Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:09):
Five o five if they five GRC see talk station
a vacation, I'm the dude man. Yeah, Well, I'm having
(00:32):
problems this morning, practical jokers. I'm not quite sure my
microphone was unplugged and duct tape up on the boom
of the mic, and of course I wasn't paying attention
to that, thinking that why should I anticipate something like
that happening? Sabotage has come to the video five KRC
(00:55):
Morning Show. Wow, okay, anyway, off on the wrong foot
here this Wednesday morning, and a happy one to you.
Let's see what we got going on today? Ay, right,
George Brennman returns Restore Wellness dot org talking health with
(01:15):
George Brennman with RFC should focus on George will be
talking about that and dive on into that, and I'm
still cautiously optimistic we will all be focusing a little
bit more on our health. J just sent me the
revised food pyramid from Babylon B. I think the bottom
three sections were all meat and what was with the squid?
(01:39):
Inc Anyway, uh, Jack advid. It is Wednesday, so we
get to hear from Jack. JACKI be on at seven
oh five as he always says every Wednesday, Marxists and
the Marx Brothers. That's a topic of conversation with Jack
Addid and I'm looking forward to see how he spends
that one. It's always a joy to hear from Jack,
(02:02):
So we will do that together at seven oh five
and find out what he's talking about Marxist and the
Marx Brothers. Uh and Judge edited a Polatan of the
Feds and their own bribery. That's the name of or
the topic or the headline of his column that comes
out tonight. I'm happy that I get a column early
so advanced. Thanks to Judge and Polatano for his u
(02:22):
ongoing participation on the fifty five Catsey Morning Show. Just
been doing it for such a long time, and it's
just a pleasure to have them on. And I hope
you enjoy it as much as I do. I always
enjoy hearing from you, so feel free to call Lein's.
The morning show started off with My Back of my
Heels five one, three, seven, four nine fifty five hundred,
eight hundred eighty two three Talk or Go with Pound
(02:43):
five fifty on at and T phones. A lot going
on with Doges. We got a Democrat or we have
a judge denying the efforts to block doge is access to,
citing uh TO well to the federal records that Doge
is looking into, saying hey, you can't prove any harm.
I'm not going to issue an injunction stopping them from
(03:04):
doing the work that they're doing. And the work that
they're doing seems to be resonating with the vast majority
of Americans polling wise, most people are approve of approving
of it. How could you not spending tens of millions
of dollars on transgender surgery for monkeys?
Speaker 2 (03:23):
You know.
Speaker 1 (03:24):
I'll bring that one up in detail a little bit later,
but first let's start locally here. It props to the
WCPOS reporting on this to Danielle Goodman. Thank you, Danielle.
Somebody has to do it. I'm glad they're still local
reporters out there doing it. Doing what while reporting on
Damilton County Sheriff Charmone McGuffey and her comments yesterday relating
(03:46):
to the neo Nazis and Evendel and she wants Ohio
lawmakers to create stricter laws in the aftermath of this
so called neo Nazi demonstration that happened on the uh
Well Overpass and even Deel, which connects even Dell in
(04:07):
the village of Lincoln Heights. Apparently yesterday, she said she
wants state lawmakers to implement, implement, rather harsher legislation for
what she characterized in her words as hate speech, and
also to make it a crime to wear a mask
while carrying a firearm for purposes of intimidation. Well, let's
(04:31):
layer this, shall we. Oh, you're a sheriff's deputy and
you're driving around your cruiser and you see somebody with
a mask on who's got a firearm. Again, I am
not supporting open carry. I know it's lawful. I don't
have a problem with it being lawful. I just think
it's probably a bad idea. There are so many nervous
(04:54):
nellies out in the world. You can carry a firearm,
you just don't have to carry it open. So why
invite the criticism, the anger, the reaction, the perhaps overreaction.
There are crazy people out in the world who might
perceive your merely open carry as an act of violence
(05:18):
or intimidation, which is part of what her you know,
request is to lawmakers, And you might have your own
your self put in jeopardy merely because you're exercising your
right to open carry. My opinion, I know it's not
shared by a lot of my listeners. Screw you, Thomas,
open carry man, open I open carry all the time.
I know, I see it all the time. I'm just
(05:39):
not someone who's supportive of actually, you know, doing it okay,
But how do you know if you're the sheriff's deputy
and you're the one responsible for enforcing laws and in
a position to issue citations or otherwise arrest somebody, if
(06:01):
someone is carrying a firearm openly for the purposes of intimidation,
how does one draw that distinction. It might be legally
protected speech, she said, but it's not okay. Huh. So
(06:28):
that's her subjective opinion on what is okay and not
okay in terms of the speech that's being uttered. But
it is legally protected speech as much as you and
I might find it ridiculous and offensive, but not okay.
I don't like that speech. It's not okay. We need
a law or we're gonna go back and start to
protect I mean embracing the European Union's view of this,
(06:52):
which we've talked about the other day, you know, making
a false statement or a criticizing a government employee, sharing
a tweet or a meme or something that repeats a
false narrative can land you in jail in the European Union.
Do we want to live in a world that's like that.
(07:14):
It might be legally protected speech, but it's not okay.
H Apparently, McGuffey said the Hemilin County Sheriff's Office has
placed extra patrols and personnel in Lincoln Heights. She mentioned
law enforcement would not be caught off guard and would
know how to handle it if a similar incident happened again,
(07:38):
with no explanation as to how, because following the protest,
the law enforcement was asked, I mean the Sheriff's department
was asked, even though police department was asked, and they
stated in their news releases about the protest, while very offensive,
what happened was not unlawful. Read your First Amendment now again,
(08:04):
carving out something like walking into the street, blocking traffic
or otherwise perhaps intimidating people in automobiles, which could be
an offense that is sitable and props to Eric had
called in and said he was one of the victims
of that kind of abuse. That's different than just standing
(08:24):
around and uttering garbage, which is why in the aftermath
of this whole thing, both law enforcement agencies, the Sheriff's department,
even though police came out and said, I'm sorry, you know,
we didn't like what was going on. These were unannounced protests,
but there's nothing we could do about it. Enter Charmie McGuffey.
If she gets her words, then they'll get to make
a decision on whether or not you walking around carrying
(08:48):
a firearm was being done for the purpose of intimidation.
I don't know how you prove that in court, and
also they know how to handle it of a similar
incident happening in how please explain and give us the
details on that. Speaking with WCPO, attorney Joshua Evans said,
(09:13):
a police officer would have to guess that person's intent,
which is my point. But when it goes to court,
how do you make that case beyond a reasonable doubt? Right,
you can do a time, place, and matter restriction where
it's not content focused. In other words, maybe you need
(09:36):
an ordinance that requires you to apply for a permit,
and that would be content neutral. Right, you don't have
a permit, you can't gather here. We have permit requirements.
Whether or not that interferes with your constitutional right to
peaceably assemble. I'll let that work out in the courts,
(09:58):
and I'm sure there's been a multitude of cases that
have already gone down that road and address those specific
legal issues. I don't purport to be an expert on
that subject matter. I'm just saying, at least that will
be content neutral. You have to go through a process
so law enforcement knows in advance that there's going to
be a group of protesters gathering and that there may
be problems that right require law enforcement resources that otherwise
(10:19):
weren't allocated to the area. Fine, I get all that
he said a lot of times as ordinance are constitutional,
but he said it's a ticking time bomb somebody that
could be having a bad day, or one of those
neo Nazis, or anybody that's doing speech that you don't like,
which is again a reason law enforcement might be needed
(10:42):
in the area where they otherwise wouldn't be needed because
guess what, the Nazis applied for a permit to do
their hate speech. We have to authorize because we can't
do content based permitting, but at least we know that
they're coming on the day and a specific time and
what place they're going to be, so we can allocate resources. Fine.
(11:08):
McGuffey said, this is a group of men who are
intent on intimidation and hate tactics. Well, i'll give you
the I'll give her the do that they they hate.
They're hateful people. They're apparently white supremacist and or members
of the National Socialist Party Nazis. But are you intimidated?
(11:40):
I I guess that's a big question. She also noted,
by all accounts, it's a small group and I'm not
going to give them any satisfaction by saying they have
any larger affiliation with anyone. It's a bunch of cowards, right,
So going back to the initial question about laws forgetting
regarding you know, wearing a mask and carrying a fire
(12:01):
with the attempt to intimidate beauties in the eye of
the beholder. Don't be intimidated by them. Recognize that, like Charmeaie,
McGuffey notes, it's a small group with no larger affiliation
with anyone, at least at this point. It's also noted
in the reporting that they claim they can't figure out
(12:23):
where this U haul came from that they rented and
showed up in, which I find to be a little suspicious. Quo.
We do not have any specific intel on that U
haul as far as where it was rented from. Someone
might even own it. I don't even know. We're working
on that. McGuffey said. Now, as far as law enforcement works,
(12:47):
and again I'm not going to try to suggest for
a moment that I know how long it takes to
trace a license plate and a specific U haul, which
I do believe have serial numbers on them. That seems
to be to be a reasonably easy thing to do.
But apparently they have not done that yet and they
don't have any They don't have anything to say for
that yet. So draw your own conclusions on this. But
(13:14):
I just get the impression based upon this statements and
the request that we need a law suggests a lack
of familiarity with the Constitution of the United States of America.
Three two three Taco Ton five fifty on AT and
T phones. I will be right back after the new.
Speaker 3 (13:34):
Fifty five KRC.
Speaker 4 (13:36):
My name is Carle Tequila.
Speaker 1 (13:43):
Here we go. Apparently got some snow out there somewhere.
We'll get a midday break from the snow. According to
the daily forecast, and Channel nine very cold winter weather
advisory ends in northern Kentucky later today. I have twenty
two snow showers return about nine pm tonight, affect snow totals,
(14:07):
coating the north by two inches. Further south, Ohio River
expected to crest at fifty five point four feet, a
couple of feet over the flood stage. We'll drop down
to twelve degrees overnight twenty three of the high tomorrow,
with partly cloudy skies and snow leaving during the early
morning hours. Overnight cloudy, butt dry fourteen degrees for the low,
(14:30):
and on Friday, mostly clear day with flood mornings set
to expire at one thirty pm thirty three a high
on Friday fifteen degrees right now forty five. Kerri se
De Talk Station five two. Let's say, happy Wednesday, but
(14:53):
a frustrated Joe Strekker and frustrated to me this morning
given the problems with the equipment an ongoing concept here,
and I apologize for that, but at least the microphones
are not plugged in a working Joe's trying to gear
things up so we can actually have an actual communication
with Jack add at seven h five judgment Pollacktano at
(15:14):
eight thirty.
Speaker 5 (15:15):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (15:16):
Anyway, and I mentioned spending money on transgender monkeys, and
why not just go into that one because it's kind
of a segue into the stack of stupid. This, though,
involves your taxpayer dollars. Oversighted House Oversight Committee Chairman Eli Crane,
he's a Republican from Arizona, revealed it millions of taxpayer
(15:37):
dollars were spent on transgender surgeries and treatments on animals.
Two hundred and forty one million dollars of your hard
earned labor converted into taxpayer dollars used to study transgender
surgeries and treatments on animals. Former National Institute of Allergy
and Infectious Diseases chief who Anthony Fauci apparently was the
(15:59):
one green lighting these projects. Crane, responding to the report yesterday, insane, right, Yeah.
Previously a taxpayer watchdog called white Coat Coasts or Whitecoat
Waste Project are the ones responsible for revealing these kind
(16:24):
of things. Testifying in an oversight hearing earlier this month,
senior vice president of that advocacy group. Justin Goldman testified
that the two hundred and forty one million dollars spent
on transgender animal testing is merely the floor of this research.
Said a lot of these cases they involve vice rats
monkeys who are being surgically mutilated and subject to hormone
(16:46):
therapies to mimic female to male or male to female
gender transitions, gender affirming hormone therapies, and then looking at
the biological, physiological or psychological effects of the gender transitions.
Looking at the effects of taking vaccines after you've transitioned
these animals from male to female or female to male,
(17:06):
looking at the size of their genitals changing, after you've
put them on estrogen or testosterone therapies to transition them. Wow.
He also pointed out there was a one point one
million dollar grant of your money to give female labrats
testosterone to mimic transgender male humans and then overdose them
(17:32):
with this drug to see if the animals who are
taking the test female animals taking testosterone were more likely
to overdose on the drug then animals who are not
taking testosterone. Science. He said it's extremely difficult to navigate
(17:57):
the federal databases to uncover the truth going back to
that had four point seven dollars in FED money that
can't be traced because it wasn't specifically marked as connected
with any particular given piece of legislation. So four point
seven trillion dollars goes out the door, and if you
want to audit it, it makes it impossible to audit
(18:17):
it because Ogee, they didn't connect it to anything that
was passed into law. He said, you essentially need a
degree in information technology to navigate the federal spending databases
to find any of this stuff. So what you found
is we're not being very transparent with what we're spending
these funds on, according to the inquiry into mister Goodman's research.
(18:37):
His response, not at all, and it's by design. He
pointed out, FAUCI funded about ninety five percent of the
transgender animal experience experiments. Where's peda, Yeah, I'm just kind
of asking for a friend, Where in the hell's Pita?
And all this? Not that I'm a big fan of
(18:59):
what does, but you think they may be out rallying
and protesting in the streets that the taxpayer dollars are
being funded or are using to be used to be
funded transgender. I don't know monkeys five twenty six fifty
five krs detalk station local stories coming up. Phone calls
are always welcome. Feel free to give me.
Speaker 3 (19:21):
A call me right back fifty five KRC.
Speaker 1 (19:32):
Corey, you're entitled to open carry. I didn't say you weren't.
I just chose not to because I just don't want
to stir the pod. Why stir the pot if you
don't have to, He says, yeah, screw you, Thomas, I
do open carry daily. That's fine. You're entitled to that.
Nazis are also entitled to spew hate speech because we
have a constitution that protects that. So, oh, you have
(19:54):
a constitutional right, and they're a legal right to open
carry in the state of Ohio. I'm just not that guy,
and I'm entitled to that opinion. And so, you know,
knock yourself out. I just listen.
Speaker 6 (20:06):
You know.
Speaker 1 (20:06):
I want to say I'm a lover, not a fighter.
I don't want to encourage a battle, you know what
I mean. I just why, But carrying concealed gives you
the same option as open carry, and I like that idea.
(20:30):
And the criminals don't know whether you're a concealed carry
guy or not. Now, I know, they obviously can see
that you're an open carry guy. They may be less
inclined to attack you recognizing that you are open carrying.
But it's a crazy place, this world, you know. That's
why I always laugh when when you find out criminals
kicking in the front door people's houses. You know, you
(20:52):
got to have you have a have to have an
extra level of stupid to be involved than breaking and
entering into a household. Here in the state of Ohio,
we have the castle doctrine, for God's sake, and a
multitude of people do own their own firearms. So you're
inviting getting shot. You don't have to prove the you know,
(21:13):
a whole idea of eminent apprehension of grievous bodily harm
or death in order to justify shooting someone who's broken
into your home. So if you're a criminal considering that
kind of behavior, you're an idiot unless you contemplate what
I'm saying and then say, you know what, it might
not be a very good idea to break into that
house because that person could be armed in there and
(21:34):
they could kill me. Exactly. Parent company of KFC, they're
leaving their corporate headquarters in Kentucky and moving to Texas.
According to Young Brands, about one hundred KFC US corporate
employees in Louisville moving to its KFC and Pizza Hut
(21:55):
global headquarters in Plano, Texas take about six months to
complete the process. Companies said over the next eighteen months,
about ninety US based remote employees would also be relocating.
Young Brand CEO and a statement David Gibbs, these changes
and positions for US substantial growth will help us better
serve our customers, employees, franchisees, and subholders. Shareholders. But it's
(22:17):
Kentucky Fried Chicken, not really anymore. It's now KFC. They
don't call it Kentucky Fried Chicken. So words of remorse,
claims of abandonment, and a shocking allegation with the highlights Tuesday,
when a convicted killer pleaded to a Butler County jury
(22:38):
to spare his life. Props the Valerie Lions over at
WCPO for reporting on this development. Robbie Robinson Junior making
dad proud, twenty five years old back in courtroom for
the start of his sentencing phase, found guilty of dousing
his father's fiance, Brenda Scott in accelerant in twenty twenty three,
(23:01):
setting her on fire and killing her. Now facing the
death penalty, jury has to determine if the aggravated circumstances
outweighed the defense of mitigation efforts to warrant capital punishment.
If not, the jury has three other sentencing options, life
with the possibility of parole after thirty years, life with
(23:24):
the possibility of parole after twenty five years, or my choice,
life without parole. During his trial, prosecutors presented testimony from
a dozen witnesses nearly a dozen anyway, as well as
DNA video and audio recordings, enough evidence to convince the
panel of twelve men and women that Robinson planned and
committed the crime. Butler County Assistant Prosecutor Catherine Pridemore said
(23:47):
during closing arguments last week, the state submits to you
that the defendant at the time literally bottled up his
anger in the form of ignitable liquids. He put on
his clothes and a big puffer jacket in seventy plus
degree weather, and that's when he attacked Brenda. He set
her on fire, He set the house on fire. State
(24:12):
did not need to prove motive, nor was it a
basis to be considering in reaching the verdict. But they
did tell the jury that Robinson allegedly disliked Scott and
her relationship with his father, which fueled him to commit
the crime. His defense didn't address that claim, nor any
others made by the prosecution during the trial his attorney
and they chose not to present a case. He rolled
(24:37):
over on that one. You got so much overwhelming evidence
that your defense layers won't even put on a case
for you. You got problems on your hands. Five thirty
six fifty five kr SE the talk station stack a
stupid coming up. I hope you can stick around for
that or feel free to.
Speaker 3 (24:53):
Call fifty five KRC. Why pay more for.
Speaker 1 (24:57):
Pursuit by forty fifty five CARCV talks to Happy Wednesday
three seven nine fifty five hundred eight hundred T two
three Taco Tom FI fifty If you have an AT
and T found and don't inject yourself with butterfly remains
seems like a straightforward recommendation, doesn't it please? In Northeast
(25:21):
Brazilian state now investigating because their speculation that the fourteen
year old boy who went into septic shock and then died.
Did it because he injected himself with butterfly remains and
they believe it's related to an online viral challenge. Pay
(25:47):
attention to what your children are listening to anyway, David
Neons take him to the hospital after his health suddenly deteriorated,
began to vomiting and started and started to go limp.
He initially told his dad that he hurt himself playing,
but things deteriorated and then he ended up telling medics
in the chemist that he had mixed up a dead
butterfly in water and then injected it into his leg,
(26:12):
taken to the hospital and then died.
Speaker 3 (26:14):
What the hell?
Speaker 1 (26:15):
A lot of speculation in Brazil where this happened, rumors
flying about it being part of some sort of strange
internet challenge. Kid didn't explain what type of butterfly he
had picked for this. Does it matter? Police awaiting a
full post mortar result after opening the investigation of the claims,
opening speculation, open speculation by the Brazilian media that he
(26:38):
did the injection because of this social media craze. I
think the word craze may be an overstatement. If they
have a difficult time figuring out whether there is actually
some social media trend out there telling people to inject
themselves with butterfly remains. They apparently found the syringe he
used under his pillow. His dad found it when he
was cleaning up the house. His death made linked to
(27:00):
possible toxins in the butterfly mix, which could have then
caused his body to shut down as he went into
septic shock. Apparently, the milkweed that a monarch butterfly eats
as a caterpillar is actually a poisonous toxin which is
then stored in their bodies. Although they do not know
whether it was a monarch butterfly that he injected himself with.
(27:20):
I think the fundamental point here is that don't inject
yourself with bugs or butterflies. Can argue with that. Oh,
local boy Claremont County Claimont candy Man accused of making
explicit and threatening social media posts. Look there he is
(27:43):
that Zachary Fox accused of mentioning a woman and her
daughter while also tagging their church in some of the post.
Debuties called to the victims home February seventh, after she
was made aware of the post by other church members.
She and this Zachary Fox went to the same church
the deputies. Fox posted messages and videos of himself quote
(28:04):
in various states of obscene acts while nude closed quote
what the hell, most of which mentioned the victim and
her daughter. Including those posts were apparently disturbing messages about
his intentions with the victims. The messages were public, so
deputies could see them. Deputies went to Fox's home. They
(28:25):
say they tried. He tried to hide his phone and
claimed he didn't post the messages. He eventually confessed because, oh, look,
there he is on social media, which we've got access to.
This year, he held on one hundred thousand dollars bond
on charges of pandering, obscenity, disseminating, mattered, harmful to juveniles,
(28:47):
tampering with evidence, menacing by stalking, and telecommunications harassment. Period.
Speaker 7 (28:55):
The biggest douche of the universe, in all the gallex,
there's no bigger douche than you. You've reached the top,
the pinnacle of douche dump. Good going, douce, Your dreams
have come true.
Speaker 1 (29:15):
Exclamation point and it's going to Louisiana, where a woman
has been arrested for being accused of killing her boyfriend
over an argument about ready breakfast food away thirty, said
twenty four year old tam Marie, who Hubbard called nine
(29:36):
one one Sunday about ten thirty in the morning, I
stating that she had shot her boyfriend Joshua Jones in
the chest. Deputies arrived. They found Jones unresponsible the gunshot wound.
He was pronounced dead at the scene. Hubbard told investigators
that she and Jones were arguing over the food made
for breakfast before the fight escalated. She's been charged with
(29:58):
second degree murder. Wow, you think it was worth it?
Joe five forty five fifty five k CE de talk
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(30:20):
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Speaker 4 (31:13):
Five card Talkstation.
Speaker 1 (31:17):
Five fifty fifty five per see talkstation Happy Wednesday. Looking
forward to having Jack adid In on the program later
this morning, as well as jud Jennen of Poulatana. You
can call if you want, Cory, you can call defend
your right to open carry. That's cool anyhow, Uh why
I guess I have to ask out loud for this
one because and I know that the beauties in the
(31:39):
I the be Holder. I'm not a huge fan of
the Tesla cyber truck. I think they look goofy, but
a Gold Tesla cyber truck. Hey, look at me, Look
at me, Look at me. Nothing screams more that look
at me than driving around in a Gold Tesla cyber truck.
This guy in message usaid, said he's been experiencing bullying
(32:02):
and threats over having and driving a Gold Tesla cybertruck.
Which don't you expect doctor whomate Jorgi close Enough said
he found a profane sticker on the back of his
cyber truck last week. The words, according to Fox nineteen
(32:22):
reporting to derogatory to repeat. He said he's now nervous
about his safety as well as the safety of his children.
He said his wife was horrified about the sticker. She
was horrified, quote unquote, she was like crying and screaming
out of her throat. Don't ever drive that cyber truck anymore?
He said, Well, maybe she stuck it on there because
(32:43):
she's embarrassed that she has to go drive it around
a gold cyber truck. Do you ever think about that?
Just the thought? When he posted what happened on social media,
he said, instead of sympathy and concern, it's social media, man,
What do you expect? Of course? More hateful messages flooding comments.
Said the harassment over his cyber truck started after Aylon
(33:04):
Musk endorsed Trump say he's worried about other drivers on
the road trying to cause a collision. Somebody tried to
cut me off while I'm driving with my kids, and
three guys came out of a car. They just pointed
to the middle finger and started screaming at me. Now
(33:24):
here's maybe the answer. The reporting says the cyber trucks
gold color serves as a walking billboard or driving billboard
more appropriately for his medical SPA quote, It's a fancy,
funky car that I think attracts a lot of attention, right,
and it also might attract a lot of people making
(33:44):
fun of you for driving around in a gold Tesla
cyber truck. He said, I pursued my dream, you know,
and now I'm enjoying the free speech. But with this
taking a different turn that made me very concerned. He
tried to trade in it, trade in the truck, with
no luck. He sent Tesla a photo of the photo
(34:05):
of the sticker that someone put on his vehicle. Representative
said Tesla is not accepting cyber truck trade ins at
This moment got a Orlando, Florida man arrested after you
allegedly attacked an elderly woman and beat her daughter after
(34:27):
an argument over a handicapped parking spot outside of a
church just away. Charging Affi David says, an adult woman
and her elderly mother arrived at the parking lot of
Saint John Vianna Catholic Church September twenty fifth last year
to pick up a younger woman's five year old niece.
The older woman, the grandmother of the child disabled, and
(34:48):
owned a handicapped placard for a car which your daughter
was driving around five year old got in the cars.
The young woman attempted to pull out of the spot.
A man in a black truck parked behind them, blocking
their exit and began yelling at the group of women.
Older women told police that the man was yelling about
the handicap parking and after her daughter showed the man
the handicap placard, he still kept yelling that she couldn't
(35:09):
use one placard on two cars. Man alleged that he
was not going to let the woman leave until security arrived. Uh,
don't be that guy. Younger woman got out of the
car to try to explain the situation of the man
and to express that they were trying to leave, but
the man pushed her into the car and slammed the
(35:31):
door into her. According to the affidavit, she tried to
push the man away, but he punched her in the face.
She tried to punch him back, but he allegedly grabbed
her collar and threw her to the ground. The older
woman told police told police to try to break up
the fight, and the man grabbed her arms and pushed
her to the side, leaving large bruises or deal stop
(35:52):
when church staffed stepped in to remove the man. Are
sharing the award. This morning, man sixty five year old
John Phillips arrested charged with aggravated battery, using are causing
great bodily harm, elder abuse, and two counts of false imprisonment.
(36:15):
All right, like I was saying, just be happy you're
not in the stack? Is stupid? Fivefty five fifty five KRC.
The talk station coming up after Top of the Ron
is George Brennan Studio Restore Wellness dot Org. George will
offer his thoughts and comments on what RFK should be
focusing on. We'll see about George after the top of
(36:35):
the hour, hood we can stick around.
Speaker 4 (36:37):
Bring Trump's first one hundred days every day, every day,
Promises made, promises kept. Fifty five KRC the talk Station.
Speaker 8 (36:49):
Six.
Speaker 1 (36:49):
I'm six fifty five KR see the talk station Happy Wednesday.
One hour from now, Jack Alligen returns. We'll be talking
with Jack about well why Democrats are still woke, plus
the topic of conversation Marxists and the Marx Brothers. Fast
forward to eight thir to Judge Annapolitano with the Feds
(37:10):
and their own bribery, and back in studio, which is
a wonderful thing to behold because I love talking to
people in studio. George Brenman and Keith Tenenfeld who are
helping the hoping to help people out with their you know, diets.
Exercise Restore Wellness dot org is the website you can
check out. We'll be talking with them today about what
should RFK focus on. George Keith. Great to see you
(37:32):
both again, and remember Keith is a nurse practitioner and
he uh you focus on alternative medicine, therapies and things.
Speaker 9 (37:39):
Of that nature, integrating it all together, you know, west
side medicine. If you want to call it. That is
Western medicine. It's not a horrible thing. It's got great,
great avenues for treatment. And then there's also the alternative options,
which allow people to have access to really great natural
things that actually work without harming themselves.
Speaker 1 (37:54):
Well, and I the trend now, and you can sort
of see it unfold. I'm not some sort of stute
observer and seeing this, but we a Western medicine tends
to focus on dealing with the symptom as opposed to
the root cause of why you have the symptom. You're
in pain, here's a pain medication. Well, wait a second,
(38:14):
why are you in pain? And what caused you to
get the pain? That's kind of I think it seems
to me at least, where more Eastern medicine sort of
focuses on.
Speaker 9 (38:24):
Yeah, Western medicine just you know, that patches the tire
because it's kind a leak in it. But the rest
of the medicine says, well, wait a minute, what's in
your driveway? You gotta nail your driveway. You keep on
driving over and it takes longer for you to find
that nail. You know, it's easier to just to patch
a hole, and so if the Western medicines and in
and out kind of process, you're just giving a drug
out the door, you go, and they can make the
billing on it.
Speaker 1 (38:45):
That's pretty much what it is. It is, and you know,
it's weird to me. I'm not the first person observed
this either. You'll have these pharmaceutical commercials always cracked me up.
Do not take filling the black drug. If you're allergic
to filling the black drug, that, in and of its
it reveals an absurdity. But beyond that, there's it's like,
here is an extra medication to take along with the
(39:09):
other medication because the other medication isn't quite dealing with
your symptoms, whether it's depression or whatever. So you're piling
on and you know, it makes you kind of wonder, well,
have they really And I don't know this because I'm
not a you know, pharmacologist, I don't play one on radio.
Do they really know how those drugs interact with each
(39:30):
other and what other drugs you are taking? I know
that's what pharmacists are supposed to be aware of. Oh
my god, you're getting prescribed this, Well, did you know
that this drug you're taking over here will have a
problem with that and interact with it. I don't know
how they can do those multitude of cross studies that
would take to determine whether there are any deleterious effects.
Speaker 9 (39:48):
I think with AI coming there, it's gonna pop out
quite quite easily.
Speaker 1 (39:52):
Well, there's a benefit from AI right there. Okay, good enough,
But you're hitting the point there. And when you start
it with saying you're seeing these ads on television. If
you watch like the football games, half the ads are
for pharmacology. Yeah, why in the world me, as a
patient should I be asking you for a specific drug.
(40:13):
Isn't that what I'm paying a doctor for, is to
tell me what is it that's going to help me. Instead,
we've got this whole money driven scheme where they got
to sell the customer you need to ask for orozempic.
I mean you just have to ask for that, Yeah,
when in fact, you know that might not be.
Speaker 10 (40:30):
Your problem at all. They I don't think we should
be having ads for pharmacy. I know this is one
of the things RFK has been talking about, is getting
rid of the ads. But it's like, you know, giving
me tools I could use as a brain surgeon. Well,
I'm not a brain surgeon, Why are you telling me
about the tools? Well, the flip side of that, and
you know I'm a free speech advocate. If you want
(40:52):
to try to advertise and sell me a product, I
am capable of saying no and seeing through the marketing
nonsense and also call into question whether or not, given
that half or more of each pharmaceutical commercial is ridden
with all of the side effects related to taking it,
that's enough to scare me away from the drug. In fact,
one of the treatment protocols I was offered.
Speaker 1 (41:14):
I'm quite serious about this because you know I have
a lymphoma and since it returned last fall I found
from a CT scan, I was given three treatment options.
And you know I love my cancer doctors. I would
never say anything bad about OHC, but one of the
pharmaceuticals that would go along with this other you know,
bag of drip kind of thing, would I boiled down
(41:38):
basically turned me into a hemophiliac. OH great idea is
that this drug will reduces the amount of clotting that
can take place in your drug. And I was specifically
told because here's the information, like RFK, here's what the
problems that might exist if you choose to go down
this line, it may cure you. But if, for example,
(42:02):
the example I was given, you got to get a
colonoscopy because there could be a puncture thing happening in there,
because they don't always go right. So if you know
in advance you're going to get a colonoscopy, you stop
taking the drug a month ahead of time. And my
response was, well, what if I'm in an auto accident?
Oh yeah, absolutely, I mean you can't anticipate when you
(42:23):
might get have a bleeding situation, sort of like, no,
I'm not going to do that. So good. I got
the information and I made an informed decision.
Speaker 8 (42:31):
And I know.
Speaker 10 (42:32):
And that's ninety percent of what we've been talking about
with Restore Wellness is getting the information out there, that's it,
and giving people like treatment options instead.
Speaker 9 (42:41):
Of them being only, you know, blindsided into one option.
It allows them to say, well, what are you doing,
what are you in control of? What can you control
about your illness? And how can you make that a
better outcome. My patients who are actually actively involved are
doing much more fantastic than walking in and saying, okay, doc,
whatever you want me to do. The engaged creates health exactly,
(43:04):
And I think the problem we face as a population
is probably that we don't want to be engaged. Yeah,
you know, we just sort of moved through our daily
lives and not consider the implications and ramifications of going
into a seven to eleven and getting a sixty four
ounce big gulp.
Speaker 1 (43:22):
Oh wit.
Speaker 9 (43:22):
But at the same time, I think that people have
been convinced that they should not manage their own health,
so therefore they've defaulted that to the experts, when really
you're the expert on your own body. You're the expert
on what makes a tick, what works, all those little incursies.
I think it's a great opportunity for us to start
waking up and going, Okay, this is my body, I'm
responsible for it. I'm going to eat right, I'm exercise right,
and then next you know, you're gonna see this wellness
(43:44):
just bloom.
Speaker 1 (43:44):
Okay. And again, going back to OURFKA, June, this is
something I'm hoping that you just elevate awareness. Did you
know by any chance that fill in the blank is
really actually bad for you? Or that the food pyramid
that we've been relying on for so many years is
best awkwards you know, or maybe the motivations for why
the food pyramid looks like like, Listen, I grew up
in four four three two. It was four servings of
(44:08):
I believe a grains three or four remember you remember, George.
Speaker 10 (44:15):
Oh, it was crazy, but I mean at the time
it was religion, I mean, and it still is.
Speaker 1 (44:19):
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 10 (44:20):
Last night, as we were having our bacon and eggs, Nancy
asked the question, you know, why is that they feel
bad when we're doing this. I'm like, we should feel bad,
but it's because we've been ingrained with this since we
were that this is wraw.
Speaker 9 (44:31):
And since the pyramid has been flipped, you've got diabetes,
hig cholesterol. It hasn't fixed, heart disease. No, no, no, no, Now
we have cancer rampid. I mean, so it's obvious there's
something going on there.
Speaker 1 (44:40):
And my grandfather and I felt so badly for him.
He had bypass surgery and this is back in the seventies,
and because he had clogged arteries, and that he was
not allowed to have eggs anymore, right, and that he
he loved to have eggs for breakfast, that was what
he did. And whether or not that any connection with
(45:01):
why you had artery blockage. I don't know it was
a heavy smoke or too. But looking back now and
eggs we find out now are not bad for you.
No least that's what I've been or did. The research
confirms actually can have some health benefits for you. What Keith,
you calling protein pills? Right?
Speaker 10 (45:20):
Yeah, right, I mean it's I think eggs and cholesterol
and statins in cholesterol are one of the most evil
things we ever came up with the idea that you know,
the reason you're getting a heart attack is because you
have cholesterol in your system. No, cholesterol is what arives
after you have the problem. It's like blaming firemen for
the fire. Yeah, there are always firemen near a house fire,
(45:43):
but they aren't the ones that are causing the problem.
Seems true with cholesterol. It's the fact that your arteries
got stretched inflamed, had had breakages, and the cholesterol comes
in to fix it. So instead of fixing the root
cause problem, which is the inflammation, we're just obsessed with
this number called cholesterol and getting it lower, and in
(46:04):
fact it's what's causing the Alzheimer's, it's what's causing Well see.
Speaker 1 (46:08):
Now okay, right there, you said the a word Alzheimer's.
I want to talk about that when we come back,
because I got you guys have done more research on
this than I have. But my dad was taking statins
from the moment they came out, remember the eighties, And
he used to joke, but I am teflon coded. I'm
never going to have to worry about any blockage and guests,
(46:29):
he ended up dying from Alzheimer's, and I'm just wondering
whether it's connection there. Let's talk about that a little
bit with George and Keith after these words for us,
Speaking of medical, how about an echo cardiogram? Do you
want to pay thirty five hundred dollars for that? Go ahead,
go to the hospital imaging department. Yeah, you'll have the
fountain there. When you walk in, it'll be marble, and
it'll be a massive building and a giant parking lot
and millions and millions of square feet of space. You're
(46:52):
paying for that. It's a profit center for the Hospital's
echo cardiogram could cost you thirty five hundred dollars or
maybe even more, and you have to pay extra for
their board certified radiologist report line item line item line
item Huge bill, New calendar year new out of pocket liability.
How about only paying ready five hundred dollars If you
(47:13):
don't need an enhancement, it's five hundred dollars, or if
you do, it's eight hundred dollars. At Affordable Imaging Services,
just one of the many many scans they do, MRI,
ST scan, ultrasound, lung screening, cardiac stories, all of them
a mere fraction of the price that the hospital charges.
Why well, low overhead, they have the same equipment hospitals used.
They run by professionals, They've been at this for more
(47:33):
than forty years. You're gonna save yourself a heap load
of money. So don't go to the imaging department, which
is where your doctor is going. You're gonna want you
to go, because, why well, your doctor's employed by the
same healthcare system that owns a hospital, keeping the money
in the house. But you do have a choice, exercise it.
Call them up, schedule a deployment. They can see you now,
not have to wait three weeks, four weeks a month
(47:54):
like the hospital. They'll get you right in. Affordable imaging
can be reached at five one three seven, five three
eight dous five one three seven, five three eight thousand
online Affordable Medimaging dot com.
Speaker 10 (48:06):
This is fifty five krc an iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 1 (48:10):
The countdown is on set six fifty five kerc DE
talk station focusing on health. In this hour George Runman
and Keith Tennenfeld in studio Restore Wellness dot Org. And
I guess your guys main motivation is this is just
to spread the word about health and awareness about health.
Speaker 10 (48:28):
We're trying to make people comfortable with the idea of
taking control of their own health. The idea that I
don't have to wait until I'm sick to see a
doctor and get well instead, don't get sick in the
first place.
Speaker 1 (48:40):
And how do you do that? Well, you know, we've.
Speaker 10 (48:42):
Been talking about keto, We've been talking about the idea
of what what it means cholesterol wise. How do we
make people comfortable with the idea of taking control? And
you know it's it's by giving information out there. I
am not certified, I'm not a doctor. Keith is a
functional you know, nurse practitioner, but I'm a nerd with
you know, this itch that I got a scratch, and
(49:04):
so we started down My wife and I started down
this rabbit hole, reading a ton of information, and what
you find out is everything you thought to be true
was actually the result of a lobbying campaign. So the
food pyramid was the result of a lobbying campaign. Yeah,
the grains the first time the other day, And the
whole idea of Statin's curing heart disease was the result
(49:28):
of a campaign because they had these new form of
drugs called statins that could reduce cholesterol. But when you
dig into the facts, every study done, especially on older women,
shows that the higher cholesterol, the longer you live, and
the lowerer cholesterol, the more likely you are to get
heart disease, dementia, Alzheimer's and all these other soorable issues.
Speaker 1 (49:50):
Have there been peer reviewed studies that show a correlation
between taking statins. Like I said, I was going back
to my dad's illustration, because he thought it was the
greatest thing since sliced bread that he could eat whatever
he wanted because he was on statins and he was
teflon coded. I remember him saying that one day. But
again from the very very first release of those in
the eighties, he had been taking him as basically his
(50:12):
whole life, because demonstrably he had what they called high cholesterol,
bad cholesterol, good cholesterol, and so did I. Oh, yeah,
you know, and so I was on him for a
long time. And you know, I ended up going with
biodentical hormone replacement therapy when I was doing commercials for
your Wellness Center, because that's what the Europeans use to
deal with cholesterol issues. I haven't had a problem since
(50:34):
there's a couple of issues.
Speaker 9 (50:37):
And to answer your question about research, let's talk about research.
Research has been hacked, right. That's big pharma, you know,
supporting the research, so therefore it's going to be sided
no matter how much you like it. And then these
universal research articles such as like or the bodies like
the Lancet, they've kind of been bought out politically as well.
And if you're in the industry and you see how
(50:57):
many times in research, you know, it's been done and
it's been pulled because it's been poor poorly designed, then
then you start seeing the science said, hey, wait a minute,
they're hijacking their research as well. As soon as you
go to google something, the top ones come up. You know,
it's just like if you go to.
Speaker 10 (51:12):
It, right, and those are the ones that are the strangest.
My introduction to the problem with Statin's as I had
a conversation with a friend that's a corner, he says.
The incident I open a body, I can immediately tell
that they've been on statins, immediately tell really, there's visual
evidence that it is destroying what's going on and my
personal experience, just like you, you're and your father, I
always prescribed Statin's fairly early. Every bone in my body hurt.
(51:37):
I could barely walk. I hurt so bad, and as
soon as I stopped taking them, I got better. And
it's like, well, wait a minute, No drugs should make
you feel that bad. And then when you do the
further research. The first book I read was called The
clot Thickens and it's all about what's the roll of cholesterol.
And what you find out is it's a necessary body
chemical that's needed for your brain, it's needed for polymons.
Speaker 1 (52:01):
You should have.
Speaker 10 (52:02):
I think the nineteen fifties standard was a cholesterol three
hundred that was considered healthy and good. And like I said,
there's been several studies recently. I want to say, there
was one that I just read about on X a
couple of weeks ago that shows this correlation between the
higher your cholesterol the longer you live. Now it is
still a marker, meaning you know, if you go in
(52:25):
and get a blood test and you have high cholesterol,
there is a chance it's because you have inflammation destroying
your arteries and your blood system. That's what you have
to solve is the inflammation, not the cholesterol. The cholesterol
is just the wake up called as there might be
a problem in your system. And Keith, you can speak
to that because I don't want to be the doctor. George,
(52:47):
you're doing a fantastic job and impact. Let me go
back to that.
Speaker 9 (52:49):
You know, the reason I think we make a great
team is that you know, we're dealing with your side
it which is the patient side, on the provider's side.
We're working together to heal something. That's the way it
should be. It's not you know, it's not just Hey,
I'm going to sit here and talk the entire time
because I think I know what I'm doing.
Speaker 6 (53:04):
No.
Speaker 9 (53:04):
I love the patient experience. It gives people a real
sense of getting better. Vitamin D. Vitamin D is essentral
for cholesterol. Without vitamin D, your cholesterol is not going
to work very well. So a lot of people have
high cholesterol probably have very.
Speaker 1 (53:16):
Low vitamin D. So and maybe we can talk a
little bit more about supplements. But you can drink milk
for vitamin D. You can get from sunlight.
Speaker 9 (53:26):
Correct, but you live in Cincinnati and the way the
sun arcs off.
Speaker 1 (53:30):
The earth, art I know. And it's also been gray
for the three months. It's see, my solar system tells
me that every month. But you can take a vitamin
D supplement.
Speaker 9 (53:40):
Correct, Definitely, five thousand units every day for most people. Definitely,
all right, if you're overweight, ten ten thousand units, Okay,
not a lot, It's not a lot. All right, hold on,
we're going to bring it back. We talk more about this.
It's fascinating for me. Fascinating.
Speaker 1 (53:53):
Indeed, six twenty seven fifty five cares to the talk
station and you should tune in. On Sundays, I do
a show with John Rooman from Cover Sincy. We really
do a deep dive into all of the different ways
that you can get medical insurance and your company you
got a small group, man, I'm telling you you should
call Cover Sincy if you are a business owner and
(54:14):
you say I can't afford to get medical insurance from
my employees. Oh yes, you can, and your employees will smile,
and you will have wonderful employee retention. And I'm talking
about employees that really may not be making a whole
lot of money. They certainly can't afford a two thousand
dollars a month policy, but they can if it's a
lot lower than that. It provides great coverage. That's what
you get with cover Sincy. He looks at each and
(54:37):
every individual. Everybody's at a different place in your life. Some
people have families, some people are getting older, some people
are young. They have worked with hundreds of insurance companies,
thousands of different policies, and what he does is layer
the coverage so you'll get dollar one coverage for regular
medical visits and things like that, not going out of pocket.
I know it sounds impossible to leave that you have
better medical coverage for less money, but folks are saving
(54:59):
thirty to six few percent every month. And he's improved
businesses bottom line dramatically. Jeff, I'm talking to you. That's
my favorite illustration because he and his twelve member team
I think it's roughly twelve, improved his business's bottom line
by tens of thousands of dollars and his employees have
much better medical insurance coverage. That's what it's all about.
Coversincy dot com is a form there to fill out
(55:20):
to initiate the conversation. You don't have to pay for
the service. They're working for you. Not insurance companies cover
since dot com or just give him a call at
five one three eight hundred call five one three eight
hundred two two five five fifty five KRCT. Here's your
Channa nine one of four. Kas's gonna see a high
(55:41):
twenty two today, break from this snow mid day. If
you're getting snow, await for a little end overnight low
of twelve Ohio River expected across over nine at fifty
five point four feet and snow shows up. Might get
a light coding in the north and maybe as as
much as two inches in the south. Partly clided marble
with a high twenty three over night cloudy in fourteen
(56:03):
and on Friday, it's going to be a clear day.
Flood warning ends at one point thirty pm and we'll
see high of thirty three degrees fifteen right now.
Speaker 11 (56:10):
Traffic County from the UCUP Tramphics Center, you see health,
you'll find comprehensive care. That's some personal would make su
your best tomorrow possible. That's boundless care for better outcomes.
Expect more at U seehelp dot com. Starting to see
some slow traffic both north and southbound two seventy five
across the Carrol Cropper Bridge thanks to the construction and
(56:31):
some snow falling in the area.
Speaker 4 (56:33):
I've also seen a bit.
Speaker 11 (56:34):
Of slow traffic south bend seventy five into the cut
because of snow. Chuck Ingram on fifty five KR seed
Need Talk Station.
Speaker 1 (56:45):
Six thirty two, fifty five KR CD talk station, Well
our talking about health. It's very enlightening in studio George
Brenneman and Keith nfl at Keith State nurse practitioner and
runs an alternative medicine practice and trying to engage his
patients and get them to take stocking themselves. And that's
what this is all about. And that's what you know.
I'm optimistic about RFK Junior, in spite of my lot
(57:06):
many of my listeners saying, oh, you're letting a wolf
into the henhouse. He's a nutcase when it comes to
green and this and that, and I'm thinking he's over
in Health and Human Services. He's not gonna have any
impact on whether or not he's gonna we're gonna be
driving an electric vehicle or not. But his mantra has
been raising awareness and giving people information. And that's the
thing that I like about it because I'm a transparency guy.
(57:29):
I want as much information as I can so I
can make informed decisions about my life. You know that.
Shouldn't we have all that? Then we were talking about
vaccines off air, and I'm saying, you know, I told
Keith listen, I'm glad there's a polio vaccine out there,
and I'm glad I've got it because I wouldn't want
to end up in an iron lung. You know, I
get that. But then again, I don't get the flu vaccine.
(57:50):
The main reason is because they always get it wrong.
Speaker 10 (57:53):
You know, it's a crap unintentionally they always get And
you see the spike right now in flu. They're saying
this year is the worst flu season they've had in years.
How much of that is what they pumped into the
flu vaccine and then release that to the world.
Speaker 1 (58:07):
I don't know. I don't know. I I get down
conspiratorial rat holes. That's fine. There may be something nefarious
out there behind the whole thing. But I mean, you know,
I don't want to put something into my body if
it stands a good chance that it's really not going
to throw anything. And I've had the flu before, and
you know what, You're sick for three or four days
and then you get well again.
Speaker 10 (58:28):
Well we had we had chicken box, we had the measles,
we had lops, we all got that, the whole family.
Speaker 1 (58:34):
We get it all at the same time.
Speaker 10 (58:36):
But I think the problem with the vaccines now is
a none of them are vaccines. My definition of a
vaccine is once you get this, you cannot get the disease.
So clearly the mRNA stuff is not a vaccine because
everybody got COVIDK after they had that.
Speaker 1 (58:51):
Well, okay, real quick here, let's do it boiled down.
What's what's mRNA versus the traditional vaccine which takes the
dead disease and interject your body so we create a
natural immune response. How is mRNA different than that traditional
type of disease. That's a good question.
Speaker 9 (59:10):
So when mRNA is one of those replicators, it's a
messenger RNA, so it takes it and it can make copies,
multiple copies through.
Speaker 10 (59:16):
You know, it forces your own DNA to make a
chemical that was instructed by the code in the mRNA vaccine.
I'm a computer NERD, so mRNAs are like hacking the
kernel of an operating system. They go in there and
they teach your DNA how to make in this case,
the spike protein from the covid. So unlike when they
(59:39):
give you a semi dead virus in your body naturally reacts.
What this does. What mRNA does is it actually rewrites
the DNA to create a new chemical in your body,
in this case the spike protein. I think there are
two different kinds. There's mRNA in there's something that they
do by introducing through a virus.
Speaker 1 (59:59):
You can get a vir carrier.
Speaker 10 (01:00:00):
A viral carrier that does it, which is a little
bit different. And that's the difference between the Johnson and
Johnson and the other two that were true mRNAs. The
issue there is from my perspective, was always how do
you know when it stops making that protein? And so
their initial selling of the mRNA vaccines is they would
(01:00:22):
only happen in the injection site, so your body would
get that the mRNA would go into your system in
your arm, and only the DNA near the injection site
would produce the spike protein. Turns out that wasn't true.
The entire body absorbs it because the blood flows through
your entire body. I don't know how that theory ever
(01:00:42):
makes sense. The mRNA was not ready to come out yet.
That the theory of how it was going to work
was going to be great, But it wasn't ready, and
we didn't know how to stop. But we knew how
to turn it on, but we didn't know how to
stop it. And it's evident.
Speaker 9 (01:00:53):
And what's happening is it's changing the immune system and
the immune systems causing all kinds of interesting problems such
as cancer aka turbo cancers.
Speaker 1 (01:01:00):
Oh great, yeah, well, fortunately I didn't get the damn shot. Yeah,
I mean I had COVID, I got a natural immunity.
I even had my T cells tested for it, and
I was off the charts. So why get a vaccine
when I went through the body? Right? Thing? You know?
Speaker 9 (01:01:14):
I think on the vaccine concept, I think it's really
really wrong that that offices can fire their patients because
they choose not to get vaccines. That should be a
patient's right and when a doctor fires you from a
practice because you don't want to get vaccine. What that says,
get out of my office so I can make money
on somebody else.
Speaker 1 (01:01:31):
I tell you what, Keith, we can develop that a
little bit further out of time in this break, and
I want you to elaborate on that as scoach as
we were doing off air, because it makes some very
interesting points on that, most notably given that recent Children's
hospitals decision not to allow this patient to get a
heart transplant because she didn't have a COVID vaccine six
thirty seven. Right now, if Dove out cares to the
talk station a call you want to make John Ryan
(01:01:53):
prestige and tears. You want your kitchen model, you got
to talk to John Ryan. He's a hell of a
great guy, real sweet guy, but just brilliant comes a
kitchen remodeling because he've been doing kitchens for like thirty
five years, almost exclusively. He's the man you call you
want something done, you got a change order, you want
to talk about initial design. He's there from the very
beginning all the way through final installation. One stop shopping
(01:02:13):
with John to make it happen for your kitchen. You
want to do a small project, just like maybe replacing
cabinets and countertops. John's the man you want to cut
your holes kitchen and replace it completely like we did
with John. He'll He'll bring your vision to light and
it will look great. Even if you don't like the
tile that my wife and I selected. I got a
criticism on that. No, it's not Bradyvin style. It's Rookwood, handmade,
(01:02:36):
Rookwood old school tile to match the interior of our home.
We love it. And that's the point. You're going to
love your kitchen when John Ryan's working on it for you.
A plus with a better business Varah of course his website,
Prestge Interior's website Prestige one two three dot com, presdich
one two three dot com tell him, Brian said, hoiving
you call for an appointment. It's five one three two
(01:02:58):
four seven zero two two nine four seven zero two two.
Speaker 4 (01:03:01):
Nine fifty five KRC the talk station.
Speaker 1 (01:03:04):
I think Christine sent me an email. We fired our
doctors because they wanted to jab us with the COVID
nineteen vaccine. That's a two way street, right that is,
and we were talking about that. I mean, we had
this recent case locally, and you know, I'm no distant
Children's They have served my family well over the years.
We've had some issues, we had ever children and Children's Hospital.
(01:03:27):
I love them. I think they do wonderful work, except
in a couple of areas. But then when I find
out they say, no, you can't get a heart transplant
here because you don't have the COVID nineteen vaccine for
a child, a child whose risk of COVID nineteen death
is so slim it's almost zero.
Speaker 9 (01:03:43):
And I want to know, you know, how much money
are they getting from the government to push the vaccine
or from Fizer Orderna. I want to I want to
know those numbers before you can deny a heart transplant.
Be transparent about your finances, and then make that decision
on air. Let's see what Let's see what that settles
the news.
Speaker 1 (01:03:57):
But you know that that goes back to the point
about you. You know, I will not treat you unless
you have this vaccine that seems on many levels to
violate the hippocratic ghoth do no harm. We now know,
and I think I can say safely, given all the
studies that have been done, it does come with risks.
Everything you put in your body, whether it's a pharmaceutical
(01:04:17):
advertised on you know, Wheel of Fortune or the COVID
nineteen vacs, there's risks associated with it, and you can
read them. And if I want to say no, you
know what, on a cost benefit analysis, I am a
little more concerned about the risks than I am about
getting COVID. So I choose not to get the vaccine
that prevents you from getting all other medical care, right.
Speaker 9 (01:04:40):
I mean, if doctors are saying to know, you have
to do the vaccine in order for you to prevent
an outbreak among the community, well, okay, why aren't you
talking about sugar and saying that's an outbreak, that's a
problem people are dying from that.
Speaker 1 (01:04:49):
So but this so called vaccine doesn't prevent you from
getting COVID or spread o covid exactly. So you can't
even make that argument from a logic and reason standpoint.
Speaker 9 (01:04:58):
And the science is out there. I mean, there's peer
of you studies showing that it did not work.
Speaker 1 (01:05:03):
But you know, go ahead.
Speaker 10 (01:05:06):
Well, the key point is that the relationship with your
doctor is probably one of the more between doctor and
patient and husband and wife. Those are about the two
most important relationships you're ever going to have, and if
if your doctor is looking at you and saying, I'm
going to fire you if you don't do what I'm
telling you, I'm going to divorce you.
Speaker 1 (01:05:25):
I'm going to divorce you.
Speaker 10 (01:05:28):
One of the books we read was Lies my Doctor
Told Me, written by a doctor, and the whole idea
in the book is if your doctor says something like that,
you should run from the office because it should be
a conversation said exactly, divorce your doctor before he or
she divorced. So if he wants to talk to you
about getting the COVID vaccine versus you know, my argument was,
(01:05:50):
I don't get the flu in the first place usually,
and if COVID is just another form of the flu,
why do I care If I get covid And indeed,
I've had it four or five times and it's just
a cough for me.
Speaker 1 (01:06:00):
That's all I get out of it.
Speaker 10 (01:06:02):
But in exchange, he's gonna say, Okay, I'm not gonna
treat you for anything else because you didn't get the
COVID vaccine or in the case of children, so I'm
not going to help your child unless you give this
child who has a zero probability of getting any problems
from COVID. I'm not going to give them a heart
transplant because you won't do whatever're telling you to do.
That just seems to be a one way communication, not
(01:06:25):
based on facts. We need to get this whole idea
that it is an exchange of information between patient and
and doctor instead of this one way you do what
I tell you or I'm going to get rid of you.
Speaker 1 (01:06:37):
Doctor seems to really.
Speaker 9 (01:06:38):
Just document, you know, educated to patient, the patient decline vaccines,
and they move on to the next conversation. But instead
it's threatening, I'm going to fire you the next thing.
You know, what's what's what's the what's that doctor really saying?
The doctor is saying, you are preventing me from making
extra money that it could be making from these vaccines.
I could put another person in your spot and make
money off of them. That's kind of what the that's
(01:06:59):
that's what the varrative is being said.
Speaker 1 (01:07:01):
It certainly can lead one to draw that conclusion, and
to me, that's enough. The suspicion in the room at
least a stension the air. It really, it really truly does,
and I find that really honestly quite offensive, and again
I would argue it violates the hipocratic oath of do
no harm.
Speaker 9 (01:07:17):
And my advice to the large corporations that are pushing
this is, you know what, let the patient make that decision.
Don't be the person that's gonna send that narrative out
because you're just going to do your patient's harmony.
Speaker 10 (01:07:29):
The key here is we're not talking about it from
the perspective of you know, you should you should confront
your physician. I mean, you got to think it from
his perspective. He's getting pressure to do certain things. And
so the whole goal of this is by getting this
information out there, it frees both sides to have a conversation.
Speaker 1 (01:07:47):
Exactly.
Speaker 10 (01:07:48):
If your doctor's aware that people are talking about this,
he may be more free to deviate from what he's
being told to do or she's being told to do
by the people in charge of them, right, which I
think I'll help both ways.
Speaker 1 (01:08:01):
Spreading more information, getting the information out there so we
can engage in these informed discussions. We'll continue with Keith
Tennefeld and George Brenneman again the website Restore Wellness dot org.
I think George has a order troop, but restore Liberty
dot us when we come back as well. That's a
genesis for George. But first a word for my friends
(01:08:23):
at Zimmer Heating and air condition form of the three generations.
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They're authorized carriers, carrier dealers, and they will help you
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(01:09:08):
Go Zimmer dot com, or tell Chris Simmer I said him,
and you call him up directly at five one three
five two one, ninety eight ninety three, five one three,
five two one ninety eight, ninety three.
Speaker 3 (01:09:18):
Fifty five krc My name is Kyle Tequila Hope.
Speaker 1 (01:09:22):
Six fifty one fifty five KRCD Talk station, shout out
Ed Grant. I understand you're listening to the program right now.
Keith Ennefeld, a nurse practitioner in studio with George Brownaman.
We're talking health and Ed apparently listens to this show
and he's a faithful listener. So Ed, thank you very
much on the bottom of my heart for tuning into
the program, and thank you George and Keith for showing
(01:09:42):
up to talk about Restore Wellness dot org and kind
of some of the things we should be focusing on
our health, getting more information maybe you know, maybe RFK
Junior will literally do something about that. And that's been
my one key hope is that having him in that position,
in spite of how looney a lot of people think
he is, will at least endeavor to get us what
we need to know to help us make better decisions
(01:10:04):
about our lives, whether we choose to make those decisions
or not. Nobody's going to hold a gun to your
head and till you can't drink a twenty four ounce
or a sixty four ounce mountain dew. As bad as
that is for you, as long as people know and
understand it's got a full cup of sugar in it,
would you drink eat a full cup of sugar if
it was sitting in front of you? So you know
stuff like that. Just and knowing about vaccines and knowing
(01:10:25):
about the risks associated with them, go ahead, get it
if you want. But as long as you've got all
the information to make that decision, that to me is
the critical component of it. So and getting ahead of
illness before it actually really the key, the key, and
that's what restores wellness. Dot org is all about help
you make informed decisions. And that's exactly what Keith does
every single day with his with his practice. Now you
(01:10:46):
have a is it a regular clinic that you run, Keith,
we'll put you can put a.
Speaker 9 (01:10:50):
Word in for it. I'm not gonna no, It's fine.
We're at root Cause in Harrison, Ohio.
Speaker 1 (01:10:56):
Root Cause. Okay, you got all kinds of ideas. People
maybe didn't finding out more about you, So I wanted
to let you let you do that. So without further too.
I know we have a couple of minutes left and
George wanted to deviate over to restore Liberty dot us,
which is your political website, the VET at the Farm.
Speaker 10 (01:11:14):
So we have an event next Wednesday, a week from today.
Americans for Prosperity is co sponsoring. They will buy your
dinner free dinner, free dinner at the Farm. It's Wednesday,
doors open at five point thirty. You can go to
the website restore with Liberty dot Us get the information there.
We'll be talking about taxes, the fact that we want
to make the what they call the Trump taxes, make
(01:11:36):
those remits permanent, not just kick the can another four years.
Let's make them permanent. So we'll be doing a podcast
with Donovan O'Neil from Americans to Prosperity. Joe's gonna help
us out with that. So free dinner next Wednesday. The
other thing's coming up is vivik Ramaswami's got his big announcement.
Speaker 1 (01:11:56):
Yeah, Monday next week. He's really looking forward to this
paper work in to run for governor of the state
of Ohio. Wouldn't it be great to have it like
a transformational figure in charge of Ohio unlike what we've
got right now with this rhino dweeb up there, I
have you know, I can't. I have just truck her
with a wuhu, you know, honestly, And I've been doing
(01:12:20):
this show for this is my nineteenth year in radio,
but the entire time Governor of Wine has been governor,
and most notably during COVID with the whole ridiculous idea
about you can't drink after my favorite example, you can't
drink in a bar after ten pm.
Speaker 10 (01:12:33):
You can stay there, but you can't drink, and you've
got to have your mask on if you're standing up
but not sitting, not sitting down or you know, I
just yeah, I don't see if a fake making those
kinds of super things, but I have I have yet
to really honestly, and no one has ever out loud
said no, I really think Dwine's doing a great job.
(01:12:53):
He's a Republican, But then again, Columbus is filled with
dysfunctional Republicans like hurting cats up there. You wonder, like,
don't they have a unified message in any way, shape
or form, And the answer is absolutely no, they don't know.
I think I think having a totally different kind of
candidate for governor would be amazing.
Speaker 1 (01:13:11):
So the vague events on Monday.
Speaker 10 (01:13:12):
The other thing I want to throw out there is
we've got a candidate trying to get on the ballad
for mayor and Cincinnati, Corey Bowman.
Speaker 1 (01:13:19):
Yeah. I talked to him.
Speaker 10 (01:13:20):
Yeah, go to King's Arms coffee shop if you want
to sign his petition. I understand he's coming up a
little low right now, so we got to get him
those last few signatures before tomorrow. I think the deadline's
actually going to say, I knew the deadline was coming up. Yeah,
so he wrote, Cory Bowman not even getting a thousand signatures,
that's the way it's looking, So we need to help.
I think again, he's someone with a different view. We've
(01:13:42):
had the Democrats running downtown for years. It would be
great to have this pastor that's got a real intense
love for the city, for the West End.
Speaker 1 (01:13:51):
I think that'd be great. I was impressed by his
passion for the city of Cincinnati.
Speaker 10 (01:13:56):
So yeah, anything you can do, and you can check
this out. Restore wellness or store almost dot org for
all the information on health and and restore Liberty dot
us for the political stuff. I hope to see at
the farm next Wednesday.
Speaker 1 (01:14:06):
Keith Tenfeld, George Breunman, It's been a real pleasure having
you in the studio. I enjoyed these conversations. Get away
from politics talking about health at least except for the
tail end there. And that's okay. This is information people
need to know. So uh, folks stick around. The incomparable
Jack Addiden comes up out of the top of our
news the topic this morning. Marxist and the Marx Brothers.
(01:14:27):
Always engaging enjoyable communication with the brilliant Jack Addiden. That'll
be next. I hope you can stick around.
Speaker 4 (01:14:32):
Covering Trump's first one hundred days.
Speaker 7 (01:14:34):
Every day we stand on the verge of the four
greatest years in American history.
Speaker 4 (01:14:39):
Fifty five TRS The Talk Station.
Speaker 1 (01:14:42):
This report is sponsored by Straight Talk Wireless. Don't let
data limits hold you back from being the gift master
in the.
Speaker 8 (01:14:49):
Promise is made the promisest politicians won't join us in
the chat. Rumps out a politician and I love it.
Speaker 4 (01:14:56):
Fifty five PRZ the Talk Station.
Speaker 1 (01:15:16):
Seven five Here a fift about KARSD Talk Station and
every Happy Wednesday to you always made extra special because
at seven oh five on Wednesdays, we get to talk
with the brilliant Jack Adid and Jack Adad and my friend,
it is always a distinct pleasure to have you on
my program.
Speaker 5 (01:15:32):
How after all that talk about heart disease and Alzheimer's
sacking the last so how about instead discussing how democratic
Marxists are now taking there too for my favorite old
time movie comics, the Marx Brothers, and how this explains
the taxpayer waste that dose is uncovered that seems insane,
(01:15:56):
from the sex change operations in Guatemala to getting drawn
was hooked on cocaine. I guess so Hunter Bryden could
have a pet. Where do the Marx brothers get into this? Well,
everybody knows that Harpo Marx played the harp and Chase
blogs and that the Italian water the Chicko Marx was
always hatching get rich quick swindles. But do you remember
(01:16:18):
Brian one of Hollywood's great romantic teams, grou Show Marx
and the Grand dum Margaret Dumont.
Speaker 1 (01:16:27):
She was in like every one of their movies, wasn't.
Speaker 5 (01:16:30):
She She was? And she towered over Ground Show, outweighing
him by a good fifty pounds. But thanks to Margaret's money,
ground Show got to be president in duck Soup of
a country called Pridonia. Graujo. When he met Margaret, asked,
were your Marrina? Did your husband leave you any money?
Answer the second question first, yeah, why? Marcare said he
(01:16:54):
definitely his entire fortune. Can't you see that? I'm trying
to tell you I love you, which pretty much sums
up the relationship between Democrats and the super rich donors
who now dictate their Marxist policies. The Margaret Dumont of
today is Steve Job's widow, Loreene Powell Jobs, and she
(01:17:18):
was let a lot of money. She's roughly twenty four
billion dollars and she is as woke. He's as woke
as an alarm clock. Missus Jobs is best budge with
Kamala Harris. She thinks Kamala would have ranked just above
Washington and Lincoln in a list of great presidents. Dumont
(01:17:41):
look as brilliant as Elon Musk used to say about
Margaret in real life, that she never understood that they
were making a comedy. She took them over line seriously,
but especially with the Democrats now out of power, it
only takes a few billionaire activists like Lorraine Jobs to
(01:18:03):
keep the party going while they wait for Republicans to
screw up, Because, folks, that's the only way Democrats can
retake power. They have no agenda for America's middle class.
They're leaders from Joe Biden to Chuck Schumer and Nancy Pelosi.
There are no young people anybody care about. They are
corrupt or creepy or both. Their strategy is to wage
(01:18:26):
lawfare against opponents, be as many Americans as possible for
and rich dependence on governments, and then serve up a
phoney quote unquote moderate candidates if Republicans get tripped up
again by something like COVID or just as bad Brian,
if Republicans fail to unite behind the promises they ran on. Meantime,
(01:18:50):
martists batcats who own establishment media. Maybe nobody's watching them,
but they still have it, and it trickles down to
local media too. Try boosting puppets like Biden and Coambla
and maybe next time Gavin Newsom the tardo imagine, But
who else do they have. Our answer, of course, must
be to follow through on Donald Trump's policies that won
(01:19:14):
the popular votes gave Republicans both chambers in Congress and
the majority at least on paper of the Supreme Court.
And we must pass a big, beautiful reconciliation bill.
Speaker 1 (01:19:27):
And I put that in a singular.
Speaker 5 (01:19:29):
I don't trust them the past two bills. We got
to do it fast, not in congressional time, but in
Trump time, to boost the economy in time to the
twenty six midterm elections. Remember in his first term, Donald
Trump lost those elections. Yeah, because his tax cuts were
passed too late. We're hearing that with Trump policies touring
(01:19:53):
in the polls, all of them. A lot of billionaires
are suddenly bailing on Democrats for now. But maybe they're
just hiding. When groud Show first meets Margaret Dumont's and
duck suit, he says, not that I can, but where
is your husband? The ground Zombre applies why he's dead,
to which Groutshow says, I bet he's just using that
(01:20:15):
as an excuse.
Speaker 1 (01:20:18):
It's brilliant.
Speaker 5 (01:20:19):
Maybe Steve, maybe Steve Jobs is just hiding somewhere. He's
hiding from Kamala and I don't want to say he's
hiding from Loreen, but from those other Marxists and maybe
Democrats want to join him. Or are you saying, my friend.
Speaker 1 (01:20:35):
Well, you know, I was thinking of this along the
lines of diversity, equity inclusion. Of course, the Trump administration
says eradicate that nonsense is not doing anybody any good.
Let's talk about meritocracy. Let's hire the best people, the
brightest people for the job. That's what everybody should be doing.
We're no longer going to, you know, embrace these woke concepts,
(01:20:55):
and so many of the businesses are now doing exactly that,
whether or not it's because they have a contract with
the government or I'm thinking Jack, and I mean it
was interested in bouncing this off your head that they
now have cover to get rid of those underperforming or
not performing or deleterious departments in their businesses so they
can get back to the job of hiring the best
(01:21:17):
and brightest people, no longer having to be beholden to
DEEI and all the baggage it goes along with it.
Why because it's bad for business.
Speaker 5 (01:21:29):
Yeah, we were talked before during Joe Biden's terms. One
term the people who are being hired were government workers.
We've been patting the books for such a long time.
I mean really going back all the way to FDR
from they had work projects that were paid for by
the government and they weren't necessary if that tign because
(01:21:49):
we had a depression. But now, you know, with the
right policies, private enterprise will make a big comeback. We'll
get all that manufacturing back and these people will find work.
Remember when they were fat and happening ensconsdin government, we
were told by Democrats, Oh, you don't need a job
in manufacturing. Learn how to be a computer tech learn,
(01:22:11):
learn how to you know, become you know, as right
as your kids are being converse it with all of this, Yeah,
it's extremely callous added sense to take. It's much more
generous to be giving people eight months severance day. People
who were supposedly bright to begin with. We've paid for
their student loans and now let them go out and
(01:22:32):
put them to use.
Speaker 1 (01:22:34):
Indeed, and you know, I keep going back to the
coal workers that were put out of business under the
green energy policies, and then the Trumpet or the Biden
administration or even the Obama administration, go get work in
the tech sector. As if a man who's been going
down into the minds for the past twenty years, can
just simply say, oh, oh, that's all I need to
(01:22:55):
do here. Let me learn computer technology and how to code,
and how long would that takes? Four year degree? I'm
going to take time off and go one hundred thousand
dollars in debt for a college education for something. I
have zero connection with their experience, with very callous attitude
toward the coal industry, and yet when it comes to
curbing back and firing unnecessary government employees and an overly
(01:23:17):
bloated government, we're all supposed to feel very sorry for
them because they're losing their jobs due to a change
in administration and a change in approach. I'm sorry. We
have thirty six or so trillion dollars in debt, we
have more government workers than we need, and apparently many
of them aren't even showing up to work or even
doing anything. So, yeah, we got a lot of fat.
(01:23:40):
It's time to trim it.
Speaker 5 (01:23:42):
Well, it's even more callous about the coal industry, and
we've talked about this before. Is it's not like the
Democrats aren't using coal. They want easse, which are entirely
dependent on an electrical grid that relies on coal or
on vehicles that are coming to us from China where
they build and talked about this many times, three new
coal plants a week. Yeah, so it's not only callous,
(01:24:05):
it's totally hypocritical.
Speaker 1 (01:24:07):
Indeed it is. And then we have, you know, in
terms of energy policy, I think one of the best
illustrations of what a failure it is. Just look at Germany,
the powerhouse of the European Union, one of the strongest
economic countries in the world up until recently, because they
got rid of their nuke plants, tried to pursue a
zero mission policy. Now they can't keep the lights on
(01:24:29):
and the price of energy has gone up. It's like
four times what we pay for energy here. Factories run
on that, and if they can't, I mean that means
the price of everything they make in Germany's going to
go through the roof. And of course that they have
to start importing electricity from France, which oh gee, relies
on nuclear power in large part, giving them an abundance
of power that allows them to give or sell some
(01:24:51):
of the power to Germany. I mean, this just doesn't
make any sense at all. Nobody This religion is so
ingrained in people over the past couple of decades, is like,
oh my god, you don't believe in climate change caused
by human activity. You don't think carbon dioxide tree food
is bad for the planet. No, I don't, thank you
(01:25:12):
very much.
Speaker 5 (01:25:14):
Well, we could talk about Germany and free speech. That
big advance came about. The first amendment was isaric. We
talked about immigration. Angela Merkel bringing in in one fellow
swoop a million illegal immigrants who proceeded to go around
raping and the pillaging. And a million in Germany is
a play. It's like our ten million here in America.
(01:25:36):
But you know one thing about the Europeans, They are
getting ahead of us at this point. And I certainly
hope you catch up in reconsidering nuclear power and not
the old huge you know, Chernobyl or three mile island plants,
but small flanks. Italy is I love Italy is moving
ahead of these and it's going to be part of
the mix. But everybody forgets, you know, when we start
(01:25:57):
debating this or that, is that it can be this end,
that it should be an all of your buft energy.
Speaker 1 (01:26:03):
And Donald Trump does talk about that absolutely. If you
have access to the ability to harness hydroelectric power, harness
it and if you can build a small nuclear reactor.
And I think artificial intelligence is going to fuel a
renaissance in nuclear power, Jack, because if the big players
and the mega billionaires who are responsible and own all
these big companies like Meta Alphabet and need all these
(01:26:26):
artificial intelligence plants, and they can run an entire artificial
intelligence computer, massive computer facility with their own nuclear power plant,
then that'll bring that technology to the rest of us,
lowly little human beings out here struggling to be able
to afford to pay our power bill because somebody thought
it was a good idea to build a field worth
of windmills and acres and acres of solar panels, all
(01:26:47):
brought to you by the Chinese Communist Party.
Speaker 5 (01:26:51):
Of course, AI winning nuclear plants, Homer Simpson will be
out of a job, but if God forbids the Democrats
come back into or he can always be a cabinet secretary.
Speaker 1 (01:27:03):
Jack, did I always appreciate you coming on the show,
My friend. Good to hear from you again today. Podcast
of this conversation will be available at fifty five kr
sea dot com, so you can cut and paste and
refer to your friends or listening again Jack until next
Wednesday or maybe even sooner. Looking forward to seeing your brother. Yeah, yeah,
I love to take care. Seven to seventeen fifty five
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Speaker 3 (01:28:42):
Nine fifty five KRCS.
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Hey, here is your Channel nine first warning weather forecasts.
Apparently we get a break if you're getting snow. We
got a break from the snow around midday. It'll be
cold day though, high have twenty two down to twelve overnight.
Got a flood warning going on. The River's supposed to
crest overnight at fifty five point four feet. More snow overnight,
maybe a light coating in the north to as much
as two inches further south. Tomorrow is going to be
(01:29:09):
partly cloudy. Snow will stop in the morning twenty three
for the high. It'll be dry overnight down to fourteen,
and then we get clear skies on Friday with the
high thirty three and the flood morning ends at one
thirty pm fifteen. Right now time for traffic.
Speaker 11 (01:29:23):
From the UCE Health Traffic Center and you see healthy,
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Expect more at ucehealth dot com. Southbound seventy five Cruis
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Southbound seventy one.
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seventy five. Break lights out of Erlmonger into downtown chuck
Ingram Mount fifty five KRO and see the talk station.
Speaker 1 (01:29:56):
Fifty five ker CD talk station. A very happy Wednesday too,
looking forward to Judge and Paul Tano, the Feds and
their own bribery. That's the name of the column that's
coming out tonight. I'm lucky to get an early copy
of it, and I appreciate the Judge for doing that.
And I'm risking my obligations, you know. I had a
list of topics that go over with Restore Wellness with
Keith and George and some interesting, you know, sort of
(01:30:19):
bullet points on some of the things we didn't overlook.
And one of my favorites is the corn subsidies. Now,
I love the American farmer and God bless them for
the hard work they do, and I regularly point out
and over the years, I mean, the work that farmers
do every day. You know, it's almost like, you know,
(01:30:41):
work that Americans won't do. Kind of stuff. You hear
that all the time when it comes to, you know,
picking fruit in the fields. You know, American workers won't
do that. And I don't know where that phrase came from,
But why do we subsidize corn to put in our
(01:31:04):
gas tanks, for example, and for high fruitose corn syrup,
which is really bad for you. I mean, this is
the kind of information again to go back to RFK
Junior and hopefully more and more people become aware of
why it's bad for you. If you're sitting there going well,
wait a second, why is corn for high fruitose corn
syrve bad for you? There you go, it's easy to
(01:31:25):
do the research on that. And the other thing was
seed oils too, they're not good for you. And to
get that information out there and what their effects are
on the body, I think would be really important for
America's health. Now you step back from the nation, you say, well,
you can't take my choices away from you. I am
(01:31:46):
not interested in taking anything away from you. But I
would like to take away the subsidies that result in
bad things ending up in our food. If you want
to grow corn, grow corn, do you need an of
taxpayer dollars to do that. I don't think My father
in law, God rest his soul, ever got a subsidy
(01:32:06):
for his dairy farm. He milked the cows twice a day,
every single day. He never left the farm because if
you don't milk the cows twice today, they quit providing
you with a source of income, which is the milk.
The market forces work. Someone bought his milk and ultimately
allowed my wife to at least have dinner, you know,
(01:32:28):
growing up in rural Avella, Pennsylvania. And the other component
and the other point that they wanted to make, and
I forgot to get to it, And I think this
is really important. Why do we allow those that are
getting government assistance for food to use snap for example,
to buy things like soft drinks. I mean, federal government
(01:32:53):
dollars always come back to states with massive strings. Tide
go back to the state of Ohio when it didn't
want to raise its drinking age. If the federal government said,
if you don't raise your drinking age to twenty one,
then we're not going to give you federal highway dollars. Well,
there's the string that came attached to it, of course,
because we needed the federal highway dollars. We want ahead
and raise our drinking age. You may think that's a
(01:33:16):
good idea, you may think it's a bad one, but
it's an illustration of the type of restrictions that the
government money comes back with. Oh you're taking this, then
you must do the following. How about what that was SNAP?
If you're getting government assistants for food, We're sorry you're
in that situation. We know you're struggling. We're happy to
help you feed your family with the SNAP program, but
(01:33:36):
we don't want you feeding your children mountain dew or
fill in the blank with other foods that are terrible
for you that shouldn't even be you know, I mean
entered into your body again. You make the decision you
want to eat a candy bar or eat a candy bar.
You want to drink them ountain do, drink them Mountain do,
just don't do it on the taxpayer back. That will
be a method and way of trying to provide some
(01:33:57):
additional healthy alternatives or limit to healthy options for and
improve the health of America generally, whether you're poor or rich.
I think this is these things are very important to
talk about, so I was happy to be able to
do that. Restore Wellness dot Org is where you'll find
the information from George Brenneman and Keith Tannefields. Really cool
(01:34:18):
stuff there. I was just checking out the page over
the break there and feel free to call. I can
get into local stories five one, three, seven, four nine
fifty five hundred, eight hundred eighty two to three pound
five fifty on AT and T phone, or maybe you
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fifty five KRC, Ozembic plus Movement I seven thirty two
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fifty five kr C The Talk Station five one, three,
seven four nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred eighty two
to three talk Comfy fifty on AT and T phone
one hour from now and Judgejennen of Politano. In between
now and then, plenty time to call in. I love
hearing from you. Maybe something else on your mind that
I'm not talking about. Feel free to steer the direction
of the conversation here in the morning show. Fifty five
cars dot com for podcasts and books and stuff and
(01:36:31):
things and your iHeartMedia apps. You can listen on your
device wherever you happen to be. Ah Him on Key
Sheriff Charmi McGuffey. I talked about this in the five
o'clock hour. They's had a press conference the other day,
and I appreciate diet Danielle Goodman from WCPO reporting on this,
so I know exactly what she had to say about it.
But speaking about that neo Nazi demonstration on the Ice
(01:36:55):
seventy five overpass connecting Evandale and Lincoln Heights. She said
yesterday she wants state lawmakers to implement Harsher legislation for
what she specifically described as hate speech, and also to
make it a crime to wear a mask while carrying
a firearm for purposes of intimidation. I struggled with that.
(01:37:19):
First off, hate speech is protected speech, and as bad
as that may be, or you might perceive it to be,
you know, the more information we get out there in
the form of speech, the more you and I can
analyze it and see it for the stupidity that it is.
If you believe in stuff like this and you out
loud speak about it, we get an opportunity to contemplate it,
consider it logically and reasonably, and then come to a
(01:37:41):
logical and reason reasonable conclusion that the people uttering hate
speech are idiots. That's the beauty of the First Amendment,
and it is protected. There's lots of Supreme Court cases,
most notably the Brandenburg case right here from Hamilton County,
which says that clan members can actually utter their vile
and stupid utterances because it's protected. So I don't know
(01:38:02):
what kind of law she thinks they can implement in
the state about how to get around the realities of
the First Amendment and the massive amount of Supreme Court
and other Federal court and other cases protecting it. But
there she was, Now, how do you know someone's wearing
a mask and carrying a firearm for the purposes of intimidation?
As I've observed, some people view merely carrying open is
(01:38:24):
in and of itself an act of intimidation. Since we
have open carrying the state of Ohio, you're not allowed
to draw that conclusion immediately. You have to, I suppose,
engage in some sort of activity that creates intimidation in
this highly sensitive ball up in a safe space environment
that we live in. I think literally anything anybody utters,
(01:38:46):
including here in the morning Show, can be viewed as
intimidating by someone somewhere. She even acknowledged. She said, quote,
it might be legally protected speech, but it's not okay quote.
And again, under these circumstances, we all might uniformly agree,
except for the idiots on the bridge, that it is
(01:39:08):
not okay at least what they're saying. But to her point,
it is legally protected so you can't get around this,
Corden McGuffey. The group intimidated the community, which she deemed unacceptable.
I understand her deeming it unacceptable, but you still can't
(01:39:28):
get around it. And the other interesting component of this reporting,
she said, we do not have any specific intel on
that U haul as far as where it was rented from.
Someone might even own it. I don't even know. We're
working on that. So someone get her to the license
plate number or maybe the serial number on the U haul,
maybe it might find it a little bit easier to
track down. But as has been reported and understood, the
(01:39:51):
idiots on the bridge all showed up in one U haul,
unloaded and then began their protest. So CPO interviewed a
lawyer named Joshua Evans who said, Hey, a police officer
would have to guess that person's intent, but when it
goes to court, how do you make that case beyond
a reasonable doubt? An excellent observation, mister Evans. Therein lies
(01:40:16):
the challenge for I guess, Charmee McGuffey, and probably ending
the even prospect of someone in Columbus considering legislation along
these lines seven thirty six right now fifty five k
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to call them to make the appointment, here's the number.
It's five one three two four eight ninety six hundred.
Tell Brian said, Hi, Please five one three two four
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eight ninety six hundred.
Speaker 3 (01:41:43):
Fifty five KRC.
Speaker 4 (01:41:45):
The countdown is on to our Iheard podcast.
Speaker 1 (01:41:50):
Channel nine tells us today if you're getting snow, we'll
get a break from at midday. It's going to be
a high of twenty two, overnight low of twelve. Snow
will return roughly around nine pm, with a coating in
the north and maybe two inches further south. Also, the
Higo River is expected to crush over night at fifty
five point four feet fIF feet over floodstage over night
(01:42:10):
low twelve with a high twenty three. Tomorrow, partley, cloudy
and snow will leave in the morning, cloudy drive over
night down to fourteen and a clear skies on Friday
with a high of thirty three fifteen.
Speaker 11 (01:42:19):
Now traffic times from thing you see, how tranthings center,
how do you see healthy? You'll find comprehensive care that's
so personal it makes your best tomorrow possible. That's boundless
care for better outcomes. Expect more at you see health
dot com stapbound seventy five. A slow go from above
Cincinnati Dayton to an accident above two seventy five. Then
break lights again, threw walkland down to a wreck wileft
(01:42:41):
hand side near Paddock sapbound seventy one. Now break lights field,
zurdle into blue ash Chuck ingram on fifty five KR.
Speaker 1 (01:42:49):
See the talk station seven forty one fifty five KR.
Se the talk station phone number five one three seven
four nine fifty five hundred eight hundred eighty two three talk.
Let's jump over to the phone. I want to take
Jim's call and see what's on his mind to day. Jim,
thanks for calling the program.
Speaker 8 (01:43:05):
Yeah, hey, Brian, I'm just wondering what has happened to
the reporting in this area. I mean, how what kind
of reporter can't follow the U haul can find out.
Speaker 1 (01:43:14):
Who gets out of it.
Speaker 5 (01:43:16):
It's a pretty big object.
Speaker 4 (01:43:18):
Yeah, I mean came out on a highway.
Speaker 1 (01:43:21):
You think about it, Jim. You know there's those license
plate trackers that are literally all over town, and you
know someone there had a cell phone camera, because you've
seen cell phone vintage and there's been there were witnesses
that saw the Nazis get out of the U haul,
So I got to imagine somebody's got you know, if
there's a serial number on the U haul or if
it's a license plate, that would be something very easily
(01:43:43):
traceable on a police or a sheriff's department database.
Speaker 8 (01:43:47):
So or the more time that goes on, the more
I think this is a setup or it's you.
Speaker 12 (01:43:53):
Know, oh.
Speaker 1 (01:43:55):
Oh yeah. You are not alone in those suspicions, Jim.
Any many people have articulated comparable suspicions to me, false
flag operation. It wasn't really neo Nazis. It's just maybe
Antifa people trying to stir the pot of descent and
in the neighborhood. And I don't know exactly. I mean,
(01:44:16):
my argument is best to just ignore those idiots and
not give them any time whatsoever and not repeat their message.
But this is the kind of news cycle we live in,
and apparently Obviously it's a hot button issue, and I
feel badly for the folks in Lincoln Heights who do
feel threatened because they think there are Nazis in the
neighborhood or white supremacists in the neighborhood. But yeah, as
a matter of law enforcement, simple law enforcement process, if
(01:44:39):
we can't track a U haul that seems to be
a sorry state of affairs, maybe someone out there in
the law enforcement community can let me know, perhaps maybe
some detail that Jim My Caller and I are missing.
Why it's difficult to figure out where that U haul
came from, who rented it, or who owns it. It's
got to have a life since in title and registration
(01:45:01):
and all that. I mean, seriously, thank you, Jim, appreciate that.
Now here's a puzzle for you.
Speaker 8 (01:45:13):
Now.
Speaker 1 (01:45:13):
The Dog's team are interested in figuring out what's inside
Fort Knox. That's where we've all been told our gold
reserves are stored. Goldfinger say the old James Bond movie.
Senator Mike Lee of Utah on Monday revealed that Fort
Knox would not let him in to take a look
(01:45:33):
at the facility. Senator Mike Lee, he said, as a
US senator I've tried repeatedly to get into Fort Knox.
They refuse this request. They told him this is reported.
I got this article on Breitbart, But he's the quotes
from the man who did it himself, who said it himself.
They told him the United States Senator is not allowed
inside Fort Knox because quote, it's a military installation, to
(01:45:57):
which Lee responded, listen, man, I visit military bases all
the time. The retort, you still can't come because you can't.
Must for his part, tweeted, who is confirming that gold
wasn't stolen from Fort Knox? Maybe it's there, Maybe it's not.
(01:46:18):
That gold is owned by the American public. We want
to know if it's still there. Is that not a
wholly legitimate request, Must said, surely it's reviewed every year.
Nah Rand Paul said, nope, it's in his state, by
the way, Kentucky. My friends in the Commonwealth said, no,
(01:46:38):
it's not reviewed every dude, let's do it, he said,
And apparently, at least according to the reporting from Breitbart,
the president can't even get in there. The leader of
the nation is prohibited from getting into Fort Knox. Now, okay,
I don't know whether there's gold in there or not.
(01:47:00):
You don't know whether there is or not. We've been
told it's there. That's the message from the powers that
be that have access to Fort Knox. They say it's there.
No need to take a look at it. You have
nothing to worry about. The gold's there. So why not
let some independent person like one of the senators, maybe
get a bipartisan group of senators Democrats and Republicans. Hell,
(01:47:24):
take Nancy Pelosi in there along with Senator Mike Lee,
and then both of them should have a vested interest
in knowing whether or not there is gold in there.
And how would you feel if finally, at some point
in time, one of our elected officials or even Donald
Trump got the keys to walk in and we found
out that no, it's not there. That seems to me
(01:47:49):
to be information the American people should know. Joey Chuck,
hang on, I'll take your calls in a minute. Got
to take quick break here and mention the best place
to get your imported or traditionally car manufacture fixed, and
that's foreign exchange. Whether it's an Asian or European type
of car, they will fix your car for less money.
The bottom line is the bottom line at Foreign Exchange.
(01:48:11):
You will get great service. I assure you of that.
The folks there are absolutely wonderful. A SE certified Master
technician with data access to your manufacturer's technical information will
be working on your car. That's a good thing. Are
you a type of person likes to talk to the
mechanic who did the work? You can do that at
Foreign exchange're not held up by a service manager. Although
(01:48:32):
the front office of Foreign Exchange you'll love. Those guys
are terrific, so full warranty on parts and services. What
you'll leave with your car will be fixed to your satisfaction,
and thankfully you'll have and quite often a lot more
money in your pocket than if you took it to
the dealer. I know that's been my experience over the years,
and I have been going to the Westchester location of
Foreign Exchange four years and years, and that is off
(01:48:53):
the Tylersville exit of seventy five Tylersville EGS at seventy
five take go east two streets, hanging right on Kinglin.
Tell Brian, they said, and the team there that I
said hi, or tell them I said Hi, please five one, three, six, four, four,
twenty six, twenty six for an appointment five one, three, six,
four four, twenty six, twenty six online for and acts
for in the letter acts dot.
Speaker 3 (01:49:11):
Com fifty five KRC your.
Speaker 1 (01:49:14):
Hands work hard. Channel nine says today high at twenty
two and a mid day break from snow, but it
will return tonight's roughly around nine pm to the north,
just the coating, maybe a couple of inches further south.
High River expected to crest overnight at fifty five point
(01:49:36):
four feet if you at Heatovers floodstage blow of twelve
degrees Tomorrow, snow will leave in the morning. Twenty three
will be the high clear every night down to or
cloudy and dry overnight down to fourteen but clear on Friday.
Flood warning expires at one thirty pm, and I I
have thirty three fifteen Now time for traffic.
Speaker 4 (01:49:54):
Frondly you see if train thing center.
Speaker 11 (01:49:55):
You see how to go find comprehension there that's so
personal it makes your best Tomorrow possi all that's boundless,
care for better outcomes, expect more.
Speaker 4 (01:50:03):
And you see how dot.
Speaker 11 (01:50:04):
Com seth bend seventy time cruiser working with an accent
in above two seventy five traffic backing up through Westchester
then slow again through lock onto an accident left hand
side above Paddock in Bend, seventy fourst backing to North Bend,
wet roads and snowfalling, not helping any northbound for seventy
one backing past Grand Chucking romon fifty five k see
(01:50:25):
the talk station.
Speaker 1 (01:50:28):
Seven fifty five krsit talk station straight to the phones.
We got quite a few callers online and I am
happy to take all of them. I hope we can
get them in now, but if not, hold, we'll do
it after the top of the hour. Break Joey, thanks
for calling this morning. Welcome to the program.
Speaker 6 (01:50:41):
Hey, good morning, Brian. Good to talk to you. Hey,
I just want to say a couple of things. You
got two points. One the gold specifically, I would venture
to say that you can pretty much count on all
the gold is not there. Yeah, based on everything that
we see on a daily daily remis that you could
count on it. And it'll probably take an act of
(01:51:04):
God to get in there to see if it's they're
or not.
Speaker 4 (01:51:06):
But I'll bet it's all not there. I bet my
house on it.
Speaker 1 (01:51:10):
Yeah, you know, Julian, it's interesting that there hasn't been
a whistleblower that works in gold at Fort Knox because
obviously military personnel are allowed in there. Someone's minding the
store there, right, So.
Speaker 6 (01:51:22):
Yeah, there's somebody that probably knows, you know, and and
who knows when you find the paper trail that you
know it's been somewhere Switzerland and offshore bank accounts that
the Clintons had moved.
Speaker 13 (01:51:36):
These people had moved, and you know the.
Speaker 6 (01:51:39):
Story will be fascinating, but you you watch, I can
guarantee you I would.
Speaker 8 (01:51:44):
I'd honestly bet my.
Speaker 6 (01:51:45):
House right now on it that it's all not there,
you know, based on everything we see on a daily basis.
Speaker 13 (01:51:51):
Yeah, if I.
Speaker 6 (01:51:53):
Had to bet for her and the other thing, I
wanted to just do. The other he I want to say,
is a cowardness. And you know they're listening because you
know they're guiney after what they did listening to the
sheriff and everything else. You know that one of them
morons are listening to you right now.
Speaker 13 (01:52:09):
And you are a moron.
Speaker 6 (01:52:11):
But bigger than that, you are a complete coward. Put
your money where your mouth is. If you believe in
something so heartedly and show your face, what are you
afraid of? And the same thing with all the protesters
on these college campuses that had to cover their face
not long ago for what's going on over there with
(01:52:33):
Israel and everything. You know, show your face if you
believe in something so much.
Speaker 8 (01:52:37):
What a coward?
Speaker 13 (01:52:38):
And you are a coward.
Speaker 6 (01:52:40):
And Brian, I guarantee you one of them morons are
listening right now because you know they're guiney watching TV
what they did.
Speaker 1 (01:52:47):
Probably yeah, but you know what they write, respond, well, COVID,
I wear a mask. Is I don't want to get COVID.
Who's next?
Speaker 8 (01:52:59):
Chuck?
Speaker 1 (01:53:00):
Thanks the order in which they received. Thanks for calling
this morning, Chuck.
Speaker 13 (01:53:04):
Hey, Brian, thanks for taking my call.
Speaker 2 (01:53:06):
I tell you what, man, I have not seen the
Democrats this upset since we took away their slaves. I mean,
I know, I don't know if you heard Glenn Beck yesterday,
but he had Sean Spicer on, and being the former
attorney that you are, I'm sure this is something you
may want to just talk about. But they fired Sean
Spicer from a federal government role back in.
Speaker 4 (01:53:30):
Back in the Biden times.
Speaker 1 (01:53:32):
And when they.
Speaker 2 (01:53:33):
When they did that, he took him to court and
the court decided that Biden had a legal authority to
fire Sean Spicer, And anyway, it's worth looking into. And
it's definitely interesting that Donald Trump has full authority to
fire all these federal employees.
Speaker 1 (01:53:54):
Yeah, I do believe that has been fully resolved in
the courts, Chuck. So it does a stop people from
trying again at litigation. Myth number twenty three. Your claim
must have a merit. You'll find a lawyer that's willing
to violate his legal principles and ethical duties and sign
on the bottom line in spite of how preposterous the
nature of the complaint is. Jay Corey out of time,
(01:54:16):
But if you guys don't mind holding I will be
more than happy to take your calls after the top
of the air news and if you feel like call him,
feel free five one three seven hund eight two three
Talk got a couple of seconds before we get to
judge out on Apolitano at the bottom of the next hour.
Speaker 4 (01:54:29):
Covering Trump's first one hundred days. Every day America's deadline
is over fifty five kr se the talk station. This
report is sponsored by Wendyall State, Do no what elected
you on? Follow the efficiency and looking all the fud
that he's shod fifty five KRZ the talk station.
Speaker 1 (01:54:53):
About eight six here fifty five KRC detalk station, Happy Wednesday,
bottom of the hoar with Judge Politano talking about the
dismissal of the case against Mayor Eric Adams and some
big swirling question marks floating around that one, and we'll
unpackage that with the judge at the bottom of They
are in the meantime going to go to the phones
five one three seven eight two three talk order, which
(01:55:15):
they received, Jay and Barry hang on. I got Corey
on the line. Corey, welcome to the show. Thanks for holding.
Speaker 13 (01:55:21):
Good morning, Brian. That was calling an offense of my
open carry from earlier. Okay, a couple of reasons I
like open carry. One, I don't have the body to
conceal a PENIX carrier like I fight too, so it's
more comfortable to open carry. That's one, yeah. Two, if
you do need to retrieve your firearm, you get a
(01:55:43):
split second faster retrieval than lifting.
Speaker 1 (01:55:46):
Your shirt up or I agree with that you're.
Speaker 13 (01:55:48):
Doing moving her coat. Another one, it is a deterrent,
the same reason police officers open carry. It is a
deterrent on crime. Obama CDC had that stat two hundred
or I'm sorry, between the what five hundred thousand and
two million crimes are deterred from people with firearms?
Speaker 1 (01:56:06):
Yeah, well you would be less I don't see that
all day long too. If you know someone right there
has got a firearm, you're less likely first off, to
attack the person with the firearm, but also anybody else
in the general vicinity. If you're using grievous, bodily harm
or deadly force against someone else, as a citizen, you
have a right to help deter that and can help
(01:56:27):
and defend your fellow citizen. I won't argue any of
those points, Corey. I just know we live in this ridiculous, nervous,
nelly world, and so I'm willing to, you know, give
up my extra second to concealed carry and retrieve my firearm,
hoping that that one second isn't going to make that
much of a difference. But I get it now real
quick though, Corey. Here's what's something. And I don't know
(01:56:47):
how you open Carrie, and it really it does depend
on how you open carry. But if you're standing, for example,
in a checkout line and a counter and you've got
a regular holster that doesn't have any you know, grip
to it or otherwise requires a release. Someone behind you
can just grab that thing. That's what do you do
to deter that? I mean, you have to be painfully
(01:57:08):
aware of your surroundings at all times. If you're doing that,
wouldn't you.
Speaker 13 (01:57:13):
Oh yeah, absolutely one. I would not ever open carry
with a level one holster. Okay, A level one is
simply just holding it. Level two so you got to
push something and then you got level threes. I prefer
level three where thea's two actions have to take place
to remove the gun, so that prevents something like that
from happening. So I agree there. It's kind of silly
to open care with.
Speaker 8 (01:57:33):
The level one holster.
Speaker 1 (01:57:35):
Right, But a couple other things, but they're good for
concealed carry. I mean, if you have a level one holster,
it slides out really easily, because that's what I have
for my concealed carry.
Speaker 13 (01:57:44):
Yes, yep, we are correct. There something else for reason
to open carry. Ohio Wall prohibits concealed carry in many
places that open carry is legal. One of the big
ones any state, university or college perfectly legal to open carry,
but to sell me to castial carry. Ohio's twenty nine
to twenty three, how revice coulde It pertains to conceal
(01:58:08):
carrying of firearms, not open carrying of firearms. So if
you see a lot of these no gun signs, if
you read the bottom of it, it says in appliance
with the hile twenty nine to twenty three, which pertains
to conceal carry.
Speaker 1 (01:58:20):
Just let me observe it. Don't you agree with me
that that's a stupid distinction.
Speaker 13 (01:58:26):
Yes, yes it is. And that's one of the reasons
I open carry in places like that, to bring attention
to that.
Speaker 4 (01:58:33):
Sure.
Speaker 13 (01:58:34):
Another one is education. I have a lot of people
come up to me one A lot of them think
they as are you had caught that's I'm known they
was surprised, Or a lot of people come up and
say that they're carrying their gun as well, but they're concealed,
And we start having a conversation about it. How more
people should carry and if everybody seeing people carrying guns
openly like that, people want to be as scared of
(01:58:54):
guns as some are, it would be more common. There
whole reason little history on open carry in the state
of Hole. Back in the day, everybody open carried, everybody
gun belt, a gentleman open carry his firearm. Only a
criminal concealed Carrio. So that's where the whole carry thing
even came about. I saw open carry's always been legal
in Ohio ever since the founding. And another reason to
(01:59:17):
open carry, it's hard to conceal my rifle.
Speaker 1 (01:59:20):
I love because that the same, Corey. I'm not inclined
to carry my rifle around unless I'm walking back and
forth at the gun range with it. So yeah, that's
just not something that I'm interested in doing. Firearm a handgun,
easy to conceal, easy to use, easy to tote around,
it's not bulky, So I get it. You make great points, Corey,
(01:59:42):
and you know I wasn't looking for a fight with
you with that. I just everybody gets to draw their
own conclusions and reach their own opinions about what they
want to do and how they want to carry it.
And isn't it a beautiful thing that we have the
option to do either now, whereas it wasn't that long
ago when you wouldn't even you weren't even allowed to
carry a firearm or even own one in your own
home in certain states. Thanks Corey, brother, I appreciate you
(02:00:03):
listen and appreciate you calling in today. Jay, You are next,
my friend. Thanks for holding a welcome to the program.
Speaker 8 (02:00:09):
Hey, good morning, Brian.
Speaker 4 (02:00:09):
Hey back to Fort Knox.
Speaker 14 (02:00:11):
No, my ears perked up when I heard that even
the President wouldn't be allowed to enter Fort Knox. And
so I started thinking, what branch of government? What is
that fourth branch of government that would tell the president
what he can and can't do? Because all the federal
departments roll up under the executive buy and large my understanding,
So I looked at up. Fort Knox is underneath the
(02:00:33):
Department of Treasury, and the Department of Treasury is run by.
Speaker 8 (02:00:38):
This guy named Scott Descents. But here's where it gets interesting.
Speaker 14 (02:00:42):
He was put in in January twenty twenty five after
a Senate hearing, so he was confirmed by the Senate
before he was tapped by Trump to go into lead
a Department of Treasury. He was a hedge fund manager
and one of his he was a partner with the
Soros fund management.
Speaker 8 (02:00:59):
So this is a Trump's feet.
Speaker 14 (02:01:03):
Trump needs to rein him in. In my mind, supremely
bad pick. Anybody that's doing anything with George Soros is
not who you put in front in Department of Treasury
if the Senate confirmed him. Great question for Rand Paul,
how did he vote on that? Was was there no
concern with the Republicans in the Senate that they would
(02:01:23):
put a former Soros Hedgepines manager?
Speaker 4 (02:01:26):
And is this the guy?
Speaker 14 (02:01:27):
Ultimately, this has to be the guy who's staying with
the president and US senators can't get in there, So
the senators are accountable for putting him in there. Trump's
accountable for appointing the guy or nominating the guy. But
really Trump ought to be able to call this guy
in because he works for Trump and he works for
the executive and say open the doors.
Speaker 1 (02:01:50):
Or order him over there. I want you go over
there walking, walk into Fort Knox and tell us what's
actually in there or not in there. You're my employee,
do it? And I don't know. I mean, I'm just
relying on the reporting in this one from Breitbart. I
know what the senator said, specifically that he was told
I am not allowed in there, and that's bad enough
(02:02:11):
from my perspective. But they followed up in the reporting
saying even the Trump, even the president, is not allowed
in there, which struck me as literally preposterous.
Speaker 14 (02:02:20):
It is preposterous, absolutely untrue. At any point the Trump
wants to part the Constitution, his level of authorities is
the executive. Treasury rolls up under the executive So Trump
could go down there today and say open the doors
and bring in the cameras and let's go. And if
the guy doesn't want to do it, then do the
right thing. Let's fire the Soros hedge fund manager that
(02:02:40):
should have never never been nominated in the Senate. Republicans
should have done their job just because Trump said this
is a good idea, they should have held their ground.
Speaker 1 (02:02:48):
That's a dual issue point there you make, and I
appreciate you making it. Jay, Thanks for calling this morning. Barry,
welcome to the show. Thanks for holding and good to
have you on the program.
Speaker 13 (02:02:59):
Thanks for taking my call.
Speaker 12 (02:03:00):
Right I heard about the Fort Knocks audit they're wanting
to do, and it reminded me of the documentary show
that I had watched years ago where Senator Huddleston of
Kentucky and a Congressman of Illinois Crane, actually took a
news through into Fort Knox and video coud inside of
(02:03:22):
it and they acted like it was all there and stuff.
Speaker 8 (02:03:25):
At the time, the.
Speaker 12 (02:03:27):
Video was a little sketchy even then, so I'm not
per se convinced that it's all there either.
Speaker 1 (02:03:35):
Well, and you know, let's face it, gold and lead
both have roughly the same weight, and there is such
a thing as gold paint, gold leaf, for example. So
just because you see a bunch of stacks of gold,
it doesn't mean you're necessarily looking at a bunch of
stacks of gold. So if they go in there, I
(02:03:55):
like them to do a little sampling as well, just
to give us all some peace of mind and satisfied.
And the other component of it is, you know, this
is what is really sort of backing the fiat currency.
Does anybody think that there's literally trillions and trillions of
dollars of gold if it's there in Fort Knox, sufficient
to actually back the fiat currency. I think that may
(02:04:18):
be one of the reasons they don't want to let
anybody in there, because someone do the math and calculated
if it is real gold. We were able to calculate
the number of bars that are there, and basically you've
got like four billion dollars worth of gold. So it
would take the wind out of the sales of people's
reliance on the United States currency to some degree at least.
Thank you, Barry, appreciate that one. It's eight fifteen. I'll
(02:04:40):
appreciate your calls to you if you want to call.
We got some time before. Judge at a polytoint ended
apolotoint Tano God Brian joins the program at the bottom
of our news. We'll be right back.
Speaker 8 (02:04:50):
It's like.
Speaker 1 (02:04:53):
It's eight nineteen if fifty five ker CD talk station.
Thank you, Eric. He sent me breakdown figure about how
much gold we'd actually have to have if the money
tech monetary supply was based purely on gold. It's a lot.
Thanks Eric. I'm not going to read the calculation that
loud I got Patrick on the line. Patrick, Welcome to
(02:05:14):
the Morning Show.
Speaker 13 (02:05:14):
Thanks for calling.
Speaker 2 (02:05:15):
Hey, God bless America.
Speaker 4 (02:05:17):
Am I gotta tell you.
Speaker 5 (02:05:20):
Jd Vance? I mean, I don't know.
Speaker 15 (02:05:24):
He should run for president after Trump has done just
because of that speech he gave and Munich was just
un believable. Then the press overseas, you mean you can
watch it on Twitter and everything else, they went nuts.
They have no clue at all what freedom of speech
is and what the actual freedom of speech is. That
(02:05:45):
the most offensive speech is actually the most protective speech
and everything else. They have no idea what.
Speaker 4 (02:05:50):
That even means anymore.
Speaker 15 (02:05:51):
No, they don't even know what it means in England
and everything else. I mean, it's just crazy. It just
and you know, you think about Twitter and everything else
like that. For me, I just I hate read it.
It's one of those things where you just hate to
read it. But you're just like the press overseas. They
have no idea what Vance was even talking about.
Speaker 1 (02:06:11):
No, you're right, I mean, that's the point I've made
many many times over the years. My friend from France,
I went to church with him, good friend of mine,
and I remain friends with him today. But he married
a French girl. He studied French in college, you got
a you know, master's degree in the French language. He's
become a French citizen decades ago, and so he's been
living there for a long time. But he came back
to visit once and I was being critical of I
(02:06:34):
don't know who was in office at the time, maybe
Clinton or something, and I was, you know, out loud,
criticizing the administration of his policies, and he looked at
me in awe, like, man, you can't do that in France,
it's like, can't do what, oh, criticize the government? Like
are you kidding me? And but no, that's in dictatorial countries.
You got communist countries Venezuela. I mean, you can name
(02:06:54):
almost any country in the world huge massive limitations on speech.
Speaker 4 (02:07:00):
Literally Germany.
Speaker 15 (02:07:01):
I mean, can you actually believe that this is done
in Germany where the German the Germans literally have some
of the harshest for free speech laws in the world
as far as online is concerned. I mean they literally
visit people's houses, they go to their houses if they
post the meme against the government or I mean just
(02:07:21):
as as far as something that the government doesn't agree
in is protected speech, or they considered that somebody calls
in like like Stazi do and say, hey, this is
supposed to be free speech.
Speaker 5 (02:07:33):
And it isn't.
Speaker 15 (02:07:34):
I mean, it's unbelievable. And it's even coming out of
Germany of all places. You think they would have learned
something since nineteen forty four.
Speaker 1 (02:07:41):
At least, yeah you might, you might, but one of
the laws of the books in Germany you are not
allowed to fly the Nazi flag. I mean, I can
certainly understand on some level the reason and the genesis
behind that because they don't want to go down that
road again. But don't see a bunch of people winding
up around the corner to followed the tenants of the
Nazi Party anyhow, appreciate the call, Patrick, I certainly do.
(02:08:05):
Oh and Eric followed up. He did the math on it.
It's five point five Olympic pools of solid gold. Now,
how many people my listening audience believe that there's five
point five Olympic pools worth of solid gold held at
Fort Knox Yeah, I know, no one. Thanks again, Eric, Eh,
(02:08:27):
just so real quick here I can get this in
and the time remaining before we get the judge out
of Politano. The number of people showing up on our
southern border has decreased dramatically just since Trump went into office. Now,
the numbers were on the downslide, but not in this
dramatic fashion. Twenty nine thousand arrests in January made by
border patrol agents, down from forty seven thousand in December,
(02:08:53):
and border patrol offishers are saying that the administration's new
policy of ignoring asylum claims has meant that immigrants, no
matter what their circumstances are, can completely be kept in
Mexico or removed on flights, obviously acting and having a
massive deterrent effects. Let's see here here by way of context.
(02:09:16):
During the Biden administration, border crossings hit record highs and
at one point reaching as many as a quarter of
a million migrants crossing into the United States in one month.
A month ago. They're calling this the Trump effect, at
least the White House is calling it the Trump effect.
(02:09:39):
And of course the Trump administration also shut down that
CBP one application which allowed migrants to make appointments for
legal border crossings and asked for asylum and then got
flown directly into our country from their home country. So
tens of thousands of folks who are waiting their turn
on the CBP one app we're told, sorry, you have
(02:09:59):
to remain in Mexico or wherever you happen to be. So,
you know, elections have consequences, and it really is whether
you believe in open borders or not. And Trump, i
think one in large part because of his concern about
the southern border, and everybody else is concerned about the
southern border. And a lot of Democrats voted for Trump
because their cities had been overrun by immigrants, soaking up
(02:10:21):
resources that were supposed to go to the local citizenry there.
And I get that, but what an amazing difference between
the Biden administration and the Trump administration. Swearing in a
new guy just really cut off the flow. I don't know.
(02:10:45):
Obviously he's having a profound impact in a lot of areas,
and I certainly appreciate the effort that Doge is doing
bringing about some transparency and giving us a real indication
is where all these taxpayer dollars are going. It's eight
twenty five right now. Why did the Adams prosecution get dropped?
We're gonna hear about that from Judge Edita Poulitano.
Speaker 11 (02:11:04):
Next Team JOS reduced from the UCUT Traffic Center. You
see healthy, fine, comprehensive care that's so personal it makes
your best tomorrow possible. That's boundless care for better outcomes.
Expect more at u sehealth dot com. Snowy Roadways making
for problems southbound seventy five the latest anksent andies at
(02:11:26):
one twenty nine. That's banking traffic to the county Butler
County rest area southbound seventy one. Break lights from a
bove Field Journal off and onto Red Bank with a
couple of rex one below two seventy five one a
little bit closer to Red Bank. Coming up next, it's
time to celebrate National Drink Wine Day. While you could
(02:11:46):
just pop the cork, pour a glass of your favorite
veno and listen to our next guests, the Judge, and
you'd be doing that for all the right reasonings. Chuck
Ingram on fifty five kr See V Talk station. Can
we get a rim shot on that one? All the
right reastlings. Bryan Thomas always happy to welcome to the
(02:12:09):
fifty five Parrissee Morning Show. My dear friend love hearing
from and I love his column comes out every Wednesday
at midnight. Judge Endita Polton, and welcome back to the
fifty five Charsee Morning Show.
Speaker 8 (02:12:21):
Where does he come up with this stuff National Red Wine?
Speaker 1 (02:12:25):
Tay, I don't know, you know what, and I bet
you that's the thing. I bet you it's a thing.
But where he comes up with it? I don't know.
I don't know how much time he's got back there
and his little booth that they never let him out of,
but certainly enough time to figure out what's going on
during the day. To make up some funny comment about you,
Judge Ennitapoloton.
Speaker 8 (02:12:45):
Why do they never let him out?
Speaker 1 (02:12:49):
That's because he does traffic for Like I heard, Media
owns like seven hundred and fifty stations, and I think
he does traffic for all of them. My god, that's
an overstatement by far. But he does the Midwest traffic.
So he's doing traffic reports in Columbus and in Toledo
and I don't know Chicago whatever. But he's got a
lot of traffic reports to follow. So he sits in
(02:13:11):
a room. I think it's got like twenty different video
screens in it. So it's an interesting thing he's got
going on over there.
Speaker 8 (02:13:18):
Right, It is fascinating.
Speaker 1 (02:13:22):
Well, anyway, this I am glad. You know, I'm always
happy with your column. You know, I love what you're right,
and you and I see eye to eye in terms
of our political philosophy. We believe in the Constitution. But
I've been puzzling over how it is that Mayor Eric
Adams prosecution was just suddenly dismissed. I mean, was it
a trumped up case that the grand jury got wrong
(02:13:43):
at the outset and the federal government said, well, or
the Department of Justice said well, we can't win on this,
or was something going on behind the scenes, and apparently
it was the latter.
Speaker 8 (02:13:54):
Yes, apparently it was a quid pro quo. And of
course the here that is giving a lawyer's ethical heartburn
and maybe even criminal exposure, is that it is not
being dismissed. It's being dismissed without prejudice, which to lay
(02:14:15):
people means being put on a shelf to be taken
off whenever the FEDS want. So, this is a sort
of democles. If you will, hanging over the mayor's head,
you change your policies one hundred and eighty degrees on immigration,
you mobilize the massive city workforce to cooperate with Ice,
(02:14:38):
and we will keep this case against you on the shelf.
Is that a form of bribery? I argue in my
piece this morning that it is a form of bribery.
It's absolutely illicit. I commend the lawyers to resign. It's
a terrible thing to have to resign work that you
love and at which you excel. Theation was prompted. The
(02:15:01):
resignations there is now eight of them, were prompted by
the initial one by Danielle Sassoon, whom Trump appointed to
be the acting US Attorney in the Southern District of
New York. She is a former law clerk for Justice
antonin Scalia. She's active in the Federalist Society. She's a
(02:15:24):
conservative slash libertarian Republican. She's also the best trial lawyer
they have in that federal prosecutorial office. And Demalis sam
Bankman freed in four hours of cross examination in that
notorious prosecution last year. When she was approached by the
(02:15:44):
mayor's lawyers who said, Hey, we have a deal. The
mayor will cooperate with Ice if you dropped this, she
said absolutely not, absolutely not. Whereupon his lawyers went over
her head to the new management of the Justice Department
and they found the deal very appealing. Whereupon the Justice
Department ordered Danielle to sign papers asking if federal judge
(02:16:08):
to dismiss the case. She said she wouldn't, and she
stated why in an eight page letter, whereupon they said
sign it anyway. Whereupon she resigned, and seven other lawyers
involved in the case, either directly or from an administrative prospective,
resigned also. Now a federal judge today has ordered all
(02:16:31):
these lawyers into his courtroom. I think he's going to
put them under oaths and have them testify to what happened.
The mayor's lawyers, of course, denied as acquited.
Speaker 1 (02:16:39):
For a course.
Speaker 8 (02:16:39):
The mayor, by the way, is pleaded not guilty and
denies the allegations against him, according to Danielle says Soon
and according to former governor of New Jersey and former
US Attorney in New Jersey Chris Christie, who says he's
seen the evidence, the evidence of guilt is overwhelming.
Speaker 1 (02:16:54):
Wow.
Speaker 8 (02:16:56):
Charge, the charge is bribery, and the charges were the
investigation was begun under Trump one. So to say that
this is a political prosecution by the bidendoj is seriously
to misread all this. So is it bribery? Is it can?
(02:17:20):
Can the government bribe a criminal defendant in a bribery case?
Speaker 5 (02:17:25):
This sounds I'm sorry, but this is what happened.
Speaker 1 (02:17:28):
Well, let me just sort of I don't know that
this is devil's advocacy. But when you're dealing with a
criminal and you have sufficient evidence to convict them beyond
a reasonable doubt in court, if that criminal maybe turns
state's evidence, like say in a mob case, quite often
they'll give them liberty. They'll relieve them from any charges
in return for testimony. Is there is there a difference
(02:17:52):
between that scenario and this scenario. You work with us
and help us get rid of these bad guys.
Speaker 8 (02:17:57):
I recognize from all my years in this business that
the scenario you have described as standard operating procedure. I
could probably go so far as to say it happens
every day in every courthouse in the United States. The
government wants a big fish, They indict the big fish
(02:18:20):
and a bunch of little small fishes around him. Then
they enter into a deal with one or two of
the small fishes, will go easy on you to testify
against the big fish. If defense council does that, it's
called witness tampering. Why are the Feds able to get
away with it?
Speaker 5 (02:18:39):
Now?
Speaker 8 (02:18:39):
I know that I am in an extream. I don't
even know anybody, anybody that agrees with me, extremely tim
at the minority of one. But that's where we that's
where we stand today. In the mayor's case, they did
the same thing, and his cheap assisted, his body man,
(02:19:02):
his closest advisor, pleaded guilty and is prepared to testify
against him. And still they want to put the case
on the shelf so that the mayor will cooperate with ICE.
Cooperation with ICE in New York City is a big deal.
Is he required in the the law to cooperate with ICE?
Speaker 1 (02:19:20):
No, he's not.
Speaker 8 (02:19:21):
Can he interfere with ICE? Of course not. He can't
interfere any more than anybody else can. Can he say,
to the beliefs, to the corrections officers, to social services
do not help Ice. Yes he can, And he was
saying that until from one hundred and eighty degree a switch.
(02:19:43):
Now ICE is allowed to walk into the jails without warrants.
He said, you speak Spanish, how did you get here?
The guy can't answer that. Yank him out of the jail,
jail and send him to Cuba. They go into homeless shelters.
They can go into any place owned and operate or
are controlled by the city without a warrant, and yank
(02:20:04):
anybody out that they want on the basis of their
illiteracy and inability to prove citizenship because the mayor has
suddenly had a change of heart. Now, to make this
even more complicated, under the New York State Constitution, the
governor can remove the mayor if she believes he is
(02:20:27):
not capable of performing his job, and if she removes him,
he is gone for thirty days, during which she has
to hold public hearings at which he can testify. But
if she does remove him, the next person in line
isn't even a Democrat. This guy's a member of the
(02:20:48):
Working Families Party. This is about as hard left a
politician as you're flying as you'll find. You think he's
going to cooperate without course, though story, but it is
profound to show what the DOJ will try and get
away with. Can a federal judge order to prosecute it's
(02:21:09):
to prosecute, of course, not Kenny dismiss it with prejudice,
meaning it's not on the shelf. They have no sort
of damicalies over the mayor. Yes he can, Kenny appoint
a private attorney general, a retired or ex federal prosecutor,
or ex federal or state judge to prosecute the case
that the government's expense.
Speaker 13 (02:21:30):
Yes he can, well.
Speaker 1 (02:21:33):
And to that point, this is what I was going
to pivot over to, because in the situation involving doctor
Fauci's pardon, the presidential pardon only extends the federal crimes,
and there are a bunch of state ages that are
looking into it to see if he may have violate
any state law. So the Department of Justice on a
federal level says, Okay, we're going to dismiss without prejudice.
We've got this hanging on the shelf here any we
can bring it back anytime he wants. You better damn,
(02:21:55):
We'll comply with what we're asking. How about a state
prosecutor stepping in, because fraud is state life law governed
by state law as well.
Speaker 8 (02:22:03):
This would be the Manhattan District attorney. You know his name,
Alvin Bragg. Yeah, it's the same person prosecuted Donald Trump.
Alvin Bragg is the mayor's up for reelection in twenty
five this year. Alvin Bragg is up for reelection in
twenty six. They both appeal to the same liberal base
(02:22:25):
in Manhattan. However, he may have very little choice but
to do this. All he has to do is the
poena the federal files. Yeah, and he has the tied
up wrapped up with a bow on top of the
Feds are ready to go. The local feds are ready
to go. Until the DC Feds came up with this scam.
Speaker 1 (02:22:44):
And to that end, and since the local FEDS had
this wonderful case, we're ready to go to trial and
have resigned because of the shenanigans going on with the
Department of Justice? Are they at liberties as sort of
just hand those documents over to Bragg?
Speaker 8 (02:22:59):
Well no longer employed, but well yeah, government liberty to
download what's in their brains, and they're liberty to share
their own personal notes. But in terms of the files,
Bragg would have to subpoena of them. I'm sure the
FEDS would resist the subpoena. I don't know how the
court will rule. Okay, Formally there is extraordinary cooperation between
(02:23:24):
the state and the FEDS.
Speaker 12 (02:23:26):
Ye.
Speaker 8 (02:23:26):
Not all the charges against Atoms are also state crimes.
Some of them are uniquely federal crimes. But the main one, bribery,
the one that the Trump DOJ under Bill Barr began
investigating in two thousand and nineteen, those are clearly state
crimes as well.
Speaker 1 (02:23:45):
Okay, but now let me but back up. So, theoretically,
had these folks not resigned, you're saying suggesting that you know,
regular cooperation between state and FEDS, and I know that
happens all the time, they could have turned the files
over to the state prosu secuted before they left, before
they quit.
Speaker 8 (02:24:03):
Yes, absolutely that may have happened, for all we know.
I sort of doubt it. That might be an ethical
problem just turning over files. Although she was the acting
US attorney And as you know, the Southern District of
the York Federal prosecutors in Manhattan are sometimes referred to
as the Sovereign District of New York because notorious independence,
(02:24:28):
at a level of independence that the New DOJ apparently resents.
Speaker 1 (02:24:34):
Jud Jennita Paula Ti, I really I'm glad you broke
this down because I know that I was confusion was
swirling in my head, and I was not aware of
the backstore. I know Adams did take a turn in
terms of his willingness to cooperate, but I never connected
the dots on the tube. But apparently there's plenty of
documents and information that would allow everybody to even write
it in your in your column constructed. The deal is
(02:24:55):
constructible from the letters and emails written between those formally
involved with the prosecution and the lawyer's working on the
case on behalf of the mayor. There one more time
from Channel nine's weather forecast here if it's known where
you are, We're going to get a break midday from
that snow. We're only going to see twenty two for
(02:25:16):
a high though today overnight low of twelve. Ohio rivers
are supposed to crest overnight about fifty five point four feet,
and they're expecting more snow to show up around nine o'clock.
Just the coding to the north with maybe as much
as many as two inches to the south. Tomorrow is
going to be partly cloudy with a high of twenty three.
Snow will end in the morning, cloudy overnight down to
fourteen and a clear Friday flood morning ends at one
(02:25:37):
thirty pm and a high of thirty three, ending the
program at sixteen degrees. And it is time for final
traffic chuck Ingram from the UCL Traffic Center. You see health.
Speaker 11 (02:25:47):
You'll find comprehensive care that's so personal it makes your
best tomorrow possible. That's boundless care for better outcomes. Expect
more at uce health dot com. Step Bend seventy five.
A new accident near Middletown has center Leans block well.
Next wreck is at one twenty nine, with a third
one just above two seventy five as a wreck. He's
(02:26:07):
found one twenty nine near seven forty seven and multiple
accidents on seventy one between fields on a one red bank.
Chuck Ingramont fifty five KRC.
Speaker 1 (02:26:16):
They talk station, Hey, fifty fifty five kr C the
talk station, A very happy Wednesday to you listener lunch
on March fifth at March First. That sounds strange, March
First Brewery on East Kemper. It's the East Kemper. They
call it the Blue Ash location. That's where we're going
(02:26:36):
to be for listener lunch on the fifth of March.
So I hope I can see you there and let
us see what else. If you didn't get a chance
to listen, I'd have fascinating conversation with a nurse practitioner
Keith Tannenfeld and George Brunman this morning on the Restore
Wellness dot org campaign trying to spread awareness about healthy
food alternatives. And you know what's in our food? What's
(02:26:59):
what do the vaccines due to us? And you know,
I'm not an anti vax guy at least in so
far as traditional vaccines are concerned, but just I want
the information and that's what that whole idea. The Restore
Wellness dot org campaign's about providing us with valuable, useful
and accurate information so we can make healthy choices. And
(02:27:19):
you know, maybe RFK general change America's perception of health
and maybe we will end up making healthier choices. I mean,
I embrace the whole idea of the federal government's dollars
or state dollars, for example, being restricted in so far
as the SNAP program or in WICK program that shouldn't
include crappy food that has no nutritional value in it.
(02:27:42):
I know in some places it might be difficult to
find healthy alternatives, but that doesn't mean we should be
paying people or giving people money to go out and
buy mountain dew. Read the label. There's nothing in a
mountain dew that's good for you, I mean, period. So
why should we pay for something that has no nutritional
value and is in fact bad for people? And as
(02:28:06):
my understanding is, the food Lobby's paid a just a
fortune to get all of those items included in those
programs for the idigen So you know, and isn't it
a bad thing that we would, you know, almost encourage
that type of behavior. Maybe if the person that receives
the snap benefit doesn't have any idea how bad these
(02:28:29):
foods are for them. They haven't been given the information
because maybe the government's withheld it from us, like, for example,
high fructose corn syrup, which farmers are growing corn to
create corn corn syrup, which literally goes into everything. Try
keeping that out of your diet. And I would frankly
like to not have to burn corn in my gas tank.
So I'm a huge fan of eliminating corn subsidies. Maybe
(02:28:50):
they'll grow something that's healthier, more beneficial, maybe even higher demand.
But corn subsidies create farmers who grow corn because it's
being subsidized. I mean that, I'm just so overly suspicious
of that program. And that's one of the areas that
Republicans find themselves in the cross their because when faced
with someone like me who doesn't believe we should be
providing subsidies to grow corn. A lot of Republicans are
(02:29:12):
responsible for red state. So you get Republican representatives and senators,
and they have a bunch of farmers in their state,
who of course lobby for this ongoing subsidy for the
product that they're growing, and you end up having year
after year after year massive subsidies for corn. So anyway,
(02:29:34):
thank you for the opportunity to ramp on that subject.
You can check out the podcast of my conversation with
Keith and George six oh five. They're in for the
full hour in studio Jack Atherton brilliant commentary Marxists and
the Marx Brothers. Now, of course Jack and I are
old enough to remember the Marx Brothers. Now, of course
(02:29:55):
I watched them on television. I never had the opportunity
to see a Marx Brothers movie in the movie theaters
because they came out way before I was born. But
I was able to follow the high comedy that was
Jack Avidan's commentary this morning because I'm familiar enough with
the Marx Brothers movie. So there you have it. And
of course, judge editor Politanum and who can argue with that?
(02:30:17):
My comment on this real quick here. President Donald Trump
issued a well warning yesterday to bureaucrats in the federal government,
ordering the leaders of all the government agencies to be
quote radically transparent about spending, talking about giving us the
information that we need to know where are they spending
(02:30:38):
our money. Going back to the article, apparently senators aren't
even allowed inside Fort Knox. And it was written up
in Breitbart that even the President's not allowed in there. Really,
Elon Musk has an eyeball on Fort Knox. You kind
of like to know what's in there. Shouldn't we be
able to know that? And how is it the elected
officials who are responsible and oversight over the parties responsible
(02:30:59):
for oversight at Fort Knox can't see what's going on
in there anyway. This memoment published yesterday by the White
House Radical Transparency about wasteful Spending directed the heads of
the executive departments and agencies, arguing that the American government
spends too much money on programs, contracts, and grants that
(02:31:21):
do not promote the interest of the American people. Quote
for two long taxpayers to subsidized ideological projects overseas and
domestic organizations engaged in actions that undermine the national interest.
The American people have seen their tax dollars used to
fund the passion projects of unelected bureaucrats rather than to
advance the national interest. The American people have a right
(02:31:43):
to see how the federal government has wasted their hard
earned wages. A men to that, and again I will
argue that people of all political stripes should embrace this
concept all unless your hands in the cookie jar and
your non governmental organization might be in the crossairs because
you are not serving the American interest. That's where your
(02:32:04):
protests come from. That seemingly small comparatively to the size
of the American population segment of society doesn't want to
deal with having their dollars go away. Have a pity
party for him. Coming up an eight fifty six. Thank
you just Jreker for producing the program. Remember fifty five
krs dot com for the podcast Tune in tomorrow. I
(02:32:26):
heard media aviation expert Jay Ratliffe among other guests, have
a wonderful day and stick around because Glenn Back's up.
Speaker 4 (02:32:32):
Next a full rundown and the biggest headlines there's minutes
away at the top of the hour. I'm giving you
a fact now Americans should know fifty five KRZ the
talk station. This report is sponsored