All Episodes

March 5, 2025 • 138 mins
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:06):
Five oh five. If it's got j R C the
talk station.

Speaker 2 (00:12):
Happy Wednesday, no idea, what's going on?

Speaker 1 (00:30):
Yeah, neither the Democrats apparently. Happy Wednesday to you folks.
Brian Thomas right here looking forward to listener lunch today
if you can make it. Uh gonna be at March
First Brewery on Eastkemper, the so called Blue Ash location,
and it's going to be a good time always is.
Sadly though, and prayers to cribbage. Mike's beautiful wife, Cindy.
She apparently is under the weather, and Mike's a little

(00:51):
bit concerned he might spread whatever illness she's got, so
he is going to take a pass on lunch today.
So no cribbage game today. Sadly, I will look forward
to next month, but I certainly am going to look
forward to having lunch with the folks who are able
to make it. It is Ash Wednesday today, which means
thank you Joe Strecker for updating the fifty five kr
see Morning Show page with the lent fish fry list.

(01:14):
There's one thing you can love about lent, and I
know there are a lot of religious reasons you can
love lent, but the fish fries. I just get a
big kick out of those things. And I love a
deep fried fish, so enjoy the fish fry list posted
right there fifty five care sea dot com. Along in
my conversation with Daniel Davis from yesterday, the deep Dive
on the situation with Ukraine. Empower You seminar tomorrow night

(01:36):
at seven pm with Peter Bronson, the incomparable author Peter
Bronson on regional history. His most recent book Promised Land,
and we had a wide variety of conversation topics of
conversation with Peter yesterday. Just a brilliant, brilliant guy and
a man I consider a friend. That's a fifty five
care sea dot com. Get your heart Meati app while
you're there and stream the content where you happened to be.

(01:57):
Pick up the podcast and hell, you can listen to
any of the iHeartMedia content and there is a ton
of it in the iHeartMedia app. Big Picture with Jack added,
and that's on the program today coming up at seven
oh five. Jack added, and will the Trump speech get
Congress to act? And I thought it was an interesting
I read the entire speech this morning. Of course, I
can't ever stay up and watch those things because of

(02:18):
my bedtime hours and having to get up at two
thirty in the morning. Uh, but I did read it
word for word, front to back, and it was a
long speech I think longest in history or something Trump
addressed in Congress, and he outlined a lot of the
things he's been able to do, but built into the
speech where a request for congressional action. Presidents can only

(02:39):
do so much. We do have a legislative branch, and
the question is whether they're going to be accomplish anything,
and what are the Democrats stay in response? Where are
they They sat in their hands. Well, so Al Green
got kicked out for being a jerk. You could probably
give me the award this morning, Joe. But what is

(03:02):
their response to all the common sense measures that Donald
Trump is engaging in. And I love that he went
through a whole litany of things that Dosh's been able
to ferret out, fraud, wasted abuse. You can't defend that.
And the Democrats are the party of resistance to stuff
that you and I can uniformly agree are nonsensical things

(03:22):
that we are paying for. It's one of the reasons
we're so miserably in debt. Ah, It's just frustrating talk
about county veteran services. Steve Balls our returns of seven
point thirty on the Morning Show today, Fast forward to
eight oh five. Congressman Dave Taylor, we'll get his response
to Trump's address, and doctor Robert lhom with the book
cy War Enforcing the New World Order that'll take place

(03:44):
today thirty in low of Judge Ennitapolaitana, who is in Russia.
So I have a whole bunch of different highlights from
the speech that I can go over, and I surely
we'll get to that, because what I found interesting and
important to highlight. I think by all accounts, it appears
that Donald Trump did a good job, although we still

(04:04):
have to have them. We still have the problem with
the tariffs.

Speaker 2 (04:06):
Now.

Speaker 1 (04:06):
He tried to do a good job of supporting his motivations,
talked about other countries tariffs on the United States, and
despite of the fact that we don't have any tariffs
on them, the trade and balance we're dealing with, this
is going to have inflationary pressures. I don't think there's
an economist on the planet who doesn't appreciate that fact.
Although it has resulted in some positives. Honda, he highlighted

(04:27):
this yesterday, building the largest manufacturing plant in the United
States as opposed to someplace else like Mexico. And there's
been other positive developments as a result of the tariff announcements.
Question how long the tariffs are going to last. I
don't know. If Mexico in Canada do something a little
bit more than beyond what they've done to stop the
flow a ventnyl and illegal immigration coming into our country,

(04:49):
maybe they'll pull them off. Maybe they'll be just a
very temporary thing. We're all gonna have to keep our
popcorn out and wait for that. But I am very concerned,
and I think I'm legitimately concerned that the ar are
going to have an inflationary impact on the United States. Ergo,
inflation is not going to go down. And the Democrats,
of course ridiculing Trump because day one the inflation problem
didn't end, and even I was critical of Trump for

(05:12):
campaigning on that. How in the hell can one man
end inflation in one day, given them multitude of factors
that impact inflation. I mean, he did bring up egg prices.
You can't stop bird flow apparently, although they do have
a plan to lower the price of eggs the five
step plan and even involves importing some eggs. So maybe
we'll get some relief from that. Let's find out together.
No one can read, you know, anticipate the future, read

(05:35):
your tea leaves all day long. We're all gonna just
learn when it happens or doesn't happen, as the case
may be. But moving away from that, I wanted to
start over here with this, this retreat the Democrats went on,
reported by Fox News, and I thought this was rather
interesting and maybe they're waking up to their lunacy. Democrats

(05:57):
at this a tree document's first team by the left
wing rag Politico. It was called a comeback retreat held
by the center left political group Third Way. Happened last month.
Democrats were told to quote embrace patriotism close quote, and
quote get out of elite circles close quote. Huh. I

(06:20):
guess this Third Way group recognized that Democrats are caught
in their own echo chamber and they're not paying attention
to what the American people want. Maybe one of the
reasons Donald Trump won the election. Anyway, the retreats sought
to deliberate on why Democrats are struggling with working class
voters around cultural issues, the nature of the economic trust
gap with this critical group, and ideas for how to

(06:42):
address both problems. They lost the middle class, trump embracing
the populist movement seeking to help everybody. Rising tides raises
all ships. The documents summarize key takeaways from the retreat
on why Democrats have this cultural disconnect with working class

(07:03):
and why Democrats are, in their words, not trusted when
it comes to the economy. Most takeaways focused on democrats
faculty lounge problem of being too judgmental and beholden to
the far left members quote. Democrats are often viewed as judgmental,
out of touch, and dismissive of those without elite education

(07:24):
or I think here's the fundamental point progressive views. This
makes the party seem disconnected from everyday people. Yeah, everyday
people who realize a man's a man and a woman's
a woman. Quote. Activist groups and progressive staffers push unpopular
cultural positions the one I just made, for example, making
it seem like Democrats are more extreme than they actually are.

(07:47):
Seem like the Democrats are the ones that allow the
far left of the party to roll over them and
capitulated all the far left wokesm stupidity that they're peddling.
I would have lamed themselves for allowing that to happen. Quote.
Operatives and campaigns must remember that activist groups exist to

(08:09):
promote their single issue and raise money about it, not
to make Democrats electable. That's a rather cold water dose
reality for the Democrats, isn't it. They also listed ways
to quote emphasize shared values and cultural alignment and quote
reduce far left influence and infrastructure. Chuck them out. In

(08:34):
other words, get rid of the alexandri A Casio Cortez
is in your party. Get rid of the idiots who
refuse to advance legislation protecting women in sports. That's the
kind of stuff that the average American voter, the average
American period overwhelmingly rejects, and yet there they are voting

(08:56):
against it. Solutions reckon of my third way? Embrace patriotism.
How about that community and traditional American imagery. Ban far
left candidate questionnaires and refuse to participate in forms that
create ideological purity tests. Reconnect with the values like hard work,

(09:20):
rugged individualism, and entrepreneurialism. You mean, adopt the strategies of
the Republican Party. Yeah, Apparently it's a winning solution, isn't it.
Fox News Digital reached out to the Democratic National Committee
for comment. Third Way, the group that had this coalition
of this meeting with the Democrats, confirmed the treat took

(09:42):
place and explained the purpose behind it. Here's what Third
Way had to say. The twenty twenty four election revealed
the profound weakness of the Democratic brand. The urgent task
for Democrats is to confront the cultural disconnect and repair
the economic trust gap with working class voters, which was
the focus of Third Way's retreat. Well, the challenges facing

(10:04):
the party are stark. There are some opportunities. Yeah, change direction.
With a threadbaar margin in the House, Democrats have an
opportunity to take back power in twenty twenty six by
focusing on how Trump's chaos is costing voters who were
hoping inflation will go down. I don't know that Trump's

(10:28):
chaos is costing voters. It may turn out that Trump's
tariffs are going to cost voters. Again, that remains to
be seen. We'll find out together, and that will provide.
I will acknowledge that will provide. The Democrats was a
message which would resonate if they walk away from their
woke ideology and out loud rejected. If you're a candidate
in the Democrat Party and you just focus on inflation,

(10:48):
you may may have a leg up. But just by
saying you want to focus on inflation and that Donald
Trump was incapable of dealing with inflation, what will your
ideas be about it? It's the same thing as Trump's
saying I'm gonna end inflation on day one. Go ahead
and campaign on inflation being real high. What will you
say you are going to do about it? I don't

(11:09):
know that they have an answer to that to that point,
I really do not. They went on, we've got to
learn the right lessons to broaden our party's appeal, show
that we understand and are focused on the priorities of
voters and not activist groups, and pick strategic fights. They

(11:31):
kind of leave that a little bit open, don't they
pick strategic fights? Again? You can pick a fight about inflation,
but you damn little better step up the plate with
an idea that resonates and that sounds plausible. Spokesperson for
Third Way quote. Fortunately, Democrats have a deep bench of
talented leaders to get the message out to voters. Really,

(11:53):
that's a development that I'm not aware of. If you
have an idea about who this deep bench includes, please
feel free to call me and let me know who
these people, or person you can come up with. One
is in the Democrat Party Pete but a judge that
hog kid, and they conclude the next nominee must be

(12:15):
electable and able to offer a compelling, moderate alternative to
right wing populism, and that will be our focus over
the next four years. Good luck with that. Ultimately, the
point being made by this left wing group to the
left wingers in the audiences, you guys are too left wing.

(12:36):
Nobody's buying into it. We don't want it. Five seventeen
fifty five KS the talk station five one, three, seven,
four nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred eighty two three
talk pound five fifty on ET and T phones. Love
to hear from you if youve got thoughts or comments,
I'll be right back fifty five KRC dot com five

(12:57):
twenty one and a happy one to you. I made
an observation to Day on Facebook about these economic boycotts
planned by People's USA, and I just looked it up.
I really it wasn't aware of what it was for,
and if you read the People's USA the point behind this,
it doesn't make any sense. They planned the boycott against

(13:21):
major retailers. Amazon included a symbolic start to economic resistance,
a day where we show corporations and politicians that we
control the economy. Now, they really are kind of sketchy
on what their motivations are on this, but part of
it is diversity, equity, inclusion. They say they're not affiliated

(13:46):
with any political party, they're not against any specific person. Quote.
We fight for fairness, economic justice, and real systemic change,
something neither party has prioritized. What the hell do you
mean by real systemic change? I don't even know what
that means. We want to go socialism. We stand firmly
for equality and freedom for all people, regardless of race, gender, background,

(14:08):
or identity. The idea that companies and institution should abandon
diversity and inclusivity is regressive and unacceptable. That's as close
as you get to a point for the economic boycott.
So I mentioned that people merely put off buying decisions
if they're behind this movement, You stop buying for the
one day or week, as the case may be, and

(14:29):
then after that one day or week is over, then
you go out and buy what you didn't buy during
that one day or one week period. It makes no sense.
It doesn't impact any individual company or collectively anyone. As
I illustrate, it's like a blizzard. You can't get out
to the Kroger. You can't get out to the grocery store,
you can't get out to the retailer because the roads

(14:50):
are closed, but you end up going back there after
the roads open up. Same thing. It's not how to work
out for them. Wah wah, wah wah. Amazon will tell you.
In spite of the calls for this economic blackout, it

(15:11):
was February twenty eighth. By the way, early data shows
Amazon sales are you ready, actually increased. Going back to
the port that this this third way organization concluded, you're
not conveying a convincing message that people embrace. Obviously this

(15:33):
was rejected. Amazon transactions rose one percent compared to a
typical Friday Momentum Commerce described as an e commerce consulting
and analytics firm, found the transactions on Amazon during the
February twenty eighth, so called boycott day ended at one
percent higher than on average across the past eight Fridays. Quote. Overall,
we're not seeing a major downturn in sales on Amazon,

(15:56):
although the peak hours are a bit softer than from average.
On Friday, data showed stronger performance early in the day,
was sales tracking six point eight percent above typical levels
by midday, before moderating in the afternoon and evening hours.
I guess because people had more important things to do
than hang out on Amazon buying stuff and things in

(16:17):
the afternoon. Overall, again one percent increase. So congratulations of
People's Union USA epic fail. Now there's a longer boycott
targeting Amazon March seventh through fourteen, so get your calendars
open and ready for that one. And then they have
additional boycott's plan for other major retailers, including McDonald's and

(16:39):
General Mills. Because the underwhelming results from the first effort,
it's written, they could dampen enthusiasm about the upcoming targeted actions. Yeah,
the credit this Forbes, Forbes. Here you go. The data
suggests that transforming social media campaigns into meaningful economic impact

(17:03):
remains a significant challenge. Why because nobody's on board for it,
anybody with a measure of economic common sense. As I pointed,
out a moment. Ago knows that this means absolutely nothing.
Even if sales went down for a little bit, you know,
there'd have to be an overwhelming embrace of this concept.
Every single American would have to decide, well, we're not

(17:24):
gonna buy on that day. As is not gonna happen.
So a whiff five twenty six fifty five KRC Detalk station.
Got some local stories coming up, potholes in the news.
Phone calls are always welcome. I'll be right back, fifty

(17:45):
five KRC the talk station. Hin'e happy Wednesday five one
three seven fifty eight hundred two three talk I fick
fifty on at and T bounds No. I wants to
chime in this morning, Joe. They're just just you and me,
Just you and me. Just Trekor executivetitioner of the Five
Cars Morning show Man. It does podcast too, if you
want to start your own podcast called Joe Up. He

(18:06):
does that side gig. You're doing a lot more of
those lately, aren't you. Joe? Trying can't be enough though?
Can it help Joe? Help Joe's family do a podcast?
Since I had departed, the public service received more than
the more service request sins the start of the year
that it received in all of twenty twenty four, in

(18:29):
spite of the fact that Joe called the pothole number
and it was out of service city. Since I reported,
the tens of thousands of potholes have already been filled.
Thousands more reported all throughout got the bubbling fungus stupidity
going on. By Sunday, over four thousand people had reported
at least one pothole in the city. Keep it up, folks,

(18:53):
Keep it up, folks. I don't know how they're reporting.
It is the website and according to their announcement on
x or whatever some social media account, it hasn't given credit.
Just last week we received them astonishing eleven hundred and
ninety seven requests for pottle repairs. Our hardworking public service
crews have already closed out six hundred and eight of

(19:14):
those request Joe skeptical and fill to opping and twenty
four potholes. Thank you for your vigilance. Please continue reporting
any potholes via three to one one. Joe, you want
to try that out again this morning, just just for
excrements and giggles.

Speaker 3 (19:32):
The service you're attempting to use that's been restricted or
is unavailable. Please contact Customer Care for assistance message SD
four zero.

Speaker 1 (19:42):
Four sixty five. That was the recording for the other day,
but Joe said he gues I did try it again
this morning and it still doesn't work. As in March second,
Sin Saint Department of Public Services reported over twenty six
thousand holes have been repaired.

Speaker 4 (20:02):
Mm hmmm.

Speaker 1 (20:05):
Oh you know what they should do, Joe, sell the railroad.
Oh that's right.

Speaker 5 (20:15):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (20:16):
Let us see what George has got to say rather
than go and get to another local story. George, thanks
for calling this morning. Happy Wednesday.

Speaker 4 (20:24):
By Hey.

Speaker 5 (20:25):
On your analogy on the blizzards and the boycott, there
is one difference, but it's minimal. Even if it's a
certain blizzard.

Speaker 4 (20:36):
You still shop on Amazon.

Speaker 1 (20:41):
Thank you, George. I'll acknowledge that hole in my theory.
But can Amazon deliver? Don't know? Uh w s is
Paul wheedon reporting on this in. A proposed ordinance would

(21:03):
target loitering at certain transit zones throughout the city and
provide law enforcement with a means of enforcing the issue.
Currently nothing on the books, and since the directing police
on how to respond to complaints of loitering at streetcar
transit zones. So people are loitering there, but they're not
riding the streetcar, they say. Stops a long Cities Connector

(21:26):
route are raised portions of the sidewalk, creating boarding and
off boarding platform. The zign means the transit zones remain
part of the public right of way. According to council
member Mark Jeffries, quote, at the streetcar today, existing city
code regulates what you can do, which is to board
the streetcar and deboard the streetcar. What that also legally

(21:48):
implies is that you can't hang out there all day.
His interpretation, he said he wants to see safety improved
at streetcar stops. His effort to crack down on people
utilizing the loading zone for any thing other than transit
was introduced to the city's Public Safety and Governance Committee yesterday,
before fellow committee members passed the ordinance to the full
Council for final vote. City's director of Sewers spoke during

(22:13):
the public comment, jeral Gerald Chico quote, safety is crucial
for an effective bus system in the Cincinnati and it
begins at the bus stop. This proposed anti loitering code
represents a positive first step Southwest Regional Transit Authority. Back
in the effort to city working, was sorted to establish
a bus rapid transit system in the city BRT Metro

(22:38):
Rapid it's called will contain quarters with lanes solely for
metro buses. They'll have signal priority, meaning traffic lights will
know when a metro rapid bus is approaching, allowing the
buses priority to get through the corridors. Because of the
bus shelters will have a platforms designed similar to those
for the streetcar. He's proposing an ordinance to apply to
designated BRT zones as well. I really appreciate your efforts here.

(23:02):
According to SORTIS Chief Operations offer John Ravisio, covered areas.
Imagine level boarding and the access that grants to all
members of our community. So this ordinance will go a
long way towards the equality of the transit experience for
the writers using the bus trap rapid transit system. Jeffries

(23:23):
said they should the ordinance pass. Enforcement should not prove
difficult for police officers the streetcar transit zone because enforcement
would pose a challenge for officers at metro bus shelters.
He said those zones are not included under the proposal's
current language. Wait a minute, it isn't a challenge at
the streetcar zones, but it is a challenge for law

(23:45):
enforcement and the bus shelters. Okay said enforcement would look
like first and foremost move along number one, number two.
If that's not adhere to a citation repeat offenders, I
think those citations could increase, but more than anything else,
since they police need cooperation, Metro needs cooperation before we

(24:07):
start issuing citations.

Speaker 5 (24:10):
Right.

Speaker 1 (24:11):
That will be comments from Councilmember Scotty Johnson five point
thirty six. If you five care city talks, station calls
or stack is stupid. But first word for Chimneycare Fireplace
and Stove, it's gonna get cold again. You're still gonna
be using your fireplace. But that just means, I mean
it's always a good time to get in touch with
Chimneycare Fireplace and Stove. Any time of year. You can
always anticipate that you're going to be using your fireplace

(24:34):
at some point. So if you take care of your safety,
I don't think you have to do this more than annually.
So ensure the safety and therefore warmth of your home
with Chimneycare Fireplace and stove. It's the perfect time to
gather around the fire on cold days which are coming up.
A neglected chimney dough could be dangerous, could lead to fires.
Chimneys chimneys do catch on fire. It'll crack your lining

(24:54):
and if you have a fire again it could be devastating.
Don't risk it right now. The winter special, the wood
burning sweep and evaluation going on right now only one
hundred and sixty nine dollars in ninety nine cents. The
experts at Chimneycare Fireplace and Steve do a video camera inspection,
do chimney sweep, make sure you're safe. Get a carbon
monoxide detector. Please, please, Dear God, do that for your

(25:16):
own safety and your family's protection. But keep your home
safe and cozy. Book your appointment at Chimneycareco dot com,
chimneycarecode dot com. We'll call him up and if you do,
please tell them. Brian said, Hi five one three two
four eight ninety six hundred five one three two four
eight ninety six.

Speaker 6 (25:31):
Hundred fifty five KRC is your talk station.

Speaker 1 (25:34):
In a very happy Wednesday till your listener LUNs Wednesday,
March First Brewery Bluash location five one three seven fifty
hundred eight hundred eight two three talk. Joe's looking at
the traffic camera on four seventy one coming across the
bridge from Kentucky. It's at a dead stop, as check
pointed out. So I'm sorry for those folks that are
stuck in that situation. Hopefully get that resolve short and
short order. Let's see what Pete Scott before we get

(25:55):
to the stack of stupid Pete, thanks for calling on
Happy Wednesday.

Speaker 4 (25:59):
Hey, thanks on Brian. Hey, I saw like an article
about the latest talking points, like twenty two Democrats verbatim
said the same exact talking.

Speaker 1 (26:12):
Points, and I actually that funny. I literally have that
article laying on top of my stack right in front
of me right now. It's kind of funny that you
glombed onto that one when that's the top of the stack.

Speaker 4 (26:23):
But I think Elon Musk is offering a free cyber
truck to somebody that tell that puts out who's doing that.
And what I saw they actually had two of the
people and that they played them simultaneously, so they were
actually verbatims say and everything. So the one thing I

(26:44):
was thinking, maybe those twenty two people are that deep bench,
because they've actually got twenty two people that can complete.

Speaker 1 (26:49):
Sentences a Chuck Shoomer, Elizabeth Warren, and Corey Booker among
the back bench, the deep back bench. Yeah, luck with
that one. Yeah. And you think with chat, GPT and
artificial intelligence, they would run that speech through the program
and ask the artificial intelligence just to modify it and

(27:10):
alter it to deliver the same message but in a
different verbiage. But no, they lack independent original thought. This
is what's been going on for a long time. They
issued talking points, the talking heads on the don of television,
left wing media, they issue talking points among their own members,
and they can't go off script. They don't have any imagination,
so they all come out like parrots, just repeating the

(27:31):
same damn thing. This is yeah, twenty two I mean
headline sad. Twenty two Democrats senators, including Schumer, Warren, and
Booker caught posting identical videos, almost word for words, smearing
Musk and Trump. What for ferreting out fraud, waste and abuse.
All right, lawyer friends out there, remember the first case

(27:55):
you went through in Tort's class, Katko v. Briny, involved
a spring shotgun that was rigged to protect a barn.
If I remember the facts correctly, well, guess what we
go to Calhoun County, South Carolina. What was supposed to
be a check up on a vacant family property resulted
in death after deputies in South Carolina see a man
was fatally shot by a booby trapped home. These are

(28:17):
the exact fact scenarios. Sheriff's office responded Monday evening to
a vacant home in Saint Matthew, South Carolina after reports
of his shooting. That got there, They found thirty four
year old Jordan Doves suffering from an apparent gunshot wound,
and he died on the way to the hospital. His
teenage daughter told deputy that she and her father went
to the home belonging to Dove's uncle, Alfonso Brown, to

(28:38):
check on it. While at home, Dove shot by what
Calhoun County Sheriff Thomas Summers calls a booby trap set
up by Alfonso Brown. Dove's daughter told deputies with while
she and her father approached the front home store, they
heard sounds similar to fireworks, and that's when she noticed
her father had been shot. Deputy say they entered Brown's
home and found a shotgun was rigged at the back

(29:00):
or to go off once anyone attempted to gain entry.
They also found the front door barricaded and shut with
no one inside. Sheriff said he had Brown had taken
a shotgun, screwed it to the stud in the wall,
and had an aim toward the door. Then he had,
for lack of a better turn, a pipe pressed up
against the trigger wedged to the door. The door opens inward,

(29:20):
so if you opened it, he pushed the trigger and
fired a blast. Do what you can't use deadly force
to protect property. Catkov Brinnie period, end of story. Don't
ever do anything like that. It's dumb. Brown incarcerated in Maryland,
currently person of interest in a non fatal triple shooting

(29:41):
January eleventh, then an unrelated incident. Somers Beleiez. Brown set
up to the booby trap in fear that the Calhoun
County Sheriff's Office would be looking for him at his
home after he committed crimes he's accused of in Maryland.
Summers said, it's my opinion he knew the crimes he
was going to commit when he left here and went
to Maryland. He knew he would be on the run.
He knew he would be trapped back to Calhoun County.
He knew that we would be coming out there to

(30:02):
get him. And I think that's what he set it
up for, idiots doing idiot things because they're idiots. Five
star experience, that's what you're gonna get with Peter Shabrie,
Keller Williams seven Hills and his real estate team the
best agents in the dry state. How many realtors do
you know that will guarantee the sale of your home.
I know one that's the only agent I'd ever trust

(30:23):
the buyer sell a home. Peter Shabrie and the group
at Keller Williams seven Hills. They're guarantee is simple. Right
at the outset, You're grant a price in a timeline
with Peter's team, and if they don't say your home
buy that price, the at that price by the time
that you agree on, Peter will buy it. That's simple.
You know what's going to happen. The house will guarantee

(30:43):
to be sold by the deadline. You have better results
with Peter Shabrie group of Keller Williams seven Hills online
seven zero eight three thousand, dot com, by phone five
one three seven zero eight three thousand, or just use
your search engine for Chabrie groups HA b R I
S SBRI.

Speaker 6 (31:00):
Group fifty five, KRC.

Speaker 1 (31:06):
Five fifty eight fIF five KRH detox station. Happy to
see four seventy one is taken care of. Just said
it was shut down her since three thirty. Anyhow, feel
free to call five one three seven four nine fifty
five hundred eight hundred eight two three talk. But moving
back to the stack is stupid. We go to Florida woman,
we'll spend decades in prison after she murdered her elderly

(31:27):
roommate and poured mountain dew on herself in an attempt
to destroy evidence. Why are you doing that? We'll see
if we can find out together. Police responded to call
regarding a fire to residence about one forty five in
the morning. This was July first, twenty three, actually recently
reported story. Though they got there, they found it a

(31:49):
see seventy nine year old man on the second floor
of the burning home with signs of blunt force trauma
and stab wounds. Please also found a bloody knife and
two cell phones near the victim's body, one of which
belonged to the man's roommate, thirty seven year old Nicole Max,
who wasn't there when the police showed up. Officers found
her about three o'clock in the morning, walking without shoes

(32:09):
near a restaurant, holding a knife and a hammer a's
this tradition. Officer that found her said she had blood
on her leg and on her shirt, which was ripped.
Police asked her where she lived and if she knew
the victim. She said she had been homeless for four
years and didn't know the man. Eventually admitted, though, that
she did know him and live with him for a
short period of time, but that she didn't see him often,

(32:31):
at which point she also admitted she was not homeless,
taken him to custody for questioning, and said that she
had never entered the victim's room before, but occasionally went
to the second floor to quote feed her spiders close
quote an. Officers told the woman they were going to
take DNA sample from her. She asked for a diet

(32:53):
mountain dew. They gave it to her, but she began
to procrastinate while drinking the soda until a detective of
actually tried to take it away from her. Accord to
the probable cause Affidavid quote. Max began to resist and
began pouring the can of soda all over her body
and hair and pulling away from officers in attempt to
interfere with the possible uh with the possible evidence on

(33:13):
Max's body. Max then began to pulling and kicking officers
while trying to secure Max in the vehicle. Due to
max action, she was charged with tampering with evidence and
resisting with violence. Investigators, however, did get a positive match
between the DNA on the knife near the victim's body
and the DNA they eventually recovered from her body. Arrested
in twenty twenty three, and on February twenty seventh, twenty five,

(33:35):
she pleaded no contest to second degree murder, resisting with violence,
arson of a dwelling, and tampering with physical evidence. Sentenced
too not in front of Judge Silverstein, thirty five years
in prison, which actually was the minimum for the charges
that she was accused of. Doc coumading. Let this be

(33:58):
a lesson to you. Mountain dew does not removed. Let's see.
I think I read about this story just the other day.
United States Attorney's Office for the District of Colorado announced
that his charge forty two year old Lucy Grace Nelson,
also known as in man form Justin Thomas Nelson, after

(34:19):
police say they found a number of explosives at Colorado
Tesla dealership, the latest incident on a string of apparent
protest against Elon Musk. Nelson charged with one kind of
malicious destruction of property, explosives or in cyndiary devices our
devices used, felony, criminal mischief, and criminal attempt to commit felonies.
An extensive investigation initiated January twenty ninth after the police

(34:41):
there received a call about a fire near a cyber
truck located in the Tesla dealership. There, they discovered an
in cndiary device aka malatav cocktail next to the vehicle.
After the alleged initial incident, there was a subsequent There
were subsequent incidents February second and February seventh, each getting
more severe. Police Department public information officer Chris Paget, speaking

(35:05):
with Fox News, said there were very offensive messages derogatory
nature left at the dealership. Quote on February second, level
the police received a report of graffiti on the test
the dealership signed where the black spray paint was used
to write the word Nazi. On February seventh, police received
a call for a graffiti impossible arson at Teslave. During

(35:29):
the investigation, police found multiple broken bottles consistent with incendiary devices,
and on February eleventh, the security guard of the dealership
came into contact with a person painting graffiti which used
an expletive on the front windows of the building during
police surveillance. February twenty fourth, police confronted Nelson at the
dealership kept coming back found a container gasoline, a box

(35:50):
of matches, and wick materials similar to the items that
police recovered in the prior incidents. He c you choose
arrested without incident. According to he spooked in a jail
issued a ten thousand dollars cash surety bond. Pat just
said the department is not sure if others are involved,

(36:12):
but there is no threat to the community, so you
can exhale and relax. I guess as long as you're
not standing near at tesla Aka. According to the left wingers,
a swasti car. Someone needs to get them a dictionary
so they can read the definition of Nazi and fascism
and realize that That is dictatorial control, controlling the conditions

(36:32):
of your life, the decision making at your businesses from
top down, issuing edicts and demands. This is the polar
opposite of what Elon Musk is doing. Wake the hell
up and quit embarrassing yourself. Five ffty six conceivable. I
did not think they means what you think. Stick around, folks,
got plenty of talk about after the top of the
hour news. I'll be right back.

Speaker 6 (36:55):
Huse happens fast, Stay up to date at the top
of the hour.

Speaker 7 (36:59):
Not become implicated. It's going to go very fast.

Speaker 1 (37:02):
Fifty five KRC Indeed Talkstation six oh five and fifty
five KRCD Talk Station. Happy Wednesday, Marion Thomas, you hear
inviting everybody to listen to lunch today. March First breweried
Blue Ash location which is on East Kemper, right across
the street from Kids First. So spend a lot of
time at Kids First. There was no March First Brewery
when we were taking the kids, my children there when

(37:22):
they were much younger, though I have a feeling I
would have walked across the street anyhow. Coming on the
fifty five KRC Morning Show seven oh five, Big Picture
with Jack add and we'll get his reaction to the
speech last night, the addressed to Congress and will the
Trump's speech get Congress to act? And there are a
number of things that Donald Trump pointed out. Congress needs
to dore Congress to cooperate. That's not going to happen

(37:44):
given the reaction to the Democrats basically sitting on their
hands or jumping up in protests like Al Green, Democrat
from Texas who interrupted President Trump right after the speech
began and end up having to be ejected from the room.
Democrats wouldn't even stand an applaud for the heroes and
the standouts and the cancer people that Donald Trump mentioned

(38:06):
during the speech. I mean, it's just anything that's against
Trump against Trump. And real quick on that point, because
you know, Donald Trump did a great job of outlining
a lot of the insane spending that DOGE has uncovered
and some of the holes in government of the fraud,
wasted abuse. Yesterday, Peter Schweitzer, senior contributor that at Breitbart

(38:32):
and Government Accountability Institute, and he's authored a bunch of books.
He observes something about what DOGE is doing, and you
wonder why the Democrats are screaming in opposition to these
insane programs that are absolutely indefensible. He said. Part of
the opposition to DOGE is just reflexive opposition everything Trump does.

(38:52):
And well, there's a lot of talk about waste and
abuse in his words, there's a deeper battle that's going
on here because a lot of this money that flows
through these grants and through these contracts is to the
political class in Washington, d C. It's a business model,
he said. You look at USA IT and some of

(39:13):
these government agencies, huge amounts of the contract money actually
never goes to the developing world. It stays in the
Washington Beltway, to constituencies that are run by political operatives
that help get people elected. So part of the pushback
in Washington, d C. Is, I think from the fact
that wait a minute, this slush fund that we operated
for all these years is being shut down or it's

(39:34):
being exposed, and that to me is the most valuable thing, Amen,
Peter Schweizer. So some of the things that I pulled
out of the speech, and I did read it word
for word this morning because I couldn't stay up to
watch it. Some of the highlights he pointed out, he
declared the national emergency on the South border. Within hours
of being sworn in, I deployed the US military border
patrol to repel the invasion of our country. And what

(39:55):
a job they've done as a result. Illegal border crossing
last month were by four of the law loest ever recorded.
It's like reportedly the lowest in twenty five years. Honestly,
so he he took a stab of Democrats, He said,
I look at Democrats in front of me, and I

(40:16):
realized there's absolutely nothing I can say to make them happier,
to make them stand smile and applaud. Nothing I can do.
I can find a cure for the most devastating disease,
a disease that will wipe out entire nations, or announced
the answers to the greatest economy in history, or the
stoppage of crime to the lowest levels ever recorded. And
these people sitting right here would not clap, will not stand,
and certainly would never cheer for these astronomical achievements. They

(40:38):
wouldn't They won't do it, no matter what said. Five
times I've been up here. It's very sad and it
shouldn't be this way. And I do think they made
the fools on themselves. Be honest with you, Nancy Pelosi. Wow,
what is with her? Anyway? He pointed out, I turned
it into the ridiculous green news scam. I withdrew from

(41:00):
the unfair Paris Climate accord I was costing US trillions
of dollars in other countries were not paying. I withdrew
from the corrupt World Health Organization, withdrew from the anti
American UN Human Rights Council. Ended all of Biden's environmental
restrictions that were making the country far less safe and
totally unaffordable. Importantly, we ended the last administration's insane electric

(41:20):
vehicle mandates, saving our auto workers and companies from economic destruction.
I directed for everyone new regulation ten old regulations must
be a limited ordering all federal workers to return to
the office, stop government censorship, and brought back free speech
in America. End of the tyranny of so called diversity,
equity inclusion policies all across the entire federal government and

(41:42):
indeed the private sector and our military. Our country will
be woke no longer, he pointed out. You should be
hired based on merit. I removed the poison of critical
race theory from our public schools, signed in order making
the official policy of the United States government that there
are only two genders, male and females. An executive order
to ban men from playing in women's sports. Major focus

(42:06):
for our fight defeat inflation is rapidly reducing the cost
of energy. The previous administration cut the number of new
oil and gas leases by ninety five percent, sload pipeline
construction to a halt, and close more than one hundred
power plants. We are opening up many of those power
plants right now that will help. Later this week, he said,
to also take the historic action to dramatically expand production
of critical minerals and rare earths here in the United

(42:28):
States of America. He created the Department of Governmental Efficiency DOGE,
and here's where he highlighted some of the what he
described as appalling waste. We have already identified twenty two
billion from health and Human Services to provide free housing
and cars for illegal aliens, forty five million dollars for
diversity equity inclusions scholarships in Burma, forty million to approve

(42:50):
the social security and economic inclusion of sedentary migrants. Nobody
knows what that is, he said. I agree eight million
dollars to promote lgb QI plus in African in the
African nation of Lesotho, which nobody's ever heard of. And
I will join him in that observation because up until

(43:11):
this moment in time, or when I read this this morning,
I had never heard of Lesotho. Sixty million dollars for
indigenous people's in Afro Caribbean empowerment in Central America, sixty
million eight million for making mice transgender, and you had
to point out this is real. Thirty two million for
left wing propaganda operation in Moldova, ten million dollars for

(43:33):
a male circumcisions in Mozambique, twenty million for the Arab
Sesame Street in the Middle East, twenty million one point
nine billion to recently create a decarbonization of homes committee
headed up and we know she's involved, and he pointed
out it was just the last moments of the Biden administration.
The money was passed over by a woman named Stacy Abrams.

(43:57):
Three point five million consulting contract for Lavish fits monitoring,
one point five million for voter confidence in Liberia, fourteen
million dollars for social cohesion in Mali, fifty nine million
dollars for illegal alien hotel rooms in New York City.
Two hundred and fifty thousand increase vegan local climate action

(44:19):
innovation in Zambia, forty two million dollars for social and
behavioral change in Uganda, fourteen million for improving public procurement
in Serbia, forty seven million for improving learning outcomes in Asia.
He said, Asia is doing very well with learning. You
know what we're doing. We could use it ourselves. One

(44:42):
hundred and one million for DEI contracts of Department of Education.
And see this is what the Democrats sporting going for
Peter Schweizer's point, You know, we don't know where this
money actually went. Did it get to Zambia. No one
follows the money trail. There aren't any Houghton's looking into
where that money was spent or how it was spent.

(45:04):
And even if you got an NNGO non government organization
in Zambia, the people that work in there are getting
paid salaries, and I bet they are handsome ones relative
to the general average economic or average salary by the
residents of Zambia. You said, we identified shocking levels of
incompetence and probable fraud in the social security program and

(45:28):
you highlighted it. Government database lists four point seven million
social security members from people aged one hundred to one
hundred and nine million years old, three point six million
aged aged one ten to one nineteen, three point four
to seven million people aged one twenty to one hundred
and twenty nine years old, three point nine million people

(45:50):
aged one point thirty to one hundred and thirty nine,
three point five million people on the ranks between the
ages of one hundred and forty and one hundred and
forty nine, one point three million people aged one fifty
to one fifty nine. Over one hundred and thirty thousand people,
according to the social security databases, are aged over one
hundred and sixty years. He said, we have a healthier

(46:12):
country than I thought. And to finish one thousand and
thirty nine people the ages of between the ages of
two hundred and twenty and two hundred and twenty nine
years old, one person between the ages of two forty
and two forty nine, and one person listed at three
hundred and sixty years of age, more than one hundred
years older than our country. This is insane. Now, I'm

(46:37):
not suggesting they're actually getting a check, but you know what,
if there's a social Security number out there and it's
active guests who could use that social Security number for
the purpose of gaining employment here in the United States,
it's a popular thing to steal social Security numbers among
an illegal migrant population who isn't qualified or authorized to
work in this country. That may be the source of it.

(47:03):
And he talked about kicking criminals that are illegal aliens
out of the country, something that nobody can argue with criminals, killers, traffickers,
child predators who are allowed to enter our country under
the old open border policy Biden administration cited specifically talked
about the regulatory control approvals that should take ten days

(47:23):
to get instead take ten years, fifteen years, or even
twenty years before he ultimately rejected. Then he turned to Congress,
pass tax cuts for everybody. He said, seek permanent income
tax cuts across the board. I'm calling for no tax
on tips, no tax on overtime, no tax on social
security benefits for our great seniors seniors out there, wouldn't

(47:44):
you love to not have your soce's security benefits tax?
That's a double taxation anyway. He also said he wants
to make interest payments on car loans, tax DEDUCTI well,
if the cars made in America, all of this would require,
of course congressional action. Just a few of the highlights
going into it. I see Bobby's on the line. Bobby,
I'll you have to take your call, but I gotta
take a quick break here and mention my good friends
a better way to bank. Emvery Federal Credit Union, they

(48:07):
also are, well, I always want it's a better way
to bank. And here's one of the reasons they got
a scholarship program. Yeah, if you're a member at Emy
Federal Credit Union and you have a child planning to
go to college or UNI are going to college, Emory
Federal Credit Union is now accepting scholarship applications for its members.
You have to be planning to attend a two year
or four year college in the fall as a full
time student. Certain other restrictions apply. For more information, EMORYFCU

(48:31):
dot org is the website EMORYFCU dot org. Those applications
have to be postmarked by the end of the month
March thirty first NMLS number four zero one zero. It's
seven federally insured by NCUA Equal Housing Lender.

Speaker 6 (48:44):
This is fifty five KARC an iHeartRadio station, oh Each.

Speaker 1 (48:48):
Sixty one and fifty five KRCV talk station. Not a Wednesday,
looking forward to hearing from Jack added in at top
of the our news, Will the Trump speech get Congress
to act? This went through some of the issues that
Congress is actually going to have to deal with. And
I commented on going on the top of the hour
news about the idiots who keep referring to Donald Trump
and Elon Musk is Nazis right on c on my

(49:10):
Facebook feed a post that had preceded my comment by
about an hour. I just looked up and it happened
to be there. Maybe Facebook is listening to me. Thank
you to Jeff for posting the meme. It's a picture
of Hitler and a picture of Donald Trump next to it,
as says Hitler versus Trump, Hitler caused the death of
eighty million people and tried to exterminate an entire race.

(49:31):
Trump lowered your taxes and hurt your feelings. Knock it,
knock it off. You look stupid. Amen. Thank you, Jeff.
Let's see what Bobby's got this morning. Bobby, thanks for calling.
Happy Wednesday, Hey, Happy hump Day, my brother. I tell
you what last night was a chronic slap down, almost
short of a public hanging through these lapt wing progressives.

Speaker 5 (49:53):
It was something to really watch.

Speaker 1 (49:56):
Yeah, and they've got nothing to say in response to it.

Speaker 7 (50:00):
Well, when you're pencil looked like they are and nothing
but blind opposition, you can't say much. Well, look what
they've done last four years.

Speaker 1 (50:10):
I get it. That's why Trump was highlighting what he's
been able to accomplish in the first just two months
of his presidency, a profound sea change could Biden has
stopped the insecurity on the border, absolutely, but it's not
what his party wanted. They wanted us to be flooded
with illegal immigrants to change the entire dynamic of our country.

Speaker 7 (50:30):
It was just a chronic beat down, my brother, It
was probably one of the best displays I've seen in
a long time.

Speaker 1 (50:37):
Yep. And I had my popcorn out and a grin
on my face waiting to see what they're going to
do in response to it. It is a remarkable success
so far for the benefit of all people in America,
including the Democrats who think this isn't benefiting them. We've
got to save ourselves from ourselves, and yeah, Congress definitely
needs to Act, and it needs to act along the lines

(50:57):
of cutting more from government expenditures. It's crazy. We're just
going to sink our own ship.

Speaker 7 (51:05):
One of the nice things will achieve from it is
a couple House and Senate seats. If he keeps this up, Well,
I hope you we won't see a Democrat in office
for another twenty years.

Speaker 1 (51:15):
Well, I can only hope. But not all Republicans are
the right type of Republican. There's a lot of them
that are just in it for themselves, much in the
same way a lot of Democrats are just in it
for themselves. We need to ferret out those Republicans and
get them to write the sinking fiscal ship that we
happen to be writing on. Appreciate the call, Bobby, as always,
you can feel free to call us well if you like.

(51:37):
Some of the other things highlighted the people that and
companies that have already invested in the United States one
point seven trillion dollars in new investment in America over
the past several weeks. You highlighted Soft Bank two hundred
billion dollar investment they promised Open Ai, and Oracle five
hundred billion dollars investment. Apple announced five hundred billion dollar investment.

(52:00):
I'm a conductor, which is apparently the biggest semiconductor manufacturer
in the world, n one hundred and sixty five billion
dollar investment to build the most powerful chips right here
in the United States. You've talked about securing America's borders,
he said, over the past four years, twenty one million
people poured into the United States. Speaking to the point there,

(52:21):
many of them murderers, human traffickers, gang members, and other
criminals from the streets on dangerous cities and throughout the world.
Because of Joe Biden's insane, a very dangerous open borders policy,
they are now strongly embedded in our country. But we're
getting them out and getting them out fast. And again,
you may embrace the immigrant population. You may think it's
a sin that we will be throwing out someone merely
because they came across the border illegally. But when you

(52:44):
go after the low hanging fruit, the criminal element, child rapists,
you're defending the indefensible. You said, I signed in law
as you're forty seven, President mandates a rule, well, the
first bill mandating the detension of all dangerous criminal aliens

(53:05):
and who threatened public safety, the Lake and Riley Act success.
You put it out the media and our friends and
the Democrat Party keeps saying we need new legislation. You know,
Congress needs to act along these lines. We must have
legislation to secure the border.

Speaker 2 (53:20):
Hm.

Speaker 1 (53:21):
But it turned out that all we really need was
a new president. Ooh, that was a growing shot. Six
twenty five fifty five. Care see the dog station. Odo
egsit wonderful products at Oto Eggs to get rid of
all the smells that are bothering you. Mold, mildews, smoke,
human odor, pet odors, whatever you got, it'll get rid
of it. And it comes with a guarantee. I always

(53:42):
to like to emphasize that been in business for twenty
five years. Congratulations to locally owned and operated manufacturing facility
Oto Exit right here in town one dredercent satisfaction guarantee.
Use the products as directed, they will get rid of
the odor or you will get your money back. That's
a strong guarantee from odo x Exit. And it even
works on skunk spray, which you like to highlight is

(54:03):
that is a nasty odor that seems impossible to get
rid of. Odo r xits the website odorrexit dot com.
Order it right there to be delivered to your front
door if you order before three o'clock in the afternoon,
or go out and buy it locally today. There's a
search engine to find out where it is sold locally.
Odor Exit works on everything except the stench of politics.

Speaker 6 (54:21):
Fifty five KRC Here.

Speaker 1 (54:25):
Jennie Weather says, rains showing up around noontime and that's
when the temperatures start dropping. Today's high is happening right
now fifty six degrees. Rain turned into snow sometime after
eight pm this evening overnight low at twenty eight forty
three to high tomorrow with sunny sky's thirty one overnight
clouds Friday rain snow, kind of mixy thing going on
high at forty nine. It is fifty six now on

(54:48):
time for traffic from the UCUB Traffic Center. When it
comes to multiple carosis, trusts the expert. Since the you've
seen Gardner Neuroscience Institute for Innovative and Comprehensive Care, one
more you see help dot com. Police activity continues to
hand lanes blocked on Broadway at third that's affecting the
ramp from inbound Columbi up Parkway to Third Street and

(55:10):
and into some pretty heavy traffic on the tailor South
Kate Bridge. Everything else in deeds and shape Chuck Ingram
on fifty five KRC the talk station six thirty. If
you buy a krc DE talk station, Happy Wednesday again, listener,

(55:33):
Lunch Wednesday. I'm gonna repeat myself this morning. March First
Brewery on East Camp. I hope to see you there,
and I turn to the phones. I got Drew pappas
former Anderson Township trustee. Mister Pappis, it is always good
to hear from you.

Speaker 5 (55:45):
Welcome Brian. It's always good to be on with you.
You know, I know, and you've done some great analysis
and recapping of.

Speaker 1 (55:54):
Last night's speech.

Speaker 5 (55:56):
But I'd like to just from something jumped out at
me last night. The Great Michael said It used to
have a saying said liberalism is a mental disorder, and
I did agree with that for a large portion of
my adulthood. However, last night we became readily apparent to
me and I hope everybody else that watched, liberalism is
more than a mental disorder. Liberalism is a cult. The

(56:19):
reason I say that is it's cults that all wear
the same type of clothing, like a uniformity of clothing,
uniformity of message, uniformity of thought, and where it became.
And it's a very it's it's almost.

Speaker 1 (56:36):
A demonic cult.

Speaker 5 (56:39):
Yes, And in the sense that if, as a member
of a group group think you cannot stand and applaud
a young child cancer battler, someone that has not won
the battle of cancer yet but is going through the

(57:00):
battle of cancer, and you, because of your cult devotion
and your orders from your cult leaders, cannot simply have
the common human decency and stand and applaud that moment.
To me and I should be offensive to everybody that
watched that charade of a response from the Democrats last night.

Speaker 1 (57:22):
Well to my listeners if you heard a pause in
the commentary there, we had to dump button you for
that the expletived. Yeah, you can't do that. You could say,
damn such a but you can't. I don't write the rules.
I don't write the rules. I just have FCC compliance
to have to cope with the rules.

Speaker 5 (57:42):
Well, here's the deal. If you watch that damn charade
last night and you weren't offended by the Democrats' inability
to at least celebrate that young man's battle, and you
and I can relate to that because we are both
gone through answer scares in our lives. Yes, sir, you

(58:03):
cannot simply acknowledge and celebrate that moment with that young man.
How ghoulish must you be? How soulless must you be
because you have to still pray at the altar of liberalism?

Speaker 1 (58:17):
Is disgusting or simply spineless because you drew know exactly
as I do, and any and you know, observant human being.
The order went out, do not stand for anything Donald
Trump says or does. Period end of story. That's the point.
And they can't exercise a moment of independent thought even
in the most appropriate circumstances, like you point out, you know,

(58:39):
talking about a poor cancer victim, that you can't stand
against the cult and exercise independent thought. You are spineless.

Speaker 5 (58:48):
And the joy, the wonder on that young man's face
when he realized that Donald Trump was presenting him with
something last night. Did you see his eyes fly wide open?
Did you see him hug the man the Secret Service
Director's neck when he got that honorary yeah identification badge

(59:15):
with his name and picture on it. You know what,
how can anyone. I don't care your political leadings, I
really don't. But how can you not just simply acknowledge
that human moment? Why Because you're a member of a
cult and that is something you a group think. As
you said, you cannot have the individual a fut and
you would be driven off the reservation from where the

(59:38):
altar from which you pray. And I am just simply
disgusted by the display, that particular display. There were several
last night, but that one really hit me hard, and
I hope it hit everybody because that was just a
human moment and for them not to be able to
just simply celebrate and acknowledge that speaks volumes to not
only their lack of soul, but there lack of character

(01:00:01):
and their lack of decency. And people should remember that,
and it reflects all the way down the line. So
when your local Democrats get on their soapboxes or their
their social media feeds, or even if you run into
a few and they start, you know, Donald Trump this,
and Donald Trump just ask him say, hey, what did
you think about that moment? Why what do you say? Oh, well,

(01:00:22):
you know, I don't like to talk politics. You know
that they'll get all hoity toity.

Speaker 1 (01:00:28):
You got it bagged, Drew. Yeah, that's a this knocked
it out of the park, an excellent, excellent, excellent observation.
It is a cult, it is, and they will they
will exclude or eliminate anyone who dares stand in the
way against any director that they issue. I just like
to know who issued the directive? And was it Nancy

(01:00:49):
Pelosi was a chucky Schumer? I mean, yeah, who's the
one that has that much power and control over all
of those individual minds, so much so that, like you observe,
they couldn't even stand for a cancer patient, crazy.

Speaker 5 (01:01:03):
Man, you know. And then when they sat there with
their little round signs, with their little messages, I'm like,
you know what I mean, just children. Petulant liberals are
just petulant children that will and please, I don't want
anyone to think that you notice the demonstrations that we
saw yesterday that that you know, when twelve people gather
and a local news service covers it ad nausea and

(01:01:25):
twelve people right, and you sit there and you say, wow,
all across the United States, all these all these protests
are occurring at the same time. Is that organic or
is that orchestrated. I'll just throw that out there. What
do you think that is? Is that or is that
organically orchestrated? I don't know what the word might be.
And and out trouts and outrots your liberal prints media

(01:01:45):
to go cover the to go cover the event, when
you know five people stand on a corner, oh mass
protests that the blah blah blah blah are really seriously
or you are being used by an organization as a
media outlet. Whatever. I'm just tired of it. I'm getting
really tired of it. I hope folks remember in November,

(01:02:06):
and I hope folks remember that one group. You know,
who do you want to stand with? When the day
comes and you have to stand in atone for your actions?
What group do you really want to stand with? You
know that young young child might be there helping judge
you and your actions, and you're going to sit there
and say, well, you know, I really wanted to stand
and applaud you, but I couldn't because I got I

(01:02:28):
got a memo, I got an email, I got a
text name. Don't do it or else you're going to
be in trouble. You might not be on a committee.
So I had to just sit there and ball at
the altar of my liberalism.

Speaker 1 (01:02:38):
Yeah, ridiculous, or your campaign funds will immediately dry up
and you won't get real live brother, your live brother.
Thank you for that that those comments drew. I truly
appreciate him well stated, and you're right. You're absolutely right.
Six thirty seven fifty five K six thirty eight. Feel
free to call. Maybe you've got some observations as well.
I love to hear them. Five one three seven fifty

(01:03:00):
five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two to three talk.
The other thing I love recommending. I just bud Herbert Motors.
They're fantastic folks. This is fifth generation family that operated business,
you know. But Herbert's motto, the most expensive tool you'll
ever buy is a cheap one, is because he knew
that cheap things fall apart quickly, and then you got
to go out and replace him inspite how much money's

(01:03:20):
bent on him. That's why they only carry the world
the best brands in the world in terms of lot
of equipment, John Deere. They got your deer tractors and
compact utility tractors, X Mart mowers, Steel power equipment, and
Honda power equipment. That's what I got from Butterbert Motors
the Honda after that terrible experience at the box store.
You're not working with a family member who needs to
protect the reputation of their own business. You're working with

(01:03:42):
some kid on the floor at a box store and
they're selling inferior products. Don't get down that road. Go
with the best in the business, the folks that know
everything it is about, the world class brands. They sell,
they service everything they sell. They will deliver to your
front door or driveway, as the case may be. I
had my mower from but Herbert going for the truck
had even left the street. One pull starts and that's

(01:04:02):
been the case for the every year that I've owned it.
That's why I need to go to but Herbert Motors.
They'll treat you great. Butterbertmots dot Com. When they pick
up the phone, you be dealing with a Herbert family member,
So please tell them. Brian said, Hi, here's the number
five one three, five four one thirty two ninety one
five one three, five four one thirty two.

Speaker 6 (01:04:20):
Ninety one fifty five krc Do you have more than six.

Speaker 1 (01:04:24):
Forty three fifty five KRCD talk station. Appreciate that call, Drew,
and uh, sorry about having to do the dumb button,
but we do have rules and I don't make them up,
but I am I've been known to use some salty
language and I must myself cut it off and not
do that on the morning show. And I know you

(01:04:48):
don't think GD is cursing and I might fall into
that category, but in the final analysis, it's not our
decision making along those lines. That's why we have a
dumb button. And so people w can you call him
fiel free? Please remember that because I will use a
dump button. And thank you jose Jekker for being quicker
on the dump button that I was. I always listening

(01:05:09):
to excellent comments along those lines. Hey, Patrick, welcome to
the show. Thanks for calling this morning.

Speaker 8 (01:05:15):
Hey, good morning, Brian. It's good to talk to you today.

Speaker 7 (01:05:18):
Hey.

Speaker 8 (01:05:19):
Uh, just wanted to recap something that Drew Pappus had mentioned,
and that was the human moment with that child receiving
an honorary Secret Service badge. That is the problem that
the liberals have right now is that they have coached
everybody on their side that Donald Trump is this evil

(01:05:41):
orange monster, just nazi demonic and they cannot, at any
cost let anything crack that narrative that he is this
evil monster that is set to destroy us.

Speaker 1 (01:05:57):
But you know it's funny, Patrick, You're right, but look
how much that served them in the November election last year.
They had been calling him a Nazi and evil Orange
man and Trump arrangement system syndrome has been going on
for years and years leading up to Donald Trump cleaning
Kamala Harris's clock in the election. I mean, it just
didn't work. You think they'd learned something from that.

Speaker 8 (01:06:18):
I didn't say the narrative work. I'm just saying that's
what they have to stick with because that's all they
have to go on and until they have enough self
realization to look in the mirror and say, hey, you
know what, we have to try something different. And you
know what's the definition of insanity doing the same thing
the same way over and over and expecting a different results.

Speaker 7 (01:06:41):
So they have a good day, Brian.

Speaker 1 (01:06:42):
Thanks, brother, appreciate your call. Patrick. By one three seven
nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eight to two
three talk. You got a traditionally imported manufactured car with
US from Asia or Europe. You know what I'm going
to say, take it to Foreign Exchange, get it serviced,
leave with the full warranch, imparts in service. You get
excellent customer service. They're family friendly folks in there, they
really really are. And yes, save money. And in these

(01:07:03):
trying times and inflation problems, and boy, I'm telling you
what servicing automobiles, huh, you're not free of inflationary pressures
on that. Whether it's supply chain or just getting parts
or whatever. You know, it's expensive to service a cars.
So why don't focus on your bottom line and go
to Foreign Exchange. You get it service for less money
than the dealer. That's the reason for Foreign Exchange's existence.

(01:07:24):
You'll be very very happy with the service you get.
I assure you of that. I've been going there for
years and years, and there, for me is the Westchester
location of Foreign Exchange, Tylersville exit off of seventy five
Head East, hangar right on Kinglin. It's just like two
streets and then you think it's like an eighth of
a mile even that's easy to get to. And again
they treat you great, save money, call them up, get

(01:07:45):
an appointment five one, three, six, four, four, twenty six,
twenty six. Please tell them. Brian said high five one, three, six,
four four, twenty six, twenty six. You'll find them online
at foreign X four in the letter X dot com.

Speaker 6 (01:07:56):
Fifty five KRC best.

Speaker 1 (01:08:04):
Here it is your Channel nine first warning weather forecast.
We're at our high today, which I observe is fifty
six degrees. The temperatures will start dropping down along with
the rain that shows up around noontime today, So to
be cold every night down to twenty eight, and that
rain will turn to snow, they say sometime around eight
or after. We get a sunny day tomorrow with the
high of forty three, overnight low of thirty one, and

(01:08:26):
rain and snow predicted for Friday, depending up on which
time of day it's going to be a high forty
nine right now fifty six fifty five ker City talk
station type for traffic.

Speaker 9 (01:08:35):
From the UCL Traffic Center.

Speaker 10 (01:08:37):
When it comes to multiplecorrosis, trusts the experts at the
UC Gardner Neuroscience Institute for Innovative and Comprehensive Care, I'll
learn more at UC health dot com. Highway traffic not
all that fad at the moment. Suthbound two seventy five
break lights between the Lawrenceburg ramp and the Carron Cropper Bridge,
but earlier INSU northbound fourth seventy one have been cleared.

(01:08:59):
I'm seeing no, he's into towntown now, Chuck Ingram on
fifty five, care see the talk.

Speaker 1 (01:09:04):
Station six p. Fifty We do get and what a
blessing it is the brilliance of Jack addit and doing
a big picture with Jack Aden, as we do every
Wednesday at this time. We got it for two segments today,
which I'm really excited about.

Speaker 5 (01:09:17):
Jack.

Speaker 1 (01:09:17):
Welcome back to the Morning show man. It's really great
having you on as always.

Speaker 11 (01:09:21):
Hey, I hope you're well.

Speaker 12 (01:09:22):
Brother.

Speaker 13 (01:09:23):
I was nervous tuning in to President Trump's speech last night,
but with the stock market tanking Tariff's taking effect, it
would seemed like the whole world condemning Trump for kicking
out our favorite ninja. Anyway, that's the way he addresses
Vlod and Zelenski. But Brian, that turned out to be

(01:09:45):
the greatest State of the Union I have ever seen that.
I'm seventy two. Yes, it was really a state of
the Union. Because Trump's already accomplished in the first forty
three days the second term, we're the most presidents to.

Speaker 4 (01:10:00):
Well.

Speaker 13 (01:10:00):
If we're talking about Joe Biden more than he accomplished. Ever.
It's a long speech, yes, but if you want to
whittle it down to four words, Trump called his agenda
the Common Sense Revolution. Democrats marched in, threatening to humiliate Trump.
One congressman yelling his head off and brandishing a cane.

(01:10:22):
Mean Al Green even had to be escorted out like Zelensky.
But the rest of the Democrats melted, melted into their
seats like the wicked Witch the West, as Trump reeled
off the horrendous results of their own anti American policies.
And then he listed the trillions of dollars of investment

(01:10:42):
all over the world now pouring into America thanks to
that Trump agenda. To cite the Wizard of Oz again,
pay no attention to the bears on Wall Street. Trump
has beefed up borders, squelched DEI, promoted merit, unlead energy,
doged government bloat, and just as in twenty seventeen when

(01:11:05):
somebody cried the skies were falling, Trump's fair trade, pro
jobs policies, including reciprocal terrorifts, will soon bring America roaring
back again. When Trump left office after tariffing China, even
amid COVID. You remember where inflation stood, Brian, Yeah, he
has one point four percent.

Speaker 1 (01:11:28):
Yeah.

Speaker 13 (01:11:29):
As for Ukraine, Trump read from a letter he had
just received yesterday from Zelensky. On Friday, Trump kicked a
lad out of the White House. We all know, why
do you do that? It wasn't about Zelenski's outfit or
not saying thanks for Trump being a bully. Zelensky was
supposed to sign an agreement negotiated with Trump giving America

(01:11:52):
a security interest in Ukraine's future by having US invest
with money and personnel in their rare earth minerals. Zelensky
had refused in Europe twice before, at the last minute
to sign the deal. The last Friday, he flew to
the White House to finally sign. Instead, we now know Democrats,

(01:12:14):
including the vile Senator Chris Murphy, urged Zelensky to ambush
Trump in front of the world's cameras with an appeal
for US troops, which Trump had repeatedly and adamantly refused.
So a mad as hell, Trump showed Vlad the door.
But Zelensky's latest letter claims that he's now ready really

(01:12:37):
to sign that agreement and to negotiate a ceasefire with Russia,
which he said we could never do because they couldn't
be trusted. He even thanks Trump for his efforts to
stop the killing. Three years of fighting under Joe Biden,
three hundred and fifty billion dollars in US eight a
million casualties on both sides, all to continue a bloody

(01:13:00):
dalemate that never would have begun under Trump. When Trump
last night called out Elizabeth Warren asking if she wanted
to see five more years of fighting, the cameras showed
the Senator and other Democrats applauding Brian. I think that
says it all.

Speaker 1 (01:13:18):
That's Gary.

Speaker 13 (01:13:20):
The only problem now is Donald Trump, who commanded the
room last night like some member of the rat pack.
Trump so far has been acting pretty much on his
own through executive orders and actions. Now he needs Congress. So,
my friend, can we talk about that next?

Speaker 1 (01:13:40):
Well, we have five more minutes in this segment, Jack,
so we'd be leaving our parting company a little bit early.
So you want to go ahead and dive on into it.
Feel free absolutely. Last November, Donald Trump won an historic mandate,
But Brian, did Congress win a mandate? Even the Republican
is in Congress, Republicans for now hold only a two

(01:14:04):
seat majority in the House to pass a reconciliation bill.
As your brilliant audience, people like Drew all the people
have been calling in. They know reconciliation lets them avoid
a Democrat filibuster. Trump needs that budget bill to fund
border security, defense spending, energy, independence, and the extension maybe

(01:14:27):
even the expansion. That's what he's looking for of the
Trump twenty seventeen tax cuts. If those across the board
tax cuts are not extended, everyone could see a massive
tax hike. However, a bunch of self proclaimed deficit hawks
in a House and a Senate want to vote on
taxes in a later bill, partly because the author Congressional

(01:14:51):
Budget Office says tax cuts have to be quote paid
for with spending cuts. Trump and the architects of his
original tax bill like Art Laugh and Steve Moore, deny that.
They prove every day on Larry Cutlow's show that the
twenty seventeen tax cuts generated more rest through growth. Everybody

(01:15:11):
could just look it up, see the numbers, and historically, Jack,
that has always been the case. You can back to
the nineteen twenties. Every time you lower taxes more revenue
ends up in government because it creates economic activity that
otherwise wouldn't have been out there. It's simple economics, one
oh one.

Speaker 13 (01:15:27):
Do you tell that to the CBO. Why if they
would listen to your show, this country would be at
all Well, It's not only that. When Congress finally passed
tax cuts at the end the very end of twenty seventeen,
Trump's first year in office, those cuts came too late
to jumpstart the economy in time for the mid term elections,

(01:15:49):
so Republicans lost their majority and their new House Speaker,
Nancy Pelosi, spent the rest of Trump's term impeaching him
on full ney charges. That's what was at stake during
last week's crucial vote. Could House Republicans agree on a
framework for what Trump calls one Big, Beautiful Bill. They

(01:16:10):
did not have the votes until Trump made last minute
phone calls to the floor of the House as they
were voting, assuring GOP holdouts that he would grow the
economy enough and cut enough waste, fraud, and abuse to
reduce Biden's two trillion dollar a year deficits. Trump malagemits

(01:16:30):
to balance the budget for the first time since Nu
Gingwich forced bill Clinton's hand. He needs some help. The
upshot of last week's floor fight was that every member
of the House the Republican caucus supported one big, beautiful bill,
with a lone exception of Kentucky's Thomas Massey right across

(01:16:51):
the river. Luckily, Massey's vote was not needed, and many
folks listening now right now salute Tom Massey as the
latter day Jimmy's Stewart in the classic film mister Smith
goes to Washington, a principled idealist standing up to his
own party. That no vote, however, was certainly the congressman's right,

(01:17:12):
maybe his obligation under the Constitution, which separates the House
and Senate from the President and creates checks and balances. Still,
Nassey's near veto got me thinking about the differences, for
better and sometimes for worse, between America's lawmakers and members
of parliament. In the Kingdom, our founders rebelled against Article

(01:17:36):
one of our Constitution gives Congress independence because the founders
rightly did not want a king. Yet Article two makes
the president the only federal official who is elected by
the entire country. Only the president runs on a national agenda,
So even if the president wins a clear and convincing

(01:17:56):
mandate for specific policies, as Trump did, he's powerless if
Congress refuses to go along, Including a Congress controlled by
his own party. Great Britain's Parliament, at least theoretically does
not have this problem. In Britain, Labor and Conservative candidates
run for their seats on party agendas. The Prime Minister

(01:18:20):
is then chosen from within parliament to advance that agenda.
If the party loses a vote of no confidence, voters
can change the government in a snap election. By contrast,
our president serves a full four year term and from
day one, Congress is under no obligation to support the president.

(01:18:42):
Each Senate candidate appeals only to his or her own state,
while House candidates promise to serve their individual districts, and
there are four hundred and thirty five of those. Fragmentation
in Congress was a challenge from the very beginning of
our country, when different state it's had very different agendas,
including of course, slavery. And as the federal government grew,

(01:19:06):
we grew even more fragmented because Congress could hand out
more and more government contracts, more and more federal jobs.
Insider stock tips ask Nancy Bolesey about that and cradle
to grave welfare both individual welfare and corporate Ever, expanding
government use lawmakers more and more power to buy all

(01:19:28):
voters and donors. Democrats they unite more easily than Republicans.
Why because they are the party a big government of
pig government. Republicans are supposed to be the party of
limited government, but establishment Republicans like Mitch McConnell and other

(01:19:49):
Rhinos have colluded with Democrats to pass pork bills. The
Democrat troph feeds teachers and other government unions, while Rhinos
refuse to even audit their donors wastehold defense spending until
we can replace big government rhinos with true conservatives and libertarians.

(01:20:09):
The GOP has to compromise, Brian to cut anything at all.
I'm sorry to use profanity on the area you're just
talking about the SEC. But yes, they have to compromise,
especially when a Republican is in the White House. They
have to compromise in Trump time, not Congressional time, because
their majority and the economy and world peace really hang

(01:20:33):
in the balance. As even James Carvill admits, Democrats have
no policy agenda that middle class American support. All they
can do is wait for Republicans to split apart. The
decentralized divided government our constitution wisely gave us should not
be a rubber stamp for any president. However, as Benjamin

(01:20:56):
Franklin implored our founders, we must all hang together, or assuredly,
we shall all hang separately. Unlike Democrats who unite to
grow government, Republicans grow government by refusing to unite. Yes, legislators,
like our principal trend Tom Massey, must consult their own conscience.

(01:21:18):
But then, at least on make or break votes, they
must find ways to compromise. Trump's populist movement survived the
bullet in Butler, Pennsylvania. Now, my friend, we have to
see if it can survive Republican lawmakers.

Speaker 1 (01:21:35):
What do you say. I say, you didn't call looking
for an argument, and I respect everything that you said.
I embrace what you said, and I certainly understand you
are asserting a realist position, and the clock is ticking
and they need to operate on Trump time, as you stated,
because you never know what's going to happen in an election.

(01:21:57):
And why I don't think the Democrats have anything to
run on except inflation, which I'm concerned about because of
the tariffs, it's going to exacerbate it, and then they're
gonna be screaming nothing. But you know Donald Trump's words,
I'm gonna end inflation on day one, which I don't
think he should have ever ever uttered, because that is
an impossible task for one man to accomplish, most notably
in an environment that you just got done describing. Jack

(01:22:20):
added in brilliant as always. It's one of the reasons
I look so forward to your segment on this program,
my friend. It's always a blessing and pleasure to have
you on speaking of my listening audience, and I'm already
looking forward to another conversation next week. God bless you,
sir for what you're doing, and keep up the great
work and have a wonderful week and best to your
better half. Seven fifty five KCD Talk Station Rebecca, don't

(01:22:50):
you look at my Facebook post or listen to the
morning show? She wanted to know if listening to Lunches
today just got into some message from her. Yes, I
posted it on face Book. I've been mentioned it all morning.
I know who's not listening. Listener Launch March First Brewery
on East Camp or they have two locations so that
they call it the Blue Ash location. So it's one

(01:23:11):
right across from Kids First Sports Center. And I wish
March First was around when my kids went to Kids First.
He's walked right across the street. I think that's brilliant.
I was kind of scratching my head and wondered how
March First ended up there, and I'm like, hmm, maybe
there's some built in brilliance to that, since there's a
built in audience every single day at that wildly popular
Kid's First place. Anyhow, since Judge O the Polatana is

(01:23:35):
not going to come on this morning, we got doctor
Robert Malone. Doctor Malone's written a book called Cywar, Enforcing
the New World Order, and he points out now's the
time in America needs hope, but more than hope, we
need to restore our constitution. And Bill writes as the
foundational documents of our republic. Now. Since the Polatana is

(01:23:55):
not not on and I do otherwise do local stories,
he did give me his and I told him I
wanted to read it. He said, please do, and it's
an impressive one and it's along those same lines. Caption
Taking rights seriously comes out of midnight tonight. He's in Russia.
By the way, it starts with a quote from John
Stuart Mill. If all mankind minus one were of one opinion,

(01:24:21):
and only one person were of the contrary opinion, mankind
would be no more justified in silencing that one person
than if he, if he had the power, would be
justified in silencing mankind. Judge of Paul Tuonner writes, the
world is filled with self evident truth truisms the philosophers, lawyers,
and judges know need not be proven. The sun rises

(01:24:44):
in the east and sets in the west. Who plus
two equals four. A couple boiling hot coffees sitting on
a table in a room the temperature of which is
seventy degrees fahrenheit will eventually cool down. These examples of
which there are legion are not true because we believe
they are are true. They are true essentially and substantially.
They are true, whether we accept their truthfulness or not.

(01:25:06):
Of course, recognizing a universal truth acknowledgies the existence of
an order of things higher than human laws, certainly higher
than the government. A generation of Americans that fought the
War of Succession against England. According to Professor Murray rothe Rothbart,
the last moral War Americans waged understood that the existence

(01:25:27):
of truisms and recognized their origin in nature. The most
famous of these recognitions was Thomas Jefferson's iconic line in
the Declaration of Independence that self evident truths come not
from persons, but from the laws of nature and of
Nature's God. Thus, quote, all men are created equal, and
are allowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights, that

(01:25:49):
among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness
is a truism. Jefferson's neighbor and colleague, James Madison, understood
this as well when he wrote the Bill of Rights,
so as to reflect that human rights do not come
from the government. They come from our individual humanity. Thus,
your right to be alive, to think as you wish,

(01:26:09):
to say what you think, to publish what you say,
to worship or not to associate, or not to shake
your fists in the tyrant's face by petitioning the government.
Your right to defend yourself and repel tyrants using and
carrying the same weapons as the government does. Your right
to be left alone, to own property, to travel or
stay put, these natural aspects of human existence are natural

(01:26:33):
rights to come from our humanity and from the exercise
of which all rational persons yearn This is the natural
rights understanding of Jefferson's Declaration and Madison's Bill of Rights,
to the latter of which all in government have sworn
allegiance and deference. A right is not a privilege. A
right is an indefensible personal claim against the whole world.

(01:26:56):
It does not require a government permission slip. It does
not require pre conditions, accept the ability to reason. It
does not require the approval of family or neighbors. A
privilege is something the government doles out to suit itself
or calm the masses. The government gives those who meet
its qualifications the privilege to vote, so it can claim

(01:27:16):
a form of Jeffersonian legitimacy. Jefferson argued to the declaration
that no government is morally illicit without the consent of
the governed. No one alive today has consented to the government,
but most accepted its acceptance is acceptance consent, of course,
not no more than walking on a government sidewalk is

(01:27:37):
consent to government's lies, theft and killing. Surely, the Germans
who voted against the Nazis, and could not escape their grasp,
hardly consented to that awful form of government. Resignation is
not moral acceptance. We need to distinguish between privileges the
government doles outs and rights that we have by virtue
of our humanity, rights so human and natural that they

(01:27:58):
exist in all persons in the absence of government. Are
our rights equal to each other. Some are equal to
each other, but one is greater than all, as none
of the rights cataloged briefly above can be exercised without it.
That is, of course, the right to live. This is
the right most challenging to governments that have enslaved masses

(01:28:19):
and gloried in the fighting. Morallylist wars that kill and
thus destroy that right to live. But if a if
a right is a claim against the whole world, how
can a government, whether popular or totalitarian or both, extinguish
it by death or slavery? The short answer is no. Governments,
notwithstanding the public oaths their officers take upon assuming office,

(01:28:40):
except the natural origins of rights to government, rights or privileges.
Stated differently, governments don't take rights seriously. Governments hate and
fear the exercise of natural rights. Ludwig von Mises is
properly called government the negation of liberty. Freedom is the
default position. We are literally born free, naturally free. Government

(01:29:05):
is an artificial creation based on a monopoly of force
in a geographic area that could not exist if it
did not negate our freedoms. Government denies our rights by
punishing the exercise of them and by stealing property from us.
Rights are not just claims against the government. They are
claims against the whole world. This was best encapsulated by
roth Guard's non aggression principle, which teaches us initiating all

(01:29:28):
real and threatened aggression, whether by violence, coercion, or deception,
is morally illicit. That applies to your neighbors as well
as to the police. Of course, in Rothbot's world. Of
Bard's world, there would be no government police unless all
persons consented, and he wouldn't have. Mysis wrote, channeling Jefferson
that in the long march of history, men and women

(01:29:50):
have given up essential freedom for the illusion of happiness. Quote.
They hail every step toward more government interference as progress
toward a more perfect world. Close quote they are confident,
he wrote, quote that the governments will transform the Earth
into a paradise close quote how right he was. How
wrong people are who think they can be happy without freedom. Amen,

(01:30:15):
Judge Andrew Nepolitana, God bless you, sir. God's Feed and
Safe Travels. Clemont County Veteran Service is going to explain
the website problems coming up, Steve Bosko from the Clemont
County Veteran Services. Stick around for that and get in
touch with Cover Sincy. Now, if you're one of my
listeners outside of the Cincinnati area, you think Cover Sinsey
with their medical insurance genius and brilliance being your broker

(01:30:35):
can't help you, You're wrong. They're in all fifty states
and just talk to John Rolan. I do a Sunday
show with him and he pointed that out. So regardless
of where you are, I strongly encourage you to reach
out the Cover Sincy and their amazing team because they
work with hundreds of insurance companies, have access two thousands
of policies. John compared it to an insurance policy to
have a bucket that's got holes in it. Yes, it

(01:30:58):
will cover something, it will hold something, but it leaks.
There are areas that won't be covered, areas that you
are going to be exposed to massive out of pocket liability.
John and his team put together a package of medical
insurance that fills and covers all those holes. So you're
an athletics left exposed and they do all this and
you pay less money. I kid you not, and it
doesn't cost you anything to reach out to them. They'll

(01:31:19):
keep all your information confidential, So why not find out
if you've got a leaky bucket, and you probably do,
let them create a new package of insurance where you
save money and get better medical coverage. To do that
one of two ways five one three eight hundred two
two five five five one three eight hundred call or
go fill out the form at the website coversinsi dot com.
Fill it out as much as possible, and they will

(01:31:41):
get back to you quickly. Coversincy dot com fifty five
KRC the talk station the dais nine first one to forecasts.
It's got to get colder today. Wait for around noon
when the rain shows up, and that's when the temperture
is going to drop from where we are right now,
today's fifty five over night down to twenty eight ran.

(01:32:03):
I'll turn to snow sometime around or after eight PM.
Get a sunny day tomorrow with a higher forty three
clouds over night down to thirty one, and I guess
depending on what pointed down on Friday, rain and snow
predicted Friday's hebby forty nine, it is fifty five now
in time for traffic.

Speaker 9 (01:32:20):
From the UCUP Traffic Center.

Speaker 10 (01:32:21):
When it comes to multiple scrosis, trusts the experts at
the UC Gardner Neuroscience Institute for Innovative and Comprehensive Care.
Learn more at UC health dot com. Inbound seventy four
continues to crawl thanks to two separate two car accidents
blocking the left lane before you got the seventy five.
That traffic backing up past North Bend and closed to

(01:32:42):
a forty five minute delay. Northbound seventy five slows out
of Erlinger to the bridge and from Mitchell to a
broken down left side at Paddock Shot King ramon fifty
five KR.

Speaker 9 (01:32:52):
See the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:32:56):
Seven forty one Fast Perching seven forty two fifty five
K City talk Station. Love the American veteran and God
love everybody with the Claimont County Veteran Services and the
other services of Veteran Service Commissions, who're all doing wonderful
work helping out our American veterans in studio. Steve Belzow,
Executive director, Welcome back, Steve. It's always great having you
on the show. Brian is good. It's another day to breathe,

(01:33:16):
another day to exist, another day to create. So thanks
for having us aboard. My friend can't thank you enough
for the positive attitude, Steve. And I'm sure you really have.
You get a big charge out of and enthusiasm and
a smile on your face from the work that you
do for the American veteran.

Speaker 11 (01:33:32):
Oh.

Speaker 14 (01:33:32):
Absolutely, this is in some sense it's we as marines,
we call it regreening. It's oh when when you get
around those in uniform, it's like, come here, let me
smell you.

Speaker 11 (01:33:40):
You smell like a cash exchange. You smell like uniform wool.

Speaker 14 (01:33:44):
Right, And sometimes just getting back around the presence, it's
like regreening with veterans.

Speaker 11 (01:33:48):
We're all speaking the same language.

Speaker 1 (01:33:50):
Yeah, we uh. I think the closest I can come
up with that sense of camaraderie is with my fraternity brothers.
We're celebrating one hundred and twenty fifth anniversary of our
our house chapter this weekend, and I just know how
what a charge is to be around the brothers, and
I know you feel that way about the veterans absolutely,
And I know you have tremendous amount of concern about
the veterans being able to access online their healthcare information.

(01:34:13):
And some of the veterans have a bit of a
stumbling block and a bit of a challenge with the
my Health that website. So let's talk about that.

Speaker 14 (01:34:20):
Yeah, yeah, the you know, you can look at there's
there's multiple facets of way to look at this. The
two most prominent are the US government and the protection
of the veterans.

Speaker 1 (01:34:32):
Yeah, right.

Speaker 14 (01:34:33):
The other ones the veteran trying to access their benefits.
The US government says we have been infiltrated multiple times
on our website to include listen to the statistic. In
twenty twenty three, the Federal Trade Commission received more than
one million reports.

Speaker 11 (01:34:53):
Of identity theft.

Speaker 1 (01:34:54):
Oh jeez.

Speaker 14 (01:34:55):
That same year, veterans or military retirees also reported to
the Federal Trade Commission three and fifty million in losses
to fraud.

Speaker 1 (01:35:05):
That's heartbreaking.

Speaker 11 (01:35:06):
So how do you prevent that? Right?

Speaker 14 (01:35:07):
This is and actually, you know, we say I'm from
the government here to help and everybody runs away, right,
But this is a positive step forward in securing the
personally identifiable information we call it PII of the veterans
accessing their healthcare on the internet.

Speaker 1 (01:35:26):
We're going to enter into another Tech Friday with Dave
Hatter's segment here, but no good security, aren't we good? Yeah?

Speaker 5 (01:35:31):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (01:35:32):
So what you're here for? You're subbing in for Dave Hatter?

Speaker 11 (01:35:34):
Is that what it is? How Dave he owes me?

Speaker 1 (01:35:37):
Right? Well, I'll tell you what with that as a
sort of teaser for the next segment, where Steve can
identify how they are protecting and better serving the American
veteran with the changes to the website access. We'll take
a quick break here, since we're up against the clock,
let me mention Chimneycare fireplace in stove. You got a
wood burner maybe fireplace or stuff. You need it inspected

(01:36:00):
and you'd probably be used it at the next couple
of days here, because well, it's going to be really
cold outside and you want to be able to enjoy
that cozy warmth of the fire but also not be
concerned about your safety. And that's why they're doing the
Winter Special, a wood burning sweep and evaluation for only
one hundred and sixty nine dollars and ninety nine cents.
Chimneycare Fireplaces though aplus with a better business bureau. They've
been around since nineteen eighty eight, locally owned and operated,

(01:36:21):
serving the Tri State and keeping your home safe and cozy.
Always use this as an opportunity to say, get a
carbon monoxide detector, but book your employment to do a
full video camera inspection, find any problems that might exist,
and of course the sweep that goes along with the
Chimneycareco dot com Chimneycareco dot com or give them a
call him, Please tell him. Brian said, Hi, if you
call them up five one three two four eight ninety

(01:36:42):
six hundred, that's five to one three two four eight
ninety six hundred.

Speaker 6 (01:36:46):
Fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (01:36:52):
Well, real quick weather here, Rain'll moving around noontime. That's
when the temperatures start to drop. Right now is the high.
It's fifty five overnight low with twenty eight rain, turns
to snow sometime at eight or after tomorrow, sunny in
forty three. It's got to be thirty one overnight with clouds,
rain and snow possible on Friday with a higher forty
nine fifty five now traffic time from.

Speaker 9 (01:37:13):
The UCUP Traffic Center.

Speaker 10 (01:37:14):
When it comes to multiple sphorosis, trusts the experts on
the UC Gardner Neuroscience Institute for Innovative and Comprehensive Care.

Speaker 9 (01:37:21):
Learn more at UC help dot com.

Speaker 10 (01:37:23):
Crews continue to work with a couple of accidents in
beound seventy four left Blane's Block before you got the
seventy five traffics backing to North Bend inbound seventy four
running close to a forty five minute delay into town.
Southbound seventy five slowed through block on northbound seventy five.
That was a broken down left side at Paddock backing
traffic through Saint Bernard Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRE.

Speaker 9 (01:37:45):
See the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:37:48):
Seven forty nine fifty five KRC DE talkxationan Brian Thomas
with Steve Bolzo from the Klemic County Veteran Services dealing
with the challenges some of the veterans are facing accessing
their healthcare online, and it's all about helping the veteran
rather than hurting it. We're talking about things like two
factor authentication, aren't we steel We are absolutely all right,
So walk my veteran friends through what's going on in
the process and the information of where they need to

(01:38:11):
go in order to get through this.

Speaker 14 (01:38:12):
Yeah, sure, great question. The veteran is used to accessing.
We all know multiple websites and we have VA. Dot
gov is a landing page for various things. But then
we had my Healthy Vet. We also had e benefits,
all separate websites. What the VA is doing is trying
to bring them underneath one umbrella, one stop shopping, one

(01:38:34):
stop shopping. However, most are still used to it's muscle memory. Yeah,
I go to my Healthy Vet and I order my medications.
But now I'm told I have to log in a
different way than what I'm used to for the past
ten to fifteen years. Moving to an id ME or
login dot gov requires now a two factor we call

(01:38:56):
it multi factor authentication, so that you need yon't know
your password, but an application to either you can have
it on your phone to give you a rolling six
digits every thirty seconds, or you have the government text
you the six digits. The problem with that sometimes it's
lagging too far behind to send you the text. And

(01:39:19):
now you're logged. Now you've got to start the whole
process all over again.

Speaker 1 (01:39:21):
Oh jeez.

Speaker 14 (01:39:22):
The difficulty becomes brian though in creating your new login
dot gov or id me, because you have to take
a picture of your driver's license. And if we look
at Ohio's driver's license, it's got a clear film over
the top, it's got gold foil underneath, it's got different
identifiers you know, void do not copy, and so when

(01:39:44):
you try to take a picture of it, all that
flashes back at the camera, It bounces back to light
and then the system says, not a good picture. Jeez,
But you're only given ten attempts. After the tenth attempt,
you have to wait a period. Right, it took me
eight try me myself. You coming from an IT company
for almost ten years, it took me eight tries out

(01:40:05):
of the ten to get a capture. So what we've
done at my office in clarment, we have a actual
like a hood to take photos from and it reduces
and rebounces the flash away from the ID card. So
it helps the veteran to not only create their presence
of who they are, but then they'll also help them

(01:40:27):
set up a multi factor authenticator authenticator app on their
phone on their laptop if they can bring it in
or iPad.

Speaker 1 (01:40:35):
So you walk them through the process, you get them
completely logged in correct, and then once this is established,
then they will work with the multi factor authentication, so
they're established in the system, the information has been verified.
When they go to log in, they'll get a text saying,
you know, here's your six digit code. You pop the
code in and that's when you get access. That's to

(01:40:56):
keep someone else from logging in on your behalf or
against your will.

Speaker 14 (01:41:00):
Well, that's right, and it goes back to that three
hundred and fifty million that veterans lost. Yeah, right, So
this is a way that they're protecting the veteran's identity
because it is too hard to replicate every thirty seconds
a rolling six digit number.

Speaker 1 (01:41:15):
Yeah. I just I guess are there plans in the
work to sort of change that at all, because if
it's not going out fast enough, I mean, that sounds
pretty damn frustrating and I can feel for the veteran
on that one.

Speaker 11 (01:41:26):
Right.

Speaker 14 (01:41:27):
I don't know how much of that has to do
with either Wi Fi connectivity, yeah, or cell phone conductivity.
What's the bandwidth to push those those digits things out?
Of the control, right, You just don't have control over that,
which is why to have it on your authenticator on
your computer, on your laptop, on your iPad tablet is

(01:41:47):
going to help you. Or to have a multi factor
authenticator on your phone. But that means you need a smartphone.
So what does Uncle Bob do. That's got the old
cricket flip phone and it's just a phone. I don't text.
I just receive phone calls old school, old school, and
some refuse at updating. So now they're calling the VA

(01:42:09):
Downtown to call in their pharmacy. They're calling the VA
Downtown to set up an appointment or to find out
their upcoming appointments. That takes time and it can be
frustrating in the loop.

Speaker 1 (01:42:21):
Huh. But if they don't choose to go down the
smartphone road, if they still keep the old flip cricket
phone that doesn't even text, do they have an option
to avoid having to make the phone.

Speaker 11 (01:42:32):
Calls showing up in person in person?

Speaker 5 (01:42:36):
Right?

Speaker 11 (01:42:37):
And now you've got time gas and.

Speaker 14 (01:42:39):
Maybe they might have time as retiree, but still the
cost of fuel right now?

Speaker 11 (01:42:43):
And are they ambulatory? Can they drive themselves?

Speaker 1 (01:42:46):
Yeah? Yeah, yeah, yeah, I know I'm with you, which
all of which are pretty good arguments for going ahead
and making the leave and getting the smartphone. You don't
have to use apps, you don't have to use it
for anything other than this and making phone call. I
was just telling Steve, I was just telling you off
the air, because my phone's like eight years old or something.
I've never upgraded it. But then again, I only use

(01:43:07):
it for texting and phone calling and looking at my
email period. That's it.

Speaker 11 (01:43:11):
That's it. I don't need it now.

Speaker 14 (01:43:13):
I need a way to get a six digit rolling number.
But it's okay. But technology is advancing, which also means
the criminals are advancing. Yes they are, which we need
to ensure our seniors out there as veterans are protected,
especially their PII. No one's creating additional credit card accounts
in their name, and we've all seen what happens with
stolen identity.

Speaker 1 (01:43:32):
Oh I know, and most notably in the senior community,
because they have that built and God love them for it,
built in trust. They just have such a high level
of trust they do, and a low level of familiarity
with things modern and technical and computer based.

Speaker 14 (01:43:45):
Sure, and if you ask me, I've got a low
level of patience. Right, that computer has slown out a
window many times. However, there is a when you try
to access my healthy VT, it's going to send you
through amultiple cycle. Right you how you got to go
back over to VA dot gov. But you have to
set up this new login method and then for VA

(01:44:06):
dot gov it'll bring you back to my Healthy VT.

Speaker 11 (01:44:09):
Instead.

Speaker 14 (01:44:09):
For the veteran, go to VA dot gov, go through
the login process, and my healthy VET is a tab
off of VA do so one stop is VA dot gov,
one stop is VA dot Start there and then you'll
get to my Healthy VT.

Speaker 1 (01:44:24):
Absolutely all right, that boiled down. I think that's the
soundest piece of advice you can give. And apparently Steve
is now in the cell phone selling game, so get
yourself a smart er phone so you can at least
do the two factor authentication. That is absolutely for your
benefit out there. It really is peace of mind. I
do it all the time with my phone. It's one
of the reasons I've got one. Absolutely, Steve Belza, it's

(01:44:47):
been great seeing I appreciate everything you do for the
American Veteran and the Clarmont County Veteran Services and of course, veterans.
If you don't want to go through all this, you
want some help, get to the Claarmont County Veteran Services
Office and they'll be happy to help you out in
this and so many other ways. God bless you, sir.
Stick around. Congressman Dave Taylor. We'll be on the program
at the top of the our news to get his
response at Trump's address, and then doctor Robert Malone with

(01:45:08):
the book cy War Enforcing the New World Order. That'll
be at eight thirty. I'll be right back.

Speaker 6 (01:45:13):
Covering Trump's first one hundred days day, every day, Promises Made,
Promises Kept. Fifty five KRZ the Talk Station. This report
here sponsored Doge digging Out doing iow of a job
check can often for the latest.

Speaker 13 (01:45:27):
I call it the Force of super Geniuses.

Speaker 1 (01:45:29):
Fifty five KRZ, the Talk Station. Eight oh five at
fifty five KRC, the Talk Station, A very happy Wednesday
to you. Hope to see it listener lunch today Mark's
first breweries Bluepash location on East Kemper. Welcome back to
the fifty five KRC Morning Show representing Ohio's second District,
Congressman Dave Taylor.

Speaker 12 (01:45:50):
Dave, good, have you back on the program. Good morning, Brian,
thank you very much for having.

Speaker 1 (01:45:54):
Me, and you were there, weren't you? I was, indeed, indeed,
I just I obviously want to hear anything you want
to say about that. But former innercent Tents of tru
Trusty Drew Pappus called him this morning and he just
just could not believe. And I understand. Apparently the Democrats
got a memo saying, do not stand for literally anything

(01:46:16):
Donald Trump says or does, period, end of story. We
don't know what they were threatened with, but clearly the
message got out. They couldn't even stand up for the
thirteen year old brain cancer survivor DJ Daniel.

Speaker 12 (01:46:29):
Yeah, it would take a very serious threat to keep
everybody from standing up for that, and I can only
assume that's the case. I never known mister Pappus to
be wrong about anything, after all. But DJ Daniel wasn't
the highlight of my night, Not just the part where
he was made our newest seacret service agent. But when

(01:46:49):
I was walking out going to meet my wife that
head home, I bumped into him in the hallway and
he was staying there, so I went over to congratulate him,
and he said I'm going to give you a hug.
Oh Man, Yeah you are. He was quite a young guy.

Speaker 1 (01:47:05):
That's like an allergy inducing moment there, I imagine, Dave. Yeah,
I know that's what happened. Experience does. But shameless that
the Democrats couldn't even stand for a cancer survivor and
and just an honoree like that. But whatever I thought
Trump did, and I didn't watch it live, I acknowledge
because I go to bed early because I get up
at two thirty to the morning show. But I read

(01:47:25):
every single word in the transcript, and he did a
phenomenal job outlining the accomplishments. It took him a record
setting length to do it. The guy just got sworn
in like five minutes ago, and it took him at
plus an hour to get through all the accomplishments and
what he wants Congress to get accomplished as well. It
really is amazing, isn't.

Speaker 12 (01:47:45):
It It is. I didn't realize how long the speech
was until afterwards, because it didn't seem long. It was
such a great speech and we were enjoying it, and
as you say, it's always nice to hear all the
things that are being done and moving us in the
right direction. And it's a long list just going to
get longer, and made for a very enjoyable.

Speaker 1 (01:48:03):
Night well, particularly when I have fully appreciate the work
that DOGE is doing the Department of Government Efficiency. And
although they're for whatever reason they think Elon Musk is
a Nazi or something because he's ferreting out all this fraud,
waste and abuse, the highlight for me was that section.
Then the Democrats sitting on their hands as they were

(01:48:25):
and screaming madly throughout the week's last several weeks about
the cuts. These are absolutely indefensible expenditures of money. How
can anyone in a country that's broke. If we were
sitting on a pile of cash and had all kinds
of money to throw around, maybe you could try justifying
circumcisions in Mozambique or whatever. But in the final analysis,

(01:48:46):
we are broke, and none of these programs sound legitimate
at all. And more fundamentally, that money isn't followed and
nobody's doing an accounting on how it was spent or
even if they accomplished the goals that they purport to serve.

Speaker 12 (01:49:00):
That last point you made, Brian, is the thing that's
on my mind the most. When he's reading that laundry
list of the trocities that the dose is discovered, there's
there's silly sounding and they are silly and sometimes worse
than silly. But are those dollars really ever leaving the
United States or are they being funneled into regime change

(01:49:20):
operations under US eight or all the other nefarious things
they've been up to here and abroad. These the studies
they do on transgender rodents or whatever. Yeah, other country,
let's see the studies. If that money has been spent,
Let's see see the results of the studies, so we
can at least know that it wasn't used for that

(01:49:41):
terrible idea.

Speaker 1 (01:49:42):
Well, you know it's it sounds like a simple proposition,
but you'd have to grow the number of government employees tremendously,
filled them with accountants in order to track all this money.
It's just an illustration of how bloated and insane the
expenditures flown out of Washington, DC are so much so
and I'll have a stab at the military budget. Can't
even audit our own military budget of eight hundred and

(01:50:02):
fifty billion dollars.

Speaker 12 (01:50:05):
Right, and they failed what eight in a row. And yeah,
and when they interviewed the lady about it, says that's
not an indication that there's fraud, waste or abuse. How
in the world is not obviously evidence of fraud, waste
and abuse when you can't account for the money you
were sent to spend on depending our nation.

Speaker 1 (01:50:22):
Yes, I also got a kick in seeing a fraud
wasted abuse. The numbers of folks in this country apparently
who are over than one hundred and twenty years old,
or one hundred and fifty or one case three hundred
and sixty years old. That's an open account. Now, I'm
not suggesting in every single one of those circumstances checks
are still going to some presumably dead person, but that

(01:50:42):
is a vehicle for fraud. If someone illegally in our
country without a work permit wants to work, they can
grab one of those active social Security numbers and assert
it as their own exactly.

Speaker 12 (01:50:52):
And you know, they found cases where they're the same
social Security numbers being used for the thousands of different
out there, with the benefits going a bunch of different directions.
But I was glad to hear that there's a two
hundred and forty nine year old, so they can. They're
two hundred and fiftieth birthday will coincide with our nation's
two hundred and fiftieth I know, feliprations next fourth and
fourth of July.

Speaker 1 (01:51:14):
I know Congress and Dave Taylor, Donald Trump did illustrate
and highlight a number of things that Congress is going
to have to do that are outside of the controls
of executive authority. And you know, no one wants an
imperial president, but Congress must act. He talked about cutting taxes,
making them permanent, among other things. That is any of
the thing or are any of the things that Donald

(01:51:34):
Trump suggested he wants Congress to act on and do.
Are they going to be accomplished or We're going to
end up in one of these oh not in my
district kind of arguments that we quite often get from
some Republicans out there.

Speaker 12 (01:51:47):
I believe though, Brian, we're working very hard on that.
You know, the Tax Cuts and Job Act, which which
the media and Democrats it's only benefits billionaires, benefits every
single tax paying household the United It's it's complete. It's
absolutely vital that we get that extended, if not made permanent.
This go round. But yeah, we're going to get a

(01:52:07):
lot of those things accomplished. Nobody ever gets everything they
want in politics. But I think we're going to really
move the ball forward in this round of reconciliation. We'll
have another crack at it in twenty twenty six. It's
gonna be a transformative couple of years. And I just
want to reassure you that the political will is there
on our side, and you know, we understand that there.

(01:52:29):
So everybody knows somebody who's employed by the federal government,
and nobody really wants anybody to lose their job. But
we don't want people's tax dollars going to support an
unnecessary job either. So that's that's that's a reality that's
going to have to be addressed.

Speaker 1 (01:52:44):
And the other thing that he obviously burst the bubble
of those who are ginty with happiness that that meeting
imploded with Vladimir Zelenski. But I guess vlad came back around,
didn't he.

Speaker 12 (01:52:59):
Yeah, It's funny how how money changes his mind so quickly.
He went over to immediately ran over to Europe to
beg for money. He didn't get nearly what he needed,
and uh, then President Trump rightly said, you know, we're
not selling any more weapons provong, you know, prolong this
bloody war that that's going nowhere. No one even really
understands what winning it means. It changes mind pretty quickly.

(01:53:21):
Hopefully we actually moved towards peace, which everybody wants. I
think everybody wants that. I know, you know there it
sort of benefits the other side of the aisle that
when when the the the war is not ended quickly,
when President Trump made it a priority, tended quickly, so
that they may want to interfere. And there's some certainly
some indications that that has been happening. But I think

(01:53:43):
every normal thinking person in the country and the world
will like say that war.

Speaker 1 (01:53:48):
End without question. And if the he does sign the
minerals deal, that would create an American lasting presence there.
American business would be established there to extract the minerals,
which I suppose, as we do in other areas of
the world where we have American interests, that would provide
at least some sort of argument, whether it's legitimate or not.

(01:54:09):
I'm not a warhawk, and I don't like the fact
that we always acted as the world's police officer. As
evidence by this particular conflict. But if we have an American
presence there, then that does justify defending the American interests
on some level, does it not?

Speaker 12 (01:54:25):
It absolutely doesn't. You know that those rare minerals are
so important to so many of the things we were
moving into and technology now, it would be not just
an American interest but a vital one that we would
take very seriously. And that, as you said, is in
and of itself a security guarantee.

Speaker 1 (01:54:44):
Yeah, and I love that after highlighting the fact that
he ended a lot of these green projects would seem
to be a tremendous waste of the taxpayer dollar. I
think it's rather interesting, ironic perhaps that Europe spent more
money buying Russian oil than gas, and they've spent on
defending Ukraine so far. Ukraine's in their backyard, not ours.

Speaker 5 (01:55:03):
Right right?

Speaker 12 (01:55:04):
That that that's you know, when you get to the
bottom of it, it's usually the case that that money
is the reason this war continues. It's become profitable for
for Russia. And you know, half of our three hundred
billion that's gone over there's unaccounted for to a country
that the only thing you heard about in the media
before this war started about Ukraine was the most corrupt

(01:55:27):
country in the world, and now the money's missing and
correct and surprise, So yeah, it's it usually comes down
to money, and Europe's the relationship with Russia and this
in this situation, and then they're purported undying support for
Ukraine doesn't make a lot of sense.

Speaker 1 (01:55:46):
Well it doesn't. And using Russian gas and oil while
not extracting their own in the European Union flies in
the face of all of their green arguments. I mean,
if you're still using petroleum products as we traditionally call them,
then how can you get to net car urban zero
which they seem to be chasing their tail over. It
just doesn't make a wits worth of sense.

Speaker 12 (01:56:05):
Right, And President Trump in his first term warned Germany
and other European nations that they'd regret, you know, buying
there or depending on Russia for their energy, and you
know they laughed and now here we are.

Speaker 1 (01:56:18):
Yes, we are. Any other observations you want to talk
mentioned Congressman Taylor, you.

Speaker 12 (01:56:25):
Know it was it was a great night. It was,
like you said, an absolute laundry list of of of highlights.
And there's something you mentioned earlier President Trump's requests for
Congress and that he wants to see us do more
of our job, and I do too, and we've been
doing that. Our goal and my goal in my office,
and lots of my colleagues on the Republican side have

(01:56:48):
been actively trying to codify President Trump's executive orders into
law because I mean, frankly, that's the way it ought
to be done. I'm not a fan of executive orders.
I think, as we've talked about before, was supposed to
be governed by legislation, and we're really trying to make
a point of doing that because obviously the things he's

(01:57:09):
doing need to be done. They're great, they're going to
move us forward, but we need to make them the
law so they don't get flipped over in the hopeful,
hopefully unlikely event that I see another Democrat president in
my lifetime.

Speaker 1 (01:57:23):
Well, given the Democrats strategy right now is just say
absolutely no to literally everything Donald Trump does, regardless of
how good it is for our country, I'm not quite
sure what they're going to run on. With the notable
exception of inflation, and I thought Donald Trump may have
stepped in it when before the election he said he
was going to stop inflation on day one. That's not
a thing that one single man can accomplish on his own.

(01:57:43):
And with all the pressures and all the factors and
things that influence inflation, it's going to be a tough
road to hoe. And again going back to Trump's executive orders,
the tariffs are going to cause things to go up
in price. I think any economists will acknowledge that.

Speaker 12 (01:57:58):
I think that's something Henow too. There could be a
little time of adjustment, but the terarfs are going to
help with one thing that I think is vitally important,
if not a lot of other things. I'm not an economist,
but I'm learning. I think we all realize that we've
we've let too much of our vital supply chain move
off shore, and the tariffs will help us on shore.
There's things we need the American steel production to increase.

(01:58:20):
We need agricultural products here, believe it or not. Over
the last two years, we're UH a net importer of
agricultural UH agricultural goods, which is just shocking. Yes, unleashed,
unleashing the energy sector, getting our pharmaceuticals back, and we're
depending on China for a lot of these things, but
depending on them for pharmaceuticals is just crazy. Computer chips,

(01:58:42):
which obviously the President announced two days ago and then
spoke about last night that the big the Taiwan chip
making investment that's come in our way. So it will
help a lot with that. And I believe the economy
is gonna really thrive under President Trump, obviously is I
think most people do. And we'll be making more money,

(01:59:06):
and under the tax cuts and Job Act when extended,
we'll be keeping more of it. So that's going to
help the economy in general. But hopefully the teriffs aren't
necessary forever, because really all it takes to remove the tariffs,
which are reciprocal, is for our trading partners to remove
their tariffs. Canada has been leveling these extremely high tariffs

(01:59:31):
on us for a long time, and we really didn't
say anything about it, and then eventually we politely said,
he could you you mind stopping these people from across
on your border into our country and bringing this deadly
drug that's killing our people. And they couldn't be bothered.
So some things have to be done until they start,
you know, acting like the friend that they have always
been again, and that's what President Trump's trying to do.

Speaker 1 (01:59:54):
I believe yep, and it's already starting to bear fruit.
You mentioned the investments one point seven trillion over the
past several weeks. It has some crackdowns by the Mexican
government sending truth to the southern border. They did extra
dight twenty five or six of the worst cartel folks
for prosecution here, and of course Canada's taking similar actions
on their border, so maybe it'll work. Congressman Dave Taylor,

(02:00:15):
second District of a Hio, It's been a pleasure talking
to me this morning. Keep up the good work and
I'll look forward to having back on the show real soon.

Speaker 12 (02:00:21):
Brian. I appreciate it, and I hope to talk to
you soon and have a great day.

Speaker 1 (02:00:25):
You do the same, sir. Eight twenty if you five
kc DE talk station. Now, how many realtors do you
know they're going to guarantee the sale of your home?

Speaker 5 (02:00:32):
Well?

Speaker 1 (02:00:33):
I know one. It's the best real estate agent and
team of agents around, Peter Shabriz, the should be group
of Keller Williams seven Hills, the only folks I would
ever consider hiring as a buyer or seller's agent. But
in so far as getting your home sold, they guarantee
that once you sit down with them at the outset,
you agree on a price and a timeline, and if

(02:00:54):
they don't sell your home within that timeline and by
that price, Peter will buy it. So you know, you
know the day it's going to be over and done with,
and I'm sure they will sell it. They're wonderful of
getting the house is sold it for top dollar, but
you know, you know you have a guarantee. And that's
one of the I don't know any of the real
estate agent team that's doing this, and just one of
the many programs offered by the Sabri Group of kellerwilliam
seven Hills that nobody else is doing. Several ways to

(02:01:15):
reach them. You can remember the website. It's seven zero
eight three thousand dot com. You can call them up
at five one three seven zero eight three thousand. If
you can't remember anything like that, just remember how to
spell Chabri cha b Ris. Type in Schabri Group and
your search engine. There you have it. Sabri Group, Keller
Williams seven Hills.

Speaker 15 (02:01:32):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 1 (02:01:36):
There's a lot cast going to be a well Chilei
afternoon temper just start dropping around noon when the rain
shows up front coming in Today's high right now fifty
five overnight low at twenty eight with rain turning to
snow sometime around or after eight pm. Sunny sky's tomorrow
with a higher forty three, clouds over ninth down to
thirty one, and the rain and or snow depending on
the time of day. On Friday, it's one up to

(02:01:57):
forty nine, then it's fifty five right now. Type of
traffic from.

Speaker 9 (02:02:02):
The UCUT Traffic Center.

Speaker 10 (02:02:03):
When it comes to multiple sclerosis trusts the experts at
the U se Gardner Neuroscience Institute for Innovative and Comprehensive Care.

Speaker 9 (02:02:10):
Learn more at uc how dot com.

Speaker 10 (02:02:12):
Inbound seventy four continues to run over a forty five
minute delay from North ben to seventy five, with the
left wing blocked off just before you get to seventy
five due directs. Southbound seventy five slows through Wachland. Southbound
seventy one off and on slow from two seventy five
to Red Bank. Chuck king ramon fifty five KRC, the
talk station.

Speaker 1 (02:02:34):
Eight twenty nine to fifty five kr CD talk station.
Good time in you tune in the fifty five KRC
Morning Show. Sadly, Judgentenapaulatana not on, he's traveling in Russia.
But we have the return of a brilliant, demonstrably brilliant
genius man who wrote the book we talked about last time.
He's on the program. Lies my government told me, Doctor
Robert Malone. We're going to talk about his new book,

(02:02:56):
A cy War Enforcing the New War Order. Internationally recognized
virologists and immunologists, clinical research and regulatory Affairs expert, US
Federal contract proposal and project manager, and the original inventor
of the mr NA delivery vaccination as a technology, also
DNA vaccination, multiple non viral DNA and r N A
m r n A platform delivery technologies. And he has

(02:03:19):
got a just wonderful background, but he stepped and he
got in trouble for speaking truth to power. Welcome back,
doctor Malone. It's a distinct pleasure to have you on today.

Speaker 15 (02:03:29):
Thanks for the honor to be here and to talk
to your audience.

Speaker 1 (02:03:32):
Well, in your last book, you know, the the idea
that you actually told the truth about what was going
on with COVID and the the the vaccine got you
into a bit of trouble. Remind my audience what happened
in the aftermath of speaking out loud.

Speaker 15 (02:03:48):
Well, I was deep platformed from LinkedIn and Twitter a
day before I went on Joe Rogan. It was the
Joe Rogan hit that really kind of broke everything open,
and that set off a cascade of attacks. They were
already in progress, really with The Atlantic Monthly, Business Insider,

(02:04:09):
New York Times, Washington Boast, Rolling Stone goes on and on,
you know, all coordinated, and of course in Wikipedia that
I'm still labeled as a spreader of misinformation. But thank
you Joe Rogan and Woody Harrelson for the recent hit
in which Joe said that surprisingly everything that Malone said

(02:04:34):
in that infamous podcast turned out to be.

Speaker 1 (02:04:36):
True, confirming all of the previously called conspiracy theories, They're
all actually true. Masks social distancing, the effectiveness of the
COVID vaccine, the idea that children shouldn't get and only
people in the most critically unstable, you know, the situations,
you know, comorbid conditions, the elderly were the ones that
it should have been given to, and perhaps no one else.

(02:04:58):
The firing of people for not getting the vaccine. Anybody
who uttered a syllable against that was deemed some kind
of nutcase and conspiracy theorist. And as it turns out,
they were all right all along, including you, sir. And
that's kind of the gist on one topic level of
what sy War excuse me enforcing the New World Order addresses,
is it not?

Speaker 15 (02:05:19):
Yeah, so very much. Sy War was a product of
what I'd experienced in many physicians and others around me.
It wasn't just me. And as I was trying to
make sense of what I was experiencing, which was unlike
I've been through multiple outbreaks at the front edge of things,

(02:05:40):
never seen anything like this in my life, and so
trying to make sense out of it. And then once
I kind of process that the book was an in
intended to be a little bit of a wake up guide.
You can almost say, a vaccination for people that were

(02:06:01):
aware that things weren't right, but they weren't able to
kind of make sense out of it all to help
them see the underlying structure and hopefully to help them
to become a lot more resistant to this kind of technology.
Here's a key point if you if you'll let me
continue to rate that I posted today on x It's

(02:06:24):
getting a lot of traction. I'm sincerely convinced that Pharma
has learned to use psychological warfare methods developed by air
militaries for use against the likes.

Speaker 1 (02:06:37):
Of al Qaeda and the Taliban.

Speaker 15 (02:06:39):
They've learned to use this as part of their marketing approach.
They've used They've learned to use propaganda in this way,
with the whole suite of modern sy ops as a
way to influence governments by ginning up fear in the
general population to make purchasing decisions and other administrative decisions

(02:07:04):
that favored the interests of Farma. I think that behind
all of this we've got the hand of Big Pharma
that's learned to manipulate the public to generate fear of
death as a way to influence decisions from government leaders.

Speaker 1 (02:07:22):
Well that says a mouthful right there. They're that capable
of doing it, that they could get people to do
really stupid things. You know what, it was sort of
revealing you knew, and I think we all collectively knew
that during COVID when they were shoving these vaccines down
our throats, or at least forcing everyone to get one
that something was wrong with the edicts from various governors,

(02:07:43):
including here in the State of Ohio. Governor line you
could drink at a bar, but not after ten pm.
You could buy things in an aisle on a store,
but not things on the other aisle, unnecessary items or whatever.
That just doesn't make sense and it doesn't process from
a logic and reason standpoint. You don't need to be
a renown physician like yourself to realize something is wrong here.

Speaker 15 (02:08:05):
Amen, And it's that it's that kind of intuitive sense,
or some people might call it a spidey sense, that
really triggered a lot of folks to start asking questions
and digging into the details. And now, thanks to Doge,
we have these amazing reveals about USAID and its manipulation

(02:08:29):
of media all over the world, which was one of
the conundrums for me as I traveled, particularly to Europe
during the COVID crisis. I saw the same words, the
same strategies and tactics, the same language being used over
there is over here, and it didn't make sense. How
is all of this coordinated? And now we know, well.

Speaker 1 (02:08:51):
It seems to be the assertion that someone gets to
be named as an export or like expert rather or
like for doctor Faci, the experts, if you know, it's
God speaking and there's no way you can resist or
save anything in opposition to it. This is a.

Speaker 15 (02:09:06):
Core tenet of scientism. Which is another one of the
kind of topic carries in the book is this development
of a new religion. In the face of the separation
of church and state. The federal government has veered towards
substituting this new thing in place of you know, core
tenants that used to come from the Judeo Christian ethic.

(02:09:30):
And this new thing that's been substituted is it's not science.
It's a pseudo religion that you know, Scientism is the word,
and it has anointed high priests, and Tony Fauci is one.
In the vaccine world, Paul Offatt is another one. And

(02:09:53):
there are many of these that are basically tested and
then appointed to these various federal commissions, like the Advisory
Committee on Ammunization Practices at the CDC and the FDA
Advisory Committees. And that's one of the things that the

(02:10:15):
new HHS under Bobby Kennedy is looking at, is really
getting rid of these individuals that are so industry biased
in these advisory committees, so we can get back to
more objectivity in terms of analyzing what the data are
and helping the government make decisions. Another thing I've been
arguing is that the government is allocating public health resources

(02:10:41):
in a biased fashion. The money that we spend should
reflect the degree of actual demonstrable need in the populace,
where is the real disease. If we were going to
allocate money based on public health urgency, we would be
spent billions on fentanyl and we're not. We're spending it

(02:11:05):
on chasing H five N one because it's infecting cows
right now, and even the CDC says it's not a
major public health threat. H five N one has been
out there for a long time. But this is another
thing that has had gin up fear of death because

(02:11:25):
in nineteen eighteen, the story goes we lost a huge
number of people to swine flu, but that turns out
to be a false narrative. The thing that really killed
people was the subsequent pneumonia, bacterial pneumonia, And now we
have antibiotics, so people don't die of bacterial pneumonia unless
they've got major other problems, so they forgot to get

(02:11:46):
medical care. The other thing that killed people during nineteen
eighteen was the overuse of a hot new drug that
had just been discovered. Overdosing of aspirin to control fever
killed a lot of people. That's all been transformed into
this narrative that flu is an enormous boogeyman and we
all have to be afraid of it, and therefore we

(02:12:07):
have to spend stupid amounts of money on that as
opposed to you know, it's.

Speaker 1 (02:12:12):
A limit in theory.

Speaker 15 (02:12:14):
It's a limited federal budget, and we ought to be
spending money based on what the true public health need is.
You get my point.

Speaker 1 (02:12:21):
I absolutely get your point, And I was thinking about
this in the context of something you write about in
the book we're speaking of today, cy war enforcing the
new world or order by my guest today, doctor Malone.
Deep state censorship. Now, there are, as you noted, during
the period of time you were speaking out loud in
opposition to the deep state narrative, this propaganda campaign about COVID.

(02:12:44):
There were many peer review studies out there which well
flew in the face of what the narrative was, and
yet they were suppressed and they were suggested to be
you know, erroneous or wrong. There are so many parallels
you can draw between that and what we're going through
with this carbon dioxide is bad thing, with this solutely
absolute plant food man.

Speaker 15 (02:13:05):
The green energy narrative is another cywar narrative that's been
promoted globally very effectively to advance financial interests of selected
third parties. And here's the irony. Who is it that's
benefiting most from selling windmills and electric cars?

Speaker 1 (02:13:26):
The Chinese?

Speaker 15 (02:13:27):
The Chinese.

Speaker 1 (02:13:29):
Isn't that crazy? I say this all the time. I
do not believe that plant food is bad. I do
not believe in carbon caption. I think it's a foolish
exercise in pursuit to think that a windmill can substitute
for something we're not allowed to have, apparently, the nuclear
power plant. Amen.

Speaker 15 (02:13:46):
And the only you know, you know who's going to
break this is the tech bros. Because they want to
have these great, big AI facilities, and you can't run
an AI facility on green energy. And that's what's driving
the development of these little kind of local nuclear reactor

(02:14:07):
technology plants. Yeah, so that you're data center, I mean,
they're building these things out here in Virginia, and they
are massive and they suck up power. The new here's
the fun fact, the envisioned stargate. Remember Larry Ellison on
day two of Trump's presidency and that little fiasco press conference. Yep,

(02:14:30):
that data center will have power demands equivalent to all
the natural gas consumption on an annual basis in.

Speaker 1 (02:14:38):
The state of Texas, Louise. You need nuclear plants for that,
and people don't get it. These modern modular nuclear plants,
you know, really are efficient. They have a small footprint,
they don't have these problems and issues that a three
mile island design how many decades old? Is that by
now we do advance technologically, we do solve problems, we
do create better efficiency. So what's the fe and really,

(02:15:01):
largely doctor, why is this happening? Why do we still
fear nuclear power? I mean that's part of this propaganda campaign.

Speaker 15 (02:15:11):
What's the point behind narratives? Exactly promoted narratives? And you know,
you got to I think you really have to ask
the question, you know, follow the money and who benefits
from these policies? And this plays out on a geopolitical
stage in terms of the interests of nation states and

(02:15:34):
frankly empires as they battle with each other, and the
use of psychological warfare methods, which is, you know, the
modern embodiment of propaganda is highly developed in all these
competing nations. You know, we hear about Russian bought farms.
I'll come on, there's British bought farms, there's Chinese boughts

(02:15:57):
of Americans. You know, American firms are huge, and I'm
sure there are Ukrainian bought farms and Romanian bought farms
and Polish bought farms. I mean, every nation state is
doing this now. It's the way you play the game.

Speaker 1 (02:16:12):
Doctor, real quick here before we pass, before we have
the part company. I wish we could talk for hours, literally,
what can we do to see through the fog of
the lies that are being fed us?

Speaker 15 (02:16:25):
Thanks for that question, I get it all the time.
Part of that's part of the logic of the book
is helping people to understand the tech and how it's
deployed and who's deploying it really helps to kind of
immunize you against that kind of propaganda. But the other
one is in a practical way, you've got to seek
out multiple sources of information and don't just select the

(02:16:48):
ones that.

Speaker 1 (02:16:49):
Agree with you. Amen.

Speaker 15 (02:16:51):
It's hard to do. And sometimes you don't want to
read what is coming down in Atlantic Monthly or Huffingtons
litt alone real clear politics, I know, but you need
to read that other stuff to understand, if nothing else,
the strategies and tactics and what the agendas are of

(02:17:11):
those that are in opposition to your own political framework.
And we seek out media from India, from South Korea, Europe.
Of course, you know you need to look at not
just at mainstream media, but you need to look at

(02:17:32):
alternative media coming from offshore to the extents you can,
because a lot of times your browser won't let you
get there.

Speaker 1 (02:17:39):
Yeah, I'll tell you what, doctor Malone. You just echoed
my theory on the Morning show. I am being trained
as an attorney. That's what we always had to do.
You had to look at alternative cases, alternative opinions. That's
how you formulate and find the truth, doctor Robert Malone.
God bless you, sir, cywar enforcing the new World order
exposed in the history and tactics of modern psychological warfare

(02:18:01):
on the American people, and a way forward for you
to resist this totalitarian control. My listeners will be buying
the hell out of this book, doctor. It's on my
blog page fifty five KRC dot com of the link
to where they can buy it. I'll encourage them to
do so and share the information and book with their
friends to spread this information. Keep up the great work, doctor,
I really do appreciate what you're doing.

Speaker 15 (02:18:22):
Thank you, sir, and thanks for having me.

Speaker 1 (02:18:23):
Hun been my pleasure. It's a forty five fifty five
KRC detalk station.

Speaker 6 (02:18:28):
Fifty five KRC. Get ready for the biggest night in

Brian Thomas News

Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Stuff You Should Know
Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

The Breakfast Club

The Breakfast Club

The World's Most Dangerous Morning Show, The Breakfast Club, With DJ Envy, Jess Hilarious, And Charlamagne Tha God!

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

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.