose
(01:28:44):
because they don't think it's constitutional.
Speaker 5 (01:28:46):
Yeah, I can see that that it.
Speaker 15 (01:28:48):
Interferes with the president's authority to hire and fire.
Speaker 5 (01:28:51):
Yeah, so I think they just ignored it.
Speaker 15 (01:28:53):
There is a case involving the Consumer Financial Protection Board,
the thing that Elizabeth Warren set up. They set that
up completely outside of the President's authority and Congress's authority.
That is funded by the Federal Reserve, and there is
a fork. They tried to put a four cause provision
(01:29:15):
in there, and that failed. Somebody sued them, and that
no longer exists. So they are now also under the
authority of the president. But the authority of the president
to hire and fire is pretty fundamental. Well, I would say,
I mean, it's his administration and he the nation would
well served if a bunch of igs are out there
(01:29:38):
undermining the administration's aims and goals.
Speaker 5 (01:29:42):
Well.
Speaker 15 (01:29:43):
The other thing that goes on, it goes on under
the radar is Back in twenty twenty, I did a
presentation for a group about the IGS, and I went
and looked at headlines in the paper trying to figure
out what the IGS are up to, and article, headline
after headline after headline where all of these reports about
(01:30:05):
Democrats asking igs to investigate the Trump administration for one
reason or another. You know, for example, one of them
was they wanted the Treasury ig to investigate why the
Harriet Tubman twenty dollars bill was being delayed. I mean,
that's that's the kind of thing that Congress just tries
(01:30:25):
to harass the Trump administration back in twenty twenty at least.
And I don't think Trump wants to put up with
that either, So he's I can imagine he's going to
put his people in place that will tell Congress, you know,
we're not going to do that. Plus he disrupts the
relationship between the incumbent IGS and Congress. You build a
(01:30:47):
relationship with people in Congress, congressmen and staff. Well, he's
disrupted all of that with these removals.
Speaker 4 (01:30:54):
Let's pause. We ring tought back and find out do
Inspectors general have to listen to folks in Congress badgering
them to investigate the president himself? Let's find out what
leverage they have with Toddzen's or former Inspector General himself.
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two two nine.
Speaker 9 (01:32:29):
This is fifty five krc an iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 4 (01:32:33):
Win the wild Man John for the Channel nine weather forecasts.
Gonna be mostly sunny day today with a higher forty
two and some light win partly cloudy every night. Gusty
wins a lower thirty one sonny tomorrow for the most part,
forty five for the high down to twenty six over
naguist and clouds, and a partly cloudy start. A Thursday,
showers and rain shows up sometime in the evening. I
(01:32:54):
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in time for traffic from the use.
Speaker 5 (01:32:59):
The up triumphing. So I expect more you see health,
more clinical trials, more treatment options for personalized care, more
chances to get you back to being you visit you
see health dot com. A couple of accidents. Northbound seventy five.
There's a wreck at the very end of the ramp
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(01:33:20):
Was in the left lane, now on the right shoulder,
but trafficks backing up through Saint Bernard King Ramont fifty
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Speaker 4 (01:33:31):
About KRCD talk station, Happy Tuesday. Todd's ins are considered
at the city. He knows what he's talking about because
he was an inspector general, had to live in Washington,
d c. And he served his various different inspectors General.
I guess firing these inspectors generals makes all the sense
in the world. And me, Todd, as you've talked about,
(01:33:52):
and as I asked you, given the scope of any
of these departments over which they sit, getting a handle
on the job in and of itself has got to
be a long term proposition. I mean, the size of
like the Medicare program or social Security or commerce as
you just mentioned to me when you were when when
(01:34:14):
you got centered to commerce, like I really didn't even
know what commerce is all about. So I learned the
job right.
Speaker 15 (01:34:21):
Well, the the transition between igs, it goes on and
you have to rely on your you have to rely
on the staff there that they're still They've got their
audits planned and they're conducting their audits and the investigative
side is doing their investigations. That the challenge is to
understand from the department's perspective what's going on, and meeting
(01:34:43):
with the heads of the departments, meeting with the people
in the departments that are really carrying out the programs.
You got to get out and you have to do
that kind of groundwork to really understand what the issues
are in the department. When I got to Commerce, I
went around to each departments and spoke to the leadership.
And here's an example. I went to the patent office
right and talked about their challenges and the big challenge
(01:35:07):
for them was how long what their backlog was. There's thousands,
hundreds of thousands of patent applications in a backlog, and
I said, well, isn't the goal to reduce the backlog
to like zero or close to zero. Well, no, they
can't do that because if it gets too low, then
they don't have enough work for their patent examiners. So
(01:35:29):
it's like you run into things like that. They really
don't really don't make sense.
Speaker 4 (01:35:34):
That doesn't make any sense.
Speaker 2 (01:35:35):
It does.
Speaker 4 (01:35:36):
Well, it's just an illustration of the stupidity of government,
you know, because they do not have to earn to
keep themselves alive and float like any other business. They
live off stealing money from us. They've got no incentive
to do their job. In order to keep the job,
they've dragged their feet.
Speaker 15 (01:35:52):
We did one case at the Patent office where they
hired all these paralegals because they were going to hire
a bunch of additional patent judges. So they hire all
these paralegals, but they never got around to hiring the judges.
So these peralalegals worked from home and did nothing. And
somebody finally got a guilty conscience that called the IG's
office and said, hey, we're sitting around getting paid to
(01:36:14):
do nothing. And they wasted millions and millions of dollars.
And what was crazy is they all got above average
performance appraisals and they got performance bonuses.
Speaker 5 (01:36:27):
Oh so things like that happen.
Speaker 4 (01:36:31):
You know, you say it and you just wish it
wasn't true, But in so many levels it just doesn't
surprise me at all.
Speaker 15 (01:36:37):
Yeah, well, it's a big The federal government is huge.
It's too big people people don't really appreciate how huge
it is.
Speaker 4 (01:36:45):
Well, going back to the idea that Congress can pester
one or other inspectors general to look into and investigate,
like say the President of the United States of America,
which has happened under the Trump administration. Do the Inspector
General saying can can they turn around and say, no,
that's not my job. I'm over the Commerce Department. I
don't have anything to investigate about Trump or filling the
(01:37:07):
black president.
Speaker 2 (01:37:08):
Right.
Speaker 15 (01:37:08):
Well, one of the big controversies that the IG investigated
under Trump was when a Hurricane Dorian occurred and there
was all kinds of destruction. Trump had actually predicted that
the hurricanes path was going to be different than what
(01:37:30):
the Weather Service had predicted, and he used the little
marker to mark up their their math. Yeah, well, the
IG was requested to investigate all that, and it's like
why what's the what's the big deal?
Speaker 4 (01:37:45):
So that's the find out if Donald Trumps clairvoyant. Yeah,
so I demanded an answer. So that's the kind of
stuff that can go on, and it did. It did
go on with the Democrats when Trump came in, they
were they were sending all kinds of requests to the
IGS all over the government. Well, you didn't restore my
(01:38:08):
confidence in the government, Todd Censor, just putting an exclamation
point on everything that we were fearing and worrying about.
It's all true, folks, It's a lot worse than you
and I ever imagine. Please, Dear God, new sheriff in
town lot, Donald Trump and the DOGE team and everybody else.
These new Inspector General stick to the task of their
(01:38:28):
their job and fared out the fraud, waste, and abuse
on behalf of the American taxpayer. Do you have any
optimism that that might happen toime?
Speaker 15 (01:38:36):
Well, what I'm optimistic for is that a lot of
this is being done with these removals clear the path
for the IGS to align their yeah resources and operations
with the Department of Government Efficiency. The government that those
has put teams in each department. But it's very small
teams and if they could align with the IG and
(01:39:00):
in stead of thinking of it is they want to
prevent the igs from doing work, they need to view
it as they want the IGS to do specific, exactly
targeted work that will support what those just trying to do.
Speaker 4 (01:39:12):
Well, Hopefully that can happen. And let's face it, man,
there is a ton of low hanging fruit out there
that they could get rid of right away. Todd, you
always have a welcome spot here in the fifty five
Cars Morning Show. I appreciate your being able to tap
into your knowledge and expertise in these areas, and we'll
look forward to having you on the show again real soon.
Seven twenty six. Right now, folks, if you have krcdtalk stations,
(01:39:33):
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Speaker 5 (01:40:25):
Com, fifty five KRC dot com.
Speaker 4 (01:40:27):
Hello, I'm here's your Channel nine first oneing Wether forecast.
Got a mostly sunny day to day light winds high
forty two, overnight gusty wins thirty one for the low
forty five will be our high. Tomorrow again be mostly
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And on Thursday we get a partly cloudy start of
the day. They say showers and slash rain or show
(01:40:48):
up sometime in the evening forty seven high then right
now thirty one degrees.
Speaker 5 (01:40:51):
Time for a traffic update from the U S. Traumphings Center.
Expect more you see helm, more clinical trials, more treatment
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(01:41:11):
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Rampton northbound seventy five over to the right shoulder, shot
kingram My fifty five KR See the talk station.
Speaker 4 (01:41:24):
Seven thirty one Here fifty five KRC DE Talk Station,
A very happy Tuesday to you after the top of
the hour news, get the inside scoop with the bright
Bard News one hour from now the Daniel Davis de
Dive the latest on Russia and Ukraine in the meantime.
Happy to welcome to the fifty five KRC Morning Show.
Shiloh Creed Days an American author. He's written under a
multiple pen names. He has sold over one point four
million books. He's received multiple Gold medals for novels and
(01:41:47):
been a best selling many times over author. Today, we're
gonna be talking about the book Plunged the Three Worlds.
It's book one Three Worlds described as Christian sci fi
series Silo. Welcome to the fifty five Careshy Morning Show.
Thanks for showing up.
Speaker 6 (01:42:04):
Hey, thank you so much for having me.
Speaker 4 (01:42:06):
Now, I'm confused Christian sci fi series. That's sort of
an interesting melding of mediums, I guess. Or I'm just
trying to figure out how Christianity and science fiction go
hand in hand. Obviously that's what the book is all about.
But how did you get the inspiration for this particular
book and the idea of merging sci fi and christian theme.
Speaker 6 (01:42:28):
Well, it's been a long journey. I've written thirty eight novels,
but this one has been over ten years in the making,
so I've had a lot of revisions and it's been,
yeah point a journey. But you know, have you ever
heard of the Philadelphia Project?
Speaker 5 (01:42:44):
Yeah?
Speaker 6 (01:42:45):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, so we go there too. So a
big part of the book is kind of based on
the Philadelphia Project, which is considered a conspiracy theory, I
guess now, So yeah, we've got conspiracy theories, sci fi
and spiritual thriller all wrapped up into one. So Pluge
is the story of Jacob Carter who is forced into
(01:43:07):
a military experiment which causes him to jump into the
spiritual side of our world, where instead of seeing the physical,
he's actually experiencing spiritual things. So it's his journey of
discovering who he really is as an avy cl He's
very strong, capable and smart, but in the spirit he
discovers his true self is not all he wants it
(01:43:30):
to be. It's a super fun journey.
Speaker 4 (01:43:33):
So this spiritual realm that he finds himself in, I
guess my understanding is that there's a cloaking device that
puts him into this spiritual realm.
Speaker 5 (01:43:42):
Now is this a spiritual realm? It is an evil
means he is? He is he attacked?
Speaker 4 (01:43:48):
I mean, because if it's spiritual, there's no physical nature
going on. I'm thinking, like, you couldn't get into a
gunfight in the spiritual world. I mean, does he come
under some threat or and how is his spirituality tested?
Speaker 8 (01:44:00):
For sure?
Speaker 6 (01:44:00):
Yeah, a lots of threats. Is definitely an action adventure book,
so there's a fight scenes throughout, but in the spirit
the enemy is a lion, and he is being hunted.
Jacob is being hunted throughout the whole book, and it's
his journey to figure out, you know what biblically does
he have, what can he do to protect himself and
(01:44:22):
to change things and to keep himself from you know,
from the enemy there. So yeah, plunge is definitely man.
I tell people when to pick it up. I say,
brace yourself because in the physical world, when he jumps
back into the physical he is facing super soldiers. They're
putting him against super soldiers to see if they can
(01:44:44):
the government can use the knowledge that he gained in
the spirit. So yeah, it's fights in both worlds.
Speaker 4 (01:44:48):
I guess is the lion a metaphor or is it
a true lion? I'm thinking like the Lion, the Witch
and the Wardrobe, which many point two is maybe a
dominant Christian theme if you read those series of books.
But in this particular book, is that is that sort
of a Is that like an homage to the lion
the Witch in the War about war driven.
Speaker 5 (01:45:05):
In some way?
Speaker 6 (01:45:07):
No, maybe maybe more to scripture. You know, the Bible
says that the enemy goes about like a roaring lion,
so it is. Plunge definitely has a lot of allegorical content.
So you know, the more that you get into it,
the more I think things that will pop out to
you as you read the book.
Speaker 4 (01:45:25):
There was a book designed to test people's faith or
to you know, affirm it in some way.
Speaker 6 (01:45:31):
Oh, definitely to affirm it. When I was thirty two,
I had major heart trouble and this book was really
born out of my struggle to find faith and to
find divine healing, which thank God I have received here.
I am so yeah. Plunge is definitely a spiritual journey,
(01:45:52):
and its purpose is to strengthen, encourage, and kind of
wake up the church and people who are maybe seeking
God but haven't seen any of his power. They haven't
seen the life that they expected to see from that relationship.
Speaker 4 (01:46:07):
How about that? So I think you've already answered the question,
but who did you write this book for? I can
certainly understand that now. I guess you went through this
challenge yourself. Was it one of those moments when you
felt like God had kind of given up on you
or turned his back on you in some way, shape
or form. Because I know a lot of people struggle
with that sort of harsh reality of the world when
they experience times of trouble or maybe in your case,
(01:46:31):
health problems crop up, like a cancer diagnosis or something.
Speaker 6 (01:46:37):
Well, it was definitely a dark time, but it was
also a time of hope because I had made the
complete decision for myself to trust God's words. So I
didn't see any doctors, I didn't do anything else.
Speaker 2 (01:46:52):
I just went to the Lord.
Speaker 6 (01:46:54):
And so although it was difficult, I think the biggest
thing that I had to do was unlearned things that
I thought about God, and I had to go to
the Bible and discover what did God actually say about himself?
And then I had to believe that instead of all
of the things that I had spent my life believing before.
Speaker 4 (01:47:15):
Fair enough, Now, this is the first book and what
is called the Three Worlds Christian sci fi series, King
Real quick, I guess have the other books been written
already and we're just waiting to release them after this
one's gone out, or are you still working on them?
And what also is the Three Worlds? What does initial
cap three worlds Christian refer to.
Speaker 6 (01:47:35):
Sure three worlds refers to Heaven, Earth, and Hell. So
the book kind of spans all three realms, and the
series definitely does. I'm actually sitting here in front of
my computer editing Book two. It is scheduled to release,
I believe in July, and it is up on pre
order right now.
Speaker 2 (01:47:53):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (01:47:53):
So as the series progresses, we definitely get into end
Times themes. There starts in book two and in book
three is full on end time revelation type stuffy, extremely
fun series.
Speaker 4 (01:48:11):
That sounds very interesting to say the least, And I
know my listeners will be very interested in getting copy
of your book. So what we've done is, Shiloh, put
your book up on my blog page fifty five care
sea dot com with a link to purchase a copy,
and I'll encourage my listeners to check that out. It
sounds fascinating. Shiloh, create a real pleasure having on the
program this morning, and keep up the great work. Obviously,
(01:48:31):
you are an inspired writer with thirty one books under
your belt. I just can't imagine.
Speaker 6 (01:48:37):
Oh, thank you so much for having me.
Speaker 4 (01:48:38):
I appreciate it's been a real pleasure. Take care seven
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This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station.
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Time down for the nine first morning weather forecast. Got
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Updates from the U see Up Traffic Center. Expect more
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You visit u see health dot com. Cruise continue to
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fifty five hundred eight hundred D two three talk and
go with pound five fifty on the AT and T phones.
Wasn't a good day to be invested in the n
ASDAC yesterday because of one Chinese startup called deep Seek.
Apparently the Chinese figured out a way to bring about
(01:51:22):
artificial intelligence for a fraction of the cost, and it
really caused a market meltdown. With Navidia it's alone going
down sixteen point nine percent. NASDAC down three percent, a
little over, but sixteen point nine percent, and the biggest
stock market loss I think in history. Six hundred billion
dollars evaporated in a moment's time. It's hard to believe
(01:51:46):
according to the report on this, and I don't play
an artificial intelligence expert on radio, and I limited knowledge
about how it works. But we've had many conversations and
in the amount of energy and electricity needed to power
these artificial intelligence centers that they're building is enormous, so
(01:52:07):
much so that you know, I was praying that at
least it might bring about the reality that you and
I could enjoy the benefits of nuclear power, since some
of these companies were talking about building their own modular
nuclear reactors just to charge the stations and so they
could make them run. But apparently, and it's been reported
deep seek, this Chinese artificial intelligence requires far fewer chips
(01:52:31):
to train than other advanced AI models and therefore cost
only an estimated five point six million, not billion, five
point six million to develop, as contrasted with other what
they call advanced models which can cost a billion dollars.
(01:52:52):
Venture capitalist Mark Andresen called it AI Sputnik moment for
those who remember us Sputnik.
Speaker 5 (01:53:00):
Hmm.
Speaker 4 (01:53:01):
It's also open source too, which means you can download
it and tinker with it, to mess around with it,
unlike these other systems which are proprietary. But the reason
the market apparently melts it down is because all of
these projects that were announced and have been announced, like
for example, Oracle Open AI. Oracle and soft Bank announced
(01:53:22):
the joint venture called Stargate, collectively investing up to five
hundred billion dollars to build out their AI infrastructure. Microsoft
on its own planning on spending eight eighty billion dollars
on AI data centers this year. CEO Mark Zuckerberg last
Friday said Meta would be spending about sixty five billion
(01:53:44):
dollars on AI projects this year build a data center
in Marxporgs so large that it would cover a significant
part of Manhattan. Now contrasted with this this deep Seek,
(01:54:04):
Meta expects they have one point three million advanced chips
by the end of the year Deep seeks model. This
is why it's so earth shattering and apparently runs as
fast or faster than these other models. Deep Seeks model
reportedly required as few as ten thousand chips. That is
an amazing difference. So the point on why the market
(01:54:26):
crash is because of this breakthrough, and assuming that others
want to want to mirror it, they don't have to
spend as much money to train their AI models.
Speaker 5 (01:54:33):
They don't need as many chips. Navidia is what.
Speaker 4 (01:54:36):
Who manufactures these amazing chips and maybe they don't need
to manufacture them anymore. I don't know how it's going
to unfold, but that's the reason for the market meltdown.
Google shares drove four percent because of this. Google's got
something called deep mind, and of course we're leading in
(01:54:57):
the technological edge according to reporting, but maybe no longer.
And then again, Deep seeks open source, meaning that other
developers can well look at it, fiddle with it, mess
around with its code, and build their own applications with it,
which is a huge, huge carrot dangling out there. See
the work is done. It's like when you're starting a
new computer program. There's all kinds of source code out
(01:55:17):
there that exists in the world that you just cut
and paste and put it in your code. You don't
have to reinvent the wheel every time. So if you're
keeping something proprietary, nobody else can work with you to
perfect and improve it. But with an open source you've
got the entire world that can work to improve and
benefit from it. I don't know how ultimately though, this
benefits the Chinese Communist Party. That's been reported that some
(01:55:39):
of the searches on this Deep seek AI model make
it impossible or difficult to get anything that's critical the
Chinese Communist parties. So there is something built into it
that sort of acts as a filter, and you would
expect that given the Chinese Communist Party sort of is
writing her to over literally any company that's under its
(01:56:00):
control or watch. But moving away from that, my understanding
of open source is that I suppose someone out here
in the rest of the world could re engineer it
in order to prevent it from filtering certain content. So
a new world order out there. So I'm not quite
(01:56:22):
sure if you're invested in a video, but it was
a bad day yesterday to do so. So I'll keep
your popcorn out on the future of AI and probably
with strong confidence this may be something that Tech Friday's
Dave had Or will be talking about this Friday at
six thirty. Get him on every single week so and
also just heads up. Apparently in other tech related news,
(01:56:44):
Apple released a software update for iPhones, iPads, and max
and it turns Apple Intelligence on by default, so if
you want to disable it you can, but remember it's
going to be on automatically, whether that is a concer
interview or for you or not. Maybe we can get
Dave to chime in on that topic as well. So anyhow,
(01:57:05):
I got to stay up on top of tech, and
got to stay up on top of what's going on
with Trump's remarkable first week. We're gonna do that after
the top of the top of the Our News the
return of Bradley Jay, who's Breitbart's deputy political political editor.
So Bradley's going to talk about the first week, and
it's just a noticeable obviously, I mean the the border alone,
if you want to show that Trump has made and
(01:57:28):
just an insane advance over Biden a stark contrast. The
number of folks showing up at the border has just
dropped off a cliff. He's telegraphed to the rest of
the world, No, don't bother making the trip, and it's
really resonating. So I applaud the ICE agents for going
after the worst criminals out there in the illegal immigrant category.
(01:57:51):
It's sort of allowed them to do this without fear
of a propaganda campaign with crimeing week crying and weep moms,
Oh my god, they're going to do poor me. No,
we're we're going after hardened criminals and who can defend
that well, literally no one, which is why you don't
see mass protests yet Wait for it. I assure you
(01:58:11):
what's gonna happen anyway. Bradley j at the top of
the Our News. Then we'll get to Daniel Davis Deep Dive,
the latest on Russia and Ukraine. That'll be at the
bottom of the next hour. Who we can stick around.
Speaker 7 (01:58:22):
A full rundown and the biggest headlines there's minutes away
at the top of the hour.
Speaker 5 (01:58:26):
A critical message, but it's important. Fifty five krc the
talk station. This report is on the Glennbeck program. It's
so rare for me to be excited week days at nine.
Speaker 7 (01:58:37):
It's gonna be very exciting on fifty five KRCD talk Station.
Speaker 5 (01:58:43):
Eight oh five, the fifty five KRCD Talk Station.
Speaker 4 (01:58:46):
A very happy Tuesday, always made extra special because this
is the moment in time and the fifty five carssite
Mornings show in the day of the week, get to
talk to bright bar b r E I t B
a rt dot com book mark. You'd be glad you
did great operation, excellent reporting and you get to read
stuff that is written by Bradley Jay the bright Bart
deputy political editor. Bradley, welcome back to the fifty five
(01:59:06):
krc Morning Show. It's a pleasure to have you on today.
Oh it's great to be with you. What an amazing
distinction four years worth of Joe Biden and what we
have two weeks or week and a half worth of
Donald Trump, and he's accomplished more in his short period
of time his second go around, than Biden was able
to accomplish in an entire year. I mean, I think
about the border alone, border agents reporting an extremely low
(01:59:31):
number of illegal crossings one week into the Trump presidency.
I mean, he is telegraphed to the world, don't bother
doing it or you're going to get kicked out eventually.
That's just one area that he is. He's tackled.
Speaker 2 (01:59:44):
It's remarkable. And Trump's actually keeping score day to day.
They're updating account they've had how many folks they've spelled
after fours of Biden doing every he could to try
to hide those numbers from the American public. I mean,
this is entirely new day. And then Trump's showing that
(02:00:07):
you can't keep a promise too quickly. I mean after
four years and and he and and and Don Junior
and others can't talk about about wonderful, uh different of
a presidency we're seeing after really four years wilderness, but
how how different of a presidency we're seeing than if
(02:00:28):
they would have just had four years back to back.
And man, they are kicking button, taking name. It's remarkable.
What we're seeing really four years of promises that have
been just in just in the first here an eight
days that they are there. We are seeing like this
in a history.
Speaker 5 (02:00:48):
And it's not over yet, No, it's not by far.
Speaker 4 (02:00:51):
And you know, on the border issue alone, when you
think about the damage Biden and his policies did with
the open borders policied, all these big, I mean dark
blue Democrat run cities, their resources are soaked up literally
billions and billions of dollars being spent to house, feed, clothed,
shelter and provide educations for the illegal immigrants. The cities
(02:01:13):
weren't prepared to deal with it. They're already challenged in
terms of homelessness anyway, and here you go adding millions
of more folks, and even dark blue cities, the residents
there started screaming and yelling about the problems brought about
by this. And that's you know, it was obviously an
intentional effort on Biden's part because as you contrast that
with what Trump has been able to do basically reclosing
(02:01:35):
the borders and starting to deport folks, and it's in
such large amounts and such a short period of time.
You couldn't have a more stark contrast. So I mean,
I'm glad that it's happening. And I also have to
observe bradley brilliant marketing with the deportations. Because they're going
after the worst criminals in the group. This sort of
(02:01:56):
tempers and reduces the ability of anybody on the other
side who wants open borders and doesn't want deportations. It's
burst their bubble because who among us can criticize getting
rid of dangerous people.
Speaker 2 (02:02:09):
Well, there are very few other than the bluest of
haired liberals that would say we need to we we
must keep the criminals here. You're exactly right. But look,
these Blue States folks, they have a not in my
backyard policy with uh, with most of their their horrendous,
(02:02:31):
hurtful left wing policies. And this is a great example
if you look at what happened when when we started
sending folks to Martha's vineyard and all these liberal enclays,
Oh no, no, we didn't need here, we didn't need here.
Speaker 5 (02:02:49):
It was remarkable.
Speaker 2 (02:02:50):
They want to impose their policies on you and on
me and all these other Americans that they think that
they're exempt from and it's it's a very you know,
it's like a Zuckerg and all these others who have
needed communities and that they don't want the imposed on them.
But New York is a great example when you have
(02:03:13):
all these migrants who are being housed in parks, in
in other housing and hotels and they're still running out
of room, when all these funds that are meant for
UH city operations are being spent in the house and
feed migrants who very often are criminals and are driving
(02:03:35):
up crime in these places like New York. That's why
you've seen Eric Adams and and other New York officials
pushed back on it.
Speaker 13 (02:03:43):
Now.
Speaker 2 (02:03:44):
Eric Adams for a variety of reasons that included is
warmed up to Trump. But it's really opened open folks
eyes on the ramifications of just unchecked migration. And after
just four years of this, I mean, the the unmitigated
disaster that that's been imposed on people, folks have woken up.
(02:04:08):
And that's Trump is relishing now in moving to stop it.
I mean, it's look, there's a reason this was his
his core policy for so long, even before he ran
for ran for office eight years ago. UH and he's
seen some early success and it's exciting, and I think
(02:04:28):
the success is going to beget success in this instance.
Speaker 4 (02:04:32):
Yeah, and you know, I mean, if the fentanyl problem
weren't bad enough that the trade de Agua gang, I
mean they were letting gang gang members establish home bases
in a variety of American cities through the open borders policy.
I mean, if that is an illustration of the horrors
and the disaster that come about, I mean, it wasn't
as if we need more gang members in our country.
Speaker 6 (02:04:56):
You're right.
Speaker 2 (02:04:57):
And I actually interviewed U several months ago a woman
in Aurora, Colorado, who had she she was the first
to flag, look, my apartment complex has been taken over
by these trende Aragua Venezuelan gangs.
Speaker 10 (02:05:12):
UH.
Speaker 2 (02:05:13):
She went to the police, she went to UH state
and local officials who just turned a deaf ear to
it and said, Ah, this can't be happening, or it's
not as bad as you think. And she had released
these videos that should It was like her apartment complex
was in a excuse me, in a parallel UH universe.
(02:05:38):
These gangs had taken over the apartment They were wiring
the apartments with their own utilities. I mean it was
it was wild, and all these Democrats were returning a
turning a blind eye to it, uh, even though the evidence.
Speaker 8 (02:05:53):
Was right there.
Speaker 2 (02:05:55):
And the American people see this and they understand it,
but Democrats didn't. And that's just another reason why they
paid for it on election day. But Donald Trump is
saying no more. He's declared that we're going to use
the Alien Enemies Act of seventeen ninety eight to go
in and detain and relocate and expel these nonicians who
(02:06:17):
have operated with impunity for four years in so many
of these blue locales. I mean, he's getting down the business. Yeah,
and we're already seeing early success.
Speaker 5 (02:06:29):
Well.
Speaker 4 (02:06:30):
And it really makes one ponder what nefarious intent that
these Democrats when they try to deny that it's happening
before their very eyes, and they see it, they know
it's happening, but that they engage in this denial When
you can point to the gang members taken over the hotel,
for example, and that their refusal to acknowledge that that's
a problem, it makes you really kind of wonder what
is their motive and intent by allowing this to happen.
Speaker 2 (02:06:55):
That's a really good question, and you have to wonder
if they do have ill intent. But also it gets
back to the fact that they see themselves as immune,
uh from a lot of the consequences of their policies.
A lot of these elitist left wing academic types, uh,
they they are insulated in so many ways, uh, from
(02:07:18):
from their policies, whereas hard work and those like you
and me, we're we're the ones who have to suffer
the consequences, whether it's economic, whether it's with the security
of our neighborhoods and our communities and our schools.
Speaker 14 (02:07:31):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (02:07:32):
But with the numbers that we have seen that there's
nobody that's insulated. And that's why you had that's well,
that's why if you look at all seven swing states,
Donald Trump beat up on Kamala so badly.
Speaker 10 (02:07:47):
Uh.
Speaker 8 (02:07:47):
And I don't they're going to be.
Speaker 2 (02:07:49):
Away with it for much longer.
Speaker 6 (02:07:51):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (02:07:51):
And certainly a lot of the policies was already reversing
just day one, which were reversing Biden's executive actions on
the Order the Lake and Rileigh Act. I believe tomorrow
Donald Trump's going to have a big signing day ceremony
at the White House, which I mean that would be
the first significant immigration or border law that has been
(02:08:13):
passed in our country in decades. That is significant. So
there is a new ship in town. And Donald Trump's
got can.
Speaker 5 (02:08:22):
Do this well.
Speaker 4 (02:08:23):
And no question, I think that the border is one
of the greatest illustrations of how quickly things can be accomplished.
Things along the lines of what Donald Trump promised, But
another one the eradication of DEI policies pretty much across
all areas of governmentst notably in the military. So you
got Pete Hagg's geth who promised to restore the point
of American military, which is, in my words, typically kill
(02:08:44):
people and break things, a strong, unified fighting force for
the purpose of winning wars and protecting the Americans from
threats both domestic and private and foreign. But DEI that
had nothing to do with the military's mission. And yet
millions and millionllions of dollars and all these different employment
positions and hires based upon you you check the appropriate
(02:09:05):
woke box and therefore you get hired or elevated in
a position as opposed to merit. Heegs has promised to
bring back merit and the elimination of DEI is a
great stepping stone to bring about that change, kill.
Speaker 5 (02:09:19):
People and break things.
Speaker 2 (02:09:20):
That makes so much sense. But yet if you look
at the mission drift of our military, and I'll tell you, Brian,
there's no better example. Look at Mark Milly, which, thank god,
his photo, his big portrait was taken down on the
first day of Trump administration. What a victory. And I'll
tell you that's not a small thing. That sends a
powerful message, that's a real important policy. But he had
(02:09:44):
this portrait commission where he's all these medals on his
chest with each and every color of the rainbow all
over it and all these ans and what have you.
And behind him he had some document dealing with Ukraine
to show how important that was to his career. Look
(02:10:05):
at you, Have we achieved victory in Ukraine. No, we've
We've propagated of a gramillion Ukrainians and Russians. We've spilt
blood that can never be reversed.
Speaker 8 (02:10:18):
Uh, it's just.
Speaker 2 (02:10:22):
Stalemate and when inevitable ended, Uh, all of this Ukrainian
and is not Uh, it's not going to be seated
back to Ukraine. It's it's gonna do.
Speaker 8 (02:10:33):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (02:10:33):
That's not something that you would think that American general
would hang his hat on. But yet that's something that
by virtue of him orchestrating it so profound or so
prominently into his portrait. That's something that he's proud of.
Speaker 8 (02:10:47):
Well that's not a.
Speaker 2 (02:10:48):
Bit what is he soud about? And that that helps
the mission driff the American military? That is uh, the
d I. It's so emblematic on day one, Trump is
reversing so much of that and saying, that's our military,
this great social experiment. We're supposed to, as you say,
(02:11:10):
move fast and break things. We are supposed to be
a lethal fighting force. D I is one of the
most prominent samples off the LASS and Donald Trump and
Pete we'd turned back to what it is supposed to
be doing what it is supposed to do, and that
(02:11:31):
a book maybe all else is one of the most
impactful repations of the Trump presidency. I mean, we've just
were living in a fantasy land over the Pentagon with
all these woke left wing generals getting back.
Speaker 4 (02:11:48):
To business there, get back to business and established, re
establish the great and greatest fighting force, and of course
hopefully encourage more patriotic young people to enlist in the military,
because I think these DEEI policies to frighten most of
the patriots away from even considering active military service, looking
at the recruiting numbers that we've seen drop precipitously over
(02:12:08):
the years. Bradley Jay, it is always great having in
the program. Apologies, listeners, we had a little communication issue, Bradley,
your phone was kind of breaking up, but I think
we got pretty much ninety eight percent of the gist
of what you're saying. I will look forward to having
you back on the program real soon, and in the meantime,
keep up the great workover at bright Bart Bradley. Always
great to be with you. Thanks Roon, take care of
tight nineteen Right now, fifty five Karsity Talk Stations. Speaking
(02:12:29):
of Russia and Ukraine, Daniel Davis deep dive on that
very topic, coming up to the bottom of the ARB.
Speaker 5 (02:12:34):
Right back fifty five KRC, the Wild KCD talk station.
Speaker 4 (02:12:40):
Happy Tuesday always made it extra special because now it's
the time we get a Daniel Davis deep dive. Retired
Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Davis. Always a distinct pleasure to have
you on the fifty five KRC Morning Show. Sir, welcome back,
Thanks for having me Brian. Always a treasure to be here.
I appreciate that, and I enjoy our conversations. Very enlightening
and of course sometimes a bit sobering, most notably for
(02:13:01):
those folks who continue to want to support Ukraine in
the face of what appears to be growing disaster. I
see first sentence of this Russian forces conquer large Dontesk stronghold.
Russian Federation forces have unstoppable momentum in the Dawnask region,
with a string of victories and the noticeable weaking of
the Ukrainian defenses. One Swiss paper Noya zech Zaeitong, the
(02:13:24):
military situation in eastern Ukraine has deteriorated sharply. Defense lines
have collapsed in various parts of the front. I struggle
to find really any good news for the Ukrainians at
this moment in time.
Speaker 5 (02:13:39):
Well, there's not any on the battlefield.
Speaker 16 (02:13:41):
I can assure you that because concurrent with that information,
there's also reports from the Ukraine side, from their minister
I'm sorry, from their forced our General Serski, the guy
in charge of their own forces, that they're saying, hey,
we're not recruiting enough people even to meet losses. The
losses they have per month is not offset by the
(02:14:02):
new people coming in. And what that tells you, aside
from just that the numbers the net net is shrinking,
it also tells you that they every time they get
somebody with some experience, they get killed or taking off
the battlefield, and they come in with the fresh so
they are constantly getting rid of all their experience. At
the same time, you also have new reports that two
additional brigades, that newly formed brigades. One was trained in
(02:14:26):
France and one seven hundred people fled the battlefield before
they even left and got to the front.
Speaker 5 (02:14:33):
Then they had.
Speaker 16 (02:14:34):
Another one, a one fifty seventh brigade just this week,
also collapsed and went away before it even got to
the front. So there's two new formations of the less
than they're getting for replacements are falling apart. And then
they fired a lot of these committee. They fired the
ground forces commander for the Eastern Front. You see, the
wheels are literally coming off, and the question is how
(02:14:55):
much longer can they continue to function as a coherent unit.
Speaker 5 (02:14:58):
And I don't think it's that much longer, well that
much longer a months, weeks?
Speaker 4 (02:15:04):
How long is this gonna lae I mean at some
point that there's going to be east On an absolute collapse,
and an absolute then I would argue perhaps Russian victory
across the board, or they're going to be forced to
sit down a negotiation table and seed some of their
land to get it resolved.
Speaker 16 (02:15:20):
Well, that's exactly the issue here. So you have a
couple of different possibilities. One is like what happened to
the Germans in World War Two. They were just methodically
just pushed all the way to the west by the
Soviet Union and they just continued to crumble, but they
stayed at least coherent all the way through. The losses
got bigger, they got the losses got faster toward the end,
(02:15:42):
but they just continued on until literally they just ceased
to exist in Berlin. Or you have what happened to
the British and French in May nineteen forty, where the
Germans then on the positive side, broke through the lines,
got in the back of their defenses and then the
whole thing just collapsed so over you had the entire
army collapse. And so either of those two things are possible.
(02:16:04):
Both are bad for Ukraine.
Speaker 4 (02:16:06):
Both are bad for Ukraine now with this, I would
argue maybe Sho should call it this way. This positive
momentum the Russians are currently enjoying, does that suggest you
either are less likely to want to sit down and
negotiate a resolution of it.
Speaker 16 (02:16:23):
Do you think they're just going to keep at it? Well,
here's this is the reality. They are definitely willing to
have a negotiated settlement. They have been emphatic about that
from the beginning. They're emphatic about it right now. But
that's not the same thing that may be in the
mind of Trump or his supporters, which is that they
think that they can negotiate a good deal at the
current line of contact that's going to be good for
Zelensky and good for Kiev.
Speaker 5 (02:16:45):
That's just not in the cards, I'm afraid, Brian.
Speaker 16 (02:16:47):
What he's saying, the Russian side is saying, we'll negotiate
for all the land that we want, which means land
you haven't lost in battle yet, all of the administrative
orders of those four provinces, and if they don't get
the and that of course that also includes in polices
that there Zelenski has to go.
Speaker 5 (02:17:04):
That's actually part of it.
Speaker 16 (02:17:05):
They said they won't sign a deal with him because
he's exceeded his mandate and they said he's not legitimate.
We need you guys to have an election. So there's
somebody that we can negost or sign a deal with.
And there has to be, of course, a declaration of
no NATO, no no troops, no peacekeeping troops, none of
that stuff, or they'll just keep fighting until they win it,
all right, And that's because they al all the negotiation
(02:17:28):
ships on their side right now.
Speaker 4 (02:17:30):
Now, to those out there that think this is a
battle that's worth continuing to wage and somehow magically Ukraine's
gonna be able to bounce back and defend themselves, what
do you perceive any existential threat or other threat to
NATO or the European Union generally speaking if Russia ends
up taking over Ukraine completely.
Speaker 16 (02:17:49):
Now, and that's that's what's been said really from the
outset of this war from the west. If they keep saying,
oh my god, if we don't stop him here, he'll
come and roll here. No, there's the Russians don't have
the capacity in my view, I mean, they don't even
have the capacity if they had the desire, they don't
have the capacity to launch into a war in NATO
because they know it doesn't even matter so much whether
(02:18:11):
they're military. They're conventional military could defeat the West, and
probably in the Baltics they could because the Russian army
is now because we didn't end this early. Instead of
about one million it was in February twenty twenty two,
it's now it's one point five million active duty troops now,
troops that are sustained, they're ex trained, they've got the
lot of combat experience, and their industrial capacity behind them
(02:18:34):
is like a juggernaut.
Speaker 5 (02:18:35):
But they understand that if they go into NATO now,
then you have.
Speaker 16 (02:18:38):
Article five issues and three nuclear powers on the other
side that could come into play, and Russia's not gonna
want to say, hey, we fought this whole war to
get security on our western flank and then we're going
to take action that almost certainly would precipitate a nuclear
response from the other side. They're not going to do
that because it's not in their interest to do so,
not because we have to trust them or anything else,
(02:18:58):
it's just not in their entry. So if we bring
this to an end, then all this stuff gets off
the table, and there's this ugly business of reconstruction and
world that's going to go. It's going to linger for
a generation. But better to start that now than later
on with even more death.
Speaker 4 (02:19:14):
Yeah, I mean, and I just have to observe it's
taking Rushia this long to get as far as they
did in one single country. So compare that exactly entire
might of the United States and the entire NATO countries.
So I concur with your assessment on that as much
tea leaf reading as we can do pioting over your
I like, generally speaking, Pete Heggsas's message, which is we
(02:19:37):
are going to establish a military fighting force. Donald Trump's
not an executive order getting rid of DEI And I
have no idea what that has to do with killing
people and breaking things. But I have a more optimistic
positive view of the direction of America's military with Pete
Heggsath at the realm and the getting rid of DEI.
What's your perception on that one?
Speaker 16 (02:19:56):
Yeah, you know, in the like the eleventh hour, just
before the vote was taken, there was a number there
was senate debate, and some of those who were against
him were saying, look, there was why do you have
to go up to this guy? That's never been in
charge of a big company. He wasn't a general, so
he wasn't in charge of a lot of troops. He
was only a major, and that was relatively low level
in terms of the hierarchy of the army. And they said,
(02:20:17):
why wouldn't you go after somebody that that's in the
Republican Party, that's like, has been, you know, in all
these kinds of categories. And they said, you know, like
Mark Esper or like James Mattis. You know, those are
the guys they had these past ninety eight to two, etc.
And I'm liking, Okay, that's the last thing that we
need right now. Those are status quo guys that don't
want to change anything, that were very unsuccessful. You may
(02:20:40):
remember James Mattis actually left office and because he had
a tantrum that Trump wanted to withdraw our troops from Syria.
Speaker 5 (02:20:48):
So he resigned over that. So he pushed back.
Speaker 16 (02:20:51):
Not only would he not support the president, he's he
didn't have the foresight to see that that's not in
America's interest, right, That's not the person we need. Somebody
from the status quo who's been in the defense industry
and all this kind of stuff. We need somebody with
some fresh thinking. Now, Hegseith doesn't come in with a
great view. I mean, he's got some genuine skeletons in
his closet and that has to be considered.
Speaker 5 (02:21:11):
But his focus and what he's saying anyway, and I
give him.
Speaker 16 (02:21:14):
I'm going to give him the benefit of the doubt
and give him a chance to say if he's going
to action with his words. He says he wants to
reform the military, wants to bring the warrior ethos back,
which as the warfighter that excites me. He wants to
bring high standards back in one standard for everybody. You
either meet it or you move out. The bottom line
is what is going to make the army stronger, the
military stronger.
Speaker 5 (02:21:35):
And that is the right focus. Well, and I think
that will.
Speaker 4 (02:21:39):
Assist in large measure to get more people interested in enlisting,
because I think all this woke ideology has really turned
off a lot of very patriotic young people who otherwise
might have signed up to serve their country.
Speaker 8 (02:21:52):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (02:21:52):
I totally agree. That's that's part of the what the
at least what they're saying.
Speaker 16 (02:21:56):
I looked at one of the executive orders that talk
about the de I stuff, And they're not saying they
don't want any more equality or you know, opportunity anything
like that.
Speaker 5 (02:22:06):
They're not saying this is against anyone.
Speaker 16 (02:22:07):
They're just saying they don't want something that basically gives
quotas and saying that you have to have a certain
amount of these categories in higher positions, because now then
you're you're elevating people based on a criteria other than merits,
other than do they deserve it or not. And the
focus is not on making the military stronger, it's on
making sure it meets DEI stuff, which is not the
(02:22:28):
same thing. And so I want to make sure I
hope they don't go too far with that where they
you know, it goes back to where people are pushed
down or certain groups are minimized and they don't get
a fair shot.
Speaker 5 (02:22:39):
We don't want that, but we do want merit based promotions.
Speaker 4 (02:22:42):
Yeah, you're I mean, sexuality has nothing to do whether
you have the appropriate merit and skill sets to do
any given job. So I'm with you on that all
day long. And briefly, let's pivot over to Tulsa Gabbard
National Intelligence. She's somewhat controversial. I know that she was
in favor of Edward Snowden, one of him, and I
personally don't have an issue with that. I think the
world is a better place for knowing what we know
(02:23:04):
after the snowed and release. But also previously against reauthorization
of FIZA section seven oh two, which I have judged
a Polaitano on every Wednesday, and boy, that's something that
he just finds absolutely an offense to the Fourth Amendment.
But she's flipped her position on that and now is
in favor of it. What's your take on, Telsea Gabbard. Yeah,
let's look at that part first. That's not accurate. That's
(02:23:27):
what's being characterized in some parts of the media that
she flipped on it.
Speaker 16 (02:23:31):
She did not flip on it. When you look bad.
I've had I feature this on my show. When you
look at what she said at the time she was against.
Speaker 5 (02:23:38):
Seven oh two. It wasn't just seven oh two.
Speaker 16 (02:23:40):
She expressly said as a member of Congress when she
voted against it, was that we need some of these
provisions for our national security and our intelligence service definitely needed,
but we need protections and reform so that we don't
get into the Fourth Amendment parts.
Speaker 5 (02:23:54):
She has said nothing different than that.
Speaker 16 (02:23:56):
Now, what she has said in recent days was that
there has been some changes that lessened her concerns about
the Fourth Amendment part, but that keeps.
Speaker 5 (02:24:04):
The issues for the security part. So she didn't flip.
Speaker 16 (02:24:08):
But she has so many enemies, Brian, I'm telling you
because she is gonna faithfully say whatever the intelligence says.
That's what gets put before the President of the United States.
The deep I had to take to say deep stake
the establishment. They don't want somebody like Gabbard in there.
They want somebody in there like themselves that's gonna give
what kind of They're gonna pick and choose, what kind
(02:24:28):
of intelligence goes to the president that fosters the opinion that, well,
you have to use military force.
Speaker 5 (02:24:34):
They all they do is they want.
Speaker 16 (02:24:36):
Somebody that's like them, that's gonna keep saying force, force, force, military, military.
They don't want somebody that may say, hey, sir, intelligence
says this, so we actually don't need to use military
power here. We can use other instruments of national military power.
She is gonna faithfully do that. She's been consistent from
the front, and she has always focused on what's good
for America.
Speaker 5 (02:24:54):
I think she may be the best pick on the cabinet.
Speaker 4 (02:24:57):
How about that? Coming through loud and clear on that one,
Daniel David this Deep Dive. You can find this podcast
online just search Daniel Davis Deep Dive. You run right
into it and you can always tune in every Tuesday
at the bottom of the eight o'clock hour for another
edition of the Daniel Davis Deep Dive. Always great talk
with you, sir, my pleasure. I'll look forward to another
one next Tuesday.
Speaker 5 (02:25:15):
See you next week, Brian.
Speaker 4 (02:25:16):
Have a great week. It's a forty count of an
eighty forty one if fIF you have KRCD talk station,
and we're gonna learn about cervical cancer. It is Cervical
Cancer Awareness Month. One of the great doctors for my
cancer doctors OHC, is going to join the program next
and enlighten us about that what we need to look
for and watch out for. Stick around. I hope you can.
Speaker 9 (02:25:32):
This is fifty five karc an iHeartRadio Station.
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Tomorrow as well with a higher forty five, breezy uh
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(02:25:58):
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Up in the evening.
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Otherwise partley cloudy thirty two degrees Right now traffic time chuck.
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care see the talk station.
Speaker 4 (02:26:40):
Eight forty five here fifty five KRCD talk station that
you didn't know it, but you know it now. It
is Cervical Cancer Awareness Month and in studio from my
cancer specialist OHC, and they could be yours too. I
hated it if you hear if you get a cancer diagnosis,
but if you do, you should do what I did
and just turn to OHC. Find them online learn more
at ohcare dot com. I'll call eight hundred sixty four
(02:27:02):
eight hundred and you may be under the care of
my guest institute today, doctor Edge got Gooby, doctor Goooby.
It's great to see you today, Rian. Thank you very
much for having me, and thank you to your listeners
for having us so long. Oh listen. I thoroughly enjoy
these conversations. They're very enlightening, and of course you know
I have a special, extra special connection with cancer, sadly,
but I've learned a lot over the years from talking
with the OHC folks across all areas of cancer. And
(02:27:23):
one thing that I've learned is cervical cancer. And we'll
talk in depth about this, but HPV human papoloma virus
can equal cervical cancer. There is a direct line correlation
between HPV and cervical cancer and women.
Speaker 17 (02:27:37):
That is absolutely correct. So HPV is highly associated with
cervical cancer. Ninety percent of cervical cancers are associated with HPV.
But that does not mean that just because you have
the virus that you will develop cancer. But it is
something that we watch very closely for and that's why screening,
annual follow ups are just absolutely poweramount.
Speaker 4 (02:27:54):
Well, and from what I know and I've read and
I went back the last time you were scheduled on
the I looked it up, pretty much everybody's got HPV.
Speaker 17 (02:28:03):
Eighty five percent of sexually active partners have HPV. It
is a very think of it like the chicken pox virus.
At some point, as long as you've been sexually active,
you very likely have HPV unless both partners have never
been with any anyone else. So if you've got two
partners that have been in a completely monogamous relationship, that's
likely the only chance.
Speaker 5 (02:28:23):
All right.
Speaker 4 (02:28:23):
Now, Moving aside from HPV, smoking and weaken immune system,
can I also bring about cirvical cancer.
Speaker 17 (02:28:29):
Yeah, I think of smoking is causing free radicals, it
diminishes your immune system. Other any other infections that weaken
your immune system, Your body just has a tendency to
not be able to fight off any other infections, including
what causes HPV. So EAHPV will cause cellular changes and
if your body just inherently can't fight that off, it
(02:28:49):
then just triggers a downstream effect.
Speaker 4 (02:28:51):
How about that? Plus I read long term use of
birth control pilled? How often is I mean is that
there's a noticeable correlation between that and how long is long?
Speaker 5 (02:29:00):
We've seen a correlation with that.
Speaker 17 (02:29:02):
So anytime you do these studies, they'll take a group
of cervical cancer patients just look to see what risk
factors have been their birth control medications have been associated
with it. Now, the hard part in that is is
that also because of unprotected intercourse, so many women that
are on birth control medications have unprotected air course. That
seems to be the bigger correlation with HPV transmission.
Speaker 4 (02:29:23):
All right, fair enough, Now, how about the signs and symptoms?
How would a woman know if maybe she's got something
going on.
Speaker 17 (02:29:29):
I always advocate that patients know their body best women men.
I mean, you know your body. You know your baseline,
irregular bleeding, abnormal discharge, and it's not something that just
lasts a day or two or a week or so.
Everyone's going to have some altered a key changes, but
this is persistent pelvic pain, pelvic pressure, just things that
are a change from your baseline where you feel like
(02:29:49):
you know something's off.
Speaker 5 (02:29:51):
Just go in and be seen. That's the most important thing.
Speaker 17 (02:29:53):
We We always worry when women go five years, ten
years with all these irregular changes is and just are
afraid to follow up. That's where it becomes extremely problematic. Afraid,
very afraid because I guess we all have that fear
of what if there really is something and I want
to deal with it. It's kind of burying your head
in the sand. And I can tell you I do
(02:30:13):
the same thing. Also, I'd rather just deal with my
other issues in life than trying to figure that out.
But the right thing to do is go for those
screening visits is follow up. You know, if there's something wrong,
just go be seen so we can figure out what's
going on. Because the earlier we catch stuff, the easier
and the better the treatment can be than dealing with
something that's more advanced.
Speaker 4 (02:30:32):
Well, and I mean, isn't it the standard medical practice
for women to get a papspmean or on a regular basis.
Speaker 17 (02:30:38):
Pulvic exams on a yearly basis, breast exams, mammograms on
a yearly basis. Peraps ME recommendations do vary a little
bit where sometimes you can space them out to three
to five years, but the pelvic exams are absolutely paramount
with that. But exactly like you said, like that's where
the fear comes in, and it's just well, life kind
of takes over. It's been a year, you push it off.
(02:30:58):
Now it's been two years. You push it off. Now
it's been three years, and all of a sudden, if
there are changes that are going on, abnormal changes that
are going on, they just develop into further issues.
Speaker 4 (02:31:07):
Well, in moving toward how to prevent cervical cancer, I mean,
you've already addressed these sexual activity thing, which I have
to imagine, giving the number of people out in the world,
most people aren't going to abide by that. But there
is an HPV vaccine. I don't want to dive into
this now delicate conversation about vaccines, but how many years
they've been in the market have they been proven to
be a safe to use vaccine?
Speaker 17 (02:31:29):
So I agree, I don't want to get into a
political conversations. Very family oriented conversation as well. But for
us from a medical standpoint, this vaccine has significantly proven
to decrease the rates of not only cervical cancer, but
penal cancer and boys also, so it is both for
men and women. It's approved from the ages of nine
to forty five. And to me, if there is anything
(02:31:52):
that I can do, and I have two girls, they
will both get it to decrease their chances. I can
trust my children inherently, but again, they're going to be
sexually active at some point in their life. You never
know who their partners have been with in what viral
transmissions can be occurring. So if there is something that
can be done to prevent that, absolutely I would go
for it.
Speaker 4 (02:32:10):
Yeah, I understand that. But as long as it's been
on the market though, they've done research and there isn't
a connection between the HPV vaccine and side effects or
damaging things happening long term.
Speaker 17 (02:32:22):
Note I mean every vaccine has some acute side effects,
such as a pain in the injection site, some rashes
that can occur, just acute effects like that. But this
has been on the market for decades at this point
and very well proven and especially proven to decrease the
risk of high grade cervical displaces as well as cervical cancer.
Speaker 4 (02:32:40):
Okay, and I understand diet can have a factor. It
can be a factor in cervical cancer as well.
Speaker 17 (02:32:45):
Absolutely so anything from And the hard part with nutrition
and cancer is that anytime you read a magazine, an article,
any sort of recommendations from a nutritional standpoint, everything varies dramatically,
But it's all about healthy, living, healthy diet. Anyone that
is medical homorbidities, hypertension, diabetes, obesity, it just makes it
harder for your body to fend off the cancer and
(02:33:06):
tolerate the treatments for cancer. So healthy living, healthy diets
always going to be paramount in your treatment success.
Speaker 4 (02:33:11):
Yeah. I've read on multiple occasions that there is a
direct correlation between obesity and cancer, and given the level
of obesity we have in this country, it's a little alarming.
I don't know the reason why. I mean, could be
the things in our food. I know RFK Junior is
going to solve that problem. RFK Junior to the Western riscue,
But I mean it's a widespread problem and a growing problem.
Speaker 5 (02:33:33):
It's an epidemic.
Speaker 17 (02:33:33):
I mean, if you look at the CDC websites as
to the obesity rates back from nineteen seventy to twenty twenty,
and you see how it spans out. I mean, it
is alarming and even for our youth of today, and
so just getting out there, just starting off with healthy
and just active, just lifestyle choices can make such an
(02:33:55):
impact when it comes to long term care.
Speaker 4 (02:33:57):
All right, So you know, sadly someone gets a cervical
cancer diagnosis. I guess my first question before we get
to the treatments that are available, can that metastasize?
Speaker 6 (02:34:08):
It can?
Speaker 17 (02:34:08):
And that's why it goes back to our previous statement
as to the earlier you get seen hopefully the earlier
we are catching this.
Speaker 5 (02:34:15):
So cancer, we cancer is based on two things.
Speaker 17 (02:34:18):
Great is how gress of the cancer is stage, has
it metastasized, So we want to do that full work
up figure out exactly what we're dealing with. Cancer is
more of an umbrella term. We want to know exactly
what cell type we're dealing with. Also, there's a whole
slew of workup that we'll do, so, especially in the
last couple of years, we can try to identify molecular
markers on a patient specific cancer to tailor their treatment
(02:34:41):
to that. So we look at it as a completely
overall approach when we talk about an individual's cancer care.
All right, fair enough, Now, what treatment options are available?
I mean, there's so many new advancements in cancer treatments.
It's hard for me to keep up with it. And
I know that's your job, and every day you come
to the office or maybe something new, and that's what
(02:35:03):
we have to evaluate. And that changes from patient to patient.
What the type of cancer is, what the stage, what
the grade are, and what those molecular markers are, so
they can vary from surgery to radiation, chemotherapy, or to
munotherapy or a combination of all the other. We are
fortunate enough to have a robust clinical trials program, so
we'll look to see what clinical trials are available as well.
Speaker 4 (02:35:25):
Well, that's exactly what I was going to ask about next,
because I was actually looking into clinical trials for the
treatment of my lymphoma when I was last time. I
talked to doctor Patel who's treating me over there. So
you always have clinical trials going on you can address that.
But also, this is something that can be cured depending
upon when you catch it. Absolutely now and that's the goal.
(02:35:47):
Is the earlier the stage, the greater the curates. Right,
the more advanced the stage, the harder those five year
survivals come down to. So we want to get patients
in the door quickly. We want to assess them quickly
and get their treatment started very quickly. Is there a
cervical cancer on the rise?
Speaker 17 (02:36:03):
For the HPV vaccine was on the rise for a
long period of time. That's where we're trying to be
more proactive with the HPV vaccine in decreasing those rates.
So patients that have gotten that vaccine, we've seen tremendous
decrease in the rates of cervical cancer. Unfortunately worldwide, it's
just not as available understood unprotected intercourse, multiple sexual partners
(02:36:24):
it is. I mean, it's the fourth leading cause of
cancer related death amongst women.
Speaker 4 (02:36:28):
So, oh my, doctor g Gooby, it's been a real
pleasure talking with about this. And so folks, if you
want to learn more about OHC and the cancer treatments
they have any kind of cancer, or get a second opinion,
I strongly encourage you to do that. It's ohcare dot com.
Ohcare dot com. And again the number is five or
sorry eight eight eight six hundred. That's eighty eight sixty
(02:36:50):
eight hundred, Doctor Guby. Thanks for doing everything you do
each and every day, and my best to you and
everybody else over at OHC.
Speaker 17 (02:36:56):
We appreciate, we're so glad you're doing so well as well.
Speaker 4 (02:36:59):
Oh thank you very much, sir. That means a world
to me.
Speaker 5 (02:37:01):
Eight fifty five.
Speaker 4 (02:37:02):
Folks, you can get a chance to listen Todd Zen's
or former Inspector General on the program this morning to
talk about Trump firing a whole bunch of Inspector generals
and what that means. Shiloh Cree with the book Plunge
available copy available fifty five cars dot com. And of
course my conversations with Breitbart's deputy political editor Bradley Jay
on Trump's first week and Daniel Davis deep dive on
(02:37:22):
the deteriorating conditions in Ukraine. It's all there fifty five
cars dot com. Thanks Joe Strekker for producing the program.
Folks Tuning tomorrow Judge Jennen of Politano every Wednesday at
a thirty and don't go away. Glenn Beck is coming
up next a.
Speaker 5 (02:37:34):
Full rundown of the biggest ten lines. There's minutes away
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